Powers & Principalities, Episode 007, YouTube Auto-Generated Transcription

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Powers & Principalities, Episode 007

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Description

Joe Atwill and Tim Kelly discuss a few currents events and how they relate to the big picture.

About

The transcription text below is a YouTube auto-generated English transcription from Powers & Principalities, Episode 007, published by "thkelly67" on 2017-07-08 with a running time of 1:17:23. All episodes of the Powers & Principalities weekly audio interview series between Joseph Atwill and Tim Kelly are included in this playlist on YouTube and are also available as audio podcast downloads on Tim Kelly's "Our Interesting Times" channel on Podomatic.

All transcription copyrights belong to Tim Kelly (thkelly67) & Joseph Atwill.

Donate on PayPal or on Patreon to Tim Kelly's "Our Interesting Times" and "Powers & Principalities" audio shows.

YouTube auto-generated English transcription

00:00 [Music] 00:17 a 00:19 [Music] 00:38 [Music] 00:41 Joe you're back how you doing I am great 00:45 Tim and it's great feedback so tonight 00:50 we're going to talk about civil rights 00:53 um and the pros and cons of the of the 01:00 effects of the civil rights movement and 01:03 the civil rights legislation that I've 01:06 changed the United States to such a 01:08 large degree Tim just sort of help 01:12 orient us like let's go back to you know 01:16 1955 what really went on over the next 01:21 10 years and that point that's kind of 01:23 referred to a civil rights movement and 01:26 then with the civil rights with the 01:27 voting act can you just kind of talk 01:29 about what was what precipitated it what 01:34 were some of the stuff that they did and 01:36 then what are kind of some of the 01:37 questions that have come out of the the 01:41 results of this really what I see is a 01:45 basically a catastrophic process at 01:47 least in terms of results for the United 01:49 States well in the 1950s potential after 01:52 1955 after the Korean War ended this has 01:57 been rolled the Cold War height at 02:00 height of the Cold War you had sort of 02:03 coalescence or formally organized civil 02:06 rights movement among black Americans 02:07 particularly in the south but also in 02:09 the north it made it really active in 02:12 the south because of the era of Jim Crow 02:13 for the better part of a century south 02:17 Jim Crow had had reigned after 02:20 post-election period you're dealing with 02:22 the pirate room destruction of the 02:24 southern economy and of course in 1930s 02:30 40s you had this mass migration north in 02:34 the into the industrial size of the 02:36 country in Detroit this is a larger a 02:40 Philly need for labor in the munition 02:43 factories 02:45 world war two but has also created a 02:48 demographic shift in the north and 02:50 create a lot of problems racial problems 02:51 particularly ethnic neighborhoods the 02:55 Italian polish German Irish ethnic 02:58 neighborhoods Edison's industrial cities 03:00 like Detroit and so you get a lot of 03:05 blacks moving north in the 1940s from 03:07 the impoverished self seeking jobs in 03:09 the factories we've talked about how 03:11 this was part of a social engineering 03:13 scheme ethnic demographic warfare of a 03:17 weaponized migration to achieve a 03:19 political agenda 03:22 socio political gender to break up the 03:24 effort Edwards and also create the great 03:28 suburbia it's also coincided with the 03:30 creation of the interstate highway 03:31 system which is the government program 03:33 creates suburbian that fundamentally 03:35 changed the demographics and therefore 03:37 the politics of the nation which was the 03:39 objective in the background of this was 03:42 of course was this blooding civil rights 03:43 movement it started right after World 03:45 War two really during World War two 03:48 because you had some legislation passed 03:49 what wasn't enforced regreting you know 03:53 certain contracts and then plumbing for 03:55 blacks in the mission factories and in 03:57 the Army after World War Two the armed 04:00 forces were desegregated prior to that 04:03 they were segregated so you had that but 04:05 in 1952 year the Chris or sort of this 04:08 rise of Martin Luther King and this was 04:11 a response to the protests in Selma and 04:13 the Birmingham the of course you had 04:16 Rosa Parks who protested for buses like 04:18 the boycott the Birmingham bus boycott 04:20 and it really started gain traction in 04:23 the late 1950s because a favorable 04:27 favorable repression in the north that 04:31 was very critical to south or in many 04:33 cases rightly so for the some of the Jim 04:36 Crow laws segregation laws in the south 04:39 so you have this agitation and in the 04:41 south and you some weak so rights 04:46 legislation passed of in the early 60s 04:49 under the kennedy administration but 04:51 still of really the watershed event with 04:54 the passage of the 1964 Civil Rights Act 04:56 and the way 04:57 right exact under Lyndon Johnson who is 04:59 succeeded to JFK when he was 05:01 assassinated and Iran was JFK or LBJ 05:06 used the death of Kennedy to push 05:08 through that bill that law and that law 05:12 itself will have any praises you know 05:15 sort of being sacrosanct and much-needed 05:18 legislation it's very problematic 05:20 because much of the law itself from a 05:23 constitutional standpoint is very 05:25 dubious particularly it's the provisions 05:28 banning employment discrimination in in 05:33 the private sector and this what 05:36 happened was in order to justify this 05:38 the the supreme court invoked the 05:40 interstate commerce clause to say that 05:42 Congress could could regulate employment 05:46 practices of private employers that's 05:49 also violating the concept of a 05:50 voluntary associations Association of 05:53 voluntary contract but there's no 05:55 provision in the Constitution for 05:56 Congress to do that but they read the 05:59 Interstate Commerce Clause rather 06:00 broadly to justify this 06:01 they said this also had had a precedent 06:04 in the during the New Deal with the work 06:06 of Wilker wicker V filburn decision so 06:10 Byrne decision Wickard V filburn 06:12 which said that Congress could prevent a 06:15 farmer from from using his wheat to feed 06:17 his grain to feed his livestock 06:21 because the sex is interstate commerce 06:23 so it was a broad moreless to that 06:26 interpretation and Congress was pretty 06:28 much on my side the Supreme Court pretty 06:30 much trashing the idea of delegated and 06:33 enumerated powers and pretty much under 06:35 the rubric of Interstate Commerce 06:37 Congress do whatever wanted and that 06:39 that's how the civil rights legislation 06:40 act was justified from a constitutional 06:43 standpoint and the quick then it 06:47 eventually led inevitably led to the 06:50 creation of racial quotas and a permit 06:53 of action because in order to enforce 06:57 the employment section so Rights Act the 06:58 courts determined eventually I think of 07:00 the nineteen seventies that the 07:03 statistical disparity in employment was 07:05 a prima facie case of racial 07:07 discrimination and any suitor and 07:11 thank brought regardless of you know 07:13 other conditions or the circumstances 07:15 that may lead to a disparity between the 07:18 races and employment so that led many 07:22 companies to implement racial quotas in 07:25 hiring particularly in government 07:27 contracts and yeah any coming with that 07:30 government country but also I mean they 07:34 were basically you know everywhere there 07:38 just became quotas and because just of 07:42 the threat of lawsuits in this area and 07:45 yeah and also yeah big government 07:48 employment coming contracts because as 07:50 the course of the federal government 07:52 expanded it became that much more than 07:54 62 contracting companies became more and 07:58 more dependent on federal contracts they 08:01 themselves have to comply with these 08:02 standards in order to compete for 08:04 federal contracts remember in a software 08:08 company you know we we were small but we 08:11 thought we could apply for a DoD 08:13 contract and the form the application 08:17 form basically had us describe the 08:21 racial composition of the company and 08:25 then if there were no blacks you had to 08:27 kind of explain why that was yeah you 08:31 know and so this was you know it was 08:36 just a burden that was placed on almost 08:38 every business in America 08:39 Nosa became an opportunity for the for a 08:41 shake down after like Jesse Jackson's a 08:45 core is it not cause it yeah but weibo 08:48 coalition rainbow coalition you would go 08:50 to companies and say you know if you 08:54 don't donate to it to us we might have 08:56 to start protesting and they wouldn't 08:58 really care who was employed is usually 09:00 threat to get donations from from the 09:01 company or they get you know like for 09:04 example I think Rachel Jesse Jackson's 09:06 son got the soldiers children ship for 09:09 in hajja Bush really yeah I mean 09:12 basically other companies could comply 09:14 with the the kind of vague criteria that 09:18 led to lawsuits let alone the kind of 09:21 vague 09:22 you know criteria that were 09:24 in the laws that they were supposed to 09:27 come you know come adhere to because 09:29 they're just during the transition and I 09:33 don't think even today particularly in 09:36 technical areas you just couldn't find 09:38 people that you really wanted to hire 09:41 put money into because that kind of 09:45 education just wasn't being given to 09:46 african-american males and when they 09:48 simply weren't there to hire yeah 09:51 just didn't exist and you know it's not 09:53 to say they didn't have a reason for 09:56 this but it just in terms of being you 10:00 know in a business it was just 10:01 completely chaos you know I wanted to 10:05 mention that when they began the process 10:08 of weaponized integration they found a 10:12 willing audience for movement from the 10:17 south because that cohort of 10:21 african-americans had never actually 10:23 been free of slavery after the Civil War 10:29 the states in that area basically 10:33 changed the laws of the penitentiary to 10:38 include chain gangs which could then be 10:40 you know you know rented out to to 10:45 government and else of individuals so 10:49 this dis condition lasted right up to 10:51 World War two and so you can imagine you 10:54 know suddenly someone shows up and says 10:57 you know how she liked to get away from 11:01 the chain gang and come up to you know 11:03 Detroit or you know Philadelphia and 11:05 there's manufacturing employment up here 11:07 so the the process began and in my 11:13 opinion it was it was completely 11:14 weaponized I mean the the target was 11:19 really sort of the the family and in 11:24 order to atomize you know the ethnic 11:27 society they had to have some reason to 11:30 push them from the cities out into the 11:32 suburbs where they would be D resonated 11:34 right where the ethnics wouldn't exist 11:36 no longer 11:37 if you think about it it's really almost 11:39 absurd because the cities in 1950 were 11:45 integrated right he could drive around 11:48 Chicago LA and you would see there were 11:51 blacks and and white European 11:56 ethnicities living side-by-side all over 11:59 the place but they were very partitioned 12:02 right they separate schools and this was 12:05 really the most important component of 12:08 it of the integration that that was 12:11 occurring at that time is that the 12:14 ethnicities felt safe in their areas 12:16 because they had their own schools so 12:19 that the children could be big 12:20 you know sequestered from any kind of 12:24 you know danger that the parents saw 12:29 from from ethnicity when that was blown 12:33 out and when there was the forced 12:35 integration that was when you know the 12:39 the the integration that had existed for 12:42 basically since America had began was 12:46 destroyed and he started having true 12:49 segregation whereas you know in a lot of 12:53 the cities the populations which have 12:55 been integrated suddenly the white 12:58 component just sawed off a cliff and 13:01 what was left basically was African 13:06 Americans in many areas 13:07 he this was supposedly the the 13:10 integrated America that they were 13:13 attempting to bring about by forcing the 13:17 school children to you know go to 13:19 schools that were not close by where 13:22 their consulate it was preposterous and 13:25 it was obviously a weapon there there's 13:27 simply no way in my mind that the people 13:30 who created the policy could have been 13:33 unaware of what the consequences are 13:36 going to be so this is a really 13:38 important part of American history to 13:41 try to understand is that the African 13:43 Americans in the 50s were given the 13:47 basically another worker 13:49 paradise story right now they had every 13:54 reason to be susceptible to the story 13:57 because of the of racism because of 13:59 slavery because of poverty because of 14:02 the chain gang I mean that every reason 14:05 to actually be ready for a worker's 14:09 paradise but at the same time progress 14:13 had been made from the civil war right 14:17 up until the Civil Rights Movement that 14:21 was positive in virtually every African 14:23 American community all of the 14:26 demographics were going good education 14:28 was on the uptick every subsequent 14:31 generation was more educated income 14:34 wealth well it was nowhere near parity 14:36 with white it was it was closing in and 14:39 it was on the uptick and the family 14:42 demographics were improving there was 14:45 less and less children being born out of 14:47 wedlock it's hard to get statistics what 14:50 I can find indicate that even all the 14:52 help numbers were getting better in all 14:55 of these inner cities which is very easy 14:57 to understand him because you just think 15:00 of I mean you know Detroit or Chicago 15:03 the african-american community is 15:06 separate from the ethnic communities 15:09 that are rounded polish Italian German 15:13 Irish but they are benefiting from the 15:17 relationship there's a tax base right 15:20 here that they'll share and they have 15:24 local control over their schools right 15:27 it isn't some bureaucrat at the state 15:30 with a you know a social agenda they 15:33 have much more control at this point so 15:37 now comes the civil rights movement 15:42 right which of course has it you know 15:46 it's kind of logo Rosa Parks right we're 15:52 in the south you know you have 15:54 segregation of eating areas and so the 16:00 is basically used to begin this this 16:05 movement that would create a political 16:08 will or at least a political cover for 16:11 the great D integration of America right 16:15 yeah it's kind of funny in that and it's 16:19 just so common though in history you 16:22 know the the Russian proletariat's are 16:24 sitting there with the Czar and along 16:26 come the Bolsheviks and offer the 16:27 worker's paradise and it looks good on 16:30 paper 16:31 political power given to the Bolsheviks 16:33 and the next thing you know 16:35 kolo d'amour right where millions and 16:39 millions of people are being killed well 16:41 here in the United States it's a 16:44 parallel because they were you know the 16:46 African Americans are being promised 16:48 that this is going to be good the the 16:50 liberal Americans who are synthetic to 16:54 their causes are promised that there's 16:56 going to be an improvement but from the 17:00 very day that the Great Society programs 17:03 came into effect the demographics of 17:05 misery all turn against the 17:07 african-americans and against Europeans 17:09 so I say it was a weapon yeah that's a 17:17 with the you had this sort of this a 17:22 decline or collapse of a black family in 17:25 the 1960s just when the Great Society is 17:29 kicking in along with the civil rights 17:30 movement and so they are being offered 17:32 this promise of salvation to the 17:35 political process into government aid 17:37 the federal government although to look 17:39 to the federal government to help 17:40 require a very very I think 17:46 shorter or divided incomplete view of 17:49 history because this is look through 17:50 history in the United States the federal 17:52 government had not really been friendly 17:54 to blacks the I mean if you look at 17:58 slavery itself was defended by the 17:59 Constitution it was only when the South 18:03 seceded from the Union and slavery was 18:04 in jeopardy ironically he otherwise the 18:07 federal government was obligated to 18:09 protect it 18:13 Dred Scott was a federal court decision 18:16 suit was a federal court 18:19 Plessy be Ferguson federal court these 18:21 things and of course not many blacks 18:26 were helped by the invasion of the Union 18:28 Army in of the south which led to the 18:30 death and starvation of you know ten 18:33 tens of thousands of civilians including 18:35 blacks the destruction of the southern 18:37 economy but then they go in under 18:39 reconstruction and they robbed the place 18:42 behind the scalawags in the carpetbagger 18:44 is the even the Freedmen's Bureau was a 18:46 scam where the money was taken but uh 18:50 after reconstruction even even if you 18:52 buy into the myth that reconstruction 18:54 north is left unless left the blacks to 18:57 censor themselves Ruth Hogg as we can 18:59 say but that yeah then you know 19:01 chenggang Jim Crow and they did nothing 19:03 for him up until the 1960 so they step 19:06 in this is the very time the civil 19:08 rights movement is gaining traction and 19:09 pose as the savior all the time using 19:13 that movement as excuses to to seize 19:17 more power because again like I said the 19:19 interpretation of the Constitution is 19:21 justify these the so-called civil rights 19:23 legislation was creating more less 19:26 unlimited federal power and destroying 19:28 what remained of delegated and 19:30 enumerated powers of the Constitution 19:31 all into the cover of freedom and civil 19:34 rights and democracy which is an old 19:36 exact it would wait yeah I mean civil 19:39 rights would used to among its a Swiss 19:43 Army knife of destruction he and one of 19:46 the things that was decimated were the 19:50 powers and protections the individual 19:53 had from the Constitution because 19:55 suddenly you have this over 19:57 arching an amorphous legal principle 20:01 that just trumped everything and and now 20:05 the idea of self-determination including 20:09 the public schools that your children 20:12 went to ah sorry no it's going to be 20:15 some federal judge you know that local 20:18 control well something is problematic 20:21 it's the 14th amendment he of the year 20:23 going further back you know essentially 20:25 before the civil rights movement but the 20:28 the Reconstruction Amendments the 13th 20:31 14th 15th amendments were very 20:34 problematic particularly the 14th 20:36 amendment because basically what the 20:40 federal government said the states was 20:41 in order to be a union in order to 20:43 rejoin the Union you have to men need to 20:46 ratify these amendments but then again 20:49 only states can ratify the amendments so 20:51 here you're getting sort of the circular 20:53 logic or the via logic or the the 20:55 contradictions inherent in in the 20:57 Americans so-called American Civil War 20:59 leases legal basis that's why I Lincoln 21:01 had to invoke the mystic chords of 21:03 memory to just devise war you couldn't 21:05 really invoke the log at the law was 21:07 against something lucky 21:08 exactly yeah I mean both sides oh I 21:10 simplified it and just say people I 21:12 should understand the Civil War as a 21:14 population reduction yeah yeah and 21:17 that's really what was in back but they 21:18 just wanted to shatter Christian 21:20 European culture and it got so bad with 21:25 the with the 14th of it was Masonic you 21:28 know you can actually the pictures of 21:29 Grant and Sherman looking for you know a 21:34 an obelisk in Egypt yeah after the war 21:38 trying to you know so they can come back 21:40 and then commemorate the Sherman's march 21:42 to the sea which had no military 21:45 function at all but was just a way to 21:47 decimate population and so it was a 21:50 Masonic and of course that just replaces 21:53 one mister with another you know need to 21:55 get to the bottom of what is that what 21:56 is that what do we mean by that but it 21:59 was certainly a Masonic project and 22:01 slavery was just again that was that was 22:04 the worker's paradise and the you 22:08 mentioned the fact that the Union left 22:10 shortly after the end of the war which 22:14 just shows how absurd the ie 22:15 the cover story of ending slavery was 22:17 they came in for just a few months 22:21 basically pillaged and then when there 22:23 was nothing left they all left II and 22:25 then that then everything dis reverted 22:28 to form of course now you had you know 22:30 the Ku Klux Klan the the European 22:32 populations were extremely radicalized 22:35 and the african-american that which 22:38 supposedly was going to benefit from 22:40 this gigantic human slaughter he was 22:43 just left to fend for themselves 22:45 yeah right and so there's a book called 22:49 emancipating slaves ladies freeman he 22:52 talks about really after the civil war 22:55 you had what he called the Gulf state 22:56 Confederacy the first secession in the 22:59 in the fall of 1863 winter 1861 is 23:04 called the Gulf state Confederacy these 23:05 were they deep state Confederate States 23:08 takes a left the southern states on the 23:10 left but really don't get a silver one 23:12 you needed you needed Virginia to secede 23:16 and you needed a Tennessee to sissy but 23:19 and and you need North Carolina's 23:21 conceived they only succeeded in 23:23 reaction on Lincoln's call-up for the 23:24 troops to invade the south but other 23:27 than that if you want to set the slavery 23:29 to end without the protection of the 23:31 federal government there's no way 23:32 there's border states could maintain 23:34 slavery good good well it's really 23:38 interesting and and I just don't believe 23:40 that just on a objective level that the 23:47 50 years in front of the African 23:50 American in the slave states would have 23:52 been anywhere near as catastrophic as 23:55 the 50 years that they faced from the 23:57 war forward ohnoki the worst you over so 24:00 catastrophic it was catastrophic it 24:02 destroyed the economy they became vastly 24:05 poor and and the the you know one slave 24:10 state was replaced with another with the 24:13 chain gang approach and so it had been 24:17 as it turns out just a bill of goods I 24:21 think then 24:23 the when in the when the civil rights 24:28 legislation led to the Great Society 24:30 programs and they were a one-two punch 24:33 because the civil rights the voting act 24:36 basically created a template for 24:38 lawsuits and they could just bludge in 24:41 any small community or any small 24:43 business by with a threat of a lawsuit 24:46 once that thing had come into effect 24:48 they could certainly shatter all of the 24:51 school districts that they wanted to so 24:53 you know that was one legal power that 24:59 you know really damaged the 25:01 african-american community but this was 25:05 also when they began the Great Society 25:07 welfare situation and this has focused 25:11 upon because now african-american women 25:15 who had a husband or a man living with 25:19 them weren't eligible for the same 25:22 benefits and that simple little trick 25:26 started to shift the demographics that 25:32 had been going positive for almost 100 25:34 years 25:35 negative and once they turn south they 25:37 turn south quickly because at the same 25:41 time drugs were starting to be 25:44 introduced in my opinion by the 25:46 government the same group that is 25:48 bringing about the on the welfare state 25:51 destruction they start introducing drugs 25:54 this is when you start seeing the inner 25:57 city as a basically the place where hard 26:02 drugs can be purchased it starts with 26:05 heroin but quickly gets into marijuana 26:07 and cocaine and you know by the 70s it's 26:12 just full throttle and Hollywood of 26:15 course is supporting this concept with 26:17 movies these pimp movies that engulfed 26:20 by the heroic struggle of the African 26:24 American male to be a drug dealer 26:27 you know yeah that's it getting back 26:30 into the system yeah yeah exactly you 26:33 know and of course you know sexual 26:36 integration the 26:37 trying to promote white women you know 26:41 the the as like the benefits of 26:45 integration right and of course this is 26:49 not exactly helping african-american 26:52 family production in their communities 26:54 he is and see all of this is is in my 26:59 opinion just obviously designed I think 27:02 the idea that it was just an all of you 27:05 know a bad social policy that some out 27:08 wiped out an entire culture now I don't 27:11 think so 27:12 I don't got very likely yeah so you 27:15 mentioned that black but black split 27:18 blaxploitation films that were produced 27:20 job early 70s late 60s of course that 27:23 was a direct directed by time life as 27:28 Gordon Gordon Parks who directed those 27:31 he was a timeline photographer oh so 27:33 Brooks helped infiltrate the Black 27:34 Panthers who set up for the set them up 27:36 to be you know to murdered yeah Fanny 27:39 Harville dark territory a bizarre 27:41 character um I don't know what the 27:44 director does maybe there's a cultural 27:46 weapon because it was that was with MGM 27:48 James Aubrey he was working with the CIA 27:50 to produce those films and this followed 27:52 just after was called the break up with 27:54 the black Jewish alliance over the right 27:56 the teachers strike in New York and this 28:00 was you know this this alliance had 28:02 formed in the ad in the wake of the neo 28:05 Frank trial in the Atlanta when he this 28:08 Jewish guy had a great could murdered a 28:10 15 year old girl Mary Phagan and that 28:12 was when the Jewish community declared 28:16 war on the south and anti-semitism 28:17 became a problem in the south it didn't 28:19 exist prior to that it was a reaction to 28:22 the media's coverage of this trial of 28:25 this man who by all accounts was guilty 28:26 was murdered this young girl who tried 28:28 to frame two black men by the way but he 28:30 was he was a local haven't been a bris 28:33 and out of been ancient ROM we get the 28:36 ADL and ADL was who was it was it was a 28:39 creation and reaction to the Leo Frank 28:41 trial because he was his sentence was 28:43 commuted and he was subsequently lynched 28:46 and murdered hung that right outside the 28:47 house of Mary 28:48 maybe Fagin's house as a message yeah I 28:51 look right um well you know um I think 28:54 that just backing up for one second to 28:56 clarify I think that Audrey's 28:59 participation in the blaxploitation film 29:01 is critical for people to understand 29:03 because that's a direct link into secret 29:07 society even he was CIA asset he was 29:11 running Gordon Parks as far as anyone 29:13 can tell I've seen some you know 29:16 reasonable conjecture about that and and 29:20 his why would again it's sort of like 29:23 for the ca's connection into Gloria 29:24 Steinem is that the question arises why 29:28 is the CIA mucking around in culture yes 29:31 you know and and it this isn't this is 29:33 just in and of itself is wrong and the 29:37 reason why it has to be secret is 29:39 because there's something evil afoot 29:41 something that the public must be kept 29:44 from right there was no other 29:45 explanation for so when you get when you 29:49 get evidence at the CIA it's like you 29:52 know creating these obviously the basing 29:57 films right you now can plug it into the 30:00 context of like Gordon Watson's MKULTRA 30:04 pay requisitions it's you you see 30:07 suddenly the pattern starts to come 30:09 clear there is an organization 30:12 controlling the CIA they're using it to 30:15 basically turn American culture into a 30:20 debase situation whereby the family is 30:24 destroyed and the individuals are 30:25 isolated so they can be easily to 30:28 control or do with them what they want 30:31 and when you understand that then the 30:34 whole history of America starts to make 30:36 them from the end of World War two to 30:38 the day make sense you know suddenly 30:41 really clear and then just one other 30:45 point you have Gloria Steinem the CA 30:47 agent MS magazine the the CIA cutout 30:51 right this now can be documented mean 30:55 that this has all been exposed very easy 30:57 for a normal person go through the 30:59 information we did a show on it with a 31:01 lot 31:02 eat open that's okay so so you can see 31:04 they're messing around the culture 31:06 they're debasing at they're trying to 31:08 break apart the family but bear in mind 31:11 that Miz magazine is where black macho 31:17 the myth of the superwoman of the black 31:19 super one comes from this was the most 31:21 vicious hit pace on the African American 31:24 meal that had ever been created it was 31:26 created supposedly by this young 31:28 african-american woman Michelle Wallace 31:31 who then later admitted it well actually 31:34 I was breastfed the book by I believe 31:38 it's Marilyn Johnson who is a Masonic 31:42 cesspool in terms of her background 31:46 she's with Allen Ginsberg and Kerouac 31:49 and then her son is Daniel Pinchbeck the 31:53 current proponent of LSD right now once 31:57 you get the context correct right you go 32:00 okay well I see what they're doing the 32:02 CIA is creating a de base culture 32:04 they're going after the 32:06 african-americans are creating but 32:07 fantasy worker's paradise then you look 32:10 at black macho well it's one of those 32:12 things that just becomes crystal clear 32:14 doesn't it I mean suddenly go cave that 32:16 that was just another element in the 32:19 shattering of the African American 32:21 community 32:21 and clearly it's coming from whichever 32:24 group is controlling the CIA they had 32:27 they had the idea that they would 32:29 shatter the African American culture 32:31 absolutely why why are they doing it 32:35 they've African American at that point 32:37 represented a very small political risk 32:40 to the older he because they're going to 32:43 integrate it you see they want to have 32:46 the pent culture and the rap music 32:51 culture be what they shove the children 32:56 from the app the D resonated white 32:59 suburbs into you see the plant yep this 33:02 this is Miley Cyrus right that this is 33:06 this is where you end up is you know 33:09 basically a level of bestiality because 33:13 there you have a poppy 33:15 relation that is incapable of defending 33:17 self but has no cultural future strength 33:20 this is what the book via the white 33:22 Negro and got the idea of state kicks 33:28 promoting the arms 33:31 what mailer yeah celebrate on this 33:34 opposes freedom you know the sexual 33:37 license there was common among certain 33:39 segments of the black community 33:41 particularly the jazz music and 33:43 musicians these things but highlighting 33:44 that behavior stereotyping that behavior 33:47 then promoting it yeah I mean he was 33:49 just think what hip thing it is for a 33:51 black for a white person to mimic you 33:54 know a pimp yeah and and that and of 33:58 course this was exactly what they're 33:59 trying to do and mailer is obviously 34:02 just a cutout from the organization he's 34:06 just a sickening individual but anyway 34:10 um so yeah he creates that and and you 34:12 know other you know culturally debasing 34:16 meme but the white Negro was really you 34:18 know that's just a very clear point in 34:20 this whole process where cues are given 34:24 through I think through athletic heroes 34:28 through success with drug sales you know 34:32 a be the pimp advertises is well you 34:37 know with fancy cars and fancy clothes 34:39 and and then you have you know the 34:43 integration that's coming from the music 34:45 world and so what happens now to the the 34:51 culture that had existed inside American 34:55 cities in the 50s that had gotten pushed 34:57 out to the suburbs now you can see the 35:00 whole plan in its you know with clarity 35:03 II because those kids couldn't really 35:06 they were very susceptible the media was 35:09 going to be promoting all of these 35:11 elements the blaxploitation films you 35:14 know shaft this up like this 35:16 they debased American african-american 35:23 would become an idol and aroma for the 35:26 white D resonated 35:29 young people mm-hmm and you pointed the 35:33 coordination between the American Jewish 35:37 Committee and MKULTRA that's CIA yeah 35:41 yep in promoting this because of course 35:43 they targeted the family particularly 35:46 the Christian family the father figure 35:48 has been the source of fascism in the 35:51 United States and the way you undermine 35:54 authoritarian personality at the 35:55 authoritative personality I mean even 35:57 the name of the project tells you what 36:00 they're up to because you know when you 36:02 the idea that the authoritarian 36:04 personality was something that was you 36:06 know seen as evil something it was 36:08 psychologically distinct and needed to 36:10 be changed through hidden psychological 36:15 techniques that were using arrows right 36:18 well gee whiz why I think that maybe a 36:23 father needs to have some authoritarian 36:25 structured wouldn't you Tim I mean you 36:28 know wouldn't this and oftentimes be 36:30 something it was valuable and good for a 36:32 family yeah they would have turned 36:33 families in the into democracies how 36:35 Masonic I'm going to get rid of the 36:39 patriarchy and you know what yeah you 36:41 know and so and so I mean you have that 36:45 type of a malevolence of being 36:47 coordinated but you buy by the 36:49 foundations by the by the media 36:52 corporations by by Hollywood and the 36:55 music and you see it's everywhere it's 36:58 also by governmental policy the 37:01 destruction of local communities through 37:03 integration under the name racial 37:05 integration but if you destroy the 37:07 ethnic base of a community you destroy 37:09 that community and the people are just 37:10 left with nothing they become de rasa 37:12 nated and all they have to really have 37:14 in common is uh you know what they're 37:16 consuming and that's okay no one you 37:19 know what Jim it mean like we don't even 37:21 have to like use metaphors or language 37:24 we can just we could just get in an uber 37:26 and drive through a city and show the 37:30 effects of all of this right I mean I 37:32 was in Detroit I am my uber driver 37:36 the GPS didn't work we we ended up going 37:40 through all 37:41 kinds of the city of Detroit that 37:43 basically has homes that are that are 37:47 not inhabited at least not on the 37:50 natural so you can just see it right you 37:54 can see it wasn't just the manufacturing 37:57 base left it was that the culture 37:59 debased the culture wasn't able to 38:02 regenerate itself there was no wealth 38:05 that could be created from a culture 38:08 that had as its main source of income 38:11 welfare and drugs right mm-hmm it's just 38:15 on there's just nothing that anyone 38:17 could do from that position and you know 38:21 this is really evil on an incredible 38:24 scale I mean Tim this is evil on an 38:28 incredible so this is like an acid test 38:31 where they bring the you know white 38:33 teenagers and give them LSD for free 38:35 right that kind of evil where I mean I 38:41 mean it's beyond evil because basically 38:42 it's a bifurcation it's it's the group 38:45 that is producing the event the culture 38:49 looks upon the other section of the 38:53 population that it's attacking as 38:57 inhuman as animals and these are these 39:00 and these are animals that you can 39:03 basically torture you can kill you can 39:07 do anything you want to because they are 39:09 not human they are not when you look at 39:14 the acid tests you're looking at a 39:17 program that is put out by a group that 39:20 looks at these teenagers as inhuman when 39:25 you when you look at the Great Society 39:27 programs and the social engineering that 39:30 went on against the african-americans 39:32 this was created by a group that looked 39:35 at these people as inhuman they didn't 39:38 have any human rights in their in the 39:41 mind of the people organizing this they 39:43 couldn't have right and and these are 39:45 individuals with great psychological 39:48 technique right look at the 39:51 psychological technique expertise in the 39:53 American Jew 39:54 committee putting out the authoritarian 39:55 personality look at the psychological 39:57 expertise in the Macy Congress look at 40:00 the psychological expertise in MKULTRA 40:02 right look at that 40:04 read through the list of the of the pay 40:07 requisition for the projects and look at 40:09 the projects they're going look out 40:11 specific they are right so you know it 40:15 isn't just that there is a secret 40:17 society that has taken called the 40:20 political and financial military it's 40:22 that they have a perspective on humanity 40:26 that basically is it is almost unique in 40:33 its evil in in the perspective of those 40:37 who are not insides of guilt I mean Tim 40:40 they would they would kill every one of 40:42 us to retain their control they would 40:47 kill everyone else just just to to have 40:50 another day of power for whatever 40:52 purpose they are and this is why you've 40:55 got to start to organize yourself you've 40:59 got to do it people who listen to our 41:01 shows and get what we're saying you you 41:04 just I know it's difficult right I know 41:06 you're atomized I know you don't have 41:08 the social connections that would make 41:10 this automatic or easy doesn't matter 41:15 purify to start to try to defend your 41:18 children's organization 41:19 yeah well yet because I send yourself 41:21 against stop acquiescing to it's up sub 41:24 support you're dealing with with 41:26 basically Psychopaths that have the 41:28 political control and and are circling 41:30 around you hmm 41:32 right so this is our dinner I mean sorry 41:35 to bring any bad news but there it is as 41:38 you know when you go through the civil 41:39 rights um situation you get to a very 41:43 clear point you just say you know 41:45 something this group is just a murderous 41:50 to the you know I mean to the point 41:53 where that doesn't murder doesn't manage 41:54 anybody yeah I don't care but the big 41:56 goal with that is if you critique the 42:01 civil rights movement as weaponized so 42:03 Human Rights or some sort of social 42:06 engineering see what your 42:07 racist you're racist and that's this is 42:09 part of the reason why figures like 42:10 Martin Luther King were promoted and 42:12 then assassinated because it is martyred 42:15 ah he serves the system much better 42:17 because and they'll name streets after 42:19 him they'll maintain libraries and 42:21 schools after him they'll build 42:22 monuments to him after they arranged for 42:24 his murder but he was always a tool of 42:27 the establish my absolutely my opinion 42:31 the same guys that made him you know a 42:33 figurehead who promoted him I mean I 42:35 think he's legitimate guy yeah yeah I'm 42:38 hitting yeah but but but he would have 42:40 been someone who no would have known 42:41 about except the group decided to 42:43 promote this individual they had a 42:45 reason for doing this they wanted 42:47 basically to create marches remember the 42:50 marches because this thing could then 42:52 use as media phenomena could justify 42:55 what was coming the civil rights 42:57 legislation and the the welfare state so 43:01 this was this was what Kings role was 43:04 was just to be a you know a figurehead 43:08 for the movement that would create the 43:10 publicity that was the cover story and 43:12 of course they were going to know his 43:14 like you know I'm you know um you know 43:18 on the mountain kind of speeches that he 43:19 would give were ideal because it it was 43:24 promoting the educator the worker's 43:25 paradise he you know that the 43:27 african-american wouldn't think about 43:31 well what does it really mean to have 43:34 the government the state be the source 43:37 of income right yeah and let me tell you 43:40 something I'm just gonna say I'm sorry 43:42 gentlemen but just the African American 43:44 was very self-reliant very similar to 43:46 say like Latino families in the United 43:49 States today because their traditional 43:51 who've immigrated from Mexico because 43:53 they come from poverty and they survived 43:55 poverty on their own so they are 43:57 extremely self-reliant and and ingenious 44:00 in terms of like how they can you know 44:03 keep themselves intact and fed and and 44:06 and in the real crisis these people 44:09 would probably survive better than 44:10 middle class individuals because they 44:12 have these skills yeah they've survived 44:14 that all this appeared right the 44:17 self-reliance skillset that 44:20 the african-americans had generated 44:22 through food slavery through the cane 44:24 game to the Jim Crow through all of the 44:28 trials that the community had faced that 44:31 all was given up when the welfare state 44:34 came into town mmm yeah and some of the 44:39 figure like King he's presenting himself 44:42 and I think believes was up to be some 44:44 challenging system and each stage stage 44:47 each step he's taking he's advocating 44:49 more government power Brooke 44:52 I've been once those weapons and he was 44:55 I mean he was a handler with Stanley 44:57 Levinson who was they wrote the letters 45:00 from Birmingham jail they sent up north 45:01 in Chicago in 1966 was a failure because 45:04 he had no idea was going on in Chicago 45:05 use in the south the problems in Chicago 45:08 were different from the problems in this 45:10 in the south you know the um then he um 45:14 he was paid to go up there and cause 45:16 trouble and break up the ethnic try to 45:18 break up the Italian and something 45:20 Lithuanian neighborhoods up there and 45:22 people saying they've been called racist 45:24 all this stuff and whitens I'm not why 45:26 I'm Lithuanian you know yeah 45:28 he got that in Chicago something threw a 45:31 brick out I mean they went back hit him 45:33 in the head but yes interesting cuz he 45:35 senses murder he was he's been canonized 45:38 a secular saint and of course the 45:41 problems were surrounding his 45:43 assassination or well now you know 45:46 obviously it wasn't a James Earl Ray 45:49 that did it 45:51 most likely based on people's research 45:53 there was a sharpshooter with the 45:55 Memphis Police Department there's also 45:58 were also was a a sniper division in the 46:06 city to on handed together so Mecca sort 46:11 of like you know 9 1 or the JFK when you 46:14 get to it it's just I was very depressed 46:16 I started research into and it looked 46:18 really clear to me like the guy had been 46:20 just taken out and it was sad to see 46:21 that but one thing I got pretty quickly 46:24 that James Earl Ray guy was just a no 46:27 way no just not this is this is not the 46:29 guy who did it 46:30 even lawyer tells him to plead guilty to 46:32 avoid death penalty 46:33 don't worry you'll be able to get out of 46:35 it because you're I'm sick 46:37 inadequate defense and they never get 46:39 our given retrial you know the King 46:42 family also is efficient they had that 46:44 trial was the civil proceeding in the 46:47 late nineties that concluded it was a 46:50 conspiracy but it was at that time King 46:54 started to criticize the Vietnam War and 46:57 then right within sight of why he was 46:59 taken out of it you know the is the the 47:02 I mean who knows what you know what 47:04 their schedules are what they are trying 47:06 to do but he was clearly created as a 47:09 hero an Elvis of the civil rights 47:11 movement yeah you can look you can see 47:14 this in the the handlers and you can see 47:17 this in the purported creation of 47:20 literature which I tried to research I'm 47:23 not certain about it but it looks to me 47:25 like it's pretty likely and that would 47:27 be your your tip right this is a just a 47:30 cutout and and then when you put them in 47:32 the right context see this is the thing 47:34 this is why you know these overall 47:36 context and why the you know the 47:39 fingerprints are so important understand 47:40 you know the Gordon Lawson pay 47:42 requisition Gloria Steinem CIA admission 47:46 you know I mean I just could go on for 47:49 it you know I'm like half-hour but the 47:51 things that that are identifiable you 47:56 know the people can look at and go gee 47:57 whiz okay this they create a context you 47:59 can see hey and World War two they start 48:03 ratcheting up psychological techniques 48:06 to control population and what do you do 48:09 with it well they're just going to 48:10 create the debates culture we have today 48:12 so we start plugging these things in to 48:15 that overall structure and then suddenly 48:18 history makes perfect sense 48:20 that's right Lee don't yet because 48:21 Bateson his aunt of his idea weaponized 48:24 anthropology the book by that title 48:27 right to have for a to coin that term 48:29 yeah David probably imposed enough 48:32 Nathan's work in the South Pacific is 48:33 how you manipulated control primitive 48:35 cultures exactly Marcus this is but then 48:39 throws it and he's writing that for the 48:41 head of the OSS on how to create a 48:43 better slave system and talking about an 48:45 archaic revival basic 48:47 like you want to take them out of 48:48 technology this is what led to the hippy 48:49 movement but it also is what led to rap 48:52 music right so everything that and then 48:55 of course if you look to your TV set on 48:58 you can watch naked and afraid you know 49:01 mountain men duel survivors mean there's 49:03 just now it's like round-the-clock 49:07 conditioning for a post-electric world 49:10 for the european right you just have to 49:12 show you turn on most absurd is naked 49:14 and afraid' which is just I mean how 49:17 anybody could imagine this other being 49:19 any other than just brain watching is 49:20 beyond me but anyway um when you put it 49:24 in the context right when you start with 49:26 Bates and letter which indicate how to 49:30 create a slave state through basically 49:32 cultural debasement you see Bateson 49:35 being basically the founder of the CIA 49:40 little known fact there's different 49:43 people who can you can give the title to 49:45 reasonably and people say Truman because 49:47 he funded it or Donovan but in fact 49:50 Truman and Donovan couldn't agree on 49:53 funding the thing and Donovan went and 49:56 got Bates and who then made the argument 49:59 that Truman accepted which is that you 50:01 know hey we've got nuclear bombs now how 50:04 we can control the people except through 50:05 psychological means this was the 50:08 founding of the CIA 50:09 you had enough Cold War or any kind of 50:12 international skullduggery it was we 50:15 have to study to figure out how to 50:17 control the populations because we can't 50:18 it's going to be harder harder to use 50:19 war to reduce populations to shatter 50:22 culture because of the bomb right so now 50:25 the CIA comes along and when you get out 50:27 of CA well the first thing is MKULTRA 50:29 right so so from the very beginning 50:31 you've got a secret society with the 50:34 power of government that is studying how 50:35 to control people and that's why when 50:39 you look at Audry's you know handling of 50:42 Gordon Parks which which you very 50:44 alertly brought up man you're looking 50:46 right into the face of it you're looking 50:49 right into the face of it this is what 50:51 they're doing mmm and there are 50:54 important aspect of the civil rights 50:55 movement was how racial don't so sexual 50:59 discrimination was added 51:00 senator seeking to derail the bill but 51:05 after two hours of debate they passed 51:07 sexual sex-based discrimination being 51:09 just as illegal and this sets the legal 51:12 stage for the feminist movement the 51:14 agitation and the litigation and so that 51:17 hysteria we're seeing I was sexual 51:19 harassment and all the psychotic you 51:22 know because legal industries that are 51:24 developed around it sensitivity training 51:26 programs these things some of some of 51:28 these things are just nonsense and just 51:31 and there's a lot of money being made a 51:33 lot of lawsuits and this also creates 51:36 more division decision between the sexes 51:38 it's not there to resolve anything at 51:41 the same time if they're promoting a 51:42 culture a sexually based highly 51:45 sexualized culture which guarantees that 51:48 women are gonna be treated well is that 51:50 if I mean women women think that like 51:54 sort of middle class males or the 51:55 problem look it's Miley Cyrus yeah it is 52:00 Hollywood this is what is the basing the 52:03 males if I was a college white or 52:08 african-american female I would be 52:11 terrified of these males ii ors they're 52:15 watching pornography around the clock 52:17 right yeah well what do you think 52:21 someone who's 19 years old who has 52:24 watched a thousand hours of pornography 52:26 thinks is going to happen in the 52:28 courtship procedure Tim yeah right I 52:32 mean isn't it clear that this individual 52:35 has no capacity for relationships really 52:37 I mean don't you think this pornographic 52:40 conditioning is going to affect the 52:42 individual and won't if you have alcohol 52:45 and drugs of then sexual abuse will be 52:48 likely to occur right okay well this is 52:52 the damn problem it's not because they 52:54 don't have laws it's because we don't 52:57 have culture you know this is what they 53:00 have to look at so you know Bobby the 53:05 Supreme Court facilitated that with the 53:06 Roth decisions destroyed the power of 53:09 local communities to police things like 53:10 providers oh yeah 53:13 that people talk it in I mean they want 53:14 they want all these blood in Alenko 53:16 these political correctness stuff get 53:19 rid of the Roth decision get rid of the 53:21 of the of the legal structures that 53:25 created the pornographic culture and get 53:28 rid of the financial incentive that 53:31 creates single moms and you're going to 53:33 have a culture that people will feel 53:36 defended inside them right the laws are 53:40 not going to help you you can have all 53:42 laws you want if you're a you know a 53:45 co-ed and you're with some des based 53:50 drunken male who's 19 years old 53:53 who's been like 2,000 hours of 53:55 pornography right look at a college 53:57 campuses they create these Dionysian you 53:59 know atmosphere and then they have these 54:02 strict codes he's almost Victorian just 54:06 go there to create conflict it's I mean 54:09 they're they're yeah conflict exactly 54:11 it's just they're chaos and then they're 54:13 enforceable the way they're going to 54:15 deal with the chaos is through just give 54:17 up every single right you have as 54:19 individual yeah presumption of innocence 54:22 was a cute from sexual predation just 54:25 give up your freedom to us II so it's 54:28 just it's the old thing you know they 54:29 always have the worker's paradise 54:31 the woman's paradise the paradise for 54:34 the african-american they always have 54:36 the paradise it's always being shown to 54:38 them and in concept and all you have to 54:41 do is give this little group that's 54:44 running everything just a little more 54:45 political power just a little bit more 54:48 will get it all right but every time 54:51 that happens then you know the culture 54:54 gets more and more based and more and 54:57 more people are basically killed the 54:59 saddest thing is the Holodomor you know 55:05 I've been doing a lot search into it 55:06 right lately and this is just so 55:08 parallel to what happened in my opinion 55:11 like to the african-american community 55:13 into the hippies the worker's paradise 55:16 is presented the bolsheviks though we're 55:20 just kidding yeah 55:22 so as you're given political power oh my 55:25 God look 55:26 our doing and so forth african-americans 55:28 you know they created their 55:30 self-reliance or they were fooled 55:32 basically weapons they were you know 55:35 there was clever propaganda they worked 55:38 to blame you know it was sophist read 55:40 they were they were a clever argument 55:42 was created they were saying hey look 55:44 affirmative action is going to give you 55:46 more more job opportunities and and 55:51 again and welfare to the single mother 55:54 will will protect your you know your 55:56 your pores the park parks in the 55:58 community yeah so he asked the question 56:01 are black Americans better off now I'm 56:02 an email to you and I the question plug 56:05 which is our voting rights more 56:07 important than having a family yeah 56:10 really determines your quality of life 56:11 now you develop I go you know voting is 56:14 largely an empty gesture you're voting 56:16 for Tweedledee Tweedledum we are the 56:17 Ozarks decide to give you the choice to 56:19 give you and you know if you don't the 56:22 benefit of a mother and a father and the 56:24 family and the community cousins and the 56:26 neighbor that you identify with I mean 56:29 the political process is is is empty and 56:32 it's absurd you know the the best 56:35 indication of basically up or down in 56:41 the misery index for the 56:42 african-american community is death by 56:44 heroin heroin overdose as that really 56:47 tells you what is what is going on in 56:50 the street how many more people are 56:52 forced into finding an oblivion to 56:56 escape you know miserable reality you 56:58 know what happened to that statistic 57:00 under the African American hero Obama 57:03 it went up 400% right oh my gosh how did 57:10 that happen 57:11 Afghanistan how did an african-american 57:14 president yeah end up creating 57:17 conditions were inside the African 57:19 American community 57:21 it had death by heroin overdose got four 57:24 hundred percent the largest percent 57:28 increase in it ever it just it just off 57:31 the chart it's like five standard 57:33 deviations you know from so so this this 57:37 during a time when Obama 57:40 who is there to help the 57:41 african-american community decided you 57:42 know what I need to do I need to invade 57:44 Afghanistan yep yeah I got to go into 57:48 Afghanistan oh I see so you're going to 57:52 put 150,000 troops into Afghanistan no 57:55 money into the african-american 57:56 communities and then somehow them just 58:00 some amazing way that all of the hair 58:03 went all the opium the poppies from 58:05 Afghanistan ends up in our street II 58:09 will wait second wait a sec I thought 58:12 would me take control of Afghanistan 58:14 however from heroin is so cheap mm-hmm 58:20 yep and that you know that lucrative 58:25 drug market is key to you well a lot of 58:28 things let me ask you wanted some how 58:30 they use it for off-balance lovely but I 58:33 don't think at this point I don't think 58:35 that's an issue anymore because now that 58:37 the financial situation is so completely 58:39 absurd they can just print money flowing 58:42 but if someone actually did a real audit 58:44 of the American government financial 58:47 system it would just be like 20 times 58:51 more debt is being created you don't 58:52 even know about money just they're just 58:54 stealing everything they're fighting 58:56 it's just a complete free-for-all at 58:59 this point which is going to faceplant 59:01 eventually but hopefully people will 59:04 understand you know what what what 59:05 happened but um you know it's it's 59:09 getting back to your question um you 59:12 know it's such a great question because 59:15 it really puts on the table there you 59:19 know you have to take steps to get out 59:21 of week if you're you know I mean I 59:23 presume that there are a lot of 59:25 individuals inside the inner-city 59:27 african-american it whites you know 59:30 they're looking out at the rap world 59:32 pornographic culture the poverty you 59:36 know the lack of jobs and they're you 59:38 know of course the drug trade is just 59:40 everywhere and they wonder what the hell 59:42 to do you know he okay you know voting 59:46 for Obama didn't really work did it 59:48 right the Masonic 59:52 you know double cross was just too easy 59:55 all they needed was a half black guy to 59:58 you know step on with a big smile on his 60:00 face and everybody thought everything's 60:01 going to get better but if you create a 60:04 real family or if you can't do it if you 60:06 can support a family just go to them so 60:09 you know I really want you know you're 60:11 having children I'm your friend what can 60:15 I do to help you want to help the family 60:17 organize families this is what you're 60:20 going to have to do and you're going to 60:22 have to do it in with the full force of 60:26 the pornographic media and the drug 60:28 trade coming right at you every single 60:30 second you're what you really need to do 60:33 inside the inner cities is to promote 60:37 two things strength and virtue right 60:44 forget the drugs business the 60:47 pornography just realize that was all 60:52 done to destroy you and how are you 60:55 going to fight back 60:55 you got to fight back first of all by 60:57 recognizing changes in promotion of 60:59 character traits that are going to make 61:02 you get back on the right right path 61:04 this is the same thing I say to the 61:08 victims of you know hippie dump you say 61:12 look you know you just got to get out of 61:14 the Grateful Dead 61:15 you know structure and you got it you 61:17 got to think about how to promote 61:19 strength of character you know and 61:21 virtue because that's from from there 61:24 you can think about maybe a family yes 61:26 and steps in there good basis lisa 61:29 foundation for growth there's an article 61:32 I came across on researching this topic 61:34 that but it's called it was titled how 61:39 the 1964 Civil Rights Act made racial 61:42 group entitlements inevitable but it's a 61:44 part of it I found particularly relevant 61:46 to what we're talking about here Billy 61:49 it's a little lengthy so if you bear 61:51 with me oh go please I'm just burgers 61:54 bucket okay um let me get a sip of water 61:58 yeah yeah 62:01 okay I thought it was by Lawrence Auster 62:07 and he I think he worded it well to 62:12 criticize the profound harm done to our 62:14 society by the civil rights movement and 62:16 it's aftermath it's not sad to send all 62:18 the cells pretty civil rights racial 62:20 policies for example the Jim Crow laws 62:23 which not only allowed discrimination 62:25 against Blacks but mandated it most 62:27 notoriously in public accommodation or 62:29 an offense to the nation's conscience 62:30 and would have had to be eliminated in 62:32 one way or another but the regime 62:34 brought into being by the Civil Rights 62:36 1964 Civil Rights Act did not stop 62:39 correcting specific racial and Justices 62:41 just as those that came under Jim Crow 62:43 but attacking in principle all racial 62:46 discrimination including private racial 62:48 discrimination it in effect D 62:51 legitimized all natural historic human 62:53 groupings and cultures if they were 62:55 white it if they were white it D 62:58 legitimized white people's most basic 62:59 rights of free association and of 63:01 property since such rights were now seen 63:03 as having only one end in view the 63:05 oppression of blacks and as pointed out 63:07 above it said that whites and the whites 63:10 entire history as the American majority 63:13 was a scandal the ongoing functional and 63:15 economic deficiencies in the black 63:16 community black community were seen as a 63:19 result of the same historic white sin 63:21 which thus seemed to be still operative 63:24 in the present as well as the past 63:26 kro individual right to service have 63:30 always harked back to the dream of 63:32 Martin Luther King the Golden Age of 63:34 race blind society that was portrayed by 63:36 affirmative action but the Golden Age 63:38 never existed the dream is literally a 63:40 dream and improved by brute fact that 63:42 minority racial preferences were 63:44 instituted almost the instance of civil 63:46 rights for act was passed the Academy of 63:49 racial blind Society idea furthermore 63:52 not only did the race blind Society 63:54 never exist it cannot exist this is an 63:57 important point this is because an 63:59 American America that declares itself to 64:01 be not just race blind government and in 64:04 legal system which is both right and 64:06 possible within reasonable limits but a 64:08 race blind Society can only do so by 64:11 outlawing the group of consciousness on 64:13 the part of the racial majority 64:15 which deal Ajith mises the majority 64:17 culture and ethos which in turn liberate 64:20 sand validates the group consciousness 64:21 consciousness and will to power of 64:23 minorities which then begin to tear 64:25 society apart and that I think s 64:27 something that the secret society 64:28 recognized the Act made it impossible 64:31 for the white majority to leave America 64:33 while it transformed blacks into sacred 64:35 victims whose clamoring for group 64:37 equality of results could not in good 64:39 conscience be opposed these are the 64:41 group these are group power dynamics to 64:43 underlie the transformation of civil 64:45 rights into a permanent system of racial 64:46 privileges for blacks and other 64:48 minorities in this country it has 64:50 alluded to above during the several 64:52 decades of this controversy Manchu 64:53 conservatives seem to believe that if 64:55 they just kept invoking the ever more to 64:57 disregard a principle of individual 65:00 rights the principle like an autonomous 65:02 being would somehow spring back a life 65:04 and become once again the law of the 65:06 land this was a fantasy born of the 65:08 neoconservative view of America as a set 65:10 of abstract ideas the reality is quite 65:13 different in order for society to 65:14 maintain its principles and must have 65:16 actual people who are ready willing and 65:19 able to defend those principles and 65:20 Americans historic white majority has 65:22 been stripped of its moral legitimacy 65:24 lacks such people the here we go the 65:28 final paragraph the proper sphere of 65:30 race-blind equality is in the state's 65:32 dealings with individual citizens 65:34 government and law must not discriminate 65:37 by race but the same does not apply to 65:38 society society consists of human beings 65:41 and the race is a part of what a human 65:43 being us human beings are just as sex 65:46 and family and nationality and religion 65:48 are part of what human beings are the 65:50 air for society cannot be made race 65:52 blind anymore thank you needs sex signs 65:55 or family blind or nationality blind or 65:57 religion blind the cost of trying to do 65:59 so is a destruction of the legitimate 66:02 liberty and cultural particularity upon 66:05 which human beings flourish upon which 66:07 human human flourishing depends there 66:10 you go so I thought yeah okay and it's 66:12 actually right the the fact is is that 66:16 we are not less race blind we are more 66:22 race conscious because of all of this 66:25 legislation yeah I don't think any of 66:27 the current 66:28 between races is been diminished one 66:33 iota I would go so far to say that that 66:37 anyone who makes a claim is simply 66:40 either a liar or an idiot because you 66:42 can just go to 1950 look at the 66:45 statistics look at the newspaper and 66:48 just see how much a racial paranoia 66:51 you're looking at and then compare them 66:53 to what's going on today you it's a 66:56 thousand to one I mean that the the 66:59 ethnic communities the of a truly 67:02 integrated city like say Detroit or 67:05 Philadelphia in nineteen fifty 67:07 fifty-five and they didn't worry that 67:10 much about you know violence from you 67:13 know other ethnicities because frankly 67:16 they were very powerful no one could 67:18 really you know just you just couldn't 67:20 walk into these neighborhoods and think 67:21 you could get away with something 67:22 because I have to defend themselves do I 67:26 keep tell its story with the ethnic 67:27 consciousness there's accountability 67:29 yeah you have negative community there 67:32 you have people watching the street they 67:34 all know each other so there's there's 67:36 accountability familiarity these things 67:39 you don't have the atom emiti so even 67:42 within these huge cities you had 67:43 communities where people weren't 67:44 autonomous and there was a local 67:47 community within the city so you had 67:49 that benefit and you might get even in a 67:50 small you know sort of idealized small 67:52 town saddest thing that you can see is 67:57 these these videos where you have a 67:58 group of police beating an individual 68:00 almost always off in America um you know 68:04 I just think in the 50s 68:07 you just couldn't beat up individuals 68:11 and lots of communities I think sadly 68:13 just sad to say african-american was the 68:16 communities where there was a tradition 68:18 of it but even there I think there was 68:20 they were able to defend themselves far 68:22 better than they can now I mean the 68:24 problem is now that the criminals have 68:26 become the culture you know the drug 68:28 trade is just so prevalent you know and 68:32 again with with the media and government 68:35 in cahoots you don't really know what 68:38 what the real numbers are but you know 68:40 when I Drive through 68:42 Detroit or Los Angeles I'm just not 68:45 seeing a lot of real economic activity 68:47 I'm seeing a lot of what I would regard 68:50 as drug trade and welfare you know 68:54 activity that would parasitical 68:57 harvesting I can account we're in 69:00 Pennsylvania the former factory for 69:03 battle definitely ham steel yeah it was 69:05 converted into casino by Sheldon Adelson 69:09 thanks a lot show them that's the new 69:12 growth model your casinos really yeah 69:15 you can't guess huh 69:16 yeah but you give example idea community 69:20 you tell its story ring to friend years 69:22 where some guy came in peddling 69:24 pornography and they just beat him up 69:26 yeah they didn't they didn't worry about 69:28 you know laws of it was this they were 69:31 going to go to the police they were just 69:32 going to get rid of this guy yeah the 69:34 death knew that this was morally wrong 69:36 morally debasing and they just they felt 69:39 empowered to be able to defend their 69:42 children mm-hmm just like oh yeah there 69:46 was a case that I heard a guy talking he 69:49 was talking to his grandfather about 69:52 when he was young here as a girl went on 69:54 a date with a local and he sexually 69:58 assaulted her and she told the sheriff 70:02 the sheriff went to the girl's father 70:03 and asked the father how do you want to 70:05 handle this and gay fathers will take 70:08 care of it and the guy disappeared 70:10 yeah and that was a truly healthy 70:17 culture that's a healthy culture right 70:20 there 70:20 you know the the use of laws to control 70:26 us by the secret society is very very 70:29 clever Vic be a topic good topic for us 70:31 to discuss a young one and another thing 70:34 is that don't you hear that stories that 70:36 what about due process I understand the 70:37 hazards in lynching and going to turn in 70:40 street justice and all that stuff but 70:42 only problem is what are the abuses that 70:43 are so prevalent in work very core so 70:46 that's the thing is that is that you 70:47 have to compare one with the other need 70:49 the idea that if you submit to the state 70:52 you're going to end up with a perfect 70:55 I'm sorry you might have been able to 70:58 pull off that one in like 1905 but after 71:01 the Bolshevik Revolution and the 71:02 Holodomor I think you know maybe a 71:05 European culture should maybe get a 71:07 little bit like a head scratching when 71:09 someone comes up with a worker's 71:11 paradise and that's what they're 71:12 offering them right that's really just 71:14 it's just a cover story that they say 71:17 okay and you know it seems you got 71:19 feminism fascinating how few women 71:21 identify with the term now because what 71:25 what has happened is they're not that 71:27 women I think understand that they want 71:31 to be in a family structure I thought 71:34 they they know that their best life is 71:36 there it's not as a you know CEO of like 71:42 some corporation they're really best 71:45 life is with children with a husband 71:47 with an extended family I mean that's 71:49 really where you have the best existence 71:54 and yet they can't produce families yeah 71:57 that's what I feel most fulfilled 71:58 because you're in constant need you know 72:00 you think it's the day-to-day thing it's 72:01 the you know it's the putting the 72:04 band-aid in the scraped knee it's the 72:05 getting well missile ready but it feels 72:08 out of all these things so your life 72:10 you're constantly needing fulfilled 72:11 right and I guess I guess you know I 72:14 guess that'd be described as what who 72:16 was it a feminine mystique that's this 72:19 is a comfortable concentration camp you 72:21 could take say but if you look at her 72:22 life what was her name 72:24 betty Friedan defending she herself was 72:26 wasn't a very stable human being and she 72:28 write his book sure was a nut job and I 72:31 um 72:33 anyway I won't look him into her but I 72:35 it's only the case of things that um 72:38 yadi we had a process of culture 72:44 production that gee it was in existence 72:48 when homo sapien was created right it's 72:51 hundreds of thousands of years millions 72:54 probably in terms of ancestral you know 72:58 behavioral input this is what how we're 73:01 supposed to to find our best life is in 73:04 the structure of a family 73:07 and the idea that well we're going to 73:10 get rid of this and you know what this 73:13 welfare state this pornographic world 73:16 that this is all going to somehow be 73:18 better how man people just have to wake 73:21 up you know and and you really have to 73:24 defend it you know that individual he 73:28 made the comment you know that there's 73:31 there's not people available now to 73:32 defend culture right and the peace if 73:36 you're it and that's really the truth 73:38 and that's why when I say you know 73:39 developing strength and virtue that this 73:42 is where it ends up you end up being 73:45 able to defend it and I mean and 73:46 sometimes you're just going to have to 73:47 defend it with your fists because 73:50 believe me the secret society just think 73:53 of you know the population is cattle and 73:56 anyone who stands up against their sofas 74:00 tree are there mind control there 74:03 they're leading the whole population 74:05 into oblivion is going to basically you 74:09 know you know be the be subjected to 74:13 violence or legal violence and so you 74:16 just if you want to you know defend your 74:20 future you have to accept the risk and 74:23 and to say so what there's really no 74:26 purpose in in existence if we're just 74:29 going to all be you know the whole 74:31 ethnicity is an oblivion in 50 years you 74:34 know we need to defend herself II we 74:37 have to uh we shall overcome right yeah 74:42 I'm thinking of the Battle Hymn of the 74:43 Republic oh yeah you know that's another 74:47 like earning Masonic and yes kind of you 74:49 know wordplay but anyway hey Tim great 74:54 conversations on thanks you okay thank 74:57 you very very much 74:58 I just there's so much it's almost like 75:01 every point we go over and leads to you 75:05 know things would really need to cover 75:08 even in more depth but I think this is a 75:13 pretty good first Col Sadick 75:15 great okay well let you go okay well 75:18 thank you some enjoy the weekend we'll 75:20 talk 75:20 yes we do it again Street all right 75:22 bye-bye 75:25 [Music] 75:53 thank you 75:56 [Music] 76:16 [Music] 76:21 [Applause] 76:23 [Music] 76:41 [Music] 77:05 the 77:10 is 77:12 [Music]

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