Topic: Procreation

5 chapters across the catalog

97: Flowers for Fuller
2:34:59 - 2:37:47

97: Flowers for Fuller

Racial Sexual Confusion and Hormone Blockers

The hosts discuss "Racial Sexual Confusion," a strategy Neely Fuller Jr. reportedly predicted in 1972. They argue that the promotion of transgenderism and hormone blockers for children is a method to prevent "undesirables" from procreating. This is presented as a deliberate effort to create maximum confusion and weaken the family structure within targeted communities.

85: Overman
50:26 - 55:51

85: Overman

The Lizard Lens and Modern Sterilization

The hosts adopt a "lizard lens" to speculate on how elites view the 75-80% of the population they deem "unfit" to parent. They suggest that modern social movements, such as the child transgender movement, are viewed by elites as a form of voluntary sterilization for those susceptible to "dumb programming." The segment argues that elites use fear, such as climate change, to trick the masses into giving up their fertility.

84: More or Less
1:57:52 - 1:59:25

84: More or Less

Faith and the Command to Multiply

Mo Facts discusses his faith, noting that the biblical command to "be fruitful and multiply" runs counter to the "less people" agenda. Figures like Tucker Carlson are reportedly hated not just for their views, but for having large families. The population control narrative is framed as fundamentally "anti-God" or "anti-Christ" in its opposition to human life.

82: High Value Target
2:49:48 - 2:52:50

82: High Value Target

The Social Gauntlet and Useless Eaters

The hosts present a cynical "lizard brain" theory that the promotion of extreme gender ideologies is a "gauntlet" designed to weed out "non-productive" people. They suggest that elites are allowing those who "buy into the gender war" to eliminate their own genetics, while "resourceful" conservative families continue to procreate. This is framed as a silent social engineering project to reduce the number of "useless eaters."

06: Meet The Parents
1:45:47 - 1:49:36

06: Meet The Parents

Procreation as a National Necessity vs. Individual Choice

Jessica Shortall argues that procreation is a national necessity because today's babies will eventually make up the workforce and tax base. She challenges the idea that women should bear the economic consequences of having children alone, as their work is essential to the national economy. The hosts contrast her view with the depopulation agenda, noting the contradiction between needing a future workforce and discouraging birth.