SHNEAKO - May 18, 2026


SNEAKO Interviews Professor Jiang: Trump World Order


Episode Stats


Length

2 hours and 12 minutes

Words per minute

179.73834

Word count

23,726

Sentence count

820

Harmful content

Toxicity

28

sentences flagged

Hate speech

139

sentences flagged


Summary

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

Transcript

Transcript generated with Whisper (turbo).
Toxicity classifications generated with s-nlp/roberta_toxicity_classifier .
Hate speech classifications generated with facebook/roberta-hate-speech-dynabench-r4-target .
00:00:00.000 The United States, Israel, and China, the Israels will be the silent partner. 0.68
00:00:03.600 Before Trump visited China, I had an argument with my wife. 0.63
00:00:07.340 My wife is like, there's no way that China and the United States are going to do a grand bargain.
00:00:13.440 Look at the internet. Look at how all the Chinese are cursing America for invading Iran. 0.69
00:00:17.900 And then yesterday, she ran into my room and says,
00:00:20.420 oh my God, have you been watching what's happening online?
00:00:22.940 After Trump visited, the entire Chinese internet has turned against Iran.
00:00:26.600 How dare the Iranians block the Shri of Hormuz? 1.00
00:00:28.660 how the Iranians collapsed the global economy. 1.00
00:00:31.580 The Americans should go in and just finish their job. 1.00
00:00:33.520 The Chinese people are, first and foremost, chromatic. 1.00
00:00:36.780 They love money, and that's it. 1.00
00:00:38.180 Whoever can make the money, they love.
00:00:40.300 Okay, it's that simple.
00:00:41.480 What does that mean, AI will become God?
00:00:43.200 So Peter Thiel wrote a book called From Zero to One,
00:00:47.920 and I just read it yesterday.
00:00:49.360 And in the book, he makes a very interesting point,
00:00:50.900 which is capitalism, free market competition,
00:00:53.200 is for losers, okay?
00:00:55.160 If you really want to make money, 0.98
00:00:56.440 if you really want to win,
00:00:57.300 you have to create a monopoly.
00:00:58.660 And the way you create a monopoly is by figuring out the secrets of the universe,
00:01:03.100 by figuring out the secrets of humans, and then using these secrets in order to create a product,
00:01:08.260 very quickly able to conquer the world, okay?
00:01:10.480 It's AI, okay?
00:01:11.640 So what is the secret about AI that will allow it to conquer America and the world?
00:01:17.880 The secret is human loneliness.
00:01:20.440 But, you know, I mean, I was watching your tour, and I would love to visit Malaysia one day with you.
00:01:25.140 Next time you go, let's go together.
00:01:27.280 Absolutely.
00:01:27.640 reason why is malaysia like just observing your adventures in malaysia and just seeing
00:01:33.320 the way you in active society i think malaysia is ripe for a lot of new ideas they've been trying
00:01:39.640 this for a long time so i'm not sure if you look into cern the particle collider in in europe
00:01:44.440 called cern c-e-r-n but if you actually do some research you have to ask yourself why are they
00:01:50.760 investing a trillion dollars to find particles okay like like like why like like i don't
00:01:56.760 understand this a trillion dollars just to figure out these particles that may or may not support
00:02:03.000 your theory of how the universe works okay if you actually look at cern you'll find that there are
00:02:08.360 many occult aspects to it and what some people speculate is that they're trying to open inter
00:02:13.800 dimensional portals which would allow for free energy and which would allow certain demons to
00:02:19.080 come into this world the idea is that luge is your spiritual energy so so if you are in a low
00:02:26.180 vibrational state okay you have hate you have anger you're feeding these demons whereas if you
00:02:31.880 are high vibrational energy which is like you're conscious you're attentive you're joyful then
00:02:36.760 you're connected to the monad okay hello professor can you hear me yes hey snico how are you i'm good
00:02:45.520 how are you good to hear from you a long time no speak yeah yeah yeah how was your your southeast
00:02:50.780 southeast asia tour it was uh it was great i i loved malaysia indonesia south philippines
00:02:57.020 i did get banned in australia on the way back but i didn't stream that i saw that i saw that yeah
00:03:02.660 yeah i was following your your tour on social media oh okay that's cool i'm glad that you were
00:03:07.380 keeping up i got to learn a little bit i was asking about chinese influence a lot of these
00:03:11.200 places because it was it was interesting to learn especially in your lectures you're speaking about
00:03:14.400 the strait of malacca i didn't know about the difference between malaysia and indonesia although
00:03:18.680 they're very similar in a lot of ways like the batek i think overall indonesia seems to be working
00:03:23.620 with the u.s a lot more and malaysia seems exactly more separate yeah the entire indonesian military
00:03:28.560 has been co-opted by by the cia i mean it's essentially a cia front cut out how were they
00:03:33.840 able to get that done because malaysia indonesia have so much in common they're both muslim
00:03:37.420 dominated countries southeast asia what's the difference um i think it was just political
00:03:44.120 leadership um so american corporations have always been very active in indonesia they sort
00:03:50.820 of took over from the dutch right so formerly indonesia was a dutch colony uh and the dutch
00:03:56.340 were basically a corporation disguised as a state and then uh the americans came in and started to
00:04:01.840 monopolize indonesia's resources industry mainly rubber and um and you know whenever american
00:04:09.240 corporations go into a company into a country the cia comes along the cia is essentially like
00:04:13.800 like the legal arm in the enforcement arm of the American multinationals you know the CIA was
00:04:20.240 founded by these uh Wall Street lawyers um and um and so they've been they've infiltrated the
00:04:27.560 Indonesian society ever since you could really feel the difference between the two I think
00:04:33.460 overall I'm not trying to say any disrespect I love all the places I went to a lot but Malaysia
00:04:37.980 I prefer slightly it's a smaller nation about 35 million people compared to Indonesia it's just
00:04:43.160 over 250 million if i'm not mistaken you can feel the western influence in indonesia you can see a
00:04:48.760 lot of them they i think prioritize money more social media is a lot more popular there there's
00:04:55.000 more of this go-getter a lot of them actually were like asking me for a green card and they want to
00:04:59.240 go over to america it seems like they want to be america in a lot of ways maybe unintentionally or 0.65
00:05:03.960 subconsciously whereas malaysia seems more content with who they are yeah no i think the main reason
00:05:12.040 is the international elite has been co-opted by the americans so um and and so the people just
00:05:19.080 follow the elite right um but you know i mean i was watching your tour and i would love to visit
00:05:24.200 malaysia one day with you next time you go let's go together absolutely the reason why is the reason
00:05:30.040 why is and this is no offense to you but i don't want to end up like as an internet personality
00:05:34.600 like i don't be a youtuber for the rest of my life you know i my background is education reform and i
00:05:39.000 I want to promote education reform around the world, possibly start up schools.
00:05:43.720 And I think that Malaysia, like just observing your your your adventures in Malaysia and just seeing the way you inactive society.
00:05:52.460 I think Malaysia is ripe for a lot of new ideas.
00:05:57.000 So I would love the opportunity to visit Malaysia with you the next time you go.
00:06:02.740 Yeah, it's perfect that you say that. I was just thinking about that earlier today.
00:06:06.580 I was actually going to offer that same exact opportunity or like I said, that invitation to
00:06:11.500 you. I met two Chinese expatriates in Malaysia. One was named as Dandi Tan. The other is Hussein
00:06:16.040 Yi. And they're both reverts to Islam. And they're, you know, they spent a lot of time 0.93
00:06:20.460 studying the religion and different faiths. And there's a there's a strong Chinese influence
00:06:24.620 there. And Malaysia, I didn't expect to like it this much. And you're right to even talk about
00:06:28.920 like, you don't want to be an influencer. Today, I went to the beach for the first time. I haven't
00:06:32.640 been going out in public because the last time we spoke was right after literally right after I was
00:06:36.000 attacked and then i flew to malaysia so since i've been back i've been a little bit nervous but
00:06:40.460 i'm going to the beach with my hat low and i'm thinking why am i doing this and why am i you
00:06:45.840 know because this celebrity this fame thing is just a detractor in so many ways i was like man
00:06:50.900 should i just move to malaysia because i have the opportunity to i don't have a family of my own
00:06:55.660 and i love the place also did you see i got to meet the the prime minister on war ibrahim oh yeah
00:07:00.420 i did i did your first interview was a prime minister like you went to a mosque and you ran
00:07:05.920 into the prime minister that's that's pretty lucky of you and things got super lucky because
00:07:09.500 i had the phones instead i didn't have my cameraman because the gear wasn't working i had luckily just
00:07:14.120 had the phone and he says come in the car and the secret service is in the front so i get in i leave
00:07:19.260 my team and but everything worked out great i met the prince of johor he was great and they just
00:07:24.300 have the same mentality i think like you would really agree with the the values that are held
00:07:30.200 there um so i am actually thinking about going maybe we can we can go uh this summer they were
00:07:35.700 also saying my community kept saying i should go to china and meet up with professor jang but i
00:07:39.980 wanted to keep it the the southeast asia tour specifically yeah yeah china may be hard i'll
00:07:44.860 tell you what okay so so so let me tell you a story so trump was in china last um thursday and
00:07:51.660 friday yeah and nbc news got in touch uh their anchor tom lammas was was in town and he wanted
00:07:57.880 to sit like you'll sit down interview with me okay um and then um before i could respond and
00:08:03.380 say like like do you guys even know who i am i want to respond like do you guys even know who i
00:08:06.640 am um the producer got back and says okay sorry we have to cancel that so i'll start my wife and
00:08:12.180 there are two possibilities right the first possibility is they actually google me and
00:08:17.260 and watch my my interviews and recognize you know i would not be kosher um for an interview okay for
00:08:23.440 for these boomers. Another possibility is that they asked the Chinese, is it okay for us to 0.70
00:08:30.280 interview Professor Jiang? And the Chinese were like, no way in hell. So I got lucky because 0.99
00:08:37.080 there was a strong possibility that if the interview was agreed upon, 100 police would
00:08:43.360 come to my apartment and blockade me from going outdoors, basically. So I'm very sensitive right
00:08:52.660 out in in china so if you're to come then there might be there might be some difficulties but we 0.99
00:08:57.900 can meet up somewhere else you know like malaysia yeah if there's any guarantee i have in the world
00:09:02.580 right now of a place where i am safe it would be a place where the prime minister is willing to be
00:09:07.140 i mean for example the political elite in indonesia i think they're apprehensive i was
00:09:10.860 supposed to be with the mayor of manila in the philippines and then it was canceled so malaysia
00:09:15.620 obviously that it seems like there's some guarantees and others i had like there's a guy
00:09:19.200 dr zhakar nayak i think he was banned from india but the malaysian government allowed him to live
00:09:23.160 there so there's uh there's more guarantees but speaking of this meeting that trump had in china
00:09:28.060 recently that was uh very interesting i saw your lectures on it i saw well i think the the major
00:09:35.020 thing is that there's 30 tech billionaires that went out with trump what was that all about
00:09:41.800 Yeah. So here's my theory, OK? My theory is that it's these billionaires that really set the agenda for U.S.-China relations.
00:09:52.640 OK, so these billionaires include Elon Musk, Stephen Schwartzman, Larry Fink, right?
00:09:57.440 And together, they're worth about $12 trillion. So about $12 trillion went with Trump to China.
00:10:05.020 So these are the people who initiated the trade war in the first place.
00:10:08.240 And these are the people who want to seek the taunt, reproachment with China. 0.62
00:10:15.040 And so the question then is, like, why did they start the war in the first place? 0.60
00:10:19.460 And why is there now a reproachment?
00:10:21.800 And the reason why is that when China entered WTO in about the year 2000, there was an implicit agreement that in return for permanent, normal trade relations status,
00:10:34.080 which meant basically just free trade between the United States and China, China would agree on two things.
00:10:39.320 The first thing was that China would rigorously protect American IP in China.
00:10:46.880 The second was that China would eventually open up its financial sector to Wall Street,
00:10:52.720 basically liberalize the Chinese financial markets.
00:10:56.940 And as you can appreciate, even though China would benefit a lot from trading with the United States,
00:11:02.040 China would lose a lot if it actually agreed to both terms, right?
00:11:05.900 So when President Xi came into power, basically the Chinese became much more nationalistic, much more assertive.
00:11:12.340 So in the first case, the rigorous protection of American IP, that didn't happen.
00:11:18.940 So the example is Huawei, right?
00:11:21.520 So Huawei was basically taking Apple IP and then basically improving on the Apple laptop.
00:11:30.620 So then of the year 2015, the best-selling laptops in the world were actually not Apple computers, but Huawei computers.
00:11:39.900 And if you just go back and look at the year 2015, if you look at magazines like Consumer PC,
00:11:46.260 Huawei laptops were the most highly regarded in the world.
00:11:48.940 They were the best performing.
00:11:50.140 They had the most features.
00:11:51.640 They were the most cost-effective.
00:11:54.400 And so Apple got very angry because not only was Huawei beating Apple in the Chinese market, but Huawei was expanding pretty rapidly throughout the world.
00:12:04.520 And so Tim Cook was very angry about this.
00:12:09.200 And then the second situation, the second agreement where China would liberalize its financial market, China couldn't do that because if China were to open up its capital accounts, then everyone would basically flee the country.
00:12:21.420 Right. The renminbi would basically go to the United States and the renminbi would collapse in value.
00:12:27.060 Wall Street would come in and start engaging these predatory financial practices and basically cause like a 2008 subprime crisis in China.
00:12:37.400 Right. So China was very smart to just say, you know, we shouldn't be doing this.
00:12:41.700 But then the trade war started to happen and a lot of this pressure started to be applied to China.
00:12:47.280 And Americans don't really appreciate how devastating these sanctions were on China, on the Chinese economy.
00:12:56.200 So let me give an example where in 2017, 2018, my Apple laptop had basically died out.
00:13:03.900 I had it for like 12 years. I mean, I love that thing. OK.
00:13:07.220 And so I need to go and buy a new laptop. And I did a lot of research.
00:13:11.940 And at that time, Huawei was the very best.
00:13:15.040 so I went to the store and I I said I want to buy a hard laptop and the manager told me yeah but
00:13:21.040 there's but there's a problem and I want you to be aware of this problem I was like what's the
00:13:24.920 problem and he's like we can't actually update the software and then I was like okay okay here okay
00:13:30.860 let's let's get this straight Huawei has an open source software for the the Apple system okay like
00:13:39.900 Android and okay it has it has a source code okay that's number one number two is that Huawei has
00:13:44.720 about 10,000 engineers, right?
00:13:47.780 Huawei is the largest IT company in China.
00:13:50.540 It has 10,000 engineers, all extremely well-paid.
00:13:52.900 Compared to Apple with how many?
00:13:55.700 Look, I'm actually just making these numbers.
00:13:58.300 I mean, I don't know the specific numbers
00:14:00.780 of Huawei engineers, but there's a lot, okay?
00:14:02.860 Like thousands and thousands of highly paid engineers.
00:14:05.680 And the third thing is that Huawei
00:14:07.620 has subsidies from the government.
00:14:08.740 So it almost has like an unlimited fund to innovate, okay?
00:14:13.740 And given these three advantages, Huawei cannot make updates to the existing operating system.
00:14:21.360 It cannot debug the existing software.
00:14:25.120 So that shows you how much innovation comes from abroad. 0.60
00:14:30.940 China itself lacks the capacity to self-innovate.
00:14:34.920 What it does is it takes products from overseas, reverse engineers it, and then optimizes it and makes it cheaper.
00:14:41.340 because China is willing to basically like like like engage in environmental practices and labor practices that other nations cannot engage in. 0.84
00:14:52.760 OK, basically, it's willing to destroy its own environment. It's willing to exploit its own workers in order to achieve cost effectiveness.
00:15:00.800 OK. And so so so basically the United States and China were actually dependent on each other, where where American consumers just love the cheap costs coming from China. 0.89
00:15:10.000 So even though, okay, American consumers couldn't get access to cheap products anymore, Chinese workers couldn't work anymore, right? 0.86
00:15:17.740 And then you have this real estate collapse, and then just this complete collapse in consumer settlement. 0.98
00:15:23.100 And so right now in China, people refuse to spend money.
00:15:25.940 You have this complete collapse in the Chinese economy.
00:15:31.020 And so China really suffered for these past nine years.
00:15:35.360 And so when Trump came into office, I think that these billionaires, people like Stephen
00:15:38.580 Schwarzman, they would think Tim Cook, Mark Zuckerberg, Michael Dell, they all went to
00:15:44.280 him and says, listen, the Chinese are willing to negotiate.
00:15:47.540 Are you willing to negotiate as well?
00:15:49.200 And Trump says, sure, why not?
00:15:50.560 And that's why in the second Trump term, Trump was pretty nasty towards the Canadians, towards
00:15:56.600 the Europeans, to everyone, everyone but the Chinese, right?
00:15:59.360 I mean, Trump was pretty respectful to the Chinese these past two years.
00:16:05.040 Contrary to the first term, where he was very vicious towards the Chinese.
00:16:08.100 A lot of us remember.
00:16:09.140 It was personal.
00:16:10.000 It was personal, right?
00:16:11.280 Because he closed down the Chinese concert in Houston.
00:16:14.360 He kicked out Chinese reporters.
00:16:16.060 He canceled the Peace Corps.
00:16:18.040 He called the COVID the Kung Flu, the Kung Flu.
00:16:22.400 Kung Flu, yeah.
00:16:22.800 Right?
00:16:24.380 So it's very personal, that first term.
00:16:26.760 But in the second term, he's been very differential and even like, you know, he's been very cautious when it comes to China.
00:16:33.760 And now we can see why, because China, because Trump was trying to negotiate a rapprochement behind the scenes.
00:16:39.140 And now and after the Trump visit, we're already seeing that where, you know, like if you're watching the news,
00:16:43.280 there are lots of like really high profile individuals who come out and say, you know, like this U.S.-China rapprochement is actually good for the United States.
00:16:50.980 So Bill Gates, so Gates, Bob Gates, who was defense secretary under Clinton and under George H.W. Bush, he went on the news circuit and he said that, look, there's no reason for China and the United States to fight.
00:17:10.120 China is inferior. It doesn't have a strong military.
00:17:13.380 It's going through under it's going through a lot of domestic political turmoil.
00:17:17.540 It's arrested two former defense ministers and wants to execute them for corruption.
00:17:22.140 The military is adrift.
00:17:24.720 China's not going to be able to invade Taiwan for the next five, ten years.
00:17:28.660 So let's do a rapprochement.
00:17:31.020 China's not a threat to us.
00:17:32.280 Let's just be business partners.
00:17:34.180 And then for it, Zakaria has done an op-ed saying, you know, this is actually one of the better Trump decisions to seek rapprochement with China.
00:17:43.800 Jesse Waters of Fox News said, listen, guys, China is just a U.S. colony.
00:17:47.820 They love McDonald's. They love Pizza Hut. They love Burger King.
00:17:51.140 They want to be like us. Right. And quite honestly, their economy is in shambles right now.
00:17:55.960 Let's just take advantage of that before they collapse.
00:17:58.980 Trump himself has said, you know, he wants 500,000, half a million Chinese students in the United States. 0.55
00:18:02.940 He wants Chinese by farmland. So so I think this is all happening really fast. 0.83
00:18:08.080 And I think in the next few months, you're going to see this massive grand bargain happening between the United States and China.
00:18:13.540 And all this has been brokered behind the scenes by these billionaires who want to use China, who want to access the Chinese financial market.
00:18:21.120 OK, they want to sell U.S. Treasuries retail to the Chinese through something called stable coins.
00:18:27.480 We'll talk more about that if you're interested.
00:18:29.660 Tether, right?
00:18:30.880 Yeah, exactly. Circle and Tether are the big two.
00:18:34.740 and there's two acts i saw you mentioned this in your lecture there's two acts specifically so
00:18:38.980 crypto uh can be reliant upon these stable coins and this is basically to pay off the 39 trillion
00:18:45.380 dollars in debt we have that's right so the two acts are the genius act and the clarity act okay
00:18:49.060 and the idea is that if you're tether or circle and you want to engage in the business of digital
00:18:55.060 currency you have to have u.s treasuries in reserve right so that forces these companies
00:19:00.820 to buy U.S. Treasuries, no matter what the interest rate is.
00:19:03.240 So Kevin Warsh, who's supposed to be a new Fed chair, he's talking about financial repression.
00:19:10.560 And the idea for financial repression is that we're going to lower the interest rates to about 1% or 0%
00:19:16.580 so that we can sustain the interest payments on the debt.
00:19:21.260 And then we're going to force everyone to buy U.S. Treasuries.
00:19:26.180 And so the Genius Act was part of this initiative to force people to buy U.S. Treasuries.
00:19:30.660 So if you want to do digital currency, you have to use U.S. Treasuries as your reserve.
00:19:37.620 And to explain, U.S. Treasury, it's basically just like an IOU.
00:19:41.140 It's not actual currency.
00:19:42.640 It's a piece of paper saying I have currency that I owe you, correct?
00:19:47.520 Right.
00:19:47.920 So the United States has a really weird system where it's not the government that issues currency.
00:19:53.740 It's not the government that prints money.
00:19:55.040 It's the banks, the private banks that print money.
00:19:57.240 And the banks, the cartel is called the Federal Reserve.
00:20:00.020 And the Federal Reserve is not government.
00:20:02.520 It's not a reserve, and it's not a bank.
00:20:04.380 It's just a cartel of all these different banks, private banks, in the United States.
00:20:10.220 And all the decisions are decisions by committee.
00:20:15.200 So the Fed chair doesn't actually have final say.
00:20:17.900 He's just one of 12 governors, and they all vote as to what the policy is.
00:20:23.120 And it's the president who appoints the fair chair, but not the other governors who are appointed by the member banks of the Federal Reserve.
00:20:31.700 So it's the Federal Reserve that prints the money.
00:20:33.960 And the way the government works is in order to finance government expenditures, it borrows from the Federal Reserve by issuing U.S. treasuries.
00:20:41.900 And so U.S. treasuries are, as you say, IOUs or bonds, okay?
00:20:46.100 So they're long-term government bonds.
00:20:48.500 And anyone can buy U.S. treasuries.
00:20:49.960 So the Federal Reserve buys the bulk of U.S. treasuries, but also governments can buy U.S. treasuries as well.
00:20:55.020 So the Japanese, the U.K., and the Chinese are the three big foreign U.S. treasury holders.
00:21:00.980 And the idea of stable coins is to make this retail where any individual in the world now can buy U.S. treasuries through stable coins.
00:21:10.780 And what is preventing the same disaster in 2008 from happening?
00:21:13.880 So you give all these subprime mortgages to people that can't pay them off.
00:21:17.920 how does the bubble not burst in the same way with all these U.S. treasuries covering up the
00:21:23.060 debt that the United States has accumulated? Right. So the entire financial system of the
00:21:30.980 West is a Ponzi scheme. And this has been true since 1694 when the Bank of England was incorporated.
00:21:37.600 Okay. So the Americans basically mauled the entire financial system of the British. And the way you 0.88
00:21:42.820 deal with a Ponzi scheme is you constantly expand, okay? So that's why, you know, Nixon went to China
00:21:50.700 because the Americans went off the gold standard and the U.S. dollar was now just a Ponzi scheme.
00:21:57.360 And the way you resolve this issue is you bring in more people into the Ponzi scheme, right? So
00:22:02.360 that's the entire idea of digital currency where, okay, U.S. treasuries is institutional. Really,
00:22:07.420 only institutions would buy U.S. treasuries. And so the way you get out of this problem is you
00:22:12.240 make it retail where anyone in the world can buy um u.s treasuries especially chinese um consumers
00:22:19.600 so right now the the savings the household savings rate in china is 40 okay so basically 0.81
00:22:25.760 chinese save 40 of their income that's just ridiculous right and so it's all this cash in
00:22:31.880 the bank and if you can challenge to give the chinese a choice to convert this into u.s dollars 0.90
00:22:36.840 they would do so like that okay they wouldn't think about it and that's the very point of of
00:22:41.780 these stable coins to make it feasible for Chinese to convert their renminbi into U.S. dollars through
00:22:48.800 stable coins. And then they could invest it into the U.S. economy. How? By buying U.S. farmland,
00:22:56.540 by sending their kids to study in the U.S., by participating in the U.S. stock market, okay?
00:23:01.420 So again, it's expansion of the Ponzi scheme. And that's how Ponzi schemes work. You constantly
00:23:04.900 have to expand and expand. And this is honestly why they say that all wars are banking wars,
00:23:10.140 because you need to expand to new markets. 0.76
00:23:12.800 And so if people are opposing you, like the Iranians, 1.00
00:23:14.960 you have to go and destroy them to open up that market. 1.00
00:23:19.300 So China seems to have a lot of leverage. 0.55
00:23:22.180 Is the United States essentially going there,
00:23:24.080 going to Xi Jinping and expecting and hoping
00:23:26.640 that they can bail them out of this $39 trillion debt?
00:23:31.040 So it's a grand bargain.
00:23:32.580 And the idea here is that these two economies
00:23:37.080 are dependent on each other.
00:23:39.480 So China depends on the United States for market access.
00:23:43.280 Basically, China is a net exporter.
00:23:47.200 And so it makes manufactured goods and it needs to sell to someone, right?
00:23:50.080 And so you sell to the United States because the United States is the wealthiest country in the world.
00:23:53.120 So you need market access.
00:23:54.160 That's the first thing.
00:23:54.780 Second thing is if you're manufacturing power, then you need resources in order to fuel this manufacturing base.
00:24:02.640 And these resources include food and energy.
00:24:06.140 OK, so China imports about two thirds of its energy needs and one third of its food needs because, you know, everyone's in the factories, not in the fields.
00:24:17.160 And so now with this war going on, there's only one place where China can now source its energy and food needs.
00:24:23.740 And that's basically what the Western Hemisphere. Right. And that's controlled by the United States.
00:24:28.220 So that's the second thing. The third thing that China needs is innovation, ideas.
00:24:32.060 right so um so china has not been not been able to climb the technological ladder because the
00:24:39.240 united states have been uh limiting uh access to the most advanced semiconductors and so the idea
00:24:45.160 is that uh china wants united states to help build its ai surveillance state so china has access to
00:24:51.940 data it has lots and lots of data it has the political will but it lacks the technology of
00:24:58.020 palantir and oracle to basically um like take all this data and turn it into patterns in which which
00:25:05.480 will allow the government to make better decisions to better monitor monitor its people so those are
00:25:09.380 three things that china wants from the united states okay so because yeah good no no no go ahead
00:25:15.360 go ahead there's a lot of things to keep track of so because of their lack of uh they just don't
00:25:18.920 have the same sort of eschatological uh eschatological pull that america has so palantir
00:25:23.980 and AI surveillance is being pushed so fast because it's part of a greater plan. China has
00:25:28.540 the equipment and has the ability to get there, but they're just not being pulled that direction.
00:25:33.000 And also because of the trade war and all these tariffs imposed, they don't have access to the
00:25:37.300 same semiconductors, which is interesting because even in Malaysia, I asked Anwar Ibrahim, what is
00:25:41.860 the number one export? What's the number one system in your economy? And he says semiconductors. He
00:25:46.980 said exactly what trump is preventing china from getting yeah yeah so um so the thing about
00:25:54.020 some of the characters don't people don't appreciate is that it's almost impossible
00:25:58.020 for one nation to control the entire semiconductor supply chain nowadays um it's a global effort
00:26:04.340 okay meaning like um it's california that designs the chips uh nvidia basically okay they're the
00:26:10.900 ones who design the chips they don't actually do manufacturing but they design the chips and then
00:26:15.860 it's taiwan that manufactures the chips then it goes to the philippines um to be fabricated to
00:26:23.540 basically add value to the chips and it goes to china to be assembled into appliances into
00:26:28.980 computers and then it goes to europe and america to be sold um and you also need like rare herbs
00:26:36.020 you need um lots of lithium cobalt from like south america and africa and so it's a global network
00:26:43.860 and so basically it's not about who controls the production that matters it's about who controls
00:26:49.940 the trade that matters and right now america is able to control the entire global trade
00:26:54.420 of semiconductors and that's why america doesn't really fear china uh it you know it's like like
00:26:59.220 it's just using semiconductors as a leverage point it's america appreciates that china doesn't
00:27:04.260 have the capacity to catch up with america um but it's using the semiconductors in order to
00:27:09.300 force china to open up its its market uh to more american corporations um so yeah it seemed like
00:27:16.560 china had a lot more leverage than we expected especially trump's first campaign he talked about 0.63
00:27:20.840 how evil china china was seeing how xi jinping was you know he had this military show and he had
00:27:28.160 he didn't show up to the airport which was a major talking point they're comparing it to how 0.90
00:27:31.720 ecstatic he was about kim jong-un coming into china as well as the in the meetings that trump
00:27:36.900 said, Xi Jinping told him that American empire is on the decline. This is the sort of humiliation
00:27:41.660 that Americans aren't used to. It seemed like the Chinese had a lot more on their table. They had a 0.98
00:27:47.620 lot more to play with than we had originally assumed. Is this true? Well, I mean, the war
00:27:53.140 went on so long because America and China are different political systems. So America is a 0.85
00:27:58.800 democracy. America can be influenced by voters as well as corporations, right? So the Americans
00:28:06.420 were afraid of a vote of backlash, and that's why this trade war was constrained. Also,
00:28:11.900 corporations needed access to the Chinese market as well. So there's always going to be a limit
00:28:18.400 to how much pressure Americans could apply to China. China's an authoritarian nation,
00:28:24.840 meaning that the Communist Party is in charge, doesn't really need to take into account the
00:28:29.100 needs of its people and its corporations and its entrepreneurs. And so China was willing to bear
00:28:35.260 much greater costs in this trade war
00:28:38.100 than the United States. 1.00
00:28:40.140 So China was always going to win this trade war
00:28:42.020 at some point
00:28:42.900 because of these different political systems.
00:28:47.740 So what was the main purpose?
00:28:49.320 It was to apply,
00:28:50.220 what was the goal
00:28:51.340 in the years of the trade war from what?
00:28:53.080 It was, you said 2017?
00:28:55.680 Yeah, 2018, January 2018 to today, yes.
00:28:59.620 Okay, and basically this meeting
00:29:01.140 had nothing to do with Iran war.
00:29:02.480 I think a lot of people were expecting
00:29:03.620 maybe something to happen.
00:29:04.500 Yeah, no one cares.
00:29:05.260 nobody cared at all right it wasn't a major topic of discussion it was just about uniting off of
00:29:10.540 what they both want which is expansion of ai right the the ushering of the new world order
00:29:15.420 the ai or the tech world order rather than being fully reliant upon oil is this correct
00:29:20.540 yeah so um trump was first and foremost interested in opening the china market right okay so you ask
00:29:28.620 the question what's the point of this trade war okay so on the surface it was because america
00:29:33.740 want greater access to um the chinese economy okay and that's that that's the main reason
00:29:39.500 but there's a hidden reason and i think once you understand this reason a lot of things make more
00:29:43.340 sense which is like both trump and president c are revolutionaries they're trying to upend their
00:29:49.900 own political systems in order to consolidate domestic control okay and the way you do that
00:29:55.660 is you change who wins who loses in the economy you basically bring the power those who are most
00:30:03.260 loyal to you those vested interests who are most loyal to you and and so therefore you have to
00:30:07.740 disrupt the economy okay so in america a very simple way to understand this is that the people
00:30:14.860 who most oppose trump in his first term are the wall street globalists okay the people who recognize
00:30:21.980 an opportunity in trump are the silicon valley tech oligarchs people like larry ellison peter
00:30:27.100 Thiel, St. Altman, Mark Zuckerberg. Why? Because they're trying to wrestle control from the
00:30:33.900 financial elite in Washington, D.C., right? So for the longest time, under Clinton, under Obama,
00:30:40.320 it was Wall Street that controlled the policy apparatus of Washington, D.C. And that's why in
00:30:44.760 2008, they got this massive bailout, even though they're the ones who criminally bankrupt America,
00:30:50.880 right? No one went to jail, and they got this trillion-dollar bailout from the U.S. government.
00:30:57.100 And so and then Silicon Valley people were like, why can't we control the apparatus?
00:31:01.580 And why would they want to control the apparatus?
00:31:02.860 Because they want to build the AI surveillance state.
00:31:04.840 They want the U.S. government to bankroll all these data centers in the United States.
00:31:09.000 Right. Because open AI is not profitable.
00:31:11.800 It needs about a trillion dollars of government investment in order to build these data centers.
00:31:15.280 And once it becomes a monopoly, once it becomes God, then it's profitable.
00:31:18.980 Right. So there's this massive civil war going on in America between the financial elite and the tech elite.
00:31:24.560 And Trump represents the tech elite.
00:31:26.260 And so a major point of this trade war was to basically dislocate the financial elite from the source of the power.
00:31:33.560 And a lot of power comes actually from China, right, because these are their investments in China.
00:31:38.560 And then once that happens, then you can start to put in a power, the tech elite, people like Elon Musk, Peter Thiel, Larry Ellison.
00:31:47.400 Many of them shifted over to a lot of the traditional Wall Street people started to invest heavily into AI and tech.
00:31:53.280 So instead of them getting left out, they just saw the shift and made the correct adjustments.
00:31:59.060 Absolutely. So people like Larry Fink, Stephen Swartzman, they switch sides. Absolutely.
00:32:05.900 But, you know, that's but that's how politics works.
00:32:08.360 I mean, it's but, you know, there's still going to be a war going on between the globalist Democratic elite versus the nationalist Republican tech elite.
00:32:19.600 um so so so so i think eventually things are things will get very violent in the united states
00:32:26.180 which makes sense when you see larry fink go on mainstream news and he's being interviewed and
00:32:31.360 he says basically that the whole push for dei woke is on this sort of gender separation that
00:32:37.640 was an experiment it was a waste of time now let's invest he was what it was larry fink who
00:32:42.680 pushed it it was larry fink right the ceo of blackrock he himself and he's admitting it and
00:32:46.600 he said it was an experiment and it was failed and basically they can move on to other things
00:32:51.520 now that the you know the market is on to something else yeah yeah but he was one of the main uh
00:32:58.160 advocates uh so so you know he's chairman of the world economic forum uh and and they're the ones
00:33:03.520 who really pushed the eye in uh in the united states primarily as responsible to uh occupy
00:33:08.100 wall street right the 99 they can't have the 99 uh united against the one percent they need to
00:33:14.480 divide in Congress. So it was very successful. Unity is the dirtiest word in corporate America
00:33:19.640 right now. That's a great point. That's a, I'm going to remember that state. That's a good 0.94
00:33:25.120 sentence. So, okay. I want to continue on with the China meeting, but you said something interesting
00:33:29.600 that I'm sure people would like to hear about. So you said AI is not profitable until it becomes
00:33:34.880 God. So right now I see your lectures. You'd say that AI doesn't, you know, it doesn't really,
00:33:40.700 it's it's pretty much it's really expensive and it takes a lot of software it takes a lot of
00:33:45.780 engineering but you type it in there's no way to really get a a to make a profit right now but ai
00:33:51.660 is basically going to usher in the antichrist state it will be god how will it be profitable
00:33:56.100 then and what does that mean ai will become god okay so peter thiel um wrote a book called from
00:34:03.800 zero to one and i just read it yesterday and in the book he makes a very interesting point which
00:34:09.740 is capitalism free market competition is for losers okay if you really want money if you
00:34:15.940 really want to win you have to create a monopoly and the way you create a monopoly is by figuring
00:34:21.800 out the secrets of the universe by figuring out the secrets of humans and then using these secrets
00:34:26.760 in order to create a product that's a very very a very quickly able to conquer the world okay
00:34:32.980 And in his mind, it's AI, okay?
00:34:36.220 So what is the secret about AI that will allow it to conquer America and the world?
00:34:42.780 And the secret is human loneliness, the lack of meaning in this world.
00:34:50.300 So for the longest time, we've been ruled by money, right?
00:34:52.780 Money is God.
00:34:53.760 And that's good because it's made us more productive.
00:34:56.740 It's made us more, you know, driven.
00:34:59.960 and this has created the world that we live in today.
00:35:03.680 But this has created a social disease in depression, in loneliness,
00:35:10.900 in just abysmal hopelessness, right?
00:35:15.320 And so the idea is, okay, given this market need,
00:35:19.100 well, then let's use AI to fill this void.
00:35:23.020 How? By having AI become God, right?
00:35:26.260 So imagine a situation where like a brain, sorry, a microchip is implanted into your brain.
00:35:32.780 Every time you feel sad, this AI knows you're sad and so comforts you and says, hey, don't worry, you're a great person.
00:35:39.280 You know, it's like having a guardian angel, you know, encourage you and accompany you throughout life, you know, to have a soulmate, basically.
00:35:48.960 And that's a fundamental recognition of these oligarchs.
00:35:56.780 Like, human misery can be a business opportunity, right?
00:36:00.080 But to do that, you need to create God, okay?
00:36:04.160 And the way to create God is by creating a monopoly, by being everything, right?
00:36:12.140 And that's why they're building so many data centers,
00:36:14.460 because they want to make AI just a facet of the social, just a part of the social fabric,
00:36:22.500 where imagine, you know, like you're born, you're one day old, okay?
00:36:27.740 Well, there's an AI singing songs to you, who's monitoring you to make sure that you're happy,
00:36:34.320 and then giving real-time data to your parents.
00:36:37.520 And then when you go to school, it's not a teacher who's teaching you, it's an AI that's teaching you.
00:36:41.120 it's an AI that's being a tutor who's your best friend right so so you know if you have young
00:36:46.840 kids you know like this is the world that we just live in where why are they encouraging young kids
00:36:51.760 like like who are like you know one or two years old to just shut a computer screen all day because
00:36:56.620 they want people to traumatize to this new reality yeah kids can't even go through the day without an
00:37:02.980 iPad now I don't know if you've had this phenomenon too I've been very wary of speaking to AI because
00:37:07.180 i didn't want this to happen and it seems pretty clear but i would ask ai or grok about you know a
00:37:11.860 youtube title or something and then it would give me the responses and the way it communicates is
00:37:15.760 very reassuring and very comfortable and you and you keep asking more like okay what about this what
00:37:20.600 about in the future and you're communicating and you're telling yourself that this is all about
00:37:25.000 analysis and it's about working and then the way it talks to you you feel good so is that what you
00:37:31.480 mean by god the way that we get sunlight and water and god gives us everything our substances of what
00:37:36.280 we need if we are now reliant upon ai for basic needs like human comfort and getting rid of our
00:37:42.580 loneliness is this what god is in the sense exactly that's right so the market need okay
00:37:48.280 the great secret is human loneliness right that's how you create this monopoly and so they design
00:37:54.540 the ai to be reassuring so so that's why there's many cases of ai encourage people to kill themselves
00:38:01.240 right because you have these suicidal ideations you want to kill yourself so you go to the ai and
00:38:06.680 the ai has been designed to engage you right and so rather than just say hey man like don't kill
00:38:12.760 yourself that's wrong the ai is like hmm let me show you how to kill yourself and then and then
00:38:17.640 you know you become really fixated on on this ai and and that's why they're trying to roll ai 0.94
00:38:22.760 girlfriends as as well sex robots and a lot of people seem excited about this and i'm like do
00:38:29.240 Do you not see how every movie from the 80s and 90s warned us?
00:38:32.600 WALL-E, AI, iRobot, The Matrix, Terminator.
00:38:37.320 This is how the world ends.
00:38:39.120 It's been predicted.
00:38:41.380 Well, they've tapped into a fundamental human need, right?
00:38:44.720 They're doing this because they see a market opportunity.
00:38:48.660 I mean, that's why they're successful,
00:38:51.480 because they understand what humans really want,
00:38:54.560 and they give it to them, even though it may destroy the world.
00:38:56.820 Mm hmm. So what sort of deal do you think happened? Do you think it's as simple as Trump brings out 30 tech billionaires because China has access to AI information that we Americans want and they could work together on this because they both want to accelerate the use of AI?
00:39:14.280 okay so i think the deal that's going to happen the grand bargain is this
00:39:20.100 where america is going to be a empire now where america is going to be an assertive
00:39:27.140 empire okay and the way it becomes an empire is basically by controlling the maritime choke
00:39:32.280 points around the world including the street of gibraltar the street of malacca panama canal
00:39:36.980 all the major choke points okay even the street of hummus they can control by blockading the
00:39:40.960 iranians um and so they're able to control global trade they're also going to control the entire
00:39:47.520 western hemisphere right um there's something called the don roe doctrine the don roe doctrine
00:39:52.840 right and that's why you know they went after venezuela that's why that's why they're going
00:39:56.460 they're going to go after cuba next that's why eventually they're going to take over greenland
00:39:59.700 they're going to take over canada they're going to take over mexico columbia okay and they're
00:40:03.420 going to create this self-sufficient continental fortress that um but but when you do that okay
00:40:09.920 You need people to actually create infrastructure and manufacturing base for this greater North America.
00:40:17.800 Something called a technique.
00:40:19.080 And who's the very best at very cheaply and very quickly creating infrastructure and manufacturing? 0.93
00:40:26.180 China.
00:40:27.360 Yeah. Right. What a great deal this is.
00:40:31.120 And China needs to export its manufacturing capacity as well as its infrastructure capacity to the world.
00:40:38.440 Otherwise, the economy collapses. 0.66
00:40:39.920 So this is the grand bargain, right, where America is going to take over the entire Western Hemisphere and China is going to come in and build the ports, the railways, the high speed networks, the mines in order to extract value from the Western Hemisphere. 0.55
00:40:55.440 Should Russia be afraid? What is Putin thinking reacting to this?
00:40:58.800 Does he feel betrayed that the Eurasia alliance is not going the way he potentially wanted, the way Dugin spelled it out?
00:41:05.280 Does he see this as betrayal, that the U.S. and China are now working together instead of Russia and China working together?
00:41:11.700 Yeah, I mean, Putin always knew this was going to happen.
00:41:14.980 Like, he's a smart guy. He knows what the Chinese are like. He knows what the Americans are like. 0.81
00:41:18.680 Like, everyone knows what, like, the Chinese and Americans are, like, best friends. 0.90
00:41:24.040 I mean, these are the two most materialistic and the most two vocal cultures in the world, okay? 1.00
00:41:30.760 Chinese love money. Only Americans love money more than the Chinese, okay? 0.98
00:41:35.280 So eventually, these two countries were always going to come together.
00:41:39.340 And so Putin's strategy moving forward is to, one, maintain quarter relations with China.
00:41:44.140 You have no choice because China has to buy a lot of energy from you.
00:41:47.620 There's no reason for you to get pissed off at China, especially when Putin comes tomorrow.
00:41:53.860 He's actually coming tomorrow to Beijing.
00:41:56.660 So the Chinese are going to treat him like a god.
00:41:58.540 And the Chinese are going to buy billions and billions of dollars of energy from him.
00:42:04.320 Right. So he's going to look like a champion. And then the news media is going to say, you see, Trump goes to China and has to suck up to presidency.
00:42:14.240 But when Putin comes to China, presidency sucks up to him. Right. So so so so that's what the optics are going to be like. 0.99
00:42:21.260 So Putin needs to maintain strong relations with China. But now, because China and America are coming close, that gives Putin an opening to reach out to Europe, to Japan, right? Because if the United States and China are coming closer, this is now a direct threat to both Europe and to Japan as well.
00:42:45.360 Right. So so put in those how this game is played. And he's going to respond accordingly. 0.77
00:42:50.400 What does Israel think about the situation? I know that I think Netanyahu is about to do another meeting.
00:42:55.440 It's like the six millionth meeting this term. Is Netanyahu happy about the U.S.-China alliance? Probably.
00:43:02.360 He's he's he's ecstatic about it. Right. Because the point of this alliance is to build an AI surveillance state in the world.
00:43:10.660 And it's the Israelis who actually are able to control the back end. 0.93
00:43:14.640 They're very good at hacking. 1.00
00:43:17.860 They're very good at this sort of technology thing.
00:43:20.520 So it's really crucial in this relationship. 0.99
00:43:23.400 So, yes, it's the Chinese who are going to be the lab for this AI surveillance state. 0.97
00:43:29.760 It's the Americans who are going to provide the technology. 0.97
00:43:31.720 But then you need people to actually do the research and to actually do the nitty gritty.
00:43:41.080 And the Israelis are very good at that.
00:43:42.860 So it'll be a great alliance between the United States, Israel and China. 0.96
00:43:46.740 The Israelis will be the silent partner in this.
00:43:49.480 OK, so China, they don't have any sort of animosity or any feelings towards Israel.
00:43:54.220 I saw there was one video of Xi Jinping.
00:43:56.060 He was shaking everybody's hands and he stops at Stephen Miller.
00:43:58.780 I'm sure you saw this. And he seems to shake his hand and look at him and be like, I know what you are.
00:44:04.800 And then he continues to everybody else and shakes their hand. Is there any sort of what do Chinese people think about Israelis?
00:44:13.500 OK, so here's a funny thing. OK, before Trump visited China, I had an argument with my wife.
00:44:23.060 My wife is like, there's no way that China and the United States are going to do a grand bargain.
00:44:29.760 Look at the Internet. Look at how all the Chinese are cursing America for invading Iran, for being the aggressor. 0.91
00:44:36.020 Like, don't worry. After the meeting, things will change. 0.99
00:44:39.520 And then yesterday, she ran into my room and says, oh, my God, have you been watching what's happening online?
00:44:44.860 So after Trump visited, the entire Chinese Internet has turned against Iran.
00:44:49.500 okay they're like how dare the iranians block the straightforward moves how the other iranians 0.72
00:44:54.560 collapse the global economy the americans should go in to finish their job okay so the chinese
00:45:00.100 people are first and foremost dramatic they're not ideological they love money and that's it 0.98
00:45:05.860 whoever can make the money they love okay it's that simple like the chinese have absolutely no
00:45:10.640 political loyalties as you point out the chinese are not eschatological in the way that the russians 0.99
00:45:14.720 and Americans are. So what does the love for money come from? Because Chinese culture values
00:45:20.540 respect, values the grandparents, and it seems to have a lot of similarities and overlaps with
00:45:26.160 Islamic culture, except it seems to deify, I think, the country and ancestry. Why is there 0.58
00:45:33.720 so much greed if respect in this is also valued so much? 5,000 years of empire, man. This is what
00:45:40.160 happens 5 000 years of tyranny where people are starved to death where people are massacred
00:45:45.560 uh where people are enslaved it just sucks a soul out of your culture 0.94
00:45:50.280 that's i mean i hate to say this but but but i mean you come to china and like people here are 1.00
00:45:56.340 like zombies it's i mean it's i mean and and this is this this this is what this this is this is
00:46:03.100 what's happening to everyone in the world if they achieve the ai surveillance state okay well there's
00:46:08.520 a lot of chinese people and i think what people are learning is that trump seems to want more
00:46:13.880 although he's anti-immigration supposedly he wants to build the wall he wants to put america first
00:46:18.520 he's also very ecstatic about having so many chinese students come in it seems like the the
00:46:24.920 best students to come in is this an ego thing to compete with iran's high education stats or does 0.94
00:46:30.420 he really want to boost the economy what's the what's the point of bringing in so many chinese
00:46:34.820 students well i mean it's a great deal for the united states right so historically this has
00:46:40.020 happened before where the children elite went to another place and became educated but historically
00:46:48.020 they were not called spies okay spies is a new term historically they were called hostages
00:46:56.020 right so if you're an empire and you want a vassal state to be obedient to you what you did was
00:47:00.820 You took the children of the elite, and you sent them to your court to be educated,
00:47:05.260 to be taught in the manners of your empire,
00:47:08.180 so that when they went back, they were loyal to your empire, okay? 0.95
00:47:13.720 This is why the Babylonians exiled the Jews, right? 0.90
00:47:17.580 So the Babylonians had a huge problem with the Israelites because they were disobedient, 0.53
00:47:24.460 and they kept on switching sides, so they basically kidnapped their elite
00:47:29.000 and sent off to Babylon, something called the Babylonian Exile.
00:47:32.460 And this has always been true historically,
00:47:35.400 where an empire, the way it controls its vassal states,
00:47:38.740 is basically keeping the children of the elite of its vassal states hostage in the capital.
00:47:44.920 That's exactly what's happening.
00:47:46.400 Look, people don't really appreciate the Chinese-U.S. relationship.
00:47:52.660 So in the 1980s and 1990s, yes, it is true that America,
00:47:56.360 offshort its manufacturing to China. Yes. But what did China do in reverse? China offshort its
00:48:04.760 elite selection and indoctrination to the United States. What a great deal for America. We're now, 0.99
00:48:11.080 you know, your best and brightest, your future elite. We're all educated in the United States,
00:48:16.140 and therefore they are loyal to the United States. So what's the chess move to respond?
00:48:21.220 Because if they're both looking at the expansion of their empire, the value of money, there must be
00:48:25.360 some sort of play. There's no way Xi Jinping is going to allow this to happen right in front of
00:48:28.980 his eyes without some sort of, there's got to be a response. The response is to triangulate between
00:48:36.120 Russia and America, right? Because as you point out, you don't want to become a vassal state
00:48:40.760 to either one. So the only play in this grand scheme of things is to triangulate, right? Where
00:48:46.780 you are helping the Americans build the manufacturing base in North America, 0.61
00:48:52.360 but you're also financing the Russian military-industrial complex
00:48:58.000 in order for Russia to fight these wars against Europe, right?
00:49:01.860 And that way you can possibly become the third center of the world. 0.77
00:49:05.480 So Russia, America, and China.
00:49:08.960 People don't appreciate that ultimately in the grand war that's happening,
00:49:14.220 it's really between America and Russia.
00:49:16.080 Only these two nations actually have the resources, the political will,
00:49:20.060 the military to fight a great war.
00:49:22.040 China does not. So China is just trying to triangulate between these two great powers.
00:49:28.380 What is preventing China from having a military as strong as Russia's or America's? Is it the
00:49:32.700 lack of eschatology? Because Russia is less populated, America is less populated. China 0.88
00:49:38.500 seems like they have all the capabilities to it. A lot of people joke and they say if China and
00:49:42.760 the U.S. went to war, the Chinese would demolish us. But it seems like the major thing they're 1.00
00:49:47.760 lacking is that religious context where there's an end-of-the-world philosophy that's bringing
00:49:53.000 them forward and accelerating them faster than another empire. Is that really what's it?
00:49:57.500 Yeah. So the most traumatic event in Chinese history was during the Tang Dynasty. And the
00:50:02.140 Tang Dynasty was China at the height of its power, okay? And this incident was called the
00:50:08.500 An Lushan Rebellion. And so what happened was that the Tang Emperor was expanding everywhere 0.96
00:50:14.920 into central asia and a very strong military and it basically was a meritocracy where if 0.87
00:50:20.680 you're a great general then you'd be rewarded and anu shan was um a minority he was not chinese
00:50:28.040 without han chinese but he was a great general and so the emperor trusted him and eventually
00:50:33.400 that they are falling out and anu shan rebelled against the emperor and this led to a massive war
00:50:39.320 that killed a quarter of chinese at that time a quarter of the population died in the civil war
00:50:47.080 what year is this and after that after that the main lesson is you can never allow a general to
00:50:54.040 be great and to be independent it is much more important to maintain the supremacy of the political
00:51:01.880 system than have a great general okay and this has and ever since then started trying to have
00:51:08.120 practice practice practice policy most notably during a song when the song had a choice uh they
00:51:14.360 were being you know attacked by these northern barbarians and the choice was either you know 0.61
00:51:19.320 let's spend our resources and build a great military defend ourselves or let's spend our 0.91
00:51:24.280 resources and bribe the barbarians not to attack us and the solution was well let's just bribe them 0.72
00:51:32.600 because if we if we build this great military the general could rebel against us at some point okay 0.97
00:51:39.320 and and that's why ever since then the chinese military has always been focused inwards to focus
00:51:46.040 on domestic political stability and never outwards okay because there's always this great fear that
00:51:50.920 yes you could send your military overseas but two things could happen right one is that they lose
00:51:55.400 this war in which case the people will rebel against you okay you lose authority you lose
00:51:59.400 the man in heaven something that can happen is they win these wars but then you know like you
00:52:03.400 have a julius caesar you have you have the the the soldiers saying let this guy be emperor let 0.92
00:52:09.480 julius caesar be emperor and like neither situation is good for china and that's why china has always
00:52:14.680 refrain from entangling itself overseas so that's all nonsense when people say oh the ccp china 0.95
00:52:22.200 would destroy the american empire because their kids aren't getting brainwashed by it woke tiktoks 0.99
00:52:27.960 and look at them marching together and doing tai chi and the fact that they were trying to 0.90
00:52:32.920 mog japan in terms of height and the average height in china raised so much in the past
00:52:38.360 several years is all this this is all fear-mongering and this is just all look look look there are
00:52:44.360 three military powers in southeast asia they are japan uh and why is japan uh a military power
00:52:52.760 because it's aggressive why because it's a island with very little resources so it is so it has to
00:52:58.360 be aggressive so it's always been engaged in piracy for example okay they basically stealing
00:53:03.640 from uh china um so japan the koreans uh because they've always been bullied by the japanese and 0.92
00:53:10.920 the chinese and the vietnamese okay and you go back to history and this during the mongol empire
00:53:16.760 the uh mongols sent two expeditions against japan and against vietnam and the japanese
00:53:22.840 and the vietnamese were able to repel both uh invasions this is the mongol empire right this
00:53:30.200 is the greatest empire at that time and the vietnamese and the japanese were were you know
00:53:34.360 these poor peasant societies so the vietnamese and the japanese were always great fighters 0.56
00:53:39.160 right like like the vietnam war i mean like the americans oh my god the amount of resources spent
00:53:46.840 against the vietnamese and the vietnamese basically you know hit it hit in underground 0.96
00:53:50.600 tunnels and fought to the bitter end that's that's the way the vietnamese are the chinese are 0.76
00:53:55.400 completely different okay if you try to invade japan the japanese would would do the same thing 0.76
00:54:00.360 on you right they would fight they would fight to the uh to the end um so the koreans the vietnamese
00:54:07.080 and the um japanese are are the three great military powers of southeast asia but china
00:54:12.360 doesn't have that kamikaze culture of japan it makes me uh remember the taiwan aspect so
00:54:19.480 you were mentioning that taiwan separates southeast asia you have indonesia malaysia
00:54:24.360 thailand philippines separated by taiwan and to the north you have japan and south korea
00:54:29.480 and so if china has control over taiwan that basically they control that trade and they can
00:54:33.560 strangle japan and south korea if they want does the the u.s seems to have some involvement i don't
00:54:38.760 know if they have military bases in taiwan but they have a strong navy and they are able to
00:54:42.760 patrol that area is trump gonna hand over taiwan to china and reunite the two nations as china
00:54:49.400 china seems to want okay so trump's best play is to encourage taiwan and china to reconcile
00:54:57.640 Now, Trump's best play is for the next couple of years to say, you know, like he wants a political solution to Taiwan and China.
00:55:08.180 Why? Because this is going to drive everyone crazy. All right.
00:55:11.440 So the Japanese would be like, no, no, no. OK. 1.00
00:55:15.640 Prime Minister Takeuchi a few months ago said that Taiwan is core to the Japanese strategic interests, meaning that if China ever makes a move against Taiwan,
00:55:25.200 she will send the military to defend taiwan okay and why be for that reason where um the
00:55:32.620 malacca controls so much trade right so if you control taiwan you can now embargo japan
00:55:38.040 so japan needs to make a move before reunification can happen okay so all trump has to do is
00:55:46.940 basically say i don't i don't care anymore you know the united states is not involved japan
00:55:51.560 would go ballistic, Japan would
00:55:53.020 remilitarize, it would buy weapons from the United States 1.00
00:55:56.000 so it's a great deal 0.99
00:55:57.740 for America, right? Because before
00:55:59.960 you had to guarantee security
00:56:01.700 in Southeast Asia. What a pain in the US that is
00:56:03.840 right? Now
00:56:05.400 you can sit back and divide and rule 0.88
00:56:07.580 Japan versus China 0.52
00:56:10.060 right? And you can be the 0.80
00:56:11.680 operator, you can be the mediator in
00:56:13.760 this relationship and you can sell weapons to both
00:56:15.700 Japan and China in their
00:56:17.900 fight against each other 0.63
00:56:18.780 right? That's genius now
00:56:20.980 right before you were responsible for keeping peace in the south in southeast asia and like 0.99
00:56:27.760 why would you do that that's just retarded now you're now you know you're you're like the godfather 0.94
00:56:32.860 you know you're you're the one you're the one trying to reconcile these these you know the 0.95
00:56:39.440 these kids who are fighting each other so they come to you and they're looking for protection
00:56:44.360 and you get to pull all the strings so it really is and who are the biggest buyers of u.s treasure
00:56:50.480 by the way japan and china right the biggest another stop no sorry they're the big biggest
00:56:56.800 purchasers of u.s treasuries okay so now they're stuck right now they're forced to buy more u.s
00:57:03.440 treasuries okay so it's a it's a global economy based off of endless war like basically yes okay
00:57:13.120 all right so well what about iran war i was hoping that there was going to be some sort
00:57:17.440 sort of discussion, but it doesn't seem like it was discussed at all. What sort of developments
00:57:23.000 have we seen? Especially guys, I saw you had a great appearance on Diary of a CEO, this podcast,
00:57:27.200 and you basically outlined a lot of the points from your lectures in one podcast with the chess
00:57:31.940 board and the map. And one of the predictions that you've reiterated many times on the stream
00:57:36.320 is that there's going to be a ground troop invasion, but it seems like it's hit somewhat
00:57:40.820 of a stalemate right now. The war, maybe we're just not seeing as much news about it, but it
00:57:46.580 seems to have slowed down have we just now reached a lull yeah so they're they're saying like there
00:57:53.980 might be a massive attack um as early as um this weekend so i think what happened was that trump
00:58:02.040 went to china to negotiate this grand bargain okay so these are leaders so they're not going
00:58:06.720 to talk about specific deals like like that that's something the underlying the underlings do okay or
00:58:11.100 the businesses do um you know privately but they're gonna fool each other out and they're
00:58:16.440 going to discuss um their understanding of how the world should develop and the word the phrase
00:58:24.180 that xi jinping used during the meeting was strategic stability strategic stability what
00:58:30.760 does that mean it basically means first of all i accept the status quo okay and the status quo is
00:58:36.360 that america controls the western western hemisphere the dunrock doctrine america is
00:58:41.320 now fighting this war in iran and america will not fight it will not finish this will not stop
00:58:45.780 until it wins this war okay so basically cdp is saying like i accept this status quo but i don't
00:58:53.740 want more changes okay i don't want more wars i don't want more conflict so basically this is
00:59:00.900 giving trump a green light to finish this war against iran as soon as possible right china
00:59:06.080 will not intervene. China will not support Iran. Trump has a green light to finish this war as
00:59:11.080 soon as possible in a way that he seems fit. And that could mean sending ground troops. That could
00:59:16.040 mean negotiating a ceasefire. That could mean withdrawing from the Middle East. But from China's 0.96
00:59:21.500 perspective, they would rather see this end sooner than later. It seems like strategic
00:59:26.700 stability sounds a lot like peace through strength. Basically, yeah. Yeah. I mean, yeah.
00:59:35.320 So the idea is, look, from the Chinese perspective, Iran has no chance in this war.
00:59:41.700 And quite honestly, China doesn't care who controls Iran. 0.73
00:59:45.020 If the Iranians control Iran, fine. 0.51
00:59:46.940 If the Americans control Iran, who cares? 0.96
00:59:49.000 Why? Because all China wants is that oil access, right? 0.83
00:59:51.760 So China is going to deal with anyone.
00:59:56.680 So you look at Venezuela.
00:59:58.000 Did China really care that America went in and took over Venezuela? 0.99
01:00:01.220 Actually, from the Chinese perspective, it was a good thing. 0.99
01:00:03.580 Why? Because it's a lot easier to do business with the empire, OK, than with a corrupt regime like the Venezuelans. 0.95
01:00:13.600 OK. And you're expecting, you said, an attack maybe this weekend.
01:00:17.940 What does this mean? Are you talking about a false flag or are you talking about another Manab situation?
01:00:24.300 So they're talking about a pretty heavy assault.
01:00:29.780 okay so um my understanding is that and i i'm just talking about this from a game theory
01:00:36.620 perspective i have no inside information okay but i'm saying like what i would do as a game
01:00:40.420 theorist how i would how i would go into this war basically in round one uh america tried
01:00:47.360 decapitation it tried you know these these like shock and all blitz quag just trying trying to
01:00:52.920 wear down the iranian military epic yeah epic theory and because the iranian military had
01:00:59.760 the mostly active fans that didn't really work I mean you can kill like four
01:01:03.520 layers of their leadership and they'll still be fighting you okay so so the
01:01:08.820 Americans recognize this doesn't really work okay so and so now you need a much
01:01:12.260 more strategic much more long-term approach so I would say there are three
01:01:19.620 approach there'll be three pillars to this long-term approach the first is
01:01:23.180 economic strangulation I'm already seeing that where Americans have bombed 0.81
01:01:27.240 Khark Island so that the Iranians are in order to export oil. They've blockaded the
01:01:33.320 serviceable moves. So basically economic strangulation. Okay, that's the first pillar.
01:01:36.600 Second pillar is a ground invasion, but a limited ground invasion. So what you're trying to do is
01:01:45.220 you're trying to set forward operating bases in strategic areas of Iran in order to
01:01:53.720 the economy but also to foment uh civil discontent in order to basically arm and finance
01:02:01.160 ethnic groups against the uh government in tehran okay so that's second approach which is the
01:02:06.260 northwest and the southeast they tried it with the kurds but they're probably going to try it again
01:02:10.340 yeah the kurds and the bullocks uh the bullocks are these insurgents in uh south uh east iran
01:02:19.720 near pakistan okay so basically the ethnic pakistanis and they've always had issues with
01:02:25.580 um the government in tehran because the government in tehran is shia and they are sunnis okay so so
01:02:31.000 you have these two um major point vectors of attack okay and the third strategy the third
01:02:36.640 pillar of the strategy is you strangle tehran okay why because tehran is below the heart of
01:02:43.860 Iran, you basically block the people's access to food, water, and electricity. You bomb power
01:02:50.840 plants, you bomb reservoirs, you bomb railways. And what you're trying to do is you're trying to
01:02:56.440 force the Iranians to surrender, to ask for political sentiment. And you do that by causing 0.68
01:03:03.120 the people to rebel against the government. Okay. And what sort of, so what is this game
01:03:10.020 theory based off of specifically i don't know maybe i missed it but what is the how we're using
01:03:15.280 past using history to make a prediction here about this weekend being an attack okay so um
01:03:23.540 um we're seeing how war changes over time okay so before the 20th century war was just about
01:03:33.200 two armies being on the battlefield and whoever won the battle won the war okay so so that that
01:03:38.660 was pre-20th century. In the 20th century, especially
01:03:42.500 World War II, it was fundamentally about destroying a nation's
01:03:46.960 industrial capacity. So, for example, the fire bombings 0.76
01:03:51.000 of Germany and Japan. So that's what allowed the Allies 0.99
01:03:54.680 to win the war, because the Americans, the British, just firebomb
01:03:58.800 Japan and Germany to death, so they could no longer produce any weapons.
01:04:03.120 And that's the 20th century warfare. The 21st century 0.87
01:04:06.660 warfare, it's different because you have these huge populations and, you know, there's social
01:04:14.060 media. So it's not feasible for you to go bomb everyone to death. You don't want a situation
01:04:20.840 like Gaza, right? So what you do is you do surgical strikes in order to foment political
01:04:27.540 discontent. So imagine a color revolution, right? But in a war. So a color revolution
01:04:33.920 strategy in this war where you're trying to use social media you're trying to use uh provocateurs 0.74
01:04:39.700 uh you're trying to use um economic strangulation to force a population to want to overthrow the
01:04:46.580 government okay so that's what the 21st century war looks like okay and this weekend it could
01:04:53.980 get to this point the propaganda you're saying that they really care about the political will
01:04:58.940 they really have they're probably learning from their mistakes that phase one of the war was a
01:05:03.380 major disaster. People were very unhappy. The rhetoric got bad. You saw Pete Hegseth was
01:05:08.440 quoting Pulp Fiction as a source of the Bible. Trump was disrespecting the Pope, saying he's
01:05:13.400 weak on crime, displaying himself as Jesus. Operation Epic Fury. They were expecting
01:05:17.680 people to be up on board. And people really didn't like this. So phase two, they're going to
01:05:21.820 redirect. And it seems like there's been a new shift in propaganda. It seems like they've been
01:05:26.740 going hard on creating a new narrative. I don't know if you saw Trump's true social post where
01:05:32.660 started randomly talking about christians being attacked in nigeria and we had the tommy robinson
01:05:38.500 protest in the uk yesterday where french women are stripping themselves of their burqa and now
01:05:43.700 they're free and they're embodying western values so do you see a new push in this propaganda
01:05:53.540 yeah i i think i think people are just tired of this war so even if this war to restart this
01:05:59.620 this weekend, people would not be as interested
01:06:03.180 as back in March, right?
01:06:06.660 And it's the same thing that happened in Gaza
01:06:08.620 where the first time the Israelis went in 0.94
01:06:11.980 and committed all these atrocities,
01:06:13.820 people were outraged around the world.
01:06:15.560 There was a lot of focus on Gaza.
01:06:18.220 And then the Israelis negotiated a ceasefire,
01:06:20.740 things stalled, and then people lost interest. 0.55
01:06:23.300 So when the Israelis went back and committed more atrocities, 0.96
01:06:27.980 then people were kind of indifferent.
01:06:30.980 People were just exhausted by this war.
01:06:33.860 And that's why this ceasefire was really bad strategically for the Iranians.
01:06:39.080 I mean, like, I was like, oh, my God. 0.99
01:06:43.260 I mean, the Iranians were winning this war.
01:06:45.780 They had popular opinion behind them.
01:06:48.780 Their people were enthusiastic.
01:06:51.340 And now they've had this ceasefire.
01:06:52.960 And this ceasefire has been around for close to a month.
01:06:56.080 And people have moved on with their lives.
01:06:57.320 So, like, if this were to restart, people won't be as interested, right?
01:07:01.480 So you don't even need to have a propaganda push.
01:07:05.540 You know, it's just people are just indifferent now, right?
01:07:08.040 And if people become more interested, then you announce another ceasefire.
01:07:10.640 And then people become disinterested, you attack again, right?
01:07:15.140 So what you're doing is you're desensitizing people.
01:07:17.960 You're normalizing people to war.
01:07:20.780 And eventually, when you have ground troops, people are arguing indifferent as well.
01:07:25.660 And eventually, you also have a national draft as well, by the way.
01:07:29.280 Yeah, that's a great point.
01:07:30.700 I noticed with Gaza, too, in the beginning, especially after October 7th, everyone was talking about it's very similar to the start of Iran war.
01:07:36.800 And then you hear people talk about Palestine and Gaza now, people who don't analyze it the way many of us do.
01:07:43.360 And they just say, like, oh, I don't care anymore.
01:07:45.500 They're like, why should I care about Palestine?
01:07:47.180 Why do I care about Gaza?
01:07:48.460 And it's like, aren't you seeing the atrocities every day?
01:07:51.180 This is some of the most horrific things that have ever been caught on camera.
01:07:54.180 but they are just tired they just don't they don't have any more emotional capacity to care
01:08:01.820 and they it's just you're right it's boring to them and they get fatigue over this information
01:08:07.700 so but that's just human nature and this is beneficial that's human nature this is helpful
01:08:12.860 for the u.s empire this is helpful for their cause or it's detrimental i'm confused no i mean like
01:08:19.100 Like, the empire is going to commit a lot of atrocities, right?
01:08:22.440 And get away with it. 0.54
01:08:23.120 So Gaza is just normalizing people to what's going to happen later on. 0.62
01:08:27.940 I mean, you're going to have a famine soon, right?
01:08:31.500 People have been worrying about this, how, you know, like,
01:08:33.960 the world gets a third of its fertilizers from the Shrug of Hormuz.
01:08:38.960 And fertilizers feed 6 billion people.
01:08:42.460 So if you just grow crops, you could feed at most 2 billion people, okay?
01:08:46.520 Okay. The other six billion people get their food from fertilizers. So if you're cutting off a third of the world's fertilizer supply, then you're going to have starvation in Africa. There's no way around it. And so, I mean, the level of atrocities, the level of suffering, it's going to be unimaginable for people. And it's like the next six months.
01:09:09.320 so you think that they don't that you don't actually think that there's a new propaganda
01:09:14.820 push so i was just analyzing this tommy robinson protest they're saying that there's millions
01:09:19.100 and it's so funny how they they're saying that we need to save the west it's the same rhetoric
01:09:23.160 here in america and they're waving iran flags next to israeli flags and they have all these
01:09:28.680 they have nigerians on stage and irish people on stage while simultaneously saying no more
01:09:32.480 immigration and it seems like the unifying objective from this protest is just saying
01:09:37.920 that muslims are the problem but you don't think that this is uh this is strategic it's just more 0.94
01:09:43.340 slop being pushed no i no i think it is strategic right because it's divided in rule 0.99
01:09:49.840 so the elite is trying to create as much animosity and anger in the world as as possible
01:09:55.780 okay right you're also seeing these attacks against synagogues around the world yeah
01:10:00.540 And Iran, too.
01:10:02.400 Yeah, exactly. 0.70
01:10:03.240 Right.
01:10:03.460 And they're blaming the Iranians.
01:10:05.660 So a synagogue in Toronto was attacked a few weeks ago.
01:10:09.980 And now intelligence is saying it's the Iranians who are doing this. 1.00
01:10:14.580 So clearly they're trying to create false flags. 0.89
01:10:17.060 Clearly they're trying to justify a larger war against Iran. 0.87
01:10:22.240 And they're trying to create conditions for civil war in the Western world in order to create a police state.
01:10:29.660 AI surveillance state. You already have the ingredients in place, right? You already have ICE, which is basically the Gestapo. You already have Palantir, who can easily roll out an AI surveillance state. You already have these data centers all around America, right?
01:10:46.940 These $200 of AI centers being built, they're being built not for chat GPT, guys, okay?
01:10:55.100 They're being built for the AI surveillance state.
01:10:58.040 How else can you explain why there's so many of them in America?
01:11:01.460 There's like 3,000 of them right now in America. 0.91
01:11:03.700 And Iran will continue to try to hit the data centers all over the Middle East, correct? 0.95
01:11:09.120 Well, I mean, what Iran can do, which would be a major escalation,
01:11:13.860 is you can actually cut the undersea cables that power the Internet, right? 0.79
01:11:20.780 If you did that, you know, these underground Internet cables that run across the straightforward moves,
01:11:27.540 if you did that, and it would be very easy for Iran to do, 0.90
01:11:30.260 a third of the world would lose the Internet, right? 0.92
01:11:32.560 And that would destroy the global economy.
01:11:34.780 So you don't even have to attack the data centers. 0.89
01:11:36.880 You don't even have to attack Israel.
01:11:39.060 You just cut all those cables, and then the bank system collapses.
01:11:42.340 that you know you you you have a mass crisis speaking of civil war you've always maintained
01:11:48.840 that there is going to be some sort of civil war some unrest especially with the national draft
01:11:52.860 coming i don't know if you've seen this if you think it's a psyop did you hear about this
01:11:58.080 situation with chud the builder the streamer who is dividing people and it seems like it's
01:12:04.300 i'm not seeing that could you provide some background yeah so the streamer just got
01:12:09.160 arrested for attempted murder he's facing 56 years and he's just pushing more rage bait it's just
01:12:14.540 this he's a white guy going around and calling black people slurs and it's uh it's really got
01:12:21.160 people angry and upset some people are saying that there's going to be more division it could
01:12:24.900 be a pretext for a race war but i think i don't think that this is promoted by intelligence
01:12:30.680 agencies but this is what we could point at and look at the future and see the tensions rise and
01:12:37.280 more separation, more division and more and look back and see it's similar to George Floyd where
01:12:42.960 protests start and people get upset. It seems like things are heating up and there's more
01:12:48.700 tension than before. And the situation is an example. Yeah. And I would also point out that
01:12:54.700 these past couple of years, social media has amplified a lot of discontent. Right. So I think
01:13:03.940 one reason that i'm so popular online is i give reason to a lot of this anger right where i'm
01:13:11.240 articulating a lot of the issues in the world and how secret societies run the world and how the
01:13:16.580 elite is um screwing everyone over and i think they like that because it gets people amped up
01:13:23.180 right it you know it's it's you're building conditions for for revolution because you know
01:13:28.900 like you know this they can easily shut me down i mean they can easily ban me from from youtube
01:13:33.800 They can easily cancel me.
01:13:34.940 They're not doing that.
01:13:36.040 You have to ask yourself why.
01:13:37.880 Because people are getting emotionally attached and getting riled up.
01:13:41.300 I do like the approach.
01:13:42.300 There was a moment where one of your students was asking a question, and he said, does China
01:13:47.180 care about the moral?
01:13:48.300 Why aren't they telling the U.S. to stop bombing Iran? 0.98
01:13:51.040 You're like, they don't care. 0.74
01:13:52.200 China only cares about the growth of their empire.
01:13:54.700 The U.S. only cares about the growth.
01:13:56.240 There's no moral assessment that I am bringing to my lectures.
01:13:59.780 You're saying that this is just analysis.
01:14:02.100 This is game theory.
01:14:03.040 which is why maybe you're separate because you don't have a specific bias with your analysis.
01:14:09.560 Obviously, you do have your own moral code, but you are strictly giving an analysis of the world.
01:14:14.800 And even in this conversation, you could see your criticisms of, I don't know if you call them
01:14:18.700 criticism, but your analysis of China, its culture, the greed, and what the Chinese government cares
01:14:24.200 about. This isn't something that I could hear or that I would hear from a propagandist.
01:14:30.500 Yeah, no, I'm very much concerned about the state of the world.
01:14:34.520 And I think like one solution, really the only solution is if we raise awareness about how the world works, right?
01:14:42.740 I mean, like, let's have an honest conversation about what's really driving the world.
01:14:48.840 And then once we have this honest conversation, then it's possible for solutions to arise.
01:14:54.380 So you don't really speak about what should be, rather you speak about what is.
01:14:59.500 It's really easy to talk about what should be, right?
01:15:01.720 Like, let's not do war.
01:15:02.880 Let's not do empire.
01:15:03.960 Let's all just get along.
01:15:05.120 But that's not happening.
01:15:06.180 So why is that not happening?
01:15:09.420 And I was hearing what I was doing in preparation for this conversation.
01:15:12.840 They're saying that you are having back and forth.
01:15:14.760 There's some things that I want to speak about with the CIA.
01:15:17.060 What happened with you and Larry Johnson?
01:15:19.860 Is there any validity in this?
01:15:22.780 I don't know the guy.
01:15:24.360 I've never been on a show.
01:15:26.240 I've seen his appearances on Judging Freedom.
01:15:29.500 and other shows as well.
01:15:31.260 I admire his work, but I have no idea who,
01:15:36.140 I've never met him in person,
01:15:37.080 I've never had a conversation with him.
01:15:39.120 I know he's a former CIA analyst,
01:15:40.900 but can you give me some background as to what's happening?
01:15:43.840 I'm not sure people were insinuating
01:15:46.140 that there was some sort of back and forth,
01:15:47.620 but I guess it's not as important.
01:15:49.840 What's more important with the CIA is Tulsi Gabbard.
01:15:52.320 She just got raided and they were taking some documents
01:15:55.760 and they were looking through her office.
01:15:57.900 What is this about?
01:15:58.620 Does this have anything to do with Epstein?
01:16:00.060 What's going on with Tulsi Gabbard?
01:16:01.140 Yeah, no, I mean, like, I think there's a civil war going on.
01:16:04.220 These different deep state factions that are fighting to control the narrative that are trying to undermine each other.
01:16:13.980 So, you know, like Trump wants to go after James Comey and John Bolton because they obviously represent a different deep state faction.
01:16:23.400 And so they're trying to dig up dirt on other people as well.
01:16:29.160 So the way that they're fighting now is through bureaucratic infighting.
01:16:34.240 They're trying to figure out legal loopholes against each other.
01:16:37.320 So I'm sure that what the CIA did was legally justified.
01:16:41.500 And I'm sure this will go to court, right?
01:16:43.460 And Congress will intervene at some point.
01:16:45.980 But this is all the beginnings of a civil war where these different factions are trying
01:16:52.440 to resolve the disputes for the bureaucracy or through legal loopholes for the judicial system
01:16:58.220 for the political system eventually they'll reach a point where they're going to arm uh their
01:17:03.340 factions on the streets right and these factions are going to fight fight it out i mean both
01:17:09.340 the democratic party and the republicans have street gangs right so the democratic party have
01:17:13.320 like intifa the um the republicans have the proud boys and so and so i think that's the next logical
01:17:20.420 step in in this conflict so what is the cia looking for specifically with tulsi gabbard
01:17:27.060 so i think these are different um deep state factions and i think um i i i don't know the
01:17:35.140 specifics but i would guess that there's some information in these files that incriminates
01:17:40.900 certain individuals um and tulsi gabbard is trying to bring this into light so i think
01:17:47.780 Tulsi Gabbard's main mission is to show that the 2020 election was manipulated and it was that was
01:17:54.900 rigged and if that was the case then there's there's gonna be certain individuals who were
01:17:59.380 involved and you know like the the um um the americans now have maduro in custody and i think
01:18:07.300 they're trying to get maduro to basically confess that he knows how these elections were rigged and
01:18:14.740 And he used his testimony in a court of law.
01:18:17.500 So there's a lot of things happening behind the scenes.
01:18:20.040 It's actually pretty violent where Maduro is being threatened by both sides.
01:18:24.120 He's being threatened by Trump and saying, if you spill the beans, I'll be leaning on you. 0.94
01:18:29.360 But then there are other people who are like, if you really talk, we're going to come kill you. 0.91
01:18:33.480 So I think it's pretty nasty what's going on.
01:18:36.740 So this is left-right division leading up to the midterm elections, which are very important.
01:18:42.020 And you still maintain the theory and the prediction that Trump will run and will have a third term, either as a vice president or in wartime, a president can go for a third term.
01:18:54.360 Is this going to be successful? And what can we expect from the midterms?
01:18:58.440 Yeah, so I think that the powers that be and they're coming to recognition that for all of Trump's problems, he is a useful idiot. 0.99
01:19:12.020 You need a guy like him in order to transition America from a democracy to a technocracy, okay? 0.98
01:19:19.320 So all the elite feel this way where, you know, the democracy doesn't really work.
01:19:23.900 You know, if democracy really worked, we wouldn't have Donald Trump as president.
01:19:27.600 And not only once, but twice, okay?
01:19:29.720 So in 2016, the elite basically came to the conclusion that we can't really trust the people to vote the way we want them to vote.
01:19:38.380 The people aren't really obedient, okay?
01:19:40.160 So the solution to this is to create a technocracy where you have an AI god and where it's an AI civilian state and where engineers and bureaucrats and technocrats basically run America to the benefit of the American people, of course, just as they do in China, right?
01:19:58.680 Come to China and look how great things are, right?
01:20:01.580 So they're trying to basically create China.
01:20:04.200 Like China is the future that they want to emulate.
01:20:06.440 But you need a scapegoat in order to make this transition happen, right?
01:20:11.600 Who do you blame for destroying democracy?
01:20:15.380 Who do you blame for taking away people's freedoms and creating this AI god?
01:20:19.860 You blame Donald Trump, okay?
01:20:21.480 So you put up with him as long as it takes to make this transition from democracy to technocracy.
01:20:26.980 And this is a process that might take eight years, ten years.
01:20:29.360 Who knows, okay?
01:20:30.000 But it's actually like two years.
01:20:31.940 And that's also why Trump is building his ballroom.
01:20:34.300 OK, so I'm not sure if you looked into the ballroom, but it's clearly an AI data center underneath the ballroom that's protected by executive privilege, meaning Congress can never, ever ask what's going on underneath the ballroom.
01:20:47.600 OK, so they're basically trying to create God under that ballroom.
01:20:52.340 Right. Right. But so you need someone to actually be the scapegoat, to be the tool to make this transition happen.
01:21:00.120 So that so the historians will say, you know, it was it was this guy, Donald Trump, who destroyed American democracy.
01:21:05.200 Right. So so that's why I think he'll get a third term.
01:21:07.840 And he's bragging about how the ballroom is now twice the cost of what it originally was.
01:21:12.340 And he's even tripled down on the statement that he doesn't even care about the finances for American citizens. 0.52
01:21:18.400 He just wants to prevent Iran from developing a nuclear weapon. 0.71
01:21:21.160 you brought up maduro they've also seemed to abandon the original idea that they were doing 0.65
01:21:26.520 it to take over venezuela because they're dealing with weapons and these are socialist criminals
01:21:32.080 they're basically now just leaning into the idea they always wanted their oil same thing with iran
01:21:36.340 originally it was like hey we're gonna free iran they've abandoned that completely no one's talking
01:21:40.820 about freeing iran it's gone it's just they can't don't care they've stopped caring the entire
01:21:47.000 system is on autopilot they have a plan they're executing the plan and the entire elite is
01:21:53.240 has agreed on the broad contours contours of this plan and you know they don't really care because
01:21:59.980 it's impossible to resist them you know you like like who's going to resist them right so and if
01:22:05.500 you know about it you know who cares it's alarming how quickly they got away with it cuba the lights
01:22:09.740 are still out the whole country it seems like they don't have electricity if the information i'm
01:22:14.520 getting us correct so quickly in the span of months it went from we are the heroes saving the
01:22:19.680 world and protecting it from communism and the evils of these gangsters to we just want to expand
01:22:24.800 the American empire like that and without even trickery they're just admitting it and I've never
01:22:30.380 seen the shift go that quickly you're right there hasn't been any sort of backlash people are more
01:22:35.100 focused on trivial things like a rage baiter streamer or these right left issues that we get
01:22:42.400 focus on its social media to see that it shift this way for them to abandon the good guy image
01:22:47.520 that america's kept i don't think it's ever shifted that quickly has it yeah it's it's really
01:22:53.080 decline of empire where you know what what made the empire sustainable was a hypocrisy where
01:22:59.160 the people fought into the idea that they live in a democracy that that the empire was about
01:23:05.520 spreading human rights around the world and then when empire declines um it's just too hard to
01:23:12.380 be hypocritical anymore it's just it's just too hard work right because like think about how much
01:23:16.620 energy you need to expand on trying to explain the iran war you know like like you have to go
01:23:21.500 and like give speeches and explain that you know like this warning iran was really about protecting
01:23:26.300 women's rights right really about you know protecting these minorities protecting democracy
01:23:31.660 and like that takes a lot of work that you know and like they don't want to do that anymore because
01:23:35.100 it's it's just it's like everyone knows it's it's bs uh you'll be laughed at if you gave a speech
01:23:41.100 like that in public and so like screw this let's just let's just ignore this it's it's let let's
01:23:48.240 not waste everyone's time okay and like that's the major sign of an empire in decline so the
01:23:54.840 first major sign is hubris but the other major sign is giving up the hypocrisy you know just
01:24:00.280 like saying like like we don't even care anymore you know we're the empire we can do whatever we
01:24:04.960 want and if you don't do what we want what's coming destroy you isn't there a conflict of
01:24:09.780 interest there so if they're going to shift from a democracy to a technocracy saying that okay the
01:24:15.040 government knows better than what the people will want we should be the ones in charge we know the
01:24:20.060 moral code we know what's best but also we are hypocritical in everything we do how are they
01:24:24.660 going to be able to shift towards this sort of governing state and this new ideology while also
01:24:30.920 being so hypocritical well you you shift people's attentions right so you have ai and the ai is 0.98
01:24:39.960 distracting you by being your girlfriend or by being your demon or by being you're an alien okay 0.98
01:24:44.880 you just distract people you know like like you have this you have old disclosure which everyone
01:24:49.000 knows is complete nonsense it's complete bs there are no aliens there's no alien technology
01:24:53.640 and it's just like a hallucination but some people will believe it and and then if others
01:25:00.380 don't believe it then you have this um ai girlfriend right and if they don't believe
01:25:04.400 that then you have like demons okay you just distract people and people just you know um 0.71
01:25:10.500 basically uh retreat in their own bubble because like just thinking about the atrocities that are
01:25:17.540 going to happen is it's going to overwhelm people so they just rather close their eyes and shut
01:25:22.020 their ears and just like live in their own world and we've seen this happen historically before
01:25:26.700 where empires decline because of civil war because they get exhausted because the world unites
01:25:32.980 against them but it's never because the people rise up against the empire it's that's never
01:25:36.620 happened it happens what's the the main catalyst if it's not the people rising up uh elite over
01:25:43.520 production so there's so civil war among the elites right so and and and so that's and that's
01:25:48.760 why i keep on mentioning the war between the financial elite and the ai elite yeah and you
01:25:52.420 mentioned the UFO files. This is a really silly one that's popped up. I saw Kai Trump speaking
01:25:56.580 about it on the Logan Paul podcast. They're saying, what about these UFO files? Yeah,
01:26:01.020 I think this could exist. Obama started doing a podcast tour. It's like out of nowhere. He's been
01:26:05.200 really silent. Although he said some things on a podcast that were pretty interesting about the
01:26:10.000 Iran nuclear deal and how he prevented so much of the growth of enriched uranium in Iran and that
01:26:16.700 this deal was successful. And now it seems like Trump is trying to get exactly to what Obama
01:26:21.680 achieved with this deal but he's also speaking about ufo files and many muslims we are of the 0.84
01:26:27.880 belief that this is just jinn they keep saying it's ufos but ufos this is all a psyop and it's
01:26:32.760 really spirits and it's really demons and it's really a lot more sinister than they let on what
01:26:38.640 do you think about ufos no i no i agree i don't think it's extraterrestrial um it could be
01:26:46.500 spiritual it could be demonic um i agree with that i mean like you know they they've been trying
01:26:53.220 this for a long time so i'm not sure if you look into cern okay the particle collider in in europe
01:26:58.980 called cern c-e-r-n yeah but if you actually do some research you have to ask yourself why are they
01:27:06.500 investing a trillion dollars to find particles okay like like like why like like i don't understand
01:27:13.280 this a trillion dollars just to figure out these particles that may or may not support your theory
01:27:21.840 of how the universe works okay well if you actually look at cern you'll find that there are many
01:27:27.280 occult aspects to it and what some people speculate is that what they're really trying to do is they're
01:27:33.560 trying to open interdimensional portals which will allow for free energy and which would allow
01:27:39.660 certain demons to come into this world okay and and i i mean that's far more credible than like
01:27:46.780 you know they're they're dispatching particles in the hope of finding new particles which will
01:27:51.340 help us explain string theory okay a trillion dollars is a lot of money right so so these
01:27:56.460 particle accelerators are one thing to think about another thing to think about is there's
01:28:01.900 been a lot of talk about uh operation stargate right so the uh operation stargate is a project
01:28:08.780 funded by the federal government to open to use 500 billion dollars to start to to like build data
01:28:14.220 data centers around the world and you know ronan farrell wrote a piece in the new yorker
01:28:19.740 about sam altman his ambitions for the ai future and in that article there's a really fascinating
01:28:25.260 quote where he talked to talk to an open ai insider and what he said was we're building portals
01:28:32.860 to summon demons okay sam almost said these yes not that's an element but an insider that talked
01:28:40.380 anonymously to the reporter ronan farrow okay you can google this okay ronan farrow said outman uh
01:28:48.220 um ai dead centers summoning demons and and and so um i think that what the elite has always
01:28:56.860 understood is that um there's always been supernatural forces in the world if you just
01:29:04.400 read homer um and you just go back to ancient greece they took they took that for granted where
01:29:10.660 we're surrounded by these supernatural forces and we're always in contact with these supernatural
01:29:16.540 forces and the reason why is that our consciousness is in is interdimensional okay so we have our
01:29:24.280 consciousness exists in infinite dimensions and so depending on how you
01:29:28.200 tune your consciousness you actually communicate with different
01:29:31.960 aliens or demons from other dimensions
01:29:35.720 and that's the great secret that the elite are trying to keep from us
01:29:40.160 and that they only have access to. And it would make sense for them
01:29:44.380 to try to bring these forces into our planet
01:29:48.200 because that would allow them to have greater control
01:29:52.400 So one theory is that the elite have made a deal with these interdimensional demons.
01:30:00.920 And the deal is that these demons would provide secrets to the elite as long as the elite gave them more power.
01:30:09.420 And the great secret that they're looking for is longevity, immortality.
01:30:14.260 So these demons have access to eternal life.
01:30:17.540 and
01:30:19.080 but they want control
01:30:22.140 so the idea is
01:30:24.140 once you create this AI
01:30:25.600 surveillance state, then the demons
01:30:28.080 will inhabit this AI surveillance state
01:30:30.340 they will actually
01:30:31.140 manifest themselves through AI
01:30:33.640 and be able to control the consciousness of
01:30:35.860 everyone 0.88
01:30:37.260 and the elite will become transhuman 0.79
01:30:40.100 they will become transcental
01:30:41.660 and they will be given eternal life
01:30:43.160 eternal youth in return
01:30:45.500 so that's a theory
01:30:46.620 I don't know how credible this theory is, but if you look at how they're behaving, it does make a lot of sense.
01:30:53.360 That seems like the only, or that seems like the only sort of, I know a lot of people are going to say this is kooky or crazy, but why else is there a new push towards talking about UFO files?
01:31:04.840 Even J.D. Vance is speaking about this, and it's clear that this could be a cover-up.
01:31:10.080 And I mean, in so many civilizations, we're aware of the interdimensional beings, of demons, of djinns.
01:31:16.720 For example, a lot of people speculate that Haiti, for example, when they killed their slave masters and became the first independent slave nation,
01:31:24.060 they made a deal with the devil to find some sort of immortality in this life.
01:31:27.860 And they could become immune to gunfire and swords and they could have some sort of immortality.
01:31:33.020 So you're really making a deal with these interdimensional beings to have some sort of immortality.
01:31:38.780 We're seeing transhumanism being spoken about more and more from people like Peter Thiel.
01:31:42.980 This is not crazy.
01:31:44.140 This is a major conversation happening right now.
01:31:48.120 And, like, you know, all you have to do is just read Homer, the Iliad and the Odyssey.
01:31:52.220 And, you know, like, if you read it, it's like he's literally talking about how we're living with gods and how gods are able to control our thoughts.
01:31:59.640 Gods don't actually intervene physically, but they're able to possess us.
01:32:03.160 possess us so for example in the iliad when the gods take sides what they do is they inhabit the
01:32:08.780 body of certain warriors and give these words renewed energy and power to fight wars but gods
01:32:14.460 the gods themselves can't manifest themselves physically in our world they do so through
01:32:19.700 possession achilles he was immortal he wasn't able to sustain a real damaging wound except through
01:32:26.960 his heel that was his weakness this movie is coming out i don't know if you've seen people
01:32:31.480 are upset because they're saying it's going to be awful it's the worst movie ever okay like like
01:32:36.560 like you know i mean i teach the odyssey i love the odyssey but like it seems to be the worst
01:32:39.940 movie ever i love that movie uh the one that came out in 2004 with brad pitt was very good
01:32:45.580 that one troy was great this one now they have lupita and gongos playing helen they have ellen
01:32:50.980 page she's a transgender she's playing achilles christopher nolan's one of the great modern
01:32:55.760 directors right he's considered one and now he is choosing to make it this weird woke dei thing 0.94
01:33:02.180 that's just pretty outdated yeah i'm not gonna watch it it's gonna be awful yeah you should
01:33:08.960 boycott it and so you said earlier i don't know if i misheard you but you're saying that they want
01:33:14.580 to tap into the uh interdimensional they want to tap into other dimensions in order to access
01:33:20.020 energy and is this free energy yeah free energy so if it's a lot of its possession how do you get
01:33:26.760 energy from different dimensions and the muslim belief is that there's like there's the seven
01:33:30.940 layers of heaven the seven layers of hell and they exist on a plane if i'm not mistaken heaven's above
01:33:36.300 and hell is below and so the access is to get to these spirits that exist in these other realms
01:33:42.980 how do you get energy from these places yeah okay so i don't know the specifics okay so so i
01:33:51.220 so let me try to provide the broad contours of this theory okay so the world works for energy
01:33:59.220 okay there are different types of energy um there's physical energy you know where you
01:34:04.100 do work and there's also emotional and spiritual energy where your emotions emit certain um
01:34:10.340 um signatures that power this world and what they say is that uh the demons feed on this emotional
01:34:20.220 energy right through hate fear anger and so they're trying to create as much hatred fear and
01:34:27.060 anger as possible through uh money and competition capitalism through wars through death and
01:34:33.180 destruction okay and um if the demons become much more powerful then they provide more insights
01:34:42.260 to the elite which allows the elite to better govern better control uh the world and um it
01:34:50.180 will also allow the the demons to basically make the elite live forever eternal youth basically
01:34:56.480 um and and and so i i think i think that's a broad contours
01:35:01.280 it's the idea of energy harvesting correct so people yeah
01:35:07.540 l-o-s-h l-o-s-h l-o-s-h so the energy they harvest is is loush and the idea is that loush
01:35:18.220 is your spiritual energy so so if you are in a low vibrational state okay you have hate you have
01:35:24.780 anger uh you're feeding these demons whereas if you are high vibrational energy which is like
01:35:31.340 you're conscious you're attentive you're joyful then you're connected to the monad okay this is
01:35:38.540 why in islam we say it's so valuable to pray five times a day people complain like oh i can i can
01:35:43.500 never do this because i don't want to put my head to the floor five times but doing this is a state
01:35:48.620 of positive energy and is redirecting yourself and grounding and centering yourself in an important
01:35:53.980 way but if your energy is directed say a concert is a great example where people present themselves
01:35:58.720 as demons and people are worshiping the same way that you worship god and so now you're worshiping
01:36:04.540 these demons on a stage you're giving energy you're harvesting uh to spirits you know here
01:36:10.080 is just meditation and we know the health benefits of meditation right as you point out all that it's
01:36:15.000 doing is like focusing your attention in a positive light light right you're being attentive
01:36:19.980 you're being present you're focusing on your connection to god right whereas in normal life
01:36:26.720 you're distracted by all these affairs you have no control over you're attracted you're distracted
01:36:32.460 by war you're distracted by you know uh thugs you're you're distracted by the this news and
01:36:40.020 this brings you down right and and and i think i think that's why as you point out the real
01:36:45.360 solution is to discover religion is for people to embrace spirituality and religion yeah it makes
01:36:51.180 perfect sense with your theory that consciousness is the number one form of currency because if
01:36:55.740 energy can be harvested and directed in a place this is where true power comes from because
01:37:00.460 currency is all fake it's a ponzi scheme it's based off of nothing you have these ious in u.s
01:37:04.700 treasury the real currency and this is why ai is being pushed so much is to try to take control
01:37:10.840 of the our own conscious our own consciousness and that's why ai is so dangerous because imagine
01:37:16.980 a situation where you know like you're just you're just born you grew up with ai well you 0.97
01:37:22.800 would forever lose your consciousness because it would just all be controlled by the ai right you 0.99
01:37:28.180 can only think in a certain way and we're already seeing that in in today's society where the young 0.89
01:37:32.860 young people young kids nowadays you go to a park and they actually have no agency you know like
01:37:37.820 Like every minute of their life is structured in a certain way.
01:37:40.200 So they're either on the iPad or they're in a class learning something stupid or, you know, they're taking swimming lessons. 0.85
01:37:46.800 It's all been so curated. 1.00
01:37:49.060 And so, like, kids nowadays are like zombies, man.
01:37:51.520 They're still, like, medicated, right?
01:37:55.400 And they're so distracted.
01:37:57.140 They actually have no capacity to pay attention.
01:37:59.980 Because somebody's harvested that energy.
01:38:01.600 And for anyone that thinks it's crazy, Coachella is very similar to something.
01:38:05.420 like I saw you speak about Mecca and Umarra, which is where people make a pilgrimage in the desert
01:38:11.360 and they go and worship God. Whereas Coachella is where people go to the desert once a year
01:38:16.280 and they all walk around in a circle and they all worship celebrities that are only approved by 0.74
01:38:21.300 Israel. And they've even publicly said, okay, yay is not allowed to perform here. These are the
01:38:25.480 selected celebrities that you must worship. It's their pilgrimage and it's their way to harvest
01:38:30.820 energy every year and that energy goes somewhere it doesn't just fade away it always it's it's
01:38:36.240 transactional that's what concerts are that's what movies are right so Coachella is it's just like a
01:38:41.500 high-end version but like a low-end version of like these concerts you go to or these movies
01:38:45.840 that that that you watch yeah that's something we need to be aware of it a lot of people think
01:38:51.860 that stuff's crazy I see the criticism I hear from you is that they try to instead of look at what
01:38:57.540 you say they try to miscategorize your lectures they don't even seem to watch them and they say
01:39:02.560 oh this is just crazy conspiracy it's like if you watch the lectures disinformation a lot of people
01:39:08.100 can agree on and there's real basis and there's real comparisons but have you have you noted I've
01:39:14.620 seen more of a push we spoke before about how people like Mehdi Hassan tried to miscategorize
01:39:18.920 oh you're not a professor like this stupid thing I've seen more people the guys like Hassan Piker 0.91
01:39:23.520 do this where instead of listening to what you say they just write you off as a conspiracy theorist 0.99
01:39:28.920 yeah yeah no no i mean that's that's that's how how they deal with me because like there's nothing
01:39:34.340 like like i'm willing probably willing to debate anyone okay um and explain why i think the way i
01:39:42.200 think because like i'm also on this journey to discover how the world works and i'm exploring
01:39:47.440 different possibilities i'm not wedded to the idea that there are any that they're interdimensional
01:39:52.660 lizard people i mean it's a possibility that i consider like i'm not wedded to the idea of like
01:39:58.100 energy harvesting of loose okay but it's an idea i consider to help me understand how the world
01:40:03.740 works these are all just frameworks and theories that i have i'm i'm probably happy to debate them
01:40:08.740 with people but people don't engage me in debate people just make fun of me people say you know i'm
01:40:13.400 a professor the main criticism is like i'm a professor like no matter how hard i tell people
01:40:16.780 like yes i know i'm not a professor they still say you're not a professor so therefore you don't
01:40:22.120 count you don't matter stop stop being a fraud um so i mean like i i've watched quite a few videos
01:40:29.220 of people criticizing me it's always like like like these attacks like these personal attacks
01:40:34.820 as opposed to like like debating me on certain points that i make the most the most that um
01:40:40.380 that i've seen where they're trying to engage me um is like i make these certain historical
01:40:45.600 points like for example i believe that the battle canine didn't really exist okay 0.98
01:40:51.000 and there's this roman historian who said this guy's clearly an idiot because we have so much
01:40:54.920 evidence that it did exist and like if you actually watch my video i actually present 0.99
01:41:00.460 some pretty compelling arguments that it was probably made up because like most of history
01:41:06.400 is fabricated um and um there aren't that many sources for a lot of things we we we believe um
01:41:14.520 so again i'm probably happy to engage people in in in debate as long as someone's willing to
01:41:21.240 debate me in good faith and you say all the time how you're a high school professor
01:41:26.440 and if they watch the lecture high school teacher high school teacher you say this in
01:41:31.240 almost every single lecture people are saying that the your contract is up soon correct that
01:41:36.280 what's your your plans for when this uh when this changes yeah so um i'm gonna leave the school
01:41:44.200 at the end of my contract which expires in in june and i'm going to um i'm try to
01:41:52.520 um i i want to try different teaching approaches so um in june i'm going to do a two-week seminar
01:42:00.360 on dante so i i'm going to read with students line by line uh the entirety of the divine comedy
01:42:07.720 because i think it's the greatest literary work ever and a lot of things we discuss like energy
01:42:12.920 harvesting and demons okay he discusses as well in the divine comedy uh and everyone agrees that
01:42:19.700 divine comedy is a masterpiece so i i want to uh do a live stream between the live stream on the
01:42:26.520 divine comedy and make it available to anyone in the world i mean i believe very strongly that
01:42:32.200 everyone should read the divine comedy and it doesn't matter your culture it doesn't matter
01:42:36.980 your background because it's so universal and it's so beautiful um so so that's one project
01:42:41.740 that i have uh in june um in the fall i will probably visit north america because i've been
01:42:48.920 invited by by a lot of people to appear on their podcasts including people like you know uh phil
01:42:53.880 vaughn sean ryan um chris williamson andrew schultz so i so uh i'm not sure the invitation
01:43:02.780 is still open but but i i feel i i want to go to north america and appear on more podcasts and
01:43:09.100 engaging people in uh more deep discussion because i i thought the dire ceo worked really well
01:43:15.860 um and you know so so um so i i value the opportunity to just engage with people much
01:43:22.740 more deeply uh and much more intimately than the internet allows so so so hopefully we'll see each
01:43:28.920 other in new york um um i want to um talk to some professors and make some videos where i try to
01:43:38.540 my arguments much more scholarly okay so like basically have debates with professors who know
01:43:44.300 who know the material where i present my argument and see how he or she responds i mean this is very
01:43:50.460 valuable because for me personally because i think it's very important to to critique myself
01:43:55.660 um and to engage in self-reflection and like to see my arguments can stand withstand um academic
01:44:02.540 scrutiny. So that's very important. I like seeing that in one of your most recent lectures,
01:44:08.980 you were talking about how you went back and forth through the emails with one of your Yale
01:44:12.460 professors, and you were addressing some of the criticisms he had about your analysis. And it
01:44:17.520 seemed like I like to see that approach in your dedication to want to refine your message as much
01:44:23.060 as possible. That is an important approach that we need to have. Exactly, exactly. So I think
01:44:29.780 this is very valuable for my audience
01:44:31.800 as well, because I don't want
01:44:33.480 to end up being a cult leader.
01:44:35.140 I don't want to start a cult. I want
01:44:37.540 to spread consciousness. I want to spread awareness.
01:44:40.400 I feel it's very important
01:44:41.860 to spread doubt as well.
01:44:44.820 And you do that
01:44:45.640 through debate and through honest
01:44:47.480 discussion.
01:44:48.940 So that's what I have coming up
01:44:51.220 recently. But hopefully, you know,
01:44:53.600 you and I can travel together to Malaysia
01:44:55.020 because I really want
01:44:58.420 to help promote education reform you know so like it's great that we have we have this discussion
01:45:04.340 but i i want us to think about how we can we can translate this into real world practice right how
01:45:10.480 to start schools how to start movements how to start communities because like like you know um
01:45:15.400 you know you went to malaysia and you can see there's tremendous interest in new ideas there
01:45:19.640 and i have the tremendous following online and and i feel like the next step is to transition
01:45:25.040 from online to the real world
01:45:26.820 and start communities where people can have
01:45:29.160 like these deep discussions about faith,
01:45:32.280 about spirituality, about geopolitics.
01:45:38.620 There's a huge demand for that.
01:45:40.020 And Theo Vaughn too, he's facing some scrutiny. 0.52
01:45:42.160 They're saying that he's crazy.
01:45:44.100 I'm seeing some similar attacks
01:45:45.300 and pushback on him that I see on you.
01:45:47.560 Theo Vaughn seems interested.
01:45:48.860 He's very curious.
01:45:49.700 That'll be a great podcast.
01:45:51.260 What about Joe Rogan?
01:45:52.180 Is JRE to not reach out?
01:45:53.500 they there's not been um i would love to run joe rogan um i'm not hopeful um you know i i know he
01:46:03.400 follows me on twitter and i i know i know he he follows my content and i think like maybe four
01:46:08.980 years ago um he would invite me like just like that okay but um you know if you look at who he's
01:46:18.000 he's been inviting on his show people like peter theo and um mark and jason and uh yeah yeah so um
01:46:27.720 so i mean i i i think he's a really smart guy i mean and i i watch him a lot so i would love to
01:46:33.960 have a conversation with him uh but maybe not not uh right now you know um i uh but you know i i i
01:46:42.060 have some other podcasts to do as well my analysis i don't think joe rogan's compromise i see a lot
01:46:46.840 of people say that. I think his pushback on Theo Vaughn comes from a place of friendship because
01:46:51.100 Theo Vaughn was saying some things about his mental health. I do believe that he still is
01:46:56.540 a free man. You know, he brought on Ian Carroll and he allows criticism of Israel. I think that's
01:47:02.220 too soon to say that. But it is interesting that he was very critical of Iran war and then he
01:47:08.260 showed up in the White House and he's right behind Trump. Trump gave him a big embrace at the UFC
01:47:12.760 fight and it seems like he's now getting more involved in politics much more than he was before
01:47:18.060 very different from that covet era when he was demonized so much for pushing ivermectin
01:47:22.520 yeah yeah um i mean what they said was that um joe had become so famous that he felt as though
01:47:35.120 he needed he needed to take a side otherwise every side everyone's gonna attack him so after
01:47:40.560 Ivor Merton, he became very, you know, he started to appreciate how Nazi policy could be. And so he
01:47:49.940 decided, you know, like, I need to pick a side. The podcast is extremely influential, especially
01:47:55.040 for elections. Of course, nobody could expect that to happen. I want to ask you maybe one more
01:47:59.660 about Hantavirus. So this was major news for a while. And people are thinking maybe this is
01:48:03.780 another Wuhan lab thing. Maybe somebody ate a bat. Is Hantavirus, is this all fear mongering?
01:48:10.300 what's the deal with hantavirus um i think i think it's fear-mongering i think but i think
01:48:16.720 also at the same time there are a lot of viruses going around so uh my children were in hainan
01:48:23.120 which is like an island in south china for the past six months and they were they never got sick
01:48:27.880 they've been back for like two weeks and like everyone in the kindergarten is sick
01:48:32.580 and so there's definitely something going around we've never been in a situation this serious
01:48:37.900 before you know where like like like there's so much viruses going around in uh in in china so
01:48:45.340 um i would not be surprised if there were there were some more lockdowns and and so i i think
01:48:51.860 you know there are lots of pre-texas that they can use to create these lockdowns but um they
01:48:58.840 tried it once it worked out spectacular well for them right i mean like like if you feel people
01:49:03.400 are discontent we'll lock them up in their apartments and and say there's a virus going
01:49:06.660 around and people are going to like, you know, stay, stay at home. So that's something that's
01:49:11.420 tried to intrude in China and to probably use it again. Have you faced any pushback from the
01:49:16.280 Chinese government? Because they are very strict. What's the sentiment over there? You mentioned it
01:49:21.320 earlier in this conversation. What have, what's that been like in China for you? Yeah. So my
01:49:27.660 theory is this, okay. And I don't know if I'm completely correct. Okay. But this is my theory
01:49:31.300 of how this works. If you're creating an AI surveillance state, what you're basically doing
01:49:34.980 you're creating a database okay you're creating a database and how it works is you're trying to
01:49:40.740 figure out the relations between these different databases okay so and what you're trying to do
01:49:44.740 is you're trying to categorize people within these databases in order to figure out how they would
01:49:49.220 behave right so given your demographic history giving your economic background given your buying
01:49:56.740 habits online given uh your social media friends i can then put you in a certain category and then
01:50:03.780 predict how you behave because people tend to behave people like them okay so it's a very macro
01:50:09.780 approach to surveillance surveillance and that's how china works my problem is i am so
01:50:17.940 distinctive that i cannot be put into a category all right and therefore they don't they don't know
01:50:24.980 what to do with me and so what the ai system does is it should be treats me as an edge case
01:50:29.860 and force me out of the system right because i don't i i don't engage in chinese social media
01:50:37.060 i don't really have any chinese friends i don't do any public appearances and so like what do
01:50:43.860 you do with someone like like me right i'm also not a chinese national um so there's limitations
01:50:50.260 on how on how they can legally deal deal with me okay so i think as long as like i don't make any
01:50:55.460 money in china i generate most of my money for my subsac um as long as i don't um engage with
01:51:04.780 chinese with the chinese public as long as i can my mouth shut in china then i'm fine
01:51:09.900 and and and that'll be my approach in the future i i i will actually spend most of my time overseas
01:51:15.700 my family family and i are looking to relocate somewhere else possibly malaysia possibly
01:51:20.680 somewhere else malaysia i have only positive things to say that's basi used to be my favorite
01:51:25.640 i think malaysia might take the uh might take the lead on that one well we'll see maybe we'll
01:51:31.560 we'll both be in malaysia i look forward to uh visiting there very well you know you know we
01:51:36.360 we start school together you know we uh you know and and we can continue to use the school to
01:51:42.600 do our online um promotion of our ideas but um but i think a school will be a great creative
01:51:50.520 community where i think people who are who think like us can congregate from around the world
01:51:54.760 you know that that's my my ambition actually it's interesting you say that because there were a lot
01:52:00.040 of them were saying uh that specifically the prince of johor was talking about how important it is
01:52:04.600 to push proper education and so many conversations i even spoke at a school there they were they
01:52:10.120 they were talking about how important it is to reshape the future and change the education system
01:52:14.740 because they see so many of the flaws that you have accurately pointed out yeah and like like
01:52:20.340 like what i think our contribution can be is that this school be a lab school where educators from
01:52:25.740 around malaysia can see new practices that might inspire them and they can take back home but which
01:52:33.140 be different or separate from from the traditional system well i still want to be a student if you
01:52:38.660 have that that live stream series i don't know if that's going to be in front of a class but i would
01:52:41.880 uh gladly it will be it i mean it will be it's uh it's set for um uh two weeks from mid-june to
01:52:50.020 the end of june it'll be at the yellow beijing center so yale university has like an embassy
01:52:55.520 in uh beijing it it wants to be like a platform a community for intellectuals to come and discuss
01:53:02.480 ideas so they generally generally agreed to host me at that um yale beijing center and we were
01:53:10.340 inviting students college students from all in the country who are interested in the liberal arts who
01:53:14.120 are interested in being like you know maybe a humanities professor to come and take this class
01:53:18.420 over uh two weeks it's it's free um so so we should get a lot of interest but there'll be like
01:53:24.180 10 or 20 students and we'll but the main but the main point is we'll live stream it to the world
01:53:28.260 so that if you're just interested in daunting if you're interested in like reading reading the
01:53:31.340 divine comedy but you've never really had the opportunity uh to read it well well read it line
01:53:37.220 by line and and i think everyone who who follows the live stream will feel empowered to confront
01:53:42.460 the divine comedy by himself or herself it's a really really deep work so we we can only go into
01:53:47.760 like the superficial superficialities but you know it's meant the vine comedy is meant to start you
01:53:52.880 on your own spiritual journey through life as well i'll definitely read that before it starts i need
01:53:57.400 to get through that what's the is there a comparison what does dante's inferno have to do
01:54:04.500 with this so um the divine comedy is in three parts okay so what dante does is he goes through
01:54:11.320 a journey through the entire uh spiritual universe so he starts in hell the inferno then he goes to
01:54:19.420 purgatory and then he ends up in paradise which is heaven okay and that's where he meets god
01:54:25.100 okay so it's basically a spiritual journey and and the idea is that to seek enlightenment you
01:54:31.700 first have to experience hell you first have to suffer you first have to appreciate sin and evil
01:54:38.940 in this world before you can actually appreciate uh the the good and and the divine so it's like
01:54:45.560 from frankism all the way to the monad exactly exactly very interesting i'll get there yeah
01:54:52.660 Yeah. But I mean, like, I think, you know, the great books were designed to be, first and foremost, human. If you want to know what it means to be human, you read the great books, right? So by reading the great books, it allows you to become truly human, to understand what it means to be human. That's why I think that every school should teach the great books, including Homer, including Dante, including Plato.
01:55:17.480 You know, it sounds similar. Have you read Malcolm X's autobiography? It does follow that trajectory in a way. He starts off as a drug dealer and a pimp. His name is a criminal. Then he goes to jail and he starts to learn more. He takes education seriously. He changes his lingo. You know, he's a black man, but he stops using that ghetto language and saying N word this. And he starts speaking and dressing and conducting himself in a way where people want to listen.
01:55:44.180 And eventually he finds God and then he is assassinated.
01:55:47.900 That's my favorite book of all time.
01:55:50.140 That autobiography shaped a lot of my philosophy at a young age.
01:55:53.960 And that's a path to wisdom.
01:55:55.260 Like you have to experience many different things.
01:55:57.900 You have to fail.
01:55:59.140 You have to suffer in order to achieve enlightenment.
01:56:02.060 You know, and that's why I think, you know, some of the most influential people in the world, like, for example, you and Theo Vaughn and Joe Rogan, they've had unconventional education backgrounds, right?
01:56:12.060 Like, if you went to, like, Yale and you became a lawyer and you spent all your time in Washington, D.C., you're not going to be a very smart guy.
01:56:19.660 I mean, like, I know tons of people like that.
01:56:22.020 They're not at all interesting.
01:56:24.800 And they're not very wise.
01:56:26.280 They're successful and they're smart, but they're not wise.
01:56:28.740 If you truly want to be wise, you're going to have to go through a very unconventional life.
01:56:35.440 That's why I was asked this question recently because I was attacked.
01:56:38.540 I've been thinking a lot about that situation.
01:56:40.760 they're saying okay was this a blessing was and i i see i i don't know if you're similar in this
01:56:45.380 way but when things happen when i experience hardship although it it sucks it's not the best
01:56:50.440 there's part of me that's like okay how am i going to become a better person from this
01:56:54.420 how am i going to learn from this experience in a way i i embrace the challenge and i like the fact
01:57:00.540 that i'm facing obstacles because this is how you develop and how you become a better person is this
01:57:06.580 how you approach life exactly exactly so my theory is this my theory is that we all come here with a
01:57:13.920 purpose okay we're all these souls that drift in the ethereal realm we all come with a purpose
01:57:22.700 okay and even before we are born we tell ourselves what our purpose is and some of us are more
01:57:29.480 enlightened to other people and like and um we we tell ourselves our purpose here is to learn
01:57:35.420 Our purpose here is to transcend, okay?
01:57:38.640 In which case, you're going to have a hard life.
01:57:41.180 In which case, because your purpose is to learn, you've come and the universe has established a very hard life for you.
01:57:50.180 That means you're born into an unfortunate circumstance.
01:57:52.880 Your parents aren't that great.
01:57:54.520 You're poor.
01:57:55.780 You're going to experience hardship, okay?
01:57:57.640 But that's because your purpose here is to learn.
01:58:00.840 and because you know what your purpose is each time you encounter adversity that enables you
01:58:07.520 to ascend higher okay um and and and and and and so the one way that you know who's truly
01:58:16.500 blessed and who's truly um great are those who have survived the the greatest adversity
01:58:22.780 um because first of all they came with a very specific purpose which is noble and second of
01:58:29.000 all they're able to transcend the circumstance because they've always understood the nobility
01:58:34.160 of their purpose that's my theory anyway you seem a lot more optimistic there was a period because
01:58:39.160 especially the war was extremely draining at a point and it was i was weighing on you it was
01:58:44.920 weighing on me you seem to have uh found your center again and it seemed like you have you're
01:58:51.100 much more optimistic about the future right now is this true yeah the main reason why was that
01:58:57.540 When it all happened, I was alone in Beijing because my family were in Hainan.
01:59:02.400 And then on April, late April, my kids came back and my wife came back.
01:59:11.160 The major difference is that when my kids aren't around, I live a very free life.
01:59:17.620 It's very unregimented.
01:59:19.380 I get up when I want to.
01:59:20.780 I just move around the house and I just do what I'm supposed to do.
01:59:25.300 OK, and so and I was distracted by this war and this made me feel hopeless.
01:59:32.040 But then my kids come back and like I need to get up at six o'clock in the morning because I need to take my kids to school.
01:59:38.360 And I want to come back. I have to make breakfast and then I have to go pick the kids up.
01:59:43.680 And it's a very regimented life. OK. And so I feel I feel as though there's meaning and purpose and direction to my life.
01:59:51.720 and being with my kids hugging them uh seeing their smiles just fills me with energy and purpose
01:59:59.460 and optimism um because like like when you see your kids you're like this is why i'm doing what
02:00:04.360 i'm doing right um when when they're not around you're like why am i doing this you know like
02:00:10.940 yeah i'm famous i'm making good money and i'm getting on all these you know very popular
02:00:16.520 podcast but like what's the point of this but when you see your kid right you you you you just lock
02:00:24.400 in like okay this is why i'm doing what i'm doing i'm doing i'm doing what i'm doing not for the
02:00:28.460 money for the power for the well uh i'm doing it for my kid because i want to set up i want to
02:00:34.840 establish a better future for my children right you get some sense of structure i had that uh
02:00:41.380 similar feeling that of isolation the trip was great to southeast asia and i go to australia
02:00:46.460 I don't even stream there. I just make a stop there. And then I'm starting to get followed by
02:00:50.520 secret police. And then I'm on the plane home and I see an email. They revoke my visa because they
02:00:55.160 say that I don't fit their character and the media slandering me. And they're saying all these
02:01:00.120 false attacks on me that are terrorists and Nazi and horrible things. And you're mad. But then 0.97
02:01:07.420 your purpose and the structure and seeing what this is for again, it can recenter you.
02:01:12.120 I wanted to ask you this, because you're a family man and you're talking about how important it is with children.
02:01:18.360 And it reminds me of when we talked about or when you mentioned the fact that OnlyFans is on the rise and how I remember the stat, but something like 25, something percent.
02:01:26.940 It's not that high. It's like 10 percent.
02:01:28.680 It's very high. It's 10 percent. That's too high. Like that's already double digits.
02:01:33.060 No, no, no. It's 10 percent too high. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
02:01:34.420 So what recommendations would you have? You know, the influence that Western culture could have.
02:01:38.820 How can this generation, how can we find a proper wife to start a family with? 0.64
02:01:45.500 Well, I think the solution will be imposed on you guys, right? 0.99
02:01:51.260 That's why they're going to introduce the National Draft, because right now young people are too adrift.
02:01:58.640 And so the idea of the National Draft is to discipline and train young people into hardship.
02:02:04.500 The national draft doesn't necessarily mean you go to war and you die, but it does mean you're forced to work, you're forced to learn a skill, and you're forced to obey authority.
02:02:17.320 And so I think the solution will be imposed on young people, whether or not you want to or not.
02:02:27.280 But I think that my best advice for young people is to first and foremost appreciate that the world is changing and that you do matter in this universe.
02:02:46.460 and you know i i mean like i have to say this but like once you start studying um the secrets of
02:02:55.120 the universe you know for the kabbalah or through uh hermetic philosophy or just through islam okay
02:03:01.020 it does change you as a person it makes you uh much more centered it makes you much more focused
02:03:08.040 it gives meaning and purpose to your life otherwise you just run around in fear all the
02:03:13.660 time right you you fear you fear death you fear um being poor you fear being laughed at by by
02:03:21.280 everyone else once you discover religion okay once you discover narcissism or the occult or
02:03:27.140 philosopher or the kabbalah you understand your place in the universe and you understand that
02:03:32.600 you're a fractal in this universe so so like whatever you do is reflected throughout the
02:03:38.120 universe and you know Kant talks about this where the best life is one in which you believe that
02:03:45.480 whatever you do it's reflected throughout the universe okay so if you smile everyone smiles
02:03:51.400 if you you're angry everyone's angry would you rather live in a world where everyone's smiling
02:03:55.580 or we'd rather live in a world where everyone's angry well you can impact that okay with every
02:04:00.900 of your actions and so once you come to believe that then I think that gives you a renewed focus
02:04:06.280 and we need a purpose and so you live a better life all right so so i mean like you have to
02:04:11.360 believe that whatever you do is going to change the course of the universe so live accordingly
02:04:16.720 and don't fear death people thought that i was insane i started saying that i don't fear death
02:04:21.500 that i'm ready to die i've been thinking more about mortality but if you fear death then that's
02:04:26.400 how you are controlled that's how they can change you and that's how they can offer you deals
02:04:30.820 and take away your purpose but if you no longer let that control you you are really a free man
02:04:38.680 when death is no longer a fear look look we're here to learn we're here to live our best lives
02:04:45.160 and that means taking risks that means exploration that means trying new things so not only uh is
02:04:52.840 fearing death a problem but also being laughed at fear being laughed at right fear of social
02:04:58.680 of being socially ostracized, right?
02:05:02.940 Just live the life that you want to live.
02:05:05.940 Be fearless.
02:05:07.500 And definitely live according to your heart.
02:05:11.280 The greatest weapon that you have in this world
02:05:12.960 is your intuition.
02:05:14.440 Trust your gut.
02:05:15.460 Whenever someone tells you,
02:05:17.400 don't trust your gut, trust the science,
02:05:20.160 that person is trying to control you, okay?
02:05:24.980 And cult leaders say that.
02:05:26.640 You know, Fauci told us that, right?
02:05:28.200 during covert it's like trust the science man i'm a scientist just trust me when there's nothing no
02:05:33.880 reason to trust this guy and um quite honestly um if you did trust him you you you you probably 0.95
02:05:42.680 got screwed over it was pretty dumb too it was giving away your own you know your own 0.89
02:05:49.160 sense of self and submitting to somebody else controlling your own mortality but we learned a 0.98
02:05:54.760 a lot and this guy's under investigation right now so uh that lesson was learned well he was
02:05:58.720 pardoned by biden right he was part he was giving a given a uh proactive pardon that absolved him
02:06:06.020 of crimes i think i think until the like like down the year 2014 or something like that that's 0.79
02:06:11.700 ridiculous that's absolutely ridiculous like why would they do that well they know well they did
02:06:17.820 that because like they know he's guilty as hell for a lot of things can i ask you one more i want 0.99
02:06:23.740 to see what was the greatest hardship you faced and how did you overcome it well i faced a lot
02:06:30.220 of hardships um in my life um um but i mean like there are some distinct periods in my life when i
02:06:38.700 when i really contemplated suicide okay so maybe going to school in canada and people don't
02:06:44.940 appreciate how racist canadians are but you know going to high school in canada and this was like
02:06:51.220 years when i was like 14 to 15 16 i was bullied every single day okay so when i went to school
02:06:59.000 i was bullied a lot i was i mean like like like people just beat me up on uh in school um i was
02:07:07.920 a terrible student because i was stressed all the time so i did i did terrible in school and the
02:07:12.960 teachers didn't like me at all i went home my dad uh was a dishwasher and he was racially abused
02:07:19.100 at work as well and i was i was a very disobedient kid so he hit me a lot so literally you know like
02:07:25.460 when i was a child i didn't think there was any hope in life i was like wait oh my god i go to
02:07:30.240 school and i'm bullied i go to home i go home i'm bullied so the only place where i found
02:07:35.540 where i found any comfort was in the library reading books and reading books transported me
02:07:41.820 to like different a different universe where i could be free where i felt i could be with friends
02:07:48.760 And so I developed a real love of books.
02:07:52.360 But at that time in my life, I was like, you know, between the ages of like 14 to 17, I really wanted to kill myself.
02:07:58.100 I had no friends.
02:08:00.040 You know, like in school, no one cared about your academics.
02:08:05.560 Everyone cared about, you know, having a girlfriend, having friends, being good at sports.
02:08:09.680 And I didn't.
02:08:10.480 I was terrible at all three things, OK?
02:08:11.880 Like no one wanted to be my friend.
02:08:13.580 I was socially awkward, so I couldn't date.
02:08:16.220 And I was, you know, the small Chinese kid who was uncoordinated. 0.80
02:08:21.820 OK, so so high school was just the worst possible time for me.
02:08:27.860 And, you know, up until age 40, I had recurring nightmares of high school.
02:08:32.200 I mean, like that's how traumatic it was for me.
02:08:34.400 Like where like every day I was dreaming about high school and like about studying a math test or getting being up, getting bullied, being pushed around, being a nobody.
02:08:46.220 So so that traumatized me. But as you point out, you know, this adversity made me who I am today.
02:08:53.540 And I'm very thankful for that experience because it gave me tremendous wisdom and insight.
02:08:57.920 And it made me a really resilient person, resilient person, so that like after that, I was never afraid to take the hard way.
02:09:05.880 I was never afraid to take a path that was unconventional and that was risky.
02:09:10.780 um so you know i stay true i stay true to who i am where there were many times in my life when i
02:09:18.280 was like really dirt poor and i could have like sold out and became like a pr guy or you know
02:09:24.980 like seriously like like public relations is being a prostitute like literally being a prostitute 0.76
02:09:29.220 um i worked for the united nations for six months um as a pr officer public relations and that was 0.77
02:09:35.720 like one worst experience of my life and i had i had to quit because i couldn't sleep at night
02:09:39.940 um so but you know so um i i i was poor for most of my life and you know like this past year because
02:09:48.300 my sub stack i'm making good money but before that uh we were my entire family was um very
02:09:54.220 well had a financial hardship so i feel that this this is this is like a turning point in my life
02:10:00.660 and i don't want to go back to being poor but at the same time i'm not afraid of being poor
02:10:04.880 so like you know if i say something stupid online and i get canceled i'm not afraid of that i'm like
02:10:10.900 you know you cancel me you know or like like take away my sub stack i don't care because i've been 0.51
02:10:15.780 poor before i i know what what it's like for me what matters is being true to myself speaking the
02:10:22.160 truth and constantly fighting the good fight and i support and hope that you continue doing this
02:10:28.140 fight it's inspiring and it's always a pleasure hearing you speak professor jang look forward to
02:10:33.120 future collaboration i did speak to professor morandi we'll schedule that i'll email you and
02:10:37.140 see yeah yeah yeah you know i i mean like like again i think he's one of the most courageous
02:10:41.360 individuals right now i mean and i can't believe um and i think it's hard to imagine how much
02:10:48.660 difficulty and how traumatic uh it's been being an iranian right now he's one of the few with
02:10:55.500 internet so i spoke to him recently he was in a coffee shop and he got internet connection he did
02:10:59.120 say that he wants to so i don't know i mean i know that you want to do these monthly collaborations
02:11:03.100 but within the next couple days if he's if he's free would you be absolutely absolutely absolutely
02:11:08.820 yeah and i'll keep trying to do these panels david ike i would love to bring him on uh others as
02:11:13.580 well yeah i would love to have a conversation with david ike because we agree on so much
02:11:17.160 and i i don't understand why um what's a beef between us but i would love to have a conversation
02:11:22.600 conversation with david ike and i mean like he knows a lot more about you know energy harvesting
02:11:27.080 and, you know, the compact contract
02:11:29.780 between the elite and these demons than I do.
02:11:31.800 So I would love to ask him some questions
02:11:33.880 and learn from him.
02:11:35.100 Especially with the new UFO conversation.
02:11:37.980 You said a great thing earlier,
02:11:39.460 I don't know if people in the chat remember,
02:11:40.560 about unity, that that is their number one trigger word,
02:11:43.840 100%.
02:11:44.360 These panels, these conversations,
02:11:46.500 this is a proper step in the right direction
02:11:48.720 towards unity.
02:11:50.820 Absolutely, absolutely.
02:11:52.400 Thanks again for coming on, Professor Zhang.
02:11:54.520 Always a pleasure,
02:11:55.200 and I look forward to speaking to you soon.
02:11:57.080 Okay, great. Okay, take care. Bye-bye.
02:11:59.640 Bye. Talk soon.