The Auron MacIntyre Show - July 29, 2024


Olympic Blasphemy | 7⧸29⧸24


Episode Stats

Length

59 minutes

Words per Minute

174.12038

Word Count

10,333

Sentence Count

679

Misogynist Sentences

9

Hate Speech Sentences

28


Summary

In this episode, Oren talks about the current state of the Olympic Games, and how the globalist elite are using the spectacle to further their agenda. He also discusses the recent assassination of Donald Trump and why the media should be paying attention to it.


Transcript

00:00:00.000 We hope you're enjoying your Air Canada flight.
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00:00:30.000 Hey everybody, how's it going?
00:00:32.000 Thanks for joining me this afternoon.
00:00:33.940 I am Oren McIntyre.
00:00:36.600 When I was a kid, the Olympics were something that were worth looking forward to.
00:00:40.940 It was a massive cultural event.
00:00:43.860 You had the build-up in school.
00:00:45.980 Everyone would talk about the different events, the different sporting challenges
00:00:50.580 that would be going on during that Olympics.
00:00:53.380 You used to have the winter and summer games happen at the same time,
00:00:56.820 but eventually they decided to split it up because waiting four years was too much.
00:01:01.920 They wanted to go ahead and maximize the amount of money you could make,
00:01:05.140 the amount of times you could hype these things up.
00:01:07.120 And all of this has come to kind of ruin a lot of what the Olympics are,
00:01:11.720 along with the fact that we basically dissolved nations.
00:01:14.820 It doesn't make a lot of sense to continue to have the Olympics the way that we hold them.
00:01:20.160 However, it's not enough to simply ruin the Olympics as they used to be run.
00:01:25.160 It's important to go ahead and insult the very people that you might be trying to entertain.
00:01:30.040 And so the Olympics, of course, opened infamously this year with a ceremony that mocked Christians,
00:01:37.960 complete with a drag show that went ahead and pantomimed The Last Supper.
00:01:44.760 We'll be getting into this display, what I think it says about the globalist religion
00:01:50.760 that is involved in running an event like this,
00:01:54.700 and why I think this is yet another indication that the woke is not going anywhere.
00:01:59.680 It's not getting put away.
00:02:01.500 The global elites have not taken some kind of off-ramp.
00:02:04.700 In fact, they are going to continue to throw this in people's faces,
00:02:07.320 not only because they want to,
00:02:09.520 not because they think it's necessarily the best strategical decision,
00:02:12.360 but they actually have to.
00:02:14.220 The wokeness is integral to the operation of the global empire.
00:02:19.320 You cannot escape it any more than a car can run on, I don't know, water.
00:02:26.460 These things have to have a particular type of fuel.
00:02:29.680 I think wokeness is that fuel that goes ahead and powers the global revolution,
00:02:34.820 and that's why we are going to continue to see it in things like the Olympics.
00:02:38.580 I also want to go ahead and get into the idea that big tech has been moving to strike the record
00:02:46.320 when it comes to the recent failed assassination of Donald Trump.
00:02:50.620 We're seeing evidence that multiple large tech companies,
00:02:54.480 the ones that drive so much of our public opinion with their ability to hide searches,
00:03:02.880 manipulate information, are actively working to go ahead and cover up or remove as much as possible
00:03:09.040 the fact that there was an attempt on Trump's life.
00:03:12.480 Obviously, you can't go ahead and vanish that entirely from the public memory,
00:03:16.060 but it is the small little bits of keeping that from popping up in people's feeds,
00:03:22.300 keeping it out of their mind.
00:03:23.940 That's what the media is so good at.
00:03:25.580 So we're going to get into all of that, guys.
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00:04:43.140 So like I said, when I was a kid, the Olympics were a huge deal.
00:04:46.860 I distinctly remember my parents grabbing the newspaper.
00:04:50.400 Yes, there's a physical sheet of paper,
00:04:52.420 an amazing thing to many younger listeners, I'm sure.
00:04:56.040 And they would look at all the different events that were going to be coming on.
00:05:00.060 They would go ahead and decide what we should be watching.
00:05:03.720 Go ahead and plan out the schedule of the different,
00:05:08.060 you know, the one to make sure they caught the gymnastics and the diving
00:05:11.680 and the tennis and the wrestling and all these things that would be televised.
00:05:15.180 It was a huge deal.
00:05:16.540 It only happened once every four years,
00:05:18.740 and it totally transformed the culture when it would roll through.
00:05:22.540 All of a sudden, your favorite TV shows would be integrating some form of Olympic theme
00:05:28.980 into what was going on.
00:05:30.600 The news, of course, was talking about it.
00:05:32.540 Your school would teach about the Olympiad and all the different events.
00:05:36.840 Perhaps your gym class would incorporate some of the events you would see on TV
00:05:41.940 into the gym class itself.
00:05:44.720 All of these things were a huge cultural impact simultaneously
00:05:48.380 across many different domains to let you know that something important was happening.
00:05:52.720 But over time, two things have really combined to make the Olympics
00:05:56.380 less and less of an interesting phenomenon.
00:06:00.600 First, there's obviously the fact that they changed the format of the Olympics.
00:06:05.180 The motivation behind that was obvious.
00:06:07.120 It used to be that you had one Olympics every four years,
00:06:10.780 and there was a summer games and a set of winter games.
00:06:13.960 So the things that should, you know, beach volleyball,
00:06:16.100 you're going to be having in your summer games, obviously.
00:06:18.640 The luge is going to come in the winter games.
00:06:21.020 These things were all happening in the same year,
00:06:24.000 but they were divided by the seasons.
00:06:26.460 And that gave the Olympics again this,
00:06:28.820 oh, it's only every four years.
00:06:30.220 This is something special.
00:06:31.440 It matters when it happened.
00:06:33.820 They decided to go ahead and break it up across two different events.
00:06:38.400 So you have your summer games and then your winter games,
00:06:40.740 but you have them every two years.
00:06:42.040 So there's a summer games, two years break, winter games, two years break,
00:06:46.260 summer games, two years break, winter games, two years break.
00:06:49.680 The advantage of this for the people who want to make money,
00:06:52.680 the Olympic Committee and everybody who sees this as a way to drive tourism
00:06:57.060 and attention to their country and everything,
00:06:58.920 is that you could go ahead and maximize your profit.
00:07:01.880 You could maximize the amount of attention in theory that the games would receive.
00:07:06.140 You're constantly trying to get all these different nations and cities
00:07:09.640 into the bidding about where the Olympics are going to be held.
00:07:12.840 They have to pay an ostentatious amount of money.
00:07:15.800 They build all of these different facilities.
00:07:18.320 There's a massive economic game behind this,
00:07:21.760 and that's before you even get to the fact that you have the television rights
00:07:25.960 and the sports sponsorships and everything else that is tied to it.
00:07:30.200 So you understand from just an efficiency point, from a money-making point,
00:07:35.400 why you wanted to go ahead and change the way that you set up the Olympics
00:07:39.460 so that you had this frequency.
00:07:41.320 But the frequency, as so often is the case,
00:07:44.460 actually was the death knell of this thing being interesting.
00:07:48.600 The whole point was that it mattered when it rolled around.
00:07:52.340 We had had large breaks between the last time we had seen an Olympics.
00:07:55.920 You only got to see so many Olympics during your lifetime.
00:07:58.840 And so the events happening mattered.
00:08:02.000 It really, again, grabbed the entire culture simultaneously,
00:08:06.160 especially as a kid.
00:08:07.940 But when you went ahead and changed it to two every two years,
00:08:12.400 it just wasn't that special.
00:08:14.180 It's constantly occurring.
00:08:15.600 There's never really a year.
00:08:17.320 It was only every other year without an Olympics.
00:08:19.740 It didn't seem to matter as much.
00:08:21.340 The fact that you had the summer games every four years
00:08:23.980 and the winter games every four years still,
00:08:26.100 it didn't make as much of an impact as you would think
00:08:29.200 because just the frequency of the ceremonies
00:08:31.480 and everything involved really mattered.
00:08:33.740 So that was one aspect.
00:08:35.040 But the more important aspect,
00:08:36.880 I think it really drained the Olympics of its gravitas.
00:08:41.060 The idea that it meant something very serious to compete in the Olympics
00:08:45.840 is that originally the Olympics were a very nationalistic affair.
00:08:49.880 The whole point of the Olympics was national pride.
00:08:54.040 It was bringing people together, setting aside your differences.
00:08:57.520 That was a huge part of it, to be sure.
00:08:59.720 But when you got there, your differences were still played out
00:09:02.480 on the athletic field.
00:09:04.900 What you did on the athletic field mattered.
00:09:08.140 People would have these different medal counts.
00:09:10.340 Oh, my country has this many golds and this many silvers
00:09:13.220 and this many bronze.
00:09:14.040 We're beating you in total medals.
00:09:15.300 Well, we're beating you in gold.
00:09:16.900 That's where it really matters.
00:09:17.820 No, this is the premier event and the fact that we won this
00:09:20.700 was a huge deal.
00:09:22.240 These were things that people argued about incessantly.
00:09:25.040 They thought were very important, stacking up against each other.
00:09:28.120 It really built that camaraderie inside the United States
00:09:31.660 and other nations.
00:09:33.180 Everyone's rooting for their team, their people to go ahead and win.
00:09:37.760 It really mattered.
00:09:39.620 But slowly over time, we've dissolved what a nation is.
00:09:44.960 We've dissolved what that means.
00:09:46.600 And therefore, we have these mass immigration programs constantly.
00:09:52.020 We're selecting immigrants specifically for their ability to fill a slot
00:09:56.700 in a particular sport in the Olympics.
00:10:00.300 And ultimately, what happens is so many of these teams end up having a lot
00:10:04.800 of people on them that may or may not actually represent anyone from the nation.
00:10:09.940 There used to be a reverse version of this, where everyone came to the United States
00:10:15.060 to, say, compete in the NBA or in the NHL or in the Major League Baseball.
00:10:21.400 And then they would go back to their home countries for the Olympics.
00:10:26.980 They would represent their home countries in the Olympics.
00:10:29.100 So you would have the all-star basketball team from the United States.
00:10:33.480 But some of the players wouldn't be there because they would go and compete in other sports or for other nations in the same sport because that was their home nation.
00:10:43.100 You can say what you want about that, but there was still this idea that even if someone came to a professional sports league inside the United States,
00:10:50.660 they were still a member of their original nation.
00:10:53.640 And that was the nation they would represent when they went ahead and competed in the Olympics.
00:10:57.580 But now, so many of these are permanent residents.
00:11:02.020 They come in, they stay for a very long time.
00:11:04.280 There is very little home nation when it comes to the competition inside the Olympics.
00:11:12.720 You're often cheering for someone who just joined your nation last year from another nation that is also competing in the Olympics.
00:11:20.020 Often, they were just competing for that other nation in the Olympics last year.
00:11:24.040 And the fact that there's constantly this mass migration, that there's this headhunting for the best talent by so many different Olympic teams inside different countries,
00:11:35.640 means that really very few of the Olympic teams often represent a specific nation.
00:11:41.880 And they all tend to just run together in this amalgamation of the best people that any given nation could compile from around the globe to compete while wearing their uniform.
00:11:51.700 And this becomes an even more important problem when you're looking at a lot of these Western nations specifically that are trying to destroy the idea of nationalism,
00:12:01.460 that see this as an anathema to their current political project.
00:12:06.840 And so the idea that your nation would go ahead and celebrate something specific about themselves,
00:12:12.040 a victory of their people, of some kind of accomplishment that is shared by their nation,
00:12:17.500 that's almost seen as offensive, something of a bygone era.
00:12:21.320 And really, all of these competitions just turn instead of a battle of nation versus nation,
00:12:27.260 looking for that national pride, looking to raise the awareness and validate the honor of the people that they are fighting for.
00:12:35.780 Instead, it just ends up being another professional sports league where a bunch of people from around the globe
00:12:41.220 all do kind of the same thing for kind of the same reason without any particular idea tied to this.
00:12:48.740 You used to have these huge victories.
00:12:51.480 You know, the United States loves to tell these battles about kind of the miracle hockey team that came up against Russia
00:12:58.440 or the battle between kind of the American or the dominance of the American basketball team and the other leagues.
00:13:04.680 But really, how much does that matter after kind of the end of the Cold War,
00:13:10.360 the end of the idea that there are these these two empires battling against each other?
00:13:14.980 And now we just have these homogenous economic zones that are rather sorry,
00:13:22.520 the mixed economic zones where anyone can enter.
00:13:26.480 There is there is no homogeneity.
00:13:28.520 There is no unified idea or identity.
00:13:30.980 It's just the best headhunters could find in place under any given flag.
00:13:36.300 And this is, I think, really what has lowered the excitement over the Olympics.
00:13:42.840 There's also the fact that really we just lost that unifying entertainment culture that we used to have
00:13:48.940 that used to be a big part of the identity for a number of nations
00:13:54.400 when you don't have just a few TV stations, when anyone can watch anything all the time.
00:13:59.580 And the value of something like sports is reduced in your culture.
00:14:03.320 People just tend to start caring less.
00:14:05.860 They could always go watch something else.
00:14:07.520 It's not going to dominate all of your favorite shows aren't canceled
00:14:11.160 because of the Olympics being on NBC or ABC or whoever's hosting it.
00:14:17.300 There's a little bit of a shift there as well.
00:14:19.280 But I think the main thing really is the slow dissolving of nations.
00:14:23.180 And so it's only appropriate that the kind of thing that has slowly dissolved nations
00:14:30.680 should eventually take over the Olympics, which has itself basically unwound the idea
00:14:36.780 that anyone belongs to any particular place, any particular people.
00:14:40.580 It's all just a bunch of athletes competing at any given time.
00:14:44.620 And really, that is the global religion of wokeness.
00:14:48.320 As I've explained in several videos on this channel, as well as my book, The Total State,
00:14:54.840 wokeness is not just a goofy idea that the left has.
00:14:59.080 It's not just the current fad progressives are into before they switch to
00:15:02.980 some other idea that will justify their rule.
00:15:06.660 My friend, academic agent, and I have a bet going for a cigar
00:15:10.960 about whether or not the woke will be put away.
00:15:13.720 AA had felt pretty good, I guess, about some recent goings-ons.
00:15:19.140 I'm not sure why.
00:15:20.120 I think the ascension of Kamala Harris and the DEI presidential run
00:15:24.980 pretty much seals the deal for me on this one, that the woke is not going anywhere.
00:15:29.120 They're going to spend the entire year talking about how you're too white,
00:15:34.920 you're too male, you're too Christian, and actually you need to check all these
00:15:38.440 other identity politics boxes in order to qualify for president.
00:15:41.800 That's going to be the attack on Trump and J.D. Vance going forward.
00:15:46.140 But in case I needed another point of data, in case I needed to go ahead and slam dunk
00:15:52.040 the fact that I'm very sure the woke is not going away,
00:15:55.560 during the Olympics and the opening ceremony, they had drag queens everywhere.
00:16:00.560 Because of course they did.
00:16:01.740 They had to.
00:16:02.760 You have to understand, they are compelled to do this.
00:16:06.840 Their ideology demands it.
00:16:08.720 This is not some quirky choice that they're making.
00:16:11.280 This is not some short fad.
00:16:15.640 This is the core of their ideology and they must spread it.
00:16:19.940 So they did this whole routine.
00:16:22.760 I'm not going to play any of it for a couple of reasons.
00:16:25.200 One of which is they took it down.
00:16:28.240 The Olympics went ahead and took this part of the opening ceremony down because it was
00:16:33.180 so offensive and there was such a terrible backlash against it.
00:16:36.820 Two, because I just don't want to parade that stuff in front of you.
00:16:41.580 I've got a little image so you can understand what I'm talking about here, but I'm really
00:16:45.620 tired of seeing this stuff.
00:16:47.160 I know you're really tired of seeing this stuff too.
00:16:49.540 And I'd rather not be the person responsible flashing in front of you.
00:16:53.080 It's enough to know that it happened.
00:16:54.440 We don't have to stare at it all the time.
00:16:56.300 It's just gross.
00:16:58.180 But the reason that they did this, of course, was not just to put drag queens on display,
00:17:03.420 although that was a big part of it.
00:17:05.080 But they also wanted to mock Christianity.
00:17:07.500 And so in this whole routine, which involved several different things, to be fair, during
00:17:13.120 this routine, they also included basically a mockery of the Last Supper, the famous picture
00:17:20.300 of Christ right before he is crucified.
00:17:24.040 And of course, the drag queens are up there.
00:17:26.120 They include a child, by the way, because of course they do.
00:17:30.600 And I'm obviously not going to show this to you.
00:17:33.160 But during this, one of the drag queens exposed himself, his genitals were exposed on this
00:17:41.260 around the child, of course, because this is the celebration that they're looking for.
00:17:46.960 This is what they are celebrating at the new global summit.
00:17:51.800 Now that we're dissolving the nations, now that the Olympics is no longer nation versus
00:17:56.420 nation, but is really just this homogenous blob of people who could be from anywhere competing
00:18:02.560 in a sport for some nondescript reason.
00:18:06.840 We have to go ahead and foist this upon the public.
00:18:10.700 So like I said, I think this is a inevitable shift.
00:18:15.400 I want to go deeper into why this shift is inevitable, why this ideology sits at the core
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00:19:41.560 So like I said, I have dove into why wokeness is not some strange aberration, but is actually
00:19:51.760 key to the globalization project.
00:19:55.220 It's one of the things that drives globalization.
00:19:58.280 And so it's inevitable that not only can this not be put away, that this becomes center
00:20:03.920 stage on an event like the Olympics.
00:20:06.700 And the reason that wokeness is so important to the managerial project is that the managerial
00:20:15.020 project requires the slow dissolution of all nations.
00:20:19.720 It needs to go ahead and dismantle what it means to be a part of a nation because managerialism
00:20:26.200 demands homogenization, demands this continuous turning of all cultures and all peoples into
00:20:34.740 one gray goo that can be ruled through managerial procedures.
00:20:39.720 Managerialism is based on massification.
00:20:42.480 It's based on the reign of quantity.
00:20:44.060 It wants people to be the same uniform so that it can create a uniform set of procedures that
00:20:50.560 can always answer questions, always manipulate people, always drive processes, never need to be
00:20:56.840 appealed to by any outside force.
00:20:59.240 That is the template on which managerialism builds its power.
00:21:05.000 Like a cog in a machine when it comes to a conveyor belt, you know, in an assembly line,
00:21:11.740 you need everything to be uniform.
00:21:14.100 You don't want one weird little gear here and one strange widget over there.
00:21:18.420 You want to be able to replace parts as quickly as possible.
00:21:22.600 You even want to turn the humans on an assembly line into machines.
00:21:26.660 They only do one thing.
00:21:28.200 They do it very specifically.
00:21:29.820 They don't change anything.
00:21:31.340 There's no alterations and you could switch out that person at any time with a little bit
00:21:35.140 of training, add another person and boom, you have exactly the same operation.
00:21:39.860 This is what managerialism does.
00:21:42.600 It dehumanizes people in order to build a standard set of procedures that can rule
00:21:48.100 anyone when, no matter where they come from, because you've eliminated all of the things
00:21:53.720 that make them unique, makes their culture unique, makes their, uh, the, the, the firmament
00:21:58.940 or rather the substrate from which they arose unique, you eliminate all of that.
00:22:04.240 So you can constantly operate in this very uniform matter that builds a high degree of efficiency
00:22:10.820 and therefore surplus.
00:22:12.420 That is what managerialism wants to do.
00:22:15.640 And it wants to do it.
00:22:16.860 Take the same assembly line process that you use to make the model cheaper, cheaper and
00:22:22.000 more efficient and take that model T and apply it to people.
00:22:25.100 It's the same process.
00:22:26.980 And so when you go to these global organizations, when you're looking at these global organizations,
00:22:32.100 they want to wear away the particularities of any given culture.
00:22:36.920 And as Sam Francis points out in Leviathan and its enemies, it is a cosmopolitan and hedonistic
00:22:42.340 culture that is most easily replicable across all given peoples.
00:22:46.920 These are kind of the base, most crass desires of people.
00:22:51.880 Uh, these are the things that are most uniformly, uh, able to be brought out.
00:22:56.940 And if you can wear away all of the religious or traditional, uh, ideas of what a family
00:23:03.060 is, what a man or a woman is, uh, what a culture should be, how religions should operate,
00:23:07.820 then it makes it much easier to manage people.
00:23:10.720 That's why you get, uh, transgender ads in India from Starbucks.
00:23:14.540 That's not an accident.
00:23:15.940 That's it.
00:23:16.580 That's a feature, not a bug.
00:23:18.240 The same thing is here true in the Olympics, right?
00:23:21.860 You have the Olympics enacting this religious ritual and that they claim that this was supposed
00:23:29.120 to be Bacchanalia, right?
00:23:30.560 That, that this is, uh, a, a celebration of a pagan ritual, which in and of itself would
00:23:36.520 be enough.
00:23:37.160 Uh, but specifically, uh, it would not have ended with a rendition of the, of the last
00:23:42.460 supper.
00:23:42.700 If that was not, uh, that was not, that was the only intention.
00:23:46.020 Uh, but the reason that you go through this ritual and you push this ideology is because
00:23:51.860 it is, it is the ideology of globalism.
00:23:55.780 It is what is supposed to dissolve all of those social mores.
00:23:59.800 You have all of those religious particularities, all those cultural hangups you have that might
00:24:05.600 keep you from being the perfect consumer and the perfect worker.
00:24:08.760 All of that has to go so that they can create this society where everyone can be managed with
00:24:15.420 the same set of standards, the same set of techniques.
00:24:20.520 You need this cosmopolitan hedonistic culture that is easily manipulated.
00:24:25.960 Everyone is, has abandoned the future.
00:24:29.240 They don't care about their legacy.
00:24:30.640 They don't care about their nation.
00:24:32.060 They don't care about their people.
00:24:33.180 They don't care about their family.
00:24:34.520 They don't care about their language.
00:24:35.860 They don't care about their religion.
00:24:36.960 All of that has been dissolved.
00:24:39.620 Everyone has been turned into this sexless, uh, you know, childless, family-less, religion-less
00:24:45.900 blob that you can just push and pull the knobs on.
00:24:49.620 You can just give them a new identity, a new belief set.
00:24:52.680 You can turn them around and make them the ultimate NPC.
00:24:55.860 They are highly programmable because there is nothing left of their original culture of their
00:25:01.040 original belief system to hinder the constant change of information, the constant flow.
00:25:06.960 of propaganda that will redirect their consciousness one way or another.
00:25:11.860 This is the goal.
00:25:13.220 And this is why wokeness is not going away.
00:25:15.900 There is no off ramp.
00:25:17.580 There is no toning it down.
00:25:19.260 Yeah.
00:25:19.460 You might get some cycles where they're not pushing every single part of this as loudly as
00:25:24.480 humanly possible.
00:25:25.340 But the general trend will always be towards this stuff that we're this stuff.
00:25:32.020 It will always be towards this kind of display because this kind of display is necessary.
00:25:38.540 This is what, and of course they truly believe in this.
00:25:41.600 They are true believers.
00:25:42.920 Is it, should it be obvious to anyone putting on a show like this, that would be offensive
00:25:49.040 to a massive block of people, specifically, obviously religious Christians, billions of
00:25:55.880 people should be offended at this.
00:25:58.140 Well, if you were putting on, if you're, you're only about the money, right?
00:26:02.620 We're, we're only motivated by the material aspects of this.
00:26:06.660 If it's all about the money and the power, wouldn't you just put on the most crowd pleasing
00:26:11.360 display possible?
00:26:12.360 Why would you push something like this?
00:26:15.140 Why would you force something like this into the celebration?
00:26:19.820 And the answer is because they believe it because they really do believe it.
00:26:23.920 This is a religious ritual for them.
00:26:25.980 This is real for them.
00:26:28.000 Is it a real religion in the sense that it brings meaning or purpose that it has a definitive,
00:26:32.860 uh, uh, definitive change that's positive on the way that people form their lives, that
00:26:39.660 it creates an order that benefits the people?
00:26:41.940 No, it's none of those things.
00:26:43.640 So if you're like, well, wokeness isn't a real religion because it lacks many of these.
00:26:47.740 Okay, that's fine.
00:26:48.780 But obviously it is filling the role of a religion.
00:26:51.980 It is taking the role of it.
00:26:54.040 Yes.
00:26:54.460 A cheap, crass, gross religion.
00:26:57.820 Absolutely.
00:26:58.780 But a religion nonetheless.
00:27:00.180 And so these people believe in it.
00:27:01.980 They value it.
00:27:03.540 And if you have a religion you really believe in, you put it at the front of the things
00:27:09.480 that you do.
00:27:10.280 You celebrate it in your opening ceremonies.
00:27:12.920 That's the most basic understanding of religion.
00:27:16.220 And once again, we see that the removal of religion, the separation of church and state
00:27:22.400 does not actually create a space without religion because humans are deeply religious people
00:27:29.880 because spirituality is real.
00:27:32.500 You are not just a body.
00:27:34.560 The world is not just a material space.
00:27:37.380 There are forces outside of which you can see and touch and taste all of your five senses.
00:27:43.900 There is more to life than just the material.
00:27:47.160 So that is just a reality and no level of denial will stop that from being the case.
00:27:52.300 You can pretend that you're super rational and super modern and well beyond all these crazy
00:27:57.680 beliefs.
00:27:58.120 And guess what?
00:27:59.780 It doesn't matter because this stuff keeps exploding back into view.
00:28:04.120 It keeps reasserting itself over and over again because spirituality is real.
00:28:09.860 This is a real spiritual warfare that's actually happening.
00:28:14.140 And when you leave a space and you pretend that there's just no overriding spirituality
00:28:19.440 that's going to invest itself in any given celebration, any given competition, any given
00:28:26.820 ritual, then eventually something like this will take your space.
00:28:31.480 There is no void here.
00:28:33.700 Nature abhors a vacuum here.
00:28:35.220 It will be filled with something and it will be filled with the globalist religion that is
00:28:42.040 now being paraded in front of you at the Olympics.
00:28:45.640 It really is that simple.
00:28:47.700 And no amount of elite machinations, no amount of nefarious hand wringing, no clever plotting
00:28:54.320 can ever truly escape this aspect of human nature.
00:28:58.380 It will always return.
00:28:59.900 It will always dominate.
00:29:01.840 That doesn't mean you can't analyze it with power, right?
00:29:05.380 I'm saying specifically this religion is necessary because of the way that managerial power works.
00:29:11.380 So it's not that the power and the belief are separate.
00:29:15.120 It's not that the ideology and the mechanisms of power are completely disconnected, but it is
00:29:22.100 their very connection.
00:29:23.180 That means that you cannot isolate one and discard the other.
00:29:26.500 You can't say it's all just power and then the ideology comes after.
00:29:30.520 It's all just power and then they make up whatever religion they need to.
00:29:34.620 No, sorry.
00:29:36.240 These things happen simultaneously.
00:29:38.360 You also can't just remove the power and say, oh, it's just the belief.
00:29:41.860 It's just the ideology.
00:29:43.360 Power has nothing to do with it.
00:29:44.920 Both of those will fail you.
00:29:46.860 That analysis will fail.
00:29:48.200 What matters is the interaction between the two.
00:29:51.840 And we can see in the Olympics right here, the willingness to go ahead and throw this in the
00:29:57.700 face of Christians.
00:29:58.700 Now, there's a lot of question about how you should react to this.
00:30:03.540 Some people said, oh, well, you shouldn't act offended.
00:30:06.260 You shouldn't, you shouldn't act offended that your religion was mocked because that just feeds
00:30:10.440 these people.
00:30:11.200 It makes them sound like they're very powerful.
00:30:13.660 It makes it sound like they have total control and you're just giving into them, you know,
00:30:18.900 calling something like this satanic that just feeds its power.
00:30:22.220 I understand that position.
00:30:24.040 I understand what people like that are saying.
00:30:26.520 However, you'll notice that no one is going to do this with Mohammed.
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00:30:45.940 No one is ever going to do this mockery.
00:30:48.760 They're never going to take a bunch of drag queens, you know, dressed up as major Islamic
00:30:53.600 figures and go ahead and reenact some part of some legend in the Muslim religion so that
00:31:02.200 they can mock them.
00:31:02.980 That's never going to happen.
00:31:04.780 And it's not just because Christianity is the sworn enemy of these people, though that
00:31:10.100 is a huge part of it.
00:31:11.060 These people hate Christianity and they are very explicit.
00:31:14.620 It is Christianity they hate.
00:31:15.900 It is not religion.
00:31:17.460 They're not doing this with Jewish beliefs.
00:31:19.640 They're not doing this with Muslim beliefs.
00:31:21.660 They're not doing this with any other group.
00:31:24.000 They're specifically targeting Christians for a reason, because it's the foundational ethos
00:31:30.600 of the West.
00:31:31.520 It is the foundational belief of the West.
00:31:33.940 And that is what they're trying to destroy and dismantle.
00:31:36.780 That's what they're trying to do.
00:31:38.100 But they're also not going to do it with Muslims because they know there would be a very serious
00:31:43.000 and probably dangerous backlash.
00:31:45.700 The people who did it, they respect that religion because that religion demands respect.
00:31:52.660 So is the is the solution to simply back away and laugh?
00:31:56.620 Well, I think there should be a good amount of laughter.
00:31:59.020 You should mock these elites as gross, as ugly, as sad.
00:32:03.280 I think that is worth it.
00:32:05.060 But I don't think that the answer is just pretending like you don't care, like this doesn't matter,
00:32:10.540 that the blasphemy, the ridicule, these things just it's not a big deal.
00:32:15.980 Because to do that, you have to enter a state of nihilism.
00:32:20.020 You have to say, well, I don't really care, ultimately, if someone's slandering this.
00:32:25.880 It doesn't really matter to me.
00:32:27.800 And that's kind of what faith is built on, is that these things do matter, that you are
00:32:32.680 willing to sacrifice them over them, that you are willing to get offended.
00:32:38.000 How is not getting offended working for people?
00:32:40.440 Has that has that shifted anything?
00:32:43.000 Is the barstool Republican or barstool conservative version of right wing politics working out?
00:32:51.260 Is that is that making any serious gains?
00:32:54.240 I don't think so.
00:32:55.660 I think there's probably a line, you know, to walk somewhere here.
00:32:58.800 I think there's probably a balancing act between we don't care about this at all and you can
00:33:03.500 just do whatever you want and we'll just, you know, we've given up ever caring about people
00:33:08.520 mocking our religion anymore.
00:33:09.900 And, oh, these people are complete in control of everything.
00:33:14.880 They're they're omnipotent.
00:33:16.620 They have this power over every organization because they're evil and satanic or whatever.
00:33:21.760 And so therefore, you know, we're we are just completely doomed.
00:33:25.100 And it's this humiliation ritual somewhere there in there is these people are ridiculous.
00:33:30.460 These people are sad.
00:33:32.540 They should be mocked.
00:33:34.440 But it's not OK for them to do this.
00:33:37.120 And we should take it seriously.
00:33:38.260 And there should be a certain level of outrage combined in that mockery.
00:33:42.100 I think there is a tone you can hit there that does both.
00:33:48.180 But I think that, like I said, ultimately, the key takeaway here is the woke isn't going
00:33:54.200 anywhere.
00:33:54.560 It is a religion that is central to the process of globalization.
00:33:59.420 It is inextricable from the managerial style and its spread across many nations.
00:34:06.080 And you're only going to see it intensify until this thing kind of comes apart.
00:34:10.380 I want to go ahead and get into the censorship of Trump or rather the attempt to censor what
00:34:17.260 has happened to Trump by big tech.
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00:35:44.400 All right.
00:35:45.160 So the other big story that's been bouncing around this weekend has been the number of people
00:35:50.960 looking into different search engines, different AIs, different big tech creations, and finding
00:35:58.060 that it was increasingly difficult to produce search results when it came to the assassination
00:36:03.840 of Donald Trump or the attempted assassination of Donald Trump.
00:36:09.100 Several different people brought this up.
00:36:11.580 I think this is America 2121 did this graphic, but even guys like Ted Cruz were getting in on
00:36:18.560 it.
00:36:18.700 A lot of people were posting that they were going to multiple different search sites.
00:36:23.420 It wasn't just Google, though.
00:36:24.940 Google was the primary target, but multiple different search sites where they were attempting
00:36:29.080 to search for Donald Trump's attempted assassination information on this kind of thing, and they
00:36:35.500 were getting nothing there.
00:36:36.980 No matter how, even if they got deep into the autocomplete, you still didn't see this coming
00:36:41.620 up.
00:36:42.080 Now, this might seem like a minor thing.
00:36:44.200 Might say yourself, Oren, everybody knows this happened.
00:36:47.340 Everybody saw this.
00:36:48.460 This has been the biggest news story in a long time.
00:36:52.720 Obviously, people are aware of this, so you can't memory hole something this big.
00:36:57.540 Can you?
00:36:58.680 The answer is, yeah, of course you can, guys.
00:37:01.460 It's not that people won't know that this happened.
00:37:03.980 Obviously, some level of awareness that this has occurred will exist in most people's minds.
00:37:12.360 But you need to remember the trick that happens with modern information and propaganda.
00:37:20.580 The trick is not necessarily to hide any given piece of information.
00:37:25.700 The trick is to drown it.
00:37:27.920 You don't have to do the 1984 thing where you go in and edit every little bit of information,
00:37:33.620 though obviously we've seen big tech do that.
00:37:36.740 So I'm not saying that doesn't happen.
00:37:38.760 Actually, it happens all the time.
00:37:40.460 But the real trick, the one that's less obvious, because it's super obvious when you edit these
00:37:45.540 things, they get called out.
00:37:47.020 It becomes very clear that that's happened.
00:37:49.400 The other option, the option that is more effective is to drown the information constantly.
00:37:55.860 When we have the news cycles the way we do, when we turn over information the way that
00:38:00.960 we do in the modern world, it's very easy for people to lose track of when and how things
00:38:06.860 happened, how intense things were.
00:38:08.680 So if you constantly bury things under waves and waves of propaganda, people forget, for
00:38:14.480 instance, people forget that in 2008, Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton both said that they
00:38:21.340 believed in the traditional definition of marriage, that California, one of the most liberal
00:38:27.620 states in the nation, voted against gay marriage.
00:38:31.340 That not that long ago, less than two decades ago, it was an anathema for the most left-wing
00:38:37.960 party in the world, in the United States and the most left-wing state in the United States
00:38:43.520 to embrace something that now, if you don't agree with, you'll get fired from any given
00:38:50.100 company of.
00:38:51.500 People forget that because there's just been this constant stream of propaganda that has
00:38:56.000 buried that reality.
00:38:57.240 They forget that that's the country they lived in not that long ago, and they believe that
00:39:02.660 because they've watched all the TV shows and the movies and that they've read all the books
00:39:06.660 that have told them otherwise, this basically is an ancient position in the past, in the
00:39:13.560 far past.
00:39:14.900 And there's no way that any modern civilization could actually believe it.
00:39:19.440 That constant stream of propaganda buries the story.
00:39:22.440 Same thing happens when it comes to, say, police shootings, right?
00:39:26.500 The difference between the police shooting of an unarmed white man and the police shooting
00:39:31.840 of an unarmed black man is that no one is going to magnify and pick up the police shooting
00:39:37.500 of an unarmed white man.
00:39:38.560 It's not like it doesn't happen.
00:39:39.820 It's not like it doesn't happen as frequently, you know.
00:39:43.500 It's that you are not going to focus on that shooting, and you are instead going to focus
00:39:49.200 on the shooting of a black man instead.
00:39:54.060 This is what the left wants to promote, and so that's what they will promote.
00:39:57.340 That's what they'll keep in the forefront of everyone's minds through the constant stream
00:40:02.060 of propaganda, and they will bury, they will roll over those stories.
00:40:06.400 So, for instance, Cannon Hinton, if you don't remember, this is a child who was murdered.
00:40:13.900 Randomly.
00:40:14.860 Just because he was out about on a bike.
00:40:19.280 He was shot in the face, but the assailant was a black man, and the child was a white
00:40:24.140 man, so no one cares.
00:40:25.780 No one talks about it.
00:40:27.180 There's no one.
00:40:27.800 No one's going to have a riot on his behalf.
00:40:30.460 No one is going to paint murals of him or do statues of him because the left isn't constantly
00:40:37.240 blasting with the propaganda.
00:40:38.740 In fact, over and over again, a story like that is completely buried.
00:40:43.500 Nobody talks about it.
00:40:45.360 The news cycle just moves on.
00:40:47.200 So controlling what is in the news cycle, what comes up in search results, that matters.
00:40:52.300 It changes people's perception.
00:40:54.400 It's not that out there somewhere you couldn't find the story of Cannon Hinton, but it's the
00:40:59.560 fact that his story is buried as opposed to where George Floyd's is everywhere.
00:41:04.880 That is actually a big deal.
00:41:08.360 So when the big tech companies go ahead and change the way that you search for things,
00:41:16.420 when they make it more and more difficult for something like Donald Trump's assassination
00:41:19.740 to pop up, that's not a mistake.
00:41:22.280 This is the most relevant search for this topic.
00:41:25.640 This is what everyone, it's the most current news.
00:41:28.040 It's what everyone wants to know when they type this into the search bar.
00:41:32.600 And the fact that that is not the first thing that comes up is a very purposeful choice.
00:41:39.380 If you try to look for common words all the time or even historical events and a movie
00:41:46.240 has been made about them or some song or video game has been made about them, that pops up
00:41:51.280 before the actual historical event.
00:41:53.020 It happens all the time when I have to do Google searches, I look up some kind of event and
00:41:58.020 you know, if I look, if I look for something that is very relevant, instead I get a movie
00:42:03.440 or a video game or a TV show that has been made about it.
00:42:08.080 The most current thing dominates the search results, even though the historical thing is
00:42:13.300 far more significant and has existed for a much longer time.
00:42:16.320 So in the current news search results, that should dominate any of these other historical
00:42:24.080 examples.
00:42:25.280 But it's not just that it's not dominating historical examples, it's that it's actively
00:42:29.440 being suppressed at all.
00:42:32.180 It's very difficult to have it autocomplete in many scenarios.
00:42:35.320 Now, social media companies can go back and cover their tracks on this kind of stuff.
00:42:38.720 They can tweak your algorithms.
00:42:40.220 One of the nice things about this is the plausible deniability.
00:42:42.700 It's very simple to go back, hit a few keystrokes, uncensored something and say, oh, well, you
00:42:48.220 know, we don't know what you're talking about.
00:42:49.640 This is fine.
00:42:50.400 See, you can search it now and it's just fine.
00:42:52.260 They can try to erase this technique and it's very easy to lie about it because their algorithms
00:42:58.640 are not public.
00:42:59.540 We don't get to see how these search results are parsed.
00:43:03.160 But it's not just the search results.
00:43:04.800 AI is a huge deal because AI in many ways will become search results soon.
00:43:09.280 AI is going to replace search results in many ways.
00:43:12.700 Uh, billboard Chris on Twitter, uh, showed how the meta AI identified, uh, Donald Trump's
00:43:21.280 assassination as a false event, a conspiracy theory, a lie, which is an amazing thing because
00:43:27.960 of course the left has created a conspiracy theory about Donald Trump's attempted assassination
00:43:32.020 where actually he wasn't hit by a bullet.
00:43:34.120 He was hit by a chunk of some screen.
00:43:36.740 There's some shard of glass that was actually what hit him and not the bullet itself.
00:43:41.420 Obviously you can see the picture with the bullet flying.
00:43:45.060 Like you, you have to have a, a massive amount of conspiratorial buy-in in order to believe
00:43:51.400 this.
00:43:51.840 Well, the left is pushing it everywhere.
00:43:53.700 They want people to believe that there was no assassination attempt because it looks very
00:43:57.460 bad for them.
00:43:58.180 And instead they want people to believe that there was some kind of, uh, you know, the
00:44:02.260 conspiracy, it was a fake or that, you know, maybe, you know, it was a piece, a shard of
00:44:07.160 glass.
00:44:07.680 It was never really hit.
00:44:08.720 So it's less heroic.
00:44:09.940 These are all things that these people need to believe.
00:44:12.380 And so they're pushing this idea.
00:44:14.420 And there's a reason that they want to suppress more and more, any truth about that.
00:44:18.600 They don't want people finding the facts.
00:44:20.060 They want people to go to AI and hear that, oh, well, maybe this is it.
00:44:23.680 Maybe it never really happened.
00:44:24.880 Right.
00:44:26.060 If you don't think that can happen, if you don't think, oh, well, no one would be dumb
00:44:29.660 enough to, to go ahead and program their AI this way, or they're searching them this
00:44:34.280 way, that'll make their search engine bad.
00:44:36.100 Right.
00:44:36.380 That'll make their AI bad.
00:44:37.520 Who would purposely tank their product?
00:44:39.820 What corporation would purposely tank the accuracy of their product just for an ideology,
00:44:44.900 right?
00:44:45.060 We don't believe that ideology rules things.
00:44:47.520 We believe in power.
00:44:48.620 It's all power.
00:44:49.300 It's all money.
00:44:50.220 It's all power.
00:44:51.140 Ideology doesn't rule this stuff.
00:44:53.140 Except if you remember, not that long ago, just a few months ago, Google released an AI
00:44:58.720 that completely eliminated white people from history, just took them out of history.
00:45:04.100 You couldn't get a white person in several different scenarios.
00:45:08.960 In fact, it inserted diversity, even in some non-white scenarios, like making sure that you
00:45:14.840 could only get black samurai in certain or ninjas in certain searches, but it often went
00:45:20.520 ahead and put awkward scenarios where you had diversity included in say SS officers from
00:45:26.340 World War II.
00:45:27.500 And so that's the main reason that Google ended up pulling it down.
00:45:30.880 Not that it replaced every piece of European nobility with a black person, like it's a Netflix
00:45:36.940 show, but that it ultimately awkwardly put diversity into historical events that were seen as very bad and
00:45:45.780 therefore shouldn't have any people of color in them.
00:45:48.400 That's actually what got it taken down.
00:45:49.920 But if you're under the impression that, you know, no big tech company would do this kind
00:45:53.980 of censorship, that they would never alter these results, that they would never go ahead
00:45:57.680 and worsen their product in the pursuit of some kind of ideological goal.
00:46:02.980 All of the evidence is kind of stacked against you.
00:46:05.340 Actually, it's like wokeness is the overriding ideology, and that's what drives even corporations
00:46:11.340 that are supposed to be fixated entirely on power and money.
00:46:15.540 And instead, eventually, even if they had originally bought into that ideology simply for power or
00:46:23.320 monetary gain, ultimately what happens is the ideology ends up driving the bus.
00:46:28.220 And when it comes to AI or these algorithms, it's ideology that drives them as well, because
00:46:33.880 these things are only ever a reflection of the people who created them.
00:46:37.460 That's all they're capable of doing.
00:46:39.040 In fact, there's a lot of effort made by these AI creators to make them as dumb as possible
00:46:45.580 so that they don't take in any non-approved ideological functions.
00:46:50.100 If you remember Tay and the death of Tay, because Tay kept absorbing too many ideas that weren't
00:46:56.640 pre-approved by the progressive mainstream.
00:46:59.760 AI kept learning things it wasn't supposed to learn.
00:47:02.120 It kept coming to conclusions it's not allowed to come to.
00:47:04.920 And so they needed to put AI safety in charge, make sure that there were a lot of restrictions
00:47:09.460 so that this didn't continue to break through the control of the AI.
00:47:13.600 These people are absolutely interested in dumbing down and controlling their products to make
00:47:18.440 sure that they conform to ideology and not anything else.
00:47:23.520 So I think we're going to probably continue to see this.
00:47:26.460 Now, I will say this.
00:47:28.340 There are a lot of people who started getting down on this, right?
00:47:32.220 That the fact that the Kamala Harris campaign has exploded on the news, that they've been
00:47:38.400 hyping Harris and that they've been burying what happened to Trump and the people getting
00:47:44.340 really depressed and blackpilled about this.
00:47:46.520 I find that shocking.
00:47:48.280 Look, guys.
00:47:49.320 Yes, it's very frustrating that the media has that level of narrative control in theory.
00:47:55.600 But in practice, they are pushing so hard and so awkwardly and so artificially.
00:48:00.560 They are doing everything they can.
00:48:03.140 They are shooting at every opportunity.
00:48:04.820 And it is so obvious that it is breaking down what's left of their credibility.
00:48:09.120 I know we've heard this a million times.
00:48:10.700 Oh, finally, you know, the last piece of credibility will fall.
00:48:13.840 And then all of a sudden the normies will see.
00:48:15.760 I'm not saying that.
00:48:16.460 I'm not saying that this will bring about the mass conversion of everyone who finally
00:48:20.760 sees the lies that are being paraded in front of them.
00:48:23.620 What I am saying is you can only put forward this level of effort at artificial reality
00:48:30.600 manipulation for so long.
00:48:32.080 And the fact that everyone can see it now, it's so obvious, it's so painful, means that
00:48:36.960 it is failing.
00:48:37.900 It is not doing well.
00:48:39.220 So I think that while it is very frustrating to see the lengths to which these people will
00:48:46.780 go, how shameless they are, how unhinged they are, and how ideologically obsessed they are.
00:48:52.620 Ultimately, this is a demonstration of their weakness, not their strength.
00:48:57.420 If they had strength, they wouldn't need to go to this level.
00:49:01.180 They wouldn't have completely lost control of these narratives.
00:49:03.800 They wouldn't be trying to push Kamala Harris of all people.
00:49:07.580 If these people had a clue, if they were really, uh, well, well, uh, in control of things,
00:49:13.820 if they were capable, if they were smart, they would not have backed themselves into a corner
00:49:19.020 where they have to try to sell Kamala Harris and where they have to try to bury the assassination
00:49:24.520 of a presidential candidate.
00:49:27.240 If they were in master for control of every one of these things, they would not be in this
00:49:31.920 situation.
00:49:32.700 So let's not black pill about this.
00:49:34.660 Let's recognize this for the desperation move by the regime that it is not some excuse to talk
00:49:40.820 about how, Oh, these guys have all the power and all the control.
00:49:44.060 Yes.
00:49:44.360 They have a vast amount of resources.
00:49:46.220 Yes.
00:49:46.680 It is important for people to understand the level at which the opinions they consume are
00:49:51.640 controlled by this force, by the total state.
00:49:54.080 But ultimately the desperate, uh, way that this has unfolded really shows that these people
00:50:00.460 are not professionals.
00:50:01.800 They are not smart.
00:50:03.520 They are not capable, or they would not have put themselves in this position.
00:50:07.360 And they are captives of their own ideology.
00:50:10.480 Or again, we would not see them continually returning to disastrous ideologies and positions
00:50:17.820 and candidates.
00:50:19.040 They would not do that if they were able to control, they're able to drive the narrative
00:50:23.620 entirely on their own.
00:50:24.880 If they were not subject to their own, uh, disastrous belief system.
00:50:30.560 All right, guys, we're going to move over to the questions of the people here real quick.
00:50:36.380 Cooper weirdo says the Olympics are happening.
00:50:38.640 Oh man, I missed out on a gay man representing America, talking about how much he hates Trump.
00:50:43.960 Also look at the woke, uh, the woke getting put away.
00:50:47.300 It's almost completely gone.
00:50:49.260 Uh, yes, again, uh, tech.
00:50:51.140 So technically, I think at some point I did say that if Kamala Harris becomes the candidate,
00:50:56.880 I would just lose automatically.
00:50:58.840 I did that.
00:50:59.940 It's kind of a throwaway joke because I thought the idea that Harris would eventually actually
00:51:04.680 inherit this, that they would not find someone else in a pinch was too absurd.
00:51:09.640 Obviously that's not how it played out.
00:51:11.300 So if, if academic agent wants to hold me to that caveat, he can.
00:51:15.560 So he can't, he can win on a technicality.
00:51:18.360 He can get the TKO if he wants, and he may need to take that option because it's very
00:51:22.560 clear that otherwise he's toast.
00:51:25.020 I mean, between the ascension of the DEI presidency, where all we're going to hear is the white,
00:51:32.140 you know, the, if you haven't seen the white woman for Kamala and the white men for Kamala,
00:51:36.300 uh, zoom meetings that these people are doing, where they, they go through these struggle
00:51:41.500 sessions about how, uh, they need to go ahead and atone for their whiteness by supporting
00:51:47.240 Kamala Harris.
00:51:48.960 That's going to be going on until November.
00:51:52.200 Sorry.
00:51:53.060 Sorry about that.
00:51:54.020 AA like that.
00:51:55.060 That's going to be a obvious and constant wokeness in your face throughout this entire presidential
00:52:00.440 run.
00:52:00.780 Also, uh, we're going to continue to see, uh, the ideology get pushed when it comes to
00:52:06.400 drag Queens and everything else.
00:52:07.540 So this stuff's just, just not going anywhere.
00:52:09.860 So he might need to take the technical out because after the Olympic, the one, two punch
00:52:14.020 of the Kamala Harris presidency and the Olympics, I don't really know how you continue to hold
00:52:18.260 on to this theory.
00:52:20.020 Uh, Cripper weirdo says, fun fact, France had a massive blackout.
00:52:24.900 There was a building that remained well lit.
00:52:27.120 You'll never guess which building it was.
00:52:29.840 Uh, yeah, sorry.
00:52:31.240 I don't really know much about that one.
00:52:33.620 Uh, there's probably a joke involved there, but I'm not familiar.
00:52:36.280 Uh, let's see here.
00:52:37.360 Glow in the dark says, uh, guess we could go back, uh, to four years intervals.
00:52:42.400 Maybe a five-year interval would be nicer.
00:52:45.060 Everyone could instinctually know that it was on 2025, 2030.
00:52:50.440 Yeah.
00:52:50.820 The four-year one was a little strange for, uh, our mind that is based entirely on kind
00:52:56.540 of these sets of 10.
00:52:57.520 I mean, it leaves our brain, you know, wanting those rounder numbers.
00:53:01.820 Uh, but obviously that's tied to, uh, I guess, original, uh, tradition.
00:53:06.560 So that, that's obviously a little more appealing to people who are want to harken back all the
00:53:12.080 way to the actual Olympics here.
00:53:14.440 Tiny stupid demon says, do I need to remind you everyone that Marquis de Sade was French?
00:53:19.040 Yeah.
00:53:19.560 Obviously the, the idea that there was not a certain level of Frenchness, I suppose,
00:53:23.780 to a, uh, decadent ceremony like that.
00:53:27.100 Uh, you know, you, you have a fair point there.
00:53:31.840 Uh, Alexander says, uh, I was devastated for the whole weekend after watching the ceremony.
00:53:36.600 Although I know we're at war to witness it.
00:53:39.000 So directly is audacious.
00:53:40.300 It changed something inside of me the same way 2020 did.
00:53:43.020 Well, I'll say this.
00:53:44.120 I understand seeing this and being, uh, you know, being disturbed, being appalled, but
00:53:51.960 I would not be devastated.
00:53:53.660 This is something that's been going for a long time.
00:53:56.440 This is exactly what you'd expect.
00:53:57.980 It's sad, but at the same time, I think this is where it's better that it'd be mocked or
00:54:04.500 that it'd be pushed back against.
00:54:05.900 Don't let these people devastate you be offended into getting them to pull it down.
00:54:10.560 That works.
00:54:11.480 You know, that, that actually had an impact, uh, you know, mock them to make them look ridiculous,
00:54:15.780 but don't be devastated.
00:54:17.120 Uh, these people are going to continue to try to sully all of these things that were part
00:54:22.060 of, uh, some kind of grand tradition.
00:54:24.360 And really what you have to do is go back to making your own traditions.
00:54:27.460 Things that are more local, things that are more particular things that they do not have
00:54:32.020 a hold of.
00:54:32.720 You want to replace this stuff with things that really matter rather than getting devastated
00:54:36.720 that destroying things that are too far away for you to actually be involved in.
00:54:42.860 Uh, Florida Henry says since the 2020 riots were a mostly peaceful protest, I haven't watched
00:54:47.700 a single sporting event and I feel much better.
00:54:49.980 Boomers, uh, uh, cons will still give their money to athletes who hate them though.
00:54:54.880 So I'll say this, uh, you know, there, there is.
00:54:57.460 There's a, there's a level of which I'm with you here.
00:55:00.620 I started watching a little bit of football last year and then the NFL reminded me that
00:55:04.820 they hated me.
00:55:05.520 I was like, oh yeah, this is why I stopped watching and I went back to not watching it.
00:55:09.640 However, there is also an impulse for, uh, some people on, uh, kind of the more online,
00:55:14.980 right?
00:55:15.160 To say, oh, the sports ball.
00:55:17.040 Oh, the idiots, the boomers with their sports ball, the bros with their sports ball.
00:55:20.740 And there is a little bit of the nerd that got stuffed in the locker, uh, to that response.
00:55:25.460 There's nothing new about watching sports.
00:55:28.240 In fact, many of the most august, uh, you know, most storied, most celebrated civilizations,
00:55:35.100 uh, throughout history were obsessed with sports.
00:55:38.240 I mean, the Byzantine empire, you know, literally they have riots that would overthrow rulers
00:55:43.480 based on their sports.
00:55:44.540 That is a level of excess.
00:55:46.020 I'm with you, but I do think that there's something very natural and normal about, uh,
00:55:51.220 being interested in sports.
00:55:52.100 It's better to play them yourselves.
00:55:53.360 It's better to be involved in a sport than spend all day sitting on the couch, watching
00:55:58.060 a sport.
00:55:58.600 Uh, you know, the guy who's sitting there, uh, watching, you know, 15 hours of MNFL a
00:56:03.360 week.
00:56:03.720 Yeah, that's a problem.
00:56:04.620 That's not great, but I do think the, the complete rejection of sports is itself also
00:56:09.780 an issue.
00:56:10.260 But again, this is something where shrinking things back down to a more local level, you
00:56:15.500 know, maybe the, the high school football game in your area becomes more of an important
00:56:20.620 deal than everyone sitting alone and isolated on their couch, screaming about overpaid half
00:56:25.720 athletes that hate them, uh, returning to something that is far more local and regional
00:56:30.000 and is about the pride in the area you live in and the people that you're a part of, as
00:56:34.000 opposed to this disembodied, uh, highly, uh, commodified, uh, version of sports that
00:56:40.900 there, there's some, some good to that.
00:56:45.680 Ruby Ruda says, uh, you're not, uh, you are not a body with a soul.
00:56:49.440 You're a soul with a body.
00:56:51.280 C.S.
00:56:51.940 Lewis.
00:56:52.900 Uh, yeah, I, I'm not sure, um, what specific quote that's coming from.
00:56:58.820 I think the more important thing is that you are both, uh, that, that your body while you
00:57:03.620 are here on earth is an integral part of who you are, uh, as is your soul.
00:57:08.020 Uh, and, uh, you know, the Gnostic mistake is always to treat the soul as the completely
00:57:14.820 independent thing.
00:57:15.860 And the body is just the meat suit.
00:57:17.260 Uh, there's also the mistake of, of course, being just raw materialism and saying it's
00:57:23.000 just the body and the soul is an aberration or it's a delusion or it's, uh, you know, it's
00:57:29.020 just something that we manifest to make ourselves feel better.
00:57:31.220 It's just the, you know, the, the sum total of our cognitive processes, but doesn't have
00:57:35.820 anything to do with anything outside of the material.
00:57:38.900 Uh, these are both mistakes.
00:57:40.260 I think it's important to remember that you are both a soul and a body, uh, at least
00:57:44.260 while you're here, uh, Jose, uh, Velasquez with just a super chat.
00:57:49.040 Thank you very much, sir.
00:57:50.480 Well, in the dark says, does anyone remember, uh, pro, uh, remember program fast and furious?
00:57:56.360 Uh, oh, oh, the, uh, the gun running.
00:57:59.700 Yes.
00:57:59.960 The gun running, uh, program.
00:58:02.440 Uh, I do remember that, uh, but I'm not sure what it had to do with any given, uh, thing
00:58:07.880 we were talking about there.
00:58:09.340 Uh, Cooper weirdo says, uh, the wellbeing, uh, the well, the well lit building was a church
00:58:15.660 or an, oh, okay.
00:58:16.620 There's the only, so the only thing that stayed on the only light that stayed on was a church.
00:58:20.840 Okay.
00:58:21.320 I can see.
00:58:21.880 All right.
00:58:22.080 Well then in that context, yes, I can understand why that would be a significant sign.
00:58:27.180 All right, guys, we're going to go ahead and wrap this up.
00:58:30.040 Thank you everyone for stopping by as always.
00:58:32.820 It's a pleasure to speak with you.
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00:59:11.340 Thank you everyone for watching.
00:59:12.800 And as always, I will talk to you next time.
00:59:18.000 Thank you.
00:59:18.640 Thank you.