Powers & Principalities, Episode 009, YouTube Auto-Generated Transcription

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Powers & Principalities, Episode 009

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The Tempest, Brave New World and the Welfare State as Slave State.

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The transcription text below is a YouTube auto-generated English transcription from Powers & Principalities, Episode 009, published by "thkelly67" on 2017-07-23 with a running time of 1:12:27. 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] 00:38 [Music] 00:41 yo how you doing I'm doing just great to 00:45 him how are you doing very good so we're 00:47 back here and tonight I wanted you 00:49 wanted to discuss your a piece of yours 00:54 Shakespeare is a paka paka apocalyptic 00:56 brave new world and its context you more 00:59 or less the brave new world in the new 01:01 world of water and the welfare state but 01:03 I'm gonna let you take a lead on this 01:05 how do I get into it yeah I it's 01:08 probably wise because it's such a 01:10 twisting labyrinth of connections and 01:14 you know because I spent a lot of time 01:17 studying you know old books and stuff 01:20 like I've developed understanding of 01:22 this stuff which few people are either 01:27 are even interested in but I really do 01:29 think that you pay attention on 01:31 Shakespeare I is as it turns out under a 01:36 little bit of analysis basically a 01:39 Jewish literature I brought out a book 01:43 called Shakespeare's secret Messiah and 01:46 I show how the plays operates and 01:49 basically they're in opposition to 01:51 Christianity and to the gospel 01:54 specifically even the name Will 01:58 Shakespeare which appears in the folio 02:01 is a pun within the genre 02:03 you know the idea will Shakespeare is a 02:06 martial declaration so um do you 02:10 subscribe to the theory that he's a 02:12 composite of different people 02:14 Shakespeare yeah William Shakespeare 02:16 it's a it's a nom de plume yeah one 02:20 individual 02:21 I think wrote almost all of the famous 02:23 plays I think some of the histories 02:25 probably had other authors and I think 02:29 Marla may have been involved in the end 02:30 after in the histories but the primary 02:32 author was a woman named Amelia Bassano 02:35 and she was the first woman to ever 02:40 copyright a work of literature in 02:42 English language she wrote a poem called 02:46 Saul de Deus Rex 02:48 Jordan which means hail God King of the 02:51 Jews and I show in the book that that 02:56 poem has a definite system of puns and 03:03 connections into Shakespeare's the 03:06 sonnet they personís which show that 03:09 Pisano 03:11 you know in fact wrote both the sonnets 03:14 and and as well as the Solvay dais so I 03:19 um I wrote the book explaining how you 03:23 know the the plays operate that they are 03:26 there are basically mockeries of sort of 03:32 who they felt produced the Gospels which 03:36 is Rome the Caesars the group that 03:40 produced the Shakespearean literature 03:42 and Bassano did have quite a bit of help 03:44 I mean she was involved with the whole 03:45 collection of authors and and and so 03:51 they had this understanding of 03:52 Christianity which they are basically 03:54 mocking with the Shakespearean 03:57 literature which is basically a reversal 04:00 of the humor that they saw on the 04:03 Gospels so this is kind of a long piece 04:08 of analysis for someone who isn't 04:10 familiar with like my book Cesar's 04:12 Messiah and Shakespeare secret Messiah 04:14 but the the play The Tempest which is 04:20 what contains the expression brave new 04:22 world and brave new world is very 04:24 important because it's used in a very 04:28 important way by rudyard kipling a way 04:31 that foresees a lot of the modern world 04:33 that doesn't get a lot of publicity but 04:36 I'll talk about it a little bit later 04:37 but the novel by Aldous Huxley is 04:43 entitled brave new world and both 04:45 Kipling and Huxley were aware of the 04:48 occulted meaning that Shakespeare had 04:51 for the term the the term just means a 04:56 world where the Gentiles have been 04:59 enchanted they've been put to sleep 05:01 basically 05:02 through art and other kinds of 05:07 enchanting mental apparatus and they no 05:11 longer really have any power and what is 05:15 interesting is that this is actually the 05:20 position that the foundation literature 05:22 of the Shakespearean play has and this 05:25 is something that you know if you go to 05:27 my article on that on The Tempest the 05:33 brave new world article which is 05:34 available at post labia and dot-org or 05:38 at Caesars Messiah calm you can go to 05:40 either one of those sites and get that 05:41 you can see the articles not there's no 05:43 charge it's a free article read it but 05:45 anyway I show that and this is something 05:48 that a lot of Shakespearean scholars 05:50 that understood is that the play The 05:53 Tempest is based upon Isaiah and most 05:57 affected that's just clear all all 05:59 Shakespearean scholars are aware of that 06:00 fact that the expression The Tempest the 06:05 character Ariel and the the the three 06:12 individuals that are the drunkenness 06:14 that occurs are all things from from 06:17 Isaiah and what what I show is in the 06:20 analysis is that The Tempest is not just 06:22 containing those elements and 06:26 incidentally the expression Ariel is 06:29 very important for people to understand 06:31 because it means basically the spirit of 06:34 Jerusalem are the Jewish people I mean 06:37 it's a synonym for Israel as a you know 06:39 description of the Jewish people and so 06:42 in Isaiah Ariel you know it's is beaten 06:47 and there's attacks against Jerusalem 06:50 but Ariel always manages to stay in 06:53 existence and then as you go forward in 06:56 Isaiah you know he basically talks about 06:59 an apocalypse of the Gentile and he 07:02 talks about how it will be as though 07:05 they they thought they were eating um 07:08 and they woke up from a dream hungry 07:11 you know the idea of a dream that they 07:13 have been placed into that's just so 07:15 complete that 07:16 they won't understand what is real and 07:17 what isn't so what I do in the analysis 07:22 on The Tempest is I show that it isn't 07:25 just the the beginning of Isaiah 24 07:28 through we like Isaiah 31 which has you 07:33 know the character Ariel and these other 07:35 elements that it describes the tempest 07:37 the storm you know that the play begins 07:39 with but in fact there are very subtle 07:43 symbolic connections inside the play 07:45 that link further to Isaiah because when 07:48 Isaiah gets into our day at 33 34 35 you 07:51 get into this apocalypse of the Gentile 07:53 and that's really what the point of the 07:57 play is and that's really what the brave 07:59 new world that Shakespeare is talking 08:03 about is is depicting now the one thing 08:07 to remember is that in the Shakespearean 08:09 era the term brave didn't mean simply 08:14 courage but also flamboyance or in a 08:19 fashion sense kind of dazzling and 08:21 that's really the the correct 08:24 understanding of how the word is being 08:25 used it just it just relates to the 08:29 conclusion of The Tempest where Prospero 08:34 stands in front of the audience by 08:36 himself and he says you know I need your 08:38 help I need the audience of the 08:41 theatrical performance to cooperate 08:43 otherwise my projects going to fail and 08:46 he talks about needing art to enchant 08:48 and that's the bravery of the brave new 08:52 world it is just the enchanted world 08:54 think of the enchanted kingdom 08:56 Disneyland so or the American dream it's 09:01 the American dream brother you got it 09:03 it's exactly right so that that's what 09:06 um that's what's going on in um in both 09:10 Isaiah and then the and then Shakespeare 09:13 picks it up and just makes a whole 09:14 little story out of the thing but you 09:18 know one thing that's very important is 09:19 that the perspective of the author is 09:22 not of a Gentile no way a Gentile 09:26 wouldn't pick up and make a whole you 09:28 know story out of 09:29 Isaiah 29 through 35 it's the most anti 09:32 Gentile passage imaginable right it's 09:35 all you know destruction of the Gentile 09:40 so so that that is the the basis of the 09:44 of the term and then it gets reused 09:48 Huxley uses it but before Huxley Tim it 09:53 gets used by rudyard kipling the insane 09:58 Freemason if you ever look at 10:01 photographs of Kipling what some of my 10:03 favorite photographs are he has like 10:04 these black pajamas that have Freemason 10:09 symbols like moons and stars and 10:12 all-seeing eyes as they're all 10:14 embroidered into it and he's dancing 10:17 around like it's some kind of nymph is 10:20 spinning around and dancing you know and 10:22 it's just I mean he's just a complete 10:24 whack job um but he so he wrote on this 10:30 poem which is um you know the and the 10:38 gods of the copybook headings okay 10:41 so you know the guy that cosmic heading 10:44 he's just talking about how you know man 10:48 goes through time and becomes you know 10:51 more sophisticated and dumb and then he 10:55 at the end he uses the expression but he 10:59 also you know he talks about they denied 11:02 that wishes were horses they denied that 11:04 a pig had wings so the pig with wings I 11:08 mean this gets reused in our modern 11:10 culture a lot comes from here and it's 11:12 just he's using Pig as a synonym for um 11:17 for Gentiles which the Shakespearean 11:20 literature does and that's why he uses 11:22 the expression here and wishes were 11:25 horses remember Richard the third a 11:28 horse a horse my kingdom for a horse I 11:31 mean see this is a they're mocking the 11:33 the horses of the Apocalypse in the book 11:37 of Revelation okay it's a little cryptic 11:41 I don't want to spend too much time but 11:43 because I want to get into the actual 11:46 the conclusion of the of this stuff 11:48 could add aside and also there's another 11:50 poem I wanted to get into to it but 11:52 anyway so um you know Kipling's poem is 11:59 kind of not to see it on a surface you 12:01 know it seems crazy 12:02 I'm very violent you know you he says 12:07 that there are only four things certain 12:09 since social progress began that the dog 12:12 returns to its vomit and the sow returns 12:14 to her mire and the fools bandaged 12:18 finger goes wobbling back to the fire 12:21 right they these people just can't get 12:24 away from their their nature which is so 12:28 debased and then he goes and that and 12:33 that after this is accomplished and the 12:35 brave new world begins where all men are 12:40 paid for existing and no man must pay 12:42 for his sins as surely as water will let 12:46 us as surely as fire will burn the gods 12:49 of the copybook headings with terror and 12:52 slaughter returned there's a sunny 12:55 vision of the sovereign of the whack-job 12:59 free mages but it's an important thing 13:02 because you know this was written like I 13:04 think around 1900 and he talks about 13:08 social progress and when men are paid 13:12 for existing and no man must pay for 13:14 since he's talking about the welfare 13:16 state 13:16 this will be dawn of the Progressive Era 13:18 exactly right 13:19 right but here you can see the Masonic 13:22 you know understanding of what it is 13:25 it's it's a way basically to make the 13:30 population impotent slaves of the state 13:33 because you know the brave new world 13:36 begins and men are paid for existing 13:40 very clear rights hardly even cryptic at 13:42 all you know this is this is what we get 13:45 we're going to get so security the 13:47 welfare state the social progress 13:49 movement but doesn't look too good for 13:53 the Europeans but 13:54 has the gods of the copybook heading now 13:57 the copybook heading gods are just 14:00 basically sayings from the Old Testament 14:02 that used to be in the top of the school 14:07 books that British school kids would 14:12 have right so when you talk about the 14:14 gods of the copybook heading he's just 14:16 basically talking about um you know Old 14:22 Testament slaughter and terror and I 14:24 mean obviously it is the Old Testament 14:26 because the New Testament God you know 14:29 is not seeing this coming back with 14:31 terror and slaughter well ethically 14:32 perhaps that's not true because you get 14:34 it the apocalypse but in general this is 14:37 more relating to Old Testament and so 14:41 what stippling is is clearly saying is 14:45 that the plan is to create a welfare 14:48 state and this would be basically the 14:54 dog returning to his vomit and the sow 14:57 returning to her mire and the burnt 14:59 fools bandage goes wobbling back to the 15:02 fire and after this is accomplished in 15:06 the brave new world again see you know 15:08 this this you know that they're related 15:11 all and when all men are paid for 15:13 existing so anyway the Kipling vision of 15:16 the welfare state very important because 15:18 of his um his very concrete connections 15:22 into masonry and I'll give you a little 15:23 heads-up about Kipling he is to spend 15:27 the summer's for a number of years 15:30 vacationing with his two closest friends 15:32 Cecil Rhodes and the Baron Rothschild a 15:37 fly on wall night conversation yeah that 15:40 would have been fun when Rothschild died 15:43 they read Kipling's poems you know at 15:46 the funeral the the gardener which I 15:50 won't decode but I do understand and 15:52 it's just nuts 15:54 but anyway so there's actually were you 15:59 know written documents indicating that 16:02 during the Boer Wars the these three 16:06 were in control of 16:08 of the Masonic British forces they were 16:11 known to have been together and would 16:14 meet in private no one could hear their 16:16 conversation while they were talking as 16:18 the information was coming in about what 16:20 was going on with the Boers so I'm you 16:23 know Kipling's very very important not 16:25 as a poet because he is just one of the 16:27 most crap poets imaginable but because 16:30 of his political structure and you know 16:32 into history and things and then so then 16:35 this brings us to a real mystery hey I 16:37 got a mystery here for you buddy but 16:39 guess what 16:41 so there's a secret Kipling poem I'm 16:46 going to read a letter from Winston 16:48 Churchill to FDR Franklin Delano 16:55 Roosevelt little letter I won't bore you 16:57 but but um so it goes that dear mr. 16:59 president I'm writing to send you this 17:02 letter excuse me I'm writing I'm sending 17:05 you in as letter to small and published 17:06 works of Rudyard Kipling which I think I 17:08 mentioned to you similar copies were 17:11 given recently by the President of the 17:13 Royal College of Surgeons of England and 17:15 the occasion of my admission as an 17:16 honorary fellow of the college and I 17:17 thought you would like to have both 17:19 books for a library I understand that 17:22 mrs. Kipling decided not to publish them 17:26 in case they led to controversy and is 17:28 therefore important that their existence 17:30 should not become known and there should 17:32 be no public references to this gift 17:35 you're sincerely Winston Churchill oh my 17:38 god what would these Masonic buddies not 17:43 want to have the public to be aware of 17:46 about a poem from from Rudyard Kipling 17:51 who is such a big time my guy hard to 17:54 understand isn't it yeah well here's the 17:57 poem it's entitled burden of Jerusalem 18:00 and I'm not going to read the whole poem 18:02 it's just too long but it's available 18:04 online and it um it starts out with um 18:11 the description of Sarah the daughter of 18:18 Abraham slapping the gent 18:22 file and its Genesis 16 6 and so it's 18:29 the you know Abraham said the Sarah 18:31 behold thy maid is in thy hand due to 18:34 her as it pleases thee and when Sarah 18:39 dealt hardly with her slaps her she fled 18:42 from her face so that's like a very 18:45 churning beginning of a upon wouldn't 18:48 you say temp nice up Old Testament 18:50 uplifting passage to get you in the mood 18:53 for a little poetry doesn't it so the 18:58 big poem began to goes in in ancient 19:00 days in deserts while there Rose a feud 19:03 still unsubdued Twix serous child and 19:06 Hagar's child that's that were a dear 19:09 Jews and Gentiles Hagar's you know seen 19:13 as Arabia but it's also you know just a 19:17 general term for jente so there's a 19:19 there's a feud still up subdued still in 19:22 subdued that centered around Jerusalem 19:24 so then it goes then he goes on to this 19:27 long thing about all of these battles 19:29 that happened around Jerusalem and you 19:33 know he talked about Titus he says angry 19:35 Titus overthrew the fabric of Jerusalem 19:38 Mohammed came you know and and and it 19:43 says and every realm they wandered 19:46 through rows far or near and hate or 19:49 fear or interject chased and slew the 19:52 outcasts of Jerusalem so he's talking 19:53 about the Jews but he's very positive 19:56 goes so it had this real terrible 19:59 history of what goes on in Jerusalem and 20:00 happens to the Jews and so then he goes 20:02 and in every realm they wandered through 20:04 rows far near and hate or fear and 20:07 robbed and tortured chased and slew the 20:09 outcasts of Jerusalem that's talking 20:11 about the Diaspora so ran their doom 20:14 half seer half slave an ages past and AD 20:18 at the last they stood beside each 20:20 tyrants grave and whispered of Jerusalem 20:23 he's talking about the love and longing 20:25 for the the aspirin Jews to return we do 20:29 not know what God attends the of loved 20:31 race in every place where they amassed 20:34 their dividends 20:35 Auriga to jerusalem but all the quirks 20:39 of times makes clear to everyone except 20:42 the hunt it does not pay to interfere 20:44 with cohen from Jerusalem now here's 20:47 some here's off the rails here it goes 20:51 for beneath the rabbi's curls and fur 20:55 are Saints and real movie Kings the 21:00 aloof unleavened blood of your brood 21:03 steadfast on Jerusalem let us read it 21:06 again for Neath the rabbi's curls and 21:10 fir our sense and rings of movie kings 21:13 and see this is this is like in critical 21:16 gets giving you Kipling I don't know 21:18 early 20th century description of movie 21:23 Kings being part of the aloof unleavened 21:28 bread blood of the Diaspora right 21:32 doesn't feel too good about the movie 21:34 industry does it when you hear this 21:36 here's pretty pretty I mean I mean the 21:39 meats erratic girls and fur Saints and 21:41 rings a movie King they loop unleavened 21:43 blood of your brood steadfast on 21:46 Jerusalem so um so anyway it goes and 21:50 burdened Gentiles over the main must 21:53 bear the weight of Israel hate because 21:56 he has not brought again in triumph to 21:58 Jerusalem okay one more time and burden 22:02 Gentiles over the main must bear the 22:04 weight of Israel's hate because he has 22:05 not brought again in triumph to 22:07 Jerusalem so Kipling's position is that 22:11 the movie Kings are part of this hatred 22:14 right you must bear the weight of 22:17 Israel's hate the movie kings and so big 22:22 big ending here he goes yet he who bred 22:26 the unending strife was not brave enough 22:29 to save the bonds made from the furious 22:32 wife now he's talking about the 22:35 beginning of the poem where the mates 22:37 get slapped about by Sarah wrens away so 22:41 he who bred the unending strife okay 22:44 that would be the Gentiles was not brave 22:47 enough to save the bonds 22:49 made from the furious wife ki raat die 22:52 whoa Jerusalem right so um this is the 22:57 poem my understanding of it I can assure 23:00 you was clear minded I'm familiar with 23:03 Kipling stuff and I know the symbolism 23:04 here and I can just assure here that 23:06 it's just exactly as it is on the 23:09 surface narration he's just talking 23:11 about um you know basically you know a 23:17 kind of of hatred that is justified in 23:24 violence you see this is you know we've 23:26 talked about the moral authority that 23:28 involved in the counterculture right 23:29 away who would have that well Kipling 23:33 would be someone who would have 23:34 something like that because he is 23:36 referencing to this passage in the Old 23:39 Testament which is you know I mean this 23:41 is a slave right who pisses off Sarah 23:46 and Abraham says just do whatever you 23:48 want to her and she slaps around and 23:51 this is supposed to be you know like 23:54 basically as the as the Old Testament is 23:56 structured God's will right this is this 24:01 is good this is this is order out of 24:04 chaos right so now when you get here and 24:08 you leave that you know beneath the 24:12 rabbis curls and fur scents and kings of 24:15 movie Kings see this doesn't look too 24:18 good to him I mean this was pretty 24:21 organized and full of a lot of papered 24:23 would you say pitting PDM look 24:26 malevolent ad yes yeah pretty malevolent 24:28 yeah and then and then now now here's my 24:31 question 24:32 okay I'm what what does the the 24:37 Freemason Winston Churchill see that is 24:40 positive about the poem that he would 24:42 send it on to Roosevelt who then in 24:47 incidentally responds by saying oh yes 24:49 I've been where of it now this is very 24:51 important Roosevelt wrote back to 24:52 Churchill Roosevelt says oh I'm aware of 24:55 it I got this poem and it's a beauty 24:58 it's a gem right really what is what is 25:02 gem like to use the expression Jeff what 25:04 is gem like about the burden of 25:06 Jerusalem which is so violent and racist 25:09 yeah but I don't forget about it but so 25:12 I'm beautiful Todd yeah it seems to me 25:14 it's like talking about a secret plot 25:16 against the Gentiles and just hatred 25:18 everywhere and violence being condoned I 25:20 don't think anything here that is a jump 25:23 you say but that this is the letter the 25:26 letter I wrote is on the Churchill's 25:28 innocence believe me the stuff I'm 25:30 showing you is absolutely documented 25:32 there's no question this is all real 25:34 exchange between Churchill and Roosevelt 25:37 Roosevelt's a statement about keeping it 25:41 quiet 25:42 that Kipling's wife didn't want it to be 25:45 published well that makes perfect sense 25:47 right I can understand that 25:50 but what I don't understand is why these 25:54 two world leaders would have you know 25:58 taken this position this seems a little 26:00 bit suspicious to me 26:03 what's the eight of the letter the 26:07 letters date is October 7 1943 okay so 26:11 in the middle of the war right in the 26:14 middle of the war yeah it's interesting 26:16 because we all know one of the em was 26:19 the aftermath and the aftermath of the 26:20 war you had the birth of the State of 26:22 Israel as a consequence of the war and 26:24 the Aeron reported atrocities that they 26:27 were committed against the Jews in 26:28 Europe so it's and also the big part 26:32 that the British Empire played in in 26:36 midwifing the Israeli state you know 26:38 with the Balfour Declaration and the 26:39 intrigues it involved and the promises 26:42 that that influential Jewish finance 26:47 ears in Great Britain could draw the 26:49 United States into the war through their 26:51 connections with their Woodrow Wilson 26:53 ministration I Bernard Baruch and he's 26:57 got a guy up in New York we're the same 27:01 altameyer these guys they look we had oh 27:03 yeah right right well that's yeah that's 27:05 the the scope rival guy yet another 27:08 thing is they they sponsored the 27:10 production the Scofield Bible after the 27:12 Pope said no to 27:13 Israel it's a crazy translation and it's 27:17 just all about promoting the State of 27:20 Israel and it's just it's crazy it's in 27:22 it that's amazing that everything ever 27:24 got you know the light of day and this 27:26 gives a bible birth to Christian Zionism 27:28 she say yeah that's how he's you know 27:31 this about you know these developed a 27:33 very small Jewish you know population 27:35 nothing and though so the much much 27:36 smaller Jewish elite to control the 27:38 agenda in control 27:40 Zionist agenda were able to you know 27:42 bring in the ranks and millions and 27:43 millions of Christian Zionists into 27:45 their fold right and you know it's 27:48 really interesting I'll taste like just 27:50 fastening is that um so um there was a 27:59 guy who had influence on Scofield and 28:03 I'm going to blank on the names I think 28:05 it was like Raglan or something but he 28:08 was um part of the CFE of phosphorus see 28:13 a feel Safa chol society right um and 28:18 and so they're at the bottom of this 28:23 hole you know chained events you've got 28:26 basically alistair crowley because the 28:30 the woman who I'm also drawing a blank 28:32 on what's her name he was the founder of 28:34 it the foundation not the sod it's 28:37 there's someone else it's a who's really 28:40 more than sorry gosh-darn um but anyway 28:43 so okay ii yeah she really kind of was 28:47 the founder of the Theosophical society 28:49 but she was from crowley he was one of 28:52 you bro Crowley's uh you know I mean you 28:56 know proto geez now what is absolutely 28:59 fascinating to me is that so not only 29:02 does Christian Zionism in a way have it 29:05 one of the strands that leads to its 29:07 origin the cieth optical society because 29:09 Scofield comes out of that world but 29:12 this woman and it's some bizarre 29:17 ukrainian name that you know she's just 29:20 this horrid looking which lie creature I 29:22 can't remember name I'm getting old 29:25 but she was really the founder of the 29:28 Thule society now have you ever heard of 29:30 that oh yeah that they okay very 29:33 influential in the rise of National 29:34 Socialism well it was it actually is the 29:37 it is the Nazi Party because the the 29:41 organization which had that like an 29:44 acronym of like PCR something with 29:47 workers part it comes directly from 29:50 Thule Society it's actually like a kind 29:53 of sub part of the organization but we 29:56 know then changes its name to the map 29:58 you have Helen Helen Blavatsky that's 30:02 that's that that's that's it so anyway 30:04 Helen hello that last year 30:05 yeah Helen so so the Thule Society is 30:09 the Strand to produce the Nazis I mean 30:14 literally if you trace this back and 30:15 actually look at the letters on how the 30:17 thing expected because right back to the 30:19 build society but on the other side of 30:21 the ocean is a same individual and 30:26 croley is right at the bottom of them 30:28 you know is that you're getting the 30:29 Scofield Bible in so I think in its 30:34 ability to require an explanation which 30:37 I well yes again we're going back to a 30:39 British and Christopher with Crowley you 30:41 get to get into British intelligence and 30:44 he was an asset of their intelligence 30:46 during the first world war here in the 30:49 United States writing program be writing 30:53 pro German literature by the way so I 30:57 guess I'm gonna twist it his last name 30:59 I'll just I'll just I don't want that 31:01 good nip it but his last name is Crowley 31:04 that's right like the word it Crowley no 31:06 rhymes with holy that's a Crowley's 31:08 house I'm not sure I've been saying I 31:10 said it Crowley for years and years and 31:11 people just corrected me for so long 31:14 okay and because and it's because I 31:18 think so much poetry knee rhymes is last 31:20 name of holies yeah we got the addresses 31:22 there you've got patrol Sally is I get 31:25 really confused yeah you know yeah we 31:32 book in the world so now all those 31:35 actually comes along and you 31:38 we can really see the Shakespearean plot 31:42 right in motion because um well first of 31:50 all actually uses Shakespearean quotes 31:52 about like 30 times and in the book he 31:58 has the works of Shakespeare as kind of 32:02 the secret literature which is inside 32:04 and and what he does this is he make is 32:07 the the book brave new world and and one 32:11 of the reasons it's kind of on my mind 32:12 is because it's sort of the centerpiece 32:13 of the new book which will be coming out 32:15 here pretty quick I called um the secret 32:18 language of the oligarchs and so there I 32:21 show that the brave new world is just as 32:23 big Masonic um you know nightmare it's 32:27 it's just it's a little better 32:29 literature but it's the same kind of 32:31 stuff that I show in the Catcher in the 32:34 Rye have you ever seen that analysis 32:35 that there's just cryptic Freemason 32:37 references throughout the entire thing 32:39 and in in this case the Shakespearean 32:42 literature is hidden in a watch right 32:45 and it's a secret book and you know they 32:47 bring it out and then you know they give 32:50 it to the blond hair guy is just a way 32:52 to make him feel terrible but the thing 32:56 about the how Huck ladies braving the 33:00 world doesn't really require any kind of 33:01 like literary analysis it's actually 33:06 historical fact is that Huxley in on 33:11 YouTube you can see this he has this 33:14 long interview with Mike Wallace and 33:17 there he just goes on and on about how 33:20 dangerous it is that the government 33:22 might get ways to control our minds with 33:24 drugs and these fancy psychological 33:26 techniques I mean you listen to 33:27 interview Huxley just sits there and 33:29 stares right into the camera and goes on 33:31 for a bloody hour about how dangerous is 33:33 and how we've got to all would be 33:34 worried about but at the exact same time 33:40 he is that there are letters that have 33:42 come into existence which show that he 33:45 was organizing projects in MKULTRA right 33:49 so enough it is an app 33:52 saluté finger of the secret fingerprint 33:55 of the secret society this is something 33:56 you know you can no no conjectures 33:59 required Huxley is lying and he's 34:04 providing some plausible deniability for 34:06 himself and he's also basically kind of 34:08 confusing things but the facts are the 34:11 leather exists that Keita he tells 34:14 Humphry Osmond to go down and get jolly 34:16 West to do a particular experiment and 34:19 jolly West because we we got the MKULTRA 34:23 pay requisitions we know where he was 34:26 and you know what hospitals he was 34:29 operating assets and what sub projects 34:31 of MKULTRA he was doing so we know that 34:34 Huxley is actually basically giving 34:38 instructions to an MKULTRA doctor about 34:42 about dumb experiments that are going to 34:45 be part of the EM kill to science that 34:47 the government is then going to use 34:49 against the population and so this is 34:51 really easy to understand you don't need 34:55 then to look at brave new world in the 34:59 occulted way you know I get deep into 35:02 the weeds and you know plant doubt as 35:06 it's a lot of a simple up like beacon of 35:12 the right framework they just don't have 35:13 a clue of what it means and it's a very 35:15 nasty piece of business it's very much 35:17 like a Kipling's poem the burden of 35:20 Jerusalem it has kind of an exact same 35:22 perspective they're reveling in the idea 35:27 that the Gentile gets crushed and I 35:29 think this is really you're looking at 35:31 the real secret of Freemasonry frankly 35:34 when you look at these things so anyway 35:38 um Huck's um talks about a world which 35:45 is basically genetically stratified and 35:48 also stratified by imaging by 35:53 psychological technique chemicals right 35:55 with drugs being being we know the thing 35:58 and so this is what the brave new world 36:02 is it is the the 36:05 coming down of everyone who isn't in the 36:07 elite chosen group in destructors and no 36:11 one can repeal because basically your 36:14 will has been taken away from you by the 36:16 by the by the conditioning 36:18 so when you see um you know like well 36:23 for example like like the peace movement 36:25 right the the hippie stuff I mean this 36:28 is all a way to damask in lies to take 36:31 away the authoritarian personality 36:34 identity an expression from the 36:36 population so we're looking at our whole 36:40 culture basically is a a weapon and it's 36:46 been polluted you know it damages us 36:48 it's toxic to just our natural health 36:52 that's right 36:53 it betrays or at least reveals a very 36:56 sophisticated understanding of human 36:58 psychology and also the difference 37:00 between the sexes in the respective 37:02 psychologies other sexes because you 37:04 have to emasculate you have to destroy 37:07 male authority to enslave society 37:08 because if there's any resistance to to 37:12 tyranny it usually comes from men who 37:14 have families to protect community to 37:16 protect and women by nature by the you 37:20 know the whole finger nestling and 37:22 children they tend towards well I mean 37:25 it may offensive be they tend towards 37:27 collaboration they go with the winners 37:29 so if you sort of emasculate the men in 37:34 that community and leave it to the women 37:36 it's much easier to conquer because by 37:38 nature they will tend to collaborate and 37:41 go along with the agenda well I think we 37:43 see that roughly played out in today's 37:45 politics what they set out to politics 37:47 in the welfare state in these things 37:48 yeah yeah absolutely I mean just look at 37:52 the morphology the differences in body 37:53 structures whoo yeah who's designed for 37:56 fighting you know at the male so if 37:59 you're going to have rebellions you 38:00 better believe the males are going to be 38:01 the one you know basically leading it 38:03 let that's just kind of a historical in 38:06 terms of Lubitsch in fact so if you can 38:10 move the males a niche over toward 38:12 feminism or eminent 'ti then you've done 38:16 it you've got a long way to you know 38:17 stablishing a permanent slaves day yeah 38:20 yeah the metrosexual latter-day Andy you 38:25 know yeah yeah it's a has no progeny to 38:31 care for no sense of posterity he's cut 38:38 off from phone Angela's ethnic religious 38:42 roots sees a metrosexual cosmopolitan 38:45 security company if you look at the 38:48 authoritarian personality science right 38:50 just look at it as the site look at all 38:52 the scales the metrosexual 38:56 would be the finished product I mean he 38:58 would not have an authoritarian 38:59 personality he would not have he would 39:02 not be ethnocentric he would not be 39:04 anti-semitic he would not have he just 39:08 wouldn't be in any way a you know 39:11 masculine and so that's that was the 39:16 idea and certainly you know you can see 39:19 it just everywhere today I mean Bruce 39:24 Jenner would be sort of the role model 39:27 or the avant-garde for the new culture 39:29 that they're bringing about yeah I mean 39:31 that story is so stranger says in your 39:33 face the fact people just accept that 39:36 it's just a independent organic news 39:42 story obviously he's he's an experiment 39:46 you know I mean it's know that this 39:49 happened on you know they make the alpha 39:50 male of the Calphalon winter to this 39:52 bizarre-looking creature to get a girl 39:56 he doesn't look like a woman you know 39:57 just too sick now looks like a man 39:59 dressed as a woman I'm sorry that's what 40:00 he is 40:01 oh yeah nothing wrong other than s you 40:04 know it's uh you know it's just 40:06 obviously a psychological device to to 40:12 just confuse masculinity in nails - what 40:18 it is you know there is plasticity 40:21 obviously you know there have been 40:23 cultures that are not suffering from 40:27 conditioning from a malevolent force 40:30 that have had 40:31 more infractions of homosexuality but I 40:33 don't think it was the effeminate kind 40:35 of so in other words if you look at the 40:37 Greeks you may different well it's very 40:40 different cultural phenomena and I don't 40:42 think it affected their personalities 40:44 the gay personality that television has 40:47 given us since you know the nineteen 40:51 sixties is very feminized yeah the 40:54 narcissist 40:55 yeah and very narcissistic and so that 40:58 that I don't think you're going to find 41:00 often in you know Roman generals and 41:03 things like this so it was just a yeah 41:05 you won't find it yeah well idea you 41:07 find a willing Grayson Sparta I fade 41:12 right exactly you're just not going to 41:14 happen and so so we had a different kind 41:17 of situation and but they realized that 41:19 and so they decided they would try to 41:21 promote it and and just again they would 41:23 weaponize it and the weaponization of it 41:26 was to create the feminine homosexual 41:30 well that's my opinion you know you get 41:33 into in that poem he talks about people 41:36 they who paid to live and you set out 41:39 sort of a he it's anticipating and 41:42 evading the welfare state and well drop 41:45 a on you know either the youth warfare 41:47 state puts us under the leave the the 41:49 boot of eight the drill sergeant in the 41:52 course well first eight were enslaved to 41:54 the nursemaid either way we're under 41:56 control is the welfare warfare warfare 41:58 state and interesting because the 42:00 welfare state largely was birthed from 42:02 the warfare state you know he's here in 42:04 that stage with the army with you know 42:06 pensions and things like that that's how 42:08 it kind of came out of and also a lot of 42:11 the legislation that the New Deal relied 42:14 upon dates back to the first world war 42:16 created in the enemy act and things like 42:18 that is your legislation that the FDR 42:20 administration used to justify the 42:24 seizure of gold 1934 but um the the idea 42:30 that this welfare state can be used to 42:33 well it's fairly obvious I can be used 42:36 to you know 42:37 expand government control over our lives 42:39 because whoever pays the piper calls the 42:41 tune and who paying for our survival 42:43 they even tell us how to live but in the 42:48 nineteen well first I look at the 42:52 progressive legislation Chris we had the 42:53 subtle reserve act was a progressive 42:55 piece of legislation even below it it 42:59 was you know but hold the progressive 43:01 era was the whole myth of the sort of 43:03 modernization rationalization of 43:05 government under the guise of sort of 43:07 the rule of the experts technocracy or 43:10 assigned to them and this is being set 43:13 up by the oligarchs because they were 43:14 going to put in place these technicians 43:16 these technocrats these acumen ditions 43:19 these bureaucrats that they would do 43:22 their bidding their get controlled the 43:23 bureaucracy whether it's the FDA or the 43:25 Federal Reserve Board or the you know 43:27 Federal Trade Commission these things 43:30 once you create these power centers just 43:32 a question for you know supporting those 43:34 power centers so it was a strategy but 43:37 of course uh when they passed the 43:39 Federal Reserve Act I think it was 43:41 Charles Lindbergh's father he said well 43:44 now booms and busts will be 43:45 scientifically engineered exactly right 43:51 um and and you know the thing is is that 43:53 the Federal Reserve System and the dole 43:58 transfer of control of production of 44:02 money from the Congress to the bankers 44:06 that owned the Federal Reserve 44:08 corporation was I think the most clever 44:11 and subtle form of enslavement that that 44:15 we're suffering from 44:16 I mean basically what they were able to 44:19 do is to you know it's just like when 44:24 Kipling says you know the all men are 44:28 paid for existing well the reason why 44:29 men are paid for existing is because no 44:31 one has a job and the reason why there's 44:34 no jobs is because the wealth has been 44:36 sucked out of the economy and therefore 44:38 it's self reliance is almost impossible 44:41 to it Qi because of just all of them 44:43 there's so many there's no place for it 44:46 wealth to exist and what they've done is 44:47 is they can debase the currency fast 44:51 sir then there is wage growth so you 44:54 think that gee I'm getting ahead my 44:57 wages have doubled but the problem is 45:01 that currencies only were a quarter of 45:04 what it was I mean think of where the 45:05 currency was relative to gold say in 45:09 1917 right oh yeah and where I mean 45:12 that's just so that's one of the reason 45:13 why gold has been massively suppressed 45:15 they you know they they control the 45:18 price by short-selling it's an issue 45:20 dumping of the market but they call it 45:23 paper gold right yeah but but the thing 45:26 is is that even with that you know gold 45:27 is 1,200 bucks whereas it was like 30 45:30 dollars back then well that's what you 45:32 what you're seeing is that the basement 45:34 of the dollar when you when you look 45:36 right the gold gold just a static the 45:38 dollar simply gone way way down and 45:40 purchasing price and that's just a 45:42 complete result of the activity of the 45:45 Federal Reserve they have debase the 45:47 currency now this is happening faster 45:50 then you have wage growth because for 45:53 one thing with the currency debasing 45:55 it's harder for businesses to make true 45:56 profits so the fact is is that now even 46:01 though everyone is making hundreds of 46:02 thousands of dollars a year you know you 46:05 have to have both parents in the 46:08 workplace and they rent their homes they 46:10 don't I've owned them I mean where I 46:13 live in Santa Barbara I mean they're 46:17 there you a couple cannot come here 46:22 unless you're very very wealthy and just 46:24 buy even like a middle-class home II and 46:27 that would be like a million two hundred 46:28 thousand dollars you'd have to have you 46:31 know four or five hundred thousand 46:33 dollars in saved money right amad now 46:36 where is that you know a couple of at 46:39 thirty with two kids going to come up 46:41 with that kind of savings yeah and their 46:43 archi source of wealth of society 46:44 because they have open of course and so 46:48 we're just a paper money em right then 46:50 yeah we're just upside down because the 46:53 Federal Reserve is just as very subtle 46:55 kind of slavery that no one sees or 46:57 understands or talked about but is going 47:00 on every single day because they can 47:02 subtract from our 47:04 wealth with their debasement of the 47:07 currency and it's a twofer for them they 47:09 take the money and you know while 47:11 they're debating the currency all the 47:13 money they create they spend on wars 47:14 right and technology of enslavement and 47:19 then our currency is worth less so we're 47:22 more easy to inflate so we get the 47:23 picture we're just headed in the wrong 47:25 direction in every possible way yeah and 47:28 the existence of a central bank and of 47:30 course with a currency that's not tied 47:32 to any anything of value like gold but 47:35 you might impose some discipline on the 47:37 creation of money this lead to this 47:39 astronomical you know debt which just 47:43 perpetual debt debt enslavement but if 47:46 you look at the post-war fiscal policy 47:49 in the United States have became just so 47:51 reckless and a lot of people to 47:53 subscribe that to politics the growth of 47:55 the welfare state sort of just a just 47:59 the convergence of events that occurred 48:01 after the war but I suggest there's 48:05 probably something more malevolent more 48:07 planted involved here you know judging 48:09 from the poem yeah when the time is 48:12 right Katie mom is a really good marker 48:14 yeah we could always be what's good and 48:16 this was written in 1915 1920 something 48:18 like that yeah cuz the 19 in the middle 48:20 of the question of sixes we had this 48:22 great society it's a unfurled by Lyndon 48:25 Baines Johnson this explosion of welfare 48:28 spending that occurred although the 48:30 poverty rates have been declining at an 48:31 average about a point a year from 1948 48:34 to 1993 Oh boom so but also in the 48:39 others crisis of poverty in the country 48:41 because some people are poor or at least 48:45 thought to be poor by the standards of 48:47 the gifts of the intellectuals at the 48:49 time but this is a parasitic 48:50 necessitated massive government 48:52 intervention massive government spending 48:53 which is massive barn because also at 48:55 the same time they're fighting the 48:56 Vietnam War and other things but in 1966 49:00 there's a to sociologist at a Columbia 49:03 University 49:04 surprise surprise claritin Piven tickle 49:07 it's called the cleric Piven strategy is 49:10 outlined in 1966 and it was the basic 49:12 call for the overloading overloading the 49:15 intentional overloading the use public 49:17 welfare system and 49:17 to precipitate a crisis their lead to 49:20 the replacement of the welfare system 49:22 with a national system of guaranteed 49:23 national income and widespread socialism 49:25 so when you look at you know let's talk 49:27 about balance the budget and trying to 49:28 get spending under control and these 49:30 things there's no intention to do that 49:32 because one thing is all this debt the 49:34 bankers make tons of them it's about the 49:35 interest payments but the same thing is 49:37 there's been an intentional plan to 49:39 overload the very system to precipitate 49:42 a crisis to bring about something that's 49:45 sort of a I mean that talk about free 49:47 masonic I know out of out of chaos order 49:52 well first we need the chaos so they uh 49:55 they create the chaos and they're ready 49:58 with the order you know so yeah but 50:01 that's look yeah it was an excuse to 50:02 abandon the US Constitution because what 50:04 they said is limiting of course I mean 50:06 they got govern had long she was done I 50:08 think when they justified I think is mid 50:11 30s and the switching nine say the 50:13 switch in time to save nine and FDR I 50:16 threatened to pack the court because the 50:17 Supreme Court was declaring some of his 50:19 New Deal initiatives unconstitutional 50:22 like a national just Recovery Act and 50:24 the Agriculture Adjustment Act but all 50:26 in the last minute they switch Mendelson 50:28 they did declare the work the of the 50:31 rhaggy act natural labor relations act 50:33 and also the social Social Security Act 50:36 and things helvering V Davis and 50:38 suddenly constitutional and then in the 50:42 sixty Hewitt the amendments to Social 50:44 Security was of course this huge 50:45 Medicaid Medicare program in middle 50:48 class welfare for middle class elderly 50:51 people and I think there is a study the 50:56 projected cost of Medicare by 1990 was 51:00 seven times with a projected seven times 51:02 right they erected 51:04 you know yeah so and these are real 51:07 these are real specialist and expert 51:08 they aren't they were only off seven 51:10 hundred percent it's so much for the 51:11 technocrats and experts right yeah yeah 51:15 they're doing a great job but it's but 51:17 it won't go with them but the 51:19 libertarian critique which I'm you know 51:20 very 51:22 supportive of generally speaking tends 51:25 to write it off it's just bad policy bad 51:27 political philosophy 51:28 nothing really malevolent no intention 51:30 but but I know with Cloud Pippin and 51:33 sort of this idea of using the welfare 51:35 state to lead to manslaughter I think 51:38 you'd agree with me that there's 51:39 something much more malevolent here well 51:42 can I just read a like I think a 51:45 relevant passage yeah and that after 51:49 this is accomplished and the brave new 51:50 world begins when all men are paid for 51:53 existing and no man if there is sins 51:55 notice that no man must pay for a sense 51:58 that just seems like Hollywood right um 52:00 you know the the debauch dub you know 52:02 kind of moral coke no man must pay for 52:04 sins but as surely as water will lettuce 52:09 as surely as fire will burn the gods of 52:12 the copybook headings with terror and 52:15 slaughter returned he now hmm 52:20 the vision of the future is not too good 52:23 here Tim it seems to me that the gods of 52:28 a getting are going to come back with 52:30 terror and slaughter um well I don't 52:34 know but that that could that sort of 52:38 suggest that at the end of the program 52:41 that has been set up right with men are 52:44 being paid for existing and nobody has 52:46 to pay for their sin that there's a plan 52:50 that there is a plan and it doesn't look 52:54 good because it looks like the gods of 52:56 the copybook headings which I know or 52:58 the you know this is this is the Old 53:01 Testament right this is where the 53:04 copybook headings come from the the 53:07 moral you know I mean remember this is 53:09 not you know Athens 53:12 you know democracy and beauty gods I 53:15 mean this is the Ten Commandment you 53:17 know Yahweh Old Testament God the gods 53:19 of the copybook heading with Terrence a 53:23 lot of return so I think people should 53:24 pay attention to people like Kipling 53:29 because you know he's really embroiled 53:32 inside the political world 53:35 and the financial world with his the 53:37 people he knows you know he's not just 53:39 some little desk clerk in India writing 53:42 some weird poetry I mean this guy is a 53:44 major player inside our the real world 53:48 and he certainly is a Mason and so HG 53:52 Wells guys know HG Wells very much Josh 53:55 vacuums reality exactly see so in here 53:59 I'm just you know so so this this is 54:01 because you see inside the Masonic 54:04 high-level they actually know this stuff 54:08 you see this is what you're getting it 54:10 just it's written in a poem so it's you 54:13 know again their position ends the the 54:16 population can't is too stupid 54:19 understand anything I mean that's 54:20 basically what this this is about that's 54:24 why with the burden of Jerusalem 54:26 you know Churchill told Roseau to keep 54:29 it quiet because it's just too damn 54:31 obvious what it means right yeah that's 54:34 so that's what he was saying you know 54:35 like you that's just too obviously 54:37 better keep that's quiet because you 54:38 don't have exposed Kipling and and 54:41 because if Kipling is exposed and people 54:43 read well gee the gods are the copybook 54:45 headings are coming back with terror and 54:47 slaughter this doesn't look too good 54:48 this looks like a group is in control 54:53 here you know Roosevelt and Churchill 54:56 are involved Kipling who is Rothschilds 55:00 vacation mate is involved and they have 55:04 an understanding you see that we don't 55:06 you see that's one thing that's just 55:08 completely clear from the letter is that 55:11 Roosevelt and Churchill have an 55:14 understanding of literature that the 55:17 common person does not have right and is 55:21 it supposed to have because they very 55:25 very subtly talk about where I always 55:27 just not let anybody see this one yeah 55:29 and and so there it is you know it's um 55:32 it's important stuff and it's uh I this 55:38 is all in the new book the secret 55:42 language of the oleg arts I mean what I 55:43 try to do with the book is just a you 55:46 know basically put this 55:48 into you know kind of decode the 55:50 symbolism and then just put it into 55:52 historical context I mean it's not hard 55:53 to understand this stuff if you know 55:56 what Kipling's background is and who his 55:59 social connections and you understand 56:00 you know MK ULTRA and and who these 56:03 connections are you know it just becomes 56:05 I think of you know you get to see a 56:07 really clear organizational structure of 56:11 power and it's one that has genocide in 56:14 mind you know urn slaughter is coming 56:17 back if we don't do something about it 56:19 it's going to it's coming our way 56:21 well it's what we stand back and look at 56:25 the bigger picture and you what you 56:26 really see the pattern of what the 56:29 oligarchs do with the secret society 56:30 does is it perception that precipitates 56:34 a crisis yeah then stands as the 56:37 solution you know power you know you 56:41 know it's a the old you Christ you know 56:45 what's that the action solution never 56:47 waste of crises you never waste a crisis 56:49 problem reaction solution yeah from 56:52 where even a Turnpike would Pike word 56:54 about not doing this but they picnic but 56:57 through you know central banking to the 57:02 governance issues they they can engineer 57:04 crises they can collapse strategically 57:08 collapse currencies cause currency 57:10 crisis in certain countries by up things 57:12 on the cheap 57:12 pump and dump on these things now what 57:16 you see is one other piece doctrine is 57:19 very important I think it was shed a lot 57:20 of light on this is yeah we have 57:22 together crises of the twentieth century 57:24 the Great Depression of the wars ii 57:25 things or precipitated people we didn't 57:28 trip into these things the leader he 57:29 wasn't stupidity is malevolent to 57:31 lebanese things but i'm the 1974 which 57:35 is interesting as well it's interesting 57:37 date because between it's like ten years 57:40 almost 10 years after Kennedy is 57:41 assassinated we have the tumult of the 57:43 60s you had this thing out of standard 57:45 research into the changing images of man 57:48 you said things are unsustainable 57:51 because you're unsustainable we have to 57:54 change human nature engage in this 57:57 widespread psychological warfare 57:59 changing how we look at the world how we 58:02 look at each other have men and women 58:03 look at each other and it's because 58:06 everything is unsustainable but they are 58:07 the ones that mean is unsustainable yeah 58:10 well I mean I mean the will is Herman I 58:13 mean that this is all just MKULTRA stuff 58:15 these guys are MKULTRA you know just 58:18 everywhere inside these organizations 58:20 and then you know the Stanford Research 58:22 Institute and the Palo Alto VA where 58:25 you've got you know so the Grateful Dead 58:27 hanging out I mean it's just a cesspool 58:30 of you know Masonic and different secret 58:34 societies all involved all interacting 58:37 in between the little MPL through 58:39 funding sources and and a Harriman is 58:43 there talking about how we've got have 58:45 this mass scale psychological change 58:49 right the changing image of man well Tim 58:52 doesn't that just plug right into the 58:54 conclusion of the authoritarian 58:55 personality yes yeah yeah you know where 58:58 they talk about gotta have a mass scale 59:00 psychologically where you use arrows as 59:02 the you know as the tool to to start 59:05 bringing change about mmm yes and yeah 59:09 let's use Hollywood the magic the black 59:13 magic kingdom Hollywood you know all 59:16 laughing there you know and again when 59:20 we talk about welfare's with the funny 59:22 what the welfare state does is addresses 59:23 you know lot in the into the thirties in 59:26 the sixties you had all these 59:27 legislation passed you had minimum wage 59:29 laws National Labor Relations Act things 59:32 you know you have collective bargaining 59:34 the strengthening of unions and then yet 59:37 in the 60s you had the civil rights 59:39 legislation the housing laws the you had 59:42 welfare you a for for fans of dependent 59:46 children then finally handed in the 90s 59:49 with the state program the SNAP program 59:51 will food stamp program these these are 59:54 suppose your remedies to travel 59:57 capitalism's inequities or the greed of 60:01 capitalism problems of the capitalist 60:03 system exploitative nature of capitalism 60:05 but one thing is these progressive these 60:08 looks these liberals is suppose you love 60:09 the poor never go after things like the 60:11 Federal Reserve and monetary debase 60:13 the usury rush is at the core of the 60:16 exploitive system these things don't 60:18 address that these things you I mean 60:19 they just make it worse because they 60:20 borrow money from the banks to pay for 60:23 that's what I mean the thing is is that 60:25 with the snap cards right the people are 60:30 at a level of poverty that basically 60:33 they're like a one government handout 60:35 away from starvation yeah this wasn't 60:38 where the poor were even in the 20s 60:40 during mean that there were much larger 60:44 extended family than ethnic components 60:48 you know they are the pictures of the 60:49 soup lines I'm telling you I've seen the 60:52 data the people were far wealthier and 60:54 of course remember you had tremendous 60:57 packs in the population that were 60:58 farmers yeah they're all the food yeah 61:01 so they're adding outside the money 61:03 economy they're outside of it they don't 61:05 care they make their food they exchange 61:07 it for goods and services yeah they the 61:11 Federal Reserve System is expertly 61:13 designed to extract wealth from the 61:17 public and it has only and it has look 61:20 that's why I know that you know with 61:22 Obamacare which is set up to fail so 61:24 they can bring in a single-payer system 61:26 and say look at failed the market failed 61:28 and note when they talk about the 61:30 problem of health care no one addresses 61:31 things like oh I don't like the car lies 61:35 medical industrial complex and yeah yeah 61:39 and how the insurance system drives up 61:41 cost the third-party reimbursement 61:42 system and how the whole nature of 61:44 medicine what it really means to get 61:46 health care should be a matter of debate 61:48 not controlled by single cartel know the 61:50 pill pushers and white coats and work 61:53 for big farm and big work yeah I mean 61:55 again it's just it is so sad too but we 61:58 are really in a malevolent cesspool 62:00 because it's almost like you can't even 62:02 talk about we talk about sports you know 62:05 it just it disintegrates into Masonic 62:07 evil we talk about you know Hollywood 62:09 obviously that's just a complete 62:11 cesspool in our entertainment industry 62:13 but then you talk about the medical and 62:15 it is just sick to use an expressed um 62:19 you know I will go to doctors anymore I 62:22 just I mean I I've studied it for years 62:25 and I just come to the conclusion 62:27 that while I'm sure they're well amid 62:29 not true if it's a mechanical problem 62:32 like a broken bone or yeah yes sir to 62:35 the trauma surgery or something I will 62:37 take care of that you know even even 62:38 like knee replacements I don't have one 62:41 but I know someone who had it very happy 62:43 with but beyond that the chemicals the 62:46 the the radiation the chemo therefore 62:49 get about it I would I would just would 62:51 not a chance 62:52 not nodded they don't have a drug out 62:54 there that I want to have put in my body 62:55 so I just don't trust them and you know 62:59 just as a little you know for what it's 63:01 worth I mean I try to eat absolutely 63:02 chemical free yeah I mean I'll pay the 63:06 extra money to get organic food just 63:08 because I just don't trust any single 63:12 thing that that they put enough you know 63:14 in the food I think actually when you 63:16 look at our food what you're looking at 63:19 you know in the supermarkets is you're 63:22 looking at part of the brave new world I 63:24 think that the toxicity and the food is 63:26 part of what makes people stupid and 63:28 weak and and you know and that's that's 63:31 why it's there it's just one of the ways 63:33 that they're slowly structuring us you 63:36 know to to dumb down and on their end 63:39 they're probably figuring out little 63:41 clever ways to have some genetic 63:42 advantages in terms of intelligence 63:44 they're trying to make distances as 63:46 large as possible so that when the gods 63:49 return with you know violence and terror 63:51 they're they're going to be in complete 63:53 control I don't have to worry about 63:54 anyone causing any trouble 63:55 so yes yep and yeah and I think if you 64:00 just simply I think it was Katherine oz 64:02 and Fitz said that she was looking at 64:04 what people spend a year on carbonated 64:07 sodas yeah and what they spent on all my 64:10 vegetables and they said if you district 64:12 I think it was like two billion a year 64:13 on fresh festivals and ten billion on 64:15 carbonated babies this reversed it 64:18 reverse that yeah you could solve 64:21 motionless health problems the client 64:23 absolutely absolutely and and you know 64:24 i'm i am pretty perky and healthy for 64:28 you know some in my age did this is it's 64:31 becoming clearer and clearer that older 64:33 that i'm I'm benefiting from you know 64:35 chemical free diet and I will say that a 64:40 cup there's two promising things always 64:42 want to bring up promising things just 64:44 for the the optimist out there that want 64:46 to hear this lips things but one is that 64:48 in our local Costco there's been a 64:51 rebellion and about 40 percent of the 64:54 food items are now organic and labeled 64:56 as such because that was just a 64:58 rebellion from the marketplace the 65:01 people just they would put like 10 years 65:03 ago we were complaining there was 65:04 nothing organic and they put out one 65:06 little product out of a thousand and 65:07 that one would sell ten to one then they 65:09 would put out another now you go to the 65:12 the counter which used to be nothing but 65:14 you know the the toxic chicken you know 65:17 they wouldn't accept with the hormones 65:19 and the insect in all of the antibiotics 65:21 in storage you can't even find them now 65:23 it's just organic chicken the whole case 65:25 right that's all the eggs now be the 65:28 largest fraction organic eggs and 65:30 they're a little bit more expensive but 65:32 no one cares people are catching on so 65:34 that's one really important revolution 65:36 that's going on that's just an 65:37 information exchange where the 65:39 population is wising up and the 65:42 behaviors changing this is great this is 65:43 what can happen politically yeah we see 65:45 a food and the other one is the electric 65:48 car which is becoming very very popular 65:49 here in Santa Barbara we're sort of a 65:51 trendsetter in this regard and the 65:53 reason that the electric car is cool is 65:56 because you can have solar panels like I 65:59 do and you're off the system you're out 66:03 of the oil system is set up maybe we 66:07 should do is shown this sometime but you 66:09 know you can actually trace the families 66:11 back to the east west trading company 66:13 that that set up the oil company right 66:15 well these are the same guys that 66:18 actually sold slaves I think this is 66:21 talk about slaves system I mean this is 66:23 what they were selling and then of 66:24 course they were they were creating the 66:27 the opium addiction in China which was a 66:32 completely Masonic process with Lord 66:34 Palmerston being the head of the gun 66:37 ships that went down the ante to blow up 66:39 the Chinese that were rebelling and he 66:42 was also the you know the chief 66:45 freemason some kind of like potent 66:47 some kind of bizarre title but he was he 66:49 was leading book both groups and when he 66:52 went to blow up the Chinese so the fact 66:55 that you know you can now have a card 66:58 that you kept transportation and you're 67:00 not in that slave system is wonderful so 67:02 those are two little points of light to 67:05 use an expression Tim that have come 67:07 into existence and hopefully they'll be 67:09 more in the future we have to beat back 67:10 to self-driving car yeah because that 67:13 the whole purpose of that is to have 67:15 complete control over you know where we 67:18 are at all times you know any driver 67:20 running yeah but so in its associated 67:24 with the electric car because because 67:26 musk yeah you know is promoting it but 67:29 you could have it for either gal yeah of 67:32 course yeah it's not really a you know 67:34 so yeah self-driving car has to be 67:37 resisted just like the cashless society 67:40 because these are just you know the 67:43 icing on the cake of slavery where the 67:46 government can simply monitor everything 67:47 at all times and yeah if you like a 67:50 resistor it's sort of tourist 67:53 urbanization they kind of do with that 67:55 well I mean once all wealth is becomes 67:58 like a Bitcoin you know that's just it's 68:00 an event and the internet that the 68:01 government has control over right 68:04 because then you can turn off the switch 68:05 he well man if they want to come back 68:07 with violence and terror they're not 68:09 going to have a whole lot of trouble 68:10 will there because all of the what we 68:12 regard as wealth now can just be turned 68:14 off by a flip of a switch 68:16 yep yep and if everyone's living above a 68:18 target in a little micro apartment well 68:25 we're just not going to let it happen 68:27 Tim we're going to organize ourselves 68:29 we're going to become more clear minded 68:32 and we were going to change the 68:36 effectiveness of our democracy to you 68:40 know put into place people that will 68:42 actually defend the people rather than 68:44 just work young Slagle yeah okay well in 68:48 the US tonight no brothers that is 68:50 that's a lump and I thank you I want to 68:53 thank you for letting me you know go 68:56 into some of the analysis I hope it 68:57 wasn't oh no 68:58 no no I think there's a lot of queue on 69:01 there and I think that said next week 69:03 well we'll be right back in the trenches 69:05 you know with with our like our normal 69:08 stuff but anyway I hope that was of some 69:11 use to it to the listeners and the book 69:14 that the secret secret language of the 69:16 oligarchs what does that do out you know 69:18 it's not I mean it's like whenever the 69:21 author can get his head clear enough to 69:23 finish it I mean it's one of these 69:25 things where I as the the you know 69:28 because I'm writing like basically kind 69:30 of building upon the Caesars Messiah and 69:32 Shakespeare Seagram sight there's just 69:35 no one really can do editing of it 69:36 except me and I'm illiterate so it takes 69:39 a long time and also because you don't 69:43 say one thing I know you and you 69:47 stimulate me and then I have to put in 69:49 the the result of my thinking into the I 69:52 don't want you know it's like you know 69:55 I'd like there's a half a dozen things 69:56 basically which are just you know 69:59 because you would point something out 70:00 and then I would start thinking go gee I 70:02 really need to put that in there and so 70:04 it's it's kind of grown but then I also 70:07 want to shrink it because it gets too 70:09 long and I want to make it readable but 70:13 anyway it'll be out shortly and you'll 70:14 be the first person to get a copy and 70:16 everyone forward to what to think of it 70:19 okay great 70:20 okay well I'll let you go and thank you 70:22 thank you so much we'll we'll get them 70:25 next week but okay good I 10 bye bye 70:27 nice 70:29 [Music] 71:16 [Music] 71:24 you 71:28 [Music] 71:45 [Music] 71:53 [Music] 72:08 [Music] 72:14 the 72:18 there's no 72:19 [Music]

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