0:09 - Introduction to Tonight's Show
1:40 - Rants About Modern World Issues
3:32 - Reflections on Trust and Society
6:32 - The Decline of Empathy
9:13 - The Cost of Living Crisis
11:05 - The State of Service Industry
11:47 - Personal Experiences with Consumerism
15:06 - Food Quality Concerns
19:22 - A Look at Modern Art and Culture
22:26 - Political Commentary on Economic Issues
26:19 - The Challenges of the Welfare State
29:43 - The State of Food and Nutrition
31:23 - Resentment and Its Impact
38:24 - Discussion on Political Ineptocracy
44:49 - Nostalgia for Influential Figures
53:10 - The Challenge of Modern Communication
58:53 - The Return of Influential Voices
1:01:32 - Closing Thoughts and Future Discussions
In this episode, I delve into the pressing issues of the modern world, addressing the things that bother us and discussing how various societal changes reflect a decline in trust and morality. Starting with a personal anecdote regarding high-trust societies, I reflect on my childhood experiences of roaming freely and feeling safe—a stark contrast to today’s environment, where we see an alarming shift towards increased security measures and the erosion of social empathy.
I introduce a recent observation of a cashier-less store concept in Norway, igniting a passionate discussion about the implications of such innovations. I lament the loss of a society where honor and morality prevailed, pondering the results of systemic resentment and distrust that have transformed our daily interactions into a more prison-like existence. I share stories illustrating the pervasive lack of communal trust, such as my unpleasant experiences in modern retail settings, which seem to cater more to suspicion than customer service.
We then navigate through various facets of contemporary life, including rising costs, subpar food quality, the complexity of social interactions, and the impact of government policies which have led to widespread economic distress. My experiences with overhyped consumerism, especially in the context of food, reveal a glaring decline in quality and authentic human connection, leaving many feeling frustrated and disenfranchised in their daily lives.
Through the lens of personal anecdotes, I probe deeper into these societal dynamics, examining the psychological burdens they impose and interrogating the validity of our collective assumptions about civilization’s trajectory. I highlight the struggles between productivity and the entitlements given to those who contribute less, raising questions about the sustainability of such a system.
Throughout the discourse, I invoke the concept of self-ownership as a potential remedy to the spiraling resentment prevalent in our society. In the closing segments, I address the nuances of political and social discourse, referencing various thinkers, including Stefan Molyneux, and reflecting on their impacts. My ongoing musings about resisting pressures to conform or remain silent resonate throughout the conversation, encouraging listeners to engage in critical thought as we navigate the frustrations and challenges of our modern climate.
Join me in uncovering not just the challenges we face, but also the solutions that lie within self-reflection, empathy, and a commitment to rebuilding the trust that is so crucial for a cohesive society.
[0:00] Good evening, everybody. 22nd of May, 2025. I'm sorry that I did not do a show last night, but I didn't do a show last night.
[0:09] So we're going to do one tonight, we're going to do one tomorrow night, and then we're back to our, well, we're back to our regularly scheduled shows tomorrow night. Don't forget, of course, Sunday morning, 11am, we are back on our Sunday morning philosophy ride.
[0:25] So tell me, what is it that bothers you the most about the modern world? What is it that bothers you the most about the modern world? I saw something today and it had my lover guts boiling just boiling and before i go into my own rant i just wanted to know, what uh what bothers you the most what are your rants what are the things that get under your skin and crank your gears i saw something today i always like it well i don't say i like it i always find it vivid when something is it takes me sideways there's stuff that I know bothers me and then there's stuff that just kind of comes in sideways and this one just came in sideways, sideways.
[1:40] I don't think I can answer that question within the character limit yeah appearance over substance bothers me that's a fair one that's a fair one for sure what else what else gets under your skin gets your goat.
[2:03] Now let's just see if we have comments over here i just wanted to check all of that all right, good evening happy wednesday night evil thursday but all right evil running unchecked and it's the most innocent who suffer most thoughts on cernovich asking you to return to x yeah well we'll get to that so i saw something posted on x from thomas soul quotes and a norwegian shows how stores can run with zero staff and parts of the law where you're allowed to enter stores you just have to, tap in with a credit card you can go and pick out whatever you want you pay for it voluntarily, on your way out and, that kind of broke my heart man that kind of broke my heart.
[2:59] It's a high-trust society, the stable society, the society of benevolence, the society of participation, the society where you have honor and morality and self-restraint, and a society of wealth. Oh, you're saying in Japan they have stores too with no cashiers. Yeah. Have you done this sort of self-checkout thing? It's interesting. It's interesting.
[3:33] It breaks my heart. You know, the high trust society of my childhood is gone. It was so high trust. It was crazy. I mean, I mentioned this before. I was roaming all over London from the age of four or five onwards. Never had a moment's trouble. Never had a moment's concern. Never had a moment's violence or bullying or betrayal. Everyone kind of looked out for each other. You get on the bus. He'd keep an eye. The bus driver would keep an eye on you. the conductor or the ticket taker would keep an eye on you and i remember going to the royal uh the the uh natural history museum i remember going to the war museum there was one in downtown england london and then there was one in um hendon i think it was going all over the place i remember the age of six getting on trains to go to boarding school to go and visit my aunts i remember my brother and taking solo trips across a boiling green Sargasso Sea and the North Sea from England to Ireland being picked up.
[4:39] I mean that's all gone. I mean we're supposed to be exploring the moons of Jupiter by now. Now, imagine stores with no cashiers, where people have the honor, dignity, morality, and self-restraint.
[5:10] But there's too much resentment, you know. I talked about this in a show this week, a solo show. It's just too much resentment. Somebody says just got back from japan saw a row of maybe 50 bikes on a bike rack not a single one had a lock on it a society of safety and benevolence and security now of course at home blah blah violence and people didn't intervene so i'm not going to go back to england in the late, London in the late 60s, early 70s, it was some sort of paradise. I get it wasn't, I get it wasn't. But...
[5:59] The road not taken, right? Everyone who's more successful than you, this is how the story goes, how the society's trust is shredded. Everybody who's doing better than you stole from you. Everybody who's smarter than you is exploiting you. Just this snake-charming, you know, weaving-headed, viper-resentment language.
[6:32] That's really uh i just looked at that and i was like a store with no cashier, a store with no security you know in some places in america you uh you can only get pictures of things on the shelf the only thing that's on the shelf is pictures of goods. Yeah, like if you go to small towns here in Canada, you go to these small towns here in Canada, and they have these little parks, and the gazebos and stuff like that, and they have little book nooks. You can sort of leave a book, you can take a book, and all of that. All right.
[7:30] And I don't recall many, if any, futuristic stories, science fiction stories, when they looked at sort of the dystopianism of the future. I don't remember any of them getting it particularly right about what was going to happen and how bad things were going to become.
[7:56] I don't remember ever locking my bike as a kid. I don't. You know, you just bike over to a friend's place, you throw your bike on the lawn, you go in, you do your thing. I don't remember locking my bike. In canada i had to start locking my bike i mean not when i had i had my bike of seven colors all pulled together from various things that were um various uh garbage picking uh franken bikes whatever right but when i started to get a decent bike yeah.
[8:45] This is resentment the resentment the rage the coaxing to immorality the coaxing to resentment, i mean it's not i don't really blame even the sophists that much people's belief in the necessity of the organized coercive nature of statism people's belief that that's necessary and essential and without it, society would just be terrible.
[9:13] People's belief in that creates a market. Lying to people in a free society is not very profitable.
[9:35] But lying to people when the government controls the money supply and interest rates and lying to people becomes ridiculously profitable you know i went to i had to stop off at um a cell phone store uh the other day i was passing through i had to stop off at a cell phone store and i looked like a complete idiot.
[10:04] I mean, depending on your view of me, that may be more common than less. But I... So two things, just the general weirdness and incompetence. So I wanted to... I needed to talk to a cell phone representative for reasons far too boring and irrelevant to get into here. I had to talk to a cell phone representative. And I don't like just showing up at the cell phone store because, you know, there's just scads of people milling around not understanding technology god help you if there's a language barrier or a boomer you're never getting seen by anyone, so i went to the company's website and uh book an appointment book an appointment, this was just one of those days welcome to the life of a philosopher this is one of those days So I booked an appointment for four o'clock.
[11:06] And then I went to go and start the car, but the car did not start. The battery had given up the ghost or something like that, right? So I have to go get the car boosted. And then I have to go and get the battery replaced. So I was going to do that. This is all sort of pushing up against the four o'clock deadline. So my daughter and I, she left coming. We call them toodles. You're going on a toodle, right? I just got a bunch of errands to run, and we usually will listen to music, make jokes, chat, and have fun. So we went to a little tea shop, and we got some tea while we were waiting for the car to get fixed. The car got fixed, and it was about quarter to four.
[11:47] Now, of course, there's no way to contact the store very easily and say, oh, I'll be a little late or whatever. But I'm like, I've got to get there. I thought maybe I can switch it to 4.30, because when I first did it, it was 4.30. And but there was no it was only tomorrow at 11 a.m and I don't want to go back tomorrow so.
[12:05] I drive very responsibly, but let's just say I was hitting the speed limit very consistently. And I get to the store at about eight minutes past four. And I go up to open the door and I'm like, because, you know, it says pull. I go up and I pull and I pull. And I, you know, it was kind of wet and slippery and I almost fell over because the door was locked. And I'm like, okay, it's four o'clock in the afternoon. Why would a cell phone store be closed? And then I see a sign which says, you can't come into the store unless we buzz you in.
[12:49] And I assume this is because of crime or whatever it is, right? First time I've seen that, that you can't go into a store. You have to appeal to them to open the door, right? So the guy comes in, opens the door. and I said oh okay I said I'm sorry I'm a little late for my four o'clock he's like what I'm like I'm sorry I was a few minutes late for my four o'clock, and he's like what and I said no like I booked on the website it said you had an appointment here at four o'clock he's like yeah we don't really do that.
[13:27] What do you mean you don't do that he says yeah you know basically it's just first come first served, And it's been really slow today because it's been raining, right? Or whatever, right? So it's like, you know, my day's kind of organized around getting there at four o'clock and I've got to go jump through the hoops of fixing the car, getting there. And I'm like, wow. So this whole thing where it says, oh, there aren't any more appointments today, but tomorrow at 11, it's like, yeah, we don't, you know, it's just first come, first served. I really, I really miss the world where things worked. don't you, where things were predictable and things made sense why do you this is like the Seinfeld thing you know anybody can take the reservation it's kind of important that you actually hold on to the car.
[14:31] I was at a fro-yo shop with my daughter the other day. And it's a fro-yo shop we've been to before. And before, you could just ask for samples, right? They'd just give you a little cup, and you could go and see if you liked the fro-yo, right? Nope. Not anymore. Not anymore. Now, you are limited to three samples, and they're going to count.
[15:06] And you used to be able to just pick up your little bowl and go over and get your froyo. Nope, none of that. Now you have to go and ask for your bowl, and they'll give you one bowl and one spoon, and you have to ask for the spoon.
[15:27] Everything's just kind of getting prison-like, you know? And, of course, everybody knows people are taking way too many samples, people are grabbing fistfuls of spoons, and the business just has to protect itself.
[15:48] It's kind of everywhere. There's lack of trust, hard-eyed suspicion. And people look in the chisel and take advantage and get something for nothing. With no sense. It's basic empathy. It's basic empathy, isn't it? Isn't it basic empathy? Right? You don't go and just take a bunch of samples because if you were running the business, you couldn't make it work if people were just taking a whole bunch of samples. or you'd have to raise the prices. I'm waiting for the, you know, the things you put on top of the froyo. Oh, all of those colorful things. I do the same couple of things every time because I'm 58 and I gotta stay healthy. I do my peanuts, I do my walnuts, I do a little bit of granola and fruit. I mean, I know the froyo is not that great for me, but my daughter likes it and it is very tasty. You know those things are going to be locked up at some point too.
[17:05] Society has become like this prison cafeteria where you've got to watch your back and not make eye contact and not upset anyone and hold on to your stuff and take your spoon with you when you've got to go pee because it won't be there when you get back. Crazy. A store with no cashier, no employees. A store that runs on people's honor, self-respect, and empathy. It seems to me the most scarce resource these days is all of this. It's just just empathy. Well, if I was running this store, I wouldn't want to pay for everyone's spoons of stole, stolen spoons.
[18:10] There's only one store that I've been to recently that doesn't seem to have a lot of extended and expanded security. What's that you wonder? A bookstore, a bookstore. Where I go with my daughter and I suggest the classics and she's like, I want to read something modern. And I'm like, okay, but it's going to be propaganda. Just flip it open, read the book. It's going to be propaganda. Go with the classic.
[19:00] I miss art where they talk about the essentials of human challenges, moral challenges, challenges of courage, challenges of connection, challenges of good decision making. I miss art that spoke to me as a human being, not as an NPC who needed an upload to some new form of bullshit programming.
[19:23] I mean, I'm working on a new novel. i'm on chapter six and i'm trying to really dig deep into the human condition as i really work i don't know it's a cliche the human condition but you know the challenges that we face that i sympathize with rather than the finger wagging nagging of what you're supposed to believe, for the convenience and purposes of those in power, what is convenient for your rulers to have you believe that's all that's left it's all that's left in Berlin even the instant coffee at the supermarket is locked behind plexiglass You need to ask the clerk for it. Yeah. Yeah.
[20:21] And the price of everything just goes up and up and up. I had to take a cab ride the other day. I was in the cab for about an hour, and it was $135 and then you're supposed to tip, right? I mean, that's wild, man. It's really wild. It's really wild, how expensive everything is. My wife just came back from the grocery store, $350, and it's not like we're set till the fall. Scorching scorching there's a little diner that i go to from time to time, it's 23 dollars for a burger and fries and i remember when it was 15 14 in fact, i don't blame them of course not i don't blame them.
[21:39] You know that you i'm sure you've seen these memes on x and other places you know this is what, this is what was taken away from you the the the world that you grew up in no longer exists.
[22:04] But, and there's too much resentment. Too much resentment. All right. And the cure to resentment is self-ownership, and a lot of people don't seem to want that anymore. Or even a bit.
[22:27] Even a bit. All right. let's get.
[22:39] To, yeah, I did pop up on X again. And Mike Sinovich, very nice, very nice. We like the mic. He said, I remember sitting at my dining room table in an apartment watching Stefan Molyneux's slideshow in South Africa. It was unbelievable. I mean, that literally i didn't believe him then i went every source he provided visited the country and if anything he understated matters yeah that was many many years ago he said uh stefan molyneux is someone else we all owe much to he was discussing topics off limits decades ago he got banned for it i knew who jordan peterson truly was when he let this happen without saying much of anything real ones know who made 2016 and today possible, And he said very nicely, Stefan Molyneux's absence from X is a loss felt daily. I'm aware Moly wants an apology for how he was unjustly banned by Twitter, but that was the prior regime. Elon's 44 billion was restitution enough for all of us. And then some, come back, Stef. And it's nice, nice to see, it's nice to see a comment like that, of course, right? It's nice. And then.
[23:54] Um um it's like what uh what is that guy still around i thought he died where is he where did he go where'd he go ah somebody says one of the most profound pro bitcoin speeches was his bitcoin and political power talk at the next web conference in 2014 i didn't like a lot of what he said towards the end of his time on Twitter, but the speech stands alone as a tour de force. I remember giving that speech. This was in Amsterdam. I remember giving that speech and wanting to yell at everyone for sitting on their phones. That wasn't personal to me. They did it for just about everyone, but he goes, get off your phones. I'm trying to save your lives. Trying to save your lives. What was the price of Bitcoin in 2014? Boy, 11 years ago.
[24:52] Yeah a couple hundred bucks yeah a couple hundred bucks, 700 bucks a couple hundred bucks a couple hundred bucks, let's see here it's gone up, 15 to 20 times since then but i'm sure that whatever they were looking at on their phones was super important super important, Somebody says, it was recently at JFK Airport, 60 bucks for Buffalo Wild Wings, fries and a drink. Yeah. And then everybody wants their tip. I mean, in general, I try to tip reasonably well, especially if I get good service. But I mean, if I'm picking up my own, it's like a convenience store thing. If I'm picking up my own food and bringing it to the cashier, I don't know what I'm tipping for. Yeah.
[25:58] $14 in 2000, bought two extra value meals at the Golden Arches. Lucky to get a small one for that price. Yeah.
[26:10] I was banned under the prior regime. They banned my backup last year, eight years after I stopped using it, LOL. Yeah.
[26:19] Yeah, I was trying to explain to my daughter how my brother and I, when we were kids of course we would go to mcdonald's with two dollars, yeah we would go to we go to mcdonald's with two dollars and be stuffed and have some change back when big macs were like 30 35 cents or whatever it was right crazy yeah post demanding tips start at 30 percent yeah i i've seen them start at 18 or 20 and then you got to go in other or whatever it is, right? I get where people are coming from. I really do. I mean, everybody's kind of desperate. Everybody's kind of broke, right? Do you think all of this has to do with the destruction of the nuclear family or technology? No. I don't think it's anything like that.
[27:19] We decided to take from the competent and give to the less competent. So we punished productivity and we rewarded non-productivity. It's not complicated. Whatever you tax, you get less of. Whatever you subsidize, you get more of.
[27:48] So, it never ends, right? You know, you've seen the analogy, right? That there's a whole bunch of people and they've got a cart, like horses, right? they're carrying a cart. And on the cart are one or two disabled people, right? One or two sick people, and there's like 20 people carrying the cart. And then every now and then somebody jumps from carrying the cart to sitting on the cart, because it's much more pleasant. And then there's more weight to pull, and there's fewer people to pull it. And eventually there's like two or three guys, and everybody else is piled onto the cart, and their backs are breaking, and they go in full Dostoevsky whipped horse route. and it all just crashes all just crashes.
[28:39] Ineptocracy, a system, somebody posted, a system of government where the least capable to lead are elected by the least capable of producing, and where the members of society least likely to sustain themselves or succeed are rewarded with goods and services paid for by the confiscated wealth of a diminishing number of producers. Yeah, yeah. I mean, it's the ultimate slippery slope argument, right? So if the food not only costs more, but I feel the food quality is less, what do you guys think? Our food sucks. these days in general food sucks by the way thank you durbins and thank you matt freedom dot com slash donate to help out the show yeah food food is has turned into absolute slop it's dry it's it's it's oily uh it's it just basically feels like it's been left in a parking lot in Florida sunshine and driven over a few times by SUVs with grit and oil in the tires. I mean, I.
[29:44] Remember the last time, the last time I flied, sorry, this is a Christoburg reference. The last time I flew, I bought a sandwich and it was damn close to inedible. I mean, I'll eat it because, you know, just need fuel and all of that sort of stuff. But I feel like eating these days... I mean, my wife is a great cook. The stuff she makes at home is great. But I'm just talking about any time anything's kind of prepared for me, like that's not from scratch or not with a competent cook. It's just trash. It's just...
[30:21] It's like, you know, if you had COVID and you lost your taste or whatever, right? Or I remember once being in an open house. It was an open house that had pretend fruit. And I remember picking up, I glanced at the sort of pretend fruit. It was a bunch of pears and there was big teeth marks in it. Somebody picked up the pretend fruit and tried to eat it, right? You couldn't eat it, right? And it just feels like I'm just forcing down bland, kind of gross fuel. And, you know, everything is so much added sugar because it doesn't taste good. And, yeah, food quality is trash these days in general. It's just bad. It's just bad. Yeah.
[31:24] Life almost almost i mean outside of some personal relationships and all that but life just kind of feels like something you have to suffer through these days until things get better i don't know when things will get better but everything's just heading in the wrong direction and you just kind of got you to grit your teeth and and write it what do you think about no tax on tips, i think it was political to win nevada not fair but better than having kamala harris as president well, what is it that your barber is going to say i'll give you a one dollar haircut, if you tip me 50 bucks i don't no tax on tips, I mean, why should a waiter get her tax bill reduced relative to a plumber?
[32:24] So, I mean, the political stuff is quite instructive these days. The Doge stuff was interesting, but as far as I understand it, I haven't followed it in any great closeness. So, obviously, correct me if I've got it wrong. But none of the Doge cuts have been codified into law. And Elon Musk I think is he's still going to work a day or two on this stuff but Elon Musk as a whole, is saying he's basically going to cut back on his political spending because he's done enough, and when the money is coerced the most corrupt always end up at the most and they have massive incentives the whole non-profit thing where you get a bunch of money from the government, you give it to a non-profit, you don't do much good with it, but you pay yourself exorbitant salaries. Yeah. And now the big, beautiful bill has passed. I think it's passed, right? And massive increases in spending throughout the Trump's term.
[33:42] Everybody's so emotional. Nobody can look at anything with principles at all.
[33:50] Everything that gets cut. Oh, children are going to die. And everybody's going to create their tear-jerking, squealy-violin, sad sounds. And it's going to be a complete catastrophe. Disaster. Children are going to fall in this. And everybody's emotional. I mean if i were in politics if i were in politics, if somebody said oh my god you're cutting this program that provides essential services for children they're like well you can donate you can donate no one no one's preventing you from donating if you care about these kids you can set up a charity you can, raise the money you do all these cool things right you got this you care, i mean if you if you care enough that you're crying tears of socialist blood because of the cuts if you care that much then go help those kids out go you know if you think that if you think that's important then you should absolutely nobody's going to prevent you from, nobody's going to prevent you from helping the people you claim need it's not going to be enough well how do you know how do you know.
[35:16] If you think people should be helped no one alive will prevent you from helping them.
[35:31] Oh yeah man the story of the modern salad is a tragedy of diminished expectations isn't it let's get our focus back on here, i've gone blurry i'm unblurry, yeah salads have gotten really sad these days swimming in goop clogging dressing lettuce it's like sought by cheapest and bulkiest, right? Lettuce, a bunch of carrot bits, maybe a bit of tomato, a couple of croutons. And it's a soup. It's a soup. No, the poor food quality is just related to the fact that everybody's broke. Like, everybody's broke. Japan's broke. Greece is broke. Europe's broke. America's broke. Canada's broke. Individuals are broke. Everybody's broke. Because the massive tilt, the massive tilt of taking money from productive people and giving it to people who are unproductive has no end save collapse.
[36:50] I talked about this, oh gosh, let me see if I can find it. When did I talk about it?
[37:06] But it was quite some time, quite some time ago, and it's called the welfare cliff, right? So this is a woman with two kids has to earn like $100,000 to just break even. To just break even. And she's not going to be able to do that. So in other words, she's taxed at more than 100%, up to 100%, until she starts making $100,000, which gives her the same amount of money that she gets from the welfare state in all of its various forms. It doesn't even count government schools, right? So she's taxed massively crazy crazy until every dollar she makes past a hundred thousand is taxed at whatever rate that would be 30 40 50 percent or whatever it is right she can't get out the welfare cliff welfare trap is called, you can't do it you can't fix it.
[38:25] Everybody's broke, everybody's getting free phones everybody's getting hotel rooms everybody's broke there's no money left, the republicans failed to implement any of the doge findings yeah, so I mean this is why you know why did you get out of politics five years ago right well because, I mean Elon Musk the world's wealthiest man with the full support of Donald Trump the president and Donald Trump's cabinet well a lot of Donald Trump's cabinet and, a significant proportion of the American population can't cut shit really.
[39:29] So because everyone's broke, everything's just a shell of what it used to be. The price of everything is going through the roof. Wages are stagnating. The price of housing is deranged. Absolutely deranged. I saw some fine print on a credit card company contract the other day where if you miss two payments there, interest rates go into the mid 20%. Like 24, 20. I can't remember exactly what it was, but it's crazy. I mean, let's do this for our American listeners.
[40:19] Average credit card interest rate. That's mad. This is from Investopedia, May 20th, 2025. Oh, two days ago, right? The median average credit card interest rate for May 2025 is what? What is the median average credit card interest rate for May 2025? What's it at? Hello, Harvey. Don't text and drive. I'm begging you. Please don't text and drive. Freedomain.com slash donate to help out the show. Freedomain.com slash donate. We really appreciate it. Anyone going to guess what is the average? Oh, the median, sorry, median. So the median, the median average credit card interest rate is 24.2%. What do you even say? What do you even say?
[41:33] Pardon me. What do you even say? At 24.5%. God help the people, who try to fund things, their purchases by paying the minimum You're going to pay, you know, $1,000 for a hundred change worth of, right? And the delinquency rate is pretty high too. 2017, 2.5%. Now it's over 3%. Yeah, that's completely mental. That is like an absolutely terrifying level of interest. I mean, I don't even know what to say about that.
[42:35] I'm sure there's things you can do where you say, well, 25% hears how long it takes to double. A month, a month. Sorry, a year. That's a year. My bad. Sorry. I got a little too excited there. A little too excited. A month. Well, wait till next year. And people are, what are they doing? Disappointed that Trump suggested fixing credit caught interest at 10%. What is the natural free market end result of this action? I was very surprised Trump suggested this.
[43:21] Sigh sigh sigh, Crazy. All right. If you have questions, comments, issues, challenges, problems, I'm going to die to hear them. Somebody says, this is on X, I owe Stefan so much for giving me the tools to succeed in life. I have not listened to him for many years, as I have him modeled in my consciousness for guidance. I remember growing up, and there was a What Would Jesus Do movement. I have a What Would Stefan Say model instead. That's very nice. I have that too. The story of your enslavement might have ruined my life amazing video, nobody stirred up the feminists more than molly meme all he had to do was mention why women wear makeup and they would lose their collective minds yeah somebody says i know he wants to maximize philosophy in the future as opposed to popularity today but very few philosophers are respected today who sat out of the public square in their time i really think i sat out of the public square I took bullets for 40 years, man, 20 publicly and 20 privately.
[44:50] I want 2007 to 2012 mollybacks as someone. I think there's a shame component limiting his return. I don't think his base really liked his decision to support Trump in 2016. I wouldn't say that my decision was to support Trump. I just didn't like the way the media was lying. That's all. The purpose of the truth about, I've mentioned this before, but, you know, if you're new, you haven't heard it. And the purpose of my series, The Untruths About Donald Trump, was the media was lying about me, but nobody particularly cared that the media was lying about me. But if I could get people to understand that the media was lying about Trump, then that would discredit the media and that would help to some degree me. And it wasn't the only reason, but it's an important factor. Stefan is the OG. His is a much needed voice. We need everyone. I loved his truth about videos. They are gold. Someone said recently that his greatest crime was being early. Yeah. Yeah. That's true. That's true. Please, Stef, come back. We need reason more than ever today.
[46:12] Loved listening to Stefan in the 2015 era, says someone. I just don't have the time slash mental energy to go to all the different little alternative sites and gather all the content to watch or read from everyone whose personal reason is not to be on socials. I use X for news and a bit of trolling.
[46:28] YouTube to learn stuff and entertainment and still follow a couple of the old school blogs. That's it. I mean, I got no problem with that. That's totally fine. If it's too much to put my show into your podcatcher feed, I mean, I used to have to go. So when I was a teenager and I wanted to read books, obscure books on philosophy or prior to the internet, I mean, I used to, I mean, there was a place on page called the Purple Village Bookstore. I actually looked it up some years ago, but it vanished long before the internet could record any of its presence, I think. I used to have to go I don't know if you've ever done this if you're old older oldish like me I don't know if I had to do this you had to go and find ancient books obscure books and you'd have to go to booksellers from place to place take the bus talk to them leave your name leave your number come back if they could ever find it it was a quest man it's a quest and I spent I can't even tell you how many hours pounding the pavement, bookstore to bookstore, trying to find, desperately find a book that I was dying to read, that I'd heard about, or was in some bibliography of some other book. Seemed interesting.
[47:50] It's cool. And I don't mean to sound all kinds of like, the young people today are weak, weak. It's like, oh, do I have to copy and paste a podcast feed into a podcatcher where my phone will automatically download the latest episode so I can listen to it whenever I want? You're too tough. Oh, come on. Come on, man, I'm only human. That's the kind of thinking that, by the way, did not get the ring to Mordor. I spent half my teenage years trying to track down obscure books, talking to librarians, making friends with booksellers, praying that they could get the book in any condition. I didn't care if it had no cover because the better the condition it was in, the more expensive it was. So that wasn't great. And you'd hope to get a book without too many, scribbles and without too many notes and hopefully without too many penises drawn in. So I spent years and years and years, hunting down obscure books.
[49:20] And people are like, okay, I have a computer that will give me the show automatically the moment it comes out, and I can listen to it wherever I want with no particular effort. But that's work, man. I mean, copy-pasting a feed into a podcatcher, oh, my God. I mean, I am but a mortal man. I have but a mortal man's energies and muscles and bones, tendons and focus. I will not live forever. I cannot do it all. You gotta meet me halfway.
[50:08] You Nagasaki'd your entire reputation to bring me the truth. But I... I can't copy and paste something from your website into... A podcast program? God, how dare you even ask me to take on such a blood-soaked quest of Control-C, Alt-Tab, Control-V. How dare you? You may have destroyed your entire reputation to bring the world unpalatable and unfathomable truths, But do you know what it could do to me if I copy and paste? It might contribute one-tenth of a billionth of 1% towards carpal tunnel syndrome, man. I mean, it's true that you got chased all over Australia by people wanting to do you fairly significant harm. That's true. that's true.
[51:23] But have you ever tried to copy and paste? You know, sometimes the copy and paste is in a soft keyboard. It's not even a hard keyboard. Sometimes, okay, Stef, like get real, man. Get real. You got booted off everywhere. Your income and reach got absolutely sledgehammered. But here's the thing. This is what you don't understand. You made those contributions to philosophy. And, you know, that's good. That's good. Goodish. It's nice. It's nice. It's nice you did that. Yay for you, Stef. Good job. But here's the thing, man. You did take on all of the crazy and some of the violent people in the world. But what if I need to copy paste? And my keyboard is not lit. Like it's not a light up keyboard. You know? You know, and sometimes the light from the screen, like even if I go to something blindingly white, like a close-up of your forehead, man, sometimes the light from the screen doesn't reach down to the keyboard.
[52:46] Then what? Then what? Then I've got to pick up my phone and I've got to turn on the flashlight. What if I copy and paste the wrong thing? What, Dad? The fuck am I supposed to do that?
[53:11] What?
[53:26] I mean, what if I hit play and the volume's too high or too low? What if I'm listening to you on a podcatcher and I put the time out so it goes to sleep? And then you're in the middle of making some interesting point and it just goes to sleep. Then what? What if I'm half asleep? You make an interesting point as you do from time to time and then it fades out.
[54:21] I don't know, man. I mean, we're all making our sacrifices, Stef, but you've got to be reasonable, man. You've got to meet people halfway. I mean, it's true that you gave speeches where you had to have bodily security. It's true that the feral leftists, tried to tip over the buses of people who wanted to come and hear you give a speech, and it's true that they threw giant batteries at the windows and it's true that you had to go and pee in the bathroom worrying about getting shanked from behind because you didn't know who was around. Stef, I mean, okay, I'm not going to say that's nothing. I mean, it's not much. It's not much. It's not nothing.
[55:14] But, but Stef, you got to understand, I mean, what if I've listened to like a hundred of your shows and then like out of nowhere, like, like a Velociraptor or a Xenomorph or Ted Cruz trying to kiss his daughter, What if I suddenly feel bad because I've consumed hundreds and hundreds of hours of your content ad-free, largely filler-free, and then I feel bad because I've never donated anything? I've never shared your stuff. I don't want to talk about it.
[56:12] What if I get a sudden attack of conscience or guilt for taking without any reciprocity? You ever think about that? You ever think about my feelings and how I might feel bad? You selfish, cute ball, bowling ball, foreheaded son of a bitch. You strangely ageless emotional manipulator, what if I just feel bad.
[56:57] You might have taken a Haley's Comet impact to your entire career. But I might get a sudden stab at guilt. Because I don't support anything you do in any practical sense. I just take and take and take. Have some compassion, for people who don't want to feel selfish. God. If you had any any like seriously Stef if you had any sensitivity at all the people you'd serve them up a conveyor belt of brilliant deep and powerful insights without them having to, lift their head from the trough of hospital food that apparently being in traction, is the only place that they can get something, You.
[58:14] I could go on and on, but I won't. I was wondering what happened to him when I had read your earlier tweet. Is Stefan Molyneux still producing content these days?
[58:31] Just ask my toilet bowl. Is Stefan Molyneux still producing content these days? Well, I could type that into a search engine, or I could post it five pages down on a Mike Cernovich post where no one will answer.
[58:54] But there ain't no coup de ville hiding in the bottom of a crackerjack box. His Polish trip video was stunning. Yes. Yes, that was good. That was a good one. Best philosopher alive. We sure could use him. boy we sure could use him man i mean my god this man is dying of diabetes, I have to reach 18 inches to my left for insulin. Fuck, he's dead. No, no, he's not. 18 inches. Is anyone producing insulin these days? Oh, is he dead? Dead. Oh, he's still alive? Okay. Does anyone have any insulin? It's 18 inches to your left. What? Oh, fuck. I mean, if that guy dies, it's going to kill me. If that guy dies, oh my God.
[1:00:11] I couldn't take it. This guy is like the best guy on the planet. If he dies of diabetes, I'm going to get tearful again. 18 inches, that's the insulin. And you even got a, somebody will even give you it in an injection. That's all you got to do. I'll even inject it for you. Just say the word. Still alive? Sure could use some insulin, man. Fuck. I want Molly's Truth About Videos back again. Some of the best videos on history out there. His video on George Washington. Super eye-opening. Yes. I miss him too. Losing Scott, Adams, I assume, emphasizes how short our time is here. We need to expend our efforts to achieve maximal good while we still can. Yes! Yes! Do you think that I'm going to complain? Do you think I'm going to complain if somebody takes speech excerpts of mine and reposts them on X?
[1:01:23] Nope. Nope. Not a bit. We need to expend our efforts to achieve maximum good while we still can.
[1:01:32] Okay, so start posting my stuff. What next? Obviously don't selective edit it to put together words saying that I want to bring Mother Teresa back as a scarecrow. Oh, there's one. But, Stef, you got to work. Well, you could repost my videos. What? No, Stef, you've got to work. It's absolutely essential. The future of human civilization, the salvation of the West, and all that is good and noble and rational that the Greco-Roman-Judeo-Christian tradition hangs on your head, Stef. I'm still producing content. You could just repost it on X. What? Somebody says, one of the best to ever do it. A flawed figure, no doubt, but also no doubt a genius. Please, Molly Memes, if you can see this, please come back. Baby come back.
[1:02:31] Just come back, so I don't have to move come and philosophize to me, because otherwise I'm going to have to pick up my phone and I'm going to have to take 20-30 seconds to get your podcast feed on my phone, that's just a bridge too far. I'm only human. We were all banned. Time to get over it. Not an argument. Universally preferable behavior is how I live my life, except how it's written in that stupid book UPB by Stefan Molyneux. I can't explain it. It's just the way it is. Somebody says, Nah, good riddance. Baby, come back. All right. Interesting. We're hitting non-argument levels that shouldn't even be possible.
[1:03:38] Scott Adams is in an entirely different league than Molyneux. There's no replacing Scott. Would Stef call out the woke right? That's just a bunch of nonsense, woke right. It's just a way of saying that the word does not apply to the left because I'm just going to attach it to the right therefore the right and the left are just the same in their craziness.
[1:04:07] Ah oh that's funny this is my um uh matrix uh which pills you take and uh one of them somebody made this i think i made i think somebody else made this meme uh for women it's like a pair of really nice high-heeled shoes or an egg is what i'm offering the red pill and the blue pill, that's funny yeah stefan molleney was actually a high iq thinker.
[1:04:36] Additionally that less than five percent of his audience says someone followed him to bit shoot or other places so that's evidence that he's not that important to most of the people on here i could be misunderstanding but one of the things he recommends in relationships is treat others exactly this they treat you yeah treat other people the best you can and then the first time you meet them and after that treat them as they treat you that's right that's right, that's right, and the audience a website over a copy and paste of a feed that's just a bridge too far, so if they don't care much about me, I will not care much about them caring more about somebody else in a relationship is a way to be sure and guaranteed and absolutely for certain now that you're going to be exploited. Exploited. All right. Let me see if you've got any other comments, issues, questions, problems.
[1:05:56] I don't know why he's so grudging about this. Lots of influencers got treated like trash around that time. Not just him. Time for him to move on and get back in the game. Yeah, it was a little bit more for me. It was a little bit more. It was a little bit more for me.
[1:06:19] Is he still creating content? Look. Look, Woody McTitty says, please come back. I appreciate his integrity, but I miss seeing his insights and wit here, here, here. You know, here's the thing, man. Like, I really want to listen to some Led Zeppelin, you know? But until Jimmy Page and Robert Plant come to my house and play a private concert for me, I mean, what's my option? I mean, do I have to open up a music player, type in Led Zeppelin, and then click on a song? Jesus. No, no, no. They have to come to me. I can't go to Led Zeppelin and get their music because that means picking up my phone and touching a few things, which I know a lot of you do anyway. But what I'm going to do is I'm waiting for them to come to me and play for me.
[1:07:38] Sure, absolutely. And somebody posted one website over. Pretty easy to find them. The person i miss the most is stefan really young lady really i'm the person you miss.
[1:08:17] I miss him so much Stef I miss you, Freedomain.com Oh he's back, I'm not dead I'm one website over, You don't need a fucking Ouija board, I miss death so much If only there was some way To have it back in my ears, If only If only we could pierce the very veil of death And reach out to a philosopher For long... Dust! What? What? Freedomain.com? Don't need to... I don't need to... I don't need to pierce the veil of death. I don't need to sacrifice a... Two score of headless monkeys, really? No Ouija board? What? Are you saying that if I type in freedomain.com, he is resurrected from dust? Come on, man. I miss him so much.
[1:09:42] That's funny. Molyneux is a charlatan. Not an argument. Call into his show and persuade him. Is Stef on rumble? Oh my gosh, I would want him to come back but that would require him to accept reality in a way he doesn't have to it's just these vaguely sinister things that well maybe you just can't handle it it's like anyway, Elon's a moron for not giving him and others a lifetime free membership what Stef has to offer Elon is far greater than that, Banning does work. I really like that dude and totally forgot about him. That's true. I mean, they wouldn't do it if it didn't work. But it works because of you, right? Banning me worked because of just about everyone in this thread. It's not any big criticism, and I'm not bitter. I'm not bitter. It's like, it works. It works because out of sight, out of mind. Squirrel, right? It works. It works.
[1:11:09] I mean, either I go back and don't tell the truth, in which case it's just an exercise in humiliation, or I go back and tell the truth and just get banned again. I mean, what's the point? What's the point? Well, you can get back together with this hot girl, But you have to pretend to be an airline pilot for the rest of your life. Or if she finds out what you really do, she's going to kick you out of a moving car on a gravel road.
[1:11:45] Oh, dear. Tonight's rant is gold. Thank you. I appreciate that. Oh, but if I repost Stef's banned content, I might be at risk of being banned myself. Oh, no. You mean you might have to ante up to help the cause? Yeah. Oh, yeah, they could download the Rumble app and just subscribe to the show. I mean, there's tons of places, right? So it says, I have to say, Stef, I would be bummed to lose you in this space. It's incredible to be able to interact with you this way without all the noise. The people on X who say they miss you are truly missing out in this intimate space. Sure, I love all of your X stuff, but being able to interact with you personally is priceless. Well, thank you. I appreciate that. I have to say, I think it would be good if you started using Twitter again. What, what? I think your takes on things, your arguments, being seen more via Twitter, would be good for society. You know, this is like re-watching a movie and hoping for a different ending, right?
[1:12:47] I think Stef is lucky that banning works, otherwise the people in power would have to use more drastic measures. Yeah, that's very true. That's very true. I don't talk like that. I'm so sorry. That was very petty on my part, but I enjoy it. We used to go, somebody put a video together, Major General blah, blah, blah. No, I don't want to, on a Burma road. Yes, I remember flogging the natives with a wicker chair. So, I'm sorry, this is just my 19th century British pompous imperialist. It's nothing to do with you. People miss seeing you fight with your enemies that aren't on here. I understand your arguments why you don't go back on Twitter. Thank you.
[1:13:29] I also understand a little bit more about corporate liability than most of you, because I founded and sold corporations. Hi, Miss Vimbordia was a colony. What? Oh, hi, James. Sorry. It's white man's burden. We take British reign to India and they become like British people. Certainly, absolutely all created in the image of God what what, shouldn't laugh absolute catastrophe, I like Stef's 19th century British pompous accent, well you burn your brides when the husband dies and that's your tradition and we put to death those who burn the brides after the husband dies, that's our tradition And since we have the Gatling, I believe our tradition will win out as a whole.
[1:14:33] People want the fighty fight, don't they? That's just what they want. They want to see me sparring and winning. And they want to see me land a few blows. It's entertainment. It's wrestling. They just want me to do the wrestling thing, right? Like I saw Andrew Wilson sparring with a couple of feminists. Oh, my God. Crazy man like why would you bother when i punched a girl i consider myself, heavyweight champion of the third grade, i mean i like him i like him he's a he's a smart guy and he's got a great a great bitter laugh i can't do bitter laughs too laughs too well but uh andrew wilson has a great bitter laugh, by the way people total live tips don't make me cry again actually that's how i just made myself cry let's just look at the live tips come on people it's interesting and enjoyable stuff.
[1:15:37] Elon bought twitter because should we do tough guy voice haven't done that for a while Elon bought Twitter because he was the only one that could. Fate called on him. Stef, along with you and Scott Adams, you are the only verbally gifted, highly intelligent thought leaders in the political space. Once he's gone, we won't have anyone to carry the mantle.
[1:16:07] Well, I'm curious. I'm open to hear this. Absolutely opening. I'm absolutely open to hearing this.
[1:16:26] What could I achieve that, say, Trump and Musk could not? Or based upon, say, let's just say Trump and Musk, right? For whatever your political beliefs. What could I achieve? What could I achieve? Thank you, Bowmaker. No problem. No problem. I appreciate that. I appreciate your support. I'm just talking to the others, right? Trump being president. Okay. And has he saved the republic? I mean, I know it's still a couple of months into his, more than a couple, I suppose, into his presidency. They cut any spending. He's got hundreds of executive orders. They can just be undone by the next president because it's not being codified into law.
[1:17:43] What could I achieve? I mean, I'm a reason and evidence guy. I mean, I've got some decent humor. I'm fairly charismatic. I'm a good communicator as a whole. I'm a reason and evidence guy. Have you had embedded and corrupt people change their lives because of your arguments?
[1:18:31] I, in my personal life, no, not really. Yeah, I mean, that's good. So if you have the ability to change people's minds and have them, I mean, I've used this analogy before, right? So let's say that you're walking down the street and a friend of yours runs up to you. He's super excited. He says, hey, man, hey, man, I've won a million dollars in the lottery. And you say, ooh, you shouldn't cash that. He's like, what? He says, you shouldn't cash that. You know, the government doesn't really have any money. It's just going to raise taxes on everyone else. It's going to borrow. It's going to print. It's going to, it's really bad, right? It's really corrupt. Do you think he's going to be like, Yep, torn up, man. You're right. I won't take the million dollars. You're right. You're right. You're right. Now, even if you explain it to him a whole bunch, right? Explain it to him a whole bunch.
[1:19:45] Is he going to walk away from the million dollars? Nope. He's going to cash the million dollar check. Why? Because the benefits are concentrated to him and the costs are dispersed to everyone else. That's the government. that's the government. Everyone who's on the receiving end of government money, the benefits are concentrated on them, the costs are dispersed to everyone else who can't track it. Inflation, borrowing, debt, maybe a generation, well, probably not a generation now, but generation down the road in the past. I mean, even if you tried to, not that you should, right? But even if you tried to wrestle it away from him, he'd fight like hell to keep it, right? He'd call the cops. He'd pop you in the nose. He'd throw you to the side. He'd throw you to the ground. He would use force to hang on to his lottery ticket. Right? You see where I'm going, right? You see where I'm going. People would use force to hang on to their unjust benefits. You say, oh, well, but the lottery is not unjust. It's like, oh, it kind of is. Yeah, it kind of is. Because it's often a government monopoly.
[1:21:14] And the math is pretty bad, and it harms the poor for the most part, of the mathematically illiterate lotteries and gambling. It's just a tax on numerical illiteracy.
[1:21:29] So, man, my brother won the lottery, Stef. My brother won the lottery. You need to talk to him and talk him out of, you need to talk him out of cashing in that lottery ticket. I don't think so. And that's what happened with Doge, right? Das ist die Realität. All right. Any other last donations? FreeDomain.com slash donate. Suggestions, questions, issues, problems? I'm all ears. I'm all yours. Thank you for my hacketing. Thank you for participating in my hacketing tonight. Thank you very much for the tip. I appreciate that. He says, It was nice to see Cernovich say something nice about you. I think the news about Scott Adams has people thinking back onto what was going on in 2015 to 2016. And you were probably the most prominent thinker in the world at that time. I learned about Sernovich, Scott Adams, and many others around that time because of you. I really wish all the people you helped could have come to your defense sooner.
[1:22:51] You're a unique Stefan, and this community is unique. I personally have no interest in you defending a bunch of people who just recently went Babchik crazy over COVID and today mostly pretend like nothing happened. As blunt as it sounds, people should get. The coming misery they seem hell-bent on bringing forth. Yeah, I mean, and this, thank you for the tip. Thank you, Tor. I appreciate that. Stef needs to be nominated for a Screen Award along with Lo Whaley? Lo-y Whaley? Who dat? Who dat? I can't look at modern actresses. They just seem like asylum inmates to me. Stef, how do you interact with normies in everyday life? Let's say you were getting a haircut and the barbershop's repeating some BS they heard in mainstream media. Do you try to engage them in a rational conversation or do you just smile and nod and leave them be? I mean, I say I don't lie, right? And I won't pretend. I'll say, I don't quite see it that way. Yeah, I don't quite see it that way.
[1:23:58] I don't see it. I don't see it that way. Oh, how do you see it? Well, you know, my approach is, you know, right or wrong, but go generally with that, right? How much of a GoFundMe goal would you really accept to start using Twitter again? Listen, that's very kind, and I appreciate the sentiment, but it's not for sale. Not for sale. Not forehead for sale. No, I'm pretty blunt with people. I'm pretty blunt with people. If they mentioned COVID, I'm like, yeah, things went a little crazy over COVID there. Things went pretty nuts over COVID. I mean, people wearing masks that say masks won't help. Six-foot distancing came out of nothing. And what is it? This is Dr. Naomi Wolf, who I think she had like 3,200 volunteers who went through the Pfizer data when it was first, when the judge first ordered it released. I think that's the one they wanted to hang on to in the nether in the back rooms for 75 years. And she, I think, the group that she organized were the first to point out that there was, what, an 82% miscarriage rate in the Pfizer trials.
[1:25:12] And I was reading, I find this hard to believe. I just find the number shocking, shocking beyond words. So I'm not saying she's wrong about any of this or her researches are wrong or whatever. But if you've got that stuff that is as deadly to babies as a morning after pill, that's just absolutely shocking. Shocking. I mean, verify. Verify any of this. Have you heard this? It's wild. It's wild. Stefan Molyneux, stop being a pussy. Catty. All right. One of the all-time greats. He's still one of the biggest influences on my political thinking 10 years later.
[1:26:05] Countless kids will grow up with reduced stress, trauma, and abuse because of the work of Stefan Molyneux. How many so-called public intellectuals can claim that glorious crowning achievement? The man deserves a monument. Thank you.
[1:26:22] Yeah. Oh, somebody did a gif of me shirtless. Beautiful. Beautiful. My Taylor Swift tweet. Oh, when was that? December 9th, 2019. This is my famous tweet. I can't believe Taylor Swift is about to turn 30. She still looks so young. It's strange to think that 90% of her eggs are already gone, 97% by the time she turns 40, so I hope she thinks about having kids before it's too late. She'd be a fun mom, smiley face. 10,000 replies. This guy, Zach Bornstein, wrote, Congratulations, this is the worst thing I've ever seen. To which I replied, wow, you need to pick up a book sometime. Try some Alexander Solzhenitsyn, or a general history of the 20th century.
[1:27:39] And another guy wrote it's when he quoted it's strange to think that 90 of her eggs are already gone and he wrote yes stefan yes it is strange to think that stranger to say it aloud also maybe a woman is more than a baby factory like with independent thoughts and feelings and professional ambition and stuff and i wrote back was your mother just a baby factory, oh it just went on and on hey dude I'm sorry to break this news to you but nobody wants to fuck you says someone and I said please do your best to stop thinking about my sex life, and then this woman said this is so disgusting delete this and I wrote back do not tell me what to do with my body.
[1:28:27] And then I posted a picture of a dragon my daughter drew and said look what an egg can make, excellent stuff it was fun to um reply back to people i mean i'm not sure it changed anybody's in particular but it was fun and then people quoted a video of my wife wants a divorce which was a call-in show. That was great. Oh, so many replies. Just hysteria. Absolute hysteria. Somebody wrote, I can't believe Stefan Molyneux is 53 years old. He looks a lot older. It's strange to think that 97% of his hair is already gone. He only had 90% when he turned 50, so I hope he thinks about having a hair transplant before it's too late. It'd be nice to see him with some hair. Actually, that was pretty witty, I thought. That was pretty witty. My skin just slid all the way off and found its way into the bin right where that weird tweet belongs, funnily enough. Oh, that's funny. I don't know how it is that people...
[1:29:56] How it is that people can conflate having babies with having hair. Hair is inert and blah, blah, blah, right? Anyway, it's fun stuff. Fun stuff. All right, so let's see here. All right um, Taylor is no longer hot I think Trump said that I don't know if he was talking about I mean he's always ambiguous whether he's talking about her physical hotness or um her um I mean she's she's pretty she's very pretty she's very pretty I've never found her sexy and I don't think she particularly tries to be sexy but all right all right uh any other last tips freedomend.com.net. If you're listening to this later, I really would appreciate it. And I will stop here. And I really do thank you for your time tonight. It was a real pleasure to chat with you all. And we will talk to you tomorrow night too. Tomorrow night too, where there will be more hacketing. And we say, scene.
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