
INSOMNIA STREAM: FINDLEY EDITION.mp3
06/25/2025German Numbers Lady
00:00:00 Right here.00:00:10 6.
00:00:24 The.
00:00:26 We feel that I'm sick.
00:00:33 No.
Mr Oizo - Hand In The Fire Remix
00:02:49 Hello.00:03:30 Come on, get me started.
00:04:47 What you gonna do? Thinking about you wake up in the morning.
00:04:54 Wake up in the morning.
Devon Stack
00:06:44 Welcome to the insomnia stream.00:06:50 Findley edition.
00:06:52 I'm your host, of course, Devon Stack. Hope you're having a.
00:06:54 Good week.
00:06:56 You're having a good week so far.
00:06:59 No World War three. You see, I told you guys. I told you. Everything's gonna be OK.
00:07:05 Everything is going to be OK.
00:07:08 It's, you know, obviously it's not over yet. It's never over. It's never over with Israel, it's never over. We'll discuss a little bit tonight about why, but yeah, it's never over. It's never over.
00:07:21 It's the.
00:07:23 But you know, no World War 3.
00:07:26 No.
00:07:29 No boots on the ground, none of that shit.
00:07:32 You know it's not good. It's not good. You know, it's not great, but.
00:07:38 You know.
00:07:43 Yeah, it could be worse. They could be so much worse. It could be so much worse.
00:07:51 And you know, to some degree, some things are are getting a little bit better.
00:07:58 A lot of people have been noticing.
00:08:01 That it's become hip. And actually before we get into that.
00:08:06 Before we get into that, some house cleaning stuff, right? House cleaning stuff. Almost forgot. House cleaning stuff.
00:08:13 So.
00:08:15 We're going to be we're going to be a little bit.
00:08:20 Easier in the chat when it comes to bands and.
00:08:24 Stuff, if if.
00:08:27 If people can behave themselves.
00:08:30 People can behave themselves, we understand.
00:08:34 That there is some debate.
00:08:37 About religious.
00:08:40 Consequences, some of which will even a little bit talk about tonight.
00:08:45 And that debate.
00:08:49 Can and should be had respectfully, like grown-ups like grown-ups that that have impulse control like white people discuss things.
00:09:00 OK.
00:09:02 And so if you would like to discuss, I don't know why, I honestly don't know why you'd want to have these kinds of discussions in a live chat for a stream, but.
00:09:12 If for some reason you feel the need.
00:09:16 To discuss religion in the live chat.
00:09:20 You may do so.
00:09:22 If you if you're, if you're cool.
00:09:25 Bitch, be cool.
00:09:27 That's it. That's it.
00:09:30 I've always said that I am I am race 1st and tonight we're really going to talk about why that's important.
00:09:38 And.
00:09:40 That's what matters to me. That's what my priority is.
00:09:44 That's what I care about. Now, I know that there are some of you who think I'm on all sides of this. The two are inseparable.
00:09:54 I don't happen to agree with that, but.
00:09:58 I understand the arguments of those who do.
00:10:02 And I would just suggest you make those arguments.
00:10:06 In a in a tactful white person way.
00:10:11 Wow.
00:10:12 Talking to your fellow white people in the in the live chats and that's it.
00:10:19 That's all.
00:10:20 That's really it.
00:10:21 We don't want to be ban hammering away, but we also don't want people screeching about their strongly held religious beliefs and some emotional outburst.
00:10:35 Or lack of emotional or religious beliefs in an emotional outburst. And we don't want people starting fights.
00:10:45 Fights you'll never win.
00:10:47 You'll never win. You'll never. Then, even if you're right, you won't win in a in a stream. Live chat again, that's.
00:10:54 Not sure why.
00:10:56 Why you would feel that's the.
00:10:58 The right venue for your proselytizing or anti proselytizing? Depending. But yeah, be that as it may.
00:11:08 Yeah. I I I prefer the live chat to be something where you can make friends, not enemies.
00:11:18 Not bitter, bitter enemies, but you know.
00:11:23 So there, there it.
00:11:23 Is there? It is just everyone, everyone be cool and and and be nice to your fellow whites and revel in the brotherhood.
00:11:35 That is there.
00:11:37 That is there for your enjoyment.
00:11:41 And for your community building.
00:11:43 And think of it that way more so that this is your personal soapbox.
00:11:48 To screech about things that you'll never convince anyone of in a live stream chat. But anyway, there you go. Now that's out of the way. Lost my train of thought. Oh, yeah. There we go. OK.
00:12:01 Many people have probably noticed.
00:12:06 That it has somehow.
00:12:08 At least in some ways.
00:12:11 Overnight, you might even say.
00:12:14 Become socially acceptable on the right.
00:12:18 To at least.
00:12:19 Talk about Israel. Ohh wow. We're making so much progress.
00:12:24 Or make it so much progress you mean you can you can say you don't love Israel and and and.
00:12:31 The piano's not gonna fall in your head. I I guess. I guess you can say that Israel's not your favorite country in the world. You can't work in the the the administration and say that obviously you still have to.
00:12:45 The Law of Israel is is more so than you would America, and if you want to, yeah, be an elected official. If you don't want to get primaried, like like Massey is going to get. If you want to be in, in, in, in the administration and you want to have any kind of important role and look you personally.
00:13:05 If you want to be an influencer in the network, a Tier 1 influencer, if you will.
00:13:10 You also have to personally express at least some level of admiration.
00:13:16 For the Jewish people and Israel, but however.
00:13:22 You may in in very limited ways now.
00:13:26 Perhaps criticize Israeli you know policies or politicians or political parties, as long as you then rope in other groups to explain away that this can't possibly be a race issue, by lumping in random people like.
00:13:47 Bill Gates or or whatever into your into your criticisms.
00:13:53 And this this is this is wow. It's amazing progress, isn't it?
00:13:58 It's amazing progress. You know, it wasn't that long.
00:14:02 It wasn't that long ago that that if you said anything even remotely critical of Israel, all people would do is shout anti Semite at you and then you would disappear. You would be banned or censored or whatever. All right. So obviously what really has changed is there exists one platform.
00:14:23 Well, I'm not one platform 11 mainstream platform, which is I would, I would say acts even though there has been a mass exodus and there are a lot of echo chambers that are developed on axe.
00:14:35 I would still consider it a mainstream platform, especially compared to platforms like Rumble or Odyssey or bit shoot or something like that, so it is certainly more mainstream than anywhere else where you're allowed to talk about these things and you're allowed to talk about these things.
00:14:54 On one platform, that's all it took. And because a lot of the controlled opposition and.
00:15:02 People that cash checks where the the amount is written in shekels. These people have to also coexist on this platform and do a job that they're getting paid for. They have to be able to. At least they can no longer rely on a algorithm or quite as much.
00:15:22 I mean, they can't lean as heavily on an algorithm to make the problem go away.
00:15:29 Now this has left them in a. They have a a bit of atrophy. They have a bit of atrophy because they have never had to engage. And when I say they, I do mean Jews and they're they're many, many goy that that work for them. They have never had to engage on any of these topics.
00:15:49 Because for the last forever they have just shut down the opposition.
00:15:55 Using Jew magic in the form of algorithms in the form of, well, we'll talk about some of those forms tonight.
00:16:04 And what we're discussed tonight specifically.
00:16:08 Not the first victim of the Israel lobby might be hard to really pinpoint who that is. You might say Mary Fagan in some ways was the first victim of the Israel lobby, but.
00:16:22 A relatively modern victim, one of the more vocal victims, one of the first people mainstream politicians to actually.
00:16:34 Not just fade into obscurity after they were cancelled.
00:16:40 Which was a lot earlier than a lot of people would like to think, especially the crowd that wants to go back to the 90s because they or 80s or wherever they think because they think that the that was some magical era. No, this guy was canceled in the early 80s.
00:16:56 Simply for stating obvious things about the behavior of Israel, this guy was not a right wing extremist by any means.
00:17:07 In fact, quite the opposite to his shame, I would say. And in fact it kind of makes him look like an idiot.
00:17:15 This is not going.
00:17:16 We we're not going to be gushing over this guy. In fact, we're going to be pointing out everything he did wrong and why these people that are hopeful that just because Charlie Kirk puts out a an opinion poll about whether or not his followers like Israel or not before.
00:17:36 He pipes up on the subject. The people that think that that's somehow a win, or that somehow we're moving the the the Overton window rather than they're just moving a goalpost.
00:17:48 Why it's important to hold your principles and realize.
00:17:53 Why?
00:17:55 And exactly how?
00:17:58 To be critical of Israel, what the context should be because of the context is one of the forms. That is one of one of the many forms that has it has manifest in the last few decades, ineffectually, by the way.
00:18:14 The most popular way that it manifests is the way that a man by by Paul Findley or Findly.
00:18:25 Allowed it to manifest in his life after being cancelled. We're going to talk about that and why it's important to actually instead of try to take this, this Christian humanitarian view of like or or, or really any religious or non religious humanitarian.
00:18:44 You of you know. Oh, well, I care about the the atrocities the human cost in the Middle East, you know, with the Palestinians or whatever. And that's really what I have a problem with and and trying to ignore the racial aspect of things. And by that I do mean obviously the race of the people who live in Israel as well as the race.
00:19:05 Of the people who shut down anyone who criticizes Israel as well as.
00:19:09 Your own race.
00:19:11 And why it's important to not want to support Israel and in fact view Israel as an enemy on racial grounds.
00:19:22 Because race matters.
00:19:24 White people need to understand these two concepts. They need to take their own side and realize that those sides, those lines, are drawn along racial lines.
00:19:36 And that we are different people.
00:19:38 And that the reason why Jews have have sought to make every western white country into a multicultural hellscape is it makes it more difficult for that kind of racial solidarity to exist.
00:19:52 But it's funny enough, Jewish behavior is so bad even under multicultural conditions.
00:20:01 People are still.
00:20:03 Noticing this bad behavior.
00:20:08 Anyway.
00:20:09 Let's start here with a little story.
00:20:13 About.
00:20:14 Mr. Paul findley.
00:20:17 Now Mr. Paul Findley was born.
00:20:20 In 1921, these are his parents here.
00:20:24 In Jacksonville, IL.
00:20:28 He was one of twelve children, twelve children.
00:20:34 Back when people were having big families.
00:20:38 You might say that one of the reasons why people were having big families were, well, because it wasn't a a multicultural society. White people are case selected. That means they like to invest a lot of resources into their children. They don't do the shotgun approach of just spraying their DNA.
00:20:58 And into every orifice possible and just hoping for the best. They actually like to plan out a future and amazing that people like that we're still having.
00:21:09 12 children. It was not all that crazy. You look at my family tree, there's people with far more than 12 children. And not just because of the polygamists in that tree. Which there are.
00:21:20 Some.
00:21:23 That's another story.
00:21:25 But you could have 12 children and raise them with a K select case selected strategy. You can invest a lot of resources in your family and raise good honest, God fearing people. And that's precisely what what Paul finally.
00:21:46 Parents did.
00:21:48 Paul finally found himself getting really political at an early age. He was very influenced by his his father, who was something of a pastor.
00:22:00 Something of a pastor. And so he had some very strong Christian views of of the world. He really cared about equality, and we've talked about this, how this kind of plays into this kind of in some ways creates a vulnerability.
00:22:16 Reality and in in white people that are forced in a multicultural situation where instead of using these instincts as white people that you have to care for the poor and to uplift the lowest among your your people. When that gets diluted by.
00:22:36 Virtue of your people no longer being your people no longer being white people, but rather just the people who are in your community, because that's that would have meant white people really, for eons up until very recently. In fact, it would have just meant your other the the white people, the people related to you.
00:22:56 When all of a sudden the poor people around you are no longer white people, but instead they are black people because of the end of slavery, and we still have these residual.
00:23:07 Obsolete farm equipment lane about that doesn't really have a purpose anymore, and so therefore they are poor. They're incompatible with this society and the instincts of the white people kick in. They want to take care of the downtrodden, they want to take care of the the people who are poorest among them. And there is a religious Christian religious.
00:23:27 Element to that, especially if you're talking about the United States.
00:23:31 And some, oftentimes that that energy gets channeled away from their people and into other people, much like a literally the where the word cuckoo or cuck comes, cuck comes from cuckold, cuckold comes from cuckoo bird because the cuckoo bird, as we have discussed in previous streams, is real. This is nature.
00:23:51 Quite literally goes to the nest of other of other birds, kills their eggs, and puts in their own eggs into the nest and then leaves and then lets those other birds raise their children for them. All of their resources go into the these these baby birds, who are they're not related to them.
00:24:13 And it's a double whammy in terms of their future as far as their ability to procreate, because not only are they putting all of their time and energy into raising other other birds, kids offspring, their offspring is now dead.
00:24:28 And so their offspring is not being looked out, looked after at all. So it's quite literally a perfect metaphor for what's going on when it comes to white people and their proximity to non whites, the non whites have swooped in and kicked the white peoples eggs out of the nest and laid their own eggs into the nest and said take care of my babies.
00:24:50 And people will say, well, white people need to have more kids. Well, you can't if they're gonna, if they're going to keep getting their eggs kicked out of the nest by these other birds, you want white people to have more kids, you have to create an environment similar to the environment that Paul finally grew up in. And then, yes, white people will have 12 kids.
00:25:11 Simple solution to a simple problem, but a problem that is not that is not recognized by most white people, including people like Paul Findley and his father. Partially not all all the way, but partially because of universalism, and partially because of the view that we're all God's children and we're all deserving of the same.
00:25:32 Resources and that this is also how they they snuck in the whole melting pot idea.
00:25:39 Right under everyone's noses. Bring us your trash, it says on this Statue of Liberty. Bring us your trash. The whole world. Just bring us your poor, your awful, your you know the worst. People just bring them in here. We'll take care of them. And this made sense to a prosperous Christian community of white people that that really couldn't see the.
00:26:00 The end, what would happen eventually? The end result of all this?
00:26:04 A century into the future.
00:26:07 Well, we see it now, but at this time there he is. Young Paul Findley had no idea that this was what's going on. And so he was very much affected by this way of thinking. He was very much affected by this way of thinking of looking after the, the downtrodden, the poor people, the disenfranchised, even though he was a Republican.
00:26:27 Even though he was a Christian Republican, a conservative socially, his, as I said, his father was something of a pastor. He was very much into politics, very critical of of Roosevelt and and very strong constitutionalist.
00:26:42 Very admirer of of the the caricature of Abraham Lincoln.
00:26:48 That lots of Republicans, including the diverse ones like like Dinesh, Dinesh, D'souza, have you know this idea that he's this unifier and this great guy completely ignoring the fact that Lincoln himself wanted to ship all the black people back to Africa.
00:27:08 But then someone shot him in the head. In fact, one of his first forays into the political scene.
00:27:17 Was he watched a a minstrel show, a minstrel show. As many of you might know, is a show where people would put on black face and make fun of black people. Like that's that was pretty much the show, you know. You'd go and see a play and it was a bunch of white guys or often a lot of Jewish guys too. In fact the most famous minstrel.
00:27:39 Performers are Jewish and they would put on black face and be like, yes, Sir. And yes, Sir. And they would laugh because black people are kind.
00:27:46 Funny. And that's that's basically his first. His first, I guess claim to fame was writing a a letter to the editor. I think he would have been about 15 or so talking about how they needed to to be more sensitive to the the black people. And it was.
00:28:06 It just wasn't. It was cruel to have these menstrual shows.
00:28:13 His father. This is a. This is his father here was very much involved in in trying to extend his charity to blacks.
00:28:24 The blacks, of course, like I said, now that they're they no longer had plantations that provided for them. They were forced to, well, earn their own keep, and they seemed somewhat incapable of doing that. So they lived often times in squalor they lived in.
00:28:42 You know these horrible, horrible shanty towns and Findley's father, his, his sister fondly remembers, volunteered and and and became the pastor for a black church that was, that was minus a a minister for a while. And this is her recollection of that time.
Paul Findley's Sister
00:29:07 There was a black church that did not have a pastor for quite a while and he went to that church and did sermons and was their their minister for a while and I heard of this later that they had said to him that when he was through that they they felt like he was one of them.00:29:27 And I thought that was the best thing anybody could say.
Devon Stack
00:29:32 Wow, how's that for Boomer brain? That'd be, like the worst thing they could say to me. Well, you know what? Yeah. You know, when I think about you, Damon. Yeah, you're just. You're just one of the Nagas. I'd be like uh.00:29:48 I'm going to throw up.
00:29:53 Yeah, that would not be a compliment, but for the, this is where the boomers get it. This is where the boomers get it. This woman is not a boomer. She's older. She's probably born around the same time her brother was probably in the 1920s or 30s. She's greatest generation, so-called greatest generation.
00:30:13 Right.
00:30:14 And this is this was the most exciting thing ever.
00:30:18 It was the most exciting thing ever, was almost like someone getting excited when they get their 23andMe results back. And it says Ohh, you're 2% black and they're like.
00:30:28 Yes.
00:30:30 Yes, I'm a.
00:30:34 Anyway, this is to give you an idea of of kind of his upbringing.
00:30:39 He ended up meeting his wife while serving in World War 2. She was a nurse.
00:30:47 And.
00:30:50 While out serving, I think he was in the Navy. He was there a.
00:30:56 Navy or I?
00:30:57 Think it was in the Navy, but he ended up.
00:31:00 Going to Japan after we had dropped the bomb and this is something else that deeply affected him, he is going out and seeing the destruction left behind from the Americans dropping the atomic bomb and this this this told him that he never again wanted that kind of of violence.
00:31:21 To be unleashed on the world, and this is this is not a something that was limited just to him.
00:31:26 This had an effect, and I think Jared Taylor has even talked about this. This had a profound effect on a lot of people of that generation, World War 2, the you know that we lost in a lot of ways. And one of the ways in which we lost was we had white people kill each other with with.
00:31:48 Technology that the world had never seen, industrial killing and the the kinds of of of.
00:31:55 The massive amount of bloodshed that the the average person witnessed on the battlefield and in this case in in Japan, after we had dropped the bomb, it it left a mark. It left a mark on these people. These people took the fight out of them. It took the fight out of them. It made them question like.
00:32:16 Maybe.
00:32:17 You know, maybe this and This is why, when they're children, we're going to parks and and going. Yeah, man, it's all about peace.
00:32:25 Yeah, bro. That's why they they were, they were more tolerant of that. You might wonder. Like what? What's you know, you're imagining some some war hardened World War 2 vet and somehow he's giving birth to these fucking hippies and it doesn't really compute. Well, that's part of why. In fact, that's kind of why.
00:32:45 The boomers were so spoiled because these these people came back from the horrors of World War 2 and spoiled their children.
00:32:52 Rotten and you had they had. Especially in America, there was nothing really to rebuild over here. Our country stayed relatively untouched. At least you know the the the homeland did. And so we got a lot of the contracts to go and rebuild the mess all around the world. And we got a ton of money.
00:33:14 So they were flush with cash.
00:33:17 They were all suffering from.
00:33:21 I don't want to say PTSD, but you know the the effects of war.
00:33:25 And this is this is here Paul Findley or Findley I think it's I think it's Findley, I'm Findley sounds better to me but it's spelled Findley Findley. We'll say Findley Paul Findley this here, he is talking about it and I believe.
00:33:45 He seems really old in this, but he he lived to be 9. He died recently, died in 2019 and he was 98 when.
00:33:52 He died so.
00:33:54 I think even though this was, I believe around probably around 2010 or whatever this interview he's he's probably already like.
00:34:05 80 something.
Paul Findley
00:34:06 For my buddies and I bought a Jeep and drove to Nagasaki and I saw the enormous destructive power of 1 bomb.00:34:16 And I made a vow. I would do the best I could in my life to try to figure out a way that the people of the world could work together and have a rule of law instead of a rule of force.
00:34:33 Perhaps looking back as a child extreme, but I was motivated by the fact that so many people.
00:34:41 On both sides had given their lives in this conflict.
00:34:47 This war had to produce something better. It had to lead to a better world.
00:34:52 That's what I what I thought and what.
00:34:54 I.
00:34:55 Planned for my life.
Devon Stack
00:34:58 And this is also kind of what gave birth, or rather got the public support of ideas like the UN.00:35:07 You know that maybe we could, we could produce some kind of world governing body that would prevent these kinds of conflicts from happening in the future. Now, looking back, as he says, I guess he admits to some extent there was a childish idea. It was a foolish idea. But this is the kind of thinking that a lot of people had they didn't want to have to go through that again. They didn't want their kids to have to go through.
00:35:32 And they wanted to find more civil, I mean, because they're white people, they wanted to find more civilized ways of handling these kinds of conflicts. But the problem is, white people have this fatal error, this major miscalculation, that really perverts.
00:35:52 And then turns a lot of their their.
00:36:00 Their problem solving skills to mush.
00:36:04 Because they make this assumption that all people are like them.
00:36:10 Now there's a lot of people that think that way, but I think that white people are especially afflicted by this because they have this thing that is really prominent in white people more so than the other races, and that is called empathy. And part of empathy.
00:36:28 Part of being able to empathize with other people is putting yourself in their shoes and trying to relate their problems and how it would feel for you to have those problems. And they don't realize that most other peoples they don't do.
00:36:43 That.
00:36:44 They don't have to the same degree, at least the this empathy.
00:36:48 The white people have the and and even the those that perhaps.
00:36:52 It's.
00:36:53 You know, come close it. It's it's, it's flavored different, it's shaded different and it's not, it's not quite the same thing. And when you're trying to deal with a, A a shrinking world because of the invention of all of this mass transit and even communications technology.
00:37:15 It becomes increasingly more important for white people to understand, to recognize that every other people, they're not white people.
00:37:23 The the expectations, in fact, even other white people, you can't always have the same expectations of, and in fact, it used to be quite understood, especially before mass transit in mass communications, that even among different kinds of white people, there were different behaviors that would that would be present in different races of white people.
00:37:44 Now, nowadays because of the.
00:37:47 The mass transit and mass communication. Those lines are not as pronounced and just from a practical, pragmatic standpoint, they're not as important as far as I'm concerned. I think white people.
00:38:04 Certainly recognize that you know there's a difference between an American someone who's raised an America and a German as an example, there's certain differences, but that those differences are becoming less and less important. And as we as a as a race.
00:38:24 Become more and more of a minority.
00:38:26 But anyway, so he's really affected by what he saw in Nagasaki, and now he wants to have a political career where he can make sure that the rule of law is what solves the world's problems and that we don't have to worry about this sort of thing anymore. And he and he really cares.
00:38:47 About social justice.
00:38:50 He goes and he runs for Congress for the first time. I believe it was 1960.
00:38:57 And in 1960, you had a lot more youthful energy behind in the same way that Trump brought in a lot of young voters, Kennedy sort of did the same sort of a thing. And so he benefited, you know, even though he was a little more, he was a younger kind of a guy with some of these.
00:39:17 I don't want to say hippie ideas, but you know a lot less of you know, he wasn't. He certainly wasn't a fascist by any means.
00:39:25 OK.
00:39:25 Right. And so he was able to ride in on that, that momentum, and it didn't hurt that the guy that was the incumbent died suddenly, which is what prompted him to get into the race because it was, you know, the guy that won every year was no longer around. So it was anyones, you know, anyone could get elected. It was all.
00:39:45 Up for grabs.
00:39:47 Now unfortunately.
00:39:50 One of the first things he does.
00:39:52 When he gets in, he gets elected, he goes to Washington. One of the very first things he does is he tries to end federal funding for segregated parks, something that's that's how based your country used to be. Your your country used to have federal funding for segregated parks. And, you know, this was.
00:40:13 You know, good old good old Paul Findley that he, he had had enough of that. He wasn't going to have any.
00:40:18 This this bullshit. And so he sought to end all that, all that funding.
News Reel Guy
00:40:26 President Johnson addresses a joint session of Congress to push a voting rights bill aimed at ending discrimination and put an end to complicated literacy tests and other hampering tactics.Devon Stack
00:40:37 Ohh yes, hampering tactics like making sure voters can read because we all know that's racist, right? We all know how super racist it is to have any kind of standards, like being able to read before you vote for things you know, God forbid we expect people to be able to read.00:40:56 Before they can vote, but because clearly that is all an evil tactic of the the white Southerners to prevent black people from voting, even though white people had to know how to read too, the literacy tests applied to everybody.
00:41:09 It.
00:41:13 You know, that was that was bad. That was a big.
00:41:15 Evil.
00:41:16 So he also supported the the civil rights bill in 1966, against the wishes of his constituents and against the wishes of his fellow Republicans.
00:41:28 And or rather, there was obviously some Republicans on board with that, but he very easily and very politically, it would have been expedient for him to oppose that. And he chose not to because that's the I'm paying a picture of the kind of person that he was.
00:41:45 He very much cared about.
00:41:48 The other, and that's what it ends up being unfortunately like when when we talked to to white people about this obsession with the exotic and there is a little bit of that that's independent of everything else where it is just a love of the exotic and that would make sense for a people that evolved in a cold climate in a way.
00:42:08 Yeah, many, many ways closed off from the rest of the world that when you had access to exotic foods or exotic people, even it was very interesting. It was very novel and that so there's a little bit of that in white people, perhaps all.
00:42:24 People, but a lot of this, I think is motivated by this short circuiting of the the case selection this ohh this this empathy for the the poor people who in invariably in every community is going to mostly be non whites because they're not going to perform as well.
00:42:45 That's just the way that it is. And so in in because he's leaning, look, he's probably he was probably a really nice, caring, sweet guy, but he is operating with this this.
00:42:59 Toxic firmware this this virus is loaded into memory where it's going to end up destroying his own people by funneling resources from them to other groups who are not going to reciprocate. They're never going to pay it back. In fact, if anything, they're going to be like like those.
00:43:18 Hungry birds in the nest saying feed me more. Feed me more. Feed me more.
00:43:23 So he supports the civil rights bill he advocates.
00:43:30 For Martin Luther King to be buried in Arlington National Cemetery, he's very much against.
00:43:40 The Vietnam War, in fact, one of the stunts that he did to become popular. Well, I don't. I don't think he did it to become popular necessarily, but it made him more popular and it inspired the the Vietnam memorial. If you've ever been to Washington, DC.
00:44:00 You've seen the walls with all the names on it. What inspired that was actually Paul Findley and what he did was.
00:44:08 He decided to read the names of every single fallen soldier in Vietnam into the congressional record, which obviously at that time was I think it was 28,000 people. It was a lot of people. And so it took all day and it got a lot of press coverage because the press part of.
00:44:28 Their job was to wait for the congressional record so they can go and report on it, and they were all waiting around all day for this fucking thing because he was reading 28,000 names into it and that's that was one of the one of the first ways he got a name for himself.
Paul Findley
00:44:47 I never hesitated. I was convinced that this was wrong. This segregation was wrong, that whenever I had a chance to move it in the right direction, I would, even though I might fail.00:45:02 My party owed a lot to Abraham Lincoln's example, and for that reason I had the temerity to write a letter to all of the Republican members of the House urging them, in effect, to defy their leader, Gerald Ford, and vote for the bill.
Devon Stack
00:45:23 That's, of course, him talking about the civil rights bill and.00:45:29 He also was the first senator congressman.
00:45:35 To have a black page, so the first black page in the House of Representatives was courtesy of our boy Findley. Over here.
00:45:48 Made made you know, national headlines. Ohh look black people.
00:45:54 They can be in Congress, so he was always. He was always about trying to again look out for the little guy.
00:46:03 There's the black page.
00:46:06 There he is.
00:46:08 On the left there.
00:46:14 Then there was the Gulf of Tonkin.
00:46:20 Resolution.
00:46:21 This is where.
Speaker
00:46:24 Turn off.Devon Stack
00:46:25 You you've a lot of people have talked about the War Powers Act recently. In fact, Mark Levin was was very angrily screaming about the War Powers Act when Thomas Massey brought up the War Powers Act.00:46:40 The War Powers Act was in response to Vietnam. Really. You had Johnson here? President Johnson, who covered up the USS Liberty because he was owned by Jews and he was a Zionist himself and he signed.
00:46:59 A. The Gulf of Tonkin resolution authorizing troops to.
00:47:08 To go into Vietnam and then this was continued under Nixon.
00:47:13 Where Nixon was invading Cambodia and the Vietnam War just kept going on and on and on. And that's why Finland authored the War Powers Act to try to limit presidents from being able to, well, do what what Johnson Nixon did and just order troops.
00:47:35 In in these police actions or or whatever they wanted to call it, but that didn't obviously hadn't had very little effect.
00:47:43 Had very little effect because.
00:47:46 Presidents still do exactly that, and Congress doesn't doesn't say anything about it, doesn't stop them.
Paul Findley
00:47:55 I think this was instead an assertion on the part of Congress of its own constitutional role in the field of war powers, a role that we've very seriously neglected in recent years.00:48:07 I took part in a very important effort in the House Foreign Affairs Committee, on which I then serve.
00:48:17 Trying to construct a resolution that would clarify the right of the President to use acts of war abroad.
00:48:28 Because Brendon Johnson.
00:48:32 Dealt with the use of war powers and what some people felt was a murky area of law. We decided to to enact a war powers resolution which spelled out the circumstances.
00:48:47 Is in which the President has the right to use military force and the circumstances in which he does. I wasn't the chief author Jacob Javits of New York as senator, and I probably could share that claim.
00:49:07 But I did contribute language to the act, and I urged this passage. And when President Nixon thought it was an intrusion on the executive power vetoed the Act, I helped to override his veto and make it long.
Devon Stack
00:49:28 He made it law, but like I said, doesn't really seem to to matter these days.00:49:35 He was also very instrumental again and this this this traction to the exotic, this empathy for those less fortunate motivating us this this need that you see in a lot of of Americans.
00:49:54 Where they want to go to foreign lands and and and give them charity when there's plenty of poor people right here at home.
00:50:03 Nixon is often credited with, you know, opening up China, opening up Communist China. It's such a great thing. Yeah. It's such a great thing now that China makes all of our shit and is now looking to be a superpower. This is another problem. When you don't think about your race, when you don't prioritize your people. When you think about things internationally.
00:50:23 When you think about things.
00:50:24 Things race blind when you think of everyone as just, we're all the same. Instead of competing groups, then you create these situations where you basically allowed China to become a superpower and a competitor in relatively short order, something that if it left to their own devices.
00:50:46 Would have taken centuries.
00:50:48 Perhaps China was very much a third world country and had no capabilities, technological or otherwise, to compete with the West. And it wasn't until the the work of well, I mean Findley asking Nixon to to open up to China.
00:51:09 And in fact, Findley invited Chinese dignitaries to his small town.
00:51:14 And hosted them against the wishes of his constituents. Once again, who began calling him a communist for inviting these Communist people into the town. And look, I think he meant well. He seems like a super nice guy, like as much as his. His his his ignorance.
00:51:34 Is is uh.
00:51:37 Really without without.
00:51:39 It it, it's boundless. And and that kind of ignorance can be a very dangerous thing when it's in a position of power. His his intentions were good, his intentions were good, and he was the first person to lobby Nixon to create this relationship with China.
00:52:01 And look, thanks I guess. Thanks. Thanks for not thinking about your race now. Everything's made in China and they live in basically a futuristic civilization compared to America.
Stephen Jones
00:52:16 Mr. Findley was the first Republican member of the House of Representatives to call for the establishment of diplomatic relations with the People's Republic of China. He did that in 1967.00:52:30 He wrote Mr. Nixon's memo after he'd been elected president on the United States should change his policies in China. And little did we know that that was coming.
Devon Stack
00:52:41 So by 1979.00:52:44 Relations are normalized and the rest is history. Now everything around you look around you.
00:52:50 What isn't made in China? Just just do me a favor, including that whatever you're listening to my voice with. It was I promise you that was made in China.
00:53:00 And yeah, look around you. Everything around you most likely made in China.
00:53:07 You want to know why we are not the country we used to be? That's a big fucking part of it, and it's all tied to the same. The same issue of not putting your race first, not advocating for yourself and not funneling your resources.
00:53:26 To other people's children.
00:53:29 Which is precisely what people like Findley and many of his generation, he's he's by no means an anomaly here. It's precisely what they did.
00:53:40 And they're proud of.
00:53:41 It they think it's something that they did.
00:53:43 That was great.
00:53:45 Uh, he also worked on the House Bill 5383, which was a I guess, a revamp of the age discrimination in Employee act and amendments with with card.
00:54:00 Order in order to.
00:54:04 Basically, it was supposed to. Well, the intention was Findley's intention was that it would stop discrimination among old people, or like, in terms of hiring practices within the government.
Jimmy Carter
00:54:19 And I'm very proud now to sign into law.Devon Stack
00:54:22 I want you to. I want you to listen to the the verbiage, though. I want you to listen to the language that they use, not just Carter, but he himself. That's after Carter signs this. He's going to talk to Findley real quick. And listen carefully to the the language that would now be considered woke.00:54:39 Because again, this guy, even though he's a a Christian conservative, that's what this stuff can mutate into. And you know, with all the all the good, all the good intentions that he had. But listen carefully how he even how he even talks about this.
Jimmy Carter
00:54:54 And I'm very proud now to sign into law.00:54:58 House Bill 5383, which provides fairness and equity in protecting our older citizens from discrimination and employment.
Paul Findley
00:55:20 Mr. President.00:55:22 Paul Findley, of Illinois. In 1974, I introduced the first bill to outlaw mandatory retirement. There were then just three Co sponsors. It's become a very popular idea. I'm glad to say I consider your signature on this legislation to be the most notable act to advance social justice in at least 10 years.
Jimmy Carter
00:55:44 Thank you very much.Devon Stack
00:55:46 Wow.00:55:48 How about that social justice equity?
00:55:53 I mean, it's all the same words. And again, this is a Republican and you know, he's looking at through he's a he's very religious.
00:56:04 And he's looking at this as I'm doing, I'm doing what's right for old people. Unfortunately, what it did is it ended the the compulsory retirement ages in the federal government.
00:56:17 Before you used to you you were forced to retire from the federal government like one of these bureaucrats at age 65 sounds pretty reasonable, right? Well, they made it to where it it was just open-ended and this created some unintended consequences, like so many of these other things do.
00:56:38 And what that did was it it basically?
00:56:42 Slowed workforce turnover, you know, like the boomers that refuse to die, the boomers that refuse to die, and they keep collecting their massive paychecks and make it impossible for the the the next generation to get the high paying jobs that will help them raise a family. Well, when people were getting forced to retire at 65.
00:57:05 You had a a healthy turnover.
00:57:07 And and look and it's it hurt the the, the Boomers too or other other generations that were aging out because it also changed a.
00:57:17 It shifted the social norm from being a, you know, retiring at 65 is like a normal thing. And so you should prepare for retirement. And then you retire and then, you know, you're you're you don't have to work till you're a million years old.
00:57:34 It shifted that to a you work forever environment.
00:57:40 It signaled a a shift to work longer, retire later first.
00:57:46 And then all of a sudden, the the people responsible for pensions.
00:57:52 And retirement plans.
00:57:54 That started to go away. Companies used to because it was normal to retire at 65.
00:58:00 Had to keep that in mind when hiring people that hey, when they're 65, they're going to expect a pension or a retirement plan of some sort. And so I'm going to have to provide that well. Now, once you've lifted this norm, they're just, you know, you're just another cog in the machine you're supposed to work until you drop dead.
00:58:20 The the age for Social Security also kept creeping up, creeping up.
00:58:29 Lots of lots of people today in their 70s and 80s are still working.
00:58:33 And not because they want to.
00:58:36 Healthcare begins to get more and more expensive and and so a lot of it doesn't really do what was intended right to the the intention was well, this will prevent old people that need a job from being discriminated against. No, the the employers still don't want to hire old people because old people aren't going to be as good at the.
00:58:58 Job and they're going to cost more in terms of of healthcare. And so they still get discriminated against. It's just that now they also don't have this social norm of of a retirement age and they don't have retirement plans and the healthcare just generally is unaffordable.
00:59:19 Unless you work for one of these machines.
00:59:21 And the, you know, the cultural expectation has has completely shifted to forever work.
00:59:28 And so you have that going on, but then you also have the problem with the boomers for refusing to die. You have these institutional bottlenecks.
00:59:39 Where they there's never any turnover, you never get any young blood. That's why we have all these geriatric presidents like Biden, like Trump and all these geriatric senators like Mitch McConnell and everybody else that's been there for fucking ever.
00:59:56 And and or in the private sector. Even you know lawyers in academia, you have all these Deans of schools and professors who are just there for fucking ever.
01:00:09 And they clog up the the institutional pipelines and make it impossible for younger people to take their places and to become the the kinds of people that can afford to have a family and to actually, quite frankly, be effective at the job.
01:00:30 And so there's there's way fewer leadership opportunities for for the next generation. You also have slower innovation now because these old people are just never quitting. And the the companies can't just fire you for being old now. And so you're just there for fucking ever. And they can only afford to have so many people.
01:00:51 Working there and this of course obviously is more of a reality in in the federal government. So all your bureaucrats are old as hell.
01:01:02 You have also have this.
01:01:05 You basically have like a.
01:01:08 The Who? You know, judges, same thing. All these judges, the the Supreme Court justices especially, I mean they stay there literally until they die.
01:01:19 And now retirement is seen as a luxury and not a norm.
01:01:26 Now it's it's it's a luxury if you can be retired.
01:01:31 And and if you do retire, it's probably not until you in your 70s.
01:01:38 So this is the problem with people like this with do gooders like this. Well they they want to meddle and and try to, you know, heal the world. I mean, they're basically spiritual Jews.
01:01:51 And they create all these problems.
01:01:54 While trying to fix other problems.
01:01:57 So this is the. This is the kind of person that we're dealing with when we deal with Paul Findley.
Paul Findley
01:02:05 Many farmers in America were illiterate in their early years, but the educational system, the land grant colleges carried out changed that totally and quickly, and with great beneficial effect. And I felt the same could happen if we got the.01:02:25 The universities in our country to take on the job world.
01:02:29 What? Well, Hubert Humphrey bought my idea in the Senate. The vote was the most affirmative vote that foreign aid ever had in the history of the US Congress.
Devon Stack
01:02:47 Oh, Hooray. So now we are training the world's farmers. We're educating the world's farmers.01:02:53 Once again, that you're you're giving away your technological edge.
01:02:58 No other countries doing this, by the way, how often is it that other countries come to America to share their their their trade secrets with us?
01:03:09 It doesn't happen. It doesn't happen. How often do you have other countries funding programs in America like, oh, you know what, America? We notice. You sure have a lot of black people stabbing everyone. You know, we're going to give you millions, hundreds of millions of dollars every year to deal with this.
01:03:29 Problem because, well, God, we just here in China, we don't like watching the TV and seeing you guys have to deal with this. That doesn't happen.
01:03:38 That doesn't happen. You don't have Putin call up the White House and say, hey, you know what, I was just watching TV and I saw all these homeless people in San Francisco or on Skid Row. And I thought to myself, you know, I it's just, that's a terrible thing. It's a terrible thing to see.
01:03:58 And we're going to send you millions of dollars so that you can help tackle that problem. No one does that. It's always one way. It's just more and more these white people, these white people, who are feeding the parasites.
01:04:12 They're happily feeding the parasites.
01:04:17 And Paul Findley?
01:04:19 Is one of these people.
Paul Findley
01:04:25 I was among those who were outspoken in support of Israel, although I didn't make any study of it at that point. That would be hard put to to identify the major countries in the Middle East at that time. I I just had no knowledge about it my.Devon Stack
01:04:47 And how about that?01:04:50 That's a very common thing, too. We're going to talk more about that in a future stream.
01:04:55 The Zionists in America, the the Christian Zionists in America that were promoting Zionism and helping the Jews funnel money to the Jewish terrorists in Israel, had no idea about any of the the surrounding areas, the surrounding countries. They couldn't find, you know, Syria or Iraq or Saudi Arabia.
01:05:15 On a map they they had no idea it was 100.
01:05:19 A religiously driven need to support Israel and support the Jews in Israel, and he was another one of these people that supported Israel because he was taught that that's what you do. And he was very gung ho about it. And that was.
01:05:38 Pretty much as we saw in look at that was the view in 1948, that last stream we talked about how Kermit Roosevelt Junior.
01:05:48 Was talking to the.
01:05:49 The the the the heads of the DoD over at the War College in in Washington, DC, telling them, giving them like a briefing on the situation. And they discussed after the briefing how the Zionists had very.
01:06:05 A lot of influence in in in the the.
01:06:11 Highest levels of our government, and so this is a lot of it was out of ignorance. In fact they, you know, he mentions that in that in that discussion where he says that you had.
01:06:24 Heads of of Jewish terrorist groups coming to America and being welcomed by Heads of State who had no idea that he was eviscerating babies, just like a few weeks prior in Palestine.
01:06:39 And had no idea of the violence that was going on, had no idea of the massacres the Jews were were committing the atrocities they were committing. They were just religiously bound and bound by their affiliations with AIPAC, which was going to come into the picture here in a moment.
01:07:00 To support Israel blindly.
01:07:02 And he was another one of these guys. And the only thing that changes is he's going to talk about this in a second, is just by chance one of his constituents, his son or her son ended up getting arrested. He was, he was just.
01:07:17 Well, another one of these Christians, he was one of these Christians going abroad and.
01:07:22 Spreading our our, our, our.
01:07:26 Technology really to foreign people. He was teaching in Yemen and they arrested him because they suspected him of being a spy. He was. I mean, he most almost 100% wasn't a spy. Still around. In fact, he gave an interview for one of the videos that I saw. And so he went out to.
01:07:47 He went out to the Middle East to go get this guy out of custody because he was just one of these. Just, you know, one of these dude, he was a he was a fellow do gooder trying to do good in Yemen.
01:07:58 And up until that moment, he had no idea he supported Israel, but really didn't know why.
Paul Findley
01:08:05 I was among those who were outspoken in support of Israel, although I didn't make any study of it at that point. That would be hard put to to identify the major countries in the Middle East at that time. I just had no knowledge about it my.01:08:25 Main interest was the American European Alliance area.
01:08:31 But in 1973, I received a letter from a woman in my home county, and she lamented the fact that her son, who had been teaching in Kuwait, had been arrested in South Yemen and charged with.
01:08:52 Was spying with espionage? Well, we had no diplomatic mission in South.
01:09:00 We hadn't had any since 1967. If I were to try to get him out, as I finally concluded I had, I would go by myself. My family approved but reluctantly, and to my surprise they really rolled out the carpet.
01:09:20 Well, they couldn't have been nicer to me.
01:09:23 And the agenda the people in South Yemen had worked up for me dealt with the Middle East by us favoring Israel and against the legitimate interests of the Arab states. It was the first time I had grass bias that exists, and the impact that bias had had.
01:09:45 On the attitude and the actions of of people of Arab blood.
01:09:51 And I got for the first time the Arab side of the equation. I saw Arabs close up as human beings.
01:10:00 And finally had an appointment the night before my scheduled returned states with the President, Rubia Ali.
Devon Stack
01:10:12 And that therein lies the problem. You see, the way he became a critic of Israel, the origin story, where he becomes a critic.01:10:21 Of Israel is not because hey, our support of Israel is actually bad for my people. It's bad for white people. It's yet again, it's bad for these other disenfranchised people. It's it's bad for these people. I didn't even know existed a week ago. But now all of a sudden they're my new pets. They're my new little fluffy pet negroes.
01:10:42 I have to go and help them out because they it's oppressor, oppressed. That's it's all. It's literally communism.
01:10:49 And unfortunately, there's a lot of people that get trapped in that. And that's precisely the the trap you'll fall into if you start to look at this criticism of Israel today in terms other than racial your people first terms, the second you start looking at all the poor Palestinians. Oh, and look, I've I've said myself.
01:11:09 On a humanitarian level, sure, I get it. They're brutal. It's it sucks. We're gonna be talking about the Nakba in the future stream. It's it's fucking brutal.
01:11:17 No, and and by the way, not because I want to say look at the poor Palestinians, because I want you to understand the people we're dealing with in Israel and what they're capable of and what they have done and what they're capable of covering up. It's not just the USS Liberty. That's like a that's not even like a blip on the fucking radar when it comes to all the things lighting up when.
01:11:37 When it comes to that topic now.
01:11:41 This is the the trap that you will fall into. Inevitably. This is the the the reframing that needs to take place. We need to stop looking at ohh, oppressor. Oppressed. Ohh oppressor. Oppressed. Because guess what? That will always be turned around on you because as many people discovered, especially after October 7th that a lot of right wing.
01:12:01 People decided to team up with Muslims or whatever because we can, you know, we we can use multiculturalism to defeat multiculturalism. That stupid idea that we could somehow, you know, let's all whites and blacks and Browns and everyone join hands and together will defeat the Jews.
01:12:18 You will be the Jew next.
01:12:22 You will be the Jew next.
01:12:25 Even if you were able to do that, which no one's managed to do that in the past, you will be the Jew next because it's within the frame of oppress or oppressed.
01:12:35 It's literally communist.
01:12:37 And a lot of Christians are susceptible to that for all the reasons we've already discussed, and not just Christians. I think white people generally are susceptible.
01:12:44 That because of all the things we just discussed where they have this white people have this empathy for people and it ends up short circuiting and and getting directed in the wrong directions like this guy. Like oh look, there's a whole new group of people that up until yesterday I didn't even know exist, but now I can feel bad for them and I can be their savior. I can be their hero.
01:13:05 And look, I I can tell you 100% that that exists in every white person that exists in me.
01:13:12 On some level, it exists in me little little Side Story just because I I noticed this in myself and I'm like this is what this is what we're dealing with. It's not a bad attribute to have again, especially if you're dealing with your own people. But when you're in a multicultural society, you end up directing your resources away from your people and towards other people. Now, me personally, the thing that happened to me.
01:13:33 Is and it's not like a big deal. This is like something like this happens to all of us all the time.
01:13:38 And we probably don't even think about it.
01:13:41 There's this Mexican lady.
01:13:44 Basically retarded.
01:13:46 I mean by white standards, retarded by Mexican standards.
01:13:51 Maybe, maybe still kind of retarded. She's not very bright. She lives in poverty. She works at a gas station and I go to sometimes.
01:14:00 And she has seen me wearing my bee equipment stuff before.
01:14:06 And.
01:14:07 One day, she's like, hey, you know, do you know about bees? Right. I'm like, yeah, I guess, yeah.
01:14:13 She's like, there's there's bees in my in my room, in my bedroom. And I was like, oh, well, how are they getting in?
01:14:21 And she's again. She's basically retarded, and there's only one way bees can. If if you don't know, bees don't fly into houses, OK?
01:14:31 Unless they something really goes super wrong, like maybe on accident, they they fly in when you're walking in and then they can't get out. But they don't like. In fact, if I if I get swarmed by killer bees while I'm working with them and I simply walk into a building that doesn't even have a door on it. But it's like, you know, it's it's like a cave.
01:14:51 Essentially, is what it would if you're AB. That's how you perceive it. It's dark in there. It's colder in there. They don't want to.
01:14:57 Go in so they don't want to go inside buildings. The only way that there's bees in your room is if there's there's probably a beehive in her ceiling or a beehive in her wall, and they are wriggling out of some hole. That's in fact, when I got this place, the way I got into bees is there was a beehive in the ceiling.
01:15:17 And I would notice when I would, because I I was moving stuff. It took like a few months for me to get all the way, moved out here, and I would come in. There'd be bees in the house. I'd be like where they where they coming from. And that's exactly what they were coming out of like a light fixture or, you know, whatever, because they were just getting.
01:15:32 Or something.
01:15:34 And so I'm like, well, you know, they gotta be coming into your room. I try to explain this to her.
01:15:39 It's obvious to me she doesn't get it right. She doesn't get it. And I'm like, well.
01:15:46 You know, can you describe, like, your room and it becomes obvious that she lives in a hovel like I was like, well, maybe they're coming in the window as an example. Are they coming in the window, which is like, I don't have a window is, like, how do you not have a window? It's.
01:15:59 Like, well, the window broke, so my.
01:16:00 Dad boarded it up and I was like, OK, I'll start.
01:16:04 Out starting to paint a picture.
01:16:07 Your living conditions are starting to be.
01:16:08 OK. And I'm like, alright, uh.
01:16:12 Well, do you notice them coming out of a hole? No, they're just they. I come home and there's like 5 bees in my room and I.
01:16:17 Get stung all the time and I was like.
01:16:20 OK. And and I had this desire.
01:16:23 To help her, you know, like to go. And I had to stop myself from saying, hey, you know what? Just.
01:16:31 I'll. I'll come over and check out. You know, I'll bring my my, my, my infrared camera, my heat. I have a little heat camera that you because that's another way you can find beehives in a wall if you can't. If it's not, I think it would be obvious. So I just went there and looked. But if for some reason, you know, I I can point out a wall and you see a hot spot. That's where the hive.
01:16:53 Is.
01:16:53 Right. And so I'm like, well, you know, I'm trying to give her advice, but I'm. I'm I'm. I'm having to, like, restrain myself from saying how about I just go over there and and figure it out for you because this is. This is like painful. It's painful to hear you like not be able to figure out a problem that should not be difficult.
01:17:14 We have to fix and I know that if I went there within like 10 minutes, I would, I would know exactly what the problem was. I could bring some, you know, some like silicon and just, you know, seal up whatever hole they were coming in, if you know, if nothing else.
01:17:30 And I had this desire to just, like, fix it, you know, just like, like you're never gonna fix. Like, I can try to explain this to you, but I if I just go there, I can just fix it. It's like, it's like a kid. It's like you want to take care of a kid. And I feel like that's how white people view other other races sometimes, especially when you go and see their primitive.
01:17:51 Environment. It's like it's the same like or why you want to take care of a lost puppy or it's it's that same whatever that is. It's in white people. It's that same instinct where you're like ohh I I need to take care of this this helpless animal.
01:18:06 And I had this, you know, look, if I didn't have a bunch of other shit going on, and if I didn't think that it was going to maybe unfold into having to do a free bee removal at the end of the day, which it probably would, I might have just been like, alright, fuck it. I'll go to your house and seal up some hole or whatever in your wall and and just be done with it. And I would have done my good deed for the day or whatever, right?
01:18:27 But I.
01:18:28 I was like, no, don't, don't. Don't do it. Don't do it. Don't do it. You don't have fucking time for this shit. But that's that's what I'm saying. It's it's these, these, these instincts that we have to want to just go around giving our time and our labor and and and our our wealth to people less fortunate.
01:18:49 Instead of justice letting.
01:18:51 Letting things be.
01:18:53 Letting you know. Let letting putting your own resources into your own family. That's a really difficult thing for white people do. And by the way.
01:19:03 That, that, that example I just gave you.
01:19:07 One of the reasons why Jews are succeeding the way that they are, that never would have crossed the Jews, mind it never in a million years would have it would have sounded that would have been a great he would have gone to see a shrink if he if he had an idea to go for free, help some poor lady seal up a, you know, her the bees in her room.
01:19:28 Or whatever he would, he would go talk to his rabbi and say, rabbi, what the fuck's wrong with me?
01:19:34 For even having that thought.
01:19:37 And that is that is one of the things that that keeps them a robust, effective enemy, quite frankly competitor.
01:19:45 Is by by not even having that like, not even a little bit. And I don't think we should get rid of it. I think we need to channel it towards our own people. I think we need to, in fact, if anything, if I if I was in charge of some kind of eugenics.
01:20:00 Program. It would be that would be my. My top priority is to make sure white people that you know that we were if we were had a breeding program we were breeding for in Group preference I wouldn't want to breed out empathy. I'd want to breed in in Group preference where you would. And in fact if it had been an old white lady and call me a racist for saying it's just the truth.
01:20:20 I've done this kind of thing for old white ladies, so I know that this is true. If it had been an old white lady, I I would have. I I would have. I would have done it. I would have gone and done it.
01:20:31 And so that's, that's what we need. That's the that's how we need to refocus and reframe this empathy, this this.
01:20:42 This addiction to service.
01:20:45 That white people have.
01:20:47 Otherwise it turns into this. What Mr. Findley suffers from.
01:20:53 Where? Now look, sometimes good things happen as a result of that. Well, we're going to, we're going to see how.
01:20:58 This story unfolds.
01:21:00 His his skepticism of Israel. It isn't like a ohh. I finally figured out that Jews are are manipulating Americans. In fact, the story unfolds backwards.
01:21:16 You know, he starts out.
01:21:18 Instead of empathizing with the the, the downtrodden Palestinians, and only then does he begin to investigate. You know, the problems with that he has he never. Nothing that was happening to his people at home. Let him down that path.
01:21:35 And that is the problem.
01:21:36 That is the.
01:21:38 And so that's why we need to be explicit with our when we, when it comes to criticisms of Israel, when it comes to criticisms of Jews when it comes to warning people about doing business with Jews or or any kind of interactions, allowing Jews in your countries, especially in positions of power, why that needs to be something that you need to.
01:21:59 We think as a people and that more than we think that there needs to be some action taken to take to separate Jews from positions of power.
01:22:08 You need to be thinking in in racial terms or you'll never get to that conclusion. You'll never be able to get to that point.
01:22:18 And so to go back to the original question that we were talking about tonight about why a lot of these influencers are magically allowed to just say certain things about Israel. This is part of why it's it's basically political judo. It's taking the energy, taking the judo is.
01:22:37 Is the the art of taking your your opponents energy and force and flipping it around against them.
01:22:45 And this is precisely what they are attempting to do. They're trying to get these the the energy of the great noticing the energy of all of this, this rising anti-Semitism and then flip it into a direction that's not going to lead down any dangerous paths and certainly isn't going to lead to the framing that I'm I've just discussed.
01:23:06 So it he by accident discovers that that Israel, the whole story about Israel, is not being told that the story that.
01:23:17 Kermit Roosevelt junior was discussing discussing with the the Generals and that private lecture in 1948 at the War College that.
01:23:30 He's discovering that that reality that hasn't been told the American public, he's just now encountering it for the first time.
01:23:38 And it was all by accident. It's all because he was getting this guy, Ed Franklin, who was just a, like I said, he was just some Christian teacher guy that got arrested in Yemen for being suspicious.
01:23:51 But then he discovers that wow.
01:23:54 There's a there's a definite problem.
01:23:57 There's a definite problem with these the way that the Palestinians are being treated and I'm hearing all these stories of atrocities I'm hearing all these stories of the oppression.
01:24:09 And I need to to rethink our support.
01:24:13 Of Israel.
01:24:16 Here's another guy.
01:24:18 This was a a childhood friend who has a similar story. His names? Well, it's on the screen. It's Robert Bradley. He's an attorney, and he actually went to a similar meeting with an intelligence guy similar to that meeting that we went over last stream.
01:24:38 With Kermit Roosevelt junior.
01:24:41 And that's what.
01:24:43 Clued him into the whole situation.
Robert Bradley
01:24:50 I had. I had come away from the war with feeling that that the the Jewish people had just absolutely what was horrifying as to what had happened to them and when in in the 1940s there the homeland.01:25:07 Was reestablished there. There was such a a great sense of of joy. I I guess I would say that that it had come to pass that, that, that terrible thing.
01:25:23 Amended about 1952 or thereabouts, I belong to a a literary club called the Literary Union, and one of the speakers was a man with the name of George and Ziegler, and he had been with the CIA during the war and stationed in the Middle East.
01:25:43 And he, in his paper, talked to the literary union. Probably for.
01:25:50 An hour one night, describing the horror as to what was going on there in the way of the displacement of the the native people, the Palestinians was horrifying. I had no idea. I really didn't. I don't think anyone there did.
01:26:10 And he talked about how it was not.
01:26:13 Ever been discussed in the press how our coverage was just absolutely almost nonexistent?
01:26:22 Of the problem.
01:26:24 And it it was then when Paul got into the Congress and he started to voice some of these concerns. But it was most interesting to to watch his.
01:26:35 His courage because.
01:26:38 And what he said in in trying to speak to things that were not being said, he sacrificed his career. He could have been a senator, he could have been the owner.
01:26:52 But he he chose to stand up and and say what he thought to be right, and he's still doing the same thing. He's.
01:26:59 A remarkable man.
Devon Stack
01:27:02 And I and look and I I I think he probably is like a super nice guy. He seems like a super nice.01:27:06 Guy.
01:27:08 But the problem is.
01:27:10 Again, it's it's it's all through the frame of oppressed or oppressed, and he's always looking for people who are oppressed so he can liberate them.
01:27:21 But be that as it may, he starts talking with Arafat of the PLO.
01:27:28 In the 1970s and this, of course, starts to piss off a lot of Jewish groups, a lot of Jewish groups who are trying to expand Israel as they've been doing since 1948.
01:27:41 They didn't want people like Arafat to be described as anything but, but terrorist maniacs in the press.
01:27:51 In fact, the Likud party had funded initially the PLO to start to create an opposition, and then Arafat was too reasonable. In fact, some of the the PLO members left because Arafat was was too reasonable.
01:28:11 And was willing to accept the reality of Israel, at least privately, and to try to work out some kind of peace deal.
01:28:20 But that's that. That was not the that was not the the end goal of Israel. Israel wanted all the Palestinians to be wiped out, and so they could take it over all the land. And so when you had the Camp David agreement with.
01:28:40 Begging and and Sadat.
01:28:42 And Jimmy Carter in 1978.
01:28:46 Findley.
01:28:48 Decided to to speak out at the at the meeting because Arafat was was notably missing from the from the talks and to be kind of his quasi spokesperson and and made a fuss. And that's really what.
01:29:05 What put them on the on AIPAC's hit list?
Reporter
01:29:09 Congressman Paul Findley of Illinois told us about his talk with Arafat.Paul Findley
01:29:13 He proposed that a peacekeeping force made-up of the Big 5 of the UN Security Council be placed in the new Palestinian State on the West Bank and the Gaza trip.Reporter
01:29:26 Did you get the impression that he's?01:29:27 Ready.
01:29:28 To recognize the existence of the State of Israel, Sir, not formally, but.
Paul Findley
01:29:33 He drew a distinction between diplomatic recognition and peaceful relations and quite clearly he contemplated peaceful relations, he said. We have to deal with reality. Israel exists.01:29:46 And did he give you any message to take back to Washington while he did he he dictated very carefully a message to President Carter, which I haven't had a chance to deliver as yet, but it's a conciliatory message. And according to Findley, our Rafat has some hidden support in the US Congress. I've long felt that there needs to be an independent Palestinian state.
01:30:09 And my impression is that the PLO is the main voice of the Palestinian movement as of today.
Reporter
01:30:17 Do many of your colleagues in the Congress agree with that point?01:30:20 Of view, Sir, while a number of.
Paul Findley
01:30:21 Them agreed. That won't say so publicly.Devon Stack
01:30:26 And that is when he's first beginning to notice.01:30:30 He's first beginning to notice because he's going after the the oppressor of the oppressed.
01:30:37 That he's starting to notice that in private, a lot of these other senators were, uh as congressman. He's not a senator, but a lot of congressmen and and senators are privately, they sympathize with the Palestinians. But there's no way in fucking hell they're going to talk about it in public.
Paul Findley
01:31:00 When election time came in 1980.01:31:05 My opponent placed ads in every Jewish newspaper describing me as the worst anti Semite who ever served in Congress.
01:31:16 Left a indelible mark on my name nicely.
Dr. Chet Bone
01:31:21 Money came from outside of our area.01:31:24 That came in such large amounts that it was hard to.
01:31:32 Compete with that kind of money with the amounts that Paul would would raise each year.
Diane (Findley) McLaughlin
01:31:39 The last congressional campaign was kind of a rough one, and we were on the trail and CBS.01:31:48 Is Phil Jones, the reporter? He came and did an interview with my dad. It was called the $1,000,000 congressman because it had to that date been the most money that had been spent on a congressional campaign. First thing that Phil Jones did was put the microphone in my dad's face and say, Paul Findley, how long have you been an anti Semite?
01:32:10 And it it was just such a a splash of water in the face. I was. I was surprised that, you know, growing up sounded like that.
Reporter
01:32:20 He will spend at least $600,000, about 80% of it from outside the district, and well over half of this money is from Friends of Israel across the nation.01:32:21 2525 thousand.
Paul Findley
01:32:30 I've been a problem to the Pro begin lobby. They want to dispose of me not only to Get Me Out of the way, but also as an example to others.Reporter
01:32:40 Paul Findley is defeated in this particular race, so it will be a testament to the the awesome.01:32:46 Length.
01:32:47 Of the the Pro Israeli lobby in this country.
John Mearsheimer
01:32:50 Paul Findley would have remained in Congress, but I don't think it was the lobby alone that defeated him. Any politician is going to have opponents, but what the lobby does it is that it comes in to races, political races where.01:33:10 Someone who's been identified as anti Israel is up for reelection or is trying to get elected for the first time.
01:33:17 And they put their thumb on the scale and in some cases in a big way, and they can provide enough support for the opposing candidate to make sure that someone like Paul Findley is defeated and the end result is that most legislators in Washington come to the conclusion that it's just not worth taking the law.
01:33:39 Beyond. So this is the reason you see that so many people on Capitol Hill will do basically whatever AIPAC asked them to do.
Devon Stack
01:33:51 They'll do whatever AIPAC asked them to do.01:33:56 And AIPAC and what we'll get to a clip here in.
01:33:59 A minute.
01:34:00 Was specifically. You know it's funny because Ted Cruz and that interview that everyone saw last week with Tucker Carlson.
01:34:09 Ted Cruz, for some reason, couldn't tell you what AIPAC even did or what it lobbied for or what it was he just knew. They gave him money for some reason.
01:34:19 And isn't that weird that Ted Cruz, a A senator from Texas, launched his career by saying he did it with the purpose, the the, the explicit purpose?
01:34:30 Of defending Israel.
01:34:35 Isn't it weird that your, your current deputy director of the FBI, the guy who still hasn't given you the Epstein tapes that he says he magically has? Now that shows that he killed himself? Dan Bongino, in an interview said that the thing that keeps him up at night is the safety and security of Israel.
01:34:56 Or that cash, Patel said, made similar comments in a in an interview around the same time prior to becoming the director of the FBI.
01:35:05 Or that our or our State Department spokesperson in the interview just last or maybe a couple days ago said that ohh America is the greatest country in the world next to Israel.
01:35:21 Quickly correcting herself.
01:35:28 You know all these people that are that are shocked by Trump shouldn't be shocked his entire campaign. You could have if you didn't know better. You would have thought that he was running for the President of Israel.
01:35:41 He mentioned Israel in every speech several times.
01:35:47 Said that he was going to be the best president for Israel, in fact, he said if he didn't get elected, there wouldn't be in Israel.
01:35:59 Janie Vance.
01:36:01 Said that they should bomb Iran with Israel and during before they were elected.
01:36:10 In fact, I think he said that in the uh, the debate, the vice presidential debate.
01:36:16 Or something similar.
01:36:22 It's weird. This little tiny country on the other side of the planet.
01:36:26 And yet every American politician.
01:36:30 Seems to love it or be afraid of it, or both.
01:36:38 And this goes all the way back. This goes back decades. This isn't 9, this is 1979 we're talking about.
01:36:45 And they had already had so much control in 1979 that everyone was afraid.
01:36:50 You're talking about almost 50 years ago.
01:36:55 50 years.
01:36:57 And it already it already taken root and blossomed in 1948.
01:37:01 That meeting with.
01:37:04 With Kermit Roosevelt Junior, I mean, they they made it. They made it very clear that.
01:37:10 The the Zionists had control of the the the politicians and controlled the media at that time already in 1948.
01:37:20 You live in Zionist like the ZOG meme is not a meme. That's a reality. You live in a Zionist occupied country.
01:37:30 You are ruled by a foreign people.
01:37:35 America is not the most powerful country in the world. Israel is.
01:37:51 And I believe this is the Israeli historian.
01:37:55 Who will answer that question that Ted Cruz couldn't answer?
01:37:59 Now what? Why? Why does AIPAC exist again?
Ilan Pappe
01:38:03 I remember the 1950s when under President Eisenhower.01:38:09 American policymakers had strong doubts about the wisdom of supporting Israel at the expense of the Palestinians, and that's one of the reasons that Abba Eban, who was the United Nation's Ambassador for Israel, created AIPAC exactly because Eisenhower was going in a way that the Israelis didn't lie.
Devon Stack
01:38:30 That's why they created AIPAC.01:38:33 For those who couldn't understand his accent.
01:38:37 Because in the 1950s.
01:38:40 Right after.
01:38:43 The creation of Israel.
01:38:46 Well, they already had enough influence to get Americans to recognize Israel officially.
01:38:53 Against the wishes of the yuan and every basically every other country in the world.
01:38:59 That still wasn't enough. It still worried them that the Americans were not.
01:39:04 Doing everything Israel wanted so they that's why they created AIPAC.
01:39:09 So Ted Cruz, if you're watching the didn't know why AIPAC exists, that's why it exists.
01:39:18 You don't know who AIPAC lobbies for. That's who they lobby for.
01:39:28 You would think that someone whose sole purpose.
01:39:31 So directly aligns with AIPAC and who receives millions of dollars from AIPAC would know that.
01:39:40 Because you do know that Ted Cruz.
01:39:45 But you're not white either. You're fucking Cuban.
01:39:48 And you're yet another reason. The reason why they don't mind if they don't give a damn about the Browning of America.
01:39:56 Because they can buy you fucks just as easy.
01:39:59 If not easier.
Pete McCloskey
01:40:03 George HW Bush probably launched the presidency in 1992 for reelection because he was working so hard to help the Palestinians endure the wrath of the Israeli community. In September, at the height of his popularity, you know, he just won this marvelous International award to depose.01:40:23 To to get the Iraqis out of Kuwait.
01:40:27 But he made the mistake of saying that those people and he was referring to the AIPAC lobby then meeting in September in Washington, DC, those people are hurting the cause of peace and of course, from then on that was, I think either 9091 or 90. From then on, the Jewish committee worked assiduously defeat him and elect.
01:40:49 Who was at Bill Clinton? Paul and I were small stuff Chuck Percy and had little Stevenson a little bigger, but still small compared to the fact that they can affect every congressman who dares take a position against ISIS.
Devon Stack
01:41:05 And presidential candidates. And I'm no fan of Bush senior or junior. But maybe that's why Bush Junior knew to play ball a little bit more, huh?Alison Weir
01:41:18 And the State Department.01:41:20 Used to be very good on Israel Palestine in terms of the policies they would recommend the position papers. They would write the reports and memos they would write. I've been researching this in considerable depth.
01:41:36 So they were recommending very principled, pragmatic, rational policies that would have benefited our country enormously if we had followed them. But of course they are overruled by Congress, who is much more interested in their next election in getting reelected.
01:41:57 And therefore do what the Israel lobby.
01:41:59 Tells them to do.
Devon Stack
01:42:01 And now at the State Department, you can't throw a book without hitting five Jews.01:42:10 So after Paul Findley was defeated by AIPAC.
01:42:15 And we'll go over some of the details of that here in a moment, he wrote this book.
01:42:21 They dare to speak out.
01:42:24 Where he talks about the influence that AIPAC has, the other targets that they've gone after, the tactics that they use.
01:42:32 And despite having trouble finding a publisher once it was published, it sold very well.
01:42:40 And he was on some he did like a media tour.
01:42:45 And here's here's Howard squadron. That's his last name. He's a he's a Jew of the American Jewish Congress. Yeah, but they're Americans, right? People getting upset with me when I said you can't be Jews or Jews can't be American. I tweeted out. God, actually, that that was one of my more.
01:43:05 Most popular tweets over the last month or so.
01:43:08 And This is why they have their own fucking Congress.
01:43:13 OK.
01:43:14 I mean that alone tells you everything that you need to know.
01:43:18 And here he is. You know, shrinking, like like the victim because someone wrote a book telling everyone what AIPAC does.
Howard Squadron
01:43:29 I think Mr. Findley innocently believes in the Palestinian cause and mistakenly believes in it. I think on the merits, he's on the wrong side of this issue that if there's lack of balance, it's in Mr. Findley's view of the situation on the merits, Americans believe.01:43:43 That Libya is ruled by a crazy dictator that the Syrian President committed genocide in his own town of Hama that Arafat and the PLO are terrorists, and that the and that Israel, On the contrary, is the one democratic nation in that part of the world. That's why there is that support.
01:44:03 Not because of undue influence.
Devon Stack
01:44:06 Say it's definitely not because of undue influence, and anyone who ever listened to Fox News or talk radio or any kind of conservative outlet or conservative influencer over the last 40 years heard basically word for word exactly what he said. Weird because they don't have an influence yet they all seem to have that exact same.01:44:27 Line of thinking that Ohh Israel it's the only democracy in the Middle East and everyone else is a fucking maniac. Just ready to blow you up with a bomb.
01:44:36 And that's why you need to support Israel, because we're the ones really fighting the terrorists for.
01:44:41 You.
01:44:42 Now I did kind of what I did before when I cloned his voice.
01:44:47 Findley's voice and I took out a few passages from his book that I thought would be fun to take a look at you. You can get the full copy of the book on archive.org if you're interested in it. It's very thick. We're not going to go over very much of it. I just wanted it. There's a couple little things that kind of illustrate. Some of the things that we talked about tonight.
01:45:07 But if you want to listen to or read the whole thing, it's it's about 400 pages and it's on archive.org and PDF format and it's you're free to download it.
01:45:18 He's written more books since then, but this is a good little window into what was going on as early as 1979, when all this business kind of or 78 really. When all this kind of begun with him.
01:45:33 Here is part of the forward where he talks about how hard it was just to get it published.
01:45:41 Because.
01:45:42 Jews by this time, by the 1970s and 80s, they already owned basically all the media outlets owned or or operated or both. All the media outlets, all the movie studios, all of the newspapers, all the radio networks, all the TV networks, all the publishers, a lot and they controlled a lot of academia as well.
01:46:05 And so he writes this book. He's a he's a former congressman or. Yeah, former congressman. And you would think that it would be easy for him to publish a book, especially if it's an expose about a.
01:46:18 Group that secretly controlling America. You'd think that if nothing else, that'd be kind of tasty, right? You'd want to have a little read of that book. But no, no, not so much.
Paul Findley
01:46:29 My quest for a publisher began in March 1983 and was predictably long and frustrating.01:46:35 Declining to represent me, New York literary agent Alexander Wiley forecast with prophetic vision that no major US publisher would accept my book, he wrote. It's a sad state of affairs. Bruce Lee, William Moore and company called my manuscript outstanding, but his company concluded that publishing it would cause trouble in the house and.
01:46:55 Outside and decided against taking the heat. Robert Lewis of Random House called an important book, but reported that the firm's leadership decided the theme was too sensitive. 20 other publishers also said no.
Devon Stack
01:47:11 So all these publishers are like, oh, that's a it's a.01:47:14 Great book but.
01:47:15 We're not touching this.
01:47:19 So it would seem that it that these tentacles are not just limited to their access to the White House, to the the House Chamber, to the Senate, these tentacles seem to be going everywhere, including book publishers. You want to know why boomers are so fucking retarded when it comes to this topic? This is why.
01:47:38 This is why, where would they hear about this? There was no Internet, there was no, you know, censored or not censored. There was no Internet, everything was censored. They wouldn't allow these kinds of books to be published. And it's kind of funny. Even the guy that this is happening to, Mr. Findley, has a hard time figuring it out. And he never, ever, as far as I can tell.
01:48:01 Starts to think about it in racial terms, but he certainly wasn't thinking about it in racial terms while it was happening, or while he even wrote this book in this part of the book, he talks about one of his good friends, one of his good friends, a Jew, a fellow Republican who worked at the Federal Reserve, I think.
01:48:20 And how? He asked him. Hey, it'd be, you know, be nice if you gave me an endorsement. And he said, well, I can't.
01:48:28 And. But listen, listen to this. You would think that he had put it together. Ohh. Because you're a Jew. And I just realized that all Jews act as as a as it. When when they feel threatened, they do act as a monolith. And even though ideologically every in every other way you agree with me. I I can't criticize Israel in a very reasoned.
01:48:48 Way without you turning on me because Jews can't be Americans.
Paul Findley
01:48:53 It was a year of surprises, the greatest being the reaction to my candidacy of Doctor Arthur Burns, former chairman of the Federal Reserve Board and now ambassador to the Federal Republic of Germany. Just after the primary election, I explained my campaign plight during a telephone conversation on legislative matters and burns.01:49:13 Responded generously. We simply cannot afford to lose you. Your reelection is very important to the entire nation.
01:49:21 Gratified, I made a modest request. If you would put those sentiments in a letter that I could use in the campaign, that would be a great help. His endorsement was not a high priority objective. In fact, I did not even think to ask for it until he praised my record. But I expected burns to agree without hesitation. Why not? The courtesy was routine.
01:49:42 For a Republican as senior as I and Burns had been not only a lifelong and outspoken Republican but a close friend. Throughout my career in Congress several years earlier, at my request, he had spoken at the commencement program of my alma mater, Illinois College. Our views on economic.
01:50:00 The fiscal issues were the same. His answer was the deepest wound of a traumatic year. Ohh, I couldn't do that. It's your views on the PLO. I'm sorry.
01:50:12 I was stupefied. I am used to surprises and disappointments, but this refusal left me speechless.
01:50:20 Listen no event before or since disclosed to me so forcefully the hidden leverage of the Israeli lobby on the US political scene, this great kind, generous Jewish elder statesman, a personal friend for 20 years, could not ignore the lobby and say a public good word for my candidacy.
Devon Stack
01:50:42 And notice how he doesn't make the connection.01:50:46 He doesn't say, and that's why I learned this lesson. The lesson that the Jews are are a separate people that work for their own interests and will turn against you even if we're good friends for 20 years. And I have you speak at my alma mater and we agree with everything. And I'm a senior Republican and this should just be, you know, a a simple request.
01:51:06 Minor request.
01:51:07 You know, but now I know that that I can't trust you because you're a Jew and that you're looking out for the interest of Jews. And it doesn't matter who you got to throw into the bus to do it. No, that's not how he frames it. He doesn't frame it in racial ways. He does it the exact same way that these fucking Johnny come lately. He's are doing on Twitter all these people who are now sensing that there's a great noticing.
01:51:30 Better way and that they need to get in front of it and direct that energy back in a direction that's safe and that is the same direction that he kind of directs it in. I think to keep his mind safe from having to face these kinds of truths. And he says that oh, wow, that shows you how powerful AIPAC.
01:51:45 Was shows you how powerful AIPAC was that even this guy who's been my good friend, this Jewish guy, is the my really good friend even. He's afraid of AIPAC.
01:51:57 I don't think he's afraid of AIPAC.
01:52:06 He agrees with AIPAC.
01:52:13 See, when it comes to, you know, there's left wing Jews and there's right wing Jews. But when it comes to Israel.
01:52:18 There's just Jews.
01:52:23 And that's why you can't have them in positions of power. That's why you can't have them in positions of power in government. Why you can't have them in positions of power when it comes to Silicon Valley or any any kind of infrastructure or any kind of crucial industry at all.
01:52:40 Certainly not banking.
01:52:44 And yet there they are.
01:52:50 And all these people that that suddenly become critical of the actions of these Jews, the behavior of these Jews, they all frame it the same way.
01:52:58 He just did.
01:53:02 Oh, it's these. It's these bad organizations.
01:53:08 No, it's the ADL. It's not Jews, it's the ADL. The ADL makes us look bad.
01:53:24 This is why it's so important. You need to have the proper framing or it doesn't matter. You can notice all day long and you're still going to be a fucking retard.
Paul Findley
01:53:33 Democrat Robinson solicited campaign contributions through advertising in Jewish newspapers from coast to coast, stirring up interest by calling me a practicing anti Semite, who is one of the worst enemies that Jews in Israel have ever faced in the history of the US.01:53:52 He drew funds from each of the 50 states in all, the campaign cost 1.2 million the most expensive in Illinois history. We each spent about 600,000.
01:54:04 University students from New York and California, as well as other states, came to central Illinois to staff Robinson's phone banks and handle other campaign chores. Dirty tricks dogged me even when I wasn't campaigning, and away from my.
John Mearsheimer
01:54:20 District.Paul Findley
01:54:22 The Chicago Council on Foreign Relations asked me to speak on foreign policy and midway through my lecture on foreign policy one evening in Chicago, the man shouted from a doorway. We've received a call. There's a bomb in the room. The crowd of 500 made a fast exit. The police later found a pipe.01:54:42 Loaded with bubble gum placed in the grand piano on the stage.
01:54:46 Later, Robinson activists drove all the way to Detroit, MI, where I was a delegate to the Republican convention to pick it and to amuse onlookers with the chant Paul Paul. He must go. He supports the PLO.
Devon Stack
01:55:05 They're calling him bomb threats. They're raising millions of dollars. They're having Jews from around the country come in and run the phone banks for his opponent.01:55:16 It becomes the most expensive.
01:55:19 Race and.
01:55:21 Illinois history.
01:55:24 And this is a guy who who checks all the the the boxes. This is the exact kind of a guy that you would think Jews would want. This is the guy that has supported civil rights. This is the guy that's that supported desegregation. This was the good guy that was doing all the things.
01:55:41 He was doing all the things that Jews had supported. He was he was a social justice warrior, he said so himself.
01:55:54 But then.
01:55:56 He said Israel maybe shouldn't be genocide in the Palestinians.
01:56:05 And he became.
01:56:07 Enemy #1.
01:56:10 Didn't matter who you were and they had their tentacles everywhere. Everywhere, places. You wouldn't even expect.
01:56:19 Or you might expect.
01:56:22 Reagan.
01:56:24 Zionist Reagan.
01:56:27 Soon as he found out that AIPAC didn't like Findley.
01:56:33 He he ran the other way.
01:56:36 He abandoned him instantly.
Paul Findley
01:56:38 At first, my plight escaped the attention of the Reagan presidential campaign. In fact, when the scheduling office learned that I was having a fundraising luncheon in Springfield, his manager asked if Reagan could stop by, since he would be nearby that day, that unsolicited warmth.01:56:59 Quickly chilled.
01:57:00 When he was scheduled to visit Illinois, New York City organizers warned Reagan's managers warning appear friendly with Findley and you lose New York. This led them to take unusual measures to keep their candidate a safe distance from me. Reagan's manager passed an order quietly.
01:57:20 Or so they thought.
01:57:23 Under no circumstance is Findley to get near Reagan, even though elsewhere in Illinois congressional candidates were to appear on speaking platforms with him, learning of the order, my manager, Don Norton, vented his outrage to Reagan headquarters. The Reagan team shifted gears.
01:57:42 Again, this time they declared that all congressmen were to be treated alike during the day and.
01:57:48 Illinois none was to share the speaking platform with Reagan Congressman Ed Madigan irritated when told he must either speak before Reagan's arrival in Bloomington that day or wait until Reagan had left the platform made no speech at all at Springfield Reagan campaign.
01:58:09 Staffer Paul Russo had only one ask.
01:58:12 Assignment, but it was an important one. He was to keep me out of camera range when Reagan was nearby. I was literally cold behind a rope 50 feet away while Reagan was photographed in the ceremonial rubbing Lincoln's nose on a statue at the tomb entrance. At the next stop.
01:58:33 A coal mine near Springfield Russo's team tried to keep me on a bus and in the process trapped my friend, Senator Charles H Percy, too. The purpose was to keep only me away from Reagan. During his remarks to the crowd.
Devon Stack
01:58:51 So Reagan couldn't even be photographed with this guy.01:58:58 The messaging got out.
01:59:01 This guy is is is poison.
01:59:05 Even Bob Hope.
01:59:08 Bob Hope, who he had Findley had a relationship with. He had arranged for a a birthday celebration.
01:59:19 In the House Chambers for Bob Hope.
01:59:22 Some years before and Bob Hope, who was a an outspoken Republican, would often do. You know, he is a popular guy. Most people, younger people probably don't know who he is. He was a popular comedian, but a lot of World War 2 vets knew him because he worked with the was the USO or whatever.
01:59:42 Uh.
01:59:44 Organization they would put on entertainment for the troops. And so he was a a very well liked, very popular American comedian at the time. And so having him at an event was going to raise a lot of.
01:59:59 Money.
02:00:00 And you know, you could charge, you know, that's how you could raise campaign money and say, hey, we'll have dinner with.
02:00:05 Bob Hope and then all the rich people would pay for a table at this dinner.
02:00:10 And then Bob Hope got the call.
Paul Findley
02:00:13 The panic even spread the Hollywood Bob Hope, who never wavered under enemy fire on war fronts in World War 2 and Korea, and withstood heavy criticism for his support of President Nixon's Vietnam policies, encountered a new and more devastating line of fire when he agreed to appear at a fundraising event for me in spring.02:00:33 Field 10 years earlier, I had organized the 75th birthday party for hope in the House of Representatives. It was the most fun filled moment in the house I can remember hoping his wife sat in the gallery as one congressman after another, voiced their praise of the great entertainer. The tributes filled 14 pages of the congressional.
02:00:55 Record gratefully recalling the unique party hope agreed to help in my 1980 campaign, his manager Ward Grant, knowing from the start that I was being opposed by Pro Israel activists because of my work on Middle East policy, declared we need men in Congress who speak their mind.
02:01:15 Coast to coast pressure quickly brought a change. Don Norton recalls an urgent telephone message he received from hopes manager.
02:01:23 Grant told me that Hope was getting tremendous pressure from Jews and non Jews all over the country. He said it's going to the point where hopes the lawyer of 35 years, who is Jewish, has threatened to quit. The pressure was beyond belief, like nothing they had ever experienced before and hope just couldn't come.
Devon Stack
02:01:44 So even then, there's the racial element that he doesn't seem to be putting together.02:01:49 Even Bob Hope's lawyer.
02:01:52 Of 35 years, who was Jewish? Threatened to quit?
02:01:57 If he went and did a dinner with this guy.
02:02:02 And Bob Hope acquiesced.
02:02:08 Because that same racial solidarity that that Jewish lawyer of Bob hopes had Bob Hope didn't have.
02:02:27 So that's that's you had another tentacle. And it's funny. He's like it. Even it even reached to Hollywood. Well, no shit, Sherlock. Jews run fucking Hollywood. What do you fucking expect?
02:02:39 So then he talks about how he, you know, Bob Dole was a senator at the time.
02:02:44 And Bob Dole mentioned that even in his home state, people were actively campaigning against him that this campaign was existed in, in states all across the country in every single state across the country. They were fundraising with Jews using his name, saying he had to be.
Paul Findley
02:03:01 Defeated the campaign to remove me from Congress.02:03:04 Had started early in 1979.
02:03:07 Time and covered most of the next four years, it attracted the attention and resources of people in every state in the Union. Reports from friends suggested it's national scope. Senator Bob Dole of Kansas for six years, my colleague on the House Agriculture Committee.
02:03:27 Said he heard Pro Israel leaders in Kansas speak with great emotional intensity about my candidacy.
02:03:35 Both before and after Election Day, Clarence Palomba, former Under Secretary of Agriculture, learned that my defeat was the principal 1982 political objective of the partners in a large New York City law firm. After my 22 years in Congress. Losing was, of course.
02:03:56 The disc.
02:03:56 Appointment. But my main reaction was wonderment. I was puzzled by the behavior of the Pro Israel activists. Why did they go to such trouble? To eliminate me from Congress? Why did people from all over the country who did not know me personally and very likely knew little of my record?
02:04:17 Dig so deeply in their own pockets, many of them contributing $1000 to my opponents. What sustained this commitment for a four year period?
Devon Stack
02:04:28 Race.02:04:32 That's what sustained it for a four year period race.
02:04:38 And that large New York law firm that you mentioned that was that made it their their whole mission in life to get rid of you.
02:04:47 I'm betting the world Jewish.
02:04:54 This is why it has to be framed this way, or you're never going to make a dent.
02:05:04 Even if you don't like it.
02:05:06 You gotta play by your enemies rules.
02:05:11 We tried it the nice way we tried it, the race blind way and what has it gotten us?
02:05:19 And quite frankly, the race blind way ain't the nice way, is it not for us?
02:05:32 It's nice for them.
02:05:41 But he really struggled to, like, put it all together.
02:05:44 He's like, I don't get it. They don't know me. They don't know my voting record. These people have never heard of me, and they're they're giving thousands of dollars to a campaign to defeat me. It doesn't make any sense. Yes, it does.
02:05:55 Because you're the the the goy in the way.
02:05:59 You're the gory in.
02:05:59 The way of of God's promise of Zion.
Paul Findley
02:06:05 I could not reconcile the harsh tactics I'd experienced with traditional Jewish advocacy of civil liberties, a record I had admired all my life.02:06:15 In Congress, I had worked closely in support of human rights causes with Jewish congressmen like Allard Lowenstein, Stephen Sellars, and Ben Gilman. In my wonderment, I pressed Doug Bloomfield, a friend on the apex staff, for an explanation. He shrugged. You are the most visible critic of Israeli policy.
02:06:36 That's the best answer I can give.
02:06:38 It was hardly adequate. The unanswered question led to others. Do other congressmen have similar experiences? To be sure, those who speak out are few in number, but it seemed implausible that the lobby would target me alone. I wanted the facts beyond Congress, with the President and the vast array of movers and shakers.
02:07:00 In the executive branch, what pressures, if any, do they experience?
02:07:06 A lobby formidable enough to frighten off a presidential campaign team and a former president of the United States. As Reagan and Ford had been in my 1980 election must have great leverage at the highest levels of government. What of other occupations the lobby had intimidated Bob Hope? Did it have?
02:07:26 Similar power over people in different professions on campus, for example, does the tradition of academic freedom give immunity to teachers and administrators from the kind of pressure I had received from the Pro Israeli act?
02:07:40 As do clergymen escape, how about people in business, large and small, and vitally important in our free society? Is their intimidation of reporters, columnists, editorial writers, publishers, the commentators on television and radio, deep questions to me, crucial questions.
Devon Stack
02:08:02 Ohh my sweet summer child.02:08:06 My sweet summer child.
02:08:08 Asking all the right questions, not coming to the right conclusions.
02:08:14 Why? Because of this refusal to look at things.
02:08:20 Through the frame of race.
02:08:23 The all important frame of race.
02:08:26 And yes, the answer to that question, all those questions you were asking is yes, of course, they obviously they have their tentacles and media. Obviously they have their tentacles and academia, obviously they've been able to shake down white people who were apparently terrified of being called an anti Semite.
02:08:47 People that are quick to sell their people down the river because they really don't have any kind of racial solidarity.
02:08:56 People that prioritize their own personal power over the.
02:09:02 Destiny of their, of their people, their race.
02:09:05 Because they don't look at it in racial terms, which is why you must look at it in through racial terms or you're you're you're going to just be.
02:09:17 Another another another speed bump for us. You're going to be another problem.
02:09:22 You're going to be another one of these in the way, motherfuckers, or worse, backstabbing us.
02:09:37 Now the problem is.
02:09:39 He.
02:09:42 He didn't. Ever. I I don't. I don't know. Again, this is this interview is from.
02:09:48 I believe around 2010.
02:09:51 I don't know if he came around before he died.
02:09:54 But he never even put together the 9/11 stuff.
02:10:00 He viewed it the same way that a a lot of.
02:10:08 A lot of lefties did. Really, where, you know, a lot of these, these, you know, all the pushback on Zionism, really in in over the last.
02:10:17 Well, since the creation of Israel, really in American politics, the majority of it's come from the left.
02:10:23 And usually from people like this guy and they all frame it the same way the 9/11 stuff, they say, well, yeah, they hate the the Arabs did it because they hate us, but they don't hate us for our freedoms. They hate us because we support Israel and that was that was kind of the accepted talking point. That's kind of what he says in this interview. He he does. However, later in life.
02:10:45 Mentioned the USS Liberty, so maybe he came around, but this is this was at least as of this.
02:10:51 Interview here. This was his view of 911.
Paul Findley
02:10:54 We deplore, as we should the 9/11.02:10:59 Assault that killed about 3000 Americans. Innocent people. But maybe it was a terrible form of payback by Arabs who remembered even just one episode around Beirut in 1982 when I was in the last month.
02:11:18 My service in Congress. Is there any fighter planes and artillery massacred over 18,000 people in Beirut and neighborhood because the Palestinians were very numerous in that area.
02:11:36 Over 18,000 were killed by bombs and artillery fire that we had condoned and furnished to the Israelis for whatever purpose they wanted to make.
02:11:51 We are reviled so widely today when, in the wake of World War 2.
02:12:00 The whole world revered America. We've lost so much because of this.
02:12:10 Very deep seated bias and the influence of our society by the the lobby for the State of Israel.
Devon Stack
02:12:23 And again, he doesn't. He doesn't seem to put together that ohh. You know, actually, it's actually even worse than that. But like I said again, maybe maybe before he died, he figured it out. Because here, here's him talking about the USS Liberty later on. This is.02:12:39 I don't know the exact year, but I think this is after that interview at a dinner.
Paul Findley
02:12:45 That's how the rest of the story, the London Councilman Brandon Johnson, ordered a cover up of what happened that he heard of the ships and ships and the fires come back. He ordered his.02:12:55 Their engagement from friends.
02:13:02 Maybe.
02:13:04 Cover up and Admiral Kidd was sent immediately to mother, where some of the survivors were being cared for.
02:13:15 And he noted ever, he noticed, notified everyone of them that they would face a court martial if they said anything about what actually happened during his summer delivery. Can you imagine that? Can you imagine?
02:13:36 The commander-in-chief doing anything like that, and he did.
02:13:42 That he accepted the the false story that Israel came up with, there was a case of mistaken identity. That was a lie. And when the Johnson issued the order of the cover up, he knew.
02:14:00 They lose a lot.
02:14:02 And that's when the big change began in our relationship with Israel.
02:14:09 As I interpreted this experience.
02:14:14 The City of Israel had the delivery ship, and with further Johnson convinced the officials of Israel that they could get by with anything, even the murder of US sailors, and there be no rebuke, no confrontation.
Devon Stack
02:14:35 Yeah. So why wouldn't they want to get away with 911? They already learned their lesson. In fact, he echoed almost word for word. The I believe it was the Secretary of State, former Secretary of State, who said the same thing, that that was the moment that the Israelis realized that they could literally get away with anything if they could get away with attacking a US vessel.02:14:56 And and killing, killing U.S. Navy personnel and then trying to cover it up and have the US President Johnson.
02:15:09 Ultra Zionist, some people say he has Jewish connections. It really doesn't matter. He was an Ultra Zionist one way or the other.
02:15:19 They can get away with anything.
02:15:24 Like 911.
02:15:28 Now here is a speech he gave towards the end of his life.
02:15:34 So you'll have to forgive the the the slowness of his speech.
02:15:39 Because he's already he's not exactly a fast talker ever, but this is this is. I think he's in his 90s when he does this, as I think this is 2015. And I think he was 98 when he died. So he I think he's like he's I think he's like 90 something when he's doing this so you know forgive him for being a little slow.
02:16:00 I in fact, I thought about speeding the footage up, but I thought it might seem a little hokey. It's not that. I mean, it's not that bad, but it's a little slow.
02:16:08 And but this is this is one of the last public appearances he made where he's talking to the National Press Club, talking about the Israel lobby.
Paul Findley
02:16:22 Of recent.02:16:25 Months the US government has displayed.
02:16:33 On enormous.
02:16:37 International television for all to see the shameful subservience to Israel and its lobby.
02:16:50 That's what brings me here tonight.
02:16:56 Turn your thoughts back to last October.
02:17:02 The thundering assault on Gaza, that tiny open air prison where people have to struggle just to live from one day to the other.
02:17:19 The total of death 2200, the toll of injured 11,000 more shattered schools, hospitals.
02:17:31 Almost everything that made-up the struggling economy of Gaza, Gaza was shattered and just a few hours.
02:17:45 World leaders thundered their.
02:17:48 Our position.
02:17:51 All except one leader. And that was Mr. Obama.
02:17:58 A reporter finally accosted him and said.
02:18:03 What do you say about the Gaza war?
02:18:08 I was watching television that night and I was struck by the the grim countenance of President Obama.
02:18:18 All he said was.
02:18:22 The Israelis have the right.
02:18:26 Of self-defense, period. Nothing else.
02:18:32 It seemed to me that that was all he was permitted to say.
02:18:39 By higher authority.
02:18:43 And no, no, no reporter pressed him for elaboration. To me, that's said that the reporters of the major media in this country.
02:18:57 Are just as overwhelmed and paralyzed by by the Israel lobbyists or government seems to be most of the time.
Devon Stack
02:19:11 Or it's because they run the media, so even President Obama was at the mercy of Israel just as much as Trump is today, just as much as Bush was before him.02:19:25 That the Israelis have run our government for several decades, several decades, really almost since the founding of.
02:19:35 Israel and then he brings out look, if you want to, if you want a good visual demonstration of how much our government is owned by Israel and and was back in 2015. He then brings up something that happened in 2015. It happened again recently or more recently but he brings up the the time it happened in 2015.
Paul Findley
02:19:58 An amazing event took place on Capitol Hill.02:20:03 And I know that Nick Whitehall feels as I do, and Jim Moran feels the same way, that there is something sacred in the House of House of Representatives chamber. It's one of the cherished heirlooms for all Republic. The symbol is those.
02:20:22 One single outstanding preeminent symbol of liberty and free speech as the House chamber.
02:20:33 And it was a sad moment for me when I realized.
02:20:39 That the lobby for Israel, Israel has sufficient power.
02:20:47 To gain control of the house chamber and to put on what is nothing more than a campaign speech for the benefit of Netanyahu 10 days before his bid for a fourth term.
02:21:06 Our government cooperated.
02:21:09 And that desecration of that heirloom of our Great Republic Dallas Chamber.
Devon Stack
02:21:20 Now what he's talking about is Netanyahu.02:21:23 Spoke to the house in in in 2015.
02:21:27 I believe he did again during Trump's first term. I'll have to look up, look that up while this is playing. But I want you to look at.
02:21:36 You guys have seen the state of the Union, right?
02:21:40 When the President is speaking.
02:21:44 Does he get both sides of the aisle to give him a standing ovation?
02:21:49 At any point, even when he's just saying.
02:21:54 You know, go America.
02:21:56 And I don't just mean because, you know, Trump is unpopular or whatever, I mean, like.
02:22:01 Do you ever see both sides of the Chamber?
02:22:06 Everyone in the room almost like they are at.
02:22:11 Kim Jong UN's birthday party, and they're worried about being the first being noticed as the first person to stop clapping.
02:22:24 These are the people.
02:22:29 That you are told, run your government.
02:22:36 Clapping for a foreign leader.
John Boehner
02:22:49 Members of Congress. I have the high privilege and distinct honor of presenting to you the Prime Minister of Israel, His Excellency Benjamin Netanyahu.Benjamin Netanyahu
02:23:13 Thank you. Thank you.02:23:21 Thank you.
Devon Stack
02:23:29 Who else gets a gets a response like that?02:23:33 No. Presidents get responses like that, and it's there. There was an it was an hour long.
02:23:40 It could have been 10 minutes long. Most of it's clapping.
02:23:44 It's an hour long and the entire hour is literally this over and over and over again.
Benjamin Netanyahu
02:23:49 I want to thank you all for being here today.02:23:52 I know that my speech.
02:23:56 Has been the subject of much controversy.
02:24:01 I deeply regret that some perceived my being here as political. That was never my intention.
02:24:08 I want to thank you, Democrats and Republicans, for your common support for Israel year after year, decade after decade.
Devon Stack
02:24:36 Every single one of them.02:24:39 Standing ovation after standing ovation when he's all he's saying is thanks for all of you supporting Israel.
Benjamin Netanyahu
02:24:48 No matter on which side of the aisle you sit, you stand with Israel.Devon Stack
02:25:12 They're they're even screaming and shouting like they're at a fucking football game. It's an hour, but you can what? Look, if you don't believe me, it's it's on YouTube. You can find it. 2015 Netanyahu speaks to.02:25:27 The house.
Benjamin Netanyahu
02:25:29 I know that America stands with Israel. I know that you stand with Israel.Devon Stack
02:25:45 It's a full fucking hour of this fucking shit.Benjamin Netanyahu
02:25:49 Facing me.02:25:52 Right up there in the gallery.
02:25:54 Overlooking all of us in this August Chamber is the image of Moses.
02:26:01 Moses led our people from slavery to the gates of the promised land.
02:26:06 And before the people of Israel entered the land of Israel.
02:26:11 Moses gave us a message.
02:26:13 That is still their resolve for thousands of years.
02:26:17 I leave you with his message today.
02:26:21 His coving 2 altu the Alta atsumi him be strong and resolute. Neither fear nor dread them, my friends.
02:26:32 May Israel and America always stand together strong and resolute? May we neither fear nor dread the challenges ahead. May we face the future with confidence, strength and hope. May God bless the state of Israel and May God bless the United States of America.
02:27:08 Thank you.
Devon Stack
02:27:12 This is the never ending standing now right here.02:27:30 I didn't. I didn't edit this for.
02:27:31 It to be longer. This is really how long it is.
Benjamin Netanyahu
02:28:00 Thank you very much.02:28:11 Thank you. Thank you very much. Thank you all. You're wonderful. Thank you, America. Thank you. Thank you.
02:28:26 Thank you.
02:28:47 Everyone's afraid to stop clapping. There's. There's still.
Devon Stack
02:29:04 This this is really how long they clapped.02:29:43 And it actually went on longer than that. It's just that's where the the video clip ended on YouTube.
02:29:53 That, that's. That's what you're dealing with.
02:29:56 Most people don't know that's what you're fucking dealing with.
02:30:03 That we are fucking, this is Zionist occupied.
02:30:08 Territory.
02:30:11 So that's what he was referring to when he was like, I I couldn't believe what I fucking saw. That's what. What he what he.
02:30:17 Was talking about.
Paul Findley
02:30:20 The the tips of the iceberg have no hint.02:30:24 Of the suffocating influence.
02:30:28 Of the of the lobby for Israel across America.
02:30:34 It's as if a blanket, a suffocating blanket, had been spread across the entire nation is not just what happens in Washington, what happens on Capitol Hill.
02:30:47 What's happens in other places?
02:30:52 I doubt if many people will realize the extent of the parallelizing influence that reaches across the nation.
02:31:03 Not just in big cities, but in small towns and Hamlets, there are people that that are willing to spend time to guard the gate, so to speak, for Israel every day they're on the alert for anyone who might say something.
02:31:23 To do something that would show disapproval of of Israel, these agents exist by the hundreds and hundreds throughout the country.
Devon Stack
02:31:36 So he's he's telling you like this is this isn't just at the national level.02:31:41 These people are in local elections. These people are in just regular positions of power in companies. These people are in academia and look, these people are obviously in the White House now.
02:31:55 These people are everywhere.
02:31:57 But they're not just at the.
02:31:58 White.
02:31:59 House. They're from the white. They're at the White House. They're at your local Sheriff's Office.
02:32:13 Speaking of sheriffs.
02:32:15 I can't. I can't tell you why.
02:32:18 I know this.
02:32:22 But I am just going to. I probably even I shouldn't even say this, but I am just going to say it.
02:32:28 I have it on good authority.
02:32:31 The Sheriff, Joe Arpaio, is a lot more based than you think.
02:32:37 But anyway, that's all I'm going to say.
02:32:40 But yeah, for the most part, though, that these, these Zionists or many, many Watchmen were Jews, but not all.
02:32:47 Of them are Jews.
02:32:49 They they they have little spies everywhere.
Paul Findley
02:32:53 And of course they are concentrated heavily as well in Washington.02:33:03 I'll give you just one example.
02:33:07 Harold Saunders, a great diplomat that I worked with quite closely over the years, told me that if he wanted to get a letter to the Secretary of State.
02:33:24 He's the boss.
02:33:26 That dealt with misbehavior by Israel, he said. I have to sit down, type the letter myself, go to the secretary's office and hand it to him personally.
02:33:41 If I would put the letter in the usual desk to desk transition up to the top of the State Department building, it would emerge emasculated so thoroughly that the intention would never appear. Imagine that.
02:34:02 Couldn't depend on a letter emerging arriving as intended to the Secretary of State.
Devon Stack
02:34:14 And that's how thoroughly all that the governments infiltrated.02:34:19 Even if you're a diplomat and you're just trying to write a letter to your boss, the Secretary of State, and in this case right now, Marco Rubio would probably just throw in the trash because he's he's about as Zionist as they come.
02:34:33 But if you wanted to write something that in fact, then you fire you after after that. But if if you had a Secretary of State that wasn't Marco Rubio, the guy that Trump picked because he's also an ultra Zionist, then you couldn't even write a report.
02:34:51 That was even that was just factually, you know, made made Israel look bad a little bit and expected to get to the Secretary of State because it would go through the chain. And there's enough Jews already at the State Department. Trust me, believe me, I've been to the State Department. It's about it. It's about the Julius part of government. And that's saying something that there is.
02:35:12 And especially if you get to anything that handles anything Middle East related, it's all Jews. It's packed full of Jews.
02:35:19 Especially under Republican administrations.
02:35:24 And so if you write a letter to the Secretary of State, by the time it it changes it, it gets read by the people. The chain of command. By the time it gets the Secretary of State, they removed all the bad stuff about Israel.
02:35:37 That's treason.
02:35:39 This is why Jews can't be Americans.
02:35:45 Jews can't be Americans.
02:35:54 It's like it's like I I said this would apply. It's it's, I mean this this goes across the board.
02:36:01 I.
02:36:02 I said something on Twitter a couple years ago, I said.
02:36:06 A Jew in your movement will never be a Jew in your movement.
02:36:11 But you will be the goy in his.
02:36:17 So anytime you see people getting excited about Jews like Stephen Miller as an example.
02:36:24 It applies to those people too.
02:36:26 At the end of the day, that base Jew that you think is a Jew in your movement.
02:36:33 99 times out of 100.
02:36:36 When the rubber meets the road.
02:36:40 You're the gore and his movement.
02:36:45 Your objectives just happen to overlap enough to where he plays Nice some of the time.
02:36:53 But at the end of the day.
02:36:55 You're the gore in his movement.
Paul Findley
02:37:00 There are hundreds of people in our government who feel that they have a duty to guard.02:37:12 Israel against any.
02:37:15 Any.
02:37:16 Miss Mr. or any harm?
02:37:21 They aren't paid, they aren't paid by the pay pack or paid by the taxpayers. But they feel this this total obligation to defend Israel.
02:37:37 And I, in a sense, admire people like that. But it has resulted in the the destruction of free speech about Israel and the US throughout the nation. This is a rare occasion.
02:37:56 Tonight there are people openly discussing the misbehavior of the State of Israel, criticizing the library for the State of Israel, isn't it? Is there a remarkable occasion because you would search the city over and you won't find another like this?
02:38:16 And there's great credit to the the leadership of the of the Force report on Middle East affairs that this meeting is being held.
02:38:30 Now they act out of fear.
02:38:34 They fear that Israel will be hurt.
Benjamin Netanyahu
02:38:38 Yeah.Paul Findley
02:38:39 Others act out of fear for different reasons. They fear that they might be accused even by indirection of being anti-Semitic. The charge of anti-Semitism system is still the most part.02:38:58 Helpful instrument of intimidation that Israel's lobby has, and it exists among these people that feel duty bound to protect Israel every step of the way. And if you think back about your home country.
02:39:19 Your homes village in the past.
02:39:23 You can be sure that someone in every village, every city, every hamlet, is there to protect the interest of the state of Israel.
02:39:36 And it's a very scary scene, one that has not receiving any attention in our in our government.
02:39:44 Well.
02:39:46 It's not fear of bodily harm.
02:39:49 That causes people to watch what they say about Israel as their fear that they might be considered a border case, at least of the anti-Semitism and most of the people in this country still believe that that's the worst.
02:40:09 Stay in. Any person could have on his or her reputation anti-Semitism.
Devon Stack
02:40:17 Well, I'm. I'm a proud anti Semite.02:40:21 And I'll tell you if there is something that's changing a little bit, it is that people aren't as afraid of that, that that fucking mind trick that Jedi mind trick worked on the boomers and it works on on some Gen. X and it works on some millennials. It works on fewer zoomers.
02:40:40 And I suspect that is the distance between World War 2 and the present increase.
02:40:46 It will work less and less and less, which is exactly why they are trying to make Holocaust education required. And they've already managed to pass it in over half the states, have over half of the 50 states have required Holocaust education now, and the the remaining.
02:41:05 States last time I looked almost like all of them, but eight, I think had.
02:41:10 Proposed legislation and as he said, it doesn't matter in the largest city to the smallest hamlet, there's at least one person that's there to keep an eye and try to see if they spot anyone that's an anti Semite early on in their career and derail it and and look, you can ask anyone who's even tried to get into local politics.
02:41:31 If that's true, if you try to get into local politics with the Republican Party, it doesn't matter if you're running for fucking dog catcher and you say something negative about Israel, especially if you're a Republican. Say goodbye to that election.
02:41:47 If you manage to slip through the cracks, they'll they will. They will, as he said, put the thumb on the scales the next time.
02:41:55 Doesn't matter how how small the position you're talking about. That is how powerful their reach is and how thorough.
02:42:04 Their subversion is.
02:42:12 And the fact that he's not making the racial connection is super fucking maddening. But they, you know, old dog new tricks.
02:42:20 These are the people that lapped up all of the propaganda of World War 2, and he thinks that, you know, it's just.
02:42:29 You know, it's just the it's just the bad ones or something. Or the ones working with Bill Gates, like fucking Alex Jones would say.
Paul Findley
02:42:36 The lobby is something more.02:42:40 That the then just the suffocating blanket of the country is something more than a lobby that has enough moxie enough rubbers to get things done in on Capitol Hill and in the White House.
02:43:00 It is also a large, effective lobby, as is next mentioned.
02:43:07 And it is one of a small group of giant Washington based lobbies.
02:43:14 That have had the effect of destroying true representative government in this country.
02:43:23 They are the power that makes big decisions on on public policy, not the people that are elected from the home districts and the states to serve in Congress.
02:43:36 It's not that group that holds the real power, it's a group of unelected.
02:43:43 People who manage big lobbies that have big money to spend in order to control what's done as public policy.
Devon Stack
02:43:56 Also known as Jews, but he won't just say it.02:44:00 Come on, man. Just say Jews just say Jews. We know that's what it.
02:44:03 Is.
Paul Findley
02:44:04 And as Nicolas pointed out.02:44:08 That's a great difficulty.
02:44:11 To overcome.
02:44:14 Because the Supreme Court has declared that the right of free speech extends even to corporations.
Devon Stack
02:44:26 OK, at this point he starts drawing on about his political solutions, which are inadequate, and solutions that again take the race component out. And and it's it's like a Band-Aid on a missing limb.02:44:44 Where he starts talking about, well, we need to reform campaign finance laws so that that way AIPAC has to register and but it's like it's too late for that.
02:44:56 Because guess what, asshole like. Sorry, but again, I bet he's a was super nice guy. I get it. But also fuck you.
02:45:06 Also, fuck you for being this ignorant, you know, withstanding all of this, this terrorism and still not putting it together kind of fuck you a little bit. Fuck you again. Super nice guy, I'm sure, but also kind of fuck you.
02:45:23 Because you can't just say it's the fucking Jews that's the problem. We can change.
02:45:29 Can't. Well, first of all, we can't change campaign finance law because the whole one of the one of the biggest reasons, there's no political solution is you need to use the politicians to get the political solution. So if they've hijacked the entire political process, as you say, from the federal level, all the way down to to small Hamlets.
02:45:49 How the fuck are you going to ever get a?
02:45:51 Political solution in that situation?
02:45:59 So it's absurd.
02:46:01 And it's and and it's all because of. Like I said, it's this post World War Two brain fuck that happened to him where he thinks ohh the answer we have to have rules we can't get into conflicts anymore. We're not allowed to stick up for ourselves, especially not on racial, racial basis. That that's like Hitler.
02:46:27 Hitler's the big bad.
02:46:31 So whatever solution we come up with, it has to be nothing like Hitler.
02:46:37 Because even though I just now moments ago acknowledged that the worst thing that you know for some reason the worst thing is to be called anti Semite and everyone's afraid of it, so are.
02:46:47 You.
02:46:50 So are.
02:46:51 You.
02:46:53 It's just a different word for it. It's the same thing. It's not. See.
02:46:57 That's what you're afraid of being called the Nazi.
02:47:02 Or a racist.
02:47:08 Maybe you've got enough scar tissue because of the anti semi accusations for the last 50 years but.
02:47:15 You still care.
02:47:18 It doesn't quite roll off your back like water on a duck's back. Is that even really a thing? I think it's a thing.
02:47:32 So it's madding to see these people that that you know again good intentions and good on him for for doing I guess you know speaking out to the degree that he was able to.
02:47:42 And.
02:47:42 I'm glad. I'm glad that he that that's how he responded. But it's still inadequate. It's woefully inadequate.
02:47:53 And and I'm tired of these people that say they believe in in, you know, little changes, incremental changes will finally get us there. These little tiny movements of the Overton Window will eventually get us there or not.
02:48:07 We don't have all the time in the world.
02:48:18 We went from when this guy was first being attacked by the Israel lobby. We were still a 90%.
02:48:26 White country.
02:48:29 Or thereabouts.
02:48:40 How much time do you think we have?
02:48:48 They were still arresting faggots for being gay in Los Angeles.
02:48:53 When the Israel lobby went after this guy.
02:49:00 How much time do you think we have?
02:49:05 You know, so we were still doing.
02:49:08 We were still supporting Israel, we were still arming Israel.
02:49:13 And Israel was still committing genocide.
02:49:18 On the same people.
02:49:20 For about half a century.
02:49:23 Really. Actually longer than that, because it really began when they first started filtering in after Belfour after the Balfour Declaration.
02:49:30 In what like 1918 or whenever that was so it's it's actually been longer than that. It just really didn't pick up steam until the mid 20th century.
02:49:42 Well, I guess a little bit earlier in that pre World War 2 is when it really started to pick up steam.
02:49:59 I meant to look up because like I said, I'm pretty sure it happened.
02:50:05 Under Trump's presidency as well.
02:50:22 Let me see.
02:50:30 Well, yeah, this is.
02:50:32 This is 11 months ago, so he he's done it a couple times since then.
02:50:38 And literally it's the same thing.
02:50:41 So this is from.
02:50:47 But it's been like, that's not even what I was thinking about.
02:50:52 I'm going to download this one while I look for the next one here. The one I was thinking of was one under Trump.
02:51:01 Where's Trump? Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump would have been.
02:51:07 That's ten years ago. Where's the one from? Like, five years ago?
02:51:16 Anyway.
02:51:18 I'm pretty sure it it.
02:51:23 I might be mistaken. I might be thinking of the one that was about.
02:51:26 A year?
02:51:26 Ago, but the one that was about a year ago. The funny thing is.
02:51:31 Because of some of the diversity, right, because of the squad, because of the the the brown people that that see, unfortunately for them Israel as the the the oppressor oppressed relationship you know the ones the the communists that see the the Israelis as the colonizers.
02:51:53 You actually didn't have a full room of standing ovations. You did. You actually did have the squad sitting down and saying, you know, you know, holding little little, I think, little signs that said, like genocide and and and this sort of a thing.
02:52:13 Which is exactly why Trump has been instructed by those people to go after the colleges and get rid of anyone, any, any any of these.
02:52:22 Brown. Anti semites.
02:52:25 That might be educated in our our schools. Look, they should. I think they should just support everyone that's.
02:52:31 That's not from our country. That's going to our our elite schools. Why? Why why should we have anyone?
02:52:39 Why should we have anyone that's at our elite schools that isn't that aren't Americans? That's that's insane to me. But that's not why Trump.
02:52:47 'S.
02:52:47 Kicking them out.
02:52:49 Trump's kicking them out because they're critical of Israel.
02:52:53 And yeah, people can say, well, you know that's, you know, we've made such progress because now now we have Trump saying, you know, with, you know, dropping F bombs and saying, you know, mean things about Israel and yelling at Netanyahu on phone calls reportedly and and whatever.
02:53:16 That doesn't change anything.
02:53:31 Anyway, it's downloading now. I'm. I'm going to go ahead and.
02:53:35 Let's look at Hyper chats and stuff and then maybe when it's done downloading.
02:53:40 We'll we'll see how long they we'll compare the the length of the standing ovations.
02:53:48 Because holy shit, I don't know. I don't know. I don't know if you could out do the 1 from 2015.
02:53:56 All right. We'll go to entropy now. Did entropy fuck up again?
02:54:02 Either zero people donated or Entropy fucked up again.
02:54:08 They refresh at the page here.
02:54:16 Uh. Entropy fucked up again.
02:54:19 That's nice.
02:54:28 Uh, fucking entropy. Come on, man.
02:54:31 Let me see if I can get it to work.
02:54:41 What the fuck?
02:54:57 OK, yeah, Entropy fucked up.
02:55:02 There.
02:55:04 Now, now, now that the stream's over, people can finally send the things. So sorry, can't control when entropy is fucked up. That's the second time it's done it.
02:55:15 But anyway, let's take a look. These are from earlier, I'm guessing.
02:55:20 Uh, we got uh, man of low moral fiber says.
02:55:25 Did you see that former representative Jamal Bowman said that blacks are getting cancer due to white people saying another reason to frequently call them?
02:55:35 I guess.
02:55:37 Well, you know, look that that's why they shouldn't be. I mean, it's absurd that we would allow them to be representatives in the 1st place it or vote.
02:55:48 We need. We need to just normalize that. I'm glad I look, I'm glad we've normalized noticing Jews and that's great, but we also need to start normalizing not just segregation but remove but reversing, reversing all the civil rights stuff. That was it was a mistake. And like I said, it's not going to happen politically.
02:56:09 Let's normalize in the hearts and minds of white people.
02:56:12 Love and division.
02:56:24 No.
02:56:27 Love and division, says Devon, you're a level headed take on Christianity as a Jewish psyop. Whatever said it was a it was a Jewish psyop is appreciated. I don't think it's a Jewish psyop, by the way. I there are people that think it's a Jewish PSYOP and I understand their argument and I don't think it's an illogical.
02:56:47 Argument. OK, that's the that's the I I I I don't. I don't think that. Look, I don't think.
02:56:53 It'd be crazy if.
02:56:56 We're up against. I don't know if we can win that war if we're up against people that 2000 years ago cooked up that kind of a long term.
02:57:06 You know, pysop, we're fucked. You know? Like, if they can pull off, you know, millennial length psyops. I don't know if we can beat that.
02:57:16 You know, I I can barely get people to look a couple of years into the past and future. You know, they're planning shit thousands of years in the future. I don't know, man like that. That that's.
02:57:26 That's tough. That's black. If anything, would be black pillow would be that.
02:57:32 In addition to your points, the theory is intellectually dishonest. Jews would love to prevent Christians from white nationalists or from white national. Well, I mean, look, I I don't think.
02:57:43 I don't think Jews hate that people are Christian. I think Netanyahu loves that people are Christian. I think that a lot of Jews love that people are Christian. There is something to the whole Noah hide thing and there is something to the the Christian Zionist thing.
02:57:58 If Trump's cabinet, every one of Trump's cabinet that isn't Jewish, that's Super Israel. They're all Christian.
02:58:05 And part of the reason why they're Super Israel is because they're Christian.
02:58:10 You know, like Pete, Pete Hegseth, his.
02:58:13 Desire to be Super Israel man is driven by his religion.
02:58:18 That might not be the form of Christianity you practice, whatever. That's beside the point. But yeah, I don't think that's a I don't think it's an issue. And and and look, I don't and it's not even like, oh, well, they don't, they they don't care if you're Protestant. They don't want to be a Catholic though that's not true.
02:58:35 Because lot of lot of the the well literally every every Catholic and that's been elected to the House of Representatives or to Congress is Pro Israel.
02:58:47 Every single one of them.
02:58:48 Well, they're all. They're all compromised. OK, well, then, judge a tree by its fruits. OK? I mean, look.
02:58:55 None of the I can't think of any. Any Catholic and government that is vocally anti Israel.
02:59:03 So that's there it is. I don't think they care. I don't think it's like.
02:59:09 You know, I I don't think Jews are like, oh, they they better not.
02:59:12 Be Christian, you know.
02:59:14 Being Christian is apparently very compatible with their.
02:59:18 Their.
02:59:20 Their objective, so I don't think they care. And I mean, why do you think Ben Shapiro is telling people to go to church, and why do you think Dennis Prager did the same thing? I used to think that it was like some because I used to listen to this prayer all the.
02:59:32 Time and I used to think, wow, you know, he's a real stand up guy because even though he's Jewish, he always tells Christians to go to church and stuff and. And so it just goes to show he just cares more about, like, people's spiritual health or what, you know, that's how I looked at it and that. But now I don't look at.
02:59:47 It like that so much anymore, you know.
02:59:50 So yeah, they don't care.
02:59:52 Do they prefer it? I mean, I don't know. I don't know. I guess we'd have to ask them.
03:00:00 But yeah, that said, it's also I don't have to sign out, but I know there's people that do and I understand their arguments, and I'm not even saying that. I don't think they're just, like, crazy arguments. I just think that if that was true, then we're, you know, that's.
03:00:15 I don't know if we can combat that.
03:00:18 Troy, 87, says just a test to make sure this works well. It works now.
03:00:23 I don't think it's. Uh.
03:00:26 You know, it hasn't been working pretty much the whole stream apparently.
03:00:30 Love and division.
Benjamin Netanyahu
03:00:35 Yes.Paul Findley
03:00:51 More.Devon Stack
03:00:53 That is my favorite one.03:00:57 I'm still waiting for someone to get it. Someone's gonna get it.
03:01:02 Love and division.
03:01:03 Alright, no, sorry. Ohh yeah. No love and division again.
03:01:09 Ohh you said the same thing twice. I hope you did that on purpose.
03:01:17 Yeah. So maybe it was kind of broken.
03:01:21 So yeah, sorry, loving the video. Hopefully you didn't get like.
03:01:24 Quadruple charged or whatever cause. Actually, it looks like you said like 3 times.
03:01:31 Bosnian mountain man.
Jimmy Carter
03:01:34 When you're trying to save money.03:01:36 A good rule to follow is to.
03:01:45 Take it from these gym neighbors, it'll pay dividend.
Devon Stack
03:01:48 Says hi.03:01:50 Oh slash.
03:01:52 Right back at you, Bosnian mountain man, are you really in Bosnia? Are you really a mountain man? Some of my best times of in my life was when I was a mountain man. I was once a mountain man. I'm a desert man now, but I've been a mountain man.
03:02:06 And I did frolic with hippies in the mountains under under a A a massive meteor shower. That's one of one of my one of my favorite memories is in the mountains.
03:02:22 Around with a bunch of hippies at a bonfire, bunch of white people, though, that in fact there was 100% white.
03:02:31 Well, the meteor shower going on.
03:02:33 And they're just like, wow, this is this is like, this is really nice. If life was like this all the time, and it probably was before came.
03:02:44 There's probably a lot of nights like that with my ancestors. I think about it like, you know where that was. Well, that's how you had fun.
03:02:50 You know, he just had a big bonfire, hung out with your friends, and then we're like, oh, like oh.
03:02:54 Look at the.
03:02:55 Natural beauty of this weird cosmic event we don't understand, right? They probably well or that's it. Maybe was terrifying. Maybe they thought the world was going to end.
03:03:06 Kurgan says I very much enjoyed the Kermit Stream, quite the eye opener. Thank you again, Professor Stack. Well, I appreciate that. Yeah. And it wasn't sure if it was going to be too dry and too boring, but a lot of people seem to like it. I it's not by the numbers. The most popular stream, but that's fine. I mean, there's going to be some streams.
03:03:25 They do that, it's just they're going to be for the higher IQ people and not everyone's going to be going to be able to get.
03:03:32 Do it and that's that's fine. I think it's important to do those. I don't wanna cater look by the way, I don't wanna. There's there's enough people out there already catering to stupid people. So I don't feel the need to do that. There's not enough people catering to the higher IQ people. And I think that's the most important because those.
03:03:52 White those people are the the white people. I wanna preserve, quite frankly.
03:03:56 Yeah, we could. You know, if we're being honest.
03:04:00 We we could use a little white people could use a little racial hygiene ourselves, OK?
03:04:05 We could, we could, we could trim the fat a little bit, OK.
03:04:10 Not all white people.
03:04:11 Are awesome. Let's just let's just be.
03:04:13 Real, OK.
03:04:15 So the people that I'm I'm more focused on on.
03:04:20 Preserving are the the people that are.
03:04:25 High IQ, enough to to survive what's coming.
03:04:29 But thank you very much, Kerrigan 86 bass Tank Hill says. What's it going to take to get all these cucked liberal whites to get a reality check? The only people that call each other racist or whites, I think liberals that virtue signal and play social justice warriors should be shamed and called out brutally. Especially stupid.
03:04:51 White women? Well, like it's just. I think it's inherent in a lot of white people and and like, I was saying, you know, cause we were this is this would apply to Findley.
03:04:58 As well, he's basically a liberal white woman in some ways, and I think that that's unfortunately it's a vestige impulse. It's an impulse that that will will it will be bred out and it's going to be a painful process to watch it get bred out because if we lived in white societies, it's something you want. You want that.
03:05:19 But in multicultural societies, it's suicide. And so really, what will happen on a long enough timeline is it will go away because the people that keep relaxing and the people that keep going to Africa to, you know, on their gapya or whatever, they'll all get beheaded and you know.
03:05:39 Raped to death and shit. And so they'll.
03:05:41 They'll they'll get washed out.
03:05:43 Of the gene pool. But it's not going to be.
03:05:47 It's not going to be nice. It's not going to be pretty and it's it's we, my, my fear is that that's not a that takes a long time to happen.
03:05:55 And I don't know that we.
03:05:56 Have.
03:05:57 That because there's a lot of people who are confident, right? Like I kind of, I don't know if I'd call it disagreement, but like, I kind of.
03:06:05 Had that exchange with JF not that long ago about this very topic where he seemed very confident that those traits would just.
03:06:14 You know, disappear and because of, you know, and they will on a long enough timeline and I think people like Edward Dutton will would say similar thing.
03:06:25 My I I don't, I don't disagree with.
03:06:29 What they're saying in terms of those traits going away, I do disagree, however, with whether or not we have that timeline because.
03:06:39 We don't. There's not. We're we have a shrinking number of of white societies.
03:06:47 That aren't reproducing and some of the whites that are reproducing are the lower IQ whites, which is not great either.
03:06:56 But that's it. Is what it is.
03:06:59 Some of these liberals.
03:07:01 Aren't stupid. They're just brainwashed and.
03:07:07 They.
03:07:10 I feel like and this is actually kind of an argument in in the the side of for you know, on the, I don't want to make a big deal out of this, but this is kind of like an argument for Christianity in a way, because they're the kinds of people that, if they were able, I think what's happening is in the absence of religion, they start creating.
03:07:29 Religions like you know the left is basically a religion.
03:07:36 And and so I think in the absence of religion, that's why I always say, look, if you got rid of Christianity, you better replace it with something because then everyone basically turn into a stupid white liberal woman.
03:07:46 Because they they still have that need and they they they replace it with liberalism and that that's worse a lot worse.
03:07:57 That's that's the the the liberal, the liberal tendencies of the white man. While it can sometimes be augmented by Christianity and and you know doing service and charity and all that stuff in in a in a some somewhat negative way, liberalism makes it way worse. Way fucking worse.
03:08:17 Off the rails worse.
03:08:20 But yeah, I I don't know that a lot of the the really bad offenders are chopping their cocks off and not or transing their kids and they're they're becoming reproductive dead ends anyway. So I I suspect, you know, if we have enough time on the timeline, they that a lot of those really bad genes will go away.
03:08:39 Volga German says hello, my fellow anti Semite loud and proud.
03:08:44 Thank you very much, Volga German. Man of Low Moral Fiber says. Why would anyone want more blacks around? The guy was a turbo nog lover. That was depressing. Yeah. No, it's.
03:08:56 Yeah, there's many such cases, many such cases.
03:09:01 And lots of people, Republicans, Maga would would really, in fact, here's The funny thing, your average Maga enjoyer would watch everything we just watched, and they would like the opposite of what we liked.
03:09:17 That's something you need to understand. Everything that I criticized about Findley.
03:09:23 About how he was channeling resources into blacks and and trying to end segregation and and all this other stuff that I criticized, that's all the stuff that MAGA would love about this guy. They wouldn't. They they would be. They'd be glued to their their fucking TV watching this guy talk and tell. He talked about Israel.
03:09:43 That's when they would stop approving of what he was doing.
03:09:47 That's what you need to understand about MAGA. They are our enemies. They're basically the majority of MAGA has turned into custards.
03:09:56 Israeli loving Q tarts.
03:10:01 And that's the way it is. Let's see here.
03:10:06 980 wheel loader says hey Devon, great stream. What do you think about groups like Patriot Front or in person activism and networking in general? I think it's good to create real life networks. And I think that it's great to do activism if, as long as you, you like. I've always said as long as you make it something you can put on the Internet.
03:10:29 Because if you just put a sign up somewhere, you you better take a picture of it and put it on on the Internet because maybe 100 or so people will see your sign IRL, but potentially millions could see it on.
03:10:42 The.
03:10:42 Internet and I I think that they at least Patriot front seems to do that.
03:10:48 I don't know a whole lot about the INS and outs of the organization, but what I.
03:10:52 I've seen looks positive. I don't see anything wrong with. I know there's some people that think that it's a bad idea to do anything IRL and then everything is going to lead to being infiltrated by feds and but about being online and it makes it easier. What do you think is easier to be infiltrated by feds? A infiltration method that requires the FBI to just sit in front?
03:11:11 Of a computer.
03:11:12 Or an infiltration method that requires the FBI to actually go somewhere and pretend to be someone, and then get into your club and look. They they do this too. I'm not saying they don't do this. They do this too. But I'm just saying the effort required to infiltrate a club IRL is.
03:11:31 Like.
03:11:33 Ridiculously, that's so much more of an investment.
03:11:37 Than to infiltrate an online group.
03:11:39 It's so much easier to infiltrate an online group and not only that, it's easier to to docs people in an online group. They get your IP, they are, they know who you are. If you show up somewhere like they probably if they infiltrate your group, they probably know you are too. Especially with facial recognition stuff, right? Like that stuff is so good that even if you wear a mask, they can see your eyes. They can, you know.
03:12:00 They they can at least get a a close match. You know there's there's there's.
03:12:07 It's still more of an investment, though. It's still more investment to try to infiltrate your group IRL, and as long as you're not doing anything illegal, who cares that they infiltrate your group? Like if your whole group is to go and, you know, do charity events for white people, you know.
03:12:27 Maybe deliver meals to old white people, maybe clean up, or white neighborhoods or or whatever it is, right, like whatever it is you're doing that's that's in service of of white people.
03:12:42 Some fed infiltrates that you're just getting free labor from a fed, right? Like what? What's the? I don't see what the problem is. It's only a problem when you start to say and that's why we need to kill them all. That's that's when you know, if you get a guy that starts saying shit like that in your club. Yeah, even if he's not a fed, he's.
03:13:01 The liability. And so you need to just get rid of people like that. And as long as you know you realize fed posting IRL is just way more dangerous than Fed posting on the Internet. In some ways, you know, because.
03:13:16 Well, I don't know. Maybe it's not. I don't know, maybe it's maybe it's about the same, but either way, whether it's online or or in person, as long as you keep people like that from participating and.
03:13:32 You just got to be smart.
03:13:34 You gotta be smart.
03:13:36 La Costa Nostra, right? You gotta you gotta be smart. You gotta you gotta know how to communicate things.
03:13:43 I've I've talked at length, we're basically you just gotta learn to. You gotta realize that you're a criminal.
03:13:50 Or at least that's the way you're viewed.
03:13:52 And so respond accordingly to that and realize that you.
03:13:57 Know.
03:13:58 Anything you say can and will be used against you in a court of law, so just be, you know, aware of that.
03:14:05 In all of your communications, IRL or electronic.
03:14:08 9 Any real order says.
03:14:10 Oh wait, no, I just did.
03:14:11 That one statutory 8.
03:14:25 Statutory aid by recently performed the experiment of walking into a room with more than 10 people and saying Jews aloud it was fascinating to see the visceral reaction and the posture of my family members who were the subjects of the hypothesis you put forth Professor Stack. Well, what I tell you.
03:14:44 You could have walked in there and.
03:14:45 Said Poles or Germans?
03:14:48 Yeah.
03:14:48 And they might giggle or something like that. You say Jews, and everyone's going to tense up.
03:14:55 Everyone's going to tense up.
03:14:58 So did I hope you discussed it with, you know, told them why you did that afterwards? That would have been a fun teaching moment and say like look.
03:15:05 If I had said Mexicans, you know.
03:15:09 Would you have done that? I mean, unless they thought you were really saying Mexicans are here, then they might, you know, quite.
03:15:14 Get the gun.
03:15:16 Let me.
03:15:18 Uh, but yeah, that'd be a good fun. That'd be a fun teaching moment, Knight Rider says. Good evening, professor Stack, PhD, JQ. I would just like to thank you for your many years and of work and service of the race and to raise a toast to many, many more in your bright future. Good Sir. Well, I appreciate that.
03:15:38 Knight Rider.
03:15:40 And yeah, hopefully.
03:15:43 Hopefully we make that happen, right? That's the plan.
03:15:46 As long as I have to do this and I suspect that this is a lifelong mission, I'm going to be on, I will be doing this and unless somehow. Right? Unless.
03:15:57 Unless.
03:15:59 I don't know. Like.
03:16:02 Like the new Hitler. Yeah, well, that's something crazy happens where all of a sudden.
03:16:08 You know, I've got more important things I'm called to do.
03:16:14 This is this is what I suspect I'll be doing.
03:16:18 Volga German says for the Kids book fund. Yeah, yeah. You know what you wanna? I gotta figure out.
03:16:28 Well, I don't wanna. I don't want, like, don't say anything right now. I'm not ready to do it, but at a certain point, I'll probably I should probably try to find an illustrator. I know I could do stuff with AI, but no one wants to fucking like a kids book with AI illustrations and. And I don't feel like dealing with it either. Anyway, so I don't know.
03:16:48 I'm shit at drawing. I could maybe I thought about this. I was like, you know, I'm not good at drawing. But you don't really have to be good at drawing for a kids book, do you? It's a kids book, right? Like they're expecting, you know, Michelangelo, it's a kids book.
03:17:07 So.
03:17:09 Anyway, let's take a look over on.
Benjamin Netanyahu
03:17:13 Rumble.Devon Stack
03:17:19 Rumble the plugin did not work this time.03:17:23 That's OK.
03:17:26 All right, so we got.
03:17:28 The Trister says Devon, watching some of all of us, I think the some of all fears, addition or no, some fear addition.
03:17:37 And the first song at the start. I noticed right before they start singing on the wall behind them is a huge Confederate stars and bars flag, Flock of Seagulls based.
03:17:51 Really. And Flock of Seagulls music video has.
03:17:55 Are you sure they have a Confederate flag? I don't know if I believe that. Let me see.
03:18:25 I don't see it.
03:18:40 I want.
03:18:42 I don't. I don't think there is.
03:18:44 They're just like this weird, fun house environment with mirrors everywhere.
03:18:58 Yeah, that would be really bizarre to me.
03:19:02 I think you were. Maybe, maybe you were seeing things.
03:19:11 Yeah, I don't see that.
03:19:15 Maybe, right?
03:19:17 Maybe maybe it was real in your mind. I don't see it on the video.
03:19:24 Purple Cat Mint says Hi Devon, thanks for the stream well.
03:19:27 I appreciate that.
03:19:31 I appreciate that. Then we got hate, commander.
Paul Findley
03:19:49 Years.Devon Stack
03:19:51 Hey, Commander says sounds like this friendly guy or son of a bitch rather belongs in the mega pit. I don't know. I don't know. Like I said, I think you, you know, misguided, misguided, perhaps evil. No.03:20:09 You know there there's.
03:20:11 There come a time when negligence becomes criminal.
03:20:14 Yeah.
03:20:16 It's it's a tough call with this guy, though.
03:20:19 Because he does seem like he was a super nice guy.
03:20:24 But yeah. Uh.
03:20:28 There does come a time when negligence becomes criminal.
03:20:31 The shadow band says in your opinion, could freedom of religion be weaponized legally in our favor?
03:20:40 EG and.
03:20:42 Odinic Norse Pagan school.
03:20:47 A Jew Jewish school or has the moment pass? I I'm not sure you're asking.
03:20:55 Could freedom of religion be weaponized?
03:20:59 With an odinic Norris Pagan school.
03:21:06 I I don't know what you're asking. I don't know how that would help anything.
03:21:10 You have to be more specific with your solution. There I I'm having trouble imagining how.
03:21:16 A A Pagan school.
03:21:20 Weaponize is anything you know what I mean?
03:21:24 So.
03:21:25 Because I look right now, a lot of schools are mostly secular, so unless you go to like a specifically a Christian School, there's not really a lot of religion.
03:21:36 In school right now, so I don't know how adding paganism to school would.
03:21:43 Unless I'm just misreading what you're saying, I I I'm. But that's not clear to me. What? You're what you're asking. But thank you for the support all the same.
03:21:54 Here we go. Next we got.
03:21:57 As I scroll because the plugin failed.
03:22:01 Hate commander again says maybe I was too hasty with my previous super chat. These Findley plot twists. It's like a Halo, a holler coaster of emotion. Here's hoping Findley's tail has about 1488. Happy ending. Well, yeah, leave said he you know, he he did what he could.
03:22:21 He did what he could.
03:22:23 He was.
03:22:26 He, you know, he did more than a lot of people did so. And he did seem like a super nice guy. So yeah, no pit for him. Zazzy Mattas Bot says thanks for the show. I will listen on my way out.
03:22:37 To.
03:22:37 The lake hope I catch an 84 LB Pike.
03:22:42 That's that's quite a fish there. I don't think I've I've caught even a 1 LB fish.
03:22:49 I haven't done a lot.
Paul Findley
03:22:50 Of fishing.Devon Stack
03:22:51 Last time I did fishing, I was in high school, I think.03:22:55 And yeah.
03:22:58 Really tiny fish and some.
03:23:00 Some river in New Mexico.
03:23:04 Rupert says fuck the Jews replay gang here, going to catch a replay. See on Saturday. Good night, professor stack. Well, I appreciate that. Rupert. Hope you enjoy the replay.
03:23:18 Uh, Rupert again says, is there going to be any stream on Louise McFadden, a representative from Pennsylvania, that?
03:23:27 Name rings a bell?
03:23:30 Louise McFadden.
03:23:41 It's not popping. I did a search for the name, it's not popping up, but that I feel like that's.
03:23:47 That's an early 20th century anti Semite, right? I could be wrong, but I've got a few people in the pipeline I don't.
03:23:53 Know if she's.
03:23:55 One of them is a woman. I don't think that's the name.
03:24:00 But I think that's in my notes because that sounds familiar.
03:24:07 Let's see here then we got.
03:24:09 Scroll scroll scroll scroll scroll scroll scroll, scroll, scroll, scroll.
03:24:16 Almost there. Uh, there we go. Night Nation says you should still be receiving entropy donos even if the stream embedded fucked up. If you check the revenue page. So hopefully that's all happened there and you didn't get fucked for the whole stream. Well, last time I I didn't work. People were trying to.
03:24:35 Donate and it wasn't working, or at least that's what I was told and I believed them because like it was, it was a slow night that night, and it was. It was kind of a slow night tonight, so maybe it's just a slow night that's happened. That's not you.
03:24:46 Know whatever.
03:24:47 But it wouldn't even let me go to that page.
03:24:52 Until I logged out and logged back in and then set it up again. So I don't know. I don't know. I I'd have to look at it from a like a user point of view.
03:25:02 To see what happens when, when that's happening, maybe I should do that maybe.
03:25:05 Like.
03:25:06 Next time it if it does that log in on another browser like in private mode or whatever and see what happens when I try to go to it.
03:25:19 9 Nation again says K select whites just don't reproduce well in captivity when we are occupied by hostile aliens and even our speech is policed, our economics impaired. Our likely future does not encourage reproduction. Exactly no our.
03:25:35 Our selected people will reproduce under any conditions, OK? Selected people are pickier and.
03:25:44 You know.
03:25:45 Maybe. Maybe that's and maybe it's design like, I don't know, maybe we evolve that way because in some ways case selected people are kind of a luxury.
03:25:55 You know, if you think about it like in terms of just survival and reproduction, our selected might be where it's at.
03:26:04 Which is why all the our selected populations of Earth are are rapidly increasing.
03:26:10 Because just in terms of, you know, quality life aside and everything else in civilization aside and just in in just pure numbers.
03:26:19 Our selected wins.
03:26:21 And maybe maybe we are transitioning to in our selected people in some ways to deal with that which would be that's depressing, but you know.
03:26:36 It's possible.
03:26:38 There are a lot of our selected whites these days.
03:26:42 Doesn't you know, it doesn't take much to see that.
03:26:46 A lot, a lot of.
03:26:48 All you all you do is look at TikTok, Instagram, only fans. A lot of our selected white people out there.
03:26:57 Let's see here.
03:27:01 All right. I think that's it.
03:27:03 I think we're good. All right, guys, there's a long one tonight. We're at, well, not as long as I thought. So we're still. We're still below 4 hours, which is good.
03:27:13 Means it might actually get a little bit of.
03:27:14 Sleep.
03:27:14 Tonight. Well, hopefully you guys enjoyed that. Hopefully it wasn't. You know it was.
03:27:20 It wasn't too boring.
03:27:23 The parts where he was talking like an old man I know, kind of my my dragged a little bit, but I just thought it was, you know, I thought it'd be weird to play it and Fast forward. Maybe I should have. But hopefully you guys all learn something.
03:27:35 Learn something about AIPAC. Oh, you know what?
03:27:42 That Netanyahu thing downloaded. Let me. Let's just take a look at the.
03:27:46 The round of applause.
03:27:52 Before we go.
03:27:57 OK.
03:27:59 This is.
03:28:00 This just by looking at the waveform on the timeline.
03:28:07 I feel like it's going to be very similar in length here.
03:28:12 So this is.
03:28:15 Last year, Netanyahu.
03:28:18 Under similar circumstances addresses the House.
Money Clip
03:28:31 Thank you.Devon Stack
03:28:37 I I don't see butts and sheets. If anything, they're cheering louder.Money Clip
03:28:47 Thank you.Mike Johnson
03:29:01 Members of Congress I now have the high privilege and distinct honor are presented to you. His Excellency Benjamin Netanyahu, Prime Minister of Israel.03:29:14 OK.
03:29:39 Thank you.
Devon Stack
03:29:42 Kind of similar kind of similar like some look at the timeline.03:29:47 And.
03:29:50 Yeah. Yeah, I can see where the applause is just cause by the the shape of the the audio form. Like this part here.
Benjamin Netanyahu
03:29:55 Of addressing this great citadel of democracy for the 4th time.Devon Stack
03:30:02 There's applause. What's this applause for?Benjamin Netanyahu
03:30:05 It's a clash between barbarism and civilization.03:30:17 It's a clash between those who glorify death and those who sanctify life.
03:30:30 For the forces of civilization to Triumph, America and Israel must stand together.
Devon Stack
03:30:42 Here's the big one.Benjamin Netanyahu
03:30:55 Because because when we stand together.03:30:59 Something very simple happens. We win, they lose.
Devon Stack
03:31:09 Yeah, looks like kind of the same. Yeah. Everything he said. Oh, my God. It's amazing.Benjamin Netanyahu
03:31:16 And my friends, I came to assure you today of one thing we will win.03:31:39 Later.
Devon Stack
03:31:40 So yeah, that's looks like there's another full hour of that so.03:31:47 Yeah. The more things change, the more they stay the same and with that.
03:31:54 I'm going to take off.
03:31:57 Hope you guys have a good rest of your week for Black Pilled I am.
03:32:00 Of course.
03:32:03 Devon Stack.
Israel Emergency Fund Voiceover
03:32:07 Listen.03:32:14 In spite of the unending threat.
03:32:18 The work goes on to build, to welcome all who come seeking a new home.
03:32:25 And peace, we hear you, Israel.