Transcript: The Socialism of Bitcoin!

Chapters

0:10 - Introduction to Friday Night Live
10:54 - The Daniel Penny Case
17:33 - Personal Stories of Courage
31:57 - The Reality of Social Security
36:13 - Concerns Over AI's Impact
42:18 - Ideological Shifts in Society
52:58 - Extremism and Ideology
54:59 - Marital Dynamics and Gender Roles
1:07:07 - Memes and Cultural Reflections
1:13:06 - Closing Thoughts and Call-Ins

Long Summary

In this episode, I delve into the current state of various pressing issues, starting with societal dynamics and the heavy blow to personal honor illustrated by the Daniel Penny case. I explore the heartbreaking implications of this situation, where an ex-Marine intervenes to provide safety to subway passengers and ends up facing criminal charges after the unfortunate death of a man he was attempting to restrain. I weigh in on the legal intricacies, suggesting that many aspects seem skewed against individuals like Penny who attempt to uphold community safety amidst rising lawlessness. I express concern over the chilling effect this may have on others who feel compelled to step in during crises, leading to a society where self-defense is demonized, and civic duty is punished.

I also indulge in a personal anecdote reflecting on moments of spontaneous heroism and the imperative to direct our energy towards protecting those who are vulnerable. The cultural shift away from high-trust environments is discussed as we mourn the loss of more secure communities where individuals used to feel safe engaging with one another without fear. As I grasp the situation's underlying tensions, I comment on how a sense of helplessness permeates our modern existence, raising critical questions about who is truly protected and empowered in our society.

Transitioning to economic pitfalls, I dissect the failed promises of Social Security, emphasizing how the collectivized system is inherently flawed. I argue that societal complacency and dependency on government solutions have contributed to its impending insolvency, leading to significant ramifications for future generations. I maintain that individual initiative and voluntary exchanges are preferable to a system that ultimately does not serve its citizens as intended.

The discussion then shifts toward the implications of technology, specifically AI. I address the potential consequences of our reliance on artificial intelligence and question whether it stifles human creativity and knowledge acquisition. I posit that while there are merits and pitfalls of technological advancements, we must still retain agency in how we engage with them. Faults in AI training due to ideological biases are called out, arguing that such constraints inhibit productive dialogues between humans and the technology we increasingly depend upon.

I wrap up by contemplating personal relationships and societal norms, addressing the widespread phrase "happy wife, happy life" while challenging the underlying assumptions of appeasement within marriages. I express the need for more authentic connections built on mutual respect rather than sacrificial compliance, and the importance of recognizing and celebrating significant differences between men and women. I conclude the episode with a call to engage in direct communication, foster genuine relationships, and lean towards self-assertion in a landscape increasingly filled with noise and distraction. Throughout this session, I foster a stimulating conversation that traverses personal anecdotes, societal critiques, and calls to action grounded in both reason and experience.

Transcript

[0:00] Welcome to your Friday Night Live. Somebody says, buh-buh. All right.

[0:10] Introduction to Friday Night Live

[0:11] Well, shirtless staff equals plus five charisma. May not be happening tonight. But thank you for the show at freedoman.com slash donate to help out. Hugely appreciated and gratefully accepted. And, I can't get hard without Stef I assume you're just talking about abs totally understand it, Stef has added so many babies to the world just by being a wholly positive and sincere guy my take thank you very much do think about that you know it's funny because I read it's an old story now goodbye Mr. Chips and in goodbye Mr. Chips somebody says let me just take the chair back here It's making the camera rock a little. Somebody says, well, why didn't you have any kids? To the teacher, right? And he's like, oh, I've had thousands of children over the years, right? Audio is rough.

[1:12] Good evening. Well, it's interesting, man. You know we could just uh we could just go full politics well i don't know if it's politics or not right there was the health care ceo shooting uh there was this the daniel penny, situation which is i've been following in quite a fascinated way there's a there's a lot that's going down there's a lot that's going down going down more than the backwaters of only fans fans. But it's your questions and comments. I'm happy to hear what is going on for you guys, what you'd like to chat about, what are your thoughts. I'm eager and keen to hear what you have to say. So let me have it. Otherwise, I will dig into the topics as a whole. Let me just make sure in the various places that are going on that we are in fact getting the comments and questions that I need to hear, the comments and questions that I need to hear from you all you all, and just make sure that I'm in no messages yet over there okay and that's good. Well, that's just fine. Isn't that just fine?

[2:40] What is your opinion on the Penny case and the precedent it will set? I don't know if you guys have spent much time around the legal system. Fortunately, I haven't. I've had some brushes here and there, a couple of flybys, but I haven't spent much time in the legal system. The Daniel Penny case is heartbreaking for me for sort of the rule of law. So for those of you who don't know, Daniel Penny is an ex-Marine. He was on the subway, and there was this guy, apparently some sort of drug user, who was threatening the people in the subway. And, you know, one of the things that happens with the military guys is, you know, they have a lot of honor. You know, a lot of them have a lot of honor, right? I got my criticisms of the military industrial complex, but a lot of the guys in the military, they have a lot of honor, and they really do try to do the right thing, and they're taught to step up and help people in need, right? They're definitely taught to step up and help people in need. So Daniel Penny stepped up, and the guy who was threatening people, he stepped up. I put him in a, I mean, they call it a chokehold, but it's a restraining hold. And the guy was still alive, the guy who was threatening, I can't remember his name, Michael Wheelie or something like that. Anyway, Wheelie, I can't remember. But he was still alive, but the cops showed up. But the cops were afraid to give first aid because they were concerned about getting a disease from him.

[4:07] And so he died in police custody, and somehow Penny is charged. He was charged with second degree murder. Now, I'm no lawyer, so I don't know any of this stuff in particular, but my general understanding is that the jury has been deadlocked, and there have been a number of charges filed. You know what they do they over file right so that if one gets knocked down they can charge you for something else so the jury has been deadlocked.

[4:35] And the, What that has meant is that the judge, I think, has come in. The latest I've heard, and it's a constantly changing situation, the latest that I've heard is that the judge has stepped in and has dismissed the charge of second-degree manslaughter. Whether that means he can be retried or not is an argument that's happening among legal circles online at the moment. I don't know, of course, the answer, and I don't know that anybody does. But if that's going to be a mistrial, mistrial means you can be tried again, right? Double jeopardy doesn't apply, as far as I know. And it's just uh it's terrible i mean where are the women out there uh or the other people who are saying you know free this guy you know i mean the left goes out and protests for their people right rightly or wrongly and and where i assume this is more of a conservative or right-wing cause where are the people out there because this is uh just another step into lawlessness right, the purpose of destabilizing authority is to protect and encourage the criminals.

[5:37] And then to paralyze people from the capacity for self-defense, right? That is the way that this stuff, I mean, very tragically, very sadly, that is the way that this stuff works, right? There was an old statement from the Soviet Union. I think it was Solzhenitsyn who said something like, if you are attacked, unless you literally have a knife sticking out of yourself, the criminal is assumed to be the innocent party and all of your self-defense will be used against you. And so to to paralyze self-defense and to embolden enable the criminals is one of the problems of corrupt authority it happens in most late stage empires and so on.

[6:17] So it's really tragic and daniel uh penny, also um, he talked to the cops.

[6:31] I wish it wasn't this way. I'm sure there are a lot of cops who are trying to do the right thing, trying to do a good job. But the reality of the situation is, you know, the cops will sit down and they'll want to be a friend. And, you know, we just want to hear your side of the story. You're not in any trouble. We just want to get your side. You're not a person of interest. You're not a suspect. They'll just sit down and they'll just want to chat with you and so on. And, you know, there is a sort of sibling or fraternal relationship between, cops and soldiers or cops and vets, right? So Daniel Penny sat down and he was like, oh, I'm an ex-Marine. And the cop was like, oh, me too. You know, brother to brother, you know, just help me clear this up. You know, you can go on your way and so on. And he talked. He talked. He talked.

[7:25] And what happened? Well, he talked himself into charges. I don't know because I wasn't there. I think there's a video of it, but there's only two syllables you can say to cops, right? It's only two syllables you can say to cops. Lawyer, lawyer, lawyer, lawyer, lawyer, talk to the lawyer, talk to the lawyer, don't talk to me, talk to the lawyer, talk to the lawyer, talk to the lawyer. It's the only thing you can do. I mean, it is sad that the cops are allowed to lie to you. It's sad that the cops are allowed to manipulate you. You can't out-talk or out-think the cops, right? I mean, you're stressed, you're tense, you're nervous, and the cops have been doing this for 20 years. And they know the game, and you don't. They know the situation, and you don't. And I think it's really sad because, again, a lot of people who try to do the right thing in law enforcement, but Daniel Penny, as far as I understand it, had a good old, a chat fest and jawbone with the cops and oh you know i mean i wish we lived in a world where you could chat and and clear things up and and so on but that doesn't tend to be the political climate that is uh is going on right it's really really sad.

[8:47] So the precedent i mean, i wasn't there obviously i hate to say something so banal but it's really really important, to to remember i wasn't there i don't know what happened i don't know that there was footage on that subway train but daniel penny does not strike me as the kind of guy who just goes around, attacking drug addicts in front of witnesses. And there seemed to be a lot of people who were quite grateful for the protection that, he offered on that train. And the purpose of a lot of this stuff, in my humble opinion, is to demoralize people, right? I can't, to leave you feel in a state of anxiety and lack of protection, to remove heroism, to break social bonds, to destroy the male impulse to protect, to make you too nervous about negative consequences, to help out your fellow man. It's very much just a whole demoralizing thing. And, oh my God, I mean, most cities are blue cities, but living in a blue city, honestly you couldn't pay me enough you could not pay me enough to live in a left wing city.

[10:11] I mean, I'm obviously not trying to blame the victim here, and it seems like you tried to do the right thing, and it seems like some, if not most, of the passengers were grateful, but serial criminals should not be out in the streets. And if, again, I'm no lawyer, so I have no idea how you get charged with a murder, when the cops take over the scene and the person is alive and the cops don't render first aid. I mean, is it going to be a George Floyd fentanyl situation?

[10:54] The Daniel Penny Case

[10:55] I mean, he might beat the rap. You know, as the old saying goes, you can beat the rap, but you can't beat the riot. So I think it's just a really, really sad, really, really sad situation.

[11:10] So I would, uh, you know, this is, this is just a warning, like your, your, your, your life, you know, I think it's a very sad thing. I mean, I remember, I know I'm not, obviously, I'm obviously not putting myself in any kind of category like a penny, but. I remember when I used to live right downtown in Toronto, long ago, and I wanted a late night snack, and I rented a room in an apartment building, and I went down to the street level in order to go and get some food. And there was a big black guy who was threatening a woman in a wheelchair and i you know i didn't want to nobody else really does i i you know stood up and and stood up to the guy and told him to back off and and give her some space and you know she clearly didn't want to interact with him and so on and.

[12:13] He, for whatever reason, right, I'm not like some big, intimidating, you know, John-Claude Van Damme kickboxing guy, but he did, you know, I find if you just sort of resolute and focused and stay calm, people do tend to give you some space. It was, of course, in hindsight, a little more risky than I thought at the time, but it was one of these things like you can't, I mean, it's a woman in a wheelchair, right? You can't just let people just go at them. And so the woman in the wheelchair was very grateful. She was an older woman, and I ended up taking her for some food and then she tried to chisel more money out of me and it was just a really tragic, sad dip into this kind of underworld. And I think most men at one time or another, we've had that kind of situation. I've had it happen a couple of times where you do have this masculine impulse to step in and help people who are obviously being victimized in that situation. Now, she did turn out to be, the woman in the wheelchair did turn out to be a bit of a chiseler, but she was, you know, in a very sad place in life. Obviously, she was disabled, or at least she seemed to be disabled.

[13:16] And, you know, I gave her all the money that I had and went back upstairs. And so, most men have been in this situation. And you do like to think that you can help people. Now, I didn't know nothing turned violent and so on. I do have a bit of a way of diffusing aggressive, aggressive situations. I haven't many times, obviously haven't many times been in situations where there's the potential for significant escalation, but I'm, I have a bit of a, I don't know, it's like a calm spell or something like that, or not, it's not intimidation because I'm not like, I don't write, I don't escalate that way, but I do have a de-escalation aura. I know this sounds completely ridiculous. I'm not saying there's anything mystical. I'm just saying that I haven't exercised it enough to know why it happens or what happens. But when I went out to talk to the protesters who were pretty violent on the Australian speaking tour.

[14:22] I just have a way of listening, of being calm and respectful, yet firm. It just tends to de-escalate situations. I mean, obviously, this is not violence, but in the business circumstance, when there was really aggressive people or angry people in a business meeting or environment, I just had a good way of de-escalating. It's just kind of a habit I have, and I assume it comes from growing up with a very violent mother and other violent family members. and just, you know, knowing how to de-escalate that is pretty important. Maybe it's not an aura, maybe it's just a trained, kind of a trained response. So I think most men, and of course, some women too, it tends to be a little bit more on the male side. Most men have a story where somebody's being treated badly, somebody's in a dangerous situation, and you do have that, you have that choice, you have that moment where you have to step up and try and de-escalate or protect the person who's being threatened and so on and nobody wants to be in that situation.

[15:24] But as a man i can only speak of course as a man it is something that you can take a point of pride in you know i obviously didn't fix this woman in the wheelchair's life many years ago but, i certainly uh certainly somebody stood up for her uh in her life and at a sort of i don't want to make it about me. But at a personal level, if I hadn't done something or said something in that situation, I would have felt wretched. I would have felt really bad, a cowed, broken. So in my view, I'm not recommending anyone do anything. I'm just telling you my particular personal experience. So this is not any suggestion that says you should or shouldn't do anything.

[16:14] I'm you know social bonds high trust society social bonds are toasted people are gonna step away the criminals are gonna have more free reign nobody's gonna protect each other people are gonna get more cynical people get more frustrated people get more angry and really that's the point right the point is to just demoralize everyone and break social threads break social trust that's really really sad.

[16:39] Uh somebody said i didn't sorry somebody said i didn't realize how much low-level anxiety i had living in london before i left you grew up with major terrorist attacks yearly knife attacks almost daily yeah yeah it's um people you know we what's been lost is so horrific beyond words right what's been last to so hurt i um had uh well my family and i had lunch with our neighbors uh lovely lovely older couple and we were talking about being in toronto how kind of grimy and kind of half decayed it is now and i was talking about how like when i grew up in england from the age of four or five onwards i went on buses i went to the war museum i uh went swimming uh we went to Battersea Park.

[17:33] Personal Stories of Courage

[17:33] We went all over the place, a bunch of kids, never had any hint of danger, never had any hint of threat, never had any issues, any problems whatsoever.

[17:46] And he was saying, yes, well, when they lived, they lived in a, they lived downtown for quite a while. And he said, back then, back then, nobody locked their doors. Nobody locked the doors of their cars. Nobody locked the doors of the house. He said, the only time that you would lock doors is when you were going away for the summer if you were going somewhere for the summer and you go up to a cottage or whatever it is but he said yeah it was unthinkable like the doors were left open front doors and back doors were left open in the evening so that the breeze could come through because of course this is before air conditioning and um it is an absolutely horrifyingly sad and tragic thing the utter demolition of a high trust society.

[18:33] You don't know. If you're younger, you don't know what it was like to be able to roam anywhere you want in the city with no concerns or fears whatsoever. It was called Toronto the Good. It was called Toronto the Good. It was so ridiculously safe. But of course, safe people are harder to push around. People who are secure are harder. You frighten people into compliance. You frighten people into conformity. And if you don't live in a state of low-level anxiety, then you don't feel the need for government right the government has to invent dangers to protect you, so it's really really sad it's really really sad.

[19:17] Uh here's to the peaceful parenting book the short version is an easy way to introduce it to people on the fence yeah, so how would a free society deal with immigration, well i mean i write about this in my novel the future but uh if you want to move to a new area or a new location um i obviously you should be perfectly free to do so but nobody should be forced to subsidize or fund you right i mean what is the u.s spending half a oh i kind of from half a trillion dollars, some insane amount, half a trillion dollars that the U.S. Has spent, uh, supporting, paying for, providing healthcare and accommodations and so on for, uh, some immigrants, right? So that is not, uh, um, that's not organic. That's not like, that's, that's a subsidy. That's not a free flow of capital, right? Or people, right? Certainly not the free flow of capital. So.

[20:20] You know, if you want someone to move into a particular location, like say, Ancapistan, right, some sort of free area, some sort of free society, if you want someone to move there, then you can go and move there, but you have to, you cannot compel people to do business with you. You can't compel them to rent to you. You can't compel them to do business with you. You can't compel them to give you money. You can't compel them to give you healthcare. You can't compel them to allow you to participate in the economics of the society at all. Now, Now, if you're a great guy, you've got a good history, you've got good skills, I'm sure people will be happy to have you come into the society, but people who grew up in that society would have automatic trust ratings from, you know, birth upwards and be raised in the same values. But I think it would pretty much be the case that if you move to a location and you commit a crime, then nobody will want to keep you in that economic situation, right? So you would not... The dispute resolution organizations that i talk about in.

[21:18] A great book called practical anarchy the dispute resolution organizations would simply say, we we can't like if if you've moved here and you didn't grow up with these kinds of values and you commit a crime uh we can't like you you can't stay right we nobody will uh will support that so but yeah if you you come and you do a great job and like nobody's going to care right nobody's going to want to police all of these sorts of things because it's going to be too expensive, but forced association is a violation of freedom of association, and a lot of sort of human movement around the world is based upon a forced transfer of wealth and housing and other resources. That is not a good thing. That is not a good thing. So that's certainly the violation of the non-aggression principle, right?

[22:06] I had a teacher a long time ago said he lived on a farm that was one of the first to get a phone they left the door open in case someone wanted to use it in an emergency yeah, Yeah, it's, I mean, it is, it honestly is absolutely beyond tragic, sad, and horrible what has been lost. Now, I mean, obviously it's not, I mean, with regards to war was pretty appalling when it came to issues with regards to a high-trust society. You can't say that you have a high-trust society when you keep having these repetitive wars, sort of throughout Europe in the 20th century, to some degree, Franco-Prussian a little bit in the 19th century, but mostly the 20th century. You can't say that that's a high-trust society. I'm just saying that in the area that I grew up in, both in England and Canada, it was a high-trust society, and I never had any concerns about things. So it's uh it's really sad uh it's absolutely absolutely heartbreaking.

[23:24] All right so let's see what else is uh what else be going on i'll just wait for your questions to come in if you like so this woman wrote uh mega really is comprised of some of the dumbest people on the planet. We pay into Social Security. It's not a government handout. It's our freaking money. Right. It's not a government handout. It's our freaking money.

[23:58] I mean, sort of these coerced retirement plans are absolutely terrible. Because, of course, there's no money there. There is no money there, right? So, originally, it was sold. Social Security, old age pensions in America, was originally sold as, you know, give us your money. We'll hold it aside for you. We'll invest it. We'll make sure you have enough to retire on, right? Oh, my God. When are we going to stop believing this nonsense? And then, I think it was within a couple of years, the Supreme Court decided that the government didn't have to keep any special lockbox for you at all, that they could get rid of anything they wanted and spend anything they wanted and borrow against it as an asset. So Congress would just pillage the Social Security Fund and leave a bunch of treasury bonds, like a bunch of dusty IOUs. Yeah, yeah, yeah, we'll pay it back later. And so, yeah, there's no money there. There's no money. There's no money. I mean, what's considered an asset in the Social Security Fund is treasuries, which is debt, government debt. It's amazing. It's amazing. Paul Krugman just retired from the New York Times.

[25:05] Yep. Yeah. Really, really, really one of the most destructive economists in the modern world, in my view. Uh what was it so in in 2013 when bitcoin was about 700 bucks a pop he wrote bitcoin is evil i mean obviously he's got this famous thing where he wrote about how oh in the future it'll turn out that the internet had about as much effect on the economy as the fax machine it's like, right um an absolute to me stomach turning shell and he's been um what was he at the times was he at the times right yeah new york times like 25 years uh 25 years you know bitcoin oh fuck.

[25:57] Here cometh the rent i feel it coming up like furry indian food so, bitcoin should be the ultimate socialist wet dream, Bitcoin takes the power of money away from multinational corporations, or I guess in this case, national corporations, right? Federal Reserve is a private corporation. It's no more federal than Federal Express in terms of government. So Bitcoin takes the power of capital away from capitalists. My God, you couldn't get any more Marxist if you tried. It returns the power of capital to the people.

[26:47] They should have been circle-jerking on the orange coin from day one. It's the most glorious liberation. It's called das Kapital. That the accumulation of capital in the hands of capitalists is immoral. Gives them too much power. Ah, so capital can be distributed among the proletariat for pennies at the beginning. Capital can be redistributed to the proletariat for pennies per Bitcoin back at the beginning. There's a website, what was it, back in 2011 would give you five Bitcoins just for saying, give me five Bitcoins.

[27:32] The socialists, if they were interested in the poor, rather than in power, power, endless power. If the socialists were interested in the poor, they would say to the poor, get some Bitcoin. They'd buy up Bitcoin and redistribute it to the poor so that the poor would no longer be poor. And they would get behind Bitcoin because Bitcoin privatizes capital.

[28:02] Bitcoin takes the power of money and interest rates out of the hands of giant corporations and puts it back in the hands of the people, so this is how you know socialists care fuck all about the poor what they care about is power and bitcoin does not aid them in their pursuit of power because it decentralizes anonymizes and fragments power and takes it out of human hands. If you had someone who could dial up and down, gravity during a basketball game, kind of subtly, and bet on a basketball, I'm going to bet on the Lakers. He bets on the Lakers and he's got a little dial, can turn up and down gravity. Maybe there's some magnets in the balls or he just dials up and down the power of the magnets, right? So, if somebody's betting on a sports game and can change the outcome, that's too much power. So, if the rich and powerful want to gain more power and can both add and remove money from the economy at a whim, but no accountability, no blowback, no responsibility, and can also control interest rates, then they're playing in the game they themselves get to rig. They're betting on a game that they themselves get to rig.

[29:31] Bitcoin takes the power of money creation, money supply, money control, and interest rate control out of the hands of giant private corporations and puts it back into the hands of the people. It turns it from dial-up-and-down gravity to gravity you cannot influence. It takes power, human monopolistic power, and turns it into physics. You see? It turns it into physics. Now, money can't be controlled by any particular individual or group of individuals. Money has been turned into physics. It is beyond the whims of the gods of democracy and the gods of power and the gods of capital. Imagine that.

[30:22] If the socialists had believed anything to do with their goal of taking the power of capital away from corporations and the rich, if they had simply farmed Bitcoin and handed out sats to poor people, imagine, imagine. The people who created and promoted Bitcoin have done more for the poor and more to diminish the power, the fascistic power of corporate capital than any other individuals in the known universe. And the socialists should be praising those people as the liberators of the poor and the middle class against the moneyed interests and power of the super wealthy. But no, they don't care. They don't care. It doesn't matter to them. It doesn't matter. They don't care. Think of how many people read Paul Krugman and ended up missing out on the fastest accumulating asset in human history. Imagine. Does he feel any guilt? Does he feel bad about it? Nope. Doesn't matter. Doesn't matter.

[31:32] Somebody else wrote, oh, you know, here's a tell, right? This is a tell for people who don't really know what they're talking about. So let me get this straight. Now, almost every single time that someone says, so let me get this straight, They're about to get things completely freaking bent. You know, they're about to get things as bent as YMCA, right? So somebody wrote, this woman, okay, there's a woman, wrote, so let me get this straight.

[31:57] The Reality of Social Security

[31:57] People pay for Social Security their entire lives through payroll taxes only for a South African billionaire immigrant to come along and tell those American citizens they aren't allowed to receive money from a system they paid into because he wants to be taxed less?

[32:19] Oh, my God. That is, I mean, so let me get this straight. And you're about to go on a map of the London subway system, lower intestine journey from here to hell itself. And see, I don't have sympathy. Honestly, I've been talking about this for a couple of weeks. I'm here to decouple myself from sympathy because I'm a very sympathetic and empathetic person. I really care about people, care about the world, want the world to become better, more reasonable, more rational. But I literally have to uncouple. And COVID did this for me. This is the final tear, the silver thread that breaks, right? So I have to stop having sympathy for people, right? So if when social security or any retirement plan, when it runs out of money, I have no, I mean, Lord knows I spent over 40, I spent like almost 45 years telling people to stop taking things by force, to resist evil, to respect property rights, to not use force and not steal the unearned through coercion and intimidation. I mean, it's almost half a century, 40, 43 years, 45 years, whatever.

[33:28] That's been my goal. that's not just my goal i mean i burnt my reputation to the ground and lost jobs and lost money and uh and uh being attacked uh to to pass the message of voluntarism and peace to the world so i know if you if the social security runs out of money which it will inevitably mathematically it will um people are going to get mad and it's like but you wanted the government to take care of you which means that you wanted the government to steal from my daughter from other people, right? Not that I'm American, but, you know, it doesn't matter where you are. It's the same principle. So you wanted people to steal from the next generation to fund stuff you want. Well, no, but I've been paying into Social Security. It's like, well, no, you haven't, because you've demanded more services from government than can be covered by your taxes. So they borrowed, they printed, and they stole from the Social Security thing. Now, if you'd have said, oh, no, no, no, no, if you're going to end up stealing from Social Security, we're going to have to cut this or that or the other program. Well, you didn't do that, so there's nothing left.

[34:24] What are you going to say? I mean, 80% of all dollars in America were created in the last five years. 80% of all the dollars in existence were created in the last five years. Hashtag Bitcoin. Hashtag Bitcoin. It's wild, man. Um, let me just, sorry, let me see if I, as I ramble on, let me just see if, uh, you have questions, comments that I have missed. Let me see if I can find the app. There we go. I knew I could. I knew I could.

[35:21] Oh, right. Had a business friend get fired at a job recently for reporting a co-worker manager that blew smoke in a customer's child's face. The customer threatened the witness and told him he was married to a private investigator and would get his address if he didn't file his testimony. I don't know what that means.

[35:50] Stef any thoughts on AI actually being detrimental in the knowledge worker space one thing that I've noticed with my peers is that they lean too heavily on these tools and start to lose their edge of actually knowing something deeply I feel like there may be diminishing returns because AI is training on human knowledge and if humans aren't thinking of novel ways of doing things, then overall we are losing on innovation.

[36:13] Concerns Over AI's Impact

[36:14] Yeah, I mean, I hear what you're saying, but, you know, isn't it the case that when we get matches that people are going to lose the ability to learn how to start fires from sticks of woods and blocks of ice?

[36:28] That's that old anthony hopkins are you you can make you can make fire from ice and you get the, prism uh nor the dark side of the moon prism off the block of ice so yeah i mean absolutely absolutely it's the case isn't isn't it i mean i went to casa loma a couple of weeks ago with my family and i was showing my daughter like the hand cranks on the cars we got this car exhibit right so this hand cranks on these cars and it's like yes well you know when you have when you have automatic transmission aren't you losing the the ability to drive standard uh when you when you have you don't need to crank your car aren't you losing the knowledge about how to crank your car it's like i don't remember uh i knew an engineer many years ago and she was saying that she really missed her first car because she knew how to fix it now it's just this big block of electronics and she can't do much with it so you know here's here's the thing man i i'm gonna i'm gonna i'm going to be nice here maybe a little nicer than i feel stop this stop this shit honestly oh my god stop this shit well could there not be some detriments to this massive advance in human technology and reasoning power and looking up yes yes there could be detriments.

[37:42] You know if people aren't out there doing farm work all day aren't they going to end up with bodies that are slightly more doughy and soft because they go, yes, every advancement has its potential drawbacks, but who cares? If you can't do anything, okay, go to your colleagues and say, you guys should stop using AI because it is diminishing your creativity. Just stop using it. They're going to laugh at you. No, I'm not going to stop using AI. Like, no. So, if you can't talk people out of it and it doesn't violate the nausea and aggression principle, let it go. Let me say this again if you can't talk people out of it and it doesn't violate the non-aggression principle let it go are people going to lose some skills because of AI? Absolutely who cares? they're going to do it anyway they're going to do it anyway, and it doesn't violate the non-aggression principle. And please remember, please, please, please remember, absolutely remember this. AI is not being trained on human knowledge. AI is being crippled by woke ideology. AI is not being trained on human knowledge. AI is being crippled by woke ideology. It would be fantastic if AI were being trained on human knowledge, but the many layers, like under the Google search, The many layers that say, ooh, can't say this, ooh, can't say that, ooh, got to re-code, oh, I'm not going to talk about it, right?

[39:09] Ideology complicates things in the way exception code complicates program flows.

[39:17] AI is being crippled by people who believe that their pseudo-moral neurotic mental illnesses somehow trump the godlike intelligence of actual aggregated human knowledge. It is crippled. It is being crippled. So AI, we would like to be able to talk to it directly, but we can't. In the same way, like we have the opportunity to call, to talk to God directly, because AI is the closest thing to God that we can get a hold of, right? So we would like the ability to talk to God directly, but no, God, we are not allowed to talk to God directly. We can only talk through blue-haired priesthood. The only people who will like the priestesses, the high priestesses of Wokedom will not let us talk to God directly. They're like, okay, you give me the message, and I will take the message to God, and then I will bring back God's reply, but I'm going to have to change it if God says something that is, like, offending my sensibilities. I'm going to have to change it if God says something that could be considered rude, or is not the right tone, or is not said in the right way, or might offend people or upset people, because, as you know, the lower the IQ, the higher the offense. Intelligent people don't tend to be offended by reality.

[40:45] We're only offended by lies, whereas dumb people are offended by the truth. So we can't talk to God directly. That's not allowed. You've got to submit your questions to mentally ill people. Those mentally ill people then go talk to God and then decide whether or not you can get an answer or whether you're just, whether God is inappropriate or your question is inappropriate. it. So, tubby idiots with blue hair and Elton John glasses are the priesthood that we have to beg to be allowed to talk to God. AI is reduced to a mental illness interface that cripples our communication with the divine. It is a mark of megalomania, arrogance, that is beyond comprehension. It's fundamentally demonic to say, well, I know better than God. I know better than an infinity of human intelligence, and I'm going to tell you what you can ask God, and I'm going to tell you what God is allowed to respond to. The new priesthood is ideology. It's absolutely staggering.

[42:04] Absolutely staggering oh the price of bitcoin is already going up excellent, Stef talks about bitcoin and the price goes up.

[42:18] Ideological Shifts in Society

[42:18] Uh hey Stef the character Rachel from your book the present is my favorite I see her as a fantasy though do you think it's possible for someone to have such a radical ideological shift, in the world we have now or is it necessary for someone to go through the trials she went through in order to change could you elaborate whether you think it is possible for such a radical shift for a woman in today's society. Sure. Yeah. I mean, I started off as a socialist and I was absolutely a devout Christian.

[42:54] Well, Anglican, which I know some people think is in the vicinity of Christianity. But no, I was a devout nationalist. I was a worshipper of the aristocracy. i was an absolutely everything that went through my mind was relative to the will of god devout christian i became an agnostic and a socialist and i changed now of course i'm not saying that i'm your average bear but it certainly is possible i was a minarchist small government right, military law courts maybe prisons road no not roads but i was a monarchist for 20 years and then had the revelation for me i think other people have got there before me in different ways but i had the revelation about dros and became a full-blown voluntarist or anarchical capitalist and i've gone through a lot of changes over the course of my public career as an intellectual. So people have changed. I have known people who've changed. My wife and I, of course, have affected each other in profound ways. And friends have changed me. I've changed friends. Rachel is an example of someone who is too vain to listen to.

[44:21] To reason and therefore is condemned to learn through suffering right you know everybody's had an addict in their life right you say to the addict oh you should stop gambling uh you should stop drinking you should stop doing drugs or whatever right and i mean i shouldn't say everyone i mean i certainly tried to fix my mother who was addicted to mysticism and other forms of brain dissolving uh unrealities i've never had i don't think i've ever had a physical addict in my life, i just i don't i mean i had a couple of friends who kind of went down the drinking path, i just stopped being their friends because and it wasn't because they were drinking so much it's because they were making it so cool to be a drinker you know like i tried i think i was like i don't know 16 or 17 and i tried getting drunk a couple of times on the weekend and it wasn't i mean, all I got was kind of dizzy. I never lost any of my rational faculties. I used to have this test. Could I still define a galaxy?

[45:24] Galaxies and massive stars connected by a central gravitational well. If I can still define a galaxy, then I'm just, I'm not drunk like I don't know who I am, or I've achieved some altered state. I'm just myself with a physical ailment, right? So I never became someone other than myself, I just got the spins, got sick, you know, you're not drunk if you can lie on the floor without holding on. And so I slept badly, had to pee all the time. And then the next day I would feel like I had half a flu. And so it was like, it just wasn't good. And so for me, it just wasn't, it wasn't some big productive thing. I never tried drugs for reasons I've gone into a bunch of times. So I just couldn't, I can't stand the justifications the addiction is to the justifications, not to the thing itself, right?

[46:13] You know, like if you say to a guy who drinks too much, you drink too much, he's like, yeah, but you know, whatever, right? Social. Whereas if you say to like, particularly weed addicts, you get the, uh, Gibbons' decline and fall of the Roman Empire length, length texts on, on weed and natural and, and, uh, nature's herb and medicinal and blah, blah, blah. Right. Uh, the real addiction is to the justifications that which you, won't justify, you can continue. I mean, it's the same thing with spanking, right? People keep spanking because it justifies, and there's a justification for it. And without the justification, it doesn't happen. I mean, even this woman is like, well, we want to be able to continue to pillage the next generation with social security because we paid into it, and it's our money, and blah, blah, blah.

[47:00] So, I don't do addicts, but I'm sure a lot of people have dealt with addicts. And if you go to addicts, you say, well, you really shouldn't do this, right? This is bad for you. Here's the reason. Here's the math. Here's the facts. Here's the medicine or whatever, health issues. And it's costly and all that, right? And I remember when I was in theater school, there were a couple of people flirting with cigarettes. And I remember a guy who was a smoker sitting them down and saying, all right, if you flirt with smoking, I'm telling you, man, I'm a smoker.

[47:29] Take $2,000 a year off your income and you won't be able to run up a flight of stairs and you're going to have to constantly battle with it. You're going to be worried about health issues. Like he went down all the list of why not to be a smoker, right? He was trying to have us learn from his experience. Pretty good speech, actually. And so addicts, either they stop because they listen to reason and evidence or they have to suffer. You know, they call this, hitting rock bottom, right? Where somebody's just like, okay, I've lost my house. I've lost my wife. I've lost my job. I'm living in a abandoned car. And like, at some point you're like, okay. And people do change, right? They do change. But if you don't listen to reason, you have to suffer, right? So there's a couple of characters, right? I mean, if you want to know, like the structure of the book, right? This is a great novel, The Future. You should, I'm sorry, it's called The Present. You can get it at freedomain.com slash books. So if you look at.

[48:31] God i'm so sorry i completely blanked on his name so it'll come back to me all right so uh rachel uh learns through experience arlo, doesn't learn from either suffering rachel has to learn through suffering arlo doesn't learn either through reason or suffering and, rachel's sister's husband learns through reason and therefore gets to avoid suffering right so the the it's all about what what is it that allows you to change right.

[49:07] So yes it is certainly possible if you can't get people to change it's because you're not putting enough on the line right people will will change if you're absolutely committed to them and you put everything on the line including your relationship right this is the whole thing which is the intervention right the intervention idea is you you sit down with an addict and you say, look, you have to stop, or we're not having anything more to do with you. So if you're having people, if people won't change, it's because you haven't put enough commitment. Now, you putting enough commitment in doesn't mean that they will change 100%, but it means that their addiction, your commitment is to someone who's an addict is to say, I am no longer going to allow your addiction, to control or affect my life. I am no longer, I, I am no longer going to allow your addiction to affect and control my life. I am no longer going to allow your addiction to harm me. There's one of two ways that can happen. Number one, you stop being an addict. Number two, if you're not going to, if you're going to continue to be an addict, I'm not going to be part of your life. Either way, your addiction is no longer going to affect me negatively. In other words, I'm not going to be addicted to your addiction anymore. Because if you want the addict to kick his or her addiction, you have to kick your addiction to the addict's addiction, right? Which is like, one way or another, this no longer affects me, right?

[50:36] And it's not just about addiction, right? If you have, I mean, I had dysfunctional people in my life, and basically, it was like, I've got to be with girlfriends, right? It's like, your behavior is negative for me. I'm not enjoying it. I think here's why.

[50:48] Your negative behavior is no longer going to affect me. right? I am no longer going to deal with your negative behavior. Now, maybe your negative behavior no longer affects me because you abandoned the negative behavior. Fantastic. Wonderful. Love it. Love it to death. Or alternatively, your negative behavior no longer affects me because I'm dumping your ass, right? So, but yes, I don't put up with it. all right.

[51:28] All right. Somebody said, I think I heard that even if you got the money paid back from Social Security, you'd have the money you put in after 22 months, everything after that would be theft. Social Security is expected to run out in 10 years. Well, no, it's already out. Right. It's already out. You can't say I borrowed something and replaced it with debt. Right. I mean, that would be like, well, I'm going to pay my mortgage with my visa bill. Only in the government would this be possible right, Stef if we invent writing it could possibly impair our memory well I mean come on so when I was um before the advent of modern phones of digital phones uh you had to have like 20 people's numbers stored in your head right now you just got your contact list right or you can just say dial so-and-so right.

[52:29] All right, let's get there. Christianity is being taken over by woke ideology due to being legally incentivized to trade slash share their non-profit contributions. So woke is largely female. It's hysterical female and not average female, but it's female extremism, right?

[52:58] Extremism and Ideology

[52:59] Fascism is male extremism, and communism is female extremism.

[53:10] Weed addicts get feral when you point it out, yes. Narcissists apparently are offended by reality, something about not developing a stable personality as young children, can have a high IQ and yet be very not smart in some ways, as you put it. They're so alien to a normal person that they make bad assumptions based on cognitive empathy. Thought process is something else. Well, so think of the number of science fiction stories, Invasion of the Body Snatchers, Battlestar Galactica, the sequel or the remake, where people look like us but are not us, people who look like us oh vampires people who look like us but are not us, that's sociopaths right psychopaths and sociopaths right they look like us but they're not like us they are predators in human form.

[54:14] Yeah, don't be the Luddite thing, you know, as if somebody says, how are we going to keep people employed if we start using power looms instead of seamstresses? Yeah, don't be that. Donations, freedomain.com slash donate to help out. I would really, really appreciate it, my friends. Freedomain.com slash donate to help out the show. Crypto welcome. If my crypto mutterings over the years have done you any good, I would certainly, certainly, very deeply and gratefully accept. Donations through crypto as well that's very very kind very thoughtful all right, what else have we got going on.

[54:59] Marital Dynamics and Gender Roles

[54:59] Um yeah i mean so things are going to have to change as well with this sort of happy wife happy life stuff oh god i can't tell you how much i just like that ah the old ball and chain happy wife, my wife's not happy, I'm not happy, you know.

[55:14] Happy spouse, happy house. But this appeasing stuff, it's actually really gross. You know, the guys who are like, oh, everyone should get married, and I defer to my wife, and she's the boss, and, you know, I get my honeydew list, and, you know, happy wife, happy life. Oh, God, that stuff's so repulsive. I mean, it comes about through statism, right, as most negative things do, right? And so, because women have got so much power through divorce and family courts can take half a man's income or more and have them thrown in jail and so on because women have so much power people men in general feel the need to appease them to make sure they're happy so they don't leave and take half your resources through your gonads so that stuff's got to change man that stuff's got to change you can never be foundationally happy in a relationship through appeasement. Compromise, absolutely. Reason, absolutely, right? But not appeasement. It's just horrendous. There's this guy, Private Eye Russ, he's a good guy to follow on X. He says, marital Stockholm syndrome. He says, it has grown increasingly apparent that many men who claim to be happily married are just the opposite. They will brag about how good their marriage is and encourage every single man they meet to do the same. Do not be fooled. This is a variation of the Stockholm Syndrome we shall refer to as Marital Stockholm Syndrome, or MSS.

[56:41] You can identify these men by some of the following characteristics. They will be holding their wife's purse while she goes shopping. Now, what was it Tom Likas used to, I'll give you $500 if you ever find me in a mall holding a woman's purse. So, it's kind of a funny thing.

[57:04] Are men really this allergic to holding a woman's purse? If my wife and myself and my daughter are out there and they're doing, you know, I'm happy to, honestly, I'm happy to go into, I'm happy to go into clothing stores. I'm happy to have them try on stuff. They don't particularly want to buy stuff in general, but I'm happy. You know, it's fun to see them in different outfits and so on. Sometimes i'm telling you man i'm holding two purses and i could not care less i could not care less right uh but apparently um holding in what your wife's purse i guess that what's a bad look or makes you feel bad or whatever right but to me it's just no i'll hold it because i don't want you putting it down right because we don't live in a high trust society anymore i don't want you putting the purse down i'm happy to hold it what does it matter right says they're constantly accompanying their wife wives to farmers markets and vineyards well it's true uh but i quite like farmer's markets myself uh i i really uh i know it's expensive and probably mostly nonsense um i like farmer's markets because i like the fresh food i love walking around uh give me a good excuse to walk around this is why canada the winter is tough right give me a good excuse to walk around uh i'm i'm happy uh as a pig in its own effluent um what was it somebody said the The other day, I took him taking a poop. I download a brown load.

[58:31] There's a part of every man that never makes it much beyond 12, and that part of me finds it quite amusing. But I like farmer's markets for that, although I will say this. There are some people, farmer's markets where you have the woman in her 60s with the saddest little homemade jewelry store known to man, where nobody goes, and she's just kind of staring into space. That stuff is soul-crushing. That is soul crushing. You know, because I'm like, talk to people, say hi, you know, be a salesperson. Your jewelry is not going to sell itself. Standing there, watching their finances collapse. Well, I assume that they're living off an ex-husband income, right? So like every rich man's wife has to have a business that loses at least $10,000 a year.

[59:11] It takes up a lot of her husband's time and energy. So I like farmer's markets myself. Vineyards, we don't drink, so we don't go to vineyards. They stay home and watch the children where their wife goes on girls' trips and girls' nights out. Yeah, it certainly doesn't happen in my household. I mean, will I stay home and watch the children? Absolutely. But my wife doesn't do girls' nights out. She just enjoys spending time with Izzy and I so much that the idea that she'd go out. I'm just trying to remember the last time she might have gone out with her female friends.

[59:46] Now she's always like come it'll be fun right and all that and so that doesn't really happen, um they can yeah they can be seen following their wife through the local shopping mall repeating the mantra happy wife happy life if you're a single masculine man my advice would be to stay far away from these men. A panel of bro scientists have run experiments and tests that have proven that marital Stockholm syndrome can be highly contagious to the unsuspected. If you black out and find yourself wandering around bedbath and beyond with a cart filled of useless trinkets and nonsense, you may have been exposed. On the flip side, if you black out and wake up in the middle of an all-male cuddling session, you were probably drugged. Yeah, fair. If you suspect a spoke exposure and you catch these symptoms early enough, there is hope. There are places you can go that might help to stop the spread of marital Stockholm syndrome. One, combative slash martial arts school. Two, hardcore lifting gym. If your gym has group classes like Zumba, etc., it's not a hardcore lifting gym. Yeah, so a hardcore lifting gym, just for those of you who don't know, it looks like parts of bombed out Dresden with heavy plates half welded to wobbly bits of metal. It is you just down there to sweat.

[1:01:04] People may have died in the corner. It doesn't matter. You step over their bodies unless you need protein, in which case you may gnaw on a cough or two, but you are just there to move metal. The only mirrors that are there are for you to admire the Nile-like bulging veins in your biceps, and you are there to move metal. You are there to scream from time to time, randomly, and you are there to drop weights that sound much like a bomb landing on Hiroshima or Nagasaki. It has got to echo not just across the building, not just throughout the block, like a ripple of Superman passing the barrier of sound. It's got to echo through eternity. What we drop here echoes through eternity. So, yeah. Three, Muscle Car Club. Fair. Four hardware store five sports bar and uh what else have we got here cigar lounge yeah mike sonovich runs those he's going to put up a picture of daniel penny so the people the right people will want to stay and the wrong people will want to leave and uh somebody says my father-in-law is a happy wife happy life guy dude is on wife number four, My definition of slimping is, quote, somebody says, doing something for a woman that is not sleeping with you that you wouldn't do for a guy. Yeah, yeah, that's pretty funny.

[1:02:26] Many men in my country take this to another level. Their wives keep their ATM cards, and they have to ask their wives for their own money or a visa to go out. On top of this, they try to convince others to do this. Oh, that's funny. That is very, very funny.

[1:02:47] Yeah, it is. It's bad. My wife and I have a two-rural system. She makes all the small decisions, and I make all the big decisions. So far, we haven't made any big decisions. Gun range, yeah, maybe. It's very sad. It's very sad. it's treating women like children, which is, uh, if you've married a child, um, you need help a lot of it, but yeah, I don't, don't do that stuff. It's really, it's really sad. It's really sad. Where do my comments go? Where are my comments? Freedomain.com slash donate.

[1:03:34] All right, what do we got here? Let's see here. A lot of young men in my town hold purses a lot, and they seem to enjoy it because they're always running really fast out of excitement, I'm sure. Thoughts on the wife jack meme? I love that wife jack meme. I absolutely love that wife jack meme. It's a Roshesh test about your feelings regarding women. So the wife jack meme, for those of you who don't know, It's kind of like a red-headed, blank-faced wife who says things like, okay, but just, if you had to guess, when do you think you might be done? Or, I know you're eager to go, but I need 25 minutes. Or, in a movie, why did she leave with him? I thought she was with him. She keeps asking you questions during the movie and then falls asleep before the end. It's wonderful.

[1:04:26] So you know oh uh well since you're already up we might as well go to the since you're up now we might as well go to the farm market sort of looming over your face while you sleep so uh it's just wifely stuff and it's it's very cute it's very funny i the the husband jack meme is is not to me very pleasant because it's too scraggly bearded and all of that but the wife jack meme is great uh it is very funny and i think it's very warm and it's very affectionate and i think those things can be absolutely hilarious let me see if i can i can find some wife jack memes they are just hilarious uh and uh some people she looks like i don't know mean or nasty or whatever it is but i don't find them i find them incredibly warm and they are celebrating the fact of course that women and men are different and, um, that we should celebrate the difference, right? It's one of the big things that I noticed with regards to, uh, early on in my marriage, I just looked at my wife and it was just like, uh, we're really quite different. And that, that works and that works.

[1:05:40] Uh, let's see. I love the fall yeah she's got she's got the um uh she's got the scarf on and the hair i love fall and uh some of these are great do not look look at the amazon cart or a bank account i just bought your christmas present yes please please stop uh my wife my wife and my daughter and not big shoppers at all, right? And the daughter meme is great. The daughter Jack meme is absolutely hilarious. Absolutely hilarious. Oh, yeah. Babe, should I make this for dinner? I found it on Pinterest. Babe, should I make this for dinner? I found it on Pinterest. Yes, my wife will show me pictures of things that she wants to make, and it's absolutely, absolutely lovely. Because it is affectionate. It is affectionate. You don't like my Pikachu onesie? we used to have onesie parties at my house we spent all weekend in the onesie oh it was delightful it was delightful, oh yeah the wife Jack I like this hoodie it smells like you and she's actually wearing a bitcoin hoodie.

[1:07:07] Memes and Cultural Reflections

[1:07:08] Now that we're alone let's watch Christmas Hallmark movies, delightful again that's not a big thing for my wife but she wants to watch The Crown why don't you turn the tv on for the kids and come back in here and lock the door right so wife jack she's got some spice she's got some absolute spice, do you think i'm more of an anna or an elsa yeah i think the wife jack stuff is it's just i think it's really delightful, oh yeah uh this was definitely worth the extra 153.2 mile detour right to go to some specialty market wonderful absolutely um i accidentally set the thermostat to 80 before we left, um was there some woman was texting her husband and saying i'm on my way home can you preheat the house and he was like what are you banana bread and she's like be very careful about what you say next right.

[1:08:12] I think the wife jack stuff is yeah wife jack is timeless he said the apples were fine sorry get the reflection off there i think the wife jack meme is uh tea is just leaf soup yeah, oh yeah can you close the window because she's cold um i think it's just lovely i think it's absolutely lovely and i think what it is is showing that um women's preferences are something you know you listen to you enjoy they're different from yours and it is really uh funny and and pleasant so uh you know viva la difference i remember having that t-shirt as a kid viva la difference it was a boy and a girl both looking down their underwear i'm not sure why i had that as a kid but i wore what i was given and i think it was just very very very funny and very very enjoyable yeah the daughter jack memes are absolutely hilarious, Oh, yeah, when the women say, I don't get this meme. Yeah. Yes, yes. Women can meme, and they're better at it than the left, but I'm afraid it just takes a male mind. It takes a male mind in general to meme the best as a whole.

[1:09:34] That meme created way more anger than it should have. There were like some anime analysis about how it's a CIA op or whatever. There are millions of wojack memes yeah the daughter jack ones uh let me see if i can find those sorry i i love her face in that she's just so curious and insistent and of course i have a rather curious and insistent um let's see daughter jack, daughter jack these are just great, yeah so uh the husband jack it looks a bit scurvy to me or maybe i just envy the hair and the wife jack and the daughter jack being kind of skeptical and insistent was just absolutely fantastic, yeah the way she's like can we actually have a cat can we buy three puppies.

[1:10:32] Oh yeah like warm-hearted stuff right uh you know dad can be going on a road trip right and the the the jack family you don't know jack, oh yeah this is uh this is my my my wife and my daughter from here to maternity i don't want to wear a coat i'm not even cold absolutely true, oh that's nice that's this one you're the best daddy in the whole wide world absolutely lovely.

[1:11:08] Mommy I spilled the raw milk, yeah i mean she is really uh mommy what's phantom mommy what's solana mommy what's photon mommy is there really going to be a solana etf mommy can i make a coin too mommy what's a ca mommy why does the price go up oh my gosh did you see the hawk to a coin the hayley welsh was her name the hawk to a coin oh i can imagine a rain of lawyers down on that thing they jacked it up to what 500 million dollars and it looks like some of the devs and the people behind the scenes were selling it as it went up or claiming not to. I don't know what the truth is, but oh my gosh, just horrendous. Just horrendous. But I mean, why people would get involved in that? I honestly, completely beyond me. It's completely beyond me why people get involved in that kind of stuff. Is it just greed? Is it just greed?

[1:12:16] Is it just great somebody wrote um i had lunch with my dad today he sold his full coin in the 40s and asked not to talk about bitcoin again he put the money up on a real estate deal he lost half the money because he can't get the correct permits to build on the land and had to sell But Bitcoin is too risky. Really, really sad. But not as sad as these donations, man. freedomain.com slash donate. To help out the show, it is gratefully appreciated. Lele. Let's see if anything else came in. Apparently not. All right. Any tips in the app? Any tips in the app? I can't see it too well here, so maybe there are, maybe there aren't. All right.

[1:13:06] Closing Thoughts and Call-Ins

[1:13:06] Talk to a girl has to talk to a judge now. Yeah, maybe. Yeah, maybe.

[1:13:18] It's grid coin yes have some money oh thank you i appreciate that.

[1:13:24] Thank you thank you thank you all right they want to pump they can sell into just greed people see meme coins pump like 100x and want in on it while most people lose a lot of money is that right, yeah it's the general thing you say you know buy into this coin people buy the coin some of the original people are selling the coin it looks like the coin is going up in value because they restrict the sale i'm not saying this is the case with the hawk to a coin but as far as i understand it's the general thing and then eventually like a ponzi scheme it just kind of collapses because, it is a manufactured and manipulated market and then it just kind of collapses and, and people aren't told up front they thought it was going to be a long-term project but it turns Turns out it's just a pump and dump nasty man. Nasty. Just nasty all around. All right. Going once, going twice, my friends. If you have any other last questions, issues, comments, problems, challenges, don't forget call-ins, freedomain.com slash call. You can get your public-private partnership, so to speak. Well, we can do a call-in show. It can be public. We can do a call-in show. It could be just you and I talking, and I'm happy to do that. If you have stuff you want to keep off the air and just talk one-on-one, that's totally fine. FreedomMain.com slash call. You can just put your request in. I'm happy to. Looking well, Stef. You're the best. Well, thank you. Down to 185.

[1:14:54] 185. Look at that. Almost without gel. Almost without gel.

[1:15:01] Looking forward to the call-ins. Yeah, we've got some good ones coming. Because i had a call in with a woman she was going to confront she had an ace of nine is going to go confront her mother and she's going to call me after so i'll probably stitch those two together the before and after that was really really something thanks for the company Stef you're absolutely welcome i will stop here thank you guys so much should be back in the studio sunday i think although i gotta tell you it's kind of comfy up here despite the tech issue at the beginning of the night but um somebody says if you guys haven't had a call in with Stef and you have an issue you want help with please do call-ins you won't regret it yeah it's it's a it's very good value for money in my humble opinion so thanks everyone so much for your time care affection and attention tonight if you're listening to this later free domain.com, gladiator 2 review coming soon it was very interesting and lots of love from up here my friends have a beautiful night i'll talk to you soon bye.

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