Wednesday Night Live 6 November 2024
In this episode, I examine the psychological toll of election monitoring amid uncounted ballots in the U.S. I analyze inflated narratives around voter turnout and gender dynamics, using humor to critique societal views on women leaders. The discussion shifts to financial implications from a Bitcoin surge and a proposal for a U.S. Bitcoin reserve. I also touch on alternative health therapies, emphasizing mental well-being through exercise. Throughout, I stress the importance of resilience in political discourse and reflect on societal privilege, encouraging listeners to maintain hope and reflection in uncertain times.
GET MY NEW BOOK 'PEACEFUL PARENTING', THE INTERACTIVE PEACEFUL PARENTING AI, AND AUDIOBOOK!
https://peacefulparenting.com/
Join the PREMIUM philosophy community on the web for free!
Also get the Truth About the French Revolution, multiple interactive multi-lingual philosophy AIs trained on thousands of hours of my material, as well as targeted AIs for Real-Time Relationships, BitCoin, Peaceful Parenting, and Call-Ins. Don't miss the private livestreams, premium call in shows, the 22 Part History of Philosophers series and much more!
See you soon!
https://freedomain.locals.com/support/promo/UPB2022
In this episode, I examine the psychological toll of election monitoring amid uncounted ballots in the U.S. I analyze inflated narratives around voter turnout and gender dynamics, using humor to critique societal views on women leaders. The discussion shifts to financial implications from a Bitcoin surge and a proposal for a U.S. Bitcoin reserve. I also touch on alternative health therapies, emphasizing mental well-being through exercise. Throughout, I stress the importance of resilience in political discourse and reflect on societal privilege, encouraging listeners to maintain hope and reflection in uncertain times.
GET MY NEW BOOK 'PEACEFUL PARENTING', THE INTERACTIVE PEACEFUL PARENTING AI, AND AUDIOBOOK!
https://peacefulparenting.com/
Join the PREMIUM philosophy community on the web for free!
Also get the Truth About the French Revolution, multiple interactive multi-lingual philosophy AIs trained on thousands of hours of my material, as well as targeted AIs for Real-Time Relationships, BitCoin, Peaceful Parenting, and Call-Ins. Don't miss the private livestreams, premium call in shows, the 22 Part History of Philosophers series and much more!
See you soon!
https://freedomain.locals.com/support/promo/UPB2022
Category
📚
LearningTranscript
00:00Good evening, 6th of November 2024, yes, that's right, I'm cooking on a little under four
00:11hours sleep because, you know that meme, this is how women sleep, you know, peacefully,
00:17and this is how men sleep, we don't!
00:20We're up monitoring the election to make sure that shit doesn't flip blue at four o'clock
00:26in the fucking morning.
00:29Don't blink, it'll get, it'll get switched!
00:34Did you have that?
00:35I'm like, I can't sleep because cause and effect is backwards for me, I still have PTSD
00:41from 2020.
00:46So yes, yes, good evening, good evening.
00:49Some answers as to where those 20 million mystery voters may have vanished, they're
00:55still only half finished I think in California.
00:58See, I know that there's some paper ballots and shit like that, but isn't the whole point
01:03of electronic stuff, isn't the whole point of electronic stuff that you're supposed to
01:08count it quickly?
01:09I mean, people with actual paper ballots count it faster than all of this fancy-dancy machinery.
01:17It's like you've got this giant Excel spreadsheet, right, and then your boss says, well, what's
01:21the total?
01:22And you're like, well, shit, I don't know, man, I'm gonna have to work that out by hand
01:24and it's like, don't you have an, didn't I pay a $3,000 computer and don't you have
01:29Excel training and you've got this giant spreadsheet with 90 tabs?
01:33No!
01:34I mean, I have a spreadsheet, that's true, but if you want the total, I'm gonna have
01:40to go and count things by hand and work it out with an abacus and my fucking toes.
01:48But you have, you have a computer, doesn't matter!
01:53In honor of how the U.S. runs its election, I will be going to everyone's house and doing
01:57the podcast by hand, I'll do it with hand puppets and yelling from probably the trunk
02:03of your car, so, yes, yes, yeah, yeah, you know, as it sort of turns out, as it turns
02:13out as a whole, going on empty vapid statements like threat to democracy, Nazi, rapist, racist,
02:21it turns out that doesn't actually change the price of groceries.
02:26Also turns out that women buy gas and eggs and milk a whole lot more than they buy abortions.
02:34Well, how did Joe Biden get 80 plus million votes?
02:42Well, it will be interesting to see if any of that gets investigated.
02:51I mean, I'm sure the evidence is long gone, but, oh yeah, Trump is the only man in history
03:00to win three presidential elections and stop two women from becoming president.
03:04Well, it's not so much the two women, it's two warmongering women.
03:09This would be Queen Boadicea's Valhalla spiked chariot wheels, harpies of absolute death.
03:17Absolute death.
03:18You know, women start wars as leaders.
03:20Women start wars more than men do, right?
03:24So anyway, I'm here to chew gum and answer questions, and I'm fresh out of gum.
03:34But how about a reverse song quiz?
03:39Days grow shorter and the nights are getting long.
03:41Feels like we're running out of time.
03:42Every day it seems much harder.
03:44Telling right from wrong.
03:45You've got to read between the lines.
03:46Don't get discouraged.
03:47Don't be afraid.
03:48We can make it through another day.
03:49Make it worth the price we pay.
03:50I don't know that song.
03:52Trump will actually free Ross?
03:54I don't know that song.
04:03Well, anybody want to talk Bitcoin?
04:07It seems to me that there might be a little bit of something going on on Bitcoin, in that
04:13Canadian it's gone up in the last day $8,415.83, which is not small.
04:21Which is not small.
04:24So right now Bitcoin is cooking at $105,377.60.
04:35And that is really, really something.
04:44So let's talk about Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
04:51This is more health.
04:53I mean, holy crap, right?
04:57Robert F. Kennedy Jr. wrote,
05:02FDA's war on public health is about to end.
05:07This includes its aggressive suppression of psychedelics, peptides, stem cells, raw milk,
05:11hyperbaric therapies, chelating compounds, ivermectin, hydroxychloroquine, vitamins,
05:16clean food, sunshine exercise, nutraceuticals, and anything else that advances human health
05:22and can't be patented by pharma.
05:24Oh, come on, I'm sure Moderna's patented the sun already.
05:28If you work for the FDA and part of this corrupt system, I have two messages for you, Robert
05:31F. Kennedy Jr.
05:32One, preserve your records, and two, pack your bags!
05:37Oh boy, it's he who wrote the real Anthony Fauci.
05:42Holy crap.
05:43That, uh, that man is like,
05:47Gollum, Italian, God, no, I'm Satan.
05:53So 20 million votes weren't counted, somebody says hello, and somebody said although it's
05:57confirmed that Trump won 270 plus electoral votes, some states have not counted every
06:01ballot for the popular vote.
06:03For example, California has only counted 8 million votes, which is 54%.
06:07Once finished counting, millions more votes will be added to the total.
06:10So that's important to recognize.
06:16Senator Loomis, isn't that nice that it's like luminescence, and Senator Loomis has
06:23put forward a bill for the US government to buy $200,000 Bitcoin, sorry, 200,000 Bitcoin
06:29over five years for a total of 1 million Bitcoin.
06:33So today's price, that would be worth $76 billion.
06:37Well, well, well.
06:47That's interesting.
06:50That's interesting.
06:51I mean, do I think that's feasible?
06:53Well it's something.
06:55It's something.
06:56It's interesting.
06:59All right.
07:03If Trump can even do 50% of what he promised in full, that's unbelievable and a tremendous
07:06outcome for the US.
07:08And if he gets to 50%, that would be amazing.
07:10That would be amazing.
07:12It's fight the good fight by triumph.
07:13I don't know triumph very well.
07:16Bought some more Bitcoin after your post the other day.
07:18Here's some of today's profits.
07:20I appreciate that.
07:21Do you think there is a possibility of other assassination attempts on Trump?
07:25You know, it could be.
07:26It could be.
07:27Of course, anything's possible.
07:30But it feels to me, it's just a feeling.
07:33It's not a fact, right?
07:35It's just a feeling.
07:36You can tell me if you guys feel differently, but it feels to me like the wind is out of
07:43the sails for this anti-Trump stuff.
07:48There was no big October surprise.
07:51There was no race-baiting George Floyd riot summer of love.
07:55There just didn't seem to be the same hysteria.
07:59I think they've burned out.
08:03For now.
08:04I mean, they will gather their strength, I'm sure.
08:07But I think they've kind of burned themselves out at the moment.
08:13Hey, Steph, women are now not going to be loose women themselves as they say they no
08:19longer have access to abortion.
08:22Thank you, President Trump.
08:23Yeah, you know, it's really sad.
08:25Now, of course, this is not most women, right?
08:29The problem is, of course, that social media gives you an impression that is statistically
08:34wildly off from the center of the bell curve, right?
08:36The extremes tend to show up in social media, but there do seem to be a fair number of posts
08:45from women who are saying, well, that's it, guys.
08:48If you're not going to give us Kamala Harris, then you can't touch women for like four years.
08:55Like did you think that one through?
08:59And how strange it is to think that all you have to offer political discourse and contributions
09:08to the philosophical weight and meaty matters of epistemological and ethical discussions
09:13in society is the giant scissor sound of your legs closing.
09:17Well, I don't have an argument, but I do have an inaccessible snatch.
09:25Okay, that's again, it's very much a minority, but my gosh, my gosh, isn't that sad?
09:34Isn't that sad?
09:35That was a great Valley Girl impersonation.
09:37Well, we all have our inner self.
09:40They should bring back cyclamates too.
09:43Okay, what's your little, what's your pet thing about health?
09:47Let's just go completely off the reservation here.
09:49What is your pet thing or theory about health?
09:53None of this is medical advice.
09:54We're just jawboning as complete idiot amateurs, but what is your pet thing?
09:58I'll go first.
10:00My pet thing is that exercise and dancing is the best cure for depression and virtue,
10:04right?
10:05But virtue is kind of a given in what we talk about here, but exercise and dancing, dancing
10:09in particular is the best cure for depression.
10:15That's sort of my hot take for health, right?
10:23Oh yes, too much exercise, too much love will kill you.
10:28Too much exercise can kill you, especially if you're a white man, study finds 7.5 hours
10:33a week of fitness doubles your risk of heart disease.
10:36Well, I wonder though, I mean, I think that's all just not true at all, right?
10:41They don't want maybe white men who are generally free speech absolutists and small government
10:46guys.
10:47They don't want you working out because then you're weak and pathetic and easily led by
10:50the nose.
10:52But I wonder if it's 7.5 hours a week of fitness doubles your risk of heart disease or just
10:59maybe the people who work out that much, I mean, that's not a huge amount.
11:05I do that at least a week, but not all of course weights.
11:09But maybe it's the supplements or the steroids they're taking that has more to do with their
11:15heart disease risk, right?
11:17So somebody says, oh Kairos, germs don't cause disease, most diseases are caused by stress.
11:22Yeah, the stress thing is a big deal, I think.
11:26If you act healthy, even when you're sick, you'll get healthier faster.
11:30Body is an engine, got to keep it pumping to keep it healthy and clear.
11:39Somebody says, hi Steph, used to follow you on YouTube, but I haven't seen you since you
11:44got squashed.
11:45Sorry for bringing up war wounds.
11:46Can I ask you for a brief update on what you've been doing since?
11:49Yes, you certainly can.
11:51I have been helping the world, spreading parenting.
11:54I've written three books since I was deplatformed.
11:57Two novels, one called The Future about how a free society works in practical terms and
12:02it's a great drama.
12:03The other one called The Present about how society slides into the abyss of disaster
12:07because of statism and my book Peaceful Parenting.
12:11And so I've written three books, I've done probably a thousand or fifteen hundred shows,
12:18one of which we are going on tonight and helped tons of people apply philosophy in their lives
12:23through call-in shows and lots of great stuff.
12:26So yeah, that's what I've been up to.
12:28All right.
12:29Imagine being a voter and your sole political concern is not being able to murder your baby
12:32because you can't not have raw unprotected sex for one week.
12:37All right.
12:41What is 6.9?
12:42Do you guys know what 6.9 is?
12:44Do you know what 6.9 is?
12:486.9 is something fun interrupted by a period.
12:52All right.
12:53The sun is amazing.
12:54Getting sunlight is great.
12:55We evolved on this planet outside most of the time.
12:57Yes.
12:58Yes.
12:59For sure.
13:01Yeah, Zuckerberg started working out, became less woke.
13:08Used to dance all the time when I was young.
13:11Favorite music in front of the mirror, haven't had in a long time.
13:13You should, yeah.
13:14Dancing with your kids is great fun.
13:18In what order should your novels be read?
13:20You could go through time, like you could go through them in time.
13:25So in sequence, it would be Just Poor, Revolutions, Almost, The God of Atheists, The Present,
13:39The Future.
13:40I liked the Bear Grylls segments in your latest video.
13:47Good.
13:48But yeah, I mean, you can just go in whatever way you like.
13:53Whatever works for you.
13:55The God of Atheists is a great book, fdrural.com slash TGOA.
14:00It's a great, great book.
14:02Certainly one of the funniest things that I've written.
14:10Outside of Stefan, I truly admire Trump.
14:12The odds were stacked against him and he still won.
14:14This gives me so much inspiration to never give up.
14:16As I understand that, I do not what is possible for myself nor my potential, thank you, Stefan,
14:23for everything you have done and continue to do.
14:28There is no defeat, save surrender.
14:32True surrender, where you give up the fight.
14:34There's no defeat, save surrender.
14:36You just switch tactics.
14:37I mean, let's say it's France in the summer of 1940, May 1940, you lose very quickly to
14:45the Germans.
14:46Well, you go and regroup in England.
14:48Some of you will continue the government in exile in the south of France.
14:54Some of you will start doing guerrilla moves against the Germans.
14:59All you do in life, you don't surrender, you just switch tactics.
15:05All you do in life, you don't surrender, you just switch tactics.
15:11The way that I view my life is, I view my life as a giant cascade of water coming down
15:19the side of a mountain and just some water has to reach the bottom.
15:26As I am a giant body of water cascading down a mountain, well, you hit obstacles.
15:35You hit rocks and gullies and valleys and pools and you pool up sometimes and you have
15:38to wait for the rain to swell and then you continue.
15:41But you just keep going.
15:42You just keep going.
15:43You just, gravity and your will, you find a way to the bottom of the mountain.
15:47Not all of you does, but you do as much as you can.
15:51And sometimes, you know, there's that great quote, sadly, from an evil guy, I think it
15:55was Lennon, who said, there are decades in which nothing happens and then weeks in which
16:00decades happen.
16:01You just have to be patient, abide your time, continue on, work your will, and whatever
16:07obstacle you come up against is there to strengthen your resolve.
16:12You just keep willing.
16:14All you have to do in winning life, in general, is just not give up.
16:18So many people give up.
16:19So many people give up.
16:21It's a... the race is not to the swift, but who can endure it?
16:30Right.
16:35So just don't... giving up is a sin against life and conscience and virtue.
16:44And giving up is the brain saying, well, I really don't want the heart to give up.
16:50I really don't want the lungs to give up.
16:52But I'll fucking flake and fall over, like a fat kid on a hike.
16:57Right?
16:58You heart, you can't give up, because if you give up, we die.
17:01You lungs, you better not give up.
17:03You liver, you better... kidneys, digestion, stomach, you better not give up, man.
17:09Teeth, you better not give up.
17:11You keep going no matter what.
17:13But the brain is like, well, little star, I'm going to exempt myself from this because
17:16I'm a fastidious little aristocrat and in times when I just need my rest, I need to
17:22rest my feet on the back of a spiny surfboard and I just need to faint on the couch and,
17:28you know, just have my little vaporous and I need to fall over blanched wassail.
17:32But you heart, you better keep hammering, man.
17:34You better keep going.
17:35But me as the brain, I'm just so hard sometimes.
17:40It's just something that, you know, I want to punch myself when I do that voice.
17:47Hoping for less war with Trump, you say?
17:50But he seems to support Israel quite strongly, so we will see how much deeper and messier
17:53the Middle East gets.
17:54Well, well, well, well.
17:58Yes, there will be less war with Trump.
18:01There will be less war with Trump.
18:05Trump's resolution is beyond staggering.
18:08Well, I think they just dropped the cases against him, right?
18:10The DOJ dropped their cases against him today because you can't prosecute a sitting president
18:16and the guy's going to get fired.
18:21I think he's quit now.
18:22He's going to get fired anyway, right?
18:25Yeah, like all we can really hope for in the world of conscience and virtue and resolution
18:35is to have, you know, roughly the equivalent life, energy and willpower of our little fucking
18:43toe, right?
18:44That's all right.
18:45My little toe never gives up.
18:47It doesn't even know what it's there for, other than occasionally get its scalp pinched
18:51when I'm trimming my toenails.
18:53The little toe, what the fuck is it there for?
18:55It's just some leftover little finger.
18:57People lose their little toes and they don't sort of careen in like drunken sailors, right?
19:01They don't just fall over like people with vertigo.
19:04You don't just fall over.
19:05So the little toe is like, I don't know what the fuck I'm doing here.
19:08I'm just this vestigial leftover thing, like the appendix on the base of the spine monkey
19:13cut off.
19:15I don't know what the fuck I'm doing here, but I'm going to keep going, man.
19:18I'm going to grow.
19:19I'm going to shed skin.
19:20I'm going to take that blood and I'm going to stay alive and I'm not going to get necrotic.
19:25And I'm just going to fucking will my way forward.
19:27Why?
19:28I don't know.
19:29I'm a little toe.
19:30What do I want?
19:31I want to make more little toes.
19:32So whatever I can do to help the balls get the semen into an egg, fine.
19:37I mean, if missing a little toe is kind of weird, having an extra little toe, I mean,
19:40the sixth toe, don't even get me started.
19:42Let's just go with the five.
19:45Your little toe, my little toe, they don't know what the fuck they're here for.
19:48They don't see anything.
19:49They don't smell anything.
19:50They don't hear anything.
19:51They're just like, yep, I'll take some blood.
19:53I'll refresh the veins, the capillaries.
19:55I'll keep the flesh going.
19:57I won't rot.
19:58I won't fall off.
19:59I won't die.
20:00And just holy shit.
20:02Can we at least have the kind of dogged resolution in our hearts, minds, souls, and virtues?
20:07Can we at least have the kind of dogged resolution you get from your average little fucking toe?
20:13That's all.
20:15It just keeps going.
20:17It just keeps going.
20:18Little toe, it just keeps going.
20:22It gets no respect.
20:24It just sits there down at the end of your body.
20:30It's like the little peninsula, a little sort of pointless appendix peninsula in your body,
20:34and it just does its thing.
20:35It just does its thing.
20:38Doesn't give up.
20:40Doesn't give out.
20:41Just keeps chugging.
20:43Providing three and a half percent additional balance.
20:47Since time immemorial, the unsung little toe, whether it's weird, is that a nail, is that
20:52just something crusty, I don't know.
20:55You don't think about it.
20:56You don't care about it.
20:57You don't work it out.
20:59You just watch between it and slice that weird little half nail off.
21:04That's it.
21:05That's it.
21:06Be the toe.
21:12Work it hard.
21:13Be good.
21:14Embrace the toe.
21:15You embrace the toe, you can't be defeated.
21:19Little toe can't be defeated.
21:22Just embrace it.
21:23You don't even have to aim to be the Ringo Starr of the drum-style heartbeat.
21:28You don't even have to be that.
21:31You don't have to be that.
21:36Don't have to be so grandiose.
21:38Oh, eyes, please keep functioning.
21:41Oh, nose, please just keep smelling.
21:43No, just look at your little toe and say, well, that shit, he doesn't give up.
21:47I barely even think about it, but he doesn't give up.
21:50So who am I to give up if my little toe can keep going?
21:52At least don't be beaten out in resolution by your little toe.
22:00Only the couch corner can defeat the small toe.
22:03Yes, that is true.
22:05See, it doesn't do much, but occasionally we just ram it into something, and then it's
22:09like, oh, I will make you suffer.
22:12You don't have to notice me that much, but at least don't brain me with the couch corner.
22:17Yeah.
22:18Yeah, that's true.
22:19Well said.
22:20Well said.
22:21Indeed.
22:22All right.
22:23Let me get to your various questions.
22:28Keep on warring.
22:29All right.
22:30Imagine being a voter and you're so, yeah, yeah, we talked about that.
22:35I'm glad you found you again, so congrats on your success.
22:38I appreciate that.
22:39I'm still standing, yeah, yeah, yeah, well, I'm sitting, but you know what I'm saying.
22:45You know what I'm saying.
22:49Somebody says, with Trump, I'm more excited to leave the decaying city of Toronto and
22:52move to the U.S. next year, hoping to find the woman of my dreams before the move to
22:55run away with and pop a million babies or two.
23:00Well, statistically, that's kind of true.
23:04All right.
23:05You can sign up on freedomain.com on it.
23:08It would like to help out the show.
23:09Don't forget to go to fdrurl.com slash TikTok and to sign up there.
23:19I would appreciate that.
23:22You can also go to tiktok.com forward slash at freedomain.com.
23:26You can sign up there and that's where a lot of shorts go and they're ripe for the sharing.
23:33Ripe, I say, for the sharing.
23:36All right.
23:43And I won't be too long.
23:46All right.
23:48So this is what Nick Carter wrote.
23:50I think he's a Bitcoin guy.
23:51Here's my Real Talk Trump 2.0 wish list.
23:54Just one man's views.
23:55Tell me which ones of these you agree with.
23:58COVID Nuremberg, most important.
24:00At a minimum, what was Fauci's role in gain of function?
24:03Research.
24:04I always read that as Game of Thrones research for no reason.
24:07Gain of function research.
24:08Ideally, jail time for those responsible.
24:09This one cannot be overlooked.
24:13Is that right?
24:13Jail time?
24:16I'm not quite sure I follow that.
24:20Maybe I'm missing something.
24:21I'm not sure how it would just be jail time.
24:23I mean, America has the death penalty for murder, right?
24:27So if you were, I don't know how this is going to play out, but if you were, say,
24:33using taxpayer money to fund gain of death research in the Wuhan lab or other places
24:42in a communist dictatorship, that would be mass murder, wouldn't it be?
24:50I'm no legal expert, but it would seem to me that if you funded and enabled
24:55gain of function research and hid it from people, then you would be responsible for
25:02the resulting deaths, right?
25:04And if you are responsible for however many millions of deaths occurred under COVID,
25:10I'm not sure that jail time would be the response in American law.
25:16Again, I'm no lawyer.
25:17It's just my opinion, but I don't think it would just be jail time.
25:23Fix and seal the border, right?
25:26A full investigation of OCP 2.0.
25:31Now, pardon my ignorance.
25:32What the hell does that mean?
25:36Open compute project.
25:38I don't know what that means.
25:39Maybe I'm missing something.
25:40But anyway, he says that, but how was the DOJ, Fed, FDIC able to weaponize the banks
25:47against his favorite causes, including crypto?
25:49Who was responsible?
25:50Prosecution when necessary.
25:53Stable coin legalization, market structure bill,
25:55overhauling the SEC, allowing legal token issuance.
25:59Restore the U.S. as the unquestioned crypto capital of the planet.
26:03Endless pointless wars like Russia-Ukraine.
26:05End funding to Ukraine.
26:06Allow Israel to win once and for all.
26:08He says new Abraham Accords force NATO to pay their fair share.
26:12End U.S. involvement in or support for the U.N.
26:15unless they massively reform and stop coddling terrorists.
26:18Completely withdraw from the World Health Organization.
26:21So a bunch of other things.
26:24End EU harassment of the U.S. tax sector.
26:27If they try and regulate, fine.
26:28And sue our tech companies responding to the Equal Force, pull all military subsidies, etc.
26:33Accelerate AI development.
26:35Massive expansion of energy base.
26:37Let America be the clear AI winner.
26:39End AI safety in all decel cults.
26:43Oh, deceleration cults forever.
26:44Unleash the private sector and so on, right?
26:46So interesting stuff.
26:49Well, I mean, saying that wars are pointless, I think is, you know, in my humble opinion,
26:53kind of missing the point.
26:55They exist because they serve some people's preferences and interests.
27:00Steph, did you see women losing their minds over the Trump victory?
27:04Yeah, Joe, don't fall for the PSYOP, right?
27:13So the PSYOP is, oh, you know, women are unstable and women are all leftists and women can't,
27:19right?
27:20These are people with severe personality disorders.
27:23It's got nothing to do with politics.
27:25They need drama.
27:27Then they grew up probably in hyper-stimulated and extremely dangerous environments.
27:32So they need hyper-stimulation and danger, a sense of danger, in order to just feel like
27:38they're alive.
27:38They are tragic victims of abuse.
27:43And women, of course, they voted for the left more than men, but white women in particular,
27:52it was white women, Gen X, and male Latinos that pushed Trump over the line.
27:58So, I guess usually married, right?
28:03Thank a married white woman for all of that.
28:06So, I mean, I did see some of this kind of stuff, but this is not, this is just people
28:11who have severe personality problems and like something is deeply wrong with their brains
28:16and their emotional and limbic systems.
28:19And so all of that is tough.
28:22But it's not representative of most people, right?
28:25Somebody says, oh, this is, yeah, from last time.
28:27Steph, I took your advice and politely confronted the executives in my company who've been going
28:32to my boss.
28:33I asked him if I'm missing something and if I should be going to his manager for questions.
28:36He looked like he saw a ghost and was manipulative, but we came to a great resolution.
28:40Super happy to have done it.
28:41Oh, good for you.
28:42Good for you.
28:42This is somebody whose other people in the company were going to his boss rather than
28:49coming to him with problems.
28:49So he said, well, should I go to your boss?
28:51Is that what we do in the company?
28:52Help me understand.
28:53And it looks like that's worked out.
28:55It's very nice.
28:56I mean, universalizing things in a peaceful and positive way is usually the best way,
29:01at least to start resolving conflicts.
29:02There's no absolute guarantee.
29:04It will, of course, resolve all conflicts because that's a free will issue.
29:07But thoughts on Joe Rogan making his endorsement the day before?
29:10Yeah, I had a pretty funny rant about this in the donor show, which you can check out
29:17at premium.freedomain.com.
29:20And of course, if you want to join this lovely crew of those who support philosophy,
29:24fdrural.com.locals.
29:26You can sign up for a month for free, see what you like.
29:28But there's great, great stuff up there.
29:32Yes, the gender mixing in women's sport is a problem.
29:36Yeah, so it took me a little while to understand this because I obviously was never a good
29:42enough or practiced enough sportsman to have it change my finances, right?
29:48So for me, it was like, I mean, I played a lot of different sports, but it never really
29:55led anywhere financial.
29:56But of course, in America in particular, and other places as well, but in America in particular,
30:01the girls need to do well in the sports in order to get their scholarships to universities.
30:07And sometimes these universities can be fairly blindingly expensive, right?
30:12So it is a big issue that really hits not just the sort of protective element of mothers
30:19and fathers, but also, you know, $50,000, $100,000 can hang in the balance with this
30:25kind of stuff as well.
30:30So it is a big deal for sure.
30:34It is a big deal.
30:35All right, so let me just check here and here and here.
30:51All right.
30:57All right, let me just see what else I had stored.
31:05It's a good quote from the Talmud.
31:08He who has mercy on the cruel will ultimately become cruel to the merciful.
31:12That's true.
31:18All right, what do we got here?
31:22Senator Cynthia Loomis, we are going to build a strategic Bitcoin reserve.
31:27That is pretty cool.
31:29That is cool.
31:30You have approximately three months until the US government puts into law active accumulation
31:34of Bitcoin as a strategic reserve asset.
31:36Other sovereigns will be discretely front-running.
31:39The clock has already started.
31:40So, I mean, this is stuff I talked about years ago, in that governments that are heavily
31:45indebted will probably need to get into crypto as the only possible chance of paying off
31:51their debt.
31:52So what you do is you get into — this is amoral, right?
31:58I'm just saying that this is a mathematical strategy that I believe could work — is
32:03you go into a bunch of crypto, you print money like crazy, deflate your currency, pay off
32:11your debt with crypto.
32:17So, that's it.
32:22Yes, this was a woman.
32:25Cancel all future plans with men.
32:29Use their own stupid traditional views against them.
32:31Say that you don't want sex before marriage.
32:33Say you're waiting for the right man.
32:35They will all be seething because they are sexually dependent on women who they called
32:38sluts.
32:39Yeah, see, this is the best angle.
32:41No sex before marriage.
32:42Give them what they voted for.
32:46Amazing.
32:49Amazing.
32:55Let's see here.
32:56Somebody says — oh, this is Libs of TikTok.
32:59So far, she wrote — Chaya, her name is?
33:02She's a great woman.
33:03So far, I've seen Democrats blame Kamala's loss on sexism, racism, Tim Waltz, white women,
33:10men, the media, Joe Biden, Latinos, everything but Kamala.
33:17They can't admit that choosing a candidate based on the principles of DEI is a terrible
33:21strategy, right?
33:23It's very hard in the world, and I struggle with this.
33:28So I guess I could say it's very hard.
33:29Like, that sort of gets me off the hook.
33:31But I struggle with this because I'm rational and really work hard to listen to evidence
33:43and adjust my beliefs and the contents of my mind according to reason and evidence.
33:47Because of all that, I keep thinking other people will do that, too.
33:53It's pretty wild, right?
33:55It is a big error.
33:56And we do this in order to have optimism, and sometimes that optimism is inspiring,
34:01and sometimes it's suicidal and insanely misplaced and dangerous, right?
34:07I mean, if you go into a conflict thinking that you can reason your way out when the
34:12other person is not itching to use violence, that optimism is dangerous, right?
34:16So, if you would vote for somebody based upon ethnicity and sex, right?
34:30What is she?
34:32Black, Indian, something, something.
34:35So, Kamala.
34:36So, Jamaican, Indian, something like that.
34:39Anyway, so if you say, well, I would vote for someone based upon race and gender, then
34:45you look out at the world, and because you see it through that lens, you say, well, because
34:48I would do it, other people will do it, too.
34:51And this just shows a massive amount of privilege.
34:54It's a massive amount of privilege to make decisions based upon not meritocracy, but
34:59ideology.
34:59That's privilege, right?
35:04It's like if you, I don't know if you've ever had in your life or been in the situation
35:09where you've had to take a job because you're broke.
35:18I've been in that situation where I just absolutely have to work my way back from the paycheck.
35:25And I used to take waitering jobs sometimes just because I needed the tips to eat, right?
35:30Because you get paid in cash, right?
35:32So, you cash out and get some food.
35:34I would take restaurant jobs because I would get food, which was important as a general
35:40thing.
35:40It's nice to have.
35:42So, if you can say, I don't really want this job.
35:51I'm living at home.
35:52I'm comfortable.
35:53I'm going to wait for just the right thing.
35:54Well, that's privilege, right?
35:55And I'm not saying it's a bad thing.
35:57It's just you have choices that other people don't.
36:00So, one of the reasons why people like some of this DEI stuff is it is a form of status,
36:06right?
36:06It's a form of status because what you're saying is I'm rich enough that considerations
36:13of meritocracy don't really apply to me.
36:16Like if you're a farmer and you've got to make it through the winter, you better be
36:19a damn good farmer and you better grow everything really well and you better chase all the birds
36:23away and you better make sure the boll weevils don't eat your cotton or whatever.
36:26So, if you're eating what you kill, then you have to be a really good hunter.
36:42You have to be a really good farmer.
36:45But if you are super wealthy, then you can be a hobby farmer.
36:51You can be a gentleman farmer.
36:52You can try all these different crops.
36:54You can fool around with things.
36:55You can give jobs to your buddies.
37:01Being against meritocracy as a whole is a status signal.
37:10It's a signal of having excess resources.
37:14If you look at women's fashion, a lot of women's fashion is to do with showing that you don't
37:19have to do physical labor, wearing impractical dresses, wearing stockings, wearing high heels,
37:24having nails, having makeup, having your hair done.
37:27All of these are status symbols of saying, I don't have to do one little stitch of manual
37:34labor, darling.
37:35Don't even touch these things.
37:38I supervise things.
37:39I don't actually do them myself.
37:41The more ornamental you are, the higher status you appear to be.
37:45It's kind of like the peacock's tail.
37:47If you can drag that thing around and still be successful, it means your genes are fantastic
37:51in terms of productivity.
37:52So, if you look at this sort of privileged life where you can make decisions not based
38:05upon raw meritocracy, but based upon these demographic considerations, what you're doing
38:11is you're saying, look, I'm so wealthy and privileged and so distant from reality that
38:16I can just jerk around things that aren't particularly meritorious.
38:20Meritocracy doesn't matter to me because I have all these excess resources, darling.
38:24So, it's just another status symbol.
38:30If you look at the people of every race who are in poor, desperate neighborhoods, they
38:35as a whole did not want the withdrawal of police from their environment because the
38:40police are the wall against them and the criminals they live among who prey upon them.
38:45So, all of the people who are like, oh, I don't want to back the blue.
38:49I think it's really important to have mental health professionals go to deal with people
38:54who are, you know, they're not immoral.
38:56They're not corrupt.
38:57They're not bad.
38:57They're not evil.
38:58They're just having various mental health crises, and I think it's really important.
39:02All you're saying is that you don't live in those neighborhoods.
39:04You have a gated community.
39:06You have a wall.
39:06You have private security.
39:07You've got a doorman.
39:10It's just a status thing.
39:12I think that police are vastly overused when it comes to dealing with criminals,
39:15where you're just saying you live in a wealthy neighborhood and you can afford other substitutes.
39:19I mean, one of the biggest things that stands between us and the truth is bullshit status
39:25displays.
39:29Bullshit status displays.
39:32And people who are interested in showing status
39:44can't ever get to the truth.
39:46It's all vanity.
39:48Vanity fair.
39:49All is vanity, right?
39:52All right.
39:56Let's get to your thoughts.
39:57Any plans to debate Andrew Wilson on spanking?
40:02Well, it's not huge on my list, but I'll mull it over.
40:11All right.
40:12Are there any names you could share, some of the people you expected most to have your
40:16back after the deplatforming who didn't?
40:19Were there a lot?
40:21I don't think you'd need to ask that, right?
40:22You would just do a search for people and see what they did after I was deplatformed.
40:30But the deplatforming as a whole, right?
40:33The deplatforming as a whole was the world's way of saying, go back to philosophy.
40:41Right?
40:43The deplatforming as a whole was entirely based on the world telling me, go back to
40:53core philosophy.
40:54There's lots of people who can do politics.
40:55There aren't that many who can do first principles.
40:57And in particular, the ethics of child raising and the non-aggression principle and so on,
41:02right?
41:09So, you can look up who was there and who was not there.
41:15And I don't blame people for it.
41:19I understand that for some people, it's a sort of practical gig.
41:23For me, it's a mad calling.
41:25I mean, it is just a mad calling, which is why I took all of these, quote, crazy risks
41:30and ended up with all these threats and problems and so on.
41:34For me, it's just a real calling.
41:37And for some people, it's just more of a practical gig.
41:41And I don't mind that at all.
41:42I mean, just telling you the way that it is.
41:44Okay.
41:45But the fact that people let me spiral off the spaceship without turning anything around
41:53to get me gave me a huge amount of liberty, right?
41:57They did me, honestly, did me huge favors.
42:00They did me huge favors.
42:02Because if people had really circled back and really worked hard to keep me in the public
42:06sphere and so on, I wouldn't have been able to do all of the great things that I did over
42:11the last couple of years and things which are better for the world objectively than
42:15my political analysis.
42:21Steph, didn't back in the day some aristocrats would get offended if you asked them if they
42:25knew how to do practical things because that would imply they can't afford someone to do
42:28it for them?
42:28Yes.
42:29Yeah, that's right.
42:30That's right.
42:37Let's see here.
42:41Bullshit status displays separate us from the truth.
42:45Jesus, that's such a good one to hear, Steph.
42:46It is.
42:47If you look at all of these, it's like the mass immigration question, right?
42:51All of the people who are for it are just saying that they don't have to live in the
42:54neighborhoods where this kind of stuff generally occurs and where the challenges are, right?
43:00Philip says, Lord Stefan of House Molyneux, speaker of truth, give her wisdom and bring
43:04her a peace.
43:05I have just sent you some Bitcoin.
43:07I thank you for everything you do.
43:08My son is raised peacefully.
43:10Thank to you.
43:11I appreciate that.
43:12Thank you very much.
43:20All right, let's get to some more comments.
43:24I won't do a super long show tonight because I already did a long show earlier today.
43:28People, keep on worrying because it won't be too long.
43:36All right, but it's pretty wild, you know, it's not a particularly political thing, but
43:44it is pretty wild to me that the degree to which the media's credibility has fallen over
43:55the past eight years is, well, nine years, really, is pretty staggering, right?
44:03The degree to which the media's credibility has fallen.
44:08It was gospel, honestly.
44:09I mean, for the younger people, you just don't know.
44:12He said, you know, wearing suspenders up to his nipples and whittling something on the
44:16back porch while complaining about the price of lemons for lemonade, but you don't know.
44:21It used to be such a monolith.
44:22It used to be such a monolith.
44:25And now, the fact that the entire, I think, morally compromised chattering classes from
44:35some Hollywood to TV, to the media, to the political classes, to the pundits, to the
44:41news anchors, to the talk show hosts, to the game show, to the late night TV show hosts,
44:46to the comedians, the fact that everybody, you know, 94 felonies, one conviction, two
44:53impeachments for Trump and so on, right, the E. Lewis Carroll thing and all of that,
44:59the fact that people voted for him en masse is such a wild rebellion against mainstream
45:06propaganda.
45:08I can't even tell you what an absolutely staggering development this is in human history.
45:14This is as big a development in human history as the break from the Catholic Church through
45:21Martin Luther, through the Calvinists, the Swingalians, the Anabaptists, and others.
45:27It's as big a break as that.
45:31Or the break from Jesus with former Judaism, the break with the Protestants from the Catholic
45:35Church, the break from mainstream media, the break from mainstream propaganda that they
45:42can say all of these things about this guy relentlessly, and he still wins the popular
45:49vote by five mil plus.
45:51That is...I can't even tell you how unbelievable that is.
46:01That is...Yeah, my grandfather always said Walter Cronkite lied about the Tet Offensive
46:06in 1968.
46:07Media's been suspect for a long time.
46:09Yeah, I mean the demoralization stuff with regards to the Vietnam War, and he said,
46:13well, it's become unwinnable in 68, and that changed the whole course of the war.
46:17So, I just wanted to say that this is absolutely, completely, and totally staggering.
46:28The loss of faith in the mainstream organs of propaganda has never been achieved before
46:35in human history.
46:37The loss of faith in mainstream propaganda organs is without precedent in human history.
46:53And let's see, what is the...I mean, what Jeff Bezos was writing about with the Washington
47:00Post and so on was really, really something.
47:04And I don't know what...where, let's see here.
47:10Trust in media has tanked.
47:12So, this is May 3rd, 2020.
47:20I'm just looking for some graphs here.
47:21But yeah, the media is...and this is why this sort of disinformation and misinformation
47:27is occurring.
47:31Because they're terrified that they can't control the way people think by repeating and morally
47:37frightening and being aggressive, right?
47:39Morally frightening people and being aggressive.
47:43It is really, really something.
47:49I'm just gonna...I mean, some of this stuff is 2023, which feels like forever.
47:53And a day ago as a whole...oh, 2021.
47:58There's no point going back there.
48:04Oh, cookies.
48:05You'd think they'd be a whole lot more fun.
48:07Oh, my gosh.
48:07January 2022.
48:09My God.
48:122023.
48:13What do we got here?
48:14Only...oh, yeah.
48:15So, only 7% of adults...this is American trust in media is near a record low study finds.
48:22This is from October 20th, 2023.
48:26So, just 13 months or so ago.
48:28Just a little under 13 months, 12 and a half months.
48:30Only 7% of adults have a great deal of trust in news media.
48:3438%, they say, say they have none at all.
48:41So, only 7% of Americans have a great deal of trust and confidence in the media, while
48:4527% say they have a fair amount of trust in mass media.
48:4828% of US adults surveyed in the poll say they don't have much confidence in the media,
48:55with 38% saying they have none at all.
49:02Isn't that wild?
49:06This poll is the first time the percentage of Americans with no trust in the media at
49:09all is higher than the percentage of respondents with a great deal or a fair amount of trust.
49:13Partisan divide, 70% of Democrats say they have a great deal or a fair amount of confidence
49:17in the media.
49:1914% of Republicans and 27% of independents say the same.
49:25A majority of Republicans indicated they have no trust at all in the media for the third
49:30straight year.
49:31So, this is a massive breakaway.
49:3414% of Republicans trust the media, 70% of Democrats.
49:40Well, that's because the Democrats have no interest in diversity.
49:45They are a monolith, right?
49:46They are an absolute monolith.
49:48They don't hire non-lefties, right?
49:56And it's one of the things, of course, that I worked on from most of my career, is just
50:01pointing out the falsehoods that the media has, right?
50:05I mean, if you ever want to know, there's two ways that you can figure out that the
50:13media is full of propaganda, right?
50:18And one of them, this is from Michael Crichton, I can't remember, the Gell-Mann effect or
50:22something like that.
50:23So, let's say you know a lot about Bitcoin, right?
50:28And then you read a mainstream media article about Bitcoin, you're like, oh my God, this
50:34doesn't, this is not true, this is not accurate, it's not right.
50:38And then you accept that, but then you turn over and the media is writing about Russia
50:42or Gaza or inflation or depression, and you think somehow that's better.
50:49Whereas everybody who's an expert, you can't be an expert in everything, right?
50:52I mean, there's lots of things I don't talk about because I'm not an expert in them, right?
50:55So, to be an expert in something and then read about what the media writes about, it
51:01is just like, whoa.
51:03But there's another level, and this is the true belly of the beast.
51:07Thank you for the tip.
51:08This is a true belly of the beast.
51:16Steph, I am glad you were wrong about Trump winning.
51:18I was so shocked when Trump won, it's really amazing.
51:20We are so back, boys.
51:21Sorry, I predicted on October the 30th, I predicted that Trump had the numbers.
51:27Assuming that there was not massive corruption, that Trump had the numbers to win.
51:32So, I don't quite understand what you're saying about being wrong about that.
51:37But no, I said he had the numbers, and he did.
51:41He had the numbers.
51:42And by numbers, I meant not just the electoral college, but the popular vote.
51:50So, maybe you're thinking about someone else or something else.
51:53I'm certainly happy to get that dealt with.
51:56So, the final boss of media falset is when they write about you.
52:03When they write about you, that's your final boss.
52:08That's truly a staggering experience.
52:11And so, if the media likes you, then they'll pump up your ego.
52:13And if they dislike you, they'll tear you down, neither of which has any particular
52:17relevance to facts as a whole.
52:21Sorry, I didn't see that video.
52:22Sorry, Steph.
52:23No, it's fine.
52:23I just don't know why you would think I didn't think he would win.
52:27I mean, the numbers were pretty clear.
52:29And again, you can go back to my show from October the 30th.
52:34I think it's at about the 14-minute mark.
52:36Somebody asked me what I think the chances of Trump are winning.
52:39And I said, yeah, he's got the numbers.
52:41And assuming that there is no particular corruption, he's got the numbers to win.
52:46And I don't think there was.
52:47And the interesting question is sort of why.
52:49I don't think that the 3 a.m. ballots would have worked this way or this time.
52:53And of course, they didn't have the same mail-in thing that they had with the 2020 election.
52:59And of course, the Republicans had learned a lot from 2020.
53:03And they had a lot of people on the ground.
53:05They had a lot of lawyers.
53:06They had a lot of experts.
53:07And they got to record everything.
53:09And, you know, they did the ground game of purging a lot of the voter rolls through Tom
53:14Fitton and Judicial Watch and things like that.
53:16So there was a lot of groundwork that was done to try and ensure a more accurate election.
53:26Yeah, it's a little thing.
53:27And I'm kind of fussy this way.
53:29Of course, not that I get everything right.
53:31Far from it.
53:32But if you say, oh, Steph thought Trump was going to lose, right?
53:39If you say that, if that's your particular belief or perception,
53:43you know, just do me a solid and check before talking about it.
53:46Because you'll be talking about this with other people.
53:48And so, oh, Steph got it wrong, and so on.
53:50And this sort of spreads.
53:52Like, you are responsible for the language you put out into the world, right?
53:57And it's not about me or anything.
53:59I'm not even in politics anymore.
54:00So I don't particularly care about the credibility.
54:03But be careful and double and triple check the things that you say, especially if they're
54:11consequential, right?
54:12Like, if you're saying something like, Steph did politics for many years, but he got something
54:16foundational like this wrong, when you put that out into the world, other people will
54:20listen to it.
54:21They will spread it.
54:22And it will be beyond recovery.
54:24Because you won't know who said everything.
54:26So don't spread rumors and don't spread false information about people.
54:31Because it turns into a sort of snowball or an avalanche or a beast of its own that you
54:37can't control anymore.
54:38So again, nobody's perfect.
54:40And I'm not trying to be this big nag.
54:41And I've certainly got things wrong.
54:43And I have to put out corrections and so on.
54:45But just try to be careful about the information you put out into the world.
54:52And make sure that you are correct as best you can, right?
54:55And so on, right?
54:56Because now, if you've told other people that I was wrong, now you've got to go and tell
55:00them and please tell other people.
55:01Because, you know, I assume if you've told people that I was wrong about something that
55:04I was in fact right about, then you will go and correct that.
55:12You will go and correct that impression.
55:14Is that fair to say?
55:16You will go and correct that impression.
55:18All right.
55:20The censorship is the biggest problem.
55:21They propagandize everyone and then they censor us.
55:23Yes, for sure.
55:25Not a nag at all.
55:26I understand.
55:26Didn't see that video.
55:27I apologize.
55:28No, no, but it's not a question of didn't see the video.
55:31The question is why you would have that impression in the first place, right?
55:33That's the question.
55:34Maybe someone told you and you just repeated it or whatever, right?
55:37So it's not a question of whether you saw the video or not.
55:39The question is that you are saying Steph is wrong about something.
55:45So you've got that impression from somewhere, right?
55:47If that makes sense.
55:51All right.
55:53All right.
55:53Any other last questions, comments, issues, challenges?
56:00You need to get replatformed and repopularized, Steph.
56:02I loved your content for so long.
56:04Maybe.
56:05Maybe.
56:05Maybe.
56:07Maybe.
56:08I'm not convinced.
56:15All right.
56:15Well, thank you, everyone, for your time, care, and attention tonight.
56:19If you are listening to this later, freedomand.com slash Donato really would appreciate your help
56:24and support with Le Show.
56:26And have yourself an absolutely beautiful, beautiful night.
56:30I will see you guys Friday night.
56:31And have yourself a great couple of days.
56:36Lots of love from up here.
56:37Talk to you soon.
56:38Bye.