89: Mass Confusion
Wed 11 Jan 2023

89: Mass Confusion

3h 19m
Duration

Transcript

2s - 3h19m54s

Whose world is this? It's mine, it's mine, it's mine Whose world is this? It's yours It's mine, it's mine, it's mine, whose world is this? It's mine, it's mine, it's mine, whose world is this? More facts with Adam Curry for January 11th, 2023. It's episode 89, a new year. That means more fresh facts for all of us. I'm Adam Curry coming to you from the heart of the Texas Hill Country. And time once again to spin that wheel of topics from here to Northern Virginia. Please say hello to my friend on the other end.

Ladies and gentlemen, Mr. Mo Facts. Hello, Mo. How you doing, Adam? Did I lose you there? Do we have a super delay or what's going on? I actually had the mute button on. I was doing my stretch. You know, sometimes we say, well, sometimes we are so amazed by the forces that try to stop this show from happening. It's crazy. How many times have we had something go wrong with this just to try and get something going? Too many to count. And it's inexplicable as well. Yeah, it is. Happy New Year to you, Mo. How's everything going? Everything's going well. How about yourself? Yeah, I'm good. I'm still hanging in there with the oral surgery and everything. Moving ahead, trying not to slice and whistle too much. But yeah, I'm good, man. It's been a good start to the year. And I am very excited for another Mo Facts with Adam Curry.

I think you are as well as myself and everybody else so I guess we can go ahead and get to the wheel. Alright, let's roll it then shall we? Round and round it goes, where it stops nobody knows. What is the topic for episode 89 of MoFacts with Adam Curry? Well, let's find out. Here it is. The United States of Fear. The United States of Fear. Okay, that could be a very broad topic for sure. Alright, so during the whole COVID situation, what's it been, three years now? Two and a half, three years? It'll be three years in February, March I guess. Yeah, coming up on three. This term mass formation psychosis cropped up and I think in doing so it pointed out a lot about race.

And I know people always talking about all y'all was talking about ratio was talking about race I think race is the biggest issue the biggest wedge Oh, probably the big great. Oh, no, first of all, absolutely I mean this is now as we predicted this is now moved to the Netherlands where I grew up now They've I don't know if you if you saw any of those reports, but of course I followed that having grown up there So now they've discovered they've discovered that the Dutch actually controlled a lot of the ships that sailed the slaves. All of a sudden they discovered that! And now they're talking reparations, you know, there's apologies, like, oh, we have to have, you know, I mean, it's mind-boggling to me how this has been exported to the rest of the world. I'm glad you brought up that point of discovery. Because in a world of having great records,

and society's known for keeping great records, all of these things are currently being quote-unquote discovered. Discovered, yeah, it's beautiful, isn't it? So what I want to do is take some terms head on. We're going to talk about words, why words matter. This thing when I say white supremacy, I can see people cringe. I can feel them cringe because it's like we have this misconception of what it is. and what the system I'm talking about. So I want to talk about that once again in a scientific approach because when you break it down to a system and not feelings towards between people, you can make some headway.

So once again going back to mass mass formation psychosis, I think that was a We might recognize the elephant in the room. Well, there's one thing I want to add to that because You know, this is a theory which was birthed into the world by professor Matias de Smet. He's a Belgian professor of psychology he also has a a degree in I think statistics, which is what got him started a little under like two and a half years ago. He was saying, hold on a second, these statistics aren't right. And what is happening with people? Why are they all acting this way? The one thing I need to point out is that it is officially called mass formation.

The psychosis part was added by Dr. Malone, and I personally think that's a little inflammatory and perhaps a misnomer. Neither here nor there, the concept of mass formation is the same. Well, that's an important point you bring up because once you, however you shape terms and add to and take away from, it can become inflammatory or dismissive or accusatory or however you want to look at it. Agreed. I'm glad you pointed that out that the original term and then what was added to it and so we're gonna get into the first clip to just go over the How this term was rolled out and how it was received Kim what's on your radar?

Well, the term mass formation psychosis trended over the weekend with so many searches it broke the internet. When people went to search for the term on Google, a couple of strange things happened. Some people saw this odd disclaimer from Google saying the results were changing quickly and that it would take time for results to be added by reliable sources. What does this even mean? I thought when you Googled something, it would bring up sites relating to the topic. Why would Google need time to add results by quote-unquote reliable sources? Sounds like they're censoring search results. Well, a few hours later, when people searched for the term, a bunch of sites began to pop up claiming it was a new far-right buzzword or one attributed to anti-vaxxers.

Well, it's very difficult to find any information using Google, so I had to turn to DuckDuckGo in order to find any relevant information. So what is mass formation psychosis? Well, the term came recently from the Joe Rogan-Dr. Robert Malone interview that aired this past Friday, but was also heard and explained in more detail during Dr. Peter Mikhailov's interview with Rogan. I'm just gonna have to add this. I really think Malone added psychosis because he then also said, and that's how you get Hitler. And that is not at all what the mass formation suggests. So it was inflammatory and it did happen. And in fact, I went on Rogan's show a couple of weeks later and said, dude, that was inflammatory what he said there. So anyway, it doesn't matter. As far as the public is concerned, the title is mass formation psychosis now. And the genesis of this show for me was when

We had a conversation, I think, right when COVID first started. And you told me about you wearing a mask. Oh yeah. And when you didn't first wear your mask, how you felt different or being looked at differently. And that was because for the first time in my life, well, Yeah, for the first time really consciously in my life, I was looked at differently or I felt I was going to be looked at differently by people because of exterior characteristics. And that was the fact that I was not going to wear a mask going into Whole Foods. And the key point is feel. That's the key point, not what reality is because a lot of stuff with COVID is not based in reality, but it's the,

How people can make you feel how it's being weaponized to make you feel Unincluded if that's a word. Yeah, our outsider you felt like an outsider when you didn't have your mask on I sure did so that I think that was a great opportunity for Everyone that didn't wear a mask, that didn't want to wear a mask to feel what it kind of feels like to be the other. And the other in America is being black. That's the that's the default other There's a couple of others, but that's definitely the default. Yes And it's the things that you can see and can't see this one I and this is why when people compare like the LGBT to being black it's like you have the option to not you're saying be Not to have your other out on the outside. That's the difference. So that's the word Going at with the show

It's just got to hang in there with me, not you, but everybody else because... I'm always hanging in by my fingernails, Mo. I'm always here, brother. If we could understand the formation of that mindset the same way that they took something that we didn't do six months ago at the time you didn't wear the mask, prior to that it would be normal not to wear a mask. And then six months later with propaganda and news pushing it, it's now that, oh, you're an outsider or you're other or All the things, your mouth breather or all these pejorative systems tied to it. You must be dumb, you don't believe the science, you're a science denier, you're an anti-vaxxer. All that was tied to you not wearing your mask. Correct. And also, I'm going to kill you. That's another thing. It's like, just me walking around without the mask is going to kill everybody. I mean, it actually evoked, or it should, I felt it would evoke fear in people, fear of me.

Correct, and then you behave differently. This is the double consciousness, right? And I talk about which W.E.B. Du Bois made popular is you had a double consciousness. One of how you felt about not wearing a mask, but then two also how you're going to be perceived for not wearing your mask. So you got these two thoughts going on like, no, I'm not going to wear my mask because I don't want to wear my mask. But then you had a fear of being rejected or Even attacked or whatever. Yeah. Yeah. Do you remember what episode that was when we talked about that? I think that was the Rona if not earlier should be yeah, because people may want to go back and check that one out So let's go ahead and get to the second part. This is uh, this is not dr. Malone. It's the other guy What's the other doctor that came out with the mass formation Peter McCullough? Yes, it's dr. Peter McCullough. He's gonna speak on the

The four characteristics of mass formation psychosis. We're in what's called a mass formation psychosis. This is very important. I give credit to Dr. Matthias Desmet in the University of Ghent in Belgium and recently Dr. Mark McDonald, psychiatrist from LA. Mark McDonald's got a new book out, The United States of Fear, describing how the mass psychosis developed. What your listeners need to know is a mass psychosis is when there is a groupthink that develops that's so strong that it leads to something horrific. And the examples are these mass suicides that occur in these religious cults. The example is Nazi Germany when people walk into gas chambers and were gassed. These horrific things. And four elements here, it's very important, Joe. First, there must be a period of prolonged isolation, lockdowns. Number two, there must be a withdrawal of things taken away from people that they used to enjoy. That's happened.

Number three, there must be constant, incessant free-floating anxiety. All this news cycle, all the deaths and the hospitalizations, more variant mutant strains, everything, people becoming scared over and over again. And the last thing, number four, the capper. The capper is there must be a single solution offered by an entity in authority. And this case is clear. Worldwide, the solution was vaccination. Everybody must take the vaccination. It's not a US program. It's not a European. It's everywhere. And you know what, Joe? Doesn't matter what vaccine it is. It's just take a vaccine, take any vaccine. And so what mass psychosis says is number four, the solution, there's no limit to the absurdity of the solution. Yep. Sounds about right. So even in racism, you had the isolation.

you know, you had the solution was racism. You know, because you got to understand how America was created, was created to be a white nation. Not my words, even Abraham Lincoln said this, we've talked about it on the show previously, that when he wanted to free the slaves, he didn't ship them away because he wanted America, he saw America as being created to be a white nation. And that's the great emancipator thinking. So the isolation part of it is Well, he didn't he actually suggest sending the slaves to their own island right Panama and he thought about the west coast of Africa there was a couple different options going there, but the reason why the reason why this is important is because

The mass formation is not on black people's mind. No, it's the whites, of course. Right, you had the media pushing that black people were savages or whatever. And the same thing with everybody else were out to get you. The same way the Rona is out to get you and the super carriers are out to get you. So this is the parallel I'm drawing between the two because once you realize It's a system that you can, and it's not personal, it's personal feelings, then we can begin to move.

past it. You know, and and well I was gonna say I I mean the mass formation has just shifted I mean now now I mean what have we what have we seen we've seen it shift to it's the unvaccinated they're the ones doing it I mean it just moves moves between anything that is handy to keep the control going I guess Same thing with Russia. It's like the Russians In a time where we shouldn't judge people by their nation where they're from We've heard people openly threatened Russians not Russian government members not The you know sentence Those leaders of Russia individual Russians living in America have been demonized. Mm-hmm

all because of how the media portrays Russians to be. And that's to be sneaky, underhanded, you know, they're trying to disrupt everything. And that's all Russians. So like you said, it's transferable. But what we have to go back and look is at the actual system of white supremacy. So now we got to go to Mr. Neely Fuller Jr. It's a staple. We always go back to him. It seems to be the go-to. Because he wrote the book Literally on the system of racism not how you make me feel or you know Not from the personal perspective, but like okay. This is how this one thing affects everything else

And it's very, you know, it's a very scientific approach how he goes about doing it. That's why I like using him because everybody else is feeling, oh, they made me feel this way or they made me feel that way or you shouldn't feel that way. No, this is how the system works. Just like the COVID. Look at the system of COVID. It's not about if we looked at from feelings, it's like, okay, I can understand why you want to go see your grandma. But the system says no you're gonna kill your grandma. You can't see you can't be killing yeah exactly Or or you know just how it divided families just

based off of what the media put out there. So let's go ahead and get in the clip number four so we can get a little bit better understanding of white supremacy. You can get the book by going to producejustice.com. And I'm not just talking about in that book about what the problem is, because I've already concluded what the problem is, is white supremacy. I make suggestions about what an individual can do about it. And that's one suggestion that I am making because I have found it to be effective. I don't try to use anything that's not effective. When I start using the term white supremacy, and you can get the book by going to producejustice.com, I notice white people sit up and take notice. They don't like to have that term attached to them, even though they gave it to me. It just goes to show you something. You ought to study why that is.

I can call, I can say that they, they are nobody. I can call them, you know, all kinds of names. I hear black people calling white people names that I never call them, never call them and will not call them. Names like Cracker and all this cypher stuff. I don't use that kind of language. But if I imply, and I don't even call them white supremacists, but if I say that they could be one, it seems like they back away from me when I say that. Now, why is that? Black people ought to ask why that is. It might be because I'm coming close to the truth. I didn't even know you had this website, producedjustice.com. How could I have missed this? This is what happens when you become effective. There's only two things you can do after you become effective from the system. The system is to one, kill you or two, marginalize you. Yeah, cancel.

I mean that's canceling and that's that's that is canceling is to marginalize you to to the margins That where you're hard to find you're hard to hear Your works don't you know, just look what happened with what we're seeing with twitter The doctors that pushed back against covet they were marginalized. No, you can't be heard. You can't be seen anybody talking to you is a problem So, now you're ostracized on top of everything else where even if you go on somebody's show or if you went on somebody's show prior to you even making your claims, it could roll back on you and leave, you know what I'm saying, leave stink on you. My question is this, to people that say oh, that system doesn't exist. How, who's pulling those strings? You heard Kim Iverson say when she went to go search Google

Google said now we can't give you no results right now. Right until we decide what the results are. Mm-hmm who makes that call? You know, there has to be a system, you know, that's not an incident. That's not an individual. This is a this is a wide-reaching overarching of a green agreement. Well, here's my here's my here's my thought it is a system. We're seeing some of that system exposed with the so-called Twitter files that are kind of drip, drip, dripping out to, you know, which are completely insignificant in the mainstream media because nothing is being mentioned. It is a system that wants to control all sides.

So it's not just one or the other. It's not a bunch of necessarily white people, white people sitting up in the tower going screw them, we'll do this, we'll do that. No, they want to control the whole, all of it. And this is just an easy way to do it, or an easier way to do it. And their goal is to do what? To push Darwinism, to push eugenics. Why? People, it's so important we have this show. is it gets to the how and then we're going to dabble around the why.

The how is, go ahead. Yeah, I was gonna say that the why in my mind is it's the same people who have been pushing the population bomb, eugenics, too many people, too many useless eaters. Anyone who is reproducing too quick has to be stopped. It's people who are afraid, who actually have their own fear that the earth will not sustain them. and that they are supreme and we just have to limit everyone so that they are useful enough, just healthy enough to do the shit that we don't want to do and we can control them. I mean that's all I ever see. It's the same people, the same evidence.

Did you see this show already? No, but you have influenced me to such a degree. You know, this is episode 89, so we've been doing this for a while. I've learned a lot and the eye-opener was always Neely Fuller Jr., who talks about white supremacy. It doesn't have to do with skin color per se. It is the system. And there's all kinds of all colors in the system, but it is, you know, call it the Boulet, call it the elites, call it the Illuminati, call it the bankers, call it the rich people, whatever it is, there is a group and they were alive in the 70s, in the 60s, maybe even the 50s, and before that there was another group, but the ones that were there in the 60s and 70s were still dealing with them today. Paul Ehrlich is one.

population bomb and he said in 1970 we will never have 7 billion people on earth by the year 2000. He said it's impossible, it just can't happen. And today he's still out there saying climate change, we're all gonna die, you know, blah blah blah. He's still a science advisor to the White House. So these people are insane. Because I wouldn't say insane because I don't want to... what's the word I'm looking for? I don't want to... Dehumanize? Dehumanize them? Not dehumanize, I don't want to trivialize what they actually believe. This is a religion to them. The same way Muslim people believe in Allah, the same way...

you and I believe in God, their God is science. Their religion is science. And just like how all those books talk about end day, you know, Armageddon, this is their Armageddon. And they're saying it's coming, it's coming. And we've heard people of all religions say, this is the end, you know, 2012, this is the end. They're saying it the same way. This is the end, the end is coming. Trust me, because it's in the numbers. You know, that's why I called them scientific white supremacists because in their religion of science, this is how they look at it. That one, you've heard the clip, we played it over and over again, how the guy says that white people are the smartest people and black people and people of color have social paths due to their environment they were raised in. So it's science. It's not that he woke up one day, you know what, I wanna, you know, feel like, you know, I wanna feel like to be racist.

They look at it, we did the IQ test, we did the numbers, this is what it is. And so they say, well, we have to have a scientific approach to that. We have to tailor, we have to tailor. population and this population tailoring is that transgenderism, homosexuality, Planned Parenthood. That's the whole point of even mass incarceration to keep the men from the women so you can't procreate. and segregation. And then we have, you know, let's convince everyone that they need to transition to an opposite sex so they also can't procreate. Right. And then we have the shots that may be impacting, you know, the reproductive systems of the people who take them. Everything is scientific and I don't want to trivialize how these people look at it because in their purpose, I mean, not the purpose, the motive,

is that they're lizard people. We can't forget that. That's right. Thanks for reminding me that if they don't sweat, be wary. And people say, oh, you know, what I'm saying is they think with that lizard brain of fight or flight, they've ran all they could run. So it's time to take action, be on the offensive. And that's the whole purpose of it. When you talk about getting it down from 7 billion to 500 million, that's not very many people when you think about that. Yeah, that's the Georgia Guidestones which were recently obliterated. Correct. They literally had 500 million. That's all you need on the planet. That was part of their

That's a very small number. Yes, very small number. That's not even 10%. So they're even telling you, like I said before, once they get their 10%, then it's 10% of the 10%. And it's to the point where now we can rebuild. It's the destroy to rebuild thing. Now we can go and work from this approved stock to build up, you know what I'm saying, Utopia. Yeah. Yes, which if you simplify it like that then it takes the emotion out of it, which I hope to do, which this show is all about because what we say we set our capacity for being offended aside to have an honest conversation. And it's also important to note that the mass formation that was created, whether through circumstance, but certainly with the all-in-one solution of the vaccine, they were targeting everybody.

Now we're not just targeting a color, we're targeting everybody. Well, I'll say that there is a target group. The ones that don't go along with it. Yeah, precisely. Those are the targets, like, because it's so absurd. Put a mask on. Well, these masks don't work and you even said the masks don't work. Put it on still. And it's like, I don't want to wear the mask. Shut up and put the mask on. And if you don't, then you're put, you're otherized. It's okay, now we figured out, oh, you're not a true believer in science. That's just like some religions make you give up certain food. You know, oh, you still eat that food? You're not a true believer. Or you don't adhere to this, the Sabbath or whatever, you're not a true believer. So this is that mask

The shot is just really, in my personal opinion, just a test of your faith. Are you really a science denier? Right. Are you really a heretic? And if you are, that's where they want, that's who they want to identify and get rid of at the end of the day. I'm 100% in agreement. Alright, so now we gotta go back to the second part of this clip from Neely Fuller to get a further understanding of how this system operates. And that's one thing that the white supremacists never want a black person to come anywhere close to is the truth. The system of white supremacy demands that only white people are supposed to know the truth about anything.

And black people are supposed to pump themselves up on everything that is totally nonsensical false. And I notice there are a lot of white people who feel very comfortable with the word white privilege. Because what does privilege mean? Privilege means that you ask somebody, all right? that you made a contract with somebody. That's what privilege kind of implies. See, that's a softer word than supreme. Oh, man, Fuller is so smart. I didn't even think about this. Of course it is. You don't have privilege. You get privilege from some other force above you. It's granted to you. It's granted to you. Oh, that's so smart. And that's where the safe space is to say, yeah, I do have privilege, but it's not of my own doing.

Right. That's the soft landing. It's not my fault. Not my fault. I got privilege. I couldn't help it. Which the only privilege that is given is to actually non-white people. That's the only people that have white privilege. That's why you can go certain places and go to certain colleges or whatever. I'm gonna give you a sample. Diamond for Silk and Diamond passed away recently. Yes. Go on Twitter and look at the the vulgar Comments that being made about her. Uh-huh. You see what I'm saying? That's the privilege. That's the, okay, now you can attack, she's not black anymore. You didn't vote for Joe Biden, you're not black anymore. You did vote for Joe Biden, okay, you can get some of this white privilege. If you do all the right things that are acceptable for the system, then you can get some privilege. Or you're essential. That's privilege.

Am I making sense? Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. Well, it's mainly right off the bat, I just did diamond dead. I thought it was such a fun term. Top one. I give zero fucks, diamond is dead. One less lunatic voter is how I see it. Not sorry. I thought her life mattered. No. But... See her privilege was taken away for her mattering. It's like no your privilege doesn't matter you don't matter anymore We're gonna take away your privilege. So now it's all all good all The gloves can come off and we can attack you ridicule you all for saying that you won't want to do something with your body No, or you didn't adhere to a certain ideology. Let's hear number two number two as for diamond. She refused to accept a

Let's see, hold on. Day four of COVID, I'm weathering it well, probably thanks to being vaccinated slash boosted. As for Diamond, she refused to accept that and profited from misinforming people about the virus and the vaccines and now she's dead and fuck her from here to eternity. That's number two. There you go. Isn't that beautiful? It's the darndest thing as far as... Really, it is. What you can say, who you can say about it, and that's why it's not justice. I have to once again, because I didn't have any clips, but the counter to white supremacy is justice, not black supremacy, it's not Asian supremacy, it's not Arab supremacy, it's justice. It's that, okay, these are the rules. Did you break the rules or did you not break the rules? These are the norms. Did you follow the norms? Did you not follow the norms? Are we holding everybody to the same standard? If we are, then that's justice. If we aren't,

Then it someone gets getting privileged and someone is not receiving privilege Then we got to ask the question who's granting the privilege and that's the system. Yes How's it Fowchee can say not to wear a mask and he gets to come back and clean it up But if another doctor says our masks don't work. I they lose their practice or they lose their standing. Oh, now in California they passed a law where if doctors don't, if they misinform or disinform by saying something different than the approved medical advice, it's now illegal. That's pretty crazy. That's your system. But nothing is confirmed on COVID.

Everything, when does that, what is the standard being set to what I need to hear by? Is it the ever-changing one? So can you be grandfathered in? Can we go back and go after Fauci for all the things he said that were counter or you can't catch it if you take the shot? And this is not about the shot. This is not really even about race. This is about how, like Nellie Forrest said, how can we become effective against the system? This is why I love Nellie Fuller's work so much because it's empowering the individual to become effective. Not me pressuring you to think a certain way or shaming you or which I thought I think those tactics one, don't work and B, are disgusting because it's like you're not going to really change someone's mind. You know, you can make them, oh, I'm sorry. But apologies, true apologies happen to become a B, you have to come to those on your own.

Not be forced. Otherwise it doesn't mean anything. If you say apologize to me, that's bullcrap. A sorry and apology has to come from the person giving it of their own accord. So now we have to go and look into the word privilege a little bit more, and this is from one of my favorite YouTubers. Pardon the noise in the back. I guess he was having some yard work. It's okay, man. It's what alternative media is all about. And that's exactly why I kept the clip because I was like, ah, I could probably find another source that goes through this word. But

We have to break away from the mainstream. The number one tool of the system is media. I want to get this out because you just triggered something in me. When we started podcasting now, what is it? 19 years ago, one of the things that always felt beautiful to me was that you didn't have to have the perfect voice, you didn't have to have the perfect sound, it didn't have to be perfect. It was real. It was real people saying real things. We've gotten away from that to some degree, I mean for a whole bunch of

There's a whole bunch of reasons, but you know people doing a lot of editing and tweaking and trying to make things perfect. But I always personally felt the beauty of podcasting was to not have that. Obviously you want something understandable and you want to be able to actually hear it. But that's always what, because that breaks you out of that fourth wall, if you will. Oh, wait a minute. No, because you listen to NPR, it's all, NPR. It's all quiet and dead and it's very serious. And now they were just real people and it had such a profound effect on me. And that is one of the, to my, in my mind, one of the most beautiful things about podcasting or YouTubers, anyone who's making something themselves,

That is it's gonna be rough because it's real those blemishes that what that was that's what makes it not the sanitized Mainstream media. Yes. All right. So let's get into some real Some real authentic content then with clip number six privilege Okay, a privilege is a right, a possibility of action, but only for a special group of people. Maybe because they've been given permission or because they've reached a certain age or have become members of a certain group or maybe they've passed an exam.

Okay, so privilege, a privilege is something that only a restricted number of people can do. It's something that is not open or available to everybody. Right. Hence the talented tenth. This is why I was saying only people that receive white privilege are people who are non-white people because it's like, okay, you're the talented tenth, you're different. This is this set aside group and on a larger scale, I think we see this with Jewish people. They're given privilege and it's weird that they don't identify as white. We've had that conversation before. But it's kind of like, how can I put this? They get the privilege of not wearing masks in our mask scenario. It's like, okay, you got it, you got it. You don't have to wear a mask, you're cool.

Because and the knowledge I'm drawing there because they look they appear to be white But even then we talked about the Hasidic Jews their privilege was taken away because it's like they they they caught hell at At the beginning with the measles vaccine. Mm-hmm. Everybody ignores that and that's why I don't get caught up in the whole I One group is bad and one group is good because they caught hell with that measles vaccine and nobody said anything. Not the ADL, not the Civil Poverty Law Center, nobody. It's even funnier because recently in Ohio there was another flare up of, I think it might have been, was it measles? It was something, because it happened in the beginning.

with measles and then and then COVID but then in Ohio they didn't even say what group it was. I had to go look like oh it's it's acidic juice yeah no they don't vaccinate it wasn't even brought up anymore. And where's their groups? Their groups were told to stand down by somebody somewhere to stand down your people are being oppressed why are y'all not taking up for them? You know they were they were going in taking children all kind of things this is pre-COVID and everybody looked the other way So that's what I'm saying. This is where privileges are given and taken. And it's like with black men, you know, you have the black privilege, but it's taken away. If you say anything anti-Semitic or anti- or homophobic, that privilege is taken away. And this is why you need as many badges as you can. Because like, oh, um, yeah, right. You know, I got my black privilege, black privilege, female badge, trans badge, all kinds of badges.

Correct. That's why you have to have so many because the people that they lean on the most have the most privileges so you can't cancel them and They're the loudest voices for the system. So I hope all this is making sense As we push on let's get in this guy has the greatest voice ever but Let's get to the second part of privilege, okay, the origin of this word comes from Privé, private, and ledge, lex, law in Latin. So, private law. Okay? It's not public law, it's a private law that permits some people to do something and other people not to. Wow. Okay, so a privilege is something special that not everybody is permitted to do or not everybody is able to do.

So, for example, in a prison, if you behave well, maybe you are given certain privileges for good behaviour. So maybe they let you go out for the day or maybe they let you have extra tobacco or extra time in the recreation area. Okay, so privileges. And if you behave badly, they will rescind, take away your privileges. That is a good way to put it. I love the breakdown of private law. Very, very cool. Yeah.

So, speaking of law, is there anything else you want to add? I'm just wanting to lay out what privilege means because it has to be given. And if you're supreme, no one can give you a privilege. So that's why the two things are not the same, but they're used synonymously. But they're not the same. They're actually opposites because one, You're giving it. It's a problem saying from the private law from the private people that control the private law like okay, you're giving this whereas with Supremacy I do what I want when I want which honestly we're all have that right That's what God-given rights are and this is where supremacy runs up against your God-given rights This is this is where the real war happens. I

Is that these are my rights. It's like a bubble, you know what I'm saying? We all have a bubble and my rights are inside my bubble. But if my bubble infringes on your bubble, then we have infringement of your rights. So it's like my rights, what do you say, my rights end where yours begin? I think that's the saying. So, say for instance, go ahead. I'm kind of struggling. So, you know, one of the, we have white privilege, which, and this is really, I mean, it's used all over the world, but it really started in America, white privilege. And then we have the slur of white supremacists. So, you know, Donald Trump and his cronies, white supremacists, which in parlance today, I think what they're, what they think they're saying is,

These are... this is tough. I'm not sure I can verbalize this, but it's... why don't you keep going and then I'll see if I can jump back in. It's a hard concept to put together. The difference between these two... And let's stop here so we don't lose anybody else. Privilege is given... let's just say 2A for instance. They say we give you the privilege to own guns. No, it's my right as a human being to own guns. That's something you can't give to me. But the supremacists say we'll give you this privilege. So you can't be supreme and receive privilege. You're the only people that can give privilege are the supremes.

Correct. But they are intermingled, these two terms are intermingled in the parlance which makes it incredibly confusing. Which confusion is the number one tool of the supremacist. That is the number one tool. Now I know what's going on. Because you have somebody stand up who It's clearly a part of the supreme and say, yeah, they'll do this thing like, yeah, I do have white privilege, right? No, you decide the laws. Nobody gave you privilege. You have what that's their thing to say, oh, I have privilege. So it takes to you takes the fact out of your mind that they are supreme and the one to make the rules.

Right, but if so the first time I was accused of having white privilege was a long time ago by a University of Texas professor and I'm talking seven years ago and it just I had never even heard the term it just came out of nowhere. You have white privilege, have white privilege. Was it a white person? Of course, of course. And did they say you and I have white privilege? Yes, correct. Yes, he did. See how he absolved him or herself of being a member of the Supreme? It's like, no, no, we have privilege.

You know, we're not the decision makers. And this is not personal against them. That's done all the way up the ladder. Right, but what's crazy is, here's the dichotomy though. So, oh, you and I both have this privilege which is given to us by the Supreme, but then they turn around and say, Donald Trump is a white supremacist, so we were given that privilege by him or people like him? This is where it confuses me. And that's the whole point of it. Yeah, got it. It sends you in a loop. That's why we had to set... That's why I'm trying so hard to separate white privilege from white supremacy. Because supremacy is not given, it's rights. It's a set of rights. And that's why you have the term black in America. Because it's like in America, it was every white man has rights given to him by the Constitution. And it's like... No, no, no, no. Hold on, hold on, hold on. I disagree.

The rights were given by God, protected by the Constitution. Well, your God don't count because we got separation of church and state. You see, that's where the governance thing comes in. It's like, no, no, no, no, no. Right, but the actual origin of the Constitution and the Bill of Rights is what the government may not do, how they may not infringe on your God-given rights. I completely agree with you. I agree with what you're saying, but how they see it is that wink wink, nah nah, we give you your rights. We allow you to have your rights. Oh totally, no. When I hear a news report, no it's a privilege to own guns. No no no no no.

And that's the supremist mindset. Because now you're telling me what I have the right to protect myself or not. No, only a fool would say I don't have the right to protect myself and use whatever means is best to do that. Right. Or to say what I want to say just go to moving to freedom of speech. I should have the right to say what I want to say. As long as not inciting violence against anybody else. then it should be okay because it's my mouth. God gave me the right to say, and the ability to say what I want to say as long as that my rights don't infringe upon your rights. And it's interesting, just as a quick aside, there's a fourth definition to violence. I didn't know this until recently when I was doing some research for a show, and that's the changing of the truth. Did you know that?

Changing of the truth is violence? Yes. No, I didn't know this. Let's look it up together because this is important because when you lie on somebody that's actually an act of violence. Okay, so how would I even look that up? Just look at the definition of violence. Okay, well. And I don't... You know, definitions. I learned today just while I'm looking this up. You know, the NOTAM system was down, the N-O-T-A-M, which informs pilots of what's... which, by the way, I've been a pilot for a long time. I've never ever heard of the system going down. It basically just tells you, before you fly to an airport, it'll say, hey, you know, these lights are out, there's a crane here, you know, just stuff you need to know when you're going into the area. And I looked at this, I thought I was having a Mandela moment. Like, it said, notice to air missions

Now this has always been notice to airmen. I mean that's I've I took the test you know it's like I have a license notice to airmen apparently they just went ahead and changed that in 2021. Yeah the supreme said we need to change it and we see definitions and I can say I don't want to harb on this but we had to look at it we have to stop and really realize the environment we're in. Because sometimes we talk, not me and you, but we talk past people and you know, we live in the age of society where nobody really listens empathetically or listens for understanding. It's just like I'm waiting to talk. So, I'm going to be quiet while you're talking that kind of thing. And I looked up the word violence just from... It said undue alteration as a wording and sense of editing.

Wow, so even though editing is violence Wow, that is really interesting and I didn't know that as well because I Was watching YouTube video and this lady that brought it up and I was like wow like is that right for anything? I had to do is go ahead and check but Words are so important in this system Because look how they changed it. What a Recession is on the fly whatever suits them. It's like no, we're not a recession. I We're you know, this is not for inflation. This is not whatever, you know, fill in the blanks. They change the definitions whenever it suits them. So I've just that is violence. So I just logged into the AI system because I'm fascinated by how that's going to change what people learn and

How they look at stuff. Oh! Yeah. So I asked first, is changing text violence? No, changing or editing text is not considered violence. Violence refers to physical force, blah blah blah. Is undue alteration considered violence? Undue alteration can potentially be considered a form of violence if it involves using force or coercion to change something against the will of the person or group who owns or has control over it. However, the term violence is generally used to refer to physical harm. In many cases, undue alteration might be considered vandalism, damage, or theft. It could also be in legal terms a crime.

So they're wishy-washy about it at best. I just like the dictionary definition. It says it right there. Undue alteration as of wording or sense in editing a text. Which is, Wikipedia is violence. There you go, done. We can all go home. All this rewriting of history is a form of violence. And even the AI is actually participating in violence. Oh, it's very violent. I'm convinced of that. I'm very against this parlor trick. Anything that types out in front of me is a trick.

And that's why it's so useful because then the system can step back and like, hey, that's the AI. It ain't me. It's like with the bill, with the calculation of bill. It's like, you know, that ain't me. You know, the justice system, it's the AI. It's the algo, baby. It's the algorithm. It determined it, yeah. Same thing with policing and everything else. That's why you're trying to move everything over to AI because then it's don't look at me, it's the AI. Then the AI becomes supreme. Only person is submissive to the person who writes the code. Yeah, but no one ever thinks about that.

They think I do. I'm sorry. I take that back. I mean, I think a lot of people do because they understand. I think a lot, not only me, but you always have to ask who's writing the code, who's writing the words, who's writing the laws. I mean, we have to ask these things, but we don't because they tie everything up to be a show. And we get caught up in the show of it. Yeah. Theater, theatrics. Yes. Well, that's just pleasant when you haven't even hit clip 10 and already I'm depressed move on Moe No, we're making progress because we know the words Yeah, then we could play the word game right along with them and to Jordan Maxwell before we start the clip Do you know who Jordan Maxwell is and?

I know he can be a very polarizing figure in the truth or in the truth around well looking at the title I know what this is about so I've probably heard of him but it doesn't ring a bell right it right away but I know I know what this what he's going to say I've heard of course all right let's go and get the number eight why just in English the dock the water yeah yeah of course but of course it goes all the way back to the English or British domination of the seas And so when the British began to dominate the seas, the Knights Templar Masonic Order of the Knights Templars, who have been in the middle of Asia, came back into Western Eastern Europe, brought all of these concepts and it was developed into a commercial system of words and terms and symbols which are used in courts and government and corporations. You know your body as a corporation?

uh... that's a whole story we can talk for hours on this but your body is a corporation of cells you mean no no no it's called and by law your body your physical body is a corporation and so when you die you're a corpse uh... because you're because when you're living you're a corporation you are a business and hanging out with that person is bad business or who i hang out with is none of your business right because it's because your body is a business Yeah, I've heard a lot and I've read a lot about this. Quite a lot. And it crops up from time to time like recently, well when you're born, you get a social security number, you are property of the United States and they can write loans against you. And if you're a business, that means they can tell you how to operate as a business.

And who you can merge with, i.e. Mary. And they control the offspring or the subsidiaries of that business. Or that merger. This is the... I don't think even to the point of education, because that's what the last show we kind of talked about. Everybody like, oh homeschool your kids. Do you know you had to be given permission to homeschool your kids? Did people know that? Did you know that? Did people know that? I do. Yeah, you have to register and everything. And you had to meet certain criteria. I know in Virginia you had to have a college degree or some kind of other standing. Not in every state. Some states have different requirements. But even still, for something that me and my wife created,

We have to go get permission to keep them home and to teach them what we want to teach them and then they got to meet certain criteria, pass certain tests at the end of the year. Oh, really? Huh. Yes. Who's really in control here? And do we really have as much control as we think we have? No, I would say no, absolutely not. And that's the seduction of it. But they make it seem like with the words they use, which words are the most important part of this whole show, it's words. Because if you can get to, if I can articulate myself to what you understand and you seek to understand

And if you articulate yourself to where I understand and I'm seeking to understand, then we can get to some understanding and you can have a win-win which the system doesn't want. The system wants to pick favorites. That way you can pick everybody else against the favorite or the favorite against everybody else, which causes the mass formation or group thing. Yes, this is a this is a good one and a tough one because I have brought this up on no agenda several times and my partner on no agenda just laughs at me. He scoffs and said this is bullcrap. So I kind of gave up on it with him. I don't think it's I mean, the reason why I don't think it's bullcrap is they wouldn't invest so much time with a rewriting the dictionary on the fly. And that's the thing about where we live in an information age that's beautiful, that

They would go in the dictionary somewhere and rewrite it, and if you didn't buy the new edition, you wouldn't know it changed. You wouldn't know at all. And just look, besides it being a scam, but look at all the college textbooks. They change every semester, it seems. Right. And like I said, Wikipedia is our encyclopedia. You know, that's our shared copy of the encyclopedia everybody used to have in their house, the Britannica, right? That's our Britannica. And imagine if people could come in and cross out and change and rewrite and I have a couple examples throughout the show but the main point of that last clip is that it's words. Everything is about words and for the believers out there it says the word was God and the word... Like I said, I don't want to make this religious but every religion, you know what I'm saying,

It attributes some power to what comes out our mouth. Definitely. You know, you can speak bad on somebody, whatever religion, I don't care, or non-religion, like the power of words has effect. And that's what they use. And they use violence to manipulate, to corrupt. So, yeah. And in this case, violence as in changing of words? Yes. Which the change their words can actually manifest itself into actual physical violence Because now you're trying to rewrite history and some people believe it one way and then some people remember the other way and some people just adhere to whatever they're told we have and then it becomes cause clashes we have a jingle for that Always played that one they do matter words matter

All right, so let's get to the second part of Jordan Maxwell. I mean the whole subject is so large and it would take hours to and I'd have to go back to square one and walk through all the words and terms that he used in law and courts and and in commerce. Yeah. For you to understand how pervasive this concept of water is on the earth The law of water maritime ability It's an extraordinary story about how governments rule the world and unless you understand this you're never going to figure out what's going on You know just because it's a personal story, but it adds a little bit to this I

In the Netherlands, which was always a seafaring nation, you know, East India Company, you know, something about transporting slaves. They did a lot of stuff. It was always a seafaring nation. There is still a law on the books today, which has been used against me. And it really, it cost like a $75 filing fee, may have gone up a little bit in the past years. If you believe that you are owed something from someone, then you can freeze their bank account as an individual until that is solved. And this stems directly from maritime law. Hey, that ship can't leave. You got to lock the anchor because I believe I have a claim on that person. And to this day, you can still do that. And it happens right away. Boom, you're done. It's approved. The bank accounts are frozen. And I've had it done against me.

It's crazy what some maritime law can do. And one more thing I want to point out from the Jordan Maxwell clip was the previous one is those who control the seas, I think still control the world. Whose navies really control the seas? Like navy, like that, because that's information, that's movement, that's the movement of Goods, information, all these things. Now I think that the internet is something they couldn't foresee in maritime law, but I think it's similar in the flow.

of commerce and goods across the, you know, the internet. I think that factors into it, but whoever controls those control the world. They call it the digital ocean. That's where I didn't know that. Yeah, the digital. Yeah, there's even companies called digital ocean for that very reason. Sure. I did not know that which I think all it leads to what I'm saying more so we gotta say who's whose navies can go anywhere and port anywhere and tell you hey you can't be here that that I think that's who really controls the world. Well that fight is on you know Russia is trying to build up their their their ruling Navy China obviously United Stealths the United States still reign supreme to some degree

And of course that's also shifting to railroad. But yeah, who controls movement? Movement of goods or information. I would say information is the most important thing now. So I just want to point that out because they're talking about the Knights Templar and things of that nature. I don't think it's quote-unquote that group or whatever, but I think it's that mentality of whoever controls flow of information currency and goods are the real controllers of this world. And it's a very seductive power. And that's where the Uniparty bows to. Notice, they can fight about anything else, but when it talks about like Ukraine,

Giving you crane warm. I'll go for it. Yeah, go for it. We got to give him more money He's like even if you even ask any questions are you're not a patriot or you're a Russian sympathizer? Yeah, it's just for asking questions of where the money's going and we know and things we could be spending here and look look at Fox News They're all in oh, yeah, Oh Zelensky. Oh, yeah, beautiful. Yep. We need to yeah, we need to help him. It's for democracy. Yeah, so Now we gotta go back to Nealey Fuller and he's gonna explain more about the system in clip three.

In 2017, the refined white supremacists does not want that label at all. But that's exactly who they are. Because they are the ones that tell people what to do. And people that they tell what to do, when they tell black people what to do, and it's not just telling them what to do, it's telling them what to do that's going to be of harm to black people. And the black person doesn't know what to do about it. You have to keep your mind on what supreme means. It means you are faced with something that is overwhelming, overwhelmingly harmful to you and you don't know what to do about it. Whatever that force is, if it's nothing but a bear or a moving wall or tidal wave or a white person, a person with white skin,

Making you do something you don't want to do and you don't know what to do about it. That is supremacy by any definition like it or not But supremacy can be overcome if you face that fact and this is where I have the utmost respect for you if every time you face the system of You can't say this or we're gonna dock your PayPal. I Or you can't say this on the airways or FCC is going to come after you. You've always found ways to dip, duck, dip, duck, dodging the system, right? Is all right, I'll go to bill 2.0. All right, we'll start podcasting. But the problem is, and I think the difference is, is with the psyop or racism, it's that the cloud is, you think it's hanging over your head.

Right. I think that exists in certain people that you may not have had for whatever reason being born not born in the Netherlands but being raised in the Netherlands or Just that you didn't have that programming to say I can't do this because you know the boogeyman is out there and that's the real power of The system is it limits your thinking, you know, I have to do this, you know, ah, well, I Because I experienced this thought process. It's like, well, do I take the shot? Do I not take the shot? You know, do I, you know, it's going to be hard starting over just hitting the groove, you know, at my job. I enjoy what I do. I have credentials and all these things. And I'm thinking what the system can take away from me.

Or do I start on my... Go ahead. Well, there's other versions of this that are very interesting to me and the one that pops to mind is pronouns. Because I've been... This is a very incredibly powerful... supremacy system that is put in place and given to very malleable minds, namely young people and children. So pronouns are not used when you are talking to someone. You don't say, hey, you know, it's when you are talking about someone. And the worst is, and Tina and I have both witnessed this, mom, it's they.

So now all of a sudden, the violence truly, in the context of the definition, the violence of changing these words and this grammar has given power to young people to tell their parents that they're out of line. And it's incredibly weird and probably destructive in ways that we don't even realize yet. This is one that really bothers me. if not destructive, divisive, which divisive mutates to destructive. So, but notice it's all about enforcement. Now, I had this same thought, I never said it before, but you're exactly right as far as we don't talk about pronouns, our pronouns, it's an enforcement tool. You know, it's a third party enforcement. You know, when you say, oh, well, you can't say that, you must say they.

Right the person's not even in the room. They're not even present. That's the crazy part That's the that's the control mechanism. That is mind-blowing That's the enforcement that is the children have been weaponized Yeah, weaponized and they've been indoctrinated. Deputized. Deputized. They're deputies of the law. That's it. They've been deputized to say, whenever you see something, say something. When you hear they, when you don't hear them using the right pronouns, you're supposed to step in and take action. And that goes to show you how fast and how seductive the system is

Because something you raised can and you gave it most of his programming our children Yeah, right, but they get this new idea to say no no no dad You can't say that or you can't say that I get the looks as well mostly when I'm pointing out more multiracial or biracial not biracial but Mixed race couples and I'm only doing it to show the propaganda to say the numbers don't make sense that the last four commercials I've seen that they're pushing this agenda. I'm a numbers person. We love this game. We love playing this game. So I'm just a numbers person. Like that's the fourth commercial, fourth in a row that you know they push the you know the idea of of mixed couples which to each his own

But my thing is, I'm looking at why are you showing me this? Who's showing me this and why are you showing me this? And I'm not going to belabor the point, but just as you said, it's one, it indoctrinates the children to push back against their parents. And when you have that division, as you say, it causes destruction eventually. All right, so let's go ahead and get to number four. But supremacy can be overcome if you face that fact. You have to face it first. You can't run and hide from something that's supreme over you. You have to turn around and grab it by the horns. But you have to know how to do it. But I know, I can understand it. Fear will make me say, well, it ain't happening. You know? Drove me up so that I don't feel it.

And many of us do just that, get drugged up so that we don't feel the effects of white supremacy. Because that's why we're getting drugged up. We can't stand the pain and we don't know what to do about it. That guy is so smart. So now going back to the COVID analogy, lo and behold, when this systemic structure came in as far as pushing medical the invasion of your medical rights and your God-given rights, we see an uptick in substance abuse.

A local alcohol and drug rehab center says calls have not slowed down. In fact, more people are wanting help during the coronavirus pandemic. They're not alone. The CDC recently recorded an all-time high number of drug-related deaths over a 12-month period. Javis Marisalizar tells us how the CDC is issuing a health advisory to first responders, medical and public health professionals. Phones are ringing, the website chats are kind of going crazy. But no matter what, Tiffany and shoots with Sage Recovery in Austin says they make sure they're here for you. General adult population that we're just seeing an increase in depression, anxiety, suicidal thoughts, and of course, a significant increase in alcohol use towards no longer becoming manageable. The CDC saw overdose deaths accelerate as coronavirus kept spreading. It reported more than 81,000 overdose deaths

between May 2019 and May 2020. The highest number of overdose deaths ever recorded in a 12 month period. The most deaths between March and May. The CDC recommends public health departments and community based organizations to one, expand the use of Narcan, a medication designed to reverse an opioid overdose to teach people about overdose prevention. Three, bring awareness to treatment and four intervene early with people at highest risk for overdose. And Schuetz says it's important to talk about it now more than ever. Mental health does not discriminate. Yeah, this is a big ass trap and you're right in my backyard with this one because I've studied this. What did we see appear during COVID besides

Zoom, besides all of the homeschooling, all of the apps, what was a big category of service slash apps that popped up? Mental health. Yes. And I've looked at every single one of these and there's a couple more I'm still investigating. And these mental health apps assign you a mental health, quote unquote, professional or a provider, as it's known these days. We used to call that a dealer, but a provider. And there's a path and they walk you down the path and pretty soon you're prescribed medication, which they can then do under auspices of certain laws. And they can do it. You know, they have a person on staff who can do this. And before you know it, they prescribe you three times. They can't do more than three, some kind of SSRI or something else. And it doesn't take long before you start to get into

things that equal that, which you then find on the street. It's a system. You know, these opioid... These are talking about opioid deaths, you know, they're talking about fentanyl. And I was gonna say that's the other thing that showed up right around when corona kicked off was the mainstreaming of fentanyl. Of course it had been around, but when the border got blew wide open... Well it was heroin and heroin had to end because heroin came out of Afghanistan and that was falling apart. If you look at the the troop movements and the stations in

In Afghanistan they were around poppy fields, not to destroy them, to protect them. American president Denzel Washington, American gangster, I'm sorry, Denzel Washington. It's a true story. They brought the drugs back in the coffins of dead soldiers. That never stopped, it never went away. But it wasn't strong enough. Well, it was complicated. Fentanyl is just you put some stuff together, some chemicals, you got a better effect and a deadly effect. You're right. And logistics wise, now we can build labs in Mexico instead of bringing it from Afghanistan. It's much better. Which go back to who controls logistics. You know, this is the thing that is very good.

It's been this thing, and it's in this talking point, it came up in New Jack City that black people don't make machine guns and we don't manufacture cocaine or heroin, but somehow it shows up in our neighborhood all the time. So now we see fast forward. But hold on a second. Is there, would you say there is a large increase in opioid deaths amongst black Americans? Yes. Okay. Because it's kind of considered a white American drug. That's the lie. That's the lie. Wow. Codeine. Look at all the wrappers that are passing away. Hydrocodone.

Yeah, or the drugs is pressed up to look like street drugs and you know, they're even finding fentanyl on weed now. Yeah. So this is how scary it is. But the point I was trying to make is how does the illicit material get here? And we've talked about on the previous show, even one of our, I think the deputy Supreme Court, no, the deputy Department of Justice head Her father had to be, her family is in the business. Sure. How does that work? Supreme, brother. Yeah, that's what I'm saying. Like, whoa, we're trying to stop fentanyl, but you know, your dad sells some of the precursors. That was for cutting heroin. So here's a question for you, Moe. Fit the Supreme Court into this theory. They are supreme. They determine the law. No? Yes.

Interesting play on words there. And when you look at court, and that's what Jordan Maxwell, I didn't clip the part of it, the whole court system is set up off maritime law to the deep water and the gate you open to go where the judge and everybody sit is called the floodgate. You know, to be bailed out and you're in hot water and all these terms. Bam! There we go. Yes, sir. Yes, sir. That's right. And that's why you can't speak for yourself in court. So now you had to go get an elite. An advocate. Or somebody that's been proven or sanctioned by the elite. Yes. Literally an advocate. Yes, yes, a barrister.

That comes from that word, confusion. You have a lot of confusion. And when you have confusion, you have people who are going to be mistreated because the system of white supremacy itself is designed to support confusion among the victims of white supremacy. It's deliberately designed to do that. And this causes all kinds of chaos and confusion constantly. All nine areas of activity all over the world.

Economics, education, entertainment, labor, law, politics, religion, sex, and war. He got them all. Nothing left. Religion, religion, religion. He didn't put religion in there. No he did. Oh he did? I didn't hear it. Okay. Yeah. So Confusion, we spoke about this the last show, you have an outside entity come in into South and say, we're just going to integrate y'all. And the white senator said we have state rights, which is God-given rights. The federal government was overreaching its power, but it was allowed to because they said we're doing this on good cause. We got to put the black people in, which causes confusion and chaos. And out of that, you have the black people look to the Southern poor people as

Oh, that's white supremacy. No, the people that come in, the Supreme Court that came in, that ruled on Brown versus Board of Education was the white supremacists in this case. But the thing is, is those same white southerners believed that they were supreme based off of whatever science or religion that they leant upon. You know, some people think, oh, black people are the seed of ham and that's why they can be slaves or We spoke about in the last show how some groups think that we're academically and mentally inferior. So that's what keeps us over here. But even though you can have a black person that's smarter than a white person, they'll say, well, you're just my, yeah, my, yeah. It was, it's just, I'm not living up to my full capability. You don't say you can, you tap out at that, that kind of mentality. And the thing is the puppet masters have them fighting and guess what? The whole thing was about state rights.

And they only needed a wedge or a battering ram to get kicked down the door. Now it's like, okay, now we can come in and overreach. You know, we don't, it's not up to the individuals and their interpretation of rights. Now it's the federal government. And that has permeated to an incredible degree that states' rights aren't even understood anymore. No, state rights is synonymous with racism. Now, Trump. If you say anything state rights, that's that's racism. Yeah That's the whole thing against Roe versus Wade why it's necessary You know because there's no state rights or the game gay marriage bill or whatever They had recently the equal marriage bill or whatever. They voted on recently. It's like state rights are

You have these pockets of backward thinking. We need to come in with our superior knowledge, our supreme knowledge, and correct their thinking, their way of thinking. And that was played up, but I read the bill. It was against the Defense of Marriage Act. It was the Comfort—I forget exactly what it was called. The only thing that it did is it said, if A same-sex couple is married and recognized as married in one state, that if they go to another state, that other state has to grant them that same status, which is, I think, constitutionally

because of interstate commerce I think is something that the federal government in a stretch of the imagination has some say over but it really it was positioned as something completely different. We codified gay rights! That's how it was positioned which is just not true. And really was more just to cause more chaos and confusion because a lot of these issues were not issues anymore. I think people really didn't care about... No, exactly! No one cares! Especially enter and because the whole thing they were going against after our Clarence Thomas was about he's voting against his own right to get married to his wife You know that kind of thing because I think our race mixed-race couples will include in there somehow They lunch not the men, but yeah, it was all just to cause whip up more chaos and confusion And for political gain. Yes, that's the whole purpose is to is to

They use all of these tactics to take your rights away. At the end of all of this, you're gonna end up with less rights. I don't care what the argument is because you can't give me more rights because my rights don't come from you. You see how this works? They can't give you more rights. I was born with these rights. They only can take them away. Well that again is the gross under-education in the United States where the Constitution is taught as rights you are given, rights you are given, not rights you have and are restricted. The document restricts the federal government. The freedom of speech shall not be encroached. That's a directive. Even marriage. Same. Marriage doesn't belong with the government at all. I mean, I've always thought that was weird.

Because I'm a firm believer one the government can't shank sanction marriage and the government can't dissolve marriage. No Because at my wedding just a little insight we did what they call the salt covenant and that's where you take Salt from your bag your wife put salt and from her bag and they put it in a third bag And they said only you can separate is you can get your salt out the bag. Oh, I've not heard of the salt covenant right, so that's kind of like No, I mean, there's no unbreaking this bond. And that's just, I think that goes per religious, you know what I'm saying, whatever your religious beliefs are. But that's, the state can't come in and say, oh, yeah, you're married or you're divorced. But if they see you like corporations, that's saying, oh, it's a corporate merger that we're sanctioning.

Ah yes, yes, yes, yes, yes. Which goes to your thing about interstate commerce. Yeah, which is why you have to get a marriage license. Oh goodness. Right. So let's go ahead and get into 13. By the way, I married my wife for her money. Trust me. That was a smart move on my part. The system of white supremacy is deliberately designed to cause all the non-white people of the entire planet 24 hours a day, every day to be confused, monumentally confused in all of the areas of people activity in everything that they do. So that's just a part of it. It's all to be expected.

It's routine. All kinds of contradictions 24 hours a day, everywhere, all the time. Contradictions, contradictions, contradictions, mass chaos, mass confusion. Anything that will keep the darker people of the planet from focusing and being successful on accomplishing anything of constructive behavior. Period. Forever and ever and ever and ever. Well, that's pretty concise. And they're just gonna ratchet down to different groups. And it's gonna be subgroups now. That's why I brought up the points on the last couple shows of the orange people. And that show's coming. I've been making four shows at once. And you can see like the bleed over from the last show to this show. And then you're gonna see it, you'll see it in the next couple shows. But

That's where they're creating the orange people. Yeah, if you believe anything that Donald Trump said You're orange now. Yeah, cuz you can't you can't be white and believe that Got a jingle for it wish that as you say they say they call it white supremacy But it's like what's the prim they wouldn't have to ask if it was supremacy. I You see what I mean? It's confusing to talk about, to be honest with you. And that's the magic in it, that it hurts your head. So it's actually a mistake if they move it towards orange people. Because that, well, it kind of breaks the white supremacist color association. They're simultaneously doing it.

They're making quote-unquote this orange way of thinking. This is my turn orange. Yeah, just so just just to clarify for people that this group of people this group of white people are being sectioned off and segmented and in their rights taking away Because of their beliefs whatever their beliefs are right so that makes them a person of color now, which their color is orange Well, I think they're moving it towards orange. It was maga now. It's mega maga Ultra mega, and then it'll be more and they have to move it to something outside of maga because they're using a brand that they shouldn't be using so they I think you're right it'll be towards the earth How about this?

Brazil just had an election. A lot of people didn't trust the election. They literally have signs, show us the source code of the voting machines. Every single news report about the Brazilians protesting this going into their Congress, congressional buildings. It's Trumpian. It's MAGA. You know, they took a cue from us. It's the same people who are going against authority and they're being lumped together. And of course- Which you can't go against authority. Right. But they're saying, oh no, it's Trumpian.

It's an insurrection, they're insurrectionists. So something that's completely unrelated to the United States, somehow this is now a category of people that is worldwide. And that is you go against the established order and then you are put into a group that is a global group. And that really, I have to say, that freaked me out more than anything I've seen in a while, is how easy that went. And what they're doing is they're forcing those people in the corner that the black people have been already in. It's like, that's why I was like, they start with us. You've always said that, Mo. You've always said they start with us, but they're coming for you. And I think it was episode two that I realized they're already here.

COINTELPRO, that was just the dry run for what's going on now. Counterintelligence, you're saying that's what it's called, it was for counterintelligence propaganda, identifying leaders, subverting leaders, you see the same thing with the leader of the Proud Boys. Now he's cooperating. We saw this with the Panthers. So if you've already went through it, it's like I know what's coming and they're just slowly backing the orange people into that corner because they don't want you around anymore. And it's like we're going to take your privilege away. If you don't want to go the way we're going with all the agendas we're pushing, you are not smart enough to be in our group.

That's that's the that's the boil down of it. You are not intelligent enough and that's why you hear terms like Neanderthal being thrown around and troglodyte and all these things that you have to be some kind of subhuman person To believe the backwards think backwards is another word to use Regressive, you know, listen to the terminology in because words matter. Yep They're telling you what they believe like you're you're yes backwards thinking and Which I don't believe they're trying to get rid of those orange people. I honestly believe what they're trying to do, and this is what I believe, the powers that be are trying to get rid of the people they don't want around. And that's not the ones that's under attack. It's the ones that buy into it. That's the ones they don't want around.

They're telling the orange people like shut up. You're blowing the cover Let them take the jab if you don't want the jab don't take it, but just shut up You know saying you you're gonna you're gonna wait that you're gonna spook the herd Yeah, we got the sheep right where we want them. You know saying we got a five six jabbed up. Shut up It's been around for a hundred years it's so funny that we still have the here he goes Already Science! I had that jingle for over a decade. And that's what it is right there. Shut up already. It's science. Don't take it. Eat your healthy food that you grow. Don't eat the poison. Don't eat the soy. Don't eat all of this. Don't take the shots. And your kids will be the only one around, maybe grandkids. It might take two generations, but it's going to work out in the end. And then we'll rebuild from there.

But if you're a just person, you gotta say, even though I benefit from this in the long run, I can't go along with it. Yeah. What a great system. What a great system. The media and the internet and the media really help this system much more than we realize. And Malcolm X warned us about the media manipulation, number 14. Never let your enemy tell you how many of you there are. Never let the man that you're against form your opinions. This is the trick that's played on everyone who's oppressed. The first thing, an occupation, when you have a revolution in the country, the first thing you take over is the radio.

And then you start telling the people, everybody, the war is over. And then, and so all of them surrender. No, they believe that thing right there. And once they take that over, they start telling you where you are and where they are, and you fall right in line. It's plain thought control. The majority of the American people aren't segregationists. The majority of the American people aren't imperialists. But the government is, the structure is, the power faction is. So how then do all the majority go along with it? Because those who sit in power over the television, over the radio, and over the press is constantly telling those who are the masses how free they are.

and how this we are and how that is. This is new. We haven't played these clips, I don't think. This is new. I've been holding this one. What, for 88 episodes? All right, thanks. Not that long, but because everybody heard them go in on the media and like a lot of times some of this stuff doesn't pop up. That's the great thing about the information age, that people are constantly loading up things into the, what you call it, the ocean? The digital ocean. The digital ocean. And if you fish in the digital ocean, you might catch a fish every once in a while. But he's telling you it's the control of the thought and it's the way it works is, okay, we'll benefit some of you if you play alone.

And that's why a lot of these doctors don't want to say anything about COVID. That's why a lot of these scientists don't want to say, nurses, whoever, because their whole existence... And they get made examples of. They get deplatformed, they get thrown out, they get fired, they get smothered, and then they're basically hung up. You know, it's like, oh, look at this, this is what happens to you. And more than that, because I went through it, is when you've worked at something and you can't call yourself that anymore. Like who a doctor if he's not a doctor anymore. What is he a provider? I mean, he's proud of himself on doing the hard work going to school You know saying achieving the goal and then to lose that because you want to be a rebel. I

Most people are not going to take that offer. It's like, well, I'm just going to take care of me and mine. I don't even think doctors are trained the way doctors were trained anymore. And they are literally called providers. Ask your provider about this. You're a medical provider. So they're providers. They're passing on, words matter. They're providing something, but they're not necessarily providing, you know, they're not looking at the whole patient. They are diagnosing, prescribing, therefore providing. That is today's doctors. Most, not, I'm generalizing, but we saw it. We saw it. And you go outside of that and you're done. And that's why you have laws in California where you can't even legally go outside of the medical system, which of course is as old as the road to Rome, this, you know, the pharmaceutical industry, which is probably is the best control mechanism because they've got all the money. I'll ask this question because I don't know the answer to it.

Who has bigger control, the arms industry or the pharmaceutical industry? Oh, close call. The arms industry, the military industrial complex has, in my mind, complete control of politics and the pharmaceutical, big pharma, the pharmaceutical industry has complete control of the media. So they kind of go hand in hand. Because they're similar in function. Yes. Because one, the arms industry provides... They both kill people. And they provide defense, right? Supposedly. We're going to provide you from... I mean, that's their pitch, is that we're providing you defense from enemies, foreign and domestic. We're protecting you. We're protecting you, right? And it's where we're protecting you in the medical industry, is we're protecting you from the unseen enemy. Yeah.

So they have the same... The same mission. You know, the same sales pitch, I would say, is that we're here to protect you. But I'm curious. I would say the arms industry, because I'm looking at the Uniparty, and they won't piss off the arms dealers. But that's what I say. The military-industrial complex completely owns politics, and that goes with the intelligence community because they have the goods on everybody. But the media cannot say anything negative about pharma because pharma is the biggest advertiser, pharma and telecoms. But pharma, I would say, is still far above, and that's unique to the United States. Most, except for New Zealand, no other country allows pharmaceutical advertising the way we do.

So why is that? Is that just because we're better? No. And who's the sickest? We are. We're sick, we're obese, we're dying. And if you factor in food on the pharmacy side, yeah, I think that balances out. Yeah. You know, because like food is part of the health industry. It's part of the pharma. Yeah, it's part of pharma because, you know, and petrochemical, pharma is chemicals. So chemicals is what we make fertilizer from, et cetera. So, yeah, agriculture is tied at the hip to pharma. But it's kind of, I think it's,

It's like farm... military really... I mean we're not really sending money to Ukraine. I mean we're sending old crap. But you can watch this happen. We're gonna send Patriot missiles over to Ukraine. They're going to fail in a... we're gonna see them live on television. We're going to see these things fail. And it's easy for them to fail because they suck. You got, you know, each Patriot has five missiles. And then you could, you know, Iran, Iranian drones, they can send 500. I mean, it's no match. And what will happen next is, oh, we need another 100 billion to give to Ukraine because we really need better weapons. It's all, it's all money that is circulating in the military political complex. It is not even going to Ukraine. We're just sending them their old, our old crap.

So we can buy new crap? Yeah, so we can make new money, make fake money to build new crap. Correct! Correct. Alright, so let's get the part two of Malcolm. So a mistake is made on your part when you think that white people suffer the same as black people. Or as many Jews will say, well we're a minority too. Or the Irish will say, well we used to be a minority. No one's a minority like we are. They didn't need civil rights legislation to solve any other minority problem. They didn't need... They didn't take a civil war to solve any other minority problem. It didn't take Supreme Court decisions to solve any other minority problem or legislation. It takes none of that action to solve the minority problems of these other people. The only real minority in America is the Afro-American. Sorry, it's now BIPOC. I don't know if you're up to speed.

Have you noticed this? Yeah, which I don't even know what that is to be honest with you. Oh, I can tell you exactly what it is Please help me out enlighten me It's just all the other black people in America who are not descendants of slavery from American slavery I'm from the Caribbean. I my great-great-granddaddy was a slave somewhere I'm from Haiti it's for all other brown people and I've seen this happen in the in the podcasting industrial complex and where all of a sudden it was BIPOC, BIPOC, BIPOC. You can go to the conference. BIPOC creators, BIPOC producers, BIPOC podcasts. The people who say the word BIPOC don't even know what it means. But you got to have it. You got to invest in it. It's important. It's a caption. What does that actually mean though? I'm looking it up now on my own. It's black interracial people of color.

No, black indigenous. I'm sorry, indigenous people of color. Black indigenous people. Indigenous to what? Australia, Aborigines, Canada has indigenous people, Haitians are indigenous. It's a color thing. It's just a color thing from other countries. It has nothing to do with slavery. It's very weird and it just blew up. And I think part of it is the BIPOC that somehow people think that might be a sexual orientation. People are stupid. They don't look stuff up. Or it could be, you know, bi means two, right? Yes. Tupac? Ha ha! Are you with BIPOC or Tupac? That's a good one. That's very cool.

It taps into that mental thing you got going on in your mind. It's all mind control. I saw it happen. Like, what is this BIPOC all of a sudden? Where is this coming from? Indigenous. I mean, that's a loaded term right there in itself. Yeah. Which nobody uses that. That goes to show you they're out of touch. And this is why they'll never be successful because They live in their ivory tower. I think it started with Pacific Islanders. That's where it started. You know, it's like, well, we have to include the Pacific Islanders because, you know, they're a part of America if you look at Hawaiians. And that quickly changed to BIPOC. Somehow there was a bridge there, maybe a couple of years ago.

that this term really gained steam and that was after the Pacific Islanders had to be included in the minorities. It missed me so they keep trying that this is not gonna work. No, not this time. So let's go ahead and get to the final clip from Malcolm. And now when white people who are oppressed and poor supposedly but the But the poorest white person can go where the richest black person can't go. It isn't only poverty in money that we're talking about, poverty in spirit, poverty in freedom, poverty in equality, poverty in human dignity. This is the kind of poverty we're suffering from. So that the richest Negro in this country is still poor. When it comes to freedom, he's broke.

When it comes to human dignity, he's broke. This is the kind of poverty we're talking about. So when you find white people who are poor with all these doors that are open to them, any door that you knock on, if you're qualified, it'll open. So when you find a poor white person, he's in bad shape. He didn't know. Yeah, honestly, I think that that is completely hidden from American view. The only time you see You really see it is when there's a riot, like Black Lives Matter riots after the umbrella people come through, break the glass. That's when you really see it.

See what you see real black America the poverty of black America and not the not the money poverty the poverty of where they can do what they where they can go what they can do and what they're and that they are not able to roust and steal typically the way the rest of America does And that goes back to the privilege thing. That's when they're the afforded the privilege and to go riot and go, you know, because it serves a larger initiative. They're literally given privilege once the windows are smashed. You're so right. That's the key sign because we saw in Baltimore when that was organic and wasn't sanctioned, it was a totally different reaction to it.

So, yep. And I say all this to say, and nearly full of brought up this one thing, it's called Black showcasing and white sacrifice. And we see this black showcases when they take black people and put them Jay-Z's buying this and you know Diddy's buying this and we gotta you know Neil deGrasse Tyson, you know, they always take these people and push it to the forefront right and then on the other hand They'll show you some white suffering like homelessness. Yeah Another one a good one is late recently is the whole skip Bayless thing Like the way the media just jumped on him for the tweet He sent out that was they used that as a distraction from what the real question was Why did that football player kill over in the middle of the game? Yeah, I

But when Skip Bailey says something in this logical to say, hey, I mean he didn't say it in the most eloquent way. And for people out there, I know they're rolling eyes at me now. He sent out two tweets, which they never tell you. He sent out one tweet saying, I hope everything is all right, that kind of thing. Then he brings up the other thing like, we're in the middle of the season here and this game is meaningful. And then he even ended off with this kind of thing. It's a throwaway tweet. People might get outraged for it, but they said we need to use Skip Blake Bayless in an example. Yeah. To take the distraction away from the real question of why that guy fell down, you know what I'm saying, and had to be given CPR and make it about Skip Bayless. So they'll take one person and quote unquote sacrifice them. We talk about sacrifice all the time here.

As a distraction and first away from something else. Did you by any chance see the opening of? The Golden Globes last night. I did not Do you mind if I just give you a quick little taste Jared Carmichael or Jared Carmichael was the host And if you recall last year the Golden Globes were not televised and Because they were deemed racist So here let me see if I'm lucky enough to get this right off the bat. Let's see Welcome to the 80th annual Golden Globe Awards I Am your host Gerard Carl Michael And I'll tell you why I'm here I'm here cuz I'm black

So he goes into this whole routine and really explains the whole backstory and it was really, I don't know what to think of it. And of course, she was, you know, the first four awards, black, black, black, white people. It was the whole thing. It was, was really messing with my mind. Cause the media industry is in trouble. Yeah. As far as we're not consuming, and I say that overall, people are not consuming media, movies, even music at the rate they used to. Correct. And this is one of the things they broke with COVID that they didn't know how to fix. When you got rid of the movie theaters, concerts, brought in lots of streaming. And you saw your newscasters at home in their kitchen.

Away from the magic lights and cameras. It's like all that ordinary people and this goes full circle to what you're talking about with Independent media. It's like they don't they don't have the charm the natural charm to you know, come across on a To entertain, just to entertain. Well it's unprofessional, that's not the word I was looking for, but amateur or unprofessional platform and still be entertaining. Like these guys are corpses. They're corpses. Well let me tell you how bad it is. 2019 the ratings were

Ricky Gervais, 18.5 million viewers. Then they went to 2021. That was, now that was, I mean everything was down 6.9 million. They didn't do a 2022, so this is the 2023, 5.4 million viewers. Moe, there's more people that listen to Mo Facts with Adam Curry than were watching that damn show. And I don't even believe that 5 million number to be honest with you. I'm with you. I'm with you. If you poll the people that you know and ask, yeah, and say, hey, did you watch the Golden Globes? I mean, I didn't know that they were on to be honest with you. But I'll actually one more question before we get into this break is what's the last movie you said? I want to go see that Top Gun.

And that came out what, two years ago? No, no, it's the latest one. Oh yeah, um... About a year ago in the theaters, I think. Yeah. That's a problem. I didn't watch it in the theater. I mean, I wanted to see it in IMAX, but no, of course not. I want to see it at home. Yeah, oh yeah. And that's one of the few movies that was successful. Except, of course, uh... Black Panther. Why do we think that was successful? According to their numbers, it was. It was the blockbuster. Okay. Just because people seen it, just don't mean they liked it. And that's the other thing is that, you know, just because you've seen it don't mean you liked it. Yeah, that's for sure. But you know what they like? They like the Mo Fats with Adam Curry show. Right! Let's see how much they like us.

First, the white man and the black man have to be able to sit down at the same table. The white man has to feel free to speak his mind without hurting the feelings of that Negro. And the so-called Negro has to feel free to speak his mind without hurting the feelings of the white man. Then they can bring the issues that are under the rug out on top of the table and take an intelligent approach to get the problem solved. That's the only way that they'll ever do it. And we've been doing it for 88 episodes. This is episode 89 and so happy that everyone is still supporting us as you probably figured out certainly from this episode. There's no way that any type of corporate money or advertising would be appropriate for this show. It would literally not be appropriate for us. So we use the Value for Value system. If you're interested in learning more about that, value4value.info. It's number four, value4value.info.

And it kind of works like this if you got anything out of this program anything that we did We'd love for you to send that back to us in in numbers literally you can do it with PayPal we have a cool way to do it with the censorship resistant Bitcoin through podcasting 2.0 and of course you can find out more about it by going to Mo facts comm or mo fund me comm will take you right to the donation page and we kick it off today, man, we got We got some big ballers today, I would say. We kick it off with Benjamin Nyders right at the top. Baller! Shot caller! 20-inch blades on the Impala! 193.33. Interesting number. Let's see if we can figure out why he did that. Added treasure for episode 88. He says, At the Cath Jew, Amsterdam made me think back on this episode about Henry Ford. Oh, Amsterdam, is that a series or a movie?

I think it's a... I'm not sure. Yeah, I think a lot of people have been telling me to watch it so it must be a movie. Made me think back on this episode about Henry Ford and the quote the International Jew that he published more digestible than the OG Saris disinfo protocols of elders of Zion from 1903 Yeah, I'm hitting fellow Hebrews in the mouth right now Some of them are genetically 13th tribe can't wait for the episode about Hebrews Hebrews to Negroes Is that planned Mo? Maybe. Maybe. Russian Protocols originally were published with image of Babylon god Baphomet. Oh my goodness. And he has a Wikipedia link there to Sabbatai Zevi. All right, Benjamin. Well, everyone's welcome at our party, man. Thank you so much. Good to have you here. Executive producership for you for this episode. $150 from Anonymous.

No note, we appreciate that. No note. No note. Timothy Lepez, $100. Wanted to give you a big boost to show my appreciation. Oh, he's talking about a podcasting 2.0 boost. Seemed to have liquidity issues with your lightning node. Very technical. So he said, here's some fiat fun bucks instead, sir. Lurks a lot and whatever was broken was fixed and we'll get to that in a moment because the boosters are big today. Catherine Bishop, $60. Well wishes coming your way. Right back at you, Catherine. Thank you. We have Brett Hahn, $53.33. And this is for show 88. Moe, first time donator, long time listener. Please de-deadbeat me. Yes, of course.

Congratulations, you're no longer a deadbeat. Thanks for keeping it real. Love your perspective of life. Righteous. Growing up, my best friend was a black woman with her family being my second family. I'm a white dude. So I thought I knew a thing or two about the black experience. But after listening to your show, I clearly don't. Thank you for peeling the layers back for us white folks to get a real perspective on the struggle and really on how deep evil runs in this world. Keep breaking them spells, my man. All love, fam, from Brett. Hey Brett, this benefits everybody because we're on deck. As we've learned. Ariana Hartsock is in Dallas, Texas. $50. Thank you, Ariana. And Jill Woods is our last Associate Executive Producer with $50. Love what you guys are doing. Excited for the new year of new shows. May I please have some Mo' Karma? Yes, you may. You've got Mo' Karma? So...

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He said that it didn't work, but man, he boosted us big time on the PayPal side and on the 2.0 side with three donations. The first one, 654,321, so 654,321 Satoshis. The second one, equal amount. And a third one with 321,000. So that is without a doubt... Paula! Shot caller! 20-inch blades! Only him, Paula! Well, over a million sats. That is very much appreciated. He says, Adam and Mo, thank you so much for the show. I can't begin to say how much I'm learning and broadening my perspective. Thanks to you two. This is something special and needed. I don't have enough sats to show my true appreciation. Take this as a token. You'll see more from me. Much love to you brothers.

Well you did it man and we really appreciate it. Dreb Scott. That's a whole lot of sats. That's a sack of sats right there. Dreb Scott came in with, just so you know, one bitcoin is a hundred million satoshi so No, he definitely, you know, you're over a million sats. That's getting up there. We appreciate that. Dreb Scott, who does all of our chapter work, and he is included in the split, but he sends it right back to us from Castamatic. He boostagrams us with two hundred thousand and one Satoshis, and he says, feeding the fax machine to see if any new shows pop out. It works, Dreb! Keep doing that. They pop out when you do that.

Oh, there's Sir Lurksalot with another 100,000. Just the same message. So, thank you, brother. You sent it a number of times through all different avenues, I can see. Murray N, 100,000 Satoshis. I don't do sports, but I do enjoy deconstructed behind-the-scenes sports antics. Yes, that was big for me too. I got a lot of- What about the timing on that show? Could it be any better? Wow. I was just amazed by that. do a football show and then one of the biggest events in football history happened right after we'd released that show. Can I tell you what my take on that was? Because it was a little different for me. Yeah, I would like to hear that. I want to share it with you because here's what I saw. I saw a primetime prayer circle. Now how often do you see that? Primetime. It's the biggest slot on television outside of the Super Bowl.

All of these big men, black, women too, anyone who was a part of the teams, they're all kneeling in a prayer circle. Where just four months ago, some high school coach does a prayer circle and he's excoriated and this is ridiculous and we can't have this and this is all wrong. And then the guy lives. I'm just saying. I saw that, I didn't even see it in the vaccine light. I'm like, wow. That was pretty big. Something that is... And just to add to that, the fact that they captured it on television and allowed it.

Go to show you how nervous they were. Yeah. Yeah, it was it was that was something very big that went on there and I'm glad He's okay, or it's gonna be okay. He's like God. He's alive. Let's put it that way. I guess prayer works We got Hendrix with 88,000 888 where's my episode 88? He says well you got it. So I guess I guess you liked it appreciated it Merlin from Fountain with 59,542, no note. And then we have, let me see, I'm looking for the ones with the notes. Sir Dwayne Melancon, there you go, Sir Dwayne. He's a Grand Duke of the No Agenda Show. He comes in- Hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on. Oh, you're right. What am I thinking? I let it happen last time. I know, I know, I know, I know. Please. I can't, ah. I know. I should have been prepared.

I should put some respect on her name. Here we go. Ladies and gentlemen, I present the Grand Duke of the Pacific Northwest, Sir Dwayne Melanson. And he sent in a number of 33,333's and all he asked for was Woosa. Woosa. Woosa. Woosa. Woosa. Woosa. Thank you Lon Baker for your 30,000 sats 20,000 from Clark who says don't stop Blake T Collins with two booster grams 19,955 he said emptying my prod friend my pod friend wallet before I forget about it. Well good should always empty your wallet towards us or your PayPal for that moment for that matter C dubs 10101. Thank you C dubs. We got sir Doug. Happy New Year. Love the show with a 10,000 sats

We have a one what is this one in a in a lin one big love from Hawaii? That is 8,000 10 Dave Ackerman always always supporting us with the boob 8008 value for value episode 88 lot of eights for him there and then we had top Ta Vija who sent one two three four five six seven eight nine ten and $5,000, $5,000, 5,000 Satoshi boosts and had a number of different messages. This was an eye-opener as always great stuff, always enlightening. Thanks to the Dream Team for an amazing episode. 5,000 from Bilbo. Thanks for all you do. Love the show. I learn something new every show. That's Bill, oh, that's, let me get it right.

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And then the final ones up to a thousand stats great show happy birthday mo from user 7307 long number cats be cool with a thousand today. I learned I helped create a super baby Dave Dave Popel well done mo great episode and counts of FSF to a quality mode. This was such an epic callback to separate but equal. I did not see this coming man crazy how I grew up hating Sanders to the degree I did. He had betrayed the 49ers. Dion was seen as a prima donna attention whore. He danced in the end zone.

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Well since you were so knowledgeable on the subject of mass formation, I think we can go jump over 18 because it's just a reiteration of what you laid out even better than she did. And we're going to go straight into groupthink and this is from a video from the Challenger Explosion and the effects of groupthink on that. But I think it provides a little bit more insight to the actual subject of groupthink. Simply stated, groupthink is a mode of thinking in which group members premature striving for agreement somehow overrides their ability to realistically appraise alternative courses of action.

In the early 70s, renowned psychologist Dr. Irving Janis first identified group thinking and theorized it could be brought on by something he called group cohesiveness. Well, basically a cohesive group is one whose members are very positive in their feeling toward the group and are very strongly motivated to retain their membership in the group. One of the consequences of high cohesiveness is a tendency for the members of the group to strive toward agreement. And this is a concurrence-seeking tendency that is at the core of group thinking.

Okay, I'm curious to see how this fits in with the challenger explosion. Well, it didn't we don't they don't get into the challenge explosion I was showing you like how groupthink sets up. Oh, yeah, and it's just wanting to stay part of the group You know, it's the don't make waves Yeah, don't be ousted don't be shunned from the group and I'll go along with it and then you start stop the question of Know what the effects of the group are and the reason why I'm bringing that up is the the powers that be the lizards They'll make you feel like you're part of the group. You know, they'll make you feel special They'll make it an instant attractive to join their group but you They're always gonna have different groups and

as the out group or the bottom. And that's what I have to say again, it starts with us, but once they, if they're successful with eliminating us, there was going to be another bottom and then they get rid of that group. Then there'll be another bottom until they get to that 500 million number out of seven. And it's not about the number that's important. It's the percentage. You know what I'm saying? We're talking 7% if I'm not, if my math is correct. more than likely there's a 93% chance that you're not gonna be in that group. Right and you mean in the United States specifically or globally? The world. Yeah. If they say seven, uh, uh, 500 million out of 7 billion. Yes, there you go.

Yeah, 93% chance you're not gonna be in that group. That's why I'm bringing this up Of course they are the chip and we know this the chip in a way They're trying to kill us one way or the other doesn't matter useless eaters cannon fodder. No good So now this goes back to how is race mass mass formation? they use fear of Black people of brown people all around the world, you know, and they did it with the Middle East, you know with 9-11 Nobody really questioned really what really happened on 9-11. It's just that it's Osama, you know, it was Osama and Iraq got pulled into it. Yeah, and that in that group think and

you know, cause mass formation and everybody was scared not to be a patriot. I remember that. It was like, oh, the worst thing you could be is not a patriot. Yeah. Well, Bill Maher, Bill Maher at the time had a show, Politically Incorrect is what it was called. And I think two weeks after 9-11 he and it was, it was on, it was like live in New York And he was talking about all these cowards, these cowards who came in and flew those planes. And he said, well, let's be honest about it. They flew planes into these buildings. They weren't really cowards. There was something else driving them. Oh, man, he got canceled for years for that, for years. Rosie O'Donnell, too. I remember she said something that just questioned the narrative.

I mean you go back to JFK the same thing you got called it. That was the OG conspiracy theorist. Yep. What were anybody that questioned JFK's assassination now we're seeing that the information is coming out that Whatever conspiracy theorists were thinking was possible is now plausible Yeah, that's why they're changing the slur from conspiracy theorists to QAnon. Yes Which that QAnon thing that Q I saw it unfold and I was like, ehhh. We all know that that was weird, but it's not even what they say it is today. No, that's the thing. It's just that once again, they create a group.

and that group is the problem. And then they can lump you into that group. Even if you question anything like, oh, should we wear a mask? Oh, you must be a Q and R. You know, you must be down with Q. It's like, uh, no, maybe I want to breathe my own exhaust, but I want to belabor the point. So let's go ahead and get into the second part of group think. Since Dr. Janus first developed the groupthink hypothesis, psychologists have discovered a number of additional factors that can predispose group members to engage in groupthink. A highly insulated group with restrained access to outside ideas, a stressful decision-making context, such as that brought on by budgetary restraints, external pressure, or a history of recent setbacks.

So I believe this is why the Southern whites were the obvious people to use in the group think to push Jim Crow to like it was basically Jim Crow 2.0 and you know the civil rights movement could things in the South they were They were what they were, but when you come in and start instigating and causing chaos, that made this group that had already lost the Civil War and was suffering from poverty feel like their position in life was shaky.

So I think that's why they use them as you know as the ideal group for group thing now people might be taking a back by saying oh, how can Moe and use a clip of Malcolm X saying no other person is oppressed like black people. It's the fact that our Reason for being oppressed is not hidden. You can't hide it. It's out in the open. That's the difference I don't think that's other than the Indian caste system, which I think you know, which is poorly understood, but it's it's certainly it certainly is real Right and the fact that you can see it Like I said, I don't know all the world affairs and groups, but anything that you can see is

and be ostracized off of visual, just off of visually. But it's everywhere. In the UK, it's, oh, it's the Pakistanis, or it was for a long time. In the Netherlands, oh, it's the Moroccans. Before that, it was the Turks. Before that, it was the, shoot, in America, it was the Irish for a while. I mean, it always changes. I was just about to go there because maybe you could tell me I don't know about this is the IRA versus the British or whatever that is. Yeah, that was a Protestants versus Catholic. That was basically religious war. I'm just saying they were really like actually blowing each other up. In our lifetime. Yeah, in the 80s, in our lifetime.

So that goes to show you the power of groupthink. So I just wanted to bring that up. But now we're going to get into why black people may be seen as the group that you need, the untouchables, the group you need to stay away from. This is Rizk Islam. He was one of the disinformation 12 dozen that was originally... Yes, the disinfo dozen as published by your government. Right. So he's going to get into the origins of mental health and he's going to explain a condition that supposedly black people suffer from that could justify being segregated and separated. Benjamin Rush, known as the father of American psychiatry. A white man here in America who from the University of Pennsylvania, he started to say things like, well,

Black people, for example, have a mental disease called necrotude. It causes their skin to be dark. It is a form of leprosy. It is what makes them inferior to us and it also makes them sick. So we need to be separated or segregated from them. Did you know that Benjamin Rush known as the father of American psychiatry? Said that nigger to it is something that infects black people and we have to make sure we are not involved

Wow, I'm looking at his wiki page and that term is not on his wiki page, I'll tell you that. Of course it's not. Of course that's a crazy, rigid Islam talking point. It has to be right. He's one of this info dozen. But what I want you to show is how that

train of thought or that kind of mindset lends to the segregationist. And so now we got to go back a minute, you can listen to one or both of them, but we at least got to listen to 22 to listen to this old man and how he feels about being integrated with black people. Do you think the Negro students ever will get in here? I think they'll get in here, but I don't know how long they'll live after they do get in here. That's my honest opinion. I'm talking to you, giving you my honest opinion. Because they cannot keep the police out here always. I don't think they got any business in here to start with. What if the president brings in federal troops? I don't think the president has the... under the Constitution, the president has any authority to send in federal troops unless our governor asks for it. They're taking all of the state rights away from the states when they do a thing like that. That's only my opinion. Yeah, that was real, real fear there.

Right, because it's for whatever reason, but scientifically black, whether black people were inferior or they carry some kind of weird disease like leprosy or whatever. And just for the back that up, I have a proof that that's not some weird talking point. This is from the Monticello, Monticello, how you want to pronounce it, .org. It was in the Americans was it observations intended to favor a substance of substitution that the black color as it is called of the Negro is derived from leprosy so this guy thought rush thought that Benjamin Rush thought it was some kind of weird leprosy that black people so there's your there's your farm big pharma

Right. And the justification for that was to say, oh, no, they're not inferior. But this would be the justification to stay away from them because they so it was like he was pro he was anti inferior but pro they suffer from a condition that justifies being separated. Right. Well, and it's a science. This is a doctor pushing this science. So weird. And then when it, you know, when stuff gets into the, you know, the lexicon, it just rolls down and like, oh, black people are contagious. Well, but how about that? During COVID, everything I heard, oh, yes, black people suffer much more from COVID. Right. There's a lot of that. That was the setup because they knew they were going to get the most resistance from us because of the jab. Right. But it worked on multiple, multiple planes. Right.

So now I want you to listen to the cleanup job that they do in this next clip. I think this is CBS Good Morning America. This is 24. Gotta love that song. Lin-Manuel Miranda put his favorite founding father on the map with that Broadway hit. It was called Hamilton. We know all about it, but what about some of the lesser known characters from the revolutionary era? Well, the author of a new book argues that one in particular deserves to be remembered, a doctor and signer of the declaration who championed progressive causes that remain topical today.

Benjamin Rush was first of all sort of the founding father that people haven't found yet. But author Stephen Free thinks it's high time America did with good reason. He had very quietly helped write the proclamation that set off the Boston Tea Party. He had written one of the first major abolition writings and after independence was won Rush refocused his fight against slavery. How much of slavery impacted his legacy? Well, interestingly so. He wrote one of the first of the Founding Father writings on slavery, against slavery. He owned a slave for about 10 years after the war. We have really no idea why. There's been speculation that he bought a slave because some abolitionists bought slaves to free them.

I couldn't find enough evidence that that's why he did it to say that. The abolition movement kind of stopped during the war. It picked up again in the later 1780s when it did rush freed his slave. Was that Lin-Manuel Nureyega? No. Someone else. Wow. That's kind of weird. Hmm you see how they rewrite history. Yes, no no mention of this of the of his scientific work hmm on black people suffer from this weird form of leprosy, but we have some information that may lend to him in abolitionist Yeah, he bought a slave to free them. I got you No, but he said we don't have any evidence of that, but I'm just gonna throw it out there that maybe he released them but

Yeah, this is the rewriting of history right in front of our face and that is violence as we know and Hamilton is the most violent because it rewrites so much of the quote-unquote history that went on at that time and that's why I left that part of the clip in is that People would think that they go see Hamilton. They think they know what happened in those times but it's great I have not seen Hamilton. I really don't have a desire. The reason why is just the fawning of New York elites over this turned me off to it. Hello! That's called the alley-oop, Mo.

You have to go to see Hamilton to be reprogrammed. That's the thing. If you want to be in our group, in our ilk, you have to go be reprogrammed to what history was. And forget what you read about Benjamin Rush or Hamilton or whoever else. I think that was the relationship. They had covered the relationship between Sally, Hemi what was her name? Drawing a blank here the black Sally Hemings Hemings, that's it. Yes. I think she's covered in there as well I haven't seen it, but I think I've read somewhere they cover that relationship in there as well But all of this they had to rewrite everything because the whole system was based off of racism and

IE white supremacy now they had to go back. Oh Benjamin Rush. He was a abolitionist We think cuz we think he let a slave go that he may have bought totally ignoring the fact that he Probably wrote one of the most important pieces justifying racism against black people, right? Where that wasn't in the movie reviews I watched or the the theater reviews. I didn't see any of that. They didn't mention this Of course not but I'm glad you spotted that you're saying that Hamilton was programming and if you didn't see it, it's like oh You haven't seen it, huh? Hmm. Oh my pinch you have to get out of here cuz you know For you, yeah, you're no good because you're orange get out. Yeah, you're right Which why he had to go and do a whole re rehab of his image. I

Yeah, that was a very powerful mojo that was created here. Very powerful. Yeah. So now we have to go and look at the other side of the relationship in Southern blacks. And this is a clip I was going to put into the last show, but I just can't squeeze it in. But I spoke on it, and that's the relationship even regionally. The relationship between blacks and whites is different. The northern blacks and whites have a different relationship than the southern blacks and whites. So these next two clips are going to cover what the relationship was like between black Americans in the South. Why didn't people get angry? There was every reason they'd be angry. And if you look back now at the pictures of black life in the Jim Crow era South, I get angry right now.

People weren't angry, at least for two reasons. First, people who are severely oppressed generally do not lead slave revolts against their masters. Those who lead the revolts are rarities. Oppression does not create mass outrage and contempt which leads to violent action. Generally what happens is that in a very repressive and oppressed society you get docility. And that doesn't mean that the people who are oppressed are unaware that they are being oppressed. Of course they understand that, but they also understand another thing. That there are terrible risks which must be run in order to challenge that system.

that the black man or the black woman who stands up and denounces the absence of participatory democracy at the county level will end up in a gutter or be killed or be run out of that county. And that's a reality that every young black boy and girl who grew up in the Jim Crow era South understood. It has still going on today with the talk. Correct. But one thing I don't think he understands is that separate but equal is more favored in the South. Because you have the numbers, you can have a whole community. That's like growing up. My whole street was black. We had a black church. Only time I seen white kids was when I went to school and I got off the school bus and I saw black kids. So it wasn't that need.

for integration because everything you needed. I mean, we had our own corner stores that we could walk to and it was very insulated. I don't think growing up in the North is like that because you have to cross so many different neighborhoods and blocks and that kind of thing. And it's different ethnicities on every block. It's simpler too because the politics is only black and white when I was growing up. You might have one Hispanic kid, one Asian kid in our school, maybe. But the politics are pretty much set. And there was an understanding, which he's not going to cover in these clips, but I'm going to lay out. It's called mutually assured destruction. Like, the Southern whites understood that. Like, if you push them too far,

then we're both gonna lose. Because it's only so far you could push human beings to the point where it doesn't matter if I lose now because I have, no... Damned if you do, damned if you don't. Right, right. It's that... You push me to a point, like, if you offend my woman, or that kind of harm my child. It's like that, what is it, Time to Kill with Samuel L. Jackson? It's like certain crimes or certain actions is going to, to the core of me being a man, I'm going to have to respond and I don't really care what the consequence is. Like Will Smith. Yeah, that's a good example as well. Once you cross that threshold, then you don't know what to expect. So it was, racism in the South is very

It's not oppressive. It's very just like an understanding like you stay on your side. I'll stay on my side And that's why I said that the north northern is coming in they upset that structure because Really in the South we were trying to build our own thing Not not to be a part of something else. So Let's go ahead and get into 26. The second factor was a factor of what I call respect and that is The Southern black life, Southern black society was profoundly conservative. I don't mean in the sense of the televangelists of the 80s. I mean in the sense that black life was conservative in that people had a profound respect for the elders of the black community and for authority within the Afro-American community. That the elders said one thing, you listen to older people, you respected them.

To be old meant to have acquired a body of wisdom or knowledge. And the sense of the older Afro-Americans was that change would come about at best only through gradual means. Yeah, we don't have any respect for any elders anymore, I don't think. I think that's a thing of the past. And that's the point I was trying to illustrate was that gradual means is that my life is going to be better than my parents' life, but my kids' life is going to be better than them. And if we stayed the course, then we would achieve the goal. There's no shortcut, but once again you have people coming in from the north and people that had arterial motives coming in, inciting this and they really upset that structure. And what it did was just kick the hornet nest and they go home and leave, you know, this destruction behind.

So I just wanted to lay that out because we have to understand the mindset of these people. You got one side that, oh, we need separate bathrooms and water fountains and all these facilities because black people carry the disease and they're nasty and they're dirty and this kind of thing. And then you had a whole other side was like, yeah, let's just all get along on the other side of the street. And to be honest with you, that thought was inverse. You know what I'm saying? Like, we don't really want to be around white people like that. Because they're different or whatever, you know that kind of thing because I remember my dad was like when he went and got no he got sitting in to integrate school He was like man. They came to the prom have blue jean dirty blue jeans on cowboy boots, right? You know like they were dressed to the night like it's totally culturally. Yeah different culture. Sure. Oh

But you want to merge them together, you know, and it only can end up in a... And I'm not pushing for segregation. What I'm trying to push for is whatever is natural. And everything these scientific white supremacists do is unnatural, it's forced, it's in a controlled environment, it's changing of words and definitions and changing everything that comes natural to humans. They want to turn it on its ear. What is that incessant need from all sides, intellectual sides really? Whereas, you know, because it's like for me, I've always... America's the great melting pot and I've always thought, no, it's a stew. It's a stew. You got some potatoes here. You got some carrots over there. I'll go visit the potatoes. I want the potatoes to come look at my carrots. There's some beef over here.

You know, and together we're a beautiful thing, but I've never really seen the need to have it all completely all one. It seems boring to me, honestly. It's easy to control. That's just my analysis of it, that if you have one way, it's easier to control. They don't want a variety of thought. Right. Yeah, hence the multi-culti child of the future, which is what you see in all the ads on television. Correct. And it's not diversity anymore. I mean, it's multicultural. Yeah. Diversity went out the window. Diversity was the Trojan horse. Like, you know, oh, we're all going to be a diverse. And, you know, like you said, we can have some Chinese food and some Indian food and some soul food and some, you know. You would literally go to Chinatown to have that or to, you know, Little Italy to have that, etc.

But then when they said they didn't tell you didn't read the fine print that is a smoothie. Yeah We're gonna throw it all in the blender. It's like I don't want to drink that It's a meat smoothie Go for it. What do you don't like Chinese food? What you don't like Indian food, but you don't like soul food It's like no, I don't like them all together. You know where they're just you know, they're indistinguishable from each other and But that's that's the fine print is that they're gonna let you have it all but it's not gonna be what you think it's gonna get so um So going back to Malcolm X. He's talks about integration is dignity

As long as we sit around here trying to pray to the white man's God and go to the white man's church and into the white man's school, we'll be brainwashed by the white man's educational system and we'll continue to look down upon ourselves and we'll continue to be a beggar to him because we'll continue to think that he's superior to us. Instead of the Negro leaders having the black man begging for a chance to dine in white restaurants, the Negro leader should be showing the black man how to do something to strengthen his own economy, to give himself an independent economy or to provide job opportunities for himself. Not begging for a cup of coffee in a white man's restaurant.

Dr. King's goals are quite different from yours. He believes in integration. Complete integration of societies. Well, that's where Dr. King is mixed up. His goal should be the solution of the problem of the black man in America. Now, not integration. Integration is the method. Toward obtaining that goal and what the Negro leader has done is gotten himself wrapped up in the method and has forgotten what the goal is the goal is the is the is the Dignity of the black man in America. He wants respect as a human being he wants recognition as a human being Yeah, so it's the goal and the method That's why separate break equal was like, okay, I

we can have our own dignity and we can make sure our children maintain their dignity. But it's like, no, we want integration at all costs. So how does this fit into today's colleges where we have black students saying, okay, we want to have our own dorms, we want to have our own this or own that? Is that separate but equal? No, go to HBCU. If you want to go to have a black dorm, Or you want to go, you're saying, if you want the black college experience, you can't go into somebody else's campus and say, oh, I want you to change it to this way. And they're only put up and propped up by this just to be inflammatory and destructive and cause chaos. So I said, who's sending them? Who's prompting these people to think that they can think like this?

You feel me? Like I mean, because naturally if you want to be around people like you, y'all can do that anywhere. Why do you feel like you need to have this whole? It's really just like reverse racism. And this is this goes back to white suffering again. Yeah, it's just like we got to show. Okay, look at these few college students over here. They're saying all they want to have their own their own safe space. That's what I was thinking about their own safe space. It's like if you don't feel safe, why are you in the environment? That's that's the mind screw that I never got it. It's like if you went to this college and you had to have a specific location to feel safe. Why are you there?

Do you hate your own so much that you'd rather feel unsafe around your own or get around people different for you than be around your own? Well, I think there's also a large degree of these colleges bringing these students in with free rides, free tickets, full scholarship, et cetera, for their own diversity. And then there's a choice. It's like, well, I can get in. Basically, I don't have to pay anything if I go over here. That may play into it. Yes, that plays into it and that's the affirmative action kind of thing like that, but it's that why subject yourself and this is the whole thing I think Malcolm X where he ran Counter to what MLK was trying to do. I'm not letting you throw hot coffee on me just to buy your pie. That's stupid.

the psychological trauma that you experience where you go to an environment that you don't feel wanted and I'm not talking about you actually are not wanted, but if you feel not wanted, why will you subject yourself? And you're like, oh, I want a better education. At what cost? Is it worth going to that university where you don't feel and I'm putting quotes around feel safe because it may not be the reality but Perception is reality. It's like, oh, I perceive I'm not safe. I perceive around every corner somebody's gonna harm me. You know, somebody's gonna hurt me or whatever. Then why are you in the environment? Once you take that brain power and bring it to, you know, wherever you want it.

Does that make sense? I mean like... Yeah, yeah it makes total sense. Well we've covered lots of this throughout the years on the episode. So yeah for me, yeah it totally makes sense. No, but from my mindset like why? Why do you want to be somewhere you're not... where you think you're not wanted? I never understood that for the life of me. How about a different version of mass psychosis? Mass formation? And I think in that mass psychosis, I believe is the inferiority. It's like, if I can just get this degree from this school, then I can think my way out of white supremacy. It don't work that way. It did not work that way. You know, and that just makes you- That was also the college promise for so many years. Oh, no, no. Once you have an education, then, and I mean, wasn't this- Once you have an education, then you're on equal footing.

And we see that even with white on white. Yes. Oh, it's like because they start doing that what you start hearing these Statistics broke down by college educated versus not, you know, not college educated, you know The women the votes lean this way or that way. Mm-hmm So they're making these groups like oh you're not enlightened which I go back to saying if you don't subscribe to their religion and You're gonna be on the outside. Moe, I moved 70 miles west of Austin. I'm already treated differently in Austin. I believe it. Yeah. Oh, you're out there in that hill country, huh? Yeah, you know what's out there? You know what's out there? Churches. I experienced the same thing, but not in that way. But when people came to visit me, there were a lot of Trump signs on the way to my house because there's a lot of farmers in a rural area.

And people were like, you live out here? Is it safe? And I'm like, yeah. I'm like, have you ever heard of GBG? You know what I'm saying? Like... Because when you live with all your rights, I'm going to push it to the limit. It's like whatever my rights are, I want all of them. Yeah. So my right is if somebody come over here tripping, whatever, whatever Rocco leaves. You put a cap in that thing. Right. And you know what and I don't have peace of mind with that as far as when you have all your rights and you're willing to exercise all your rights and keep your dignity and don't live in fear. There's peace in that. I don't live afraid. I don't live foolishly either, but I don't live afraid. No, that's just not in my DNA. But we have a

Exactly. Exactly. So let's go ahead and get into 28. Now, if integration will get him that all right, if segregation will get him that all right, if separation will get him that all right. But after he gets integration, and he still doesn't have this dignity, and this recognition as a human being, then his problem is still not solved. Well, isn't this exactly what Dr. King is looking towards? And that is the day when the Negro will be treated with dignity. Wasn't this after all, the result of the Montgomery bus boycott? No, because I don't think you can... having an opportunity to ride either on the front or the back or in the middle of someone else's bus doesn't dignify you. When you have your own bus, then you have dignity. When you have your own school, you have dignity. When you have your own country, you have dignity. When you have something of your own, you have dignity.

But whenever you are begging for a chance to participate in that which belongs to someone else or use that which belongs to someone else on an equal basis with the owner, that's not dignity. That's ignorance. Mo, do you feel that this has changed in your life now, that you have dignity in that way that Malcolm X describes here? No, I think it's worse. I think it's actually worse because we don't even have communities anymore. Like we're so blown to the four winds that we don't even have anywhere where we can go to have community and Except church possibly. Yes, except church which churches Shrinking. Yes, and it losing its power because it's beholden to the LGBT to the feminist movement that the message has to change to accommodate And I know we gotta go to the next statement. I was waiting one point

This is where no man in the house and elevating the black man over the black woman over the black man starts to play out because now who's the financial base in the black church? It's the black woman. So now the preachers have to lean and tailor their message to what is acceptable to whatever they want to hear. Which is no different than any clergy, you know what I'm saying? But that's what's happening here which causes men to withdraw even more and then there you have it. Right, and that's probably not reversible at the present time. Well, it is because eventually what's going to have to happen is that if men hold strong, the order will be reset. And this is why it's so important that we identify

when it's outside forces that's causing the gender war and the generational war, especially in our community. And that's what I try to do. It's not us fighting each other. It's somebody, it's outside forces that's making us think that we're each other's enemy. So I'm optimistic. I'm an optimist. Good, good. I'm very optimistic because we like new money. We love it, even though it's going away. There's not going to be that crisp $100 bill anymore. It's going to be digital. I like brand new money. I just don't want any money around me that's not... I'd almost rather have a new one than an old 20. That's kind of dumb, isn't it? But there's something about new money that excites you. You like $100 bills? Oh yeah, I like new money too. Oh! The most beautiful thing on earth is a $100 bill. I haven't seen a woman as good looking as a $100 bill. There's something about a $100 bill that excites you.

Well, we only have a few more people to thank, but it's incredibly important that we thank everybody in the Value for Value model, or as much as we can. That can be a lot of value for him and that's all we ask for is that you return the value that you got out of MoFax with Adam Curry and we appreciate that Gregory Mark J. Asher 23 Now we have $20 from Alejandro Alocer, Matthew Weaver Melissa Reeve, $15.33. Gotta love the magic 33. $10 from the following people. Aaron Sneed, Arsonomics, Bo Baldwin, Benjamin Barlow, Christopher Bellier, and Dave Jones. I don't know if that's... Are Dave Jones? It probably is Dave Jones.

Jacques Delisle, 10, and SV, also 10. None of those had a note. We did get a note from Johnny Hipwell with $9.99. Don't know what to say anymore, but wow! Thanks, Johnny. I have the same very often after this show. Reggie Roberts, 7.77, magic striper boost. Love the show. Eagle Pride, amplified. Happy New Year. Nice, thank you. No note. Vincent Farrell, $5.55, $5.50. from, this is a good one, Bamadel Oregon Thomas, I think. For a great show, really enjoyed it. Jobs, jobs, jobs, please. Okay, that's interesting. I think we have, we can give him a jobs mo karma. I think that's possible. Jobs, jobs, jobs. We'll use that. You've got it.

And then rounding it out with Kevin with $5 Michael Kilgus with $5 and of course Terry Keller the human subscription $4.11 no note, but we appreciate he's there for every single episode Thank you all again for supporting Mo Facts with Adam Curry episode number 89 go to MoFacts.com that's with a C T Z or or mofundme.com takes you directly to the donation page. And remember, try out a brand new podcast app to do the same to boost us at newpodcastapps.com. So we come down the home stretch and this is where the rubber really meets the road at because as I was doing my research on the last show, I came across something that I didn't know about. And it was the Rosenwald schools

Okay, so these were there was this Jewish gentleman named Julius Rosenwald And he built these schools in the black community. He also did a lot of funding of Booker T. Washington, which I didn't know anything about Rosenwald or his schools. And the interesting thing is I have now have to go back because my grandmother's grandparents old house was a former school. Hmm. I'm gonna look in to see if this house was one of the Rosenwald schools cuz it fits the description So it's just funny. Go ahead. He was also part owner of Sears and Roebuck

Yes, that was how he made his money. Oh, interesting. But let's go ahead and get into this. This comes from one of those morning shows. And it's just fascinating what I found out about him, but then I had to go deeper. 30. They became known as Rosenwald Schools, named after wealthy industrialist Julius Rosenwald, the president of retail giant Sears. This is an important Southern story. This is an important American story. This story transforms America. I and noted educator Booker T. Washington, founding president of the Tuskegee Institute. Together they sought to reverse years of inequality in education because of slavery and segregation. This story are the pillars of my life. The relationship between Julius Rosenwald and Booker T. Washington is the foundation

of the Black Jewish Alliance that becomes a pillar of the civil rights movement. In 1912, they launched a pilot program, building six schools in Alabama, requiring local communities to donate the land and raise matching funds. What were they trying to defeat? Schools started off as being segregated. they were trying to get through that part. What does that do to a child? Well, to me that would dishearten them and give them, make them feel like they didn't matter. So she says schools were segregated and they were trying to get through that part.

So he built this school for black children with the help of Booker T. Washington, which Booker T. Washington was more of we need to build up from the ground up, you know, have tradesmen and, you know, and build the foundation from the bottom up, which the counter to that was the talent 10th, W.E.B. Du Bois was you need to elevate 10 to talent 10% and then they'll pull up from the, you know, saying top down kind of thing, which Here's a psyop right here. You need both You know, but they made it one ideology versus the other ideology which I think it was by design because If you get all the engineers and the doctors and all these things like that Where your nurses and your construction people and plumbers and electricity is gonna come from right? Mm-hmm. Well, we should have literally the problem we have now correct

So if you have, but if you only have plumbers and electricians and all these things, who's going to make the grand design for what's going to be built? So if you pit those two against each other, It's gonna be a community divided and that's what's happened right now Is that's what the division is is like one way still to this day, you know everybody like half the people Oh, no, we need to know we need this show of what they call black excellence You know, we need to have the deities of the world which is not but racial showcasing, you know, that's excellence for you. I

Right, Diddy and Jay-Z and Obama, which was a big one, right? You know, which I can't take away from what the importance of Obama was. It made people start thinking, oh, we need to start thinking on a bigger, grander scale. That was the good part of Obama. But the bad part was everything else. Yeah, like him not being actually black, black American. Well, that and then also the fact of He was he was handled. I mean we know his story We heard what George O Brown told it taught us about Obama and his relationship with the Bush family and the intelligence agencies and everything like that so but

With every bad it comes from good it start the conversation. They're like, okay, we need to be further if we know We need to start thinking on a bigger scale So that that's the thing about the Rosenwald schools, but let's go ahead and get into the second part of this clip Why don't we know this? Julius Rosenwald is a very modest man He did not name these schools Rosenwald schools. They become known as Rosenwald schools. One of the reasons why we don't know the Rosenwald name as much as we know the names of some of his philanthropic contemporaries like Carnegie, Rockefeller, Ford. They were monument builders. They were. He was a legacy builder. Yes.

That legacy is still being felt. Many of those educated at Rosenwald schools went on to higher education and in turn educated future generations. And prominent leaders of the civil rights movement like Medgar Evers, Maya Angelou and Congressman John Lewis came through these institutions. I didn't know that. Huh. And you heard the programming, right? We shall overcome. Yeah. Which we know was written at one, uh, I can't always forget that school in Tennessee, but you know what I'm saying? This, the, uh, communist school out of Tennessee that where that was written at. So they always love to throw that in there. Um, because they say it's a trigger, um, a racial trigger. Oh, big trigger.

So I'm trying to figure out who when was that it was Highlander folk school Highlander folk school. That's the one that Rosa Parks and MLK were noted as attending which that's where the song was written Which most people if you ask them that they think it's a Negro spiritual But it was a remix and rework of a Negro spiritual. Well, let's go to the violent Wikipedia. Shall we? We shall overcome is a gospel song which became a gospel song a gospel song would be something from the gospel Right, so I don't think it's a gospel song which became a protest song and a key anthem of the American civil rights movement The song is most commonly attributed as being lyrically descended from I shall overcome someday a hymn by Charles Tindley That's the rework. Yeah Yes, it is

But they had to punch it up, you know, to make it more jingly. And that came out the Communist school. So when I start hearing Rosenwald's name thrown around with Rockefeller, I'm like, oh, and it's going to get deeper, their connection. We have to understand what Rockefeller was really trying to do with his work in the, quote unquote, black community. Well, let me guess. He was creating a pipeline for his businesses. A little darker than that. 32. Rockefeller made sure to get the better end of the bargain. He would donate his great wealth to the creation of public institutions, but those institutions would be used to bend society to his will. As every would-be ruler throughout history has realized, society has to be transformed from the ground up.

Americans in the 19th century still prized education and intellectual pursuits, with the 1840 census finding unsurprisingly that the United States, a nation that had been mobilized by tracts like Thomas Paine's remarkably popular common sense, was a nation of readers with a remarkable 93% to 100% literacy rate. Before the first compulsory schooling laws in Massachusetts in 1852, education was private and decentralized, and as a result classical education, including study of Greek and Latin and a solid grounding in history and science, was widespread. But a nation of individuals who could think for themselves was anathema to the monopolists.

the oiligarchs needed a massive obedient workers, an entire class of people whose intellect was developed just enough to prepare them for lives of drudgery in a factory. Which is literally George Carlin's, one of his final rants where he said, it's a big club, you're not in it, all they want is obedient workers and to keep you just well enough just to perform the tasks they want you to. And that's for all people. Correct. And Rosenwald had the task of doing that with his schools. At the same time, Rockefeller was also funding the talented Tim side. With like I said, with Morehouse and Spillman and the other HBCUs, he backed with his money. But the goal was to shape education and

and the way he and his Robert Barron counterpart saw fit. It wasn't long before Carnegie's endowment approached Rockefeller's foundation with a proposal to cooperate on their shared desire to transform the American education system in their own image. Norman Dodd, the director of research for the congressional committee who was granted access to the Carnegie endowment's board minutes, explains. So they approach the Rockefeller Foundation with the suggestion that that portion of education which could be considered domestic be handled by the Rockefeller Foundation and that portion which is international should be handled by the endowment. And they then decide that the key to the success of these two operations lay in an alteration of the teaching of American history. So they approach

four of the then most prominent teachers of American history in the country, people like Charles and Mary Bird, and their suggestion to them is will they alter the manner in which they present this subject and they get turned down flat. So they then decide that it is necessary for them to do as they say, build our own stable of historians. Okay If we can't buy it We'll build our own. Yeah And that's what we're seeing now is we can't we can't buy the scientists off or we can't you know We can't buy them all for they won't go which way we're going we saw this with this What was it CDC or one of their they kept replacing the board? Until they got the votes that they wanted to push. I think it was like the juvenile shot and

Oh yeah, people dissented. I don't know if they replaced... I think they just ignored them, honestly. I think on several occasions they replaced the board. Oh, that's possible. The advisory board. Or members of the board. That's possible. Well, I mean, but this happens everywhere. That's like the Lisbon Treaty, the Constitution of Europe, you know, Ireland voted against and they went back and said, excuse me, Ireland, I think you want to try that again because you did that wrong. And they did and they voted yes. Whatever the coercion is, it's strong and they know how to do it. So I say all this to say that we've seen

In real time, the rewriting history of Benjamin Rush, the rewriting in the history of whether suppression of mass formation itself. Oh, well, Google has to look in to see if you can get the information on there or not. Let's make sure we can give you some palatable information that we approve of. Well, it's the trusted news initiative is what we have today. Which is a group that that literally approves or that the social media companies Turn to to say Kim is this okay? Can can this be posted, you know, and it's usually medical stuff and that's comprised of the Reuters Associated Press, you know the the big news networks that are all pretty much owned and controlled so yeah, and I'm a firm believer that this may be liberal now and

But it's gonna go ultra conservative in the future. Like everything's free right now, pornography and all drugs or whatever else. But when the literacies get tired of that, then it's gonna go super 1940s, 50s conservative. I honestly believe that that's where the social credit score, all that I believe is gonna go. Oh man, that's why I'm afraid of it. Not that I even agree with what they're pushing, you know what I'm saying? But it's like, okay, it's a purity test. I would say first, they have some work to do and that's taking place right now and that is making us very weak. And they're doing that through food. That is the first step. We are still too strong.

When you say we, everybody, and that's where I think I differ in opinion. They're making who needs to be strong, stronger. Well, I'm seeing no evidence of that in the food that is being literally created. I'm seeing no evidence that make it well. The food for the masses, yes, trash and it's going to be bug soon. But that's what I say. When I say we, that's who I'm talking about. I'm talking about who the ideal citizen they want for their future. Is still going to be eating bugs. I don't think so. Look at what Texas Slim is doing.

The people that actually care about their body and is smart and enlightened, those are the ones they want to stick around. I think this is the biggest mind screw ever. I see what you're saying, interesting. They want people like me and you to stick around. It's like, y'all get it, but you got to shut up though. Like you got to knock it off telling everybody else what's going on. Like just eat your healthy beef and shut up and let them eat bugs and take 99 boosters and they'll be dead soon. And then we'll be okay. Yeah, but it's the shut up part that's the problem. That's why me and you are doing it. Because neither one of us can shut up. I can't knowingly see somebody about to walk off a cliff

And stop him and me in class talk about this all the time. Like why do you care? You might because he's kind of person like that's what your choice is go forward, you know I mean he'll stop you if he could but me and you obsessed over making sure people are informed. Yeah, that's because I don't want to live with them. I want to live with cool people who are healthy and healthy in body and spirit and also are able to discuss things. So there's a conflict coming whether they want us to be strong or not, there's conflict coming. My motive is a little different because if I know something and I don't tell a person, like the blood's on my hands. But if I tell you and you still go through with it,

Then I can at least say I tried to warn you. But if you walk off that cliff and I don't stop you, then it's like, oh, that's on me. And that's why I come here every, you know what I'm saying, every show and try to let people know it's not what y'all think it is. The mass formation is not what you think it is. The people that's in formation, are being led right off a cliff like the Pied Piper. They're taking them right off the cliff and we're going to be left behind. And if we were cold-hearted people like, hey, we got our beef stacked up, we got our guns stacked up, we're not feeding our kids this, we're not letting our kids watch this or be taking part of this agenda. So it's for the best.

Because you could easily go there once your heart grows callous and cold. It's like they deserve like give them more boosters But we will be pushing if we were cold We were like you need to get more but you can have mine and yours Take them all if we were trying to eliminate people, but that's not well. That's not who we are where we come from right? Oh And that's where we become a problem, because it's like, you know, but you won't go along with it. It's like these movies where like, when you walk in on, when you walk in on like the boss and they're like embezzling money and it's like, come on, take some. It's like, no, I don't want none. Like now you're a part, you're a liability because you won't become part of the scheme, but you also, but you have knowledge of it.

So we're a huge liability. Bring it on. Bring it on. Bring it on. Of course. Bring it on. Of course. So now we got to get into this last two clips. And this is Arthur Eli Evans. And he's going to speak on why Julian Rosenwald, Rosenwald, Julius Rosenwald was not well known. Well, you know, One of the real puzzles in this whole thing is that Julius Rosenwald is one of the great Jewish figures in history that nobody knows. That's gonna change. So the question is really why? I mean, why is this? The man spent billions of dollars, really, everything he had to do something for black Americans.

And we're at a time in history when we need him so much. You know, we the Jewish people need him so much. And the world needs him so much. I mean, all these people sitting around with money and with all the things that they could do. I always thought that one of the big important things about him was that he was asked to be on the Rockefeller board. And he said at that time, with sort of awe, Mr. Rockefeller sat me beside him. Now you know, I've been in philanthropy really for most of my career. And the Rockefellers thought on a big scale, always a big scale. They were not making small grants. They were changing New York City, building great, looking across the country at the whole future of food and the world, that sort of thing. I have a feeling that something happened to Rosenwald sitting in those, he was the only Jew on the Rockefeller board, and the first Jew on the Rockefeller board.

And I just have a sense of the fact that this touched him greatly, the power of what, the possibility of what could be done. I didn't know this, but we lost him last year, Eli Evans. I didn't know that either. He passed away according to Washington Post, complications from COVID-19, July 26 last year. Sorry to hear that. Yeah, but now I gotta give you the punchline and then we'll listen to the clip They say they can't figure out why? Rosen our wall is lost in history Even though he was hand selected to sit at Rockefeller's right hand The only Jew this is that talented Tim thing playing again again a plane and again well, you know we selected one and we not only gave him racial showcasing and

We didn't just let him on the board. I put him on my right hand, right? The problem is he funded the fight for Leo Frank now I'll give you time to go look up who Leo you might know who it is already But if you just in case you don't know it Leo Frank's familiar. All right. So while you're looking at I'm just gonna give you a Comparison he was basically the Jewish George Floyd That time like in the 19 early 1900s How you found it yet? Yeah, I'm looking at it right now. Sure Texan, right? Yeah, he was born in Texas end up living in Georgia and he was convicted of Raping and murdering a little white girl named Mary Faye. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah this I've I have heard of this sure and

And this was the whole justification for the anti-defamation league. And I'm going to do a whole nother covering of this. That's where I know him from. Yes. Oh, okay. And so Rosenwald funded his defense? Yes. No, no, that's off the reservation, bro. Right. Especially for that with the Rockefeller was kind of in the mindset. He got canceled. Right, because he was in the mindset of, I mean Rockefeller kind of thought like Henry Ford and those guys at that time. That was real the Anglo-Saxon kind of power structure. And when you have, you're the only Jewish person on a board and you're backing a child murderer and rapist.

That'll get you lost into the hand that to that to history Now I want to let you hear how what's his name again? Eli Evans Eli Evans. This is a long clip so you can stop where you want to this is the last clip I had to lay out the punchline first so you can see how people try to rewrite history. I can't wait to hear this Okay, let's go Why isn't he more celebrated why isn't it wasn't he embraced and Well, the only thing that's so crucial about this is there was a parallel drama going on and it was the Leo Frank case down in Atlanta. I spent a lot of time down there interviewing people who remembered the Leo Frank trial, remember the day their mother came and dragged them out of school and took them home because of how the decision ended.

All of that. And it created such a dark mood in Atlanta that one, let's see, half the 3,000 Jews who lived there left the state. They didn't want to do it. And therefore. A great migration in itself. Yeah, it really was. And therefore, the idea of embracing Rosenwald in a situation like that, when they all felt threatened, As I travel through the South, I went 5,000 miles to the South interviewing people. This fear that came over them because Leo Frank was a very distinguished businessman in the city. He was very active in Jewish affairs.

All of a sudden he got caught up in this thing and the thing right newspapers that were sort of bigoted just laid it on him. He hasn't even told anyone what happened as a murderer. Oh there we go. He demanded that something be done and and all and and when the decision came down the governor of the state would not let it happen. So he was free he thought for a moment. but yet jailed. And you know the story is the jail was broken into, he was taken out, he was taken up to the place where Mary Fagan, who was the young girl's name, lived and was hanged lynched from this tree. And they left the body up there for a long time. It was a horrifying moment in Jewish history to tell you the truth. Wow!

And so you're gonna do a show about this, right? This is great. Oh, that's... I did not know any of that. I think I also heard about Leo Frank from... my business partner, my first business was a Jew from Georgia. And Jews in the South was an interesting history. He had a lot of interesting stories. Yes. Wow. Eli couldn't really even say it could he you saw how he now you really get it out What was on display there was his mass formation of? protecting Leo Frank is you know he got caught up in this thing It was the newspapers and he was the judge set him free which was a lie, which was a complete lie and

Because according to Wikipedia and like I'm just gonna go deeper into I'm just gonna say that was an out-and-out lie because it says here Frank sentence was Commuted from capital punishment to life in prison, so he was never free right man But they go to show you that he played part in it, but he tried to put he tried to Look out for Leo Frank and they basically you're saying worm or memory holding And that was the the genesis of the Anti-Defamation League. Yes. Wow. Yes. The only Jewish man to get lynched in America on record and they get a whole organization out of it. Yeah, which is quite an interesting organization indeed these days. Oh, we're going down that rabbit hole all the way down there. Best believe it. Well, I really appreciated this was an interesting one, Mo.

through the different versions of mass formation, mass formation psychosis if you will. Let's you and I just try to stay out of those brother. The funny thing is we got to stay in it so we can report from it. Yes. Yeah. Report live from the formation. Oh man. It was a good one. I appreciate it. I appreciate that and as I always say, pay attention to everything and the truth will reveal itself. And we will return in about two weeks I guess for another Mo Facts with Adam Curry. We hope you all got some value out of this particular episode. Go to mofacts.com, mofundme.com. Mo, I'll talk to you real soon brother. Thank you so much. All right, talk to you later Adam. Bye bye everybody.

People moving in wide because of the color of their skin. Vroom, vroom, vroom, but you sure can't hide. And I bought a tooth for a tooth, both for me and I'll set you free. Ripple, oh, really, ripple. The only person talking about love and love is the preacher And it seems nobody's interested in learning but the teacher Segregation, determination, demonstration, integration, aggravation, humiliation, obligation to our nation That's what the world is

is today Revolution, revolution, got control of the sound of soul Shooting rockets to the moon, kids going up to zoo Politicians say more taxes will solve everything And the band played along So, round and round and round we go Where the world's at, nobody knows

Say, kookabooka, can't you hear me talking to you? Just a moment, let you know. Oh, it is a day, yeah. Beer in the air. And the only safe place to live is on an Indian reservation.

Evil destruction, tax deductions, Inspectors, bill collectors, Cyclones in the main population of Maine Suicide, too many bills, hippies moving to the hill People all over the world are shouting into war And the band played on Hey, booga booga, can't you hear me talkin' to you? Singin' ballin' the children That's what we want is to be Let me hear you, let me hear you, let me hear you Singin' ballin' the children Let me hear you, let me hear you, let me hear you

Say it more than the future