00:02:04.000Hey, yo, Joe, you'll have to mute when you're not talking dull because you've got weird ambient noise in that Casbah you're in, in that weird place.
00:02:35.000Let's have a look at Hillary Clinton now praising up Donald Trump.
00:02:38.000If you're watching this anywhere other than Rumble, please join us on Rumble.
00:02:41.000You know that YouTube is a corrupt instrument of the centralized authorities that want you dumb and distracted.
00:02:46.000And if you subscribe to Rumble Premium, not only do you get additional content from us, you get Glenn Greenwald and Dave Rubin and Crowder.
00:02:57.000But before that, let's get into Hillary Clinton praising Donald Trump.
00:03:00.000I think all of that is a very good signal that there is beginning to be a better understanding, both by the president and the people around him, as well as by the leaders of our European allies, that there can be common ground amongst us.
00:03:18.000And the kind of dismissiveness that we saw in the first Trump administration has been replaced by a much more obvious working relationship to the good of European security, transatlantic security, and hopefully Ukrainian security.
00:03:38.000If one of the things you like about Donald Trump is that he's a rabble rouser and seems to be like a one-man middle finger to the kind of global authorities that many people rejected.
00:03:49.000How do you feel when you see Hillary Clinton praise him?
00:03:52.000And what do you feel about that sort of haughty position she has, like a deputy head mistress saying, like, he's coming round.
00:04:16.000I more liked it when she was in that tribunal thing.
00:04:20.000Like where they're asking her and her husband about Epstein Island and she's sort of bridling with like, how dare you?
00:04:25.000How dare you ask me about my secret life as a Satanist?
00:04:30.000That's what some people are alleging, not me, of course.
00:04:33.000Elsewhere, the power diaspora continues to spread in New York.
00:04:37.000Mamdani is a lot of, well, I guess this is going to be New York City Hall in a sort of a state of dysfunction and disrepair.
00:04:45.000Although, I'd like to take this opportunity to iterate exactly this.
00:04:48.000Do you think that contemporary politics could house and contain a variety of political ideologies, i.e., you could have an entire socialist city.
00:05:25.000You can't make yourself free through power or approval or orgasm.
00:05:29.000If you could make yourself free through orgasm, Joe would be free right now in Marrakech, where I can see he's absolutely surrounded by young Mohammedan boys all offering favours for farthings.
00:05:41.000Let's have a look at what's going on under Mamdani.
00:06:05.000Actually, look, I'm not against Islam or Muslims or religious freedom, but you know that secularism is the abiding ideology of United States culture, i.e. the separation of church and state.
00:06:21.000So in a way, do you think that the aim of that is to celebrate variety or diversity and New York's melting pot identity?
00:06:30.000Or do you think that it's deliberately provocative?
00:06:32.000Have you noticed that with a lot of the information that you get these days, there seems to be a secondary insidious intent to enrage you, to provoke you?
00:06:41.000And do you notice how hard it is not to topple either side of the wire?
00:06:46.000Not to fall into, well, I think it's fantastic.
00:06:48.000I think it's fantastic that there are Muslims in New York City who are, this is the worst thing that's ever happened.
00:06:54.000Do you know they're happy with either result?
00:06:56.000Either result is good for them either.
00:06:59.000What they don't want you to do is go, cool, as long as I'm free to be who I am with God, then I'm okay with it.
00:07:05.000I don't have a strong opinion on what other people do.
00:07:08.000You know, see, just this morning I was reading 1 Corinthians where Paul is addressing the apparently hedonic and decadent people of Corinth who have been engaging in mass sexual immorality.
00:07:19.000And on the list is, and this is a difficult thing for a person that comes from a progressive and liberal time and culture and land like me, homosexuality is listed as one of the sins.
00:07:29.000Sexual immorality, homosexuality, stealing, all these kind of things.
00:07:33.000And Paul goes on to say, you know, all of you were, many of you were in these categories before Paul says, huh?
00:07:40.000And what I note is that our identity oughtn't be ensconced or housed within our sexuality.
00:07:48.000Our identity oughtn't be within worldliness.
00:07:51.000Our identity oughtn't be trapped within any kind of false idolatry.
00:07:56.000Let me know what you think about that in the comments and chat.
00:07:59.000Let me know what you think when there is clear prescription around sexual morality.
00:08:06.000And let me know how you sort of keep away from judgment in that.
00:08:09.000Like how you keep from the resist the temptation to judge others.
00:08:15.000I find it pretty hard sometimes because we live in a fluxy, hazy time where people that were nailed down superstars of history like Winston Churchill are now kind of up for equivocal debate.
00:08:28.000And perhaps the reason for that isn't that if we are becoming aware through like the revelations in the Epstein files, for example, that nothing can be relied upon as absolutely true anymore, that maybe you can go back and look at Winston Churchill and go, well, maybe he wasn't a man of great fortitude, valor and bravery.
00:08:46.000Maybe he too was some stooge of the system.
00:08:50.000For me, Churchill, oh, that's what it's all about.
00:08:53.000That guy with a stogie on and a cane, in every hand, a phallus, nothing but endless masculinity in Churchill, a man that understood rock star iconography even before rock star ideology had been instantiated, is difficult to undermine because he represents Britain.
00:09:10.000He is, whenever there's a list of who's the greatest ever English person, Churchill, then maybe, I don't know, John Lennon.
00:09:16.000I don't know where you go, Shakespeare, Churchill, John Lennon.
00:09:19.000The Bank of England has confirmed Winston Churchill will be scrapped from banknotes.
00:09:23.000Look, even this is designed to create a reaction and replaced with images of wildlife.
00:09:48.000God help you if you try and get involved in a currency that's not centrally mitigated, organized, and controlled.
00:09:53.000But with the currency that we control and can print at leisure and can authorize, control, inflate, deflate at will, you can decide what picture.
00:10:04.000Okay, you're choosing from these free movies.
00:10:07.000I'm not letting them choose or they'll make me watch some sort of Nickelodeon pedo propaganda thing or some terrible, boring thing from Disney where you think, why are they doing a dirty over the shoulder of this 12-year-old girl that includes the ass in the shot?
00:10:29.000Anyway, the fact is, is that by the people that govern you, you are regarded as a kind of child.
00:10:34.000And in a way, you're supposed to become as a child so that you can innocently live in the free-flowing spontaneity of the moment, like Christ, like the Lord, and receive the true power that's available only outside of time.
00:10:45.000But what they want you to do is think that you're free because you've got to choose, I don't know, a centipede is going to be in a five-pound note or a picture of a python on a $10 bill.
00:10:54.000Instead of saying, we're not participating anymore.
00:11:08.000Why don't we participate in that together instead of quarreling about whether or not Mam Dar and his mates have got prayer mats or whatever?
00:11:16.000The move to replace historical figures with animals was described as significant and overdue by celebrity birdwatcher Nadeem Pereira.
00:11:28.000We're about to reorganize our financial systems.
00:11:31.000Please, somebody get me a celebrity birdwatcher.
00:11:36.000To quote Dave Chappelle's amazing jar rule bit there.
00:11:40.000Victoria Cleland, that is its chief cashier, says the key driver for introducing a new banknote series is always to increase counterfeit resilience.
00:11:59.000And you look at that crazy eye and that crazy triangle.
00:12:02.000You recognize that it requires your faith for it to have any value at all.
00:12:06.000You know that Joby Weeks, one of the early pioneers of Bitcoin mining, is still on a tag on a bracelet on house arrest in his own home because he quickly figured out the way that cryptocurrency was heading and that he was going to back like that.
00:12:21.000A lot of people were going to make a lot of money and a lot of people were going to be free.
00:12:24.000And what happened as a result of his ingenuity and entrepreneurialism is that centralized government authorities, in particular the CIA, nicked his ass and he's still in jail right now.
00:12:34.000Free Joby, there's a link in the description to the film about that, which we did a watch along.
00:12:40.000In a sense, what I'm saying is the important arguments to have now are about centralization, centralized authority over information, centralized control over currency.
00:12:50.000These two arguments are pivotal to our advance and our freedom.
00:12:54.000Why don't you let me know what you think in the comments and the chat?
00:14:47.000If you live on that false plane, you will never penetrate into the foundational reality, the essential reality in which he invites you to be a co-creator and participant.
00:16:43.000The IRS enforcing collections through wage garnishments, bank levies, and property seizures.
00:16:48.000They can even file for you without your consent.
00:16:51.000This is where Tax Network USA comes in with over 15 years in business.
00:16:54.000There hasn't been a tax case they haven't seen or resolved.
00:16:57.000They specialize in tax controversies and help taxpayers nationwide get back on track by resolving back taxes and unfiled returns once and for all.
00:17:05.000Whether you owe $10,000 or $10 million, their team has resolved over $1 billion in tax debt.
00:18:44.000Like, why do you have to load the word hold with meaning?
00:18:47.000Former comedian, former comedian Russell Brand has appeared, but now full-time rapist, has appeared at Suffolk Crown Court charged with two counts of rape and sexual assault dating back to 2009.
00:18:59.000Brad, dating back to, like even that, every little bit, like the most recent, the most recent allegation relates to 2009.
00:20:29.000Like, what possible justification is there for that level of scrutiny?
00:20:33.000Anyway, when I was on question time one time with Nigel Farage, at that point, what I was focused on is what I felt was the lack of compassion in arguments where migrants are highlighted and framed as the most significant problem in a country's decline or a country's problems.
00:20:55.000What I recognize these days, right, is that when the state or state-sanctioned interests try to take the role of the try to fulfill the void left by the kind of waning of compassion in our culture, it gets it wrong.
00:21:25.000There's a lot of reconciliation that needs to be done.
00:21:27.000Anyway, like me, I didn't like Nigel Farage very much because I thought he was sort of like stirring up hatred and dislike and disdain.
00:21:36.000Now that I talk to people that have different perspectives when it comes to nationalism, what I see is that they're trying to protect and defend tradition and their rights to their land and their country and their culture, rights that are being eroded, I think, significantly from top down.
00:21:53.000My argument has always been, how can people that are at the bottom of a culture that don't have any power be responsible for the trajectory and direction of that culture?
00:22:19.000What are the powers that are behind it?
00:22:21.000Do you not know that when you focus on other poor people, you're doing exactly what they want you to do?
00:22:28.000And these are the conversations that I have with E.G. Tommy Robinson and the conversations that, gosh, I hope I'm better equipped to have now with people that have genuine concerns about migration and Islam and all of these problems that define our space that generate division and that ultimately, if not addressed differently, can't lead us to the unity, the unity that we will require to oppose centralized authority, which is all of our real problem.
00:22:53.000Anyway, here's Nigel Farage talking about banknotes.
00:22:56.000Our great British banknotes produced by the Bank of England and they have on them giant figures like Winston Churchill and yet they're proposing we replace people like him with a picture of a beaver.
00:23:20.000But what I know, please, what do you think?
00:23:24.000In a sense, look at how politics has adapted to the online space now.
00:23:28.000Indeed, that's the problem that we face.
00:23:30.000If you can identify and see how decentralized currency is a threat to financial systems, surely you can understand that decentralized information is a threat to the very same power structures, or at least different aspects of the same centralized power structures.
00:23:45.000Can you see now how politicians are emulating the language and even the body language of this very media?
00:23:51.000Let me know what you think in the comments and chat.
00:23:53.000Nigel Farage might as well have just said.
00:23:56.000I recognize that the people that are most interested in conserving and preserving centralized power are aware now of the serious threat that independent media represents.
00:24:06.000They cannot continue to justify their control and authority unless it's by enhancing and exaggerating external threats.
00:24:14.000That's why we live in a time of perpetual continual crisis from 9-11 onwards.
00:24:52.000I like that where you selected to do this podcast was actually a busy public square, like as if you're going to do a relationship breakup or a mob hit.
00:26:04.000By the end of this podcast, Joe, I bet you, like, if you put your mind to it, by the end of this podcast, you could have a monkey on your shoulder in a waistcoat.
00:28:04.000And I wondered what function that thing was fulfilling in the show of friends, really.
00:28:09.000Is it that everyone was so perfect, such a perfect quadrant, a perfect quadrant of beauty, that there was the requirement for some sort of little element of mischief?
00:28:21.000Who's going to be gone for the guy in the coffee shop?
00:29:22.000Basically, you're watching how thousands of people are betting on outcomes, political elections, big policy moves, even events you wouldn't expect.
00:29:28.000It's kind of like a live pulse on what people actually believe.
00:29:32.000You can see trends before they hit mainstream news.
00:30:03.000When you're listening to this, I was sort of conscious that you were in the room because we're working together at the moment.
00:30:08.000And I talk, for example, about the centralization of information and the way that the decentralized information has contributed to the necessity for kind of takedowns and also really how that theme runs through a film we've already made, the Joby Weeks film.
00:30:25.000Do you see that across many institutions and of areas of American cultural life?
00:30:30.000That there's a sort of a trend towards decentralization that's been resisted.
00:30:34.000Well, of course, the trend towards centralization is the problem because then you can push a button on the control of our money, our healthcare, our politics, everything.
00:30:43.000And so I think really the solution to all of it is the decentralization, which has become the enemy, really, because that creates that sovereignty, that ability for us to control those particular elements of our lives that are important, that we need.
00:30:58.000There's been a particularly, you know, the one beautiful thing about the lack of trust that's been developing is it's created this return to sovereignty.
00:31:06.000This return to people wanting to put their hands in the soil again, to grow their own food again, to realize that they need to be, to have their own energy supply at their homes.
00:31:16.000So the fear, which was intended to divide us, has divided us, but kind of into this place of sovereignty where people are now understanding that I'm no longer a slave to the system.
00:31:28.000I want to break away and have the ability that if they do push a centralized button, my family will survive.
00:31:35.000And so that's driving us really kind of back to the days of a, you know, personally, I have rethought all of the Amish, the Mennonites, all of these communities that were, you know, backwoods and out of touch, you know, for so many decades, that's how we viewed them.
00:31:54.000Now it's easy to look at them and realize, wow, maybe they actually had it right.
00:31:59.000You know, they're educating their children on their own, not sending them to public schools, using natural medicines.
00:32:06.000And all of that stuff is returning right now.
00:32:08.000Integrity is how the Amish appear to have been living.
00:32:11.000Their spiritual beliefs impacted every aspect of their lives.
00:32:15.000And what we didn't know, it seems to me, members of the generalized culture, is that we had been groomed into believing that progress was occurring unilaterally.
00:32:28.000Because there's obvious and observable progress when it comes to technology and medicine in some areas, we feel like we're somehow different and better than the people of antiquity.
00:32:39.000One of the things I started to understand was that there were pagan cultures that had a relationship with their environment and the soil and their food and the cosmos and let's suppose call it what it is with God that provided them a kind of, I don't want to say safety, but meaning and purpose.
00:33:00.000And I think it's very difficult to discover that now.
00:33:03.000When you were talking just then, mate, I really thought, gosh, it must be really fundamental to keep people divided through cultural conflict because it's so obvious that the technology that's being used to eventually, it would seem to me, and it sounds like it's your diagnosis too, legitimize the pushing of a button.
00:33:22.000And now we've got your biometric data.
00:33:24.000Now we can switch off your bank account.
00:33:26.000Now, if need be, we can have your self-drive car take you right to a police station directly without your volition.
00:33:34.000But that same technology could be used to create the kind of sovereignty that you're saying that traditional communities always recognized.
00:33:42.000And so do you think that the constant provocation of cultural conflict is an important part of what's happening now?
00:33:54.000And as a filmmaker with all this technology, we have filmmakers off camera right here because we're doing a project together.
00:34:01.000I will say that, you know, the invention of AI has changed the game.
00:34:05.000I've been doing this for over 30 years.
00:34:07.000And there's an element of it that is just taking the game to the next level of things, audio cleanup and things that we can do now that we could never do before that I actually never saw coming.
00:34:33.000Because if we can, you know, well, let me say this.
00:34:37.000The thing that became really clear, COVID was a wake-up for all of us in many, many, many ways.
00:34:44.000I believe in what we've deduced from all of our research, particularly after the release of Plandemic 1 in 2020, was that this was planned and the Epstein files have proven that, but it wasn't supposed to happen yet.
00:35:25.000We have states within our own country who they hadn't yet been able to install their own leadership, so they didn't play the game.
00:35:32.000We're able to look at the data and say, well, why is it that the Dakotas did so much better?
00:35:36.000They didn't clamp down their economies better.
00:35:38.000They gave their citizens a choice whether you want to wear a mask or not.
00:35:42.000Why is Africa and Sweden and all these different places where they had yet to perform these regime changes and their leadership didn't follow the game?
00:35:52.000That's the problem when they don't have the centralization totally intact because then you get these outliers that become the case study for us to look at and go, well, hold on a second.
00:36:01.000Why do we have less deaths there for a country that was 3% vaccinated?
00:36:06.000We can look at that now as a case study, literally.
00:36:09.000And so their need to perform all these regime changes where everybody is under the same control, the same centralized control, is because they need the consistent, omnipresent participation of everyone.
00:36:24.000Then they can say, if we didn't have those outliers, a lot of us would believe COVID was successful.
00:36:32.000How many of us would be dead without that?
00:36:34.000But we only know that it failed, that it was a terrible, terrible crime against humanity because we have outliers that weren't centralized yet.
00:36:42.000A lot of people still live in the reality, the managed and fabricated reality that you're describing, where wasn't warp speed a success.
00:36:49.000And thank God that those brilliant scientists were able to engineer those vaccines.
00:36:55.000And you've been a kind of an almost Zealig-like filmmaker, finding yourself in important places, important moments.
00:37:02.000You shared with me the story about your brother earlier and some of his struggles, which seemed to have been instrumental in your perspective as a filmmaker and as an activist, if you want to use that word.
00:37:12.000I also would love you to cover, if you don't mind, your involvement in that case where there were them young kids that were wearing, I think, like MAGA hats or Trump hats and they were at some public protest.
00:37:26.000And the way that the story was first told was, oh, these awful children were confronting a Native American man.
00:37:34.000And I remember that that was a very instrumental and pivotal moment in my own understanding of media and politics because I'm a kind of counterculture person.
00:37:43.000And I like, I'm like, oh, yeah, you know, I read black elk and I recognize that the settling of these lands could be regarded as a genocide.
00:37:53.000And that moment seemed somehow perfect.
00:37:54.000But the way that that unraveled and the way we learned the truth of that particular story was interesting.
00:37:59.000And you made a film about that that was pre, I think, even was influential in the outcome of the trial around it.
00:38:05.000And it actually started off quite with a different intention.
00:38:08.000So I had been working with the Standing Rock community for about two and a half years and represented a lot of the Native American Lakota community that was wrongfully persecuted for flying drones over the Dakota access pipeline, for sitting and praying on the front line.
00:38:25.000And so we were making these videos, these lawfare videos, to get these people released from their persecution.
00:38:32.000And then this narrative comes out, and the narrative was: you know, this team of Catholic students from Kentucky, racist 14 and 15-year-old white boys, surrounded the Native Americans as they tried to conduct their first Indigenous Peoples March in Washington.
00:38:51.000The truth of the matter was these kids were coming from their own march, the Right for Life march, and they were told to meet on the stairs and they were just standing there minding their own business.
00:38:59.000And the crime was they bought red hats so that they could identify each other as they were in the march.
00:39:06.000And they found a vendor that was selling $5 red MAGA hats.
00:39:10.000Some of the kids had no idea even what that meant.
00:39:16.000So as soon as they were spotted on the stairs, all wearing these red hats, the Native American, this group of activists approached them, created a scenario that these kids surrounded them and started chanting, Build the Wall around these Native Americans.
00:39:32.000So it was the perfect headline to show what Donald Trump was creating in America with now these young kids are disrespecting the original Americans and saying, let's build a wall around them.
00:40:22.000And at this point, like you, I come from the far progressive left.
00:40:27.000And I knew at this point, if we make a film to expose this truth, we're going to perceive to be supporting Donald Trump at a very volatile time.
00:40:37.000And we're never going to come back from this.
00:40:53.000And first death threats I got, suddenly, you know, this community that was once, you know, very fond of the work I did now hated me, wanted to bury me.
00:41:02.000I actually got threats of next time you step onto this particular land, we're going to bury you.
00:41:23.000And it turns out that the legal team that represented these boys used it in court, called me and said, we want to thank you because your video was the thing that as soon as it was shown, all the major media corporations just cashed out and paid the boys and let that case go.
00:41:40.000Because they were trying to actually dox these boys and trying to, they went to all of, they found out what schools these kids were applying to, colleges, and they went to the schools and threatened the schools that if they allow them into their colleges, that there would be trouble.
00:42:13.000Some of the things I identify with in that are, well, firstly, I had a sort of similar awakening because it kind of was irresistible as a story because it sort of seemed like they, oh, they look kind of obnoxious, them kids.
00:42:26.000You know, they're handsome or whatever.
00:42:27.000And once you're told to look at them in that light, it's easy to look at them in that light.
00:42:32.000But when you hear, oh, they were wearing those hats like someone just holding an umbrella aloft at Disney World so that a tour guy can see them, that changes your perspective.
00:42:40.000And then there's something nagging in the background.
00:42:50.000What is this appetite to damn and judge that we have?
00:42:53.000Secondly, like when I, as well, moved from like the cozy celebrity that I was in of being, oh, wow, this, like, I guess looking back, that my celebrity seemed to be about, I'm a hedonist, I'm a former drug addict, I'm sleeping around a bunch, look at me, you know, like, I don't know, showing off, being spontaneous, all that stuff.
00:43:12.000When I got more involved in politics and started to say stuff that I'd always felt and kind of felt like I'd always said, particularly, there's no point voting, don't mean anything, whoever you vote for, you're going to end up with these same sort of institutions controlling your lives.
00:43:26.000That's when I started to get pushback.
00:43:27.000And what I noticed was the people that pushed back hardest and were meanest were the organizations in media that present themselves as compassionate, specifically The Guardian.
00:43:36.000The Guardian in the UK, as their name suggests, is like a kind of a pious, hey, we're your guardian, we're going to help you to understand this from a leftist liberal perspective.
00:43:45.000They were such bastards when I actually started to sort of stand up and say things that were politically a bit more challenging, I suppose, is one word for it.
00:43:57.000Of course, as well, like you, I started to become like more engaged during the pandemic and things started to unravel and unfold.
00:44:03.000And you sort of spot these, firstly, it's very encouraging too and bold that you had that moment with your crew where you're like, well, shall we tell the truth and recognize that now we're not coming back?
00:44:14.000We're not going to be at that party anymore.
00:44:16.000But what I think where we're blessed is I think that whole culture is dying.
00:44:20.000I think that whole culture is sort of dead.
00:44:24.000When you see something now like the BAFTAs or like when I first felt like I was cancelled and I would see someone like the Oscars or the BAFTAs or whatever, I'd be like, oh man, look at all that glamour and look at all that excitement.
00:44:35.000Now I look at it and I think, nah, man, I don't want to be there.
00:44:40.000It makes me feel creeped out a little bit and it's stupid and it's dumb.
00:44:44.000You just said something, you used the word perspective and I wanted to put a cap on the Covington students situation because it was all about perspective.
00:44:52.000The kid that was confronted, Nick Sandman, is actually very short.
00:44:56.000He was standing on an 18-inch stair and the perspective of him looking down that snapshot that was on the cover of everything.
00:45:05.000And when that boy was interviewed, he actually said, because they said it's the smirk, right?
00:45:10.000Now, what was happening was he had friends behind him that were acting like 14-year-old boys, you know, because they were just being silly.
00:45:18.000And so he was smirking because they were being funny.
00:45:21.000But what he said was, I felt the Holy Spirit moving through me.
00:46:05.000And so that's that, you know, and some of what's happened to you, I recognize, those snapshots of a moment in your life that are then blown up and publicized all over the world and they look bad.
00:46:17.000You know, but if like that's all we see is a frame, a frame in the moment of someone's life, and the world is willing to make harsh judgments against a 15-year-old boy, knowing that he's evil and he's wicked, and having no idea of the perspective, that's what we have to get smarter as the people to realize that it's all about perspective.
00:46:37.000And let's get the holographic point of view so we can understand the circumstance.
00:46:44.000Because the moment I got that he was standing on this stair, and then I realized he's just this little tiny kid.
00:46:53.000Yeah, that's very interesting that they run with it because of an agenda.
00:46:57.000Like they don't want to say, well, actually, we're standing on a stair or you've been moved by the Holy Spirit or you just put that because all those things don't fulfill the agenda.
00:47:03.000This sort of reverse engineered component, I think, is pretty significant.
00:47:10.000One of the moments too, but I noted was when I always felt as like a British person, when it comes to subjects like migration and global responsibility, the British had a massive empire.
00:47:23.000their actions in India and across the continent of Africa were doubtless deleterious and have negative consequences.
00:47:54.000And then with America, with America's contemporary political power, you can make the same argument.
00:47:58.000Well, gosh, if it's American companies that are benefiting from these lithium mines and all these various different global activities that are required to keep the machinery of capitalism active, sort of it makes kind of sense.
00:48:10.000And then when they, there was this beautiful moment where they applied the same narrative to Ireland, like when they said, the Irish people are racist, those imperialist colonialists.
00:48:21.000And if you're a British person, you go, well, hold on.
00:48:45.000I think you're spot on that the pandemic was almost a premature ejaculation of power.
00:48:51.000That if it had happened in 2025, they'd have been ready for it.
00:48:54.000And we'd have all been in very, very serious trouble indeed.
00:48:58.000Because do you start to look back now at all history with the revelations in the Epstein files and wonder, firstly, what does it take to shake us from our stupor and into the kind of mutual action required to truly oppose these forces?
00:49:15.000And the other one is, do you start to question even the macro narratives and heroes and villains of world history?
00:49:22.000And so I think, well, maybe it's not as simple as we'd always thought.
00:49:26.000Maybe these people that we always thought were the goodies are not the goodies and maybe the people with all the baddies are not the baddies.
00:49:32.000And particularly when, like, I was learning in real time during the pandemic about Anthony Fauci, mostly from reading some of Robert Kennedy's writing about Fauci's involvement in the HIV pandemic, Fauci's, like, you know, like he, when, when I was first reading Bobby Kennedy's The Real Anthony Fauci, I was like, well, this can't be true, but also this book is so dense and so full of like its proofs and QR codes of, and this is how we know that, and that's a bioweapon.
00:49:59.000And like, as it all, like, don't you think that the age we're living in is it's collapsing time somehow.
00:50:06.000Like, if you think of in the age of the Gutenberg press, suddenly information was available in a way that and could be disseminated in a way that it couldn't be previously.
00:50:18.000And now the diaspora of information is so rapid that the center can't hold together.
00:50:23.000And I alluded to, mentioned at least your brother's, your family's personal involvement when it comes to Fauci's history and the HIV virus, which at the time we were told that one of the reasons we should trust Anthony Fauci, he was presented to us as a kind of celebrity kind of doctor.
00:50:38.000And he was kind of sexy and fantastic and stuff.
00:50:41.000It was weird, actually, looking back at it.
00:50:43.000But his involvement with HIV was not so, forgive the word positive so soon after HIV, as we were told it was at the time.
00:50:52.000Well, you know, a lot of people ask me, how did you have a film ready and launched May 4th of 2020?
00:51:17.000And then suddenly this medicine came out and said, you know, if the people start taking this medicine, even the people that don't have full-blown AIDS, it's going to go away and their quality of life is going to return and they're going to be healed.
00:53:46.000And if everything that has power has been corrupted, how has the Holy Word been corrupted?
00:53:51.000And I've been releasing a lot of data.
00:53:53.000And I don't know if you've seen it, but I'll send it to you.
00:53:55.000Are you familiar with dispensationalism and John Nelson Darby and C.I. Schofield?
00:53:59.000As a Christian, this is probably the most important thing you can know.
00:54:03.000So in the late, mid, mid, yeah, mid, actually 1839 or so, a man named John Nelson Darby took the word dispensationalism out of the Bible, redefined it, and created a framework that allowed for them to suggest that God's word means something different in these different dispensations.
00:54:23.000A man named C.I. Schofield took that information, that framework, in the early 1900s and created the Schofield Reference Bible.
00:54:32.000Funded by Oxford, that Bible was pushed to every Western pastor hard.
00:54:38.000And it turned it from a loving, unifying message of Jesus into a doom and gloom end times prophecy, where God's original word was, anyone who shall believe in Christ will be blessed into the chosen people and only Israel will be blessed.
00:54:58.000That is where the translation happened.
00:55:01.000And when you study that, which right now there's a mass awakening, Christians all over understanding that they've been studying dispensationalism and not Christianity.
00:55:10.000And so that's one of the most important things for us to wake up to so we can feel the true, the true holy love of that of that holy word.
00:55:19.000I've got an inkling that I'll know where the funding for that interpretation may have come from.
00:55:25.000That's not going to take too much time to investigate.
00:55:29.000So, oh man, yeah, that's pretty cool because, see, the media is meant to be a sort of a transparent conduit that here is the information.
00:55:38.000Anytime you detect in media an inflection, then it's doing a different job.
00:55:44.000Government, I suppose the word tells you that it's about control, but really what we require are merely administrators.
00:55:52.000The entire function of government is what needs to alter.
00:55:55.000The center of our whole culture must be God.
00:56:00.000Even if there is some debate about what the nature of God is, that's in fact something that people are going to have to, we're going to have to afford one another that or live in a perpetual state of Armageddon.
00:56:12.000That's the other option, which is not favorable.
00:56:14.000And to your point about the Holy Word, what because I've come to Christ late and I've come to Christ via drug addiction, I've come to Christ via psychedelics, I've come to Christ via crisis, I've come to Christ via anti-establishment political thought, secular ideology, shamanism, sex magic.
00:56:33.000All of these things that I've done first absolutely for me made me feel that the reason I'm not, you know, if someone had told me that Schofield Bible stuff prior to my conversion, I've gone, yeah, you better believe it.
00:56:47.000This is yet another tool for conformity.
00:56:51.000If the result of people becoming Christian is they become obedient little prisoners of the system, then you know what its function was.
00:56:58.000But because I came to when I did and how I did, which increasingly I reckon is, I learned the word theophany.
00:57:05.000Theophany is like, as you can hear in the sound, like Epiphany, but like the sudden appearance of God, which I'm not making any particular or individual claim for, just in the crisis of my life, in the moment that you're sort of aware of, it came so fast and radical and peculiar and like sort of an upward sudden rush of realization, he's real.
00:57:32.000And like, so that when I started to read the Bible, like in particular, say something like the book of Acts, where what's interesting about the book of Acts is he's not there no more.
00:57:41.000Jesus isn't there in the flesh no more.
00:57:44.000But what you're dealing with is human beings, recognizable somehow, identifiable human beings.
00:57:49.000Like, oh my God, like I've just had the experience of like what I know it would feel like because I have felt it to know God.
00:57:56.000And then like the urgent, we've got to deal with this right now, right now.
00:58:02.000It's evangelical and it's passionate and it's precisely and deliberately non-pharisaic, non-centrally controlled, not about tradition.
00:58:11.000In fact, you know, when you then subsequently read the Gospels, you realize his number one beef is with the people that are saying, listen, we're in charge of it.
01:00:41.000And I have a new platform under MickeyWillis.com, M-I-K-K-I.
01:00:45.000And there's a program called Decode the Narrative, where every Thursday night I have a call with a few hundred or thousand people or something.
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