0:09 - How's everyone doing?
12:24 - Let's Talk About Movies
28:45 - Thoughts on Money and Happiness
40:09 - Technology Frustrations
53:04 - Relationships and Expectations
1:00:56 - Beauty Standards and Society
1:09:22 - The Nature of Memory
1:17:12 - Movie Recommendations
In this episode, I delve into the current state of Bitcoin, reminiscing about its recent surge in value, which has brought a sense of excitement and speculation within the cryptocurrency community. I reflect on the contrast between the open nature of Bitcoin trading versus traditional financial markets that are bound by time constraints and regulations. With Bitcoin's increasing prominence, I also take a moment to express gratitude to those who support my insights and analyses, and I encourage listeners to consider how their investments in Bitcoin can positively influence their financial well-being.
Addressing listener questions, I touch upon a variety of topics including the cultural representation of Jesus in modern media, reflecting on my views about the TV show "The Chosen" and the film "The Whale." I delve into personal experiences and preferences, sharing my appreciation for uplifting audio experiences and the importance of quality production in content creation, which has been a recurring theme in my discussions.
As I navigate through the various questions, I discuss the phenomenon of buyer's remorse, examining how individuals often feel regret after their purchasing decisions. I offer my perspective on spending habits and how essential and luxury items are perceived differently based on personal experience. Drawing from my past of living frugally, I emphasize the importance of distinguishing between necessary expenditures and those that bring joy and happiness, noting that trading money for delightful experiences can be a worthy investment.
The conversation shifts towards my views on economic dynamics, specifically the tension between wealth distribution and productivity. I discuss the implications of wealth concentration in society and how it breeds resentment among those less fortunate. Drawing parallels with contemporary socio-economic trends, I critique the emergence of 'woke' culture and its implications on interaction within society and the economy, framing it as a misguided attempt to address inequalities. We explore these themes through the lens of philosophical inquiry and personal anecdotes.
Additionally, I reflect on the changing landscape of career opportunities and the unique challenges faced by those who venture into streaming as a profession. Highlighting the difficulties of maintaining an engaging presence while balancing audience expectations, I touch on the paradox of perceived ease versus the reality of hard work required to succeed in the streaming world.
The episode concludes with my thoughts on the importance of investing in meaningful experiences over mere monetary accumulation, reminding listeners that life's richness is often found in memories rather than in extended comfort zones. I encourage a mindset that values personal happiness and experiences, while also pondering the intersections of technological advancement and personal identity in our ever-evolving society. Exploring ideas around emotional stability and personal growth, I emphasize that every decision we make can be a step toward enriching our same energy and connection to the world around us.
[0:00] Good morning, everybody. 10th of November, 2024. Hey, how's everyone doing in the land of Bitcoin?
[0:09] How's everyone doing? Gonna take you higher, higher. That's right, my friends. Almost 111,000 Canadian up 4.8K in 24 hours. Did you? I mean, you know, I'm not obsessive about it or anything like that, but I will say that occasionally before I go to sleep, I like to get the good dreams of high spikes, and checketh the priceth of the Bitcoineth. And every now and then it's like whiplash, whiplash. So thank you. Thank you to everyone who voted for higher Bitcoin rather than, I don't know, World War III. That's a plus. I'm not saying that World War III wouldn't help the price of Bitcoin, but it's nice to not have the associated mass deaths. So that's a plus. A massive deep and a good plus and isn't it nice that bitcoin is pumping i like to pump it pump it and, uh all of the regular old trad fi markets are closed they can't do nothing about it but bitcoin is always open always open, All right.
[1:28] Let's get straight to your questions, comments, issues, challenges, problems, criticisms, whatever is on your mind. Thank you for your donation.
[1:38] Ickpaz2020. I can't see the Z without thinking of the ZX80, which was an original, what was it, Sinclair 2K computer? All right. Did you have a look at the TV show, The Chosen, about the life of Jesus? I did try. I did not, it did not take for me. It's like the Robe miniseries. It just did not take for me. It did not take for me. The depth and power of the life of Jesus would be very hard. Hey, maybe I should try it, right? But the depth and power of the life of Jesus would be almost impossible to write. And it does not, it did not work for me. Any thoughts on the Brendan Fraser movie, The Whale? Your life's dreams over this whole summer have been hitting it out of the park. Your perfect audio for a good gym workout session. Thank you. I appreciate that. I did watch a little bit of The Whale but it's too depressing and Brendan Fraser of course, criticized the Hollywood executive for inappropriate touching and I assumed that the only way he could get his career back would be to do some kind of humiliation ritual like playing this character, he was a great actor and all of that, but boy talk about the price of fame you know that guy just wrecked his entire body doing all of this, he's so fit and healthy.
[2:43] So, alright, good morning Stefan and community, no questions this week, just a note of thanks for your work you are a gem to the human race thank you i appreciate that thank you think clearly all right good morning the sun has finally come out where i live taking kids to play in the forest we'll listen later totally that that's a good priority man well done that's a good priority morning james good morning.
[3:09] Bitcoin new high. Oh, yeah, I think I noticed that. I think I noticed that. It's just interesting because there's so much of investing that has to do with a lot of research and figuring things out. And most of Bitcoin investing is just keep your hand away from the keyboard.
[3:31] What you need to do is you need to have a special computer for trading Bitcoin, selling bitcoin and it needs to have about 4 000 volts going through the all uh metal keyboard so you try to sell that's what it needs to be that's what it needs to be my net worth has gone up 40 plus this past week or well last wednesday i'm about to donate uh on your website thank you Stef thank you i appreciate that i appreciate that that's very kind thank you thank you thank Thank you. If, you know, if some of my analyses have helped your pockets over the years, you know, sharing the love is not irrational. It could, in fact, be positive. So sharing the love is great. It's great. All right. Thank you, Dylan. I appreciate that. Let's go check on the various places where we can get chatty chats.
[4:26] My god what is it with slow software these days holy crap stick doodle head holy you just want to take these developers and wood chipper them fargo style so when i print out my questions i have a bunch of questions to answer when i print out my questions i have saved a little setting on my printer so that doesn't print double-sided and you know it prints on a larger font so i can read the questions if i'm doing video without having my glasses on and i swear it's like four to five seconds to bring up the print options dialog box on an i7 computer with 32 gigs of ram i remember when i bought 32k of ram to add to eight to get 40k i got it from a guy in a parking lot hey man hey kid you look like you need some memory so yeah uh and it's just wild to me, that.
[5:21] That stuff all worked fast. I mean, think of QDOS, bring up a print dialog, boom, right there, Windows 3.1, that was the first big one, right? 32-bit disk access, let's go! And that stuff would just, you get whiplash from the user interface. Now, with computers a zillion times faster, it's like, hey, can I bring up a print dialog? Box? Anything? Bueller? Anything? No? Oh there it is oh wait no i need to change the tab like i programmed back in access 2.0 i programmed a tab interface i had to do it by hand it was really really complicated i programmed a tab interface now those tabs are built into windows but back in the day they weren't so you just click and it would flip click and flip click and flip well actually i preloaded all the screen i preloaded all the subforms and and hidden showed them based upon what you clicked on in the tabs, and it was like instantaneous and this is back when, a Pentium was hot shit not 46SX you want 46DX with the math coprocessor for things that you'll never use does it make Wing Commander run faster? No, then I don't care so why? why is everything so slow? What is the story with computers? I mean is it just backward compatibility is causing.
[6:47] Slow motion signal come on james t kirk even he spoke fast from time to time windows xp where was last good windows yeah it's just so slow, I've upgraded to the new software and the old versions worked better. Spyware ain't going to run itself. Yeah, isn't that wild, eh? You know, like you get this little thing on Outlook. Hey, do you want to try the new Outlook? Sure, I like new things. Oh, ads? Oh, okay. You could mention that. You could mention that. Would you like to try the new version of Outlook where you have to pay to not see ads? No, I really don't, in fact. Oh i remember windows 2000 man windows 2000 was glorious.
[7:40] It was so fast it was so fast and boy i i didn't even want to upgrade to windows xp i really didn't but i had to i had a god said envision m portable audio player that wasn't recognized under windows 2000 so i had to upgrade and uh just move to linux 10 times faster yes uh yes i'm too old to learn a new os sorry i just have time now time i'm just aware of time time passage of time you know i i have a uh the computer that i use to record my call-in shows is eight years old it's creaky the battery life sucks uh now and of course it's going to fail at some point probably right in the middle of a very important call and i'm like okay i could get an i could get a new computer, because eight years, that's a long time for a computer to be used, right? I could get a new computer, but then I got to spend a couple hours setting it all up. That used to be fun. Now it's, you know, when you have, when you're young, you have an infinite amount of time, so you don't really think about it. But when you're pushing 60, right, you're like, ah, there are limits. I can see, I can count the gumballs left in the machine. It's not just, hey, guess the number of gumballs. It's like, oh, yeah, there are 20 to 25, maybe 30 gumballs.
[8:57] So, yeah, I'll write it into the grave, that computer. It's a nice little computer, but, yeah, crazy, man, crazy. All right. Thank you for your support.
[9:12] So, Surface Pro 4. No, it's not a 4. This is an old Acer computer from, like, yeah, it's early 2017. I bought it now. It's late 2024, so.
[9:24] Yeah, I have a Surface Pro 2. But it's sludgy, man. It just slows down. Just stuff slows down. And of course, in the past, I'd be like, oh, I'll just reinstall Windows. And it's like, no, I don't have the time for that. Ain't nobody got time for that. So I just let it sludge. And, you know, you bring up the, what is killing the processor? It's a pretty fast processor in i7, right? So you bring up the task manager sought by CPU, and it's like, okay, why? Why are these interrupts? Why are they doing? Why, right? You've still got an Acer going from 2012. Excellent. Excellent. Maybe I'll get another half decade out of it. Yeah, Acer, that makes some pretty solid, solid machines. Windows to Linux on my personal computers five years ago. Never looked back. When I'm forced to use it to work, I suffer greatly. I have a Linux virtual machine that I played around with. Yeah, Acer is hardy. And this is a computer that's dented because I dropped it. It's dented on the corner. So, but I like it because it's got a stand that has a handle. So, if I'm walking around, right? I got a 2008 ThinkPad with Linux. Wow. That is immortal beloved. That is immortal beloved. All right. Anyway, let's get to the meat of the matter. So somebody asked me, and let me know if this would be an interesting topic. Hit me with a Y or an N if somebody asked me how to avoid.
[10:48] Buyer's remorse. How do you avoid regretting your purchasing decisions?
[10:55] Right? Do you have this, do you have a, like, do you feel like you wasted your money? Do you feel like you've, you've bought badly? Do you feel like, what's your relationship with spending and saving and so on? Right. I'm just curious if this is an interesting topic to you because, um, yes. Okay. Yes, yes, yes. So i've thought quite a bit about money over the i'm fascinated by money i'll tell you straight up i'm fascinated by money i love knowing people's finances i love uh how do you survive because that was always the big mystery to me how do you survive like when people are like oh you know the women like the suspicious women um who are like yes i uh i've been traveling for the last year from place to place. I don't have any particular job, and I have 18 followers on Instagram. It's like, okay, I get it. You're not traveling, you're riding a carousel from country to country. So.
[11:56] With regards to spending, there's this kind of puritanical thing that happens where you say, okay, here's the essentials and here's the things that are luxuries, right? Here are the essentials and here are the things that are luxuries. Now, I lived in a tent for a year in sometimes minus 40 degree weather. So, anything above that is luxury. I mean, I really, really lived hard, low, deep, mean, and lean to the ground. Nanook of the North, but without the igloo.
[12:25] So I'd lived in a Jack London novel or an Andes airplane crash novel. So, and I remember, I just thought about this the other day when I got the question and there was a guy, a friend of mine had a house and I needed a place to stay for a month. And he, the rooms were all full because he had roommates, but he put me in the attic and the attic was like dusty and, you know, there was crap and, and so on. And so to me, hey, you know, I'm not Raskolnikov style living in an attic. I'm not Harry Potter under the stairs. So anything above that to me, like anything above the bare minimum is luxury. And of course, I'm sure you guys have had this too. When I was a student, I lived very, very lean and poor, right? I lived very, very lean and poor. And you just get the big vat of pasta and sauce, you make it, you freeze it, and you just thaw it, and you just live on.
[13:17] Right novel you just live on on uh the sort of bare minimum kind of thing and uh i used to there was a student newspaper that would give you two for one subway so i'd go and order a big subway and this is back when you could heap on the toppings and they didn't charge you more so i'd get two for one 12 inches and then that would be you know four dinners because you cut them in half and all right so you just you know live as as cheap and lean as as possible so to me anything think above that could be considered a luxury. So I don't sort of divide things in my mind between essentials and luxuries. And, you know, much though I'm not a huge fan of Starbucks as a company for pretty obvious reasons, but they do make a crack addict nitro cold brew that is God's gift to caffeine addicts. He points at himself. So once a month or, you know, if I'm around a Starbucks, I'll pick up a nitro cold brew and they're like, I don't know, five bucks or something like that. And so I was like, is it a luxury? Sure, it's a luxury. Can I live without it? Yes, but it does give me joy. Now, trading money for happiness is a pretty good deal.
[14:29] Trading money for happiness is a pretty good deal. Now, my general philosophy is this. If something makes me happy, it's not too expensive and it's not like every day, I'll do it. But, but I will not spend to avoid unhappiness. I don't know if you've ever had this, if you're sort of feeling down or something like that. And then you're like, well, I could just go buy something and set it up. You have some technology thing. Like I need to replace the light behind me because it stopped working and stuff like that. So.
[14:58] I won't spend money to avoid unhappiness, but if it's, for me, it's not super expensive, it's not that often, and it does bring me happiness. And of course, the rarity is what helps bring the happiness, right? If I had a nitro cold brew, God help me, I'd probably have a heart attack. If I had a nitro cold brew every day, it wouldn't bring me that much happiness. But once in a while is a nice treat, so I view that as fine. So if you are spending money on things that generally gain in value that's a good thing, if you're spending money on things that lose value then that's fine as long as it gets you some happiness and you can't you you know you can't buy love but you can buy happiness but the virtue hopefully that gets you the love also gets you some success in the money-making world so you can't buy love but you can buy happiness i'm straight up at that you can't and.
[15:56] There's things that i don't particularly care to spend money on like i was never a car person although i gotta tell you i think self-driving electric cars are the shit they're just fantastic but i mean but the problem is for me now uh it's like even if i wanted to upgrade which i don't really want to do i think about that and it's like oh okay so i'm gonna sell the old car and then I got to research the thing, I got to test drive it, find things out, I got to buy it, transfer, learn all the new, blah, blah, blah. It's like, I don't have time for that. I'll drive, like I drove my first car literally into the ground. It had to be towed to the lot. They gave me 500 bucks as pity money and my new car, it's not even new, it's pretty, pretty old by now, but I'll just, I'll just drive that into the ground too because, right, it's just about, about the time to spend new stuff.
[16:50] So spending money to buy happiness is a good thing i remember going occasionally on vacations and if i wasn't seeing anyone and my friends were busy i'd just go on vacation on my own i have great memories of that i have great memories of going on vacation on my own i remember flying to the dominican republic for like two weeks after i had a big push at work, and it was glorious i sat on the beach i read philosophy i was going through a big Nietzsche and Jung face. And then I played beach volleyball for hours a day and went for dinner and chatted with people. And it's just lovely. It's great. Now, I wouldn't remember those two weeks if I hadn't spent that money. I wouldn't remember those two weeks. I wouldn't have the couple of photos that I have of that trip. So yeah, that's spending money to get good memories, spending money for happiness seems to me a good investment. It seems to me a good investment. And I.
[17:43] You can't take your money with you, right? And when you get old and decrepit, right, then you want to have memories of things you did that were fun and cool and memorable. You don't want these copy-paste days, which is when you're just on the hamster wheel of productivity and you don't buy particular time slices of beautiful memories. Then it's just like one of those ping-pong ball days, you know, like you're living inside a ping-pong ball. There's no cloud differentiation. There's no breaks. It's just white ping-pong over sky. Whereas, you know, one of the beautiful things you see, breaks of the clouds, sunbeams going. I remember when I was a kid seeing a plane fly over my school and it was going in and out of the clouds, going visible and invisible. I still remember that just as a beautiful thing.
[18:24] So you want breaks in the routine. You want breaks in the routine. And a lot of times for breaks in the routine, you got to spend some coin. And it's worth it. When you get old, you want to look back. Now, when you're old, your memories keep you company, right? When you're old, your memories keep you company. Obviously, you have people in your life too, but you want to look back on a life with as few regrets as possible. And if you just copy-pasted your days rather than buying some break-in-the-cloud, sunlight streaming, Mormon tabernacle, choir, beams-on-the-land memories, then you're going to look back and say, well, are you just going to sit there and stare at your bank account when you're too old to spend anything on fun? Are you going to sit there and look at your bank account and say, well, having those numbers there is really, really worth having no particular differentiating memories in my life. I sacrificed happiness for bits and burps and beeps on a computer. That is not a wise thing. Now, you can say, ah, yes, but you can leave your money to your kids. Absolutely, for sure. But what do you want to leave for your kids? A bunch of money or an exciting life that they had some adventures in? And, you know, like there was a time for this show, I traveled like more than half the year. Like I was going to go to speeches. I went, of course, at the Australia thing. I went to Poland, went to Hong Kong, went to the European Union in Brussels, gave speeches.
[19:44] I went to Florida to give speeches. And so I was just traveling all the time. And my daughter, we had a blast doing those things. We have very vivid memories of being hunted through the streets in Australia. So and you know you think you think of the poor young people whose lives were completely wrecked and destroyed because of old age querulous paranoia during the covet era um those days i mean they look back on those years or sometimes 18 months or sometimes even two years, and they can't remember them at all right it's just copy paste copy paste you look back on your life, the repetition evaporates, and all you have to look back on are the peaks and valleys. And as you look back, the valleys were never as deep as you thought, but the peaks were great.
[20:42] Right? Nostalgia is just sadness erased or eroded by time. So, I mean, I even have nostalgia for my teenage years these days, which was a very difficult time, but it was a very memorable time. It was a very memorable time. So, I think it is worth spending money on memories. It is worth spending money on vivid experiences. And to save at the expense of joy is to erase endless amounts of your time through blind repetition, right? I mean, if somebody says to me, oh, what were you doing at this particular time in 2018? It's like, oh, yes, i was touring australia i was touring australia very vivid time very powerful very wild great crowds great danger bomb threats death threats you name it and getting ripped off by the organizer it's like just a whole whole bunch of things right a whole bunch of things right so.
[21:50] Very vivid very very vivid stuff so have that have that so you look back upon your life and And it's not just the sort of endless copy-paste days of, you know, work, some video games. I mean, it's funny because I even remember vivid things in video games. There used to be this server called GWAR's server that ran Unreal Tournament. And I remember, I still remember, very vivid. We'd play Facing Worlds. I remember, you know, just winning in a battle that was going on forever, getting to the flag with like three hit points left. And like, I just, so, you know, there's vivid stuff with regards to that too. There's nothing bad about that, but just have something vivid, and vivid stuff can cost money. It generally does. So I think spending money to buy dopamine is a good deal in life, because when you have enough dopamine, you're not existentially concerned about meaning, right? When you're happy, right? Say, what's the meaning of life? Well, be happy so that you don't worry about meaning.
[22:47] I mean, nobody has an absolutely fantastic day where everything goes right and then says, well, what's the meaning of all this? Meaning is the smoke that comes out and stings your eyes when you are cratered from a lack of happiness, a lack of dopamine, right? And so to avoid the question of the meaning of life, have vivid, positive, productive experiences, and you won't have to worry about meaning. It won't even cross your mind. Nobody has a great orgasm, and right in the middle of the orgasm like yes but what's the meaning of all that not that there's a bad orgasm but you know what I mean so hopefully that hopefully that helps.
[23:36] All right. So somebody asks, is woke a violation of UPB? And if it is, can you make an argument against woke using UPB? Or is it evolutionary that most people find it repulsive?
[23:48] So woke is just part of the late cycle of a combination of freedom and coercion. So freedom allows people to generate wealth. The capacity to generate wealth relies upon inequality in capital, right uh you should give your money to elon musk rather than somebody who's bad at business because elon musk will multiply that capital with his sheer intergalactic competence so you should give your money to elon musk but of course since elon musk is a magic capital creator or increaser then lots of people want to give money to elon musk which means that elon musk is very wealthy, and so a certain amount of freedom allows a meritocracy, right? Freedom is meritocracy.
[24:34] So you end up with a lot of, a small number of very wealthy people as a result of freedom. That's right. You can have equality or you can have freedom. You can't have both. So then what happens is there's an evolutionary strategy that arises in the free market when people become wealthy, and that is whining, bitching, complaining, nagging, and playing the victim, right? It's not fair, not fair. It's a younger sibling strategy, right? And it's fine when you're a younger sibling, if the older sibling gets more, you have to raise a fuss and kick and fuss and complain and so on, right? Because you have to make sure you get your share because the older kids will get more because they're bigger and stronger. So that's totally fine as a kid, right? But...
[25:27] What happens is when wealth gets concentrated, then it becomes highly profitable in conjunction with the state to complain about inequality. Because then, the complaints about inequality are one thing, but the complaints about inequality plus the state, since the number of poor people outnumber the number of rich people, like tenants outnumber landlords, like by definition, right? So the mob through its numbers either implicitly through the state or explicitly through like pitchforks and torches and and go and and and steal and kill from the rich guy they threaten right the minority of productive people are threatened by the majority of resentful people.
[26:17] So freedom breeds meritocracy breeds a concentration of wealth in the hands of the few amazingly productive people and then the strategy is to complain about inequality so that the rich people will bribe you not to attack them right so whenever a politician says well we want the rich have to pay their fair share right that provokes ancestral memories of rich people being killed for their money okay here you go here you go angry mob here's some money here's some money just don't kill me.
[26:59] And this is why capitalism breeds socialism and communism, with the state as the adjunct, right?
[27:08] So that's the cycle. So then what happens is, if you bribe people to be unsuccessful and not attack you, then you just pay more people to be unsuccessful and threaten to attack you. Which is why on the left, it's all about, oh, you know, the wealthy have gotten wealthier and they need to pay their fair share. It's just, it's an absolute statement of, give us your shit, oh, we'll run you out of town or kill you.
[27:41] Right. It's, if you have a successful store, organized crime might show up and say, you know, it's a nice store here, be a shame if something happened to it, but we can protect you from something happening to it if you just pay us $5,000 a month or whatever it is, right? So the moment you get successful people a resource allocation or reallocation strategy emerges which is to complain about inequality with the implicit threat of bribe us pay us off or we'll chase you out of town or kill you right and the sophists always arise to complain and they say look there's this giant office tower this vertical ice cube tray of pomp circumstance and capitalist greed And look, there's somebody who's living in a cardboard box at the bottom of the giant glass tower of capitalist greed and is so unfair and it's so wrong. And it's just, you know, just take a little bit from these guys, give it to this guy. Right?
[28:40] Yeah, paying a fair share is code for a foundational threat against the productive, right?
[28:45] Because the reality is the rich pay most of the tax. Wealthy people pay most of the taxes. And it's horrendous. It's horrendous the way it goes, right? So, woke is demanding equality of outcome rather than equality of opportunity. And woke emerges, right? This is why when you have a state as the center of your society, economic freedom leads to tyranny. Now, in the past, the way they solved this, and I'm not talking morally, I'm just talking practically, is that the, the rich were the aristocracy, and they could just kill you. In general, right? So, that's how they defended their wealth, was just with violence. But when you have capitalists it's not the same kind of thing right so of course the capitalists expensive the high-end capitalists will work with the state to try and protect their interests and so on but.
[30:01] In general, the wealthier you get, the more resentment is targeted against you, right? And this is, of course, the result of foundational economic illiteracy, right? That if you take away resources from the most productive people, your economy will collapse. Because most people do not increase capital in any substantial way. Most people do not have the weird freaky brilliance to increase capital they don't start businesses that are very successful right they don't invest in things that have a high rate of return because of massive productivity the number of very very productive people in society is very very low they have magic abilities like the people with the green thumb some farmers can get 10 times the productivity out of their fields. They're just obsessed about it. They work at it. They're relentlessly curious. They experiment like crazy. So there are some people with this green thumb, they can just produce amazing stuff.
[31:17] And because they can produce amazing stuff, they can bid more for the land. And so they end up with more land. And then what happens is the people who used to work the land, who were just not skilled or not curious or not brilliant or not innovative or, and it's no fault, right? It's just scattered among the population as a whole. So they end up that we used to own the land, man. Now we just work the land. You know, I used to have these 20 acres. Now I just work for daddy warbucks up there on the hill. And then people come along and say, Hey man, he stole your land. He wasn't, it wasn't fair. It wasn't right. They just provoke this resentment because in a successful, around a successful capitalist people go from capitalists to workers especially in the in the realm of farming right so let's say you and i are in competition for land you're 10 times more productive than i am with the land so you can at least offer five times more or twice more you can certainly outbid me right you can outbid me if i can only get a hundred thousand dollars worth of crops out of the land but you can get a million dollars then you could outbid me.
[32:17] And so and you can also come to me and you can say to me uh sell me your land right tell me your land i'll give you you know three times what it's worth or five times what it's worth and they can make that money back very quickly so you when you're around one of these magic producing people then you go from owner to renter you go from capitalist to worker you go from entrepreneur to.
[32:49] Wage earner. And generally, you'll make more.
[32:57] So, what happens, though, is that you resent. It appears to be magic. It appears to be magic. And look, we've all seen this. I mean, you watch John Bonham playing his double guitar at the height of his powers in the 70s. It's weird. It's freaky. I don't understand it. I do not. I mean, I remember learning how to play guitar. It's like short, stubby fingers. And it hurts, man. It's uncomfortable. So you see people playing this and to me it's incomprehensible like how do you know what to play especially jazz musicians it's just it's a weird it's a weird it's a kind of magic it's a weird kind of magic right i don't understand it but you know there's people who look at what i do and they don't understand it it's incomprehensible to them whereas it's kind of natural to me, so when you're around these kinds of people like you know freddie mercury sitting in a bath in Munich, and the tune to Crazy Little Thing Called Love just kind of pops into his head, and he records it.
[33:59] I mean, that's, I mean, I tried writing a couple of songs when I was a teenager, too, and yeah, it's not easy, man. It's not easy, and it wasn't particularly fun for me, and I didn't particularly enjoy it, so on, right? So, there's just people, it seems magic, it seems, like, bizarre. Now, of course, religious people have, well, it's a gift from God, right? It's a God-given gift. You hear this about singers, right? What was it? Sweeney Christmas or Christmas Sweeney or something. I was watching the other night, this woman who was on a British talent show with like an absolutely stunningly ethereal, angelic, you would say God-given voice and presence and talent and just amazing. Amazing. So yeah, if somebody can look this up and get me her actual name, I don't want to disrespect the woman. And she was in her, I think she was in her mid-late 20s, and she'd sung on cruise ships and done this and that, but had never had her break. And she was just absolutely glorious. She took a song that's kind of bad, in my view. Tomorrow, tomorrow, I love you. Tomorrow, you'll always be there. And she just brought that thing to life and sent 80,000 volts through it and just made it absolutely electric and powerful. Songs you've heard a million times before with an amazing singer, it's like you're hearing again for the first time. And it really was amazing.
[35:25] Let me just get her name.
[35:30] What was her name? Come on, you can search. Sydney Christmas. S-Y-D-N-I-E, Christmas. Sydney Christmas. She won the 17th series of Britain's Got Talent in 2024. And she was stunning. Absolutely stunning. Somebody's saying this is happening right now with the popular streamer, Kai Sinat, he does crazy streams and raises the bomb. Many streamers are mad and saying that he's making being a streamer much harder. Was he the one, somebody said, hey, streaming is tough. Streaming is hard, right? And it's funny because I won't sort of particularly talk to that, but I will say that if a successful streamer, let me just see here.
[36:25] If a successful streamer says that it's hard to do, that's absolutely valid, right? Yeah, I can't find it. But somebody was, and of course, that person just got mocked, right? Oh, man, you just sit down and you yap into a microphone. I mean, that's easy. And it's like, I remember going to see Chris DeBerg. I've seen him like, I don't know, three times or whatever, great, great live performer. And Chris DeBerg was like, oh, this is just so easy. You just stand and yell in the microphone. And I remember Roger Waters, when he was talking about touring, doing the wall, he's like, this is easy. You know, like, hey, raising a toddler, that's hard. This is just easy. This is just like second nature, right?
[37:06] So people are mad. So being a successful streamer is hard. Being a successful streamer is hard. And I don't mean that it's hard for the people who do it, but it's a difficult and challenging skill set. And the people who were like, oh, talk to the guys who were like digging gold out of the ground, or talk to this, or talk to that. And it's like, but hard doesn't mean physically difficult. Yes, you're just sitting there and clicking, right? But it's hard to engage with the audience. You've got to multitask. You've got to be original. You've got to make jokes. You've got to self-censor because you don't want to say something that's going to get you in too much trouble. There's a whole lot of processing that's going on that is not easy because a lot of people would much rather stream than work at a nine to five, right? So if it's a desirable job and very few people can succeed at it, then by definition, it's not easy, right? If it's a desirable job and very few people succeed at it, then by definition, it's not easy. Now, it may be easy for the people to whom it comes naturally, but it's not an easy job. Otherwise, everyone would do it, right? Otherwise, everyone would do it.
[38:28] Ah wow okay sorry a lot of my chats here uh a lot of chats later over.
[38:38] All right Stef not sure if i can ask a bitcoin question in the stream so please ignore off topic but if i but i buy bitcoin but i would like to invest my 401k also so i can use my company match but they disallow that obviously uh uh obviously where does the next question come up i'll work Roth, RIAs can't buy Bitcoin. So I'm trying to explore investments that are impacted by its value. And then, okay, now, sorry, that's investment advice, which I not only can't do, but wouldn't do even if I could, because you need to make your own decisions about that, right? All right. I buy tactical stuff I don't really need. It's a disease. Luckily, I have a wedding to plan and a budget to keep and a fiance with a death stare. Do not spend too much on your wedding, man. Do not spend too much on your wedding. Do not, because that is a shit test. Do not spend too much on your, oh, honey, I'll give you anything you want. It's your dream day. Oh, my God. No, no, no, no. Do not do that. Do not do that. For a lot of women, it's a power play. For a lot of women, it's a power play. And they're begging you to say no, right? They're begging you to say no.
[40:00] All right. The movie Watchmen has a good quote about the past getting brighter when the mother looks back fondly on a traumatic experience that resulted in the birth of her daughter. Hmm.
[40:09] Yeah. All right. So a lot of topics about, oh, are these repeating? It looks like they're repeating. Excellent. Good job. Is it moral to invest in companies that profit from government contracts. I don't, in particular, I don't care about purity stuff. I mean, I don't think it's particularly wise to invest in, you know.
[40:37] I don't think it's wise in particular or moral to invest in companies that are straight up like war profiteers. That's not particularly great for me. So yeah, it is hard to be a streamer. It's rare to be a good singer, right? Really, really good singers are rare because it's not just the voice. You usually have to have the look. You've got to have the passion, the commitment, the theatrical style. You've got to have the emotional connection, you got to be able to tell a story through the song, like a really good singer is not common. And so, but if you say, oh, come on, man, you just sing for like an hour and a half, three times a week. That's easy. It's like, no, no, it's not. I mean, there was an old Dr. Phil, I'm actually off Dr. Phil these days as a whole, but I remember there was an old Dr. Phil thing where his grandmother was like, well, you only work an hour a day. What do you do with the rest a few times. The show's on only an hour a day. So, less productive, less intelligent people view the productivity of the productive geniuses as, it's magic, it's unfair, and I get that it's unfair. I get it is kind of unfair. Right?
[42:02] How much of the value that you have in life did you specifically earn through your own free will and choices? Right? I have a pleasant speaking voice. I did not earn that. Now, I've taken voice training. I went to theater school. I've taken some singing training, which is good for general voice control. I can maintain the instrument and so on. I have a little bit of an accent. I'm a decent looking guy and so on, right? So I didn't earn these things. I mean, you can say, well, you know, I maintain my weight and exercise and that helps a little bit, whatever, right? But my IQ is, you know, 80 plus percent genetic, right? Like my intelligence is born with, didn't earn, right? And so when you look at all of the things that you have that bring value to the world, and you say, what are the things that I am responsible to? That I'm directly, I'm not responsible for my intelligence. Now, I am responsible for some of the integrity and the focus in which I apply my intelligence to, to try and create additional virtue. So there are definitely things that you can be proud of, but it's like height. Hyde is 100% genetic, you know, barring starvation or whatever, right? But Hyde is like 100% genetic.
[43:27] So if you're tall, to take pride in height, you know, like everybody knows that guys with great hair, and I guess women too, but for guys, because the alternative is bald, guys with great hair are often kind of snobby and arrogant. And they literally believe that they have some sort of significant value because some ape-like protein strands grow out of their forehead. It's really pathetic. But women do this with looks as well. She's got a great figure and she thinks that me. But she didn't invent lust, she didn't invent hormones, she didn't invent male desire, she didn't invent her figure. Now, again, she works to maintain it, and that's a value, I suppose, but one of the reasons she works to maintain it is it's a great figure to begin with, right? so.
[44:14] The sort of bare forked animal something I really remember from studying at Glendon University I still remember the name of the professor but studying, King Lear you know King Lear goes from pomp and vanity and arrogance and dictatorial natures out into nature's elements in the wind and the bare forked animal what is man but this bare forked animal who are you outside of the accidental outside of the genetic outside of the inherited outside, of the unchosen. I didn't choose my race. I didn't choose my sex. I didn't choose my height. I didn't choose my eye color. I didn't choose my accent. I didn't choose my voice. I didn't choose my intelligence, right? Who am I that is not inherited, accidental, or unchosen? It's a big-ass question, man. You answer that question, that's the beginning of real virtue. You answer that question, That's the beginning of real virtue.
[45:11] Um, somebody says, why do listeners claim to have difficulty financially supporting you through subscriptions or donations? If they listen to you, they'd have gotten Bitcoin and easily afford to support you. Some people are new listeners, right? So the greats make something difficult look easy for sure. Yes. And that's the other thing too, is that when you're really, really great at something, then you make it look easy and then other people want to replicate it. They can't, they get frustrated, right? My brother is low class and thinks that real men do hard labor. And didn't think anything intellectual was serious, always thought what I did was too simple and I don't think I deserve to make money. My parents sided with him and both sabotaged me throughout my life. I didn't realize they were sabotaging me until it was brought up to me by someone who cared enough about me. Yeah, for sure. Yeah. It is a low IQ thing to think that the factory guy who makes the good, right? This is back to the song, Rehumanize Yourself by the police. I work all day at the factory, making a machine that's not for me. It must be a reason that I can't see, right? Right?
[46:22] Well, it is the organization and pointing of the physical labor, a genuine market need and profitable enterprise that is the brilliance, right? I mean you can go carry around a bunch of plates in the forest and make no money at all but if you build a restaurant you have somebody builds a restaurant around and puts the right menu with the right approach the right decor the right like investment the right advertising the right you name it right then uh then then you can make money carrying plates of food around right, so do you think somebody says so do you think that streamers say it's very easy compared to a nine to five are they virtue signaling to win over the audience no no no no everybody who's successful knows about the resentment of the less successful.
[47:10] Everybody who's successful knows about the resentment of the less successful. I mean, that's really a lot to do with my de-platforming was the resentment of the less successful. Right? If you, I mean, this goes back to, I used to go to this camp, Camp Bolton, uh, sometimes for a month or six weeks over the course of the summer. It was very, very cheap back then. I got subsidies because my family was so broke. And there were these dances. There were these dances.
[47:42] There were a lot of disappointments in that, although the camp was fun at all. But there were these dances where, this is one of the first times at the age of sort of 13 or 14 or wherever I would go, that, and I was actually taken back there for a photo shoot, because I was considered a somewhat attractive young man, but anyway. So, at the age of 13 or 14 is when I first asked girls to dance, right? And I got girls to dance with me, and my friends who were up there who were less attractive would one of them came by and elbowed me in the in the thigh really hard right and this was considered funny you know and i basically half folded over right because like it was really painful it's tough to stand on a really bruised thigh so i understand that right so he made he needed to make me look bad because he couldn't compete so there's that resentment right like my my my i had a family member i was much more attractive to when i was growing up uh he had really bad acne and uh he was uh sabotaging with the girls all the time this can't compete sabotage right so you have to appease the mob in order to continue to be successful.
[49:10] So that's not that's not good i mean it's it's inevitable right because uh that is uh that is nonsense yeah yeah the communist propaganda the us are the factory workers make all the products and the people in the offices are just freeloading it's freeloading yeah for sure i mean how do you how do you be the most attractive without getting the rage with resentment of the less competent mob.
[49:41] Uh, yes, the smugness when you ask some 40s guys dating 20-year-old women if he kept his hair. Yeah. Oh, yes. Yeah. And he, you know, I'm fine with that, but let's not pretend you earned it. Let's not pretend that you got to keep your hair because of some God-given virtues or something. It's just, you know, 10% of guys keep their hair into their old age. And all four of them happen to be in the Beatles. So, although John Deacon of Queen went bald, but you could see that poofy hair vanishing.
[50:13] All right. Is a coffee date or a lunch a good idea for a first date or maybe invite a woman to an upcoming gala or dinner? I think a coffee date is a bit cheap and it's not a very romantic environment. I would do a lunch as a whole. Kids would do that in school, kick you in the leg to give you a charley horse happen whenever you got a girl's attention. Yeah, yeah, for sure. Sabotage is essential in the sexual marketplace, right? So they did this study and they did the study where they asked women to suggest to other women how short they should cut their hair and if without without fail without fail the women suggested to the most attractive women that they cut their hair the shortest without fail the more attractive she was the more, women said oh you should cut your hair short it's a perfect bob for you this is why a lot of times you know, there's a lot of shit I don't understand about women, but this gives me a tip. So one of the things I now understand about women is have you ever talked to a woman who's gone to a hairdresser and she comes out and she's in tears because her hair is now too short?
[51:26] Right? Have you ever heard that happen? I can't believe she cut it so short and in tears and it's going to take months to grow back and blah, blah, blah. Well, that's because I think a lot of female hairdressers sabotage their clients because their clients are more attractive than they are. And it's just an instinct. Like, the unattractive women will now suggest to women that they cut their hair short, that they dye it blue, that they get nose rings and shit that men hate. I'm not going fishing. I don't need you to look like a tackle box. It's not a thing. So, yeah, there's intersexual competition. And this is another thing, too. So, a super productive guy is genetically going to have more kids, right? And so when you take his resources from him and give it to you through resentment and explicit or implicit threats of not so peaceful income redistribution, then you're taking resources from the more productive person, giving it to the less productive person, which means that you are taking reproductive capacity from the more productive person, taking that away and giving it to the less productive person.
[52:40] So, I mean, so you've got all these unattractive women going on sex strikes over Trump, which is like me going on a strike against getting a mohawk as a hairdo. Yeah, pretty tragic. Pretty tragic. All right.
[53:05] Baby take off your coat real slow all right is it okay to modify yourself like surgeries or implants to get an edge on people i would never in a million billion zillion years personally would never ever date a woman who did plastic surgery or breast implants or butt lifts or anything like that. That is just so much of a red flag. I can't see the person beyond the wraparound Chinese communist parade.
[53:37] So I would not in a million years get anything like that. I mean, I think fake boobs are just repulsive. I think they just look weird and gross. And I couldn't, I couldn't, I couldn't, I've never touched any of that. And I just think it would be completely bizarre. Like a basketball under a blanket is not my definition of sexy. And I mean, obviously, I don't know, a nose job, if you've got some fierce schnocker, you know, like, hey, your nose was on time, but you were five minutes late. Okay, whatever, right? But if you start wearing a toupee, I won't judge. I am not going to stop wearing a toupee. Oh my gosh, can you imagine?
[54:18] Can you imagine? That'd be terrible. So I wouldn't, I wouldn't date anyone who had any significant body modifications. I never dated a woman with a tattoo. I've never dated a woman with any piercings other than her ears. I've never dated a woman who wears a lot of makeup. I've never dated anyone like that. I just think that's weird. And it is a sign of deep neurosis and insecurity, right? If it's a good job, it looks completely natural. I don't know i mean i don't because it's it's it's like because what you're doing is you're messing with the whole body as a whole right so a slim woman with big boobs is virtually impossible right a slender woman with big boobs is virtually impossible it can happen right but in general if you add size to the boobs and it doesn't change the body as a whole then it just looks off, everything just looks off because we have an instinctive sense of what, fits together from a body standpoint right, so do that for April fools I don't think it would fool too many people.
[55:33] Uh, yes, Kamala Harris supporters are now doing something called a 4B strategy after Trump won, which includes shaving their hair and looking as unattractive as possible as some sort of spite. Yeah. Yeah. No, I get that for sure. I get that. And it's really, really sad. Thank you, Jeremy. It's really, it's really sad that all they have to offer the world is, celibacy. So Christian conservatives are celebrating the Trump win by having a lot of kids. And leftist women are going on a sex strike. Nature is healing. Nature is healing.
[56:21] And it's going to be very hard for them to maintain this, because women, and men too, okay, but women like male attention, because the women who didn't care about male attention, didn't do what was necessary to please men, and their genes did not reproduce, right? So, women like male attention, and a lot of the ways they get, like, you can get male attention by being a quality person, and a great conversationalist, and virtuous, and funny, and curious, and all of that, right? But a lot of these women get male attention through offering sex, and therefore they think that the greatest harm they can do to men is to withhold sex. Okay, so then if they withhold sex, and they make themselves ugly, they are setting themselves up for a massive depression, because are they going to be the kind of women who can get quality men to pay attention to them?
[57:27] So they're going to find that they are going to, they're courting massive depression by a withdrawal of attention. And so what they're trying to do is they're trying to get a female solidarity instead of male romantic attention, right? And this is a very dark road for women to try and get the approval of dysfunctional women rather than romantic interest from functional men. It's a grave, coven-like disaster, right?
[57:59] All right, sorry, a couple of other questions here. Why is a breast implant fundamentally different from a dental implant? What? Sorry, I'm not quite understanding this. Why is a breast implant fundamentally different from a dental implant? Okay, I don't... I mean, you can answer this for yourself, can't you? A breast implant is putting something in that wasn't there in the first place a dental implant is replacing something that got removed for medical reasons not having a breast implant is not bad for your health sometimes having a breast implant is bad for your health having a tooth replaced that fell out or was pulled out for some medical reason prevents the other teeth from drifting and additional problems and allows you to chew so you're replacing something that was already functioning with something that's exactly the same as opposed to and that you need for your health and and all of that so i don't i don't understand why do braces count well no braces are important because if you have really crooked teeth then it can be hard to clean and cause dental problems so yeah with bad teeth you can't eat yeah.
[59:18] Women love male attention. Of course. I mean, and they should. And we care, men care whether they're attractive to women and women care whether they're attractive to men. Of course. Feeling that that's the kind of slavery is kind of incomprehensible to me. It really is. I'm so enslaved by all the biology. Like it's pillaging from the past. It's one thing I really hate is this pillaging from the past shit. It's UPB in a nutshell, right? Oh, sorry. The final question I got to with regards to the woke stuff. Hey, you can have as much resentment as you want. You can even go around, talk its free speech to go around and complaining that the rich guys have stolen everything from the poor guys. It's false and demonic, but it's not evil to be wrong. But when woke leads to the feeling, see, what woke wants to do is say the rich guys stole from you to justify stealing, quote, back, right? That's all. That's all. That's all it's theft, and aggression by pretending it's self-defense or the recovery of property that was unjustly taken. So, it is a justification for the initiation of the use of force, and therefore, it is wrong. It is wrong.
[1:00:27] So you want a bell curve of attractiveness, right? You don't want somebody who's totally slovenly. You know, like the guy with no neck and a neck beard who, you know, lives in his sweatpants and doesn't brush his teeth much or, right? So, and doesn't wash his hair much and right. So you don't want someone who's slovenly. You want someone in the middle, right? The Aristotelian mean. You also don't want somebody, like I remember working with this girl up north. We had to go into town to pick up some groceries and she needed an hour to put her face on. I'm like, we're just going to a little town, to a one horse town, to a tiny grocery store to get some groceries.
[1:00:57] You don't need to spend like so you don't want, that you want somebody in the middle right somebody who cares about their appearance enough to be presentable and attractive but not somebody who can't leave the house without 14 pounds of makeup on right because that's both of them one is depressed and the other is hysterical right.
[1:01:19] Stef what do you think of the women who require that their husbands and sons sit down on the toilet while peeing to me it makes rational sense but it feels like the men are getting castrated is that a thing i think that the women say can you put the toilet seat down, but i don't they require the husband sit down peeing oh so they don't there's no splash damage yeah i i i i've never i've never had that in a relationship uh so i i can't really speak to that but i would just laugh at that right i would just laugh at that i'm just like i mean what are you talking about i'll i'll pee the way that i want to pee thank you very much and of course i will work to not make a mess and blah, blah, blah, for sure. I get all of that. But yeah, I, I find that, uh, I just think that's ridiculous. I, I just, it would be funny to me. That would be just something that would be funny and kind of ridiculous. All right. Teeth are not a sexual display. Uh, yeah, they are. Teeth are a sexual display for sure.
[1:02:31] Yeah, teeth are absolutely a sexual display. Good healthy teeth and even teeth and white teeth and, you know, it shows self-care, it shows health and so on. So, yeah, it absolutely is a sexual display. I could never understand why rather heavy women would spend hours every night doing makeup. I always thought it would make more difference to spend the time in the gym. Yeah, I remember having a significant disagreement with a friend of mine many years ago about a fat woman who'd obviously labored over her makeup. And I'm like, well, why wouldn't you just spend that time and exercise? Like why wouldn't you just do that right let's take all the people who were completely terrified of covid and who hadn't gone to the gym or exercised in 10 years and i'm like i i can't take your concerns of your health seriously like i just can't i can't take paranoia about health seriously if a person is unhealthy right do you exercise do you get your blood work done do you get your checkups right do you check in on these things are you a healthy weight do you eat well right so i you know that the people who said that other people were endangering them by not wearing masks when they themselves were a good 75 pounds overweight it's like no if you were that worried about your health as a whole then you wouldn't be in that situation right so.
[1:03:53] Now it was just i mean as you know it was just a bullying thing right It's just a bullying thing. All right, let me get to your last questions, comments, issues, challenges, problems, whatever is on your mind. Thank you for your support. If you would like to tip, freedomain.com slash donate is the best way to do it. And don't forget to go to freedomain.com slash books and listen to the present. That's so good. It's so good. And I think it's unique in that I think it's one of the few novels in the world that talks about men's rights in a sympathetic way.
[1:04:38] And, uh, let's just wait for the Ozempic lawsuits to start. It's my particular opinion. Not medical advice, it's just my particular opinion. All right. Uh, so let's see here. Saw your interview on BitChute. Have you done other interviews recently? I don't remember that one on your page. Well, you're going to have to narrow that down just a smidge, my friend. But I did five hours with Keith Knight. I did a review of my novel The Present with Duke Pesta but no I haven't I haven't really done interviews lately I mean I suppose that these are kind of interviews and that you guys are asking me questions and I'm answering them so.
[1:05:22] And don't forget fdurl.com slash tiktok fdurl.com slash tiktok would be it's a good thing to follow it's a good thing to follow, all right let me just see if i had anything interesting with regards to saved bookmarks, uh bookmarks uh bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum oh it's so funny of course to me and entirely predictable entirely predictable stuff do you think you'll see another huge invention like the internet in your lifetime? Uh, yeah. Yeah. Um, I mean, it's happening right now with AI, right? It's happening right now with AI. So, I, of course, was, Stef, have you ever lost a significant amount of writing when you wrote a book through file corruption or deletions etc uh yeah yeah and and and a few a few bits of crypto and a few bits of crypto but what are you gonna do right um, so
[1:06:46] On, I was rabidly attacked for saying to people that you should not, you don't have to be in abusive relationships, even with parents, right? An immediate family, if the relationship was continually abusive.
[1:07:02] Oh, do more if you're scrolling X and commenting on the timeline. Okay, thank you. I will. I will absolutely do that. That's fun. That's fun. So I will absolutely do that. And thank you for the, for the reminder, right? so uh remember back in this is back in 2008 or something my first sort of in in the um in the media was you know that i'm just a terrible evil guy for saying to people that you don't have to spend time with abusive people even if they are parents right never told anyone to leave their family and it apparently was just absolutely appalling and now all over the left is cutting people off for voting, right? Cutting people off for voting, voting Trump, right? And that's crazy. Cutting men off from sexual activity, cutting boyfriends off, ending relationships, breaking up with people, not seeing your grandparents, not seeing your parents, not seeing your kids, cutting people off for political differences. Apparently now that's fine. That's totally fine. When I talked about not being in abusive relationships, that was just evil and culty. But now, if somebody votes different, boy, they're just evil. And I don't know. It's very sad.
[1:08:24] So, there are only 2 million Bitcoin left on all crypto exchanges, worth $150 billion, what happens if a country tries to front-run Donald Trump and buy $500 billion worth of Bitcoin? There are only 2 million Bitcoin left on all crypto exchanges. That's less than 10% of the total, right?
[1:08:46] Isn't that wild that Kamala Harris raised a billion dollars and left a debt of $20 million? She paid a million dollars for Oprah's endorsement. I don't know how that's specifically in line with the absolute legality of the situation but i'm no lawyer plus a hundred thousand dollars for a set on the call her daddy podcast so she didn't have to travel oh my gosh oh my gosh that's wild oh that's wild.
[1:09:23] This is interesting as well. And I did a podcast many, many, many years ago called The Joy of Anger. You can get that at fdrpodcasts.com. Somebody says, nobody talks about the angry stage of healing, the rage you feel when you realize how much and for how long you were taken advantage of, the absolute disgust you feel towards those who misled you. It comes in waves. Sometimes you will feel healed and suddenly it hits you. Yeah. So anger is your body cranking up its defense against exploitation and evildoers so yeah kamala harris spent six figures just building the set for her appearance on call her day how did she plow through a billion dollars, ah well you know she's a big spending liberal right that is wild, um donald's trump plan to destroy and dismantle the censorship cartel, I gotta tell you, that's pretty freaking tempting I'm gonna put it here so you can look at it after the show but you gotta watch this, man you gotta watch this if he's able to achieve this, man, I'm alive man alive, that would be something a digital bill of rights you can't get deplatformed without due process and just absolutely incredible stuff maybe even reform a section 230 which is a mixed bag, but nonetheless holy crap.
[1:10:43] That is something else. Yeah, I don't know how you can pay for endorsements. Again, I'm no lawyer, but it doesn't seem quite right as a whole, but I'm again, I'm far from an expert in these things.
[1:10:59] Remember I was talking about body memory and I was talking about your gut sense and so on. So there's an interesting article that came out on nature.com, which says, we think that all memory is stored in the brain, but our study published today in Nature shows that all cells, even kidney cells, can count, detect patterns, store memories, and do so similarly to brain cells, right? So, the body remembers the body memory, your gut sense, and all of that. That seems to be a thing, I mean, according to the latest science. Patriot J says, not once have I seen a Republican brag about how they're cutting off their democratic friends and family. Yeah, you all think that's a virtue? You all think that's a virtue? I mean, that they take their morals and values seriously, but you don't. I don't know how that's a win. I don't know how people, right? BlackRock's Bitcoin ETF is officially bigger than its gold ETF, 33.2 billion assets in just 10 months. Men scored higher than women on emotional stability across countries, even more so in highly individualistic societies. Yeah. Trump is proposing term limits for Congress. I don't know, wouldn't that just mean that they pillage faster?
[1:12:25] I like this woman, Patriarchy Hannah. She's pretty funny. She says, I might make myself a vegetable platter and watch brainless TV while I fold laundry. My husband is outside in a storm, fixing a fence, securing stuff and pumping the drainage ditch because it's clogged. Is this oppression? Oh, it's a bitter meme. It's a picture of two people, a young man and a young woman in 1914. And the young woman is like, she's not allowed to go to university. And for the young man on the eve of World War I, he's not allowed to live. Did you know this ancient Babylonians did math in base 60 instead of base 10 from this we derive the modern day usage of 60 seconds in a minute 60 minutes in an hour and 360 degrees in a circle very interesting, uh key and peel are these these two black comedians incredibly funny by the way uh incredibly funny I'll give you guys a sketch to watch after. It's an escalation of macho Southern black food ordering. Absolutely hilarious. Absolutely hilarious.
[1:13:34] Well, it's not up to him. See, the problem is that how many really smart people are still openly Republican and available and willing to work in Washington, right? Oh, please link to the Nature article. Sure, I will get you the Nature article. That is a reasonable request. Let me go up.
[1:14:07] All right. Ah, yes, here we go. Copy link address. Yeah, here we go. I will put this all over the map. They are hilarious, those two, key and peel. All right, there's your nature article. You should check it out. Yeah, body memory is very real. The idea that we can just, that all therapy occurs in the head. Therapy and healing is as much physical as it is mental. Thoughts on if the life-changing profit days on Bitcoin are over? I don't believe so. I mean, I've said this for years. This is not investment advice. It's just my personal opinion. Make your own decisions. Do your own research. I said this probably 10 to 12 years ago that I view $750,000 US of Bitcoin. Which is what 10 times what it is now that's my target in my head in some reasonable time frame so that's my target again just my opinion just my opinion, and a human foot.
[1:15:15] All right any other last questions comments issues challenges problems. All right.
[1:15:29] Yeah, it'll be interesting. It'd be interesting to see if there's any retroactive restoring of accounts under a digital bill of rights. It'd be very interesting. Very interesting. And this is why, to me, exercise, and in particular weights for men, is so therapeutic. It's so therapeutic. Because you're saying, I'm worth being strong and defended. I'm worth being strong and defended. I'm worth having some muscles. I'm worth being strong and defended. I'm worth moving through the world in a relatively powerful way. I'm worth it. I'm not under the control of people ten times my size who can do whatever the hell they want to me whenever they want. And Waits is absolutely therapeutic. Have you seen the new movie called The Heretic? It's called Heretic. And I would say the first two thirds are absolutely good. Hugh Grant. I don't mean to be a body shamer, but holy crap, man. Has he ever used face cream in his life? Ah i mean those are the kind of cheek wrinkles that fold space-time into another dimension.
[1:16:45] Oh it's not a bad movie it's well written by the guys who did a quiet place and uh to me it gets kind of goofy towards the end but the first two-thirds uh really good intellectual cat and mouse stuff and the monopoly scene is just fantastic mind-blowing mind-blowing a really really great description of ideas and arguments so i would recommend i'll do a proper a review this week, but I would recommend a movie called Heretic. You should go and check it out.
[1:17:12] Not necessarily for, it's not for kids. I don't know this 14A thing. It's not for kids. Not for kids, not for teens, in my view. But, alright, let's see here, anything else?
[1:17:27] Alright.
[1:17:30] All of Kamala's supporters needed to be paid huge fees, but Trump's campaigned with him for free. Yeah.
[1:17:38] Well, it wouldn't hugely surprise me if Biden ceding to Kamala was just vengeance. It's just vengeance. Why do preachers always say we are living in the end of days? I love my life. I think we're living in blessed times. Yeah. Yeah. Well, anxiety breeds conformity to authority, right? Fear breeds conformity to authority. Which is why the people who want to take over your life want to keep you continually afraid. So, I hope that makes some sense. All right. Well, thank everyone. Thank everyone for me, if you don't mind. Appreciate your time today. What a great chat and conversation. Lots of love from up here. Don't forget you can get your call-ins at freedomain.com slash call. You can choose public or private. It's totally up to you. freedomain.com slash call. Operators are standing by and you can check that out. Freedomain.com slash books to check out my books, really pushing the present at the moment, although the future is also great you can read them in any order you want but one is a prequel to the other and just poor the god of atheists revolutions is available at freedomainnft.com and almost which is my masterpiece of a three book series uh incredible incredible work all right thank you have a wonderful wonderful day i appreciate your time support freedomain.com slash donate if you'd like to help out the show by listening later i would hugely appreciate it lots of love my friends bye.
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