0:12 - Let us get our groove and our philosophy on.
12:28 - The Power of Political Differences
21:48 - The Nature of Violence
27:03 - The Struggle with Cowardice
33:41 - Dating and Young Women
42:00 - Parenting and Relationships
56:09 - Escaping Trash Planet
1:04:36 - The Dangers of Modern Dating
1:14:22 - Self-Redemption through Self-Awareness
1:25:39 - The Importance of Philosophy
1:31:22 - The Absurdity of Current Politics
1:33:22 - Reflections on Impact and Legacy
In this episode, I delve into a myriad of topics covering societal concerns, current events, personal anecdotes, and philosophical reflections. With a mix of humor and gravity, we explore the unsettling state of global affairs, where the specter of a potential World War looms ominously, and how it complicates our aspirations for personal peace and family life. The emotional narratives shared by listeners highlight the importance of nurturing the next generation, especially as one listener announces the arrival of their third child, underscoring the hope we hold amidst prevailing chaos.
We transition into personal reflections on parenting, touching upon past experiences and lessons learned from my parenting rants. As we celebrate the joys of parenthood, I emphasize the profound responsibility we bear in shaping a better future for our children—a future that counters the harmful norms propagated by those in power. The conversation circles back to the challenges posed by societal structures that often prioritize control over freedom, and the consequences of blind obedience that we must navigate.
I then pivot to discussions surrounding current financial shifts, particularly the meteoric rise of Bitcoin, which has outpaced the valuations of major banks. With a historical perspective, I examine how the adoption of cryptocurrencies parallels past technological revolutions. The discourse is interspersed with insights into the ongoing evolution of societal norms and values, revealing the clash between traditional institutions and the emerging digital landscapes.
Amidst these discussions, we delve into deeply personal experiences shared by listeners, including the dynamics of family relationships and the lingering impacts of childhood interactions. I invoke the importance of examining the implications of our upbringing on current behaviors and choices, making the case that a critical analysis of these patterns is crucial for genuine growth and well-being.
We gently tread into potentially contentious territory, unpacking political views and their real-world consequences, while applying layers of critical thought to social and familial bonds. I challenge notions of 'tolerance' as mere acceptance, stressing the necessity of active engagement in ethical discourse and asserting the importance of standing firmly against injustices that threaten our values.
The episode culminates in a hopeful vision for the future, despite the dire challenges we face. Inviting a sense of collective responsibility, I urge listeners to remain vigilant and proactive, emphasizing that the fight against societal decay requires both wisdom and courage. Through humor and serious introspection, we strive to cultivate an understanding that fosters connection and ultimately leads to transformative societal change.
As I respond to various questions from the audience, I underscore the need for intentional parenting—a reminder that the path to raising healthy, emotionally grounded children lies in our hands. Ultimately, we are called not just to reflect on our experiences, but to take meaningful action that leads to a brighter tomorrow.
[0:01] Hello, good evening, welcome to, oh, second, last third of November 2024, it's the 20th, and good evening, good evening, nice to chat with you tonight.
[0:13] Let us get our groove and our philosophy on. Let's hope we don't explode into radioactive nitrogen shadows before the end of the show. Be nice to finish this shit off before the fucking sociopaths in power blow us all sky. Remember all those plans you had? Might be a bit on hold. Because they can't stop themselves from trying to start World War III.
[0:46] Well, maybe we'll meet in the great beyond. Jeff says, good evening, Savannah. My wife and I are welcoming our third child into the world tomorrow. Put another point in the peacefully parented generation column just wanted to say thank you for all that you do especially for showing us a better way when it comes to parenting yeah it's funny i did a whole series of parenting back in 2006 my 2006 rants are old enough to vote now isn't that nice thank you zinf bought the toolkit i needed to start my business nervous but optimistic you are welcome then um i hope that you'll keep us posted about how it's going and congratulations of course. A zillion fold. Thank you, thank you, thank you. And congratulations on your child. It's a beautiful, beautiful thing.
[1:36] All right. Oh, what have we got? You're the greatest of all time. Well, thank you. No explody, please. You know, that's pretty much the chant of people who have premature elaboration. No explody, please. At least not quite yet. Thank you, Matt. Appreciate your support. And, um.
[2:06] Questions, comments, issues, and challenges. And if you don't, I certainly have a thought or two. I certainly have a thought or two.
[2:22] Somebody said, it's a good quote here, in my final meeting with my employer, where they asked if I had changed my mind regarding taking the vax. I asked them if anyone else working for them had communicable diseases like HIV or hepatitis. They said, well, they couldn't disclose that information because it was personal. I then asked why they weren't fired for having a lifelong communicable disease, but I was being fired for an illness that if caught lasts only a couple of days. They were silent. What they did to people like myself and countless others was not only outright discrimination, but it was criminal it must never ever happen again but as long as it happens as long as the state allows you the profit of evil as long as the state is the final subsidy for evil evil will continue and there will be no escape somebody asks anthony says do you do your own home gardening just curious i do i do i have um a patch fairly large patch and i plant we have a chain link fence around it to keep wildlife out. And yeah, I weed and all of that kind of stuff. So yes, I do. I absolutely love, I love the food that comes out of that. I just love the food that comes out of your own garden. It really is the best. I got into this many, many years ago. I'm a big salad guy, love salads. And my wife is a whiz with salads because she's a vegetarian.
[3:51] And her Greek salad is just fantastic not the kind of thing you'd get in a restaurant it's um it's uh onions tomatoes feta cheese and oil ah so good it's so good so your fresh lettuce from your garden uh is uh.
[4:09] Unmatched unparalleled my friend unparalleled yeah i love it i love it it's good to stay close to land, and it's good to remember where, in fact, food comes from. Just an important thing to remember as a whole. All right. Did you know Bitcoin is now worth more than the top three global banks combined? Bitcoin, 1.85 trillion. JPMorgan Chase, 684 billion. Bank of America, 356 billion IC Bank of China 280 billion fuck the banks go gold go orange man bad orange cash good, oh my gosh, Bitcoin is now worth more than JP Morgan, Visa, and MasterCard combined, 1.86 trillion for Bitcoin. This is slightly different times, of course, 1.76 trillion for JP Morgan, Visa, and MasterCard. The fastest growing asset in the history of the planet, and they're still, it's so early. The consumption or the number of users of Bitcoin is about equal to the number of users of the internet in 1999.
[5:28] The DNC has announced, the DNC has announced they are laying off long-term permanent staffers for just one day's notice and no severance pay after overwhelming election losses. They spend a billion dollars in a hundred days and ended up $20 million in debt. Oh, well, she can always fight Jake Paul to get her money back. Oh, oh my. It's just oats. Food delivery. Ah. It's not even hot. Oh, sorry. I just panicked a little. You know how sensitive I am? Now, listen, sorry, just before you go, I just had a, okay, you can eat the apple.
[6:12] Now, Izzy has learned something about trolling, I assume from the internet, certainly not from me, little old me. And um would you like to reveal your latest troll that actually occurred just before, just before you come a little closer come to here uh the the latest troll that occurred just before the show so basically earlier today or i don't know i think it was yesterday you had half a banana yeah and didn't eat the other half so it was just in the fridge even though it's kind of diabolical so i took it upon myself because like not like wrapped up just in its peel yeah it's in the fridge not on a plate i just didn't want to finish it last night i was full yeah so i took like the half not half i just took a little chunk off and then put it back so when you so you cut the top off and then you put it back so then when i ate to eat my banana it launched itself at me like a scud missile of potassium. It gently dropped on the floor. But it almost hit my toe. Oh no. I could have been potassium toad. Monstrous. Anyway, that's just important. Remember, thank you for the snack. I begged Disney not to get me something crunchy. Begged. No, you were like, what's the worst thing I could possibly eat on this show? Thank you. I appreciate that. Bye. Oh, you can close that. Yeah, thanks. Ah, delightful.
[7:41] Uh, oh, somebody says, Denise says, I'm making this right now with oats too. It's good. You should try it out. Thank you. I will pass, before I forget, I will pass that recipe. Thank you, Denise. Peanut brittle topped banana. That's your passive aggressive, uh, uh, uh, approach to your dentist, right? Just have a whack load of peanut brittle right before you go in from a listener. Uh, thank you. I appreciate that. Uh, Stef could have slipped Mario Kart style. No. Mario Kart. Mario Kart. I could have slipped Mario Kart and a banana. Sorry. I've been reading this novel with my family. Sort of read it out loud. And I am king of cheesy, outrageous accents. And there's Enzo. Is he Italian? Italian. It's just everything has to be like, hey. Like I'm casting a magic fingertip spell of delusion. Lower intestines with the hands. Right. So, all right.
[8:47] Even if the US owned all 21 million Bitcoin, which is impossible, they would have to sell them all for 1.7 million US to pay the current debt. I think this rate is going to be worth more than 1.7 million in my humble opinion. Well, no, you can't own 21 million Bitcoin, of course, because what is it, 25 or 28% of them lost? Like 25 a quarter of them are estimated to be lost who knows for sure but estimated to be lost, is there a real plan to pay the national debt with bitcoin i've been out of the loop since i've been rather busy well i mean not a real plan but it's a pretty good approach it's a pretty good approach, all right uh i don't like salads because of all the work to cut and make them i like eating whole vegetables excellent you should post a picture of the salad sometimes i'm so jealous of people who can make a good greek salad oh i will i absolutely will i absolutely will thank you, michael saylor says bitcoin is going to be worth 13 million per coin I mean, you've got to get in the long run, we either end up like it's Bitcoin or nothing, right? You understand? It's Bitcoin or bust. Like we either end up with Bitcoin or the world is in flames. So.
[10:16] Yeah, Satoshi's wallet is like 1.1 million, right? And the remainder won't be mined till like 2140. Yeah, but I mean, that's diminishing returns, right? There's very few left towards the end, right? The halving and the halving of the double work requirements. That is a very different thing, right?
[10:35] Who needs Uber Eats when you have Izzy? Yes, that's right. That's right. It's very funny. She's very funny with her little practical jokes. It was very good. Somebody says, sorry about the other day. In a rush to get my question out, I didn't word the question properly. And you're right. We must represent your views correctly. Stef has often mentioned siblings in her life longer than anyone. So it's sad that some siblings either neglect each other or can be quite spiteful. However, many siblings also have loving relationships. Yeah, I don't know. I mean, how many siblings or how many people have you met who have great relationships with their siblings? I mean, other than the Tates, it seems. And just by the by, right? I mean, I don't know if you've been following any of this, but according to Andrew Tate, and I'm pretty sure he's not lying about this. According to Andrew Tate, the Romanian government has said that the majority of the evidence that was gathered against him was illegal, unsubstantiated, and the witnesses did not appear to be overly credible, to put it mildly. And I think they've got a couple of days to revise it, but that's probably going to be dropped. And that is important. Hmm, that's so good. And that is, that is important.
[11:55] Yeah, I think Max Keiser gave Alex Jones a bunch of Bitcoin. However, of course, they would have just ended up in the hands of the Sandy Hook lawyers, right? So I don't view that as a huge loss.
[12:17] Boomers would probably just get mad that the younger generation figured out how to unfuck their mess. Well, that's the argument, right? The boomers can say, well, you have to pay five times for a house.
[12:28] And the younger generation can say, okay, boomer, you just have to pay a hundred times or a thousand times for Bitcoin.
[12:49] Max works for Gary. Max Kaiser? I don't know what that means. All right. Let's see. What else did I have stored that might be of interest to you?
[13:10] Uh, it is wild to see the leftists using the against me argument, which I've recommended to non-leftists or, and leftists too, for decades. It's fascinating to see them use the, I'm not going to have anything to do with you against me argument, right? That, that if it's not, oh, they're not just political. There's no such thing as political differences. I mean, that's like calling being pro or anti-rape, just dating differences. It's like, no, no, no, there's pro-violence and there's anti-violence. There's pro-peace and there's anti-peace. There's pro-reason and then there's pro-shooting people. There's nothing else, right? Reason or violence, negotiation or brutality, changing people's minds or throwing them in rape cages. I mean, that's all there is. That's all there is. And it's really sad. You know what? It's really sad to me that people say, well, it would be so petty. To break relationships with people based on mere political differences. You know, political differences get people killed. Political differences get people thrown in jail. Political differences are why there are concentration camps and fucking gulags.
[14:26] Mad. Mad. Now, have you seen this thing where, it's sort of on social media, a little bit all over the place, and what it is is all of these sex workers coming on the internet to say how much they know about men. How much they know about men. Oh, man, it's wild. It's absolutely wild. People who go, and I've talked to a bunch of listeners who go to sex workers. And of course, I have great sympathy for their childhoods and all of that for sure. But holy crap. I mean, it is really, really dysfunctional to go to a sex worker, to get sexual pleasure out of somebody who has been abused for the most part, and it may currently be being abused. And I get there's some laziness in it and all of that, but it's really messed up, man. It's really messed up. Yeah, political process has the power to send people to war. It has the power to enslave your children.
[15:32] Financially, it has the power to indoctrinate, to set children against the political power. Oh, it's just the difference of political opinion. There are no political opinions. Everything is force. I don't know why this needs to be said in the world. Everything is force there's no political opinions well it's just a difference of opinion, you know the guy with the knife in my ribs just has a difference of opinion about where my wallet should be it's just a different let me live and let let's just why would you get so hung up over these petty differences of opinion bullshit it's all force it's all violence or anti-violence that's it. That's it. I mean, let's say your kids have a little lemonade stand, right? A little lemonade stand on the corner.
[16:38] And let's say they make 50 bucks, right? They sell a hundred drinks over the course of a hot sweaty day for 50 cents and they make 50 bucks right that's a lot of work right right 20 drinks an hour that's five hours right so they sell and they make 50 bucks and they're incredibly proud pleased happy excited they made 50 bucks and let's say your neighbor, pushes your children's lemonade stand over and steals their 50 bucks.
[17:25] And you see this, right? They're down on the corner, down on the corner, and you see your neighbor, he's an adult, right? And he pushes their lemonade stand over, and he takes their 50 bucks, and they're crying.
[17:42] Would you still be friends with your neighbor after he stole $50 from your children? The fuck is wrong with people? Do you, I mean, I'm not talking to you guys, because you get it, but like, do you not understand? Pushes over your kid's lemonade stand, takes their 50 bucks out of their hand, pries it out of their hands, leaves them crying and sobbing on the ground, and you'd be like, oh, he's totally welcome to my next barbecue. It's just a difference of opinion about entrepreneurship. We just have differences of opinions. That's it. Jesus. You know, these statist assholes are having your children born a million dollars in debt, right? Million? Slightly more than 50 fucking dollars. It's like people are so concrete. Well, you know, if my neighbor took 50 bucks from my kids, I'd be incensed. He wouldn't be welcome in my home anymore. I'd have fuck all to do with him. He's not coming over to my barbecue. I'm not. Jesus.
[18:56] The fuck 50 bucks is meaningless relative to the destruction that the state does to children as a whole but it's just a difference of political opinion i wouldn't want to be petty i wouldn't want to be petty oh i'm such a large hot minded toleranted person that even though people are advocating for a system that enslaves my children about a zillion times more than the 50 dollars I'd be incensed at the $50, but the million dollars and the propaganda and the drugging and the hacking, oh no, that's, uh, it's just a difference of opinion. That's like circumcision. Well, it's just a difference of opinion. Yeah, with a dicksaw. Hacking off a third of the penis skin, lowering sexual pleasure. Harming the woman's vagina because of a lack of sheathing of the penis thrusting. Nah, it's just a difference of opinion. I'm open-minded. Yes, you're so open-minded your fucking brain fell out. I wouldn't want to let mere political differences get in the way of a good relationship. I wouldn't want to let a mere $50 being stolen from my hard-working children.
[20:21] Let's say your kid goes to school with 10 bucks for lunch and every day some kid pushes him in the mud and takes his money well you've got to be friends with that kid you know boy son you've got to be friend with that because it's just a difference of opinion on property he just has a difference of opinion about where you're where you're where you're ten dollars it should be it's just a it's a matter i mean he he likes red you like blue you like peace he likes violence he's a thief you're not but it's just all differences of opinion because everything apparently on the right is just an opinion dear god above dear literally dear god above thou shalt not steal, oh but all the people who advocate theft from the unborn oh no that's that's just a difference of opinion. It's not an opinion. If you're a Christian, it's a commandment. It's a commandment. It's a commandment. It's not an opinion. It's not an opinion. Thou shalt not murder, thou shalt not kill. Is that not a little bit more than an opinion?
[21:41] Every week you've got the government stealing 20-30% out of your paycheck. It's a lot more than that, brother.
[21:49] That's just the shit you see. It's a lot more than that.
[22:03] I mean, imagine someone who drugged someone and then cut off their foreskin. Or maybe they didn't even drug them, just kind of strapped them down, cut off their foreskin. That would be assault. No, it's just the difference of opinion.
[22:24] Like, you don't know. The younger among us here the younger among us here sadly you don't know how much you've lost, that's terrible my first job I got paid $2.45 an hour right got paid $2.45 an hour, now you could buy a candy bar for 10 cents, so i could buy 24.5 give or take right some tax right just just raw cost right 20 24.5, candy bars right now candy bars are about a buck and a quarter which means that the starting wage for an 11 year old kid should be almost 31 dollars, but instead, it's not, right? I mean, what is the minimum wage up here in Ontario is like 16 and change? Dollars lost 25% of its value over the last half decade.
[23:44] Well, it's just a difference of opinion, though. I think I should keep the fruits of my labor. They think I'm a fiat fucking slave. It's just a difference of opinion. You know, like some guy, you got your safety deposit box and some guy drills in and takes half your shit. And it's like, well, it's just a difference of opinion. I think I should keep my family heirlooms and my sentimental items and he thinks he should sell them for drugs. It's just a difference of opinion, man. Oh, there's tolerance Just say I'm scared Just be honest I'm chicken, I'm scared, I'm nervous, I'm frightened I don't want to upset people I don't want to call people immoral Okay, just be honest That's all I'm asking Just stop lying and saying you're tolerant You're just chicken shit, That's all, That's all.
[24:47] It's not tolerance, you're just frightened and listen i don't i'm fine that you're frightened i'm fine that you're frightened not everyone is built for war i get that not everyone is built for intellectual combat i get that i have no problem with it just don't use the stolen valor don't say that you're a warrior of tolerance. I mean, it literally makes my gorge rise. It makes my gorge rise. Just say, I'm chicken. I'm going to let other people do it because I'm frightened. And that's fine. I'm not, honestly, I'm not complaining about the fact that some people are too chicken to take our moral courses. Chicken, of course, is a prejudicial phase. Too circumspect, to discretion. They have too much discretion. It's fine. Not everyone is built for intellectual combat. That's fine.
[25:46] Then get out of the way and stop clogging up everyone's brains. See, honest cowardice doesn't infect others. Dishonest cowardice does. So dishonest cowardice is when it reframes itself as a virtue and thus infects other people and takes them down. If you don't want to be my ally, that's fine. But don't strip me of other allies by talking about the virtues of tolerance. Tolerance is earned by people who are tolerant. right?
[26:25] I mean, if my de-platforming didn't teach people that tolerance was not a virtue, I don't know what will. But that's the problem, is that if you're honest about being too nervous or frightened or wishing to be inoffensive and not upset people, that's fine. Then just be honest and say, you know, it's not for me. I mean, I like my peace and quiet. I'm going to let other people do the fight, other people do the battle, maybe I'll support them in the background, but I, yeah, right? But no, no, no. They can't just say, I'm chicken. They say, cowardice is a virtue. Cowardice reframed as tolerance. That's a virtue. And then they fuck everyone else up. That's the problem. You're spreading your cowardice by reframing it as a virtue.
[27:03] That bothers me enormously.
[27:21] That's the problem. Your kids are crying because the neighbor stole their money. And you're like, well, it's important to be tolerant. He just has a difference of opinion from you kids.
[27:38] It's wrong for you to be upset because that means that you're not going to be tolerant. All right. Question from Rumble.
[27:49] Catching a live stream. I asked this in the comments of your last live as it was going to be 2 a.m. here for the live. Here's my question. I would love if you could touch on the talk you had with your daughter a few years back when she was becoming a young teen about what it means to head into teen slash adulthood as an attractive female. She says, I'm female and didn't handle it the best way when I was young. My daughter just turned 12 years old and is very pretty, so I'd love to hear you take on all of this stuff. By the way, my husband, her dad, and I are still married and have a good, happy relationship. Both sets of grandparents and all family members are all in stable, long-term relationships. Right i appreciate that i appreciate that so i'm not going to give you my direct speech in particular to my daughter because that's obviously specific to what i know about her and so on but i will say that for young women for young ladies you have a power granted to you by nature You didn't earn it, right? So boys want to kiss girls and there's nothing wrong with that. It's very healthy and positive thing. It's, you know, where we all end up coming from is from the kissing and all of that. So boys really want to kiss girls and you didn't earn that. And whatever you didn't earn, try not to profit from. If you didn't earn it, try not to profit from it because it's kind of like a pillage, right?
[29:12] Like, I mean, if you find a wallet on the street with like $200 in it, you shouldn't just take the money and spend the money because you didn't earn it. You just kind of found it by accident or you landed into your life by accident. Then that's kind of what prettiness is. Nothing wrong with prettiness. Prettiness is a beautiful thing in the world. It's a lovely thing in the world. You should be happy and work to maintain your health and your attractiveness as a whole throughout your life. It's a beautiful thing, but don't think that it makes you better or special or valuable just because nature has implanted in boys against their will, I might add, which is, again, not to say that there's anything wrong with it, but it's against their will.
[29:51] And, you know, so for instance, I would say something like, when you were younger, right, when you were a girl, and the boys were playing baseball, let's say you were seven or eight, maybe nine, and the boys were playing baseball, and you wanted to join, they were, you know, maybe they were nice about it, but they weren't super keen, right, because you were a girl, and maybe you couldn't throw as well, or hit as well, or run as well, for whatever reason, right? So they were kind of not that keen on you. And then, you know, 12, 13, 14 years old, it all flips. And the boys become girl crazy, the girls become boy crazy a bit. And it's a beautiful thing. It's something to embrace and enjoy and be happy about. It's why life is here. It's everything in life is trying to make more life and all of that. But it doesn't make you better. Because when the boys didn't want you to joined the baseball game because they were like, oh, does your little sister have to play? Come on, man. Right? So you haven't fundamentally changed from the age of eight to the age of 13.
[30:50] But boys' relationships to you has fundamentally changed. That's programmed into us. Right? Like if you're walking down the street, you see all these restaurants. Why are the restaurants there? Because we get hungry.
[31:00] We're programmed to eat. Right? So our bodies are like, hey, we need some food. Otherwise, I'm going to have to start eating your belly. Right? It would be more than a snack for me. But we're programmed to get hungry. We're programmed to get thirsty. So there are people who sell bottles of water. There are people who sell hot dogs and different kinds of food. And that's just programmed into us. When we're tired, we want to lie down. We want to have a nap. We want to sleep or whatever it is, right? It's just programmed into us. And wanting to, like liking girls in a romantic way, wanting to kiss girls and so on, it's just programmed into boys.
[31:38] And it's a beautiful part of life, but it doesn't make you valuable because boys are programmed to want to kiss you or want to chase you or ask you out. Again, it's not a bad thing. It's a good and beautiful thing, but it's shared by everyone. And because otherwise you'd have to say, well, I guess I was just a really negative kid when I was eight and the boys didn't want me to play baseball. And now that I'm 13 or 14 or 15, it's a positive thing. Like that's too much of a roller coaster, right? It wasn't that the boys disliked you before and now because you were bad and now they like you because you're good, but it's really easy to get vanity and to feel like you're special because of things you didn't earn, right? And now you're a pretty girl. That's great. That's wonderful. It's a beautiful thing and so on. But you didn't really earn that. That's just kind of built in. And of course you earn it, you maintain your weight, you're healthy and all of that. And that's good. You can certainly be proud of the things that you do earn, such as healthy weight and exercise and all of that.
[32:38] But in the great game of romance, we are basically run by, you know, hormones within the body, right? And again, I'm not trying to diminish it or make it a bad or negative thing. I'm just saying that the fact that hormones get activated in boys doesn't substantially change your value as a human being. Just because you're being chased doesn't mean that it's a good thing. I mean, zebras are chased by lions. That doesn't mean that the zebras want to be caught or necessarily it's a good thing, right? So enjoy the dating, enjoy the boys, enjoy the attention, but recognize that it doesn't fundamentally change your moral nature. It doesn't change your value in a foundational way because the value that you want to get out of life is doing the right thing and being good and that you earn, right? Every moral choice you make, every good choice you make, that you earn. But the fact that there's a big spigot that turns on boys desire to chase and kiss girls doesn't fundamentally change your value, but it's really easy to think that it does. And that's not, that's not a good thing though. That's not a good thing in the long run.
[33:42] So I hope that helps. And, um, if you didn't get it now, perhaps you can get it later.
[33:50] All right. Let's see here. Somebody says, I was spanked as a child a few times and have spanked my three of four children. I have no trauma from this. I have followed you for years and respect your opinion. My question, is there something wrong? Is there something wrong? I don't know. We're at the end of that. Oh, you're very welcome. And if there's more that I can do, freedomman.com slash call, I'd be very happy to help out. Um, so if you were spanked a few times, I mean, if it was just swats on the butt and so on, I can certainly understand that there wouldn't be any deep, significant, lasting trauma out of that. But the question is, if you had parents willing to hit you, and if you're willing to hit your child, what other effect does that have, right? I mean, let's take a silly and extreme example. Some guy kills a hobo, right? You say, well, but I only killed one, like 99.9999999% of my life, I wasn't killing anyone. It's just one time, just one time, right? Well, but that's kind of important because that is the tip of the iceberg of the whole personality structure that's willing to kill someone, you know, bury the body, cover it up, not confess, not take your punishment and move on, right? So it's more the manifestation of hitting and the justification for hitting.
[35:18] It's an indication of an entire personality structure right so if your parents hit you say five times of from the age of i don't know five to ten or whatever they hit you once a year okay that's obviously you know you probably get more injuries learning how to ride a bike, but it's the fact that your parents are willing to hit you and what that tells you about your parents right right that that it's what it tells you about that they're willing to use violence that they're, in a sense, eager to use violence and they think it's the good thing and the right thing to do, which means that violence remains omnipresent, right? If you have a husband who beats the hell or, let's say, punches his wife or hits his wife only once a year, do you think that the rest of her year is like, he didn't hit her? No. The rest of her year is, I don't know when it's coming back. I know he justifies it. I know he wants to do it. I know he thinks it's the right thing to do to quote discipline me, right? What's that old grim, horrible joke about why does the woman have two black eyes? Someone had to tell her twice. So it's not the momentary act of being hit that is the issue. The issue is what it tells you about your parents as a whole and their willingness to use violence to get their way, to force you to obey, right?
[36:41] If a manager screams at you, right? Some manager like screams at you in public or in some big meeting or whatever, only once a year, do you think that for the rest of your year working with that manager in the room that, you're exactly the same as if he'd never yelled at you? Of course not. Of course not, right? So, all right.
[37:14] All right somebody says uh and tips of course more than welcome you can tip at freedomaine.com slash donate so you can tip here uh on the website locals uh and rumble you can tip so i would really really appreciate it thank you thank you so much somebody writes a few wednesday And that's live ago, a listener named Joe asked how to vet a woman. After listening to this, I had an idea. My son just turned three months old, and I think it would be a great idea to pass along lessons I get from watching your show. As he grows up, I will have many chats with him about life, dating, business, and most importantly, how to find the right woman. What I'm considering is creating an email account for him now and emailing him from time to time as he grows up and when he's of age, 16 or so, giving him access to the account. What are your thoughts? That's fine. That's a great speech. I've got it bookmarked. Uh, Jimmy says, Hey, I'm a father of a 16 year old daughter. How would you vet potential boyfriends for your daughter?
[38:10] How would you vet potential? Well, I mean, it's interesting because now that things are online, boys and girls will chat to each other without having to come to the house. Now, if a boy comes to the house, I can chat with him. I can get to know him and someone, which I've done. But because boys and girls chat with each other, right, you can ask your kids, hey, what did you chat about? What did you guys do? And so on. And to me, the major vetting thing is, are they aware of quirks or negatives in the family? Are they? I mean, most normie families have quirks and negatives. I mean, most families do as a whole. And I guess even I have quirks and negatives in that peaceful parenting makes your kids very different from the average, right? So there's a bit of a negative to that for sure, right? So you're teaching them Esperanto when everyone else is speaking Klingon or something, right?
[39:08] So I am always curious, or I think it's worth being curious, oh, what did you chat about? Oh, what's his family like? What are his perspectives on his family? And so on. And every family has their quirks. And if he's like, oh, yeah, my family has these quirks and so on. It's not my particular cup of tea or whatever. And here are the positives and here are the good things and so on. Do they have a realistic and objective view of their family? Because, of course, you can't, I'm saying this very clearly, you can't judge people by the families they have. You certainly can't judge teenagers by the family they have because it's not their fault or to their benefit that they have those families, right? So, but I think trying to have a sense of whether they have a clear right view of the pluses and minuses of the family, I think it's really, really good. Really, really good. All right. So that, I think, is fundamental, fundamental betting.
[39:57] But the vetting that you do is, I mean, you don't need to give, if you raise your kids speaking English, right? You don't need to give them tests on how well or how badly they speak English. Like they're just going to speak English. I mean, not when they're young, right? They're just going to speak English because that's what you speak. And they're going to read books because you read books and they just become really good at English that way, right? If that makes sense. So the way that you vet boyfriends is you have you know a great relationship with your spouse, and you have a great relationship with your kids and so your kids grow up speaking you know peace and reason and happiness and enthusiasm in their relationships and then that's just what they speak and that's what they're used to and so if there's someone dysfunctional who comes along, it's very clear and it's very evident in the same way that if you only speak one language and somebody comes speaking to you in a foreign language, you understand that you don't understand them, right? Somebody, you speak English, somebody comes along and speaks Hungarian to you or something. You're like, you know, you may be vaguely able to identify as an Eastern European, language because of the amount of goulash and cauliflower between the teeth. But.
[41:09] If a dysfunctional person comes along and starts trying to hang out with your kid who's been raised in sort of peace and reason and positivity they just won't really have anything in common they won't have much to say and and there may be some sort of delicacy about disengaging or whatever it is but they just I mean the best way to vet boys is to raise your kids in a happy loving affectionate positive reasonable relationship and then they just they won't speak that other language. And they'll recognize that something is different. They may not know exactly what it is, but they'll recognize that it doesn't fit with them.
[41:50] There's no vetting later on. There's really only vetting earlier, right? Jimmy, does that help as a whole?
[42:01] And I really like these parental questions. Parenting questions are absolutely fantastic. And I really, really do appreciate that.
[42:12] Oh, Bitcoin hit its all-time high. All right. The trust and safety with the parent is gone and the bond is compromised once the child knows the parent is willing to use violence. Well, it's the continually willing to use violence that's the issue. It's the continually willing. So if somebody, I don't know, like some parent like smacks the kid or whatever, and then it's like, oh my God, I'm so sorry. Oh, that was the worst thing. I'm, you know, blah, blah, blah. Okay. Well, then trust can be restored. Like we all make mistakes, right? That's a pretty big one. But you know, it's the fact that when you justify something, the trust is gone, right? I hope to be a great father like you one day. I question if I'll get there, though. That's good. You should question if you'll get there. If it's any consolation, I still question whether I'm doing the right thing sometimes. So that's good. Questioning whether you'll get there is fantastic, because fantastic, apparently, because it means that you'll keep working to be better, right? You'll keep working to get better. Don't forget, fdrurl.com slash TikTok to join the TikTok. It would really, really be nice to help drive up the views. a little bit over there and it's really good so tick tock.com slash at freedom.com, every time you talk about bitcoin it pumps dev i like to pump it pump it all right please don't stop talking about it even if you sleep maybe maybe maybe.
[43:41] What is it the people who abandoned me on deplatforming lost seven times increase in value.
[43:51] Uh, thank you for the tip. I appreciate that. Yeah. I mean, I, I think, I mean, easy 100K by Christmas, probably more in my view. It's just my opinion, my opinion, not investment advice. Do your own research, make your own decisions. Somebody said, oh, Anthony says, my dad would always follow up his threats with being forced to listen to and accept his rushed apologies and was very overly sentimental and contradictory, especially to my six to seven year old mind. Yeah. A power tends to corrupt, and there is almost no greater power in the world than that, of a parent over his child. Almost no greater power. That's rough, man. And you absolutely have to resist that power and say that my power exists to serve.
[44:54] Those who have power over it. All right. So Crypto T, Crypto T underbar on X wrote today, ETFs bought 9,000 Bitcoin yesterday. Only 450 new Bitcoin were created. This is what a supply shock looks like. I'm going to read this again because it's just math, right? ETFs bought 9,000 Bitcoin yesterday and only 450 new Bitcoins were created. This is what a supply shock looks like. So you understand that's a 20 to 1. Yeah, it's exactly 20 to 1, 450 to 9,000.
[45:36] Yes 450 times 10 would be 4500 times 20 is 9 000 so that's a 20 to 1 demand to supply ratio that's a 20 to 1 demand to supply ratio.
[45:55] I can't, uh, how could it be more clear? How could it be more clear? Let's look at this. Americans have $1.17 trillion worth of debt on Visa and MasterCard. Okay. Brothers and sisters, help me out here. Help me out here. Help me out here. Do you have significant credit card debt? Do you have significant credit card debt drop my fork one second here while you answer and by significant i don't know whatever that means 500 bucks or more like do you have some significant credit card debt, which is another way of asking um are you ridiculous right again unless there's some massive emergency whatever right you need to pay rent and you put it on your credit card because you're between jobs or something like that. Do you have significant credit card debt?
[47:06] Well, we're waiting for those answers. If you had a boy, do you think you'd play cops and robbers with him and shoot BB guns and cool masculine stuff like that? Well, yeah, I mean, I would follow my child's lead. Some boys are into that stuff and some boys are not right i mean you wouldn't want this obviously you don't want this just big giant monolith of like boyness but yeah i would absolutely play cops and robbers and bb guns and stuff like that would be would be excellent um my daughter really got into sort of this fantasy this like medieval fantasy role-playing stuff which we did for years and years and it's just kind of tailing off now and have i have massive joyful happy memories of um all of the stuff i mean we had she ran for mayor of a town and we went through the whole process of running for mayor and raising money and interviewing all the townspeople trying to get their votes and and sabotage from the media like we went through the whole like it was just an amazing thing that was like a significant chunk of her homeschooling so she was into that kind of stuff. Some girls wouldn't be. She's gone through more girly phase. She went through a tomboy phase. Now she's back in the girly phase. And so you just follow the kid's lead. I mean, if he wanted to do that kind of stuff, we would. If he wanted to do other stuff that was more indoors, we would do that too.
[48:26] So somebody says, I haven't visited my parents in almost three weeks and never want to again, but I still feel guilty and don't want to unleash my full anger towards them. Don't want to want okay so when you say i don't want to unleash my full anger towards them i assume that means in your mind right because you're not seeing them is that right.
[48:48] So you can unleash your full anger towards your parents in your mind, right? In role plays, you can write things down and burn them if you want to. You can, you know, yell into pillows, whatever it is, right? I mean, when I unleashed my full anger towards my mother, it was very, very violent in my mind. Obviously, I didn't, you know, do anything or say anything to her, but in my mind, it was very violent, which is, I mean, because she was very violent towards me, I needed a form of self-defense in my mind to make sure nothing like that was ever going to happen to me again. So you build your immune system, right?
[49:22] Like, you know how the traditional virus is, it's a deactivated virus that your immune system recognizes and learns how to push back. So when the real thing comes along, so just thinking about your anger towards if your parents were abusive, which of course I have huge sympathy, but if you think about your anger towards your parents, and it's all just in your mind, you don't yell at them, you don't confront them, directly or whatever, right? I'm not saying whether you should or shouldn't. Obviously, don't do anything violent. You can yell at people, that's not violent. But if you just work with it in your mind, what happens is that's like a deactivated virus stimulating your immune system. So if you just kind of yell at your parents in your mind or write things down or whatever it is, right? Then that's practicing for a repudiation of brutality, exploitation, and violence. And that way, if it ever comes into your life again, then you'll be ready and prepared in the same way your immune system is when it's modeled its reactions on a deactivated virus.
[50:27] It's a safe way to build up immunity to the problem of violence and exploitation. So yeah, I haven't visited my parents almost three weeks and never went to again, but I still feel guilty. I call bullshit. With all due respect and affection, I call bullshit. Not that you're lying. No, you don't feel guilty. You are programmed to serve people who exploit you, particularly parents, right? So it's not that you feel guilty. It's just that you have landmines put into your head by your parents to make you feel negative if you're not serving their needs.
[51:02] See also patriotism, right? So if you're not serving the needs of those who are exploiting you, then you feel bad. And the reason for that was that it's very dangerous to not serve the needs of selfish parents when you're a kid. Like it's really dangerous. So you will have a negative experience if you're not serving their needs as a child, to protect yourself against the escalation from exploitation and some violence to abandonment or overt violence, which, you know, we're sort of programmed to avoid at all costs because that would be the end of us. So it's not like you feel guilty, like you just, I just have this guilt, it's just me, this is all just implanted in you, right? It's all just implanted in you so that you can be, well, so that you can avoid the escalation of danger that comes with being exploited. And so you continue to serve, like, you continue to serve those who, like, we're not, designed for these kinds of choices. We're not designed to be like, oh, okay, I was raised in this shitty tribe, this underworld, this trash planet, these dungeons. I was raised in these orc mines, but you're supposed to forever be in the orc mines. You're supposed to forever live in trash planet, in the trailer park, like whatever cliche. We're not supposed to break out. I'm not supposed to be here. Are you kidding me?
[52:20] I was raised in a violent, deranged, like literally both parents institutionalized in mental institutions, violence, terror, poverty, chaos, fear, aggression, screaming, messy relationships everywhere. And I'm awesome. You don't just live like that in a bubble. You're not just on some lovely suburban street. Everyone around you is like that because like attracts like. You're in a whole different world. You're in a whole different world. You know, like these different dimensions, oh, you're portaled to another dimension well because you live in these like trash medium excellent like you just live in these bubbles because you don't touch each other in any substantial way and you're supposed to, be born be raised live reproduce get old and die in the same bubble right you understand you and i, we're never supposed to get out never never never we're not designed to get out society doesn't work very well if we get out I'm not supposed to be here I'm supposed to be.
[53:34] Back there in Trash Planet, pompous, vainglorious, self-aggrandizing, touchy, volatile, aggressive, maybe addicted. I'm not supposed to be here. According to evolution and history and the cycle of the generations and the lack of opportunity, I mean, how many people got out of the slave class throughout human history. Like the Koreans had the longest unbroken chain of slavery in the world. How many people, I mean, very, very, very few. Very, very, very few people got out of the slave class.
[54:12] I think Dr. Thomas Sowell has a bunch of examples of brilliant blacks in the antebellum South who bought their way out of slavery and invented things and started businesses and often bought other slaves. But 99.999% of serfs stayed serfs. 99.999% of slaves stayed slaves. And 99.999% of people who were raised like me never got out. We're not designed to. This is why it tends to be so repetitive and why it's so hard to break out. Because breaking out, you don't want to, genetically, you don't want to fall between two worlds. So let's say there's Trash Planet, and then there's Middle Class Planet, right? So if you try to cross from Trash Planet to Middle Class Planet, and I write about this in my novel, The Future, which you should, if you haven't read that novel, my God, stop whatever you're doing, except for listening to this, or read to you, or listen to that. It's a great book.
[55:11] Because you've got the striving classes, the nouveau riche, right? So if you try to get out of Trash Planet to Middle Class Planet, you can easily fall through the cracks between. Too classy for trash planet, too trashy for middle class planet. It's like the Apollo 13, right? You just get, your ship gets disabled between the Earth and the moon and maybe you just float on forever, right? If you stay in trash planet, your reproductive odds are high.
[55:39] If you get all the way over to middle-class planet, your reproductive odds are lower because you're still not raised there, so you don't quite speak the language that well. But if you reproduce, you're happier and better off. but a lot of people get lost in the middle, right? A lot of people like you, the decaying town, the decaying town, you got to cross the desert in the hopes there's distant smoke on the horizon.
[56:09] In the hopes of getting to the village of reason, you got to leave the trash city, right? The slums, the ghettos.
[56:16] That's tough, man. We are, I think about this like every day. I think about this every day that I'm not, I'm not supposed to be here. I'm not supposed to live in a reasonably nice place. I'm not supposed to have, you know, a wonderful, well-educated, professional, loving wife. I'm not supposed to have a great relationship with my daughter. I'm not supposed to have quality friends. I'm not, I'm just, it's not what I'm, I was never, ever designed to get out because really none of us are. And we're defying the odds. We're defying the physics of repetition compulsion, which is our gene survival metric. We're not supposed to get out we're not supposed to get free which is why it's so hard to do so and why you have a negative experience of trying to get off trash planet trying to break orbit, from you know the wally planet of infinite garbage and exploitation and just shitty people shitty people as a whole all right if you had a son would you have encouraged him to play contact sports like american football or wrestling.
[57:18] Due to CTE concerns, would you try to dissuade the activity despite the character building benefits? Well, I think they have helmets now, so I think it's a little better, probably not in the wrestling, but it's a tough call. And the metrics have really changed because we have far fewer kids now, right? So because we have far fewer kids now, each kid becomes progressively more important because we don't have spares, right? And Aaron's bear. And so because we have fewer kids now, female neurosis of danger has taken over male indifference to injury, right? So, I don't know. If, let's say that football, maybe they get a helmet, but let's say football was the only sport he really wanted to do, I'd probably say, go for it. Because let's say he doesn't do that, he just sits on the couch and he gets injured by inactivity, right? There's no particular safety. there's nothing that's safe in the world right activity is dangerous you work out you can pull muscles weights can fall on you you can write happens all the time and if you don't work out then your bones get soft and your muscles get soft and things are very bad as a whole right.
[58:31] I would do bitcoin to sit 95k damn son damn son 200 bucks an hour from the all-time high so yeah there is no uh.
[58:50] There is no there is no safety there is no safety it is simply cost of benefits, the last few dates thank you tom the last few dates i've gone on when the talk of topic of kids come up the women have no plan around beyond around kids beyond like yeah i want kids someday these women are in their mid to late 20s. Have they really put no thought into this? Or do they think displaying enthusiasm isn't attractive? Well, so by the time a woman is in her late 20s, it's really tough for her to say, I really, really want kids. Because then she looks like an idiot. Right? Because then the question is, okay, well, if you really, really want kids, and you're in your late 20s, so you've been an adult for well over a decade, why don't you have kids, right? Why don't you have kids?
[59:46] So they can't say, I really, really want to have kids, because then it would be like, well, why haven't you married? Why haven't you found a good father for your kids? Why haven't you settled down? Are you bad at planning? Are you bad at vetting people? Do you have bad character? Like, why haven't you done it? Why not? Hussy, right? Why haven't you done it? And if they say, well, I don't want kids, then they're going to chase away the guys who would be good providers and who themselves want kids, right?
[1:00:18] So they they're hedging their bets right yeah i want kids someday which means that it hasn't been a high priority for them which explains why they don't have kids but they're not also saying i don't want kids which would cut off guys who are good providers and want kids themselves, so it is just a strategy to explain why they haven't well you know ah maybe one day like if somebody says they're 30 they say oh man since i was a kid i've just been desperate to learn the piano and they haven't even learned chopsticks be like well what does that mean you've been desperate to learn the piano but you've never learned the piano i mean you can pick up a used piano for like a hundred bucks like a keyboard like why haven't you learned the piano i mean even owen benjamin i'm kidding uh he's he's very good at piano but it wouldn't make any sense right, it's like you know somebody who's broke and has a decent job and he's ah i've always been desperate to save money. I've always been desperate to save money. Well, why haven't you then? It just makes them look stupid, right? Makes them look chaotic and without plans and without self-knowledge. So they're stuck there because of that. Okay. You guys pay off your debt. You hate debt. Current balance to pay off by the end of the month, a bit, but not a lot. I only have 2k of debt. I will pay it next week. Excellent. Okay. Good. Good. Yeah. Stay off credit cards, man. Stay off credit cards. Stay off credit cards.
[1:01:46] Somebody says, oh, the anger regarding your parents, it's coming in waves. Some days I feel more anger. Some days, like today, I'm more lulled out and apathetic, even though they said and did so many horrible things. I'm really, really sorry for that. And if there's anything I can do to help with the call-in show, public or private, freedomain.com slash call. I would love to help, and I'm sure it would help the community as a whole. And what I would say, though, the best way to deal with the anger towards your parents is to imagine them doing it to your child or to some other child you care about. Some kid in the name. Like that's why I talked about like your kid is having their lemonade stolen from them, right? The lemonade money, right? So think of your parents doing what they did to you, to your kid or to some other kid you care about and the anger will come and that's a very good thing as a whole. Oh, Zim says, I'm so genuinely surprised that I very narrowly, very narrowly, may I add slash emphasize, made it out of the bubble and I really try not to take it for granted.
[1:02:45] If it weren't for the internet, I wouldn't have learned the language of freedom. Ron Paul was my gateway drug. We love Ron Paul. Rand Paul, on the other hand, well, anyway, you can see the speech today. Few achieve escape velocity, right? Right.
[1:03:01] I don't want to make this about me, but I've listened to the future, but I feel stuck in the middle. Oh, I thought you meant stuck in the middle of the book. right got it all right uh thanks for your great explanation i feel like i'm in that phase of exiting trash planet and working on entering the middle class zone yeah just get out man get out try not to look back and condemn condemn it all condemn it all you know when you get out of a tyranny, you burn your fucking passport, don't you?
[1:03:37] Not that I'm suggesting anybody burn their passport. This is just an analogy, right? But when you get out of a tyranny, you burn your passport so that you can't get back in. You can't be sent back in because you don't have a passport, right? You cut off your exit, right? Or cut off your way home and you have no choice but to go on. So if you end up burning all of your bridges in Trash Planet and everyone hates you in a sense, or can has holds you in contempt good that means you won't be tempted to go back, would me showing my enthusiasm around kids come across as stupid too since i'm in my late 20s as well no i mean nothing nothing that you can explain with self-knowledge sounds stupid, you have to say well it wasn't a high priority for me i wasted time i dated the wrong people i didn't know how to vet i grew up badly i've learned how to vet i'm ready to right there's nothing wrong with that right.
[1:04:37] Uh, Tony says, I'm listening to a great audio book on how to start a business by being a penny pincher. It's authored by the guy Trump picked for the Department of Agriculture, Joel Salatin. Uh, the guy has a great business sense, says he's never even owned a car from the same decade. Oh, he hangs on to his cars. Yeah. Yeah. You can farm the entrepreneur's guide. Stef, would you debate Owen Benjamin about Bitcoin? I don't think so. I mean, I debated the great Peter Schiff like 10 years ago about Bitcoin. There's no debate about Bitcoin anymore. There's no debate about Bitcoin anymore. You understand? Like there is no debate about Bitcoin anymore. So it's all done. It's all done. It's all done. There's no debate. I, I just, I mean, it's hard for people to admit that they're wrong. It is. And I'm, of course, I, we've all, I mean, I wouldn't say, I wouldn't speak for you. I've certainly had that challenge. So, I mean, I don't, I don't have any idea what the debate would actually be.
[1:05:57] Oh, okay. Somebody's doing a, uh, let's block this person. Surely i can tell oh they're gone i guess all right let me just refresh this got a little bit of a little bit of spam happening over spam spam spam spam lovely spam wonderful spam spam spam spam spam spam all right all right penny opera time, all right other questions comments issues challenges problems.
[1:06:50] Going once, going twice. Support, absolutely humbly and gratefully accepted. We are, you know, it's funny, I had some hope, I suppose, that support for the show would increase a little bit after the election, but I understand that times are tough, and I sympathize with that. So let's see here. A couple of days ago, Schiff said, Schiff still thinks Bitcoin is the wrong and its value in the future, about its value in the future. He was right on about the 2008 economic collapse, but I don't know why he's still in denial about Bitcoin. I mean, I can't possibly imagine why, but I mean, I suppose he's advised his clients to buy gold, right? If you told people to invest hundreds of millions or whatever it is, I don't know what his number is, but if you've told people to invest in gold and that Bitcoin is a scam with no value.
[1:08:02] What are you going to do? Are you going to say, thank you for the tip, are you going to say, yeah, I missed it, right? I heard your reason for not going back on major platforms. Is there any way we can convince you to enter the zeitgeist arena again? Well, what is there that philosophy can do now? Right? What is there that philosophy can do now? In the general social arena, right?
[1:09:01] I'm dating a woman in her early 30s who has very little dating experience, but she is very intelligent, curious, and conscientious. Well, the question is, if she has been an adult, let's say she's 33, just to make the math easy for my brain. So she's been an adult for 15 years, or maybe 17 years, since people often start dating around the age of 15 or 16. She's been an adult for about as long as she was a child, right? Or she's been in the dating arena about 50-50, right?
[1:09:46] Why hasn't she dated? And what has she done instead? I mean, personally, if I see somebody in their 30s with very little dating experience, I just assume a masturbation addict. She's taken steps to get into dating like hiring a dating coach what questions should i be asking her well obviously don't ask her about her masturbation habits but uh the question is uh you know why right why and you know without judgment without like it's bad or terrible but in general the standard is to date.
[1:10:26] I mean honestly if if if you met a woman who was 33.
[1:10:32] And she says uh i've never had a job or i've only had one or two jobs i think your first question is well what do you live on what do you live on i mean okay well i'm independently wealthy this, that, and the other. It's like, okay, well, then you don't have any particularly good job skills. And without job skills, maybe she doesn't have negotiation skills or know how to find value and establish value and so on. But it's like, well, why haven't you dated? The normal, natural, healthy development is to date. And it is without criticism. I'm just like genuine. To be curious, it's like a superpower. It really is just a superpower. I mean, you've heard me say this a million times on the call-in shows. Like, I'm not judging. I'm not saying whether you should or shouldn't. I'm just genuinely curious. Like, so I said, why haven't you dated? Well, I didn't find the right person.
[1:11:25] Okay. And that could be because she's just an incredible woman. And, you know, my wife was still single when I met her in her early thirties, but she found it obviously tough to find someone that met her standards of quality. She was looking for a very, very intelligent man and um she she found him eventually right but it took took a while because she's i mean very smart and wise and virtuous now i can't sing the praises of my wife will be here all night so you know why uh why why not why not.
[1:12:04] And why wait until your early thirties, right? Because that indicates a lack of planning, right? Why would you still be single in your early thirties? And again, none of this is disqualifying because there can be great answers. You know, I had a bad childhood. I got bad advice from my parents. Nobody seemed to care about it, but I've gone to therapy. I've got the bad people out of my life. I've confronted people and I'm ready to move forward. Because you understand, you don't just, I mean, I have to remind this to be annoying nag guy. I have to remind men of this all the time. You're not dating her, you're dating a whole gene pool. Right? You're dating a whole gene pool. So the question is not, why are you single? I mean, that is a good question. But the fundamental question is, how did your family and friends let you stay single?
[1:13:02] How is it possible that your entire family just let you stay single like what did your parents concerned did they say listen you've got a date you got to get some experience even if it's not the perfect guy you've just got to get used to being in a relationship because guys are going to ask you questions and they would be right to ask you questions how did she slip through the cracks of a family that's supposed to care about her. Do you see what I mean? Like, how did that happen? How did it happen that people didn't care about her enough to make sure that she got some dating knowledge or experience, right? All right. Hey, Kairos, nice to see you again, my friend. We got, hey, Stef, I don't know if you saw my post about seed and company on locals. I posted the info I've seen around it, good I just wanted to say how I presented it in the stream was likely a misrepresentation and you're right to implore me to be more skeptical and I'm sorry for putting out bad info I will denote on payday thank you for all your hard work appreciate that very honorably spoken and I'm glad that we got to some truth right.
[1:14:14] Alright I could potentially be single in my early 30s for those reasons and those tasks I've been doing to fix that problem. And those tasks I've been doing, sorry, I don't get that.
[1:14:23] How valuable is self-redemption through self-awareness? Oh, fantastic. You're not responsible for the family you're born into, but you are responsible for the wisdom you extract from bad situations. So this person says about the woman in her early thirties, her mom would give her dating advice, but never told her directly that she needs to date.
[1:14:43] Ah, interesting, Never told her directly that she needs to date I'm not sure what that means.
[1:14:58] I mean, occasionally, my wife will remind me to eat. Oh, no, I need to eat. My hands are shaking, right? So, occasionally, my wife will be like, hey, have you eaten anything today? I'm like, I got involved in thought. And, you know, these shows are workouts, right? Like, when you think a lot, it uses up more calories in your brain. Like, this is a couple of hundred calories sometimes for a show, like for a really intense, challenging show. It's like burning glucose, like nobody's business, like smoke coming out of my ears, like the fires of rohingya. But.
[1:15:30] So generally if i'm thirsty i drink right so why would doesn't she want to date doesn't she want to date where's the passion where's the drive because here's the thing i mean let's just be perfectly frank if a woman can go let's say that she's a virgin or let's say she's only had one or two sexual partners over 17 years right so she can go without sex right, do you really want to date a woman with such a low sex drive that she just just doesn't really date, and again i'm not saying she should have a body count in the ludicrous score i'm just saying she can clearly do without romance without sex without love without affection without cuddling, i don't know man if you're really into irrigation farming probably not great to buy a bunch of desert land right and that's probably not uh not great.
[1:16:39] Yeah i mean my wife somebody says early stages of your wife's relationship so um she just wanted a guy who was very smart and she was dating a very smart guy but she wanted a guy who's very smart and she says intelligence always shows up within in the eyes and your eyes were the most intelligent i'd ever seen right and you know i dare say that while i have my faults um a lack of intelligence is not one of them that's not really a thing uh thank you c2 spark as always i really really appreciate your support and i thank you for that, uh oh yes this is the fellow with the challenges with his parents i was also left to be single and i'm 24 and never been in a relationship i've only been on two first dates in my life i had a girl who was sexually interested in me but i didn't want to mess with her since she had a boyfriend it hurts to be 24 and not have much to show for in dating experience as a dude nobody in my life cared to bring this up ever yeah and i'm really sorry like you just at some point you just have to disagree with people who think you're worthless. At some point, you just have to fundamentally disagree with people who think you're worthless. All right.
[1:18:06] I love making you, seeing you make libs seethe on Twitter, saying your eggs are dying is funny. I think it's that funny. I don't think it's that funny. Our generation is cooked. We don't date or have sex. Yeah. And that's a very volatile situation because if society can't provide young men with opportunities to settle down, then young men have no allegiance to that society. and it usually ends in some sort of aggressive rebellion. It's very sad. We want to avoid violence as much as possible, but a society that doesn't give young men and women an opportunity to settle down and have kids, well, what if young men and women got to lose at that point, right? Very sad. Two-thirds of young men are single. It's a volatile situation. Any current political, social, cultural event is an opportunity to connect philosophy to outcomes. It's also a great help. People practice practical reasoning to important modern problems. The arena awaits. We'd love to see you in the arena again. You helped my whole family. Your contemporary commentary was a gateway to philosophy. Fantastic. I'm in the arena, right? I'm in the arena.
[1:19:30] I'm in the arena. I'm here, aren't I? lead people to where I'm at. It's, I mean, there is a cost-benefit calculation that occurs, right? Which is, the dangers of continuing to do what I was doing were immense. Right? The dangers of continuing to do what I was doing were immense. I'm willing to take on those risks, but not if people don't care. Do you follow? But not if people don't care. If people don't care that much about me, I'm not going to take on risks, right? You know, it's one thing to say, I'm going to go slay the dragon, right?
[1:20:20] Or at least fight the dragons. I'm going to go fight the dragon. Okay. But then if people are like.
[1:20:28] You know, you know, the blacksmith says, well, I don't really want to sharpen your sword. I don't really care that much about the dragon, right? And then someone else says, well, I don't want to reinforce your armor because honestly, the dragon is not that big a deal. And someone else says, well, you know, I don't want to, I don't want to pack you any provisions to go and fight the dragon because, you know, that's like half a loaf of bread, man. And I mean, the dragon's not really that, not really that big a deal. And at some point, don't you say, well, why would I put my life on the line to fight a dragon when people don't really want to help me and clearly don't care that much about the dragon, right? And then if there are a thousand people in the village right there are a thousand people in the village and you say okay you know i'm willing to fight the dragon but i just i just need people to tell me that they care about it right now if of those thousand people, and this is not imaginary math this is real math there are a thousand people in the village who all claim to be terrorized by the dragon. They want you to fight the dragon, man. You're the only guy who can do it. Stef, you're the only knight who can take on the dragon, man.
[1:21:55] And of those 1,000 people begging you to take on the dragon, seven or eight show up and say they think it would be nice. And of those seven or eight who show up and say, I think it would be nice, one of them gives you a little bit of material help. One out of 1,000. And I say this because my average videos, when I was deep platform, my average videos did a bare minimum of 100,000 views each on YouTube, not counting the other platforms, right? And then when I moved over to other platforms, I got about 3% of that, right? So there's 1,000 people in the town.
[1:22:47] So you could say it's 30. I mean, it's a little bit of a change because the reason I cut it in half is because, there are kids and people who can't hear or who don't know what's going on or senile or whatever, right? But let's say it's 30, right? So I went from 100,000 views down to 3,000 views, even though I was just one website over. And this is before I stopped doing politics. You understand this? Before I stopped doing politics, I went from 100,000 views down to like uh 3 000 views which meant of the thousand people in the town only 30 cared right, of the thousand people in the town saying Stef you got to do it i'm like okay come over here and then tell me i got to do it and only 30 people come over and of those.
[1:23:41] Only one person gives packs me a lunch So out of the thousand people in the town One person packs me a lunch And I'm supposed to go and fight the dragon Do you see what I mean? Like, who would do that, right? Now, if all thousand people come and maybe there's 2,000 people like, oh, my gosh, we'll do anything we can to have you fight the dragon, maybe. That would be compelling. But the deep platformers did me a huge favor because they showed how many people were only in it for the entertainment and didn't take philosophy seriously at all.
[1:24:28] You've got to ask yourself this question. There are a thousand people in the town, 30 show up, saying that they're still interested. And because only about 3% of people donate, one person packed you a lunch. Would you go and risk your life to fight the dragon? Hmm. I think to ask that question is to answer it. And again, it's not a problem. it's not a negative because nothing that is real is positive or negative nothing that is real nothing that is information is positive or negative so all right let's just check here.
[1:25:14] Bitcoin just now briefly broke the $95,000 mark. Yeah. Yes, yes, yes, yes. No, the crowds are in the future, right? The crowds are in the future.
[1:25:27] And that's fine. I don't need to be here. The only purpose is not my ego, but what's best for philosophy. It's all that matters. It's not my ego, but what is best for philosophy.
[1:25:40] Is it best for philosophy that I run off on a fool's quest to fight a dragon that nobody really seems to care about? Well, no, of course that's not in the best interest of philosophy, right? I learned that much from my ancestor, William Molyneux, and John Locke's best friend. I learned that much from Aristotle, and I learned that much from Plato.
[1:26:00] They went to fight dragons, and then they didn't. All right, any other last questions or comments? Let's see here. I understand and agree with your arguments for not being back on X YouTube. I don't have any choice. I mean, they haven't restored my account on YouTube, so I have no choice about YouTube. Sometimes I get a little black-pilled knowing how little interest there is publicly for philosophy. People have chosen to learn by bitter experience, and that is their choice, right? That is their choice. I have given people all the reasons in their own universe to learn through sweet reason and to learn through arguments. People have chosen to learn through bitter. Society as a whole has chosen to learn through bitter experience rather than sweet wisdom. Okay. The important thing for me, I don't have any control over that. The important thing for me is do I have a good conscience, right, regarding all of that? Do I have a good conscience regarding all of that? And the answer is I do. I do.
[1:26:59] I did everything I could, honestly. I mean, if there's more that I could have done, I would love to hear it. I really would. And I don't mean that in any bitter or cynical way. Why is information not positive or negative? It's just facts. There's gravity. Is that positive or negative? Two and two make four. Is that positive or negative? It's just facts. You are wrong. Fight the dragon because it needs to be done. You are that man. Okay. So I put for a whole layered argument there and you're just, you're wrong. You are that man. It's like, why aren't you that man? Why do I have to fight the dragon? Why don't you? I mean, if you feel that fighting the dragon is so important, there's no fence between you and the dragon. Not even one. Not even one. You can go and fight the dragon. There's nothing stopping you. I'm not going to stop you, right? I'm not going to stop you.
[1:28:03] Totally get it now, Stef, the significance of your de-platforming on so many levels. Then we all say, charge, Stef, you were alone in the bunker. Well, no, not alone. We're here. We're chatting. And I really, really do appreciate that. I really do. I really do appreciate that.
[1:28:19] But people have told me very clearly that they don't take philosophy seriously. Not you guys, right? The others. Then they've said, we choose to learn by bitter experience rather than sweet reason. Okay. So this is um the show um intervention right where people say to some guy who's a horrible drunk um we're not going to have anything to do with you unless you go to rehab and sometimes they go to rehab and sometimes they just drink themselves to death that was a guy with the tanning beds or whatever tanning bed business very wealthy he drank himself to death okay but i'm not going down with you right you understand you try to help people you try to help people i've tried I've done this my whole life since I was a teenager. You try to help people. If they don't accept help, you don't go down with them. Hey, man, that boat's overloaded. You shouldn't go out in this storm. And if they go out, do you go out with them and continue to lecture them? No, because you're going to fucking drown. Oh, man, you shouldn't smoke, man. Smoking is really bad. Do you keep smoking with them to go with them on that smoking journey? No. Hey, man, you shouldn't drink so much. which is bad for you. The person doesn't quit drinking. Do you just keep drinking with them? No.
[1:29:39] I say to people, non-aggression principle, against me argument, peaceful parenting, I said all of that a zillion times. I handed the world on a platter the great holy grail of philosophy, which is the rational proof of secular ethics, sounds, gods, and governments. Did that almost 20 years ago.
[1:30:00] And people said, no, I think we're going to learn through bitter experience. I mean nice nice words nice arguments you know good job you know entertainingly presented and you've got a little bit of humor a little bit of charisma you can string a couple of sentences together worse than your average victim of tourette's but i think no you mean you make a strong case you make a strong case but i think we're just going to get fucked i think we're just going to get fucked and then we're going to maybe learn on the smoking crater on the other side of all this shit i mean we could we could organize our personal relationships and our family relationships and our friendships and our parenting according to the moral principles we all accept. We could do that, or we could risk Third World War with senile Biden lobbing US-backed missiles through Ukraine into Russia. Oh, and also just decided to up the ante significantly by authorizing land fucking mines. Now, they are the kind of landmines that are supposed to deactivate after a couple of weeks, so they won't be blowing children's legs off, hopefully, leave for the next 50 years. But there you go.
[1:31:10] There you go. I mean, they let Trump get in, didn't cheat it too much. And now they just, I mean, how on earth Biden stays in is beyond me. Biden is authorized.
[1:31:22] Biden couldn't fucking authorize the purchase of a packet depends, for God's sakes. Biden isn't authorizing shit. Well, he is authorizing shit, technically.
[1:31:40] Yeah, Gonzalo, Lira, right? Your book, RTR, Real-Time Relationships, has been super helpful. I almost finished it now. Excellent. Excellent. Thanks, Stef. I unfortunately did not have access. Sorry, I unfortunately did not have the parents to follow footsteps in quite literally no usable tools. You've given me an extensive toolkit, which I put into practice and can say I'm following in your footsteps. I appreciate everything you do. I'm living a great life that I'm happy to have now. Congratulations, Bob. That thrills my heart and warms my cuckles. Thank you. Oh, the guy who said, go fight the dragon. Why don't you go fight the dragon? Because I suck. So if you say that you suck, which I don't think is true, but if you say that, then if you suck, then your advice sucks. Therefore, I shouldn't fight the dragon. Oh my gosh. All right. Let me just get any other last tips, support, anything I've done helpful. Let me know I really do look forward to your tips and support if you're listening to this later of course freedom.com slash donate yeah they have the 25th anyway anyway it's crazy.
[1:32:57] No it's not the Bob all right just in case there are any last questions that are being typed in just as we close off tonight thank you thank you thank you, I appreciate everybody who's been here tonight. It's wonderful to have these conversations with you. And the fact that we have all of these things recorded from here to eternity is beautiful and wonderful.
[1:33:23] And hopefully space aliens won't be decrypting this in 10,000 years from a still glowing set of ruins. But if we get consumed in a nuclear fire, the important thing is to go out with a good conscience. And if there is a god hopefully he'll forgive me my skepticism and welcome me home all right thank you everybody have a beautiful evening lots of love i'm up here take care my friends bye.
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