00:02:05.760And I say, because God has a sense of humor, he put my Orthodox Jewish family there in Salt Lake City, Utah, to kind of mold me so that I could become a famous comedian, I think.
00:02:20.000Because I always had the stranger in a strange land thing going on, and the outsider view, you know.
00:02:29.420And just things that I noticed in that culture, the Salt Lake City culture at the time, which is way different now.
00:03:10.440And in Utah there, they kind of wrote themselves.
00:03:13.240I had a very funny family, and jokes were king.
00:03:16.800And if you told the right joke at the right time, like when my dad's fist was about here, and you could get out a good joke, he wouldn't hit you.
00:03:27.760If you could make dad laugh before he slapped you in the head or whatever he did, it was a lifesaver.
00:04:35.000And I just see, you know, people are, I think they're afraid to be alone to go there because it's all so stark and sometimes terrifying to have self-reflection and want self-reflection because that's where good jokes come from.
00:04:54.560You know, you know, so comics, I think, by and large are kind of isolated personalities with a lot of tics.
00:05:02.600But, yeah, we like to write jokes and think and not the way people think comics are.
00:05:50.800That's a lot of things I like to sit and think about.
00:05:53.420The people that came in and out of my life, that each one was a giant, and I was friends with these giants, you know, that, you know, it was an amazing thing.
00:06:09.220But, yeah, the comedy store, I got to meet and befriend Richard Pryor and Dick Gregory and, oh, my God, I'm forgetting everybody's name, Phyllis Diller, Rodney Dangerfield, Sam Kennison, Dice Clay, just everybody in my generation of comedy.
00:07:53.220Because he took on the stuff that America didn't want to talk about and just made it funnier than hell.
00:08:02.040And I would meet people, because I traveled the country, and I talked to a lot of people, and I would meet people who, when I was doing interviews and stuff, people who don't like black people at all, you know, real racist types, and ask them who's their favorite comic, they'd say Richard Pryor.
00:08:25.680And it was, I was, you know, kind of doing a study on his, the effect he had on American culture.
00:08:38.780And then I was also friendly with him.
00:08:42.720And I have a picture of him, and he's very skinny and old, and he's on his way out there, and after he burned up, you know.
00:08:50.820And I was eight and a half months pregnant, I was huge, and he said, you want to take a picture and tell me to sit on his lap?
00:08:59.100And I go, you're going to, if I sit on you, you will die even faster, because, you know, I'll crush you to death.
00:09:08.180And then I saw, I sat on him, and they took the picture, and his face in the picture, he looks like, he's like, why would I tell her to sit on me?
00:09:17.700And also, Kinison, as well, is somebody else who changed comedy.
00:09:36.920I saw a battle on stage at the comedy store between him, Harry Basile, and I think, to me still, one of the greatest comics I've ever seen.
00:09:47.260And that left comedy and moved to Israel, but he was just great, and his name was Jackie Diamond.
00:09:59.520He was only 22 years old, and I think Sam was jealous of him, and he kept on attacking him.
00:10:07.180And then he and Harry Basile turned on Sam Kinison on stage, and it was like a blowout fight, and people were running out, and it was just great.
00:10:19.340It was the greatest thing that happened at the comedy store, I think.
00:10:59.740People are more like, well, I've got to keep my shirt button because, you know, somebody's looking at me, and I might get a special.
00:11:07.720They're always looking for the special, or the show, or, you know, the bump up, or, you know, I've got to be on my P's and Q's, and I have to do comedy in this certain way.
00:11:17.840And you can see that they're working for, you know, a future in comedy.
00:11:40.080He was, he's the one that really laid the groundwork for Richard Pryor behind the scenes because he wrote on all those Norman Lear shows, like Sanford, Son of Jeffersons, all the good times, all the ones that were, you know, the black family.
00:11:56.840And he really laid the groundwork for Richard Pryor and wrote with him, too.
00:12:02.320He was a great, great comic, one of the greatest.
00:12:06.380I just have to say that about Paul, and he was a good friend of mine, too.
00:12:10.120But, yeah, there were people then that wanted to burn down all the horrible bullshit.
00:12:21.800The comics that were like, yeah, well, we're supposed to die like Lenny Bruce.
00:12:28.060We're supposed to be warriors that come out and do too much of everything and then die, you know, in our bathroom because that's the rock and roll of it.
00:12:38.900Just like people that were rock and roll stars that used to come to the comedy store and hang out.
00:12:43.380They knew they were supposed to party until they, you know, died when they were 27 of an overdose.
00:18:23.320When Reagan shut down mental health problems, and then it was just all the violent, schizophrenic people that weren't being treated all over that same street.
00:18:35.380And I was like, what are you going to do about this?
00:18:38.900So I started writing and getting in trouble, you know, in independent magazines and saying things.
00:20:29.680And doing the sitcom in the middle of it, I don't even remember a day of it anymore since, you know, all the trauma I went through of that.
00:23:24.880And sometimes they come up against each other and sometimes they congeal and they're the same thing and you get a big bang for your buck.
00:23:33.080But I think just that it was about regular, imperfect people who love each other, even though sometimes they can't stand each other either.
00:26:04.220Two, there's no dissent, and there's a lot of self-righteousness which allows you to discard the human rights of other people who don't think like you.
00:26:18.240Two, so it's a grotesque arrogance that's inhuman with a sneer on its face.
00:26:26.020And three, it has a loathing for Jews.
00:26:37.060So those three things are the same three things that make up fascism, and they're just Nazis.
00:26:44.480The left are Nazis, and the far right are Nazis too.
00:26:49.700And that's my humble opinion, living 72 years.
00:26:53.640They get paid from the same people, and I really would love to see some disclosure on that.
00:26:59.500If there are any, I know that there's, I know a lot of Anons, and I have for a long time, and I'm like a non-anon-anon.
00:27:07.000Because I research, and I'd love to see where these people who are trying to destroy our culture and our country with their anti-Semitism, which is a tool of power.
00:27:22.100And, you know, they already destroyed the Democrats with it, and that's why I thought the vote for Trump was a rejection by Americans of anti-Semitism.
00:27:33.320And now they're trying to take down the right with it.
00:27:36.020But I'd love to see disclosure of these mouthpieces that the Jews, the Jews, the Jews.
00:27:41.820I'd like to see who sponsors them, because I'm damn sure it's the same on the left as it is on the right.
00:27:49.360But the sad thing about the anti-Semitism stuff is that that is how you destroy a republic, particularly a Christian republic.
00:28:04.000And I hate seeing that happen here, and it terrifies me, because I like that this is a Christian republic, because Jews do really well and are protected in Christian democracies all through history with some bleeps.
00:29:13.020But it's so obvious that I just will say it.
00:29:16.020The owners of the world are the royals, kings, queens, dukes, duchess, imams, popes, wizards, that own every single dime on earth and bank at the Bank of International Settlements.
00:29:34.020That's the owners of the world who decide every war and arm both sides, because they make money.
00:32:35.180Well, other people say it better than me because I can't remember dates and stuff like that.
00:32:39.780But we, and this will sound crazy, but you should listen to other people who put it better than me about how we came back under the control of the British crown in the late 1800s and how we still are.
00:33:46.900That's what we want, but the bad parts of it are fucked now, and there's going to have to be a huge change, and the people are going to have to demand it, and it's the same here.
00:33:59.900But up until the part where everybody went, hey, this is fucked, it was really fucked.
00:34:07.640They were, they were allowing rape, grooming and rape gangs, and the police were protecting them, you know, and, you know, the BBC, and even back to Margaret Thatcher, they were protecting the worst fucking elements in the world.
00:34:26.720And, uh, you know, I mean, I don't want to say too much about the Epstein thing, but, you know, that, that was also, they had a royal.
00:35:58.920I knew when I was a hippie in a women's commune that, you know, that the owners of the world, the royal classes, the privileged classes, were fake.
00:36:14.380And, you know, probably me and my sister used to play the Queen of Russia versus the Queen of England, because we, we have Russian background, Lithuanian too.
00:36:28.340And so we'd always have a war between those two queens, because they weren't human to us.
00:39:40.320But what I mean by socialism is abolishing capitalism, not having things like a welfare state or, you know, free to enter health care systems.
00:39:57.980I think it's the opposite side of the coin as vampire capitalism, because every time things, they build up a bubble, Marxism comes along and the bubble bursts, and then the richest people move in and buy everything for pennies.
00:40:16.880So I think they work like this, and even Marx says that.
00:40:22.640He was hired to write it by a capitalist.
00:40:25.360He was hired to make up Marxism by a capitalist.
00:40:29.380And, you know, he—I won't even go into that.
00:40:33.080But the fallacy of Marxism is being a feminist.
00:40:37.540The French feminist wrote a critique of Marxism in the 60s, which said, Marxism doesn't even count the unpaid labor of women.
00:45:13.400What do you think he needs to do that he's not doing?
00:45:15.860As I've said over many years, where's the fucking arrest of these criminals that were traitors to our country and to our troops and to our people?
00:45:27.640I think it's a traitorous act that our Congress is allowing our veterans to sleep on the street.
00:45:38.340That is traitorous and they should be charged.
00:45:47.040People should be called out for their being traitors to our troops and our people and our parents that sent their kids over there to fight and die for this country.
00:45:57.160And then the first thing that happened when I was running for president, I said this, isn't it funny that the single mothers of the heroes that went to fight overseas, they're the first ones that lost their fucking houses.
00:46:12.380They're the first ones because of that grift, that fake bubble Marxist burst grift.
00:49:59.560I wish I could remember his name, because he was a great American.
00:50:02.980A lot of whistleblowers, a lot of dissenters, prison, just like in the Soviet Union, like the Stalinists here did.
00:50:14.280I mean, the January 6th people, that was a gulag.
00:50:17.980And they just loved prison, imprisoning dissenters and whistleblowers and thinkers and ruining everyone else's life by, you know, stepping on their face with their jackboot, like they did me.
00:50:58.540And the few things they don't like are the things we like, like our Constitution and women's rights and children's rights and rape activism.
01:10:33.800Roseanne, on that happy note, the question we always end the interview with is, what's the one thing we're not talking about that we should be?
01:10:39.620Well, I think that one thing that we're not talking about that we should be is money and the Bank of International Settlements in Switzerland and how that all works.
01:10:58.620It's the central bank of all central banks, how that all works and how it affects everything.
01:11:05.600I think we should be talking about that.
01:11:39.160You gave most of the actors on the Roseanne and the Conor show their break.
01:11:45.780Did any of them try to stand up to the network for firing you?
01:12:09.160A claims program for harmed Canadians has begun as a result of a landmark tobacco settlement.
01:12:16.300If you smoked regularly before November 20, 1998, and were diagnosed with lung cancer, throat cancer, emphysema, or COPD, you may qualify for a significant payment.
01:12:28.940To learn more, call 888-482-5852 or go to tobaccoclaimscanada.ca.