In this episode of Stay Free With Russell Brown, host Russell Brown is joined by his good friend Jake Chapman to discuss a variety of topics, including: - What is the difference between Tony Blair and George W. Bush? - Why is it so difficult to talk about vaccines and autism in the media? - What does it mean to be a Christian in the 21st century? - Is it possible to have a healthy relationship with the devil? - How do we deal with it? - What do we need to do about it? - Where do we go from here?
00:06:23.000This brilliant book by Gavin DeBecker that actually shows that you know how it's still to this day difficult to talk about vaccines and autism.
00:06:30.000Well, it this book shows you why it's difficult to talk about that.
00:06:51.000I don't have that kind of he's not ready, he's not ready.
00:06:53.000Maybe when we come back after a brief break, when we're coming back roaring, baby, we are gonna be touring, we're gonna be live, we're gonna be appearing at college campuses and churches, we're gonna be bringing the message.
00:07:05.000You know, I love Crowder, you know, but like you see, Crowder, he's very much in the confrontation mode, anyway, when he goes to a college campus.
00:08:01.000I don't understand the ins and outs of business, but I do understand that it's possible to have a personal connection to the living Christ.
00:09:35.000American researchers demonstrated it was possible to replace the DNA from an egg with genetic material from another person's skin and turn it into a sex cell ready for fertilization.
00:09:44.000This reminds me of when I was a boy at school, we're gonna do six sixes winning, we're gonna do that.
00:09:48.000It reminds me though of when I was a boy, that's what I was once.
00:09:51.000I it was uh it was still me, but I was a boy.
00:09:53.000And before that, I was uh baby, and before that, I was a sperm and an ovum.
00:09:58.000It won the sperm was in Ronbrand and the ovum was in Barbara brand.
00:11:40.000Is there someone I'd like someone who actively hates me, like you know, and I know they're in the Rumble chat to come on and go, I hate you, but I thought U was great.
00:11:55.000I'll do the whole film different, to be honest, from the get-go.
00:11:57.000I'd do the whole film different from the get-go.
00:12:00.000You know that job before Dudley Moore did the original one, fantastic after in the 1980s.
00:12:04.000John Belushi was gonna do it from so they would have made if it was John Belushi, it would have been a really he would have been a disgusting lunatic, wouldn't he?
00:12:11.000It'd have been like, you know, like puking up and punching people and crazy.
00:12:18.000It's uh it's what the Lord uh had in mind and intended, it was part of the holy journey.
00:12:22.000But what I mean to say is on the subject of Hollywood, the reason I couldn't function correctly there is because even though I wouldn't have been able to articulate it this way then is I knew I was amid something that's not right.
00:12:34.000And I don't mean to say that people like Jard Apatow isn't fantastic, he is, or Helen Mirrin isn't fantastic, she is, or Jason Siegel or Jonah Hill or Alec Baldwin, loads of people that were actually amazing and brilliant writers and brilliant, brilliant, clever people.
00:12:47.000And one time I met Larry Charles, you know, like and I did a movie with Larry Charles and he directed me in it.
00:13:55.000And don't for a second realize that your whole life hangs upon the single thread of God, that he's present all the time with you, and you've been distracted.
00:14:02.000You've been distracted by the evil one, the father of lies, the great counterfeits.
00:14:06.000And that's what the show's gonna be like when we are reborn.
00:15:14.000Dugger, I still like you know, Durga, she's the goddess of female power.
00:15:18.000And whilst I know there is only one true God, and that Jesus Christ came and he died for us.
00:15:22.000Don't mean that I can have to pretend I didn't have a past.
00:15:24.000I had a I've done a bunch of crazy stuff.
00:15:26.000And I know people that worship Krishna, and when they're talking about it, when they're talking about it, it's you know, they're talking about absolute love.
00:16:21.000Look at you, and you seem to me very much like an outlier.
00:16:24.000You we talked about you know the writing ability, which everybody in Hollywood has.
00:16:28.000A lot of people just want to be on camera.
00:16:29.000A lot of people just want to be a star in my industry too.
00:16:32.000Poems and prayers is the name of the book for those listening.
00:16:34.000Um you've got writing ability, you move out to California, you get cast in the first two things that you apply for, you try out for audition.
00:16:42.000You become a star pretty quickly, and then unlike virtually everybody who follows that path with success, you leave Hollywood, you go back to your native Texas, you choose to raise your children there, you get married, you're in a long-term marriage, like your marriage works, which is rare in your in your industry.
00:17:00.000By the way, you're not the first McConaughey I've interviewed.
00:22:02.000To ensure the success of this effort, my plan calls for the creation of a new international oversight body, the Board of Peace, we call it the Board of Peace.
00:22:28.000Uh the leaders of the Arab world and Israel and everybody involved asked me to do this, so it'd be headed by a gentleman known as President Donald J. Trump of the United States.
00:22:40.000That's what I want is some extra work to do, but it's interesting.
00:22:49.000It's so important that I'm willing to do it, and we'll do it right, and we're gonna put leaders from other countries on, and leaders that are very distinguished leaders, and we'll have a board, and one of the people that wants to be on the board is the UK former Prime Minister, Tony Blair, good man, very good man.
00:23:08.000Oh Ashela in the locals chat says he's uh put Tony Blair in charge of peace in Gaza wasn't Satan available.
00:23:15.000Maybe this is Satan's always available.
00:23:18.000Maybe it's the um opportunity for Tony Blair to redeem the million dead Iraqi kids that lost their lives as a result of that war built on the weapons of mass destruction liar that also had the suspicious death of David Kelly, the academic that produced the report saying that there was no requirement to invade Iraq, and then he's sort of like found dead in the woods.
00:23:42.000Uh I don't know, maybe it's not a conspiracy.
00:24:56.000It's very interesting to consider that there can be any kind of um I want to say pact or truce between Christians and Jews, given that there's this kind of Well, actually, really it just what it's I think in Revelations is that the branch will be grafted back on to the tree.
00:25:16.000But you know, you have to accept Christ as the Messiah, which a lot of people are not down with.
00:25:21.000Oh no, Manchester attack on synagogue.
00:25:29.000Okay, I'm sorry to hear there's been an attack on a synagogue in Manchester.
00:25:33.000That's obviously Oh man, we don't need that crap.
00:25:37.000With highly qualified experts from all around the world.
00:25:40.000Hamas and other terrorist factions will play no role in the uh board, but uh they'll play no role in the governance of Gaza at all, directly or indirectly, as you know.
00:25:59.000Let me know more about this um attack.
00:26:01.000And we'll do it right, and we're gonna put leaders from other countries on, and leaders that are very distinguished leaders, and we'll have a board, and one of the people that wants to be on the board is the UK former Prime Minister Tony Blair, good man, very good man, and uh some others, and they'll be named over the next few days, and it'll be quite the same.
00:26:24.000Andrew Bridger, President Trump has got this seriously wrong.
00:26:27.000Tony Blair is despised by the majority of British citizens and he has a very poor record in the Middle East after his legal war.
00:26:33.000Fair points, fair points, all of those.
00:26:37.000Trump, would you like to take a question or two from a friendly Israeli reporter if there is such a thing.
00:26:42.000I've got to see that clip just based on the type.
00:26:45.000I think while we're waiting for signatures and waiting for approvals from a lot of different countries that are involved in this, we probably shouldn't take questions, or would you like to take a question or two from perhaps a friendly Israeli reporter if there's such a thing.
00:27:01.000Oh that's a very, very tough proposition.
00:27:05.000It's pretty very funny that he can even be funny in that context.
00:27:10.000You've got a f some sort of fortitude.
00:27:13.000And I feel like the people that don't like him should acknowledge that as a sort of part of the route back to peace.
00:27:18.000We didn't I didn't finish what I was saying about Colbert, did I?
00:27:41.000We'll work it out, we'll work it out over the course of the thing.
00:27:44.000Kamala's book tour event gets disrupted by pro-Palestine.
00:27:48.000I mean, look, if there is a deal being offered uh Hamas and that there's a way for the killing to stop, wouldn't that be ultimately fantastic?
00:27:56.000About how and why you were saying what you were saying now and how I felt about it, you're not letting me talk.
00:28:51.000It didn't seem like the circumstances had improved by the time they were cheering.
00:28:55.000It seemed embarrassing and awkward and unpleasant.
00:28:59.000Oh, so many things I want to talk to you about, but before we go any further, we best get a Jake, man, we're gonna have to we can't make this content is the truth, without the support of our financial partners.
00:29:10.000Here's a quick message from we've got so much more to talk about.
00:29:36.000Using comet feels like having a personal assistant living in your web browser that can actually do things for you across the internet.
00:29:42.000Yeah, do things, not just give you answers.
00:29:44.000For example, you can ask Comet to handle tasks and it literally clicks, types, searches and scrolls, just like you would, getting things done for you in the background while you go about your day.
00:29:53.000Comic can shop for you, make reservations, book travels, summarize articles or videos, send emails, schedule meetings, and a lot more to make your lifestyle easier.
00:30:00.000Comet don't just give answers, it gets things done.
00:30:54.000You're gonna get on with that guy, don't fall in love with it.
00:30:56.000Look, we did it a different time because we're gonna be taking a break soon.
00:31:00.000The reason I'm taking a break is even just before Charlie Kirk was assassinated.
00:31:06.000I was trying to feel very disillusioned and challenged by this space.
00:31:10.000A minute ago I was trying to tell you what it was like to leave Hollywood, and whilst probably if I'd been getting I don't know, more money or more fame, if it had been continually inflating, I might have remained because I'm a s addict.
00:31:21.000But because it didn't do that You know it sort of somehow broke out, was cast out.
00:31:27.000I went back to the UK, got involved in politics.
00:31:29.000If you've followed me closely, then you'll see that around 2015 I got involved with politics primarily from an anti establishment position saying there's no point voting, it doesn't make any difference.
00:31:39.000Then got involved with activism, primarily supporting working class people with their housing rights in a crisis of housing in the United Kingdom.
00:31:48.000Then I got back into doing YouTube videos, and the YouTube videos started to get very successful, in particular during the pandemic period, massive views.
00:31:54.000Go back and have a look at that stuff.
00:31:57.000We're talking about stuff about vaccines at the time, and now we all know a lot more about vaccines and a lot more about the pandemic.
00:32:02.000And certainly not claiming to be like some pioneering trailblazer.
00:32:05.000I was using other people's content, other people's research, I was being influenced by the same people you're probably influenced by.
00:32:10.000Then Rumble were kind enough to give us an amazing deal all throughout the time where I've been accused of crumps that I'm gonna defend in court, and by God's grace I'll be exonerated or it or not, you know, that'll be that one that's not in my hands.
00:32:27.000But now the Lord is so um real to me that I can't do anything unless I believe in it anymore.
00:32:51.000You know, I'm like, but I'm gonna take this opportunity to cultivate a deeper relationship with God to reflect on what's happening in this culture and to see how you know what they say is um where what you have to offer meets what the world needs.
00:33:10.000And if I have nothing to offer that the world needs, then that would take care of itself, won't it?
00:33:15.000I'll just um maybe get a little cabin somewhere and uh be with my beautiful, beautiful children.
00:34:26.000So we had the spectacle of my successor in the oral office, making broad claims around certain drugs and autism that have been continuously disproved.
00:35:00.000Thank you for yes, it's so harmful when people say that vaccines and autism might be connecting.
00:35:06.000Most people would define a vaccine as a benign and harmless injection that makes people immune to a disease reliably preventing infection and transmission of diseases.
00:35:14.000Children are likely to be exposed to, and which in the absence of vaccination could be fatal or debilitating.
00:35:52.000So there's Barack Obama, who, whilst he might seem superficially like to be kind of delightful, charming and stuff.
00:35:59.000And whilst I can see the and understand the excitement for America remending its complex and difficult past when it comes to racial dynamics.
00:37:16.000Um Ben Affleck and Jennifer Garner's daughter demands that countries around the world bring back COVID mandates.
00:37:22.000Well, I'm sort of uncomfortable about doing this, really, but let's have a look.
00:37:25.000So when it comes to the ongoing pandemic, our present is being stolen right in front of our eyes.
00:37:30.000For adults, the relentless eat of back to normal, ignoring downplaying and concealing both the prevalence of airborne transmission and the threat of long COVID manifested in a series of choices.
00:37:41.000Young people she's smart, she should do load of reading.
00:38:44.000Do you know what comes out over the next few months?
00:38:46.000The vaccines are worse than the disease, shouldn't have taken the vaccines.
00:38:49.000And that's so hard for people to kind of deal with that you know it's difficult to believe that, isn't it?
00:38:54.000It's difficult to believe that something that you're invested in is um has been that potently negative.
00:39:01.000But let me know how you feel about this, because I guess we would expect of um I guess thank you.
00:39:06.000I guess we would expect from uh um from like someone that's probably been raised in and around Hollywood, God love her, and God bless Ben Afleck and uh Jen Garner.
00:39:15.000I pray they're all right, and and I pray for this young lady.
00:39:18.000But um this you know here's Trump sort of praising Baller.
00:39:23.000Baller is announcing a 70 billion deal with the US to expand its MRNA empire.
00:39:29.000Did you feel that that would be happening?
00:39:32.000We are ready to invest, as the president also mentioned, 70 billion dollars in the next few years from Pfizer in manufacturing and research in America alone.
00:39:45.000I really think this is an historical moment because also I can put that behind us and focus on the things that I want to spend my time.
00:39:54.000Cancer treatments to bring better obesity medicines, to bring better vaccines, to be things that people value.
00:40:01.000And thank you for allowing us to do that.
00:40:36.000And that was the most important thing that allowed us to be able to pull very difficult negotiations.
00:40:43.000Of course, also want to thank the US trade representative who is also heavily engaged.
00:40:51.000And he's probably the first trade representative that I have seen that curse about our industry and cares to do something about first situation.
00:41:30.000You know, amidst the infinite, is there any difference really between some wrecked and ravaged soul strewn upon the streets of DC, broken, hopeless, mental illness, addiction, homeless, helpless, and an extraordinarily powerful CEO of a globalist corporation like Pfizer or any of the tech companies or whatever.
00:41:54.000In the context of infinity, and even if you're an atheist, atheists believe that the reason that we have the perfect rules for reality here, you know, the gravity, the distance from the sun, the conditions for biology.
00:42:08.000That's because the universe is so vast in scope that inevitably all conditions would eventually be initi would be achieved.
00:42:14.000But isn't that just a mathematical way of saying that there's an all-powerful creator so potent that all conditions are there?
00:42:19.000They except it gives you this sort of odd nihilistic crease that God may not love you, God may not care for you.
00:42:25.000And your own experience of love tells you that God is real, or at least let's start here, that love is real, or let's at least start here, right and wrong are real.
00:42:35.000You know it, you intuit it when you deny it or act against it yourself, you are subject to it.
00:42:40.000When you reflect on that, when you breathe into your heart, when you see your heart held between your lungs when you breathe in, when you feel God in you, when you feel God in you, when you feel that the thread of your life, the light of your life is hung upon the currency of God's grace, then you know that he is real.
00:43:00.000You know that the kingdom of heaven is within, you know it.
00:43:03.000Of course, it can't be measured and calculated, particularly diffuse across the infinite is the way that we receive it, as well as particular and subjectively, how hard it is to aggregate those vast poles, the personal and the macro, and come out with it something as certain as faith.
00:43:20.000It's almost as if you need a vertical axis that plunges you deep deep into the earth while reaching into the unknowable and the unknown, and a horizontal axis that reaches out in love in every direction.
00:43:33.000And that is what we've been offered, and that is what we have in the cross.
00:43:37.000We have a geometric symbol and an assurance, a covenant of blood that reaches beyond language, and it's here that we have to find ourselves.
00:43:48.000The ones taken at Valley Forge, issued under the guidance of General, as he was then, George Washington, to ensure that the smallpox epidemic didn't destroy his troops who were fighting against can't remember what country America was fighting against to get its independence.
00:44:07.000So it's not like vaccines are in and of themselves bad.
00:44:10.000It's not as if business in and of itself is bad.
00:44:13.000It's not like government is in and of itself bad.
00:44:16.000What's bad is when government and business combine to create power bases and profit opportunities at the expense of freedom and at the expense of the well-being of people.
00:45:42.000It's when you lose 10 pounds or so, and then you just pull it straight back on.
00:45:46.000You won't be doing that with lean, and hopefully you'll take this opportunity to get some lean, but with it bad for you to do weight cycling.
00:47:18.000It was pr pr primarily and initially the party of the trade union movement in the UK.
00:47:23.000Some people feared, you know, oh no, it's communist.
00:47:26.000But socialism and communism are in a way different things.
00:47:29.000And the famous edict that British socialism owes more to Methodism than to Marx is important because you could have socialism undergirded by the idea like that if you want to follow me, pick up your cross, put down your stuff, you're not you don't need material possessions.
00:47:44.000Why toil for things that are gonna get hit by moths and worms when you could be pursuing eternity?
00:47:49.000Do you see how you could get to a position of not valuing property over people from a Christian perspective?
00:47:58.000Now, what is the British Labour Party about now?
00:48:01.000It's a bureaucratic entity that sees that its primary function is to ensure that corporations, European and international, are able to trade freely in the UK, practice business as well as trade, because it's not obviously just commerce and products, it's more of bureaucratic digital ID, surveillance technology.
00:48:21.000And whether or not they know it, they may not know what they do.
00:48:24.000They are facilitating globalist imperialism of the worst possible kind.
00:48:28.000One way to stop that is the rise of nationalist populism.
00:48:32.000That seems to be what's happening around the world.
00:48:34.000A better way to overcome it, a better way to overcome it, is by getting Jesus Christ right in your heart and running your life from that perspective.
00:48:42.000Let's see what we say about free speech.
00:48:43.000Free speech is a real value, it's important.
00:51:15.000Britain's a landmass, it's a flag, it's the Magna Carta, it's the royal family, it's London, it's the Beatles, it's Shakespeare, it's free speech, he says.
00:51:24.000But I wonder, like, what I'd like to see from not only from politicians, but also from you know, pundits or whatever.
00:51:33.000I'd like to see a little bit of steel manning, wouldn't you?
00:51:35.000Wouldn't you like him to say, right, I've seen these statistics where the most arrests in the world for online speech is the United Kingdom.
00:51:43.000And number two is number two is something crazy, like you don't even think of it as a proper country.
00:52:09.000Um what he's engaging there in is empty hollow rhetoric, and he's got a nerf doing it in Liverpool, man, because he betrayed them a lot pretty bad with his relationship with his son.
00:53:19.000And you know the person that wrote it did it based on research, and you know that they're aware that their biggest problems are problems around migration.
00:53:25.000You know that a new resurgent reform pie, it's not resurgent, it's nascent, a new party is threatening for the first time the two parties of the Conservative Party and the Labour Party for like more than the century since the advent of the Whigs used to be parties that had silent H's in them, for God's sake.
00:53:48.000There's millions of people in the streets of London patriotically marching.
00:53:51.000We have to somehow address those concerns while still deploying the idea that they might be racist, legitimizing the idea that we have to infringe people's free speech while Claiming we still care about free speech.
00:54:01.000Let's use this mad Chinese takeaway example that somewhere, somewhere in the UK, there's a Chinese takeaway where kids probably were harassing a Chinese takeaway owner, which any idiot knows is wrong, but probably if you were to investigate it and find out who wrote that bit of graffiti, there'll be some sort of, you know, it'll be some kid that's abused or drunk or high or broken in some way.
00:54:23.000So what they do is they select only salient and useful information, and the information will always be deployed in order to legitimise control.
00:54:32.000So instead of tuning in to what they're actually saying, have in the back of your mind, this is a technique I've been shown or know somehow.
00:54:39.000Think, how are they gonna use this to justify control?
00:54:42.000So don't listen to the words, just be thinking, how are they using this to justify control?
00:54:46.000How are they using this to justify control?
00:54:48.000How are they using this to justify control?
00:54:49.000And then it might be they might be talking about war, they might be talking about pandemic, they might be talking about migration, free speech, big tech, commerce, new deal with Moderna, new deal with Pfizer, it could be anything, but in the background, just think control, control, control.
00:55:27.000Get everyone carrying a national ID card so that if you need to, you can switch off their money, you can prevent them using transport.
00:55:34.000You man and me, man, we need to get involved in cryptocurrencies.
00:55:38.000We need our own networks, we need our own communities where we can declare independence if we wanted to, you don't have to, but if you wanted to, wouldn't it be good if you wanted to?
00:56:39.000If you say or imply the people cannot be English or British because of the colour of their skin, but mixed heritage families owe you an explanation.
00:56:51.000The people who've lived here for generations, raised their children here, built their lives here, working in our schools, our hospitals, running staged.
00:57:00.000The applause is staged, the logos is staged.
00:57:24.000How can we delegitimise people's concerns around migration and even the concerns about migration are symptomatic of a deeper concern, which is why is our life not make sense?
00:57:44.000Now, my personal belief actually is that migration shouldn't be the centrifugal focus of the dissatisfaction of the British or the Americans or anyone, shouldn't be, that's what I think.
00:57:51.000I think we should get to a point where we're able to look at refugees through the lens of love and compassion.
00:57:56.000However, if you want to go and live in a country, then you should obviously abide by the rules of that country because you've just come to it.
00:58:01.000So, you know, there's a kind of common sense approach.
00:58:03.000Let me know in the comments and the chat.
00:58:05.000Don't let people exploit that and turn you into a racist.
00:58:09.000Don't let people tell you that it's about hatred.
00:58:11.000But can you see that in it in a way, encoded in Keir Starmer's constructed speech are the clues for the position that you must find yourself in?
00:59:29.000Yeah, um, because it's plural, it's the Trinity, it's the triune, it's the patriarch, it's the sun that comes to instantiate it on the carnal frequency to show that you can live according to God's law, even if you're caught in the flesh.
00:59:42.000And then the ongoing advocacy of the indwelling holy spirit.
00:59:53.000But not yet, because I'm gonna take some time off because frankly, this whole thing has driven me crazy because it's uh cyclical, uh, what do I want to call it?
01:01:27.000Let's see Starmer hitting out of Arage.
01:01:29.000So Nigel Farage, he's um the leader of reform, a new and emergent party.
01:01:35.000If you want my uh prediction, here it is.
01:01:38.000The Conservative Party will have to, at some point, combine with reform and they'll win the next election.
01:01:43.000And Nigel Farage will become prime minister, and they're probably trying to time it exactly right so that we don't sort of spot it all getting um what I want to call it, absorbed into the system.
01:03:17.000There's no need for the system to remain like this.
01:03:19.000Um so, but now we're all aware of like Epstein files.
01:03:23.000The reason that the Epstein files haven't been released is because they're compromising in a way that spans both political parties.
01:03:28.000That's obvious, otherwise, they would be exploited.
01:03:31.000Obviously, there were people on it that Democrats didn't want released, that's why Biden didn't use it to fight Trump, and the reason it's still not being released, I'll, you know, I wouldn't make any personal aspersions, but I would say that the ability to compromise politicians is not uh uni partisan issue, it's trans partisan, it's bipartisan, it's encompasses everyone.
01:03:50.000If you want my personal opinion, I don't reckon Trump's on there in any kind of dark way.
01:03:55.000I reckon that uh probably there are so many different political figures that go beyond our you know, sort of our football team mentality understanding of what politics is about, like oppositionism and dualism goes into the heart of it.
01:04:08.000There's people that are sort of deeply compromised.
01:04:10.000Now, someone like Keir Starmer, he might be compromised.
01:04:12.000Certainly, there are a lot of rumors about the guy, a lot of rumours.
01:04:14.000Yeah, and beyond rumors, there were some people that got arrested for firebombing his car, and some people say that it's because he was sexually compromised.
01:04:23.000What I care about is what the compromise leads to, and what the compromise leads to in this instance is the British people being exploited and lied to.
01:04:32.000And if you think the system hasn't adjusted to the possibility of the reform party, then you've not been watching the last century or so.
01:04:41.000So what you need is radical systemic change.
01:04:44.000And I'm going to take some time off and work out how to do it.
01:04:46.000I won't work it out because, you know, my thoughts always migrate back to what's best for Russell and who cares, really, what's best for Russell.