The FULL VivaFrei Interview: Feminism, Zionism, And MORE!
Episode Stats
Length
2 hours and 17 minutes
Words per Minute
228.16772
Hate Speech Sentences
161
Summary
In this episode, we have a special guest on the show, Myron Gains. Myron is a former US Homeland Security Special Agent who served as a Special Agent in charge of Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) in the Miami Field Office.
Transcript
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all right that's it i see myron is in the backdrop and he's looking dapper is he looking ready i see
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an american flag thumbs up myron let's see if you're coming in hot sir what's up man how are
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you very good how you doing i'm good i'm good i'm good can you uh hear me good and see me good
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i'm gonna hear i can hear encrypt let me see hold on encryptors you'll tell us if the audio is good
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i'm gonna zoom in on your face so that we maximize our real good myron sir are you following what's
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going on in canada no i am not filming what's going on no it doesn't we have our election or
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canadians have their election today so today is the day where they're going to decide to re-elect
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the liberal party uh or a re-elect the conservative party we've got a crazy parliamentary system so
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there's like seven or eight different parties and it's a bit it's a big day in canada but we'll see
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how it ends uh this evening so there's no equivalent of like the american election pretty much in
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november for you guys yes it is it is our november election day today and uh people have been drawing
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some analogies between how accurate or inaccurate the polls are versus the two candidates because
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like everyone's like oh they said kamala was going to win they said hillary was going to win and trump
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beat them both times but we don't really have a trump up in canada because apparently canadians
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are so offended by any trump-esque personality their populist conservative has to be pretty much a liberal
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democrats wow you know uh canada is very uh much different uh you guys are a lot nicer than we are
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well you say i i make the joke you know uh nice until you disagree with them nice until they
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nice is in the sense of subservient and then when you are no longer subservient to their subservience
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that's when the subservient cease being nice and find the the liberal tyrant in their heart
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myron i for my my crowd's going to know who you are but just in case they don't uh tell them who you
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are 30 000 photo 30 000 foot overview yeah sure um so my name is uh myron gains um prior to this i
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was a uh special agent with homeland security investigations i used to do criminal investigations
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um on the southwest border i started my career in laredo texas where we went after you know everything
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from mexico cartel members sicarios drug traffickers weapon smugglers human traffickers human smugglers
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um you know immigration violations everything money laundering um i did that for four to five
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years then i went over to the miami field office i did that for two years and uh i was doing a
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podcast as i was i was starting up the podcast as i was working in the miami field office and they
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basically brought me in and said hey man you got to pick one uh i ended up resigning from the
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government and now i work uh you know doing the doing the podcast uh fresher fits male self
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improvement then i also do myron gains x where i do more of the um political slash cultural commentary
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uh we go i go live uh monday through friday and on sundays 5 p.m eastern standard time and uh
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yeah and then we just try to help guys out as much as we can with the male self-improvement
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and we talk about a lot of other crap uh things going on like feminism and all the other stuff
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people know us for well yeah you've been in the news for other well other reasons which we're going
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to get to and yeah i do too okay so hold on like back it all the way up because when i just when i heard
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i was listening to a couple of podcasts that you actually you know you were doing field work
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for uh the government for for for which agency again uh for homeland security investigations uh
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or hsi uh basically think of them as the um they they're the biggest investigative arm of uh homeland
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security so they're like the uh they're like the fbi for dhs okay and uh you think you weren't
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carrying a gun when you were doing that no i was have you ever shot anybody no i never shot
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at anybody no i never shot at anybody uh came close a few times but but never never actually
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did but yeah it's it's a it's an 1811 position which is basically or a special agent so it is a
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criminal investigator you carry a gun you're you know you got you're carrying you're doing you're
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carrying cases uh i had ar-15 as well um i'll bring that out for the raids but um but yeah that's
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what that's actually it's it's wild and i want to flesh it out a little bit more but
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sure i i like to go even before that uh we're we're how many generations american are you
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uh i was born here so my parents are american citizens but they naturalized uh but i was the
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first uh gen born in the u.s there and where your parents from originally sudan sudan but both both
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mother and father both yeah both of them and did they get married before coming here did they get
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married meet each other here they they uh they got married back in sudan and then they came here
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after because my dad had already um was like coming back and forth here so he brought her with
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him all right and was your dad working for the american government as well in any no no he he my
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dad i mean we grew up poor uh my dad was a cab driver in new york city in the in the 1980s and 70s
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shut up okay so this is how many siblings do you have i have a sister she's a doctor right now doing
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her residency um and i got a little brother he's like 21 uh and you're 36 35 35 uh so you have a
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brother who's 14 years younger than you from the same parents yeah 12 12 years younger than me yeah
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he's like 23 i think yeah um and then same parents yep same parents hold on how old were your parents
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when they had your youngest brother yeah i don't know what my mom was smoking uh she was um what was
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she she was she was probably she had me when she was 21 so yeah she was like 33 when she had him
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oh well that's that's still very young i was looking for an excuse to knock up my wife again
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but she's 43 so that probably wouldn't happen sudanese uh immigrant refugees um no they're they
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were from north well back then sudan used to be one country uh now now it's uh you know north and
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south sudan uh but my parents are from the arab north okay and why did i mean it's gonna be a stupid
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question because everybody wants to come to america question well i say like why did they
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come to america they were they were they fleeing i don't know if there was conflict at that time but
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were they fleeing any conflict or just wanted to come to a better a better life yeah yeah no there
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was definitely there was definitely conflict um i um south sudan um and north sudan were fighting this
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before they had the like they were fighting the the countries weren't split yeah i think they split in
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like the 2010 or 2011 2012 ish but um there was definitely uh fighting going on even at that
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point back when back then i think this i mean i say it's a silly question we look at some parts of the
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world and there's always fighting it's just a question of the degree to which there's a flare-up
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so they come to america your dad goes to new york and becomes a cab driver in new york in the
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late 70s early 80s yeah he came he came here in the in the 70s if i'm not mistaken is when he first got
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here but and that is like that's taxi driver levels of when new york was at its i don't know
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if it was at its nastiness but pretty close to yes um so 1990 if i'm not mistaken was like the uh
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most it was the um had the most murders um ever uh 1990 so it was it was a bad time new york city in
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the 90s was was horrible um you know uh giuliani eventually ended up coming in and cleaning it up
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but uh but it was very very bad i remember like i was there in 1996 it was the first time i ever
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saw blue man group at with high school we had a a field trip and um it was it was pretty gritty but
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that was sort of on the on the up end of when it was gritty um but so but it's kind of amazing your
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dad becomes a cab driver and the obvious question is he raises i don't know what your youngest brother
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is doing but at the very least i'll say successful uh by every metric children i mean how does that
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how does that work what what work ethic is your dad who's how many hours a day is he driving a cab what
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is life like with the dad cab drivers your mom at home yeah no um my dad is is a big part of the
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reason why i'm i'm the way i am now um like my dad uh so he's the type of guy works really hard one
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thing i remember growing up as a kid he refused to take welfare he would never he would never take
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it he was like i'm gonna work for everything that i get i'm not gonna be one of these like
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um scammer immigrants that comes here and just abuses welfare whatever so uh he always worked
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and i remember one story uh about him and i actually had to tell rudy giuliani this thank you
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when i saw him but um one that happened was my dad was driving a cab and you know he was no stranger
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to weirdos that would like you know try to rob him or whatever and i in new york city in the 90s i said
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before it was really bad and one day he was there uh at a gas station filling up and um he got hit
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basically someone like like hit him um and they ran away and uh ended up messing up his leg he ended
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up breaking his leg and um instead of taking time off right what he did was he just drove a cab with
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a cast on and um my mom would go downstairs every day because we lived in like this uh apartment building
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she would go downstairs every day pick him up and help him up the stairs and um and that kind of
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like was a story that um my mom told me way later on when i became an adult that my dad did that um
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but that was just like his resilience to like get stuff done and be a provider right he didn't want
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my mom to work um you know that's just how he was and he just really wouldn't take any excuses so
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um when when giuliani came when i met giuliani at the rnc i said thank you because he started going a
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lot harder on violent crime in new york city back then in the 90s uh because my dad had been robbed
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multiple times he had been attacked uh being a cab driver um you know had been put at gunpoint a few
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times but yeah when he got hit and and the guy just ran away uh and broke his leg he he refused to um
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to take time off and he just like drove the cab with a with a cast on i'm gonna ask the politically
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incorrect question and we're gonna it'll come earlier the majority of the incidents that your dad had
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uh with with you know held up at gunpoint etc demographically is it it was it white americans
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black americans black dudes every time don't worry i i i i talk shit about the black community all the
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time no well no that that'll be you know what i say like some people get mad at the things you say
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about jews in israel i was like well if it's fair game and he's critical of but but it's it's very
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important as well because it does explain again the genesis story of someone who comes from
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sudan a foreign country comes here to work hard bust his ass and then has those types of
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experiences whether or not you would draw the same conclusions from those experiences this would
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explain at the very least his his experiences and how it brought you up to be the way you are
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uh and not the bad way i'm saying it's no sure uh yeah but with him yeah he um you know and this is
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why yeah it was 100 black people man and and they're you know i my thing is i'm critical of of anybody
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right i don't just like like i've talked shit about black people asians indians you know i've
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with h1b visa actually that got me in trouble on x when i talked about the h1b visa
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um but uh but yeah no 100 they were all black man every single time because they're fucking a lot
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of them were crooks in the 90s and and even to this day let's be honest the majority of the violent
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crime in the united states is all perpetrated by a minority of the of the people unfortunately so
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that's kind of what it is uh i presume your dad your parents are muslim yes and were you brought
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up religious or were they religious um so they're religious um i was brought up fairly religiously um
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you know obviously i'm not as um religious as they are um i still believe in the religion i still
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think it solves um you know a lot of the problems um you know but i i i'm not religious myself i'd be
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lying if i sat here and said oh yeah i'm super religious so no i i think and again you know i don't
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know if your dad watches your channel but with some of the ladies on the show we'll get into how that
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jives with um with everything in terms of some of the guests but so you you you're an athletic kid
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right you you did very well in university in sports uh yeah yeah yeah i i was uh i was division one
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athlete in college um i was a rower uh for those that are unaware it's uh the sport of crew which is
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like uh you know it's like the um um it's called crew or rowing uh like if you if you ever been to
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boston you see like the harvard guys on the river like rowing i did that um i went to northeastern i
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graduated in 2013 so um you know it was good because that kept me away from a lot of uh stupid
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stuff right because when you're you know you go to college people do drugs and do all that other
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stuff like me i i never did a drug in my life i rarely drank uh you know we were always training
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because uh it was a year-round sport okay it's very cool and i guess so you work for the you work
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for homeland security for how many years did you do that for is so i was interned in 2010 i was 20
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years old i came on as intern and then i became an agent at 23 years old when i graduated from school
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so um so that was in uh 2013 so yeah i was with the agency a total of uh 10 years seven as agent three
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as intern um and i left in 2020 i left december 4 2020 uh that because they basically made me pick
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one they said hey you know government or you know social media and at that point you know i had
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employees so i had to uh i had to make the decision to uh you know what i was going to do so it was um
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it was difficult but you know obviously i you know i had to stick by my people because at that point
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people were depending on me so i couldn't just let them down but i didn't want to leave the government
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man i know a lot of people love to be uh you know i can't wait to leave my job and everything
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i actually enjoyed um working for the government quite a bit it was a really fun job uh you know
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i had it since my 20s and um you know i didn't want to leave well the salary is is is decent but
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i presume not comparable to what you're able to bring in on your own if you work for yourself you
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make a lot more money than working for someone else yeah for the government i'll be honest like
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i was making um about 120 000 a year uh working for the government in the miami field office
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which you know compared to being an entrepreneur that's that's nothing um but you know for me i
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live way below my means i'm a hardcore minimalist i don't believe in like you know flexing and
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you know all the other dumb stuff that idiots do when it comes to like buying jewelry and these
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extravagant things luxury um you know you've been in my place the nicest things i have are is a studio
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but other than that man like my stuff is all relatively very low uh minimalist you know i don't
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believe in in luxury items i think a matter of fact i think luxury a lot of times is a scam
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luxury items luxury cars luxury anything luxury um you know fine dining i think it's all a scam
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to be honest with you i know i i a thousand percent agree i just had my kid in vegas for an event
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and we're like walking around and people spending stupid money on stupid things and like there's there's
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no value to this high-end uh call it not jewelry but design stuff it's it's it is a big fat waste of
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money but it's just to show that you have the money but you're so you're 35 now not married no kids
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right uh no not married no kids nope or is that on the horizon i would say for sure in the future
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um you know i do i do think the nuclear family um and um kids are obviously the future a lot of my
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political views a lot of the times when i do say the things that i say it's almost always based on
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um you know preserving a good future for the kids like for example like a lot of my anti-trans and
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anti-open homosexuality worldviews that comes from like kids not having to see that right i don't
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think it's appropriate to have um but whether lesbian or men um you know people kissing out in
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public in front of kids i think that's problematic and and for the for you know for that matter i
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don't like it when i see heterosexuals either doing uh public displays of affection i think pda
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is just inappropriate in general um you know but it's even worse when two gay guys are kissing i mean
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i'll just be honest it's disgusting when gay guys kiss that's well let me ask you the rhetorical
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question how about when two attractive lesbian women kiss uh not as bad but i still don't want
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kids in it well no see i agree in the general rule about like grotesque public displays of affection
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or just public displays of indecency that being said you know normal loving relationships i this is
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one thing where i i don't um i don't have any of the problem that some people on what they call the
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right has with gay marriage um and i know there's a number of people who say like you know a man and a
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woman is obviously the ideal circumstance does it mean that there's something sinful about the
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alternatives where the if there are two functional loving parents be they both men or be they both
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women uh that's still better than having a broken home or no or not having the kid to begin with
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the question is this where is it the slippery slope that you see or others see in terms of
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i see in reality people say well it's gone from gay marriage to 2s lgbtqia plus rights and
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transgender ideology and and gender mutilation and genital mutilation on kids do you see that
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transition pun intended as necessary or evolution is necessary from supporting gay marriage or gay
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rights so so the question is do you need to support um the trans the trans movement to support the gay
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rights movement no i guess the the less convoluted way of asking it is do you see as a necessary
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evolution from supporting gay rights and gay marriage the uh transgression into the 2s lgbtqia
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trans movement like do you see that as the inevitable outcome for supporting gay marriage okay i see what
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you mean yeah i mean here's the thing i'll go back even before that i think feminism started all these
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problems um uh you know because feminism was the banner that brought all the other um you know social
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justice topics uh to the fray whether it was you know yeah uh general egalitarianism gay rights etc
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it all came under the banner of feminism but to go back to your specific question as far as
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do i think that um supporting uh gay rights will inevitably lead to the alphabet community i i would
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say yes to a degree um and but this is where i think i like me personally i don't support um gay
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marriage and i'll explain what i mean i'll break that down a little bit i think gays should have the
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ability to have a civil union but i think them being able to have a gay marriage is um well number
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one it bastardizes the sanctity of the of the um of the institution and it's a religious thing and i'm
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not even a religious guy but i still think that we need to have if we're going to have religious
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institutions that need to be protected so um if gays want to be able to you know get the the benefits
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and the rights of a marriage where it's uh you know they're getting the tax benefits and everything
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else like that cool but to call it a marriage i think um it you know bastardizes the the the
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movement or the sanctity of that that union so i think we should be um giving them their own thing
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but not necessarily under the umbrella of religion um so that's my take on it when it comes to gay
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marriage civil union is fine but um marriage no and then as far as um supporting them yes i do think
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that you know if you support it to some degree fully you're gonna have to eventually get to the
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level of of you know you're gonna have to at least have the conversation about transgenderism and
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you support it or whatever and then some people say i do support and then some people have common
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sense to say no this is problematic so um but i do think that gay marriage was the slippery slope
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that brought us here um when obama kind of brought that into the into the fray uh roughly what 10 years
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ago now at this point a little over 10 years ago so yeah it is interesting because i i again it's like
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you don't have to agree with the argument but at least you have to make an attempt to understand it
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in quebec we have something called civil union and it's all of the legal uh recognition to same-sex
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couples but you don't call it marriage for people who think the definition of marriage is the civil
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the holy union between a man and a woman as per the bible i now appreciate how people are going to say
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i'll give you all the rights in the world but not the word because of what the word means
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and then you analogize that to them saying recognize me as a transgender and call me a woman even though
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i'm not and you say i want the word not just uh rights under the law um going even further back
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are you one of the people who would support a repealing the 14th amendment did the women right
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to vote oh the 19th amendment 19 sorry sorry i think is is uh uh unlawful what is it uh unreasonable
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bail i forget what the 14th is but yeah repealing the 19th are you one are you someone who seriously
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believes in that it's still impressive you're canadian you know that and you know most americans don't
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even know so still impressive um yeah no i i yes i'm a firm believer in repealing the 19th
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amendment i don't think women should vote and um and a reason for that um i tie it mostly to um the
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um the the draft right so uh in america we have something called the selective service where when
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you're 18 years old as a man you have to uh register in and if you don't you you know you
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could deal with some serious consequences you can get fined you could um go to jail you won't be able
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to get a government job you won't be able to get funding um it really impedes your ability to move
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in the united states it's almost like being a convicted felon almost so um if you're not in
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this like the service as a man at 18 years old uh there's gonna be some problems but women necessarily
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don't have to necessarily um enroll in it now i know some people might say oh well myron you know
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what's next time we're gonna have a draft right you got to start being a little bit more realistic
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or whatever well my thing is i look at it like there needs to be skin in the game now with that said
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i do think that we should be having um people take um you know i think step one you need to be in
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civil service and i think it should be men only and then number two i do think that we do have a lot of
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guys that are idiots that don't understand certain things maybe we need to put a test out there
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where they need to take this test maybe a civil test or something like that to give them the
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ability to vote but in general um i don't think women should have the right to vote and then there's
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a bunch of biological reasons as well but just to keep it nice and simple i think um the selective
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service is a big reason why they shouldn't vote i don't think them not having um i think the fact
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that they don't have skin in the game yet they're able to elect the commander-in-chief that can send us
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to war uh i think that's wild and then let's be honest here too women a lot of times they're
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single issue voters they just want to vote for whoever's going to be able to let them kill babies
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if we're going to be very candid here the whole dnc right was based around abortion literally was
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based around abortion and that's because that is a voting topic that um that they know women are
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going to be interested in and they know that the democrats are going to lean more towards and
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that's really the only um thing that they have on on the left when it comes to getting voters is
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you know saying that we're gonna we're gonna let you go ahead and kill as many babies you ladies
00:21:38.580
want and that's what they care about the most we how much flack do you take i mean i'll preface this
00:21:44.780
by saying again don't agree with it only because i don't you know i say once you start getting into
00:21:50.080
excluding demographics from voting and people are going to say to you myron especially as a son of
00:21:55.100
sudanese immigrants or as a black man in america once upon a time blacks weren't allowed to vote and
00:21:59.900
once you start excluding one demographic well then it's only gonna be a matter of time before they take
00:22:03.640
away your right to vote um or and they'll say at least the the criteria for your right to vote is
00:22:09.140
rather arbitrary why not make it paying taxes then they have skin in the game type thing um but who
00:22:14.320
who gives you the most flack for this oh uh man uh everybody i i you know women obviously get very
00:22:20.320
mad at me uh because i i look at when i say the things that i say a lot of the times i i do think
00:22:26.160
that in a lot of cases i i got i had a tweet that went viral i said that women need to go back to
00:22:30.260
being second-class citizens and what i mean by this is uh what i mean by this is that um we've
00:22:36.580
we've given them so much power so much privilege that um it's created problems right if we look at
00:22:43.360
the birth rates being low if we look at um the problems that we have where they don't necessarily
00:22:47.020
contribute to society to the same level where they're not necessarily in infrastructure jobs
00:22:50.320
they've completely taken over academia and led to the woke culture um a couple weeks ago i was over at
00:22:55.980
united uh university of south carolina um and i was talking about um i saw some of those
00:23:02.240
i mean it's i wouldn't do it i i but it's it's even funny even if you don't believe it just to
00:23:10.800
see the reactions of of someone an adult male telling a woman to you know go back to the kitchen
00:23:15.640
i mean it is they would call it crass juvenile insults and and stupidity it the inability of
00:23:22.080
people to laugh it off is what i find truly stunning about it yeah that sorry now please go
00:23:26.640
on no no no worries um so you know i was having these debates and you know some of the stuff is
00:23:31.160
you know just it's funny because you know people get so pissed off or whatever but i i truly do think
00:23:35.300
that um you know if we're gonna if we're gonna run a great society it's got to be a strict
00:23:40.720
patriarchy and all we've seen from you know female liberation and you know female sexualization
00:23:47.440
and and um you know modernity in general and and the growth of feminism is we've just seen the
00:23:53.420
society kind of be uh degraded so um you know people sit there and say oh well myron is it is
00:23:58.620
it all the women blah blah well look i think when you put women in positions of leadership a lot of
00:24:02.760
the times it creates problems um you know the the society that we have now and a lot of the things
00:24:07.580
that we enjoy was created by men right and a lot of times for women by the way um if you look at like
00:24:13.080
a lot of the inventions that allowed women to even enter the workforce like sanitation tools etc
00:24:17.040
like the tampon whatever all these things were made by men so you know but at some point we also
00:24:22.760
have to be able to say okay enough is enough we need to we need to push some of this stuff back
00:24:26.580
because when women enter the workforce or when women are too involved i i think it creates a lot
00:24:30.880
of a lot of problems so um and then a big problem that i that i see is uh the over sexualization of
00:24:37.460
women and how it's been basically mainstream for women to be sex workers that's a big problem but that
00:24:42.180
can only come you know in extreme times of feminism like we have now so i think if we don't really
00:24:46.460
start making some steps to reel some of this back in uh we're gonna have some serious problems
00:24:51.140
now i it's this is not to fight and it's not to be antagonistic some people you have to anticipate
00:24:56.560
the arguments are going to say what you do on your show with the um i don't know what the word is i
00:25:02.260
don't what's the word for the ladies that come in after the the late part of the show oh it's called
00:25:06.320
after hours okay uh something we're going to say that that's that's specifically contributing to
00:25:10.900
the problem or at least explo exploiting of the problem and so you know not speaking out of both
00:25:15.800
sides of your mouth but on the one hand you're you're criticizing something while simultaneously
00:25:19.520
capitalizing off of it i'm sure i'm really glad that you brought that up so okay so the after hours
00:25:24.280
right um we actually keep uh numbers on all the girls that come on the show some girls are regular
00:25:29.920
girls that have regular jobs some girls are only fans girls etc like the last show we had we actually
00:25:33.680
had a couple of college graduates one of them was actually a master's uh graduate right um so we do
00:25:39.100
have bring on us a good amount of women that actually are educated that go to school but what i've come to
00:25:44.400
realize is regardless of women's education levels or their you know their intelligence whatever they
00:25:49.160
still regress back to female you know um traits which is you know getting emotional when facts are
00:25:54.880
presented disliking certain world views um egalitarian mindset or thinking everybody is equal like uh the
00:26:01.460
lack of a gross unawareness of meritocracies and hierarchies like it's it's actually fascinating to
00:26:06.600
see how women regardless of how educated they are what their background is etc they're just like
00:26:12.220
not cognizant of these of these certain things that like guys like me and you will understand
00:26:15.960
immediately like a meritocracy and hierarchies women don't understand this stuff so when i'm having
00:26:20.660
conversations with them about this it's very difficult for them to understand now that's one
00:26:25.080
part and then the other part obviously there are girls that come on that do only fans or whatever
00:26:28.520
now i think it's important right to be able to engage with these individuals and show how their world
00:26:33.940
view is ridiculous now um you know we all know that people want to be entertained so if you can
00:26:39.680
entertain people while also teaching them that's a fantastic way to build a great audience and also
00:26:44.080
keep people um uh retained onto the content so now some of my critics might say oh well you bring a lot
00:26:49.740
of these thoughts on yes sometimes we do that is true but i think if we're bringing them on and we are
00:26:54.240
challenging the world view and showing how it's incorrect and a lot of these women are idiots
00:26:58.180
um i think that does far more good than bad um there's been a few times where we brought girls on
00:27:03.320
where they thought about doing only fans or a girl watched this and thought about doing only fans
00:27:06.900
and she saw the girls come on the show and how they behaved and how stupid they were and she said
00:27:10.900
you know what i don't want to do that and she changed her mind so we've been able to um get
00:27:14.940
girls to quit only fans uh stop doing it or not go into sex work at all because they see what's up
00:27:20.280
happening um when they go into that world even if it's something like stripping where you can
00:27:24.160
relatively hide it and be uh conceal that that background but girls have watched the show and said
00:27:29.580
you know i'm not going to do that so i do think you have to engage with the um with the opposition to
00:27:35.160
some degree to show them how their worldview is wrong and if people can watch that i think it's
00:27:38.620
it's a huge learning experience you see what i love about that is you didn't know i was going to ask
00:27:43.100
that question i didn't know i was going to ask that question and there's nobody out there who
00:27:45.720
could have listened to that answer that's going to disagree with that answer and just so i'm clear
00:27:49.160
i'll clarify for everybody thought is t-h-o-t which stands for that hoe over there you know what i i i've
00:27:57.100
never know i never knew what the acronym was but i now you taught me something i didn't know that's
00:28:01.220
what is that for i i remember learning that i was like oh i learned something new that is totally
00:28:05.360
useless and totally stupid because i always said like i thought they were they were calling them
00:28:08.880
thoughts because they had i don't know silly thoughts but it was t-h-o-t um okay very i mean
00:28:15.120
it's it's it's it's it's fascinating and it's very interesting whether people disagree with it or not
00:28:19.200
the issue about uh well they say women's women women becoming as you put it second class citizens
00:28:25.440
again is it not just a question of the freedom of choice and if a woman wants to go and not have
00:28:31.560
babies or be you know one of the lawyers i knew a literally knew a lawyer who broke her water
00:28:35.760
at the office if you want to be that go ahead and be that but is it not a question of just
00:28:40.580
sensitizing people to traditional values of whether you like it or not there are biological
00:28:45.240
differences physiological differences brain differences and historically women have occupied
00:28:50.140
certain roles and men have occupied that of the warrior whether that's a good thing or a bad
00:28:54.000
thing is it about sensitizing them to it or trying to actually legislate it at some point in time
00:28:59.260
this is a good question um so i my thing with this right and i say sunglasses i'm being funny right but
00:29:04.960
like my thing is um i think we at least need to educate them and let them know look go ahead and
00:29:10.040
pursue your education go ahead and go to school sure but understand that you are never going to get
00:29:14.180
the same level of fulfillment as you will from a family and i think the biggest thing is that we've lied
00:29:18.920
to women i think we need to start being very candid and honest with women and let them know
00:29:22.720
look you want to go to school you want to pursue a career that's fine but we're not going to sit
00:29:26.480
here in line and tell you okay you can have it all you're going to get the family you're going to get
00:29:30.480
the money you're going to get the career you're going to be this badass lawyer and become partner
00:29:34.020
and also have three loving children that want to be with you at all times and a husband like it's
00:29:38.060
not you're going to have to pick one you're going to have to sacrifice i think the biggest lie
00:29:40.940
we've told women is that they can have it all um you know the cheryl sandberg um the cheryl sandberg
00:29:48.400
mantra of you know have your fun in your 20s and then in your 30s go ahead you'll find your your dream
00:29:53.720
man later on um for you and i would argue it's become even worse now because not only are we
00:29:58.900
telling women to pursue their career now we're telling them you can be a whore too and there's
00:30:02.160
going to be a guy waiting waiting for you it used to be before hey you could go and get your education
00:30:06.880
and uh do what you want to do and find your guy at 30 years old now we're telling women not only can
00:30:11.480
you just go go find your education you can also have your have your fun and be a slut and then
00:30:16.140
your guy will be there as well um you can even do some only fans you can have a sugar daddy here or
00:30:20.260
there like um it's really bad how um what how we're indoctrinating young women to kind of just tell
00:30:26.880
them like oh yeah there's no consequences to your whoredom i i saw this in one of the i don't know
00:30:32.060
which episode was it might have been a clip where you said you know they become the sluts and the
00:30:36.640
men who do this are the slut makers and my initial reaction to that was on the one hand
00:30:41.700
if you find something morally objectionable about being a slut you would not find anything remotely
00:30:47.900
proud in being the slut maker you are partaking in create i'm not accusing you of it i don't know
00:30:53.480
what your sexual proclivities are and it's none of my business but you would you would concede that
00:30:57.600
it's it's as immoral or potentially comparably immoral to both engage in that promiscuous behavior
00:31:03.540
and be the male who turns the woman into that person living with that promiscuous behavior
00:31:07.120
oh no so on this one actually i think for men um it's almost required nowadays uh for women no so
00:31:14.380
for men uh when i say guys need to get a so so i have five things i tell guys i tell guys they need
00:31:19.900
to have in place um before they decide to get married especially in today's day and age they got
00:31:25.140
to be making six figures a year have six months to one year of savings be in shape 35 years old and
00:31:31.440
have had sex with uh 50 women now five zero five zero and i'll explain this i know that's very
00:31:38.300
shocking a lot of the traditional conservatives get mad at me about this ben shapiro did a whole
00:31:42.320
video about this uh about uh disagreeing with this now the reason why i say this now does it need to be
00:31:47.640
an explicit 50 no doesn't need to be an explicit 50 but what i mean by this is it's not necessarily
00:31:52.540
the number that matters as much as i want guys to get experience to deal with modern women now i think
00:31:58.100
it's very important that people understand that um women right in today's day and age the way women
00:32:03.720
are now especially women that are like being raised right women that are turning 18 19 20 21 now the
00:32:09.440
girls that are desirable i would say right because men look at women in a certain age group they're
00:32:14.520
growing up with a different set of rules than even you know just a generation past my my the girls in
00:32:20.740
my age group uh grew up with they're growing with they're growing up with an entire different world
00:32:24.920
view different set of rules etc and i think men need to understand this and be keenly aware that
00:32:30.780
the women that your mother told you about no longer exist right the you know nice girls that you know
00:32:38.140
would save the virginity and not be not be whores or not be promiscuous etc that's effectively gone
00:32:44.020
right um i can't tell you how many times we brought girls on our show you know 18 19 years old and they
00:32:49.580
already have 20 partners right this is where we are in society now it's an ugly reality but this is
00:32:55.220
what feminism has done this is what modernity has done and this is what you know uh society has
00:32:59.680
basically done where we've told women that they could be like men and if guys don't understand how
00:33:05.200
modern women are what's going to happen is he's going to play by a set of rules let's say we take a
00:33:09.260
religious guy right a religious guy that goes to church and he believes that i'm not going to have
00:33:13.300
sex until marriage or whatever that's great that's noble i respect that but here's the problem
00:33:17.160
the woman that he ends up getting with or potentially marrying right she might go ahead
00:33:22.720
and have been a 304 but decides to change her life around doesn't tell him about it he doesn't know
00:33:27.700
he can't look at the 304 is a whore okay yeah because if you put it in account in a graphing
00:33:34.320
calculator 304 it uh says hoe okay okay well now now i learned something all right i know i know boobies
00:33:42.260
on the calculator 800-135 or something whatever oh yeah yeah i see that too um okay so he doesn't
00:33:50.800
know right so he won't know these things so what ends up happening is he gets with this girl right
00:33:55.600
and he doesn't know about her past because he wasn't able to pick up on the red flags he thinks
00:33:59.720
that she was you know a girl that was saved by god and then winds up happening you know she reserves
00:34:03.900
the right to always go back to herself to what she used to be i use an example look at stephen
00:34:08.180
crowder he had this wife right who was a devout christian and what did she do she regressed back
00:34:13.140
to the feminist ideals and try to destroy his name in the process and this is what i need guys to kind
00:34:17.760
of understand is that regardless how religious you are regardless how religious you think your
00:34:21.620
your wife is women always reserve the right to use the feminist route to absolutely destroy your
00:34:26.460
life so i i want guys to not just be red-pilled from a religion perspective but i need you to be
00:34:31.080
red-pilled from a female perspective and be able to identify these women early on the relationship
00:34:35.200
so you don't commit to these types of women and then put yourself in a bad spot because
00:34:38.460
men take on far more risk when they get married nowadays especially if they're the breadwinner
00:34:42.880
than women do so this is why i want guys to ensure that they're able to identify and detect these
00:34:49.580
types of women so that they don't commit to them so and you do that through sexual experience
00:34:52.660
unfortunately now i wish we could do go back to a day where both parties are virgins they get married
00:34:57.700
on their wedding night and it's beautiful but um thanks to us being in a what i call a deregulated
00:35:03.080
sexual marketplace where women are the ones kind of choosing who fucks and who doesn't um this is
00:35:08.120
kind of how we adapt to the new normal well okay i think four of your five points i think we all agree
00:35:13.080
with and they're actually very good i think this one this is one of two things it's either the man
00:35:17.660
whores trying to justify their man horridness like i get to have my addiction while judging others for
00:35:23.220
theirs sure or or flip side it's it's just okay well now i'm going to break myself because society's
00:35:28.140
broken instead of just looking for that person who is not a 20 person but that myron and putting
00:35:34.800
your wee wee in that many different people you're going to find something that you don't want to
00:35:38.780
discover and that's going to be an std at some point i don't care how many condoms you use um
00:35:44.080
so we'll agree to disagree on the number of 50 that i think breaks a man and makes it incapable to
00:35:48.740
actually settle down but i don't know that from experience that so maybe i'm totally wrong
00:35:52.200
um okay yeah we don't have to agree with it if you don't want to i like i said my thing is it's
00:35:57.800
more from a perspective of the guy being able to identify women that are worthy of committing to
00:36:02.640
versus women that aren't because my fear is that i don't want a guy because here's the problem right
00:36:07.420
when guys get laid right they end up making really bad decisions a lot of the times and they might
00:36:12.140
forego identifying red flags for sexual access so they'll be like oh this girl's really hot wait she
00:36:18.900
has this really weird habit but you know what i just want to get laid and they'll like like they'll
00:36:22.800
totally ignore like red flags or blaring things that are probably potentially going to be problematic
00:36:27.400
later on they see the smoke but they say you know what there's no fire i'll be fine so and it's
00:36:32.580
since men's need to um to mate and get sexual access is so powerful they'll they'll totally ignore
00:36:38.700
that for a month years and then when it does become a problem it's too late so i just want guys to
00:36:44.360
be able to think with this head up top versus the head down there and when guys are less sexually
00:36:47.940
experienced they're more likely to make really bad decisions from a mating standpoint with a woman
00:36:52.460
that quite frankly never deserved enough yeah but they're gonna but you have sex with 50 different
00:36:56.180
women one of them or at least two of them are going to be psychotic and you're going to have some big
00:36:59.480
problems there as well in terms of having dip dip the company ink and that's why she's recreational
00:37:05.300
use only and you now now you know never to deal with girls like that uh now but the other thing is
00:37:10.600
this i you're right that i haven't dated since 1999 and i can't imagine what it's like today like i
00:37:19.340
can't i could yeah no well i mean are you uh you're what is it like i mean i can't even like where do
00:37:26.820
you go to meet people because nobody does seemingly like when i was a kid we used to rock climb we used
00:37:31.640
to go to the gym the rock climbing gym biking dog runs uh like where do people meet these days
00:37:37.780
and and what's it like trying to have a relationship yeah no it's it's really bad man um so
00:37:43.940
basically um okay so and i and i've talked about this in detail so i'll go through this so like
00:37:51.620
as technology has gotten better right and um and the internet has become a thing what's ended up
00:37:57.440
happening now because you said you haven't dated since 1990 so in the 1990s women had to go outside
00:38:02.420
right to find a man they had to put effort into the way they dress the way they look they had to
00:38:07.460
put themselves out there they had to have real interactions they had to be able to communicate
00:38:11.020
with with an individual right but make themselves available now thanks to the internet namely instagram
00:38:16.740
and dating app especially what's ended up happening where women are now able to basically have their
00:38:22.060
pictures on the internet have their instagram profiles there and men just approach them via the
00:38:26.200
internet now uh when it comes to instagram and social media what this has effectively done is a
00:38:32.660
woman's phone is now like a box of cocks they open up their phone and they got a bunch of dudes
00:38:36.880
offering them all types of offers whether it's i'll fly to dubai i'll give you money here uh i'll be your
00:38:42.840
sugar daddy i'll simple on you whatever so what this has done is it's made women a lot of the times
00:38:48.000
in fucking sufferable the entitled rude obnoxious and stupid because they haven't had uh the um
00:38:56.960
the need to prove themselves to be a good girlfriend to be a good wife or whatever so
00:39:00.960
what ends up happening is you have an entire generation of extremely entitled brats that now
00:39:06.320
exist out in society um you know they're they're dumber they're less intelligent they they're not
00:39:12.240
interesting they don't have any hobbies they're not uh you know and they're and quite frankly they
00:39:17.220
think that they're better than a lot of guys any young man that's watching this right now probably
00:39:20.820
knows what i'm talking about where if you take an average woman she thinks she is more
00:39:25.740
important than an average man she thinks i deserve a guy i'm a five even though she's going to look at
00:39:30.720
herself as a nine or a ten she's going to think i deserve a nine or a ten and it's because of the
00:39:35.820
internet and it's because of this constant attention that they get where no matter what they just open
00:39:40.320
up their phone and someone is hitting them up now the problem with this is that since all the women
00:39:45.300
think that they're tens they all think that they're entitled to the top tier guys and what ends up
00:39:49.120
happening is the top tier guys all the women are chasing them so what ends up happening is these
00:39:54.460
guys never settle meanwhile the regular guys that maybe 20 30 years ago that would have been able to
00:39:59.860
get you know a good monogamous relationship these guys are getting um ghosted these guys are not or
00:40:05.320
these guys are struggling these guys are having a very hard time finding girlfriends so this what ends
00:40:09.100
up happening now is the marriage rates are plummeting the divorce rates are skyrocketing um women
00:40:15.040
don't find a majority of men as attractive because women's needs have shifted because while this
00:40:19.840
very um while this pernicious uh you know activity has been going on with the social media and women
00:40:25.880
being um you know you know getting their fucking egos lit on this side what also has been going on is
00:40:31.560
women are becoming more educated so not only are they getting it from the validation with the internet
00:40:35.880
now they're becoming more educated they're making more money we all know thanks to hypergamy when women
00:40:39.960
make money and become uh rise up the socioeconomic status they want a guy that's better than them
00:40:44.740
if not at least bare minimum on their level but on average they want a guy making about 56 percent
00:40:49.020
more money than they do so not only are their egos out the fucking wooza because the internet now
00:40:54.700
their standards are going up alongside it so what ends up happening is virtually no guy qualifies for
00:41:00.080
a lot of these girls and what ends up happening is when women are in their peak in their 20s etc
00:41:04.620
they don't want these guys they want to they want to go ahead and just kind of play the field be
00:41:09.020
single um if they do have a guy they think that they could do better and this was kind of led to
00:41:13.800
this hookup culture that we have now and this uh situation where so many women are complaining
00:41:18.160
and saying that they can't find a guy they can't find a guy not knowing that the reality is the
00:41:22.060
reason why they can't find a guy is their standards are too goddamn high but they don't want to hear
00:41:25.220
that because women think that they're special and they all think that they're 11 out of 10s so you
00:41:30.060
have multiple things going on socially and culturally that have kind of led to this degradation of the
00:41:35.280
relationships and it's because of the internet social media dating apps women being educated women
00:41:40.160
entering the workforce etc that's led to this um overall degradation and why so many guys are
00:41:45.880
struggling now versus 20 30 years ago where we saw more relationships well i can't say that i didn't
00:41:52.820
picture myself in there in terms of an average man today who would have gotten totally ghosted and when
00:41:56.920
i met my wife we were at a house party of course i met her when she was 17 and i was 19 so she had not
00:42:02.380
yet met any better if there is it is it is wild that you met you you know the internet thing in
00:42:08.900
terms of just having every access on earth just you know flipping through and the right
00:42:13.380
swift or the left i forget which one is which way uh i wouldn't want to be dating today but
00:42:17.820
i mean what is your it's gonna be a stupid question what's what's your advice to to men then you give
00:42:23.160
them the good advice the four the five points make you know get a good decent job get some decent
00:42:27.020
savings be in shape what was the fourth one that i agreed with exercise six digits yeah so have have a
00:42:33.900
good amount of savings like six months to one year of savings um obviously be in shape go to the gym
00:42:38.080
you got to train uh 35 results you have a little bit you know you're a bit more you understand
00:42:42.560
things yeah so uh so stuff like that so um but yeah i mean that's just just that's just like entry
00:42:49.660
level just to be in a position where you'll be attractive to a good amount of women where you
00:42:53.680
can be in an authority position because women a lot of them make their own money a lot of them are
00:42:57.280
successful a lot of them are educated um and then a lot of them just to be honest are very arrogant
00:43:01.220
and cocky like you know they'll never admit this but the reason why i speak about this in such a
00:43:05.560
in the manner that i do because a lot of people might be watching like myron not all women think
00:43:09.280
this way blah blah blah no a lot of them do and the thing is is that they'll sit there and they'll
00:43:13.140
try to play the humble card or whatever but the reality is their main practice is tell you guys
00:43:17.000
everything you need to know when women sit there and they say oh um you know i'm very picky or blah
00:43:21.800
blah blah that's based 100 on where they view themselves i think guys need to understand when a
00:43:25.980
woman has high standards and says i'm picky blah blah blah she's doing that based off of what she
00:43:30.540
thinks she deserves so that is a very easy way to see a woman see where to see where a woman sees
00:43:35.860
herself in the sexual marketplace and most women have an overinflated sense of self-worth to the
00:43:41.300
10th degree they'll be there and they'll say i'm a 9 out of 10 i'm a 10 out of 10 oh i'm perfect
00:43:45.680
and they'll want a guy on their level if not more but the only reason why they believe that
00:43:49.820
is because we live in this very um kiss woman's ass they are the prize um you know guy a guyocracy
00:43:58.120
um and guys need to wake up and understand that this is the world that we're in and the only way
00:44:02.420
that you're going to be able to really compete is number one you need to have your stuff together
00:44:06.160
number two you need to be able to you know uh kick her ego down a little bit and let reminder that
00:44:10.900
she's inferior to you and then number three be able to adapt to the new normal which is a sexual
00:44:15.440
marketplace that women quite frankly control uh well you say kick her down to let her know that
00:44:20.880
she's inferior to you i think i know what you mean by it but i mean uh explain that to the people
00:44:26.280
who are going to melt because they heard that um yeah so the the key is you need to the thing okay
00:44:31.520
so so this is why um so women will sit there and say i want an equal partner but that's not true
00:44:39.360
they don't want an equal partner they want a superior they want a guy that's better than them
00:44:42.860
in every regard they'll sit there and say i want a partner whatever but if you actually end up
00:44:46.980
becoming that partner she's going to lose respect for you because being a partner infers equality and
00:44:50.700
that's something that women actually find reprehensible despite the fact that they try to sit
00:44:54.680
there and say that they want an equal partner they want a superior they want a leader they want a
00:44:57.920
dominant etc and and a perfect example of this is if you watch if you um look at the books they read
00:45:04.080
the books that women read romantic novels nine out of ten times what they're actually aroused by
00:45:08.300
uh for these shades of gray and these other romantic novels it uh you know it catalogs a man who is
00:45:13.840
the dominant versus the woman being the submissive this is what women are actually aroused by and super
00:45:18.300
attracted to despite the fact they don't want to admit this because for them admitting this it would
00:45:23.120
basically infer that they're inferior which they fucking are and if you actually treat them like
00:45:26.640
that they're gonna have far more respect for you so that's number one is understanding that um
00:45:31.280
that they don't want a guy that's equal to them and not only do you have to be better than them in
00:45:35.520
every regard you got to be better than strength wise you got to be smarter than you got to be
00:45:38.780
taller than you got to be fitter than them you need to be able to basically be almost like at a
00:45:43.380
mentor status and i know a lot of people say well i don't want that myron that's that seems like a lot of
00:45:48.480
work well guess what that's what it takes nowadays to keep women truly attracted and aroused by you
00:45:53.320
and be in a position where you always have the frame um and you're the leader in the relationship
00:45:57.460
and you're the boss because that's what how women want it now they'll never admit this for obvious
00:46:01.260
reasons because it shows their female nature shows how unfair they are and you know obviously they
00:46:05.760
fought through feminism the past several decades to get equality but the problem is that as with
00:46:10.700
everything they imply the equality but they don't really want it they just want the ability to be able
00:46:15.440
to have the opportunity but they still want a guy that's better than them in every regard and i think
00:46:18.720
guys need to really um you know take this and understand that this is um this is the new normal
00:46:25.200
right what they say versus what they respond to are two different things and i know for a lot of guys
00:46:29.100
like oh my god i can't believe this this guy's radical this guy's a messager this is the way it's
00:46:33.920
always been women never wanted equals they never did the only reason right women fight for um equality
00:46:40.880
and egalitarianism and feminism the only reason they fought for that was so that they don't have to
00:46:45.280
be with equals i'm gonna say that again the only reason women have fought through feminism
00:46:50.080
egalitarianism everything else like that is so that they don't have to saddle themselves up with
00:46:54.000
someone that is equal they would rather work for their own stuff and be by themselves right and
00:47:00.400
and do everything by themselves than be with a man that they see as equal okay that's what they
00:47:05.360
actually fought for the feminism so they don't have to saddle themselves up with a fucking loser
00:47:09.040
now if you're a winner they will gladly throw all that feminism stuff by the wayside
00:47:13.600
and be your woman but they need you to be superior to them in order for them to do that that's the
00:47:17.600
truth with feminism it was to get rid of the normal guys and remove them from the sexual marketplace
00:47:21.840
so they don't have to saddle themselves up with that guy they'd rather go to college and take on
00:47:26.000
hundreds of thousands of dollars of debt stress work for someone that doesn't care about them and
00:47:30.480
put themselves in an early grave so they don't have to be with an average guy that's how much women
00:47:34.400
hate average men it is when you mention like women being or people being picky and you know when you
00:47:41.440
say like that and i i view that as sort of like a transactional view of human relationships like
00:47:47.520
how tall how you know how strong whatever as opposed to just viewing the human but the idea what you're
00:47:52.640
describing sounds a little bit like the innate desires of what made women women and men men throughout
00:47:59.680
history versus the feminist promise which is they want to be the if you say the alpha of the
00:48:05.760
relationships where it doesn't work when someone actually has to carry the babies and raise the
00:48:09.120
babies and that subconsciously they want something that they haven't been promised they were told was
00:48:13.200
the opposite by the modern feminist movement if we can put it in more politically palatable terms
00:48:18.800
yeah um you know and i'm sorry about that i was i was getting my guy to uh to help me with uh some
00:48:23.920
stuff because for some odd reason i was supposed to be streaming this on youtube but it's only on rumble
00:48:27.520
um yeah no so basically um the the whole the whole feminist like movement etc a big part of it was
00:48:35.840
to allow women right the same opportunities as men because this is what what feminism really is about
00:48:40.960
right women want the ability to be able to do what men do but at the same time be able to get off that
00:48:48.080
what i call like the masculine journey whenever they feel like okay you know what i'm tired of working
00:48:51.840
that sucks i just want a guy to take care of me now um and they can go ahead and kind of just get
00:48:56.560
off that career trajectory and then have a man take care of them because regardless of woman's
00:49:01.360
success level no matter how you know masculine she is or whatever she still wants a man that
00:49:06.240
could provide for her or get married and have kids one day almost always so um you know they always
00:49:12.400
they want to be able to just be able to reserve that right to you know get off the totem pole whenever
00:49:15.920
it suits them it's funny i was coming into this thinking like oh if i have a zinger if i'm going to
00:49:20.480
finally ask the question that i've always been wondering is why the men in the call it the manosphere i don't
00:49:25.920
know if that's a demeaning word uh or or they tend to be single uh without kids and as i've asked you
00:49:33.120
not as a judgmental question men have a lot more time to do it but you know i'm thinking like okay
00:49:37.280
in the manosphere the big names myron games you got the tate brothers you got um you have to give me
00:49:43.360
another name but the the ones that i've noticed myself uh you know there's a bunch of us there yeah
00:49:48.880
you got guys like donovan sharp rollo tomasi myself andrew tate uh his brother and i'm not wrong
00:49:54.800
all unmarried and with no kids right um well andrew has a bunch of kids uh he's talked about
00:50:00.640
that tristan too um rollo has a wife he's married yeah they don't have the traditional um kids with
00:50:08.640
different women is not going to be exactly what i guess they would bro has a traditional family okay
00:50:13.520
well my question was gonna be like why some of the the younger and i'm seeing younger compared to
00:50:17.920
me don't have that traditional system now when i when you describe this reality with which i am
00:50:22.240
totally unfamiliar i look at my wife and i like we got we got married after dating for eight years
00:50:27.200
monogamous dating relationship kids and everything and like maybe it's just not possible anymore
00:50:32.880
in this in this day and age of dating and marriage and and political expectations i don't
00:50:37.360
know is it simply not possible what i thought was pretty standard traditional stuff from the late
00:50:42.240
90s early 2000s not feasible anymore you know that that's a good question i i think we're at a point
00:50:48.720
now where um regular guys are gonna have to work a lot harder um because unfortunately thanks to the
00:50:56.400
internet and thanks to um how we've kind of what i call like a globalized sexual marketplace um it's
00:51:02.080
made it where um it truly is far more competitive right a regular guy would have been able to you know
00:51:07.120
find a grub before right in the in the golden era in the 50s right just have a factory job you'd get
00:51:11.840
a wife that was going to be submissive to you she probably wasn't a 304 um and you'd be fine right
00:51:16.320
you can have your two family you can have your two three kids your dog white pick a fence the american
00:51:21.040
dream but i think nowadays um being an average guy and being able to uh find an attractive woman and be
00:51:28.080
able to get her to submit to you because it's not just about getting the woman anymore now it's about
00:51:31.520
getting her where she's going to be in a position where she feels as though she wants to submit to you
00:51:35.840
because keep in mind we've made it where we've socialized if we made it completely socially
00:51:42.080
acceptable for women to talk back to men we've made it socially acceptable for women to be rude to
00:51:45.520
men we made it socially acceptable for women to leave men if they're not happy we've made it where
00:51:50.240
you know i've i say this thing all the time um you know women will destroy their family if they're
00:51:54.800
not happy men will destroy themselves you know for their fat family to be happy so um we we live in
00:52:01.040
this very um you know i call we call it a gynocentric social order where if the woman's not happy happy
00:52:06.560
wife happy life like all these are like our entitled society is framed around female happiness and her
00:52:12.480
being satisfied so we have all these different um institutions set up for for um for women's benefit
00:52:20.400
so guys need to kind of go into this with their eyes wide open and understand that hey if you get
00:52:24.720
married or hey you get a long-term relationship or hey just the courtship process now um it's changed a lot
00:52:29.760
now luckily you met your wife when you were young you guys met in the 90s you guys met in a time where
00:52:34.000
social media was not a pernicious um social thing that we have nowadays that's literally destroying
00:52:40.320
our young women um but it's going to be a lot harder for the young guys because i don't think um
00:52:44.880
you know like even myself like i have to get a lot of this stuff from looking at the internet talking to
00:52:50.400
my younger people but social media is absolutely corrupt corrupted both men and women both young men and
00:52:56.160
young women you know that that much i can understand especially the the pornography side
00:53:00.720
of it like we grew up in kids we had we had access to nudie magazines and you'd have to go to a store
00:53:06.080
and ask for the top shelf or go into the movie store and go behind the beaded things and if you
00:53:10.240
want to catch a glimpse and now it's like the the the most um hardcore at your fingertips uh i can't
00:53:16.880
imagine what that does to kids and we're gonna have to figure this out because we've got three kids of
00:53:20.320
our own uh ubiquitous it's wild right like used to be very hard to access now it's i mean thank
00:53:26.800
thankfully they got rid of it in florida where you have to log in and show your age which is good
00:53:30.640
um but yeah man i mean this is like all of these the the the ubiquity of pornography social media
00:53:36.800
etc like all of this has been extremely destructive and i think it's going to have some serious
00:53:40.480
consequences for um the next uh generation this is the question i have to ask when you said you know like
00:53:45.920
women get used to talking back yada yada and i know i can hear i can hear the snowflake screaming
00:53:50.480
and i part of me says well okay people are equal and if someone wants to be a rude jackass well
00:53:56.000
they'll end up divorced like 50 some odd percent of people out there flip side is go to societies
00:54:00.640
where women can't talk back and i can only think of like the most extreme religious societies which are
00:54:05.840
not you know which i wouldn't want to emulate either so there is something of a middle ground in there
00:54:09.920
where uh i mean i do believe spouses should talk back to each other but they should they should
00:54:15.680
fight in private not in public and i definitely understand the idea of the emasculating thing that
00:54:20.880
goes on with being slapped by a woman and that becomes somehow cute and acceptable but god forbid uh
00:54:26.320
the roles are reversed and it becomes quite literally criminal spousal abuse um i don't know what the
00:54:31.440
middle ground is when i say talk back i mean as in i'm not saying like oh yeah you know sean connery
00:54:35.680
your girl no what i'm saying and for those for those who don't know sean connery talked about
00:54:39.920
slapping a woman if she was rude to him yeah yeah so no what i mean by that is like um she she's
00:54:45.200
constantly challenging your authority like you say hey this is going to be the final decision and she
00:54:49.040
doesn't respect that right um because you know it should have used i think any relationship dynamic
00:54:54.720
the man needs to be the final decision maker i'm not saying don't listen to what your girl has to
00:54:58.480
say or to what your woman has to say obviously her opinion matters um and what's going on but you
00:55:03.520
need to be the final decision maker so and but when you make these final decisions or when you
00:55:07.040
say something she's constantly changing challenging your authority and i say that because we live in
00:55:11.600
a society now where it's amazing to me how many times i ask a woman hey what do you think men want
00:55:16.720
and she says like girls literally think that challenging their guy or making him better through
00:55:21.840
challenging him is something that men men want and it's actually alarming how many young women think
00:55:26.080
that this is something that men find attractive and it's like no that's not what we find attractive
00:55:30.000
whatsoever but they've been indoctrinated through feminism through mainstream media to think
00:55:34.240
challenging their man is something that men want no the last thing a guy wants to do is work all
00:55:38.240
day challenge the world then come home and have his wife challenge him that's a completely antithetical
00:55:42.320
but young women think that this is attractive so that's what i mean by that and i just happened to
00:55:46.640
flip over to the rumble and look at it one chat it just stuck up right now it says christine anderson
00:55:50.480
this guy's a real jerk he hates women and thinks we are useless i i know what your response is
00:55:54.560
going to be but let me let me hear it yeah so the majority the reality is the majority women are
00:55:59.280
useless um and they don't like to hear that but um you know the a big reason why so many women are
00:56:04.320
useless is because they've never had to be useful if we're going to be honest here um because a lot
00:56:09.520
of women right you know especially if they're attractive they just get everything given to them
00:56:13.840
like let's let's be very candid here a man's life is significantly harder than a woman's life in
00:56:18.240
every in every regard right um men have to earn their value women don't now if women do want to work
00:56:23.440
hard and become successful absolutely there's a bunch of women out there that are extremely hard
00:56:27.440
working right i could give give my sister as an example but that's far and few between most women
00:56:31.680
prefer not to enter the workforce or work a super hard job or have to go through um you know ridiculous
00:56:37.120
levels of education to reach that job and if they do actually go through they end up quitting or backing
00:56:41.360
out because the reality is there's no real proclivity for women to earn an abundance of money or
00:56:47.680
resources because their sexual market value is not determined by that a man is far more likely to work
00:56:52.800
hard because if we don't work hard we don't get laid we don't get sexual access we can't procreate
00:56:58.000
but for a woman um if she decides i don't want to work hard that's not going to affect her ability
00:57:02.400
to find a suitor okay and in many cases it'll probably make it easier for her to find a suitor
00:57:06.640
when she's not too successful so um when i say these things women get angry but the reality is
00:57:13.120
that there there's a significant burden of performance on men versus women
00:57:16.160
i you know the funny thing is it's only the focus on sex that i think would piss some people
00:57:23.360
off this is pretty decent advice for everybody is make yourself useful and don't rely on superficial
00:57:28.160
elements of your being in order to get what you want because i mean i i'm not one of them but i've
00:57:32.720
seen plenty of men who are so good looking it's actually been a curse in their life because
00:57:37.120
they get things that they don't necessarily have to work for or deserve and also become something of
00:57:42.160
like people look at them and they don't see someone who worked hard and did whatever they just see
00:57:45.360
they just see something like painfully good looking chiseled and whatever uh so i mean i
00:57:49.920
think this this this applies to everybody but materializes quick i'll tell you viva so so notice
00:57:56.160
how people get offended when i speak in generalities this is something also that's a unique phenomenon
00:58:00.800
that i see only with women when i speak in generalities with men no one bats an eye if i were
00:58:05.120
to say yeah most men are complete idiots and buffoons no one in the chat would get angry at me and say
00:58:09.920
for me saying that they'd be like yeah a lot of guys are fucking idiots i agree with you on that
00:58:13.520
but if i say most women are retards whoa what the hell like women have an inability to understand
00:58:19.680
that the world operates on generalizations and they will get offended and they will go ahead and
00:58:23.520
make an argument for the exception to the rule well i'm not an idiot i'm smart i have a 4.0 gpa even
00:58:29.440
though the whole education system is literally you know made for women to be better better slaves
00:58:34.160
because they tell you to sit there and follow instructions so of course little girls do better
00:58:37.200
that's a whole other conversation the whole education system is scammed on women but the point i'm
00:58:41.200
trying to make is like men when i say when i talk in generalities no problem no one's gonna bat bat an
00:58:47.520
eye even if i say something bad about men but when i speak in generalities about women and i say something
00:58:52.320
negative they get extremely offended and they're unable to think of things from a rationally sound
00:58:57.520
logically sound perspective and they get angry and offended and they get mad at me it's a phenomenon
00:59:01.600
that only women have this thing well i say you might be right on a broader scale but if you speak if you
00:59:07.040
generalize about other demographics i think you'll find those demographics or those broad groups will
00:59:12.080
get angry at the generalizations and we're probably gonna get there in one second but just the thing
00:59:16.000
about you said about school being designed for girls and any girl or anybody who's saying that's
00:59:20.640
that's a sexist thing i've got we've got three kids one boy and the we're homeschooling the boy now
00:59:26.880
because school is quite clearly not made or at least today's schools are not made to deal with
00:59:32.080
rambunctious boys because they are i don't care what anybody says physiologically psychologically
00:59:36.400
different and not necessarily better boys are i think are bigger idiots for a longer period of
00:59:40.400
time than girls they don't sit still there and they're not just like harder to deal with they're
00:59:44.800
more destructive also because they're like strong strong you know primates compared to girls that
00:59:49.680
don't break all the time and yeah and the teachers who happen to be at school happen to be young
00:59:55.120
females by and large like 90 some odd percent who can't deal with young boys and it either leads to
01:00:00.960
the emasculation of young boys or the medication of young boys or i should say the prescription of
01:00:06.000
medication to young boys or what we did pull them out and we'll do it ourselves despite it making us
01:00:11.120
both go freaking crazy it's a thousand percent true um or at least accurate but um my it's funny
01:00:18.720
myron like i i people i can see people not liking the delivery not liking the you know some of the
01:00:24.400
the rhetoric but yeah it's it's very tough to disagree with thousands of years of human nature like
01:00:30.240
this is what religion was predicated on uh this is what the nuclear family was predicated on and
01:00:35.520
whether or not there are exceptions to the rule that by and large you know there's plenty of nuclear
01:00:39.600
families where there's abuse and and broken marriages and unhappiness but you're talking about
01:00:44.000
odds over a longer period of time and in poker you know an amateur can win every now and again but
01:00:50.320
over the life of uh of years the professionals will win just because all the odds tend to flip in
01:00:55.600
their favor over a period of time but i what is the um i'm just saying what we all say in a locker
01:01:01.840
room anyway and i also the other thing you were saying right like i find interesting right if you
01:01:06.240
look at ancient islam biblical times etc there was no cell phones there was no i you know um emails
01:01:12.880
there was no text messaging how is it that all these different ancient civilizations understood that
01:01:17.360
men need to be in leadership roles in order for the civilization to progress right like whether it
01:01:22.000
was asian indians uh native americans whatever they all were patriarchies and understood that
01:01:26.560
men need to be at the at the helm for us to be able to progress in a society and then even to this day
01:01:31.600
it wasn't until we have all this technology and all this modernity that now that we've pretty much
01:01:36.160
civilized the world to an incredible degree that we let women have some kind of power and they still
01:01:40.000
fuck shit up so my thing is i'm just saying the truth that quite frankly when it comes to leading a
01:01:45.840
society uh prosperity etc men need to be at the helm and if they don't we're going to end up with
01:01:50.480
women at the helm and that's going to lead us to problems because let's be honest man women suck at
01:01:54.640
everything when it comes to competing with men men are better than women at every single endeavor
01:02:00.960
when you actually compare the two genders and for all the women that are probably losing their minds
01:02:04.000
watching the stream right now it's like that's not true we have kids well you need us to have kids
01:02:07.280
you dumb bimbo so the reality is in every regard where humans can compete you put a man against a
01:02:12.640
woman we are better than them i'm trying to think now because sports it's an easy one except
01:02:18.480
they'll say gymnastics women perform better than men uh i was going to make the joke that you know
01:02:23.280
there haven't been very many warrior societies that were led by women because i presume they would
01:02:26.720
have been uh decimated by uh the other warriors that had like the the the maoris as their warriors and
01:02:33.840
whatever okay let me try to let me try to there's nothing i'm telling you we're better than i'm gonna feign
01:02:39.520
outrage at what you just said it's terrible there have been very many good female chess players uh there's been
01:02:45.280
very many good okay i can only think in sports literature there have been some great thinkers
01:02:50.480
so i mean the question is going to be you mean just by numbers proportions statistics and then
01:02:54.480
the argument is going to be well that was only because you know the a and rands of the world had
01:02:58.000
to break through the patriarchy there are just as many great philosopher women as there were men
01:03:03.040
but men kept them down that's going to be the retort yeah they always say that but then i say well
01:03:07.040
women have more privilege and rights now than ever before and they still like with the affirmative action
01:03:11.760
they still can't beat men out like well excuse me in the hip-hop industry i'll say the women are
01:03:16.320
doing very well with cardi b in the music industry what's her face lady gaga just went to space
01:03:22.000
notice it is interesting because i guess people will say you're wrong there have been great many
01:03:26.400
female thinkers and then you're gonna say yes but then statistically you know the ancient greeks were
01:03:32.240
by and large men the argument's going to be well that's because the men prevented the women from
01:03:36.480
reaching the tops or they built their their their knowledge base off the backs of women and then it's
01:03:41.200
just going to be a question of statistics and then it's going to be a self-fulfilling prophecy
01:03:43.920
did the women not attain those those peaks of intellect and and physique because they were
01:03:49.200
forced to raise families or because they chose to raise families and then is it a natural order of
01:03:54.720
things to have that distinct or that that that differentiation between the sexes i'm gonna have
01:04:00.720
to mull that over yeah the correct part of me wants to get mad at you for what you just said
01:04:06.240
but now i'm going to have to actually think about it for a second yeah because even when you think
01:04:09.600
about it right like um because women now right over the past was 60 80 years right thanks to
01:04:14.320
feminism they pretty much have all have had all the same rights and privileges men why do they still
01:04:18.800
not dominate um stem why do they still not dominate infrastructure jobs why do they still not dominate
01:04:23.520
certain fields where they can make quite a bit of impact and the reality comes down to men and women
01:04:27.360
are simply just different and women aren't interested in a lot of the things that men are interested that
01:04:31.280
just tend to lead to civilization growth women just aren't interested in this stuff i'm trying to think i'm
01:04:35.600
trying to go stem uh industry anything that's not based on strength as a general requirement so take
01:04:43.360
out athletics take out oil rigging uh i'm i'm i am trying to think of thing uh endeavors that are purely
01:04:49.280
intellectual and then whether or not you reach something of a parity but then you get into things
01:04:53.840
like stem engineering which is purely intellectual there's nothing physical required and there will be
01:04:58.080
statistical over-representation at higher levels but of men i think but statistical over-representation of women
01:05:04.480
in education and so what happens is they're filtered out for whatever the reasons is it because the
01:05:08.560
brain is different or because they realize yeah you can't have a family and do this um but i don't
01:05:15.920
think you can i don't think you can disagree with the stats overall i think i think women are just lazier
01:05:21.680
than men in a lot of regards like and i'll explain what i mean by this right so so for i can't tell you
01:05:27.120
how many times right i've met a guy he had to sacrifice and this is anecdotal but i'll go somewhere
01:05:33.040
further with this men will sacrifice right a dream because they understand damn i can't be a musician
01:05:39.600
and make a bunch of money it's not gonna happen i gotta go ahead and do a job that i hate doing
01:05:43.920
because there's a there's a burning performance on me to get out there and make money i gotta become
01:05:47.760
an engineer because my family told me i need to do this or else whatever right they'll sacrifice
01:05:51.280
doing what they do but women right they'll go ahead and they'll also kind of sacrifice okay my
01:05:55.600
family told me i got to be a pharmacist because i can't be a singer whatever but they're far more likely
01:06:00.000
to quit that job and pursue what they want to do or find a man that will allow them to take care of
01:06:04.960
you know the provisioning and stuff and then they'll go ahead and pursue their dream so in other words
01:06:08.960
like women have uh a back door that they can escape out a lot of the times where they don't necessarily
01:06:13.840
have to um be the provider but for men it's like if you don't provide you're not going to get sexual
01:06:18.400
access no one's going to respect you etc so we have to work women don't right that's the difference i
01:06:23.840
can't tell how many times girls will have a degree right in in a certain field and they'll just quit
01:06:28.720
they'll say i don't want to do it and they just want to do it because they don't need to versus
01:06:31.920
the guy he doesn't want to do it but he still has to get up every day and do it well now but now i
01:06:37.120
got it all all there's a logical problem here is that on the one hand you're saying that you know
01:06:41.040
women should be the homemakers and not endeavor to do what the men do and become senior partner at
01:06:47.120
law firms but then unless you're suggesting they're not quitting to raise a family they're just
01:06:50.960
quitting because they're lazy and not actually doing the other part of what you think that they
01:06:54.400
should be doing is the natural order of things which is building a home
01:06:58.960
yeah i mean it depends right so it you know they might not see it through for different
01:07:03.440
reasons maybe she wants to pursue something else maybe she wants to pursue a family but the point
01:07:07.040
i'm trying to make is that they always have that um they always have that luxury of where if they
01:07:12.880
they could find a guy to to take care of the provisioning side and then they can focus on what
01:07:17.040
they really want to do versus for us we can't do that right like we have to you know i can't say
01:07:22.080
many times guys you know give up on their dreams or stop doing what they want to do or don't pursue what
01:07:26.640
they want to do because it's just simply not going to make enough money for them and they understand
01:07:30.320
that uh they got to live in reality and earn money versus for women they can go ahead and quit doing
01:07:34.880
what they're doing or find a man to take care of them so they can pursue their dream um and do what
01:07:40.000
they want to do so with us we we're very rigid in our opportunities versus for them they have a bunch
01:07:45.680
of opportunities right and that's because um you know women are the privileged uh gender and that and
01:07:50.320
my thing is people get mad at me for acknowledging this and um and saying it out loud they say oh
01:07:54.880
well that's sexist well reality is sexist i argue that sexism only benefits women i really can't
01:08:00.160
think of um how sexism benefits men the only way i could think of that sexism benefits men is like
01:08:05.600
men are basically able to have sex with multiple partners without being judged but maybe that if you
01:08:10.080
want to use that as an example but in general sexism wildly benefits women over men uh some would actually
01:08:16.800
disagree now that i thought about a little bit more that uh the women that do dominate uh tend
01:08:21.680
to also be men i'm thinking of that's that's the but a bing but a boom joke um myron so well some
01:08:28.000
people are going to say that the reason why you're not getting married is because you're gonna you're
01:08:30.640
not going to find a woman who's not going to be offended by what you're saying you know you know
01:08:34.560
it's amazing a lot of girls actually you know privately agree with me a lot and say yeah no you're
01:08:38.640
everything that you're saying is 100 um and they agree because a lot of women respect guys that can
01:08:43.760
just say it like it is right they want a guy that isn't afraid of what they're going to say
01:08:47.200
can tell them that this is what it is you know like as much as women sit there and say they want
01:08:51.280
to equal they really don't man they want a guy that's superior to them that could tell like look
01:08:55.040
at them be like yeah be quiet you're we're gonna do this oh my god that's so hot you can just tell
01:08:59.040
me what to do because it's such a foreign concept now of men just standing up to women like so many
01:09:04.720
guys are so scared to tell a woman to shut up because they want to get laid so bad like oh my god i can't
01:09:10.880
say anything that she's not gonna like because then i won't get laid but it's like if you could just
01:09:14.000
simply tell a girl like you're dumb we're not doing that we're gonna do this like so many girls
01:09:17.520
would respect you and find that attractive because so few guys can do it right now i know
01:09:21.440
there's a bunch of women probably in the chat right now that are mad guys it's not just shut
01:09:25.680
up bitch you're you love guys like me that can tell you to go into a kitchen and make a sandwich
01:09:30.240
that women want guys and tell them to go back in the kitchen you know what why you guys are
01:09:34.080
watching the stream right now it's okay i got y'all if you guys are watching this with a woman
01:09:37.200
hey go get him a sandwich you see if she doesn't get up and get you a sandwich right now guys you
01:09:44.880
might you might need to rethink what you're doing all right so some people are going to get wildly
01:09:49.600
offended i would say you know first of all you can if you can't hear what someone says you don't like
01:09:53.840
and you're going to get offended you're a bit of a baby i'm looking at you my right i'm saying like
01:09:57.520
this would lead to a divorce in my family not because i'm a beta male but because you know i first of
01:10:03.360
all it's maybe it's a different time where and maybe i'm just fortunate that i don't actually
01:10:07.680
disagree with my wife or we don't disagree on meaningful things so like we don't have to have
01:10:12.160
these uh critical arguments on on issues that would otherwise drive a wedge in people's marriages like
01:10:17.520
when we moved to florida we both agreed it might have taken some persuasion on my part but not
01:10:23.120
not this type of uh force or psychological force when the kid came out of school we both agreed so
01:10:29.120
like we we're we're in simpatico but some people said like if i told my wife to go make me a
01:10:33.600
sandwich i'd get divorced and some people are going to say that's why people do get divorced is
01:10:37.600
because some of the men it's not a question of being dominant and the man who could defend them
01:10:41.840
but being verbally abusive and psychologically abusive but i know that maybe most of what you're
01:10:47.600
saying is sort of tongue-in-cheek um and also you got to have a bit of a spicy delivery to
01:10:54.240
catch people's attention yeah the reality is right there there's a there's a reason why women
01:10:58.160
want a guy who's stronger than them taller than them and can tell them certain things and there's
01:11:02.000
a reason why they love books like 50 shades of gray they want that dominant sort of man i'm not
01:11:05.360
telling you to be walking in the house all the time and like like i'm not saying i do that but what i
01:11:10.640
am saying is that women are very aroused by and attracted to men that could put them in their place
01:11:15.120
when they get out of place because let's be honest here there's plenty of times where women will
01:11:18.400
sit there and try to test you and you know try to disrespect you and see how you respond sometimes
01:11:22.400
you just got to be able to tell her shut up okay i'm watching the game shut the
01:11:26.480
fuck up go make a sandwich and be quiet and she might like pal like no that's all me but
01:11:31.680
deep down she's like damn like that that is hot this guy could tell me what it is and a big part of
01:11:36.080
the uh being a man is being able to identify when you need to do that right like it's obviously you
01:11:42.160
can't do it every day you can't be sean connery but at the same time you also can be a wimp where
01:11:46.800
you're scared to do it you need to be able to wield that um that authority and be able to do it when
01:11:51.760
you need to now of course there's gonna be women in the chat that are gonna get mad and be like
01:11:54.800
that's not true blah blah blah because um these are unflattering realities about female nature
01:11:59.440
because you know they've been fighting for decades to be treated as equal so you get this guy on the
01:12:03.520
podcast that comes in and tells you like yeah they're actually aroused by you telling them to
01:12:06.480
shut the hell up they're not gonna like that right yeah but the truth that's if you're the right guy
01:12:11.040
they will like but that might be good and i'm putting it in quotes that might be good advice for
01:12:16.640
having sex and you know short-term relationship short-term dating but not for a marriage because i i view
01:12:22.320
marriage more like a corporation and you're working with the vice president type thing although who's
01:12:27.200
the president i view it as a corporation uh in terms of you know the relationship not that might be good
01:12:33.120
advice for dating but not good advice for marriage but we'll you know time will tell uh and and you
01:12:38.000
know success leaves clues but myron if people are offended by this let's get into the one that's
01:12:42.000
really gonna let's really gonna piss him off sure israel and the jews myron we have to get into this okay
01:12:47.120
sure sure no i say tongue in cheek you got in trouble recently for uh i think i gave you a bit
01:12:55.040
of a hard time and i'll i'll explain it but for the people say at some point the people who take
01:13:01.280
a trajectory like you in terms of what you talk about on the internet eventually you find yourself
01:13:06.000
in the rabbit hole of the jews are behind everything uh question everything even you know
01:13:10.880
i say basic historical facts um did you get into the most trouble for some of the things you said
01:13:17.360
not questioning the holocaust but rather questioning certain elements of the history of the holocaust
01:13:22.720
how much flack did that get you into and did that have anything to do with whether or not
01:13:26.400
you were at risk uh in terms of going to england for social media posts yeah so my thing is uh look
01:13:33.280
i think uh we've been lied to about a lot of things right not just world war ii we've been lied to
01:13:37.600
about 9 11 we've been lied to about the iraq war we've been lied to about um the conflicts in the
01:13:42.160
middle east in general we've been lied to about uh the uss liberty blood hell we've been lied to even
01:13:47.760
about october 7th in many regards right and that's in modern day society so um and many wars right so i
01:13:54.960
think um the the important thing here the bottom line is i think people need to be able to look at
01:13:59.520
what's going on and be able to question things in a healthy manner obviously you don't want to get into
01:14:04.080
the whole um you know conspiracy theory rabbit hole and go deep down in there and just you know
01:14:09.520
become an autist uh but i think people need to be able to critically think and look at everything with
01:14:13.520
another set of fresh eyes and be able to um you know assess what we've been told the truth about
01:14:18.240
and what we've been lied about because i mean there is an absolute trend here where you know many big
01:14:23.200
historical events we've been lied to about it that's the and full disclosure people can accuse me of
01:14:30.560
whatever i've had this discussion with people where you know there's the the term holocaust denial
01:14:36.480
has taken on such a broad meaning now where people come and say well i you know let's talk about the
01:14:41.200
numbers talk about the extent and that's holocaust denialism uh and and it's illegal in certain
01:14:46.320
countries and i've always said like you need people to be able to discuss this because if you don't
01:14:50.640
allow them to on the one hand it will legitimize their views in their mind and it'll actually
01:14:55.440
legitimize their the conspiracy theories in the eyes of others the question becomes however
01:15:01.040
censorship never works right and and um and i think this is what israel is like kind of uh
01:15:05.280
losing a lot of uh support here where they're trying to censor people with these anti-semitism
01:15:10.320
laws and all they're doing is making people think oh well they're hiding something oh they're lying
01:15:15.040
like censorship simply doesn't work i mean the daily wire tried it with candace owens it hurt them
01:15:19.040
significantly um even to the point where brett cooper when she left they thought it was because
01:15:23.600
of censorship when in reality it wasn't but that's how much people hate censorship so um to censor
01:15:28.400
people and tell them oh you can't talk about xyz all it does is empowers them to want to talk about
01:15:32.160
it more and um i think this is something where uh you know they're losing quite a bit of uh support
01:15:38.480
in the main arena in the information war for trying to censor people from talking about certain things
01:15:43.040
well no but the question is censorship in terms of talking about it is one thing
01:15:48.000
the other issue is that there's always going to be an underbelly or a niche and people are going to
01:15:52.000
say like there's going to be in the markets of the world there's going to be a market for people who
01:15:56.880
want to make that argument that uh you know the the calculation as to how many bodies could have
01:16:01.520
been cremated in the holocaust and you you tap into certain niches and then the question becomes
01:16:07.040
whether or not the discussion is one about free speech or commercial exploitation of the niches that
01:16:12.160
you know will exist and when does i mean when do you distinguish sincere questioning versus
01:16:19.680
when it descends into potential niche like i don't like the word grifting and i'm not going to use it
01:16:24.160
but getting into a niche where you know there's going to be people who are going to be interested in
01:16:27.840
hearing it despite the fact that it's either been debunked or that the only use in entertaining it
01:16:34.480
is to entertain that niche if that question is clear yeah no i i think um my thing is i think you
01:16:41.200
know i'm a i'm a pretty much a free speech absolutist slash maximalist um i think all a
01:16:46.400
conversation needs to be entertained and even the conversation that might be looked at as like you
01:16:49.760
know potentially being grifting i think it needs to come in and then people should be able to challenge
01:16:53.360
it if if they do think that it's grifting i think all uh discussion um you know as long as it doesn't
01:16:58.720
lead to imminent violence um needs to be had right so these laws that that are in place about you know the
01:17:04.000
certain event i call it i call the cookie monster event um when i'm on youtube but like you know this
01:17:10.160
discussion in general i think it needs to be allowed and i think people need to be able to
01:17:13.920
question it because whenever you uh forbid people from questioning things you create a market for it
01:17:18.880
and then you almost like give energy and power to the thing that you're trying to avoid so um i think
01:17:25.040
all conversation should be able to be had um uh and then and then what so that way people can come
01:17:31.600
in and question and they can go ahead and have a debate because my thing is i i like the arena of
01:17:35.440
ideas where we're able to kind of come in and then go ahead bring in the people that don't believe
01:17:39.840
the world war ii narrative bring them in and let them talk to the people that believe in the world
01:17:43.200
war ii narrative and let them have a debate and i love those discussions because then now we're
01:17:48.320
letting them have the discussion and then the people can decide what do they believe in what do they
01:17:52.400
agree with because you're letting both uh parties debate each other and then the people can decide
01:17:57.360
the it's it's going to be a very i don't know if it's politically incorrect you're suiting parents
01:18:04.160
are sudanese uh you're you're black the question is this i mean say black as in you're physically
01:18:10.720
black skin depends on what you're asking well that's the question now yeah well do you have it do
01:18:16.800
you do you view um do you consider yourself to be part of what they refer to as you know uh african
01:18:22.640
american uh black america or do you have it do you do you feel that you're uh do you consider
01:18:27.760
yourself coming from a different demographic that doesn't necessarily see eye to eye with what they
01:18:32.320
typically refer to as black america yeah so me personally i consider myself black right um you
01:18:38.640
know i i grew up uh you know in the united states i'm very familiar with black culture my skin is black
01:18:44.000
when i checked the little box i put black um but black people you know interestingly enough and it's
01:18:49.360
only this one demographic of idiots called fbas foundation of black americans who basically for
01:18:53.920
those that are unaware thank god that you're not aware but yeah basically they're um like descendants
01:18:59.200
of slaves they look at me and say you're not one of us because i'm not a descendant of a slave
01:19:04.160
um and they consider anyone by for that matter that isn't a descendant of a slave as not black they
01:19:10.000
if you're jamaican if you're haitian if you're from um anywhere from africa nigeria whatever they
01:19:14.160
don't consider you black which i think is absolutely ludicrous but this small demographic of idiots
01:19:19.120
don't consider themselves black i consider don't consider people that aren't fbas black but i
01:19:23.520
consider myself black i would argue most black people in the united states would consider me
01:19:27.440
black and they probably consider themselves black regardless of where they're from or whether they're
01:19:30.880
related to a slave or not um but yeah it's only that small demographic um of people that don't think
01:19:36.720
so but i i think i am i think other individuals would probably identify me as that um like literally
01:19:41.920
i am the definition of african-american like my parents are from sudan i was born here like i am
01:19:46.880
african-american to the t quite literally but no but i mean i mean like in terms of
01:19:52.320
culturally between sudanese immigrants who might come to america and have as much cultural collision
01:20:00.000
with black america as you you would imagine white america would like do your parents have that
01:20:04.560
experience with uh with with what is historically or traditionally regarded as black america um so like
01:20:12.080
funny enough like my dad he doesn't like being called uh black he likes being called african um
01:20:18.320
and i and i've noticed this with a lot of people because because like being black in america has
01:20:22.160
such a bad connotation with being affiliated with crime and hip-hop and degeneracy so like growing up
01:20:27.360
like my dad never wanted to be called black himself he was like no i'm african i'm not one of them
01:20:31.600
um and i think a lot of people that you know are first generation uh their parents might have felt this
01:20:36.080
way whether they came from the caribbean or they came from africa directly they felt this way um but
01:20:41.120
yeah i mean you know let's be honest like you know the black community does push out a lot of
01:20:45.600
degeneracy single mother households drug uh drug trafficking gang violence um violence in general
01:20:51.840
to solve their problems not being educated drug use alcohol like um there's a lot of degeneracy and
01:20:57.280
like as an adult i can look back and be like damn yeah this is stuff that um isn't necessarily good for
01:21:01.600
the for the community but this is something that's pushed by this culture so i could see why now as an
01:21:05.520
adult i could look back and see why my parents didn't want to be affiliated with it okay and
01:21:09.360
and then this ties back it goes back to the the jewish question what's the cookie monster is the
01:21:13.680
holocaust right yeah okay sorry that that one i've never oh the cookie monster event i i whenever i'm
01:21:21.840
on youtube i refer to as the cookie monster event i i've given i used to have code that we used to call
01:21:26.320
it the my sharona cyrus instead of coronavirus but uh i've i've given up on that uh and the reason why
01:21:31.760
i see the question about you know like studentese versus black america uh and then the the holocaust
01:21:36.720
question we're like where i say in this i don't find anything you've ever said um that offensive
01:21:42.320
some of it i i'll disagree with it and i think some of it's i'll say juvenile for lack of a better
01:21:46.400
word or shocking for the sake of being shocking underlying points you know there's a discussion
01:21:51.520
to be had there when it comes to the holocaust and and the number and then you know i saw the video
01:21:56.080
or like oh you know everyone do the math i saw someone say do the math video and i'll say like okay
01:22:00.480
i'll even entertain the question and just say how many millions and i i say not exclusively jews
01:22:06.240
because the whole the whole irony and i think i mentioned this in my reply to you it's not like
01:22:09.520
the nazis were they were a little bit better to the blacks but they weren't good to the blacks they
01:22:13.280
weren't good to the gypsies the gays the handicaps i mean how how many do we agree that
01:22:18.320
the holocaust happened and i and i don't know that anybody yeah and i i don't know who disagreed with
01:22:24.000
that uh and then you say okay well if it wasn't six million do you agree that it was many
01:22:28.320
millions of jews and i don't think anybody's going to disagree with that because like the nazis were
01:22:32.240
kind of kept good records decent enough so if you don't think it was six if it was five four
01:22:36.480
i know that that qualifies as holocaust denialism and i'm not sure that i agree with that because
01:22:41.680
like as far you know four million versus six million that's that's a genocide getting back to
01:22:46.560
the you know the black america versus not one of the history if i'm i correct if i'm wrong but like
01:22:51.440
one of the historical gripes between the jewish community of america and the black community
01:22:56.320
is the success that the jewish community had in recognizing the event the holocaust versus
01:23:02.320
black america a you know not necessarily getting the recognition or the historical recognition for
01:23:07.040
the for the for slavery but also the um uh reparations for slavery where you know jews got something back
01:23:14.560
from germany and german companies and the like your dad's from sudan is there any of that uh harboring
01:23:21.360
that resentment for i say success it's not it will know for for the call it the successful
01:23:28.400
acknowledgement of the holocaust in particular like that that's where i think a lot of the
01:23:32.560
resentment of of the black community comes in terms of the jews were successful at at getting you know
01:23:37.920
turning it into hollywood oscar winner movies although there's been a bunch of slavery movies that have
01:23:42.640
been very very widely recognized as well but that there has been a successful campaign to single out the
01:23:49.200
genocide that was the holocaust and not say the armenian genocide not say the the whole of the
01:23:55.440
whole other more i always get accepted yeah so is did your folks or did you have any of that
01:24:03.280
resentment if it even existed i might be presuming it existed but no not at all okay not at all like
01:24:08.960
my dad grew up like he told me like he never ever used any of the injustices against like african americans
01:24:15.280
the united states ever to justify any of his positions he always told me that his thing was
01:24:19.600
he always used to yell at me and say i brought to united states it's the best country in the world
01:24:22.880
more opportunity here than ever before i would be a doctor or a lawyer if i was raised here you better
01:24:26.800
be somebody something and then he smacked me if i was being a mess up so that that's how my dad right
01:24:31.280
he never ever used like the history of the united states to try to justify you know grievances he always
01:24:37.040
said i brought you here which is the best country in the world you better be somebody that's how he
01:24:40.720
always framed it to me all right and now the other question the flip side to that question is yeah
01:24:46.560
you you talk about the cookie bonds of the holocaust and people can get mad at you you also and i know
01:24:52.000
it you deal with the the black community just as bluntly in terms of statistical over-representation
01:24:58.960
does the black community ever look at you and say well you're you're you're the son of sudanese you're
01:25:02.400
not part of the american black experience and so what you're saying about us we take offense to
01:25:07.200
because there's historical reasons or uh you know you're picking on a small demographic to
01:25:11.440
come to broader sweeping generalizations of black america at large yeah no that's 100 the reason
01:25:16.640
they come at me they say they always say well you're not one of us so therefore you can't comment
01:25:20.240
that's 100 that's their argument 99 of the time but what i tell them is actually i tell them like not
01:25:26.080
only have i dealt with a lot of the um obstacles that you guys cry about whether it's poverty or being
01:25:30.720
labeled or being uh racist um getting uh stereotypes thrown at them because you know people used to follow
01:25:35.920
me around the store and think that i was a criminal as well um you know also i had to deal with the
01:25:40.080
whole uh after 9 11 i had to deal with the whole um i hate the term islamophobia but um you know
01:25:46.240
people there was there was distinct yeah there was distinct stereotyping after on 11 it went from
01:25:52.320
the russians being bad in every movie to middle easterners exactly so i you know and i hate to even
01:25:57.520
use this like whether like um but yeah i got on both ends i got it from the being black and i also
01:26:01.760
got it from being muslim so like i can sit here and put myself in a victim box too but i refuse
01:26:05.680
to do that so when they say that and say oh you don't even you can't even comment on this because
01:26:09.200
you're not one of us i'm like well i've dealt with a lot of stuff that you guys have but that
01:26:12.560
doesn't even matter because my thing is i don't think you have to be a part of a group to be able
01:26:16.320
to comment on said group if you're able to identify um you know patterns or you're able to
01:26:21.360
uh see things the truth is the truth regardless of who reports it right so i think this whole concept
01:26:25.600
of you need to be a part of said group to be able to criticize group as well but the only reason
01:26:29.760
the fba has used that is because it insulates them from valid criticism saying well you're not one of us you
01:26:34.400
can't comment and that's what a lot of these low iq individuals use to kind of um curb criticism
01:26:38.720
from themselves myron what is the um the post that you've taken the most flack from man uh so i
01:26:47.840
get a lot because i'm critical of you know obviously i'm very critical of uh of zionism and jewish power
01:26:55.280
i'm very critical of uh the black community i'm very critical of uh i got a lot of slack actually um
01:27:00.480
for the h1b visa stuff i talked about um you know bringing in indians united states to work
01:27:06.080
these h1b visa jobs that elon musk didn't like that um so yeah man i get i get it from from all
01:27:12.640
angles i've been critical of islam even as well even though i'm i grew up in a muslim household
01:27:16.560
i said it a bunch of times where i don't think um you know sharia law is compatible with a first
01:27:22.720
world democracy where freedom of speech is a paramount um principle because unfortunately um sharia law
01:27:28.080
doesn't engage allow you to engage really in freedom of speech um you know you look at any
01:27:32.000
of these even the wealthy arab countries the monarchies and the dictatorships um if you
01:27:36.080
criticize the government you're getting killed you're going to get khashogged in a in a embassy
01:27:39.760
somewhere so um you know i i am able to be critical even if it doesn't necessarily benefit me i've even
01:27:46.960
insulted the arab world in the in the muslim world well they'll think of it as insult but i've even
01:27:50.880
criticized uh many of their fault points and they don't like it because my thing is i i will say
01:27:56.000
something even if it doesn't benefit me or attacks the group that i'm aligned with because i think the
01:27:59.840
truth is more important than how i feel so there's many things i'm critical for but yeah people are
01:28:04.320
obviously most aware of how i'm critical of the black community um critical of israel quite a bit
01:28:10.720
but um but you know some other things that have got me in trouble definitely they should be visa
01:28:14.160
got me in in a lot of trouble which end were you on you were on no more indian uh immigrants to
01:28:19.680
fill the visas or you should allow the immigrants in no more indians to fill the visas you were
01:28:24.880
disagreeing with elon uh who said that we well he he attenuated his position over that debate
01:28:30.400
him and in fact uh agreed with the h-1b visas i was anti h-1b visa because there's a multitude of
01:28:35.920
reasons why but like um you know i'm not for foreign labor and i'm also not for a foreign group
01:28:40.800
of people coming in to have completely different um cultural values to us coming here and in swarms
01:28:46.000
and not acclimating because the reality is uh a lot of these people that come from these countries
01:28:49.680
like india etc they don't they don't assimilate they simply don't now that's an uncomfortable
01:28:53.520
truth that no one wants to hear but they don't want to assimilate a lot of the times they want to
01:28:56.480
keep their hindu god they want to keep their cultural uh their their their culture and stuff
01:29:01.760
like that which is cool but that comes at the cost of infiltrating our culture and i look at places
01:29:06.720
like toronto i look at places um like like western europe where they've allowed this mass immigration and
01:29:12.320
then these these places have basically turned into um you know shells of their former selves like you
01:29:17.680
go to london now london is filled with muslims everywhere and this is me as a muslim guy like this
01:29:22.080
doesn't feel like i'm in england it doesn't feel like i'm in london i just see a bunch of north
01:29:25.440
african immigrants everywhere and i'm worried about getting stabbed uh toronto now has basically turned
01:29:30.160
into into india you know so it's problematic you know i i was just saying like i went to toronto
01:29:36.880
recently and it was i say call it what you want it it felt like going into bangladesh in the airport
01:29:41.600
and literally like the lineup for the immigration visa checkpoint was it was just bangladeshians and then
01:29:46.720
and and but now this is a problem though uh or a problem this is the question your dad comes in
01:29:51.520
you're you're a muslim family how what is the path what is the path for for islamic uh or muslim
01:29:58.320
assimilation for it has such a negative connotation but you know how does how does what is your ideal in
01:30:04.080
terms of assimilation in western society for anyone in particular but from from your muslim experience
01:30:10.160
um so i i think um you know especially these western countries whether it's united states um
01:30:16.240
uh canada whatever i think they need to stay white majority christian countries the way they were
01:30:19.680
founded but by you know protestant white men um because that's the way the country was found and i
01:30:23.840
do think that that's the best way for the for the country to continue um having the the rights and
01:30:30.240
privileges and the uh structure that had in the first place because what ends up happening when you
01:30:34.480
import too many um immigrants is they bring their way of thinking and what ends up happening as the
01:30:39.360
culture slowly starts to change and let's just be honest here muslim countries don't value free
01:30:44.480
speech they just don't um and there's a bunch of cultural and religious reasons for that but um but
01:30:49.280
if we want uh democracies if we want freedom of speech to be paramount um we can't let them be the
01:30:54.320
the dominant force in this and again i'm gonna get around the flagpole for saying this but i'm calling it
01:30:59.280
like it is i think the countries need to stay majority what they were founded by in order to preserve
01:31:04.080
those values right and i think um uh disintegrating the um the way the country was founded for economic
01:31:11.680
gain through h1b visas or whatever is not worth the trade-off uh in our encryptus encryptus in our
01:31:17.280
local screen he says show us myron rabbi myron but over on rumble may i ask who rabbi myron gainestine
01:31:24.960
is i have like uh i have like a hat that i that i put on every time i uh go into certain things
01:31:30.400
all right well let me ask you you mentioned it zionism and and i i might be one of the very few
01:31:35.920
people also who does not equate criticism of israel with anti-semitism but i i had on uh natty taub
01:31:42.000
last week and i asked him to define zionism and i think he gave a decent exact definition what what
01:31:47.040
is your what's your definition of zionism um zionism man i would say to to be very very uh clear about
01:31:54.160
this because i do think that you know given the fact that the jewish people have been persecuted for a
01:31:57.840
very long time it makes sense that they would need their own their own homeland but uh when
01:32:01.760
i'm talking about zionism i'm talking about specifically the state of israel where it's
01:32:05.280
located uh and um the preservation of israel particularly when it comes to what used to be
01:32:10.880
uh british mandate uh mandatory about palestine that's what i'm referring to when i so that's
01:32:15.680
that's that's the existence of the state of israel so critical of zionism and i don't really care to
01:32:20.400
get into because i i don't even i it's not that i'm going to think less of you if you if you don't
01:32:24.240
think israel has the right well if you don't think israel has the right to exist where it exists so
01:32:28.240
the palestinians have the first claim to the land um when you're critical of zionism so in that sense
01:32:33.840
what critical of israel's right to exist where it is under the modalities that it exists under the
01:32:38.160
conditions that it exists yeah precisely you know um their right to exist over another groups of people
01:32:44.080
another group of people's right to exist that were there before so um you know i i'm completely
01:32:49.920
sensitive to the fact that um you know they've been persecuted kicked out a lot of countries had
01:32:54.880
issues and haven't had a homeland there that's where people are very aware of that um but i think
01:32:59.760
them having a homeland at the expense of another group of people is is not is not uh is not acceptable
01:33:05.120
um i think they should have a homeland but at displacing another group of people i think that's
01:33:09.040
problematic yeah and then i said like i want to say i'm not interested in because i i know what the
01:33:13.600
responses are going to be and then i'll ask you the question how how far back do you go in terms
01:33:17.040
of who is displaced from the land of israel and then you'll say 200 years and someone will say
01:33:21.040
2 000 years and that's why the jews get to have it back and this is where like it's just there's
01:33:25.040
there's an impact and then it becomes a biblical thing and i i know exactly what you mean like it's
01:33:30.240
it's like almost you go down this hole that no no one's ever going to be satisfied with this with
01:33:34.400
with it so no i i completely understand why you might not want to get into that and people ask me
01:33:39.440
it's like well you know are you zionist are you pro-israel i think first of all i can i can easily evade
01:33:44.400
the answer because israel exists whether i like it or not or whether you like it or not and i'm not
01:33:48.400
there to say israel should not exist like am i anti-canadian canada exists a lot of natives would
01:33:53.040
say canada shouldn't exist where it is because it displaced a lot of natives and not just a couple
01:33:56.400
hundred years ago to which i'll say well canada's there and i'm not advocating for the destruction
01:34:00.400
of canada and therefore i respect this the the country of canada's right to exist uh people
01:34:08.320
i agree with you on that that that like at this point like bro you're we got a deal israel
01:34:12.560
ain't going nowhere right i've said this a million times too as well for the fanatical um you know
01:34:16.000
pro-palestarian people i tell them look israel's not going anywhere we need to figure out a two-state
01:34:20.000
solution okay that's the only way that we're gonna we're gonna um fix this because israel
01:34:24.480
ain't going nowhere obviously the palestinians aren't gonna go anywhere they're trying to get
01:34:27.680
them to go somewhere right as we saw with the workers to take over guys whatever but i think
01:34:31.360
the only way that israel's gonna be able to live in peace in the middle east without constantly
01:34:35.360
having to worry about being attacked is they're gonna need to come with a two-state solution now we
01:34:39.360
can make the argument about you know who's been preventing this whether it's nanyahu or whatever
01:34:42.880
but i think at this point the only way to move forward is we need to come up with a two-state
01:34:47.120
solution now that's where i think the conversation needs to go this whole uh you know who has historical
01:34:51.520
rights of land whatever that's irrelevant now at this point because we are where we are so i do think
01:34:55.280
the next the path forward is a two-state yeah well and that's where i was also but then the the
01:34:59.840
question becomes two-state under what modalities and some people say two-state with the right of return
01:35:04.000
which is effectively a one-state others say a two-state and then uh two-state with one state that refuses to
01:35:09.120
recognize the right to exist of the other we'll get eventually we'll get there i mean the the irish
01:35:13.920
uh the ira or the northern southern ireland they resolved their differences after enough people got
01:35:18.480
killed but it looks like we're not yet there in the middle east um myron if i let me if i may see if
01:35:24.960
i have any questions in the chat for you there's um sure well if i let me read this it's not a sponsor
01:35:30.240
but built on if you're uh you want to talk about healthy foods and healthy meat built on has his own
01:35:34.960
channel he's a great guy king of built on get some built on go to built on usa code viva and guido 240
01:35:40.800
says myron you're wrong women were first class and now they're second class now and now second
01:35:46.960
class they were held on high and taken care of and they had it before making suffrage this is well
01:35:53.600
the religious argument to this is that it's not it's not uh sexist to say that you know the men
01:35:58.880
and the women have separate roles some people consider it antiquated and if you consider it antiquated
01:36:03.200
then go live out your wildest modern dreams and see how that works out for you we can certainly
01:36:08.000
see the way it's playing out to some extent in modern american society but then you compare it
01:36:12.720
to other countries and then you'll never find an ideal or you'll find some better ideals than others
01:36:17.600
um myron did i forget to ask you anything that i wanted to this has been i i the funny thing is i
01:36:22.960
think the chat's gonna cut i don't think anybody really hates you but it's i i like this discussion
01:36:27.200
because i you know i know how what what the media portrays you as and they you know take they'll
01:36:32.000
take a few clips from here and say you're a total misogynist anti-semitic whatever you're a reasonably
01:36:37.600
thoughtful thought-out guy and i don't think many people are gonna think ill of you after having
01:36:41.760
watched a full two hours yeah no i i i appreciate that man yeah like again you know what all my
01:36:48.080
world views right whether it's you know people say my views on you know israel or jewish people or um
01:36:54.640
you know or islam or immigration whatever you know i'm able to always um explain how i came to that
01:37:00.640
conclusion now people might not necessarily like it but what i've realized is when i'm able to you
01:37:05.120
know get the opportunity to explain why i have the world views that i have um you know people kind of
01:37:10.000
say okay you know what i see how you came to that conclusion i might not agree with it but i can see
01:37:14.400
how you came to that conclusion um so you know it is what it is i i i understand that sometimes uh the
01:37:21.120
way i put my ideas out might be crass or rude and people might not like it it's deliberate it's
01:37:26.400
deliberately provocative and some people might call it immature or whatever but it's first of all
01:37:30.400
if if people don't like it they can you know they can listen to someone with a british accent
01:37:34.000
say it in a much more polite manner and cloak and cloak the verbiage and whatever um whatever is
01:37:39.360
more palatable exactly uh myron so are you going to stay live on your channel afterwards are you
01:37:44.640
going to end this at the same time yeah i'll probably i'll probably still uh stay live i'll cover
01:37:49.520
some news and stuff like that um and you know i will probably go until i think like 8 pm when we do
01:37:54.560
fresh and fit but yeah i'll go on a little bit longer okay encrypt this guy that you're looking
01:37:58.720
at right now is the uh the viva fry equivalent of the jamie uh rogan's jamie encrypt us what's up
01:38:04.960
uh you do have some other tip questions a couple people in chat wanted me to remind you and i just have
01:38:10.320
to say this was freaking entertaining as hell um the chats were off the chain you've got about
01:38:16.320
okay yeah whatever 20 screaming hate yeah no we can talk about you know like i said i'm i'm still
01:38:24.720
chilling so any questions you guys have on anything uh if you guys want to expound more on uh whatever
01:38:30.160
you guys want i know that we kind of went surface level and a lot of the stuff weren't able to go
01:38:33.520
deep but uh whatever i think we went deep on we are good on some issues let me let me have this one
01:38:38.880
over on locals boops he says ask him having many women makes you judge and compare each woman that's my
01:38:44.560
argument against that level of promiscuity environment because once you've done that
01:38:48.240
it becomes very you've led a very exciting exciting life it becomes very difficult to settle down with
01:38:52.800
you know well i would argue i would push back on that actually makes you appreciate um girls that
01:38:57.120
are good more right so when you deal with so what i've realized with with men um is when you when you
01:39:03.120
dealt with a lot of women right that are annoying because a lot of women are annoying and stupid and
01:39:06.960
not really interesting um when you do find one that is you end up you end up you know we tend to
01:39:12.560
appreciate that more because men don't get the same level of options and you know volume when it
01:39:16.880
comes to dealing with the opposite gender that women do so when men are in a position where we're
01:39:20.880
getting um you know attention for women or where we're getting treated well we tend to appreciate
01:39:24.640
that far more this is why being a nice guy as a man doesn't work but being a nice guy as a woman
01:39:28.640
absolutely does work and uh in crypto says there are women in the chat who do agree with him as well as
01:39:34.000
women who do not agree with him all in all show and the chats are very entertaining and then says
01:39:39.680
that's from pants on the bottom says with viva w viva w myron w interview which i think means win
01:39:45.040
let me just go see i'm gonna i'm gonna take it out just so i can get um some yeah the women that don't
01:39:49.120
a girl may tend to be fat and ugly a lot of the times so okay the the idea it is amazing that i like
01:39:56.480
i was talking to some younger kids like where do you meet people these days and i am i'm old school
01:40:01.040
dog run but you go to the dog run now and people are on their freaking phones and nobody's making any
01:40:06.000
human to human uh interaction you know interactions censorship versus truth grift thrives in lack of
01:40:13.920
knowledge and there's europa the last battle there's a video there in the is the chat room
01:40:17.680
going crazy my iphone and even my pc joining chat room and never getting there i don't know if it was
01:40:22.640
going that crazy okay here rich 987 says 13 60 when it comes to afro americans i'm not going to read
01:40:29.040
that word that'll get me cancelled you are you and barnes are deranged as ben shapiro and glenn
01:40:33.680
greenwald i don't even know what that means i know the 13 50 is the idea that 13 of the population
01:40:40.320
accounts for 50 of the violent crime murders and that's the black population it's like it's
01:40:44.960
like uh because blacks make up about 15 of the u.s population about half of that so seven to eight
01:40:49.520
percent is men um yeah yeah and they make and the and the age bracket so it's like it's probably maybe
01:40:54.800
one to two percent but again the question is what's the is the purpose of that to say there's something
01:40:59.680
genetic within black america or is it because they get convicted more because it's a racist institution
01:41:05.840
or they're prone to it because of poverty and historical uh inequalities uh but the bottom line
01:41:11.680
is i think it's a multitude of things it's it's obviously you know the culture it's the um you
01:41:18.080
know what what they value versus what they don't value the fatherless households that's a big one and
01:41:22.720
then this is the one that's going to get me in trouble but iq as well um blacks in general have lower
01:41:27.680
iqs and other uh than other um groups of people um asians are number one whites are second uh
01:41:33.360
hispanics are third and then blacks are are fourth and some people yeah but they'll get mad at you and
01:41:39.200
they say well the iq test i mean you put patterns and whoever they give who gives a shit about the
01:41:43.040
iq test they're going to say that that is a culturally irrelevant and patriarchal or white patriarchal test in
01:41:49.680
the first place i i'm not convinced you know the ability to predict patterns or detect patterns
01:41:55.200
which is what much of the iq test is um but you know like who composed whatever piece is purely
01:42:01.280
cultural um but there was there was oh i forget i just lost the question and there's been a bunch of
01:42:06.640
and there's been a bunch of meta-analysis that have like proved this as much as they try to say
01:42:10.080
like oh this is like pseudoscience it's not true no it's absolutely true and they've been suppressing
01:42:14.960
it for a very long time but iq is tied to race now does this mean that anyone that's black has low
01:42:20.080
iq of course not but what we're saying it what i'm saying is that um when in general when races
01:42:25.200
are tested certain races tend to score lower than others and this is just what it is now that you
01:42:29.760
know sorry that's just how it goes and i remember what the comment was that i was looking at in rumble
01:42:35.200
it said jews per capita which is where i wanted to go with this because some people say well good
01:42:38.880
iq doesn't necessarily translate into criminality it doesn't necessarily translate into being a good
01:42:43.520
person uh and then the flip side is well the bottom line is you're talking about statistical
01:42:48.400
over-representation you said something earlier about jewish dominance or jewish um influence
01:42:56.800
i forget what it was it was talking about zionism israel and jewish power sorry that's what i think
01:43:01.920
it was okay yeah yeah yeah elaborate if we can all get ourselves into a lot more trouble today
01:43:08.240
yeah sure um well what that what that means is basically the um the over-representation and the
01:43:14.560
influence in certain uh what i call trigger points in society that allow for um basically the ability to
01:43:23.600
um preserve israel right and preserve israel utilizing this network um of different individuals
01:43:30.800
in different places different industries of different positions of power for the self-preservation
01:43:35.280
of israel i'll give you an example so donald trump right donald trump was able to get into office a lot
01:43:40.640
of people don't want to admit this let's be honest he was able to get into office because of the
01:43:43.840
zionist lobby the zionist lobby um of someone like amira madelson who gave him 100 million dollars
01:43:48.800
who obviously her husband sheldon adelson made a bunch of money as a casino tycoon then someone
01:43:54.960
like bill ackman who made his money in a whole other different endeavor who is a lifelong democrat
01:43:59.680
who came in and supported him and then other individuals as well that are zionists that you know
01:44:04.160
all basically got together and said you know what we need the president's going to be more uh you know
01:44:08.960
more pro israel let's make sure that we get them in regardless of our political affiliation before
01:44:14.320
because right now what matters is getting trump in to preserve israel so what i mean by this is
01:44:20.320
utilizing that influence to push and get someone into office um for their own means and they're able to do
01:44:26.080
this by having uh positions of power influence you know obviously money um and uh and that's basically
01:44:33.040
why trump is in power right now and why he's why he's present this is because he understood that being
01:44:37.760
extremely pro-israel was going to be critical to him getting back into office uh kind of yeah i'm
01:44:44.640
trying to think if not not how to push back but just to even steel man the rebuttal to that uh the
01:44:49.680
the numbers are relatively accurate there was a hundred million through whatever that pack was that
01:44:54.400
adelson gave to the question is going to be being pro-israel versus being anti-israel
01:45:02.080
i'm just trying to think of how to ask the question which is going to be um and is it is it is it
01:45:07.760
so the the argument is that there's rich jews who are zionist or who are pro-israel
01:45:13.600
that you think have the determinate impact on the outcome of the election and then others are going
01:45:19.120
to say well okay the hundred million whatever but there's 77 million people who voted for trump
01:45:23.680
uh on the one hand either they want that as well or on the other hand the 77 million who are not
01:45:29.360
zionists certainly maybe maybe some of the big ones are uh wanted trump anyhow so the question is then
01:45:34.720
what degree is the being pro-israel related to his election if it actually got 77 million
01:45:40.400
americans to vote for him who seemingly exposed that policy if the people didn't like it he
01:45:44.160
wouldn't be elected is the point no sure sure sure um but i do think it's very important to understand
01:45:49.280
that that money right that was that was given to him that was donated to him was used to run the ads
01:45:54.080
was used to run these rallies was used to be able to to create this enormous social media platform that
01:45:58.560
he was able to do running these ads etc because running a campaign is very expensive um and i do think that
01:46:04.080
it's also important to note that you know um the fact that like uh this crosses party lines right
01:46:10.720
like whether you have someone i'll give you an example you got someone like a john the greenblatt
01:46:14.320
who's a leftist and then you got someone like a ben shapiro who's a conservative um when it comes
01:46:19.440
to israel they agree right and they both understood look uh trump is going to be the better party for
01:46:24.240
israel let's get him in right bill ackman etc so they will go ahead and change their voting philosophy
01:46:29.360
or even their their party lines depending on who is going to be more beneficial to to israel so that's
01:46:35.360
just one example there's other examples as well um but i do think that um you know uh to to not
01:46:41.520
understand to not um acknowledge that they have an enormous amount of influence and power in certain
01:46:46.560
regards uh i mean hell i mean the fact that you know aipac is able to exist to this day with no fair
01:46:53.040
registration compared to other um or organization uh lobby lobby organizations is wild right like uh
01:46:59.360
thomas massey went on the on the tucker carlson podcast and literally said yeah everybody has a
01:47:04.000
back i'm the only one that doesn't have have one and then the fact that he doesn't have the the
01:47:07.840
support that he that these other ones have they tried to primary him so um i do think that there's
01:47:12.960
an enormous amount of um of power there where if you want to be a politician in the united states
01:47:18.160
you must bow down to the israel lobby otherwise you're not going to get elected or your ability
01:47:22.240
to get elected is going to be significantly hindered i do think that that's that's a very
01:47:26.320
important to note someone in the chat asked who are the biggest donors and a quick uh to trump's
01:47:32.000
campaign and a quick grok overview is timothy mellon who i don't know who that is 150 million to make
01:47:37.120
america great miriam adelson 100 million elon musk 118 million richard we line who i don't know who that
01:47:43.440
is 84.1 million uh isaac and laura i'm just trying to see who looks like they have jewish names because
01:47:49.040
some people are going to say well look you got elon musk who's donating massive amounts
01:47:52.800
but then i see where you're good yeah and i see where you're going to go with that as well
01:47:57.840
and then the question is going to be the resentment the resentment seems to be that it's i know your
01:48:04.160
answer is going to be it's not because it's israel it's just because it's another country
01:48:07.360
that we are seemingly uh that that election is loyalty to which is determinate of the outcome of
01:48:14.400
elections and it could be it could be madagascar it would be just as offensive others are going to
01:48:19.520
retort and say yes jews you can't disagree with the influence because on the one hand some people
01:48:26.480
will get offended at you and say you're an anti-semite for noticing the jewish influence flip side
01:48:31.200
how many times jewish community is very proud of the fact that what is it like 30 percent of uh
01:48:35.760
nobel laureates are jewish or half jewish or jewish descent and so i mean my thing is you know
01:48:41.680
they'll gladly take credit when it's positive right like for example i've seen it many times
01:48:45.280
where it's like hey you know jews led the the um the civil rights movement they led the um the you
01:48:51.600
know the um gay rights movement right they'll say that like but if you say anything negative well
01:48:55.840
yeah well they also you know um are involved in pornography oh well that's fucked up you know so
01:49:01.600
my thing is i just kind of call a spade a spade and um you know it depends on the way that you say it
01:49:06.560
and then they'll go ahead and call you an anti-semi but my thing is i'm against all foreign aid i was
01:49:10.400
against giving aid to ukraine uh years ago when the war first started um and then they were calling
01:49:15.600
me you know a russia shill for saying that but my thing is i'm a very i'm a hardcore american nationalist
01:49:20.960
that's why a lot of the opinions i give might not necessarily be um accepted by many when i say things
01:49:26.240
like yeah we need to limit immigration we need to have an immigration moratorium i don't want united
01:49:30.640
states to be a muslim majority country because i understand what comes with that despite the fact that
01:49:34.240
i grew up in a muslim household i'm able to take myself out of the situation and understand what's
01:49:38.640
best for the united states regardless of whether it benefits me personally or not i think that's
01:49:41.840
very difficult for a lot of people to say um or admit um but i'm critical of everything so yeah
01:49:46.800
i mean when it comes to the the israeli uh conflict in gaza um you know i think this is you know just
01:49:53.200
another example of us giving foreign aid and quite frankly my biggest issue with a lot of the problems
01:49:58.480
that's going on with with gaza is it makes us look bad on the world stage giving this aid to israel
01:50:02.480
and they're conducting this um military campaign and killing a bunch of innocent people because we lose
01:50:07.440
influence in the process and it makes us look horrible internationally as well well flip side
01:50:11.520
they've also been giving ironically enough giving funds to the to hamas as well directly or indirectly
01:50:17.200
so it's funny it's the meme the bombs are going off on both sides and like my tax dollars somehow
01:50:21.600
also my tax dollars yeah and the funny thing is you know when you notice the statistical over
01:50:26.560
representation when it's a bad thing people get offended when it's a good thing they take pride
01:50:30.320
the funniest thing is when you notice it on the same thing like it's one thing okay
01:50:33.200
a statistical over representation of jews in porn yes and there's a historical reason for that but
01:50:39.040
the best is when you say like all right well there's an influence in science or the arts or media but
01:50:44.320
don't dare say that jews control the media because they don't control it there's just statistical
01:50:48.000
over representation in it for which we're proud when we want to take you know credit for it but which
01:50:53.120
becomes anti-semitic if it's a source of criticism because of the message being conveyed so the it's one
01:50:58.080
thing you know one screen two films and that's the best example no and this is why i i can't really
01:51:03.920
disagree with you and and there is statistical over representation for which the community is proud
01:51:09.600
but then you have to take the responsibility that comes with that statistical over representation
01:51:13.920
and when you see uh you know the the first impeachment and the disproportionate number of
01:51:19.280
players who you might make an association with you can't blame someone for coming to that
01:51:23.200
conclusion and noticing it flip side you look at the other side and say well there's enough
01:51:26.960
over representation as well they're fighting the impeachment and then you get some people saying
01:51:30.560
well why are there just so many in any event in a christian society like america that you have
01:51:36.720
1.6 of the population that has this influence and then it leads into all the other questions about
01:51:42.000
iq uh culture heritage etc etc yeah and i'm glad that you're willing to have the conversation uh viva
01:51:48.000
because a lot of them would say i'm not even going to entertain this is an anti-semitic uh you know
01:51:51.760
uh conversation the fact that you're even willing to have the conversation you know i think speaks
01:51:55.600
volumes and i know you know yourself you're ethnically jewish but you're willing to have
01:51:58.720
these these talks and you know that's that i think that's very important that you know we can have
01:52:02.800
these discussions and be critical of our own people like i have been with with uh with muslims and you
01:52:08.080
have been with um with jewish people or uh zionist whatever it may be um though i know i was i was
01:52:14.400
critical of of israel's response to october i mean i'm critical where i think it's warranted i'm not and
01:52:19.120
i hate the tribalist mentality that like viva if israel ceases to exist so will you as a jew okay fine but
01:52:24.800
that you know something and i say the longer term existence means uh being critical if only out of
01:52:30.160
love you know even assume that critical could be either because you want to destroy or because you
01:52:34.560
want to build up when i'm critical of pierre poilievre some people say it's because i hate him others
01:52:38.640
might say because i expect more from him but um uh no you know i i had on a guy gadi taube last week
01:52:45.680
and he's a proud zionist who does not any longer believe in a two-state solution and i can understand his
01:52:51.120
argument but when i asked him the questions you know how did october 7 happen at the scale it did
01:52:56.720
for the duration it did and the answer was i don't have a good answer for that that's that's in and of
01:53:02.160
itself you know kind of not a good answer when you're relying on the same people who are at the
01:53:05.600
helm of that catastrophe to determine the proper response to that catastrophe and then i get people
01:53:10.240
yeah i think that happened i i think the conspiracy theory i i think that yahoo let it happen man honestly
01:53:15.920
so i i asked him about that because there's two there's two depending on your political leanings in
01:53:20.080
israel there's two conspiracy theories to that the left would say netanyahu let it happen so that
01:53:24.640
he could justify expanding or you know some i'll say you know the critical of israel or the anti-semit
01:53:30.480
would say netanyahu let it happen on purpose to justify expansion when i asked this to gaddy
01:53:35.040
taube he said there's some people who think that the left allowed it to happen so they could blame
01:53:40.880
it on netanyahu because well i was explaining like there are people who hate netanyahu in israel as much
01:53:45.680
as libs hate uh trump here and so i said well so then how do you know they didn't let the
01:53:50.960
intelligence lapse and then you know his his argument is uh on for both sides do you think
01:53:56.240
anybody would let a thousand plus people get slaughtered in the most horrendous manner possible
01:54:01.360
and i mean it's uh if you're thinking about humans as normal humans that would be your response but
01:54:06.800
there's a bunch of libs out here that i would have no doubt would love to see something terrible like
01:54:10.880
that happened to republicans and trump supporters etc yeah and i would say too just so that i was
01:54:18.000
gonna say one more thing take on number seven building number seven and killing people sure
01:54:23.680
i'll talk about building seven here in a second um with uh with 9-11 so real quick when it comes to
01:54:29.520
october 7th when it hit me that something was wrong um so the day after october 7th happened a lot of
01:54:36.000
people don't know this because they buried this story egyptian intelligence came out immediately and said
01:54:40.880
we warned the israelis we told them that hamas was planning this attack we had seen them on on
01:54:45.280
our our intelligence services had seen them planning this attack and staging it we told them
01:54:50.000
now the reason why that's important is because egypt has the agreement with the united states where
01:54:54.560
our aid for egypt because it's a very poor country they have a lot of debt our aid for egypt is contingent
01:54:58.400
upon them playing nice with um israel jordan as well jordan and egypt are allies to israel because we
01:55:03.520
give them quite a bit of money to play nice with them so when the egyptians came out and said hey look
01:55:07.440
we told them about this we warned them about this um that told me right then and there i was like oh
01:55:11.360
wow they want to continue to get their aid and they did warn the israelis because they know that their
01:55:15.120
aid is contingent upon this so that's when i started to question like okay something's going on here how
01:55:20.640
the israelis who have the most advanced border like that that area is one of the most secured
01:55:25.280
areas in the world they have an enormous amount of technology how did they let these guys with
01:55:28.720
paragliders and rudimentary bulldozers like well i i had actually asked that to gadi as well first
01:55:36.080
of all i remember that story about egypt warning them and i remember i i tweeted out about the time i
01:55:39.760
could go back and get my tweets but one of the theories was that they didn't actually warn them this
01:55:44.240
was egypt again trying to make netanyahu look bad as though he didn't heed to the warning um then and
01:55:49.440
when i asked this historian you know how did it happen he said they became too reliant on technology
01:55:54.560
and i'm like that's that's i mean okay fine that's that all you're explaining to me is like grotesque
01:55:59.760
criminal negligence to let this happen in the to have allowed this to happen under your watch in the
01:56:04.080
first place but how does it explain the amount of hours that it took for the military to respond
01:56:08.960
to some of these villages israel six hours across by drive let alone jets and tanks and whatever
01:56:14.720
and again no good response and so it's either the most catastrophic criminal negligence imaginable
01:56:21.440
in which case i wouldn't empower that catastrophically critically negligent uh machine to wage the proper
01:56:28.480
response or something far more nefarious and um after everything we've lived through yeah i mean i i
01:56:34.800
it's you can have very evil people out there who would who who you know enough said on that
01:56:40.320
uh building seven uh myron what i mean yeah so building seven officers blown up sure sure so
01:56:48.160
everything when 9-11 is aligned this comes back to like the whole you know where i question every
01:56:52.000
narrative whether it's world war ii we were discussing earlier the the cookie monster event uh 9-11
01:56:57.200
uss liberty all this stuff so when it comes to 9-11 right um i did a whole podcast on this with a guy
01:57:03.360
named ryan dawson um really smart one of the best 9-11 researchers but long story short um i also
01:57:09.200
brought richard gage on my show to talk about this building seven was a controlled demolition
01:57:13.760
no ifs ands or buts about it three thousand plus engineers agree uh the plane did not hit building
01:57:18.960
seven but yet it went down perfectly in a symmetrical fashion um and not only was it a
01:57:24.240
controlled demolition was a controlled demolition to the degree where whoever put the bombs in there
01:57:28.160
did it at a perfect level the textbook uh the controlled demolition so you know which you know
01:57:33.440
leads to more questions with 9-11 like how the hell is it that you know these random hijackers
01:57:38.400
were able to hijack these planes crash them into these buildings and then the third building that
01:57:42.080
goes down goes down in a perfect fashion alongside the uh the twin towers which also went down uh as in
01:57:48.160
a controlled demolition fashion um and there's a bunch of reasons for this i mean i can go on so
01:57:51.920
many different ways but uh i'll just to answer it controlled demolition 100 percent
01:57:56.080
well look and again i'll be called crazy because everyone's excuse for the two the two the twin
01:58:01.600
towers was jet fuel planes you know and okay fine what's building seven then that it was burning and
01:58:09.120
the and the fire uh whatever they called them the water sprinklers were not working and that melted
01:58:13.680
the foundation there has never been a a skyscraper a metal structure a steel frame skyscraper that has
01:58:19.920
ever fallen collapsed as a result of a fire except 9-11 the excuse being well planes never flew into them
01:58:25.760
neither did that happen with building number seven and what was in building number seven there was
01:58:34.480
government agencies were there uh you know there were definitely government government agencies there
01:58:39.040
i know that one for a fact i think some private the other thing that's also very important for
01:58:42.560
people to understand again not to get into a jewish conspiracy but i do think it's important worth
01:58:47.440
worth noting the person that purchased the world trade center was a guy named larry silverstein
01:58:51.520
now anyone that's familiar with uh commercial real estate united states to get a loan for commercial
01:58:56.320
real estate you need to be able to demonstrate that the house that the property is uh profitable to
01:59:00.960
be able to get a loan from the bank because larry silverstein got a loan from the bank and leverage and
01:59:05.040
he put just a little bit of his money in was able to procure the entire property now the problem is
01:59:09.600
that with the twin towers back then they had a big asbestos problem and a lot of the the um
01:59:15.200
the units not the units a lot of the office space that was there wasn't rented right for that
01:59:19.680
problem so this was a billion dollar stake that needed to be done to basically get it all done
01:59:24.720
and it would have cost more to get this asbestos problem handled then it would have done then it
01:59:28.880
would have cost to just build a whole new uh structure so um he got this this so not only
01:59:34.000
was he able to get this loan to purchase this property despite the fact that it wasn't cash flowing
01:59:38.320
but he also was able to get a very unique terrorism policy on the world trade center which
01:59:43.200
was also weird now i know some people might say well myron he was able to get this terrorist
01:59:46.480
policy because back in 1993 the world trade center had a bombing with the failed attempt by ramsey
01:59:51.440
yousef and i would agree with you on that and say yeah you're right there was a failed terrorist attack
01:59:55.520
um to bring the world trade center down back in 1993 um who ended up ramsey yousef is actually the
02:00:00.640
nephew of khalas sheikh muhammad who planned a 911 attacks but the point is is that um you know too
02:00:06.400
many similarities there and then not only that he bought the properties he bought the property literally
02:00:11.040
like in july before 9 11 the same year that 9 11 happened so um and there's even more to it there
02:00:18.560
i don't know where you want me to go with this but there were people that were going into the um
02:00:22.880
the world trade center that were israeli um intelligence assets and this has been documented
02:00:27.760
now at this point at a wide level um but just too many too many problems i think we focus so much on
02:00:34.080
al-qaeda and that connection and the saudi arabians which yes they were involved in 9 11 i'm not going to
02:00:38.080
sit here and say osama and them weren't involved they were but we almost always um avoid the um
02:00:44.480
israeli intelligence angle that was uh very prevalent in 9 11. encrypt us so you both you
02:00:50.560
guys who said you didn't know who the tenants were i'd love to give you that information oh no i i
02:00:55.440
yeah i was going to pull up solomon smith barney major investment bank leased 37 floors this is the
02:01:00.080
world trade center seven u.s secret service cia department of defense irs sec office of emergency
02:01:07.200
management other tenants uh encrypt us who else that's my my focus was cia sdc u.s secret service
02:01:15.920
and irs and the financials it's a government building yeah it was i don't think there's many
02:01:24.400
people who actually think that that one fell down as a result of natural fire because it makes no
02:01:28.400
sense even based on the explanation of the time yeah even this like this couldn't properly um explain it
02:01:34.800
but which where they were the ones that were tasked with um with covering you know how the buildings
02:01:39.280
uh what went down and then on top of that the person that designed the twin towers literally
02:01:43.040
designed it so that if it gets hit by a plane it won't go down there's never been a steel structure
02:01:46.480
that went down from fires so um it was 100 a controlled demolition it is what it is you know
02:01:51.840
i think at this point americans are awake to the fact that you know 9 11 is something that we've
02:01:55.760
been lied about um a guy named kurt weldon went on the tucker carlson show and you know he even alluded to
02:02:01.440
a lot of this stuff as well um i i think people are waking up to to the fact that 9 11 is probably
02:02:06.560
one of the biggest lies but you know if they if we were to tell them the truth that hey the u.s
02:02:11.280
government alongside israeli intelligence alongside the saudi arabians alongside al qaeda all work
02:02:15.760
together to you know uh organize an event uh and again it might not have been organized the way they
02:02:22.160
think i think it was more on the long lines of terrorists were trying to attack us and then we just
02:02:25.760
allowed it to happen right they thought they were successful but we merely allowed it to happen to you
02:02:30.480
know kind of create this police state this terrorism feared um you know society that we have now the
02:02:35.600
patriot act etc i think if americans knew that these were all these components were working together
02:02:40.640
uh it would make the american public have a deep level of distrust and you know this is jfk i think
02:02:45.760
there's a big reason why they didn't disclose the jfk stuff we finally got what we've been looking
02:02:50.000
for for the past 50 to 60 years which you know discloses finally that israeli intelligence was in
02:02:55.200
fact involved with killing john of kennedy um which they've been trying to keep restricted for the past 60
02:02:59.520
years well hold on i think you might be i think that one might be factually well i say factually
02:03:03.520
incorrect one of the documents that purportedly showed you know the the jews have the money and
02:03:08.880
machine guns is from what i understand fake the the the israeli intelligence level of involvement i
02:03:15.840
don't know that was involved in anything related to the actual assassination i think that was i think
02:03:20.400
what was revealed was that it's actually the american deep state lbj with the cia not actual israeli
02:03:26.720
involvement unless there's a document that i can yeah so no i can i could go through this so
02:03:31.920
what ended up happening was so for on a lot of the different declassifications with jfk
02:03:36.880
what ended up happening was there was like a part that was redacted right and if you look at it on the
02:03:41.680
on the document says cia is okay with disclosing this right um but except for the parts that are
02:03:47.120
bracketed and the part that was bracketed now that on this last new um release um said israeli
02:03:52.640
intelligence now there were other countries as well that were bracketed in there too but i do find
02:03:56.720
interesting that the the one that they focused on bracketing or redacting the most was the israeli
02:04:01.120
intelligence and then when you find out that james jesus angleton um was obvious you know because they
02:04:07.040
also redacted the a lot of his um his hearings that he gave um which a lot of those hearings ended up
02:04:12.400
where he was admitting that he was involved with helping them procure their nuclear program that they
02:04:16.800
currently have now and this was against john f kennedy's wishes where he did not want israel
02:04:21.840
to be involved in nuclear proliferation for a multitude of different reasons which you know
02:04:25.200
which we have this nuclear arms race going on in middle east right now with iran and israel
02:04:29.600
um but that was a big um that was just a lot of the stuff that they wanted to to not be shown in
02:04:34.880
in these documents so you know people said all the time oh it's just a conspiracy theory to say that
02:04:38.640
israel was involved in um in jfk's assassination they absolutely were involved and then um the bracket of
02:04:43.840
stuff that they had kept redacted all this time finally was unredacted we saw that it said israeli
02:04:47.680
intelligence agencies now with that said i do think it's very important to state
02:04:51.920
that you know i'm not one of these crazy people that are going to say the jews killed jfk
02:04:55.440
no there was a group of people that wanted jfk gone the the zionislavi wanted him gone
02:05:01.360
obviously uh the mafia organized crime wanted him gone the cubans wanted him gone they were mad
02:05:06.800
about the bay of pigs uh the intelligence agency wanted him gone because he threatened to smash
02:05:10.800
the cia into a million pieces ellen dulles had an axe to grind with him there was a lot of people that
02:05:15.280
wanted john f kennedy gone so to put all the blame on the israelis is uh disingenuous and you know
02:05:21.840
into uh you know intellectually disingenuous but i do think that all of them had a shared
02:05:26.560
interest in getting rid of him for different reasons well i i know that i know the guy who
02:05:30.880
i've considered to be the brain of the jfk assassination and he'll listen to this afterwards
02:05:35.040
and he'll be screaming at the screen but uh my understanding uh mark robert you he would be
02:05:41.520
very fun to talk to i'll see if we can hook it up but i know he'll come up all right no and his his
02:05:48.000
his take his take and i mean he's one of the i think he is you know him and i know that he would
02:05:52.720
say he knows more than uh roger stone uh and roger stone and all of hold on one second who's the
02:05:59.120
director of dick no oliver stone is the director of jfk and roger stone i want to make the same
02:06:03.840
mistake one of those those uh congresswomen i could debunk the roger stone movie right now
02:06:09.360
the problem with the rider stone movie uh you know jfk uh the famous 1991 film that you know
02:06:14.880
chronicles uh harrison's uh jim garrison's um pursuit to find the killer um the problem with that movie is
02:06:20.880
it doesn't cover the israeli angle whatsoever and and um some people are gonna say my understanding is
02:06:26.240
that the israeli angle never existed until very recently where no one actually credibly or
02:06:30.560
seriously thought israel had anything to do with it and my understanding is that the recent disclosures
02:06:34.320
don't actually prove that what they do prove you know the jewish element why so i'll tell you what
02:06:40.640
the fact the fascinating reason why a lot of people don't know this the reason why they didn't cover the
02:06:44.400
israeli angle is because the person that funded that movie was a guy named arnon milchan arnon milchan
02:06:50.000
is a jewish billionaire zionist who was a spy he literally admitted this on israeli television
02:06:55.840
he was a spy and not only was he a spy he was a spy that uh worked um as part of israeli's um
02:07:02.720
unacknowledged nuclear program so in other words his job was to ensure that israel's nuclear program
02:07:08.880
stayed unacknowledged and stayed secret um and this guy funded the jfk movie so when you actually look at
02:07:15.200
it you know it makes perfect sense the person that funded the jfk movie was a spy for israel that was
02:07:22.000
focused on making sure that the nuclear program never saw the light of day and then when you find
02:07:27.200
out that jfk's biggest issue with the israelis was quite literally because of the nuclear program it
02:07:31.440
makes perfect sense why the jfk movie was funded by this guy and clearly omitted the nuclear angle
02:07:38.000
um with israel because this had been known since like the 80s uh there was i forget the um
02:07:43.040
maybe it was a doug valentine i forget who the who the um who the author was that wrote about this i mean
02:07:48.480
the book was banned everywhere but he did go into this indeed doug valentine or something like that
02:07:53.040
that talked about um the israeli angle it had been out for a very long time so they knew it back in
02:07:57.680
the 90s even when they did this movie it's just that arnon milchan made sure to never mention that
02:08:02.080
part in the movie and then what ended up happening was the jfk movie ended up becoming the most famous
02:08:08.080
piece of media that documents the assassination of jfk and this is why so many americans are completely
02:08:12.720
unaware of the of the israeli angle i'm reading a chat here mark rubert helped on that movie he
02:08:21.200
knows rod uh oliver stone and advised on this and he's the one who says very clearly that that
02:08:27.440
information is fake uh and it would be a wonderful debate to have here the uh what information was fake
02:08:34.880
one of the one of the new releases which talked about is which which mentioned israel was apparently a
02:08:40.320
falsified document and i don't want to make a mistake as to which one it was now but um no look
02:08:46.480
that might be a fun discussion to have with mark i'll i will and i won't get into it because i know
02:08:50.960
i'm not the expert on this sure uh general general over on rumble says great guest and great show as
02:08:56.240
always thank you and tt full-time or over in our locals community says you can like this or not and with
02:09:02.160
the population of the usa 100 plus 70 divided by 2 equals 85 why looky there okay i don't know that i'm
02:09:09.760
gonna figure that one out in a second and big bad bob there are pictures of two so-called israeli
02:09:14.640
art students for some reason renting two entire floors of the twin towers standing between a
02:09:19.440
massive number of boxes on both sides from floor to ceiling and wall to wall with a company label
02:09:24.960
on those boxes and that particular company made nothing but demolition materials for the demolition
02:09:30.640
of tall he's referring to team e11 if i'm not mistaken and that's just one group so here's the thing
02:09:35.760
with 9 11 and i'll go over this real quick there was um there was multiple israeli um spirings that
02:09:42.000
were caught in the united states leading up to and or around the time of 9 11. so that was one group
02:09:46.880
that was um actually living in the towers and doing an experiment i think he's referring to team e11
02:09:51.280
then there was another group that was actually um caught by the dea that were basically going around
02:09:57.280
and taking pictures and doing uh surveillance on government buildings the da wrote an entire memorandum
02:10:02.720
on this um on israeli students that were posing as israeli intelligence assets that were posing as
02:10:06.960
students and then on top of that there was the urban moving systems cell that was basically um following
02:10:13.360
the hijackers around so the the cell the the urban moving systems guys which is you know tied to the
02:10:19.040
dancing israelis these guys were moving the hydra were basically um following the movers the um the
02:10:24.960
hijackers around because a lot of the hijackers actually lived in hollywood florida when they were
02:10:28.160
taking these flight classes and these hijackers lived in miami beach and were surveilling these guys
02:10:32.560
the whole time under the premise and the guise of a moving company so it ended up happening when the
02:10:37.280
attacks happened on november uh on september 11th these um israelis were dancing uh on an apartment
02:10:43.600
building and a woman saw this and called the police so the police ends up um catching up with these guys
02:10:49.600
and they're driving an urban moving systems van and a lot of them had i think one or two of them had
02:10:54.240
large sums of cash um and uh plane tickets to leave the united states the day after and uh you know
02:11:00.000
obviously this was suspicious so what they did was they um ended up calling the fbi fbi interviews
02:11:04.400
these guys two of them when they ran their names came back to israeli intelligence when they ran their
02:11:08.480
databases and then when they interviewed them under polygraph hey did you guys have four
02:11:12.480
knowledge that the towers are going to be attacked um a couple of them failed the the polygraph test
02:11:16.800
and then to make it even crazier about 70 days later when they're in immigration custody they're
02:11:21.440
deported back to israel they go on a talk show and they admit on the talk show that they were there to
02:11:26.320
document the event and they knew what was going to happen and the interesting thing is on september
02:11:29.760
11th when the towers were hit around 9 a.m they were there at about 8 a.m waiting for the towers
02:11:34.160
to hit and they were taking pictures dancing celebrating whatever then it gets crazier the
02:11:38.320
fbi executed a search warrant on urban movie systems at headquarters when they went there they
02:11:43.040
found a bunch of hard drives and computers which doesn't make sense for a movie company to be there
02:11:47.680
and that they were going to basically stop shop after september 11th then they didn't look they
02:11:52.240
they looked at the financials they found that the moving company was funded by israeli intelligence
02:11:56.880
and then on top of that the guy that ran the company a dude named dominic suitor right you
02:12:00.720
guys can all look at the fbi 302s they're all out there by the way you type in dancing israelis
02:12:05.120
fbi 302s you can read all this yourselves so they got they look for this guy dominic suitor
02:12:10.000
he runs he flees back to israel to this day they still they still haven't um caught him he's hiding
02:12:15.120
out in israel this guy dominic suitor so um you know they're look when it comes to 9 11
02:12:22.080
you know i'm not gonna sit here and say because a lot of people again they're lazy and intellectual
02:12:25.680
dishonest oh the jews did 9 11 no but what i will say is there was absolutely israeli zionist
02:12:30.800
fingerprints all over 9 11 in tandem with other deep state assets al-qaeda etc so um and there's
02:12:37.360
even more there's another uh ring that was caught out of tennessee that was that was in the in the
02:12:41.840
towers months before the towers went down i could go into crazy detail on this but i don't want to bore your
02:12:45.920
audience but there's a lot of smoke and fire there when it comes to israeli intelligence
02:12:50.720
assets that were uh around and or involved with the towers leading up to the attacks i noticed in
02:12:56.720
the chat someone said why is viva suggesting the document was fake i need i'm trying to find the one
02:13:00.560
i know jeremy the quartering published it i shared it with mark privately and it's the one
02:13:05.040
that refers to machine guns and the jews have the money and i don't mean i'm not trying to be funny
02:13:08.560
it says the back of the jews yeah that's the thing i'm talking about that's not what i'm referring to
02:13:14.240
no that's that's why i just want people to i'm not saying if we're not talking about the same
02:13:16.960
document i'm not i'm i i i am certain that mark robert is certain that the document that
02:13:22.800
is talked about the machine guns i think and the cubans and jews with the backing was fake because
02:13:27.680
even though it had the doc the cia numbers on it whatever it was but um yeah no it's uh yeah i mean
02:13:33.760
i could definitely set up um i could set up a discussion with uh cory hughes and your guy if
02:13:38.000
you want they can debate it um but yeah no i mean um the the document i'm referring to basically um
02:13:44.160
just it says here basically what it says is cia is okay to release except for brackets and then
02:13:49.920
they finally remove those brackets that i do remember i do remember that and then people were
02:13:54.640
arguing that it doesn't really in inculpate or implicate israel in the actual plot itself but that
02:14:00.480
the the idea they had to redact that it was even israel in the first place was to save face for
02:14:04.000
israel i remember that discussion happening when these files were released that as well as the the
02:14:09.280
james jesus angleton um uh information is also critical because james jesus angleton who he was a
02:14:14.960
high-ranking cia operative he worked very tightly with israeli intelligence agencies and he was a big
02:14:21.600
part of um israel being able to procure its nuclear weapon program which obviously happened after john
02:14:27.920
f kennedy was assassinated first of all i don't get scared for things like this i only get scared
02:14:33.920
for immediate events of of potential violence and that's the fight or flight syndrome viva will get
02:14:38.720
the call after this live lmfa that's funny just so you understand with total independence come certain
02:14:45.200
uh limitations but come certain freedom first of all they don't have my number but uh no i don't it's
02:14:51.600
funny just as a joke we've already went over a bunch of different things that most people would never
02:14:57.440
touch so i it's funny that they would say that about me it's a beautiful thing i know i think
02:15:00.960
they mean a tongue-in-cheek but uh because you know i i won't get the call because they won't
02:15:04.560
make it to me because there's no point in making it to me myron we're going to do this again and uh
02:15:09.360
it maybe sooner than later i'll come back down to miami and we'll we'll do another one but this is
02:15:13.360
it's you're always welcome thank you very much and and ordinarily i'll say we'd say our proper
02:15:17.840
goodbyes but you you continue doing your show i'm going to maybe go to my locals after
02:15:21.280
party for just for a few minutes but uh myron it's fantastic i i look i've never in as much
02:15:26.880
as i disagree with certain things like the i it's it's one thing to talk in generalities
02:15:32.320
while simultaneously acknowledging that you don't get to treat any one individual in any
02:15:36.640
predetermined way because of whatever you might uh assume or say by way of generalities for a group
02:15:43.280
and that's unfortunately the human brain works by making rules based on probabilities but you know the
02:15:49.120
true i would say critic criticizable behavior comes when you treat an individual differently
02:15:54.400
as a predetermined basis before even having any discussion with that individual and i and i uh
02:15:59.520
i dare say my i like it and i appreciate you i appreciate you allowing me the ability to speak
02:16:05.120
and kind of convey my ideas and you know though you might not agree you're open to hearing it out which
02:16:09.040
i think is something that's like kind of lacking in today's society where people are able to you know
02:16:13.120
have a discussion and talk to people and say you know what well okay you think this way can you
02:16:16.160
you tell me why you think that way right and i really appreciate you affording me that the
02:16:19.760
platform to be able to to give my world views and why i think the way i do and what i love is that
02:16:24.480
if you've said anything factually incorrect the aggregate knowledge of the internet is going to
02:16:28.400
figure it out on both of our ends and then it'll make me revise correct and be better for the future
02:16:32.880
and the same for you yes absolutely man and that's that's one of the beauties so no it's always great
02:16:37.760
talking with you viva really is i always can um you know i know i got to bring my a-game and be
02:16:41.920
come uh prepared whenever i talk with you and it's always great uh i'm gonna go back and listen and
02:16:46.240
i know our community is gonna what it was never a question of just like finding a gotcha if some
02:16:50.160
of the stuff is incorrect i know that you would reassess as well and that's what it you know that's
02:16:53.680
what we have opinions and and be ready to be challenged on them myron it's amazing i'll i'll dm
02:16:59.120
you after this and we'll uh we'll meet up for coffee all right man absolutely take it easy all right have