Video URL: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CnMWWRV7oeQ
[Music] comedy crime fighter you don't hear it here there we go you go damn yeah we're in it we even have a cough button damn it's like a real radio show damn professional joe you have to blow your nose or anything you press that red button not anymore dog what's happening i don't do any of that stuff oh that's done how long how long has it been since you did that stuff a year and eight months almost oh so you go back you go full no no no dude i'm i'm clean as a whistle dude done nothing how many times you quit in the past well i went five years with uh sober and then i went 10 years just running and gunning and now i'm back to uh here in eight months man ten years of running again yeah wow yeah white knuckling it dude white knuckling literally survive in advance that's what i was doing yeah thanks for having me bro i love you i love you too yeah man good to be here what the [ __ ] is going on just uh you know are we ready to go bro see what's going on happy world war three day everybody nancy pelosi is in china they're rolling tanks around you seeing this yeah they threatened they're not not a direct threat but they said if anything happens with those jets you might fire back keep your jets out of our area they said something like that our jets yeah there was some i'll look it up but like that but then they were saying this is not a direct threat we're not taking this as a direct threat this is not a threat and i was like a lot of threats being said a lot hearing those 80-year-old sloppy tits of her is gonna get us in trouble like why is she there i don't well there's a whole bunch to that like has to do something with some processing chips that she has some like illegal like insider trading on or something like that look at this in a banned tweet a top state media commentator reportedly said that china could forcibly dispel pelosi's plane and shoot it down if it flies to taiwan could you [ __ ] imagine if they blow her out of this big crazy dude and you see everybody on twitter just telling china you know hey if it happens we understand imagine if they [ __ ] execute her
yeah it's crazy right because like i guess russia is not happening so they're like who else can we go russian pokemon but i mean like in terms of like i don't know man just seems like the ukraine is like just a complete failed state well russia is ramping up and the the real fear is that um what's going on right now is all happening while the roads are moist uh that you can only travel on the road you can't drive on the ground in ukraine so like they're very limited so their tactics are very limited because when they move the tanks in the ukrainians are shooting at them from the side of the road but once the winter comes you could drive anywhere oh man yeah so winter is coming literally yeah literally winter's coming so we're we're headed towards september right we're in august now next month is september and then once it gets cold in ukraine i don't know when it gets cold in ukraine exactly but once it gets cold that ground gets hard once that ground gets hard they can roll tanks anywhere they can't go off the side of the road they get bogged down now you think world war iii is coming i'm very scared i am too i i don't trust that anyone is got has got a really good plan to prevent it you know it just doesn't it doesn't seem like anybody expected russia to do what they did in ukraine and then once once it happened it's like it's still happening so it's like how do we get out of that how does how does uh ukraine survive it how does the rest of the world handle it what happens if russia takes over ukraine and then wants to push further scary [ __ ] dude it is scary [ __ ] because it's like a hot war in i mean it's not technically europe it's technically asia right but we think of russia and how is right russia is like partially europe and partially asia is that how it is ukraine is definitely in europe and i don't know about russia like some parts of russia are considered
to be yeah like eastern europe yeah yeah so europe and part part of russia is in asia right well armenia is a part of uh asia but i have like eastern european armenian in me right so it's kind of so it's like that weird kind of gray space in there right there [ __ ] dude what a wild world we live in and ukraine reminds me a lot of afghanistan and what we did there which was like you know like supplying weapons and funding to like extremists there and then drawing russia into like a a prolonged war to try to weaken them and then eventually the people we gave the weapons to and the money to we'd be make them the bad guys now we're like we gotta go solve that problem too with like al al-qaeda and stuff that was in the taliban and all that stuff and it seems like the exact same playbook that they run over and over and over and over again the difference is they're making the ukrainians look like the greatest people ever yeah you know that you know what i'm saying like zelinski and his wife are on the cover of vogue unbelievable yeah it's very strange to do that in the middle of a war to have like a photo shoot like a glamorous photo shoot why you're like bombing pow like camps and stuff like that killing off your own it's like what do you mean bombing pow didn't they just bomb like a giant but didn't ukraine just bomb like a giant pow camp i was i was reading and that killed a bunch of people bunch ukrainians yeah their own people i don't know if it was done by accident and you see that a lot so basically they blacked out to ukraine it was very hard to get anything out of the ukraine explosion kills ukrainian pows held by russian-backed forces moscow and kiev accuse each other of targeting ukrainian prisoners held in russian controlled territory so there's it's not clear who did it yeah which side imagine being a [ __ ] prisoner in russia like this brittany grinder situation imagine being a [ __ ] prisoner in russia
and you're like you are basically caught in a a war like you you are a pawn in the war you're a pawn yeah yeah it's crazy i feel for any of those people i feel really bad for her i feel really bad for julian assange i feel really bad for anybody in america that's in in in a prison for drugs in particular marijuana yeah no it's ridiculous and how about uh edward snowden like he's still stuck in russia and now russia is like technically our enemy you know he goes over to russia to escape the grips of the united states criminal justice system because he reveals that the nsa has been spying on every [ __ ] american yep yeah there's no good guys yeah who are the good guys and like most of us don't even want to fight with the uh everybody just wants to raise their family you know laugh at a good fart joke drink a little beer have fun get laid once in a while and it's like these power elites that all get us all the fight with each other i know it's it's crazy it is crazy it's crazy and like 99 like like the the spectrum of life five percent five percent on each end are the crazy people and everybody in the middle just wants to be like i used to do i used to do um uh i used to go entertain the troops and we went to afghanistan and you met the locals they were the nicest people you know i would do tours in china i would do stand-up in china nicest people like everybody is so more alike than we are different yeah but we highlight these little things that gets everybody to fight with each other well it's other people that you know they orchestrate it it's not the people that are just regular folks living their life it's the elites it's the people that are in charge of government the people in charge of military the people that are in charge of massive corporations that seek to consolidate power and control resources and you know regular people most people just want to live their life and and you know raise their family and have fun with their friends and do their job get laid once such a small percentage of people that
are [ __ ] who are trying to like start wars and cause trouble and with such a small percentage of people and the thing they're most terrified of is everyone being united if there was like a way where everyone could communicate very easily with everyone else you know there's language barriers and cultural barriers but if those dissolve because of the internet and because of software that lets people translate languages quickly yeah that that's going to help and it's just people are going to realize after a while that there we have way more in common than we do apart that's that's easy to hide when there's language barriers and cultural barriers and and distance barriers but and the control of information like if you're getting pumped certain things and that's all you're hearing all the time that's all you're going to believe but thanks to the internet now we realize that there's like a whole other side of the story that we were never told and if you take a look at religions man you look at like christianity islam judaism they're all almost saying this exact same thing it's like almost where they power ranked jesus right it's like where where what the fight's over right is he the top guy is he like ranked fifth where is he a regular dude yeah right what is he is he just a prophet easy mystic man wizard dude who knows was he the son of god or was he the son of god and what do you think do you think there was really a jesus listen man uh it's very weird to be a guy who used to like do blow and raw dog strippers and be like i love jesus but you know i'm really cool with the guy i really it's a really weird thing to say like you sometimes like you pump the brakes a little bit but man a big journey for me has been this spiritual thing that i've been on and like i think jesus was just like a starseed and i don't know like like okay man i think that like should i smoke weed before you talk go for it dude please light it up bro i feel like we're gonna get deep into the conspiracy hole i i well i was talking to young
jamie about that he's very much into it young jamie is a a connoisseur of z conspiracies gets it dude gets it but he gets it i think that the universe sends people down to help send humanity and to help direct people and humanity in certain way in directions and i think that's what he was and whether he was born at this time or born way back you know when they had that one movie that was like the story of jesus is told 28 different times and eight or twenty different yeah that's called the god who wasn't there that's the documentary for me that doesn't mean that someone might someone existed and they're just telling the same story in their own language in their own way but it's all the same story and whoever that was whenever was here was very special and organized religion which i have no problems with but i think there's you know especially like the the vatican and rome hardened religion taking out all the kind of mysticism of it and made us take it literal and that's not what i'm into i'm into a spiritual thing and the universe and energy i'm trying to become a wizard and trying to become a wizard dude i'm trying to manipulate energy that's the whole thing right now how are you doing this uh there is no reality there's only perception that's what i'm all about so i'm ch for my i really have worked on changing the way i look at the world there's no reality there's only perception yeah that's my belief how's that how you perceive things is becomes your reality but what about um things that are tangible like games like like the game of basketball if you throw a ball and it does not go into the hoop then it does not go in the hoop that's not right those are little things those are little things but overall overall was uh you could be like okay is that is that a good shot or was that a garbage shot well i tried to take my shot and that could be a good part of that do you understand what i'm saying the interpretation of of the energy that's what i'm all about the interpretation of the energy so so my whole thing is when
we take a look at all everything going on in the world right which is like are is there a small group of people that are running everything right it seems like there is right and what is that world economic forum what is davos right have you ever gotten into that dude you see that post there was a post that uh [ __ ] who made it here i'll send it to you jamie but i uh i pulled it aside just because i'm like wait a minute did he really [ __ ] say this it was uh a klaus schwab it was attributed to klaus schwab saying that um we need to get rid of private vehicles oh yeah is that real did you really say that well i mean they put out that video says that you know in the 2030 you'll own nothing and love it i'll send it to you jamie yeah i did some guy from cass central casting is just smiling you're like you own nothing and you will be happy that it said that's what i said you'll own nothing and you'll be happy yeah well then someone's got to own it because they're renting it to me no so you'll [ __ ] know well not you you want me i won't own nothing but they'll own everything world economic forum urges public to eliminate ownership of private vehicles juju thinks he is rising the bus how about his dab bro that's uh from someone uh gateway pundit world economic forum urges public to eliminate ownership of private vehicles did he really say that that seems like a crazy thing to say well you know his it's super interesting man who they are and what they represent paper they put out on july 18th which three circular economy approaches to reduce demand for critical metals oh wow and this is who put this out this is on the world world economic forum shifting from fossil fuels to renewables requires huge amounts of critical metals which is true recycling alone won't be enough to sustain them oh i get it they they [ __ ] played the old switcheroo on us you got to get an electric car so actually yeah now that we've got you off the fossil fuels that's not enough not dude not even no you don't need to uh recycling is not going to be enough to sustain the amount of materials needed
so we need to increase sharing reuse and a preference for longevity to reduce demand what does that even mean who's going to turn the ubers interpret that please we need to increase sharing reuse and a preference for longevity to reduce demand what does that mean why is that so ambiguous i get reduced in sharing i get reusing but a preference for longevity to reduce the man reduce demand what does that mean do you know what that means don't buy new cars a lot left off preference for longevity so preferring older cars is that what i prefer to own it longer like cuba like communist cuba they have cars in cuba they have dope old cars which i love old cars oh my god have you ever seen like those photographs of because what they've done is they've maintained them and taken care of them and like re you know like re-fixed them and refinished them they're [ __ ] amazing yeah they have like 1950s dope-ass cars see if you can find like i know there's articles that have been written on the cars of cuba poverty makes you find ways to thrive right you have to figure out a way to play the game and win the game with limited resources and that would be taking a an old car and learning how to make it look amazing that is kind of the game right yeah for sure that i mean that's always been like a prideful thing for people if you you can afford a car and you you know fix it up like look at that cars in cuba photo gallery where the green cars in the center the top top uh yeah right there okay one more over no you missed it right there yeah look at that look at those cars man that's incredible so they do have a few modern cars you can see that car is pretty modern but i think part of the issue is we could find this out i think part of the issue is that it's hard to get cars over there why is cuba filled with classic cars let's see what it says um the story of classic cars in cuba is full of political and historical significance
cuba has never had a car manufacturing industry so they relied solely on automotive imports to populate the island's road roads uh during the cuban spanish-american war the first car ever imported to cuba was how do you say that la parisien i'm illiterate bro from a little known french manufacturer in 1898 however the turn of the century cuba's primary source of cars and parts was the united states so that's what it is okay 20th century by 1956 there were more than 140 000 cars in cuba okay and then the cuban revolution and the embargo is 59 and it says the saw change in the islands automotive industry as old friends became foes fidel castro placed an embargo on the us and foreign imports oh you couldn't get cars in there any cars which meant no american cars were exported to the island the embargo even extended to include car parts which had serious implications for cuban car owners with no new cars coming into the country and no parts available to make repairs car owners had had them make a choice i guess the typo had to make a choice either let their cars rust in the garage or use what parts they had available and make repairs themselves wow so they just started figuring out how to make parts make their own parts yeah yeah they need to became a mechanic and create innovative ways to keep their cars running unfortunately as abandoned american cars included american car parts cuban locals were forced to make repairs and restorations using parts gleaned from russian and chinese vehicles primaria the plethora of that's right i'd heard a lot of these cars have different engines in them like they don't have the original engine in it ah but aren't there places in like china that make old car parts like let's say you own like a fancy old car and you need a new part they don't make them in the regular car manufacturers so there's places in china that make old car parts that's uh i'm sure they probably do i mean they definitely do in america there's a company called year one it's a
really dope company and year one makes classic car parts yeah like say if you have a 1969 camaro you can get a 1969 camaro fender yeah full on replica fender make sure that's true i know because i know they have a lot sounds true year one it's like year one auto stuff but basically because so many people in america love classic cars they've developed this industry where they can you know give you replaceable parts and then there's companies that like make you a brand new classic car so this is uh yeah so it's all stuff that they'll they'll make like a body 1962-1976 dodge duster let's go to that because that's a pretty obscure well actually go to the barracuda go to the barracuda okay so 1970 1974 e-body barracuda what do they sell might not have a lot of stuff in stock newer selling items does it say is that what does it have anything that would come up okay now that's down there all that stuff down there what is all that stuff oh i see so those are oh i'll see step one section right website right it's a little clunky right the website's a little clunky so go to uh engine yeah let's just let's go to engine so click on that oh yeah oh there we go jesus christ jesus christ like you how dare you question me oh my god they have so much for sale they have everything look at all this [ __ ] yeah alternators and 500 wedge crate engine oh go back please 500 wedge crate engine 505 horsepower they have uh oh look at all these different engine mounts oh they have all kinds of [ __ ] they have different blocks yeah yeah this is build your own like classic new car basically basically a classic new car and then there's other companies that will do it for you from scratch there's this company called revology and he only i think he only does mustangs but dude these cars are insane he makes a mustang he takes like i don't know what of the old car you even have to have because it's not the
old car it's a [ __ ] completely brand new mustang i want one of those so but it's a nine like that's a 67 that's a 67 gt that's a gt350 i think that is a wicked car man and this guy will make you like a new one of them like look at the inside of it since that cost you a shitload of money i don't know but it's worth it if you have it it's a shitload of money but see the difference is you know it's not worth it you're right nothing's worth that amount of money go back up to that first image the blue one yeah right there nothing's worth the amount of money like you're talking like hundreds of thousands of dollars for a car but that thing is a [ __ ] rolling work of art and it might be one of the only reasons why you would want to have that kind of market yeah exactly and look at that thing man if you can afford it i mean bro look at that that's art right there that is art and maybe some people don't get it i get it like some people think my you know i have classic cars some people think they look stupid i was like i get it i get it i get it they're loud and they're [ __ ] noisy and they're bumpy and they yeah they don't handle as good but there's a difference in what's going on you're looking at it like a hugo you're looking at right you're looking at like a thing that gets you from point a to point b you're looking at it like a prius yeah that is not a prius no no no no no that is american ingenuity and it's a powerhouse it's an american art how can you look at that i think that looks stupid bro that thing is so sick that's a 1968 that's the same car from steve mcqueen and bullet 100 percent make that a little does it make it a little smaller like that's that looks stupid a prius looks stupid compared to that thing is sexy that is gorgeous sexy that car is they just knew how to make cars back then man they just it's the weirdest thing that a country and all you like an industry can figure out like this insanely compelling shape and then lose it
like it was like it just vanished like what they had versus what it became yeah those things became gross yeah you look at mustangs from like the 80s yeah dude like yuck i used to drive one of those i was in a high-speed car chase with a uh uh with a tow truck driver and a police helicopter driving one of those like the the 80s 90s mustang that pablo francisco gave me in a card game that he won and rita piazza's like i shut this card and i needed a car and she gave it to me amazing and like i was at a laker game and me and my buddy scott ross who as a who owns uh you know 10th planet in uh ventura we were going to a laker game we got done i might have been partying that night a little bit but i i go and i go to the 7-eleven i buy some stuff i get back in my car and i back up and i don't see this tow truck driver had parked illegally and i hit his car and i was like what should i do and the voice side my head says go i'm like food i just go right so we're just driving and uh i'm just trying suddenly here i look back this tow truck driver is chasing me and we're just and then all of a sudden we get into like this robert de niro ronin like car chase scene through west hollywood all through west hollywood and we get on santa monica and this car was like a beat up car it was like a a junk so he he this guy's so crazy this car tow truck driver he drives up on the sidewalk and blocks all of the traffic from going and i had nowhere to go so i was like [ __ ] it bro i back it up and i shoot the the intersection i jump the intersection boom and i take off and the way i got away was i valet parked my car at the standard hotel and let him take me and mazda body took me when we went down and did our weekend at la jolla that's a true story dude i just valley parked your car it's like not mine yeah yeah take it dude i got out of there dude what year was this this had to be early 2000s and i didn't have a car and he gave me a car could you imagine what it was like if you got arrested in the 60s and there was no computers like how did they know you could get
away with a lot more [ __ ] i can imagine if you're like you're a bank robber and you're fleeing the state yeah for sure how the [ __ ] would they know if you got like two three states away how the [ __ ] would they know it was you i think you just gotta get on one off ramp and you are gone i mean did they have significantly less crime like well i mean there were less laws right so they were probably less criminals i mean every day there's a new law you're like i'm going to jail for what now right yeah well if they start making laws about this stuff like what you can and can't own that's when people are going to wake up yeah have you ever looked into klaus schwab's like dad no have you ever heard a new schwab in land new schwabenland you've never heard a new schwaben land no have you ever heard a operation uh high jump i knew i was gonna love this podcast no dude it's operational high jump what does that mean okay so at one point some people like what's going on with antarctica have you heard this where they sent admiral bird up what's going on in north dakota yeah so the us government's like something's going on with antarctica there's some activity up there we want to find out what's going on so they send this cat name admiral byrd up to investigate with a giant fleet like just a a fleet to go to go bank bro you know when was this i think this was in the uh when was eisenhower in was it the 50s yeah it was like right around like just uh either around world war ii or right after it and so they sent avril bird up to go find out and according to his journal that they found much later he he basically met with ufos nazi ufos what yes this is ufos the nazis the nazis had a like a flying saucer had made a deal basically working with internships you've never heard this no it's the greatest story ever bro it's the greatest story nazis made a deal with the aliens yes holy [ __ ] for technology and the deal was they were
going to work together okay i know this sounds crazy so basically the aliens go down and and klaus schwab's dad go down and meet with eisenhower it's gonna be like we could we could either do it one way or the other way we could do it nice or we can do it the wrong way and that's where they say eisenhower made a deal with these aliens that they could kidnap people and do experiments but they couldn't just do it anywhere they had they had specific places which were our national forest yeah dude you've never heard of it [Laughter] [Music] you're making this sound as if this is like a story that is commonplace well for my people it is jamie count me out here have you heard the story you're brand new you've never heard of this [Laughter] oh yeah you've never heard of operation high jump bro i feel like i've heard of that but i haven't not in this context this sounds amazing please keep going and this is where the missing 4-1-1 come from the missing information what missing information no the missing 4-1-1 what do you mean by that which is all these people have mysteriously disappeared in force and they don't you're not talking about the missing 4-1-1 like information no no no so missing 4-1-1 is a number of people that have been abducted yeah and it's all really weird because they all have like a lot of similar characteristics german-born like german background excuse me highly intelligent and it like i don't know how weird you want to get bro but i want to get weird okay bro they think like the this might be some time traveling nazi [ __ ] bro i know you're gonna think i'm crazy but it's true dude that's what they believe and they made a deal these day folk who who when you say they believe who are these they the conspiracy people are they united no there's a whole different there's a lot of warring clans bro there's a lot of warring clans dude but that was how deep do you want to go what
is interesting is how advanced the engineering of the germans was you know it's really interesting when you think about car manufacturers like audi and volkswagen mercedes it's all at a bmw bmw didn't bmw make engines for nazi fighter pilots i think that's what they first started they all did well i don't think that's what bmw did right yeah 100 percent and then we were told he made hitler a car yeah hitler had a race car that was never part of their marketing plan though that would have been a crazy campaign what does it say there 1939 bmw 801d piston radial aircraft engine and national origin is germany so that year they made world war ii planes they made engines for world war ii planes so this is wild man i mean ibm was making stuff for these camps too dude it's crazy yeah like they had computers we've talked about that before yeah right what was that there's a book uh what did they do they were make it was the precursor to actual computers it was like a uh filing system to keep track of stuff yeah of who was where and what into these camps right i'm remembering this and and then you oh yeah man it gets super weird but it was called ibm right was it called something else i think i think it was ibm yeah the book is called ibm and the holocaust the strategic alliance between nazi germany i mean you ain't [ __ ] around with that title huh that title is rough [Laughter] straight to the point [ __ ] do we do that did we really do this the strategic alliance between nazi germany and america's most popular powerful corporation expanded interesting so the area and of antarctica they went to was new new schwabenland new schwabenland do you think that's why he dresses with the space so they're all in contact with the aliens i think well dude i mean it gets in the i see a lot of people think it's about power and money what do
you think it's about it's spiritual war dude this is these people got all the money and all the power they got more than they could ever want i think they want complete control but that gets into spirituality not just complete control but lowering your vibration and jacking you're loose you think they're doing that consciously or do you think they're doing it like they're chasing the economics and along the way it actually becomes a spiritual battle because everything is a spiritual battle i think it's done purposely i think they're they're evil i think i think they're they're at low low there's low frequency stuff going on and they've made deals with people and things and that's why things going on that was very ambiguous but i understand where you're going with it okay i mean if you want me i just don't want to get too weird too fast bro but fast i'm like we just opened up we're good i uh i 100 believe this is spiritual war and that these people are working with dark entities and that's what this is all about let's imagine this if there was like uh an alien race that came here from another planet and gave just a random group of people uh technology yeah gave them an understanding of things and how to do things how much of a record do you think they would keep at that wouldn't that be something that people would want to talk about yeah but that but that's the beauty of the internet that we're now able to do that we could never do that before so you think that's what the story is about the story is about they went there and they met with aliens and the aliens gave them information i mean hitler was really into the occult yeah like he would send people all over the place he had a lot of bad ideas yeah a lot of bad ideas but see the occult has a negative connotation to it not everything involved with the occult is negative and what the occult really means is secret secret so there's not as much word yeah
it's basically mean it means like it's hidden i i always associate it with people that believe in silly [ __ ] when someone starts talking about the occult i'm always like um how do you feel about ghosts you know how do you feel but like when people start talking about like dark magic i'm like for real you sure i believe in that there's some energy manipulation but i don't disbelieve yeah i don't disbelieve listen i like i i i don't know what's going on i just kind of read stuff and i'm like how does this fit into the puzzle right how does this fit into the jigsaw of life and you start looking around and you just start going okay man this is interesting that is interesting this starts to make sense because if you look at it from a power and money point of view it doesn't make any sense why would you want everybody to lose their jobs why would you want everybody to be staying at home if if nobody's making any money then you don't make any money yeah i don't think that's true i think you just got to keep people at like a constant level of consumerism and a constant level of work and you'll always make money but you control the money this way the way to control people is to control their access to food and goods and control their access to travel so if you could limit their travel if you can tell them that traveling's bad if you can tell them that if they have to travel they have to travel with other people and then if you could change their food and tell them they have to eat bugs you have to eat bugs we're gonna have they're trying they're literally pushing that you're eating bugs right they're pushing you got to stop eating meat like you stop are you sure you're sure that regenerative farming isn't real because the people that run it are saying that they can literally get to like a zero carbon state where they're not emitting any extra carbon they can do that with regenerative farming i just don't think they can do it for millions of people yeah where that is the problem that's the problem with like regenerative
farming to me it's like the reason why they do factory farming it's [ __ ] gross and terrific it is so many people are eating meat how are you gonna feed that many people i think that synthetic meat has a real shot the um you know it was it's not really synthetic i don't think that's the right word for it what what is the word for the meat that they're making where they're basically like reproducing steak cells like they're making a lab-grown steak but it's actual meat this is interesting to me because i'm like if they're doing like if the if they can figure out what the building blocks for an actual cell are and recreate it perfectly and if they could do that in some sort of a form that that makes it a stake that would that would mean they could probably do that if someone gets their arm blown off that would mean they could probably do you know yeah for sure that'd be great like that might happen 50 years from now with the same kind of technology they might create meat i think now they're just making it's like mush and they put it together with like fat and they just it's just not very presentable at this point what does it look like cultured meat that's what they're calling it oh that's i love the names they come up with stuff it's such a great celebrity cultured meat it's been around the world it's it's cultures it's from france it's a me produced uh by in vitro cell cultures of animal cells it's a form of cellular agriculture which such agricultural methods being explored in the context of increased consumer demand for protein so what does it look like let's see what a lab-grown steak looks like you think it looks delicious probably looks like a lab-grown vagina shady [ __ ] [Laughter] that's lab grown whoa oh you know what that is that's tiger steak that's um what that is is la lab-grown tiger steak so they reproduce other animals tissue that looks like a [ __ ] real steak man that uh that's lab grown steak is that really lab grown do you think
there's not enough food though joe is that do you think that's an issue right now that there's not enough um i have not done any accounting on how much food there is have you well you know we hear a lot of stories about you know where we subsidize farmers not to grow and it's just like if if you know why you do that though why they started doing that because in world war i think it was world war ii and the reason why they started doing it because they wanted to make sure they were never caught without grain and caught without food because there was you know one of the scariest things about war particularly in in those days was famine like if you were cut off to supply a food and food couldn't come in i mean obviously there's everything about war is horrible everything about it but famine is kind of crazy and i think they were trying to uh avoid that by supplying you know making sure there was like a a surplus and so they made some deals with farmers make sure this is a an accurate interpretation i'm pretty sure that's exactly how it was though so that's why they started subsidizing the save the soil well because they were at war and then they just kept doing it now i don't know how much has changed i really don't know much about subsidies and how they work but i do know that you know we make a [ __ ] load of corn that most of it is used for animal food the us government created farm subsidies during the great depression to offset the surplus of crops and low prices of both crops and livestock okay though the great depression ended nearly a century ago subsidized farming persists today farmers make up less than one percent of the u.s population hmm so what what was the food subsidies that took place during world war ii was that world war one yeah so that was that when the great depression was in between them okay so maybe that's
what i'm [ __ ] that's what i [ __ ] up the the year of it so it's essentially [Music] they had to do it because we needed food we needed to make sure you didn't [ __ ] starve and people back then people had to like get together and work to help like they would they would make things for the war effort like you're supposed to donate tires and people would like donate like pots and pans and medals and [ __ ] and they would melt them down and make bullets out of them like it was it was a crazy united time in a way that i don't think we really understand today it was a crazy time everybody came together and i just wonder if we could ever do that now today i i feel like people are starting to wake up maybe and coming together a little bit more but the point is that's the subsidy of that's where it started it started for a good reason it started because they they were really trying to feed people and they were in the middle of a war right but but for me it's and it's also that they they they said that it was also about controlling the price of of of product right so that's right for sure definitely too the key because if you keep the market right it's just everyone's buying it for pennies on the dollar if they're if they can get it everywhere which is fine i'm totally great but i'm very nervous about what's happening with these farmers right now yeah it is strange right i mean strange what they're doing um in uh is it the netherlands netherlands canada the where in the netherlands where they're having these um they're blocking streets and lighting things on fire because they're proposing these uh new things to farmers it's basically going to put farmers out of business in terms of like how much methane they can produce right which is how many cows they can own yeah basically yeah um i think there is some feed that you can use that reduces the amount of methane a cow produces but i mean how are they doing that and do we really think it's cow's farting that's the problem right it is a problem really is a problem but is it anything like what's going on in these
giant cities that we live in well you would think it wouldn't be until you realize how big some of these farms are and how many cows they have and that's how they feed millions and millions and millions of people most people are removed from the [ __ ] horrific reality of meat farming and dairy farming but the the reality is like those there's a lot of those [ __ ] animals there's a lot of them and they're all farting and it's really burping burping is the real problem oh really yeah yeah burping is the big problem more than farting you know but the people that are the fans of regenerative agriculture i'd love for them to sit down with someone who is like an economic realist who could tell us like can you do this everywhere can you have animals just run free and [ __ ] and then you have the chickens around and you have the pigs run and they do everything they want to do and the whole soil stays healthy from the manure and the way they eat it and everything the way they eat the the the greens or are you bullshitting me like is the only way to make mcdonald's burgers for a billion people it's only the only way to stuff these animals into these [ __ ] cages and do that horrific [ __ ] that we see in those videos yes that's the question it is it is a hard question too because there are so many people so this is where i get excited about lab lab-grown meat i think they can the best possible solution is those two things regenerative agriculture where the own but but you only can produce a certain amount because realistically it seems like you would not be able to produce as much you wouldn't have as much land i mean it's like if you're just gonna have cows everywhere you're gonna just have cows everywhere it's like india it's like [ __ ] up traffic can you imagine if like we've realized like we have two choices we have factory farming yeah or cows roaming dude it's the only way we can keep up with all the steak houses and all the five guys burgers i just have [ __ ] cows everywhere can't touch him
on the street that's gonna feed a family let him enjoy his life right dude that that might be the solution so it's one of those two things it's either factory grown meat lab-grown meat cultured meat or uh regenerative agriculture what is the new one that they're putting out near meat or almost meat or something meat and didn't have animals yeah that's it beyond meat right and then it had like insane amount of uh seed oils no yeah like uh it's not good for you yeah not good for you you want to eat vegetarian there's plenty of really healthy things you can eat if you want to eat vegetarian you should eat real vegetarian food not some fake [ __ ] meat thing if you want to be a vegetarian i eat indian food it's delicious there is a place i mean there's a lot of delicious vegetarian food but there's a place near my house in uh back in l.a and it was this uh total indian joint like everybody spoke hindi is that it is yeah hindi i'm cool um they spoke um in their native language and everything was in you know their native language and it was all vegetarian it was this crazy authentic place i love that restaurants do that too like you go into a certain epic right you want to see those people working there yeah if it's a bunch of hipsters you're like oh this is gonna suck right but you go in there and it's authentic bro you're good to go it was literally like you were transported to a small you know small shop in india that's what it's like and the food's legit so that's my point it's like eat real food don't be eating that nonsense well you know i mean unless you like it i don't give a [ __ ] yeah man i mean like i've lost some weight i'm not gonna lie i'm happy fat but i'm also happy in shape too so it's like how'd you lose weight i did intermediate fasting intermediate or whatever it's called what's it called intermittent yeah that too yeah yeah i've done that yeah i did that 48 i'm good for 48 72 i'm ready to go on a killing spree you do 48-hour fasts yeah oh wow that's a long time yeah i was doing 22s mostly but then i got to 48 and
i liked it man i was losing weight but man i was getting like i think we eat entirely too much food i mean it's pretty evident when you look at the the population and when i say we i definitely include me i eat too much food i like it i'm a glutton but if you look at the rest of the population like most people don't eat like us well they stretch us really thin we're running we're working more than we ever have so sometimes you gotta stop and the only thing open is that green yellow arch and you're like oh man i haven't ate that in a month and then you eat it your body's like go [ __ ] yourself now you mcdonald's and you have nowhere your business ate a preservative bomb oh you know what's the most amazing thing when they take those burgers and they put them on a shelf and they never rot have you seen you're like this is not good for anybody maybe let's find out how much of that's true i know there's photographs of like big macs that are on shelves they're just sitting there forever oh you're looking like something you're drinking you're like good for like 10 15 years you're like this ain't healthy not healthy not healthy at all like i try to eat good man but i also like to eat like [ __ ] i like to have occasions of course right everybody does oh man there's like a extra thing to eating like [ __ ] because you know you're giving your body a little treat i go to i go to uh mcdonald's get that vanilla ice cream and every time i show up there's like a race ride about to break out right there it's like some giant black trans about to fight cholos on the other side of the [ __ ] every time i go with this one one are you going on santa it's on la brea near santa monica so look at this go scroll back up so i read the thing it said found mcdonald's cheeseburger looks exactly the same after five years i wonder if it's edible do you imagine if someone just [ __ ] ate that thing five years he had to eat it he had to try it look at this she vowed to uh megan coundry conjuri has vowed to ditch fast food all together after she found the burger still looks exactly the same
as the day she bought it back in 2017 [Laughter] megan from washington dc decided to conduct the experiment after noticing a forgotten burger in the back of her car had not started to rot after five days she said i would it was untouched until around three weeks ago i was in the closet sorting out my christmas stuff and i knocked the bag and the burger rolled out i'd forgotten about it it was rock hard as hard as a hockey puck i could probably smash a window with it she's saying it's completely dry and it it could start to crumble she sounds like an alcoholic that hides bottles all over the place she's just like hiding fast food so no one knows she's eating it yeah that's crazy i mean dude you know it's not healthy when it's turned and burned that quickly but sometimes you just gotta you know people are spread thin dude yeah they gotta eat dude and it's like oh dude i get it i know i'm i i'm not a an anti-fast food person don't i mean i'm a person that says like just don't eat it all the time don't don't make that your whole diet anything too much right anything that but that kind of stuff in specific it's like when you get in a habit of having like chocolate shakes and and burgers and fries and you know those [ __ ] buns and all the sauces and everything you get in a habit of that and then you're just giving your body too much to get rid of you're you know it's that's not nutrients yeah you're giving your body like this just rush of sugar and there's a lot of protein and fats in there too so like by itself like what i like to do is go to in and out and get those uh how do they do it what does it call flying dutchman is that what they call it i don't know i think they called the flying bass they're the [ __ ] but the flying dutchman is like they take a cheeseburger patty and they put a piece of cheese on it and that's it is that animal style no animal style is when they pile a bunch of crazy [ __ ] see that's a flying dutch
that's a flying dutchman with onions so no lettuce no nothing just the meat and the cheese so that's like the least guilt-free [ __ ] for me because i'm just getting ground beef nothing cheap it's pretty [ __ ] good that's why the line is around the block every time exactly look at that it's a flying dutchman on french fries animals look at these [ __ ] yeah i mean going hard dude carl's jr one time was just whatever they could shove on a burger was their new burger it was like lettuce tomato a bike an elephant it just was like it was just so ridiculous and it's like it's that's the most unhealthy [ __ ] i've ever seen in my life but it looked good and tastes good i'm sure the in-n-out thing is like what they've done is said look it's gonna take longer because we're gonna cook it right now but it's gonna be better so you have to wait and everybody's like let's do it yeah whereas everywhere else like you want it right now which is so crazy that they already have a chance yeah ready for you before you're even done ordering it they're handing you your order it takes time to make a [ __ ] cheeseburger the fact you can get it so fast and i like did i have the metabolism of a dead person like i gained weight i once gained weight driving i felt my pants getting tired so i had to take off my belt as i was driving to a gig you were eating in the car oh yeah i could just feel like i had to undo my pants just so i could breathe dude that's fast dude i uh dude yeah so i've really bad um my metabolism is super slow so i can gain weight doing nothing his um the intermittent fasting helped that yeah for sure yeah so i had a show called wild world of spike on spike tv and i remember that i was doing like stunts i didn't even know i didn't even know what the show was about when i got it because i just wanted to be on tv who was on that with you me and jason ellis and kick cope oh that's right that's right ellis is doing stand-up right now he's so funny dude cause he's lived such a crazy life he's it's like fun watching
someone starting to learn stand-up and you kind of like give them a couple tips here and there to lead them in their way but so we were doing a show and like i i discovered what a hematoma was i didn't know what that was before and then i would get these stunts and these giant hematomas on my leg and i just gained this this layer of permafat that i never lost like i i probably started show around 175 and i ballooned up to like almost 200 maybe and i kept it forever and then doing this this fasting like helped me finally shed a lot of that that fat that i have forever that i could never get rid of you must feel much better too right i love it dude but sobriety and like eating better it's just it's it's 180 dude nice it's i wake up every morning i'm like oh man i feel so much do you have any vices now i have all devices bro but i mean like in terms of like cigarettes um alcohol no alcohol no alcohol no drugs no marijuana no marijuana um you know i always question like at some point will i ever be able to do shrooms again cause shrooms kind of changed my life um what do you think maybe i mean i'm just being honest with you but right now i just enjoy being sober but you know the whole story about bill w at that one point or like he had done acid yeah he wanted everybody like to do the 12 steps and then trip balls and that was going to be the experience the spiritual experience and then he almost got ran out so they're like okay no uh but that's not interesting because boy what a much better organization it would have been it would be interesting save my lifestyle if you if you could do that if you could do like the whole spiritual journey and then like work yourself into a place where you're capable of doing the psychedelic experience yeah i just don't know if some people can do that the problem is it's whenever you got something like that here's a problem it gets culty what if you're giving people psychedelics yeah you know it's already culty if you're giving them a guideline to live their life right right because each and it's very hard for a person to tell you how to live your life because it's very hard
for a person to live their life it's very hard for people to get it together so if you're giving advice like how good do you have it together right so if you're telling me that i have to believe in a higher power and i have to do this and i have to do that and this is the way like are you sure or is is that the way for you you know like maybe it is the way but it it could get culty and i'm not saying alcoholics anonymous is culty i'm saying any kind of organization that starts to tell you what you're supposed to be doing and how to do it it could get cultivated i think anything could get cultivated right i mean like then you add psychedelics yeah then you get weird then then you could really if you had movie trivia night and you had psychedelics it could get gulty right well i think most of those early cultures that got together like these [ __ ] circles of wisdom and [ __ ] these [ __ ] dude if you ever there's a guy brian murray rescue he was on my podcast and he's got an amazing book and it's uh it's all about how the ancient greeks and the ancient romans were tripping it's called the immortality key it's an amazing book and it's actually opened up a field of study at harvard now they're studying this this part of the history of the ancient greeks because they found these wine vessels and when they do a sample test on the wine vessels they found ergot and ergot is a type of psychedelic it's like a it's it mimics like lsd it's got lsd-like properties it's something like lysergic acid or it's related to lysergic acid so they definitely had at least that in their stuff and they found some other stuff too i think they might have found psilocybin too but that was what their wine was their wine wasn't just wine it wasn't just this is one of the things that he went into depth about like when we think of wine the wine that we have today like you get a nice cabernet oh delicious oh i like it with a steak their wine had [ __ ] in it they were pouring like [ __ ] they were pouring weight and looking at each other each other psychedelic mushrooms and [ __ ] and [ __ ] ergot you know they think that ergot was
responsible for the salem rich truck the witch trials oh there's a whole bunch again to that like schizophrenia what is that and like people hearing voices like i mean you read all these holy texts everybody heard voices back in the day and like how we treat those people it might not be the proper way not saying you know they're they're they're any kind of like uh shaman or anything but there might be some stuff to that you know i hear i've heard voices like when i did yeah voices that had good advice but yeah but when you yeah that's different that's different like when you do shrooms it's like you're taking on an entity you know that's interesting man i think so when you get into like what is alcohol spirits right it's like there's something to that the thing i was telling you though about the salem witch trials we could look this up make sure it's true but i'm pretty sure it is what they did was they did a core sample you know they dig into the earth and they find and through the core sample i don't know how they make the calculation exactly but they know where the years were as they go down and when they get to the years of the salem witch trial it turns out there's a late frost and when late frost happens sometimes plants die and sometimes they get fungus and fungus grows on them that fungus is called ergot and so they found evidence of this stuff in 1976 linda corporal offered the first evidence that sail witch trials followed an outbreak of rye ergot ergot is a fungus blight that forms hallucinogenic drugs in bread it's victims can appear bewitched when they're actually stoned er got thieves oh thrives excuse me urgot thrives in a cold winter followed by a wet spring so wow so they found evidence of that so if if they had evidence that at least accidentally they were tripping balls because they were eating the bread was so important to them like you know that was a big part of how they stayed alive they're they're probably all tripping their [ __ ] balls off oh yeah 100 what about the guy whose job it was to go around to determine whether somebody is a witch or not look at this according to this theory the abrupt end of the witch trials in may 1693 happened
quite simply because salem ran out of ergo contaminated grain wow so the winner is over no more no more witches because we're not tripping balls anymore oh my god i never knew that isn't that nuts that is crazy everybody's on shrooms they're like witch yeah you imagine you really would think you were bewitched like why am i thinking like this why do i feel this way oh my god i'm under a spell and if you believed in spells and [ __ ] the 1600s they believed in spells 100 100 you know that's crazy i'm nuts i did shrooms at the k rock acoustic christmas about like basically the same thing yeah and i i heard a voice and it's the last time i ever worried about my life really it was said you're exactly where you need to be i heard it loud wow and i never worried and then i just went watch prophets of rage just annihilate bro annihilate and it was like and i my life has always been kind of on this nice nice path since then but yeah shrooms were a big part of my my recovery and just like all the stuff having the kids and then this this this covered thing forced me to like reevaluate a lot of [ __ ] and i'm on kind of the spiritual path right now which is like i really love it i really it's a much better way of looking at the world so you've made it's not like you made like big leaps like big changes in the way you think about things yeah man huge ones there's this video going around about me and ari shafir yelling at each other on my my past punch drunk videos you know of us doing it and i i watch and it's super cringy right i watch i go but now i understand a lot of stuff like how my energy was back in the day and how people received and i get it i get it was this the run any gun days this was this was running and gunning one not running and gunning two this was the earlier days when it was just like blow and stuff like that and you let me tell you say one thing about you you always even if you're on coke you're always a cool guy to hang out with thank you joe it means a lot to me you always were but you're not one of those guys who does coke and then becomes
unmanageable well you know what's interesting joe so i saw you recently at christina's party right yeah and the truth of the matter is is that i was talking about this on my my broken simulation podcast i i was i drove around that place like 30 times because i have like really bad social anxiety and i was just like i was like gotta go in got going and then i was like defensive farting the whole time right so just just just baron farting tourney just blowing up my car just nerve farts nerf farts really bad and then i finally went in i was like okay i'm okay but i have like really bad wow so like that's a big part of like why i was doing drugs too like to be able to like be calm into my to be into my like skin and being able to talk to people and like i wasn't a good drinker i never really liked drinking but coke was just like every time i did blow i fell out like i was like motley crew and the girls girls girls just walking through pointing the chicks getting weird dude like [ __ ] you felt like the man yeah i felt like the man and then it just it worked till it didn't work anymore and then uh you know just i had a couple things happen and i fell back and uh and then just like you know i had uh two girls and i said i had to change myself i'm somebody's dad which is like the weirdest thing ever for me like i'll be with them at the park and i'll be i'll look at them i go i'm this person's dad dude like wild like it's like i i'm their mo i'm going to teach them their moral compass and all that stuff and like it's just a weird feeling and it's the best feeling i've ever had in my life but it's i i sometimes have this out of body experience that i'm this person's dad it's so weird to me and but i i love it and it just i want to be i i didn't want to embarrass them so i decided i'm going to clean up my act and go on the spiritual journey and it's been it's been a really great time it's like life is so much easier now so than it was before and it's just you feel like there's less resistance
the way you live your life now right yeah pete that's a one of the problems with people that get like stuck in patterns you know you've always behaved a certain way or thought a certain way so you get stuck in that pattern you live your life doing blow and getting crazy you get stuck and so then to create a new pattern it requires a lot of effort you know it's a big a big switch i always wanted i always said i always wanted to set a high score in a game that nobody else was playing right i just wanted to have these rock and roll stories that i thought were so important and then i look back like nobody cares it's almost to the point of embarrassment like all this stuff i used to do all this chaos i used to get involved in and but at the time i thought it was well it was super important and then i realized it wasn't and i was just like that's beautiful man that's beautiful for you that you figured that out that you made that adjustment the store and all the stuff like like i so i really enjoy the store it's it's one of my favorite places to go i miss when all you i miss the time when you are all there you know it's like i'm the last of one of the mohegans you know in terms of the whole desk crew and all that i miss that but i also used to love the dead period too when we would all go there and there would be like 30 people in the crowd and you could go up there and bomb in dignity and just work on your [ __ ] dude it's changed it has changed it changed you know it changed when we came back in 2014 it stopped being it would it had changed while i was gone too because uh when i came back um they had already started doing gross battle and i remember watching rose battle thinking like whoa like this is so creative and it's so important because it was such a joke writing show like you had to write jokes to [ __ ] with each other and in the way moses does it because he's such a nice guy he makes them all hug you know it makes everybody hug at the end it's nice like you're insulting each other and he's a great host too
that's me and brian callan's show bearing calendar mind show is uh we just load lay into each other and then at the end we hug before we go but when i came back and i saw that that was happening at the store i was like oh that's this is very interesting this is very interesting i'm like this is a whole different thing and kill tony too they were doing kill tony and like what they were doing in the belly room and i remember going in there going man this is really interesting like this is a crazy show you're giving these people one minute they do stand up and then you got hinchcliffe who's like the best roaster ever yeah [ __ ] super fast he's the fastest dude he's the the best host of one of those shows i've ever seen i took him on his first uh road gig did you really yeah it's the funniest story ever dude so i'm like hey man you want to do a gig with me i forget where it was it was like um it was like uh fresno or something like that so you know it's starting off bad and it was for a 7-eleven christmas party right so i bring him up and i would do this thing called pre-show post show like how you think you're gonna do and then reaction to how you actually go right and it was his first time ever [Laughter] and it was so fun to watch him like try to figure it out in front of this all 7-11 indian crowd it was so funny and yeah it was his first road gig and from there he just kind of went boom and he's been crushing it ever since yeah he's killing him we just did a gig in dallas how was it it was awesome dallas is a great town great town i love dallas i love town i love dallas i love houston they got futuristic black chicks that i love there's something about these big texas cities they're just extra fun and you remember back in the day when you would do stand-up you go to like some of the bluer states and you know it was very interesting like you know the the crowds in la now are supe are tricky i would say they're tricky you got to kind of like learn how to like present to them so i
just did a jimmy dore show like he asked me to stand up in this tiny theater he does in the valley and they're the best crowds you can just tee off right and then i'm like okay gotta go do hollywood stand up in hollywood and now i'm gonna have to figure out what this crowd can handle and what they can't handle right it was never like that before right back in the old days like you were just sling dick in comedy dick in la and then you'd have to go on the road and kind of like dumb it down a little bit it's kind of flipped now and it's like in la you gotta like can't say this can't say that can't say that because they're gonna shut down right on you on the road you can just tee off like red states like used to be super conservative right they were like when do you think that shift happened at the store how long ago you've been feeling this way ah since everybody started coming back from covert i i i don't think it's here yeah it's like it's not the store store is great it's it's crowds in l.a whether you're at the improv or wherever it's like they're everywhere everywhere they're way more sensitive like sarcasm is violence you know right well you know they're not like that here at all i know that's why i like to do the road but the thing this is not a red city this is a blue city this the whole thing is not like a red blue thing it's a like people lost their [ __ ] marbles versus people kind of went back to living their life and trying to just deal with the fact that it's a disease and hopefully you don't get it and if you get it get treatment and you know oh it's not about california it became a cult it's not about science now that's you know when the conspiracy theorists have been saying the same thing now that they said at the beginning it was it's not about science and like mass they try to bring that back so like we might bring it back and bay uh long beach uh beverly hills and um who else was it pasadena we're like nope we're not taking we're not doing math
and they're like yeah you know what the numbers aren't high enough we're not gonna we're not gonna bring back the mass like no dude everybody says the emperor's got no clothes on that's what happened right there biden survived it can we end this i mean jesus christ i got a crazy story for you more crazier than the nazis meeting with the aliens no it's right there though okay you sure okay so i i do have this podcast called broken simulation and i was interviewing a friend of mine named jeff hilliard and jeff it's it's gonna drop this week and he used to be a sober companion what's up dude okay that means like when people are newly sober either like someone who loves them will send you in to like knock the the pipe out of your hand or like just to make sure you don't use and abuse or do anything so someone who goes with you so you don't yeah [ __ ] up or or if you're newly sober and you just want somebody there in case you start getting like a little froggy you know they stop you from doing stuff so he he um he he was a sober companion he used to go to all these hotels and um he one of his clients at the time was a high-end escort and this was like during the election and he was having a conversation with her and she was like one of my one of my people that i party with is hunter biden right and he told her before the election this is what jeff says on my show that they're going to get his dad in by the slim and some margins and then they're going to figure out a reason to get them out and they're going to put in camel toe hairs and that's who they're gonna [ __ ] they're not gonna do that did you see that video the other day where she announced her pronouns and said she was wearing a blue suit yeah they're not gonna have her be the president well i think she's so bad they gotta be but that seems to be maybe they thought maybe they thought that way back in the wes end but i think now after they've seen how she gets reviewed by the public she
would be like the most unpopular president by far she'd be more unpopular than dan quayle more unpopular than any any of the presidents that we make fun of or vice presidents rather but she is uh she's don't you think yeah i can't imagine that they would do that can you imagine they would do that well i mean i'm surprised by it i mean i can't really get surprised by anything they do right at this point i think they would try to put somebody else in to replace him that probably i mean if he makes it to the four-year mark do you think he's gonna make it to the four-year mark not according to this hooker well here's the thing about hookers they're always right and they make good choices they make good life choices so they're definitely not mentally ill it does definitely not on drugs and definitely don't lie so uh i don't know what to tell you um she i i i think they would you already see the rumblings that nobody wants them to run again so i think it's going to be super interesting but who else could they run i mean how are they going to run gavin newsom do you think they're going to keep kamal harris they're going to have two totally new people because if he doesn't run if he's gone does she autumn she doesn't like become the vice president right or she doesn't become the president no i mean if he steps down yeah she's like right before if he steps down right before then she might be the president for a day a couple of days well if she's in there three days she just starts trying to start launching us yeah man so she so she becomes a candidate again it's not like you know they would definitely run her and if he steps down in 2024 and and they have a real you know obviously it's going to be another election somebody has to run with her i mean if he if he can't do it she steps in right or maybe she gets a lucrative offer to do something else from only fans or something now for
[ __ ] from krauss schwab wants you to work at the world economic forum oh yeah transportation who knows man who knows what all these pieces that are getting moved around are for but you know it's interesting to see them try to figure out who's going to run and then seeing that trump is probably going to run and they're trying to put trump in jail they're trying to figure out what what [ __ ] they can arrest him for and i didn't indict him on it's wild dude and then hillary clinton who just can't read a room is like i think i might run again [Laughter] ah that's hilarious right she just i mean she obviously doesn't read any of her social media or anything like that well she can't yeah i mean that would be devastating i was talking to young jamie about that about what do you think about the clinton body count oh dude it's real bro what do you think about that most recent guy oh i mean like this one's a wild one folks if you don't know this is a guy who let epstein into the white house seven times they found him hanging from a tree 30 miles from his house from an extension cord with a shotgun wound to the chest and they're calling out a suicide are you sure yeah dude like wait a minute what did this guy do for a living yeah hold on a second who did he know is that he let in where what happened isn't the most dangerous job in the world is a like a clinton bodyguard or clinton business association yeah right it's like it's like it's like 90 clipping or something like that who but listen we don't know whether or not the clintons have killed people but we do know for sure that people have assassinated their rivals that's yeah that's been a thing throughout history well her dad like didn't he her dad at one point was in charge of like the chicago mob what yeah yeah like when they took out al capone he stepped in well that would make sense
right and then you look at like you want some real theater dude is that real though let's find out if that's real before let's look we go any further because that sounds so bananas like she's um either way she's he she's extremely fortunate that her rivals and people who know things yeah people who know something themselves it's like what the [ __ ] man one of the craziest ones i ever read about was a guy who shot himself in the head twice he was like an enron whistleblower and he pulled over the side of the road and he shot himself in the head twice wasn't that gary webb too who came out about the whole crack epidemic did he shoot himself in the yeah i found an article that says this but i it says according to someone and i don't know who this is sam tripoli nichols and it says larry nichols was a former trusted advisor to bill and hillary but i don't know it's an article on a website okay so okay this is just an article on a website yeah it's a blog balls i don't know what it is but i found the link it's pretty presentable it's very presentable seems to prefer i might have made this though so it might not be true so it's said what it says hugh rodman is hillary clinton's father he's pictured above daughter hillary is sitting holding the doll okay what does that mean nickel okay after al capone hugh rodman and dan rostinkowski took over and ran the chicago mob according to larry nichols who's this larry nicholson nichols is a former trusted advisor to bill and hillary clinton nichols helped run bill's political campaigns while bill was president and governor of arkansas nichols called matt drudge to break the story of president clinton and monica lewinsky whenever i hear drudge i hear like i think drudge report and i think yeah is that true that's him is that but but yeah no for sure i know i know but whenever i hear drudge report i'm like okay is that slanted
like drudge report is like a heavily right-leaning website right isn't it i don't know is it still i thought it's like one of those things where it might gone the other way might have went left yeah no but i could have sworn like they were very yeah they went like anti-trump are you sure judge report oh okay so this is whether or not it's legit bob knows the bias the media bias check so it says mixed could be a little bit of both but this is also back in the 90s i don't know if it's changed but look how it says this so it's right of center it's not extreme bright right of center in terms of factual reporting it's mixed mo it's like in between mostly factual and low so it might be a little so these media sources are slightly moderate conservative and bias they often publish factual information that utilizes loaded words okay so that's why but you know it isn't interesting like you're always uh you're programmed to like when you see something's on one network yeah another name oh what is this [ __ ] to dismiss it right you see the vox article oh yeah you know it's like it's it's a natural inclination that people have to like resist people they think might be ideologically driven or that all or and that just means the information isn't real right or it might be biased or it might be funky it's hard you know like you know i know you're into the ufo thing and the ufo thing is one of the ones i got jeremy corbell coming on soon and one of the the ufo thing is one of the ones that i keep going back and forth on like sometimes i think we are being visited by other other galaxies or other creatures from some other world and other times i'm going why would they tell us why why would the pentagon be telling us that these are crafts not made from this world why would they tell us they wouldn't tell us i don't think they would tell us jack [ __ ] so if they are telling us i think it's a smoke screen i think anytime you see like a sauce or
anything i think that's man-made do you think they're from china or russia or the united states all of them all of them yeah i think if there are entities they're interdimensional and that they don't come here in a i don't think they come here to metalcraft no i think they walk through some portals or something and they're in your mind i think that's what's happening when you're eating mushrooms yeah i mean you're contacting other things like the thing the feeling that you have when you're in a high dose of a psychedelic like a dmt type trip the feeling that you have of going to another place it's like unmistakable right it feels like you're in another place that might be like a place that's a real place but you can only access it chemically like our idea that you have to access things physically for it to be real you know like you have to open up a door to get in the room that's true but why do we think that way we only think that way because that's how we move around the earth but if you think about it just experience itself the kind of experience you get on a high dose psychedelic whatever the [ __ ] that is whatever is happening it's an hallucination okay whatever it is it's real i agree while it's happening that is real as [ __ ] there's nothing more real it's not like you can end it anytime you win can't you stop it you got wrong just hop off the ride no whatever the [ __ ] that is is as real as anything you ever encounter in life maybe real er because you have no control you have zero control it's one of the most terrifying things about it is people are scared you're giving your consciousness up to the psychedelic i feel like you're in another place when you're doing that man and if that is another place that can only be accessed chemically maybe we should think about it that way don't think about it like like it's it's not really there because i'm still here yeah but that's just like tissue and bone and what about your mind what about whatever the [ __ ] it is that is you inside your head your thoughts they're not there they're going to this [ __ ] other
dimension and they're seeing pharaohs floating in gold cherries 100 and buddhas and aliens and jokers and they're seeing all kinds of wild [ __ ] tin elves and [ __ ] and they're and everything is changing constantly around you and moving and war and if you play music it dances to the music that's the wildest thing about some psychedelics like particularly dmt if you play those south american ecoroles those uh those songs that they play when they when they do the ayahuasca ceremonies when you do that the [ __ ] the psychedelic imagery dances to the music like it changes too and syncs up with the music have you done ayahuasca no i haven't done ayahuasca i've only done dmt with with those uh ecoros i would love to do iowa i would too down the line at some point i just got to make sure i do it with legit people yeah so it's you know it's like one of those things man it should be [ __ ] legal and if it was legal then you'd know who is legit and where to go and what's good otherwise you're i think that's why they don't want you to that's why they don't want you to do it and it is weird they know i don't think they know i don't think any of those people have experienced it if they did they wouldn't make it illegal they would immediately want to change their tune because if you did it if you did dmt and then you didn't think that that was the most profound thing that's ever happened to you in your life other than like the birth of your children you you didn't do enough yeah that's the only thing that makes sense if we just like every politician once they win an election they have to have douchroom day or do a psychedelic day where they just have to hit it hard heroic doses and then go into office they should have a series of ceremonies they should probably have a series of them they should probably do some some peyote they should probably do some mushrooms they should probably do some dmt they should probably do a series of things but the problem is there's not enough people that are doing that there's not
like there's not enough people that are looking at their life and saying i want to have like a spiritual journey where i can sort of correct my path and make sure that i'm doing the right thing and i'm true to myself and i'm i'm on a like a soulful pathway and it's because that's not encouraged in our culture that's all it is and some people seek it out and those people become you know they become different people when they've had those journeys and i don't think it's for everybody i used to think it's for everybody but i don't think it's for everybody now i realized that when i thought it was for everybody i was being foolish some people are having a hard time with regular reality right and that shit's maybe not good for them i would say probably not good for them but i'm not a doctor well you know for me man it's just like i think people there's so much information out there that could help people change their life 180 degrees and they're just they don't know how to find it no one's pointed out to them yeah and it's also they don't know whether it's legit they don't know who's who's running it why is it am i going to go to jail you know there's like weird [ __ ] that is a weird thing right whether legal versus illegal like if something's legal they're like oh man i could do it and if it's illegal like oh i would never well that's what's really weird about these uh ketamine centers you know they're doing iv ketamine therapy i've never done ketamine but the friends that i have that have done it like neil brennan says he was tripping his [ __ ] balls i heard he grabbed me at the comedy store was telling me about it and i was like what is it like he's like dude i'm tripping i mean i am [ __ ] tripping oh he's still tripping no no no no he's saying like when he did it like when when he's he's like thought okay i'm gonna do this in a clinical setting it'll probably be like pretty mild it's like no because i was [ __ ] tripping balls and those are legal so you can go and get like if you're depressed if you've got anxiety there's a bunch of different
reasons why they do it and they give people ketamine therapy i don't know what the reason what what are the what's the basic like what's the requirements to get ketamine therapy what do you have to have wrong with you it's got to be like an off label thing it's not like the [ __ ] your insurance is paying for that well i i like anything that helps you explore what you're feeling instead of numbing yourself out to it and i think that's uh that's a big part of like i think what's wrong with a lot of our culture is like instead of trying to understand what you're feeling and why you're feeling it i think some people want to numb themselves out so they can continue down this path and i think we're all here on a path we're all here to learn something and sometimes the universe likes to tell us hey this isn't where your path on it makes you super uncomfortable and some people are depressed i think like things like depression anger sadness is the universe talking to you about you need to change some stuff up you're not on the path you want to go patients with depression anxiety ptsd end-of-life distress chronic pain drug and alcohol problems and other conditions may be eligible for psychedelic assisted therapy with ketamine you're in bro that's what i'm i'm telling you man enhance enhance like don't run from it you know i'm in a place right now where i think things happen for me not to me i used to be like really think everything was happening to me this is instead of like okay what's the universe trying to tell me what am i learning from this what is my role in where i am right now right and that's like that's a big power shift in how i see everything and i think we live in a society that runs away from that stuff i'm sad i'm depressed i'm all that okay why why are you why are you going to take these medications and i'm not saying all medication bad people got to do what they think is best for them and there's a lot of great uh positivity and all that stuff but a lot of people don't want to ask themselves why do they feel this way and why are they going down that line and why they want to do maybe they maybe they're meant to do something
else and they just got to get the the you know the ability to make changes in their life you got to make change to get changed that was my biggest problem i was i i wanted to change but i wasn't doing anything to get those changes right well i think so many people just get stuck you know living their life a certain way you know thinking about things a certain way and what you're saying having the philosophy that things happen for you and live your life like things happen for you like you're going to make better choices yeah whether or not you really truly believe that everything is happening for a reason if you think that way you're going to make better choices you're going to feel better about it you know i think there's a lot of anxiety that gets alleviated in certain people when they push put their trust in god right they put their trust that god has a master plan for it all it's all out of my hands i'm just going to trust god and that and people say well that's a foolish notion you don't have to think that way but the people that some of my friends that are atheists are some of the most anxiety ridden miserable well they're just so freaked out and then some of them become spiritual air quote spiritual you know and i think that i don't i don't think it's necessary for people to believe in anything but i do think that people have structures that have been long established because they help people get through the just the [ __ ] existential angst of being a person and a good strategy for that is thinking that there's a great deity that's watching over everything and thinking that you have a very special role in life that this great deity wants you to fulfill and so everything is happening for you you know it's all god's plan and if you think like that it can be very self-serving in a good way i mean it can help you like the with uh because one of one of the things a lot of people are burdened with is negative thoughts yes people are burdened with negative
thoughts and anxiety negative thoughts are the [ __ ] of [ __ ] because you can't really just turn them off like if someone goes well think positive like well [ __ ] you like when you have negative thoughts it's hard to get away from those [ __ ] yeah but if you really program your mind to think that there is a god that's watching over you and everything's gonna be fine and everything is god's will and god is a master plan for you and just keep showing up at church and keep praying and you're gonna be good if you just that'll alleviate enough anxiety for you to get a lot more [ __ ] done i 100 believe in everything you're talking about how many friends do we have that are atheists that are just riddled with anxiety just riddled just angst well they believe in like they believe they don't believe in the god or anything like that but they have a they have a faith and that faith is in science right they they they read stuff and uh they read an article and they believe they automatically have faith in what that article is telling them is real and like i have zero problems with science but i like i said i i question everything it's free might as well do it right and ask questions as long as you're willing to do the research on whatever it is you're questioning i agree because there's some [ __ ] out there that's stupid to question and then there's some [ __ ] that you go hey how come no one's questioned this you know there's there's plenty of weirdness in the world where anybody who doesn't think that some conspiracies are legitimate is naive right you're a fool because people have openly conspired people have gone to jail for conspiring right right it is a natural inclination of human beings it's not like that doesn't even make sense to me a conspiracy where they make money and they gain power what you expect me to believe that it's such a dumb attitude that people have and the problem is that phrase conspiracy theorist is such a negative if that gets slapped on you immediately people like oh you're a conspiracy theorist
yeah just a couple like enron or like uh the operation northwoods or iran contra yeah gulf of tonkin incident that got us into vietnam you know kennedy's assassination yeah you know just a few just a few beya pigs just a few just a few [ __ ] you man [ __ ] you you don't think and you don't think some conspiracies are real well then they're gonna run another one on you all the time because you don't believe in them because you're scared to say you've been tricked into not questioning the most questionable [ __ ] people that have ever existed they're the only people the reason why we go to war it's those [ __ ] and they use the same playbook over and over and over and over and over again this is a new playbook though they're turning us against each other for you know being non-binary and for uh saying spazz you see they went after beyonce unbelievable people are so they're so [ __ ] crazy with what they get outraged about spazz is an ableist term she can't say spas but it's also like what does the media choose to highlight right it's like there's a million people out there saying a million thing what do you highlight and when you highlight it it becomes like there's a there's a trend when it's really just one crazy person that's just going hey man spas is i don't even know that existed right i never thought that word was a bad word i thought that was someone who like knocks over cans and spills that's me i'm [ __ ] yeah i [ __ ] knock things over but there's an actual physical problem being [ __ ] like it's an actual thing that's the problem that's a condition i guess so like let's find out what that means we were when we grew up i didn't know anybody that had that condition but i certainly knew that phrase right it was always for a guy back in like a spas yeah or stop knocking [ __ ] over and being a [ __ ] spaz like sit down like you know you're knocking [ __ ] over i didn't know that was like this kind of thing that makes that is worth like protecting their feelings on
let's find out okay like it's in the dictionary it depends how you get here but yeah okay spazz uh third person spazzes past tense spazzed past participle spazzed uh to lose physical or emotional control he offered a post-game assessment i spazzed out real bad but still there's nothing but i i enough no disrespect to anybody but i don't understand the connection between that and okay so here it is [ __ ] often offensive a person with cerebral palsy see this is why okay so relating to or denoting a form of muscular weakness uh [ __ ] paralysis typical of cerebral palsy caused by damage to the brain or spinal cord and involving reflex resistance to passive movement of the limbs and difficulty in initiating and controlling muscular movement it's also just def defining what a spasm is so right it's right a bit of a stretch it is a bit of a stretch because it says relating to or affected by muscle spasm but they use that term sometimes for people with cerebral palsy dated what does that mean here's the lyrics from how it was used it's right down here i haven't even heard the song it says spazzing on that ass spazz on that ass fan me quick girl i need my glass bro we need to start writing raps what are we doing worse than that you ever read children's books no that's they're like people couldn't make it as rappers so they write kids books the gruffalo it's crazy i can't believe all those lyrics because it was better on top of that on top it was good yeah yeah yeah tip tip tip on hardwood floors 10 10 10 across the board is this a good song i've i haven't heard it so i don't even know like the problem is i'm reading you can't read lyrics it's [ __ ] you're an [ __ ] if you read lyrics i mean she has a beautiful voice but it's also like delivery right play it let's hear it the song's called heated and did they beep the spaz part out spazz on that so i heard they're gonna go back and correct
it oh it's kind of like let's get [ __ ] in here they let's get it started in let me get to here archie bankers rolling over this grave just give us it any time [Music] that's pretty good [Music] [Music] that's not bad not bad that's a catchy song spazzing on that ass have you ever thought that that would be an issue imagine you go back and listen to some old nwa kids and get back to me can you imagine thinking that that's a problem it's unbelievable on that ass spaz on that ass and there's like a social movement going on just people are just looking for things to complain about no matter what it is i remember when i was younger still old but younger and i didn't know what holla back girl met and i went to this chick i was telling them like what you're not you won't you're not hollow back girl she's like [ __ ] you you [ __ ] [ __ ] how are you calling and that's what doesn't mean i think it's about like a girl that hooks up with people oh oh okay you're hollering hershey hollow ain't no holla back girl you know what i'm saying right you hollered her she falls right in yeah right something like that oh okay that makes sense so it's like i don't even know what's offensive anymore i've tapped out all that the problem is everybody's got a [ __ ] opinion and there's always going to be someone out there that finds something you say offensive because if you're talking [ __ ] like we do being offensive is part of the thing yeah it's not the whole thing but occasionally it is occasionally you're saying things because they are offensive because it's funny to say something offensive sometimes yeah and people can get offended that's fine i don't know when being offended became a felony right but when it gets down to spazzing on that ass and then you're like i am not having this conversation again this is [ __ ] this needs to stop it spazzing on that ass spas on that ass that's that's the end of society as we know it
this is what we're dealing with it's pretty catchy i mean it's catchy but it's like who is actually upset so a while ago like about five years ago uh i'm an la clipper fan i love the basketball team and the clippers were i think in memphis and they were playing the memphis grizzlies and this iranian center checked in and the the announcers uh one of the announcers who had been the announcer there for like 30 or 40 years i think made a joke that that the center could uh have auditioned for borat right one guy sent in an email and this guy who had been the the the announcer for 30 or 40 years got suspended for two games one guy sent an email but did the guy look like borat yeah so what's wrong with being looking like borat he's a [ __ ] beloved character i don't even know but one guy got upset by it and emailed the the stage the television station and they suspended this guy for two years see when they say cancel culture isn't real this is somewhat what they're talking about that's so silly because what it is is it's corporations that act quickly to make it seem like there's consequences panicking they panic you know right they don't all panic some of them stand their ground and a lot of these companies are saying get out of here this is nonsense leave us alone it is nonsense it is nonsense and especially nonsense in that context because that was clearly humor the guy was cracking a joke a guy looks like borat borat's funny that's funny if he looks like borah you'll be back yeah i was there and i saw it like ah he does why is that bad it's not negative towards borah it's not negative towards him the [ __ ] is wrong with people i one no but the the point was is that one person complaining borat is the [ __ ] yeah it's a great movie it's the [ __ ] well he's a great character [ __ ] sasha baron cohen is the [ __ ] one guy how is that negative i don't know can you imagine you can't even say that so silly but why would a corporation shut it down for one dude which is getting into this like no it doesn't it doesn't have to make sense they're just panicking they're just
scared they're scared of a boycott they're scared of their name getting out there they're scared of it being like they're the person who didn't respond and then a campaign of people come after them you know i get it i get it if i was a a corporation and things are shifting this quickly i'm like whoa whoa whoa whoa whoa people are so sensitive now it's and then kovid was just gasoline gasoline on the fire gasoline yeah and now a monkey box did you know that 98 of the people who get monkey box get it from unprotected gay sex and the other two percent are liars [Music] that's just a joke kids i'm neither a statistician or but i do think that that's most of it i really do jokes aside i think uh what is it what is this like mostly what is it poppers and ass juice is that what the bad cop is having sex it's like a thing it's shingles dog but why can't um bisexual men give it to women it seems like they could right 528 infections diagnosed between april 27th and june 24th 2022 at 43 sites in 16 countries overall 98 percent of the persons with infection were gay or bisexual men 75 percent were white and 41 percent had immunological amino deficiency virus infection hiv infection the median age was 38 years old transmission was suspected to have occurred through sexual activity and 95 percent of the persons with the infection and then again it's five percent were liars and this is case series now how bad is it like when you get it see what it says common um systemic features preceding the rash included fever lethargy myalgia headache lymphadeno lymphadenopathy i guess that's like swollen lymph nodes is that what that is oh uh commitment sexually disease so okay rash lesions hmm mucosal lesions um genital levels oh yes man you get polka dots on yourself so um what do they do to cure it what do they do to cure that thing uh
people are calling out for the vaccine they're trying to get a vaccine for it i guess yeah they're already waiting in line for it so they already have a vaccine for it well there's lines in new york city you see it that you can see how long has monkey box been around for i don't even know i didn't even know there was monkey box it's a problem it is it's a problem la's declaring a state of california gavin newton's like i think they did they have emergency i get to keep my emergency cases of monkey pox are there that said 50 71. in a in a state with what how many millions 40 800 5800 people in california alone or the nationwide map sorry the u.s map 5800 people have it in the united states one florida case is listed here but included in the uk since the he was tested in the uk so this is current august 1st right 5 811 cases wow my montana i only have zero cases the [ __ ] manliest people alive they're the manliest folks since yellowstone bro that's [ __ ] kevin costner right what am i getting zero i ain't about to get [ __ ] monkey bucks com or nobody's talking yeah he's not getting much couple states with just one case which then how did they get it you know if a cowboy just has one cowboy shows up on a ranch from nebraska and all of a sudden you see a blue spot in the middle as we're watching it slowly turns blue you know what happened this one badass gay cowboy [ __ ] everybody he just shows up at these ranches slinging dick and riding ponies who how do you get one case who who gave it to him did he give it to himself yeah right who is case zero yeah where did monkey pox originate from it's uh 23 600 worldwide according to monday's numbers that's a first outbreak really good snoop dogg concert had snoop dogg at an arena 23 600 worldwide according to monday numbers from the center for disease control and prevention the outbreak first spotted in europe in late april has reached 80 countries the vast majority in nations that hadn't been previous or hadn't previously had significant caseloads of the rare viral
infection so it's a rare viral infection and monkey pox originated uh where did it originate from like the original is this like an old disease yeah is it so it's uh it's a zoonotic disease isn't it a zoonotic yeah a disease that came from animals i think it i think it is i think most of the the diseases that we have like the avian flu and this is another problem with factory farming that's one of the things that happens like they jump like pigs will get a disease and swine flu will jump and and start infecting people oh my god yeah when i was at the center for disease control with duncan we filmed an episode of joe rogan questions everything there they scared the [ __ ] [ __ ] out yeah because this is the story that's where every zombie movie starts by the way me and duncan ate edibles and we went to the airport and we got so high we missed our flight and not by a little it had taken off like a half an hour ago so we were stuck in this [ __ ] airport i mean interdimensionally traveling like so high and then we got a flight out in the morning so we basically stayed up all night till like six in the morning flew into wherever is that i guess it's houston what's outside of galveston anyway then got a rental car and then drove there so we were giddy we were silly we hadn't slept and then we were talking to this guy in this [ __ ] laboratory where the walls are as thick as this building plexiglas and inside there's people with spacesuits and they're manipulating these [ __ ] viruses they have these these big uh like vacuum ducts in the ceiling that suck any air any possible particle of a escaped virus out of them it is wild to see so this guy is showing me and he's like inside we where we have in this facility multiple diseases that could just wipe people out and then so they're they're just trying to figure out how to you know how what how what makes these viruses function that which gets really um controversial right and they're um also trying to figure out how to develop vaccines for them and medications like how do you you
know how do you kill it in vitro in a cell culture they're doing all kinds of tests on them but this scary stuff is when they try to make them better right that's game of function research that's right why you old [ __ ] and that's the [ __ ] that the obama administration shut down yeah i believe it was 2014 they shut it down did they supposedly but then you know the trump administration came along and according to uh josh rogan josh rogan is a journalist i think he's for the washington post right he was on the podcast explaining it that they restarted gain of function research wasn't doing that i thought obama was part of that and he was like visiting their those i think when he visited he was like what the [ __ ] are we doing really i think he put the gabash on it let's let's google that i'm pretty sure the obama administration put the gabash on gain of function research and then it became a question of what exactly is gain of functional research right and that was those arguments that rand paul had with fauci when they were arguing you do not with all due respect you know what you are talking about wow yeah and he uh they were going back and forth in this very fascinating way because the the problem is the term i almost wish they'd abandoned the term that that rand paul said okay did you or did you not take viruses and make it so they were more they were more effective in infecting human beings and did you or did you not develop them on human lung cultures did you or did you not do that did you or do did you not alter viruses to make them more infectious capable of infecting human beings did you do that did you what kind of stuff did you do to viruses tell us what you did like you know don't call it gain of function research let's call it abracadabra what abracadabra did you do to the virus perfect term did someone do abracadabra did you give someone money to do gabriel cadabra forget about get a function let's just say this thing where you're manipulating viruses let's just call it abracadabra did you did we do
that did we spend money did we spend taxpayers money okay 2017 on december 19 2017 the u.s national institutes of health announced that they would resume funding gain of function experience right so this is during the trump administration so the moratorium had been in place since october 2014 right so that's it so during the obama administration in october of 2014 wow they went let's stop doing this at the time the nih has stated that the moratorium uh in quotes will be effective until a robust and broad deliberate deliberative process is completed that results in the adoption of a new u.s government gain of function research policy what that seems like read that statement again will be effective until a robust and broad deliberative process is completed that results in the adoption of a new us government game of function research policy so that means they they were planning on restarting it no matter what that's what the nih stated so they were like until we meet again that's basically what they said just hold on we'll get the funding we're gonna make it happen the crazy thing is like now that they've done this and now that this uh this virus has come you know out and infected the world there's still the question of where it came from and there's still people saying it came from the uh wet market like i just read an article recently and i was like okay who believes this and who thinks this is horseshit have you ever heard of the uh spars pandemic simulation no it's kind of like event 201 have you heard of 201 no well you've never heard of does that have anything to do with new jersey no well i don't know where is uh john hopkins uh located so this is a very interesting one this is our pandemic scenario what is what is this uh center for health security.org this is a legitimate website yes okay and this is a training exercise
based on a fictional scenario here's the problem it basically tells you the game plan that went down and it's before we get into this one will you look up event but no no no no no no we were here let's just get to it okay okay because i just wanted to set no no no no no okay let's not jump we're here okay hold on hold on but just let me just establish this the center spars pandemic exercise narrative compromises or comprises rather a futuristic scenario that illustrates communication dilemmas concerning medical countermeasures that could plausibly emerge in the not so distant future its purpose is to prompt users both individually and in discussion with others to imagine the dynamic and often times conflicted circumstances in which communication around emergency mcm development distribution and uptake takes place well that just makes sense because in chaos in any kind of an emergency it's very difficult to get information out but okay but all that's logical while engaged with a rigorous simulated health emergency scenario readers have the opportunity to mentally rehearse responses while also weighing the implications of their actions at the same time readers have a chance to consider what potential measures implemented in today's environment might avert comparable communication dilemmas or classes of dilemmas in the future that makes sense that you would want to have something like that in place right so where is it bad so what what basically it gets in is it's uh it's if you follow it it's step by step exactly what happened let's see what the steps are you have to go through it now a real quick i know you don't want to jump but if you get into this thing we're not jumping we'll go we'll go to that okay but for this so if they outlined it step by step yes and this is the plan they had in case of pandemic broken well so of course they outline right but there's also a notion that this is the game plan that they created to follow okay there's that okay there is that the problem with that is it implies a
grand conspiracy to release a virus into the world right i think much more likely the virus accidentally got into the world and then what they had to do was figure out a way to manage people okay and they did it by the same ways that they had devised to handle a pandemic if one was to break out i think it's way more likely that someone did some sloppy [ __ ] especially when you find out that the laboratory where they think it might have emerged from yeah had safety violations in 2018 like they weren't these people are not happy doing what they're doing like i'm sure they're getting forced into working with [ __ ] viruses and there's probably some [ __ ] you know i mean you see the way they treat the foxconn employees how are they treating the employees at the virus place are they tip top magoo is it like galveston where they're on the spaceships right right where they have like n95 massive handling ebola what the [ __ ] are they doing do we know you know it's interesting it's interesting my guess my guess i'm obviously not an expert is that it got out and they tried to panic and they tried to contain it and then they tried to lie about it and then there's a bunch of people that do not under any circumstance want to tie it to u.s funded research and when you read stories about oh it definitely came from the wet market they don't have an animal host they don't they don't yeah so if they don't have patients here right they don't have that so if they don't have that like they don't really know there's a lot of guessing and there there are legitimate scientists that think it may have come from a wet market that's legitimate what if i just don't know if they're correct there's a lot of people that don't think so there's a lot of people that have examined the virus and think that it's been manipulated the problem is i'm too dumb to know yeah i mean if you're too dumb what does that make me jesus christ but my whole thing is it here's my whole thing with everything it's your whole thing with everything sam tripler you
have to be the title your book that will be my next special um it always just seems like this if if it's just some random event that got out of hand how come it always seems to fall the same way where the same people get the money and same and get all the power all the time because they're the people that already have the money and the power and they keep keep expanding it it's a natural human instinct it's a natural human instinct when you're governing people to try to have as much control over them as possible because you can get [ __ ] done like that's why people are so angry at trudeau with that trucker rally because it's a natural human instinct to try to demean those people and to say that many of them are racists and misogynists it was a crude way he did it like it was really it was very clunky like if you're a leader you're a leader and this is the way you treat people with no evidence right because they didn't have evidence that they were racist and misogynist and if how many of them there's hundreds but that's one of the game plans right right right but with no evidence you're you're not supposed to do that if you're a person that people are supposed to look to as a leader you should be offering evidence why this group is problematic and evidence with like real research and you know it for a fact and you can prove it in court if you want to say that you want to say hey maybe you didn't know but there's a bunch of nazi truckers heading our way and they really are nazis we should know that too right right but you we're never going to believe you now so when when you say that these people are terrible people just because they're protesting against mandates it means you don't like protests that's what it means you don't want protecting you don't like crushing power that's a natural human instinct to try to stop stop the people that are the dissenters stop the people that are questioning stop the people that are opposing you stop them in their tracks by whatever means we can investigate them find out what they're doing cut them off at the pass you know you you have to have an ability to talk about stuff that you don't like and protests are a part of that we just
have a different set of rules down here man we have the first amendment it's a totally different thing you know we have this uh ability to express ourselves that's pretty rare in terms of like it really is yeah i mean other countries are pretty free but this place is really [ __ ] free in terms of the most of the world and anyone who denies that like i'm not a fan of drone strikes and unnecessary wars and capitalist agendas that ruin environments i'm not a fan of any of these things let's just be real clear but when you look at it you gotta look at the big picture this is like the first time over the last like couple of hundred years that people just generally got along or when a boat shows up at your shore most of the time you don't think they're trying to kill you right it's only been a few hundred years or 400 years you know i mean we all [ __ ] columbus read about what columbus did you know read about what columbus did read about what those people did it's horrific there were monsters there were barbarians they killed babies they cut people's arms off because they didn't bring back enough gold there's a there was a priest that traveled with them and rhoda he wrote like a journal and they got a hold of this journal they're reading about this guy talking about what the columbus's men did unbelievable it's scary there were like sanctioned monsters you know and that was most people back then man most most of those [ __ ] marauders and explorers they did horrible [ __ ] man horrible [ __ ] you know you read the empire summer moon and find out what the comanches did to other indians yeah oh my god horrible [ __ ] man they would capture people cut their arms and legs off and then while they were alive throw them on the fire oh and watch them and they would laugh and laugh and they would always fight to the death native americans would fight to death because they didn't believe in captives like if you got captured you're getting tortured and killed like you
might as well fight now they're not going to like put you in a prison take care of you and try to [ __ ] prisoner war and give you back when the war is over no you're getting murdered slowly and agonizingly what they did the women was off cut their noses off one of the girls was in the empire the summer moon she was kidnapped and then when they returned it they returned her without her nose and they they freaked out went back and killed a bunch of people and it's they brought people to trial it was terrifying times man where just the ruthlessness of human nature was so awful and obviously the things that the europeans did to the native americans is awful too but the most awful thing they did was give them small box give them diseases yeah that's like kids it wasn't even blankets man that's that's apparently a myth too they didn't really understand virology back then like that they just gave it to them they just gave it to them by being around them that's what killed everybody in north america killed like 90 of the native americans like when we talk about like the genocide of north american indians it's real 100 but it's also disease did it too disease killed most of them and that's probably why the [ __ ] mayan pyramids were left there that's probably why when you go through the amazon when they they do that lidar scan of the amazon they find these ancient pathways and structures that indicated grids where cities were they probably all died off yeah from [ __ ] smallpox it's wild [ __ ] it is man and like the the history of man is like who knows what the real timeline is i think the timeline goes way back i think it goes back tens of thousands of years before the younger driest impact that's what i think one hundred percent i think it only makes sense when you see [ __ ] like the pyramids and you see some of the really ancient structures like gobekli tepe like what 12 000 years ago they did this like who did this and where these pyramids are located ley lines all that stuff just the amazing way they have it
due north south east and west and it comes to this perfect peak like you can't make any [ __ ] ups when you're building a pyramid there and they have some that are [ __ ] up some that are like kind of bent and jacked but what uh graham hancock thinks is those are the ones where people were trying to imitate the older structures just everybody had died off they lost everybody like they got to a very high level of sophistication and then everybody died it's almost like grizzly bears who move into houses in michigan like this is my cave dog exactly dude it's exactly like that it's exactly like that yeah i used to have a bit about it that we were the children of the idiot stoneworkers of egypt and everybody else died i i was my joke was that the dumb people out [ __ ] the smart people but i think what it really probably was was some sort of cataclysmic event i think it happened all over the world and i only think this because of talking to randall carlson and all the physical evidence that he provides when they do the core samples and they find all that iridium at like 12 000 years ago and and there's another moment too i think like 10 000 years ago i think we got [ __ ] blasted with space rocks i think it killed most people and then people had to rebuild that's why have you ever heard the brock saga you were going to tell me about the 201 thing though okay i mean but it gets into that what i was telling you before i just felt like we had to like if you want to get into 201 we can get into that it was basically what is 201 basically to 201 is a lot like what the thing i was telling you where these people got together and they they just basically role played out what happened if if a giant pandemic came out and scenarios and it just totally matched up to what happened now the only thing tiny pushback i put is that you see like laws being passed for kovid before the pandemic actually happens what do you mean like uh certain laws pass to give the government certain uh um powers if uh and then they literally let's pause this right here because i got a piece so bad oh yeah
yeah let's play because i drank uh two giant liquid ivs after getting out of sauna all right we'll be right back we see that in l.a man this is a drought though in texas this is unusual for texas really yeah it usually rains a lot here which is one of the things that i love um fire's dying down okay it says uh star flight has been contacted according to austin fire department which says the fire is dying down no evacuations have happened yet oh hold on go back to that it says low fuels mulch and bushes fire dying down okay fire's dying down do the craziest thing i do joke about but the craziest thing is that uh when you know in california the fires were like people like live stream driving through the murder fires i know and you're like what are you doing it's all for clicks and views i know it's like you're gonna die stupid and people do die like that they died in not doing uh live streaming but died in their cars trapped in fires in northern california oh that one big giant fire a lot of people died from fires i think there was a very high number uh of people that got stuck on this one road you imagine yeah you're stuck in traffic and you watch the fire just evaporating the cars in front of you and you know you can't go backwards and you can't go forwards and you're stuck with your family that's one of the reasons why i had my land cruiser made if you gotta get out yeah i wanted to get in a apocalypse vehicle yeah respect that giant gas tank giant gas tank that can drive over anything a car can drive over other than like one of them crazy jeeps that expect that can articulate get a militia going bro just a bro just a whole group of people crossbows guns i just think you should have something that can drive on a place where there's no road yeah it's a good thing to have i think that's huge bro because that when when [ __ ] went down out here i have a 1995 land cruiser and i don't know if you know about those but the land cruisers are like some of the most dependable off-road vehicles that have ever been made and the 95s were the one of the the
last models the 80 series i have the fzj80 80s it's it's dope icon built it for me it's silver it's sweet it's beautiful it's dope as [ __ ] is this some batman [ __ ] it looks like a nine you know 1995 land cruiser it's just got cool tires on it and great lights but it's got flood light so i could see all kinds of [ __ ] with it but most importantly these cars have solid axles front and rear it's a real off-road vehicle so you even though like most people that bought them used them for like mall crawling like they were used in afghanistan they were using a lot of like uh overseas uh military applications they're [ __ ] durable as [ __ ] that's why a lot of those guys who came over like jack carr the guy who wrote the terminal list the reason why if you watch that television show chris pratt's driving a land cruiser he's driving a 60 series 62 series which is a dope model year and he's got this like souped up one by the same company it's icon one you need something to get out i think about that in l.a all the time dude when shit's the fan everyone's trying to get out yeah if you got a corvette you're not going over here yeah yeah yeah you gotta have something to do out of here i know it's dirt bike or something most of the time you're not gonna need it i know i know most of the time it's so silly to prepare like this but if you do if you do if you needed to drive over the ground most people can't do it there's no you know your your car can't do it and my car can only go some places you can't go straight up a mountain you can't go where there's no road you're not gonna go but the difference between being able to like when when the snow hit out here i was having a great [ __ ] day i was on that lake [ __ ] yeah man that thing just drives like so smooth over snow it was like oh it was like that all the time my truck was like we got this dude we got this i think about like if shit's a fan in la how am i gonna get my kids out it's too big there's too many people i want to live straight on the edge of l.a yeah that's when they flood right to you then they're gonna go right we gotta beat them all bro
you gotta live a couple miles outside of a place like i mean a couple hours out outside of a place like la to be able to like have enough time to evacuate when the zombie apocalypse do you think about that with like austin where you're gonna go if you had to i didn't think about that until coveted i mean i did think about that but not really think about that until kovit when cove had happened i was like what if this was way worse and what if the power grid went down and what if there was a solar flare that blacked out all communications and you know what if there's an asteroid impact that takes out chicago and blows our grid to pieces and there's a nuclear winter because of the [ __ ] i think about that all the time that can happen man yellowstone can blow you know there's a lot of things that could go wrong there's a lot but the asteroid impact one is one of the most likely what's happened before man it happens all the time we we are getting at least little tiny ones that are flying through our atmosphere all the time i think there's like an alarming number that enter into our atmosphere every day but they're usually small like what is the number of meteorites that enter into our atmosphere let's just guess i must say i think it's like a hundred really yeah what do you think a thousand a thousand every day every day oh every day every day gotta be a couple uh i mean yeah about 100 i'm low ball i'm low ball i'm saying 100 but i think it's i probably get thousands over like a year i think maybe let's well let's find out and i think it's more than 100 i think i'm super low balling how many meteorites enter into our atmosphere it added together a bunch so it added together meteoroids micro meteoroids and other space debris an estimated 25 million enter every day 25 mil every day whoa that's it's amazing that's what that is that should be the name of your next special space bulgaki dude you should do a bid on this and you should literally name it spacebook document oh my gosh
look at that one it's estimated that probably 500 meteorites reach the surface of the earth each year okay but less than 10 are recovered that's interesting that is because most fall into the ocean land and in remote areas of earth landing places that are not easily accessible or just not seen to fall they fall during the day interesting do you know that they find a lot of uh chunks from the moon meteorites that uh are apparently they know they're from the moon they find them in antarctica the moon is really interesting dude really interesting cause like it doesn't make sense a lot of it people think like why it's there how it works what it represents there are cultures that remember when the moon wasn't there they're probably not right okay hey you know what they think they're ancient bro yeah they're not right they know how old the moon is they know how the old the moon is like that's one of them theories it's like it's silly to go that far to think there's cultures that knew when there was no moon no they don't dude there's some weird energy stabilizes our atmosphere it stabilizes like a lot of things about uh like the the the moon is uh what is it one quarter size of the earth right isn't it it's an energy collection it's one-sixth earth gravity what is it one quarter size of the earth how big is the moon i think it's less than that i think the moon's interesting bro i think it's less than a quarter i think i think it's an energy collector oh okay and uh pac-man is about the moon less than a third the width of earth i don't know oh that's a lot bigger than i thought the third i'm i i a third the width of earth really it gives back a lot of different answers for the way that you say how big is the moon so the prevailing theory i believe is that the moon was formed when earth was hit by another planet a radius of uh 1080 miles the moon is less than a third of the width of earth if earth are the size of a nickel the moon would be about as big as a coffee
bean the moon is an average of 238 855 miles away earth is four times bigger than the moon is more than one quarter 27 percent the size of the earth wow so it's more than 25 percent a much larger ratio than any other planets and their moons so what they think is that earth they have um i think the theory is earth one and earth two and that earth one was the original earth and this was like the early formation of earth and then earth was hit by another planet because back then [ __ ] was wild yeah it was wild out there by the way that's not that long ago right earth is only like four point something billion years old right and the universe is like 10 billion almost 10 billion more than that for what we know so it's crazy like the universe around for 10 billion i can't even think about in years like what was that what happened the moment before the universe showed up what was there right what was there dude these meat suits can't i can't calculate that [ __ ] well that in the idea of infinity is too much yeah we can't we we can pretend that we can understand it but it's not really i think these are sumo meat suits right like kind of like when you go to a party and you're like doing those and they're meant to limit our ability that to understand certain thoughts for reason for on purpose yeah because we're here for karma well isn't it oh what yeah dude i believe we're here this is a realm of karma and we're here to figure something out really yes that's my honest belief huh and this dude these meat suits are purposely made to limit our capacity to figure stuff out so we don't just superman this [ __ ] or the boys hit so we have to go through and we have to learn this thing i think we live multiple lives it gets into this thing about abundance versus scarcity and i think we live multiple lives until we get it right i've heard that ex that that thought is an old thought a lot of people believe that including elio gracie like the grandfather of the gracie clan i do believe it he believed that you believe you live your life over and over again
until you get it right i think we're taught scarcity as children that there's only limited this and limited that and it puts fear into us instead of that there's enough for everybody and the more you give away the more more it comes back to you and like we you only live once buh-buh-buh that's pounded into us so i think that we have multiple lives that's interesting you're you're like kind of almost like back engineering it hey man i try to look at it from like ancient times to today you know what we know about ancient times versus today like what is going on and i think i think people had i think if you look at the impact theory and the concept is that people were super advanced they built all these giant structures and then something happened and then they had to rebuild yep it almost kind of makes sense because you have people that are like super intelligent but they're acting like [ __ ] total psychos like like people would if it was like a mad max scenario and then it eventually evolved be less of a mad max scenario like and then you know it became just kings and monarchs and ruling over people and famine and disease and occasionally witches and but it all like the reason why people are so [ __ ] smart and why none of it makes sense is because we we did have a certain level of sophistication at one point in time we don't have any more yep i i think history is a giant lie i think we're told a lot of history that we know isn't exactly what what went down i think you know there's a whole bunch of stuff when pieces start coming together you're like whoa how do these conversations go with callan when you guys do oh it's the best bro it's conspiracy theories oh yeah yeah does that he doesn't uh he doesn't believe in all but you know he's a great guy i love him and i love him the pieces and it's a fun show i think if he believed in anything it would just be another conspiracy show but the fact that i always used to love the old um the old debate show william f buckley where they chop in suits and verbally
announcing each other firing line yeah and i always wanted to do that and so when when you know calen's like let's do a show i'm like okay let's do it and that's the it's the number one debate show between binary men okay we just we just kind of go at each other right and it works and i i just enjoy it he doesn't want he believes in some stuff he doesn't want to believe but that's why the show is great and i enjoy it i love hidden history uh i kind of started getting into it when this uh author matt lacroix came on my podcast he told me about all the pyramids and how like all the pyramids around the world have such similar architecture and design and how they're on all these ley lines and then i had this woman who kind of helped change my life her name is van gaalt she's a buddhist author and she was saying the same thing but in a spiritual way and i go wow the man we got science over here saying this and then spirituality saying this maybe there's something to it and it's just about all kind of like the anunnaki and stuff like that whether you want to get into that but i believe we have a long long history of of that we've been lied to about how really special we are wait a minute have we been lied to or are we all trying to figure it all out this is the problem that i have with a lot of conspiracy theorists is that they want to think that someone in every every facet of life someone has it completely under control and knows exactly what it is and why we're here okay what's wrong with that is that everybody started off as a baby everybody that's alive today started off as a baby and they started off as a baby fairly recently yeah you know so i don't think they know i don't think it's possible i think you'd have to be alive back then to really know what the [ __ ] is up and even if you believe even if you 100 believe you don't know for sure even if you believe in some wacky skull and crossbones [ __ ] scroll that they pull out where they tell you how the earth was formed yeah the anunnaki are coming you gotta be prepared and you gotta suck a dick with a polaroid
because we have to have evidence on you what do you mean it's not working again the only way we can do this is you got to suck a dick on camera you know that's like even if you believe all that i think you don't know and i think that's the reality of being a person i don't think there's any all-knowing all-wise person that's easily running the the world through strings like like a puppeteer i think it's more likely a bunch of people that have amassed mass wealth and power and they're trying to maintain that in any way shape possible and that doesn't even leave a lot of time for exploring the origins of mankind and then conspiring to keep it from the plebs i i agree with a lot of that okay the only pushback i have is when we take a look at like let's say how canada treated the indigenous people right so they went in there and they kind of made these deals with people and then what they did is they shipped their their children off to schools away from the adults and the elders and that made a disconnect well they did that here too yeah and and it makes a disconnect from your heritage yeah and i think that's a big big issue with the black community that was done to them they never really were told how powerful they truly are and like that we mistake this thing culture for heritage and heritage isn't your culture is not heritage your heritage is much different and your heritage is uh your lineage through you your people through time and that allows you to get a running start in life right and we're trying to erase their heritage yes so that's why that's what they did in in to the native americans too as well that is a common theme in cultures when they take over another culture right they they make them assimilate to their laws and their gods and their way of living you know the native americans one of the things that most demoralizing for the men was they cut cut all their hair off you know they would shave their heads they'd you know give them buzz cuts and i was reading this book one of i think it's black elk speaks i think it's that one um about this guy going through that whole system and
being alive during the time when the native americans roam the plains whether and being right there when they all got when it all got taken down destroyed and being alive when like um sitting bull like uh that whole um little bighorn thing went down they killed custer and all those uh americans [ __ ] up and they came in there was a giant super camp of native americans that have come together in union like for the first time ever and they slaughtered them this guy was alive when all that happened and then went on to be you know captured by the system and have to live on a reservation and the whole deal and these uh people that tell these stories about those times it's i mean it's no wonder why so many native americans are alcoholics and stuck on these reservations and he's in horrible poverty like the whole thing was atrocious it's like it's a terrible moment in history when you uh you think that that is how history was done over and over and over again like this is like what we're dealing with with today with everybody being woke and super sensitive and over crazy is still way better than living you know as a plains indian in the 1800s and having all this [ __ ] happen to you like all the things that are happening in society even if they're questionable and even if they're problematic at least for most people are moving in a better direction most people i mean even people that want to be working why do they want to be well what does that mean well they want to be the most sensitive the most inclusive the most kind so like their intentions are probably good and then they get crazy with it and then some people are like hyper aggressive with it like you know the few percentage on each side right whether it's the right-wing people that want to take down the capital or the left-wing people that want to light the capitol building on fire because you know you're not supporting trans women's rights to have babies in the bathroom at k-mart like you know whatever the [ __ ] talk dancing for gay ukrainians get pregnant yeah something like that you ukrainian men
have abortions yeah 100 it's like we're moving in a good direction it's i don't really believe that there's a mastermind behind it all i think there's people that capitalize on weakness and vulnerability and during covet obviously we were very vulnerable and the economy became very weak and those are very dangerous uh scenarios for people that are used to capitalizing on moments when society is weak and divided in moments of economic strife moments when they can control markets and control industries and figure out how to profit the most and how to eliminate certain competitors you know it's all scary [ __ ] man because economics does play a factor in how they make decisions that can affect the vast majority of us and the people that are profiting off of these decisions it's small amount of people small group of people man like here's a question who owns the [ __ ] oil in the ocean and why do you get it who who gets it who gets to pump that up isn't that the world stuff yeah like how do you own that you don't own that part of land like you can't own the ocean right the ocean is international waters right like how many yards from the shore are they allowed to pump and say like this is california's oil like it would point out at what point in time i mean i'm sure there's probably a law but at what point in time they decide that that's someone can own that because if you're going to sell oil that you got out of the ocean like first of all you should give us a piece because sometimes you guys [ __ ] up and it ruins the beach well i don't even know why when they [ __ ] up we gotta pay for it that's like going to a restaurant and they're like hey the cook [ __ ] up your chicken it's gonna be another five bucks you're like why pay for it oil companies post record earnings a sky high price they're posting record earnings while the [ __ ] that's weird that they would charge a lot for gas and make a lot of money yeah it's crazy wow what business model is that eight points the best one billion dollar profit for bp as prices soared during the russia ukraine war wow the world is a blaze and the oil
industry just posted record profits is it us or them it's like hey is that a dick in my ass or a finger i just want to know what is happening it's it's it's nuts i also don't i also don't think there's a limited supply of oil i think it replenishes itself and you make it you make it seem like oh dude we might run out we might run out we got we got to jack it up a little bit it doesn't take a long [ __ ] time to replenish yeah i mean it might yeah i mean i think the idea is that it replenishes itself but the idea is that the supply might outstrip the demand i don't think anybody's questioning whether or not the world will make more oil i think the question is how much does it make how long does it take to make enough that we need to drive you know [ __ ] one of them badass mustangs yeah well is that why they called it fossil fuel forever because it was like the notion that it was from dead dinosaurs which was hilarious i think it was i think that's a misnomer i think they think it's more dead plant material i think it's decaying plant material if i remember correctly see if that's the case i don't think there's enough dinosaurs i think that was just like a silly way of thinking about it i don't think they think i think it's a bunch of bile or organic matter a natural fuel such as coal or gas formed in geological paths from the rem remains of living organisms but what kind of organisms mostly is it mostly fossil fuel just google fossil fuel is mostly plants plants and animals and animals dead plants and animals that is extracted i would imagine there's way more uh animals than plants yeah what is the process i don't remember where i read that but you remember it was like peak oil is going to come we're all in trouble you're like what but that's what um [ __ ] i was going to tell you something i forgot it [Laughter] decompo decomposing plants and animals god damn
it was i going to tell you [ __ ] i had it it was a good one too i'll probably remember it in a moment i think it's interesting dude i think uh yeah i i don't know if it's one i think there's a lot group of people but i think there is a push to not allow us to know how special we are and that that really is a big part of what's everything going on and i think they really are doing that on purpose or do you think they're not thinking about that i think they're just thinking about trying to make a lot of money uh again i think it's a spiritual war and it's being done purposefully i could be wrong i've been wrong about uh the first 48 years of my life so it's an interesting theory we should explore it you don't have to have any i mean i get it you could be wrong we're jim fine with you get used to it after a while yeah um i i just like when you study like there's this book called murder by injection and it was talking about uh how the um uh rockefellers and what they did to them uh the medical the healthcare industry and what the rockefellers did yeah what they do well they basically pumped all this money into the american medical association which basically became this kind of like uh it became the standard for the government's policies on uh you know health but in reality it was more like just an organized crime family what that dude study this stuff they like dude they you know the weirdest thing is is they wage war on on the chiropractic community oh but that's probably a good thing let's let's go to this first murder by injection the story of a medical the medical conspiracy against america paperback um 391 ratings and five stars the present work result of some 40 years of investigative research is a logical progression from my previous books the expose of international control of monetary issues in banking practices the united states a later work revealing that the secret network of organizations through which these alien forces wield political power the secret committees
foundations and political parties through which their hidden plans are implemented and now the most vital issue of all the manner in which these depredations affect the daily lives and health of american citizens despite the great power of the hidden rulers i felt oh boy this guy this is a run-on sentence from a guy that's an adderall son this guy's on the good [ __ ] he's on that i need to write a book right now [Laughter] this is crazy this is a great book so yeah you get into that and then the other book is i'm sure you know about is tragedy and hope and it's like but let's let's explore this so what do you think happened with with the the medical community basically the rockefellers created the basically funded the ama to basically almost make it so it was impossible unless you played ball with them to get anything and get any funding going to be seen as legitimate and they controlled it through that and they ran out any holistic medicine or anything like that that was wasn't involving a pill about pharmaceutical companies or anything like that now i'm going to be honest with you i'm not i'm not explaining it as well as it should be but that's don't be hard on yourself you're doing an amazing job you should be in front of yale right now the only way i'm gonna be at yells if i'm a custodian so [Laughter] so i mean but basically they basically took over everything defined have with us what is that jamie you got something that guy could be at yale he sounds super important he seemed very important but oh okay he basically they basically i don't i have no way of knowing yet came they basically took over and became the the governing body of how the the healthcare medical communities operated but doesn't somebody have to be the governing body don't they have to make sure that people don't get sold snake oil and and fake medicine which is really gross
had done that throughout history right 100 but then that could easily be manipulated to go the other way so that you are buying snake oil and you are buying these things that maybe aren't the most healthiest for you when there's healthy opportunity healthy options out there that maybe someone can't make as much money off of i will they're certainly always here okay go ahead please this is the author of the book i believe is wikipedia i believe him look at his face oh here we go with anti-semitism and i'm just saying this this is what the wikipedia says he is he's an american white supremacist anti-semitic uh conspiracy theorist propagandist holocaust denial oh god holocaust denial okay writer a disciple of the poet ezra pound i don't know who that is but hold on um in which he alleges that several high-profile bankers had conspired to write the federal reserve act for their own nefarious purposes and then included congress to and then what no not in connecticut enacted acted into law the southern poverty law centers described them as a one-man organization of hate the problem is a southern poverty law center uh didn't they have a similar designation for sam harris like wasn't there like an issue where they called him an anti they called him something something i don't want to put words in there well you know it was like a real issue with like multiple people being accused of horrific offenses by them that they've been sued they sued people or people sued them rather well if you look at esg right which is environmental social governance that is basically a new branding of what they call cultural marxism and if you look up culture and marxism it would say it's anti-semitic so here hold on a second this guy wrote that he espoused anti-semitic views and expressed the belief that america owed a debt to hitler jesus yeah you might not might want to look into this but that doesn't change sam it does change it changes a lot it changes the only source that you have for this wacky [ __ ] theory no i mean it uh there's a there's other books i just haven't read no but why is it so exciting for you to think that that's
true that that that that's the case instead of that people are messy and that the american medical association was trying to figure out a way to govern and figure out what's what what's real what's not real and have high standards in terms of what medications they accept and what physicians they accept and then along the way money compromises that right and then people start denying the use of certain medications because they're not profitable and pushing and propagandizing towards other medications and maybe not even also being deceptive and inaccurate about test results because they want to achieve a desired result that will be more profitable now that's been proven to be true right that's been proven to be true with violence by who like the cdc right yeah well i mean this is like the court w the w-h-o and all that that's simply the same thing i'm saying just a modern-day version of it whether you take the cdc or the ama sort of but what i'm saying is that the roots of it were not this nefarious plot to imprison americans the roots of it were most likely that they were trying to figure out what is legitimate medicine and what is not legitimate medicine and that along the way then nefarious people can compromise the system that's already in place for profit if they have gotcha some sort of a power system that allows them to dictate who gets funded and who doesn't that is provable okay that's real stuff i i and i totally agree with that but i think that could be applied that guy might be well a broken clock could be right twice a day right i mean like somebody could say some stupid right [ __ ] or it might be he's out of his [ __ ] mind it can be but i think there's a history that he just illustrates and i could be wrong and i'll take an l on that why do you believe that there's a history of them manipulating stuff and because uh um why do i believe that because you could do research into it and see what they're doing i mean if we just take a look what's going on right now well right now i think goes back to what we were talking about before that certain people do get compromised by the
thoughts of profit and whether it's people that are the head of pharmaceutical companies that are pushing some new medication that's going to be very very profitable or you know whether it's the people that decide to fund certain research and not fund other research or rig studies or also like throw out bad studies the thing is it's not transparent you know if they do like 10 studies and they can do 10 and throw out eight and find two of them that show a good result and they can say we got a good result and the way they can describe these results is like really sneaky and this is what they get busted for and this is why we found out that they lied about opiates being addictive when they were pushing oxycontin and oxycodone and all that [ __ ] they i mean there's like there's a direct paper trail it shows they were deceptive you know and this is what they've done like big corporations have done this forever have you seen what is it called dope is that what dope sick sick haven't seen you haven't seen it everybody tells me it's sick i have to watch it in a good way it is the it is the exact playbook that they ran well that's about the opiates right right yeah that's real but so that's my whole opinion like maybe that guy's a an idiot and i hate anybody who is like this group is that doing this i don't think it's like a born in group or anything like that but i do believe people conspire i think they do too right this is where you and i uh share but i'm trying to look at it like objectively right the problem with conspiracies and conspiracy theories is they're [ __ ] fun yeah i love them yeah i love bigfoot and ufos yeah and ghosts and hip hop earth i love hearing all this crazy [ __ ] like hitler was conspiring with demons and what magic bro i mean also like that maybe hitler lived and moved to argentina how about that you don't play that one oh i don't know i i tim kennedy was the one who uh filled me in on that and and everybody goes that's crazy do you folks know that there is a giant thriving german community in argentina and some of them have [ __ ] like this is grandpappy like it's an ss soldier wearing his [ __ ] uniform on
the wall of their house like tim kennedy described going to these places and seeing these people they have oktoberfest down there have you ever seen that yeah bro it is a fact okay escaped nazi germany and went to south america right i don't think the nazis lost the war i think germany lost the war this is oktoberfest in uh argentina how nuts is that that is not nuts there's that many germans down there look at these people they got the lederhosen dude they got the [ __ ] crazy they got the old-school dress and the bagpipes and [ __ ] that's wild that is secret german village in the middle of argentina like bro now now google this did nazis escape germany and move to argentina that whole uh now you got to remember also 1947 the way you get information is books and newspapers that's it you know in argentina in argentine haven for futur the fugitive nazis jesus in argentine haven for fugitive nazis april means chocolate eggs and hitler parties 20 years after the capture of eric how do you say his name in some are trying to come to terms with the city's legacy of silence how do you say that word barolos some in barolos so most likely that's what that is do you think that's crazy have you ever seen go back up to the top well no no scroll through the first paragraph what does it say here a little boy han schultz the blue-eyed son of a hitler youth member would walk uphill half a block each afternoon from the german school to his white stucco house in the argentine ski resort of barolosh steps from an icy lake hugged by andean peaks inside he'd often find his dad the president of the town's german argentinian culture association sitting with his vice president and close friend and osteur
well-respected delicatessen owner named eric this is wild [ __ ] man yeah dude scroll scroll down a little further does it say anything else is notable yeah it's very not very oh hold on a second hold up here we go last october prima k died in rome where he spent his final years under house arrest serving a life sentence for his role in carrying out the massacre of 335 civilians at the our deity caves in 1944 when he was a captain in the nazi ss but from 1946 when he was smuggled to argentina until 1994 when the tv journalist sam donaldson confronted him on a bar illusion i hope i'm not [ __ ] up that word barlow street pre-bokeh lived a comfortable if fabricated life in this bavarian style city at the bottom of the world holy [ __ ] dude when i looked into the operation paper clip when they just they were there was a they didn't all come to america some went to russia some went else they went elsewhere have you ever looked into huntsville alabama that's wild though that's wild no i haven't looked into huntsville albert what's huntsville alabama what dude they have he's excited i've seen it i know he was going with this yeah tell me dude they have an arena named after a nazi von braun like and then in a hot oh you mean werner von braun yeah yeah that's an interesting one right that's a really interesting one werner von braun who was the um can i do joke for you real quick yeah okay please a nazi a scientologist no a nazi a nazi a scientologist a pedophile and a um i'm not you know what's a satanist okay a nazi a satanist a pedophile and a scientologist walk into a bar what do they do what do they do invent nasa [Laughter] the horrible story of nasa is that nasa was uh constructed with uh people from operation paperclip which was nazi scientists like not just people that were working under nazi germany but people actively practiced as nazis the simon wiesenthal center google this
make sure it's true because i keep saying it at one point in time the simon wiesenthal center i believe said that if werner von braun was alive today they would prosecute him for crimes against humanity because yeah because people claimed that he had hung the five slowest jews in front of his rocket factory in berlin that's so they would encourage people to work faster oh my god now that part i don't know if it's true so we should probably find that out or edit it out but i've said it so many times i know i've read it i know i read it and i know why well you're not pushing books by anti-smack so you look good on this i know i watched a documentary where a guy who is a um a concentration camp survivor remembered seeing werner von braun at the uh at the camps or at the um at the rocket factory but that's a it's it's a fact that they use jews as slave labor it's a fact right yeah and it's tragic and it's it's scary [ __ ] that they brought those people over and they knew they were nazis and they also had those um dueling scars in their face this is the wiesendoll centers what does it say article about the us and nazis right says this was interesting united states record on this issue can basically be divided into four periods during the first which lasted from the end of the war in 1945 until approximately 1948 the u.s government played a major role in the prosecution of senior nazi officials at the nuremberg trials and of other criminals in additional proceedings some of which were held in former concentration camps during the second period from 1948 until approximately 1953 the exact opposite happened with the cold war already underway the u.s lost interest in actively pursuing nazi war criminals preferring to build up west germany as a bulwark against communism and therefore adopting a far more lenient attitude towards former nazis some of whom were enlisted as intelligence sources or rocket scientists their criminal nazi past ignored equally appalling was the fact that during these years u.s
immigration authorities allowed entry into the united states as refuge to thousands of the worst of hitler's east european henchmen that's true that's scary [ __ ] dude the nurse scrolls scroll up scroll up look at this holocaust crimes however could not be prosecuted in the united states as they had not been committed as as they had been committed overseas and their victims were not americans at the time of the crimes were committed so instead nazi criminals were prosecuted for immigration and naturalization violations that is for concealing their wartime past all this appeared to be a cop out of sorts when announced the decision yielded relatively successful results the good news was that it was relatively easy to win such cases compared to war crimes prosecutions the downside was that the punishments denaturalization and deportation were often grotesquely incommensurate with the crimes and what does it say anything about werner von braun that's i didn't get anything specifically about him but just google werner von braun was a nazi let's see that uh well i mean they would talk about for like the longest time up until almost the 80s or early 90s like in huntsville you weren't allowed to talk about how it was a nazi you'd have to be because everyone was like convincing themselves like he didn't want to do it and stuff like that think about those times man think about 47 where you know when they were doing all this or 48 when they're bringing all these guys over here how would anybody find out how would anybody find out that the head of nasa was a [ __ ] nazi his nazi record was not widely known until after his death right yeah right oh we did not know what he did yeah we had no idea yeah huntsville alabama werner von braun received an unpleasant surprise a west german court asked him to testify in the trial of three former ss men from the middlebury concentration camp which had supplied slave labor for the production of the v2 ballistic missile
von braun had been the technical director of that project and visited the associated midtil work factory a dozen times now the head of the center that managed the gigantic saturn v moon rocket he was afraid the attendant publicity would damage his reputation and that of nasa he tried to beg off but in the end spoke to the judge and the court at the west german consulate in new orleans on february 7th 1969. he denied any personal responsibility and put as much distance as he could between his say that word pin [Music] rocket development center and the middleware complex yeah man it's crazy that's wild [ __ ] crazy the military did the same with von braun's ss officer rank and nazi records of more than a hundred associates who had come to the u.s with him wow jesus christ but you know i guess they felt like we were in the cold war with russia and we have two choices either lose the war because the russians get the nazis or we get the nazis like that's some [ __ ] that you have to do and that sounds horrible it is horrible but so is war and so is losing a nuclear war to the russians right and if these [ __ ] are making weapons and and [ __ ] superior jet engines and all kinds of crazy [ __ ] the germans were doing and making rockets they were very advanced with rocketry those crazy [ __ ] they had to grab them that's what's sick what's sick is it was probably the thing to do because if russians got all of them can you imagine that the russians got all the nazis said come on over here we got you we got you bro what do you want to want a palace hey set him up you want some hot russian ladies keep company with you while you're designing of the next uh [ __ ] apocalypse weapon that's gonna destroy everything let's get all the greatest [ __ ] scientists
that you got come on you ever heard of tataria tataria you've never heard of tataria it's like i love this sam is always he's always right i don't want to get too weird on you i guess we already did but yeah um too weird son there's this belief that there's been a uh a hidden empire wiped from our our history books and it's tataria when was it around it was it was a shipping empire that was around up until maybe the 1800s what yeah and that where it was wiped out of the history books and i love the idea i love it sounds exciting where did they wipe it out of where was it supposedly out of russia it was russia yeah it was out of russia and it was like very advanced and have you looked into this yeah of course as much as you looked into that guy being a nazi well i didn't look at i read his book okay here is something tatari um look up tatarian empire there it is asia tataria well before we get into that have you ever looked into like wait a minute they seem to say it's real that was a real place sam yeah someone said like a ufc fighter said he was from tataria maybe there's hard [ __ ] people in that part oh yeah dude let's uh see what it says what is uh what is tutorial about it's talking about it's it is there a article that doesn't look like the problem with wikipedia is my eyes suck i can't read it um echo the conspiracy theory sure okay grand total civilization originated in russia with aspects first appearing in anatoly fomenko's new chronology and then popularized in the racial cult history of nikolai lavoshov russian pseudoscience known for its nationalism tataria is presented as the real name for russia which was maliciously ignored in the west but also says it's a deep oh [ __ ] but it's basically that there is this shipping empire that went all over the
world imagine if you're on the beach in the maldives you see some hard ass looking russian gangster with tataria tattooed on his back yeah like oh you're like [ __ ] bro i gotta get out of here one of the chosen but they're also known to be giants dude this says the uh the great pyramids and the white house are remnants of tatarian buildings dude that's the crazy thing in the white house as long as it's the white house too now i believe also penn station what the [ __ ] are you talking about the original penn station in new york have you ever looked into the conspiracies involving the world fair of the like the chicago world fair and how like so they basically said they built this world fair right in like two years and if you ask actual architects they go just the design would take 15 years and to build it would take forever and they said that they built in two years and then knocked it all down bang gone what what did it look like it's like the conspiracies of the world fair it looks like the vatican so this is what they built and then they knocked it all down they said they built all this in two years whoa they built that in two years that's what they said and then they knocked it all down what okay we're gonna have to dive into this one because did they really knock it all down yeah why would they do that this is in chicago yeah so they built all this and then they demolished it yep wrote remains of the 1893 chicago world's fair today so why did they do that are you asking me yeah because they're racing history why would they want to race something they built that's a whole different thing i feel like i'm providing a much needed service with your thought process on these things thank you i think someone needs to go wait hold on yeah the interesting thing about this world's fair i think this was the tesla edison one where they were about to like ac dc power was a really big thing right look at that they said they built that in two years dude all the structures the sculptures and everything yeah how many
people did they build all those buildings that's what they're saying so why did why would they knock those down they knocked those down are those like sets like when you go to like universal studios and there's no building behind it not that i know of man oh my god why don't you google why they demolish i was hoping it would be in this thing let's just google that let's google just if you could uh indulge me please google why did they demolish the chicago world fair what do you think what do you think it's gonna say i'll tell ya some propaganda by them right they're gonna it's to raise history bro but why would they want to remember something that we know about but if we know that they did that why would they want to because the tatarians had very advanced technology like giant uh organs that could heal you through sound have you ever heard of that organs like musical organs yeah like phantom of the opera [ __ ] you through sound through sound free energy that's a big part of it free energy free energy yeah what what do you mean by free energy that they could harness energy oh like tesla type harness electricity through the air yep yep you know they had said that if he had done that if tesla had done that it probably would have [ __ ] the whole computer revolution for good or bad for bad it wouldn't have worked all the electricity in the air be frying all devices but then i would i would think like wouldn't they be able to make oh so there's a fire giant fire convenient oh yeah convenient fire licked up a large part of the rep well let's see they're experimenting with electricity for the first time and it causes a massive fire what a shocker yeah well don't you think maybe they didn't know what the [ __ ] they were doing sam for the uh for three hours the flames raged along the past end of the court of honor until nothing was left but charles
charred timbers and blackened plaster a shower of sparks fell upon the ice in the lagoon until it looked like a sea of fire they fell upon the adjacent buildings threatening them with destruction it was a magnificent spectacle that drew ceaseless examine exclamations of wonder and awe from the spectators that crowded the grounds in the vicinity of the fire it was the greatest pyrotechnic display of the fair interest caught fire but hold on but it's saying but the destruction did not end with the burning of these buildings fire brands were carried to the roof of the manufacturer's building and the promenade around the crown of that enormous structure was soon on fire the wind was strong and the flames soon reached the immense wooden ventilators under the eaves they were soon burning fiercely the story under the roof was in a blaze it sounded like a horrible fire sam yeah but why would you think someone would start this on purpose uh to to destroy it but would you think that it would be possible that the winds were really strong and an actual accidental fire that happens all the time broke out and it destroyed those buildings because they were experimenting with electricity for the like what caused the fires do they know what caused the fires did they have like arson inspectors back then it's very interesting dude because you know you go through a lot of these big cities and you kind of see this weird kind of ancient architecture and then it's surrounded by modern architecture and it's just the two don't match at all one is like very advanced like stuff we don't see anymore and now this new stuff and it's just like it's really mind-blowing and you see a lot of stuff especially when you go to the smaller cities like they went around and got rid of a lot of the stuff in the bigger cities and they didn't bother to deal with the smaller cities listen as the panama pacific international exposition proved so popular and profitable that long before its closing proposals were made to save oh pro long before its closing proposals were being made to save all or part of
it architect willis polk in particular lobbied heavily for the preservation of the palace of fine arts the palace of horticulture north and south and north gardens and the avenue of palms louis christian mogart told the commonwealth club that when the exposition buildings are torn down then we have destroyed one of the greatest architectural units which has ever been created in the history of the world the influential club like many others passed a resolution pleading for the preservation of as much of the fair as possible speculative forces proved far stronger than the dream however and the arches and towers were brought down in clouds of colored plaster revealing their fall the underlying lath framework the south gardens were scrapped clean of paintings fountains fountains and sculpture and small buildings were moved to the waterfront and barged throughout the bay area the north gardens marina gray marine green rather and yacht harbor remained a gift of the exposition along with the column of progress with its adventurous bowmen at the end of south street until the 1920s it succumbed to automotive collisions and was pulled down huh this was the 1915 world fair in san francisco a similar thing happened would you do me a favor and hold up go back to that and google um the adventurous bowmen at the end of south street what is that so that was the last thing that remained what did that look like see a few like images so there it is so it's a statue and so too many people hit the guy with the bow and arrow and that was the last thing remaining now it sounds [ __ ] that they would tear that stuff down but you know i'm open to the idea that some idiot owned the land or someone wanted to do something else with it and they decided to destroy it and build new [ __ ] there you don't think so like after a fire you think that they would have decided to preserve it what if preserving it would cost a shitload of money events
two separate events the fires were in chicago at the it was pre-19 oh what is that this was 20 years later in the san francisco world fair that was what you were showing me right there oh i thought it was the same world famous so there's two world fairs that caught fire no no one of them they just destroyed this one yeah this one says they destroyed it for no reason i don't that's where i don't we didn't get there yet so you think they did it because they want to hide history yeah and you're not even high um is it possible tell me what you think of that which one is this that's the one that's got caffeine that's the ignite yeah dude that's 150 milligrams of clean caffeine baby spicy pineapple it's good dude that's my [ __ ] son and i uh helped design that one that's my idea okay so this remains that's pretty dope see here's still building like you don't see anymore it's like this weird architecture that's true isn't surrounded by anything around it and it's it and it's like so ev what do you mean so this gets into this gets into something you talk about like mud floods too like yeah but this this stuff is like happened during modern history like they know about this like they know who built it pretty amazing that's interesting okay it's still there so look at that scroll back down there it says nine amazing examples of world world fair architectures still stand today and look how dope that looks go back to that picture again but they knocked down a lot i'm sure they did but that's because people are [ __ ] yeah i don't think there's a grand conspiracy to knock i mean i could be wrong but i'm looking at it i think that's a win take it as well take that w the world is very interesting brother and why would they try to hide their their ability to create awesome structures because uh if you're asking me joe everything is about
trying not to let us know how special we really are keep going back to that what do you i don't know that we are powerful beings and the way they do that is by knocking down that by by not letting us know our history by by rewriting history by by but who would do that low frequency [ __ ] well i think we flood ourselves with low frequencies right i think that's the problem is that we gravitate towards no low frequency [ __ ] and low frequency shift becomes profitable right right it well it just becomes like before the internet like we we only had a few kinds of a few different kind of ways to get stuff right and they and the and these people controlled all that whether it was like just think about all the stuff that people were able to get away with before the internet was here and we could like people do their own research and stuff like that and the control catholic church like dude that's a you look at that you look at the vatican that i don't know it's like what is that i went to the vatican on an edible oh my god oh my god the stuff you must have seen and felt and yeah because edible's a good thing to do because it lasts a long time you know that's a good you smoke a joint you're going to be normal in 20 minutes yeah i want that you want to be you want to be riding that cannabis wave for a while and soaking in the history of that place and what did you think while you were there it's wild it's so much art it's [ __ ] insane you want to go where did you get all this how is this all yours don't you want to get in that library just like let me see what's in there dude what do they have what is in there did you ever read the sacred mushroom in the cross no i have you need to read that i will it's a a great book about uh this guy john marco allegro who deciphered the dead sea scrolls he was on the on the committee like for 14 years worked in the dead sea scrolls and his conclusion was the entire bible was all misunderstanding it was really about psychedelic mushrooms and fertility cults it's a wild book supposedly the catholic church bought it up but it's it's in print again now oh really yeah i love dangerous books i got old copies of it i got copies used
copies of it from when it was first released i have two copies of it okay it's a fascinating book because if this guy was right it's great but the the thing about it is that there's for sure in a lot of ancient religious artwork there's depictions of mushrooms for sure yeah and for sure they thought that if they ate a mushroom and tripped balls they probably thought they'd stumbled upon some gift from god some magic some something that reaffirmed all of their beliefs in the world just like you know the people that thought rich witches were real they did the lsd bread and they [ __ ] tripped those people probably when they were consuming mushrooms they probably thought that god had given them this [ __ ] amazing gift to communicate with him and they had to hide that information in any way shape or form and so they did it in stories and they hid they hid the meanings and allegories and in in all these uh different this was john marco allegro's belief and that he broke down the word christ he traced it back to an ancient sumerian word that meant a mushroom covered in god's semen really and what they believed is that when it rained you got to remember infant mortality back then is very high are we talking space pukaki right yeah it's facebook hockey exactly but but god's space be cocky but infant mortality back then was really high right so they they and they wanted to make as many people as possible otherwise it wouldn't be any people like these people were actively practicing fertility rituals and they were trying to get pregnant and it was like a really important thing so they had rituals they would do to try to get pregnant and they also had this ancient use of psychedelic mushrooms so when it rained all of a sudden these mushrooms would appear like you know what it's like when you go out in your yard and it was raining and then you'll see mushrooms like they weren't there yesterday well they would go out and see these things then they would eat them and they would trip their [ __ ] balls yeah and it made sense that they thought that god had given this like that god came upon the earth and that this mushroom that from would get allow you
to talk to god and they would try to hide this [ __ ] from conquering armies so they hid in stories i i believe all that and i also think that you know the vatican has a real interesting role in like the interpretation of the bible and what the bible represents and how they try to make it like literal instead of like a spiritual thing and you know i mean if you kind of take a look at like saint patty's day right you ever study st saint patrick's day and what it really is it's like so it's like you know saint peter's days basically saint uh uh who was it uh patrick is sent into ireland to rid the snakes that is it right but the truth is like i don't think there's snakes in ireland and what they're actually talking about are pagans and it's actually a story of genocide dog really yeah that's what saint patty's day is all about no yeah i don't i think iron maybe they used to be snakes i think it was successful yeah you just got them all out of them all killing those things you just going around killing like gardeners big snakes man yeah i i think it had to do with pagans and pagan so then you get into something called eagle versus serpent have you ever heard of that story that that no but let's let's start with saint patrick's day and work our way to eagle versus that's the life that's interesting well jamie's like what about it can't follow this chaos no i am i like what you do okay st patrick's day was really about uh pagans that part was is not that'd be harder to find out but there were not snakes there okay it says uh did st patrick really drive snakes out of ireland the stuff of legend the reptiles never existed on the emerald isle um st patrick's day oh you son of a [ __ ] enter your email to continue reading you son of a [ __ ] yeah what are you doing trying to get us it's your [ __ ] meal it's too cold it's too cold for snakes right right so maybe it was just uh
like a way they had to explain why there's no snakes there which gets into this thing called eagle versus serpent and that we'll get into but those are symbolisms right the eagle represents authority and power that's why you see it on all these flags the eagle represents the serpent represents knowledge and knowledge is power and so and ancient knowledge so like when they talk about serpents they're talking about pagans and and we have a negative connotation what pagan is in this country because we assume it's like witches and stuff like that but we assume it's uh kids with [ __ ] stepdads right goth kids they're really in the anime right right right smoking cigarettes in high school yelling at about that's what they think it's not man it's about basically a cult like well paganism was the existing religion that christianity kind of incorporated right didn't they incorporate a lot of their holidays coincided with pagan rituals yes like jesus's birthday and all that to bring people in some modern pagans refuse to observe a day which honors the elimination of an old religion in favor of a new one and wear a snake symbol on saint patrick's day the idea that saint patrick physically drove the pagans from ireland is inaccurate what he did do was facilitate the spread of christianity that sounds like a very euphemism a very cleaned up version of it that sounds like somebody's pr person came in well now read this often that's not quite what we did killed same thing people have a distorted version of history apparently we were trying to spread christianity which is of course the real true word of god right and then patrick the patron saint of ireland was born in britain not ireland near the end of the fourth century at age 16 he was kidnapped by irish raiders and sold as a slave to a celtic priest in northern ireland whoa after toiling for six years as a shepherd he escaped back to britain yo so it's a real person in the fourth century
is that a real yeah which now explains why he wanted to go back and we'll pass right what there were no snakes okay we get that so snake was okay leprechauns are likely based on celtic figures leprechauns are based on mushrooms and you can eat leprecha eat mushrooms rather and meet leprechauns yeah for sure that's what the elves are i mean everybody has their own version of it but there's like little things that you meet when you do mushrooms no they must have had mushrooms they had cattle they always had moisture right they had a lot of moisture so like i know europe had mushrooms a lot of mexico has a lot of mushrooms that's where gordon watson i think his name was who first started writing about psychedelic mushrooms i think it was in life magazine gordon watson google that and he was a guy that like sort of first started describing psychedelic mushroom effects in like modern publications this is back before it was illegal mushrooms weren't even made illegal in america until 19th century it was cocaine was for the longest time yeah seeking the magic mushroom is a 1957 photo essay by amateur mycologist robert gordon-wassen describing his experiences taking psilocybin mushrooms in 1955 during a mazda tech mazatech mazatec ritual and how do you say that oaxaca mexico oh god that's a beautiful name yeah that is a great name you want to get weird in oaxaca so did he didn't he wrote it in the book but didn't he do something in life magazine there was something that was in like a mainstream publication yeah life that's it life series of great adventures by our gordon wassen yeah there it is okay interesting mushrooms are life-changers man and i think that human beings have been eating them forever and i and i think uh based on brian maro rescue's work with uh that book the immortality key which i can't recommend enough it's a wild immortality
key yeah you would love it all right i'll buy it it's wild i've got a thousand books to read i have also it's also based on very hard evidence like they they have the vessels that these people drank wine out of and they found ergot in these vessels the liberty cap and the fly agaric which is um fly argeric is uh i think it's a type of amanita muscaria mushroom grow in ireland and are both believed to produce visions of fairies and leprechauns ding ding ding we have a winner along with a variety of other world creatures associated with ireland fairies and mushrooms have always been a big part of irish culture and are deeply intertwined in culture in fact the gaelic slang for fairies and mushrooms is the same word i'll say that again the gaelic slang for fairies and mushrooms is the same word the word is pookies pookies and i that's what we should we should do pookies we're gonna do pookies we're gonna call it from now is that what they call like pipes and crack pipes or pookies do they yeah i think that's what they call know that see hold on before we do that before we do that we'll go to that i promise in ireland uh the trip goes the trip one goes from magic mushrooms described as going away with the fairies being off with the pixies in pagan times imba for forrosnai in embassy were psychedelic poets the poet spoke of eating the red flesh of a pig dog or cat which is believed to be in reference to the fly augeric because that mushroom is red with white it looks like santa claus which is another [ __ ] conspiracy oh yeah for sure poets chewed on this red flesh of a pig before lying in a dark room to seek out inspiration yeah bingo yeah dude we have a winner they were tripper yeah your mushroom's going to be just to some cave and just all about yeah everybody tripped i think that was a giant part of most cultures until the power cultures eradicated it and that's the story of the immortality key must be southern california thing but pookie means a tweak pipe oh wow crap they're also called crack pipes wow [Music]
pookie wow that's crazy damn dude that's crazy it went from being something that allows you to connect with leprechauns to a crack pipe that's what they always do they take it and they they invert it dude all the time wow that's crazy it is crazy dude or there was like a dude named pookie who was who just got weird he was such a crackhead they named the pipe after the legendary crackers he was the best crackhead ever it was the cheech and chong of crackheads i don't know in austin if like ma'am i'm this how i know i'm old like i don't i didn't do my drugs out in the public now i mean dude you drive around people smoking meth i was walking i like so i i like to walk around hollywood and just look for danger right like oh yeah i just just so i could talk about it um well that's right you're a crime fighter yeah uh my on my podcast like so i could just talk about what i really so you go to bad places just to walk around yeah i'll walk around just to see what i could find you're a [ __ ] investigative journalist yeah i am i'm a dick joe comic investigator reporter and dude i was on hollywood boulevard one day and like hollywood boulevard now is like straight out taxi driver dude it's the same kind of it's really like gritty yeah gritty dark and dangerous and you just walk around and they're still tourists and they're still tourists so this is the just one of the streets so the the tourist uh company that's in charge of uh the hollywood tourist uh board was bragging that hollywood boulevard was voted top 100 uh tourist spots to go to but what they never told you it was number 100 out of the 100 that they were what was number 99 i have no clue but it was voted number one paul revere's house he has something like that dude you ever hear about what ben franklin was okay that's a different story but what did he do you never heard that like what he was found in it they found in his house no like tons of bodies bro what ben franklin they found tons of bodies in his ben franklin was a serial
killer no he was like doing some weird [ __ ] dude bodies like experimenting everything i say was ben franklin's basement filled with skeletons repairs on franklin's old london house turned up 1200 pieces of bone from at least 15 people holy [ __ ] for nearly two decades by the way this is from the smithsonian this is not some wacky conspiracy this ain't samtripoli.com for nearly two decades leading up to the signing of the declaration of independence benjamin flank franklin lived in london in a house on 36 craven street in 1776 franken left his english home to come back to america more than 200 years later 15 bodies were found in the basement buried in a secret windowless room beneath the garden in 1998 conservationists were doing repairs on 36 craven looking to turn franklin's old haunt into a museum from a one meter wide one meter deep pit over twelve hundred pieces of bone were retrieved remnants of more than a dozen bodies said benjamin franklin's house six were children forensic investigation showed that the bones dated to franklin's day holy [ __ ] the most plausible explanation is not mass murder but an anatomy school run by benjamin's young friend and protege william hewson oh just an anatomy yeah and we're just gonna bury them downstairs okay anatomy was still in its infancy but the day's social and ethical mores frowned upon it a steady supply of human bodies was hard to come by legally so houston hunter and fields other pioneers had to turn to grave robbing either paying professional resurrection men to procure cadavers or digging them up themselves to get their hands on specimens researchers think 36 craven was an irresistible spot for houston to establish his own anatomy lab the tenant was a trusted friend and the landlady was his mother-in-law and he was flanked by convenient sources for corpses bodies could be smuggled from graveyards and delivered to the wharf at one end of the street or snatched from the gallows at the other end
when he was done with them houston simply buried whatever was left of the bodies in the basement rather than sneak them out for disposal elsewhere and risk getting caught and prosecuted for dissection and grave robbing franklin was probably aware of the illegal studies going on in his building says the benjamin franklin house but it's doubtful that he was involved himself still we can't imagine that curious man that he was he didn't sneak down and check out the proceedings at least once or twice of course he did could you imagine if you're my friend and we live together and i say sam what are you up to you're like bro we got to find out how people work and there's only one way to do it we got to look at bodies whoa how do you do that we gotta find a place where we can [ __ ] legally or uh secretly look at bodies well i'm gonna basement okay so what do we do with the bodies but back then when they were studying medicine isn't that what they did like all those people that like studied anatomy back then how did they if it was illegal to study anatomy if it was illegal to study bodies how how else would they find out how anatomy worked that seems weird but who knows they had weird laws back then but it does seem weird but it makes sense right because if they had never studied anatomy before and then all of a sudden it came along like we gotta [ __ ] up your grandpa you gotta carve grandpa up like a turkey to find out what makes people tick you know so weird note to add in another article about this oh boy franklin's history as a mason was one of the historian's initial points of inquiry though shrouded in secrecy masonic rituals have dark known undercurrents which have at times gone horribly wrong for example in a 2004 initiation ceremony a new member was accidentally shot by a member who meant to fire an empty gun but instead fired a loaded one so yeah they fake shot at each other yeah but when historic and historians dug deeper into what was going on the franklin home during the years the bones dated back to they discovered the real
culprit behind the bones was one of william houston yeah they're basically saying the same thing crazy right yeah i think they all were part of like secret groups back then right so have you ever heard of the the special deal that ben franklin supposedly was a part of and i'd love to hear if you could debunk this because i would love to know a special deal special deal with the basically the royal family of england that they would get a percentage of taxes of all taxes so benjamin franklin made a deal that some of the taxes from the united states would go back to england still to this day i don't want to just debunk that but i do i was what they just put out a special like a uh who's the ken burns yeah he made a uh ben franklin special like maybe three three four episodes there was a time period he was going back and forth which is what this other article was saying where he lived there and it was whether it was in germany or england i'm not i don't remember specifically he lived there for a long time like his wife he abandoned his wife like 25 30 years he had a kid abandoned never came back benjamin franklin did yeah he was like the american representative living in england this was like you know like right after the uh revolutionary war the text there's a lot of stuff about taxation representation is still going on after the fact so there might be some thing to that i'm trying to remember all the stuff about that documentary yeah that like maybe they're like benjamin you get 80 people buried in your [ __ ] house let's make a [ __ ] deal we'll blame this kid or we'll blame you and then they that exposedly that the queen of england or the the royal family gets a percentage of our taxes what what do you think is going on now that one day some [ __ ] like you and i will be sitting doing a podcast talking about what the government is doing today about imagine imagine imagine yeah 30 years from now yeah
they're talking about how nancy pelosi went to taiwan and started a war with china that we underestimated china's response and that was the initial start of world war three imagine if that's what it is if this is our gulf of tonkin or whatever this is our d not d-day this is our uh what's d-day two days pearl harbor pearl harbor yeah this is the day the day that we live in infamy this is our day imagine crazy imagine imagine imagine if that's because history is going to play out right we we are not there yet whatever whatever's going to happen hasn't happened yeah that's a possibility it is that's what's crazy is that the chinese government is saying that did you know that chris williamson said that yesterday that they had posted on their social media account prepare for war yeah that's what we're using now social medias to declare war if trump did that yeah yeah remember kim jong-un little rocket man and he's like our rockets are bigger and better i promise you we have the best rockets i'm the best at rockets no one loves rockets more than me yeah dude i mean she went over there and is she there now yeah she landed on she landed what do you think that's all about is that a dick waving contest well it's also like did imagine that's how they're trying to get rid of nancy pelosi oh like this lady's making too much [ __ ] money it's too obvious she's [ __ ] up our whole scandal yeah right hey but nancy you know uh taiwan would love for you to visit hey we love let's go maybe make a deal over there find out about some chips you know bring the husband he's really good with numbers and he won't have to drive there he could drink all he wants bro they made more money in the stock market they're better at the stock market than george soros and warren buffett it's unbelievable guys that that's all they do that's their thing warren buffett that's his [ __ ] thing i get what she's like hitting at 80 percent basman's a genius he's amazing just a whine drunk with a big shiny
asked her whether or not she gave information she's certainly not and she pushes the microphone okay thank you yeah i just play dude how long has she been there forever there's a picture of her yes with jfk at his inauguration yeah yeah that's insane to be there in power it's amazing it's amazing and it's just like how how do we not have term limits like that is too long to be there she keeps getting voted in what's amazing is uh one of my favorite images of her mock clapping trump oh yeah oh yeah you don't like this one whatever she's doing here oh my god kyle dunnigan's [ __ ] with the funniest dude the craziest [ __ ] of all time it's so funny so gifted so good that that is so good that [ __ ] that thing that thing that they do oh my god that that web series that they do it's him i think kurt matt's currently is the [ __ ] man he is so funny yeah he's a great writer he's so good he's so funny the two of them together the [ __ ] sketches that they put together are so funny they're so ruthless and it's just weird that like we need like those guys to do it on youtube and we're not seeing like saturday night live do it and all these other because that's what should be done i feel like no one can go that hard unless you're on the internet right it's kind of crazy but even just a little bit it just seemed like when ever and this is my kind of problem with comedy right now and i love all comics but there's a lot of comics who are like my generation who felt like the censorship from the religious right that still can't that just don't understand that that censorship yeah there are crazy religious right people out there but the censorship is now from the left there's a lot of censorship from the left but if the left lets up the right will pick it up you already see it you remember when with the rovers wait you got the crazy people on this is the end of hookup culture you're like stop it please settle down the guys who are like hating against gays while they're sucking trucker dick on the weekends d now the
real conspiracy theorists will say that this roe versus way thing is to distract us from all the other stuff going on in the world so that we'll fight over that because it's such a hot button topic for america yeah people are so divided on abortion rights and it's so it's so important it's such a line in the sand for a lot of people especially women you know that this a woman's right to choose is such a line of sand that when they take that away then people are going to be fighting so hard for that that they're going to ignore all the other shenanigans that are going on well i think that i think the biggest problem that the right to to choose people messed up on is that so many of them were anti right to choose when it came to getting a vaccine and you see it happening a lot of times yeah and then they they it's different they think it's different because it involves other people like the being having a pregnancy and me as a woman having autonomy over your body is is your choice and a man telling you what you can and can't do which is often the case is what's so infuriating the difference is they thought the vaccine was going to stop the spread of the virus and stop the virus in its tracks so they also was a world horse a public uh problem when it really wasn't if you take a look at like the actual numbers of people who could who passed away from it it was like a 99 survival rate yeah but it still is a public problem if you have a hundred friends and one of them dies from this [ __ ] thing especially people that are vulnerable people with autoimmune dis diseases older people overweight people right i get their perspective and i get if if it really did stop the spread of the virus that it totally makes sense the problem is once it was recognized that it didn't they stuck with the same game plan instead of saying hey what are the other options what are the other things to do it and how many people exactly are experiencing adverse symptoms and effects from this how many people are hospitalized because of it what what's happening like really happening let's instead of pretending that it's all good let's look at all of the good it does and then also what's the bad it does and let people make
informed choices that's always been the case with medicine especially when you're talking about something that may or may not help you because it may or may not stop the spread it may help you if you if you encounter the virus within a certain period of time but then you know a lot of places they're saying if you were vaccinated and boosted a year ago it doesn't count anymore it's crazy like they're making you get boosters and more boosters and even while the effects of the virus have diminished greatly right it's still dangerous to a lot of people no doubt about it but at what percentage now and what are the numbers and can we be accurate about that so we can make an informed decision that's why people get upset because they don't feel like they're able to make their own decisions about these guys but do you believe there was a manipulation of the numbers to make it presented as something so it all kicks off with these videos of a of chinese people falling backwards right they're like oh my god this thing's going on in china and it's presented on the news as this crazy thing going on and even though we never saw until when vaccines and you see all these kind you see the comedian uh what's her face in in oh yeah she just falls right back yeah there's there's certain people that and dr drew's talked about this from the booster do have uh and maybe even from the second shot do have an adverse event i know people that have had it the question is how many the question is also when you're mass vaccinating right when you you're giving a medication to 300 million people just in this country alone right or whatever it is 260 million people you're going to absolutely have some adverse effects the question is is it worth it to like risk that because the benefit is overall good that's where people should be making like logical debates and logical conversations about it the problem is people get scared and when people get scared and they think that some people aren't doing the right thing when they did the right thing then
they get angry and emotional and then they start believing things that turn out to not necessarily be true because some of these people that have put out these you know results and studies they they have skewed the data and this has been proven right so it's like this is just humans this is humans and and just because it lines up with this what they thought the pandemic was going to be that's because that's that was their game plan to what to do if something went went down it doesn't mean they planned it i don't think they would i mean so many [ __ ] powerful important people died man a lot of [ __ ] people that were like you would think like they they were at the top of the food chain in terms of uh resources and knowledge and influence a lot of those [ __ ] people died from covet like co i got coveted covetous yeah i got creepy it's [ __ ] real but it's just it's not good that's i'm not trying to diminish covet but i'm saying it's not the same for everybody that's a fact and and taking into account different people particularly children's immune systems and their responses to it i think uh you know we we as a as a society always when something goes down and it's scary we we have like sides that we pick we have positions that we take and we stand by them and we defend them even when more data keeps coming out that shows you that it wasn't exactly accurate so i always think dude this is my opinion that you know you'll have the trust authority side then you have the conspiracy side and never is it one completely way or the other right but for me i think it tends to more lean towards the conspiracy side more often than not now not saying that's completely but it towards leans towards the conspiracy side more times than not because to be honest with you joe i've been saying the same thing today that i'm saying when this whole thing came out so that's the only reason i go there's nothing that's happened to me that has changed the way i look at this thing it just it just always is the same people they get the more the money the more the power the more and then you discuss like is this a move to get us into uh some
kind of like uh uh thing on our phone where we have to have a vaccine pass on her phone and all that stuff and you can't go a certain place unless you got this vaccine passed and what that represents that's what scares people and contact tracing and all that stuff that we start seeing that's happening in china now i don't know everything that's truthful that comes out of china because there's a military industry definitely have that they definitely have that they definitely have a social credit system and you know that's been documented it's also been documented that people that didn't have enough points or did the wrong thing or said the wrong thing or whatever they weren't allowed to travel they weren't you weren't allowed to purchase certain things there's parts of the world right now where you have to show your id in order to get gas like you have to sure yeah you have to scan your your number right or see if you're allowed to get gas i mean what happened in canada with the truckers where they shut down people's bank accounts because they're associated with scary [ __ ] been some people been talking about for a very that that is the scary part of moving to crypto right did they give them their money back did they give the the truckers in canada their bank accounts back whatever happened with that that's an interesting question right it's scary but yeah they took away their access to their funds to try to encourage them to quit or somebody just uh one woman just sent like a hundred bucks to it and the government shut down her bank account didn't allow her to get into her bank that to me is super scary canada unlocks vast majority of bank accounts frozen over support for trucker convoy so they they unlocked the vast majority but they kept some lock down do you think trudeau is castro's kid boy he looks like it doesn't until they have the exact same crazy it's crazy that's the wildest conspiracy ever you you see that you see that how is that is that there's there like a timeline where that actually makes sense where it is
castro i have basically all of these offsprings that don't look like they're fathers but they look like friends of the family and i have this whole theory that they all just like everybody hooks up and it's hot potato oh yeah with frank sinatra looks exactly like him here trudeau was born a little more than nine months after the marriage of his parents and more than four years before margaret made a much publicized trip to cuba so that doesn't make sense margaret was 22 when she married the 51 year old prime minister and was the subject of intense media scrutiny i like that yeah good for him good for him sort of like okay subject of intense media scrutiny or ex back then that was normal though right experts say it would have been impossible for an earlier visit to cuba to go unnoticed experts say long as they say cuban media have been unusually open about the death of castro's oldest son fidelito describing it as a suicide after a long depression neither state media nor independent reporters covering the death have reported the existence of a suicide note okay but that's just we're going into a weird area here but yeah that's what i wanted to do okay uh february one suicide of castro's oldest son fidolito spurred the most recent reports on several sites claiming that fidelito left a suicide note referring to justin trudeau as his half-brother the theory was that castro was trudeau's father was also shared wildly on social media okay just for funsies and this is just funsies let's go let's google look at the two of them together no there's some that i like there's some there's like more right down there right down there see that six pictures right there there it is yeah that's it that's wild that's wild that is [ __ ] wild when you look at those look at all of them the top oh my god look at the top one bro that is wild but then you compare him to who they say is his father and he doesn't look anything like this
but that is wild hey bro you need a 23andme right away sir we need a you know it's wild how close he looks if if it's not his dad boy if i was the father i'd be [ __ ] suspicious as [ __ ] well yeah have you ever where's his real dad i think that's what this is oh okay well let me say hold on okay but it's real dad he looks like he's real dead too yeah he looks a lot like his real dad dude a lot okay i give up it's just coincidence it looks a lot like his real dad have you ever looked hold on go back to that go back to that don't don't take that away go to the top the top one that looks a lot like a man he looks a lot like this a lot a lot both men no no no no look at the nose this shade that's not ridiculous at all he looks a lot like a man a lot it's just it's just fun it's fun hey man we're just having fun because looking at it right there he looks a lot like his dad have you ever seen like uh prince obviously we had the frank sinatra one but who's that are you spreading the news that's the best one yeah how about the uh that's woody allen's kid [ __ ] you no not even close not even close [ __ ] you have you ever looked into the video in case dude it's super let's end this okay we've been how long are we going four hours no click getting close ah three and a half don't go too deep then no it's not bad so we had a show and yeah two hours hope it wasn't too weird it was awesome we got to do this more often any time anytime i love you very much thank you for everything you're the [ __ ] man i appreciate you very much you're a fun dude thank you dude and uh we've had fun gigging in the past and we're gonna do it tonight i'm so excited to be back with the boys bro we haven't done a show together in [ __ ] a few years now years and years yes my friend love you bud love you too um social media tell everybody all your podcasts uh i have seven but uh-huh you have
really seven parts i have seven podcasts oh my god yeah if i what listen it's either i could talk to myself or just throw a camera and a microphone in front of me uh tin fall hat broken sim is my grand theft auto one where i go around and i just look for i i just look for danger and tell you what i see uh my spiritual podcast is called zero i got a show with um my good friend uh brian kelln called conspiracy social club cash daddies is my financial one and uh punch drunk sports just go to a fat dragon pro on twitter or sam tripoli everywhere else go to samtrible.com for all my dates i'm in san francisco this weekend and he's a hilarious comic too very funny dude i love you man i love you buddy so much good night everyone [Music] [Applause] [Music] you
