Navigated to Day 216 - December 21, 2025 - Transcript

Day 216 - December 21, 2025

Episode Transcript

Speaker 1

I get what's going on, guys, you boys forward twenty here, woke y'all back another episode of day z Ra, What Day?

Well on to sixteen?

I think that's what to put it.

Speaker 2

Jesus, I can't count that we two We two hundred.

Speaker 1

And something, Okay, We're like, we we way into two hundreds, all right, and we feel really good about it.

We've got everybody here today, the emaculate one, the spiritual one, the powerful one, me, the one.

Guys, are you doing well today?

Speaker 3

So it's Christmas, it's the best of the year.

Speaker 2

It is the best time of the year.

But I'm gonna tell you what's making me not well?

Okay, I'm really getting fucking I'm over.

I'm I done about hat it with these motherfucking I don't even know they're allegedly influencers, but I don't know where the fuck they come from.

I don't know what the fuck they do.

And all these his hang on their nuts like they do something special, and I don't fucking get it.

I got I can't stand this motherfucker neon.

Who the fuck is this neon?

Speaker 1

How is he?

Speaker 2

Why is he famous?

And why does he have a million dollar watch?

And who the fuck is this guy?

Cause someone please explain what's going on in the world.

Speaker 1

To me, he seems to be.

Speaker 2

Because once you see if you can't unsee it, and this motherfucker will pop up on your phone.

Dude, he's gonna start popping up on your stream, on your fucking X feed just because I'm talking about it, and it's gonna make its way back to the fucking the artificial intelligence.

So but no, these guys, I'm sick of people who are famous for no reason.

Speaker 1

And you're sick of hear him.

I'm sick of Jake Paul.

Okay, I'm done with a Jake Paul.

Speaker 4

He's gonna be drinking soup for the next three weeks.

Speaker 2

Him and his brother are just Internet opportunists.

It seems whatever they can get some clicks on, they do to get the clicks.

And so I'm kind of disappointed that something like WWE would be so inviting to somebody like fucking Logan Paul, Yeah, because like that that makes a mockery of their own profession.

Speaker 4

Like yeah, but it's their target market, you know, It's like they've got like that, it's it's the demographic to perfect.

Speaker 2

These marketing terms make me want to vomit.

Speaker 4

But that's how they're looking at this.

They're going, he's got a whole new audience.

He's got this, he's online, he's it.

You know, it's people that wouldn't normally be into this, or they're into it or whatever.

You know, that's how they think.

But you have to see building in the south the west of Vegas, Corey.

Have you driven by their there about aout in the.

Speaker 2

Last I love they're in twenty twenty, but I've I've driven It's right off the highway.

What's that highway that makes the loop around Vegas?

That highway that makes the loop and no one ever, that's the fastest highway ever, Like everyone gets bogged out in the traffic.

And this is every time I've ever been on that fucking road has been like you can get anywhere, but.

Speaker 4

They dominate like there when you drive by their the UFC headquarters, you know it is right off the freeway.

It is massive and it is undeniable.

So like that didn't get built by people that are bad at demographics.

That's what I'm saying.

This is a calculation.

It may be gross and you may not like it, but you're dude, they just there's a lot of money out there for them.

They get a new batch of people that are hooked on it or something, and.

Speaker 1

You know, okay, so much.

Speaker 4

Let me just say my issue.

Speaker 1

Let me just say my issue, okay, because I got the same issue with fully May with all Right, is that it just starts to make a mockery of the sales sport, and he get paid a ton of money for people to go watch symbollishit.

I mean, that's all I'm saying.

Million dollars ninety two million last night or two nights ago, made ninety two million, from what I'm like, But there's people out here struggling.

You made ninety two million for some bullish year, it's some for a million.

Speaker 4

This is this supplying demand.

This is when you're when you're in a specialized industry and you can you're the guy who can go across the middle and catch a convert on third down.

You get paid because nobody else can do it.

And if you're at promoting and fighting, he's he's better at fighting than I.

Then I honestly gave him credit for it when he started.

Speaker 1

And I know he's trying a bunch.

Speaker 4

Of I know he hasn't fought like a bunch of you know, the top line guys like you or like the dude is an influencer and then became a boxer, not a boxer who became an influencer.

I mean, like, it's a pretty fucking crazy pivot if you ask me.

But but he's cracked the code, man, And I you know what, he came out of Hollywood early, so let's not kid ourselves.

A lot of this might have been made to happen as well.

He was one of those kids that was like young and doing a lot of work in Hollywood, and uh, you know how that shit goes.

Man.

Speaker 1

The fact it was, I just like I do not get it, Like I'm not going to the event.

I don't watch the events like it's like not even interesting at all, Like I don't it's not competition like and it's it's somebody like I'm gonna dude, Like I thrive off that competition like a good play sports because I love the competition.

And it's just like when I just see the bullshit, I'm just like, damn, man, I mean I understand when I watch professional wrestling that I understand what I'm looking at all, right, you're so you're you shouldn't.

Speaker 4

Be watching this for the competition.

You be watching this to watch to see that dude get knocked the fuck out just because he had it coming to him.

One of those hate watching there's I bet you how much money people just want watch knock the fuck out by this big ass dude, like a real ass boxer who is a gorilla.

He's going to kill him in the ring.

Maybe I'll pay to see that.

Speaker 1

Yeah, he's a British guerrilla team niggas.

Speaker 4

It's gonna sound awesome when he does.

Speaker 1

He's a full o brilliant.

Speaker 4

I was like, okay, Lennox Lewis would get the fuck out of you and they stick a microphone in front of him and people would lose their minds and'd.

Speaker 1

Go, oh my god, this sounds like he should be teaching at Oxford, Hey, sacred job.

And he said it correctly.

I rumble n PC's loved that ship.

There ain't no doubt about that dude.

For sure.

Folks.

They'll get together, they'll get liquor drinks, they'll have friends over.

We're gonna stay up to two am to see Jake Paul fight.

Uh Josh, I'm like no, I'm like, oh no, not at all.

Speaker 3

Yeah, to get famous, you basically have to cater to idiots, people who are vapid and self absorbed and like super super mainstream.

I don't know if there's any other way.

Speaker 1

Yeah, and it's it's just like it's extremely weird.

I mean, like I understand the bread and search this type of deal.

I understand that, but like this this whole Jake Paul phenomenon and how he is like bringing in millions and millions of dollars every single time, I'm just like, man, how man.

I'm like, I'm just trying to I'm trying to grab it, and it's like it's not correlating.

Speaker 4

The same way the Trans Siberian Orchestra brings in millions and millions of dollars because they're putting on sho you know what I mean.

Speaker 2

I can't believe you just mentioned that there's a lot of lasers.

I didn't documentary on them, so I just watched the whole fucking thing on those guys.

Yeah, they used to be the band Sabotage, a heavy metal band out of Tampa.

Who actually would They were like a local band in Tampa when I was growing up, and I probably seen them a couple of times, like opening up for other bands and never gave a fuck because they were kind of like opera opera, kind of metal ship.

And so one day their manager just went to them and said, hey, you guys want to be this Christmas fucking band, and like they're like, yeah, let's do it.

That's it.

Speaker 1

Decision.

Wow.

Speaker 4

I used that.

I used that line on my on my fourteen year old when we were driving.

I was driving her to school and the commercial came on for Trans Siberian Orchestra.

I just go, there is no way the entire orchestra is trance.

And I did it with a straight and she and she I watched her.

I watched her just kind of turn a little bit look me, just to see if I always keep it together.

I didn't track that.

Speaker 1

I'm dead serious this this is this is dead serious what we're talking about here.

But I'm just saying, like, there's people, there's people that's legit, that's real, there's people out here doing real things in the world.

I understand, you know, you got supplying the man and how howver much money is moving through it.

But I'm just trying to figure out how that's that much money moving through Jake Paul.

How like, like I didn't think you like, he wasn't really a personality before he even started boxing.

Not for me, you know, you're it's people reason, but he was never really a personality.

Speaker 4

I don't think he's he's I don't think he's targeted to us though.

I think he's like definitely not our demogratic, you know, like and like like if I go to YouTube, what I see and versus what my daughter sees vastly different, right, So so maybe she's getting fed Jake Paul, but I'm certainly not for a variety of reasons.

Speaker 3

Well, and it's a repetition thing, like anything like how many exposures can you make someone have?

And then that many exposures determines whether or not they like it or not.

I mean, it's like a proven thing.

And especially in music, right, they'll be like a pop song, nobody likes it, but then they play it like five hundred times and now everybody likes it, and like even if you started out not liking it, you're like, well I kind of like it now.

It's because it's like it got into your brain and what it a they studied.

You know how many times you have to hear something in order to believe it's true, even if logically you know that it's not right, and repetition is all that it takes.

You just repeat it, repeat it, repeat it.

So even if people are like, who cares about Jake Paul?

Who cares about Jake Paul?

Who cares?

That's his name, right, And then like, however many times and then and eventually they're like, who the fuck is Jake pad Now they're just like watching Jake Paul.

Speaker 4

So I actually watched one of his video interviews.

I guess it was a pod.

I guess it was his podcast, but it was, and it was I must confess, it was super fascinating.

It was this dude from Europe, this European guy.

It was just it was funny.

Speaker 1

I was.

Speaker 4

I was.

I was like, damn, I'm not supposed to like this, but it was a fascinating conversation with some dude.

Speaker 3

I was like, fuck it, I've never listened to Peter Tie.

I'll listen to him.

And then I was like, holy shit, I agree with so far one hundred percent of things he says, So maybe he's not something where I'll just hate his guts and he'll say something fucking just way across the line.

But so far he's like pretty cool in my book, everyone too.

But I think all the people who hate hearing it have never heard him talk like I it was before I was like with him how he talks.

Yeah, he's a weirdough, but like so is every tech person I've ever known.

Like it's right, like, whether you're autistic or not, you're you're probably a transhumanist, and you're also deeply, deeply left rain logical, like beyond most you know, so people who don't understand what autism is will just think that you're autistic because they don't understand what autism is because you're so logical and so left brain.

So it's it's it is almost like alien to people who are anywhere in the middle or like really right brain, they're just like, what creature is this?

But idea wise, now he had nothing that I was like, what a fucking evil guy like nothing.

Speaker 4

His business partner.

Speaker 3

Yeah, well, and this is separate from like the architecture, what they might have actually built or what it might be being used for.

I'm just saying, like the dude is just a dude.

Speaker 4

So it's interesting back to.

Speaker 1

Yeah, back to your point on you know, putting like songs and things that nature.

Uh, they put people in front of you that they've already paid.

So like if they if they've already like, hey, here goes money, then they're damn sure gonna make sure that people see it.

Yeah, I mean, that's see it or hear it.

Like that's just all there is too, is that hey, we already sent this money into it, so you need to see.

Speaker 4

It in here.

That's see it.

Speaker 1

Like whether it's whether it's actually going to be able to be profitable or not really doesn't matter at the end of it.

It's just the fact that we want this person out in front of you.

So that's what's going to happen.

Speaker 3

Yeah, regardless, you will watch this person.

Speaker 1

Yeah, I mean that's pretty much it, which a way of.

Speaker 3

Looking at like, you know, is everything that is put in front of us manufactured for a very specific outcome, because that's the black pill version of reality, right, And that's like sort of the idea about even the cabal or the Illuminati or anything that you want to think is going on and it's very coordinated.

But the opposite of that is that if they's just like, this is how you make money.

But they're both true.

In my opinion, there is a very coordinated effort and there's all so like a whole conglomerate of effects that are literally just because someone's making money, the people who are very coordinated are gonna use that right and absolutely, but that doesn't mean that everyone's who's in the sphere of like making a lot of money off of things is also in the sphere of very coordinated efforts to bring you down right mentally.

Speaker 1

Or the or the or the or the thought that they may make money.

Like there's been a whole bunch of shit AI that they just they're just throwing out there.

Oh yeah, we're gonna make money at some point in time.

I'm like, okay, I mean, I guess it's fair enough before we get too much further, Lindsay, I always like to bring up if somebody leaves a comment and uh, you know, I just want you to respond on this because this one was put directly to you on a YouTube page.

All right, all right, it's from a bail sig.

Not sure what that means, but it says, Lindsay, you've been lied to about the supposed social credit score, and chat people do have a financial credit score, just like in the US, and if a Chinese person is arrested on suspicion of a serious crime, then their movements may be curtail to prevent them escaping.

That's about it.

If you have any concrete evidence which shows that there is more to it than that, feel free to present it.

So I just want to make sure you know I want to put that out for this.

Speaker 3

I have the same response to every single person who says anything like this to me, and it's a go fuck yourself, and b if I wanted to, I would.

I don't need your invitation.

I'll add to that by saying like I have done plenty of shows where I provide plenty of evidence, and then when people say where's your sources, I say, go fucking find your own, like, because when it comes down to it, I don't give a shit what you think about China or their social credits for random internet commenter, so I just think it's weird.

But yeah, obviously they do.

And many, many, many many Chinese citizens who leave China will tell you all about it, and you can go find them yourself.

Have a good Christmas.

Speaker 1

There we go, there we go.

I just want to make sure, Hey, I don't want to leave no stone in term for people.

You know, you leave a comment, I don't want people to be able to respond happiness to say comment.

Speaker 4

Hey.

Speaker 1

But but once again, like I said, I mean, I was talking to some people at my gym the other day as we got done playing basketball, when they were talking about you know how you go over and you know, live in Chrya and cost you four hundred dollars a month, I said, I said, man, everybody, they see some flashing lights, but and we just go right in.

The fucking three year old kid made I'm trying to tell you, dude, you need just quickly.

Speaker 4

Go visit first before you blindly move to China, and.

Speaker 3

Pay attention to how closely you will be like quartered into like just different pathways and different places at these times and these and like even your visit will be highly tailored and highly watched.

If you think it's not.

Speaker 2

You're blind everywhere but here, so no matter how bad it sucks here like it s worse no matter where else you go.

So I don't know what the people are thinking.

Speaker 4

You need to stay away from a place them bombed or that's going to be bombed in the future, like maybe Europe.

Yeah, I don't know, maybe Venezuela.

You don't want to be there anytime soon.

They're about to get some democracy dropped down their ass, unfortunately.

Speaker 1

I see the issue that I believe that, or the thought that they got in their mind, is that the people over there will be assisting of them.

Speaker 4

And I'm just like, it's not what they always think.

They got spoiled with that.

Listen, I mean the French treated the Nazis, you know.

I mean the Nazis were giving roses and ship like that too when they strolled into certain parts of of the world.

So yeah, like.

Speaker 1

A secret said perfectly or rumble, visiting is different than living, Yes, So we got that conception in our mind.

So I hear people all the time, I want to move to the beach when I retire.

I'm like, but once you moved there, it takes away all that, you know, that great feeling that you get when you're on vacation and go to the beach, Like now you're just there and you're like, yeah, whatever, Mike, You've got this utope in your mind because when you go there, you're not working, you're having a good time.

You might be sitting in the sand.

Not me, fuck the sand, but you might be sitting in the sand sipping you on margarita.

You know what I'm saying.

Your wife might actually that you have sex with her.

You ain't have sex with in about six months, but I won't go on vacation, and he's like, hey, I'll let you get some of this puss today.

You know what I'm saying.

Because I feel good today, you know.

And so you're like, oh, man, we need to move to the beach and that that opened up our horizons.

No, it won't.

It's just gonna be life as usual once you get there.

It's just gonna I mean, you're just gonna beat now be at the beach, and you'll be tired of that.

Eventually you'd be like, oh shit, all these terrorists and the man, shit's closed during this time of year.

You see what I'm saying, Like, you're just used to the good times, but what do you do with the rest of the time.

It's just like everything.

It's just like your relationship.

Your relationship is not the first four or five months of it.

If you're talking about going ten fifteen to twenty years, it's a whole lot more evolved to it.

So it's just like once again, shiny objects, shiny rocks.

Corey, we're attracting the shiny rock, shiny objects.

Speaker 2

Stay roight, dude, fucking shiny rocks.

I'll never get over gold.

Gold is the domost shit in the world.

It has no purpose except the jewelry.

People are like, well it has industrial used.

Well it didn't fucking five thousand years ago.

When they started using it.

It just looked fucking cool.

All right.

People are stupid.

Shy rocks are dumb.

I can't believe they hold value.

I'm just everything is just blowing me away lately we live in I hope this is a simulation because the real world better be fucking cooler than this.

Speaker 4

Did we get thrown off into a different like timeline or something, lindsay you did?

Speaker 1

Yeah?

Yeah, because because in the timeline I was at before, I'm not here talking you see what I'm saying, Like that was the timeline I was in before, Like I wasn't here, Like I wasn't anywhere near here at all.

So it's just like it's just wild man.

But you know, when I heard those guys talking at the gym about China and Japan and all that stuff.

I'm just like, man, they just say, letting all y'all jigs go over there.

But they just hang out, you know what I mean.

That ain't happening though, like they are, you know, culturally Japanese and culturally Chinese.

There ain't no miltain pot don't get Yeah, I know they gotta McDonald's over there, But that's about it, you know.

That's about all you get.

Other than that, it's straight Chinese.

It's straight Japanese.

Speaker 3

Japanese.

You're like, you're hoping that you're going to get this like Starbucks or this like chicken sandwich from KFC or whatever.

It's going to be like what you remember, but it's not because it's different chicken, it's different breading, and it's different everything, and everything's different.

It's like culture shock too.

Like people think culture shock is just being somewhere where things are wildly different than you're used to and it's like hard to consider for a moment or something, and then it's over and it's like no, culture shock is like a series of stages you go through for years.

And so if you're going to move to China, like you can look to be wildly uncomfortable, sometimes deeply depressed, horribly angry, hating everything at various times along that journey, So like you could do it if you're really want to live somewhere, But you should really want to live somewhere, if you're gonna go through all of.

Speaker 4

That, Like.

Speaker 2

I know you're like out different stuff.

Who check out what China?

Speaker 4

Check it out?

Speaker 1

But I ain't.

Look look, man, it's all good.

I'll let y'all.

I let y'all talk to me about it, you know what I'm saying.

And i'd be like, man, sounds great.

I just sain't looking to fuck with none of it.

I'm just gonna be honest with you, like at all.

And I know that like all well, you know you're not broadening horizons.

And I said, that's okay for me.

I'm gonna let everybody, everybody else broaden theirs, all right, get your horizons broaden.

But I ain't trying to go over there.

And I can't understand these niggas.

You know what I'm saying.

That's that's my first thing.

I've already got your problem here.

I got a problem here that ain't going over to the country where I can't understand them, be sitting there looking at me, talking to me in some foreign language.

I'd be like, oh, no, there, I mean, Charlie, they are they midway on the brothers, let me know where they at.

Speaker 4

They don't, they don't care, they don't care for the brothers.

Speaker 3

Full of like basketball players, most of which were black, and like everyone was like yelling the Edward out.

Speaker 4

The hard are you in the stands pretty easily monkey sound jew for sure?

They don't.

Speaker 1

We said, we said that the Asians are pretty much just white people, which is a touch of tint.

We talked about that on theology.

I mean, the world is just pretty much labeled him as that, or at least America has.

Speaker 4

You know.

Speaker 1

It's like, man, it's like, what about the Chinese people to get protections?

Speaker 4

No protections.

Speaker 1

We made one commercial for him, and then we figured out what was really going on.

We're like, yeah, they deserve the hate they're getting.

That's what happened.

Speaker 4

Whatever.

Speaker 1

Every video they showed some black dude beating some Asian dude, Asian dude or Asian woman up in the damn somewhere or somewhere, they were like, well, maybe they deserve the hate they get.

It is black folks whooping, they ass so they got to be doing it for some reason.

Speaker 4

I was like, whatever it is, guys.

Speaker 1

I mean, they say, hey, we stopped Asian hate real quick by just not talking about it no more.

That's how you truly stop the hate.

If you want to really stop the hate, you just stopped talking about it.

Now Asian funks no longer hate it.

Speaker 4

Just like that.

Speaker 1

One commercial I had, the one commercial.

Speaker 4

H they got they got one week.

Yeah, I know they got to stop Asian hate thing.

That's nice and all, But they didn't know that there was a lot of I didn't know that was something that was going on.

Speaker 1

They didn't realize that it was the black people until like you know, like a month or two later, they thought it was white people that was hating agents.

Speaker 4

So they were running it as like trying to what it really was was hey, white people, stop being so racist.

And then they were like, oh, actually the blacks, yeah, back off.

Speaker 1

And then to be honest, like white people have have went out of their way to try to assimilate everybody into one culture, like everybody is in the world.

I mean, if you want me to be honest, and everybody is is like, you know, it's mostly.

Speaker 4

Of the Jews.

They've been assimilated in our behalf.

Speaker 3

They weaponized white women.

They weaponized white women, and white women have been trying to assimilate the whole.

Speaker 2

Did we just go twenty five minutes and not mention the Jews?

Or did I accidentally say it earlier for something?

Speaker 1

I think you might have slipped it.

Speaker 2

Think I can't go ten minutes, but that's the word Jew coming out of my mouth for some reason.

Speaker 1

I think you might have slipped.

Speaker 4

I think we might have slipped through the YouTube sensors.

Speaker 1

Yeah, but I mean, you know, created this this this hole and made it a melting pot and all that stuff.

You know, they try to go and bring technologies and all that was the man.

I'm not sure, but it was there, the melting pot.

Speaker 4

Maybe melting pot concept is not true.

I don't think it's true.

Conversity is our strength.

I think sociology will tell you that, like the tribes that stick together stay together.

Man, Like when you get like when you get to prison, it's about the color of your skin.

The idea that like on the outside you're like, oh, you're racist if you talk about skin color and everything.

It's like, dude, you better get real honest with reality when you get into prison, right, the first thing they do is just group up based on color, even if you were in rival gangs.

So like this this, these leftists are like, I don't see color.

Liars, your total liars.

You sound like you want people to think that you are so evolved that you don't see color.

But to say that you don't see color is to is to admit that you are, in fact not seeing the entire picture.

Thing about not seeing color as a context doesn't mean it's the only part of the picture, but it is part of it.

It's like, oh, I don't see color.

Better your life might depend on it, you know what I mean, Like.

Speaker 3

Look at a black person and be like, I can't tell you're black, Like that's not right.

Speaker 4

I see I see a clear I see clear through you.

You're just clear your mocha, you're siena.

Speaker 1

Well, the crazy thing about not seeing color is that they're still black and white.

Speaker 4

I mean, unless they're legitimately color, then.

Speaker 1

You see two distinct colors.

Speaker 3

It's still like different.

Speaker 1

Even even somebody who wasn't like like black like me, they were bright.

They would be like distinctly a different shade.

Speaker 4

You do see gradients, right, yeah.

Speaker 3

Sham, even if you're colorblind, Even if you're.

Speaker 4

Colorblind, I mean, did you pass the site test?

I mean, what's going on here?

Speaker 3

It's a virtue signaling bullshit thing.

It has the exact same energy as the Canadians who are like, oh, you Americans still don't have socialized medicine, Lawn.

I'm like, you fucking assholes.

Your system is still fucking broken.

Motherfuckers wait for like fifteen fucking years for a basic surgery that could get done it just in a moment down here, and then they die from it.

And then like when they can't get it fast enough, you're like, well, we'll kill you for free.

How about that?

That's your socialized US and you arrogant fucks as exact same flavor as that, because you're both virtue signaling fuckholes who don't actually care about reality at all.

Speaker 4

And if you actually are in that Canadian situation and you have money, what you'll do is you'll fly to Mexico and have the procedure done.

We're here, and that won't be socialized medicine, will it, right, it will be I've made a decision to go into the private market to save my life.

I'm hating on you for it, but don't brag about socialized medicine and then go pull that bullshit because we all know who there I was.

I was in the emergency room in Port of Iardo, and I got thrown off that fucking horse by the white tiger.

By the way, when my wife sent that message to my mother in law, my mother in law responded in the text message, is this code for cocaine?

I was like, no, I know I did.

But when I was in that emergency room, they had a flat panel TV screen, a big one with like a loop plane that was an ad for the private medical services of this of this like emergency room.

It's like an emergency room slash private place that's doing all kinds of surgeries.

And it's like I sat there while I was waiting for them and watched the infomercial for like thirty minutes.

I was like, goddamn, man, if I ever need anything, I'm coming down here because you get a nice little vacation.

They've done the whole thing too.

It's like you fly in, you stay at a beautiful resort right next to the place.

You we do the procedure, you go back there, you stay there for like four days, you recover, and then you leave.

You get a little vacation, and then it's like all that is a third of the price of what you would pay in the States, and you'd be in like insurance policy.

Hell trying to swing it.

So people are like, if they've got the money, they're like, I'll come down to it.

And a lot of it's elective surgery, right, it's like nose jobs and hair plugs and ship like that, but like some of it's not.

Some of it's like you fly to Turkey because like they can do some ship that nobody's in the States is legally allowed.

Speaker 1

To do, like cut your tongue into and like cut your nose off, in your ears off and ship like that, yeah, or yeah, and puck and put put fucking metal metal rods in your hair, look like a damn clean on and ship.

I'm like, it's like, yeah, I'm trying to figure out how they got all the money to do it.

That's what I want to know.

Practice.

Speaker 4

How you how you taught yourself how to do that to somebody else?

How you were like yeah, without you should have seen the first version.

He doesn't look quite as cool as he thought he was gonna look.

Speaker 2

Groc has come back with an answer for us on the melting pot.

Okay, I'll skip the preamble.

It says is a couple basically as a couple of miscellaneous references going all the way back to seventeen eighty two, but in as far as like an ongoing usage of it in the current context we have, I'll read this paragraph.

The earliest known public use of the exact phrase in print was in April eighteen seventy five a magazine article titled A New Country by Titus Munson Cohen co an, so I don't know if he's, you know, wearing a little hat or not.

In the Galaxy, which employed nearly identical wording to describe the transformation of immigrants into Americans fused down in the democratic alembic like chips of brass thrown into the melting pot, was the exact quote used Cohen.

Speaker 1

Come on, yeah.

Speaker 2

And then the phrase gained widespread popularity and entered common usage after its prominent role in the British playwright Israel zangwill Is nineteen oh eight play called The melting Pot, which celebrated America as and this is a quote God's Crucible, the great melting Pot where all the races of Europe are melting and reforming people right right exactly exactly white white.

Speaker 1

Yeah, America is really just white folks and black folks who were the slaves they brought over Native Americans because they took all them out pretty much.

Speaker 2

But the Mexicans, Mexicans had the country for a long time, so some of there's mean.

I think Mexicans can put a steak some kind of a claim.

Speaker 1

So yeah, so so white black Mexicans, that's about it.

And I know what Native Americans they were here for?

About them, they got reservations.

Hey look hey, look at least at least it was nice enough to give give them reservations.

They said, look, man, I know we fucked y'all up.

He goes to a piece of a young gambling ship on it, you know, drug abes.

Speaker 4

And.

Speaker 2

Hey, why don't they have hookers there?

Speaker 4

Yeah?

Speaker 1

Did they have paid with what?

Though?

I like, truly Indian that would just like Puerto Ricane.

Okay, we'll take that.

Speaker 4

And we drove from uh Sedona back to Denver or there and back you drive through this area, you know, you like through New Mexico, and and there's there's nothing for a long long time, just really long stretches of nothing, and then out of nowhere there's a fucking casino and and like uh like one of them was like there's like a small little hotel, pretty nice, but it's like where are people coming from?

Like it's gotta be well.

Speaker 2

I always wondered that about some of those obscure a lot of casinos, like in Laughlin, Who the fuck goes to Laughlin for their three hotels?

Right?

Like weird shit.

Speaker 4

Like the state line, Yeah yeah, Vegas.

Yeah, you're like, who's who's got like that?

That's for the degenerate gambler who's like, I can't even wait another forty five minutes to get into Vegas.

I have to stop here.

And either it used to be that you'd stop there to get a like a hot dog or something, you know, or ride the roller coaster or go to the outlet malls.

But I think for a lot of people it was like I just need to get to a slot machine as fast as hostile could.

We believe that one.

Speaker 1

At one point in time, these were popular popping havens and that they've just declined as far as inclined tailor map people.

So so I harkened that back to my experience with South of the Border.

Okay, so I remember going to South of Border when I was a kid, and like there was people there and it was fun.

You got fireworks, You're like, oh yeah, And now when I drive by South of the Border, it looks like if you stop there, uh, it's yeah, no, oh no South.

So it's pretty much the border in between North Carolina and South Carolina.

So so the reason that it's popular is because people would drive down there to buy fireworks because the byo the baby fireworks because they're technically illegal in North Carolina.

So that's why it made it popular.

You have Ferris with, you have food, that was all kinds of stuff.

But now when I drive by, it seems like one of those Hord like horror movies.

If I stopped there, like I'm gonna get abducted, take us somewhere and like chopped in the pieces.

That's what it looks like like it was.

It's like I shouldn't be stopping there for anything like the Piace or anything.

Speaker 4

New Orleans.

Like when you get like in the on the ten Freeway and you're coming through New Orleans and it's like New Orleans next four exits.

You're like, oh, we should get off and and and see New Orleans.

Yeah no, I don't think so fuck that.

I remember I got off and I was like, no, that'm good, and they're like, just and I got right back on.

Speaker 2

I got I got lost, and I got lost walking around in the ghetto in New Orleans on acid.

Ye oh, that's great because I couldn't find We went to see Fish at jazz Fest in like ninety six and I parked my bus.

It was like six of us, maybe seven of us, and we got out of my bus and I parked it on the street in the hood somewhere, and we had to walk like half a mile to the venue.

And then I eat some acid, and after the thing's going on, I'm looking for the bus and I'm like on the verge of tiers, like couldn't find my ship, tripping balls.

It was wild.

Speaker 1

South of the Border, like there's there's literal like signs.

It's like, hey, you're one hundred miles away from South of the Border, like they I didn't promote it.

Speaker 4

It was a big deal.

Speaker 3

I was like.

Speaker 2

In New York a couple of times, and like it was always one of those exciting things to stop there.

Speaker 1

Yet, no, don't no more.

But I'm trying to tell you.

You've seen the movie, what's that movie vacancy where the uh where the serial killer had like ten different personalities, but they were all in his in his mind, and so the personalities we had one night they like did it put him in a trance or whatever?

And all the personalities were coming together and killing each other in his mind.

You don't realize that to the end of the movie.

But that's what this shit was.

Like, Okay, fucking rain and dark.

You're like, it's a motel.

Nigga's like, hey man, how many minutes you want to stay?

It's that type of place.

I'm saying, well, you need how many minutes I want to stay in this room?

Let's say we do by the minute?

I mean fifteen minutes.

I mean like like it's that type Like you're like, nah, I'm not stopping there, you know what I'm saying.

I mean, I just see it from Afar and do you see like a couple of cars out there and you're like, whoo, I mean, I'm pretty sure people were they but they're no longer there that somebody's right that was stopping to get fireworks or like taking peas or a pea or poop or something, and they're no longer with us.

Speaker 3

So what happens.

But it happened to these places.

Speaker 1

Just time, because why don't people do things.

Speaker 4

Well?

Speaker 3

Everybody they feel.

Speaker 1

Like they're doing something fun.

They feel like they're doing something fun when they when they get on their social social media.

Speaker 4

That's what's fun.

Speaker 3

That's what sucks.

People needs to go outside and do something like every day go to stuff, you.

Speaker 1

Ask people, Lindy Lindsay, you're asking a lot out of people, and then to go outside, and it's scary out there too, like there's other people out there.

You might have to talk and interact with them.

Speaker 3

I was really excited.

I went to buy chicken food yesterday and the lady at the check I was like, probably fuck, I don't know, sixteen to twenty right, like somewhere in this range super girl, And she asked for my email or whatever to get my rewards or something, and then she asked me what the word in my email meant.

And I was like, oh, my God, you're like a real human being and you exist, and you're this age and you're willing to talk to an old lady and ask her a question.

And then I told her and it's the word is a potrpaic, by the way, and it means naturally resistant to evil.

And she's like, that is the coolest word I've ever heard.

I don't think I've ever heard that word.

I'm like, and you never will again because it's super archaic and no one uses it.

She's like, I'm going to use it.

I was like, I love this person.

People don't talk anymore, like they won't even look at you, or like you're like a problem for them, and like everything's bad.

And I'm just like, good God, you guys, you're alive.

Act like it.

Speaker 2

You know, the guy at the grocery store with down syndrome talks more than anybody else, right, And then I get excited.

Speaker 3

I'm like, yay, someone who's willing to interact.

It's like the death syndrome people, and like the rare friendom person.

Speaker 1

Oh, I mean we all we all know when it when it when it took a shoot twenty twenty body stay in the house and the one's recover.

Speaker 4

Stop.

People realize that, They're like, wait, I don't have to go out and inter interact with these other lunatics.

You know, I felt like I was on There were points during that that twenty twenty to twenty twenty two era, I felt like I was on a cruise ship.

Like I didn't leave my house.

There Sometimes who were like I didn't leave.

I would leave, I'd go down to the gym every day, but I never like I wouldn't leave my neighborhood for like a week, and.

Speaker 3

Like nobody was anywhere.

It was kind of nice.

It was kind of like a vacation.

You're like, wow, we can drive anywhere we want and no one's there, Like there's no one on the road, and like this is amazing.

And then now it's like really really really really old, and I'd rather have like effect.

Speaker 1

Was crazy.

Oh before we even before we even go in the front, let me pull it up.

I know y'all have been hearing about the was it the H three?

Speaker 4

This this is the.

Speaker 1

No.

Yeah, there's like.

Speaker 3

And they're tracking it back to a medical research facility.

Speaker 1

Here we go, here we go.

Speaker 5

We are seeing a massive outbreak of flu in the United States right now influenza A.

It's H three and two, and as we previously reported, this is a mutated version that appears to evade some of the expected protections of the current flu vaccine.

We don't have a lot of data on that, but that's what we think.

We're seeing a surgeon cases in the United States and in our own emergency department at Yale, we're seeing a lot of cases, particularly among kids right now, and kids just will eventually spread to the adults.

From the closs I talk to, there are many cases among the vaccinated, but the senses that they are less severe.

That's anecdotal at this point.

One related item to highlight.

In August the Journal of Medicine, there was a study that confirms and augments our understanding of the value of the high dose influenza vaccine for those sixty five and older.

It seems to reduce hospitalizations substantially compared with the usual dose.

Even in a season where we believe the vaccine may be less effective than ideal, it still has protections.

And I'm going to continue to earn anyone who is as yet unvaccinated to get their flu shot.

Speaker 2

Now it don't work, for get it.

Anyway, Yes, that's what he just said.

Speaker 3

No, it's so much better.

Speaker 1

He said, it seems he said, it seems to make the symptoms less severecdote.

Speaker 4

But it's.

Speaker 1

God doses.

I mean he's saying, like Schrader from Teenage Ninja.

Speaker 4

Turtles, but he's like, not taking flu vaccines, not under any circumstances, take the flu vacs.

Don't take any vaccines.

Speaker 2

But do not take flu vaccines, well said, a lot of they're junk sciences, are drunk science.

Speaker 4

It's eugenics.

I mean, it's like that scenes.

Speaker 2

Going back to the late seventeen hundreds and shiit like, how fuck you think effective those things were?

Give me a goddamn break.

You know, it's unfreaking believable.

It's all fabricated, bullshit, junk science.

Speaker 4

I think about the Rudolph Steiner quote about the vaccine that separates you from your soul, you know, like and then talking about that one hundred years ago and things like yeah that they were dreaming of.

They're talking about how that'll be, you know, the future.

I think we're there.

Man.

Speaker 3

First, some of the first feedback we got from people who were doing the injection for COVID were right it's like the earliest tests and stuff they were doing, some people were saying that they couldn't feel God anymore.

And then that that's when that real Seiner quote came back into like circulation, because people were like, do that motherfucker predicted this?

And I've said this before, but there were people who I know in my in my circle of people were like spiritually connected and whatever, who took it and had that experience, like they no longer could do their spiritual work.

So I'm like, I mean, I don't that's all the proof I have.

I don't just like everything else, if someone asked me to prove it, I'll tell them to go fuck themselves, and I don't care what they say.

But like in my experiences, that's at least one of the potential side effects of this thing that they got everyone to take.

Speaker 1

Mayus Mayus ma may is saying that if you're over sixty five, then go and get the high days, and.

Speaker 3

That is what he said.

Speaker 4

Here's why they don't want you to collect social Security right because they want you to be dead.

And so of course if you're sixty five and older, the sooner you're gone, the better for the state.

You're no longer productive economically, your assets will turn over to your relatives.

We'll get to tax them.

You're just a drain.

We would love to You're going to start to cost us a lot of money with healthcare, medical, all that stuff.

If you're not already, we just assume you be gone.

In those vaccines, We're most definitely part of calling the herd, especially sixty five and older, take four shots of it?

Is that literally, like you study would Japanese studies say you take those shuts, you're closer to death?

Speaker 3

Is that literally the age of like when you get social Security, your retirement or whatever.

Sixty five?

It also happens to be the age that they say in their every time sixty five and older.

Sixty five and older, and.

Speaker 4

When you get your money depends on whether or not you defer, or you can defer out a couple of years and then you get a bigger chunk.

But if you need it sooner, you take what you get and it's lower.

I think it's sixty five, but I think you can defer out to seventy and then it kicks in and it's it's more.

I'm not I'm not an expert on that though, but I think it works something like that.

Speaker 3

That's pretty telling that they choose the same exact age, Like there's no medical reason you would just choose sixty five cut for like old Yeah, why not sixty four?

Speaker 4

Why not seventy two?

Why not fifty four?

I mean sixty five is more like more of that six feet social distancing, Like where'd you get that number?

Speaker 3

Yeah?

Speaker 2

We just so where It's like life expectancy at these days is it declining?

Speaker 4

It?

Speaker 1

Well now for women, for women is in the eighties, it's like, well it's almost eighty.

Speaker 4

For women.

Speaker 1

Me, it's still like seventy two or something like that.

Speaker 4

In the US, I think the average median death age seventy nine.

But if you had COVID, it was eighty.

Just worked just the way the numbers shook out, you actually lived a year longer if.

Speaker 3

You had COVID.

Speaker 4

You had COVID.

Speaker 3

I don't get it, don't know, there was no.

Speaker 4

That's just what the number.

Speaker 1

The deal is is that the women, the women live the women live longer.

Speaker 3

I hate that.

Speaker 1

I see it.

Per capita, per capita, women live longer.

And somebody was trying to say they were like, oh, you know, uh, the men don't have as good as lives later on, and they died before us.

Said well, yeah, men have always died before women.

But there's a myriad of reasons for that day.

Speaker 3

You're just sick of listening to our ship.

Speaker 1

You're like, God, please, I want to go.

Well me and back in the day had to go to war.

So all, I mean, a fourteen year old boy was getting a bow and arrow through them, raw through his eyeball.

You know what I'm saying.

At fourteen, nigga, go hey, go protake the village file.

I mean, you know what I'm saying.

I mean, so yeah, and then when they conquered, and they came and conquered, they didn't just kill all the women.

Now, they didn't do great things to them, but a lot of to hang around afterwards.

They just got fucked.

Something gets their wheel for a period of time until they were like, well, it's the new normal.

Yeah, I mean, you know what I'm saying.

I mean, I know that sounded bad, but it's the truth.

They usually don't just get rid of the women because yeah, because at the end of the day, men still want to fuck the women.

Like it's just it just it that.

Speaker 4

Salt there is of them.

Some of them they they didn't want to conquer or some of them they they did.

Speaker 1

I don't even know.

Yeah, only only to reach people were fat.

It was fair you determine whether you were Whaley or not.

Speaker 4

Yeah, if you were fan.

Speaker 2

I think that was longer ago, longer ago than than that.

Recently, I just.

Speaker 3

Saw this very convincing argument I think it was by Black Pigeon speaks on YouTube about how women are essentially destroying the entire world because because they refused to stop being promiscuous.

And it was actually like really, like you said, all this data and ship and you're like, oh my god, is it seems to be true that empires fall when women become promiscuous and stop having like one partner, you know, marriage and like monogamy and all of that falls by the wayside, So too does society and there goes all of civilization.

Like, my god, might it might be true?

Speaker 4

Well, I mean it will.

Speaker 3

I mean if you looked out the world right now, like it's pretty much just host.

Speaker 1

No no, no, no, they said they just said that they're they're done with men.

Speaker 3

They're just free.

Speaker 1

They ain't done, they ain't done fucking men.

But it's just done with relationships with men because of they they might have to make dinner one night, and maybe when they put their clothes in the washing machine, they put their man's clothes in there too.

That just the one girl tried to So one girl said, it's like, oh, they get free labor and they get a sex worker.

I was like, I don't know, I don't know.

If we get a sex worker, we in a relationship because a sex worker you pay, you fuck them, and then they hey, get out of here.

Now what you are basically, yeah, that's something very much different.

Yeah, but that's that's that's what you hear from women.

And like the four B movement, like we're saying, I mean that started in South Korea and so they fucking know me, and like so the women are just like and I hear this, and it's perpetuated that.

It's like, oh, you know, if if we never get another relationship with a man, and good, I'm just like, what the world's gonna cease to exist?

Speaker 4

Yeah, Like.

Speaker 3

He made to like, what is your stupid fucking life for?

What did you come here for to do?

To sit around and not ever do anything productive and just fuck everybody and have like a job.

That's your fucking purpose of lipping.

Speaker 4

Like film film aspiring young chap with a ton of testosterone, you know, bord an airplane and go to South Korea and fuck his brains out, generational run, you know what I mean.

Because it's just a season like that's what's It's just like break can never come home.

Speaker 1

Hey look all I know, Hey, it just takes one of them down there.

It is like they just gotta get They just gotta get hit by the right one.

That's all it is to it.

And you know I always hear it this, you know all that, and it's for some reason.

It's like a whole bunch of old bitter broads.

I'm like, y'all ain't even reproducing no more.

So shut the fuck up with what you're looking for in life.

Okay, all right, that's just all I mean.

When you start getting fifty sixty year old and you talking about, oh well, my standards, shut the hell up at that point in time.

This is when you're supposed to be passing the pussy out.

It really don't matter, right, I mean, you be passing it out early.

I mean when it gets late.

What we're talking about, it's all, I won't fuck on the first day.

Man, you're fifty five, Okay, you better get dicked while you can't, Okay, because that thing gonna shut down shortly.

All right, This is all there is to that.

Speaker 4

But there's certain old folk communities in Florida where there's a lot of swinging going on, and there's a lot of like gonner rhea going on too from what I've heard.

Speaker 1

Yeah, but that's wild because they ain't worried about no rubber.

And I don't blame them on that, Okay, No.

Speaker 4

They're just they're worried about after nineteen sixties flashbacks.

Speaker 2

So my dad's After my dad died, his best friend came in and visited me in Denver and he was living in like a fifty five and up place, or maybe even older than that.

But he basically said, when you get into one of these communities, all the women just want to fuck.

He's the guys real.

Yeah, he was like seventy something.

Speaker 1

I heard.

Speaker 3

It's like a like a like basically being on a cruise all the time.

Like all you're doing is just like hanging out, having fun, like fucking, like eating and like going to events, and then that's it.

It's your whole life.

Speaker 2

I want to sign up.

Speaker 4

Well, I I sold in a place that was a fifty five and older community that was had the coolest clubhouse.

It was like so badass, like they had a real setup there, and I don't.

Speaker 3

That's not why I want driving over community.

I want to live there because usually they're so cheap.

Every time I find something cheap, I'm zillow.

It's like fifty five and over, and I'm like, dude, what so you know apparently in a couple of years, eleven years, I'll be there.

Speaker 4

Oh my god, but.

Speaker 2

Are there Charlie.

Speaker 1

Two?

Speaker 3

Two years?

Speaker 4

Yeah?

Speaker 1

But I'm just trying to figure out, like where all this bitterness come from.

So we so we've got the assumption and and I've seen this from a lot of women talk because they're like, oh, well, I make my own money now, so I don't need a man.

I'm just like, yeah, you've got that assumption that you don't need men just because there ain't some shit going down where a nigga's just gonna bust in your house and pull you out of it.

You know what I'm saying, Like that ship ain't going down, you know like it used to be like, if you got left at the house, they'd be folks over at your house trying to pull you out of like you know, so like so when times are easy, it's like, oh, yeah, I don't I don't need them no more.

But I'm like, through all your bitterness, are you gonna really, you know, live out your life like this and potential miss out on a connection with somebody that would be good for you just because you got to be better and got to show everybody, Oh, I can do this shit by myself.

It's dumb.

I mean, like doing it by yourself is fucking stupid.

Okay, the shit's too tough right now to be worried about trying to do some shit by yourself.

I'm gonna show people I don't give a fuck about all that.

It's too tough right now.

It's like when I hear there's some people talking about, oh, yeah, you know, the kid went back to live with their parents, It's like, you know how tough shit is out out here right now.

If you just graduated from college and you look in the job and you look up there and fucking the top companies are all laying off A thousand, two thousand, ten thousand people and you like and you're looking to get a gig.

It's like bo, you might have to go back with your folks.

You might have to room up with some people, and ain't it.

Ain't gonna have to be ashamed about.

It's just called survival, that's it.

Speaker 3

How there is this girl that I have to do has done it forever.

I mean, like all of Europe essentially you live with your parents until you're like twenty five or thirty, right, and that's normal.

No one's making fun of it or like thinking you're a dead beat or like anything.

There's like, yeah, of course you are.

And it's only here where we're like eighteen, get the fuck out, which maybe economically did make sense for a while, but apparently not right now.

Speaker 1

Well, you know, back back when you could just leave the house and just walk right down the road and work at the steel meal or the chicken playing or fucking damn dig a ditch, and you know you have that and you have your pension both, you know what I'm saying, Like you could just walk out and not know shit, be like hey man, we need you, we need some help.

You want to come work, Yeah, all right, we'll come pick up a shovel.

It'd be that day, like, oh, let's fill out the paperwork and let me get your you got your driver's license.

No, but you could go work today.

It's like you ready, It's like, well, I and speaking the word I need you today, No, I need you here.

We got a spot for you.

Man, let's go.

I mean, you can get it right on the spot.

They ain't like that no more.

You know, we're not in that industrial stage where you could just go get a job.

It's like, man, I would job, job, just go get a job.

Speaker 3

I was like like if anybody just like looked at me wrong, I would quit and go get a different job.

Like I would just like didn't take shit from anybody because I didn't have to.

Because that's how good an economy apparently was that I could just find another job.

Nobody gave a ship.

Where I was coming from or where I was going to, there was another job, over and over and over again my whole life, and.

Speaker 2

Its killed twenty five jobs.

Speaker 3

Yeah, if I had listed like the number of jobs I've had, it's retarded.

Actually until I twelve thousand and eight when I was a fresh teacher, and then they had just laid out and you would just the teachers.

Speaker 1

Yeah, you would just go get it too, right, Lindsay You just walk up say hey, I'm looking a job, so okay, cool.

Speaker 3

I's just a job.

Yeah.

It was always like to pay whatever rent food.

Speaker 2

You know.

Between like ninety eight and like two thousand and five, I worked at malls and I probably had like six different jobs.

You get to know people and as soon as an opportunity comes open, you're like, hey, let me get that job.

And you're like okay.

It was that simple.

Speaker 1

Yea.

Speaker 2

Now even they go to work at the supermarket, you've got to go online and fill out their application and hope someone calls you and past.

Speaker 3

Test ten people.

Speaker 1

Yeah, and you bet somebody who works at a supermarket.

Speaker 4

Yeah, that's knowing knowing somebody.

I don't.

I don't remember.

I think like the last time I like applied for a job in when I was working in real estate, when I applied for it was always like the dude, the job I had.

By the way, a cheat code for people, I'll give them answers to a test.

If you I want to make a lot of money in real estate, go get a real estate license and go get a job in new home sales with a big builder.

You will be shocked at how much money you make.

You will have a five day a week job eight hours man maybe ten hours a day, and you will make a shitload of money.

And it is surprisingly stressful.

But if you're interested in real estate and you don't know where to start, start there as somebody who's done it for years and years.

And I came out of this like my last I started a company and I was leaving that and I moved to Vegas and I was doing something else.

But I said I'd never had you know, I thought I could do the job, but I wasn't sure.

If you can do the job, meaning if you can talk to people like a regular human being and not bazz out or be super autistic and and be weird and just talk to people normally, you will make a lot of money and have a very cushy life if you want to do that.

Speaker 2

I bought a house from a builder directly, and like it was like they couldn't wait to give the house away.

It was the process was so quick.

I was shocked and I only put eight hundred dollars down, Like they just were like, okay, whatever you want to do and they just took it and like the next month my bill was from Chase.

Speaker 4

Yeah.

Speaker 2

So because they don't give a fuck, they'll just get anybody in there and then they'll just sell it to another to another bank.

Speaker 4

So so win win for them, just just sell it all.

Speaker 1

Yeah.

I mean, so the job market for most people is yes, I mean, it's just all they used to do it.

I mean, to know someone.

Speaker 4

I guess.

My point is that like in that job, after that, I never like went online to find out if there was a job at another competitor, the competitors will would find us.

They see who's selling, they know what was going on.

Next thing, you know, like the sales manager for some competing companies just like, hey, man, you want to go to lunch.

You're like, I don't know, do I like?

Maybe?

Speaker 1

Man, it's a little weird.

It's like some demo with some some good fail is shit.

Speaker 4

My old boss from one place hired he went to another place and took four of us with him.

We all four of us started at the same time, and everyone in the office was like, what's going on.

It's like, well, why are you all here at the same time.

It's like, well, because your sales manager's one year lock up period expired yesterday.

That's why the four of us showed up today and he's and they're like, oh, he brought in all of us from we had worked with him before.

He brought four of us in and we just he just said, I'm going to put you in primo neighborhoods, and you just fucking go for it, and we just killed it.

So you've got to know people.

You know, you got to be good with your boss.

Your boss gets promoted, takes you with them.

The boss goes to another company, takes you with them.

Speaker 1

I did that.

Speaker 4

I left a company and went with my boss to a high rise.

Speaker 1

That's what I tried to tell Charlie.

Speaker 4

She's like, she literally she said to me, what would it take to get you?

Speaker 1

Yes, that's but that's what I was talking about.

Like the people like the people that's like working from home and they won't like buddy buddy with their bosses or none of that.

They ain't go to a baseball game or birthday party.

I said, Nick, the first one on the chopping ball.

Speaker 4

But you've got to be there, dude.

I went out playing craps with my boss till five o'clock in the morning and I didn't see anything, if you know what.

Speaker 1

I mean, so exactly, you know that's what you got today?

Speaker 4

Man, Why that's why I got the Christmas bonus and at this at this high rise, I got the Christmas bonus and he goes, I only gave out two.

The owner of the company goes, I only gave out to you and the other guy, Matt.

I go, why, because we're guys.

He goes, yeah.

Pretty much these other broad say annoy you and annoying me.

Speaker 1

I's like, thank you, hey, hey day.

Yeah.

Speaker 4

I mean, I was like, why did you put this?

I'm like, I think just because he likes me.

I was like, I think because I partied with him.

I said, I think because I took him out and we fucking stayed out like the five in the morning playing chat.

I said, yeah, I think because I took him out and he lost one hundred and seventy five thousand dollars playing craps early on, but then we built it back up towards the end of the night and he was good.

Speaker 1

I was like, oh, sure, Well, there's been a debate online right here recently where the uh you there's two different salaries.

So you got one hundred and twenty thousand dollars to work remotely, and then or you you paid two hundred and forty thousand dollars and you go to the office and there's people that's like, ah, you know, working remote is really going to be better for my mental health.

I'm like, but that's one hundred and twenty thousand dollars difference, right.

Speaker 2

It's not better for your mental health.

Trust me.

Speaker 4

It depends on where you have to work.

Speaker 1

I mean, I guess, but.

Speaker 2

Working from hung up a goddamn wall, you got to force yourself to leave the house.

Sometimes.

Speaker 4

It's if if it yeah, I mean, you know, it depends on.

Speaker 1

You know.

Speaker 4

I well, I understand that, Yeah for sure.

I mean that's what I'm saying.

Speaker 1

But if it was like.

Speaker 4

If someone was like, no, if if someone was like, you gotta I don't know, you got to move to New York City, prime example, super expensive fifty taxes.

Fuck, I just lost half of it anyway, and I gotta live there.

No, thank you.

I'll take one twenty and stay where I am versus going to New York City paying getting paid two forty losing half that to taxes.

Anyway, and having to deal with homeless people having mental breakdowns in the middle of the street, so or.

Speaker 3

Just like standing there with their pants down like shitting somehow, right, how are you even doing.

Speaker 4

That while I'm trying to have a seventeen dollars bagel?

Speaker 1

H of cour You say you had to make this if an external schedule.

Speaker 2

Oh, I was just talking about, like when you work from home, you gotta get the fuck out the house or else you'll go crazy.

Yes, So, like on Fridays, I go to this little cafe with this cute waitress and I eat there every Friday morning, just so I can have a fucking you know, something that keeps me on a feeling Like Tuesdays and Saturday.

Speaker 3

You know, you're real.

Speaker 4

I go to the gym that's my That's got one not too far in our community, and it's easy.

I can walk there and drive there when it's hold.

Speaker 3

But I had to, Like when I first started working from home, I had to build in my days off, Like I forgot that I should have days off, and so people would just book and it would just fill up my schedule, and all of a sudden, it be like four months since I've had a day without work.

I was like, oh shit, Uh so I had to like think about that, you know, the things you don't think about until you're too late.

Speaker 1

That that's a really.

Speaker 4

Interesting thing though.

I mean it's a good problem to have.

Speaker 2

It is a good when you guys have to do and you just don't want to do it.

Speaker 4

So you just got for yourself too, to like, you know, that's the issue, turn it off, that's the issue.

Speaker 1

Because so so I so I go to the gym I go to is at a college campus, the one I graduated from, and and so this is you know, winter break, so they're closed for the next two weeks.

Well, you know, yesterday, like, well, here's one o'clock.

Like, I'm out there at the GM basketball.

I'm like there from like one to five.

I mean like, but it won't open.

So I was just like my girlfriend was off working and I was like, all right, I need to get out.

I mean, I just need to.

I mean I got out, went to Cole's and went to dig.

Speaker 4

Sporting here for like or Lindsey too.

I mean when I lived in Castle Rock, like the athletic centers that they have, like the Castle Rock Athletic Center is out of fucking control, like indoor soccer, outdoor soccer, outdoor rock climbing, indoor rock climbing, like a million things.

Pools, big pools and little pools, all kinds of shit like they do it up in Colorado.

And there's like there's one of those big ass facilities in every one of the cities too, and then like big hockey facilities.

I mean there's a lot.

There's a lot of like outdoorsy shit going on out here, of which I do zero.

Speaker 2

So we're fortunate we're right by the foothills here, and so we've been taking the dogs out to like the base of the foothills where the old stadium used to be.

They knocked the stadium down here in Fort Collins and moved it to the campus and so now it's just a big open field basically, but it's right at the foothills, and so we get out there a couple of times a week, which is kind of close to nature.

You know, you can see nature from a distance.

But yeah, this year we didn't get out for ship.

Normally we get out and we go camping, we do all kinds of stuff, but we didn't go do nothing this year.

Speaker 4

I should join an indoor soccer league.

If I blow my ac l out, though it'll come back to this conversation right now, would be fun.

Speaker 2

The least I want to do shit that's going to make me get injured.

Like I definitely don't want to be doing no squats or nothing.

I'll blow out a fucking knee.

Speaker 4

Shoot you just stand there your arms fun softball league.

When I lived in Vegas and sold uh at this mid rise condo, I played with all the people at my work and a bunch of other people.

It was we just had a really good, fun work group, and and we wanted to hang out with each other after work, and we would go play softball and then we'd go drink beers and ship.

Speaker 3

I can't imagine wanting to hang out with anyone I've ever worked with almost ever.

Speaker 4

I had some good ones.

Speaker 3

I've had like zero good one.

I offend anyone out there if we were actually friends, but there was a far between.

Speaker 1

I was a teacher.

Speaker 3

I worked with retards.

Like that's almost all there is.

Pedophiles and retard.

Speaker 1

Want a couple.

They want a couple of cool teachers, a couple.

Speaker 3

Of psychotic freaks.

Like there's there's like the type a like overachieving, like I'm going to be Teacher of the Year and I'm perfect and everything about me is perfect, which I think people thought I was.

Or there's like the pedophiles and the fucking actual retards who are just like I don't even know how they like ridiculously stupid people.

Speaker 1

And then I just.

Speaker 3

Happened to work in all these really like essentially remote, rural or otherwise insular places, so I was always the outsider coming in, so like I got treated like a piece of shit almost constantly, whether it was in like the bof Rainy, like the princes and fucking princesses, Land of Teaching, or like out in the sticks in the United States, like it's the same same energy.

They're like, you don't belong here, You're not one of us.

So yeah, everyone's assholes.

Oh it's depressing.

Speaker 4

I had such as.

Speaker 3

They fill up your tie, so like that was good.

It didn't actually matter that everyone else was dumb.

Speaker 4

I went on a I went on a pretty good I went on a pretty good run work for a couple companies in a row that the people were just off the chart, smart, really well run companies.

Stuff that I would see and I would just go like, oh my god, like I fucked up by leaving the first company I worked for, which was Poult Dell Web.

Speaker 3

They're so well run, see you because you probably thought like, this is what most places are going to be like, and then you found that almost nowhere is almost everywhere is retarded.

Speaker 4

I left with one of my managers who had come through the system and was brilliant, and I followed her.

She said, you want to do this, and I said yeah, So I went with her.

It wasn't so much a vote against them as much as it was a vote for my manager, who I was loyal to, who was going on this thing.

And she's like, I said how much?

And she said two million over three years.

And I said what's the base salary?

She goes, what do you want?

I said eighty five thousand.

They said fine.

I'm like, okay, never got the two million.

Building never got built.

William got the eighty five thousand.

But but that was a that was a fucking sixty percent pay cut.

Speaker 3

Ah.

Speaker 4

So then it's like I got to get out of here.

So then you have to like know people and do all that.

So if you want to, like, you know, if you want to sit home and do nothing.

You can sit home and do nothing.

If you want to go out there and hustle, you can.

You can go out there and hustle.

I was really motivated to do that.

I but I'm not I'm not into that much anymore.

But if someone is out there and they're they're looking and they want to get into real estate but they don't know how, trust me, trust don't don't do don't take any of the other new home jobs.

Don't go into accounting or service or construction or any of that bullshit.

Only sales.

And if you don't heat advantience, it's not the end of the world.

They'll teach you.

In fact, some of them want you to not have experience.

They just want you to be decent human being and easy to communicate and remember shit.

And if you can do that, we'll fucking kill it.

Speaker 3

But see, Johnny also had a job, you know, which he also left to go into self employment.

But it was also like all the people he worked with were amazing, that the boss was amazing, they had awesome perks, and like all of this like it was it was awesome.

I was like, I don't get how everyone else she used to find these people in these places, like I've never found one.

Speaker 4

It's I had that again that at the mid rise condo place I was at in like twenty ten, twenty eleven, and the team that hired me had been in Vancouver on a project together and they came as a big team and I knew one of the guys from that team and they're like, we need to hire salespeople.

Who should we bring in?

And that guy reached out to me and he was like, hey, by the way, I'm leaving, you know, like I can't stay long.

I'm going to be doing something else.

I'm going elsewhere.

Would you want to replace me?

So, like I didn't apply for a job, the job found me.

The guy reached out to me and said, hey, do you want my job?

That's how that's how it actually works.

Once you're in.

Once you get in, you're like a tick.

You know, you just burrow in and then make sure you meet all the people that you can with like other companies or like when somebody from your company leaves and goes somewhere else, Hey man, here's my cell phone number.

Like stay in touch and like be like a good team player, and you do that shit, and you can if you want to, like, if you want to, but I then again, I talked to my friend who works in Hollywood in a big, like corporate job, and it's a nightmare.

Speaker 3

Man.

Speaker 4

All I hear about in his line of work is like, this guy's trying to take my job and this guy's trying to sabotage me or to credit for a project I'm working.

I was like, holy fucking shit, that was like the type of shit I dealt with.

Speaker 3

I'm like, you, guys, it's not that serious.

It's fucking teaching.

Like calm down.

They were like literally sabotaging me and like like stealing ship from me, and like, oh god, it's ridiculous.

Speaker 4

Yeah, if you find yourself in a situation, like a work situation like that, you need to leave talk about talking to recognize the signs this is, this is this is not going to end well, and like be honest with.

Speaker 3

So here's it.

I'm a I'm a spectacular teacher.

By the way.

So this university found me and they were like, hey, we want to use you in your classroom to do this project.

We want to take impoverished kids and we want to go do this John Steinbeck thing because nearby to our school was a ship that Steinbeck had been on.

It had crashed and sunk, and they were bringing it back up to the surface and they were rehabilitating it and they were gonna turn it into a fucking floating museum or something, and we want your kids to be involved in that.

And I was like, awesome.

This is like the best possible thing for impoverished role kids to have is access to this thing that's outside of their community.

They get to be empowered to do things that it like, you know, feels real and meaningful and like you get all these skills and all of this efficacy and whatever.

I was like, awesome.

So we're working on how can we do this and working with this team of like university gut and we're like putting together Okay, on these days it could be like this and be like this.

I put the proposal into my principal.

She's like, oh, well, I don't think you understand our students, and our students could never possibly even begin to go to a boat, Like I'm like, are you what, Like, what are you talking about?

Speaker 1

Then?

Speaker 3

So she acted like it was so crazy that I even thought that this could be cool.

So I had to tell those people like, I'm so sorry my principles apparently retarded and won't let our students have this opportunity.

What a sad fucking day for our students.

And you know, I'm sure you guys will find some other school where people aren't retarded, you know, good luck.

How sad?

Then, really, what she had done is like find the car, she broke into my email, She found the contact, she started communicating with them herself, and then gave the project to this woman who wasn't even a real teacher but had been brought in because we didn't have enough people to fill the roles and so she got like a fake teaching certificate or whatever.

Like so she's like a twenty year old idiot who doesn't know anything.

Gave the project to her, but because she's an idiot doesn't know anything, it fell apart, so like in front of my face.

I had to watch them like steal it and give it to that lady.

When we went as a group to like meet these university people, they were like, oh, you're lindsay, oh we want to talk to you, and they were like, oh, you can't talk to her, and like put me away and like ad them talk to the dumb lady they were.

You could tell they were like upset because they were like, no, we want to talk to like the lady we chose because she's who we wanted, and no, they weren't allowed to be.

So the whole thing fell to shambles because fucking idiots were like jealous of like a project that was extra work without pay for me, and then they ruined it anyway.

So this is how stupid people are.

So yeah, backstabbing, fucking jealous children.

They're like children and adult bodies.

Speaker 4

You ever try to do anybody ever try to poach you from your job.

Anybody come in and say, damn man, like the way you handle that shit, you want to come work for me?

I do you know somewhere down the street.

Speaker 1

No, no, no, let I let people know right off handed.

There's there's zero possibility to pach me.

Did you like your situation now?

Well, well, I'm the assistant manager.

My best friend's the manager.

We made a pack that when we started this back in twenty ten.

This is if if one of us maybe just because the other one was maybe, which is it's.

Speaker 3

Probably why you probably don't get any shit like that.

There's no one who can fucking backstab you or like try to sabotage you.

Speaker 4

Yeah.

Speaker 1

Yeah, so we kind of just like we kind of build it from the floor up because it was it was in a rough spot.

Speaker 4

We both got there.

So yeah, that's good, a great situation.

Speaker 1

Yeah, And not only that, I I talked to the owners every single day, Like the owners are there, like yeah, it's family oriented, like like I literally talk to him every day football, basketball.

Speaker 4

Uh uh.

Speaker 1

The guy's sons worked there.

I think they've got I mean either got I think that's seven seven people this part of the family that works there had the dealership.

That's pretty cool, I'm correct.

Speaker 4

Yeah, yes, sir.

Speaker 1

So yeah, I'm like like poaching me nah.

And then plus that they couldn't pay me enough.

I just got to be honest, like I do.

Okay, so I'm like, I know you're not gonna pay me more than what I'm getting paid here, so like it's not it's not feasible at all.

So uh, but if something were to happen to the company, I've got people that I know that I could get on with immediately.

Like there's other companies outside it, and it wouldn't even have anything to do with cars either that bring their cars into the dealership.

So it's just like, you know, I guess that's one of those things.

Speaker 3

Yeah, for some reason, Well, people recognize fucking skill.

People recognize like when someone's just a normal fucking person who's intelligent and capable.

Because honestly, that's in like last supply, I'm not saying you're not like amazing too.

I'm just saying like, oh, okay, we've got something here, right, Like this is not everywhere, this is not everyone.

Speaker 1

Right, right, and you know when people come in there, like we've been like staples to the dealership, so like the past fifteen years, sixteen years now, it's been you know, me and my buddy, Like no matter what else has been happening there, they know us too, or are going to be there, so they're like I can go to one of them because they've been there, they know who I am.

I've talked to them multiple times, you know.

So I don't know that that kind of that kind of puts customers more ease when they see the same people and they understand who they're dealing with for sure.

So because because most of the time within the industry that I'm in there's severe turno, crazy turno.

So I think they said that most of the time it's a two to three year window.

It's not all somebody can take before they before they have to go somewhere else because it just falls apart there for whatever reason.

And a lot of us got to do with poor ownership and just poor pay for what like the bullishy you have to deal with.

So I mean, if you don't pay the people well to do what I'm having to do to do any type of service advisors, the people are not gonna stay because you are getting some cat shit talk to you and it's bad, you know what I'm saying, And you got to hold back.

You just got to be like from just blasting on somebody like like that's daily because people just they when they come in, they come in unhinged.

And everybody always tells.

Speaker 4

You about how much they paid for something.

Speaker 1

It's that that that that doesn't have any bearing on what we got going on right now because I've got three I've got four or five hundred people this week that also pay for vehicles that are looking to get shipped done.

So just because you paid eighty K, that mean that that the thirty K that my man paid is not justified because that thirty K might have been a whole lot to him, the fifteen K was a lot to this other person.

It's because you spent eighty That don't make you any better than anybody else out here.

Everybody they've got that belief in their head.

They believe, oh, I paid this much, so I should get something instantaneously.

And I'm just like, well no, I mean there's processes of this.

There's people that's got expectations of what I'm gonna do when I'm gonna get their car ready.

People have waited for two weeks to get in here, patiently not being up in my ass.

And then you like so like all that stuff has the factor in and like the customer doesn't have to factor that in, but I do.

And I just let him know, like, hey, look, you know, I get what you're saying, but I got to do my job too, and my job is to tell you that I ain't gonna be able to do it today.

It's just the way it is.

Speaker 4

It's just not going today.

The problem I had this week with my mechanic was not that he couldn't do it today.

It was that how much it was gonna cost for all the ship that he was going to need to do today.

Oh yeah, my power steering uh pump went out.

Mmm mmmm on me had have my are toad get that fixed and get my bricks fixed.

Speaker 1

Yeah, okay, So we talked.

We talked about, we talk about.

Speaker 4

Had to get three three right.

Speaker 2

Didn't like was the model T.

Was the model T that ship needed to repair all the time.

Yeah, I mean like they was back in the day, much better they had.

Speaker 4

They were in the.

Speaker 3

Street like they had like fucking constantly, like old ship and they're always like fixing axles and tires and fucking ship.

Speaker 1

Yeah.

The only thing, the only thing that was good that lasted a long time was like appliances and they put it in today.

Speaker 4

Alliance is.

Yeah.

You get some fridges still going from the fifties.

Speaker 3

I love them.

I want them back.

Speaker 1

Yeah.

Speaker 4

Yeah.

Speaker 1

My mom still got a kin more microwave from like nineteen eighty two.

Due I use every time I go back home, it's like, and did nothing wrong.

They ain't rested out or nothing.

So uh so yeah, up before we before we get out here, because getting close to the end, uh they I know y'all had to have seen this.

They dropped some Epstein files.

Okay, some photos and all it was redacted, like I got out everybody black now that even black now, uh just just Slain's Maxwell pussy, which I mean, I appreciate it.

Where she was getting out of the car and they had that oh yeah, we're gonna redact her pussy that was hanging out.

So uh so yeah we we uh we got some, we got some some movement.

Here are people happy they got some?

They got some movement?

Now they've got folks blacked out.

But they said this is to protect the identity of folk.

You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 3

I never gave a shit about the Epstein files because I was never under the delusion they were going to tell us anything meaningful like.

But I get that people cared, and I think those people should be happy.

You got what you asked for.

Speaker 2

Technically, Yeah, and some they broke the law like it was all supposed to be released on the thirty days and no redactions except for victims.

And they totally watched all that stuff, which broke the law.

Technically, I don't know.

Speaker 3

Did not have they ever released anything that didn't have redaction.

I'm not defending them.

I'm just saying, like what.

Speaker 2

They released shit by accident, because the dumb fucking charge of releasing shit doesn't understand the context of what's in the document.

That's all over the old Kennedy documents, all the Kennedy documents that actually mean something that are good or accidental or there are things in them that the person reading, I promise you had no concept of what he was reading.

Yeah, like vehicle descriptions and just weird things like that that are important that matter to the case.

But the fucking guy released in the documents is like, I don't know whatever, right, Like I would never ever in a million years understand the context of what's in some of the documents.

Speaker 3

But see, I wondered if you did the same thing, like if you comed through the Epstein files on the same level of attention to detail, if you would find the same sort of like the story actually does emerge, they can't actually redact it away.

Speaker 2

Who knows well, I said this before.

The study of history is the study of relationships period.

Who's friends with Who tells the tale more than sometimes the details of whatever it is you're looking into.

Speaker 3

So it makes sense.

Speaker 2

You're not going to go rob a bank with a fucking total stranger.

Right, You're robbing a bank with people in an inner circle, if not directly to you, through one of the other people you're directly connected to, right, So there's always these intimate bonds between people.

And that's the big that's to me is the bigger story.

Speaker 3

Oh yeah, and that's why I think we knew everything we needed to know way before the mainstream even started talking about Ebstein.

But also, you know, it's cool for the people who expected something different to see that, like this is how it's going to be for the whole time that this government's in power, which is probably going to be the whole of your life, right, Like break now, get rid of the delusions, like you know, it's good for you.

Speaker 2

Well, some of the things I think is funny is that, like it's kind of yesterday, it kind of quote unquote broke that, like Epstein's connection to Iran Contra through Stanley Pottinger, Right, Mike Benz has been talking about this a lot, But this is all stuff that like the Epstein people have known for a long time.

Speaker 4

Johnny Bedmore stent outstanding work on that, Corey, Corey, and I you you were Corey and I were the first two guests on Johnny's NewSpace Game Show, which was fun and I think we're supposed to come back and do it.

But he's done great work on Stanley Pottinger and who lived right like on the other side of the harbor from Epstein in Palm Beach, like was right down the street from him.

Speaker 2

It's funny how all these people are connected to Kennedy too, Like Pottinger was dating Gloria Steinham, who started Miss magazine with a woman named Elizabeth Forsling Harris, and Elizabeth Foresling Harris injected herself into the Kennedy story, attempting to give Jack Valenti an alibi.

Speaker 4

For Gloria Steinem was Cia.

Speaker 2

Yeah, yeah, the whole thing.

Like, it's funny because when you look at who c I A and who their friends are, you're like, oh, Cia, people don't have non ci A friends.

Speaker 4

It just doesn't work that way exactly.

And there's no such thing as X C I A.

Speaker 2

In my opinion, unless they have something out for you, unless they're unless they don't like you for some reason, like a John Kurioko type, you know, somebod they force out.

Then I could say, yeah, that's probably he's probably former.

Speaker 4

Yeah, yeah, exactly.

Speaker 2

Yeah.

If the if you're useful to them, you're useful forever, you know.

Speaker 4

Job security.

Speaker 1

Here, we can honestly say that the different things ship has nothing to do with child trap because he ready to do it.

He ready to do it.

Speaker 4

I'm just.

Speaker 1

Yeah, oh, that's just some ship that happened.

But we don't need people to get out.

I'm saying it's just a more normal ship.

Matter of fact, their parents are bringing them down there to them, I mean that, I mean that's she probably end up figuring out on the back end, someone down there wielding some of them.

Uh, the parents brought them down to him.

But that intelligent shit is the ship that we don't need y'all to know anything about, Okay, because yeah, appreciate it.

Stop asking, okay.

And that's why they got Dan Balgino's ass in there, and now he's quitting like bitch nigga.

Speaker 2

Well, the government has had for a long time.

They've had a they've had relationships that were like ultimately ended up being like, uh, the person they were in a relationship with ended up getting to like, you know, overlook some of their shit, you know, like Arnold Rothstein and the government.

The relationship between them back in the twenties is what started the government involvement in the drug trade because he was getting opium from Shanghai Sheek in China and the government needed to be connected to people in China.

So Arnold Rothstein connected the government to people in China and they just kind of looked the other when it came to his drug dealing, right, And so that's the kind of relation where we do that very often.

And so the child trafficking, while engaged upon by politicians, was probably one of those look away kind of things, you know, not primary, because the CIA don't care about child trafficking, and the CIA don't care about drugs, and they don't care about a lot of things, and they'll facilitate those things to get what they do care about.

That makes sense, so.

Speaker 1

And then see it.

That's how you get Damn.

I'm pretty said everybody for being with us on this episode of Day zero.

We're gonna go ahead and go around to round table.

Lindsey let him know some things.

The Soults.

Are you doing soliss anoight?

Speaker 3

Yeah, I have a big Solstice event and we got an hour and a half from right now, so there's still time for people to sign up.

If you want to go to rouguesol dot org and click on schedule a session, it'll be one of the first things you see.

Also, the twenty twenty six terror readings are still going to be available for probably another few weeks at least, so if you want to get that, you have just a little bit of time to grab yourself at twenty twenty six reading.

All my books, all my other things are there on the site.

You can catch the show at Roguesol, on Rumble and other places.

Yay, Happy Solstice, Happy Solice.

Speaker 1

Merry Christmas as well.

Speaker 3

And Merry Christmas.

If you don't celebrate it, you can still hear Merry Christmas from me because I do.

Speaker 2

I saw this week like all the fucking Christmas songs were written by Jews and there's no mention of Jesus in any of them, and that was the point.

Speaker 1

Jesus.

Holy night, Yes, hey, I mean that's a good one, would say, No, Holy Night, Charlie.

Let it ride what we got.

Speaker 4

I've got an interview with Sarah Andrew that is out today called the Great Parasite Apocalypse.

She she did the parasite cleanse from chemical free body and described her her experience and it was graphic, and I'm on day twenty two of it.

Speaker 2

Are you like stuff or something?

Speaker 4

I got sick on day eighteen.

That was the one day that I actually felt bad, right, you want I didn't get any worms.

Don't guinny worms?

I was.

I was promised worms, but none.

Speaker 2

So I've been taking I've been taking f M vendez all for like two months now.

Yeah, I think as that's the same thing or what.

Speaker 4

No, it's a different protocol, different protocol, but yeah, I've done that before as well.

So anyway, you can listen to that episode and Sarah will some results may vary.

Man, my experience has not been what hers was hers almost immediately, almost immediately and like it she said, it was just like she But you've got to think about that, like in the aftermath of something like that, like how fucking good do you probably feel?

Speaker 3

Like?

Speaker 4

God, damn, I got all that all that stuff out of my body.

But like Tim James said, only like one in ten that really have her experience of that.

I was like, okay, because I thought that's what I was going to have and I haven't had anything.

Speaker 3

I would guess that only one in ten have your experience too.

Of like nothing, I think.

Speaker 4

It's weir say nothing.

I had a headache.

I've had headache.

I've had like a mild headache throughout probably because I'm dehydrated, which you you are.

My mouth is super dry, has been a whole month, and you know, I've got like so a headache.

But that one day I felt pretty shitty Thursday.

Speaker 3

But I mean, like, not noticing any visible parasites leaving your body is I think rare one on a deep parasite clones.

Speaker 4

Wow, Yeah, well maybe they're maybe that.

I mean there's still a couple of left, so maybe that that's coming.

I don't know, So yeah, there's that, So check that out.

Also Narkopol Code February fifteenth through the twentieth Jeff Berwick, Curtis Stone, Gareth Ike, David Ike, Maxig and doctor Andrew Kaufman, Christian Jordan of Tim James Patrick Kenningson, Greg Ree, Steve Falconer, President of Liberland, Vit Jed Lanka, He's cool.

A couple more that I don't think I'm supposed to talk about, but they're coming, and hopefully i'll see people there.

Discount code Macro, do that save some money.

Port of Iarta this year, good spot.

Mexico light, easy to get to.

You know, it's a light you can do like Greeno style, like everyone speaks English, you can navigate like there's some parts of Mexico where then we'll speak in motion and you're kind of on your own.

But Port of Iarta is like so touristy, so convention oriented, like you're gonna be fine.

Speaker 1

Okay, Mexico.

Like that's what I like to hear.

I would say, Corey, give us some give us some stuff, but I always do because he's a nig about it.

Uh Buddyistory dot subsec dot com, Wonder for History, JFK Book, Lee Harvey Oswalden Black and White Lighting one, Volume two, early twenty twenty six, February twenty twenty six.

We appreciate everybody being with us.

Of course, me x Q four twenty dot com for everything I do.

Make sure you give you some independent media token by you some Salona first, transfer that over into phantom wallet.

We appreciate everybody for being here with us.

Mary Christmas, Christy next week for two seventeen so

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