2:58:19

INSOMNIA STREAM: HISTORIC ECHOES EDITION.mp3

07/30/2025
German Numbers Lady
00:00:00 I'm. I'm I'm.
00:00:17 6.
00:00:31 Yes.
00:00:46 Right.
00:00:48 The the right.
00:00:54 Up to.
00:00:56 The right fear fear 6.
Martha and The Muffins - Echo Beach
00:01:37 I know it's out of, but I can't help it. I'm a romantic. It's a habit of mine to watch the sun go down.
00:01:39 And equivalent.
00:01:54 On Echo Beach, I watch the sun go down to spend my time at work. Only thing that helps me pass the time away.
00:02:10 Lego me someday.
00:02:37 The skies are building in the distance.
00:02:44 Sight.
00:02:47 On Echo beach.
00:02:53 On Echo beach.
00:03:00 I have to step.
00:03:08 I'll be back.
00:03:41 Beach Beach beach.
00:03:55 Beach.
Gene Clark – Echoes
00:04:44 On the streets, you look again at the places you have been for the moments that you thought. Where am I going?
00:04:56 Though.
00:04:56 Walls are like the dead.
00:04:58 They reflect the things you said and the echoes in your head continue showing.
00:05:07 Here the castles you can build.
00:05:10 Dreams you have filled or keep out all of the new wing that is blowing and you would still for a trace of an opening in a place.
00:05:23 Where you find the.
00:05:24 Life that you were used to knowing.
00:05:39 You can walk out in the night and be sure that it's all right to exaggerate the world, the song, the being. You can watch Regina dance through the crystal panes of glass. Yet you know that there's so much that she's not seeing.
00:06:01 Still, you'll hold one precious though.
00:06:04 But after all this time, you saw it as she might be just protecting what she longs for her eyes are.
00:06:14 Paired with black.
00:06:15 Fishy plays. She can't look back at.
00:06:18 The love she wanted soul, but says there's no more.
00:06:34 The lights go on and commence the cold as you sense it's will be sold to the Pirate watchers men. The King no reason to pretend that what they are.
00:06:48 From the fact from blindly fire.
00:06:51 While the truth may be betrayal, lies and treason.
00:06:57 Build their towers in the sand on the roads of their command of the Kingdom is the innocence, their stealing.
00:07:08 An infection easily spreads through the searching twisted heads as they team up to chat down each other's feelings.
Devon Stack
00:07:43 Welcome to the insomnia stream.
00:07:47 Historic echoes edition.
00:07:51 I'm your host, of course.
00:07:53 Devon Stack, I got to.
00:07:55 Turn my time back on. Where's the time thing at?
00:08:01 Every I was on now with Mark Collett earlier today, so my settings are weird. That's usually what happens is usually what I do is stream someone, but I'm. I'm also going to be on with.
00:08:14 Tim Murdoch, I think Friday.
00:08:17 So that'll be a whole lot of Devon this week.
00:08:24 Let's see here. Where's the stupid clock thing?
00:08:28 Where is the stupid clock? Here we are.
00:08:32 Stupid clock activated. Alright anyway.
00:08:36 Ohh, it's Wednesday. It's Wednesday.
00:08:40 It's getting hot.
00:08:43 The hotness has not stopped. It's almost August. Or is it August now? No, it's August. Like tomorrow, right?
00:08:51 Or is that the day after tomorrow that it's August? It's August on Friday, so Friday, August 1st. I guess I'll be on with Tim Murdoch, I don't know.
00:09:00 We're going to talk about.
00:09:03 And then we have a stream Saturday. So a whole lot of whole, lot of insomnia, stream action this week.
00:09:11 Tonight.
00:09:13 We're going to be, I don't know, like I I had a a couple different things.
00:09:17 That I was working on.
00:09:19 That by themselves, they weren't really.
00:09:24 It wasn't enough for like a full stream, right? But.
00:09:28 I felt like if I put a couple of them together.
00:09:32 That that it would be.
00:09:34 But there have to be some kind of coherence. There have to be something in common when really they don't on their face, don't have a whole lot in common. They're from totally different decades.
00:09:45 But they they one thing they do have in common is they kind of illustrate how a lot of things never really change.
00:09:54 A lot of the the problems facing.
00:09:58 Right wing.
00:10:01 White Americans, in terms of trying to get what they want, trying to achieve the goals that they want, they run into the exact same problems over and over and over again, which which makes you wonder if perhaps.
00:10:18 The solutions that they have tried over the past century, at least.
00:10:23 They're they're not working for a reason.
00:10:26 And that reason is is something that I've been saying for a long time is the that they've tried to work out these problems and achieve their goals politically. And quite frankly, there's just simply not a political solution. There's not. And and this is something that's a difficult thing to to get around. It's a difficult thing to convince people of, especially when they're.
00:10:48 Comfortable. Just comfortable enough.
00:10:51 When all it takes to get people to be happy and to be pacified is some blonde haired big titted actress in in a jeans commercial, it you can see how it's it's fairly easy to pacify people and get them thinking that everything's just fine. And if you look at historically.
00:11:11 When when things have boiled over, things have gone into the realm that is post political. I guess you could say it's because the the comfort or the discomfort for the average person has risen to a.
00:11:26 Level that is intolerable, and I think that comfort has been so easy to manufacture, especially since the the industrial revolution, that it's really hard for a ruling class to, or at least a modern, you know.
00:11:47 Competent ruling class or even just somewhat competent ruling class to fuck up so bad that people are are willing to to step out of that that comfort zone that they've manufactured for them and demand more.
00:12:04 And so.
00:12:07 I think that's why I want people to think about when we look, take a look at some of these these examples that I wanted to talk about tonight of in, in the first case, this man here, a man that was, you know, probably if he were alive today would be someone that would agree with us on on most things.
00:12:27 He was a A.
00:12:30 Well, let me just get his name here. His name was Ernest. I don't know if it's Sevier or Sevier. It's spelled. You know, it's one of those. It's hard to know if it's like a French pronunciation or not.
00:12:41 But we'll just say Ernest Cox, his last name is Cox. He was born in on January 24th, 1880 in Knoxville, TN, and he was the child of a Methodist preacher. It's a he looked into doing that as a career first.
00:13:00 He did some preaching, went to Vanderbilt University, found it.
00:13:09 To be A at odds with his upbringing, in some ways, because of the fundamentalist Methodist upbringing that he had. But because of this environment he became kind of interested in a field that was becoming popular at the time. And that was eugenics.
00:13:29 You know the the idea that that actually environment wasn't 100% what caused the behavior or the behavioral patterns in people, but that there's this thing called genetics.
00:13:44 There is this heritability to different traits in that I don't know why this was was something that was such a A or considered such a a newfound discovery. Considering this is something that humans recognized for eons when it came to breeding cattle, or even.
00:14:04 You know, selecting the best crops to plant again the next year for whatever reason.
00:14:11 Humans have had a hard time.
00:14:14 Or at least it appears as though humans have had a hard time coming to terms with the fact that this, this heredity thing that we we witness all in in the universe all around us, and also it applies to humans as well. It's not just with animals. It's not just.
00:14:34 With.
00:14:34 Props, but with people. And it's not just the obvious things that people I think do readily, even today, recognize that, you know, like obviously like eye color, hair color, things like that. But that, that your brain is also an organ. And then if every other organ is a product of your genetics.
00:14:54 Why would your brain be exempt?
00:14:56 On that and I think obviously a lot of that has to do with, you know, humans not understanding the brain and how it works for for a really long time and maybe having some kind of metaphysical view of of existence and consciousness and everything else. But he this man was alive during.
00:15:16 I guess this this uh.
00:15:18 Period in time when we were starting to have the technology to understand brain science in a limited way and start to understand that it wasn't just how tall you were or your eye color or your hair color that you inherited from your parents, but that your brain also was a product of your genetics and that that would affect behavior.
00:15:39 And that would affect intelligence and that this is something that we had to maybe start taking into account as we manage Western civilization, especially as we.
00:15:52 Became more and more in contact with other races that had, well, different genes that were producing their brains. So he he wrote several books over the years. He wrote one book which is we're going to listen to a couple passages from it White.
00:16:12 America, which was his first book from it's not really a super long book. I don't even know if I'd call it a book so much as a maybe a long pamphlet. It's only something like 65 pages long.
00:16:23 But it's he published that in 1923. He then published another book in 1925 called Let My People Go, another book in 1926 called the South Part and Mongrelize in the Nation.
00:16:38 In 1938, he published Lincoln's Negro policy.
00:16:43 In 1940, he published the 3,000,000 negroes thank the state of Virginia.
00:16:49 In 1951, he published Teutonic Unity and then his last book in 1963, Black belt around the world at the high noon of colonialism. He then passed away of emphysema in 1966 and was buried.
00:17:09 In Arlington National Cemetery, he was a World War One vet. He traveled the world. In fact, one of the things that prompted him to start writing on this topic.
00:17:21 Well, in addition to his experience, his personal experience with living amongst black people at a time when they were.
00:17:29 You know, they were emancipated and at a time when the civil rights movement was well and he lived through that right, he lived through towards the end of his life, that transformation that America went through and.
00:17:46 But what uniquely qualified him and probably inspired him to write on this topic was he decided to do what many Americans you know, even today have never done. And that is to go travel around the world to countries that had a large white population.
00:18:06 In proximity to non white population. So he went in for example, he lived in South Africa for.
00:18:13 For a while, he went to a different parts of Africa and South America and Central America and and just kind of observed what what kinds of interactions that you had, what kinds of results you had when you had white civilization.
00:18:35 Either integrating with or living alongside non white civilizations so he traveled from Cape Town to Cairo, Australia, New Zealand, Hong Kong, Singapore, the Philippines.
00:18:51 And then they went back to the United States for a little while, and then he went to South America. And after after his travels, he came back to America and wrote White America now in White America, we covered a lot of what he writes about in a previous stream.
00:19:11 Because his writings were the source materials for that that Southern senator blanking on his name right now from a few strings back.
00:19:23 Where he was the segregationist that was promoting Negro colonization, removing blacks, deporting blacks back to Liberia and carrying out Lincoln's plan. Obviously he was a big fan of Ernest Cox because in fact, that's where I came across the name, as he referenced Cox's writing.
00:19:45 But you go back and you read Ernest Cox's writings, and there's a lot of it's very similar, especially the fact that he wrote the whole entire book about Lincoln's Negro poll.
00:19:55 The called Lincoln's Negro policy in 1938. You can tell that that very much was, I think, a a popular publication among segregationists that we're looking to find a way that they could relate to Northerners. You know, the Southerners that that knew that Northerners had deified.
00:20:15 Lincoln and that by trying to use arguments of Lincoln that maybe that you could get through the Northerners or something like that, which of course obviously didn't work. But at any rate, Ernest Cox when he talks.
00:20:29 About his observations of whites living in proximity to blacks and the interactions between them, he has he has the same fears. He talks about amalgamation, talks about how civilizations throughout the world that some of this using.
00:20:49 Some of the same examples.
00:20:51 Where you know, anytime whites like in in the case of India where you had the one of the the proto Iranian whites that moved to the subcontinent of India and despite their caste system and and their efforts to remain racially distinct, that inevitably there was enough interbreeding.
00:21:13 Going on to where they cease to be white.
00:21:18 And that's the kind of observation that.
00:21:22 That he he saw all across the world historically that he he viewed whites as basically the source of civilization and that it was there was a constant cycle of whites developing a civilization, introducing it to an area, perhaps with a lot of non whites.
00:21:42 And eventually, through interbreeding with the non whites, that civilization declining and then eventually fall.
00:21:51 In the book, he talks a lot about the Spaniards and how they came to South and Central America and their strategy of of breeding not only with the Aztecs or, you know, the indigenous people in the area, but also with the the slaves.
00:22:10 The black slaves they had brought with them to Africa and he talks a lot about, you know, the decline of of the civilizations South of the border as a result, specifically talks about Brazil.
00:22:23 And really focuses a lot of that in that in, in this book, we're not going to, we're not going to go over that because a lot of it's.
00:22:33 You know the context is 9, you know, it's 100 years old. And so the context is a little bit off. But one of the things I thought that was interesting was how he wanted to, how he opened his book and kind of laid out his case for, you know, his basically making his argument before delving into these specific examples.
00:22:54 That we've already kind of covered.
00:22:57 About civilizations around the world rising and falling, essentially based on on their racial makeup and and one thing that's kind of telling is is, you know, we have the I guess the the unfortunate reality of of living 100 years later when he was already kind of seeing the first signs.
00:23:17 Or the first indications that that that we were going to have a decline in our civilization that that if we continue to demographically change. Now The funny thing is.
00:23:30 A lot of these guys, their fear wasn't so much mass immigration because I, while he does talk about that, the proximity of other races will forever be a problem because of the technology. Like he talks about, we'll, we'll actually hear that bit, I think.
00:23:49 If I'm forgetting the exact phrase, but he says something along the lines of thanks to Steam and Steel, I think that's the term that he uses, that we'll we'll always.
00:24:00 Have.
00:24:02 This this proximity problem because transportation has become too easy, and so that the all these natural barriers that used to exist, that would separate white countries and white civilization from non white civilizations, all those barriers have been erased thanks to technology.
00:24:22 Now, I don't think that he could have foreseen the the the technology that as it progressed to the level that we've got today or or even just.
00:24:32 The the attitudes of the white governments and the the the way they have facilitated a lot of this demographic shift, or at the very least they have failed to fight it because a lot of what he sees as the danger is more misogyny nation, a lot of interbreeding with.
00:24:52 The non non whites not being the country being flooded with non whites. You remember too the contact when he's writing this.
00:25:00 We didn't allow non whites to become citizens. The only exception was was African Americans that were descended from slaves. That that was the exception and that that exception only existed because of the civil war. And you know, that was a major fuck up.
00:25:21 That was that was a major step in the wrong direction as far as the the the future prosperity of this country. But that was The only exception. There they were. They were not allowing as we've we've covered in previous streams, there was that Hindu guy that wanted to become a citizen. We wouldn't allow Hindus.
00:25:38 To become citizens, we wouldn't allow any non whites because that's that's that's the way the laws were until the 1950s. So I think that that was maybe a hard thing for him to wrap his head around the idea that we would somehow for for whatever reason changed that and that we would allow all these non whites to come into the country.
00:26:00 Accelerate the process that he was worried about to a degree.
00:26:03 That would blow his fucking mind. I think he was more sensitive to situations like South Africa when he went and visited South Africa and saw that there was a.
00:26:15 Lot.
00:26:16 Of interbreeding between the whites and the blacks, and that concerned him he he mentioned something along the lines of.
00:26:24 Now the the half breeds were on the way to outnumbering the pure whites, and that was going to permanently doom that that country of South Africa and you know.
00:26:39 Yeah. Look, look at South Africa today. You know, it is what it is, but.
00:26:45 I guess with all that said, understanding that context, then we're going to skip ahead after we after.
00:26:50 We.
00:26:51 Listen to some of these passages here. We're going to skip ahead to a story from the 1980s, a story that is related to Jeffrey Epstein in a way, in a manner of speaking, because again, just like a lot of the.
00:27:06 Arguments that this guy is going to be making and a lot of the frustrations he's going to have with other white people when he tries to talk about racial differences.
00:27:17 And get them to understand that this is hard coded in the genetics and getting white people to accept that and and just the the hurdles that he faced with that. You're gonna hear a lot of the same. I mean it's gonna sound like maybe your own frustrations as you've tried to maybe talk to boomers about race and IQ and things like this.
00:27:38 As much as that's going to be very recognizable and relatable when we Fast forward to the 1980's, the case that look a lot of people have maybe heard of.
00:27:49 A little bit and it's hard to have heard of it because really it was. It was kind of out of the news very quickly, very this was back before the Internet. This was back before the Internet and they got 1 front page story. It's a big scandal involving sexual black male and, you know, just.
00:28:07 Like I said, the more the more things change, the more they stay the same, but this was at a time when the White House had the ability to shut a story down. In fact, what they did when this story was first published, the one time that it was.
00:28:22 Published in the one newspaper that it was published, they sent the Secret Service around Washington DC to remove all of the copies of this newspaper from back then. You had those? Well, I guess to some extent you still kind of. I don't. You don't seem very often, but they the the newspaper.
00:28:42 Machines that you used to see on street corners, you drop 1/4 in and open it up and pull a newspaper out. They they kind of had to stop doing it that way because black people would put 1/4 in, open it up and then take all the newspapers and then start.
00:28:56 Selling, selling the newspaper. So I don't know if those machines, even I think you see them every once in a while, but they used to be that's how everyone got their newspaper. If you lived in a big city. And so they sent the Secret Service around and removed all of the newspapers and raided the houses of people that were involved.
00:29:18 And the story just kind of went away.
00:29:20 OK.
00:29:20 So we'll be talking about that story and a similar fate. Similar fate faced some of the people involved, but we'll we'll take a look out of that. Take a look at that after we we have a listen to earnest Sevier.
00:29:41 Cox talking about his his concerns about the white race and their ability to maintain civilization, should we become a a multicultural hellscape.
00:29:57 I guess is is one way to put it.
00:30:00 So without further ado, here we go.
Earnest Sevier Cox AI Reader
00:30:03 A well known British statesman when contemplating the perilous position of 60 million British whites who ruled nearly 400 million colored subjects, said that the problems arising from the white man's contact with the colored races were the most difficult. Confronting civilization problems upon which history casts no lie.
00:30:21 There is an element of gloom in this observation. Practical statesman seek light from the past by which to proceed in the present and in the future. If civilizations chief problem is not to be made clearer by light from history, there is reason for doubt and gloom.
00:30:38 Where the problems arising from the contact of races, temporary problems that would not be cause for uncertainty, but aggressions on the part of the modern white man, have placed the white race in contact with all colored peoples and race friction is to increase rather than grow less.
Devon Stack
00:30:57 So it mentions the aggressions of white men, what he's talking about is colonialism, the British Empire extending itself into all kinds of non white corners of the world and increasing more and more exposure to non whites. He then goes on to talk about.
00:31:17 In a very I believe naive way thinking that, well, you know, thankfully there is a solution. The solution is, you know, negro migration back to Africa, which obviously that's, you know, we've talked about that ad nauseam.
00:31:31 It's it was never going to happen, obviously didn't happen, and so he would, but he was very. It's odd that someone in 1923 could even be optimistic about that, that that was even considered a rational solution that that you could maybe pull off and that should that should show you how different your country has changed in just a century.
00:31:51 That in in 1923, it seemed reasonable that you might be able to politically accomplish deporting All Blacks back to Africa, and that you still had senators on the Senate floor talking about this all the way up until the 1940.
00:32:07 It's.
00:32:09 So it was, you know, it was something people tried. It just was never gonna happen, obviously. So he he gets a little optimistic about that and opines on that for a little bit but then he continues.
Earnest Sevier Cox AI Reader
00:32:21 A study of the results arising from the contact of races is to have a practical influence upon the white Man and his civilization.
00:32:29 It will give knowledge that may be considered the imperative need of civilization. Race friction is not local, not confined to one continent. It is worldwide. We cannot escape it, though we make the attempt, but there is no evidence whatever that either the white man or the colored seeks to avoid race contact.
00:32:49 Contact is the source of friction.
00:32:52 Steam steel and electricity prevent isolation of any race or breed.
00:32:57 We must look forward to a continuation of race contact from the white man's standpoint. The color problem may be defined as the difficulty of determining the extent and intent of race contact to the end that the colored races may benefit, and the white may not be endangered either in race, stock or culture.
00:33:16 That the white race retain ethnic purity is not a superficial desire. It is a primary necessity. If civilization, as we understand it, is to continue.
00:33:27 By preserving itself, the white race is to promote its own progress and impart its achievements to the backward races.
Devon Stack
00:33:35 Now this is another attitude that's really kind of madding that you see from a lot of these, these uh, pro white people from you know, century ago, this attitude of the white man's burden, this attitude, that, sure, it's it might sound really based in ways where he's talking about.
00:33:55 Now. Wonderful. You know, it is that you know that white people have created these civilizations, and it's such a benefit to everybody else. But it's it's unfortunate that they never. It never occurred to these people for whatever reason. In fact, I I don't really see.
00:34:12 This appear in any of the the writings from these people very often, where the where that's not the assumption and and maybe that's just a that they were writing stylistically like like that to have broader appeal to appeal to the egalitarian white people. But it was.
00:34:31 This is something that, that.
00:34:33 Is not unique in these kinds of writings where he talks about how you know civilization. It's a product of white people and and really the argument that he continues to make is that, you know, non white people should want us to remain white because they they benefit from our inventions.
00:34:54 And our civilization and our culture and our arts.
00:34:57 But it it's like this given that for some reason that that that they should benefit like there's never a notion that why you know, why should they benefit? Why are why are we required to share everything that we produce all of the technology that we we create or all the culture that we create.
00:35:18 The civilization that we create, not that we shouldn't, you know that. We should, greedy greedily, you know, like misers guard the products of our of our people.
00:35:28 But maybe, maybe protect them a little bit. You know why? Why not have have some kind of ownership over the the inventions of our people. But that's that's the thing that really gets a little frustrating is he has like, this the white man's burden attitude about this stuff where he's he's constantly talking about.
00:35:48 How? It's just a given that white prosperity is good for non whites because they're going to benefit from our our successes.
Earnest Sevier Cox AI Reader
00:35:58 The white race has white.
00:36:00 Has outdistanced the other races in cultural attainments, spiritual and material?
00:36:06 This will constitute light from history.
00:36:09 We shall also see that the white race become hybrid has not been able to continue its cultural progress. This too is light from history. We confess that we do not know how to convince or even disturb that once large but constantly dwindling group of white theorists who, when confronted by indisputable facts, past and present, simply reply. It might have been different.
00:36:30 Or it may yet be different.
Devon Stack
00:36:33 So this is where he starts talking about you point out to other white people. How can you look at at all of history?
00:36:41 How can you look at all of history and see and measure our accomplishments as a people?
00:36:47 Against the accomplishments of all other people, how can you see this contrast? That's easy to see over and over and over again. And no matter how far back you go, you can go back to the ancient Greeks. It doesn't matter. You can go back thousands of years and if you measure the accomplishments and the the production of white people versus.
00:37:07 Is the entire continent of Africa. As an example you. It's impossible to to not recognize that there is something completely unique about the the white people and their their ability to create civilizations functioning.
00:37:27 Civilizations.
00:37:29 And high art and philosophy and technology. And there seems to be something special about the way that white people have excelled and have have outdistanced as he says, the other races, and their reply. Maddeningly, he says as well it it might. That's just.
00:37:49 It's all chance. It's all chance or that, that that Jewish book. What is it called? The guns?
00:37:57 Guns. Something in steel, I forget the name, but it tries to explain it away as a product or as a consequence of environment, saying that, you know, white people were only only excelled at civilization because we had, like, some magic dirt in Europe that made it easier.
00:38:17 And and and so again, going back to the environmental argument and that those are the same kinds of arguments he was running into when he would point out, well, how do you explain the fact that for ever, white people have have exceeded the accomplishments of everybody else?
Earnest Sevier Cox AI Reader
00:38:35 This group of non scientific thinkers grudgingly acknowledges the age long ascendancy of the white race, but will tell one that it might have been otherwise, and it may yet be so.
00:38:45 Those who construct a race, sociology upon ifs, maize and mites dwell in the realm of fancy and are secure, for there is no method by which they may be reached.
00:38:57 To them, the ethnologist may reply when your ifs, Mays and Mights come true, you are entitled to consideration.
00:39:06 In constructing a program by which the white race is to be guided in its future, contact with the colored races.
00:39:13 We are to be influenced by facts only suppositions and hopes have their place, but not properly. So in determining the future of the white man in his civilization. What is needed is the light of experience, not the Halo of prospect and prophecy. The results of past contact of white with colored are to be relied upon as imperative.
00:39:34 Suggestions which are to determine the purpose and limits of future contact?
00:39:40 By knowing the past, we may profit by reason of such knowledge.
00:39:45 Whether it reveals success or failure, it may be necessary that some consider the fact that the races as such are not of recent origin. At the dawn of history, they were constituted very much as they are today.
00:39:58 The earliest records revealed the white race in ascendancy. Just as that race is foremost at the present time.
00:40:05 The relative position of the races has not changed for many thousands of years. Some ethnologists have asked if the races have retained relative positions for 6000 years. What reason have we to supposed that long before the dawn of history, say 50,000 years ago, they were in different relation, one to the other?
Devon Stack
00:40:27 And I would say, why would it even matter if for the last thousands of years white people have had this?
00:40:37 Vast separation in culture, technology, and civilization. Why would you assume that that gap could be closed in less than 1000 years? It's like I was talking to my boomer mom once about the the failure of blacks.
00:40:57 To assimilate magically like boomers thought, and I talked to her.
00:41:02 How you know, I'm sure that when you were a kid in the 1960s that you experienced a lot of propaganda telling you that blacks were were just the same as whites, that the only difference, you know, aside from the color of their skin was opportunity. It was environment. And if we just gave them.
00:41:23 You know, equal opportunity and affirmative action and it would, it would close this gap rapidly because there were no biological differences beyond the aesthetic.
00:41:34 And so that the only differences could be environmental. So if we could alter these environmental factors, then they would in in essence become white very quickly. And I and I and she still kind of believed it and probably a little bit still does today unfortunately because you can't you know you can't teach.
00:41:54 An old dog, new tricks, and I remember telling her I was said, you know, you're you're you're asking blacks to make up for, you know, thousands and thousands of years in evolution like you realize and. And here's something a lot of boomers don't realize. I said you realize they never invented the wheel. Right.
00:42:12 That they didn't have a written language, right?
00:42:15 And she had no idea that blew her mind a little bit. She didn't want to think. Think about it very hard. But that did blow her mind. There's a lot of people are not aware that while we were, you know, we we had Chariots and and, you know, all these the the all the all the the trappings of the the Roman Empire.
00:42:35 They didn't have a written language or the wheel in in sub-Saharan Africa where you know the origin for a lot of the black people live in America.
00:42:44 Today that they they literally are, are about 50,000 years behind in evolution and that it's impossible. They're going to just catch up and that you are if that's your project, if that's the project that you want to inflict upon your fellow whites, you're damning them to a project.
00:43:04 That, in essence has no end because you are expecting you're you're damning your children to a life of of.
00:43:15 Well, proximity to blacks that that it's going to be have a net negative for at least the next 50,000 years.
00:43:24 All because of what?
00:43:26 What's the benefit?
00:43:28 What's what's The upshot for white people? And that's The thing is white people never take their own side. They never ask themselves.
00:43:35 So there is no, and let's say it was out of some kind of white guilt thing. Let's say the reason why you thought that white people needed to endure the proximity to blacks or the proximity to, you know, whoever the other non whites, other other other melanoides that we're going into the country.
00:43:56 That you that for whatever reason, they had to endure this as.
00:44:01 Because of colonialism or because of slavery or or what have you, you're you're still saying that because of of the actions of a few white people that spanned maybe a couple 100 years, that for 50,000?
00:44:21 Mayors, all white people, are going to have to pay the price.
00:44:26 How is that a fair shake? I mean, even if that's your argument, it doesn't make any sense. And so there's no way in which this makes any fucking sense at all that white people should be in proximity to non whites and that their civilization should suffer because of it. There is. There's literally no benefit to the whites. There's only a benefit to the non whites.
00:44:47 And there doesn't seem to be a whole lot of gratitude for that benefit.
00:44:52 But yet, you know, even this guy, this guy seems to to think that there's there is some sort of responsibility that white people have for non whites.
Earnest Sevier Cox AI Reader
00:45:01 Contact to the white race with the colored body produces that which is popularly called a color problem.
00:45:07 But it is necessary for us to understand that a color problem is not merely a problem of color.
00:45:13 A color problem.
00:45:13 Rightfully understood goes deeper than the skin.
00:45:17 It is that problem or problems arising from the culturally advanced white man's contact with the lesser advanced non white.
00:45:25 It is this, and yet it is more.
00:45:27 Culture is the product of a peculiar mentality, acting upon environment and being in some degree responsive to the influences of environment. But races placed under similar environment do not produce similar culture.
Devon Stack
00:45:42 See and this is this is an argument I've made a lot of times. This is was was particularly frustrating. Is reading this passage where I've I've said again and again and.
00:45:51 Again, is that when people try to say, well, is it race or is it culture? Is it biology or is it culture? How do we change the culture of black people? You'll see a lot of people on on X saying stupid shit like that, right? The centrist of the world saying, oh, we just need to change their culture and and not realizing that culture is just an expression of.
00:46:12 Biology culture is a product of biology.
00:46:15 Analogy culture cannot be changed radically, at least unless you change the biology. You know you'll never be able to produce white culture from black people that will never fucking happen.
00:46:33 And it's it's something that he understood over 100 years ago over 100 years ago, he was he was making the same argument over a century ago. He was trying to explain the exact same thing he was saying. Look, there's people that say there's culture and there's environment and that that's what explains everything but.
00:46:53 It's easy to see that if you have and this is because he traveled to these countries where you did have blacks and whites in the same environment, and he would say like, look, you have the same environment for two different groups or two groups of people and you're getting wildly different cultures. And so it's obviously not environment.
00:47:13 It's obviously coming from the biology of these people, so it's not like a new way of thinking. It's just it's just a frustratingly suppressed way of thinking.
Earnest Sevier Cox AI Reader
00:47:23 If advantage and opportunity be equal and the results widely different, we have cause of inquiry whether the various races have not evolved, differences in mentality, just as they have evolved, difference in skin color, hair texture, and other less obvious though equally material physical distinctions.
00:47:41 Is it not reasonable to believe that if evolution has given to the various races well defined markings in skin, hair and head form, that the same forces may have established coordinated differentiations in brain quantity and quality?
00:47:54 This is a plausible theory, and to it we cannot refrain from inviting the consideration of the remaining members of that one time world dominating host who seek to show that the African is a youthful Mongolian and a child Caucasian.
00:48:08 Environment has played.
Devon Stack
00:48:11 I I just thought that was kind of a funny way of.
00:48:15 Basically saying blacks are they're like children.
00:48:19 And you gotta remember, in the context of 100 years ago, that's how it's changed. It's, it's actually not changed, but this is the difference. He in 1923 and you you actually hear this a lot from people that are. They're describing black people in well in in 1923 or thereabouts, they'll describe them as acting like children.
00:48:39 That they have the understanding of children, that they have the the the drive of of children, the that they have the ingenuity of of, of children. But it it's it makes it sound really non threatening. And I think it's because.
00:48:55 It was to some degree, like in in, in terms of black people, they've always been more violent than they've always been. More of a problem, obviously, than white people. We've we've had lots of streams talking about like why lynchings happened and and this sort of thing and the behavior of blacks really. You know, this this.
00:49:16 Manifestation of rioting that happens every so often. There's just a product of having black people in your social.
00:49:23 So not, not that they that they were remarkably more well behaved back then, but I think that they were to some degree because white people put them in their place when they got out of hand. They well, as an example, they're there were lynchings right when when you would have the kinds of behavior that we you see now.
00:49:43 Every single fucking day on X you see a new fucking video of black people lashing out violently and and psychotically. And what's the response from white people? Well, usually nothing other than, you know, bitching about it on fucking X. No one's rounding up all their friends and stringing them up any of these people in a tree or something like that.
00:50:01 And in fact, there's not even any kind of actual justice system response either, but that I think it's funny because even though he describes them as children.
00:50:13 That's kind of what how children behave when you don't discipline them. So it is really they are kind of like children. They're just children that haven't been disciplined in a very, very long time.
00:50:26 And so they're running amok like fucking feral psychos and. And so anyway, I just thought that was kind of funny the way he describes them like that because you see that over and over again in that era where they talk about black people as basically having the minds of children.
Earnest Sevier Cox AI Reader
00:50:42 Environment has played an important part in determining the differences between the races, but it has done so only in conjunction with an immense period of.
00:50:49 Crime, race traits and potentialities were determined at that remote period when the races were young and plastic. Succeeding centuries have that accentuated. The differences in racial trends, which were determined countless centuries ago. Those who have held at the difference between the white and the colored is a temporary environmental difference merely have an effect held that evolution.
00:51:10 Has qualified every organ of the human body except the brain, which organ remains the same in all races?
Devon Stack
00:51:18 See again, this could be an argument from from one of us where you're talking to people that quite literally believe that that somehow evolution affects every organ of the body except the brain. I mean, the fact that, I mean, I've heard people phrase it exactly that way where you where you when you get in those arguments like, oh, you're.
00:51:36 Trying.
00:51:36 To say that that the.
00:51:38 Brain is the only organ that's not affected by evolution or or or.
00:51:43 And and and and and the fact that he's phrasing it the exact same way shows you that this is a problem we're always going to have trying to have these rational arguments and discussions with not just non whites, but other white people trying to get them to figure out this, the fucking issue and and the problem is, is, is that this is something that apparently.
00:52:04 White people have struggled to understand for over a century.
Earnest Sevier Cox AI Reader
00:52:11 Such a conclusion is rankly uncritical, and that at one time was seriously considered is ample evidence of the low state of biological knowledge prevailing among a large proportion of white people.
Devon Stack
00:52:24 And that's, I think a lot of it is education. I think it's the fact that white people grow up in a system that's telling them the exact opposite of this, that everyone's exactly the same. In fact, you know, the more educated someone is, the more leftist they're going to be because that's, you know, all education is, is.
00:52:44 His lefty propaganda or not, all of it. But you know good.
00:52:47 Good portion of it. I remember even when I was in college. Even when you take English class right where you're just, you're just supposed to be learning. It was like English 101. You're supposed to be learning, like grammar and spelling and, you know, whatever the fuck. And.
00:53:03 The examples they would use.
00:53:06 Were were it was, it was subtly.
00:53:09 Injecting leftist talking points like I I I I remember it because it was just like I was surprised to see it. They were using. They were talking about fallacies, right. You know, different fallacies that people would use in argumenting or argumenting in arguing. And they all the examples. And I mean every example.
00:53:29 They used for an example of a of a fallacy was a right wing, either like Rush Limbaugh was one of the examples, like literally, they used rush limbo.
00:53:40 Or or Newt Gingrich. Or, you know, it was it was some politician or pundit, right Wing, Conservative politician or pundit. For every single example saying, oh, look, and as you can see, he's employing this fallacy, the appeal to authority fallacy or whatever, and and. And that's just how it is. It's.
00:54:02 It's just all education is saturated in this, you know, Jewish leftism, leftism anyway, so.
00:54:11 That he he basically makes the point that look most white people don't understand this because they don't understand biology, they don't. They have a a total and look, even today you have an issue when trying. There's a I mean look there's a lot of people in the right that don't even believe in evolution and that's that's a fucking obstacle where you have people that are.
00:54:32 On your side, but because of for religious reasons, they think the world's only 4000 years old and they can't wrap their head around evolution. And that's that's a big fucking problem.
Earnest Sevier Cox AI Reader
00:54:43 We cannot ignore race.
00:54:46 It is written large in human history.
00:54:49 It has left its visible trace upon every continent. We may specify a single race that biologically is, but a portion of mankind.
00:54:57 But by virtue of race, instincts and capacities has contributed all the higher human achievements.
00:55:04 This race, the white race.
00:55:06 Has not had advantage over other races in time, climate, country or other environment.
00:55:13 But to its fertile brain and restless activity, humanity owes its all.
00:55:18 From our knowledge of history, we are safe in assuming that if the fight race were effaced from the Earth, civilization as we know it would perish. The cultural debit of the colored peoples to the white race is such as to make the preservation of the white race a chief aim of the colored if these latter but understood their indebtedness.
00:55:39 By keeping a white man white, the colored may look forward to a future in which they may enjoy cultural surrounding superior to their own racial contributions. The inventions of the white men are to become world possessions. This is so at the present has been so in the past, and apparently is to continue to be so.
Devon Stack
00:55:59 And that's this is the white man's burden bullshit that really irritates me, where he tries to make the the appeal to non whites, saying you you have bought you. If all people you should want us to stay white because you're going to benefit from all this.
00:56:13 And just that, that really frustrates me because I feel like that's really what leads to the situation that we're in it. It's really just a watered down version of saying, hey, come on into our countries and live amongst us, why should we have to share all of our?
00:56:27 All of our wealth and all of our.
00:56:30 You know the the product of our blood, sweat and tears. It doesn't make any sense that this is our responsibility now. Conversely, it doesn't mean that we go and and take advantage of and exploit the other people. That is also unfortunately bit us on the asks every time that we've done that. But yeah, this idea that it's kind of like when we were talking we had that.
00:56:51 String about what was it called that?
00:56:54 I like that really cringe. Name there was that guy, the segregationist that was trying to develop his own religion, and it viewed different.
00:57:07 Different races is basically morally relative, and so that they should be allowed to develop their own morality and and develop their own value system independent of each other and.
00:57:23 You know, I think I used the example of like the prime directive and Star Trek, you know, leaving, leaving other cultures to develop independently of each other and and let. I don't. I don't understand why that's not something that's more accepted or sought after when it comes to white people, you know, like white, why don't you want to?
00:57:43 To allow other groups to develop on their own. Why do you feel the need to impose, in some instances your civilization on on non whites and or if you wanna frame it another way, give them the gifts of your ancestors? Like why would you want?
00:58:02 To do that.
00:58:03 It doesn't matter. It's really something I don't understand and I feel like that it's something that separates people like me from the kinds of whites that open up the floodgates to the people, like, well, like the melanoides he's talking.
Earnest Sevier Cox AI Reader
00:58:17 The insane desire of the colored to blot out the color line and bridge the evolutionary chasm between the races by the process of interracial marriage ignores the fact that the white race as white is the source of progress.
00:58:31 That the colored races should seek to kill the goose that lays the golden egg is further proof that their inferiority demonstrated so clearly in cultural attainments extends to their rational processes in.
00:58:43 While the future of the colored races is concerned so deeply with the purity of the white, we are not for a moment to consider it proper to permit their judgment to determine whether the white is to remain white. This is a question for the white to decide.
00:58:56 But it would seem that light from history on this matter ought to reach even the mind of the colored the white man founded the cultures of Egypt.
00:59:04 India.
00:59:05 And eventually interbred with his colored subjects, leaving a mixed breed population heir to the culture of the pure.
00:59:11 White.
00:59:12 With what result? Arrested Development stagnation. This is light from history that should penetrate the densest intellect. The African negro was raised from a brute like condition by White Egypt.
00:59:25 What influence for good as Mongrel Egypt had upon the negro, the African negro's knowledge of the present civilized arts has come from the pure whites of Europe, not from the mixed breed whites contiguous to his domain.
Devon Stack
00:59:39 See, again, it's it's. I get what he's saying.
00:59:43 He's saying that, you know, whites are able to maintain these civilizations. The the second they cease to become White uses India and Egypt as an example that those civilizations stall out. You could say Brazil is another example of that. You could say the United States is on the way to being another example of that. And I do believe that.
01:00:05 You could say that, yeah, this this is all true. But again, it's kind of it's kind of flavored with this assumption that that non whites should benefit from from whites like that's a given that that that non white should want us to be.
01:00:25 Remain white civilizations because we will uplift them to a higher level. Why are we even considering that? Why is that even?
01:00:32 And.
01:00:33 A topic of discussion. We are in direct competition with these people and I think really part of it's hubris. Part of it is because there was such a wide gap between whites and the other countries of the world, partially because we we hadn't yet managed to give them.
01:00:53 All of our technology and you could even say that.
01:00:58 Like.
01:01:00 Well, much of Asia as an example, much of Asia, the the modern conditions that they live in in China and Singapore and Japan and elsewhere that they would not, they would still be centuries behind us in technology had we not shared.
01:01:15 The.
01:01:20 All of our technology with them and well, in order to have cheap manufacturing, which is really what it boils down to.
01:01:30 But that. Yeah, that's that's that's Asia where they have higher IQ people, but that separation would or that gap would be even fucking like way wider between say, Saudi Arabia or a lot of these Arab countries where all of their technology comes from.
01:01:49 The West injecting their their.
01:01:55 Technology and customs and and everything else in order to well in in the in. I guess in the case of the Arabs is to obtain their their oil wealth and that was the trade off right? So over and over and over again you see all these examples now 100 years later like think because think in 1923.
01:02:15 What do you think Riyadh looked like in 1923? What do you think? Well, I mean, what do you think that even?
01:02:26 Most of China looked like in 1923.
01:02:29 I mean, what do you think most of or even Japan? I mean, what do you think Japan looked like in 1923? What do you think?
01:02:38 I mean, a lot of our, a lot of or well, especially African countries, African countries were probably quite literally still very tribal in 1923.
01:02:48 Probably still had a lot of cannibalism and you know, all that stuff going on in 1923, so it's the the gap was so wide, maybe it it seemed as though sharing your your you know allowing allowing the whole rest of the world to brain rape you that the consequences?
01:03:08 Will never be severe enough to wear these other civilizations like in the case of China, they would ever become competitors. In fact, when he talks about China or as these people did at the time it calls them, you know, calls them.
01:03:20 Floyds there was no sense that that the Chinese posed any kind of of a threat that they would, that they were ever going to be any more of a threat than, say, Mexico would be they. They're they very much underestimated the capabilities of of East Asians.
01:03:40 When you go back and read the writings of the eugenicists, the way that they viewed, and I think it's because of out of a lack of exposure, right, they just didn't have a whole lot of interaction with East Asians.
01:03:54 But they really underestimate the capabilities of East Asians. When you read these guys, what they write about the other races?
Earnest Sevier Cox AI Reader
01:04:04 While science may deal with experience only and may not take authoritative cognizance of events that have not happened.
01:04:11 Yet the results of the experience are all that we have form which to construct a program for the future.
01:04:17 And in this respect, it may be said that a program for the future based upon experience is a program based upon science.
01:04:24 Yeah.
01:04:25 The light of experience will reveal that regardless of the consequence.
01:04:29 The colored races will gladly avail themselves of opportunity to enter bread with the white.
01:04:35 And if the white is to remain white, since that race is now in contact with all races.
01:04:41 Such results shall depend entirely upon the attitude of the white man.
01:04:46 A gloomy consideration with regard to this matter is that 60 centuries of race history have proved that the white man has at no time or place remained white when in prolonged contact with color graces.
01:05:00 This, then, is the essence of the color problem.
01:05:04 The difficulty of preserving the culturally fit when in contact with the culturally unfit, there are incidental to race contact, economic and political problems which are constantly manifest.
01:05:16 But the fundamental problem is to preserve the breed from which progress issues.
01:05:22 In dealing with the worldwide color problem, great stress should be placed upon the fundamental rather than the incidental phase of the problem.
01:05:30 For the question of color, is a mooted and vexed question.
01:05:35 Yet strange to say, the white man seems always to have grasped the essential phase of the problem, but has been greatly confused in his practical dealing with the less important phases.
01:05:47 Those who are familiar with the history of race contact, or those who have considered the situation today.
01:05:53 Will readily admit that racial interbreeding is 1 irredeemable phase of race contact.
01:06:00 And that other problems so-called are of but minor importance.
01:06:05 There is an omen of hope in the fact that the leading white nations at present are united in opposing interbreeding of the white man with the colored races.
Devon Stack
01:06:15 And there's there's the context, and that's another that well, it's it's kind of amazing that a in 1923 race mixing was was taboo all around the world in well in all around the.
01:06:27 White.
01:06:27 World.
01:06:28 It happened.
01:06:30 But it was it was really socially unacceptable to an extreme degree, especially as compared to today, right. And so it's kind of amazing that in 1923, when he lives in a, in a society where race mixing is super too.
01:06:48 Taboo and that it's not just a society he lives in, it's it's pretty universal throughout all white countries that he's still worried about this because he still believes that historically every time you've had white people live in proximity.
01:07:08 The non whites, inevitably the white gets, gets browned out and it and that there's literally no example of that not happening.
01:07:20 Which is true, which also makes you wonder, why do you think there is this obvious, intense effort to make sure that there's not a single white person in the world who's not in proximity to non whites?
01:07:42 Why do you think that is?
01:07:46 If it's true that historically every time.
01:07:50 You've had white people in proximity to non whites.
01:07:54 That the white jeans get blotted out.
01:07:59 Why do you think?
01:08:01 There is this extreme, deliberate effort to make sure not a single white civilization on the face of the planet is not in close proximity to non whites.
Earnest Sevier Cox AI Reader
01:08:20 This much the white peoples of the world theoretically hold in common opposition to miscegenation.
01:08:28 With this in common, white men, regardless of nationality or geographical location, should be able to formulate a program upon which all whites may agree, and by such agreement become a unit in dealing with the backward races.
01:08:44 Any analysis of the colored problem should be stated in unequivocal terms.
01:08:49 For the future of the white man in contact with the colored races is to be determined by the attitude of the many of the white race rather than by the conceptions of a few.
01:08:58 The white world is a democratic world and the people, rather than the specialists, have the deciding influence in national policies.
01:09:06 The color problem must be resolved into a few simple propositions, so very clear that the average man will not have doubt in comprehending their meaning nor difficulty in testing their merits.
Devon Stack
01:09:19 And I guess that's honestly he points, unintentionally, he points another problem.
01:09:24 That maybe that is really.
01:09:27 Another reason why whites have declined worldwide.
01:09:32 And by that I mean democracy. Because how were whites ruled in Europe for centuries before democracy kind of blossomed and took root in the West?
01:09:45 I mean, you could say that to some degree, right, that the the Roman Empire was a democracy. Well, look what happened to the Roman Empire.
01:10:00 It's a major hurdle.
01:10:03 In fact.
01:10:05 When you're trying to preserve your people and you have to go around and convince all of them.
01:10:12 To do something that is not.
01:10:15 Easy for them to understand because of their lack of of in Group preference because of their lack of, you know, education when it comes to genetics and biology and or what have you or whatever other whatever the other factors are and how much harder does it get.
01:10:35 When you live in not just the democracy where you have to convince all you know, the majority of people that, hey, if we don't save the white race this, this wonderful democracy, you guys all love, it's not gonna, you know, it's not going to stick around. You know, this this society that you like so much.
01:10:52 It's. Yeah, it. It's it's gonna not look like this in a in 100 years, even though you, you can't, you don't have the the forethought to look ahead and and understand that.
01:11:04 Not only do you have that issue.
01:11:06 With a homogeneous democracy.
01:11:10 That that problem becomes infinitely harder when you're now talking about a multicultural democracy. Now, when you have a multiracial and multicultural democracy, you're supposed to use those that the tools of democracy to convince white people to not be genocided.
01:11:27 Decided and when? When when some of the people that you're trying to, you know, it's like the other day I tweeted out that as a joke obviously that there should be an app, you know in reference to the Tea app where women are talking shit about men. The app that got hacked. I I tweeted out that there should be an app called coffee where white men.
01:11:47 Can rat out mud sharks to each other, right?
01:11:52 And it was amazing how.
01:11:56 It I mean it, it was obviously it went and that was one of the more popular tweets. But the reason why it was one of my more popular tweets is it had a lot of engagement and a lot of that engagement where black people who were desperate to have to keep access or maintain their access to white women.
01:12:17 That's really what it was. It was. It was a lot of black people who felt threatened that there might be this system that would exist that would limit their access to white women. And so it's it's.
01:12:31 It's something that you're never going to convince. For example, people like that.
01:12:39 That you're gonna that you need to make a race mixing laws. You know, like that you're going to go back to a tradition of of not race mixing because unfortunately too many non whites benefit from race mixing because as he's already articulated.
01:13:00 That is as bad as race mixing is to the future descendants of a of a white person.
01:13:09 That's equally good for the future descendants of a non white person to race mixed with a white person. Why do you think it's so easy as a white guy to go to any foreign country and get a what? What you might perceive as a higher quality woman?
01:13:29 Easily. It's because you are instantly way more attractive than all the native population, simply simply by being a normal white.
01:13:38 The whole reason why Passport Bros exist or the whole reason why you have like this, you know, like these old boomer guys that go to Southeast Asia and get these much younger women, it's because just by virtue of being white, you are way more sexually attractive to all the non whites of the world.
01:13:58 Because on a genetic level, they understand that your genes are going to be a positive for their children. That's the way it works. That's how we select within races. When you look at someone that you're attracted to sexually, there's usually there's something whether you are are.
01:14:18 Uh.
01:14:19 You know, conscious of it or not, what's you're doing is you're identifying things about them genetically that would would make for a good match with you, with your genetics and producing optimum, you know, genetic makeup for your children.
01:14:40 And so the same thing happens when a white man goes to Africa or goes to Asia or goes to anywhere like, you know, South America. You are instantly better looking than the native population because you have you bring to the table, you bring to the genetic table all of the benefits of your white jeans.
01:15:01 And on some genetic level, they all fucking know that. And so you become super desirable. And so that's that's.
01:15:10 Always going to be an issue and that's why with proximity comes these kinds of inbreeding issues. Partially it's because you know, it's because of lust. It's like like it's like the Spaniards. When they came to when they first came to the Americas, they they were, they were getting, they were swimming in it and they were fucking every every.
01:15:31 Aztec woman that they could get their hands on and they probably gave it up freely because of, you know, they they were the the alpha and they were genetically superior to the the other options.
01:15:46 So at any rate, this is this is.
01:15:48 Why?
01:15:50 If that's the environment that you're in, what's the political solution to that?
01:15:55 I mean, if you can't even convince the.
01:15:56 White people that this is a problem.
01:15:59 You're not going to convince the non whites.
Earnest Sevier Cox AI Reader
01:16:04 A study of the worldwide color problem during the past 8 or 9 decades will reveal the white race divided into two schools of teaching with regard to a proper attitude towards the colored one. School is constituted generally of those portions of the white race that live apart from the colored, while the other school is made-up of those portions of the white race.
01:16:25 That live in contact with.
01:16:26 Colored the whites who dwell apart from the negro have advocated one policy towards the negro, while those whites who dwell with the negro have advocated another policy. There is a general agreement among the whites who live apart from the negro, whether these whites live in Europe or in America. There is also a general agreement among the whites who live in contact with the negro.
01:16:47 Whether these whites live in the southern states of the American Union, in the European colonies of Africa, Asia, Australasia, or in Latin.
01:16:56 Becca the teachings of the whites who live apart from the negro have placed great emphasis upon environment rather than upon race and heredity. Whilst those whites who live in daily contact with the colored races are agreed that there is a difference between the white and the colored, which cannot be bridged by present environment, and that the development of the various races.
01:17:18 Is conditioned by their respective race traits and tendencies.
Devon Stack
01:17:24 So again, it makes the the observation again we you, you same observation be made here and now in 2025 that the people who don't have to deal with black people or non whites generally they're quick to say oh it's all environment because they they don't have any exposure to these people or to the degree that they do right.
01:17:44 Like if you're talking to someone that works in DC, they live in a neighborhood where you know it's it's all upper middle class and they they really don't have any interactions with anyone that has an IQ below 80.
01:18:02 And so the blacks that they're encountering are like the cream of the crop blacks, the Arabs that they're encountering are like the cream of the crop Arabs. They're they're only encountering the the high end people that are able to function and interact with them in the workplaces that they're, you know, that they're working and.
01:18:22 The social.
01:18:23 Circles that they're socializing in, and so they're never exposed to, you know, like the, the typical the average of these groups, they're only exposed to the high end people. And this was even more amplified 100 years ago, where almost nobody would have even met. I mean there.
01:18:43 100 years ago this might sound crazy, but most white people probably had not met an Asian.
01:18:48 Person and that's just the way it was. And so it was all theoretical to them. They didn't have any kind of exposure. They never witnessed the behavior themselves. And so they just went with what sounded good on paper. And he makes the the the observation. There's a major distinction between.
01:19:08 The theories of people who are never around black people and the theories of the people who are always around black people. He mentions the South and all the the the calling it the European colonists that live.
01:19:19 Then Africa, including South Africa, and saying that, look, you talked to people in the South who live around black people. Like, isn't that funny? Like, that's the funniest thing is historically, and this should include people in, they should include people in. But this has always been the case historically, all of the.
01:19:39 The the the areas where whites are demonized as being like ignorant racists are the the areas where the most non whites live.
01:19:48 You know whether you're talking about the South Africans the way they're depicted in 1980s movies and everything else.
01:19:54 Or the way that the Southerners are depicted in, well, even today in, in movies, it's always, it's always like this, you know, uh they're they're the dumb people that are just racist for no reason and just by coincidence those are the whites that have the most non whites surround.
01:20:12 And so that that hasn't changed either. He's just making the observation like, look, the people that have the most experience with these people are trying to tell you this is a biological difference that does not change my environment. Oh, and by the way, we live in the same environment, you know, like the people in the whites in South Africa live in the same environment.
01:20:31 As the blacks in South Africa, the whites in in the South live in the same environment as the the Blacks in the South. You know like this, this is there's, there's two totally different results that you get and the difference doesn't seem to be geographical. The difference seems to be racial.
Earnest Sevier Cox AI Reader
01:20:52 It is safe to prophecy that there will be no further serious, certainly not armed, conflicts between the white groups over the colored races for the perilous position of the white race in the world of today and tomorrow will compel that race to seek race unity rather than division.
Devon Stack
01:21:11 Now this I didn't understand what he was meant by this because he makes it sound like there's never going to be any great wars among racial lines because of the fragility of the position of whites. And I didn't understand if there had been some kind of maybe there was a a.
01:21:31 Event that had happened, you know, recent to 1923.
01:21:36 That had given him this this view I, but it just seemed a little weird for him to say that one of the reasons why whites were were so willing to go along to get along or get along to go along or or however you want to phrase that.
01:21:51 They wanted to just you.
01:21:52 Know smooth over these this racial friction rather than.
01:21:56 Actually fight any war. I didn't. I didn't understand the context. I didn't understand why he was. He just said this as a certainty that.
01:22:05 Oh, no. And whites don't want to ever have conflict with non whites ever again. It's like, why? What? What did I miss? You know, was it like, was he time at World War One? Was it, you know, like what? What's the? So I don't know where he was coming from with that statement.
Earnest Sevier Cox AI Reader
01:22:22 Which can only weaken the white man and artificially elevate the colored.
01:22:28 Furthermore, there is an increasing tendency on the part of the whites who dwell apart from the colored to recognize that race traits and tendencies not only permanently adhere to the races, but that such potentialities must be taken into consideration in the white man's dealing with the colored.
01:22:47 It may readily be seen that the negro problem is a part of the greater problem of heredity.
01:22:53 When eugenics seeks to eliminate the unfit and established the fit, it has for its purpose, not the betterment of physical types merely, but the establishment of those types of greatest value to progressive civilization, a race which has not shown creative genius may be assumed to be an unfit type.
01:23:13 So far as progress and civilization is concerned.
01:23:16 And is a matter of concern for the eugenist those who seek to maintain the white race in its purity within the United States are working in harmony with the ideals of eugenics, Asiatic exclusion and negro repatriation are expressions of the eugenic ideal. The latter chapters are given to a consideration of those problems which arise when.
01:23:38 Civilization is in contact with the colored races and to the only possible solution of the color problem. If the white man is to remain white and retain his culture.
01:23:50 The American negro problem has already given rise to more volumes than has any other similar problem. Justification for this publication lies chiefly in the attempt to indicate the conditions in the rest of the world at present.
01:24:04 And the results of race contact in the past and present this knowledge as supplementary information to the many and capable works upon our negro problem, which is more acute today than in the past, and the intensity of which is ever increasing.
Devon Stack
01:24:21 The intensity of which is ever increasing 100 years later. Ah, look at this. The the intensity of the the negro problem. Wow, guys, can you Can you believe the intensity of the negro problem these days?
01:24:37 Wow, it's it's pretty in fucking tense, isn't it?
01:24:41 The fucking negro problem, it's. I feel like we should have like, a like when you go to the the the the National Forest and they have like that that little fire danger meter you know that tells you like oh it's the the fire danger right now is severe we should have like a.
01:25:01 A negro problem intensity meter.
01:25:08 Or or maybe. Maybe I have it like the like the deck clock. You know the deck. Like like maybe that.
01:25:13 Would be more.
01:25:14 Appropriate the debt clock that's always spinning up. You know it's going crazy and and it never. It literally never, ever, ever fucking goes down. That would be that. We should have, like, the the negro problem intensity.
01:25:27 Clock.
01:25:30 Make it like a speedometer, just like fucking spinning around like a like a like a fucking wheel.
01:25:37 Yeah. Well, there you go. So like 100 years ago again, there wasn't like a lot of it was just like I I just cut out a few.
01:25:45 Little.
01:25:47 Nuggets I thought were that were different than what we already covered and that didn't repeat kind of the same thing that you know.
01:25:56 Going over, going over amalgamation and going over like the historical examples of of, you know, societies falling because of demographics and that sort of a thing and and focus more on on some of the newer stuff where you know he talks about.
01:26:13 Well, the the white man's burden and the the problem with trying to convince white people that this is a biological issue and that's and that there seems to be a problem with white people who have no proximity.
01:26:31 I guess in a way you could say that that is partially why there has been a little bit of a change in in the way.
01:26:41 The average white even views race, even over the last couple of years. You could maybe chalk some of that up to proximity, whether it's personal proximity because of, you know, the kinds of behaviors that they're encountering post BLM riot, you know, or maybe it's just the the exposure to.
01:27:01 Some of this propaganda that a lot of us are kind of tired of, but all I I still think it's has value. You know, all these, the endless stream.
01:27:11 Of of footage of black people abusing white people, because that's the sort of thing that, like I said, I don't think it's that has super intensified, certainly not over the last, like during my lifetime. I think blacks have always been way more violent and and these sorts of things have have you know maybe increased.
01:27:19 Oops.
01:27:32 A little bit in amplitude and frequency.
01:27:34 See, but not, not dramatically. I think really what's changed is the exposure. So I think that even though it's all online, people aren't actually experiencing this necessarily if they live in a white, you know, suburb somewhere they were, they wouldn't have been aware that this sort of thing was.
01:27:56 Even happening prior to the Internet and even and well, and even after the.
01:28:00 That when you had censorship, I think that a lot of this attitude change is a result of white people who were walking around clueless in their Lily white suburban neighborhood somewhere.
01:28:18 All of a sudden online seeing all the in this endless stream of of footage of black people abusing white people and just having no idea that even was going on.
01:28:32 So in a way, you know, I think that maybe that's that's some value or some reason why there's value in that that kind of propaganda still anyway. So this was like I said, I thought it was interesting. He was he was noteworthy enough to bring up earnest, Sevier, Cox again, it might be Sevier.
01:28:51 Cox in his books.
01:28:56 I might. I might look into to tonic unity just because I like the name and maybe some of these other books, but I thought he was worth mentioning bringing up, and he seemed like an interesting guy.
01:29:09 World traveler, adventurer. Scientist.
01:29:13 And you know some some looks kind of like looks like a little bit of a Chad, you know, going around traveling the world.
01:29:24 And researching the negro. Anyway, the other, the other storyline I want to talk about.
01:29:31 Then again, it by itself, and partially because there's just not enough information to cover it in any kind of lengthy way.
01:29:40 But the other story that I thought mimicked things that were going on today is this Washington Times front page story.
01:29:51 That popped up one time.
01:29:53 Was reported on one time.
01:29:56 In this one issue.
01:29:59 That was yanked off the shelves by the Secret Service.
01:30:04 In 1989, during Bush seniors presidency.
01:30:10 This Washington Times article the headline is homosexual prostitution inquiry ensnares VIP's with Reagan and Bush Call Boys took midnight tour of the White House.
01:30:27 Now this is something that a lot of people are.
01:30:34 Have they've maybe heard of this? Maybe? Or they've heard people mention it, but they don't know the actual storyline. And again, this is the only fucking article about it. There were other articles, a little bit that, but that came afterwards. But then they they all kind of came to a close.
01:30:55 Rapidly afterwards and we'll talk about why. But again, this is just more confirmation that the more things change, the more they stay the same. This is a Republican administration and there is a sex for for black male or some kind of.
01:31:11 Weird gay underage sex, because that's the thing. That was the allegation. There were a lot of underage.
01:31:20 Boys being trafficked to powerful people now, I'll give you kind of a low down, a little timeline of of what this was and then we'll actually I I got a I found a a a local news reporters voice from 1989 to to voice the article because I thought it would be kind of fun.
01:31:40 And it sounds, I think, actually it's one of the voice clones that worked the best, that if anything I've ever done.
01:31:47 But to give you a kind of a timeline of what happened.
01:31:51 In 1988.
01:31:53 You start to have rumors that there was a lobbyist by the name of Craig Spence.
01:31:59 Was having these wild parties.
01:32:04 Craig Spence, who was a fagot, was throwing these crazy fad parties and they involved top brass in the military. Journalists very high up in the government, people you know, people in the administration, cabinet position, people.
01:32:25 Political appointees, local and federal government in DC and.
01:32:33 There were rumors that some of these escorts that were at these parties were underage, so they're they were having underage, you know, look, this is this continued to keep happening. Dennis Hastert was after this.
01:32:48 So this is in 1988, you had a good number of powerful Republicans in Washington, DC, partying with underage male prostitutes and.
01:33:03 This was not just some, you know, secret.
01:33:07 Pedo Dungeon type of operation Spence Craig Spence had access to the White House and would often give late night tours.
01:33:21 Of the White House.
01:33:23 That included these little boys.
01:33:26 So there were people potentially fucking little boys in the White House.
01:33:33 On a regular like in the White House.
01:33:35 On a somewhat regular basis.
01:33:41 So rumors were spreading of this happening and that there were also rumors that he was videotaping the parties.
01:33:49 And that they were possible. There were possible blackmail connections and or connections to intelligence agencies.
01:33:57 Now, as far as I can tell, because I I I obviously looked Craig Spence does not appear to be Jewish and I don't know that his connection to a Mossad is the connection so much as it might have just been a CIA connection. He claimed later that it was a CIA connect.
01:34:17 But I don't know. There's no way to know. So anyway, rumors kept spreading in early 1989.
01:34:26 And there was a federal investigation into the male prostitution ring.
01:34:34 After of course.
01:34:37 You know, like this was becoming the talk of the town.
01:34:41 And by June?
01:34:44 June 29th, when this article was written in The Washington Times.
01:34:49 The that really kind of blew lid off of it.
01:34:53 So the article alleges that and we'll, we'll again we'll go over it, that there are major prominent figures that were part of the pedo ring. The then identified Craig Spence as the key facilitator and that it it also claim that.
01:35:13 That he was arranging these these White House tours and possibly blackmailing people.
01:35:21 So then by July?
01:35:25 And the month after this article was printed, White House officials confirmed.
01:35:31 The late night Tours had taken place.
01:35:36 And they threw a Secret Service agent under the bus.
01:35:41 Claiming that that they had, they had no idea that it was happening, that it was just this rogue Secret Service agent that was letting them in.
01:35:49 Uh.
01:35:51 At this point, Craig Spence is is kind of in the crosshairs of a lot of powerful people. He starts claiming that he's working with the CIA, and he also told reporters that, quote, I didn't do anything that the big boys didn't do.
01:36:09 He also said that he feared for his life.
01:36:13 And we'll get on to that. So this is the, this is the article.
01:36:18 From 1989, the front page article.
01:36:21 That most people don't even know existed.
Reporter
01:36:27 A homosexual prostitution ring is under investigation by federal and district authorities and includes among its clients key officials of the Reagan and Bush administrations, military officers, congressional aides, and US and foreign businessmen with close social ties to Washington's political elite, documents obtained by the Washington.
01:36:46 Times reveal one of the rings high profile clients was so well connected, in fact, that he could arrange a middle of the night tour of the White House for his friends on Sunday, July 3rd of last year. Among the six persons on the extraordinary 1:00 AM Tour were two male prostitutes.
01:37:02 Federal authorities, including the Secret Service, are investigating criminal aspects of the ring and have told male prostitutes and their homosexual clients that a grand jury will deliberate over the evidence throughout the summer, the Times learned. Reporters for this newspaper examined hundreds of credit card vouchers drawn on both corporate and personal cards and made payable to the escort.
01:37:22 Nervous, operated by the homosexual.
01:37:24 Thing many of the vouchers will run through a so-called sub merchant account of the Chambers Funeral Home by a son of the owner without the company's knowledge among the client names contained in the vouchers and identified by prostitutes and escort operators are government officials locally based U.S. military officers, businessmen, lawyers, bankers.
01:37:44 Congressional aides and other professionals, editors of the time, said the newspaper would print only the names of those found to be insensitive government posts or positions of.
01:37:54 There is no intention of publishing names or facts about the operation merely for titillation, said Wesley Pruden, managing editor of the Times. The Office of US Attorney JB Stephens, former deputy White House counsel to President Reagan, is coordinating federal aspects of the inquiry, but refused to discuss the investigation or grand jury action. Several former White House colleagues of Mr. Stevens.
01:38:15 Were listed among clients of the homosexual prostitution ring, according to the credit card.
01:38:20 And those persons have confirmed that the charges were theirs. Mr. Stevens office after first saying it would cooperate with the Times inquiry, withdrew the offer late yesterday and also declined to say whether Mr. Stevens would recuse himself from the case because of possible conflict of interest. At least one highly placed Bush administration official and a wealthy.
01:38:40 Businessman who procured homosexual prostitutes from the escort.
01:38:43 Services operated by the ring are cooperating with the investigation, several sources said. Among clients who charged homosexual prostitution services on major credit cards over the past 18 months are Charles K Dutcher, former associate director of presidential personnel in the Reagan administration, and Paul R Balak Labor.
01:39:03 Secretary Elizabeth Dole's political personnel liaison to the white.
01:39:06 House in the 1970s, Mr. Dutcher was a congressional aide to former Rep Robert Bauman, Maryland Republican, who resigned from the house after he admitted having engaged in sexual liaisons with teenage male. Mr. Dutcher also worked on the staff of Vice President Dan Quayle when he represented an Indiana district in the House. A charge also was discovered against the credit card of a former White House staffer.
01:39:29 Who prepared the President's Daily News summary in the Reagan?
01:39:32 Duration Todd A Blodgett said he had not made the charge one of the rings big spending clients is Craig J Spence, Washington socialite and international trade consultant, according to documents and interviews with operators and prostitutes who say they engaged in sexual activities with Mr. Spence. Mr. Spence spent upwards of $20,000 a month.
01:39:52 For male prostitutes who provided sex to him and his friends.
Devon Stack
01:39:57 $20,000 a month in 1989. Money, by the way.
01:40:01 $20,000 a month and and gay prostitutes.
01:40:08 From this guy, Craig Spence. Anyway, he continues one thing that they they do, they obsess over the credit card aspect of it, which is kind of annoying. It's kind of what they did with the disaster reporting too, where they they obsessed less about the the fact that he was getting gay prostitutes and more and well and and not even.
01:40:28 Causes he was banging underage gay boys.
01:40:32 And more about the fact that he used campaign funds to pay them off to not say anything, which was a campaign finance.
01:40:46 You know violation, which is like, OK campaign finance violation. Whatever. He's fucking little boys.
01:40:55 He's fucking little boys.
01:40:58 And there's there's kind of a sense that you kind of get the same attitude with this. This papers reporting too, where they focus a lot on like the the credit card aspect of it, because there's credit card fraud and and whatever, and it's like they're fucking little boys in the White House.
01:41:16 What?
01:41:17 Who cares about the credit card ship?
Reporter
01:41:19 Said to include military personnel who also acted as his bodyguards.
01:41:24 It was Mr. Spence who arranged the nocturnal tour of the Reagan White House. Repeated attempts to reach Mr. Spence by telephone, fax machine and personal visits to his home were unsuccessful. Credit card vouchers confirmed that Mister Spence charged thousands of dollars on American Express and visa cards, sometimes making $600.00 charges against his card several times a day.
01:41:45 Drawn on behalf of an escort service called Professional Services Incorporated, Professional Services is one of several umbrella companies used by operators supplying Mayo prostitutes as escorts, as advertised in Washington tabloid newspapers and the telephone Yellow Pages.
01:42:00 Members of major news organizations also procured escort services from the ring. Credit card documents show. These include Stanley Mark Tapscott, who is an assistant managing editor of The Washington Times. Mr. Tapscott his resignation on June 20th was accepted, said he had not procured homosexual escorts or sexual services of any kind.
01:42:20 He said in an interview that he had talked to two women he arranged to meet through the escort service as part of an investigation of dial A porn services he had initiated a year earlier when he was editor of the newspaper's money section. The charges were made against his company, American Express card. His editors knew of no such investigation.
Devon Stack
01:42:39 That must have been like an awkward conversation. You're you're like, working on this expose and you like. Yeah. Hey, Jimmy, down the hall. His his credit cards in here.
01:42:52 Yes, we have a little talk with Jimmy. Hey, Jimmy.
01:42:55 Yeah, you you into underage male prostitutes, are you? No, no, no. I was. I was just doing a I was doing a report on prostitution, see. And you know, I just. I had to use my. Oh, I'm fired, aren't I? Yeah, I think you.
01:43:13 Sure.
Reporter
01:43:15 Before joining the Times, Mr. Tapscott worked for the Office of Personnel Management in the Reagan administration. Managers of the escort ring said that a few women were used for clients who called with specific requests, but that the regular stable was altogether mail. The documents show that a number of clients, lawyers, doctors and business executives use corporate credit cards.
01:43:34 Procure escort services and that a number of military officers from the United States and allied countries, including one foreign officer using a Department of Defense Credit card charged male escort services.
Devon Stack
01:43:47 I'd like to know who that foreign officer was. They don't say.
01:43:52 But again, a lot, to be honest, this doesn't necessarily, as far as I could tell, this didn't seem to have Mossad written on it so much as CIA.
Reporter
01:44:03 One former top level Pentagon officer said that for the past eight years, military and civilian intelligence authorities have been concerned that a nest of homosexuals at top levels of the Reagan administration.
01:44:15 May have been penetrated by Soviet backed espionage agents posing as male prostitutes, said one former top level Pentagon official.
01:44:24 A major concern, said the former official with longtime ties to top ranking military intelligence officers, was that hostile foreign intelligence services were using young male prostitutes to compromise top administration homosexuals, thus making them subject to blackmail. We have known for many, many years that there is a department of the KGB.
01:44:44 Soviet intelligence, whose job it is to prey on sexual deviants, said retired Lieutenant General Daniel Graham, former head of the Defense Intelligence Agency.
01:44:54 Because closet homosexuals and government service can easily be turned through blackmail for espionage purposes, General Graham said. We have always in intelligence, tried very hard not to be giving classified information to known homosexuals.
Devon Stack
01:45:10 I mean.
Gay Jew
01:45:14 Faggots, Faggots, Faggots
Devon Stack
01:45:17 I mean.
01:45:21 Ah, I'm telling you, man, like Washington, DC is way fucking gayer than San Francisco. Way fucking gayer than San Francisco. And basically what they're saying is that the the Reagan administration, you know, based Reagan based Reagan, the Reagan administration was packed full of fucking.
01:45:40 Faggots pack so thick with fagots the military was withholding information from them because they were faggots and they were like, well, we don't. We know that faggots are easy to to blackmail, so we try not to get them, get them anything that's too classified.
01:45:57 I mean, for fucks sake, this is. This is how bad it was in 19 fucking 89.
Reporter
01:46:04 Those interviewed by the Times confirmed there were blackmail attempts by male prostitutes who wanted money and other favors to protect clients secret sexual lives. The clients interviewed say of February 28 police raid on a house at 604 34th PL. Northwest was set off by reports of black, male and possible.
01:46:23 Credit card fraud and complaints by district hotel operators about prostitution activities.
01:46:30 In the raid, spearheaded by the Washington Field Office of the US Secret Service, authorities found a telephone switchboard operations serving a half dozen homosexual escort services, Secret Service agents and district police. Vice investigators confiscated financial records, as well as ledgers, photos, Diaries, telephone records, rolodex's and.
01:46:50 Client lists of the prostitution network during the raid and with subsequent subpoenas issued by DC Superior.
01:46:56 Your court, although the confiscated material was turned over to district police on the scene, witnesses and law enforcement agents say the Secret Service kept one box of files containing names and other information about high level government officials who were clients of mail escort business.
Devon Stack
01:47:13 So you have the Secret Service covering it up.
01:47:19 This see this thing? It didn't get rotten overnight. This is it's been rotten. And Washington a long time. In 1989 you had top level officials fucking little boys giving in in some instances fucking little boys in the White House. And you had the Secret Service.
01:47:40 Swoop in to cover it up once the the lid was blown off of.
01:47:45 Taking taking you know, the box of names and and even though it's it, this is way outside their jurisdiction. Just acting like the the cleanup crew for the administration.
Reporter
01:47:59 District police officials say that to their knowledge, this is the first time the Secret Service has ever become involved in such a raid in this.
01:48:06 Area, initially the Secret Service, denied it was involved in the raid, but after a second raid of the 34th place house on May 18th, the agency acknowledged its involvement in the investigation. Secret Service spokesman Bob Snow said the agency participated in the search and seizure operation because of its jurisdiction over credit card fraud.
01:48:27 We come into such operations usually at the request of a US attorney. If the fraud involves $10,000 or more, we are not involved in any local prostitution investigation, Mr. Snow said.
Devon Stack
01:48:40 Yeah, yeah, sure. You know, you know who else was Secret Service, by the way, who's covering up sex scandals right now for the administration?
01:48:49 Dan bongino.
01:48:52 That's right, Dan Bongino, former mall cop for the ruling class.
01:48:59 Well, you know, the more things change, the more they stay the same.
Reporter
01:49:05 Witnesses to the February raid said 12 Secret Service agents and blue parkas entered the house and spent several hours collecting and removing boxes of files. Federal and district investigators have since interrogated several prostitutes working for the ring, as well as clients of the homosexual escort services operating under such names as Joe Van Man to Man.
01:49:26 Metro Date ultimate models and Ultimate first.
01:49:29 Class in addition to credit card fraud, the investigation is said to be focused on illegal Interstate prostitution, abduction and use of minors for sexual perversion, extortion, larceny and related illicit drug trafficking and use of prostitutes and their clients. One of the chief operators of Professional Services Inc and a regular.
01:49:49 Client of the service speculated in separate interviews that the investigation would be restricted because quote big names were involved. Henry Vincent, the operator, said a high level official is going to try to block the investigation and may succeed, said Mr. Block, the labor secretaries liaison to the White House.
Devon Stack
01:50:10 Look at that. Republicans covering up underage sex rings.
01:50:15 Ah, tradition as old as time, isn't it?
01:50:19 See, this isn't new.
01:50:21 This isn't new. Republicans have a lot of practice in covering up for pedophiles in the ruling class.
01:50:29 You know, like I said, this is before Dennis Hastert and everyone knew about Dennis Hastert, just like everyone knew about Epstein.
01:50:38 This is not this is not. This is nothing new. It's been this fucking rotten for a long time.
Reporter
01:50:46 Mr. Vincent said he believes a highly placed federal official whom he would not name is working to derail the investigation, but he would not elaborate. Authorities have been investigating possible credit card fraud by the ring since last fall.
01:51:00 As early as last October, nine months before the police raid at 34th place, Mr. Block was interviewed by investigators about grand larceny he said was committed against him by a male escort named Jason Michael Manos, according to Mr. Bullock, who first procured homosexual prostitutes from the network in June 1988.
01:51:21 Several clients, including himself, were blackmailed by the prostitutes. Operators of the ring told the Times that videotapes, audiotapes and still photographs were made of sex acts performed by clients, and the call boys, including perverted act.
Gay Jew
01:51:25 Faggots.
Reporter
01:51:36 Documents show that customers were charged for quote videotapes from the operations in an attempt to hide the nature of credit card charges for some clients, professional services billed them for innocuous items, such as a quote, cremation urn or prayer cards. One of the Rings, quote prayer D card processing companies.
01:51:56 Was established by Robert A Chambers, a funeral director whose family owns Chambers. Fun.
01:52:01 Home, Mr. Chambers, who declined to be interviewed, was said to have arranged with the Sovran bank in Silver Spring to establish the sub merchant account in the Chambers Funeral Home credit accounts in the name Professional Services Inc. It is through this sub merchant account that credit card vouchers and checks were processed from the mail escort services.
01:52:22 Following the February 28th police raid on the 34th place residence Chambers Funeral Home, officials at the request of WWW chambers, the Patriarch of the family business, canceled the unauthorized professional services account, according to the company company.
01:52:36 Muller Robert Chambers was fired by his father from the company at the time, a company official said. Mr. Vincent, professional services callboy dispatcher, is a trained mortician who also once worked for the Clerk of the US House of Representatives. Mr. Ballock is still involved in civil litigation with a local bank over payment of thousands of dollars of MasterCard.
01:52:57 Charges of Mr. Manus in Mr. Ballack's name, Mr. Ballock said in an interview that Mister Manus tricked him into taking a trip last fall to Greece in pursuit of employment with a Greek shipping tycoon for whom Mr. Manus had provided homosexual.
01:53:11 Services. When Mr. Balak returned from Athens, he found that Mister Manus had taken $4000 from his bank checking accounts. My bank accounts were in the negative cash savings bonds and opened up about a dozen charge accounts in his name at major department stores along the East Coast. Also, Mr. Manna stole and demolished his car.
01:53:31 While Mr. Ballock was on the trip to Greece, he said this was a nightmare in my life, Mr. Balak said, explaining that his involvement with Mr. Manus was brought about by loneliness.
01:53:40 Easiness, Mr. Balak said his financial losses occurred after Mr. Manus threatened to expose to his governments superiors his homosexual involvement with the prostitution ring. Mr. Balak said he informed his superior at OPM. Edward gusts of the black male attempts and other problems involving Mr. Manus.
01:53:59 The Times has been unable to locate Mr. Mannis, who reportedly has returned to the district in recent week.
01:54:04 Mr. Dutcher, who now heads a private consulting firm called the Dutcher Company, was charged with placing Reagan oriented conservatives into the career civil service during the closing years of Mr. Reagan's presidency, he described himself as bisexual and said stress drove him to seek out a male prostitute. I only used the service once. I only saw the person.
Gay Jew
01:54:24 Faggots.
Reporter
01:54:25 Once this person was there no longer than 35 minutes, Mr. Dutcher said.
01:54:29 He confirmed paying $155, which was charged to his visa card. The sexual encounter was brief and the sex was safe extremely. I've had friends who died of AIDS, said Mr. Dutcher, Mr. Dutcher said.
01:54:42 Never used his White House personnel position to place anyone in a government position whom he knew to be homosexual. My priority was my job, not my private life, he said.
01:54:54 According to a credit voucher, Todd Blodgett's account was charged $325 on May 19th, 1988 for mail Escort, service referral by professional services Mr.
Devon Stack
01:55:04 Anyway, they they got most of what they go on from here. It's just time out, like the credit card charges and stuff like that. Bottom line is that Craig Spence.
01:55:17 Craig Spence, who was named in the article as being that's the guy that was spending $20,000 a month.
01:55:23 And arranging for powerful people to have underage gay escorts.
01:55:30 Gay prostitutes, that guy started saying that he was fearing for his life.
01:55:37 And that everything he did was for powerful people and that he was, you know, going to go down, that he was going to be a Patsy. And then.
01:55:47 He was found dead.
01:55:50 He was found dead under kind of unusual circumstances.
01:55:56 Actually.
01:55:58 So here's a little timeline.
01:56:01 Of what happened here, he says. He said he feared for his life and July.
01:56:09 By August, he had disappeared from public view and had started traveling around, like moving around from New York to Tokyo.
01:56:19 The escort service, of course, was shut down.
01:56:23 The scandal was was quickly buried. There was no investigation because the Secret Service kind of covered everything up.
01:56:32 And then by November, November 10th, 19 nine, they found Craig Spence dead in his hotel room at the Ritz Carlton.
01:56:46 In in Massachusetts, in Boston, MA.
01:56:52 So he checked in under his real name.
01:56:56 Allegedly told staff not to disturb him.
01:57:00 And then he is seen drinking alone.
01:57:05 At the hotel bar.
01:57:08 And then they.
01:57:11 They went into his room to see here.
01:57:14 I had the notes here. There was everything was really fucking weird.
Reporter
01:57:19 But but but.
Devon Stack
01:57:21 Oh, I I I think I forgot to.
01:57:25 Get the notes on this one. They they found him locked the the short version is they found him locked in his own room dead with a note that said sorry, Mr. Director or something. It was some weird, correct. Let me find the actual note.
01:57:46 See here.
01:58:11 Let's see here. What? What did I got?
01:58:13 Here.
01:58:14 The UM.
01:58:21 And here it is. So he was found fully dressed in a black tuxedo.
01:58:26 With a white bow tie.
01:58:29 And white suspenders.
01:58:32 And he had. Let's see here.
01:58:36 He was wearing a.
01:58:38 A Walkman headset.
01:58:41 That was playing Mozart's.
01:58:44 A little night music.
01:58:48 Which was a theatrical presentation. Let's see. Let me see if I can find that Mozarts a little night music.
01:58:58 Maybe we can see what that sounds like.
01:59:06 So this was the song that was playing.
01:59:20 So this this is what was playing in his in his headphones.
01:59:33 And then the note said where to go.
01:59:42 He had barricaded the room.
01:59:45 The door was barricaded with a king size, bed and chair, requiring police and firefighters to saw through the door to gain entry.
02:00:00 Let's see here.
02:00:04 Items found in the room 7 small packets of of Xanax and anti anxiety drug blah blah blah. They were hidden in a false ceiling in the bathroom with one pill missing.
02:00:22 Let's see here. The autopsy showed that he had any depressants.
02:00:26 And alcohol in his system.
02:00:30 But ruled out or ruled that it was, it was over an overdose of the drugs. He had a newspaper clipping the newspaper. Clipping was about the efforts of the CIA agent or the efforts to protect CIA agents from testifying before government bodies.
02:00:49 So we had it clipped out article.
02:00:52 Talking about the CIA protecting CIA agents from testifying.
02:00:59 He also had his birth certificate and will in the room.
02:01:04 Well, where's the?
02:01:06 I'm trying to find the note though. There was he had scribbled something on the mirror in the bathroom.
02:01:13 And you see, like, oh, here it is. OK.
02:01:18 So he had sent a video postcard 2 weeks before his death.
02:01:22 Spence hired a production company to record a 7 minute video for friends filmed in his dining room. In it, he appeared upbeat and joking about his dog Winston, and avoiding explicit mention of suicide, but referred to his message in case I ever disappear.
02:01:42 Let's see here.
02:01:45 Here it is the note.
02:01:47 Was written in a black felt tip marker on the mirror of the hotel room, addressed to someone referred to his chief.
02:01:55 It said chief, consider this my resignation effective immediately, as you always said, you can't ask others to make a sacrifice if you're not ready to do the same. Life is duty. God Bless America as a postscript, he added to the Ritz. Please forgive this inconvenience.
02:02:21 So.
02:02:23 Yeah.
02:02:33 So yeah, they I guess another another instance of.
02:02:40 Of an Epstein style.
02:02:42 Character in Washington.
02:02:45 There's always an Epstein, there's always an Epstein.
02:02:49 Because these we're basically ruled over by by homosexual pedophiles.
02:02:55 That that's really when, when it when it comes right down to it, all of our problems.
02:03:00 Really stem from the fact that we've allowed demonic homosexual faggots that fuck little boys to run the country.
02:03:13 We we've basically lifted any kind of of.
02:03:21 Selection pressures from the ruling class.
02:03:25 And and essentially just.
02:03:29 Rewarded liars.
02:03:32 And sellouts and traders.
02:03:35 And just continue to vote for the the scum of the Earth and throwing, throwing people, throwing their hands up on their what are you gonna deal? I voted for the, you know, the the lesser of two evils.
02:03:46 For generations.
02:03:48 For generations, Americans have allowed this to go on.
02:03:51 And now we're where we are today because of it.
02:03:57 Anyway.
02:03:58 Again, I just I thought this was.
02:04:02 Interesting little tidbit of information. A lot of people have sort of known about this story, but I don't think a lot of people have really known the full.
02:04:10 The full deal.
02:04:12 So hopefully that was an interesting article for you to listen to. Anyway. That's about it. That's what I had for tonight. I didn't like. I didn't have, like a full blown string tonight. Cause I'm string with Mark earlier today and I'm going to be streaming with.
02:04:26 Mr. Murdoch on Friday, but we'll have like a normal stream again on Sunday. Let's take a look at or I'm sorry. On Saturday. Let's take a look at.
02:04:37 Entropy. Shall we? I think entropy broke.
02:04:42 Yep.
02:04:44 And then we broke again.
02:04:48 I love it when that happens.
02:04:57 So entropy broke, which means I won't have any super chats.
02:05:03 That's great.
02:05:06 I like how it does that.
02:05:09 Real great. Real great. Uh.
02:05:13 Oh wait, apparently it was working for everybody. Still, that's good.
02:05:18 Alright, let's take a look here we got.
02:05:22 Tyler WO 5 says just giving you the request that update as of today we have a healthy baby boy. Thank you for your well wishes. Last stream was insane. I've worked inside synagogues doing electrical work. Somehow my old boss has earned their trust after.
02:05:40 That we worked for all of them, it seemed like went inside the document rooms.
02:05:47 They would have all kinds of things. They shouldn't have binders labeled, things like Harvard faculty meeting and things for certain companies, all kinds of stuff that experience. Plus last stream is enough for me to say fuck them all. Yeah, obviously.
02:06:06 Obviously.
02:06:09 The.
02:06:10 Synema.
02:06:12 The synonym or everywhere.
02:06:14 And yeah.
02:06:17 You have to basically just assume there's at least a 30% chance.
02:06:22 I mean, according to a Mossad agent, there's a 30% chance that any Jew, at least that would be of use to the Mossad, is a Mossad agent, and that the other 70% is willing to look the other way and never contact authorities if they're ever approach.
02:06:43 By law enforcement.
02:06:46 But yeah, great. Great news about the kid.
02:06:50 Tyler WH, 05 with a healthy.
02:06:54 Little black pill out there, so congratulations with that.
02:06:59 And then we got Penelope Maynard.
02:07:02 Penelope Maynard always, you know, never, never disappointing with the the big Donos.
Money Clip
02:07:11 Children.
02:07:11 Today we'll be reading the best Christmas ever.
Devon Stack
02:07:17 The magic negro.
Money Clip
02:07:24 And I said.
02:07:28 Where did the show man go?
02:07:33 Yeah.
02:07:41 The best Christmas.
02:07:42 Ever.
Devon Stack
02:07:46 All right, Penelope Maynard.
02:07:48 Always a big supporter of the show, you're now, you're now entitled to two beehives.
02:07:56 In fact, I'm going to add that to the Beehive list.
02:08:01 See here.
02:08:06 Two hives for Penelope.
02:08:12 There we go.
02:08:13 No man. It says hi. Thank you for or thank you. And skinny churro.
02:08:20 Oh, wait, what? I can't read the name. Hi. For you. No, thank you. There's no thank you. I'm. I'm. I'm thinking thank you. As I read this. Hi. For you and skinny churro. You know, it's funny. He's.
02:08:31 He's been eating so much and he's almost normal cat sized. He's not a chunky churro a size.
02:08:39 But he's he's almost like because he was so skinny when he first showed up. And so when he would eat, his belly would actually expand like it looked weird. He's starting to like look like a normal cat. He's starting to get back into. He was really kind of whiny and.
02:08:56 Little little like like he was pretty much the same, but there was something not quite right with him, but that's worn off. He's back into like, a routine where he sleeps all day and he's he's he's not he. He was slightly sketch and and that seems to have gone away and he's out right now. He's he goes out when the sun goes down and he shows up in the morning.
02:09:19 And if I go out and do things in.
02:09:22 Fact.
02:09:23 I was out last night.
02:09:26 He's he's he sneaks, he sneaks up on you because I had to fix. I had this problem with my this this other building, the solar something was up with the solar where the batteries were draining. I couldn't figure was going.
02:09:42 On and so I wanted to check the solar panels at night when they wouldn't be charging, obviously. And I'm sitting there going up a ladder and I feel something brush up against my leg and like.
02:09:57 And there he was. He just sneaks up like so if I go out while he's out, he must. He must be staying close by. Cause if I go out at all, he he like zeroes in on me and and just magically appears. So either that or he's a he's an actual ghost.
02:10:12 And that's how he does it.
02:10:14 But yeah, thank you, Penelope Maynard. Always. Uh.
02:10:18 Always in big support of the show and and just of the movement. Generally you're you're a patron.
02:10:28 You're a patron of our people, so I really very much appreciate that.
02:10:34 Let's see here. Next up, we got.
02:10:37 Jay Orlando.
02:10:39 No.
02:10:40 Jay Orlando says Dev and I recently crossbred Starlight Olive Eggers with Whiting true Blues. They look nothing like either parent. It's neat, but certain qualities are completely gone and can't get back. Also, if you're a white male in Florida.
02:11:01 You have women of every race, every hemisphere, wanting your whiteness. Friends have fallen to this. I have stayed steadfast in my standards. God bless.
02:11:12 Yeah. You know, you get interesting, weird results when you race mix. It's even like, you know, Speaking of churro like cats, there's a type of cat.
02:11:22 Called A A Cheeto, and it's produced by mixing 2 cats that look nothing like a cheetah, but it makes a spotted like Cheetah style cat. When you mix the two, I forget what 2.
02:11:35 Cats it is but.
02:11:37 I don't think this is it, but just as an example, it's like mixing like you mix a tuxedo cat with a a tortoiseshell cat, and then you get a leopard cat is what it looks like. It's something like that where it's like 2 cats that don't look anything like a Cheeto, and then it makes a.
02:11:53 Cheeto.
02:11:54 So you get unexpected results sometimes when you mix two different.
02:11:59 Races together and some of those are not great results and you know well, I mean, if you think about Africanized bees, that's a product of race.
02:12:08 Mixing. You've created this like demon bee that now plagues our entire continent because some fucking asshole and in Brazil decided to cross breed African bees with European bees. So it's, you know, in a way, Africanized bees are really just mulatto bees.
02:12:28 That's one way to.
02:12:29 Look at it.
02:12:30 So yeah, you get you get bad results when you race mix. I mean, maybe not always, I mean nothing's 100% right, you can get hybrid vigor from time to time.
02:12:46 And.
02:12:49 You know like.
02:12:51 It is what it is, right? There's there's there's race mixed people, I'm sure, listening to the sound. My voice right now that are that, you know, for for no fault of their own. You know, that's the situation they find themselves in. And it's not like they're, you know, you're not necessarily a mutant or anything like that, but it also takes away just from like away from.
02:13:11 Take a side or put aside all the things we talked about tonight. It really kind of folks with your sense of of identity and with your sense of belonging. I mean, I think, for example, one of the reasons why Tim Poole is the way that he is and can't well and and never will be like Pro White.
02:13:30 As an example, because he himself can't identify as white, and in fact.
02:13:36 I think you see this not just in instances where.
02:13:40 People themselves are race mixed. You know, the products of race mixing.
02:13:45 But you also have people that they themselves have race mixed, you know, because they have married a non white or they've had children with a non white they are now they will no long. They'll never be on your team now just because and I'm look I I don't want to name names but there are people that you can probably think of that have been say nominally in the movement or at least adjacent with the movement.
02:14:08 And they'll never go all the way. And that's why that's why. So yeah, there's lots of reasons to not to not race mix, but it's why would you want to, you know, why would.
02:14:22 You want to.
02:14:24 Unless you're not white, then it makes sense, right?
02:14:27 So alright, we got kergan.
02:14:44 Hergen says entropy keeps giving me a message that says something went wrong. When I click on the start streaming button. Hopefully you still get this. Yeah. Like that. I so OK, at least I'm not being crazy. Entropy was all fucked. Look, this is the second or maybe even third time.
02:15:04 It's done this.
02:15:05 Before this stream I hit go, it looks like it's going in fact today there was already some.
02:15:11 Some super chats in the queue, so I thought everything must be good and then I'm not going to sit there refreshing the page. The whole string, right? So I just assume it's working until I go to this part of the show and I go to that tab and and and it's.
02:15:29 It's. You can tell something's wrong, right? Like. And so I refresh the page and then it makes me log in again and then it's all kind of.
02:15:37 Fucked.
02:15:37 Up. So yeah, not great, not great.
02:15:43 But we, you know, we got to deal with it. This is what we got to do, because of Jews. So that's the way it.
02:15:51 Is.
02:15:52 But I appreciate that. Then we got Chuck, Elector says the reason the chosen like pushing sexual degeneracy is because when people indulge in taboos, it gives them black male ammo.
02:16:05 If people just like vanilla sacks, that wouldn't hold as much guilt shekel.
02:16:10 Yeah, I think I think it's more than that. I mean, it's not like they're trying to blackmail everybody, but because it also just degrades you as a human. It also it it it makes you more like an animal. It takes you further away from divinity. It makes you more like a a base.
02:16:30 Acting on instinct and on lust and on on appetite.
02:16:36 Animal and those are the kinds of people that are easier to control. You don't have to be blackmailed. You can just be a normal person. And if you're controlled by your appetites, you'll be controlled by every appetite. You know it, it's it. And that's the you don't have to blackmail people for that, right? You could say that getting people to be reduced to just.
02:16:58 A pleasure seeking seeking animal.
02:17:00 Rules. That's exactly what you would want. We talked about it in the very beginning of the show that the ruling class is in a unique position historically where providing comfort seems to be extremely easy. You have to really fuck up as the ruling class to not be able to provide comfort anymore. And they.
02:17:20 You know, you could say that they are kind of fucking up here and.
02:17:23 But.
02:17:24 The the level at which they'd have to fuck up to where people wouldn't even be able to watch porn and Netflix and and eat high fructose corn syrup. I mean, that's a lot of fucking up that they'd have to do to get to that point. And unfortunately, I think that's what you'd have to get to for people that.
02:17:40 Quote UN quote rise up and demand change.
02:17:43 That's why I don't think that's how change will will happen. You're you're going to have change happen because some powerful person sees an opportunity to make it happen. It's not going to be some kind of grassroots kind of a thing unless things get really bad. So.
02:17:59 You know it is what it is, but I think that's what that's part of why they do it is they want you to be porn addicted, calorie addicted animals. They want you just to be running pigs in the pig pen. And that just makes you easier to control generally.
02:18:16 Grimly fiendish.
02:18:31 Grimly fiendish says the worst kind of people get ahead in politics because the worst kind of people get promoted because the worst kind of people are easy to blackmail. And then you say.
Gay Jew
02:18:44 Faggots.
Devon Stack
02:18:46 Yeah. Again, I I think that they are easy to blackmail, but I think they're also just easier to control, I guess, like an elevated or an extended version of what I just said.
02:18:58 You you don't necessarily have to blackmail them, and that might just be the carrot, right? Like they might do what you say because you're the one that gives them access to little boys, not necessarily because they're even ashamed of the videos that you're in a release or or whatever it is, but because they rely on you to provide the little boys for them, you know.
02:19:18 Now I think that that might be part of it. I think that that's the influence that, that.
02:19:24 They will have over you, just like in the same way that a drug dealer would have influence over someone that's broke, that comes to their house and says, oh, I need the drugs and like, alright, well, you know what you got to do, you know that kind of a thing. I I feel like that's that's part of it too is once you once you are you know you control an addict.
02:19:45 Not through blackmail, but through the, you know, through their vice.
02:19:51 But yeah, there's more to it than that. I think we've just, I think powerful positions. the United States attract psychopaths.
02:19:59 A. Because that's just the way it's always going to be to some extent because of the nature of a social hierarchy and the kinds and it it, it really comes down to who's a killer and who's not, because everyone wants to be the king, right? Everyone wants to be the king. And so really, who ends up being the king? It's the. It's the person who.
02:20:19 Isn't necessarily the most qualified for the job, but the person who's capable of, well, just look if look at in the animal Kingdom, right, look at a look at chimpanzees you know or or any kind of you know, like like look at lions pride. You know, something like that, the alpha.
02:20:39 The person who ends up being the leader isn't necessarily the one that's going to be the most successful for the survival of that group, so much as the one that's capable of beating the fuck out of any any challenger. And that's really what it comes to.
02:20:52 Want to is we've created a system and this look this might be where you start looking at democracy as maybe not being the best system. This is where it might make more sense to have a monarchy or something like that. I'm like, I'm not. I'm not advocating for that. I'm just saying all of a sudden you realize.
02:21:11 This is what happens with democracy.
02:21:14 In democracy, you end up with just who, who's capable of beating the fuck out of everybody else up with, you know, the stick on the ground. Whereas if you have a monarchy or another system where it's it's not, you know, it's not about elections. It's not about, you know, it's more about.
02:21:34 You know, lineage or some other mechanism that controls SUS.
02:21:37 In charge, you're going to get totally different leaders. You're going to get completely different leaders and look, those systems have their own problems, right? Like obviously if you had something that was like a monarchy where you're just reliant on whoever the first born son is. And what if he's an idiot?
02:21:57 Or what if you know he has his own appetites or issues or.
02:22:03 Or immorality, or mental illness or whatever. Right. So you're at the mercy of a shitty leader just for a different reason. And maybe for a longer period of time. So every system has its issues. But I think that people too often really look at.
02:22:23 Democracy through rose colored glasses and don't realize that no, there's some real issues and and some of these issues are you end up being ruled by homosexual pedal.
02:22:32 Miles.
02:22:33 Apparently so. There you go. Grimly fiendish again, says the problem with mixing people is that you can't euthanize the most horrible miscreants. We have to just live with them. Yeah, I'm not. I'm not for euthanizing people, but I would be for sterilizing people. I think that there there could be a criteria that you could come up with that would make sense.
02:22:54 For sterilization, I think certainly there should be an IQ threshold and in fact, here's the funny thing. If there was an IQ threshold, if you were to sterilize people that were considered retarded, and then if you were also by the way to redefine what retarded meant like in the 1950s, retarded was, I think below.
02:23:14 80 was considered retarded.
02:23:17 But then, because if you were to maintain that that standard, that would necessarily mean 50% of black people would be retarded, they they actually lowered the IQ that you'd have to be to be considered retarded to accommodate black people. That's how much our our.
02:23:38 Nation or civilization is being held back by the presence of non whites. It's being held back so far that you had to actually redefine what retarded meant to accommodate how fucking retarded they are on average.
02:23:53 That's just the fact the fact of the matter is, the average black person, the average black person is fucking retarded. But like I said, if you were to have sterilization rules that were based on whether or not someone was retarded, then you'd be able to sterilize over 50% of black people.
02:24:14 And look, maybe maybe people think that sounds extreme or whatever, but.
02:24:18 You could give them a choice. OK. You don't wanna get sterilized. Here's a free ticket to Liberia.
02:24:24 You can. You can either get deported back to your your continent that you come from, where you are the norm, you know where you're not retarded, or at least you're just as retarded as everybody else and so.
02:24:39 You know, you can either do that in which, OK, we'll pay for it. Even we'll even give you a little. We'll give you a little spending money, right? I mean, you're a net negative to the budget anyway, so we're actually saving money by giving you, you know, 20 grand. 30, actually. I mean, I think we can get into the the six figures on this offer. I mean, I'd I'd try to like.
02:24:59 It's an egg, a little bit, and get that that number down, you know. No, no reason to give them too much money, but you could pay people to go back to Africa and or. Or you could stay here and be sterilized. If you're below a certain IQ, I think that would be a perfectly.
02:25:16 Rational thing to do as a country, but because of democracy, it'll never fucking happen. That's a perfect example of a policy that would that would create prosperity and success for the nation for centuries, the reverberations of that would, would, would, would.
02:25:36 Go on for century.
02:25:38 It would have a positive impact that would be almost impossible to calculate, and it would in fact it would. It would lead, I think, to like you want a golden age that would give you a real Golden Age. But guess what? You'll never be able to do it because of democracy. So it's a perfect example of where a policy.
02:25:57 Should be enacted and it would have infinite positives.
02:26:02 Everlasting positives to the nation, but it can't be enacted because the system has a flaw. A major fucking flaw. And look, I just think that actually applies to most things that have to get done in America these days. Most of the things that cause there's simple solutions to all of these problems. There are simple solutions.
02:26:22 To every single one of these problems facing America that under any other circuit, well, not any other circumstances, but under different circumstances would be extremely easy to execute and.
02:26:35 Would once and for all solve a lot of these issues? A lot of these problems that we have and we won't be able to do it, we won't be able to do it, at least not politically, which is why it's not that there's no solutions, there's no political solutions which really translates to there's no democratic solutions. Maybe that's a more accurate way of putting it.
02:26:57 Uh, let's see here. Then we got Jay Orlando.
02:27:02 Jay Orlando says there's many.
02:27:05 Good reasons not to race. Mix speaking as 1/2 pasta negro, half potato negro not breeding out your people's natural identity is 100% true whether bees, chickens or beautiful women. Well, yeah, but you're not like, super not like you're super race mix just because you're.
02:27:26 You're half Irish, half Italian. I don't. I don't think it's.
02:27:29 I mean, that's just American. A lot of Americans are are.
02:27:35 Random white people mixes.
02:27:38 Not everyone can be a, you know.
02:27:40 Chad Super Nordic white like me but.
02:27:49 Just kidding, yeah.
02:27:50 Yeah, most my back. I'm very Anglo-Saxon, very Anglo-Saxon, genetically.
02:27:56 But but yeah, I mean, like mixing Italian with Irish that's there's a lot, there's a lot, there's way worse mixes. I'll tell you. I'll tell you there's a I would prefer that over a lot of mixes that you could have been.
02:28:11 Grimly fiendish.
02:28:19 Grimly fiendish. Says also great stream with Mark. Well, I appreciate that and Mark was very thankful by the way, he told me after the stream that it'd been a tough month for him and that that you guys have been very generous to him and you helped make up the difference.
02:28:37 And you know, he's got the new kid and everything. It's always good to help support our people. And Mark's a good guy. Mark's good people.
02:28:48 And.
02:28:50 Not, I mean, he's he's.
02:28:53 He's British, but we can forgive him that.
02:28:58 But now he's good people and he, he he he wanted to let me know that he appreciated me coming on because that you guys were.
02:29:05 You guys were a good crowd, so I'm gonna pass that on to you guys. All right, let's take a look over at Rumble.
02:29:15 Rumble. He got Sarah town. Is that like your name or you come from a town of Sarai's?
02:29:21 Sarah town.
02:29:24 Sounds like a place.
02:29:26 That's the place I'd go. I'd go to Sarah Town.
02:29:29 Sarah Town says it can't. Can't food for Churro. You know, I'm actually have to get some more pretty soon. He's been eating so much, he's almost gone through like, I had, like, a couple of cases.
02:29:39 There's one like you know what it this is always the way, isn't it? I got, like a case of, like, fancy, you know, good for like the healthy cat food. And it was kind of expensive. And he hates that shit he wants, like, the garbage junk.
02:29:51 Food cat food.
02:29:53 So I've been trying to like because I have so much of the good stuff and it was expensive. So I've been like trying to like mix it, you know, like I'll, I'll, I'll dump like the can of the the healthy, the health food and then I'll I'll dribble some gravy of the the the junk food on top of it and doesn't trick him and he figures it out pretty quick. So yeah, I'm gonna have to get some more.
02:30:14 He's going. He's almost plowed through all the junk food, so I appreciate that.
02:30:19 Then we got words or words. The best stream on the Internet. Thank you for all your work. I'll always share it to everyone. Well, I appreciate that words are words.
02:30:30 And then we got another big dunno by Cabbage bandit.
Mayor Rothschild
02:30:34 Money is power. Money is the only weapon that that you have to defend it.
Devon Stack
02:30:39 Look, look how jewy this flag is.
02:30:58 Alright, Cabbage Bandit says Hi, Devon, thank you for your last stream. Sign him or sinem rather addition. It was eye opening and very informative. Thanks for all you do. Well, I appreciate that. Yeah, I felt like that was a good one.
02:31:13 Because I I I knew that that that was going on. I didn't know there was a name for it and I didn't know it was so formal and I didn't know. I mean, I'd seen clips from that guy before, and I never read his.
02:31:24 Book.
02:31:26 And so I thought that it it was worth.
02:31:29 To read and it was, it was. It's. It's definitely worth a read that you guys should pick up his book. Like I said, the PDFs, easy to find. Just look for a way of deception.
02:31:39 And then his name, which was it started with an O and ends with the ski. I forget the name but the.
02:31:47 Pretty eye opening stuff and I.
02:31:52 And look, you've heard Jews, kind of.
02:31:54 Insinuate that that was the case before, but it was good to hear from the horse's mouth like an actual Mossad agent say. Yeah, 30% of Jews.
02:32:03 Go along with it and the other 70% sort of do too, but thank you very much, Cabbage bandit for the the big support there.
02:32:12 And yeah, that's another another patron of the show there.
02:32:18 Then we got, Tomohawk says. Been listening to you since you were on YouTube. Never caught a live stream till now due to my schedule. Buy churro some cat food. Glad he's OK. Well, I appreciate that. I always wonder how many people like that there are out there, people who because of the the.
02:32:37 Weird time that we're on the air. Only listen to the replays. I suspect there's. Well, I actually, I think part of the majority, if you look at the numbers, right, because we always end up. I mean we never have. Let me just put this way. We never have 20,000 plus people live, but we almost always get.
02:32:54 You know, not me, not always. Very. No, we always. We always get like 20,000 views on the streams at least. And so there's the majority of people, I mean across all platforms sometimes on one platform. But you know we always I would say the majority of people are probably replay gang.
02:33:13 Appreciate that tomahawk and welcome to the.
02:33:16 Live Night Nation says if you're making the rounds, it being too hot out there on the surface of Mars, please come back on my show too soon. I'd be very interested to get your take on the PM. A white settlement developments, the return of land stuff.
02:33:37 Yeah. The big thing with them is like I said.
02:33:39 It's just now.
02:33:41 The the news today.
02:33:44 Is apparently.
02:33:46 At least again, I don't know. They said that the the, the Arkansas AG.
02:33:53 And.
02:33:53 I don't know if this was an announcement, but it was. It was reported that the Arkansas AG.
02:34:00 Was upon their initial assessment had assessed that there there was no nothing illegal happening with return to the land. Now I don't know who this AG is. I don't know if he's based.
02:34:17 And or if you know in fact, let's look him up. Why?
02:34:26 Let's see.
02:35:00 So his name is.
02:35:04 Tim Griffin he's a Republican, which I would expect from. So here's the problem. Arkansas is where Tom Cotton comes from.
02:35:12 Tom Cotton's about his Zionist. As a go I can get.
02:35:19 And if that's representative of the kinds of people that you get in Arkansas, and maybe it's not, but if it is, that's a problem. So Tim Griffin.
02:35:33 Let's see here.
02:35:40 He was Lieutenant governor.
02:35:42 Of Arkansas.
02:35:44 Prior to his job as AG, so for for almost 10 years.
02:35:50 Uhm, let's see here. Blah blah blah. He worked for George Bush.
02:35:59 At the DOJ?
02:36:12 Bump, Bump, bump, bump.
02:36:20 OK, well, this isn't good. So he supported.
02:36:28 He supported Arkansas Act 710.
02:36:32 Of 2017, which prohibits state contracts with entities that boycott Israel.
02:36:42 Framing it as a measure to combat discrimination.
02:36:48 So that's not great.
02:36:52 So that might mean that he is like a Tom Cotton style Republican.
02:36:58 Let's see here.
02:37:03 And this also is not great.
02:37:06 Griffin LED a coalition of 20 state attorneys general and a letter to federal officials.
02:37:14 Calling for the removal of foreign student visa holders who endorse terror activities or provide material support. Basically, he's he like they're making it sound worse, but is he essentially what it is he's he's supporting the the deportation of students.
02:37:34 To protest against Israel.
02:37:36 So he wrote a letter that was signed by 20 other state AG's supporting the the move to deport people who support Hamas, basically.
02:37:52 So that's not great.
02:37:58 Let's see here what else there's more about that ACT 710.
02:38:14 Let's see here.
02:38:19 And Griffin's 2023 letter to federal officials. He emphasized that quote, anti-Semitism and anti Israel activity are unwelcome in Arkansas and condemned threats of violence against Jews as contrary to American values. This suggested broader blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
02:38:41 I mean that's I'm not seeing too crazy other than I mean that's this is.
02:38:47 Unfortunately, it's very standard Republican right.
02:38:54 There's no direct ties to Jewish organizations.
02:39:02 Yeah, it's hard to know. It's hard to know. He might be a turbo Zionist. He might just be a watered down Zionist, but he sounds like he's a Christian Zionist one way or the other.
02:39:13 So it's hard to know.
02:39:15 It's hard to know if this news story was just a.
02:39:22 At first glance, we're not going to do anything or we're actually not going to.
02:39:26 Do.
02:39:26 Anything problem is the the legal jeopardy is it's not just the state law, it's also the federal law. And you kind of need a.
02:39:38 A decision with a friendly judge as soon as possible, because let's say, let's say the Trump DOJ declines to pursue it, which I suspect. I don't think the Trump DOJ, but who knows what these fucking people you know what I mean? Who?
02:39:54 I don't think the Trump DOJ is going to go after him, but if they did or I'm sorry if they don't, they're still. It's just a matter of time before you get someone else that.
02:40:07 Runs the DOJ that maybe does decide to bring charges.
02:40:14 And then without that legal precedent being set, you have to go through that whole process sooner or later, right? So it it it's just.
02:40:23 That's the problem is the the the Fair Housing Act is so broad in the way that it it describes what you can and can't.
02:40:32 Do that, it really could apply to almost anything when it comes to housing and race. It's almost like if if housing and race are at all tied together in any way, shape or form, it's illegal.
02:40:47 Like that's that's pretty much as broad as it gets. And so I think that's going to be the problem or and look here, let's say that the state AG does nothing and let's say that the DOJ does nothing, but you're a Jewish NGO's and you can bring a a lawsuit against them and then you're in court whether you like it or not.
02:41:07 So.
02:41:09 That's that's the short version. Yeah, I could. I could hop on your show. Like I said, doing Murdoch on Friday.
02:41:18 Maybe, maybe, maybe. Maybe we knew next week I'll take a look and see what's going on next week, or maybe maybe the week after that.
02:41:27 Man of low moral fiber says the American Association of Mental Deficiency used to describe different levels of retardation as certain mental ages.
02:41:39 Which were normalized on white people. This was defined in an early in the early 1900s, French researchers created the Bennett Simmons scale. In 1905, Americans adopted it in 1911. This classification system was used up until approximately 1959.
02:41:59 In which levels of retardation were defined? OK, so that's in reference to talking about blacks in, you know, as as having the minds of children.
02:42:11 Yeah, that would make sense. That would make sense.
02:42:16 Yeah. And then we had to change the whole thing or else they would all be considered retarded.
02:42:21 Gravy, Bear says. Did you ever play Fallout New Vegas? Looking back, Caesar's Legion is the real good ending.
02:42:29 No, I I haven't played any new video. I mean, I know that's not super new anymore, but I I haven't played video games really since before that came out. I I play.
02:42:41 I play old Retro arcade games from like the 80s and stuff I know.
02:42:45 That sounds weird.
02:42:47 But it's because I can't. I can't dedicate a lot of time to video games, but I can. I can play around in Miss Pac-Man for 5 minutes. You know what I mean? I I used to fix up old arcade machines. I used to have a miss Pac-Man.
02:43:01 Machine next to my desk. You know, at my apartment in DC, actually, which was a it was a crowded apt I had. I had a pinball machine too, in that little tiny fucking studio apartment.
02:43:16 And and it was allowed. It was a electromechanical one, too. So as loud as fuck, I bet my neighbors loved it. But yeah, I don't. I haven't. I haven't.
02:43:25 Played.
02:43:25 Like any new games in a while.
02:43:29 So I'm not sure what the ending is. I never liked fallout anyway because I remember when fallout.
02:43:36 I forget which one it was that my friends were playing all the time.
02:43:40 Because I know like the the original Fallout 1 was like a totally different game. So whenever they changed to like whatever the, you know what? It's kind of like now.
02:43:48 I didn't like it because it was like first person but.
02:43:52 I didn't like the the mechanics. I didn't like how you navigated around and and the.
02:43:58 I don't know. It's hard to explain without having the game in front of you to show you. But like I I didn't like. I didn't like the fallout games at all.
02:44:07 The shadow band says gonna have to watch this on VOD, but thanks for all you do, ma'am. Well, I appreciate that. And thank you to you in.
02:44:16 The future?
02:44:18 Alright then we got. Let's see here, Rocco, D2 says. I want to watch a hanging of a well. We can't say that.
02:44:28 But yes, there are. There are some people that deserve that.
02:44:32 There are some people that deserve the death penalty and we need to be much more liberal with the death penalty.
02:44:37 Man of low moral fiber says they make gay porn in the Senate and no one went to prison for it. Therefore, the Senate is a gay porn studio. Such is life with Jews.
02:44:49 Yeah, that's good point. You know, like the, it's, I feel like that's that's basically how bad it's been.
02:44:57 Well, that's how bad it is. Now you think there's not a bunch of degenerate fagots in the Trump administration? You're wrong.
02:45:03 You know, there's a bunch of degenerate fagots in the Trump administration, and really every administration probably going back quite a while, Rupert says replay gang here going to catch a replay. See you on Saturday. Good night, professor stack. Well, I appreciate that. Rupert, the resident Jeet.
02:45:24 Then we got cranking says I don't want to be a buzzkill, but Spence is note, reads like a legit suicide, a Mozart joke. Requiem. The man nearly killed him.
02:45:41 Demand never, by the way, it's incline.
02:45:45 Notch music. Wait, what? Wait, hold on.
02:45:48 Don't want to be a buzzkill, but Spencer's note reads like a legit suicide. Yeah. Look, I'm not saying he.
02:45:53 Didn't kill himself.
02:45:55 He could have killed himself, given, you know, given the position that he was in, this might have been a situation where they say, well, if you don't do it, we're going to.
02:46:05 And so he he he could have killed himself. I'm not saying he didn't kill himself. I'm just.
02:46:09 And the the circumstances, obviously around his suicide was really fucking weird. I didn't mean by weird. I meant someone else killed him. But weird as in, he obviously had some kind of connections to the CIA and he was obviously killing himself because of this scandal regarding.
02:46:30 Underage boys that were being trafficked to faggots that ran the country.
02:46:36 And so that's, that's what I mean by that, whether or not he he overdosed himself or it was made to look like that really doesn't matter. The reason he's dead is because of his involvement with that scandal. 100% obviously, right. And yeah, like he could have. He could have killed himself.
02:46:56 It's just really weird. It's just a really weird that the note was really weird. Hey, chief, here's my resignation. You know, he's obviously, has. He obviously had ties to intelligence is what?
02:47:08 I'm getting at.
02:47:09 I don't understand what you mean by the incline. Not that's the Mozarts real name. OK or for the music there.
02:47:21 Let's see here Kraken.
02:47:23 Says, by the way, ordered a no bueno Churro shirt for my girlfriend a while back and they sent me two. Is there an inside joke for this design? She loves your cat and loves the shirt. Thanks for the string. Well, I wish they would just send me one. I don't even have one of those shirts because I I ordered like a a sample of 1 and they never sent it.
02:47:44 Uh there.
02:47:46 We're changing companies. I know. I keep saying that. I just gotta fucking do it. Well, yeah, there's a stream. Where I I tell the story.
02:47:54 Of Churro being suspicious of the the Mexican gas company Guy. He he is.
02:48:04 I don't remember what I mean that that's such a long time ago. I have no idea when that would have been, because I don't think that was. That wasn't what the stream was about. That was just a story I told during the stream.
02:48:13 Right.
02:48:15 So yeah, I mean the short version is there was a weird gas company guy that showed up.
02:48:22 On my property and.
02:48:25 Churro was very suspicious of.
02:48:28 Him.
02:48:30 Because he saw that he was brown, so Churro was kind of a racist, I think is.
02:48:34 What it what it is?
02:48:36 Ah man of low moral fiber says, Speaking of race mixing. Did you see that Genghis Koon that took out the?
02:48:45 NYC Jewis also he killed an Indian cop before taking himself out too.
02:48:53 I no, I I I mean beyond seeing the story on Twitter a little bit, I've been real busy the last 24 hours, you know, not, you know obviously with stream with Mark earlier today.
02:49:04 That stuff. So I haven't looked into that story at all. But it isn't that crazy that that's how non white your country is.
02:49:12 To where like you have this big shooting in New York and like almost no one involved, this is white. You know, the shooter's not white. The people he's killing is not white. It's, you know, well, the Brazilian vacation is always it's already taking place.
02:49:26 Night Nation says I gotta fix for your entropy issue. It happens when the page needs to be refreshed. If you hit refresh before you embed the stream, it will likely make you re log in. Should work, then fixes it for me. Yeah, that's what fixed it. But I I refresh before I start the stream.
02:49:46 I I don't even activate the stream until like I'm basically I'm live because I don't want it to break, you know.
02:49:53 So I don't know why it.
02:49:53 Funked up like that.
02:49:56 A man of low moral fiber says. I believe democracy could be a good system if voting was limited to literate white men who owned property. Letting women vote is akin to letting the blind drive right now, that's The thing is democracy that then it's not really.
02:50:13 Though and it really wasn't the way it was intended, it was. It was supposed to be limited to landowning literate white males, like that was the system. But what happened? I mean, apparently landowning literate white males voted other people's voting rights for some reason. So.
02:50:34 You know.
02:50:35 Was that every every system has its has its uh.
02:50:42 Problems and and sounds like white people created the problems for that one because yeah, women couldn't vote themselves the right to vote. White men had to do it, and so.
02:50:55 And yeah, they were. They tricked by Jews, of course.
02:50:59 But at a certain point, white people either you know, either we need to, like, have all the people who are easily tricked by Jews just die out, you know, or or or some other solution needs to.
02:51:13 Man of low moral fiber says. I don't know why, but Jew lovers are really, really offended by boycott Israel movements. It's strange because I assume actual Israeli commerce is a drop in the bucket compared to the handouts. Yeah, I I think it's more of a.
02:51:32 You know, I think they see.
02:51:36 As threatening. Because that's the tactic that they used against South Africa to some extent. They think that it's a step in the direction of sanctions at some point that if they even start going down that road, that it will inevitably lead to the delegitimizing.
02:51:56 Israel as a state and justice look, they're they're ferocious. They will. They they know that if they give people an inch, they could take a mile. So they don't let anyone even have an inch. And that's really what it comes down to. And yeah wish. Look, I wish white people were as tribal.
02:52:14 Man of low moral fiber says a simple oh, wait, that was the oh wait.
02:52:20 There's a new one, a simple boycott Israel shirt will have boomers walking up to you and picking fights with you, even in even in supposedly based areas of the country. One of the guys I play disc golf with wears 1.
02:52:35 Frequently. Well, there you go.
02:52:39 Rocco D2 says you can't have historically black colleges on private land, openly discriminating and not allowing whites to do the same. Well, here's The thing is there you can. You're right in that the same laws would apply. But here's the thing. The historically black colleges don't explicitly.
02:53:01 Prevent white people from attending, but really, really. What? It's even if it did the the.
02:53:10 The whole thing is different when it comes to housing and now there are black communities that are explicitly black, and we've all seen them right celebrated in the news over the last few years. You know, you never hear the follow-ups because we all know how they end up. But you always hear about like, oh, these black people are going to make a farming community and Boo Boo. It's awesome.
02:53:30 Those are those would technically be illegal too, if they were operated in a way that they had.
02:53:37 Land that was just for black people and they explicitly excluded white people from living there. You could you could go after them using the same laws. It's just that a the DOJ is never going to go after black people for doing that. And neither is an AG.
02:53:56 In any state, they're not going to go after that and there is a Jewish NGO's and there's no white people, NGO's to go after them.
02:54:03 Because honestly, that would have been a way that'd be a sneaky way to make it happen, right? A sneaky way to to set precedent would be to have black people taken to court, and then you have a better chance of a Jewish judge's ruling in favor of black people and their right to have their racially exclusive.
02:54:25 You know, housing project, right? And so if, if that and then your legal precedent is set and now they can't go after white people because you could just cite the same ruling that apply to black people and it would have to apply to you too. I mean that's obviously.
02:54:43 Not going to happen, but like that's.
02:54:46 That'd be a sneaky way to push it through.
02:54:50 Let's see here. Then we got man of low moral fiber again. White people never voted to give Browns the right to vote. That was tyranny from the Union Jews and their allies. Also a white guy with an HBC U degree is resume shredded.
02:55:09 Well, I'll tell you what. In a in a manner of speaking. Now, you people did still vote for it because they voted for the representatives that that put it into law. So, you know, no matter how you look at it.
02:55:24 You know, you either white people voted for it or they voted for the people who voted for it.
02:55:30 Alright, we got.
02:55:35 One last one, we got Jay Orlando says I was making a funny I've been called very handsome. I need to predicate my dry humor with a disclaimer sometimes. Yes, that's a very common mix. Not hard to find. Very pretty. To like my chickens.
02:55:56 Well, there you go. There you go, handsome. Jay. We're going to call him.
02:56:00 Good old handsome Jay.
02:56:02 Alright, let's see here.
02:56:06 That's everything we're going to go and shut her down. Like I said, I'll be live with Tim Murdoch on Friday. I'll send out a link for that, and then we'll have the show on Saturday. Other than that, I hope you guys have a good.
02:56:18 Rest of your week.
02:56:20 Hope you have a a. We're officially in the last moments of July. August is almost here.
02:56:27 I can't wait for September. I can't, you know, and even after the shitty thing is the way the summer is out here, it's not even like, like September. I'll get toyed with, right? We'll get, like, a little cool day here and there.
02:56:42 But it really isn't going to be till October. It's, but it's nice outside.
02:56:47 So.
02:56:48 But then it'll be beautiful for about 6 months.
02:56:51 A little chilly, but mostly awesome for six months. All right, guys, I hope you guys have a good rest of your evening. Or if you'll listen to the replay. Morning. Afternoon, whenever it is.
02:57:05 You guys all have a wonderful, wonderful whatever part of the day you're in.
02:57:11 In the meantime, for Black Pilled, I am of course.
02:57:16 Devon Stack.
Barbra Streisand
02:57:21 People.
02:57:24 People who need people.
02:57:38 That was a lucky song for me, but it made me think, what about people who aren't so lucky, like the thousands and thousands of children who are born each year, mentally retarded, they're often quite helpless, but with help, wonderful things can happen like a little retarded boy.
02:57:54 Putting on his own hat and coat for the first time, or by himself. Or maybe a teenager will learn how to work at a job and feel useful needed self supporting.
02:58:05 The retarded are people who need people. They can be helped. Won't you support the work of your local unit of the National Association for Retired Children? Thank you.