Thursday, 14 April 2022

79: Pizza Party

The confirmation of Ketanji Brown Jackson serves as the catalyst for a high-stakes information war involving the Pizza Playbook, Disney corporate leaks, and the grooming debate.

By Moe Factz with Adam Curry | 3h 16m listen | 39 chapters
79: Pizza Party cover

About this episode

The Republican Party has deployed the Pizza Playbook against Supreme Court nominee Ketanji Brown Jackson, using her sentencing record in child pornography cases to frame the 2022 midterm narrative. Senators Josh Hawley and Ted Cruz led the interrogation, focusing on Jackson’s Harvard Law Review notes and judicial history to link the Democratic platform to the normalization of sexual predators. This strategic maneuver utilizes the same information war tactics seen in the Pizzagate and Hunter Biden laptop sagas to energize the conservative base.

President Joe Biden fulfilled a campaign promise to the She Will Rise collective by nominating Jackson, a move advocacy groups like Sista SCOTUS claim is a necessary correction for judicial representation. However, the confirmation hearings descended into a cultural firestorm as Senator Marsha Blackburn pressed Jackson on the definition of a woman and MSNBC’s Joy Reid compared GOP opposition to 1960s Dixiecrats. Meanwhile, leaked internal footage from Disney reveals a self-described gay agenda in children's programming, while the San Francisco Gay Men’s Chorus released a provocative video titled We’re Coming for Your Children, further fueling the national debate over grooming and parental rights.

Adam Curry recounts his 2003 firing from Dutch radio after exposing elite pedophilia rings involving the Belgian Dutroux case and government officials. Mo Facts deconstructs the Disney film Zootopia, identifying the character Dawn Bellwether as a symbolic archetype for the unassuming political operative. The episode concludes with a somber analysis of the North American Man-Boy Love Association and the long-term institutional push for social justice solidarity in public schools.


CHAPTER 01 / 39 Discussion

Mo Facts Episode 79 Introduction and Host Catch-up

Adam Curry and Mo Facts open episode 79 of the Mo Facts podcast from the Texas Hill Country and Northern Virginia. The hosts discuss their recent scheduling conflicts, including Mo's severe seasonal allergies attributed to Japanese cherry blossom trees in D.C. and Adam's recovery from heat stroke and lingering "long COVID" brain fog. They transition into the day's heavy subject matter, issuing a trigger warning for a discussion centered on pedophilia and political grooming debates.

adam curry· mo facts· texas hill country· allergies· long covid· cherry blossoms

00:07 Mo Facts with Adam Curry for April 13th, 2022, episode number 79 and class is back in session. I'm Adam Curry coming to you from the heart of the Texas Hill Country and time once again to spin the wheel of topics from here to Northern Virginia. Please say hello to my friend on the other end, Mr. Mo Facts. How you doing, Adam? I'm good, man. I'm in the groove, as you can tell. I'm in the Janet groove. Jimmy Jam, Terry Lewis throwing down. This is interesting. This is a very main, to me and Mary, a very mainstream top 40 track you've chosen for the opening of this show. It is, but it's appropriate. Oh, okay. Interesting. Once you see what the topic is. Because, you know, whenever I think of Janna Jackson, I think Miss Jackson if you're nasty. Yes.

00:57 How you feeling Moe? Because we had to, it was, man we had a weird scheduling bunch of conflicts. You had horrible allergies when we were scheduled for two weeks ago. I did and it was to the point where I thought it would take away from the show quality. So I hit you, I was like I don't think I'm gonna be able to record today and I think it's these damn cherry blossom trees which are beautiful let's be honest the cherry blossom trees are beautiful which are from japan yes yeah i forgot about that that's true and it's so interesting because the japanese tourists will come into dc to photograph the cherry blossoms is that is it a bio weapon this is for pearl harbor no because the reason why i say that in jest but

01:50 It's a known fact if you move to Virginia, and people told me this, you're going to get allergies. And I think it's a lot due to the cherry blossom because I lived in one state over in North Carolina all my life. Well, you know when I got here is just they're terrible when they start to bloom That's interesting because the same thing when you move to Austin everybody says up next year You're gonna get allergies and which happened to me and I've had allergies for 12 years now Mold is the one that hits me but we have cedar fever here real bad people go nuts with that. So yeah, I And how are you? Yeah, I almost died from my heat stroke. No, I'm good. So of course.

02:32 You know, we didn't do the show on the Wednesday, I have no agenda on Thursday, and we were leaving Friday morning early, and we just got into this quagmire of flight cancellation after flight cancellation after flight cancellation, wound up just out of despair going to Florida for a few days. So I'm more tired now than I was before we left. But, you know, and then, you know, got sick for a day, you know, out in the heat, not drinking enough water. So I don't know. And now I'm back, you know, I got, we got Phoebe the dog here by my foot. It's a beautiful day in Texas. I'm like, yeah, why did I even want to leave anyway? This is what a beautiful, charmed life I lead. And how's the voice? The voice is almost 100%. Thank you for asking. So long COVID is still with me because I need to use that for when I forget things.

03:21 I'm sorry, darling, I have long COVID. I can't believe I forgot that again. Sounds promising. I'm telling you, it's a good one. Brain fog, brain fog, brain fog. What can I say? So yeah, it's all good. It's all good. Now the voice is almost 100%. And we're moving into springtime here. So everything is green and exploding and baby snakes are slithering. So it's a good time. Yes, I guess yes, I'm back your voice is bad. Yes, sir. I'm back with another bag So I guess we can go ahead and all right. Let me crank it up around the round It goes the wheel of topics where it stops Nobody knows of course Mo knows because you put together another excellent episode for us the topic for episode 79 of mo facts with Adam Curry is pedophile Okay, let's just barge right in the door with that. Shall we? Holy crap Okay

CHAPTER 02 / 39 Discussion

Will Smith and Chris Rock Oscars Slap Viral Reaction

The hosts reflect on the viral moment when Will Smith slapped Chris Rock at the Academy Awards. Mo describes how his live YouTube reaction to the event went "micro-viral," garnering 25,000 views and a significant increase in subscribers. Adam suggests the incident may have involved deeper psychological triggers or "MK Ultra" elements related to Jada Pinkett Smith, while Mo hints at a future "rabbit hole" discussion regarding the couple's history with the "Oscar So White" movement.

will smith· chris rock· oscars· jada pinkett smith· youtube· mk ultra

04:18 We're gonna need a trigger trigger warning yes, hold on trigger warning Oh my! Trigger warning. Your attention please. Trigger warning has been activated. Yeah, well this is interesting that this is the topic. This is very good because I've been studying this confluence of things that have happened that have brought us to this pedophile groomer debate and all this stuff. I'm glad you did this instead of Why did Will Smith slap Chris Rock? If Will Smith smack-clipped Chris Rock, according to someone's... Okay, I'll take it. I'll take it. I'll take it. Could have been CGI, who knows? I mean, but... We had to talk about it, like, two minutes about it because actually I went micro-viral.

05:09 Yes, Michael viral yes What that means is like you hit me up with text that hey? Will we say it's Chris Rock touch the third rail and he was like Will Smith B slapped Chris Rock yeah, and I took that as a Yeah, because I had watched it and I was like, oh man, I got to talk to Mo about this. So I text you and then I didn't even realize it. You didn't know that it happened and you thought I was just like talking about something someone said, not something that actually happened. Right. So then my good buddy Young Grump hit me up. Young Grump, this is another great name. E-class Young Grump. Cool. I got to have a name in your club, Mo. You the power phone.

05:56 I mean, like, that rings bells, I mean, like, across all genres. I'll take it, thank you. No, but he was like, did you see? And I was like, what? And he was like, Will Smith. And I was like, yeah, I heard he said something. He's like, no, he sent me a link. And I'm like, holy crap. Because I took it as when you said it, how you said it, like, he, like, got a good joke on him or something. No. So then I'm like, well, I got to do a quick video. You know what I'm saying? Me and Groin, it's like, we got to do something. So we went to YouTube. You know saying did a little short video but end up having like 2500 people in the live. Wow. When you normally get about 200. I was gonna say I was gonna say that's pretty big. Yeah. And then had about 25k view. So nice. We picked up another hundred subs. So hopefully those some of those people here listening to this episode. So it was it was a

06:48 fruitful but this is not the episode. No I got you but you know I I made some assumptions on no agenda and I said listen man all I know is that Jada is in the coven and and she triggered some MK ultra there on will that was basically what I said Just tell me I'm in the right direction. I have a rabbit hole for you. Trust me. We're gonna talk about it. We will. I know we will. But I thought, this is the show that I was gonna do. Now this is an important one because this is a much, much bigger... Yeah, it's just much more important than anything that... Well, that could be much deeper. But this is big. This is a political thing. This is tearing the country apart again.

CHAPTER 03 / 39 Discussion

Ketanji Brown Jackson Supreme Court Nomination and She Will Rise

President Joe Biden nominated Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson to the U.S. Supreme Court, fulfilling a campaign promise to appoint the first Black woman to the high court. The advocacy group "She Will Rise," led by Kim Tigner and other Black women lawyers, is credited with organizing the political pressure necessary to secure this commitment on paper. The discussion examines the perception of the nomination as a "diversity hire" versus a strategic political victory for Black female voters.

ketanji brown jackson· joe biden· she will rise· supreme court· diversity hire· kim tigner

07:33 Right, and so you said a confluence so we had to start at the beginning of the beginning But I guess that's where the Kataji Brown Jackson her whole confirmation, that's the beginning President Biden made the official announcement on Friday, nominating Judge Katonji Brown Jackson for a seat on the U.S. Supreme Court. In doing so, Mr. Biden appears to have fulfilled one of his campaign promises to put the first Black woman on the high court. But the groundwork for the choice was laid far earlier. CBS News correspondent Nicole Killian sat down with a group of African-American women who've been leading the charge to reach this historic milestone.

08:23 I'm looking forward to making sure there's a black woman on the Supreme Court to make sure we in fact get every representation. As soon as President Biden made that campaign pledge, it was game on. I was ecstatic. I was it was something that I personally had been working for and thinking about my entire career, but I didn't see it catch fire the way that I thought it should. So have you all rented your cars? Ernie Kim Tigner tapped some of her lawyer friends during the height of the social justice movement in the summer of 2020. No justice, no form the group, she will rise. There is not another black women's created and led entity within this space that is helping to inform the discourse. And this is a labor of love for us. I mean, we are living this. The collective has been dedicated to elevating an african american woman to the high court, launching a petition and a website to track judicial nominations. Yeah,

09:24 Yeah, so this thing has been, excuse me, this thing has been in the works for a while, in the works for a while. And so what we have to do is talk about, I'm going to go back to the beginning of her actually this team setting up to get a black Supreme Court female justice in there and how that played out to feed into this confluence your word of conversation about pedophiles or maps. I, my abbreviation or... What does map stand for again? That's, for them it stands for minor attracted person. Yes. For me it means minor attracted predator. So, this is one of the things where you can say, that could be taken different ways, but as you see

10:21 This wasn't anything organic. This was a well laid out plan. And on its face, if I just may say in the context of our show, ridiculous that anyone in the United States be chosen based upon skin color for anything. Well, this would be a good time to talk about that. Normally how this works, it's not discussed in public, but the fact that The two parties involved, this group that was pushing for the black female Supreme Court justice and the Democratic Party, had so much distrust that they said we have to get it on paper.

11:09 We have to get it on record that you promised right that's because everyone else got screwed look at ice cube, you know Don't worry. We'll make your hole after you after we're elected. It's all gonna be good And so this was a smart one and what was the name of this group? She she will rise she will that was that was that was their hashtag. They actually had a hashtag for everything So yeah, so this this is They had to get it on paper because they know how the Democrats are. Once you get in office and you don't get it on paper, then it never happened. So I understand the logic of it, but the fact that they had to do it so publicly made it look like a diversity hire slash affirmative action. Right.

CHAPTER 04 / 39 Discussion

Sista SCOTUS Advocacy and the Affirmative Action Debate

The group Sista SCOTUS argues that the absence of a Black woman on the Supreme Court was an abject failure of representation. Critics, including some conservative media figures like Tucker Carlson, questioned Judge Jackson's qualifications, leading to a debate over whether the pick was based on merit or affirmative action. The hosts compare the scrutiny faced by Jackson to the rapid confirmation of Amy Coney Barrett and suggest that questioning the pick was framed by supporters as inherently racist.

sista scotus· thurgood marshall· affirmative action· tucker carlson· amy coney barrett· qualifications

11:57 So that was the Catch-22 that they were in. But gotta give them credit, they were effective in getting what they wanted. So I mean, this is how politics is played, but there is some... And this seems to be a pretty... I'm looking, they have a website, SistaSkotas.org. Right. Any idea who's behind them? You know me. We can hear more about it in the next clip. Ah, okay, good, good, good. Why do you feel it's important to have a black woman on the Supreme Court? First and foremost, because we've never had one. And we know that the demographics of this country are changing every single day. And we believe that representation is important.

12:43 The nomination of Ms. Thurgood Marshall, Solicitor General, to the position of Associate Justice, Supreme Court. When Thurgood Marshall became a Supreme Court Justice and he walked into the room, everything changed. The tone, the tenor of the other justices also changed, right? And so what we want to see is someone who can bring her legal acumen, her brilliance in scholarship and her lived experience to those conversations and to those deliberations. The reality is we actually think that the absence of a black woman on this court is an abject failure, frankly. You look at the state of the country and today black women make 63 cents on the dollar. It's 2022.

13:28 on the concept of what it means to be a deliberative body, right? Now we have to understand the civil rights movement is built on five, four decisions on the Supreme Court, right? And there have been times in history where justices have had their minds changed because of these conversations that are happening. It's that deliberation. But what do you say to people who say this is just an affirmative action pick? Wow, man, this thing is run by four black women lawyers. Very professional. One of them is super cute. One of them is super cute. April here, she's cute. One of them has a big track record with hashtags and pushing online and social media products. So you hear, I mean, you could hear, I mean, the person asking the question there for CBS Morning News,

14:22 Ask the question, what if they would have to say it, or for people to say it's affirmative action? I just spoke on that, that when you do these things publicly and say the first criteria is to be fill in the blank. This is not specifically to black women or black people or whoever else. When you say it has to be this, it's like, oh, you didn't go off of qualifications, or that would be the perception. Well, of course that's what that and that is the perception but it just got steamrolled. Well, I think the Republicans chose not to go after that attack. Um, just I don't have the clip here but I think Tucker Carlson try to float the L sack score thing out there but it was too it was

15:14 not well received because it was a, I think it was a trap laid actually to say like kind of like with the Obama and let's see your, um, yeah, you just, right. Exactly. Exactly. I agree with you. That was probably a trap, but the whole, but it was in essence, oh, you don't agree with this pic. You're a racist. That's, that's what it was. And people are tired. I think they're tired of fighting back. It's not, not just political, but where was the outrage from the people? Well, you couldn't really have any outrage. Exactly. And we've seen it for two reasons. One, we saw it on the other side with Amy Coney Barrett and Kavanaugh that, you know, we're just going to ram it through. You can't stop us, so we're just going to ram it through. So that means the same thing on the other side. But I have the clip, the throwback clip.

CHAPTER 05 / 39 Discussion

Erica Cobb on Identity Politics and Minority Scrutiny

Erica Cobb of Daily Blast Live defends President Biden's nomination, arguing that "identity politics" has historically protected white men in positions of power. Cobb asserts that any woman of color in a high-ranking seat is likely "overly qualified" due to the extreme scrutiny they face compared to their peers. The segment highlights the argument that the Supreme Court should reflect the actual demographics of the United States.

erica cobb· daily blast live· identity politics· white men· demographics· credentials

16:09 Let's see here. No, no, we got one. No, I have a no, excuse me. I have a a Clip from Eric Erica Cobb and this is from daily daily blast live and she's gonna answer the question that was asked and then we'll get back to those ladies and answer it because I think her answer was a little more detail As I'm sure you've heard, Justice Stephen Breyer Breyer is retiring from the Supreme Court. So yesterday, President Biden confirmed his campaign promise to nominate the first black woman ever to fill the seat. She also or he rather also said the person will have quote extraordinary qualifications, character, experience and integrity. Now some on the right are saying this is identity politics on steroids. In fact, I'm already reading a lot of our viewers comments who are on both sides and other

16:56 on the left are worried that any eventual nominee will now have to face critics who say they've only been chosen because of their identity rather than their credentials. All right, so what do you think of Biden's campaign promise, Erica? And what do you think of the criticism? I don't know if it necessarily had to be a campaign promise, but I definitely feel like it had to be done. In terms of identity politics, this is always so interesting. Anytime that there is a person that's qualified as a minority group, whether that be woman or person of color, then all of a sudden they're getting the job because they're a minority or person of color. But we never talk about the original identity. I just like to interject one thing. Women are not in the minority. OK.

17:39 I'm a little tired of hearing that. What? Yeah, I agree with you. I agree with you, but it's in the minority in the spaces. Okay, all right, but that's how they spin it. Like, you know, spaces. Yeah, but she's not saying in the spaces. She's just saying minorities like women and people of color. I know that's what she means, but words matter. Anyway, we'll finish the clip. A woman or person of color, then all of a sudden they're getting the job because they're a minority or person of color, but we never talk about the original identity politics, which has always protected white men. Why? Because they have been the most protected constituency historically because they were the first to be allowed to vote. So as we're getting to the highest court in the land, of course, the court should reflect the actual demographics of our country. Now, in terms of her having an asterisk by her name,

18:34 She was going to have the asterisk anyway, because people were always going to question if she deserved that spot or if she got it because she was a black female. Whether Biden said it or not, I can tell you this much. When you see a black woman in a seat of any capacity, especially of authority, rest assured that she is overly qualified to be there because black women and women of color, women in general are always subjected to the most scrutiny. I'll play that clip so you can hear the tone of, we won't in the room, but you can't question this. And I'll go back to the Amy Coney Barrett specifically.

CHAPTER 06 / 39 Discussion

Black Women's Political Leverage and the Democratic Party

A 2020 demand from Black female leaders published in the Washington Post reminded then-candidate Joe Biden that his path to victory relied on their mobilization. The hosts discuss the tension between political "tokenism" and actual progress for the ADOS (American Descendants of Slavery) community. Mo suggests that while the nomination is a win for the "She Will Rise" sisterhood, it may not result in material changes for the average Black American, and notes that Jim Clyburn's preferred candidate was passed over.

washington post· anita hill· jim clyburn· ados· tokenism· democratic party

19:22 he's a minority by being a woman then she shouldn't have been questioned right? Or at least half questioned. Half less than she was. Yes, yes. If all things were equal, yes, you're right. But of course not. Because this is racial. And I'm laying this out as this is the the paradigm that they have of let us in the room, we deserve to be in the room, but don't test us the same way you tested everybody else to get into the room. And now we can go to the actual request. And this is from show 38. And this is from the Washington Post when they made their demands to Biden. Vice President Biden, you need us. You owe us.

20:13 Black women are miracle workers. We have been saving the Democratic Party since 1965. 2020 is no different. Your only path to victory is through Black women. The voters who need to turn out, we know how to mobilize them. Our votes must not be taken for granted. The following commitments will begin to show Black voters that you are serious about us. America needs a Black woman vice president. Candidates like Amy Klobuchar will not energize us. America needs a Black woman Supreme Court justice. Remember Anita Hill? We do.

20:55 America needs more in a comprehensive black agenda. The rules are rigged against our communities. It was working so well and it came to the Washington Post, but also it really showed, you know, this is what you always say. It's like we need to, as black Americans, hold the politicians to account and say, okay, you want my vote? What are you going to do for me? And here's a group and they said, hey, you want our vote? We literally be controlling, you know, this is what they're saying. We've been controlling the vote since 1965. You better give us our black woman on the Supreme Court.

21:36 and they did a good job. Why did they do a good job? Because they've gotten all those pesky black men out of the way. And you know what? That's the notion. Yeah. That's like move out of the way. We got it done. We got it. We don't need you. And then by the way, F off. But the only problem is as a black man, we see that when you say let us in because of our race, then you have the backlash of not being, um, appreciate it for what you bring to the table. That's what Paris Thomas said in a past show that the only way you can validate you're there off your merit is make a hundred on the test. If you make a 99 or 98, then it's like, well, we gave you the other two points. That's why you're here. And so that they had to do it so publicly and the fact that

22:30 when we talk about atonement slash reparation they say shut up something that will benefit all no you can't you can't hold leverage but when it benefits a handful of people let me make sure i make this very clear and i made this clear in the last lost tapes um these women don't stand to benefit quote unquote all black women it's their COVID or their people in their status level. Because we have a sorority that we'll talk about a little later in the show down in Florida. I was gonna ask you this very question, so before you answer maybe I'll help you. Go ahead. As a black man, as a black American, do you feel like it will make any difference having a full-on ADOS black American woman on the Supreme Court? No. Okay. And that's a general perception you would say?

23:22 Yes, okay, because I'm just out of the and in it's a divide here It's those people like any progress is good progress But then it's the other side that says well tokenism is tokenism You know and just and this is clear. This is clear. It's so clear. Oh And that's the thing, the divide is clear. There's no middle ground here. And then when we start to look at what was unraveled and unwrapped about this candidate, they had better candidates to offer. I mean, the one that I thought was going to be in there, the one that Clyburn had picked, she would have been an easier pass through the confirmation process. Oh, really? Yes.

24:12 I believe, but the fact that some of the radical takes that we're going to look at later about Judge Jackson, because we got to be put respect on Justice Jackson, excuse me, put respect on her name. They made it very easy for her to be attacked in the manner that she was. Yeah, yeah, I would agree. I would agree. It seemed like and it also seemed like there was these these issues were vetted, but seemed like they were like, okay, we'll just push through it. We know what's coming. I think she knew, everybody knew. I don't think that, I don't, we'll get to that a little later because I think, because I don't think they thought it was going to go like it did. Oh, okay. And when I say they, I'm talking about the, this she will rise sisterhood

25:00 That was pushing for this agenda. I don't think they were thought it was gonna go like Okay, and we're gonna hear about that a little later So now we go back to the ladies from she will rise and let them answer the question about their firm action Talking point. But what do you say to people who say this is just an affirmative action pick? It's an interesting It's an interesting argument because in this country, the people who benefit most from affirmative action are white women. And yet no one claimed affirmative action when Justice Amy Coney Barrett was nominated and eventually confirmed. In 27 days. Right.

CHAPTER 07 / 39 Discussion

April Reign and the Origins of Oscar So White

April Reign, a member of the "She Will Rise" collective, is identified as the creator of the #OscarsSoWhite hashtag in 2015. This movement led to significant changes in the Academy's diversity requirements but also created a rift with Chris Rock, who hosted the Oscars during the 2016 boycott. Mo links this historical tension to the recent Will Smith slap, suggesting the conflict between the Smiths and Rock has roots in this diversity advocacy.

april reign· oscar so white· academy awards· chris rock· jada pinkett smith· hashtags

24:12 I believe, but the fact that some of the radical takes that we're going to look at later about Judge Jackson, because we got to be put respect on Justice Jackson, excuse me, put respect on her name. They made it very easy for her to be attacked in the manner that she was. Yeah, yeah, I would agree. I would agree. It seemed like and it also seemed like there was these these issues were vetted, but seemed like they were like, okay, we'll just push through it. We know what's coming. I think she knew, everybody knew. I don't think that, I don't, we'll get to that a little later because I think, because I don't think they thought it was going to go like it did. Oh, okay. And when I say they, I'm talking about the, this she will rise sisterhood

25:00 That was pushing for this agenda. I don't think they were thought it was gonna go like Okay, and we're gonna hear about that a little later So now we go back to the ladies from she will rise and let them answer the question about their firm action Talking point. But what do you say to people who say this is just an affirmative action pick? It's an interesting It's an interesting argument because in this country, the people who benefit most from affirmative action are white women. And yet no one claimed affirmative action when Justice Amy Coney Barrett was nominated and eventually confirmed. In 27 days. Right.

25:37 And so when someone says affirmative action, the adverse to that is them basically saying that there are no qualified black women to serve on the Supreme Court. And that's obviously not true. April Rain created the Oscar So White hashtag in 2015. The viral movement led the Academy to make sweeping changes to diversify its voting membership and film requirements. When it comes to the Supreme Court, only seven justices have not been white men in its 233 year history. In essence, is this courts so white?

26:17 It is, and it's not just the Supreme Court. It's the entire federal judiciary. We come in all shapes and sizes and colors and genders and sexual orientations. The judiciary, up and down from the Supreme Court to your local judge, should represent the community. That is why it's important to have more people who identify as women on the court. That is why it's important to have people who are visibly disabled. That is why it's important to So think about people's ages as well, because these justices will be on the court for decades to come. This April rain is very interesting. Yes. So yeah. Go ahead. No, no, no, no. I'm just looking at her business stuff.

27:05 So you hear the Oscar so white. Yeah, was created by one of these ladies. That's her April rain. She's the one that created. And then the fact that that's where the whole Chris rock and Jada Pickett Smith will Smith issue started. Oh, This is why I said when I saw will crying I'm like he's crying because he knew he had to do this That's all I could all I could think of is oh my god He's crying because he knew that he had to do that at the at the height of his career I think he knew whatever happened he knew and not leave people hanging you're saying give him a little dose of wheel and Chris because I know people want to hear about it is that

27:47 The reason why I say that's where it started at, that's where Jada and Will said we're boycotting 2016 Chris Rock was hosting. It made him look like a sellout to stay on. And then he's been opening monologue. He was saying he really went in. So that joke about the alopecia or the whatever. It was just a small piece of the overall puzzle. that was a straw that broke the camel's back. There was already a heavy load there and it was a, like I said, it was highly touted on the internet with this Oscar so white that Chris Rock was a sellout for continuing on. So there is, yeah, and April's right at the,

CHAPTER 08 / 39 Discussion

Senate Judiciary Committee Deadlock and Bipartisan Support

The Senate Judiciary Committee reached a deadlock on Judge Jackson's nomination, requiring a full Senate vote to advance. While Republicans like Lindsey Graham criticized her as an "extreme left" jurist, three Republicans—Mitt Romney, Lisa Murkowski, and Susan Collins—announced their support. Adam and Mo discuss the theory that Barack Obama is effectively "running the show" behind the scenes of the Biden administration's judicial picks.

lindsey graham· mitt romney· lisa murkowski· susan collins· senate judiciary committee· barack obama

28:25 precipice, but that's another show for another day. Okay, give people a little dose. Yeah, that's a nice tease. Holy crap. Good one. All right. So now we get to go. We stopped there with the last clip. Now we get to go to Joy and Reed. Oh, yay. Nothing like a little Joy Reed. Here's the thing. Now you're going to get to hear how they expected for it to go and how it actually went. In just the last few minutes, the nomination of Judge Katonji Brown Jackson, who will become the first black woman to serve on the Supreme Court, passed yet another key hurdle. Although not the way it normally happens. Normally, the Judiciary Committee advances the nomination to the full Senate for a confirmation vote. But because no Republican senator on the committee broke ranks, there was a time and it was left to the full Senate to accomplish that task. And know that that was deliberate.

29:21 The 11 Republicans on the Senate Judiciary Committee want you, and especially their base, to know which side of history they are on. If Judge Jackson is confirmed, I believe she will prove to be the most extreme and the furthest left justice ever to serve on the United States Supreme Court. In fact, Judge Jackson remains more of a defense attorney for criminals from the bench than a judge. I have concerns that Judge Jackson will be pinch hitting for one team or the other. I asked her to define the word woman. The fact that she couldn't or wouldn't answer that question speaks volumes. I'll vote no. I'm the first time I've ever voted against any Supreme Court nominee.

30:07 First time. For people who don't know, that was Lindsey Graham speaking. Lady G. Yeah, Lady G, who is from South Carolina. Right. Clyburn is from South Carolina. I think her name is Jay Michelle... My memory's failing me. I don't know, Mo. It's not. It's gone. But I mean, I remember her first initial James Michelle, but that was the Coburn's pick also from South Carolina. So I think there was some I think Lindsey Graham thought. Clyburn's pick would be in IC. Right, and it didn't happen. So wait a minute, let's just pause it for a second. That's a double slam against Clyburn. First of all, he wanted to be picked according to our theory. Then he has his pick and his pick is also superseded or passed over. I always thought it was his pick and I think maybe we miscommunicated a little bit there. Okay.

31:10 I always thought he wanted his pick, which would gate he would have quarterbacked her basically. And I think that was his, you're saying that was his in route and with South Carolina. That's a lot of power on the Supreme Court, which across party lines. It would have been the same thing. you know, because Lindsey Graham, hey Clyde, hey Clyde, you know what I'm saying, I need a favor on this one. And he was saying, you know, so I think that's how that was going to go. And he was saying she was J. Michelle, she was also pro-police. Like I said, she would have been a far easier person to go smoothly. But I don't think it was up to them. Do you think the She Will Rise ladies wanted her?

31:58 I don't think it really mattered to them who it was. Who I think it wanted it was, the current president, Barack Obama. Man, it's so clear he's running the show now, isn't it? It's so clear! We've talked about it a way a long time ago, the committee. You remember when they finally decided to pick Biden? It was the, it's going to be a committee around him. It's going to be, you're seeing the committee. Yeah, of course. It's so sad to see him like, just kind of stumbled around the room. Well, I loved it when when the vice president and Obama they were together. I mean, it was just like, you know, and Joe was just bumbling around the background. And of course, you're the only person that I know who can tweet a picture of Kamala and Barack that says the only thing black in this picture are the pearls. I mean, you're the only guy who could do that. So I could retweet it, though. That was good. And the other thing is that

32:55 One out of two for these ladies ain't bad. At least they got the black Supreme Court justice. That's another tweet for you, Mo. So you heard how she act surprised that it was gonna go like it did. I don't know why. Maybe they thought, well, they won't openly attack a black female justice at first because nobody really wanted It's like, okay, they have the votes, let her in. No, you know what? I think you're right that Joy Reid was surprised because she said, well, I mean, surely no one wants to be called a racist by me because I'm going to. You know, I think that's probably how she thinks. And it was also the same thing with Obama's first term, right? Nobody really wanted to criticize him. Right. It's the same kind of vibe there. So I guess we can go into the second part of this clip.

CHAPTER 09 / 39 Discussion

Joy Reid and the Comparison to Dixiecrats

MSNBC host Joy Reid compares the Republican opposition to Judge Jackson to the "Dixiecrats" of the 1960s. Reid also attacks Justice Clarence Thomas and his wife, Jenny Thomas, labeling her an "insurrectionist." Mo argues that the Republican strategy against Jackson was a calculated "information war" tactic, using her sentencing record to link her to the "Pizza Playbook"—a reference to the Pizzagate conspiracy style of political attack.

joy reid· clarence thomas· jenny thomas· maya wiley· pizzagate· information war

33:53 But there is some bipartisanship here. Tonight, Senators Lisa Murkowski and Mitt Romney joined Senator Susan Collins in announcing their support for Judge Jackson's nomination. While Judge Jackson's confirmation is assured, today's committee deadlock vote puts Judge Jackson in the same company as Justins Clarence Thomas and Robert Bork. as the only nominees in the past 47 years to not be voted out of that committee favorably. Again, that is on purpose. They do not want soon to be Justice Jackson on that court as a black woman unscathed. But unlike Thomas and Bork, Judge Jackson is neither an extremist nor accused of sexual harassment nor married to an insurrectionist.

34:30 and she is overwhelmingly viewed favorably by the American public, which should give some Republicans... Wait a minute, she just called Clarence Thomas' wife, Jenny, an insurrectionist? Right, and him a sexual harasser. You know, that's libelous. She's got to be careful with that. And not only that, but it's also lax self-awareness that you're talking about a political figure. Let's be clear here. Clarence Thomas is a political figure. Justice Brown is a political figure. So if it's good for the goose, it's good for the gander. And it's like, I can't believe that she got put through this process, but we're still hurling rocks at Clarence Thomas. You know what I'm saying? What, 30 years later? It's crazy. Nixon is neither an extremist nor accused of sexual harassment nor married to an insurrectionist. And she is overwhelmingly viewed favorably by the American public, which should give some Republicans pause, though it clearly does not.

35:26 As the Daily Beast points out, support for Jackson in a Marquette Law School poll among black adults currently sits at 86%. Among Hispanics, it's at 76%. And among whites, it is at 50%. 59% easily making her the most popular Supreme Court nominee since John Roberts was elevated to Chief Justice in 2005. Joining me now is former Assistant U.S. Attorney Maya Wiley, who will next month become the President and CEO of the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights. Congratulations, Maya. I have to say, it struck me, and I will only put this on myself, watching that montage of all of these right-wing Republican senators denouncing, essentially, this judge and saying they can't support her, and only these three not Southern justices, it definitely felt for me like watching the Dixiecrats versus the Northern Democrats

36:17 in the 1960s on civil rights. It sounded like if you just put yourself there, that is how that sounded. Now I feel like I know how that sounded. What do you make of it all? And I agree with her. Yeah. That the fact that how divided it is. Now the topic is not race. The topic is pedophilia. Yes. That's the divide. And I'm gonna lay out, I know people are like, why is he tying her into Pettit? Because a lot of these attacks levied against Justice Brown was to

36:54 was a political tool tactic. Yes. To get the soundbites to run in 2022. And the message was clear before it even started. I was already getting messages. It was being trolled out all over, you know, online. Oh look at she, oh she cut this guy's sentence in half and why is she letting pedophiles off the hook? That was planted, planned, and rammed through everywhere. And executed Well, extremely well. It was, I mean right away people were like, oh I can't believe this. Why do you think that's being, have you actually seen the rulings? Do we know every single part of it? Not defending what she did, but I was like, okay that's launched.

37:35 But the point is we're living in an information war where memes are used. They work. Right. And that's all. And I think the Republicans understand this. They're going to go back. Let me unveil what I think here. So this is a good spot to do it. They're going back to the pizza playbook. Yeah. It's interesting that the Justice Jackson was also the judge who presided over the Pizzagate shooter. goggles curry. I'm sorry, I'm sorry. I'll let you go ahead and finish it, but exactly. And just as a small aside, Maya Wiley, who we didn't hear, who was on this in this clip though, she's a Sorosista. She's Open Society, she's worked there and still works there I think. Yeah, this is all so clear. Okay. So

CHAPTER 10 / 39 Discussion

Clarence Thomas and the High-Tech Lynching Legacy

The hosts revisit Justice Clarence Thomas's 1991 "high-tech lynching" defense during his confirmation hearings. They discuss how the modern political landscape uses memes and innuendo to "cancel" or discredit figures. Mo posits that Republicans utilized the "Pizzagate playbook" during Jackson's hearings by focusing on her sentencing of sex offenders without explicitly mentioning the toxic "QAnon" or "Pizzagate" labels.

clarence thomas· high-tech lynching· anita hill· qanon· memes· republicans

38:31 Now we got to go back to the lynching episode and Clarence Thomas and since Joyery brought him up. Now you're bringing in the lynching. Okay, this is good. Oh Moe, this is bringing it all together here. not occur. When it came time for him to publicly respond to the allegations, Thomas turned the tables on his interrogators and for all intents and purposes ended the debate. This is a circus, it's a national disgrace. It is a high-tech lynching for uppity blacks who in any way deign to think for themselves. And it is a message that unless you kowtow to an old order you will be lynched, destroyed, caricatured, memed,

39:20 by a committee of the US Senate rather than hung from a tree. Well, they're trying to cancel him anyway. I'm saying the black voice, you know, like now we have a real black voice. Yeah, not that faker. Right. So, I mean, that's all skinfo and kinfo kind of thing that these games that Joy and Reed play, but they're looking at like, this is how the game is played. This is how y'all played it with Kavanaugh. That's interesting. The way she talks about Justice Thomas, it's as if he's a white man.

40:08 For all intents and purposes he is, because he's married to a white woman, which Justice Brown is married to a white man, but it's different. That's very different. So what happened here is a lot of hypocrisy. It's being made clear to see. I think they walked her, Justice Brown, right into a trap. She's a smart lady, smarter than me, I hope. And then see that she sits in. And she couldn't see this coming? But I don't think they thought they would go there because of the stigma that Pizzagate had with it. But once again, I think the Republicans know that the pizza playbook is a winning playbook. That was a big reason why Trump won in 2016. So then why did they hold back? Wait a minute, so you're saying they obviously held back on it because it was known, I knew about it.

41:11 So they held back because why? Who held back because why? The Republicans. They didn't bring it up. No, they didn't. They said everything but Pizzagate. Yeah. Oh, I see. I see. So they used the Pizzagate playbook without using Pizzagate because that would have been too polarizing and obvious and there's too much hanging off of that to discredit the entire the entire line of questioning. Correct. You even did it unknowingly. You connected a dot between her and the... That's QAnon shit. That's QAnon. Get out of here. Yeah. Got it. Right. So it's just like, let's put it out on the web.

CHAPTER 11 / 39 Discussion

The Pizza Playbook and Republican Midterm Strategy

Mo explains that the "Pizza Playbook" involves framing political opponents as soft on pedophilia or "grooming" to energize the base for the 2022 midterms. He notes that Lindsey Graham's "no" vote was a strategic move to align with this playbook, while Republicans who voted "yes" are being labeled as "RHINOs." The discussion suggests this "groomer" narrative will be a central theme in upcoming elections.

pizza playbook· midterms· lindsey graham· mitt romney· rhino· grooming

41:52 Just keep asking her about, you know, what's a woman? That by the way was a great question. We're gonna get to that in the actual clip, but I just want to lay it out so people know where we're going. And I'm not saying that she is with Pizzagate. I'm not even saying Pizzagate is real. But the thing is, And the information war is about the memes you can make. And this meme has stuck around for so long and still has legs to this day. Indeed, and I guess I'll just wait to see how it unfurls in your story. Okay, so let's go ahead and get to the final clip number 10 Sadly, well, let me just start with the joy because I do think we should all be channeling Senator Booker right now and I You joy look this is a day to celebrate because judge Jackson will be justice Jackson and that matters it's huge but

42:51 But I'm with you because the reality is there is no question in any of the minds of any of these senators that this is a highly qualified jurist who has not only the credentials, the experience, the intellect, but also the temperament to be on this court. And this is the problem. This is not about her in terms of her qualifications. This is about a wedge in our democracy and using that wedge. Dixiecrats were all about, you know, making sure they were preserving a racial status quo. And this certainly feels like it because we do have to call it.

43:32 But this feels very much like that kind of moment. Lindsey Graham is the example of this, because as he himself said in that clip, he's the one who actually has been the reliable Republican to always take the institutional Pro-democracy stance in these confirmations and he's not doing it now and that's Trumpism. Yeah, indeed. That's Trumpism. Thank goodness. There it is. And the thing is Lindsey Graham was smart enough to know what the play was. It doesn't matter about political party right now. It doesn't matter. It's are you part of the pizza party or not? Right. And Romney walked right into it. And the other two.

44:20 Yeah, you're with them now. Yes, you're on their side. Um, and so interesting calling of the herd that way I hadn't I hadn't considered that and that's interesting. This this gets right. It's rhino season. And I think they're just gonna keep hammering this home hammering this home and we see what's coming out of Florida with the we'll get there later because I think it's as well this I think that's the other part of the confluence you were talking about uh if I'm oh yeah correct or not so yeah you see where all you see how everything is lining up and for Graham to put his record I mean he easily could say yeah I said I'll vote yes but the fact that he didn't just only uh uh accentuates in my mind that

CHAPTER 12 / 39 Discussion

Cory Booker's Emotional Tribute to Judge Jackson

Senator Cory Booker delivered an emotional speech during the confirmation hearings, invoking figures like Beyonce and Venus Williams to praise Judge Jackson's resilience. Adam and Mo critique the speech as "phony" and "patronizing," with Mo specifically highlighting Booker's story about a woman wanting to "touch him" because he was close to Jackson as an attempt to project a sense of divinity onto the nominee.

cory booker· beyonce· venus williams· public defender· divinity· patronizing

45:11 This is the the pizza playbook is is fully in play and it's not over just because the confirmation happened Yeah, I agree with you. Yeah, I'm seeing that too. Yeah the whole groomer thing And this of course is where I guess we're gonna get to Disney pretty soon that we're not there yet This is what they expected for it to be like. And this is Cory Booker, he gets emotional. It's a long clip, like two minutes and some change I believe. Maybe, I'll close at three. You can stop whenever you want to. It's rich. So we could just end it wherever you want to, but he lays it on thick to Judge Jackson, Justice Jackson. Any one of us senators could yell as loud as we want that Venus can't return a serve. We could yell as loud as we want that Beyonce

45:59 Can't sing we can yell as much as we want that astronaut may Jamison didn't go all that high But you know what they got nothing to prove as it says in the Bible let the work I've done speak for me Well, you have spoken you started speaking as a little girl watching that man right there Try to raise a family and study law while your mama supported everybody You went before the Senate three times in a bipartisan manner. God bless America. We don't do that much stuff bipartisan around here. You went to became a public defender because you wanted to understand all aspects of the law. Who does that? We live in a society that's very materialistic sometimes, very, very consumeristic. You went into, do people become public defenders for the money? No.

47:02 Your family and you speak to service, service, service. And I'm telling you right now, I'm not letting anybody in the Senate steal my joy. I told you this at the beginning. I am embarrassed. It happened earlier today. I just look at you and I start getting full of emotion. I saw this and we'll play a little bit more. No, go ahead. I found this in an odd way having watched and heard it before. It was the body language is important. It felt a little patronizing. Right. I got this. I'm glad you said that because I was like,

47:48 Like she was handicapped or something like yeah, or maybe like she didn't belong there, but I can need to convince everybody that she belongs here Well, that's what he was doing for sure. He was he was his job was to represent the the black American backing of the justice and But I think it's all he was leaning back a lot when he was saying it and then you know then the tears but it was kind of like I'm an elder black American statesman and I'm just telling you how how fortunate you are that you deserve to be here. I don't know it's something icky about it. And it was I mean even with her

48:28 You can see her face like, oh god. But then she had to keep, she had to take it like, yeah, yeah, you know, thank you, thank you. But you could see her face like, he's really laying it on thick, you know. It's not about him, it's just unlikable. I mean, I don't know him personally, but just the way he comes across. He's phony because he's phony, Moe. He's phony. He's a phony. But he's bad at being phony. That's the baddest. A lot of politicians are phony, but he's not even bad at it. But that makes him such a wonderful, colorful person in politics. You got to have a couple of nun nuts and you're just like, don't call me Booker. You're a cuck. Let's listen a little bit more. All right. I'm jogging this morning.

49:08 I live on and I get terror because I put my music on loud when I'm jogging trying to block out the noise of the heart attack I'm having And this woman comes up on me Matt practically tackles me. He's making it about him to hear now That's that's kind of that's creepy to an african-american woman and the look on her eyes She just wanted to touch me because I think cuz I'm sitting so close to you who? and tell me what it meant to her to watch you sitting where you're sitting. I can't take no more. And you did not... Stop it. Stop it. Please. All right, all right, all right. She wanted... I tried to make it through. I'm sorry, folks. But she wanted to touch me... Yes. ...because I was so close to you. Close to you. I know. Crazy. Like Jesus is him or something. That's right. Like, all I need to do is touch your him, and I'll be healed. That's right. Was it T-Bone's mama? I mean, like, is that who stopped you?

50:07 That's Cory Booker, that's Cory Booker, phony to the core. He doesn't jog in the morning either, you know it. But the reason I really played all the way up to that point of touching me to touch you, that spoke to a divinity. You know what I'm saying? To something divine, you know, that the power can be transferred. By touch. Yeah, right. You understand? So it's, that's what they expected. But no, that's not what they got. So now we can get into what she got. And I'm going to be honest with you, she got beat up.

CHAPTER 13 / 39 Discussion

Marsha Blackburn and the Definition of a Woman

Senator Marsha Blackburn asked Judge Jackson to define the word "woman," to which Jackson responded, "I'm not a biologist." The hosts analyze this as a major "forced error" in the information war, providing Republicans with a perfect soundbite for campaign memes. They argue that while the answer satisfied progressive gender ideology, it undermined Jackson's own historic status as the first "Black woman" on the court.

marsha blackburn· biologist· woman· lgbtq· progressive· memes

51:05 She really got put through the, you know what I'm saying, through the ringer. But the thing is, this is politics. I don't feel in any kind of way because Kavanaugh was done the same way they had the MK Ultra allegedly. MK Ultra asset come in and talking a baby voice in his hearing so this is where we're at with politics. That what they were talking about all the civility and all that? No, we're at the wedge. And now the wedge is pedophilia. And that's why this show is made the way it is because

51:40 This is gonna be forecasting what I believe to be what 22 is gonna look like and they're gonna ride this thing as long as the wheels fall off. So now we can get into Senator Blackburn asking her to define a woman. Can you provide a definition for the word woman? Can I provide a definition? Yeah, I can't. You can't? not in this context. I'm not a biologist. So you believe the meaning of the word woman is so unclear and controversial that you can't give me a definition? Senator, in my work as a judge, what I do is I

52:24 address disputes. If there's a dispute about a definition, people make arguments and I look at the law and I decide. So I'm not... The fact that you can't give me a straight answer about something as fundamental as what a woman is underscores the dangers of the kind of progressive education that we are hearing about. Yeah, that's the Florida tie-in. Yes. Yes. Yes. Yes. You're right Murkowski. Where's she from again a Blackburn? Where's she from again, Tennessee? Yeah, yeah, I think Tennessee but I mean, but yeah, I'm pretty sure it's one of those two states but She even chuckled at the end like got her like she couldn't even hold it in that she knew like this is the clip that we wanted cuz you're gonna hear this and

53:20 Do your justice, I mean, do your politician know what a woman is? Well, the opposition's Supreme Court justice didn't know. Brought to you by the, you know, Friends of Republicans, whatever it is. Yes, yes, the soundbite, it's the clip right there. And that's all they wanted was these memes because they understand. I mean, and you know this, of course, but all, all hearings in Congress or in Senate ever since the advent of C-SPAN, they're all pretty much scripted and expected and they know what's coming and a lot of the all the statements are known beforehand and everyone's talked to everybody. Well, thanks for coming to my office yesterday. So it's all showboating. It's one big show. But this is how politics is played, especially in the 21st century that we only need the minute

54:14 Clip. Yeah, that's it. No and that's where we are. It is what it is. It's the information war so when they got this what it told me and I agree with Senator Blackburn the fact is that let me know who Judge Jackson's Justice Jackson's allegiance was to it wasn't to women. It wasn't to black folks and with X But it was with us it was to the LGBTQ LGBTQQIAPK plus what you said yeah and the new and all the noodle boys and girls yeah but let's be clear that they don't even represent gay people and lesbians because a lot of gay people live like I'm not on board with that no it's just you know just a wedge it's the wedge yeah and you starting to see like is how devoted are you but I'll go back to one thing that um

55:10 Well, and you know what, and even though yes, what's her face, Blackburn's job was to bring in the education part. That is exactly what Justice Jackson did. She was like, oh no, no, I'm just gonna, nope, nope, nope, nope, I'm just gonna toe the party line here and just say, no, I can't answer that, I'm not a biologist. She knew the question was probably coming. But that was a poor answer because your whole thing was it has to be a black woman. to satisfy the election promise. And then you get in there and say, I don't know what a woman is, an anabologist. It's the dumbest answer I've ever heard for a simple question. I'm with you on that. And for, I'll say this, I think they were poorly unprepared

56:06 Because I think the fact that she went through three other confirmations. Yeah, it was bipartisan. Without a problem. Right. They thought and then I think they thought it was gonna be a little bit of like the Obama inauguration kind of thing where it was just gonna be celebratory. You know, the Republicans didn't want to see races so they'll back off. I'm just speaking through what I think the pro-Jackson people were thinking. Sure. Like they don't want to have mud on their face. They don't want to make any gaffes. Right now, they're up, you know what I'm saying, going into the midterms. They don't want to make any forced errors. And I think the Republicans look at it like, all gas, no brakes. And we're going to hang this pedophilia thing, the tag on them forever. And it's the way things just hit the Disney, the don't say gay bill, this thing all at once. That's not a coincidence in my mind.

CHAPTER 14 / 39 Discussion

Josh Hawley on Jackson's Sentencing of Sex Offenders

Senator Josh Hawley questioned Judge Jackson regarding her history of handing down sentences below federal guidelines in child pornography cases. Mo argues that these clips were designed to brand Jackson as the "pedophile judge" in the court of public opinion. He suggests Jackson was poorly prepared for these specific "Pizza Playbook" attacks, which will likely haunt her legacy and the Democratic party.

josh hawley· sentencing· sex offenders· child pornography· memes· information war

57:05 I am in total agreement. It's just too much for it to be conclusive. I'm in total agreement there. So let's go to Holly and his questioning of Jackson. You also said to this individual who is an adult, tried as an adult, 18 years old, you also said to him, besides saying that you thought his victims were his peers, you also said there's no reason to think that you are a pedophile. Then you went on to say again That's another reason why you weren't going to give him you're only going to give him three months because you would have judged that he wasn't a pedophile and then you said and this is something I'd I really need your help understanding Then you apologize to him, and I just have to tell you I can't quite figure this out He said to him. This is a truly difficult situation. I Appreciate that your family's in the audience. I feel so sorry for them and for you and

58:02 and for the anguish this has caused all of you. I feel terrible about the collateral consequences of this conviction." And then you go on to say, sex offenders are truly shunned in our society. I'm just trying to figure out judge is he the victim here or the victims the victims? Yeah, Hawley. And people might be wondering why I'm only playing soundbites because normally go in the weeds and go get the full testimonies and transcripts whatever. I'm playing this to show what's going to be played over and over again. And over again. And further linking

58:47 She's gonna be known as the pedophile judge, just like Clarence Thomas is known as the sellout or sexual harassment judge, just like Kavanaugh is known as the Me Too judge. This is gonna be her claim to fame. Right or wrong, I'm just illustrating to people early on how I think the politics are gonna be played, and this was a huge win for Republicans to have one and say she doesn't know what a woman is and two 18 and eight year old PR peers. Yeah, I'm afraid you're right, Mo. I really am.

59:24 It's the gift that keeps on giving and I think it was out of lack of preparation because I think they thought it was going to just be a celebratory ceremony. I don't think they were prepared. And then you say they get the question in advance. That's even worse that you can't come up with an answer for these two topics. But you know what, if you think about it, that is the progressive answer. That's what she gave. That's the correct progressive answer. I'm not a biologist? You know? That's dumb. I mean, like, if it is, I'm not saying it's not. I'm just saying that's dumb. No, but think about it because the whole point about anybody can be a man or a woman is all external. So if she looks at... The way I took it from her answer, because I thought about this because I was like, what is this answer? I mean, you're just making the memes for him.

1:00:22 Which is what a lot of these leftist progressive ideas are. They're highly amiable, they're so stupid. And I think that what she meant was, well, you know, I can't define a woman. unless I'm a biologist in there looking at all the bits and pieces that are different. It has to be all those pieces, and if they're not there or they're taken out, then maybe you're not a woman. This is how twisted it is. I think the left actually liked her answer, thought it was perfect. Right, but the fact that you say I'm not a biologist proves that biology decides what a woman is. You see what I'm saying? Like that's... I'm with you and I'm completely with you. She's stepped on a bunch of rakes when it comes to...

1:01:08 the information war. Like we can get into biology and all of that, you know, I'm talking about giving them these nice clippable nuggets that can be put on a meme, that you know, that can be shared, uh, and I gotta give credit, the pizza playbook was executed to perfection. I gotta give credit where credit is due because that's what we do, we look at attacks, right? Or tactics or, you know... I'm honestly I'm kind of mad I didn't I didn't see that this was I mean I had all the pieces but I couldn't put them together that this was the playbook good job well done well thank you thank you I'll take that yeah you said it was a confluence I mean that's

CHAPTER 15 / 39 Discussion

The Evolution of the Information War from Pizzagate to Hunter Biden

The hosts discuss the evolution of political innuendo, from the 2016 Pizzagate rumors to the recent verification of the Hunter Biden laptop. Mo notes that the "Pizza Playbook" relies on "juicy nuggets" of information that may not meet legal standards but are highly effective in social media warfare. They also mention the sudden resurgence of Pizzagate-related content on platforms like Telegram following the Jackson hearings.

pizzagate· hunter biden· laptop· telegram· john mcafee· innuendo

1:01:55 I was trying to think of a word, but that's exactly what it is. It's a confluence of... Right, and I had all the pieces, but I didn't put it all together to say, oh, they're running the Pizzagate playbook. Now I get it. Pizza playbook. We don't want to... Pizza playbook, yeah. I love it. So, because... With the pizza gate, I think that was overplayed. But was that, I gotta ask you this question, looking back now, do you think that was the beginning of the information war? Like just get this information out here and let the internet does what it does with it. Not whether it's true or not. I mean, it was a lot of sketchy stuff that was in those emails and stuff, but at the same time, it was a lot of speculation.

1:02:45 innuendo in it. So, looking back, I'm like, is that, was it? This was injected. It was injected. Clearly injected into, I'm not quite sure where it's done, but I don't even think it's that hard. And it's juicy. This is, it was, everything was primed, was perfect. Yeah, because you got spirit cooking and all that other stuff. I mean, it was, I'm telling you, the reason why I say this is, My mother-in-law. I mean, what she watches is the local news, right? I mean, that's pretty much what comes across her Facebook feed. And she was like, child, you get stuff? I'm like, what?

1:03:23 Like that's the reach of it and that was the that sold the ground for QAnon and everything that came after that and I think I think the Democrats did a good job of demonizing QAnon So I'm giving credit on both sides like you can't it's so toxic and radioactive That they couldn't say pizza gate in the hearing exactly bring it up. They couldn't bring up QAnon, but they masterfully just set the innuendo and to resurface it. You know, there's another... This is really nuts. So, you know, Telegram is a cesspool of just diarrhea. And what's odd about... I've never been interested in Telegram and I don't like it, you know, these groups with thousands of messages you can't keep. I don't like it. But I need to have it because a lot of Bitcoiners use it and there's some Bitcoiner groups. And somehow I got subscribed to a

1:04:21 John McAfee telegram which is obviously not his but all of a sudden that thing came because it's it's just been dormant for months and months and months of course after he died it kept going which was Which was the fun? There's kind of why I was like, oh, this is fun Let me see what what these people are doing and there's a couple other ones that post the same stuff and it but it's not McAfee, it doesn't matter But that came to life all of a sudden with this short video that ties together Pizzagate with Seth Rich with the Podestas and that all happened around the same time. So, you know, wherever this is coming from, it's coming. And there's one more piece that I didn't include in this rundown, but since you went there, the Biden laptop.

1:05:08 Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah. So it's the Hunter bottom, to be clear, the Hunter bottom laptop. So the fact that they had to admit it was real, now you can say, see? They said Pizzagate wasn't real either. It leads to that. I'm fascinated by this whole rollout because I think, like I said, it was executed with perfection. They got what they went in there to come. It could have been just a, oh, yeah, hey, clap. Yeah, okay, you won. you know, let her in, but no, they got some juicy nuggets to use in the coming election. And just let people know, I don't vote. So this is not a partisan thing. This is an appreciation for political science. Yeah, some good psychological information warfare. Yes. So let's go ahead and get into the number 15.

CHAPTER 16 / 39 Discussion

Purity Tests and the Danger of the Surveillance Apparatus

Adam brings up a recent "scandal" involving libertarian figure Tom Woods to illustrate the growing trend of searching for "pedophiles everywhere" as a political weapon. Mo warns that the "apparatus" of social credit scores and purity tests is dangerous regardless of which party wields it. They discuss the fear that the far right could use the same silencing tactics currently associated with the left.

tom woods· social credit score· purity tests· far right· surveillance· libertarian

1:06:03 You're saying that you are you're apologizing to him. You're saying you're sorry for the anguish This has caused him there was a victim impact statement in this case It didn't get read into the record, but it was there I've described the videos that we have. You say earlier in the case, you talk about how heinous these crimes are and you describe them to your credit. You describe how heinous it is to your credit and yet here you are giving him three months and apologizing to him and saying you feel sorry for the anguish it's caused him and also saying you think that sex offenders are truly shunned in our society.

1:06:39 So just talk about that. Help me understand. I mean, is he a victim? Is that your view here? Is that why you said this? Is that what you meant by it? Senator, I again don't have the entire record. I remember in that particular case, I considered it to be unusual in part for the reasons that I described. I remember in that case that defense counsel was arguing for probation. In part, because he argued that here we had a very young man, just graduated from high school. He presented all of his diplomas and certificates and the things that he had done and argued consistent with what I was seeing in the record that this particular defendant

1:07:32 had gotten into this in a way that was, I thought, inconsistent with some of the other cases that I had seen. Such an interesting answer. Another bad answer. Yeah. And this is a running thing, but the manager said you see 18 and 8 year olds as peers. You gotta, you can't let that linger. You gotta extinguish that right then, because this is, this is, those, even though those two separate clips, they were sequential, you understand, and uninterrupted. I just, well, I divided it. So he said all that and you just come back. I don't remember that case. I don't have the details. Nobody's gonna remember that part. Nope. So from my standpoint, and just in how I understand the information warfare, you gotta be like, look,

1:08:25 We all know an eight year old, 18 year old is not a peer. You know, and that way it could be clipped to say she stood against, you know, the attack. But to say I don't have my records and that kind of thing, it's just... poor response to a well-crafted attack. You know what's weird, just as a side note, my buddy Tom Woods, and I say my buddy because I've been on his podcast a couple times, he seems to be a stand-up guy. He works, I think, for the Mises Institute. You know, he's well followed by the libertarian crowd and party.

1:09:06 And they tried to take him down recently, I didn't even know this was happening until someone sent me a link to an article. So apparently his first wife and he dated when he was 25 and she was 15. And this is now a scandal of epic proportions. And I'm looking at how people arrived at this assumption and what he's saying, and it's just like, wow, you know, what's happening here is people are out. They're out to find pedophiles everywhere. This is just what really scares me is this right here. You know how you talk about the social credit score and those kind of things? Yeah. Everybody always talks about what it's going to be like in the liberal or left-leaning hands. What about start having purity tests around your social media history and that kind of thing? I mean, not condoning anything. I'm just saying we always look at something if one party has or one

1:10:12 group has it so when if the far right gets this technology and they're like oh it'll suck just as bad we've got to stop all these idiots right that's that's the point i'm trying to make is that it's the it's the apparatus that we need to worry about not who wills it because It's gonna be just as bad or even worse. You start having purity tests to say, you know, whatever it is. I gotta tell you Mo, we've been talking for 78 episodes and you've influenced me greatly. Lots of things have happened in my life since we've been doing this show. But right now, I see these things, you know, because this of course is absolutely true.

CHAPTER 17 / 39 Discussion

Ted Cruz on Jackson's Harvard Law Review Note

Senator Ted Cruz questioned Judge Jackson on a note she wrote for the Harvard Law Review regarding the restraint of released sex offenders. In the note, Jackson argued that certain sex offender statutes, such as registration and DNA testing, should be viewed as "punitive" and therefore potentially unconstitutional. Cruz used this to frame Jackson as having a long-term "record of activism" on behalf of sexual predators.

ted cruz· harvard law review· sex offender registry· punitive· preventative· constitutionality

1:10:53 Would, if Republicans had upper hand, would they be silencing other people? I'm pretty sure they would. You know, because this is good versus evil, brother. This is not even people. I'm really becoming a believer these days. It's control. I mean, which we call control witchcraft. I mean, that's my definition of it. You have to think a certain way. And I don't want people to think it only goes one way. Guess we finished off now. We got to go to Ted Cruz and read you why Ted Cruz. He's a very smart person I'm not saying my account, but just Always got a knowledge that his legal mind. Yeah, even his detractors, so this is legal mind against legal mind and watch the the sparks fly He comes there with

1:11:49 And I'll confess, Judge Jackson, as I listen to your testimony, I believe you are someone who is compassionate. I believe you care for children, obviously your children and other children. But I also see a record of activism and advocacy as it concerns sexual predators that stems back decades and that is concerning. You wrote your note on the Harvard Law Review on sex crimes. Your note is your major academic work on the law review and yours is entitled Prevention versus Punishment Towards a Principled Distinction in the Restraint of Released Sex Offenders. And in it, you argue, and I quote,

1:12:34 A recent spate of legislation purports to regulate released sex offenders by requiring them to register with local law enforcement officials, notify community members of their presence, undergo DNA testing, and submit to civil commitment for an indefinite term. Although many courts and commentators herald these laws as valid regulatory measures, others reject them as punitive enactments that violate the rights of individuals who have already been sanctioned for their crimes. Under existing doctrine, the constitutionality of sex offender statutes depends upon their characterization as essentially preventative rather than punitive. And what you go on to explain is if they're viewed as punitive, they are unconstitutional. If they're viewed as preventative, they are not. And throughout the course of your note, you argue they should be viewed as punitive and therefore unconstitutional.

CHAPTER 18 / 39 Discussion

Adam Curry's 2003 Firing and European Elite Pedophilia

Adam Curry shares a personal story from 2003 when he was fired from a radio station in the Netherlands for discussing allegations of pedophilia involving the Dutch Attorney General and Turkish political prisoners. He describes the "Dutroux case" in Belgium and rumors of male prostitutes at a house he purchased in Amsterdam. Adam notes that his radio station lost its license within weeks of him bringing these "elite" scandals to light.

amsterdam· dutroux case· netherlands· turkey· radio· censorship

1:13:30 Yeah, now I just want to say something about this because this is the conversation we should be having and no one's having it. Let's have it. Yes, my personal opinion because I've been studying pedophilia amongst elites for a long time and I've even gotten in trouble for it. You want to get, I know, I know, but just for people that may not know let them know to the extent where Yeah, no, I'll explain Of course, I'll explain I'll explain the background this goes back to 2003 I think maybe 2004 no 2003 problem. Anyway, it doesn't really matter Almost 20 years ago

1:14:18 And there was a lot of noise around, and this was actually an old case, around a... the Attorney General of the Netherlands that he was abusing young boys and there was this connection with Turkey and there were political prisoners that were a part of this. And it really goes back to something called the Dutroux case, which was elites sodomizing children in the Netherlands and in Belgium. Oddly enough, The house that we bought in Amsterdam when we went back to the Netherlands in 1999 belonged to the lawyer of the Queen and he and the Prince at the time were

1:15:09 known to have male prostitutes in that house, which I didn't know we bought it of course. But also there was, you know, one had gone missing and so there was this rumor that it was buried underneath cement patio in the backyard of this house that we had. So I took an interest obviously, what the hell are all these stories? And so I brought that up on a radio show that I was doing at the time and Right away I was fired, the radio station lost its funding, their license was pulled and it was gone. That happened within two to four weeks. It was amazing and I'm like, you know, I should kind of be careful with this stuff. Then I studied a lot of the Catholic Church and what happened there. So to come all the way around, when it comes to pedophilia, what is typically thought, you know, you gotta lock them up, castrate them, do all these things.

1:16:02 The majority of pedophiles who abuse children have been abused themselves. These people need long-term medical care and it may not be fixable. You know, that's... it comes from severe trauma often and this is medical fact that this is how a lot of this propagates. Then there is section of the population mainly powerful people because of political position or money etc and they do this and some of that is a cult related so that's a lot of it is power related and this because these people are insane and they lose their freaking minds because of the power and they need to be detained and

CHAPTER 19 / 39 Discussion

Medical Incarceration versus Normalization of Pedophilia

The hosts debate the proper societal response to pedophilia, with Adam arguing for permanent medical incarceration rather than standard prison or the death penalty. They express concern over the "normalization" of the behavior through terms like "MAPs" (Minor Attracted Persons). Mo suggests that Judge Jackson's academic history indicates she may be a "Trojan horse" for the eventual normalization of these behaviors at the Supreme Court level.

medical facility· rehabilitation· normalization· maps· jackson brown· trauma

1:16:52 And maybe one day they can be reintegrated into society. But none of these people should be on the street. But I'm not in agreement of throwing them in the cell, castrating them, killing them, etc. Even though they've done horrible things. You need to stop the epidemic. And just to go to what Cruz was discussing is, they're a special kind of criminal because one, Like you said, most of them are victims at some point and that's how they get into that whole terrible cycle. But I think the impact of if they act again is so detrimental. It's kind of like, do you quarantine? It's kind of like, we go back to like the COVID thing. It's like, if something can spread,

1:17:50 And that, I mean, we're saying they became a victim because they were victimized and it becomes so much of like an addiction. I wouldn't say it is an addiction, but the fact that it's off impulse. What do you do with them? Do you have to tag them as sex offenders? No, no, no. They have to be incarcerated in a medical facility. You cannot know what he's saying with Ted Cruz said after they served their sentence I think that conversation we're having that what do you do with them then do you tag them? Right, but so my point is It's not a time that's that's going to you don't fix somebody by throwing them in jail someone like this You don't fix them that way so they should there should that's not the wrong. That's my entire point We're all are saying we're all arguing about to their rehabilitated

1:18:37 Yeah, and so and putting them in prison is not gonna help anything. They need to be you know We need medical facilities where these people are locked up and treated and maybe they're not treatable Because you cannot let that out into society. You can't. Right, and the issue is they want to go one step farther when I say they, I'm talking about the people that condone this kind of behavior is they want to normalize it. Yes. And this is my issue with Justice Brown. I mean, excuse me, Justice Jackson Brown, which also is like, I know, isn't that annoying? I know, isn't that annoying? It shouldn't just be Justice Jackson Brown that feels so much better.

1:19:18 Right, but they also shouldn't a maiden name come first. I think her her husband name is Brown. No, no No, it's it's it's also it would be no it's always maiden name comes last Oh, okay. I had that confused. But I think it's the Jackson Brown part that throws me off too. I always have to think justice and when I'm saying justice already know it's not Jackson Brown so Justice Jackson. Got it. Okay. All right. Jackson Brown. Brown Jackson, excuse me. I'll get it right here soon as I but the point I'm trying to make is that people behind her are trying to normalize it

1:19:53 To the point and the reason why I'm bringing this up is this not to be smirch her character But the fact that she's so young and you hear that she's had this this Idea in her head you're saying for a very long time. She wrote in the Harvard Review about it This was this was her thing Exactly. I see this as being a children horse and similar to how Barack Obama was with gay marriage because remember he came in and saying no I believe in marriage between a man and woman and then Joe Biden conveniently opts him. Joe Biden fucked it up or not. On purpose. I'm a firm believer in that. He was the litmus test. Yeah I'm with you on that. Let Joe take the heat and then I'll take the credit.

CHAPTER 20 / 39 Discussion

The Trojan Horse Theory and the "MAPs" Narrative

Mo compares Judge Jackson's potential influence to Barack Obama's shift on gay marriage, suggesting she may wait for the political "wind to blow" before advancing radical changes. They discuss the "MAPs" terminology and the controversial push for "chemical castration" of children through hormone blockers. Adam argues that these trends are ultimately tied to a "depopulation" agenda.

barack obama· joe biden· gay marriage· maps· chemical castration· depopulation

1:19:18 Right, but they also shouldn't a maiden name come first. I think her her husband name is Brown. No, no No, it's it's it's also it would be no it's always maiden name comes last Oh, okay. I had that confused. But I think it's the Jackson Brown part that throws me off too. I always have to think justice and when I'm saying justice already know it's not Jackson Brown so Justice Jackson. Got it. Okay. All right. Jackson Brown. Brown Jackson, excuse me. I'll get it right here soon as I but the point I'm trying to make is that people behind her are trying to normalize it

1:19:53 To the point and the reason why I'm bringing this up is this not to be smirch her character But the fact that she's so young and you hear that she's had this this Idea in her head you're saying for a very long time. She wrote in the Harvard Review about it This was this was her thing Exactly. I see this as being a children horse and similar to how Barack Obama was with gay marriage because remember he came in and saying no I believe in marriage between a man and woman and then Joe Biden conveniently opts him. Joe Biden fucked it up or not. On purpose. I'm a firm believer in that. He was the litmus test. Yeah I'm with you on that. Let Joe take the heat and then I'll take the credit.

1:20:39 Right to see how you're saying how the which way the wind blows and it goes bad. I'll say that's just Joe Ben Joe He's crazy and I'm saying but if it goes well as I don't think it went well But enough and this is where race comes into it enough black religious people We're still on board with Obama and it goes back to what? what Booker was saying, that he had this divinity about him. You know, that how I just want to touch you to touch him and there's this iconic picture with all the preachers. Yeah, but you also do you remember just the posters, the iconography of Obama, the hope? I mean, this was beautiful. This was a massive campaign.

1:21:22 But in the black church it left, it created a wedge. Just go back to the wedge of are we standing on our beliefs? Of, you know, it's not condoned, you're saying homosexuality. You know, we understand, you know what I'm saying, they're humans, they still need to be loved. That kind of thing. Like, it's not a hate thing, it was like, but my beliefs say this. Or do we side with Obama, our first black president? And he had enough people that stuck with him that he was able to eke out 2012. So that I think is the same thing, like she's gonna get in there and when it comes up to the Supreme Court where we need to look at age and say, well, can a minor decide if they want to be in a relationship with an adult? I see her being a Trojan horse. I just gotta be honest with people. It's because it's like, you chose this hill to die on, right? I mean, metaphorically, let me make this clear, to say, I'm gonna back this 100%

1:22:21 That's a problem for me. I mean, it's a hard because I know these people are victims and I try to humanize everybody but the impact to the next victim they have. You can't let them out, Mo. Right. That's what puts us in a weird spot. It's like I try to humanize everybody I understand but other than murder, which even with murder The murdered person doesn't have to live life after the event. Right, well, exactly. My point is in America, we talk about pedophiles and child sex predators, and everyone gets so mad, all they can ever say is, you know, kill him, throw him in jail for the rest of his life. And I'm like, that's never the answer. That's a really dumb way to do it because everyone always gets out. It's just too easy.

1:23:09 But also I think it's the, this brought to light what we already knew if you watch Chris Hansen, How to Catch a Predator, that these guys get too far short sentences. I mean, when you look at some of the crimes and what they get, like you were talking about your friend and how it ruined his life or whatever he did, but then you got guys that are known pedophiles getting out in a matter of months. and they get caught up again by Chris Hansen, it's like, well, you just got out last month. You understand for doing a six-month bid, it's like six months. Like we letting these guys out, but this, I'm speaking to how this will receive by the masses that hear somebody say, yeah, I'll let them out in a year. Yeah, I'll let them out in those two years. I'll let them out in those six months. This just only, like I said, this... I'm so glad that you put that all together this way. This truly, this is a huge,

1:24:02 content collection campaign. Yes. For the midterm elections and you're right it's going to be the Democrats are pedophiles how many months all this stuff. Yes so and then on top of all of that it's gonna be that um it's just not this and then this one more thing before we move to I don't want to be late with a point but The solution is, yes, castrate and chemically castrate the children. That'll solve the problem. I mean, they... Wait, who suggested that? That's what with trans children, right? Cut their bits off. Oh, I see what you're saying. Give them homosuppressants. Yeah. That's chemical castration. Or do you have actual literal castration? That's the solution. And don't bother the pedophiles.

1:24:58 That's the sickness of where we're at today. Right, and I'm telling you that's how it's all going to be packaged together. And it's going to end up bad for the Democrats. It's going to end up very bad because, like you said, this is a third rail of third rails. For them to try to, you know what I'm saying, be pro- Pro-pedophile. Maps. And then they come up with terms like maps. They're just minor attracted people. Yeah, persons. Persons like what? That's all. It's normal. Yeah. So I guess we stopped at, where we stopped at? Ted Cruz. Okay, now we can go to, this is the view.

CHAPTER 21 / 39 Discussion

Marjorie Taylor Greene and the "Pro-Pedophile" Meme

Marjorie Taylor Greene labeled Republican senators who voted for Jackson as "pro-pedophile," a move the hosts call the "warhead" of the Pizza Playbook. While "The View" criticized Greene's rhetoric, Mo argues she is effectively "calling the herd" and purging "RHINOs" from the party. They speculate whether this "45 Savage" strategy is a coordinated effort to win back the House and Senate by making the "pedophile" tag stick to Democrats.

marjorie taylor greene· matt gaetz· mitt romney· the view· pizza party· 45 savage

1:25:36 And this is MTG, Marjorie Taylor Greene. She launches one of the first memes of pro-pedophilia. We were talking about the goop trying to block the confirmation. Yes, GOP. Block it. That's right. I said it. Trying to block the confirmation of Judge Kataji Brown Jackson and Marjorie Taylor Greene took things a step further tweeting that Murkowski, Collins and Romney are pro-pedophile because they voted for Judge Jackson. She tweeted this from her official congressional Twitter account. And should there be consequences for such a... You know, can I apologize to Sarah Palin because this woman makes Sarah Palin look like Madame Curie.

1:26:26 I mean and also not a word about her pal Matt Gates who's under investigation for a year for dating an underage girl. Yeah. Nothing on Roy Moore but on these three Romney hello and I mean come on. Three only was offensive and it missed the mark in terms of she's attacking our own party We've got the Republicans are about to probably take over the house and the Senate Biden's poll numbers are tanking and her focus is to be childish Call names to Republicans. It's completely missing the mark Okay, this is okay. I'm Morris coming. My new shit is coming to light. So of course we also had

1:27:09 Matt Gaetz accused of trafficking underage girls across state lines, which turned out is incorrect what they just said because he was completely exonerated and it was that someone was blackmailing his family with this as far as I understand it, also in Florida, right? And then you got Marjorie Taylor Greene And she's in on it. So she's the warhead. She's launching the pro-pedophile meme. Yes, and she's been launching a lot of memes lately. One with the trans saying if some trans guy attacked her, her husband should beat him up. I mean, I'm paraphrasing, but she's one that really gets under their skin because how can you punch back against somebody that's saying

1:28:00 their own party is pro pedophile. Right? I mean, how do you... that goes to show this is not partisan. This is... you're in the pizza party. And they're making a clear distinction because if we got to cut... I mean, Romney, they're looking to get rid of him, let's just be honest. Because he sees what the wind is blowing and for some reason I think he still has presidential hopes. Oh Yeah, yeah, yeah I look too much like a president not to be one you know I come from the right family. We're rich everything have all the looks I'm perfect right so I think that they're looking there. They're looking to

1:28:46 shed the dead weight, you know, and I, and Lizzie Graham was, when I saw Lizzie Graham like give up that record, it's like yeah, this, this, they're, they're making moves. So, you know, considering where this is all heading and where it's coming from, you know, there's a lot of Southern, it's all coming from the South, particularly Georgia, Marjorie Taylor Greene, but also Florida. So much of this is centered around Florida. You just got to think that this could be a 45 Savage strategy. Was PC Gate 2016 one of his strategies? Is he cranking up the machine at one? I don't know.

1:29:28 I don't know, but I like watching the show. It had a very chilling effect when they rolled out the whole pizza gate thing in 2016. That, you know, looking forward, he's like, let's just go ahead. We can win back the House and the Senate with this and then, you know, coast off the momentum because they're going to take seats anyway just due to inflation and how everything's being handled. this could be a game changer and I think the Democrats are handling it poorly by doubling and tripling down on the things they're doubling, tripling, tripling down on. Yeah, oh man, this is really deep Moe. I like this a lot. So 2016 was indeed during the presidential election cycle. I can see why you say, hey 45 might have been behind it then. And of course, the way I see it is

1:30:24 You know, behind something doesn't necessarily mean that it's not true or there's not elements of it that are actually true. All you need is some in the court of social media. You know, all you need is some innuendo. some dots to connect for people. Now it wouldn't meet the litmus test of an actual criminal case, but we're playing out in a case of court, a public opinion, and nobody wants to be on the side of, you know what I'm saying, of the pro pedophile movement. So you gotta see a lot of... It's not a good look. It's not a good look. It's not a winner. It's not an election winner for sure. No. But let's go ahead and move on. Well, moving on, let's go backwards a little bit, and this is,

CHAPTER 22 / 39 Discussion

Whoopi Goldberg and the "Rape-Rape" Controversy

The hosts revisit a controversial clip of Whoopi Goldberg defending Roman Polanski, where she distinguished his crime from "rape-rape." They use this to illustrate the "Hollywood" double standard regarding sexual crimes against minors. Mo argues that this culture of protection for "friends" in high places is exactly what the public is beginning to rebel against.

whoopi goldberg· roman polanski· rape-rape· bill cosby· hollywood· statutory rape

1:31:06 I think from the Bill Cosby episode, and this was Boobie Goldberg talking about Roman Polanski and child rape. was not charged with, I know it wasn't rape, rape. There is a child molest maybe, I'm not sure. It was something else but I don't believe it was rape, rape and when we get all the information somebody will tell me in my ear. All I'm trying to get you to understand is when we're talking about what someone did and what they were charged with we have to say what it actually was not what we think it was. He said he did, he gave her quaaludes, he gave her

1:31:44 campaign. She was drugged. She was 13 years old. He asked her, here's a transcript. That's what I'm saying, you're 13 years old. She was still a child. He asked her. Excuse me, initially he was charged with rape. Go ahead. And then he pled guilty to having sex with a minor. Okay? And he went to jail, and when they let him out... 45 days. And when they let him out, he said, you know what? This guy's gonna give me 100 years in jail. I'm not staying. And that's why he left. So that's why I wanted to be really clear, because I wanted to know exactly what we were talking about. And I'm going, does that make it okay to, you know, instead of staying and fighting, to say, you know, he's gonna give me 100 years. I'm out of here.

1:32:23 I don't know if it's okay, but what we were talking about was what he did. And that's what I wanted to clear up. That's all I wanted to clear up. Because I don't like it when we're passionate about something and we don't have all the facts. Okay, so he was charged with statutory rape. So should he be prosecuted now? I believe yes, because the crime has not changed. I know she wants to move on, but what does it say about crimes that are still being committed against children? Yeah, it was really interesting. It sounded like Whoopi was kind of defending him a little bit. She was. It's not rape, rape. Yeah, rape, rape. What is rape, rape? But this is why they get called Hollyweird. They don't do themselves any favors. And I know a lot of it is like, you know, looking out for a friend, that kind of thing. But the problem I have with it is, in this case,

1:33:16 I think that was Sherry Shepard talking, if I'm not mistaken. She was like 14. It doesn't matter. But then when Brown Jackson gets questioned about her record of something similar these guys did, or involving children, it's like, now it's like, well, you know, she was, no, didn't want to drop the hammer on them. No! No, you can't. I don't know. I just feel strongly about this. I mean that having, you know, saying four kids and knowing, you know, like knowing the effects, like you said, it's kind of like, it's like a vampire. Like once you be bitten, it's a high chance that you become a vampire. So we have to protect the youth. And I think that that goes across party lines, that goes across

1:34:09 racial lines that goes across I mean and and believe me there's also a lot of stuff that happens in school to children oh we're gonna talk about right and you know what the one that's not talked about is in and this is I didn't covered it in this topic sports clubs I mean it's all kinds of creeps everywhere And a lot of them are women sleeping with young boys, which we laugh off. Like, oh, no, he enjoyed it. Yeah, yeah. It's also, and that, man, that can screw with a young man's head, you know? It's very, it's just as damaging because what it does, it warps their sense of

CHAPTER 23 / 39 Discussion

Whoopi Goldberg's Admission on Shilling

In a clip from "The View," Whoopi Goldberg admits that "everybody is shilling for their side" regarding political commentary. Mo and Adam mock the hosts of "The View," suggesting they are "witches" with "crystal balls" who are openly admitting to being propagandists. They encourage listeners to remember this admission when consuming mainstream media.

whoopi goldberg· the view· shilling· crystal ball· propaganda· voting

1:34:46 how a proper relationship is supposed to go, but the way we look at it is, oh, man, he's lucky. You know, that kind of thing. And this is not something new that's happening. So let's go ahead and go to the final clip of The View, 19. time Pedophiles, let's do that. Everything's a pedophile. The conversations referring to were child pornography cases. We already discussed this ad nauseum. She's jumping straight to, oh, we'll make it about pedophiles now. It is literally, you gotta look at Leslie. I wanna point something out. It's completely dishonest.

1:35:39 Nobody at this table or in any of those buildings in Congress can tell you what's happening in the future. We can't see the future. So we don't know that people are poised to take over. We won't know until somebody does it. And so keep in mind that everybody is shilling for their side. Okay, everybody. Well, this thing, I just feel very strongly that we all need to stop telling people what's going to happen since none of us have a crystal ball. None of us know. You will decide what happens. Not us. Not us. We're all talking for the things that we're for, but the bottom line is you don't know until you cast your vote.

1:36:27 Hmm. We're all shi- everybody's out here shilling. Everybody's shilling for their side. Mm-hmm. Remember that when next time you all are watching The View, whoopie, let the cat out of the bag. We're all up here shilling so you have to take their- of course we did but Just remember it out of Whoopi's mouth. And then I disagree. All you witches on the view, I'm sure somebody has a crystal ball. I'm just saying. I think you're right. One of you's got one. We know that. I'm sure there's a crystal ball owner amongst one of you all. That's funny. So that's the first block of the show.

CHAPTER 24 / 39 Discussion

Alexander of Middle Cascadia and the YouTube Alternative

A listener named Alexander writes in to express his boycott of Big Tech and asks for an alternative to YouTube for "Lost Tapes" content. Mo confirms that he mirrors his content on BitChute. Adam discusses the development of "LIT" (Live Item Tag) for Podcasting 2.0, which will eventually allow for live video and "Boostergrams" outside of the YouTube ecosystem.

bitchute· telegram· podcasting 2.0· big tech· boycott· live item tag

1:45:13 Sent to the PO box. Gentlemen, and the hits keep coming, point of clarification. Now that you have a PO box, who do I make checks or money orders out to? Please post it to your website. Point of concern. I will not under any circumstance click on a YouTube video. I have deleted all social media, will not support big tech with clicks, I'm going to starve their ad revenue, and have a rapidly growing group of friends and family who have done the same. Sadly, as long as lost tapes only appear on YouTube, most everyone I know will never see or hear them. Is it possible to upload to an alternative platform so we can enjoy them? Keep up the great work. Mad love, Alexander of Middle Cascadia." Well, let me answer this. He had questions and I have answers. Yes. Go ahead. You can make it out to MoFax because...

1:46:02 Go, I'm not go daddy, but legal zone finally got my issue resolved. So now I can cash all checks in the MoFax name to he asked about a shadow me a alternative platform which I do have a mirror bit shoot channel so you can catch all the YouTube content over there and mirrors to MoFax on bit shoot. So that's the solution. And hopefully once podcasting 2.0 allows us to go live, we'll start going live there with the Lost Tapes as well. Yes, and allow me to give you a little update on that. Yes, we've been testing the live, which we call Lit actually. It's an acronym for live item tag, but your podcast is Lit. I thought that was cute. Lit sounds so much better. It does.

1:46:55 And we've been doing that on Fridays with the podcasting 2.0 podcast. So right now we only have one app that supports that and but it is pretty cool because it pings you and it says, hey, there's a live show coming up and then when it's live, it turns to live and then there's a chat room built in. Then we have a version of a super chat where you can send some money. In this case, it works through the boost system on the podcasting 2.0 platforms. And that works and also shows up in the chat, which is really cool. We are we have not yet put the video piece together. That is what we're working on right now and just to add to your note there Alexander if you really want to Stop supporting the broken systems that we live in it's not just big tech that you need to boycott but you also need to boycott the financial system which is why we put this Bitcoin system into podcasting 2.0 because that is a

1:47:55 Truly with the de-platforming that's the final stop where they go for your wallet, see truckers support in Canada, see Russia, you know, they're going for your money. So that's how we view it and I think we're, you know, this summer we'll, before the summer we'll be up and rolling with the video and you'll be able to mirror off to Podcasting 2.0. But of course everyone will be running away from YouTube and BitChute because they'll want to participate in the BoosterGrams and and in the super chat environment. So I have big hopes about you are in fact the hope of the live video podcasting 2.0 dream. So like I said, we're ready when you are. And in the meantime, you could catch the playbacks on bit shoot. So for all the people that are anti and not I admire your dedication because

1:48:48 This is what it takes to walk away from the big platforms. But as I tell people, YouTube is the mall of eyeballs. So we got a hundred more people off of being over there just this couple weeks, you know what I'm saying? Just having that one big video. But the plan is like my man, TD Media says, to grow big enough to get off of YouTube, not grow big on YouTube. So that is the plan. Yes, because we don't want YouTube to own the audience. Also, I'm not I'm gonna make it clear. I am NOT monetized. I don't take any money from Google or anything It's just that no you you wouldn't be on there They cut it off. It would be done. You would have had three strikes by now. No, actually they would take my content still Monetize it but just not pay not pay you exactly by the way, you know share crock

CHAPTER 25 / 39 Discussion

Boostergrams and the MoFacts Transcript Database

Mo reads "Boostergrams" (Bitcoin tips) from listeners like Sir Dwayne Melanson and Dave Jackson of the School of Podcasting. A listener named "Klude" announces the creation of a "MoFacts transcript database" as a "talent" contribution. Mo encourages others to use the "Take Action" button on MoFacts.com to join the "Fax Machine" talent pool.

dwayne melanson· orchard frog· dave jackson· clude· transcript database· fax machine

1:55:13 Congratulations, you're no longer a deadbeat. We appreciate that very much and before we close out our segment because that's it for the associate executive producers, we do have some booster grams that came in. We have 11,111 Satoshis from Orchard Frog. And, or Orchid Frog says, boost! And that's Todd from Northern Virginia. And then we have an old favorite on the show. Ladies and gentlemen, I present the Grand Duke of the Pacific Northwest, Sir Dwayne Melanson. Yes, Grand Duke Sir Dwayne Melanson with 10,000 Satoshis. And he says, the Open Society episode is fantastic. I especially like the thoughts on how we are programmed to love or hate or ignore people and causes as a society. Crazy stuff.

1:56:06 Along those lines, I found a way to mess with people's heads the other day. My neighbor was asking me who I'm going to vote for in the next governor race and I told her I didn't know yet and that I was a libertarian. She said, well, do you tend to lead toward Democrat or Republican? I just said, I think they're fine people on both sides. She froze up, didn't know what to do, priceless. Sir Dwayne. Abel Kirby with 8888. You can't skip over the elders of Zion doc was originally titled the Antichrist. It's a Catholic meme, which is weird because of the Russians relationship with the church of that era. Remember the Pope supported Napoleon. Interesting. The more you know.

1:56:46 We have Dave Jackson, the famous podcaster with 5,000 Satoshis. And he's famous for the School of Podcasting. He has taught tens of thousands of people how to podcast throughout the years early on. Early on, Dave says. And he says, first time listener, I had no idea Henry Ford was such an asshole. Subscribed go podcasting. Yeah. Well, you need a D dead beating brother. Welcome to the fam. Congratulations. You're no longer a deadbeat. A couple more booster grams. Dave Ackerman, 5,000 sats value for value episode 78. Thank you, sir. Doug 4,400 enjoying this episode. Keep up the good work. Nomad Joe 41, 12.

1:57:29 Greetings from the road, WNC Appalachian American. Thank you for what you do, Mo and Adam. Then we have Klude, C. Lude with 333. Adam and Mo, we wanted to send in some value. And although 333 sats isn't a lot, I wanted to let you know that I'm going to contribute some talent. I'm currently working on, oh yes, the MoFax transcript database, and I currently have a minimum viable product. I gotta put this in the show notes, hold on a second. And while you do that, I want to tell people about how to sign up for the Facts Machine. If you go to MoFacts.com and click on... what's it? It's the button that says, I think, active.

1:58:15 It takes you to a form you can fill out and let me know what your talents are, how you like to contribute your time and talent value and we'll definitely utilize it. Excellent. And I put that link to the transcript. It's very cool. I've used it. We just need to get it up online, but he shows exactly how it works. So it's in all of the shows as part of podcasting to promote. You can search in each episode throughout the transcript. If you're looking for a certain spot, you tap on those words. It goes right to it. Then Chad Farrow sent a whole bunch of 106 and 107 boosts.

1:58:55 and two times a message boost in another great episode. And thank you all very much for supporting MoFax with Adam Curry. Wait a minute, wait a minute. Oops, did I miss something? I sent you Mama B's letter. I don't want to get stung. You know what I'm saying? Oh, you emailed it to me? Oh yeah. Yes, because if we don't, hey, I don't know if I'm allergic or not, but I ain't trying to find out to the B's. That's bad news. Here we go. We're letting people know it is a take action button on the mo facts calm and it takes you to the Fax machine form you can just send this over email and we'll figure out how to utilize your time and talent Everything that we got so far we utilize and coming up with some great stuff

CHAPTER 26 / 39 Discussion

Mama B's Letter on Race and Relationships

A listener named "Mama B" shares a story about growing up in a diverse neighborhood and making a "pact" with a Black friend not to date across racial lines out of mutual respect. She describes the complexities of being called a "racist" for her choices and expresses her appreciation for the intellectual level of the show's racial deconstructions.

mama b· race· relationships· jesus· pact· colorism

1:59:36 Mama B. writes, hey Mo and Adam, what a pleasure it's been to listen and learn from you because I grew up in a racially diverse suburban neighborhood next to a large city and an Air Force base. I've been hyper aware of race and the differences in our culture since I was a small child. My first beloved childhood friend was raised by a single mother whose father left the family for a so-called white woman and he helped raise the woman's pretty blonde daughter. I was told with derision by mother who had to console her friend for months. It fascinated me that the woman being White made it all the worse for my mother's friend. This led to a pact I made with different friends many years later. This friend began noticing her brothers bringing home white girlfriends more often than not and her explaining to me why this is a problem. We made a pact that I would not date black men and she would not date white men out of our mutual respect for each other.

2:00:27 Of course, years later, this pact led to a black male friend calling me a racist because I wouldn't date him. And surprisingly, he was still pissed even after I explained why. Again, I found this fascinating and I asked my friend, why am I racist for this choice? And she's strong and brave for her choice. Oh, that's interesting, which led her to laugh and say, because you're white. I can't believe you said that to him. Fascinating. I have so many stories like this because my friends and I have always talked race This is why I find the service you are providing extremely valuable I would love to do what you're doing, but there is no way I can do it on the intellectual level that you're doing it Keep up the good work my friends. Please D deadbeat me and then some karma for open communication for all Congratulations You're no longer a deadbeat You've got

2:01:18 Moe Conway. And that was signed your sister in Jesus, Mama B. P.S. Value for value said by PayPal and a monthly will start in April. Mama B, thank you. That's a beautiful note. It is. And we do have subscriptions now and I want to let people know before I can hear people yelling at their device right now. She put pretty white, pretty blind girl daughter in quotes. Excuse me. So I know people like what? Yeah. Oh yeah. No. Yes. Thank you for pointing that out. Exactly. Does come across rather weird. Hey, it was a cold read man. What can I tell you? I know I take the blame but you're saying we're neither one of us gonna get stung and now we thank all the people and And I just want you to know that mama be you are helping out you are you are a part of the the fax machine the fam This is this is what we need you to do and propagate the formula tell people about it get more people on board there's gonna be so much to do and I'm just sitting here just

2:02:12 Twiddling the numbs, watching Mo grow the empire. I mean, I have a front row seat, man. I love it. I need more popcorn. That's it for our, as I said, our Boostergrams, our executive producers, associate executive producers. We'll thank a few more people before we're done with the show. And again, thank you all for supporting episode number 79 of Mo Facts with Adam Curry. Alright, so we talked about Pizza Gate in the first block, but I think we need to go back a little bit because you didn't have your goggles on and you stated a factual point that she was the lawyer in the sentencing the guy that showed up in the Pizza Gate pizzeria. I mean, what was it? The ping pong pizza? Comet pizza. I mean, excuse me.

CHAPTER 27 / 39 Discussion

Edgar Welch and the Comet Ping Pong Sentencing

The hosts revisit the 2016 incident where Edgar Welch fired shots inside Comet Ping Pong pizzeria while "self-investigating" Pizzagate. They highlight that Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson was the judge who sentenced Welch to four years in prison. Mo expresses skepticism about the event, suggesting Welch's behavior—walking into a D.C. pizzeria with an AR-15—felt like a "limited hangout" or "crisis actor" performance designed to discredit the Pizzagate narrative.

edgar welch· comet ping pong· pizzagate· ar-15· crisis actor· katanji brown jackson

2:03:01 Comment pieces, so let's go back, refresh people memory or people that may not have heard the story. Let's go ahead and go back and play clip 21. One of the big surprises of the presidential campaign was the explosion of fake news on the internet. Fantastic tales that some believe to be true. Well, Chip Reid reports that one phony item led to a dangerous situation in Washington. 28-year-old Edgar Welch was arrested in Washington Sunday afternoon outside Comet Ping Pong, a popular family pizza parlor. D.C. police say Welch fired at least one round into the restaurant floor with an AR-15 rifle like this one on his Facebook page. No one was injured.

2:03:44 Police say Welch drove all the way from North Carolina to self-investigate Pizzagate, a fictitious online conspiracy theory. Pizzagate started on the internet shortly before Election Day when right-wing sites that make up fake news spread rumors that Hillary Clinton was involved in a child sex trafficking ring in D.C. Court documents say Welch read online that the Comet restaurant was harboring child sex slaves and he was armed to help rescue them. He surrendered peacefully when he found no evidence that underage children were being harbored in the restaurant. Pizzagate has been pushed by Michael G. Flynn, son of retired Lieutenant General Michael T. Flynn, chosen by President-elect Trump to be his national security advisor. The two were seen together at Trump Tower last month. After Welch's arrest Sunday, the younger Flynn tweeted, until Pizzagate proven to be false, it'll remain a story. Mmm.

2:04:41 So I have the article here from ABC News and um... As you stated, she was the judge that sentenced him. And I have a quote here saying that Judge Katonji Brown Jackson called it the extent of the recklessness of the defendant's actions breathtaking. As she sentenced Welch on Thursday, Jackson said that she had no reason to doubt that Welch thought he was being helpful, but said she could not overstate the concern that other people will see what you have done and will be inspired by it. No matter how well intentioned, people are not allowed to take matters into their own hands, she said. Upon his release from prison, Welch will receive mental health assessment and was ordered to stay away from comic ping pong. And in another part of the article says that he'll get four years in prison and then another three years of supervision after release. Right.

2:05:43 It's kind of skewed, isn't it? The guy that wants to save children, you give him for it, you throw the book at him because of what could happen and who he can inspire, but the people actually harming children, you know, go lean on them. I found that to be very strange. And let me make one point clear here. I'm not sure if this guy that showed up with an AR-15 in the middle of DC walks into a pizzeria was not part of some kind of limited hangout or some way to Stein possible and piece of gate because I just thought that we're like if you're going to invest that you're gonna put a sidearm You know if you're there to actually truly do an investigation, it's just my from my perspective You're gonna put some small carry in to go inside there, but you walk us out of DC Pizzeria with a big ol AR 15

2:06:38 That just seems like that played into all the talking points. Yeah, that's a good point. And I don't think they mentioned in that report that he discharged his weapon. And that was really the problem. That's the other thing. It's like if you're trying to look for missing children, going inside with a big, a long rifle and letting off shots, you definitely, I don't know, he just gave me the vibes of, maybe some kind of a crisis actor or something. I mean, that's just my, just a possibility because it just seemed convenient that, cause that kind of threw a wet blanket over the whole pizza gate talking point. Um, it did. I remember this by the way he got out of jail, uh, last year.

2:07:29 So he did do he did the time. Yeah. Yeah, that's weird I don't know that would that was it just seemed convenient to me that somebody was sure yeah I hear you also did that video when it was on his way and you know There was a lot going on there. Yeah, I'm doing this for the kid doing for my kids And if I don't come home girls that kind of thing like what is this? Yeah, it reminded me of the guy that um, I The guy that, I think he threatened to do something at the White House against Joe Biden and he had the strong Southern accent. I'm coming for you, Joe. Oh yeah, yeah, yeah. He had that same vibes to it. So it was just strange. Yeah, the guy that said he was going to blow up his car or something had... Right. Yeah, yeah.

2:08:14 It's at the same time it was conveniently came about you know, um, there's all kinds of convenient things You know smoke bombs was shooting on the subways I was about you took the words right? I say I say you that video is also a katanji brown jackson link to that guy I did not know that. Yes, I think I thought I sent you the video. Yeah, so there's this video of this guy, I forget his name. There's tons of videos on YouTube and Instagram that he did and he's bitching and moaning about Ketanji. How can this sister be married to a white man? We're going to talk about that maybe on another episode. Just so you know, there's a connection there too. The whole thing is just messed up, man.

2:08:57 It's too many connections just to be coincidental. You know how we feel about coincidences. Yeah, I agree. So now let's just go into make sure people understand how he was sentenced in 22. The North Carolina man who police say self-investigated a Washington DC pizzeria armed with an assault rifle pleaded guilty today to weapons charges. Edgar Welch was allegedly inspired by false internet rumors dubbed Pizzagate. Back in December he fired several shots inside the Comet Ping Pong restaurant after driving up from North Carolina. Fortunately no one was hurt. And self-investigated that kind of reminds me of doing your own research One of the legacies from that whole pizza gate thing that happened or one of the memes it had legs was the $65,000 hot dogs. Do you remember that?

CHAPTER 28 / 39 Discussion

Stratfor, RAINN, and the $65,000 Hot Dogs

Mo discusses a 2012 WikiLeaks email from Stratfor employees regarding $65,000 spent on "hot dogs" and "pizza" for a private party at the Obama White House. He notes that "hot dogs" and "pizza" are alleged pedophile codes. The segment also explores Stratfor's parent company, RAINN, and its role in global threat intelligence, while Adam mentions rumors of Alex Jones's connections to Stratfor.

stratfor· rainn· wikileaks· hot dogs· barack obama· alex jones

2:09:58 No, I don't think so. Okay, so from the wiki and just to let people know it wasn't only pizza gate the The actual pizzeria that was cropped up from this it was also the WikiLeaks in 2012 and then they had those big drops like every couple of weeks right before the election as well so in it so in a 2020 2012 drop we have a communication coming from people from the Stratford. What is it? Stratford. Stratford. Yeah. In Texas. Right. So this this wasn't like just two random people. I have a little clip about Stratford. We'll get to a little later, but I want to go over this article right quick and their parent company called Rain. So let's just

2:10:51 Um, talk about the $65,000 hot dogs. It was a communication going back forth an email between Stratford employees saying, yeah, I think Obama spent about $65,000 of taxpayer dollars money to give me own flying in pizza slash hot dogs for Chicago for a private party at the white house. Not long ago. Assume we are using the same channels. That's... Yeah, well, Hot Dogs is a pedophile code for little boys. Yeah, and pizza is little girls. Yes. And you have these Stratford people that are... Talking about this? Yes. Yeah, like they're really in the pizza and hot dog delivery business. Exactly. And the thing was, this article is from August 23rd, 2020. Oh, really? It's a USA Today fact check.

2:11:47 Talking about the $65,000 hot dog. Interesting. So this goes to show you that the pizza playbook has legs that they're trying to debunk it in 2020 before, let me say a few months before the 2020 election. And of course we had pandemic and everything so... Yeah, and then you had the whole QAnon thing, you know what I'm saying? It was around that time. But let's go and just... These guys work at Stratford. Stratford's parent company is RAINE, that's R-A-I-N-E. And this is what they do according to their YouTube page. Customers rely on RAINE to help them assess, monitor, and take action to mitigate significant and evolving security threats around the world.

2:12:29 RAINN's redesigned Threat Lens solution for security professionals delivers objective threat intelligence covering the global security landscape across a range of risk categories, all in one place. With RAINN's Threat Lens solution, security professionals can understand leading and lagging indicators of risk across the globe with forecasts that help you anticipate where physical and cyber risks are likely to head. Utilize ongoing threat monitoring with an interactive map-based dashboard that displays security incidents that can be filtered by country or risk type and geo-fenced around your locations of interest. Easily navigate our 25-year intelligence archive and receive push notifications of new analysis based on your interests.

2:13:15 All with direct access to RAINN security analysts and a network of pre-screened security experts and service providers to help you mitigate risks to your employees and business locations. RAINN's Threat Lens solution for security professionals significantly improves your ability to assess, monitor, and respond to evolving threats. Learn more today. Yeah, these guys are serious. Do they sound like they would be party planning? about pizza and hot dogs through the same channel. What's interesting is there's a lot of, there's always been a lot of noise of Alex Jones being connected to Stratfor.

2:13:55 Oh really? Yeah. I didn't know that. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. Who knows? Who knows? But these guys know a lot though, that's for sure. And yeah, they do high-end, mainly corporate clients, information and I think logistics. Pizza logistics. I'm just saying, I'm talking in terms of memes here. And that you see the legs that it had this thing happened in 2016 and 2020 USA Today is still trying to debunk it. So obviously it's, you know, it's a very shareable mean and it had, like I said, not to repeat myself, but has legs. So, um.

CHAPTER 29 / 39 Discussion

Disney's "Not-at-all-Secret" Gay Agenda

Leaked audio from Disney leadership reveals a "not-at-all-secret gay agenda" and a push to add "queerness" to children's programming. This follows Disney's opposition to Florida's HB 1557 (the "Parental Rights in Education" bill). Journalist Chris Rufo published the videos, which show Disney employees boasting about adding queer characters and stories to their content.

disney· florida· hb 1557· chris rufo· gay agenda· queerness

2:14:41 This is even more reason I think the Republicans are playing the pizza playbook. So now we got to talk about the used to take confluence. Now we got to get into Disney. Yay! And this is a clip from Fox and they talk about a leaked audio from the Disney's woke agenda. In the meantime, in other news, remember last week we told you a story about how a number of Disney employees walked off the job last week because they felt that Disney did not do enough to oppose a bill that passed in Florida. It's HB House Bill 1557. And what that bill does, because it

2:15:20 has been signed by Governor DeSantis is it prohibits teachers from providing instruction on sexual orientation and gender identity to children between the ages of kindergarten and third grade. So they just don't want teachers talking to kindergartners, first, second, and third graders about sexual orientation or gender identity. So that we knew for sure because that was in public where they walked off the job. But now Chris Ruffo, a journalist, posted on Twitter some videos that show pretty much exactly what Disney behind the scenes is thinking. Watch this. Roberts and like our leadership over there has been so

2:16:01 welcoming to my not at all secret gay agenda. And so I feel like I felt like it was, I mean, maybe it was that way in the past, but I guess something must have happened in the last, they're turning it around, they're going hard. And then all that momentum that I felt, sense of I don't have to be afraid to like let's have these two characters kiss let's in the background this like I was just wherever I could just basically adding queerness to like if you see anything queer in the show, grab them. But like I just was like no one would stop me and no one was trying to stop me. So it's not an at all secret agenda anymore.

2:16:45 Yeah, there's a number of these videos. It's really interesting. And this really goes back further, Moe. This goes back to your neck of the woods and other places around the country with school boards and with parents showing up and saying, hey, by the way, besides this masking and shitty online education, what's this stuff you got in the library? And that was the whole critical race theory thing, right? They tried to Ramp a lot of this no LGBTQ stuff into critical race theory and and the parents sniffed it out and the whole Transgender bathroom thing that ended up poorly in Loudon County where one of the students attacking another yeah That was that was the I gotta be honest. That was the final straw for me with Obama and

CHAPTER 30 / 39 Discussion

The San Francisco Men's Chorus and the "Gay Boulé"

Mo discusses a controversial video by the San Francisco Gay Men's Chorus titled "We're Coming for Your Children," which he views as an antagonistic "crescendo" of the current cultural movement. He argues that radical activists, whom he calls the "Gay Boulé," do not represent the majority of gay and trans people. The hosts criticize the push for "Drag Queen Story Hour" as an unnecessary provocation.

san francisco gay men's chorus· drag queen story hour· rupaul· billy porter· gay boulé

2:17:41 Yeah, second term transgender bathrooms. And then the point that we're going to push it down, you know, saying like pushing on you and it was, well, it's, this seems like an agenda, but when you would say that, no, you're just being hateful. So now when it starts to surface, you know, I'm sure you've seen the video, the San Francisco choir, men's choir is like, we're coming to get your children. It's like, what? No, I didn't see this. You have, I feel so bad I didn't include this. I have not. It sounds great. Oh man, like maybe we can play the next clip and then maybe you can find it because it's, I assume it's been so widespread on social media that these guys are singing like, yeah, we want to corrupt your children and all kind of stuff. And then they went to go look as the internet does, like who are these guys? And a lot of them had

2:18:38 child abuse records. Oh really? When did this break? Because you know this was months ago. Oh man, you know there was probably doing some other dumb stuff. No I'm just telling you this is the momentum that's been building on this. Like you said, the Loudon County thing with the kids, the Hunter laptop, Hunter Biden laptop. Now you have Kataji Brown-Jackson, her confirmation and this lady with pedophilia. Hold on a second, here it is. This? Uh.

2:19:27 We'll convert your children. Happens bit by bit, quietly and subtly. Oh man. And you will barely notice it. Holy crap! Thanks for pointing that one out. That was like the crescendo of it. I wonder what was happening that I missed that entirely. Well they probably suppressed it so much. Because as soon as, I mean you wouldn't have seen it on any major social media, they got it out of there quick. But the internet started looking to these guys' backgrounds and you know what I'm saying a significant number had child abuse things. And this is that slow release of

2:20:13 Yes, we have an agenda. Yes, we're here to corrupt your kids. Yes, we want to have drag queens read to your children while they sit on our lap. It's like, I thought drag queens... Answer this question for me, because I don't want to be wrong, but isn't drag queens like kind of fall under the classification of sex workers? Like burlesque? I mean not saying prostitutes, but saying like a burlesque or that kind of thing. No, I wouldn't say that. I think it's... Okay, I just want to be sure. I just want to make sure. No, I would say that most drag shows now, and it's all kind of... It's just an evening of expression and being crazy and being in a safe space. I don't think it has much else to do with anything. It's RuPaul's Drag Race, you know? It's kind of like, uh... Let's be outrageous. I just want to make sure, I mean, let me make it clear. If you're an adult, knock yourself out. Because I am. I'm going to do what I like. You were saying, so do what you like. I have no problem with whatever it is. My issue is this thing of

2:21:17 Yes, we have a hidden not so hidden agenda. We're gonna corrupt your kids. You know, we're gonna you know push all these you know I had not seen that. That is so crazy. Oh it gets better. I mean you we could do the play. You're all probably put the clip in it on in the show notes with me link Yeah, no, of course. I put it in there. You kidding me of course. It's a very interesting admission And this is this I don't I don't know is this in It's a rhetorical question so you don't have to answer it, but is this we know our time is short So we have to come out or is this we know we have things wrapped up so we don't have to pretend anymore No, it's lunacy. It's There's there's so much license given there's so much power being given and there's also there's also you have to understand there's a there's a another dynamic at play here where

2:22:15 There is no such thing as the LGBTQI plus community. It's just not true. You know, lesbians and gays do not necessarily get along very well. You know, look at Dave Chappelle's alphabet people skit. You know, what he says is true. So now for the gay men to make a move like this is a radical thing, and I'm not so sure it represents the majority of gay men. I think it doesn't actually. I agree totally with you, but just like how the boulé speaks for, you know what I'm saying, it doesn't represent the quote-unquote black community that doesn't exist. There you go. This is the gay boulé. There you go. That's where this comes from. And it's just meant to antagonize. And the gay guys I know, shit, I know some trans women. They don't like any of this shit.

2:23:11 And that's my point, is that they're pulling away, the wedge is causing them to pull away. To say, you don't represent me the same way I say to the bullae. To say, you don't represent me, stop speaking in my name. And that's why I'm saying this. And it's so sad because it gives such a skewed representation of who these fellow Americans are. You know, they're not your enemy. But you know, but if you keep showing the... I mean look, Billy Porter just does not represent all gay black men. He just does not. I totally agree with you. Eddie Murphy, he represents gay black men. That's... We all know it, Eddie. Come on.

2:23:58 Hey Arsenio, how you doing? Come on, man. Come on now. We allegedly know. It's purely speculation. Yeah, but what needs to happen is, what's gonna, I think, gonna happen is people are gonna start being put on islands just the way the Republican Party is like the RINOs? You're over there. You know what I'm saying? Like, we're reusing this this playbook to get like-minded people, no matter party, no matter gender, no matter sexual orientation, no matter race. This is something we all can agree upon. The children need to be protected. And there's a nefarious push to corrupt children by a group of people. I don't know who these people are. That's the weird thing.

CHAPTER 31 / 39 Discussion

Libs of TikTok and Teachers Grooming Students

A montage from "Libs of TikTok" featured on Jason Whitlock's show depicts teachers discussing their desire to "groom" students regarding gender and sexuality. One teacher admits to replacing social studies lessons with discussions about being gay. Mo and Adam argue that teachers have no right to shape a child's worldview on these topics and should focus on basic literacy and math.

libs of tiktok· jason whitlock· grooming· florida· social studies· gender identity

2:24:55 How about this Moe, how about just pure evil? I don't think these teachers are, because this is a clip I pulled from Jason Whitlock's show. And he's talking in it. He plays a montage of teachers from lives of tick-tock Oh, yeah, Dvorak was talking about this. He said this was an amazing piece this this episode. All right So that's a sad part about can't list you all show that much I don't want to make sure you're saying I want to make sure we have a fresh conversation. Yeah, so let's go ahead and get into 24

2:25:42 Building a relationship with a child so that you can shape their sexual, gender, political, and racial worldview. This is what the parental rights bill in Florida is about. Here's a compilation of just teachers on camera filming themselves talking about their desire to groom young people as it relates to gender and sexuality. One of the things that teachers always do with back to school night and meet the teacher and things like that. They sent home this cute little meet the teacher thing where it has a little bio about us, some of our favorite stuff just so that you know who we are. How do I do that next year? Do I lie and not talk about my marriage? Do I pretend I'm single?

2:26:38 Do I invalidate my spouse's stance as a trans femme person? Ready. When they've been exposed to information, they're ready to learn about it, whether you think they are or not. And the research says that there is no age too young to talk about pretty much anything. If they know about it, they're ready to learn about it. Right? So there is no, you know, what we think is always age appropriate. It is if they don't know about it. That I don't care what the government tells me to do. I am going to do what I think is best for the health and safety, and that includes mental health and safety, and emotional health and safety of my kids. I will never let any child come through my classroom feeling unloved or ashamed for who they are. You know, like the LGBT promotional, like this is a safe community kind of stuff, the rainbow stuff all up in my room.

2:27:36 And I told them, I'm like, if you look around the room, that should give you an answer to your question. So I did officially tell them. They of course went berserk. So instead of teaching social studies today, they just asked me a whole bunch of questions about being gay. So I think it was pretty well. That's what's going on in schools. Yeah. Yeah, I know, and you pointed out, you know, my kids. These people believe that most parents are too stupid and probably already abusing their children by not letting them be who they want to be. But the point is, or the whole fact, yeah, the point is that they have no rights over our children.

2:28:27 Just teach them to read and do math. How about that for an idea? If we were number one in the world in math and reading? Yeah, we got some time for gender studies everybody. Right. But I think we got some other things that we need to be doing, that we need to be teaching. Yeah, how about basic economics and some actual history? How about civics? There you go. It's a bunch of stuff and this is K through three. I mean, I don't think this bill goes far enough But I mean we're talking and then one guy was in there and it's kind of disappointing that you're saying it's He was a brother, he's like, I don't think there is an age. It's not appropriate. What? I'm a father. And I'm like, eh, why not start talking to the kids about this? So you're a complete stranger. Don't get it twisted. Of course you with the kids. So there's other ways to look at this. So when I say that this is evil, what I mean is evil has taken hold of these people. These people are not evil by themselves.

CHAPTER 32 / 39 Discussion

Camille Paglia, Weimar Republic, and Depopulation

Adam Curry references Camille Paglia's observations on the Weimar Republic to suggest that flamboyant gender expression often precedes societal collapse. They play a 2013 clip of Melissa Harris Perry arguing that "kids belong to whole communities," not just parents. Mo argues that the push for hormone blockers and gender surgery in minors is ultimately a "depopulation" and "eugenics" agenda.

camille paglia· weimar republic· melissa harris perry· hormone blockers· depopulation· eugenics

2:29:29 Correct evil has taken hold and in a much broader Perspective and as as you're always, you know, you always point out is that everyone benefits, you know There's so much benefit for so many groups and people and political and just so much of all of these different things but If you go back in history, there's been many times and the most recent one as far as I know was The Weimar Republic, just before the big hyperinflation in people, this is Germany, and people were going out with wheelbarrows of cash to get some bread before World War II. It was a very similar situation. Camille Paglia talked about this recently, that's how I was reminded of it. And people were flamboyant and cross-dressing and there was some transgenderism. And just, you know, it's when society loses all

2:30:30 loses the plot really because the parents who are now being coerced into this by the scholastic system and the media and everyone telling me, hey, it's good, it's important, you hear this woman, it's for the children's health that they can be who they want to be. Yeah, absolutely. I used to play with dolls and my sisters played with some boy stuff for a bit and you switch it around and let the kids be who they wanna be. But there's a whole enforcement mechanism right down to the child, California won't even have to have parental agreement to start, you know, on like hormone blockers. This is a society is just as you say we're not back to the basics of just you know let's learn how to read and write and some you know some general skills to be productive members of society. No, we've lost the plot and we're just all about the crazy now. Right, because let's be clear it's not about just a conversation. It's about oh

2:31:32 Do you feel like a girl sometimes? Or you know that kind of thing? Oh yeah. And then he's like, yeah, I mean, I guess. And then like, oh, he's transgender. Let's go and get him on some antidepressants. And I've read the books, Mo. I've read the books that parents are recommended. You know, My Child is Transgender, What to Do, and 90% of that book is all about the politics and the neighbors and the school, and it's very little about the child. And we know some friends of ours have transgender children. Some not doing so well, you know, I've seen a lot of this from many different aspects and it's for sure there are people who have transgender, who have gender identity disorder. Ali Jade is the official tranny of the NOAH Gender Show. She's very specific to explain her path and

2:32:27 And it has almost no bearing on what's happening today. It is not responsible. And it's the same, I feel the same way about critical race theory. That you don't take, and there's some parallels there. Because remember the abolitionists? Remember Kevvie? The abolitionist? How he went off to school and then he came back in the classroom and he wasn't literally teaching critical race theory, but he was teaching from that lens? I think these teachers are the same way. They went off to school. They sat in these gender study classes. they get this certain lens that they see through, and then they come and want to shape their children with it. And that makes me think of Melissa Harris Perry. Good prime example, yes. Right, that your children don't belong to you, they belong to us. And I'll finalize what you're saying on this point is, at the end of the day, the depopulation people win.

2:33:25 Because if you cut off a guy a boy's genitalia or you ruin a young female child's hormones and reproductive organs through... It's depopulation, absolutely. I have the Melissa Harris Perry clip from 2010. never invested as much in public education as we should have because we've always had kind of a private notion of children. Your kid is yours and totally your responsibility. We haven't had a very collective notion of these are our children. So part of it is we have to break through our kind of private idea that kids belong to their parents or kids belong to their families and recognize that kids belong to whole communities. Once it's everybody's responsibility and not just the households, then we start making better investments.

CHAPTER 33 / 39 Discussion

Arnie Duncan and the "Social Justice Solidarity" High School

In 2010, then-Secretary of Education Arnie Duncan supported a proposal for a "gay-friendly" social justice high school in Chicago. The hosts link this to the broader implementation of "bullying laws," which they argue were the genesis of modern "hate speech" regulations. They suggest this long-term plan was well-funded and supported by the Obama administration and Big Tech.

arnie duncan· chicago· bullying laws· hate speech· social justice· barack obama

2:34:12 And again, that's 12 years ago. Brown Jackson is Obama's pick because he was pushing this when he got in, he put in Arnie Duncan. And Arnie Duncan before he got in, he was trying to start a safe gay school in Chicago. You're right. Proposal to establish a gay friendly Chicago public high school has been in the news and late today the plan was reportedly pulled off the table by the Chicago Board of Education.

2:34:48 It was to have been voted on tomorrow. The school would have been called Social Justice Solidarity High and now appears dead, at least for this year. Is the high school still needed to protect kids who are bullied because of their sexual orientation? Or would it create a different kind of stigma? Joining us to talk about the proposal are Katie Hogan, a design team member for the proposed school and chair of the English department at the existing Social Justice High School. And Katie, beginning with you, obviously the first question is what happened today? I think that you need concrete examples, you need good practitioners, and in order to do that you need a space where educators can grow, receive training, and spread that out across the system. That's what Social Justice High School has done with social justice teaching. And since we have a model that works, let's replicate it in 2010 and continue the fight. It's not over. So your expectation is to resubmit this proposal next year? Absolutely. We're going to resubmit it stronger.

2:35:44 We've gotten full support from Arnie Duncan. Again, this is not the Chicago Public Schools saying we don't want this to go through. This is our design team wanting to make sure that we have the number one proposal next year and that this school will open with a great reputation and great expectations and more community involvement than ever before. I get a little mad at myself when I hear this. There's so many things that happen when we're focused on other news that also needs to be deconstructed, like the headline. And you know that there's stuff going, like, you know, the slap heard around the world. You know there was so much stuff that happened in that week that we just didn't catch that's going to pop up sooner or later. It just bugs me. It's good to go back.

2:36:33 And I have a luxury of going down one rabbit hole at a time. I mean, you went and saying John have to cover so many topics for the product you all create. And I'm able to just kind of look at one rabbit hole. And there's a lot of stuff going on right now. I don't have any clue about like the New York shooting or the Sacramento shooting or those kind of things. Because I'm focused on On one thing. So I mean that's the good one-two punch of Noah Jenden and the MoFax. He's like, you guys keep us abreast on all the things that's kinda going on, and I can go down in depth with what's going on here. But as you see, 2010. You know, Arnie Duncan. And another name that pops up that was an Obama appointee was Kevin Jennings. And this is his message to send a strong message.

2:37:29 Principals are the CEO of their school and the tone they set dictates everything else. When teachers were asked what they needed to make schools safer, the number one thing they said they needed was a clear policy. The number two thing was a supportive principal or superintendent. Principals need to communicate at the beginning of the school year to everyone in the school, parents, kids, staff, that bullying simply is not going to be tolerated. And like any other important message, that needs to be reinforced repeatedly over the course of the year. If principals show leadership, if they use their voice, and if they stand behind teachers who intervene when bullying occurs, we're gonna see much greater action by staff. We're gonna see students stepping up to the plate and intervening and being upstanders rather than bystanders. And we're gonna see bullying decrease. If principals are silent, what they are saying to kids who are getting bullied is, your suffering is not important to me. And what they're saying to staff is, this is something I don't really care that much about.

2:38:28 Your silence is not neutrality. So, Prince Fulce, you have an important role to play and I urge you to take the role that you've been given as a leader and use it for good. Yes, silence is violence. So, another thing that we covered on No Agenda was the bullying laws. And this was again around the same time and it was really miraculous because we were talking about, hey man, whatever happened to sticks and stones will break my bones, names will ever hurt me. And so we were seeing the participation ribbons and all that and then it was bullying, bullying, bullying and then bullying, you know, so

2:39:09 That's where we got hate speech from. It came from the bullying laws and I remember so distinctly we were just like how the hell can you make up a law against any kind of speech? It just didn't make any sense but yet here it is and now it's hate speech. Best to hold my beer. That's right, exactly. And now it's actual hate speech. So this all goes, this is well planned. Well planned and it had big money behind it because remember Obama Google everybody it only gets better. Yeah, it only gets better That was a whole it was like all the big companies kind of like now with the black lives matter It was the the genesis of woke. Yes, it only gets better and I was like, well, that's a weird statement like What does that mean? Like I mean it only gets better so I

CHAPTER 34 / 39 Discussion

Kevin Jennings and the NAMLA Connection

The hosts discuss Kevin Jennings, Obama's "Safe Schools" czar, and his alleged praise for Harry Hay, a founder of the North American Man-Boy Love Association (NAMLA). They play a vintage NAMLA phone message from the Howard Stern show to illustrate the group's "boy lover" rhetoric. Mo notes that the "times will change" message in the recording seems to have come to fruition in the modern era.

kevin jennings· namla· harry hay· howard stern· boy lover· safe schools

2:40:01 I have a handy clip and he talks about this guy Kevin Jennings and his associating with a nefarious group. We're calling for Kevin Jennings resignation. The question is, will it happen? And joining me now to discuss this is Iowa Congressman Steve King. He also is asking the president to get rid of Kevin Jennings. Well, you just heard about the group NAMLA. You heard about this guy that Kevin Jennings has praised, a guy that always inspired him, that was associated with this group. What are we to conclude? Well, I think we can conclude that President Obama's agenda and his associates and their fellow travelers have been appointed to influential positions in the United States government. But this is a breathtaking reveal that you've done here, Sean. To think that, I mean, I've said before that I think Kevin Jennings has got to be the poster boy for NAMLA, but to understand that he has also endorsed Harry Hay.

2:40:55 the other day. He was a member of the national health organization. And he's a lifelong friend and a really least reference to his association with him that tells you that at least they support him and his lifetime agenda as a now he's supposed to be the safe schools and drug free promotion of homosexuality within our schools and a lot of it within our elementary schools and to think of this association I can't imagine how the president can do anything if he cares about the values of America except simply fire him. And did he get fired because I don't remember? I didn't find out I don't think so but I couldn't confirm that. But

2:41:37 For people that don't know what Nambla is, you want to say anything else before we get into this next clip? No, no, no, no. Let me just set this up a little bit then. This is from Howard Stern's show. And this used to get played frequently on his old show. Oh yeah, so goodness. Right, just to go show you how things, how fast things have changed and how far they've changed. This is the Nambla phone message. This is Nambla, the North American Man Boy Love Association in New York. The Oresh Raju chapter meets on the first Saturday of each month.

2:42:16 From noon to 2.30 p.m. For any other matter, please leave your message at the end of the beep. We'll call you back as soon as possible, but we'll have to do it in collect. Right. In the meanwhile and if you're a boy Do not despair Be true to your feelings Times will change your oppression will end But if you're a man be safe

2:42:53 Be brave and above all, be proud to be a boy lover. In either case, do call us again. Best time is in the evening between 8.30 to 10.30. Thank you. Man, that goes, that takes me back to my New York days. So old. So his message to the boys is times will change. We're in those times that he's talking about. We are and then in this message to the man is be brave And what's one of the things that tell him be I'm stunning and brave. I'm stunning and brave. Yeah, it's I need a shower But I want to make one more point before we go thanks to more producers is in my studies for the last shows lost tapes I

CHAPTER 35 / 39 Discussion

Aramis Ayala and the Soros-Funded Florida Prosecution

Mo identifies Florida prosecutor Aramis Ayala as a "Soros Sister" who received $1.3 million from George Soros-linked groups. Ayala famously refused to pursue the death penalty in a high-profile murder case involving a police officer. Mo highlights Ayala's recent tweets supporting Disney workers and the "Say Gay" movement, linking her "Open Society" agenda to the current cultural conflict in Florida.

aramis ayala· george soros· florida· death penalty· disney· open society

2:43:52 On Soros, I ran across a Soros sister that I'm pretty sure we never discussed before. Her name is Amaris Ayala. And she is the, I believe, Orange County in Florida, where Orlando. Oh, hello, hello Disney. Yeah, exactly. And then on her tweets, she has these two tweets, but she's a known, just to give you, I gotta tell you the story. So, we had this killer that killed one black woman he was in a relationship, he's a black man, killed one black woman he was in a relationship with,

2:44:29 and her unborn child, right? Goes on to kill another black female police officer. that was trying to arrest him. Another police officer dies in pursuit of him and he shoots the first woman's brother and maims him. And it's like, no, I'm not pursuing any death penalty cases. Really now? Due to her allegiance to open society and their views on death, on the death penalty. And she's taking money from, it's verified that they pumped $1.3 million

2:45:05 into a prosecutor race down in Orange and Ocella, I think it's called Ocella County. Yeah. And then now recently she's been tweeting, say gay. say the names of every LGBTQ plus human being we lost to hate. Florida must not move backwards, teach love, stop hate and puts the gay flag. And then she has a black piece of tape over her mouth with gay written across it. And then she has another post that says I stand with Disney workers and the LGBTQ community. And just to let people know, Disney workers are being arrested.

2:45:42 for being involved in, you know, various things with children. There are instances where we have that. 108 they rolled up at Disney. Right. And then she says, I call on Disney to meet the demands of their workers. I ask my fellow Democrats to refrain from crossing the lines of protests on any circumstance until those demands are met. Today we have an opportunity to rise to the occasion once again but our solidarity must be anchored in action. That's a Soros sister. When was this? This was, let me see, did I get the date? This was around when they don't say gay bills to first start cropping up.

2:46:27 But you can go to her Twitter, her Twitter handle is A-R-A-M-I-S-A-Y-A-L-A-F-L. Remind me to tell you something about Disney before we start the next block. Okay, you want to tell me now? No, no, no, we're going to thank some people. I understand that there's some people out there who need my services. Are there any people out there who are weak? Any people out there who are weary? Any people out there who are tired? Any people out there who just need a hill? Y'all got cash? Well then come on! Hey, you're switching it up. You're switching it up.

CHAPTER 36 / 39 Discussion

Zootopia's Dawn Bellwether and the Character Profile

Mo deconstructs the Disney movie "Zootopia," focusing on the villain Dawn Bellwether, a "lamb in sheep's clothing" who rises to power by manipulating fear between predators and prey. Mo draws a parallel between Bellwether's unassuming, "overworked" persona and the public image of Ketanji Brown Jackson. He suggests that Disney movies often contain deep political archetypes that influence both children and parents.

zootopia· dawn bellwether· disney· predator· prey· ketanji brown jackson

2:52:54 We're talking five-year-olds dressed like strippers, five-year-old boys paying them to touch them. I mean it's all Disney and it goes right through Shirley Temple. I mean that was that Shirley Temple was creepy. That is the history of Disney movies And I'm sure if you really go all the way back, you know, you'll find more probably back to Steamboat Willie But it has always been a very very creepy company in that regard. You brought up Steamboat Willie aka Mickey Mouse. If they're able to get rid of that copyright protection

2:53:37 That will be the death blow. Oh yeah. That will be the death, I mean because everything else unravels for Disney after that and I think that is maybe a target of the anti-Disney people. It always has been. It always has been. You bet. You bet. So, uh, because that also frees Florida. Because what you want is you want China to get a hold of, to be able to do all the Disney stuff. Because first of all, they're nuts about it. And they'll crush Disney. Yep. I might be selling the Mickey Mouse t-shirts. Hell yeah. Repurpose it.

2:54:15 The fact now we're down and talking about Disney and I want to go through these next clips and it may be a space jam reach But you let me know as we go through them. Okay, but they had a movie called Zootopia Have you ever seen this movie before? I don't assume you have because it's a children's movie. Sounds familiar, but probably not. Okay, so the basic premise of the movie is all these animals, predators and prey live in harmony together until they don't. And so in there they have this character called Dawn Bellweather. So they're going to explain what who Dawn is, her profile, and I

2:54:58 I'd like to take this chance to do two things. One, show you maybe a character profile of Brown Jackson. Because she reminds me a lot of Dawn Bellweather, the character. And two, to show people the depth That Disney writes movies in a lot of times people think they're children movies, but there's so much nuance there that I think impacts the parent and the child. We always talk about the impact to the child, but it's also impactful to the. to the parent as well. So let's get going down with these clips. You let me know if I'm reaching out. Okay. All right. Don Bellweather tactfully brings utopia to its knees and rises to power by bringing fear into the city. But what led her to become hateful towards predators? How was she able to set up this plot and what happened

2:55:50 that led her to desire chaos. Today, I'm going through the full story of Bellwether's rise and fall as the dangerous mayor of Zootopia. Hello, I'm Isaac from WatchSewedVideos, where we discuss fun topics for fun people. On my channel, I focus on spreading magic by examining Disney films, so if you are new here, consider subscribing. Now, onto the video, where we will go back to a time when the assistant mayor was just a lamb. At her birth, the tiny sheep that would one day attempt to rule over all prey and predators in Zootopia was given the name Don Bellwether. Dawn meaning to bring about the beginning and Bellwether referring to a sheep that leads a herd. From the beginning of her life, her parents and family believed that she was destined to bring about a new era as a leader. She had a destiny to uphold.

2:56:39 But that was not seen by those outside of her family. Bellwether was tossed aside by many animals growing up. Much like Judy, Dawn was constantly looked past, was discriminated against, and was never taken seriously throughout her schooling days and into her early jobs. All of these animals made her feel like nothing, and she couldn't stand it. Bellwether was hardened by constantly being underestimated, especially by predators. Underappreciated aren't you sick of it? Okay, I have you interest. I you have my interest of course of course I love this And just for notes when she starts out as a little lamb. She's black where she grows up to a sheep. She's white well, that's

CHAPTER 37 / 39 Discussion

The "Prey vs. Predator" Social Structure in Zootopia

In "Zootopia," Dawn Bellwether uses her position as assistant mayor to undermine "predators" like Mayor Lionheart, eventually aiming for prey to "reign supreme." Mo suggests this reflects a "majority rule" strategy where 90% of the population is unified against a common enemy. Adam and Mo discuss whether a Supreme Court seat is the "end station" of power or a platform for radical social restructuring.

zootopia· mayor lionheart· inclusion· social structure· supreme court· power

2:57:31 I don't know how that works. This was a big movie, right? Huge movie. Huge, huge movie. I don't want to give too much away so when people watch it, but I just want to go through this character profile. But am I reaching yet? Where am I at in the reach-a-meter? Well, you're at a seven. You're a seven on the reach-a-meter and it's growing quickly. All right, let's go ahead and get to 31. After being repeatedly picked on, put down, and seen as weak by the predators she confronted in her life, Bellwether's perception on predator mammals became distorted, filled with hate, and was absolute. Over time, she slowly came to believe that they were an irredeemable breed with an unjustified superiority complex over prey. Years of being seen as second-rate and incapable by predators solidified in her mind how wrong they were.

2:58:24 she wouldn't let them treat her like this. She didn't want to let any predator treat any prey like this, which led to her to devise a plan. The bullying, paired with her aspirations of ruling over other animals, transformed her inner self into an utterly vengeful, scheming, and diabolical sheep that was devoted to fight against all predators. Bellwether allowed herself to be consumed by hate and internal rage, but she hid it under a seemingly meek disposition. Dawn Bellwether epitomized the term a wolf in sheep's clothing. On the surface, she appeared to be sweet and finicky and overworked, while inside, she hid a ruthless and embittered mind. While she seemed bumbling, awkward, and submissive, most of the time she is truly a master organizer operating with lethal cunning as she climbs the ladder of power.

2:59:14 Okay, yeah, this is interesting. Yeah, yeah, yeah, you got me there, you got me there, I'm there. And what made me think about the Dhamik, that was her disposition doing the whole thing and she was unassuming, you know, just this, she gave off this persona but you could tell under there, and you don't get to that level of power, let me say this, without having some cunning and motives. You mean the Supreme Court? Yes. Well... In anything, I mean, you don't get to the top without having some kind of... Right, well, what my mind went to was I was thinking, did I have the same thoughts about Amy Coney Barrett? And I don't think I did. I do. Clarence Thomas, I do. I mean, you don't wake up in the morning and be like, oh, I'm gonna be a Supreme Court justice. You know what I'm saying? Like, that is a very...

3:00:22 Right laid out path, huh? Okay, well, I'm there. In my perception. Yeah, yeah. No, I'm, hey, I'm there. I'm there. Alright, uh, 33. As she worked her way up within her personal and political career, she held onto the belief that prey would soon no longer fear predators under her rule. She was confident that she would help her city of Zootopia to rise above them, and that belief only became more important to her when she became associated with one Leodore Lionheart. Through her sheer competence, perseverance, and timing, she becomes assistant mayor by appealing to City Hall Councilor Leodore Lionheart's strategic mind. Bellwether convinces him that he could win the position of mayor with the vote of the sheep on his side, which leads to her being placed onto the ballot of the most charismatic and beloved candidate for mayor of Zootopia. After campaigning and going through the election, the team becomes the leading politicians of Zootopia.

3:01:19 As the heads of the city, Lionheart serves as a mighty leader with genuine pride in the unique community that is Zootopia, while Bellwether is mainly just tossed aside. Similarly to the many predators who had hurt Dawn before her, Lionheart was impatient and intolerant towards even the slightest mess up by Bellwether, which often led to her being humiliated. This is some Kamala here. But nonetheless, I got it. But I'm just saying the archetype of the unassuming, overburdened, overworked, never appreciated. We're going to teach those predators one day. See Cory Booker's monologue. Right. That's exactly right. And then the other lady is like, oh, yeah, it's exactly right. Two things about Katonji. One, she was born and raised in Florida.

3:02:19 I was waiting on that. Also the name Kitanji is interesting. It's actually from, I think it's from Hindu. I'm reading a page here from, I don't know what this is, Politico maybe? It is a unisex moniker used in the Hindu religion in the context of trans, that's also interesting. And can I give you a quote from Dawn Bellwether? She's talking to Judy and Judy was a female cop that was also prey, not a predator. That's how they split it up, predator and prey, but somehow they figured out where the predators wouldn't eat the prey. But that wasn't good enough.

3:03:00 So she says to Judy, she says, we're on the same team, underestimated, unappreciated. Aren't you sick of it? Predators, they may be strong and loud, but pray outnumber predators 10 to 1. Think of it, 90% of the population united against a common enemy will be unstoppable. So the only thing that I can't quite put into place for your theory here, which I do like, is you know the Supreme Court is kind of when you're a justice on the Supreme Court that's kind of your end station. It's a very powerful position but you know you're not going to be president, you're not gonna, I don't think that there's no other place to go. To me, and like I said this is the lens I see it through, I think it's more powerful than president. It's very possible, yeah. Who did Joe Biden had to go see for his vax mandate?

CHAPTER 38 / 39 Discussion

Visual Presentation and the "Natural" Sisterhood Aesthetic

Mo observes that Judge Jackson's appearance during the hearings seemed "darker" and more "natural" than in previous photos, comparing it to Kamala Harris's aesthetic shifts. He explains this as a trend within a specific "sisterhood" where darker skin and natural hair are used to signal authenticity and belonging. They discuss how these visual cues are used to shape public perception of political figures.

colorism· crown act· natural hair· kamala harris· makeup· aesthetics

3:03:58 Yeah, yeah. Everything that's consequential to this nation. Oh yeah, I mean this is why we have Senate hearings, is to find out because it's very important who's on the Supreme Court. No doubt about it. No doubt about it. Alright, so I just want to lay that out. Like I said, it's not everything going to be spot on, but this is just what jarred in my mind. And like I said, I didn't go looking for this, but when I saw her and I'm just watching a movie with my kids, it's like she reminds me of The villain in this movie, like, she was the villain. You know what's interesting? If you look at her Wikipedia page, she doesn't even look like the way she looked in the hearings.

3:04:35 No, she had that very, what's the lady that testified against Kavanaugh? How they dressed her down? Yep, but also just her facial features don't even, I mean, it's the same person, that's not what I'm saying. Right. But she looks- I'm not saying she portrayed a role is what I'm saying, like this meek, to me, like I said, this very unassuming, You know, but her face on the Wikipedia page and I put all in the show knows her face is very open It's a very open face. You know, her eyes are open and bright and then in In the hearings, it's like her eyes are not Open and bright and she's it's very closed everything very close. It can just be her defense mechanism Making it I mean she made it became in with a defensive posture so I could see this and to be real honest with you She looks a lot darker now than she did before

3:05:33 That may be by Kamala did it. She definitely darkened up. You think? Oh, definitely. Really now? Definitely. Really? Is that noticeable? Yeah, it's very, it's very noticeable. Is that a thing? Is that just when she was running for president? Is that just her going under the UV lamp? This is a thing. I'll say this is a thing. with the whole colorism thing that we've talked about on many episodes. And then with the whole crown act, there's this certain thing now amongst this sisterhood that the darker and more natural you are, that's how you fit in. It's like fitting in, and so even the fairer skinned women have to go a little darker.

3:06:21 And you just do that by exposure to sunlight or UV light or tanning bed? Or makeup. You can do makeup as well. But I'm just telling you that I've noticed this. Even the anchors, notice, even the anchors, I mean Melissa Harris Perry lost her job to who? You know what I'm saying? So it's out with the old. And then if you are, and I'm just telling you, as we do like an executive review, it's not a personal review, but If you're not dark, then you have to have like a little sass to you. Like see your uh, uh, what's your girl's name? Um, Rye, Angela Rye. No, no, she has that little, she's a fair-skinned woman, but she has that sass to her. Right. You know, so, and they do the same thing with the guys. You can't be too masculine. You know what I'm saying? You have to

3:07:09 If you're a masculine man, you have to wear these light pastel colors or like the straight hand effect. He can't embrace his masculinity. So I'm just saying all of what's going on is shaping the appearances of the news broadcasters and public figures they're putting in front of us. And sadly, providing example for young people. Yes. Because it does shape it. Yeah, of course it does. I guess we can go and get into 33. I think that's where we start. As mayor, Lionheart had a single goal to ensure all mammals were given a chance to live their dreams, which led to the popular phrase in Zootopia, anyone can be anything. To implement this goal, Lionheart enacted the Mammal Inclusion Initiative, an act which provided all animals with high ranking opportunities to ensure equality among the predator and prey citizens. Of course, though, who implemented

3:08:04 implemented the grand majority of these pieces of legislation, Bellwether, and she despised creating positive programs for a predator who kept her under his paw. Even though Assistant Mayor Bellwether remained a sweet sheep with a little voice and a lot of wool, she despised her place under the foot of the praised Mayor Lionheart. Over time, Bellwether had developed a disdain towards predators like larger-than-life Lionheart and their treatment towards prey mammals. Especially now that she was able to witness Lionheart's rise through the popularity of inclusion while subsequently putting her down, she felt more than ever that prey needed to reign supreme and predators should be shown for what they were, worthless, cruel, and bloodthirsty.

3:08:47 She committed to taking the power from predators and specifically Lionheart himself. To Bellwether, majority ruled and in Zootopia it was true that the prey population drastically outnumbered the predators ten to one. Prey would soon see what predators were to her and they could finally be unified in their hate to allow them to revise the city's social structure. She would attack and manipulate the fear of those who had a mistrust of predators to enact her rule. With her ascent within her grasp, Prey would finally rule over one of the largest mammalian cities in the world. Wow, man. Disney is the Antichrist. That's a Disney movie! Yeah, and it's so interesting to see

CHAPTER 39 / 39 Discussion

Closing Thoughts on Protecting Children and Independent Media

The hosts conclude by emphasizing the importance of protecting children from institutional indoctrination. Mo advocates for homeschooling and monitoring children's media consumption. They encourage listeners to support independent media to avoid propaganda. The episode ends with a somber musical track and spoken word piece about the devastating effects of child abuse on the family structure.

homeschooling· independent media· propaganda· child abuse· family structure· mo facts

3:09:37 How does been so many calls for changing Disney movies specifically because you know snow white or Cinderella they don't did not the right role models for little girls and yeah this is me. As as a parent as both of us as parents, you know, there's been tons of of cartoons and and children's programming throughout the ages that always have a Typically a cool little it used to be just a fun joke for the parents You know the kids wouldn't get and the parents would all be laughing in the movie theater but Yeah There's no doubt that Disney has really really been doing a lot of indoctrinating and

3:10:25 And I have an example of the parent being indoctrinated. 34. Baby is gay. Yeah, this is him. He's gay. I called up my dad and I said, hey, guess what? Your grandson, gay, gay, gay, gay. My dad says, you can't just say that your baby is gay before he gets a chance to tell us he's gay. And I go, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa. Straight people do it all the time. Little baby boy is born. Oh, he's going to be a heartbreaker. Little baby girl is born. Oh, you better lock her up when she turns 60 clearly people want their children to be straight well, my son is gay, okay, oh that's just a There's trauma there. She's rebelling against her parents No, no her father her father. I'm sorry specific predator. Yeah going back to the movie. Yeah, the patriarchy is the predator yeah, I

3:11:30 And you see it play out, I call my dad and tell him your grandson is gay. Gay, gay, gay. Gay, gay. I finally got something I can hurt you with. Exactly. Well, Mo, I'm delighted with all I've learned today. Also, just a little bit depressed. Just a little bit. But this stuff is coming out into the open, man. That's the good thing about it. These people are talking about it. And again, no judgment from me. on whatever you want to be. You and I think exactly the same on that. You're an adult, knock yourself out. But the way this is being positioned and the way the government and government resources like schooling want to take charge of your children and just predetermine this, and the whole enabling of society with pharmaceutical and just the whole healthcare industry, politicians, media, whoo!

3:12:33 That's a that's a big movement man. There's a lot to slow down But the way you do it is turn off your subscriptions if you don't agree with it Don't give it screen time if you don't agree with it and support independent media like us you know, that's not trying to propagandize you. And like I said, the only issue I have is when you come at kids, let kids be kids. And you saw what I've done. I took my kids out of school and went the homeschool option. I limit what they watch. I monitor what they watch. So that's all you can do.

3:13:16 Mo, thank you so much once again for this episode and I love that there's all kinds of teases in here for future things and for setting my head straight about what is actually going on here because now I too can pay attention to the Pizza Playbook. It's in play and it's activated and it's gonna, I think we're gonna need some popcorn to go with our Pizza Playbook. It's gonna be very interesting. You're welcome. And as I always say, pay attention to everything and the truth will reveal itself. Allen Morton for Lifestyle News. Our top story for tonight is child abuse and the effects it has on the family structure. Film at 11. Damn. Every time I turn on the news, someway, somehow, another child has been abused. Now confused, they must be sick doing the things that's being done. See what I'm saying, y'all? Young children being raped and battered.

3:14:14 to the right of chat chatter who protects them who respects them when their own family neglects them it's common check can't have this type of madness scurrying like it but others in their cats now we make the change of day won't be no more mothers to hear their child's face A mother cried slumped over a dead body a teenage girl in the corner screams her mother wants to know one thing Why here's the words of a girl too scared to lie. She said it happened to me first when I was nine He broke the rule and told me I was fine He sat me on his knee and said that he loved me and in these dirty strange ways He touched me that night you were late at night

3:15:18 Mommy, I pray that you will come home and save me. Cause he did these things, these nasty things to me, Ma. These things, these nasty things. And I told I would die from the pain. It was crazy, the young girl that slain. When he was through with me, he looked down and said, you tell anyone, your mom and you, you're dead. She feared for their lives, so she stayed quiet. Five years of being raped and being silent. 1,825 days she suffered from a man who said, I do this because I love you. Now she's 14, can't take no more. And she knew he kept her guard and his dressage real. So she guarded, she saw him, she

3:15:57 that I hate you Uncle Chester, that's why I gotta stop it. Rude, but sex such a thing, grown ups touch your feelings, when you thought you had it. Mommy, please don't leave, and if you leave then I can't sleep. Mommy, mommy, who's gonna leave, when you're not touching? I miss it, I hate that I can't sleep. The dress is gonna slip and top me. Mommy, please don't leave, and if you've got something,

3:16:38 And if they're not listening to their zombies, I'm listening to zombies. God bless our children.