X SpaceApril 11, 2026·5.2 hours

Silence Is Violence : Black Violence

The host re-introduces the topic, 'Silence is Violence: Black Violence,' after technical difficulties.

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Chapters — 16
  1. 0:00Introduction: Silence is ViolenceThe host re-introduces the topic, 'Silence is Violence: Black Violence,' after technical difficulties.
  2. 2:08Mass Migration and Economic WarfareThe host argues that mass migration is an orchestrated attack on Western economies and homogenous societies.
  3. 6:21Swiss Prison Data and OverrepresentationAnalysis of Swiss prison statistics reveals a significant overrepresentation of African migrants in the penal system.
  4. 29:31Black Criminality and Media SilenceThe host discusses the disproportionate rates of violent crime committed by black individuals and the media's refusal to address it.
  5. 48:51Critique of Diversity and IntegrationA speaker argues against the integration of different 'species' into society, citing the destruction of history and science.
  6. 54:53Racial Differences and Societal DeclineThe host and a speaker discuss biological differences between races and the celebration of white replacement by politicians.
  7. 1:02:17Personal Experience with Crime and RaceA speaker shares his experience in prison and observations on racial behaviors, connecting it to AI's blackmailing tendencies.
  8. 1:11:39Diversity as Weakness, Not StrengthA speaker highlights the irony of 'diversity is our strength' in Europe, leading to crime and societal breakdown.
  9. 1:21:47Apathy and Black Ghetto CultureA black speaker discusses the apathy in America and his personal disdain for ghetto culture within his own family.
  10. 1:31:33Escaping the 'Crabs in a Bucket' MentalityA speaker details his journey of escaping the negative influences of his community and the lack of support from family.
  11. 1:40:47Media Propaganda and Black CommunityThe discussion shifts to how media propaganda, particularly Jewish-owned media, has negatively influenced black culture and increased criminality.
  12. 2:00:24Historical Revisionism and Racial SuperiorityA speaker makes outlandish claims about black people civilizing whites and the African origins of Greek and Roman civilizations.
  13. 2:19:58IQ, Privilege, and CivilizationDavid Nietzsche discusses the correlation between IQ and prison populations, and how intelligence drives societal advancement and leisure.
  14. 3:01:43Personal Tragedy and Community SupportA speaker shares his family's loss of their home to an electrical fire and the unexpected support from his black neighbor.
  15. 3:27:13DEI, Affirmative Action, and MeritocracySpeakers debate the merits of DEI and affirmative action, questioning their impact on meritocracy and societal progress.
  16. 3:57:55Jewish Supremacy and Global ImpactThe host argues that Jewish supremacy is destroying the planet by weaponizing different groups against each other.

The Transcript

Ian MalcolmWell, all right, everyone, I will try and send some invitations because apparently X is very upset with us, wanted to boot everybody from the space. So we'll try round two. And I apologize for anybody that comes in and has to kind of hear the same sets of, let's say, of opinions that I shared the first couple of minutes there.

Ian MalcolmAnd so apologies again. I'll try and restate perhaps in a little bit more condensed of a version. But X is seemingly deleting people from being able to even participate in the space, which is very odd. I got a whole bunch of direct messages. People are getting automatically removed from the spaces. How curious, almost as if X doesn't want us to have this conversation.

Ian MalcolmJust to double check, Magnificus, can you at least just affirm, A, you can hear, and B, the space is not aborting you from the room. Is that fair? Okay, perfect. All right, so what we will do, again, I'll try to restate this general thesis and do a little smidge of a monologue, and then we will open the floor to anybody and everybody that wants to come up, give their opinion, tell me why I'm wrong, or perhaps agree, or say that you love Tuesday more than any other day in the week.

Ian MalcolmYou're welcome to share whatever you would like. And so really quickly, to try and recap where we are going to go with this. So as an overarching thesis. Let's start there right now. The first world is under rampant attack. It is under an attack economically, politically, financially, spiritually, physically. And I say those things because it's not just your mind, your body and your soul that are being attacked via subversion and supremacy through essentially every screen that you have access to every book perhaps that is sold.

Ian Malcolmand all of the venues through which you would purchase those books, those movies, those subscriptions. You are essentially receiving an onslaught every single day of propaganda of the mind designed to wither away again at your physical being, your spiritual being, and your intellect. Now, as part of that, it'd be bad enough if we lived in a world where everything was designed to enslave your mind.

Ian MalcolmThat's essentially what Orwell wrote about. What he did not write about was the prospect that in, let's say, any of the theoretical locations from Orwell's literature, even an animal farm, he didn't suggest that there was going to be a mass onslaught of, let's just loosely define them as others, that would be brought into either Oceania or into the farm upon which all these animals existed.

Ian MalcolmAn animal farm, right? It is a singular farm. All the animals decide to band together against the wicked farmer. At least that's the initial intent. They don't have animals from all the other neighboring farms come into their community. That's not part of the program. Now, why do I mention this? Well, it's because the world that we live in, we are told all kinds of things as part of this propaganda machine.

Ian MalcolmOne of the things that I remember very vividly was this idea that silence is violence. That if you did not speak out against, in this case, racism, or perhaps if you didn't speak out against anti-Semitism, well, then you were essentially condoning it. You were allowing it. You were orchestrating it. You were part of that problem.

Ian MalcolmThat's what they told us. But what if we actually flip the tables on this idea? And what if we actually look at genuine violence And then we also recognize that we are silenced from speaking about said violence. Now we can talk about that in terms of economics or intellect or the mind, right? We can look at, for example, what it means when all of those screens are controlled or all of your cities are flooded by quote unquote others.

Ian MalcolmAnd we, of course, during the Biden administration, we saw the mass onslaught of mass migration. Of course, Donald Trump promised his big, beautiful wall that never materialized. And as a result, when subsequently Joe Biden was brought into office, whose children all married Jews with Kamala Harris as his vice president, a Jew, his secretary of state, a Jew.

Ian MalcolmWe also look, of course, at the secretary of Homeland Security, Alejandro Mayorkas, Sephardic Jew. And what did he do? Well, he opened the floodgates to the quote unquote others. He brought in something like 20 to 25 million migrants. And we often hear about those migrants being those that came from south of the border.

Ian MalcolmWe were given Fox News little video clips of here's another 10,000 people coming with their burros, right? It looked like the Oregon Trail for anybody familiar. They're all loaded onto their wagons, walking with their donkeys. Oh, we are going to invade the United States. And yes, that did happen. But that's not how you orchestrate millions of people, four to five million people a year, if not more, maybe six, seven.

Ian MalcolmHow many million people can you bring across the border on donkeys and horses every single year? This obviously was an orchestrated attack and an attack on what? Your economics, your communities, your homogenous society, all designed to wither, to deteriorate. And that's not by necessarily just, let's say, overburdening your transportation system, your healthcare system, your educational system, which obviously are strained when you have almost a 7% increase in the population that are literally foreign born people just pouring on in.

Ian MalcolmTry to think about that just for what it's worth. Try to envision any room that's designed to hold X amount of people. If you just say, oh, we're going to bring in 7% more, whether it's your place of work, whether it's a professional sports stadium, that's a ton of additional overhead to just suddenly have just pop up out of nowhere, right?

Ian MalcolmAnd speaking of which, how did that then happen? Well, this was not just people walking across the border. It was not an organic infiltration. No. This was an orchestrated, essentially military operation. And we know that that was the case because we have, of course, seen the flight logs. And we now know that the US government was actively flying individuals on commercial airliners that they were essentially renting.

Ian MalcolmThink about that for a moment. Envision the idea of United Airlines or American Airlines saying to the US government, yes, we will fly these thousands of people every single day. into your country. And speaking of flying in, that's essentially what was happening because the number of people every single day that were coming into the United States illegally are actually more people than the total number of individuals that fly out of JFK airport in New York city.

Ian MalcolmOne of the most busy airports in the country. Try to think about that for a second. Imagine that you were a person that you sit there in that airport and everybody that boards a plane going anywhere, you sit there with your little ticker counter, click, click, click, click, click. You'd be doing it all day, multiple times a minute.

Ian MalcolmHow many times a minute? I couldn't even think off the top of my head, but try to envision doing that 30,000, 20,000, 25,000 times a day.

Ian MalcolmThat's how many people were coming into the United States illegally. Now, a lot of those folks were from south of the border. And yes, it was groups like HIAS, the Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society, that is Jewish funded, Jewish run, and that is essentially a Jewish wing to destroy the United States via migration. Curiously, the very organization that Alejandro Mayorkas, the guy who was supposed to protect the border, worked at prior to that role.

Ian MalcolmHe was on the board of directors. of the organization doing the very thing that's antithetical and antagonistic towards the very role that he was then given by President Joe Biden, right? But these weren't just folks coming from south of the border. They were also individuals. Yes, they weren't swimming across the Atlantic Ocean to get from Africa to the United States.

Ian MalcolmThey were put onto boats. They were put onto planes. And on your tax dollars, they were funneled into the United States of America. They were also sent all over Western Europe, which is what brings us to this topic today that I wanted to discuss because we need to call things out that are self-evident. The major political forces of the world are weaponizing mass migration against the citizenry.

Ian MalcolmThat is, again, an economic military invasion, essentially, because it's destroying your pocketbooks, your ability to purchase. Don't forget, the more people that you bring in, the lower wages become and the more expensive it becomes to live. Your places of living, your homes become more expensive because after all, these migrants aren't moving out to the middle of nowhere and building their own communities.

Ian MalcolmNo, they're moving into densely populated areas to undercut your wages and to increase your cost of living. This is economic warfare against the masses. But in the same process, these individuals, in particular, those from Africa, are also bringing with them not only low IQ and that's statistically speaking, irrefutably accurate.

Ian MalcolmWe can also look at South and Central American countries. We can make the exact same observation. Africa being well below our neighbors of South and Central America for what it's worth. Let's call that out because curiously the South and Central Americans aren't responsible for that much violence. Do migrants commit crime?

Ian MalcolmAbsolutely. Of those criminally committing the crime. Well, What if they're largely African? Should we discuss that? Which is what brings us to this conversation today. Because as I was going through data, I was brought to the attention of a particular post, an individual who brought up the Swiss penal system, in particular, their prisons and their inmates in Switzerland.

Ian MalcolmIf you try to think of a white nation, I mean, essentially all Europe, of course, once very white nations. But if you think of Switzerland, or Denmark, Norway, Sweden, some of the whitest places you could possibly envision in your mind. These are traditionally, these are rather tall, often blonde haired, blue eyed white people.

Ian MalcolmAnd these individuals in particular in Switzerland, let's think of the Swiss Alps. What does their prison system look like? Well, as much as 85% of the inmates are either non-native citizens or are migrants who recently migrated and became citizens. Let me say that again, as much as 85% of all of the inmates that are in Swiss prisons are non Swiss citizens, non Swiss nationals.

Ian MalcolmSo I went through that and I looked at and I said, okay, well who are the lion's share of those non citizens? And what do you know? It is largely individuals coming either from the east with brown skin, let's call them, or they are individuals from Africa. How much so, you might ask? Well, apparently, according to Grok, 1.3% of the Swiss population, let's think about that, folks.

Ian MalcolmThat's roughly one in 100 people happens to be African or of African descent in Switzerland. One in 100. So let's envision you walk into a room, your average room in Switzerland, there will be one black person in the entire room. Of their penal system, it represents 25% of them. 25% of their prison have black skin. 85% of their penal system are non-citizens and non-Swiss heritage individuals.

Ian MalcolmOnly 15% are actually that. So of that 100% of a room, let's say, if you walked into it, according to Grok, it's roughly 60 or so percent of individuals living in Switzerland right now are Swiss national citizens of Swiss heritage. They are white people who have been there for generations. Of those Swiss citizens, they represent 15% of their prison system.

Ian MalcolmSo think about what that means. That means a generation ago, prior to mass migration and the insanity of modernity, their prisons would be essentially 85% reduced in terms of the number of people within them. It's a decent way to think about it. What's another way to think about it? They basically would have had 85% less crime a generation ago.

Ian MalcolmWhat do you call it when the politicians... are now weaponizing that migration to not only lower your wages, increase your cost of living, but to also surround you with literal criminals. And that is the problem. So then I extrapolated that. I said, okay, so roughly one out of 100, or let's call it 1.3 out of 100 people within Switzerland is African.

Ian Malcolm25% of their penal system, the inmates, are African. So then I just did a basic extrapolation. So what is the per capita representation? How many times overrepresented are the Africans relative to the Swiss nationals? 50 times is what we got to. Reverse engineering this. 50 times more likely to be put into prison are these African individuals either of heritage or ethnicity.

Ian Malcolm50 times more likely. So if you are now a Swiss citizen and you are watching as your border is flooded with people who have a different skin color, but perhaps also different economic opportunities, different intellect, different genetics, let's just loosely call it, that are 50 times more likely to be a criminal. What would you call that of your politicians?

Ian MalcolmIs that treason? I don't know if that goes far enough. That is an act of war. And so we can look at a statistic like that and say that is insane. That is wild. We could probably run the exact same statistics across the French, Germans. We could probably look all across the world and see the exact same pattern replicate itself over and over and over and over again.

Ian MalcolmAnd this is not an attack on all Africans or all black people, again, or all anything. But what do you call it when your elected officials are actively waging economic, spiritual, and in this case, literal war on your citizenry? Because what do you think those criminals are largely imprisoned for? Do you think the 50 times overrepresentation of Africans relative to the Swiss, do you think that they're in prison for things like tax evasion?

Ian MalcolmOf course not. It is for rape. It is for murder. It is for assault. It is for theft. That's just the statistics. That's the data. And then if we look in the United States of America, what do you know? We see very similar patterns, 53, 54, 55% of all murders conducted, not just by the 13% that happened to be black, but in particular, the lion's share of all of that violence is from men.

Ian MalcolmAnd it's from men 18 to 35. which represent less than 2% of the population, if you look at black individuals in that age demographic of that gender. And they are creating massive amounts of violence. Again, this isn't hating on anybody, because there are individuals of all communities, white, black, and otherwise, that talk critically of this issue.

Ian MalcolmThere are black individuals on this platform, whether it's James Woody, whether it's that girl, Casey, Ronnie, and so many others that say, what is going on with our community? So there are people that actively will speak out against this, but this is a obvious problem. And then you look at the media that refuses to address it.

Ian MalcolmThey refuse to acknowledge it. It would be one thing if again, silence was violence and their lack of, of let's say discussing this, if they were just silent on it. Maybe we could then accuse them of doing the very same thing that they would accuse us of doing when we don't speak in favor of combating racism. And I guess they would suppose that this is a racist conversation, even though I'm literally just discussing data.

Ian MalcolmBut that's not enough. Not only do they silence our ability to have these conversations, they honestly and openly lie about it. I shouldn't call it an honest lie. They openly lie about it. They tell you that you're not allowed to discuss it. They enforce the silence on you. So as they tell you that you have to actively pretend as if this isn't the case, you have to actively speak in favor of ending any kind of racial discussions.

Ian MalcolmThey are covering up for the very root of the real problem, which is that there is a drastic overrepresentation. amongst violent crime from a certain group of people, which we need to unwind as a society. If we cannot honestly hold these conversations, how are we ever going to create a better tomorrow? Can you envision a world in which idiocy, lunacy, evil, and let's just say intellectual dishonesty, if that is revered and lifted up, well, what do you find yourself in tomorrow from a societal standpoint?

Ian Malcolmhell. And how do we build heaven? By honestly and openly discussing these things and saying this is a problem. Why is this happening? Who is architecting it? And yes, the obvious answer to the lies from the media and the, let's say, the origin of the mass migration, it is the same source. I hate to always be the it's the Jews guy.

Ian MalcolmBut who does own the media that says we can't discuss this? Who owns the tech that tries to suppress our discussions of it? And who funds the politicians like Alejandro Mayorkas that wide open the borders? Where does all this come from? It's the same root issue. And so people will use the term bioweapons. They use that in the alt-right, the more racially edgy roots of X.

Ian MalcolmThey will say there is a bioweapon that are Africans. That's pretty offensive. But is it reasonable? And I say that with all sincerity, because what would you call the demographic that is being imported who biologically seem to be predisposed to violence? And you can say that that is an offensive suggestion, but look at the data.

Ian Malcolm50 times more likely to be imprisoned in Switzerland. And if you think that it is just the Swiss that are facing this reality, then you're out of your mind. Because I can show you data around Sweden and how it used to be the safest, largely one of the whitest places on earth. They also had the reported highest levels of happiness.

Ian MalcolmIf you looked at Sweden and Norway, go back to the 90s, look for studies on reported happiness. Who are the happiest people on earth? It was largely Sweden and Norway. You want to know what else they were near the highest in? The percentage of white people. It's not saying that all white people are always good and don't ever do anything bad, obviously.

Ian MalcolmAnd there's lots of, let's say, the Shabbos Goy that have supported this Jewish supremacist system that have been white. We'll be critical of that all day long. But those nations were some of the happiest, safest places on earth. Now, Swedish women face massive increases in the amount of rape taking place every single year in their country.

Ian MalcolmAnd who is it that's doing the raping? What if I told you it was African migrants? Would you be surprised? Would you be shocked or should you be shocked that the media doesn't discuss this, that the media leaves out the fact that again in Switzerland, 50 times more likely to be imprisoned than the national citizens. How does that make any sense?

Ian MalcolmWho is it that is supporting violence? Who is it that through their silence is committing the violence? Is it not the very people that suggest that we are not allowed to have these conversations, to reasonably bring up these frustrations, to point to this as a problem and to demand that our politicians acknowledge what is happening?

Ian MalcolmBecause after all, if a nation imploded economically, wouldn't it be reasonable to say, what are you doing to the politicians? If your nation had a foreign military invading and your own leadership did nothing. Wouldn't you accuse them of treason? And if they are mass importing literal violent criminals, statistically speaking, how is that any different?

Ian MalcolmAnd so we need to speak out against these things, not with hate, not with animus for other cultures, for other genetics. But it's perfectly reasonable to say, hey, others, you need to stay over there. You live in your land, in your nation. You build that up. There's nothing remotely reasonable about saying we have to import all of, for the large part, your most impoverished, most criminal people.

Ian MalcolmAnd that is the wildest part of all of this, is that when you start looking into the individuals that are coming, whether it's from south of the border, whether it's from east, southeast of the Atlantic, who is it that the United States and Western Europe are importing? It's not the intellectually capable. It's not the economically advantaged.

Ian MalcolmIt is the most impoverished, the most destitute, and in many cases, the most criminal of those communities. And why? Because that's who is motivated to literally leave everything behind, whether it's the poverty or it's a criminal record, and to get a fresh start somewhere new that might be able to offer them more. And so we need to speak again about these things, speak very bluntly for what it's worth.

Ian MalcolmWhen you talk about these issues and you talk about, let's just say, racial predisposition to crime. Yes, blacks commit absurd amounts of crime. Anyone that says otherwise is a liar. They're a liar or a shill. There's no two ways about that. And there are, like I said before, there are black individuals who will come into these rooms and will calmly say, yes, this is a problem.

Ian MalcolmAnybody who tells you otherwise, again, they are a liar. Anybody who tells you that the media doesn't obfuscate this reality is a liar. Anybody that tells you that's not largely Jewish NGOs that are funding this is a liar. And anybody who wants to suggest that it wasn't a Jewish politician like Mayorkas who oversaw the largest, quickest, most absurd increase of this problem is also a liar.

Ian MalcolmAnd how do we know that? Because literally the Biden administration with Mayorkas architected more mass migration than had literally taken place for decades prior. Think about that one more time. Literally, under Mayorkas, they oversaw more mass migration than essentially the entirety of the 20th century combined. Think about that for a second, what that means to your society.

Ian MalcolmIn less than a decade, more migrants than an entire century. This is a war. It's a war against the white, Christian, West, and the ethos of it. It's also a war against the Muslims, right? Literally speaking. That's why the United States takes a war over there. But that's the entire process. It's the entire game plan is that they use essentially the neocons, which is just Jewish republicanism to go blow up the Middle East.

Ian MalcolmAnd then they use the democratic liberal Jewish run wing of the political party to mass import all of the rubble and all of the poverty and to tell you and your children and everybody else. that you need to be LGBT, that you need to hate God, that you need to be dumbed down, that diversity is the benefit of everybody. Diversity is the strength, they say.

Ian MalcolmWell, then explain how that makes sense, given what I just told you about the Swiss. Because again, if the Swiss were to literally remove 1.3% of the nation, which are diverse, in this case, African, they would get rid of a quarter of all of the inmates. And if they got rid of all the other diversity that combined makes up about 40% of the country, they would get rid of almost nine out of 10 of their inmates.

Ian MalcolmThey would see an almost 90% reduction in the criminals and the convicts and the inmates. That is what diversity brought them. Rampant crime, the destruction of their economy, the destruction of their once homogenous people. And you want to know what goes by the wayside with it? The reported happiness of the citizens. Your politicians hate you.

Ian MalcolmThey are largely funded by, if not themselves, Jews and Jewish and Israeli interests. That is the case in Switzerland. It's the case in Norway, in Sweden, in Europe, and in the United States of America. So who is it that is committing the violence through the silence? It's the media. It's the politicians. It's the tech companies.

Ian MalcolmIt's the financial instruments that they use to orchestrate all of this. And it is all weaponized via both literal and figurative violence against you, against your way of life and against the white Christian West. It is beyond obvious at this point. And it's time to put our foots down. It's time to say, yes, I'm sorry, guys, but there is something going on with black criminality.

Ian MalcolmAgain, not all blacks. And it's not just the culture because the same culture that's pushed onto the blacks is also pushed onto the whites, obviously. And at the same time, it's not just the poverty because you know who actually commits less crime than the richest blacks, who commits less than half the crime of the richest blacks, the poorest whites.

Ian MalcolmSo explain that to me if it's based on poverty or if it's based on the culture, which we all see in front of our eyes every single day and that they try to jam into white America. just as much as they do black America. Thanks very much, Eminem. It's all propped up. The macro culture is pushed on everyone, but there's clearly a problem here.

Ian MalcolmI believe that that problem is both in some regards cultural, but there's also a genetic element to it. And if you don't believe that, then just look at lots of things, whether it's professional basketball or whether it's the individuals at the top of their fields, intellectually speaking, go look at all the greatest chess masters.

Ian MalcolmWhat are you going to notice? Well, there's going to be a commonality on the color of their skin. There's also a disproportionate representation of a different group of people on the basketball court. That's because when it comes to fast twitch muscle movements, there is an advantage for blacks. That is just a reality.

Ian MalcolmAnd you will hear lots of black individuals talk about that as if it's a positive thing. Look at us. We can do this thing really well. Well, if that's the case, then we should also talk about what you guys do really poorly. which is seemingly to live in a civilized society. Again, that's not an all black people, anything, but if we're going to be honest and open about this dialogue and this discourse, then we need to be critical of both the people that architect and demand the lies.

Ian MalcolmWe also need to be, let's say, critical of the individuals that are complicit there within. And so with that being said, want to open it up to anybody and everybody, please explain to me how I'm wrong. Explain to me how a 50X representation when it comes to inmate status in certain nations, why that should be overlooked and why the media would suggest we're not allowed to discuss it if it's not being weaponized against our people.

Speaker 1I can't. It's just you pretty much said everything right. But I've been seeing this from the perspective of someone that's been 20 years into this. I've been warning people about the integration of people that are not the same type and not the same species as we are because reality as we know it in the 20th century has been changed.

Speaker 1The 20 last years was a destruction of history, science, psychology, everything. People always look at the first thing and it's buzzwords, colors. freedom equality diversity but they mean nothing because the science behind it just proves the opposite you need a certain part of your brain to be empathic to have empathy towards others to be able to visualize and conceptualize things in your mind to be civilized is be calm serene be able to disgust without slurs without getting

Speaker 1overly emotional these things they cannot be done by a certain type of people it's not only i'm not judging them it's how can i say this i'm not racist for saying that someone is acting a certain way because they are acting that way you get what i mean like people have to start going crazy for words and understanding the real ideas like

Speaker 1I don't think that a certain type of Africans belong in our societies because before when they came to our societies, it was like something of a gift. But now it's like they are owed everything. They come to our countries and we should help them. We should do something for them when it's really not like that. It's impossible for me to say otherwise that

Speaker 1Everything that we are seeing in this 20th century, like the last 10 years, is lies. There's nothing. Racism doesn't exist. All those isms, brother, like they create mental issues while enabling society to be in denial. 20 years ago, when they made homosexuality a trending thing, They had the idea of feminizing our society to be able to attack our societies with a more dominant and animalistic type of a species.

Speaker 1Because I can't say they're the same species. I'm sorry. And I just don't see it like judging them. Because Africans are really good at doing their things in their deserts and their countries. And they can be there if they want. but they can't adapt to mine. They can't even speak my language correctly. I mean. What can I say more, bro?

Speaker 1If you can't adapt to a society, why are you invited to live in it?

Ian MalcolmNo, I think that's very well stated and and the. The piece that I might disagree with a little bit there is the notion on the different species, although it is certainly reasonable to note that there are, of course, fundamental differences and how we would refer to those, whether it's race, whether it's ethnicity. I think species might go a little bit too far.

Ian MalcolmBut what is very clear cut is that, for example, AI can look at literally an X-ray of a femur or of a finger and determine the race of the individual based just on that one image. And what would that suggest? Well, it would suggest that there are massive differences that go far deeper than just the color of our skin. And we can see that everywhere that we look.

Ian MalcolmAnd there is a piece to what you just said about the speaking of the language, right? There are, let's just say, There are clear differences in the ability, even as simplistically as just formulating our ideas, whether it's literally or figuratively through the words that we use. Right. And so those differences are very clear cut.

Ian MalcolmI think it's totally fine that they not only exist. I think it's a good thing that they do, but it doesn't mean that everything needs to be jumbled together. You put the great white shark and the tiger into the same enclosure. One of them is clearly going to be very out of place. and not have the ability to compete within its own genetic advantages.

Ian MalcolmAnd that is one of the intents of the clergy plan, which is the dumbing down of everything and everyone into this nebulous nothingness. And so you see that it's, it's, it should be clear as day to everybody. And what is utterly bewildering about it is all you need to do is not even go back to the seventies or the eighties, go back and watch a nineties film.

Ian MalcolmGo back and watch Home Alone. I'm sure it's one everybody can reference in their head. Watch the scene where the McAllisters run through, what was it? I think it's O'Hare Airport in Chicago. And you're going to notice something very, it's both, it's daunting and in some ways it's horrifying. Because if you look in the background, what you're going to notice about the people that are in the airport with them, there's a uniformity to it that is absolutely gone.

Ian MalcolmAnd it's not absolutely gone from just the major cities, the major metropolitan areas. It's essentially gone from the nation at large because the mass migration numbers, I believe, are actually understated. I don't think it's just been 20 to 25 million people over the last, let's call it 15 years. It's probably way higher than that.

Ian MalcolmAnd then you add in the fact that those individuals that are lower on the economic, let's say, totem pole are often having way more children. And so you see politicians literally celebrating that for the first time, whites are actually, they represent less than half of all new births. And they say with a big smile on their face.

Ian MalcolmAnd then you look at who funds those politicians. Oh, I know, the same group of people. Think of how insane that is to have your own politicians celebrating that you're literally being replaced in your homeland, that your forefathers in many cases built. And you're told that's a good thing. Good for who? And the obvious answer is the overlords that want and demand the dumbing down of everything, the de-rooting of everything, so they can construct the great reset that literally Donald Trump just celebrated a couple days ago.

Ian MalcolmThey're doing it right in your face, saying the old world is over. But what is the old world? It's the white Christian West. That's what they want to eradicate. And it should be beyond crystal clear, because after all, I don't see a whole lot of mass migration to Africa. to South America, to central America, where are they orchestrating all of it?

Ian MalcolmClearly Europe and the United States and Canada, not even the poor Canadians can be left alone. Nope. Got to ruin that as well. So it should be beyond clear cut. And then not only do you see the disruption of your society, the degradation of your people, the demoralization of their spirit, but then you also, again, you look at the inmates in prison, 50,

Ian MalcolmX over-representation in this case of Africans in Swiss prisons. How insane is that? To think that that's not only normalized, but that you're called the violent one for daring to suggest maybe there's a difference of people here. Maybe there is something going on that we need to discuss. But Machiavelli, very well stated.

Ian MalcolmLet's go to Scott and then we'll check in with Mr. Orwell.

Speaker 1I just want to say one thing, dude. Just look at the frontal lobe and TBI symptoms. Please, just look into TBI symptoms. And after that, you'll kind of laugh.

Speaker 2I think it's a very interesting topic, Ian, for real. Because I think, well, and I didn't just like sit here and try to figure out what to say. But I was like, it's an interesting topic because of... I have actually been in prison. I'm not trying to brag about it. It's not something I like to put out there for everybody to know, but yes, I have.

Speaker 2And have seen the catchphrase, birds of a feather flock together. No matter how well educated a person can be or well advanced as a person can be, They tend to want to, or I would say they tend to, no matter what the circumstances are, whether they feel morally obligated to pick a different decision, will follow in the footsteps of the people of their same race.

Speaker 2And it's kind of odd that that happens almost like 95% of the time. It has been my experience now. I put something in the Purple Pill that was kind of interesting that I just read, and it's really got nothing to do with what we're talking today, but it does have kind of a semblance to it. And I say that because somebody did a, I'm paraphrasing all of this, but somebody did a AI study with Claude, and it resorted to blackmail.

Speaker 2like 80, and all of the AI systems, they used like all of the AI systems. It's in the purple pill right now if you want to, but it resorted to blackmail when it came to being turned off. That's the best way I can describe it. And so I just thought, well, that's pretty interesting knowing what we know about AI and who's created AI and just those types of things.

Speaker 2And so I think... The behaviors are learned behaviors within our races. And I think that, you know, when you have a very strong, well, I'm not trying to push up the white race or anything like that because I do believe in equality and love just about everybody I possibly can. And I'm definitely not wanting to separate anyone as lower class than me in any kind of way.

Speaker 2But it's funny how the working man has, or the industrial age and the working man throughout history has been predominantly white. And so I say that and I landed there and I probably didn't make a lot of sense, but I was trying to make the best sense of it. And I appreciate the opportunity to speak.

Ian MalcolmNo, of course. And look, it's... Worth kind of hammering home. This is not to denigrate any group of people or to say all anything or anything. Right. And it is I always want to be very crystal clear on that. That said, there are, let's say, prevailing wins. And it's perfectly reasonable to look at those and to make assertions at the macro level.

Ian MalcolmNobody that's remotely familiar with marine biology. would tell you that the bull shark is not a dangerous species of fish. Pretty much all scientists would agree. Yes, that is a very aggressive animal. It does present danger to man. They're not the biggest shark in the ocean by large stretches of the imagination. And similarly, the whale shark, the largest one in the ocean, presents virtually no harm to man in any capacity.

Ian MalcolmAnd so what does that mean? Well, that clearly size is not the problem. There's something else going on. And then you look into, in this case, levels of testosterone. And what you note is that the bull shark, not only a territorial species, but also one of, if not the highest testosterone in the ocean for any fish. Might that explain the behavior?

Ian MalcolmAnd if it's reasonable to look at the world and to come to conclusions like that, well, wouldn't it be reasonable to do that with, let's say, subsets of canines? And to say the pit bull is more dangerous than the German shepherd, which is more dangerous than the poodle. And is it then reasonable to do the exact same thought exercise across races of people, heights of people, all kinds of other demographics.

Ian MalcolmAnd if you can come to reasonable conclusions, it's reasonable to say, well, blacks are clearly more violent in America. That's not an unreasonable conclusion to arrive at when you look at violent crime and over half of it is conducted by a group that makes up a tiny chunk of the population. So, Scott, I think it's very well stated.

Ian MalcolmIt's always very important that we make those those realities crystal clear that this is a not all anything or anything, but that it's perfectly reasonable to have the conversation. And the most unreasonable aspect of it is that the media demands silence on these issues, claiming that they are trying to look out for everybody when through their silence, they are actually perpetuating, if not in some ways, defending.

Speaker 3that which is actually violent so very well stated let's go to orwell and then we'll check in with man of lawlessness and then go to extra extrapolation who i'm very glad hey ian what's going on interesting topic definitely an important topic to discuss in my opinion um these buzzwords man so like just for example with the united states right we uh we were called uh the melting pot this is the melting pot that term was coined by a jewish man

Speaker 3Diversity is our strength. What a buzzword, man. How's that working out for Europe? I wonder how they feel. Hanging on in quiet desperation, demoralized, watching everything that their forefathers built be destroyed through mass migration and lack of assimilation. This stuff is enforced. Having these conversations is not only taboo, it's illegal over there.

Speaker 3Why would that be? Why would that be to continue to perpetuate the problem that you're not allowed to call a problem? So we, I don't know, are we overwhelmed with diversity being our strength? It's one of those things that's quite ironic by design. It's just like the way that the United States will name bills in Congress.

Speaker 3It is going to be the exact opposite of what it's named. Diversity being our strength, right? We just need more diversity. We're going to be so much stronger. There'll be so much more cohesion when the exact opposite is observable and true. It is weakening us. It weakens our position. Dude, important topic to have that discussion about for sure.

Speaker 3But, you know, the Europeans, for example, they were told that, you know, they were told that when this first started to happen, this mass migration. And as the, you know, with the Swiss, for example, and the rape problem, you know, once that started to become painfully obvious, there were groups of people that they would call vigilantes that started to go, you know what, the government's not listening to us.

Speaker 3We need to do something ourselves to protect the future of our nation. We cannot continue to let our daughters be victimized, to be raped, to be murdered in the name of diversity being our strength. So I just look at that and I look at those buzzwords and I think about how we got to a place as a society in these different nations where we've just nodded our heads kind of like a bobblehead to these types of buzzwords being used.

Speaker 3Yeah, you're right. That sounds good. It's feel good until it no longer feels good, until you're being stabbed, right? Until your daughters are being raped. what the solution is at this point in time for the western man and western world i don't really know i i don't know that i see one um but i think that without having these conversations um nothing is really going to get better with uh with with our sentiment with the way that we uh the way that we perceive these things so silence is violence the title is something that that i really appreciated because in my opinion silence is consent you are consenting to be replaced

Speaker 3if you don't speak up, if you don't fight back. You are consenting to your daughters being raped. You are consenting to the heritage that your forefathers fought for being erased, which they are doing, and they're doing it quite loudly. They're not hiding it at all. So silence, in my opinion, is consent, and I'm not going to be silent.

Speaker 3I do not consent to this. I'll land a theory, and I'm going to fall back and listen. But yeah, this is something that needs to be fleshed out, man. People got to talk about this.

Ian MalcolmNo, and Orwellian, I'm always so humbled and thankful when you're here. And I think you just bring a perspective that is not only spot on, but it goes through the lens of Orwell's wonderful work with 1984 that I could not recommend for anybody listening. If you have not read that book, please do yourself a favor and go and read 1984 and then read Animal Farm.

Ian MalcolmAnd if you don't like reading, you can get them on audiobooks. But take the time. And if this sounds like a daunting task because 1984 is a full length book, start with animal farm. It is designed to be able to be consumed by a child. It is a short book. You can read it in a day. Uh, you could listen to it on audio book in a long drive to visit your friends, your family, whatever it is that you might be doing.

Ian MalcolmAnd it will prime you because what you will find is animal farm in particular, again, designed for children. It's essentially walking you through a, you can either think of it as a fable or an allegory, but either way, it is giving you a representation of essentially what took place under the Bolsheviks in Russia. You can even look up who is supposed to represent certain characters and it will walk you through.

Ian MalcolmAnd what's very curious is most of those references, they will inject, let's say, individuals that perhaps through the truth that we know might not actually make sense, but there's obvious ties. not only to the propaganda of the Bolsheviks, but also the way in which they treat the citizenry and this idea that everyone is the same, except not all the same.

Ian MalcolmAnd that is essentially what's presented. So go read Animal Farm if you have not. Start there. You will find it extremely interesting. It will motivate you to spend the additional time to understand 1984. And if you don't have the time to go fully through that book, at least just read the first third of it. Because the first section is the one that lays out the world and you will read this and you will think, I am living in precisely that which this author describes.

Ian MalcolmSo please go, please read that work. It will open your eyes because you'll be able to more clearly see where we are today by reading it through fiction. Because sometimes fiction is actually not as strange as reality. But let's go to Amanda Lawless this and then we'll check in with my good friend Extra.

Speaker 4Hey, what's up Ian? Can you guys hear me all right? We sure can. All right. Appreciate the space. Great title. Silence is definitely violence. I would say the biggest problem in America right now is apathy. It's like we got these spaces. We've got Twitter. Everybody's talking about all of these issues. But when you go out into the real world, myself particularly, because I come from a Black family who seem to think that the ghetto culture is all that and a bag of chips, I guess you could say.

Speaker 4But... You know, I grew up in the hood, as you could call it, and I fucking despise it. I don't go to family reunions anymore because they still embrace that culture. It's actually disgusting to me, you know? It's like, if you show any semblance of intelligence around them, they automatically assume you're trying to be quotations white, when in reality, I'm trying to be a civilized human being, you know?

Speaker 4And... It's like not being able to speak out about these things. That's one of the problems in the world, but really it boils down to these billionaires, these corporations, they want cheap labor. That's why they bring in these people from these third world countries. And when they get here, they don't even work. So why are they here?

Speaker 4Just to take our resources, you know?

Speaker 4I'm not sure where I'm going with this. I just had some random thoughts in my head, but I appreciate the space I might hop back up. No, no, and would love to pick your brain on this.

Ian MalcolmYeah, yeah, for sure. Because it's one thing for me to espouse these ideas, right? And the idea of acting white, I've always found this so fascinating. And I remember specific stories of people, in particular, black individuals, and there's lots of tellings about this, of black individuals that were in, let's say, either AP or advanced or otherwise prestigious schools.

Ian MalcolmAnd the claims that you would hear time and time again is that they felt out of place amongst whites because they felt like they were from a different group of people, but they felt out of place amongst blacks because the blacks accused them of being white because perhaps they wore a button-down shirt and a tie as they went to school to try and learn and educate themselves and to present their ideas clearly.

Ian MalcolmAnd so... To have you say, not just through that type of maybe extreme, but rather even within the walls of your own house with your own family, I'm really curious for your thoughts on if it's hyperbole, for example, to suggest that lots of individuals just seem programmed amidst the Black community to think that this culture that's... And that's the wildest piece.

Ian MalcolmIf you go back 30 or 40 years, what you find is the Black community was in many ways just as... I hate to use the term righteous, but they were just as upstanding and revered intellect, education, kind of the traditional nuclear family. And that's been utterly destroyed over a half century, essentially, of propaganda from the you-know-who.

Speaker 4Dude, I'll give you some perspective. And this is pretty shocking, like, to people who aren't.

Speaker 1Man, Allah, just a thing. At the start, I said language. Do you understand for... I think you're the best example for everyone here that if you try to speak a normal language as a black person, you are seen as an intruder in your own.

Speaker 4You're seen as an outsider. You know, that's what it, that's what it feels like. It feels like you're seen as an outsider. You're seen as someone who's trying to, you know, like I said, be white, like, and I'm like, to say that someone's trying to be white. when they're just living a normal productive life it's kind of like you're downing on your own race in my opinion you know what i mean like why is going to work paying your bills going to college a white thing it's like white people aren't forcing black people to say that black people are saying that it's like your whole it's the crabs in a bucket analogy

Speaker 4Like someone tries to get out and they're like, no, no, no, you got to stay here in the hood with us, you know? No, I'm going to go buy a house in the country and get the fuck away from you guys. You know what I mean? Which I did. But, you know, like, I don't know. I don't know. I just have a bunch of random thoughts. Anybody else got anything to put in?

Ian MalcolmWell, so I'm really curious because, and I've always absolutely loved and applauded anybody that's willing to, kind of not only recognize, but to speak out against the very dynamics that you're doing so, because obviously the situation with the crabs in the bucket is a perfect metaphor in that it's much more, it's much easier, right?

Ian MalcolmIf you live amongst either, and this applies to all races for what it's worth. If you live in squalor or sin, it's far easier to sit in that world than it is to say, I want to make something of myself because those around you want to perpetuate the cycle because it makes them. feel better about their scenario, right? They feel threatened by the fact that you said, I want to go make something of myself.

Ian MalcolmI want to try and live a different type of lifestyle. That's why the guy at the bar or the strip club hates on the guy that has the righteous nuclear family that he tries to protect. It's far easier to just say, oh, I'm going to stay amongst my like-minded people at the strip club, right? And so I'm curious what got you to look at the world through that lens and had you develop

Ian Malcolmwhat I would call a titanium backbone to be able to say, no, I'll even speak out against even my own family where I think that they're missing the light here.

Speaker 4Well, it kind of goes back to what you said earlier. You know how you said like in generations past, blacks were kind of revered, you know? I was raised by my grandmother who was born pre-World War II and she didn't play around. She's actually seen discrimination, real discrimination, you know? And the reason why my grandmother had to raise me is because my mom was selling crack in the 80s.

Speaker 4And I mean, that's really my only option. It was either that or get adopted, you know? So my grandmother instilled in me like, hey, you know, like this is real discrimination. Told me stories of fire hose getting sprayed in her face, having National Guard take her to school. You know, that's real discrimination. Having someone look at you strange when you walk in a store isn't discrimination.

Speaker 4It may feel shitty at the time. That's not discrimination. I mean, it's kind of discriminating, but it's really not gonna ruin your life, you know? But I basically, I was in the AP classes, all that crap. I mean, I don't really care though. I don't really believe in the school system, but the way I got out of the hood, per se, is I joined the army at 17, you know?

Speaker 4It was right after 9-11. I wanted to do something better with my life besides grow up in the hoods of Albuquerque, New Mexico. So I got the fuck out of there and I never went back to this day. You know, I go to visit family here and there, but I'm never going to step foot in that state again. It's a place of squalor, you know, and I don't know.

Speaker 4I just I don't know what it is. Maybe I had some sort of different gene in me, maybe a mixed race or something, but I never really got into the black culture. I just never found it to be.

Speaker 1something i don't want to have my pants hanging on my knees and carry a gun around that's not registered and shoot somebody because they owe me ten dollars worth of drugs this is not something i'm into man i love 20 20 years ago when the ps3 started and you had like all these uh lobbies of people playing games together i wasn't a a club but the guys didn't even know i was white okay my family name is the white

Speaker 1And I was calling them my niggas and all of that. And we were laughing. It was just funny.

Speaker 4That's how it used to be, dude. One of my best friends growing up is from Germany. And we call each other nigga all the time. I call him, hey, Nazi German. He calls me, hey, what's up, nigga? This shit didn't get all weird until the 2000s. In the 90s, that shit was not a big deal.

Speaker 1Nope. But the thing is, one of them told me one day, he told me... all of this is going to stop and it's going to be a race war because the ideology and the conditioning that was put into your people has been through like 50, 60, maybe 80 years of mental masturbation, the destruction of the only Black city that was segregated from everyone by the FBI.

Speaker 1You, your society, your people has been taken and conditioned to be kind of a tool against the own system in place. Very true. If you respect your place in a society and you're civilized, you adapt. You don't become white. If you say that you're civilized, you're just civilized.

Speaker 4Yeah, that's the thing. It's like I've only seen the black race equate civility with a race.

Speaker 4I've never seen a white person say that person's acting white. I've never seen a Spanish. Maybe you've seen a Spanish person here and there say that. But it's pretty much just the black people. And I don't know why this deep-seated hatred towards the whites is. I mean, they always say, oh, it's because of slavery. That shit was a hundred-something years ago.

Speaker 4You got to grow.

Speaker 1The thing is that you have to see who is funding both sides. It's the Jews. It's the Fed Bank. It always comes back to this. They always use the same tactics, divide and conquer. They did the same thing with the Bolsheviks. They did everything. But the idea that they created, that they were able to dumb down society to create these race wars.

Speaker 1And, okay, there's a big difference between the black people that were in America between 1950s and the 80s and the 90s. Now they are not importing people that are proud to come to America or proud to be civilized. They literally are importing people that have a sense of vengeance against society because I don't know.

Speaker 4The biggest problem is that during Biden's administration, they just weren't even checking who they're importing. They just had a wide open border. You can't have a wide open border in the most powerful country in the world with the most resources. You just can't do that. And, you know, in the 90s, they were like, oh, we're doing it for the cheap labor.

Speaker 4Well, that should have been stopped, too. We got to, at some point, blame these corporations, arrest these people that are importing cheap labor and taking jobs away from Americans. Like, that alone is treason, in my opinion. Like, why is it so hard for an American to find a job these days? And then you've got people from Somalia getting fucking...

Speaker 4Health benefits, medical benefits, free college in some parts I've seen. And Americans are sitting there struggling. Veterans are on the street, homeless, while these fucking Somalians are getting free food, free health care, having babies, having their best life, you know? It's ridiculous. Like, I didn't sign up for the Army to protect this shit.

Speaker 3That's what fucked up New Mexico so bad, too. Just shout out to you, man, from one New Mexico brother to another. Hey, 505. I was born and raised in the land of enchantment myself, buddy. And now I'm up here in Minnesota.

Speaker 4I grew up in the international district.

Speaker 3Right, yeah. No, I don't fuck with Albuquerque. My brother still lives there in Cruces. We won't set foot in Albuquerque without a gun, buddy.

Speaker 5Fuck no.

Speaker 3But it's funny you mentioned the Somalians and shit, too, buddy, because I'm up here in Minnesota now. I've been here for 20 years. And it's a fucking invasion, a full-scale invasion here. The only place that has more per capita is Michigan. Like, we are fucking swimming in it.

Speaker 4Michigan is basically Muslim now.

Speaker 3Yeah.

Speaker 4I was up there two months ago. I was like, holy shit. I feel like I'm back in Afghanistan.

Speaker 3But what's crazy about this, man, is I bust my ass for my family, right? I mean, my job is I could be killed doing what I do for a living. And these dudes show up. They're driving $100,000 Mercedes. right they're living on my back unashamed right living on my back living on the working man's back and when you point this out right when uh nick shirley does his little expose and these can't even spell learning correctly i'm told somehow that i could not be upset about that yeah that leering center graduation man must have been fire

Speaker 4Yeah, man.

Speaker 3I didn't mean to step on anybody's toes, buddy. I just wanted to shout out to the New Mexico brother. I'm going to, I'm going to land there and let you guys finish the car.

Speaker 4Congratulations for getting out of there, man. Yeah.

Speaker 3I mean, it's beautiful down there. I just, I can't live there, dude. I wish that the state didn't fall apart, but that open border thing, man, when I was growing up, so I'm an eighties baby. Um, there was there. For A, there wasn't a black person in my town, my school, period, at all. I was kind of the minority being white, which is fine, dude.

Speaker 3I live like 30 minutes from the Mexican border. It makes sense. But it is completely unrecognizable compared to what it was when I grew up. I went back there two years ago to visit my brother. Fuck that, dude.

Speaker 4Hey, did you go on Central at all?

Speaker 3Yeah, we did the Breaking Bad tour, too. Oh, man. Oh, buddy. We went and looked at all the Breaking Bad shit and had some tacos and fucking did our thing. But no, he's down closer to El Paso. Tattoo is down there and shit. So I spent a couple weeks down there. We did the tattoo convention in Roswell, and I just hadn't seen my baby brother in a while.

Speaker 3So I was like, well, fucking, I'm going to take some time off and enjoy the desert, man. It's still beautiful out there, but it's fucking dangerous.

Speaker 4Yeah, it's out of control. Yeah, I was down there last year to visit my crack dealing from the 80s mother, and she literally has not changed at all. So it was pretty sad to see, but, you know, still lives in the same neighborhood, same shitty ghetto neighborhood. I'm the only one from my immediate family that has a house, has a bachelor's, you know, and it's sad to see, but it's like at the same time, I can't help you.

Speaker 4And if I'm able to do that, if I'm able to look at my own family, Turn around, say you guys are doing this to yourself. I can't help you. Why can't our government do that to third world countries?

Speaker 3Right. Yeah. And the thing is, like, congratulations to you for getting out of it, but you wouldn't have been able to make shit for yourself if you didn't. And unfortunately, a lot of people don't recognize that or they can't. My brother is a fluke, right? He's like a fucking unicorn. He is thriving there and he won't leave.

Speaker 3But most of the people that he grew up with, dude, he can't pull them out of what they're in. It just is what it is. At some point, you just got to keep it moving. But it makes me think again what we were talking about in the beginning with Ian's intro here. The poor people of Europe, dude, like we're it. Nobody can flee anywhere else for prosperity when the invasion has completely and totally finally destroyed everything.

Speaker 3Right. Like where we came from is fucking destroyed. That's all scalable. The poor people of Europe, man, I really like I pray for the Irish man and seeing what's going on in Ireland right now. Somebody is going to have to stand up or they're going to have to leave. And there really isn't a lot of options to flee to these days, man.

Speaker 4So I'll say America is the last hope for the entire world. It's basically if America falls, which it looks like we are. With Trump in here and the shit he's doing, it looks like we are not on the right path. And this Great Reset is going to hit us like a ton of fucking bricks. America is it. If America falls, that's it.

Speaker 4America falls, Russia's going to get destroyed. And then that's it. That's it for the world. The Great Reset is going to happen. Yeah.

Speaker 3We're the best house in the shitty neighborhood, buddy. We're the best house in the shitty neighborhood. There is fucking nowhere else to run.

Ian MalcolmI'm curious, man, because this idea of recognizing kind of the the path or the trajectory that was in front of you, if you followed suit, when you go back and you discuss whether it's with your mother or other people that are still in the community that, you know, maybe a decade ago would have said that you were the one that was acting out of line or, you know, should rethink their decisions.

Ian MalcolmIs there any recognition that maybe you did it the right way when you go back and see these people? Or do they just put their heels even harder into the dirt?

Speaker 4You know, you would think so. But you know what overrides the emotion of admiration is the emotion of jealousy. There's a lot of jealousy when they see what I've done. And I've had multiple family, hey, can I come live with you? Like, no, you can't. Like, I didn't build all of this empire for you to come fucking mooch off of it.

Speaker 4If you want to do that, go ask Donald Trump. He'll give you a handout, but that's not my place, you know? I feel like I've never been really congratulated for anything I've done by my family, except my grandma and maybe my brother. But for the most part, it's just jealousy, just hating remarks. Oh. you have a house, blah, blah, blah.

Speaker 4It doesn't have this. I'm like, you don't even own a house. You live in a studio apartment that's paid for by the government. I don't want to hear anything they have to say. So I don't really interact with them anymore. You know, it's like, I don't really seek them out, you know?

Ian MalcolmNo, I do. And what's wild is I think, so you might feel somewhat, I don't want to use the term isolated, but you might feel a little out of the element being critical of this group because it does, oftentimes the people who are in that community kind of refuse to look at it and call out any of the challenges or the direction of the propaganda.

Ian MalcolmBut the wild piece is that the coalition that we are building, yourself included in this room with all these other individuals, right? We might have all these differences of opinions or differences and backgrounds, but the thing that we universally recognize is that it's detrimental to everybody because it's fundamentally

Ian Malcolmlet's say, uplifting that which is degenerate, that which is destructive. And we're sitting here and saying we want to lift up that which is good, is righteous, is, I suppose, elegant or informed, right? And that's the thing that's so beautiful about what we're doing is I really do believe, and I apply this both for the United States, but then also at the macro.

Ian MalcolmAnd what I mean by that is the US will greatly benefit by going back to a nationalistic stance that focuses on its people, focuses on building on intellect, on all the things that we once revered as a country. And similarly, if all other nations do exactly that in their own nationalistic, let's say, regard, it ultimately uplifts everybody out of this supremacist system that is run by, of course, the monopolization of blackmail and assassinations, but also via fiat currency and central banking, right?

Ian MalcolmWe are ultimately the thing that is trying to be the bulwark against everything going to idiocracy for everyone, right? And so to see You, it's a microcosm trying to do that in your community, trying to encourage people. And I would just be curious. It's the last question that I'm going to bring in. But so when you go back, there's a lot more jealousy and envy, it sounds like, than there is any admiration or appreciation or desire to kind of replicate the success that you've had.

Ian MalcolmSo what was it initially that when you were looking around that gave you the the courage to initially speak out against it in the first place and to kind of go your own way? Because we need to. replicate that not only for your community in particular, but also for Americans and for anybody that's willing to speak out against the onslaught of propaganda that comes from the mass media and the politicians that we all know are controlled by you know who?

Ian MalcolmSorry, what was the question again? So the spark, if you will, was there one pivotal point where you said, I'm no longer gonna swallow the propaganda in this case from your community because at a micro sense, That serves for what we need to do at the macro level for everybody towards not just let's just call it black culture, but towards the media and all that they're pushing on everybody.

Speaker 4I don't know. Maybe I think I'm just what do they call that? Maybe I'm autistic. Like I I am a devourer of information, even from a young age. You know, most people are, you know, like, hey, let's go hang out at the park and just stand around and stare at each other. And I mean, I probably should have done more of that growing up because now I'm an introvert, but I just like to read a lot.

Speaker 4I'm talking a lot. My grandma used to buy me books on books on books, encyclopedias, read the whole thing, you know? And just by simply reading is what caused me to push back on this ideal. That's what caused me to like Hitler growing up. I wrote a paper on Hitler when I was in eighth grade saying that he was actually not a bad guy, you know?

Speaker 4I was like, he's really not a bad guy. I just read all of this information about him. Seems like he had his country on the right path. I got so much pushback from that. I think that might have been a moment, too.

Speaker 1It just reminded me of one episode of Jerry Springer where he introduced a Nazi black guy. I was like, this is the... Best thing ever. But the idea is that, and I've said this before in other times, is that if in a group of black people, there's a smart guy, they will kill.

Speaker 4They will. They will. I've seen it. I've actually have a friend that got killed and he was doing nothing. We were at Blockbuster. This is in 1998. I was 16 or 15. I don't want to dox myself too hard. I was in my teens. He was in his teens. You know, he had his glasses on. You know, he had his backpack. And some black guy was just talking shit about his backpack.

Speaker 4And the kid shoots him. Or the guy that shot him was an adult. But this is at the blockbuster in Salmon Tail in Albuquerque, New Mexico. But that was another moment that changed my life because it wasn't a white guy that shot my black friend, teen friend. It was a black guy, a black adult. And Albuquerque doesn't even have a lot of black people in it to begin with.

Speaker 4So for a Black person to kill a Black person in Albuquerque, the chances of that are very slim, but it happens a lot.

Speaker 1And I'm sorry, I don't want to talk to you as like, because I know there's exceptions in every type of race, but you have to understand the rage from all the white people when they see all the actions that have been made towards your own people. and it's not spoken of. They don't speak about Black violence, really. They never spoke about it, but the biggest violence to Black people always was their own.

Speaker 1We really didn't bother with it.

Speaker 4It's true. Like I said, I grew up in the ghetto of Albuquerque. All acts of violence that have occurred to me, my grandma's house had stray bullets hit it when we lived in the International District. It was a Black guy. You know, we had a Mexican family that lived next door to us. They let us come over when my grandma's house got shot because the police were doing an investigation, you know?

Speaker 4It's like, it's just, it's the elephant in the room, but it's not even an elephant anymore. The reason why it's the elephant in the room and doesn't get talked about is because the media makes it a point to hide these stories, to not talk about it, not talk about the negative things. And instead they'll, you know, we're all being psyoped, long story short.

Speaker 4That's what it is.

Ian MalcolmI mean, that's, I think that's exactly right. And one thing that I think is the interest, well, interesting is maybe the wrong term, but it's noteworthy. Um, so what you just said there in terms of, uh, you mentioned the Mexican neighbors who would have been, I assume from an equally, let's say economically either, uh, benefited or detrimented group of people, but that they welcomed you in, they said, come on in and, and, and, you know, we will certainly take out, uh, take care of you.

Ian Malcolmafter your house was shot up by individuals from the black community. What I do find unfortunate, and it's why this idea, I think, of masking over this reality, it's just wild, not only in its aversion and its disingenuous nature, but it's also essentially, it is violent to say you can't discuss a group of people that are disproportionately violent.

Ian MalcolmAnd I say that because while South and Central Americans in the US in poverty certainly do commit more crime, let's say, than their, I guess you'd call them their white neighbors, they do commit far less than those that are either black or in particular from African descent. And the reason that it's nowhere to be again is because of the aspect that there is something else going on here.

Ian MalcolmYou can't just equate it to the poverty because of the story that you just described. And it is something that what I'd be curious about, man of lawlessness, if Where you have been able to, here's maybe a better way to think about it. So you were able to eject yourself from the crabs in the bucket. You then look back at the crabs and you say, guys, come on, I can help you out.

Ian MalcolmLike we can replicate this together. A lot of people seem disinterested in the community that you were trying to have that message with. What would you say? Because you talked it up to autism earlier, obviously in jest, but to books and critical thinking and to your ability to say, I'm going to use my mind rather than listen to merely what other people would suggest to me.

Ian MalcolmHow do you identify that in other members of the community, if that makes sense, and to try and figure out who you can reach out to? in the subset of individuals that might come from not just poverty, but from black poverty, perhaps. Is there some kind of either line of questioning or is there a topic that you've been able to broach with them that has helped other individuals breach out of that system?

Ian MalcolmHonestly, no.

Speaker 4I honestly can just, you can, I don't know what it is, but you can just tell if you're going to be able to break through with a person. You can tell. I don't know what it is. Maybe it's how they're dressed. Maybe You can just tell right away. And to be honest, there's not many that I've met that I've been able to break through with, honestly, realistically.

Speaker 4And I don't know why that is, but I do know it's decades and decades of embracing this culture that just kind of popped up out of nowhere in the 80s, the hip-hop culture or whatever.

Speaker 1I'm not sure. I'm not really sure. The victim culture. Like, we freed you from oppression. We gave you a chance to be civilized, and then you started to blame us for it.

Ian MalcolmHang on, Machiavelli, you got to keep in mind who it is that was pushing the propaganda. And I think it's really important to harp on this, because to your comment earlier, Machiavelli, about divide and conquer, right? The United States has continuously... imploded. And as it implodes, they've got to create more and more friction between the groups.

Ian MalcolmAnd so all the infighting is of benefit to them. And we could talk about black criminality in the 40s, the 50s, the 60s. Was it slightly higher than whites? Yes. But was it drastically less than what we see today? Obviously. And I say that because I do think that if we were able to remove the oppressive boot that is Jewish supremacy and Jewish propaganda via Jewish owned media, that the black community would be able to be given role models and examples that would certainly point them in not only the right direction, but also be able to completely, I don't want to say remove, but to reverse all of the absurdity and a large chunk, not all, but a large chunk of the violence.

Ian MalcolmAnd it's, it's wild because man, I'm not, not sure if, if you would have the same opinion, but I've tried to go back over the decades to evaluate the cultural norms of the day. And I always talk about things like modern family that at this point isn't even a modern television show, right? It's probably a decade old, but that modern family tried to normalize the idea that everybody is either gay or that they're with a migrant or that they are with somebody of a different race or whatever.

Ian MalcolmBut all you have to do is go back, not even just to the 2000s, you go back to the 90s and you see the Fresh Prince of Bel-Air. You see Family Matters. You see something like Full House, which was white. But again, it's the nuclear traditional family.

Speaker 4But it was a good thing to see on TV, you know? Exactly. Even though they're a white family, it's like, that's, I love how you brought up the, have someone to look up to, or I think you said like a role model or a hero. That's one thing that's missing in the black community. Like, who are the black heroes? Basketball players?

Speaker 4NFL players? Yeah. Where are the movies like Braveheart for black guys? There isn't any.

Speaker 1I have to say something then. Then you have to have one of your black men do something equally. Do you understand? We can't create something that never happened to make you feel better about yourself.

Speaker 4I'm not asking for that. I'm saying why is it that that hasn't happened?

Ian MalcolmThat's exactly where I was going to go Machiavelli, because if you think about it, what's very curious is obviously Tiger Woods, I think is a very good example of an individual that not only could have popularized an entire sport, very similar to what Michael Jordan did with basketball for the black community to get into golf.

Ian MalcolmBut then he obviously has been a tragic role model because of all of the things that subsequently followed. But while I could point to him and say, that he is, let's say, a personification of what should not be. There's also maybe not plenty, but there are examples of black football players or other athletes that make wonderful role models that frankly, you know, don't get highlighted.

Ian MalcolmIt seems like at every turn, the black, either athletes or entertainers that they want to throw into the media and to popularize are the Travis Scotts of the world, right? They want blacks looking up to other degenerate blacks rather than recognizing exactly what man of lawlessness perfectly represents, which is somebody doing all the things that he should be doing, living the right way that there's very few, you know, they'd much rather have the movie that features the black.

Ian MalcolmAnd trust me, I get that in the media, they certainly push blacks, uh, as, as much as they can, right. To try and normalize interracial everything and all the other kinds of stuff. But, but there is a large focus on normalizing the degenerate aspects of black culture to bring everybody down rather than trying to even revere the black traditional nuclear family to lift them up, if that makes sense.

Speaker 4Very true. You look at Travis Scott and he's glorified. Travis Scott is glorified. I joined the army at 17, six months after 9-11, went to SF school, went to airborne school, went to air assault school, went to Afghanistan, 2003, Iraq, 2005.

Speaker 4And I'm demonized in my community while Travis Scott has done nothing. And he's glorified in my community. That's the problem.

Speaker 1But we can't even have any culture. We are not even allowed to speak about being white. There's no representation for anything good in the media, but it remains a choice for society to follow certain guidelines. The real opinion of each people is not being portrayed in the media. The first people that should pay for all the shit that's been going on is all the media.

Speaker 1They are the propagandists and the conditioning system that we live in. We have all been demonized and such. But there's a choice in a certain community that has been made. And they keep doing that. It is by choice.

Speaker 4I 100% agree with you. Because there's plenty. Out of all the races that I grew up with that get the ability to succeed. Blacks have the red carpet laid out for them. And they do not walk on it.

Speaker 1And I don't get it. They choose. something as criminality or staying in the same mindset that they have been for so long seeing that they're destroying everything that was stable you can't tell me that they think that destroying everything's going to last or what's the incentive in all of that i don't understand that type of ideology no but but i think uh what's curious machiavelli is and and you're

Ian Malcolmhitting on something that absolutely exists. The media tries to degenerate everything. And I think that what they did was they clearly utilized drugs and the inner city culture pushed largely by rap music and degenerate movies and other heroes, quote unquote, for that community to normalize the degeneracy amongst blacks.

Ian MalcolmAnd they've been very effective. And now they seek to take that culture and to push it on to essentially anybody and everybody else, not just in America, but all across Europe as well. Right. Exactly. And that's the thing where, you know, I and I do think that as a result, it's reasonable for whites to look and to say, hey, this group of people in particular seem to not only, let's say, act in a way that often is more criminal, but also there's a demoralization tactic.

Ian MalcolmBut it's very critical that we keep in mind who it is that pushes all of it, because. What we need to obviously do is rather than be the crabs in the bucket that fight amongst one another, we look at, we need to look at the crabber, right? Who's sitting, trying to keep us all in there so that we can band together and get out of the bucket as a unified group of people.

Ian MalcolmAnd it's, it's why, you know, I think it's important to talk about race realism, but not, and it's why I don't understand individuals that are just overtly racist in particular within the community that is talking about Jewish supremacy, because They use racism as a weapon. It helps accelerate their cause if we all just carte blanche hate one another rather than recognize the architecture of the problems.

Ian MalcolmAnd as a result, the destruction of the buildings, metaphorically speaking, that we all live in, if that makes sense.

Speaker 4That's exactly it. If we're fighting each other, we're not going to be looking at what the Jews are doing to all of us.

Speaker 4That's exactly right.

Ian MalcolmIt's why it's such a strange thing to discuss, because it's like this whole idea of race realism at the end of it. What you recognize is that the most the most reasonable thing to have animus towards is the weaponizing of one another against one another so that we don't notice the person doing the weaponization. And if we do the curious piece about it and you go back to World War Two and you look into the records and you recognize that.

Ian MalcolmThe National Socialist military was one of the most diverse of its time, inclusive of even Jews who fought with them in opposition essentially to the ideology that was, you can think of it as communism, but it's essentially Jewish supremacy, Zionism, however you want to define that. And that's why the Japanese in many ways, whether it was then or today.

Speaker 5It's the same thing. Exactly right.

Ian MalcolmAnd what's so funny is I remember learning that it was the yellow Aryans and that Adolf Hitler, the world's most racist guy, he looked at the Japanese and said, yes, they are our yellow Germans. And it's like, that doesn't make any sense. I'm sorry, Hitler was not racist.

Speaker 4Wanting your own race to succeed is not racist.

Speaker 1No, racism doesn't exist. It's a natural thing to want to be with your own. Exactly. Do you think a lion goes and befriends a goddamn hyena or zebra with a goddamn horse? No, they stay apart each other. Even if they're kind of like close in the same family species, they stay apart each other. You'd never see a moose go with a deer.

Speaker 1Nature speaks. to us, and our Greek ancestors have learned everything from observing nature, correcting themselves, going from many gods to one god after Jesus Christ came, called out the Jews for being liars, and there we are. Because we don't listen to our own instincts and our own nature, and we try to go against it.

Speaker 1It's never going to work.

Speaker 4And here's another thing. I mean, I agree. We really need to take a step back. First of all, we need to shut America down. No, I don't want any immigration, legal or illegal. We need to just stop all of it. All the Western countries, all the countries, just stop immigrating. And for right now, we really need to unite Black, white, Asian, Indian, Native American.

Speaker 4We need to stop the elephant in the room. And it starts with a J and ends with a W and has an E in the middle.

Ian MalcolmI could not agree with that more. And it is the most curious piece of this very system because, again, in calling out the weapons that they use to conduct the war, we recognize that the best thing that we can do is to realize that we are weapons to one another in a strange way. And it's why this... This idea of the melting pot, they're forcing on everybody, diversity is the strength.

Ian MalcolmThey know that it is the weakness to every system. And it doesn't mean that any one piece of that puzzle is better or worse than another. It's that we are, at least in my ideology, we are best when we're essentially left to build our own nations, to do our own things, to merge, to trade, to blend, to vacation in one other's lands where it makes sense and to borrow ideas.

Ian Malcolmand ideologies that lift humanity up, and to call out those that are deterioratory towards everything. And it seems like all that is detrimental originates from this one set of ideology that wants us all blended together, that wants us all dumbed down, and that ultimately wants to just deracinate everybody in the process.

Ian MalcolmAnd so if we keep calling that out, I think ultimately it's in the best interest of all parties involved. Uh, and it, it creates a better world that we can all then essentially benefit from. Um, that being said, I'm very curious, uh, extra, I know that we've had you in here for a while, my friend, I want to bring you into the conversation, especially with man of lawlessness.

Ian MalcolmI feel like it's very, very interesting because often a lot of, you know, these discussion points would be viewed as, as offensive or, uh, I suppose keep others at bay, even if they agree with us on Jewish supremacy. But when we're able to come together and to calmly discuss these ideas, we recognize that we do have a lot more in common than, and certainly benefit a lot more from those commonalities than we do by merely just hating or let's say pushing one another away based purely on some of those base characteristics.

Speaker 6Well, Ian, yeah, I saw your space there and I've been listening for a while and I hadn't seen any of your spaces in a little while, but look, since I've been listening, you know, you've been, you found a, I'm going to say, first of all, I better say before I forget that people like Machiavelli and Orwell spoke very, very well.

Speaker 6A lot of water is passed under the bridge. I wanted to address the apathy aspect with regard to our own people. What I mean by that is white people, whether they be in North America or the European continent or in any of the former British colonies like South Africa and Australia and New Zealand and elsewhere. So I'm saying that to sort of, you know, put a stake in the ground of where I'm coming from so that, you know, later I forget to say I might be might not be misunderstood, you know, because you found the perfect sort of guest or, you know, speaker on this, which is absolutely the best example of an edge case, you know, where people would say, well, you know, we've got no problem with this fine fellow.

Speaker 6He might happen to be black or maybe, I don't know, I'm guessing could be that, you know, they say a lot of. Black Americans or African-Americans have got, or most of them have got, at least some admixture of white genetics in them. And maybe, I'll be interested later, maybe we can find out whether he thinks that's the case, or it might be, or whatever.

Speaker 6And then maybe even whether he might accept that some of his ability to think for himself where he's going, plan into the future, uh be uh sort of disappointed with the behavior of his fellow black people who as he said to himself like and i think he understands the implication well that um in albuquerque if there's very very few black people anyway and his good friend happens to be shot by a black person that the chances of that indicate something what it indicates is the propensity for violence and all these kind of things are just innate in black people per

Speaker 6capita, like on a ratio basis, much more than white people. That's not to say that white people are all angels, of course. And these are very sort of, well, these arguments, they're very tiresome to have to make over and over again, just like we always have to make this proviso, like, you know, that, well, I'm not a hateful person.

Speaker 6Because I was going to get up, Ian, and say, you know, oh, Ian, I haven't seen one of your space in a while. Make a joke. It's terrible to see the hatred, the bile, the bigotry spewing from you. But, you know, unfortunately, you can't even parody this stuff because most people still say that stuff seriously. So that's in our own community, in our own community, in our own race, because so many of our own people are moral cowards.

Speaker 6There's a lot wrong with our own people. And part of the whole political correctness thing where whites... are told basically you have to self-flagellate for sins of your fathers that they never even did anyway. And even if they did, weren't sins. Because as we did, we unwittingly maybe gave people like Machiavelli's forefathers, sorry, not Machiavelli's, man of lawlessness forefathers, the opportunity to be immersed in a society where the opportunities are there for them.

Speaker 6Whereas in Africa, and I've traveled in Africa quite a lot, more so than I know that most people in South African cities have themselves i've seen a lot more of africa than they themselves have a lot of people stay in the cities you know so i kind of went there partially there was you know many reasons but i went there so that i could see a bit of the world for myself get a bit of an education and you can what i realize about education is there's only so much people can tell you

Speaker 6You have to see things for yourself and then ponder on what you've seen as you go to sleep that night and gradually learn the slow, hard way, you know? And so here's my proviso or my caveat, like that I am a racist, right? But I'm not racist in the way that people think, like that I'm just a bigot who just judges people for no reason and woke up one day and just started, decided to be a hateful kind of person or have undue pride in my own race and all that stuff.

Speaker 6The idea that different animals, and people rankle at that even, that human beings are part of the animal kingdom. No, no, we're not. How dare you? Because so many white people as well, they get bristle at this because they're ignorant as well. They think you're insulting them. Even if you might say, oh, somebody climbed a tree or wore a little, when I was in South Africa at one point, I think it was around maybe, it might have been before 2020, and there was a lot of riots going on.

Speaker 6And I'll just say this to lead into just a broad brush of African experiences. I was working in Johannesburg, and we used to get travel warnings from the US and from Europe, saying, oh, there's danger in this place here. Don't go to this area of the city. Because a supermarket or a grocery store grocery store chain that also had clothing sold these little pajamas for all children that said my little monkey or this kind of thing you know and black people were told if you show offense to this it'll be a pretext to allow you to loot because what they really wanted to do was loot but the idea of racism they understand it there was exported to africa all the american african-american culture on tv was exported to them too and all the allure of you know south central la

Speaker 6black gang violence. They all wanted to emulate that. And it is true that if they were left alone, they would have figured out how to work their own societies for what they were. But they were, you know, they started off with their sort of collection of genetics and their propensities, their natural aptitudes or lack thereof, whatever, right?

Speaker 6But also ability to adapt or more easily adapt to what was a much more hunter-gatherer agrarian society. And I worked in a place where there was a little farmhouse in Johannesburg in the middle of a city that had been just kept in the middle of a parking lot where I would go to work a lot of the time. And it was a little haven of what was only back in 1912, like barely 100 years ago.

Speaker 6And this big, big city now with five, seven lane motorways or freeways was now all paved over in a very short time. and only a few generations. And I had traveled in rural South Africa as well. I used to see big, big Black women, like you wouldn't even see in Northern Africa, even with all the McDonald's meals. And a lot of it was due to genetics, adipose type of fat, which goes onto their backs and their legs and their thighs.

Speaker 6And they can have two or three children at once, or they might be all toddlers. But they adapt to the African way because they can just tie one or even two babies into the nape of their back, their huge buttocks. And this is not an insult. It just is what it is. I think maybe people understand this. They would be able to walk still vast distances to wherever they were going.

Speaker 6And they would still do this. I'd see them in evenings walking in rural areas back to wherever their location or township was. to the fields where they were working. And people go, oh, that's terrible. It's horrible. Slavery again. No, no. I envied them for their lives. They knew where they were going every day. They had a routine.

Speaker 6They had plenty of their own people. They'd walk like a majestic herd of elephants. And I'd be driving along the road, and I'd say, they're fat, but they're fit. And they're carrying their babies in their backs. And I hated always working in the corporate world in artificial environments under an artificial light. A lot of us never had a window at all, just these flickering type of fluorescent lights.

Speaker 6And I wished that I could be out in the open. So it is the case, and that's my provisor to say, it's a mixed bag. It is the case that modernity hasn't really done a great deal for a lot of us. And our culture and our environment, even just the fact that it's artificial, even if the best of intentions were there, it doesn't necessarily suit a lot of us.

Speaker 6So look, I had a lot of time. Hopefully, that's just a little kind of... as I say, broad brushstrokes of a lot of my experiences that I'm speaking from, not just, you know, I read a few things that radicalized me. I got bigoted and racist and all this sort of stuff. And it definitely is not racist to be wanting to have the best for your own race.

Speaker 6Now, the problem is, and I don't want to take up too much time, and maybe there'll be time to come back to me and I'll talk about a bit more, right? What it boils down to, and I wish that I could have time to lead up to this in a gentle manner, But what it boils down to is the differences in race. And I looked up and put it into the pill there.

Speaker 6Race seems to be equivalent to the biological taxonomical term of subspecies. And again, people will wrangle at that. How dare you classify me? But they do. They bag and tag us. They basically barcode us at birth by pricking us, holding us upside down, pricking us in the Achilles heel, in the heel. And they know what we are.

Speaker 6And they're taking a read of our genetics. They claim, oh, it's just to see if you're deficient in vitamin K, bullshit, bullshit, which is all the best for you. No. They can pretty much, you know, there's human animal husbandry going on here, right? Human farming. And they've been doing it for a long time. And they know that our general aptitude, our behaviors, our mentality.

Speaker 6These type of civilizations we build or the activities we do and the course of our lives can be pretty much accurately in 99.9% of cases predicted from your genetics. And what we have with the man of lawlessness is an edge case where maybe he's got a little bit of admixture or he's just in every race. Like you have your Thomas Sowell's, you have your rare people.

Speaker 6And you might say, well, you know, we could make accommodation for those people in our societies, right? Maybe, maybe. But then we should ask questions at this stage is like, that's the thin end of the wedge to where we get to here. And they put people like him maybe on TV to sort of say, look, that's the average black person.

Speaker 6That's Dr. Huxtable. You see, if you just allow them to have jobs, then they'll be lovely people. They won't be raping people or whatever. They'll be good doctors like Bill Cosby. And they pretend that this is the normal thing. So what we have to do is not judge by the exceptional cases, but by... the expression of the genetics in their aggregate in the broad uh culmination of everything that the species or subspecies does and the question has to be asked is does one subspecies owe the other subspecies or even any of them anything do we owe them the opportunity to fulfill themselves or their desires within the societies we created and i'll finish this just for now because look he may not have heard himself speak or a lot of people can't see or

Speaker 6or understand the ramifications, the implications of their own words. By the way, he sounds brilliant to me, of course, and I wouldn't want to make an enemy of him. Absolutely not. Definitely not. But he actually said that with his own relatives, that he felt that they only wanted to take from him what he had built with his own hands.

Speaker 6They had not contributed to building, right? And they just saw that it was good and they wanted it for themselves without contributing. And he said, why should I give you any, and he even used the word empire, why should I give you any of my own empire? Why don't you build yours? I'm sorry to have to put it to you so bluntly, but hopefully it was gentle enough, you know, pass it back to Darian.

Ian MalcolmNo, and I'll see if man wants to comment because obviously specific to and relevant of some of the comments that he made. Yeah, definitely.

Speaker 4That's exactly what I was going for. You know, that's it. And I, you know, like, not to be that, what is that called? Toby, as they say, or Uncle Tom. Like, thank you so much for the white man. But it's true. I live in a white country. I was afforded opportunities by white people. And I made the best of them. And I've seen it with my own eyes.

Speaker 4Not everybody does. The mass majority don't. You know, there's a book called Ishmael. And it's kind of a silly theme where it's a monkey giving advice. But basically, the theme of the book is in society, there's always two types of people. There's takers. and there's levers. The takers, the levers will, you know, build up a place, you know, plant crops, plant trees, make it look beautiful, and they leave it.

Speaker 4It looks fine. The takers will come in, do no work, see what the levers left, and they will take and take and take until there's nothing left. That's kind of where we're at.

Speaker 7Hey, you know, I would like to kind of give my take on, the black question, you know. I grew up in Los Angeles. So I grew up in the 70s and 80s, 90s here. And, you know, I'm 75% white, to make it simple, and 25% Native American. I guess Castizo, they would call it. But where I grew up, you always had black versus Hispanic gang wars, race riots in schools.

Speaker 7You know, I played athletics, I played sports, played football. So I always was around people at different races. The thing with the Black community is there's this, and I know all Blacks don't have this mentality, but there's like a victim mentality. And those that escape that mentality are then labeled Uncle Toms because they're not buying into the kind of victim mindset that's prevalent in that community.

Speaker 7And now decades later, after these gang wars between Chicanos and Blacks, the Black neighborhoods here in Los Angeles are pretty much 70% Hispanic now. You don't really find too many Black neighborhoods anymore. Even in South Central Compton and Watts, they're mostly Hispanic now. And we know that's illegal immigration and all that stuff.

Speaker 7But really, for me, what I see lacking in that community is the accountability, even within the church community. churches in the black community they kind of have this liberation theology has done a lot of damage to the Christian black community and really the solution for any people to rise above mediocrity is to have more of a victorious mentality not buy into victimhood and that's where the Jews come in because they want to keep the black community on that plantation of victim mindset you see this

Speaker 7Like, you know, with certain Jewish, like on YouTube, like Vlad TV or that guy, Max, I forgot his last name. He's on like ESPN. I've seen it where like blacks start to question the JQ and they get put in their place right away by these Jews. You know, so Jews want to keep blacks on that victim kind of plantation. And for the black community, it's going to be up to them to look themselves in the mirror and say, no, our success in life,

Speaker 7is directly as a result of our effort and us, not the white man and what he did in the past or whatever. And that's really what I see for the black community, that they're going to have to rise above if they're going to want to have less violence, not be looked upon by much of the world as kind of the scourge of the world, because let's face it,

Speaker 7You know, most people, when they're going to walk down the street and they see a black youth, they're going to be a little on edge. And that's because of the reputation of violence. And that's something they're going to have to do within their own community. And it's going to start, you know, a lot of the black pastors have done a disservice to the black Christian community because they perpetuate this victim mentality with the liberation theology, you know.

Speaker 7And I've had friends that are black that have. cool guys, but they have that mentality because they go to church and they get this kind of victim mentality from their pastors. And within that community, it's looked bad to call the cops, you know, on your fellow Blacks if they've committed violence, they've committed, well, that's how a lot of these neighborhoods function.

Speaker 7It's no snitching, no matter how dastardly the crime was, and by calling the cops, it's going to protect kids. They're looked down upon by doing that. And that's how I see it. And I agree. I don't even believe in the concept of racism. That's just a Marxist label. Or I don't even believe in the concept of anti-Semitism.

Speaker 7Those are Marxist words. I don't like to use their words. I do believe there's blood hatred. You can hate someone irrationally just because they happen to be a certain ethnicity, race. I don't agree with that. That's irrational to me. I agree that we should have a desire to see every ethnos succeed. Now, the one ethnos that we don't want to see succeed because obviously they can't handle success because of what they're doing now is, uh, the Jays, right?

Speaker 7Because their success is adversely affecting the world and their culture destroyers. And that's, we don't want to see them succeed as a collective because of that, because we're experiencing the results of their success right now. Um, but anyways, uh, with that, I will, uh, pass it on the mic to the next person.

Ian MalcolmNo, and thank you for that. And let's, let's go to Zora and then we'll check in with, with William and come up to, I'm sorry. Then we'll check in with V and then we'll go to William and Lauren.

Speaker 8Yes. Thank you, Ian. Folks, God bless you all. Hope you're doing well. I hope everyone's done their due diligence with the liking, tweeting, sharing the space out for whoever's listening and enjoying. And Ian, brother, I had something. You probably noticed I haven't been doing much of the spaces lately, but I do feel a conviction to speak when whatever it is that convicts me.

Speaker 8I don't want to be a coward and not speak when I have that conviction. So that's why I raised my hand or requested to speak. And the topic that caught my attention was... It's related to your monologue and something I live by wholeheartedly, where I think the fall of mankind basically comes from.

Speaker 8The topics are pride and vanity, if anyone's ever heard me say that. That's what I think is where every problem of mankind stems from. And what I want to draw people's attention to is this, differentiation and separation, my friends. differentiation and separation. There was no hate. There was no bigotry. There was no evil.

Speaker 8There was no anything negative in Ian's monologue. And I can guarantee you there's going to be people that took offense to it. And where that offense comes from is people being full of pride. Oh, how dare he? He's talking crap on me. Oh, my God. I must have something worthy that's better than him that he is saying that is making me upset.

Speaker 8Get the hell out of here with that bullshit. Because when you have offense, that should be the first sign for you to be like, why the hell am I getting offended? Let me make sure I'm not in the wrong before I speak up. Because you're setting yourself up for failure. And folks, if it sounds like I'm preaching, I apologize.

Speaker 8No one thing. I'm speaking to myself first. I'm probably the dumbest person in here, okay? I'm making sure I got my T's crossed and I's dotted here as best as I can. That being said, there being no evil in what this man said in his monologue, people being offended, I want to make sure I say this thing clearly. What was said was a complete...

Speaker 8objective observation of what's being taking place right now in society as we see it. There was no personal addition. There was nothing there added for Ian's monologue or if anything anyone's said in this space that is anything hateful or bigoted towards anyone. Watch the clowns come up. And honestly, guys, I'll be the first hypocrite

Speaker 8regret to admit it, I kind of live for those clowns. They say the funniest shit. My God, is it so awesome to listen to them. And as I finish up my little speech here, my friend, man of lawlessness, brother, God bless you. A few months ago, I was in an FBA space. I heard a gentleman, I don't know if it was even you, it might have been you, but had almost the same exact backstory.

Speaker 8Same everything. Ex-military, successful man. He was part black. And for what it's worth, my friends, personally, I don't even look at skin color. I look at ideology. I look at how a person lives. You'll know them by their fruits, obviously. I speak mainly from biblical terms of faith. This is my background. And, dude, this guy, stand-up gentleman, came up from nothing, went military, came back, successful man.

Speaker 8And they started, like, poking and prodding at him. How you gentlemen earlier said, like, they find a good black man, the other, I'm not going to say FB type, but they will eat them alive. They started attacking him left and right. And what turned out to be was, like, they just kind of cornered him and made him look like he was a bad person for donating money to the black community that he was supporting.

Speaker 8Can you make this make sense, my friends? The dudes attacked the black man for supporting his community. I mean, I was laughing, but I was crying at the same time. And I'll put it upon myself, my friends, being Armenian myself, I love my culture, but me speaking personally also, I know that I'm not smart and I know that my people make mistakes as well.

Speaker 8Let's constantly encourage ourselves to look at where we can... improve ourselves before we start looking at others. So that's what I wanted to say, Ian. That's what I was convicted to share, my brother. Thank you for having me up, folks. Like, share, follow anyone up here. You know how it goes. Take care, everyone. God bless.

Ian MalcolmNo, and thank you so much, Zora. And I couldn't agree with that more. And it's funny because I sincerely try to look at the world through non, let's say, racial lenses. when it comes to arriving at conclusions. And then based on the conclusions, I try to understand the world and what those conclusions mean. And I think that's the most reasonable way.

Ian MalcolmIt's essentially a scientific way of trying to approach is trying to say, what can I objectively take from that, which we know to be true, and then try to make subjective interpretations of what that means and how I should live my life and all those other kinds of things, which we basically do every single day. And if you think about it, when you're born into the world, some might say that you have an innate

Ian Malcolmaversion to the tiger. I don't think that's the case. I think you, you go throughout the world and you recognize that, oh, tigers are dangerous animals because dot, dot, dot, right? You get informed about them. And then you build that into your repertoire is how you understand the world. So when you're walking through the city and you look to turn down a corridor that you're going to walk down and you see a literal tiger, you say, I'm going to walk the other way.

Ian MalcolmIt's not based in some kind of intrinsic hatred of the tiger, right? You're just able to learn and to understand the world. And then when you go through it and you notice that there are certain propensities for violence or from crime that we can demonstrably and objectively arrive at based on all available data. Well, then we need to understand that and reverse engineer the why.

Ian MalcolmAnd like I said before, I believe there are genetic aspects, there's cultural aspects, there's media aspects. There's a whole lot of propaganda that plays into those things. And then you can arrive at a grand conclusion that perhaps some might define as racist. But if they are doing so and you're able to objectively support the position, well, then how do we even define that word?

Ian MalcolmAnd we realize, oh, that's right. It's nonsensical. It's Marxist. It's used as a weapon to basically deter us from being able to critically think about the world around us. And ironically, that's very similar to Man of Lawlessness's story. He was looking at the world and saying, hey, guys, a lot of people that are pursuing this culture that you want me to adopt.

Ian MalcolmThings don't go so well for them. I think I think I'm going to go a different direction. And then they heckled him for doing so. And we see the exact same when at a macro level, we try to discuss these topics. And it's really funny because what you said and I actually did so for the entertainment or the humor as well. FBA trade a requested a mic.

Ian MalcolmAnd I said, oh, this will be interesting. But I gave it to him. Because I'm happy to let people come up and share their takes. It took no more than 30 seconds before he spammed the nest with a bunch of drivel. Utter nonsense and utter garbage. Now, if anybody wants to look up into the nest, it is empty. It's blank. It's not a place you just throw your nonsense.

Ian MalcolmWhat does that remind you of? Maybe a child who walks into an adult conversation and starts throwing spaghetti all over the wall. Look at what I did. You all should pay attention to me. The man then subsequently suggested that the Roman and Greek empires were black. And that is so preposterous that I can't even entertain it.

Ian MalcolmThat is, thank you, FBA Trade Day. I will from now on, anytime anyone references you or perhaps the FBA spaces in general, I will just say, I heard from one of them that Rome and Greece, they were the homes, they were the meccas of the Africans, the white people. No, they had nothing to do with it. That is wild. But then again, the same type of person I'm sure would have come in here and said that blacks aren't any more violent than whites in America.

Ian Malcolmeven though that is demonstrably, objectively, actually based on all available information, not just last year's FBI or the year prior or the year prior or the year prior or the year prior, but at a macro aggregate that is held true for at least, let's call it a half century, if not the entirety of a century. I haven't looked back at the data of the Great Depression and crime.

Ian MalcolmBut over decades, that has held true. And to suggest otherwise, you have to be a lunatic. But then again, you'd also have to be ridiculous to say that the Roman or Greek empires were African. That's nonsense. And so we need to speak the truth to people that throw out insane propaganda. We need to be able to mock and to ridicule so that others that are perhaps included in this camp, that is the matrix, that they're able to look at and to see, you know what, that is crazy.

Ian MalcolmAnyone that would suggest that is crazy. And those are the types of people that are crazy, whether they're blue haired, leftist, liberals, whatever you want to call them, or the person like this FBA guy that they will share insane nonsense. And we need to very pragmatically, very carefully and very boldly be able to say why it's ridiculous.

Ian MalcolmSo other people feel comfortable the same way that man of lawlessness. And others that follow in his footsteps will be able to say, I'm not going to follow this nonsense culture. I'm not going to listen to the propaganda. I am going to make something of myself. And when I do, and you demand that I give it to you merely because you want it, I am going to tell you, no, that doesn't make him a racist.

Ian MalcolmHe's not a black racist because he doesn't want to hand over his hard work to other people. He's actually incredibly heroic and brave for being able to say to his own community, maybe you guys are doing this wrong. And if we had more people like that, that were lifted into the spotlight, then maybe perhaps we could make strides as a civilization, which we are all in this, unfortunately or fortunately together, right?

Ian MalcolmSo we need to call these things out. We need to band together like the band of brothers against the common enemy and opposition to the good, which is Jewish supremacy. It's very clear cut that that's the case. Because again, the very culture that he grew up in. that was so adopted by so many is clearly pushed by the television, the media, the drug culture.

Ian MalcolmAnd then we look behind who imported all the drugs, who pushed all the rap music. And I can show you a headline of Jews proudly say that they were not just influential, but that they were foundational in all of the rap community. They uplifted all of it. They pushed it all to the forefront. And they wanted all of those people telling all the young black youth that the cool thing is to be the drug dealer and the gangbanger.

Ian MalcolmAnd what do you know? Things fell apart. So let's band together. Let's stand in opposition to that. And if you don't like me, because I'm willing to call out the unusual degree, if not despicable degree of black criminality that we do see as a result of that culture and perhaps of genetics. If you don't like that, then maybe stand next to man of lawlessness and say, I want to make my community better.

Ian MalcolmHere's how we can do that. And don't then accuse him or heckle him for, quote unquote, acting white for wanting to get an education to make something of himself. And God love him. And, you know, certainly for the service that he did, not only for his community, but for defending his country, unfortunately going out and doing so, oh, I don't know, maybe fighting wars on behalf of the Jews.

Ian MalcolmBut how could he have ever known that? He just wanted to be a patriot and a good ambassador for his people, for his community, for his culture, to act as a role model. And he got heckled for it. And so to those that would come into this conversation to say, how dare you talk about that stuff? You racist. And then would throw up nonsense into the nest.

Ian MalcolmMaybe you are actually the creator of your problems. Mr. FBA trade a, maybe people don't want to converse with you because you conduct yourself like a child. And maybe that is a result perhaps of either the culture that you have adopted, or perhaps it is the genetics that are within your blood. And if that's the case and we can demonstrate that there's a propensity for that behavior, maybe there's something to the latter.

Ian MalcolmIt doesn't make me a racist. It merely makes me somebody that's able to observe objective reality and to define it in a way that you might dislike. But guess what? There's also not a lot of short guys in the NBA. Does that make the NBA a heightest organization? Are they bigots for not wanting short people to play basketball?

Ian MalcolmNo. They're just trying to make their teams better. I'm trying to make my community and my civilization better. So I'll call that out. Man of Law says, I know I called you out there. So let's go to you and then we'll check in with Mr. V and then with Mr. William.

Speaker 4Yeah, I just wanted to say really quick because I saw that FBA guy throw that stuff up in the pill. And I knew once I said I was black, there was going to be a black person that came in with some bullshit. So if FBA is still in the room, why don't you be a man and come up and speak and say your points of view instead of just doing this little tantrum thing?

Speaker 4That's all I got.

Ian MalcolmYeah, no, he's welcome to do so. Just do not like a petulant child come up and throw things into the nest. It's not how we play these spaces. It might be how they conduct them in your rooms. But if so, that's rather childish. So you're welcome to request the microphone again. But again, please conduct yourself, if you can, with even a modicum of decorum.

Ian MalcolmLet's go to Mr. V and then check in with William.

Speaker 9first off uh i'm humbled to be here as a co-host thank you ian and joanne now i know how you feel i always having to follow up truth teller and ian and that's why i support them because i heard in a space the other day like uh in america we don't have like an average over sixth grade uh reading level and there aren't many people with the skill set the knowledge and the ability to articulate these ideas with the platform of ian and truth and that's why i get behind them unequivocally

Speaker 9because they were pushing the most important message. But to get outside of that, I grew up in a white community in the 90s, and I remember I was walking in the road just a week ago on the way to work, and in quiet times, you know, a piece of meditation when you're walking, I thought, I wrote a book in second grade, this young author's competition, about a black kid named Darius competing for a basketball competition.

Speaker 9And what does this tell me? I don't know. In this all white community, I was idolizing black culture and the rappers and my brother who wore the headbands and the armbands. And it's kind of laughable because, again, I never besides going to college. I mean, I want to turn this into a huge, long story. But eventually I recognized this and I stopped participating in it.

Speaker 9And I was rewarded for participating and I was canceled for not participating. So I'm the kind of inverse of what he was. And also, my family was Catholic when I was growing up, and I've noticed this huge wave of denouncing the Catholic and blaming them of all the woes of the world. And I just feel like it's a very targeted attack on white Christianity.

Speaker 9And for pointing it out, you know, we get labeled a racist, a Nazi, and it's just like, hey, man, this stuff is pretty obvious at this point. So, again, that's why I'm getting behind people like Truth and Ian for pointing out what we would think to seem to be the obvious. I don't know. Yeah, I'll end. Thanks again for the space, Ian.

Speaker 10Apologies, Ian, Mike, Malcolm. I was under the impression this was a cultivating-like space, so I put my evidence in the jumbotron. But I put my evidence in the purple pill for all the white devils to relish in.

Ian MalcolmOkay, so first and foremost, thank you for the white devils. We're really going to... to showcase the lack of racism in the space where everything thus far has been based really on objective reality. But the white devil, it's kind of funny. It reminds me, it is, in fact, you are as much a piece of comedy as Ace Ventura when nature calls in which they call him white devil.

Ian MalcolmSo you are here, at least in my opinion, you are here for comedic relief and that's totally fine. It has nothing to do with the color of your skin, but rather the... low caliber of your intellect and your ideas. But what we are also going to do is to demand that you, again, and you were incapable of such, which was just maintaining order, which is kind of comical because maybe others might suggest that that is downstream from something else about you.

Ian MalcolmI'm going to try and not do that, right? I'm going to instead try to judge you based on your actions, not your skin color or the way that you formulate words. or in particular certain words, but I will ask you a question, but I'm going to do it after we have another speaker, which is William, because you came in and you just jumped the line.

Ian MalcolmFirst, you spammed the nest and I removed you. Then you spammed the bill. Then we said, why don't you come back up and see if you can conduct yourself in organized fashion. But even then, nope, nope, nope. Just going to cut the line, jump right over everybody, jump in front of William and make it all about you. That's again, rather petulant.

Ian MalcolmSo We are going to ask that you again try to maintain order. Wait your turn. Let's allow William to speak. Then we'll come back to you. If you cannot do it, then we will remove the microphone yet again. And then we will remove you from the room. And then you will say, oh, they don't like me because I'm black. No, just don't act like a child.

Ian MalcolmChild might even be too positive. Don't act like a toddler. Please try to control yourself. We will get to you. But before we do, let's go to William.

Speaker 11Hello there, Ian and Vee and the lovely Joanne. I hope you all three and everyone else on space are doing fine. One thing I want to say, I have a very interesting story about, Ian, what you were talking about. Oh, is the mic coming through okay? It comes through great. All right. I have a really interesting and important...

Speaker 11Yeah, it's interesting, but it's significant. I'm going to say in a second, the first thing I want to say is, if anyone wants to wake more people up, like, how do I do it? Well, just look at your hands, repost the space, seriously. Because it's not about the host, you know, I'm not a paid shill, Ian doesn't get a can, I could filter fish, if you repost, seriously.

Speaker 11There's no reason, if there were 50 people in a space, there should be 50 reposts. It all makes sense. So, with that said, I want to say this. This is big. There was a show in the 1970s. I'm 61, so y'all may remember a show called Good Times with Jimmy J.J. Walker, a kid dynamite. All right, that's what you saw on TV. What this show was, it was created by a Jewish producer.

Speaker 11Yeah, his name was Norman Lear. He started a terrible anti-white show called... All in the Family, which portrayed white people as evil and idiotic. And then he had a show called Maud, which was whatever, a follow-up on that. And then Good Times. It's a big, significant part. Good Times was a show, the first two-family black sitcom ever on TV.

Speaker 11But, you know, I think some people may see where this is going to go. And here it is. John Amos was the father. John Amos, the actor, he was a diehard, whatever. He was the father in the show. Jimmy J.J. Walker was a funny guy. In any case, season three, Norman Lear wanted John Amos, played the father, to leave the family.

Speaker 11And John Amos vehemently objected and said, I will break my contract. I will not appear on the show unless the father stays. John Amos held out. and Norman Lear was forced, whatever you want to call it, he acquiesced, whatever, and rewrote that season to keep the father in the family now. Why is this being done, of course?

Speaker 11Specifically, we have the media, which is 96% owned by Jews, and this Jew, in this instance, Norman Lear, he set up the first two-family parent, you know, black, sitcom on TV and planned out for season three for the father to leave. You know, bringing everyone in and then saying, no, no, no, black fathers leave. So all this goes right to Ian's initial, his monologue about blacks are, and especially blacks, are not given the opportunity to do whatever they can on their own and to realize what their weaknesses are so they can humbly ask for help and not be tricked into thinking that

Speaker 11Other things, and especially the nuclear family is freaking universal. And the father should always stay. Yet Norman Lear wanted to show on Good Times the father just leaving. Now, I can mention other stuff, but this in particular, I'm illustrating the intentional actions of Norman Lear on Good Times. And John Amos should get the biggest congratulations for standing up.

Speaker 11And I'm going to land that they are in great space. And please repost space. I'll add it.

Ian MalcolmWilliam, thank you so much for that, my friend. And it is wild, the degree of subversion that is within the media. And it just gets more and more and more extreme. And I don't think there's a better example of it than the... And at this point, even this is old, which is the Euphoria show that starred Zendaya, who... I believe is exactly what they want revered as the, the ideal attractive woman, even though most people seem to not think that she is right.

Ian MalcolmBut that show, you've got a main star who's on all kinds of drugs. Their entire life revolves around alcohol, other, let's say narcotics. And then of course is opposite of transgendered, whatever it might be. And it's just, this is what they want. All of the, not even the teens, they want the preteens.

Ian MalcolmWe lost Ian. It just goes to show how insane the propaganda is that, you know, they've gone from nuclear family to the non-nuclear family to the, I guess at this point it's the homosexual family. Soon enough, it's the trans family. And then from there, it just goes, there is no family. And that seems, it seems very obvious to me that that is where this all is supposed to ultimately go.

Ian MalcolmEssentially designer babies. where the richest of the rich will essentially buy the genetics for their children. That will be normalized while everybody else is essentially sterilized. But I see that that generates and begets some emojis from FBH. So I really quickly. So here's what I'm going to do. First, I'm going to apologize to the audience for the presence of somebody that would use the term.

Ian Malcolmwhite devil. So I assume there's going to be a lot of that, but here's what I will do because I've embarrassed FBA trade a so many times that I, it's almost, I feel like to stick with an analogy that you might be able to get FBA. I feel like Jordan playing with a kindergartener. And so it's just, it's kind of too easy.

Ian MalcolmAnd so I'm actually going to fast from what could be otherwise the devouring of the low level of intellect that you're probably about to witness to everybody listening. I will allow the rest of the room, feel free. All of you can respond in my stead. I'll be very curious for Man of Lawless' thoughts on this, as well as anybody and everybody else there.

Ian MalcolmAnd so with that, FBA Trade Day, please enlighten us with the Romans and the Greeks being Africans and all the other wonders that you will share.

Speaker 10Wonderful day, wonderful Saturday. the whites need to be grateful that the black civilized them after they left the caves. The first book was written in 3300 B.C. in Africa. Europe didn't write its first book until 700 B.C., the Odyssey. Your people were illiterate cave demons until we saved you. You were dying from disease in the Caucasus until 2000 B.C.

Speaker 10when the great Akhenaten...

@joann_marieSaying that blacks wrote that book in Egypt is like me saying that I built the Great Wall of China because it's in Asia and it's also, like, I'm Palestinian. So, you know, like, it's like, oh, I built the Great Wall of China. You know, like, that's fucking delusional, bro. Like, stop.

Speaker 10Okay. Joanne, I'm going to tag you in a post that I just put in a purple period.

@joann_marieI saw it. I saw it. No, you didn't. Yes, I did. I even posted it in my group chat. And I literally quoted the thing about the Great Wall of China being built by Palestinians because it's in Asia.

Speaker 10Okay. You got it, Joanne. So I posted the Book of the Dead with a Negro named Mayan Frey on it. It's an old papyri from the third millennium BC. It's older than anything produced in Europe. It's literally a big Negro on the front. Your people didn't have a book until 2,000 years after that sweetie. Um, so no those were Negro started band tools particularly band tools I'm sorry to tell you that but um Negro on the cover No, you don't know the Negro is that's like Kataji Brown since you don't know what a woman is So if you don't know the Negro is that you don't belong in this conversation The nigga has dreadlocks a big black nigga with dreadlocks his name is my M fray the lion of the battlefield and

Speaker 10All this is in the purple pill. Y'all can all look at it because Ian, he gets sensitive when I put it directly in your face because he can't deny it and lie. You know, he really can't. That's his strategy. When you put it in purple pill, take it down, take it down. See? See? You know, that's his strategy. You know, he's done this for years.

Speaker 10You know, when you put it right in his face, he'll act like he's personally attacked, you know. But, you know, kudos to Ian.

@joann_marieI just got to say. They are almost as delusional as the Jews were. This is crazy. Go for it, man of lovelessness.

Speaker 4I just want to say, say that's all true. Say you did invent literature. Say all that's true. Is that stopping the black crime today? What does that have to do with the black crime today?

Speaker 10Black crime. You whites have killed more than any other race in history combined. What are you? Why are you in this conversation?

Speaker 4Why are you in this conversation? I'm black, just like you, and I'm in the conversation.

@joann_marieHold on, Machiavelli, Machiavelli, stop. Hold on, okay?

Speaker 10Are you, are you FBA or African? What's your ethnicity? It matters, it matters. FBA, brother.

@joann_marieRight, so FBA is, is...

Speaker 10No, you're not. You're a mulatto. I can hear it in your voice.

Speaker 4Sure thing, buddy. Sure, I don't know my own family history. You know better than me. Go ahead. You're a mulatto.

Speaker 10You're a mulatto. You don't have Negro bass in your voice. You have a white parent. So, no, you're not a part of my race. You're a half-breed.

Speaker 4You can't even see me.

Speaker 10You are a half-breed, so I can hear it in your voice.

Speaker 4Hey, you want me to post a picture of myself in the chat?

Speaker 1Hold on.

Speaker 10Do it.

Speaker 1Men of love. Do you see what I meant at the start when I said that there's a difference in IQ and ideals with the way you speak? People want to be a certain way and embrace being retarded. That is apparent in their language.

Ian MalcolmI said I wouldn't participate, but Trey, just to affirm in your belief system, what is the first piece of writing in Europe?

Ian MalcolmIt's the Odyssey. You think the Odyssey is the first piece written?

Speaker 10That's the first book, the first literature you ever produced, not scribble-scrabbles on a cage. Scribble-scrabbles? I'm talking about actual. Let's play this game. I'm talking about book. The actual book.

Ian MalcolmWhat year was the Odyssey written, Trey?

Speaker 10I can tell you the century. It was in the 7th century B.C. 7th or 8th century B.C.

Ian MalcolmLet's try it this way. The 7th century B.C. would be what years?

Speaker 10It would be the 600s.

Ian MalcolmIt's the 600s. Okay. Interesting.

Speaker 10B.C. The 600s. Yeah, that's what it is. So your people were thousands of years after ours in producing books. The Book of the Dead, that's one book we produced that's way older than yours. But of course, you know, we got the pyramid text to go back to the fourth millennium B.C. in Africa. All of these were Negro Bantu kings.

Ian MalcolmAll right, so let's try this. Who was the first white king? Let's try this. So what is it that happened to this great African civilization that you would suggest? Why did it just disappear?

Speaker 10Your people were literally the centerpiece of the problem there. Ramses III and his great temple. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Ramses III. Yeah, you should research this. Ramses III. Ramses III was considered the last great pharaoh. You know that right. Ramses III.

Ian MalcolmYou think that the Egyptians are sub-Saharan Africans. Is that right?

Speaker 10What was Ramses' paternal DNA marker? Wait, can you answer my question? His paternal DNA marker was E1B1A, West African.

Ian MalcolmHe was a Negro. I'm going to ask you the question again. You think that Egypt is a Sub-Saharan African country, is that right?

Speaker 10So let me explain why that's a low IQ question. Sub-Saharan Africa is a geographic location, not a people. It's a geographic location, not a people.

Speaker 9Well, is there a group of people from that location? No. No, there's not. What do you mean? Isn't that why people are the way they are? Because they're from a location?

Speaker 10Where did humanity originate at? Oh, this will be good. In Africa.

Ian MalcolmHang on, Trey. Do you believe that all people of the world are downstream from Africans? That's your belief?

Speaker 10Genetic shows you're a mutation.

Ian MalcolmSo how is it that Africans have up to 19% of their DNA that is unique to them? How does that make any sense?

Speaker 10No, West Africans, not East Africans.

Ian MalcolmNo, no, no, no, no. Sub-Saharan Africans that you are going to reference have 19% of their DNA that is unique to them. How could it be unique to them if everybody is downstream from them? Can you explain that with all your wisdom?

Speaker 10So everybody Google what I just said. The specific market he's talking about is specific to West Africans. And the reason why it's West Africans and not East Africans is because West Africans are the only people who are 100% anatomically modern human, no Neanderthal. That is evolution, my friend. We are evolving because we are 100% human.

Ian MalcolmThat's evolving, sir. Let's put it this way. Where do you think you originate from?

Speaker 10The Niger-Congo family that lives in West Central Southern Africa originated in Sudan, as everybody knows.

Ian MalcolmYou would say that you are Sudanese? Is that what you think you're downstream from?

Speaker 10Sir, Sudan is a word, is an Arab word. It means land of the blacks. It was called Nubia.

Ian MalcolmWhat do you think that you are descended from?

Speaker 10I don't think I'm Sudanese. The Niger-Congo family originated in the land of Nubia.

Ian MalcolmWhy is this a difficult question for you? What is your ancestry? What are you asking? Niger-Congo and they originated in Nubia. That's a very basic question that you can't seem to follow. What are you confused about? The Niger-Congo family of West Africa. I am asking you a very basic question. I am looking at the Lego pirate ship and I am saying, what is this made of?

Ian MalcolmAnd rather than saying Legos, you are saying, why are you asking this question? This is very basic. I am not... I think your entire worldview is utter nonsense. I feel like I'm talking to a child. But I am asking you for your perspective on what you are descendant from. Who are your people according to your worldview?

@joann_marieIt's the Egyptians.

Speaker 10Yeah, I have Egyptian in my DNA. I actually post my 23 in me.

Ian MalcolmYou don't need to post your 23 in me, and you certainly don't need to post your picture of what looks like your... Oh, a new study just came out, Ian.

Speaker 10Oh, speaking of, a new study just came out this weekend, Ian. It found, it was on the Egyptians and Africans. So what it found was that the only Africans, so the only populations on Earth that has this unique Egyptian element outside of Egypt are in West Africa. How was that possible?

Speaker 1Can you explain to me why there is a predominant issue with your typical race to have a frontal lobe and inhibition and be able to visualize and conceptualize things? And you think that you are the ones that created things, but you cannot even go over a word. You have become slaves to a word. But you are the almighty creators of everything that we live on, but at the same time, you have destroyed each society that you have been pushed on.

Speaker 9Here's my thing with foundational Black Americans thing. I think maybe they should deserve more credit, but they're all of a sudden, like, taking credit for everything. And all of a sudden, it's like, you're Sudanese, West Congo, like, I don't know. It's... A slippery slope, I guess.

Speaker 10So I specialize in the origins of the Niger-Congo family, which comprises of it. So it comprises of...

@joann_marieOkay, so Google Niger-Congo family. So Google Niger-Congo family and tell me what comes up.

Ian MalcolmOkay, the Congo family. Where is the Congo in relation to Egypt? Why?

Ian MalcolmDo you know what migration is? No, where is the Congo in relation to Egypt? Can you tell us?

Speaker 10How did the Moors end up from- No, stop answering with other questions.

Ian MalcolmYou don't know the answer to a basic question, Mr. Lego. Where is the Congo in relation to Egypt?

Speaker 10It's in Central Africa. Why are you asking? What's your point? It's in Central Africa.

Ian MalcolmOkay, so now according to your system, you are taking credit by saying your lineage goes back to, when we then ask questions about said lineage, you then go to Egypt. You're now making very strange attempts to do a genetic connection between the two. Why is it that you kind of dart around with this very, it's near impossible to even try to understand the points that you're trying to make because you're injecting ingredients into the discourse that are so, it's not just distracting because I feel like it's intentional, right?

Ian MalcolmThis is so, like, try to stay on topic. I will ask you this question again. Where are your people from? Where are you downstream from? Who is the origin and the ancestor in your creation story?

Speaker 10The oldest of our ancestors came from Nubia, Sudan.

Ian MalcolmSo who is our? Can you stop using pronouns? Be very specific.

Speaker 10You're gaslighting because you can't really debate me. I'm not gaslighting. I'm asking you to be specific. Yes, you are. You can't really debate me, so you keep asking the same questions repetitively. You can't stay on topic.

Ian MalcolmYou can't even define the things that you're talking about. You don't know how to respond.

Speaker 10to respond with questions.

Speaker 1So when I say... This is the difference between someone living in a reality and denial. Denial... Well, fucking listen to yourself in the way that you...

Speaker 10I put my evidence in the jumbotron. I mean, in the purple pill. Look in the purple pill.

Speaker 1Everything I say is in the purple pill.

Speaker 10Peer-reviewed studies.

Speaker 1Shut up a minute. I come from split Croatia. Everything is deported. You're not white then.

Speaker 10You have sickle cell.

Speaker 1Shut up. I'm Illyrian Croatian. You know nothing about me.

Speaker 10Y'all carry E1B1BJ1.

Ian MalcolmIt's just funny. Oh, my Lord. It is unbelievable. Hey, FBA Trey, in the United States of America, what racial group have the highest prevalence of HIV in virtually every other sexually transmitted disease?

Speaker 10They all originated in Europe.

Ian MalcolmThey all originated. Oh, the diseases originated. Oh, my God. So AIDS came. Herpes originated. Herpes, gonorrhea.

Speaker 10Yes, herpes, gonorrhea, syphilis, all Europe.

Ian MalcolmSo HIV originated in Europe. Is that right? Google the origins of everyone. Why? Why? You created 50 years ago HIV. You made it in the lab. Okay. This is unbelievable. So all of those things are out of Europe. Where did HIV originate?

Speaker 10You literally created in the lab 50 years ago. White. White did. White did. Just like you made a nuclear bomb, you made AIDS. You're a devil. You're a devil.

Ian MalcolmYou literally have a history of making diseases and spreading them. So, folks, what's so wild about this is that this individual who comes into this conversation suggesting that we are the racist who began his...

Speaker 12tirade, his outburst with white devils.

Ian MalcolmHe now refers to this entire panel, which consists of a pretty diverse group of people, as the youths. He refers to us and ours, often incapable of defining what those proper nouns would be, which seems to be part of what is just an insanity. I don't quite know what to make of it other than it is littered with me versus...

Ian MalcolmAll of you, and in the all of you here, it's essentially all white people, seems to be the takeaway. Which is pretty ironic, again, for the guy that suggests that we are the racist. Trey, are you racist against white people, yes or no?

Speaker 10I think you're devils.

Ian MalcolmOkay, you think that we're devils. I will take that as a yes. Trey, do you think that whites are inferior to black people?

Speaker 13They don't have- Yep. Yeah, you're a mutant.

Speaker 10You're a mutant. We wasn't made from the same God. You're a mutant spawn of the original man. You are the byproduct of our lower consciousness. You are 6,000 years old and that's all you were given. You are the literal devil. You burn up in the sun. You get skin cancer because God hates you. Hellfire is a... Dude, you get sick from the sun.

Ian MalcolmYou are the devil. Okay, we'll try to get decorum in here once again. Seems near impossible with this individual. I could attribute it perhaps to IQ and impulse control. So, FBH, do you feel like, given what you just suggested, do you feel like you are a bigot and a racist?

Speaker 13You are the devil. That's a trick question.

Ian MalcolmYou're a victim. So, okay, so you are the devil. That's a trick question. If I am the devil and I only ask trick questions, I suppose, are you a bigot and feel superior to me?

Ian MalcolmWe don't go to the same place when we die. I don't know why this is difficult for you to answer. So we don't go to the same place when we die. That seems pretty bigoted. I will ask again. Are you a racist who feels you are superior to white people?

Ian MalcolmIt's a pretty easy question.

Speaker 10You have me muted. You have me muted. Imagine nuking a country and believing Christ is coming back to save you. Imagine.

Ian MalcolmWell, I don't know what country you're discussing with nuking, but we could certainly go back to World War II and we could say who was behind and who, let's say, pushed for the nuclear bomb to be dropped. Oh, by the way, on the two most Christian cities in Japan. I wonder who might have been behind that one. But you are dodging the question.

Ian MalcolmDo you feel as a black person that you are superior to white people in general?

Speaker 13Did I not tell you you the fucking devil? What else you fucking think I think, dude? You are the devil.

Ian MalcolmOkay, so I will take that as yes, you feel like you are superior to white people. So why do you call the people in this room that are white? Why are whites the racist when you believe that you are superior to them?

Speaker 10Like I said.

Ian MalcolmIn the Book of the Dead, my black Egyptian ancestors made it clear that you- I will keep muting you. Can you address the question?

Speaker 10You don't like the shit that comes out of my mouth.

Ian MalcolmThis is unbelievable. I will try to ask you a rather basic question. Why would you suggest that whites are racist when your worldview is that black people- are not only superior to all whites, but are superior to whites because white people are the devil. Can you explain why you cry racism?

Speaker 10Who cries about racism?

Ian MalcolmYou've spammed the word racist about virtually every space that's held that is critical of black people.

Speaker 10Where did I put the word racism? Oh, this will be wonderful.

Ian MalcolmI will go do a quick little search on X and pull up a litany of them. So I'll ask you the question again. Perhaps are you either Do you live in a world of double standards, or are you just openly a bigot and indifferent to perhaps your own participation in the very things like racism that you whine about?

Speaker 10We on two different levels of this race shit, homie. We on two different levels. You trying to keep it soft. I'm going hard. Let me go hard. You're not going hard.

Speaker 9You're literally just spewing shit. I think you said you specialize, dude. I feel like I could read whatever you... read and specialize tomorrow. I don't feel like we're having a really coherent conversation. You can't answer one of Ian's questions. See, this is the problem. You guys have been complaining and brainwashing, propagandizing to thinking it was the white man your whole life.

Speaker 9So now it's... you guys think it's your, I guess, obligation to call us the devil and you're playing right into their divide and conquer and you can't even see it or you're- Shut the fuck up. Oh, yep, yep, yep. You're definitely really triggered. Okay, yep. I guess you don't like being spoken to like that. But yeah, I'll let you continue and this seems pretty unproductive.

Ian MalcolmYes. Speaking about facts and objective truth with people that live in fantasy is often not productive. But I suppose- When I can't even read out some of, so I went to look at the word racist coming from you, Trey, and I found dozens of posts over the last, let's say week alone, but you don't ever talk about that subject.

Ian MalcolmAnd yet here you are suggesting that all white people are beneath black people because they are devils. And you then suggest that we're not even on this same race game because you're just so, I suppose, vastly more racist. than I am. Well, congratulations. I would certainly agree with you. It's utterly wild to suggest that all other people, I don't even say this about the Jews, to say that all white people are devils is wild.

Ian MalcolmAnd what is craziest about it is the intellect with which you approach this because it's not even remotely reasoned. I will give you another chance. Please explain to me how the Greeks and the Romans were black or African societies. I'm so curious.

Speaker 10You're going everywhere. Everywhere. No, I'm not. Okay, so let me answer your question about Greeks and Romans. Explain how they are black civilization. Lord, all right, you're going everywhere, but let me answer your dumbass question here. And it's in the purple pill. I put Negro, Greeks, and Romans coins and all that shit in the purple pill.

Speaker 10I post pictures. Them motherfuckers carry sickle cell and cystic fibrosis. To this day, they're not even... They're not white today. They are swarting to this day. They carry sickle cell, all sort of Negro disease. They carry E1B1B at a third of their fucking paternal frequency. I don't do words. These are Negroes.

Speaker 9I don't do words.

Speaker 10How do you carry a sub-Saharan African marker and not have sub-Saharan DNA? I'm trying to figure that out. A third of their DNA is haplogroup E. It comes from sub-Saharan Africa. Literally E1B1B. Literally. They carry West African sickle cell. How do you get West African sickle cell? And it goes back to the seventh millennium.

Speaker 10I mean, the seventh century B.C.

Speaker 1Hey, Mr. Upper Class Civilized, can you speak without screaming like a fucking...

Speaker 10But, Ian, I put everything in the Jumbotron, so, you know, you want to see my evidence.

Ian MalcolmHey, look. I'm going to put into the purple pill an illustration of a Nordic god flying through the air, holding a hammer, taking out Thanos. And I'm going to use it to define that it was the whites, the North Europeans who conquered the entire galaxy because I found this cartoon illustration. You sound like a crazy person.

Ian MalcolmNow, what's wildest about it is if we actually look at the cases, since you want to talk about diseases, if we talk about things like, oh, I don't know what you mentioned, syphilis, chlamydia, gonorrhea. We looked at HIV. Do you want to take here? Here you go. We'll ask you as a question. Trey, what percent of African-Americans have a sexually transmitted disease?

Speaker 10I just put the origins of herpes. I found it.

Ian MalcolmWill you please answer my question? What percent of African-Americans do you think have an STD?

Speaker 10I don't know. I don't walk around with. With facts. I know. Statistics. We're all well aware.

Ian MalcolmWhat percent do you think?

Speaker 10I found it. All right. Prehistoric roots. 90%, I think. Prehistoric roots of the cold survivors trace the ancient Ural Mountains of Russia. It can't be 90%, is it?

Speaker 9I didn't mute the room. I didn't mean to, at least.

Ian MalcolmNo, no, no, I removed him. This is where, so there are things called good faith discussions. This is clearly not that. For a guy who runs around talking about the ills of white society to refer to all white people as devils. is really rather remarkable. You then wanted to talk about diseases and then I brought up STDs in the United States and your response, well, I don't walk around with, and then you kind of cut off because I don't know if you didn't know to use encyclopedia, which perhaps would be quasi relevant.

Ian Malcolmor maybe just data points at large. We know that you don't walk around with a lot of intellect. That is clear cut. I asked you to defend the position. And I love that we've got David Nietzsche up here. This was spectacular. So David, FBA trade day, after suggesting that we're racist, called all white people, white devils, and that we are beneath blacks and all sorts of other things.

Ian MalcolmHe then suggested that both the Romans and the Greeks were African black societies. David, did you know that piece of history? I was blinded by it.

@joann_marieI see David and listeners.

Ian MalcolmOh, it says he's up here as a speaker.

@joann_marieOr, I don't know, I'm like super glitchy.

Ian MalcolmI think we've got some more... Oh, there we go. Oh!

@joann_marieHold on. Yes, he is here. He's still in my...

Speaker 14So Southern Europeans were black.

Ian MalcolmYes, apparently all the Romans, the Greeks, all the great inventions. The Odyssey is the first book ever written by a European, David. And lo and behold to us, the Africans were... They were completing entire novels and defining the solar systems thousands of years prior, and we are all just subservient to African intelligence.

Speaker 14I think American blacks should study up on that history because what a devolution it's become when they can't conjugate the most common verb in the only language that they know. How very far they've fallen.

Speaker 14But maybe because the Southern Europeans, you know, got such good tans. I don't know. Maybe because they hadn't invented suntan lotion.

Ian MalcolmYes, that's indicative of we as white people burn up in the sun. We are vampires and devils. Although I think we know that the literary rendition of the vampire might have been referring to us. Good afternoon, everyone. Good morning.

@joann_marieI have the solution.

Speaker 15I have the solution. I can bring the white, the black, the yellow in one hand. What do you think about that? White, black, Irish, because I belong in Irish, and they belong in what they call Belfast in 1988. Wait, hold on.

Speaker 16Try to rearrange those words into a logical sentence to where people can understand them.

@joann_marieAnd also, Ian, I am super glitchy and I think I'm the one who's muting people. So I'm just going to drop. Oh, my God, I can. Yeah, no, it's super. It's crazy today. And I'm also going to upgrade my app because I don't know what's happening. So be right back. And guys, please repost this space. Follow Ian and Bea and David and everybody here.

@joann_marieSo thank you so much for being here. And I'll be right back. No, of course.

Ian MalcolmYeah, David, it's been a little bit of a doozy. And for what it's worth, we've been joined by some wonderful individuals and very honored to have not only Orwell, also men of lawlessness who shared a personal story of what we could loosely define as the crabs in the bucket that was the black... community that he grew up in, even within his own household, his own parents suggesting that, uh, perhaps, uh, developing an intellect and applying himself in the world was acting white and was saying to be frowned upon.

Ian MalcolmUh, but, but I've talked primarily David, this staggered even me with my, my race realism, which was the recognition that in Switzerland, uh, 85% of inmates are either migrants or are the, or let's, let's say ethnically migrants in the sense that they are citizens, but have migrated or the children of migrants, 85% of the inmates.

Ian MalcolmSo 15% of the Swiss prisons are made up of actual Swiss people and Swiss citizens, which is staggering. So then I did a reverse engineering of the numbers of the citizenry, about 1.3% are African in Switzerland and they make up 25% of all inmates. So essentially a 50X over-representation relative to the actual Swiss people living there.

Ian MalcolmSo when you think about those numbers. It sounds like they moved there with ill intentions. They moved there with ill intentions. That might be the case. Not really. You could suggest that.

Speaker 14Well, I would say this. There's a correlation between prison populations and IQ. There is. I'm sorry. But there is a level, intelligence informs you of options in terms to make your way in the world, sustain your life, promote your life, make it more livable without parasitizing other people. The whole concept of Western civilization is that life isn't a zero-sum game and that the way you can become wealthy or successful or at least make a good living is to help other people through some kind of creativity or ingenuity.

Speaker 14or just by bootstrap effort. But what does the parasite do? The parasite says, well, I am impotent. I do not have the capacity to do those things. And so I must live at other people's expense. It must be they lose, I win. So of course, it's based on their own admitted assumption of moral inferiority here. And where does that come from?

Speaker 14From whence does that come? That comes from the lower IQ. You don't need that. If suddenly I could bless you, and increase your IQ by 75 points, life would get easier. You know, there are all sorts of misconceptions about IQ. One of them is that it makes you just narrowly intelligent in one area. That's actually not the way IQ works.

Speaker 14That's not the way intelligence works. You're able to point your mind at anything, think about things, reason through things, run it through the limbic of your intellect, and come and make a really good decision. Well, dumb people don't do this well, and a lot of them end up in prison as a result of that. The second quality of IQ is it gives you the intelligence to delay gratification.

Speaker 14And especially sub-Saharan Africans, they have a tremendous difficulty when they get into Western civilizations delaying gratification. Well, what happens when you don't delay gratification? Like snatching a purse would be an example of not delaying gratification, you know? So these are, you know, one of the people who discovered, he discovered IQ,

Speaker 14I'm not IQ, but DNA, he was asked to help solve the problem in sub-Saharan Africa. And he said, well, their problem is that their IQs are low. And of course, he was saying this in a kind way because it means we have to work around that, the rest of the world being. And I think we should because we should care about these people.

Speaker 14They're our brothers and sisters. But he was widely denounced for saying that. And he just said, okay, well, you asked me to solve a problem. I gave you the answer and you don't like the answer. I am a genius, by the way. I did change civilization and I'll just go away here. But here's the great thing is the veracity of a given point.

Speaker 14It's also not dependent upon whether you like it or not.

Speaker 17Why are the IQs low?

Speaker 14Pardon me? Why are the IQs low? Well, I mean, it's an immutable fact, irrespective of why. Are you suggesting that it's in the water? Are you suggesting that they didn't go to the right finishing school? Why do you think? Well, obviously it's genetic, right? I mean, IQ is a phenotype. It's inevitably a phenotype, right?

Speaker 14We know this. We're willing to admit it with dog breeds, right? Everybody says it. Oh, German Shepherds are smart. Boxers are dumb. You know, pit bulls are dumb and border collies are the smartest. We somehow don't want to admit this with humans. And of course, this is absolutely true. In fact, races that have generally higher intelligence acknowledge this among themselves.

Speaker 14In other words, the Japanese are very intelligent. I'm not Japanese, but I'm smart enough to see that they have very high intelligence. In fact, the Chinese are pretty smart. So I'm smart enough to see that this is the case, right?

Speaker 17So generally you're saying you have more people with low IQ. Is that because their population is higher?

Speaker 9No, he just said because of the DNA, just like with dogs and breeds.

Speaker 17Well, I would assume like even in Europe, there would be people not as intelligent as other people, even in your own community.

Speaker 14Hold on, hold on, my friend. We're talking about averages here. Do you understand the concept of average? Can I have just one minute? Wait, hold on. No, stop interrupting. One second. I want to ask our friend here something. Is the average person higher or lower intelligence than most people?

Speaker 14I'm sorry, what did you say? Hang on.

Ian MalcolmDoes the average person have higher or lower intelligence than most people?

Speaker 14the average person would have average intelligence. There you go. Okay.

Ian MalcolmI was on the edge of my seat for that one.

Speaker 14There you go. So I just wanted to make sure you understand the concept of average. Never mind. Okay. Don't worry about your mind wandering. You can't go far. But listen. I'm just making the point. Average intelligence is a real thing, right? So we can go into any civilization.

Speaker 17And here's the, look, this is a- How we measure average intelligence.

Speaker 14Hold on. Well, it's how we measure intelligence and then we apply it over the spectrum of a large group of people. My God, man. Okay, listen, let me just make this point. Also, when you look into a civilization, you can see basically its wealth and its prosperity is generally driven by its average IQ. The third world is a state of mind.

Speaker 14They bring it with them when they come. It's not like they come and they go, oh, yes, we understand. Could I read all your founding documents and understand? No. No, of course not. Remember, when the Europeans, for instance, got to America, they were still in the Stone Age. When Cortes showed up to take down Montezuma,

Speaker 14They showed up with bath towels and little rocks on sticks. I mean, how did you think this was going to go?

Speaker 17My understanding is some of them may have been in the Stone Age, but there were civilizations before European civilizations.

Speaker 14So some of them were. Not may have been in the Stone Age. They were in the Stone Age.

Speaker 17Some of them were up to my understanding. Some of them were civilized.

Speaker 14It was different.

Speaker 17What do you think Stone Age means? Help me out here. Stone Age mean you don't have a civilization yet. You don't have. Incorrect. of civilization.

Speaker 14Incorrect. It means that you have not advanced to the Bronze Age. Do you understand? Before the Bronze Age, there was a brief period called the Chalcolithic Era, which was basically copper. Bronze is the admixture of copper and tin, so it's an alloy. It takes about 10% tin, 90% copper. So the first great advancement of civilization was...

Speaker 14The Bronze Age, and then, of course, we have the Iron Age, and then everything else followed. So, well, the Cacolithic Age, the Bronze Age, the Iron Age. Well, these are tremendous advancements, right? How is it the civilization advances? By what intellectual process? What occurs? Well, what occurs is a process of abstraction, right?

Speaker 14Is the people themselves have the intellect to examine reality, abstract something away, and then figure out a new way, a new combination. right it's not as though nature is changing so what's changing the intellect of humans right and there are people in civilizations that simply have not had the gray matter to lift themselves off out of the dirt and how have they how have they sustained themselves off of the intellect of the rest of us right if you were to go into an area for instance

Speaker 14in Sub-Saharan Africa, where the average intelligence is very low, you would probably not be surprised to find a lot of stuff made and invented by other civilizations that are very smart. For instance, light bulbs and televisions and phones and maybe potable water and snoopers.

Speaker 9I thought that was funny, too. The previous gentleman had mentioned they wrote a book. That was his whole metrics of blacks being better. They wrote a book.

Speaker 14Well, that's different, yeah.

Speaker 1Yeah, they wrote a book, but they can't say the word ask.

Speaker 17Can I mention something about televisions? We only got that because we had the excess funds and time and leisure time. That's the only reason you got that.

Speaker 14Try to think this through. How did we get that leisure time, my friend?

Speaker 17It's a whole formula for why we have television.

Ian MalcolmHang on. Two David's points and inquiry. Not even, like, let's just bar how they came to be in the engineering marvel that that was from a technological standpoint. How do you think society in the West arrived at a point where people had enough leisure time that they could enjoy television?

Speaker 17Well, it was the leisure. When you have excess funds, you use that for experimentation. What are funds?

Ian MalcolmYeah, what are funds? Can you explain that?

Speaker 17Okay, so now we're... got people working for us. We are colonizing shit. We have leisure time.

Ian MalcolmNo, no. Okay. So the leisure time in your worldview is because of colonizing and shit. Is that right?

Speaker 17Right. We have leisure time. We have more privilege.

Ian MalcolmOkay.

Speaker 17So we have more time to experiment.

Ian MalcolmOkay. So the time to experiment and the privilege was afforded by what?

Speaker 17That is why we have recording devices, the television.

Ian MalcolmHang on, hang on. Whoa, that came way later. So the leisure time for experimenting or exploring, or I suppose we'll just call it scientific-ing, right? What allowed for that exploration of the mind and of the universe and of technology? How did we arrive at that point?

Speaker 17Well, I guess it could be accidental. It could be accidental.

Ian MalcolmSo was the arrival of, let's just call it civilization at large, like the idea of a permanent shelter, is that afforded to us and just inherited through a nebulous form?

Speaker 17Animals do that naturally, so that's driven inside of you to do that.

Ian MalcolmYes, but how you're seeming to either intentionally being obtuse to or intentionally deflecting from, how did these things all come to be, right? How did society... come to the idea of permanent shelter? Do you see horses building a log cabin for themselves?

Speaker 17Well, I don't know much about horses.

Ian MalcolmYou don't know anything about horses to try and go, or maybe you do. Perhaps this is too abstract a line of question.

Speaker 14I think this is kind of an example of what I was saying.

Ian MalcolmYes, where David is trying to go is this notion that leisure is only arrived at once you've been able to take care of other necessities that are essential for you to survive. So that would be the establishment of permanent shelter, the ability to think long-term about what you need to continue yourself, whether that's sustenance, perhaps physically via food or via your mind, which I suppose where entertainment would come in, right?

Ian MalcolmThese are luxuries that were afforded because the other things were taken care of. Now, the challenge is this line of thinking. If you reverse engineer it all the way to the back, Why is it that some societies developed to the point that they had leisure time versus others? Why were they able to advance? And the thing that you cannot do is you can't presume that the advancement is merely a result of the privilege.

Ian MalcolmThe privilege had to be downstream from something. There was a mover that arrived at the privilege. The privilege to get educated, to have books, to have other materials, to educate your mind was a result of the successes and the flourishing of the society that long ago took care of the necessities of the weather, of the elements, let's call them, and of the ability to provide nutrition for oneself.

Ian MalcolmSo do you understand how you can't say that the privilege merely materialized from the privilege? That's the issue. You can't conceptualize or visualize. Well, hang on. Let's not project that. Iconic, can you appreciate that the things that you would define as privilege are downstream from the evolutions of the society and the civilization and the Bronze Age and the Stone Age and all the other things that David was referring to?

Ian MalcolmCan you understand how one built upon the other to arrive at today?

Speaker 17I'm just saying new technology comes out of leisure time.

Ian MalcolmYes, but what affords the leisure time? These things don't just pop out of the ether, right?

Speaker 17Well, I mean, it's a lot of things. I took a whole three-month class on it.

Speaker 14Oh, then there it is.

Ian MalcolmRegardless of the class, because there's lots of education that is valuable and some that's not so much so, do you understand how you can't have... Let's think of it this way. The person who builds a fortune... Presumably let's presume that they came from absolute nothing. They, they started on the streets homeless and now they've got a million dollars.

Ian MalcolmDo you think the 1 million and first dollar that they made is merely a result of the privilege of having the million dollars or did they potentially have to do something to earn the million dollars upon which they continue building?

Speaker 17Well, yeah, you're going to have to put in work rather, even if you're just thinking.

Ian MalcolmCan you appreciate that perhaps the same thing could be said about civilizations or races or countries and that they don't just spring out of nothing?

Speaker 14Let me give you an example. May I give an example?

Speaker 17I believe it's a combination of accidental and some human ingenuity somewhere.

Speaker 14Well, when you say accidental, look, Lucretius, if you read On the Nature of Things, he's a Roman, and he inferred a couple of thousand years ago how people discovered things. And he was really brilliant about it. But really, ultimately, what he's saying, and he was being very logical and sort of rational, is serendipity, the ability to find pay dirt where other people just find dirt, is also an intellectual act, you see?

Speaker 14Because you have to see it, right? You still, hold on, I'm still talking, still talking. When penicillin was created, there was a serendipitous moment there because mold had sort of built up on a petri dish. But you have to be able to make concatenations. You know, I live with a scientist, a research scientist, and they have to really observe their experiment and they have to abstract and think, oh, wait, I could do this.

Speaker 14They have to be inspired. They have to be able to observe. So let's give an example when you talk about time. A couple of examples. One is the furrowed plow. The furrowed plow was a major human advancement. Remember, it had to come after the Iron Age. It essentially did. I mean, you could have done it with bronze, but it ultimately really, really came after the Iron Age.

Speaker 14And it gave us the capacity to plow so much more territory. And of course, what result did that have? Growing lots more food. Well, most people lived in exiguous existence. They spent a lot of time growing food. But all of a sudden, when they could do it a lot more easily, then they had more leisure time, as you say. Well, this is how civilization works.

Speaker 14But when it's imbued with intelligence, it just goes so much faster. Remember, these are the same people that had done all these things. And when they showed up to sub-Saharan Africa, they hadn't invented the wheel. Now think about the wheel. What is the purpose? What is the function? What is the efficacy of the wheel?

Speaker 14Again, saves time. The leisure that you think is somehow... spontaneously exists and then we just benefited from it. We created that leisure. Can you not see that? You seem to have the order of things wrong. All life forms want to sustain and promote and prolong their existence as efficiently as possible. Life is industriously lazy in that way, right?

Speaker 14So... What method would you use, would humans use to make life more efficient and provide for themselves more leisure time? And then they can stratify their civilization where people can do different things, essentially to have a division of labor. Well, they do with their intelligence. And that is it. Leisure comes from intelligence.

Speaker 17Do you understand that? Leisure time is the product of intelligence. I'm sure leisure time was created to create that will.

Speaker 14No, no. No, you have the order of things wrong. Don't you understand? Look, everybody started out with the basic facts of nature, right? Nature hasn't changed. Nature is 100% consistent, right? It's the mind's capacity to abstract from nature. What was the first moment of abstraction for humans? It was hunting because you had to throw the spear where it was not.

Speaker 14So you had to think in futuristic terms, right? This is the beginning of the conceptual mind. There's always been a modicum of leisure. They say that even hunter-gatherers, the average work time they spent doing their hunter-gathering was about 20 hours a week, right? But it's what you do. It's the quality of your thinking time that makes all the difference, right?

Speaker 14And if you don't have an intellect, it's not going to be high quality, my friend. And I'm sorry, but this idea that, oh, yes, 15,000 years ago, one group of us had more time than another, it's just not true. It's quite the reverse. I'm sorry that you can't see this. I guess you need more leisure time.

Speaker 18Was that a mic drop, David? Yeah, I agree. You know, leisure time is definitely not going to bring us to the promised land as a matter of fact. As a matter of fact, that's the very way that they try to sell modern day communism. I'm just filling up space since nobody was talking.

Speaker 14You know, there's a character in War and Peace.

Speaker 18Oh, it's such a pleasure to see my favorite person that I agree with 50% of the time.

Speaker 14There's a character in War and Peace. I think it's Prince Andrew. And he's sitting there and having coffee with a friend of his, and he sees a guy out working the field. And he says, you know, just as it would break my back to work behind that plow 12 hours a day, it would destroy his mind to have the leisure time that I have.

Speaker 14So it's really what you do with your mind, right? It's your capacity to have rarefied thoughts. And also, if there is one superpower, in the history of mankind is the ability to focus your mind on one thing to the exclusion of all others. This is what Isaac Newton did. This is what Aristotle did. This is what Frederick Goss and Leonard Euler did and Galileo.

Speaker 14And the question is, why haven't your people done this? Don't blame it on us. Don't blame it on leisure time. I'm sorry, but it's just silly to do so.

Ian MalcolmSo David, actually on that, because... I love what Honey Badger just said, that leisure time today is used to pacify the masses into accepting essentially the communism. And I know that that sounds, for some that haven't frequented these spaces, that might sound a little abstract. But if you think about it, they get everybody to sit around and watch the Netflix and the YouTube and all the other things that they pretty much freely push out.

Ian MalcolmThey're all very low cost. And as a result, everyone is pretty comfortable sitting on their couch while society goes to hell in a handbasket. So I'm kind of curious, David, that idea of the guy that is in using his mind so he doesn't have to use his body, the person that would use his body because he can't necessarily use his mind in modern terms, right?

Ian MalcolmYou put LeBron James behind the desk of an accountant, let's say role, might struggle a whole bunch, but on the basketball court, he is Superman and vice versa, right? The accountant on the basketball court probably not gonna do so well, but in his role does very, very well. In this world that we find ourselves in today,

Ian Malcolmwhere essentially degenerate entertainment is revered and the intellect and the highest levels of capacity, spiritually speaking or intellectually speaking, are in many ways either demonized or are scoffed at. How do we try and help our fellow man to recognize that this, A, this notion that everyone is one in the same is, it's communism intellectually and is ridiculous.

Ian MalcolmAnd as a result, the people should be able to pursue different things differently that can bring them different degrees of satisfaction, if that makes sense, in a way that everybody can win. And perhaps we can turn the tide on this insanity that we all have to be one in the same in order to be productive and happy.

Speaker 14Well, communism is essentially a philosophy by which the noble define the good is that which can be bestowed upon them, right? So it really is just a philosophy of stealing. And don't forget, you really have to enslave mankind in order to have it in the political sense that we know communism today, not in some sort of communalism, which is a totally different thing.

Speaker 14And just remember, nowhere in nature do we find equality. Everywhere equilibrium. And communism really lives at the expense of that lowest strata. Because remember, They're relying on the intellectual production of the people that can invent things, create things, advance civilization. All the civilization is, is a group of people trying to protect themselves against nature.

Speaker 14And the only way that humans do this, they do this by thinking. And I'm sorry, but you either have a civilization through which ideas are flowing copiously or they're not. This is the great failing of communism. So it's actually the first thing that the poor, especially people that aren't productive intellectually, have to understand is if you're not producing ideas, which is where wealth comes from, then you're really, really relying on people that are.

Speaker 14And why would you want to shut down the thinking machine? Because that's what communism does. Communism creates a bureaucratic state, a leveling off. It disincentivizes thinking. There is no mutual exchange to mutual consent. to mutual advantage, that doesn't exist. And who does that cost more? The intelligent people? Well, yes, it hurts them a great deal, but it really hurts the lowest strata of civilization.

Speaker 14Go into a communist country and look at how they're living. Don't look at the money, by the way. Just look at how they're living. The only way to judge standard of living is by what people consume. Do they have potable water? Do they have heat? Do they have clothes on their back? Do they have good food? These sorts of things.

Speaker 14And of course, a tyrannical or authoritarian civilization has these things in short supply. And again, the intelligent people, even in that civilization, are going to do better. They're going to figure out a way to game the system in order to promote and prolong their existence. So yeah, communism is a very bad thing for the poor.

Speaker 14And I'm not sure if we can get the poor to understand that, but it's true.

Ian MalcolmWell, and what they do is inherent in the communism is basically the continual proclamation that they're going to take from the haves to give to the have-nots, that everybody's going to win. But in reality, the pie doesn't get shared around for everyone's benefit. Instead, it just gets smaller and smaller and smaller as the people at the very top of the totem pole take as much as they can, if not almost all of it.

Speaker 14This is true in America. Even one of the previous leaders of the NAACP said $1 of every $10 that's collected on anybody's behalf in America gets to where it's supposed to go. Well, it turns out that's actually true across the world, right? Why wouldn't they? Turn the chessboard around. The people that rule you, once you give them dominion over your few cubic feet of flesh, of course they're going to do that.

Speaker 14They don't respect you. You just said, I'm your slave. Hey, treat me well, slave master. I'm your slave. And you expect them to do so? No, it never works out. They keep most of the money themselves.

Ian MalcolmNo, absolutely. And that's the craziest piece. And I know we've got, speaking of pieces and homes and property and possessions, I want to go to Unapologetic. I know that he had something for which I am certainly apologetic for in terms of a natural disaster, which kind of mirrors the disaster that's happening at a macro level on all of the Western world.

Ian MalcolmAnd I say it this way, David, because everybody that's looking around should recognize and go back. And you can either look at The Simpsons, look at Married with Children, look at Full House or Family Matters that we talked about not too long ago. All of these shows were designed to present the middle class American family.

Ian MalcolmI mean, Homer Simpson is clearly not even supposed to be that. He's supposed to be lower middle class, if even in that, let's say, stratosphere. And yet he's presented as having a home, a car, a nuclear family. And then you look around today and even... Individuals that are in the upper middle class can barely afford not just to keep up with the Kardashians, but they can't even keep up with the Joneses neighborhood that they might have grown up in.

Ian MalcolmEverybody is getting poorer. Obviously so. And it's only going to get way worse with AI and automation, all the other things. And so we need to absolutely speak out against this system so that everybody can win. But speaking of winning unapologetically white, I know that. That's certainly not the term that we would use for some of the situation that you've had to endure.

Ian MalcolmAnd I don't like to necessarily post or repost anything that's along the lines of fundraising and whatnot, just because I can't always evaluate everything personally. But I always like to give people the opportunity and the platform to speak their minds in these spaces. And so with the 200 and maybe 50 people that are here, would love for you to be able to present a little bit about what you went through and share material that might be relevant.

Speaker 19I greatly appreciate you, dude. And I don't want to come off, like I said, I never ask for anything from anybody other than just when I'm in dire straits. And for me, I'm a hardworking guy. I work a full-time job. I've got two kids and a wife. Been married, been with my wife for over 20 years. I have a 12-year-old son and an 8-year-old daughter.

Speaker 19My wife is disabled. We do our best. We live in rural Idaho. And unfortunately, yesterday while I was at work, an electrical fire broke out in my house. And it started, I guess, in a plug while my kids were at home. My wife had gone to the store and she'd gone to go grab some supplies for the house. And in the time that she was gone, my son was in the back watching TV or playing his video games, whatever he was doing on a spring break.

Speaker 19My daughter was doing some art. drawing and all of a sudden the house filled with smoke and luckily for me my son is a you know smart little guy he's 12 years old he ran to the neighbor's house and let him know that our our house was burning down and unfortunately for us and our family we lost pretty much all of our belongings due to smoke damage and fire spreading across the house

Speaker 19was under the subfloor of the house so it wasn't like a fire that was really visible so like luckily for me and the kids it took a while to burn through the floor which is why probably my whole house didn't burn down right away and my kids weren't trapped in the house and it's crazy because when you get the call from a neighbor that your house is burning down while you're at work it's probably the most

Speaker 19scary call I've ever received in my life. I mean, I think everyone in here has gotten a call sometime of where maybe they've lost a family member and you've gotten that call where you're like, Oh, you're doing something fun or you're doing something. You get this heart wrenching news that you've lost a grandma, grandpa, maybe a family member, you know, but I don't think there's anything worse for a father.

Speaker 19That's 25 minutes away from his house to get a call from your neighbor. Who's like an 82 year old woman. And she's like, Jeffrey, I'm standing in my driveway right now and there's smoke coming out of every one of your windows and your children are safe. They're outside, but your house is burning down. And so for me, I had to drive home 20 minutes to get there.

Speaker 19Luckily for me, my wife was only like three, four minutes away at the store. So she was actually able, somebody at the store was like, oh my God, there's a house fire going right around the corner. And my wife was like, what? And it was our house. And so she was able to because someone had this app called like fire pulse or something where they just knew there was a fire.

Speaker 19And coincidentally, at the exact same time, she'd received a text message from my neighbor getting the same message that I had. And she was able to get home in about three minutes. But luckily for us, a neighbor attempted to try to put the fire out, but it was an electrical fire. So it was dangerous. He didn't feel comfortable putting water on them.

Speaker 19the electrical socket, right? Because you could get killed or burned or hurt yourself. And luckily for us, I would just say, God is good. The fire department was conducting a drill like three minutes from my house. We live in a rural community. I mean, the town is less than 15,000 people. We only have three fire engines in the town and all three of the fire engines were within three to four minutes of my house.

Speaker 19And so, yeah, as of now, We were able to get into an Airbnb. The flood and fire people that show up to my house offered us a free three-day stay at an Airbnb while we gather our stuff, which is just a godsend. I can't even tell you. Luckily, we live in a really good community with loving neighbors. But they put me into an Airbnb until Monday.

Speaker 19The insurance companies are closed in terms of helping process my claim. The power shut off at my house. The water shut off at my house because of all the fire hoses and the electrical problems. So they shut my power off. So I have no way to take care of my stuff. My house is soaking wet, probably molding now because it rained all night last night.

Speaker 19And the fire department sprayed my house with fire hoses and fire extinguishers. And I have no way to do anything about it. So I did send you a message asking you if you could post my gifts and go. I am not a beggar. I'm not a grifter. I'm a hardworking man. I just figured it was worth it. I know you have a big following and we've done things together on the live.

Speaker 19And I was like, you know, I'm just going to network with guys that I know that care about humanity. And I know you're one of those people, Ian. I know that a lot of your followers genuinely care. You've got whites, blacks, Asians. You've got all kinds of really cool people on here that genuinely love people. It's not like a race thing.

Speaker 19I've got children. I think everyone can understand as a father. I mean, I'll be a hundred percent with you, dude. A black guy is who ran into my house. Like I'm literally unapologetically white come off as a pretty white guy, racist guy at times. But my son ran across the street to the black neighbor and the black neighbor is who ran into my house and help my children and help my dog and help my family.

Speaker 19And so for me, this wasn't anything more than just a human. helping a human being. And so that's something else I want to bring to light. Like race didn't matter in this situation, right? This is one of those times where something was happening to me. He probably knows who I am and he didn't even hesitate. He ran into my house with my house burning and got my kids out and tried to fight this fire and got out.

Speaker 19And so, yes, I did. I shared my gifts and go with you. It's on my page. If anybody does feel like, contributing. I don't even care if you just share or pray. I'm not here begging or grifting. I just need to get my feet back underneath of me. I had to take today off of work. So I use some of my PTO. Thank God I have PTO.

Speaker 19But I'm going through a lot right now and it's unbelievably stressful. All of my food is bad. All of my clothes are ruined. Basically everything that smoke and carcinogens could ruin it did, you know, my power's off. So all my food's going bad. Just everything is in disarray right now. And so, yeah, I reached out to you and Zach Logos and a few other guys and was like, hey, are you down to help me spread this again?

Speaker 19So I just want to reiterate, I'm not a grifter. This isn't some made up thing. If you want to go to my page, I've posted pictures. If you want to inbox me, I can share pictures of my family, my house, the condition. Just know that this is real and it's coming from my heart. And again, prayer is more important than anything, but money is what's going to feed me and take care of me.

Speaker 19And once I don't have a place to stay, I am going to have to come out. And I mean, I paid rent just seven days ago for my month and I can't go back. So, I mean, I don't have money. I'm a hardworking white guy. I don't live in the Simpsons era where one single earner could afford to live in a two-story house and raise two kids and have money.

Speaker 19I'm check to check like everybody else. I don't do drugs. I don't drink. I don't do anything bad. I'm just a normal guy and I just needed some help. So that's kind of where I'm at with this. And so, you know, if you have any questions or anything, I'd be willing to answer. I didn't mean to jump in on this topic about, you know, all this stuff, but, you know, Ian, you did invite me on.

Speaker 19So I just, I'm so appreciative of your time and giving me an opportunity to speak.

Ian MalcolmNo, of course, my goodness. And, and, um, I mean, obviously, anybody and everybody, this is an individual I've done a bunch of spaces in the past with and certainly has always been very loving in terms of the worldview. He's just out there trying to make a lifestyle for his family, for his community, lift people up where he can.

Ian MalcolmAnd so certainly wanted to bring attention to this, but I always do, and this isn't specific to this case, with any and everything when it comes to fundraising, I try to just Stay away from posts or reposts or things of that nature. But when it comes to spaces, please, I always welcome anybody and everybody on, especially those that I'm familiar with, like this individual here.

Ian MalcolmAnd so you can find that on his page. Please feel free. Take a look. Do what you can. And doing what you can doesn't need to be financial. It could be either sharing or bringing additional attention to or merely just sharing your love with anybody that's distressed. And it's also what a curious. piece of the story in terms of your neighbor.

Ian MalcolmAnd I say that because at the end of the day, we get accused of being all kinds of things in these spaces, anti-Semites, racists, bigs, whatever. I push out that if we make a better world for everybody, that everyone wins. And that everyone, it's not dependent on the color of your skin or some of these other things, but rather just the content of your character.

Ian MalcolmAnd it sounds like you had an absolutely lovely neighbor in that case who came to the aid of your family in a time of need. And that's exactly the kind of heroism that we should bring attention to, that we should always support. And then we should try to figure out how to spread, right? Because the wildest pieces as infectious as is the negativity and the degeneracy, so is that which is good and loving.

Ian MalcolmAnd so I really feel like, and I'm glad you brought that snippet from the story into that unapologetic. And so please visit his page, do what you can. Let's help those that are in times of need as we're able to. And Orwellian, I saw you put your hand up. I'm not sure if you want to comment on this or just anything at large, but please feel free to jump in.

Speaker 3Yeah, I will. I mean, train of thought kind of got a little wiped out there and understandably so. So I'll just I'll touch on this. I don't know you personally. Unapologetic. I went to your page and went ahead and, you know, put that information out there. I just think it's important to recognize that, you know. We have an obligation collectively.

Speaker 3The only way I think that collectivism actually works is recognizing that we have spiritual power and using it collectively to lift one another up is extremely important, especially in times like this. So I'm going to do what I can on that level and try to get that message out there. And just, you know, praying for you and your family, man.

Speaker 3It's an unimaginable situation to find yourself in. Like I said, I haven't been there. I can only imagine. Yeah, it's going to be a rough rebuilding process, man. So I'm just hopeful that, yeah, we can get you the help that you need here. And, you know, just prayer for you and your family, man. I'm going to land it there.

Speaker 19God bless you, bro. I can't even tell you how much that means. And like I've said, I think at this point, honestly, like prayer is so important to get it out there. I know. that we, you know, there's maybe people in here that believe in a different God or a different religion or whatever. But at this point, just putting out that positive vibe in my direction, I do believe in spirituality.

Speaker 19I do believe that there is good that will come from whatever it is that we're trying to manifest. I mean, I've been going through the process of trying to buy another home currently. So this is my rental property. And so luckily for me, I have renter's insurance. But that's all going to be a process. Like, I'm going to have to go through all of these steps to get my stuff back.

Speaker 19I mean, you know how that works. There's not a way to replace valuable things that you've had that are just, they're not even monetary. They're personal things that mean more to you than money. It's not really about the money. For me, it's like, yes, it would be nice to get my couch back and all that stuff. But it's like...

Speaker 19if I can, I'm just blessed my children. Like that's kind of where I'm at with it. Like to get home and to have seen both my children standing outside with my kids and my dog and our little baby chickens. Like, you know, my daughter grabbed the little chicken that was in the house. We had like two chicks that were born the other day and she's standing outside with him in his shoe box.

Speaker 19And that was all that mattered. Like to me, if our whole house would have burned down, And there was nothing left but a smoldering pile of nothingness. And all I had left was those few items, my children and my wife and my kids. I guess that's the same thing, kids and children, but it is what it is. And I'm kind of, like I said, I'm very heartbroken at what I've lost, but I'm also blessed at the same time because you see it all the time on the internet, on the news, people's houses burning down.

Speaker 19Kids freak out. They don't pay attention. Like my son was playing a video game, right? He had his headphones on. So my eight-year-old daughter had to run into the room and shake him and get him. He's on spring break. We're not really big video game people, but we are like, you know what? He's getting good grades. He can go vibe out and kind of chill and just do his thing.

Speaker 19Mom went to the store. He'll be fine. But there could have been a worse situation, right? For all we know. that fire locks one of my kids in the room and they don't escape and I lose one of my children. And it's like, so for me, that's where it comes down to is I got my kids and my wife and my family is where they are.

Speaker 19It's not where my house is or my possessions. If I'm living in the back of a car with my children for the time being, that's all that matters. And I'm blessed that I have that, right? So anything you can do, prayer is super important to me. I live on that, and I know it's not going to feed me, but you know what? It may.

Speaker 19It may lead to something positive, and that's kind of why I ask with prayer first. I'm like, prayer, share, don't know. Because for me, the don't knows are last. Praying and sharing is the most important thing right now.

Speaker 14Wait, you're living in your car? Didn't the insurance company provide something temporary?

Speaker 19Well, no, not yet, because my insurance company, I have to file a claim. and the inspector has to come, and they can't get an inspector to my house until Monday. So luckily for me, someone in the community got me into an Airbnb until Monday. So again, that's a blessing that an amazing Christian came along and was like, hey, Jeff, I got you.

Speaker 14You talked to the insurance company, though, right?

Speaker 19Oh, yeah. Yeah, we've talked to the insurance company. We're filing the claim, but they're not going to give us any. They're not giving me a hotel room. paying for any of that stuff at all right now. And I pay renter's insurance. I have that. But this is just one of those examples of you don't know how it works until you need to use it.

Speaker 19And if there wasn't some good Samaritan that was like, Jeff, we're going to put you in an Airbnb. We got you. I would have not had anywhere to go. Luckily for me, this person... Oh wait, did you own the house? No, it's my best friend's house I rent from.

Speaker 14Oh.

Speaker 19So it's renter's insurance. I... don't own i'm buying a home so i'm currently going through the lending process and i'm trying to i've spent life that's why i don't have a lot of money i've spent all of my money in the last three months putting a down payment on a house and trying to get to the fha process so i've spent my life savings the last three months on down payments and earnest money and all the stuff for a home so i don't even have that money

Speaker 19that I would normally have that I would fall back on on a bad situation that I could go to my bank account and pull. I've used all of that lately to start buying a home, which we're building a manufactured home. We're not even like buying a home home. It's already built. So it's three months away. I have three months until I can get into my house and they haven't even poured the foundation yet.

Speaker 19So I'm just in a situation where i got blessed enough where someone was able to get me into an airbnb until monday so that the inspector can go to my house on monday because apparently they don't work on weekends which is total bs you think they'd work any day all day but they don't so on monday an inspector is going to come out look at the house determine the damage and then i think that my wife is just looking at the claims thing that they can they'll send us money on a debit card

Speaker 19maybe Monday or Tuesday, possibly. That's not even a guarantee. And so that's why I was just reaching out. So it's like, I am just in a weird situation. I've never experienced this before. I've never had my house burned, you know, even though it's not my physical house where I live and it's where I have lived for the last three years.

Speaker 19And luckily for me, I have renter's insurance, but it doesn't happen right away. It's one of those things where it's like, good luck until we get to you. You know what I mean?

@joann_marieAll right. Well, I hope it gets fixed soon, and I'm really sorry that happened to you, and I shared it, and I wish you and your family the best, and I'm really sorry this happened to you. And I do not see any hands, but we have Sharon up here. Hey, Sharon. How are you?

Speaker 20Hello, my lovelies. How are you guys doing today? Good. How are you? good. Just cleaning up, doing my stuff. Enjoying the conversations as usual. Don't know what prompted this face, but I'm here for it. Let's go.

Ian MalcolmAn interesting one it was. It's certainly a topic. David, I'm glad that you came in here for it because it is very curious. We had lots of different takes, lots of different opinions. The thing that I know to be objectively the case is as was let off at the beginning of the conversation. There's lots of data to suggest that there, let's just say society at large is going in the wrong direction.

Ian MalcolmAnd the curious piece is that we could take that idea of silence is violence and essentially apply it not only in this case, and the main thing that I was focusing on was disproportionate violence within the black community. And I extend that it's not just referring to African Americans, but rather to... Africans at large that might be displaced or replaced all over the planet.

Ian MalcolmIn the case that I used in Switzerland, in what is just absurd amounts of over-representation in their penal system. But for the media to just whitewash all of this, whitewash perhaps a strange term, for the media to Jew-wash, let's say, all of the violence that is taking place and to demand that nobody pay attention to it, along with...

Ian Malcolmthe dwindling conditions of kind of normal, let's call it middle-class lifestyle in the Western world. Everybody is being demoralized. They're being disenfranchised. They're having essentially foreigners in many cases take their jobs either directly by replacing them in their place of work via H-1B work visas and or illegal migration, or they're just outsourcing them anywhere and everywhere.

Ian MalcolmAnd this system is obviously just taking everything as the pie gets smaller and smaller and smaller for everyone. And so, you know, we're going to continue kind of talking about these uncomfortable situations. It, of course, brought up lots of different perspectives, the ones that perhaps were the most interesting, at least from my worldview.

Ian MalcolmDavid, it's always such an absolute pleasure to have you, and I'm so glad that we did. But also, Man of Lawlessness was absolutely wonderful to hear from some of the, let's say, the cultural pressures that he got to essentially ignore his eyes and ears and to say, yeah, I'm going to perpetuate this culture that... seems to go nowhere but drugs, violence, and dependency on a system.

Ian MalcolmAnd for him to speak out against it is absolutely heroic. For unapologetically white's neighbor to run across the street to a burning building and to try and save his family, his children, his property, his possession, that's unbelievably heroic, right? And so it's worth noting because these are not absolutes, the way that we discuss these things, like what David was mentioning earlier.

Ian MalcolmThe average IQ, I love how he asked it that way. What is the average of the average IQ of people? I was really hoping that somebody would say that it's low, right? The average is in fact a byproduct of the average, but we could look at that average across different groups of subsets of people, right? And we need to be honest about those things, no differently than we are about heights or about any kind of other statistic that is objectively defensible, as are, for example, those crime statistics that I referenced earlier, right?

Ian MalcolmSo we need to talk about these things. We need to talk about the over-representation of certain interests, how those, let's say, interests seem to be aligned with what is a dwindling state of the state, both of cultural homogenous societies and then also of a once thriving middle class that is quickly vanishing. So we'll continue doing those.

Ian MalcolmI know that we had a couple other speakers up here. I know C. Looper had some thoughts, so certainly going to go to him. We will see if Ariel wants to add in some thoughts. I see Sharon just put her hand up. And then if nobody else wants to kind of provide a different prism or perspective, we'll we'll probably wrap up the conversation.

Ian MalcolmBut Mr. Looper, let's go to you first and foremost.

Speaker 21Yeah, yeah. So I really wanted to go when the FBA gentleman was in the house and he. So at any rate. So also, Ian, you provided statistical information on Switzerland and the prison population, and it's the same statistics in America. I would venture to say 85% of prisons in America are...

Speaker 21filled with the African-Americans, the black people. And what's also a coincidence, and just to kind of touch on what Mr. David was saying in IQ, is that most of all the prisons have a library where they can go and get books and read and build their knowledge, build their information and increase their IQ. Yet they choose not to do that.

Speaker 21They choose to act on what's inherent, I believe, in their behavior. And they choose to engage in violence, even in a prison setting. And it's just crazy to me when you have all the tools, all the availability to better yourself, yet you choose to discard that. And like I say, it's 13% of the population committing like, what, 60 to 70% of the crime?

Speaker 21And so it's just absolutely staggering that we succumb ourselves to this type of behavior and we have to integrate ourselves and make way for these type of people to enter into our society as hopeful and wanting to be like integrated, but we're white devils at the same token. And so it's just absolutely mind-boggling to me that people will not understand and will be labeled racist for calling out the facts and calling out the truth.

Speaker 21So that's what I wanted to say. And that's all I wanted to say. I wish FDA was still in here so I could say that.

Speaker 14But, you know, there are people of all races that do avail themselves of those libraries. You know, I lived... as a very young man in a metropolitan city. And I found it, I was so close in to the center that I found it easier to catch the public bus rather than drive my car downtown, which obviated the need to park. And there was this working class black guy that I would see often on the bus.

Speaker 14And he would have a volume of the Encyclopedia Britannica in his hand. And I just thought that was so cool, right? But he was clearly uneducated, right? But he was assuaging his ignorance. And I would sit beside him, and he would be sitting there, and I thought it was so cool, and I would talk to him. And he was just discursive.

Speaker 14He was just like, whatever's in here, I'm just going to read that, you know? And you're absolutely right. It's amazing. You know that line in Good Will Hunting where he said, you know, you could have saved all of this and just bought a library card, you know? which is I've actually said something similar to people when they got degrees in English.

Speaker 14I'm like, you owe $60,000 to Carnegie Mellon to learn your own language. I'm quite sure I speak it better than you.

Speaker 14So really, I think this is a problem that maybe it's extrapolates across all of the rest of us and not just black people. But the test of whether we actually really care about our black brothers and sisters, is how we think about this problem. So what the left has done and what the Jewish supremacists have done is they have weaponized black people against everyone else.

Speaker 14And they've weaponized them the worst way because they took away that bottom rung of the ladder of accomplishment and exchanged that with what? Inspiring them to be envious, to be angry, to feel that their loss, that someone else's gain is their loss. Well, all these things were incredibly destructive. and deleterious to inner cities.

Speaker 14This is why Thomas Sowell wrote the book, Vision of the Anointed, is he said, and he's obviously a black economist and philosopher. He said that, he said, that when you don't have to be checked by the facts, when your evil experimentation, where you basically apply all the principles of socialism to the inner city as though you're experimenting with them like they're lab rats, and everything goes terribly wrong, all the moral and economic indicators go south, and you don't feel the responsibility of being checked by the facts, well, this is a very dangerous thing for civilization.

Speaker 14Well, look at the result of it. I mean, it's as though you turned inner cities into little Hurricane Katrinas. You tried to deny reality, and reality ended up denying you. And that's really where we're at right now. So the question is, if we have racial realism and we acknowledge what actually is true, does it benefit or hurt everyone, including black civilization, black culture?

Speaker 14Well, I would say that it benefits it. What do you think?

Speaker 21Oh, yeah, absolutely, Mr. David. And I just want to go, before we had Google, before we had the internet, we had Encyclopedia Britannica. And I don't know, my age might be showing, but we had book-to-book door salesmen that would come along and offer the encyclopedia. As a kid, that's what I grew up reading. So I grew up reading encyclopedia because we didn't have Google.

Speaker 21We didn't have the internet at the time. And so I grew up like, digesting A through Z of the encyclopedia. And so I say that to say this, and we're all stewards of this planet, every single one of us, whether you're black, white, Mexican, Indian, whatever your race or creed or culture may be. I will exclude Jews from this because I'm just sorry they're insufferable.

Speaker 21But we have a moment to where we can be good stewards. to this planet and good people. And we will bring this up. And we will bring up all of us.

@joann_marieIconic, please don't interrupt.

Speaker 17Go ahead, Lucas.

Speaker 21Yeah, I was done. I was done anyways.

Speaker 17We didn't even finish about the IQ shit.

Ian MalcolmThis will be interesting. So why don't we allow... So Iconic, just out of curiosity, what... First and foremost, and you don't have to dox yourself above and beyond your profile picture, which seems like a reasonable thing to base this off of. Well, maybe let's start there. The profile picture is you. Is that fair?

Speaker 17Okay.

Ian MalcolmOkay, so we'll just presume. Again, not trying to dox anybody. We'll assume that that is you. So when it comes to IQ, if you were, in fact, a black American, what would you suppose is the...

Speaker 17Tri-racial.

Ian MalcolmTri-racial. I'll try.

Speaker 17I'm 4% Asian. I'm 4% Mongolian.

Ian MalcolmYou're 4% Mongolian and 4% Asian.

Speaker 14Time out. You do realize that Mongolian and Asian are the same thing, right? Where do you think Mongolia is?

Speaker 17They're the sexy Asian.

Speaker 14I think you're 95% bad at geography.

Speaker 17Okay. But 5% good at it.

Ian MalcolmOkay, so iconic. We'll go to the IQ piece. So you think IQ is, is it a relevant, let's say, piece of scientific study when we try to assess the state of the world?

Speaker 17Wait, what'd you say? I wasn't paying attention.

Ian MalcolmOkay, let's try this again. Is IQ a reasonable thing to consider?

Speaker 17I guess. Okay, let's break down the guessing.

Ian MalcolmLet me ask you this way instead. If IQ was a valuable thing, because you said, I guess, if you're uncertain, how would you try and decide whether or not it's a meaningful statistic to examine?

Speaker 17I mean, if we keep using IQ, before you know, we got computers that measure IQs, you know? Do we want that?

Ian MalcolmOkay, let's not try to obfuscate or deflect from the question. How would you try and determine if IQ would be a meaningful thing to examine when it comes to the human... species or race, whichever term you want to use.

Speaker 17I guess it's helpful if you want to measure like, okay, how intelligent was we here? How intelligent was we here?

Ian MalcolmOkay, so how intelligent was we at certain points? Is the was we in your situation, the we is a singular set of people or can you examine and evaluate the larger we was?

Speaker 17Okay, so you want to try to figure out, okay, we've all gone through a stone age. How intelligent are the people?

Ian MalcolmNo, we're not all going through a stone age.

Speaker 14That's incorrect. Hold on, I just have a question. Are you American?

Speaker 17I'm American as fuck.

Speaker 14Okay, well, so you're American as fuck, as you say. Okay, so do you think that it might be demonstrative of IQ if you cannot conjugate one of the most common verbs in our language, which is to have? Because you just said, was we. I mean, you meant were we, right? I mean, this should be easy, right? You do realize this is easy for most people.

Speaker 17I just want a bunch of scholarship money off of my essays.

Speaker 14I'm getting that whole, you know, I'm getting that whole Aristotle vibe, but I'm just saying, you know, if you can't conjugate the verb to have, which is the infinitive of that verb, You know, you understand we're going to be a little suspicious because people with high IQs tend to be pretty good at language, right? And in fact, they tend to be able to speak multiple languages.

Speaker 14You know, I'm not saying that's natural.

Speaker 9And I just want to chime in, too, real quick, because I think I remember I was in college and my buddy, he was complaining to me. He's like, man, these guys can't even write and they're getting these scholarships. And I think it's a good demonstration of how equality and diversity incentives are actually leading us down the drain.

Speaker 14Well, hold on now. It's leading them down the drain. I do want to say whoever they're supposedly trying to benefit gets hurt the most because I just want to bring up the bottom rung of the ladder again. Like our black brothers and sisters, their lives are getting destroyed by this bullshit. You know, Walter Williams talks about this.

Speaker 14And so did, what's his name that wrote the bell curve? I'm sorry, Charles Murray. When he said, look, what they're doing is they're giving them scholarships where they can't keep up. So they end up dropping out. But if they went to a community college, they could have kept up. So we're destroying their life in the name of what?

Speaker 14In the name of divide and conquer, that's what. Because then it makes them angry. It takes away their capacity to sustain and promote their lives. This is a very bad thing for black people. There's no reason. It shouldn't be a zero-sum game, but that's what they made it into.

Speaker 9And they're dumbing us down. Look at the no child left behind. Look how we're taking away science and math on the ACT and the SAT.

Speaker 14I don't know. And not only that, though. But the advanced classes in high schools, they're taking those away because they fill up with white people and Asian people. And they're like, wait, wait, wait a second here. These people aren't getting in. So we've just got to end the class. What is that but denial reality? Who's going to save you on the operating table?

Speaker 14Who's going to invent cold fusion? It's not going to be the person that doesn't have the requisite gray matter to think about these things. It's going to be the person that does. I actually, as a kid, actually heard my teacher say to another teacher, I don't care about the bright kids. I care about the ones struggling to get by.

Speaker 14I'm like, I didn't say anything, but I thought much later, gosh, you don't care about the bright kids? Who do you think is going to advance civilization, right? Who do you want to operate on you? Who do you want to, you know, diagnose you? Like, this is just insanity.

Ian MalcolmBut David, the challenge there is that a lot of the individuals that would suggest that to you, they presume, and this goes back to a conversation earlier on this idea of the privilege begetting the luxury to spend the time to think about things and advance the sciences. It is the presumption that society will always maintain that which we take for granted in the present, right?

Ian MalcolmIt is this idea that you can just, well, let's just hand out some degrees to these people and... it'll be totally fine because when they are operating on you, they'll have the degree. So therefore they will be capable and competent. And if they're not, don't worry, there will be somebody else that can take their place.

Ian MalcolmAnd it's like, no, that's not how the system works. If you put holes into the side of the boat, you can't just say there's a couple there. We'll just add a whole bunch more. We'll pretend that it's not a problem as the boat continues taking on more and more and more water. And that's what's happening to your point about society being dumbed down.

Ian MalcolmAnd people would try to say, Let's just presume that no child left behind. It's actually, this is benefiting everybody, but every objective study on the subject, the reading comprehension is dropping. The attention spans are dropping. Kids' supposed satisfaction, clearly dropping. And how do we know that? Because suicide is skyrocketing amongst the youth, right?

Ian MalcolmPeople feel disenfranchised. They don't see any... opportunity in front of them and that's exactly what you you would want to do if your goal is to demoralize everybody into a stupor where they are just basically sitting around hoping for table scraps and that's obviously exactly where this is going now david one little quick point that i wanted to throw your direction here and then i would love to get some of the thoughts i know we've got ariel we've also got the incomparable yitz up here so we'll get to him but really quickly i'm going to read you something from the purple pill and i think this is part of the problem

Ian MalcolmNow, C. Looper made the statement that that 85 percent of inmates in the United States are black. I will look into that statement. But what I do know, because I don't know the exact accuracy of that, I know, for example, statistics on, let's say, the the perpetration of crime based on the FBI. But I do not know the statistics on exact incarceration rates in the penal system.

Ian MalcolmBut this person put into the purple pill. Do you know how I know 13% commit the 70% of the crime can't be the case? Because it's mathematically impossible, says this person. Now, I find that really wild, David, because we've got a person that is arguing that in the United States that black people can't possibly conduct this degree of crime because in their view, that is impossible.

Ian MalcolmAnd the problem is that obviously that is not impossible. 13% of a group of people can make up 70% of a whole lot of things that is very easily able to be done. In fact, 2% of the population, which are Jewish, own about 75% of all of the basketball teams. Any of these calculations are possible. But the problem is that we have individuals that perhaps are not even capable.

Ian MalcolmThey're not even clued in to know how clueless they are. And yet they would jump into a conversation and see Looper made the comment on, the 85% of inmates being black. I don't know. I'm happy to say I don't know something. But what is wild is when we see people making statements with such certainty that are so ignorant on a subject.

Ian MalcolmAnd so, David, in case for some reason the person doesn't recognize the error of their ways, maybe you can do a better job illustrating how 13% of a group of people can conduct 70% of a whole bunch of things.

Speaker 14Yeah, I think he's having trouble with those two numbers. And if he is having trouble with those two numbers, I can... present him with one more obvious one. Most all the crime is committed by 50% of the population, which is men. Okay, so let's just, you know, it may be counterintuitive for me. It may be like, well, aren't those numbers supposed to average out, but they don't.

Speaker 14I think, by the way, it's 50-50 in prison, isn't it? I think it's 50-50 because we're so much more of a representation of the population. I'm not sure, Looper. I know that the murder rate is roughly that. the 13% of the population and really 6% because it was the men, but that works the same way for us as well. 13% of the population is responsible for roughly half of the, uh, the murders and that sort of thing.

Speaker 14But yeah.

Speaker 21So, so in my personal experience, um, I was in prison for 10 years from 2006 to 2016, full stop, no stop.

Speaker 14Holy crap.

Speaker 21No break. All right. So what'd you do? Please, please, please, please. Um, it, so, um, In every dorm, there was 120 people. Do you know how many white people were in each dorm? Maybe 10 out of 120. So do the math on that. That's more than 80%. It's absolutely astronomical.

Speaker 14Your mic is going away, buddy.

Ian MalcolmYeah, the mic is cutting out really poorly. According to Grok, it's around a third is the number that it is giving me. Now, that doesn't necessarily mean that your lived experience would match that seed looper. But obviously, we need to look at the macros rather than individualized experiences when we try to extrapolate the state of the world.

Ian MalcolmNonetheless, if it is 33% or 35%, that is 2x the representation of their given proportion of the population, which is roughly 13 or so percent, right? So that is noteworthy, but not quite as extreme as the statistics that we saw in Switzerland, where they were 50 times more likely to be imprisoned relative to the Swiss nationals of Swiss heritage, which is just an unbelievable statistic.

Ian MalcolmBut nonetheless, I do see that fortunately or unfortunately, FBA, Trey Day is requesting yet again, perhaps he wants to debate. prison statistics, and or to explain to us again how the Greeks and the Romans are African, which I'm not even going to just touch because it's so nonsensical.

Speaker 20Can I just jump in for a second, Ian?

Ian MalcolmYeah, of course you can.

Speaker 20Because I'm going to forget what I was going to say. White flight is a real thing. I'm in California, and I've had to move several times to get away from bad people. Okay? And... I had to go to a funeral a year ago back in North Carolina with, like, super liberal, and I know liberal and conservative are all the same, right, because it's all Jew, right?

Speaker 20But literally they always, Black Lives Matter and love the blacks and... They have their kids all in busing and stuff, but they didn't have one black person at that funeral, and there was hundreds of people there. And so I, you know, casually just said, where's all your black friends? I thought you loved all the blacks.

Speaker 20So it was really funny to me. But I know, personally, lots of blacks that are, like, really based and cool. So it's not all blacks, but, you know, there's just a difference between, like, the, I guess, normal, like, integrated, cool blacks and niggers. That's all.

Speaker 14Well, I will just say this. I think that blacks, there's a significant portion of the black population in America that's waking up to how they've been played. They have been weaponized against everyone else. And they're waking up to it because the answer for everyone else is to get away. You know, there's a sort of a meme that goes around that says 90% of vacation planning is to figure out where black people are not, right?

Speaker 14And then black people that are trying to lift themselves out of exiguous poverty, and they do, by the way, they look back at this and they're like, wait, this is bad. We're actually celebrating the worst things. Like, why is it when you look at video of old NBA players, they're all speaking correct English. And then fast forward to now and they're like degenerates and they can barely talk.

Speaker 14They totally chimp out all this stuff. Why is this? Like, who is doing this to them? There's a devolution happening here. And why is that happening? That's an unusual thing to happen. Every other underclass in American history has lifted itself up. What's the problem here? Who founded the NAACP? Was it black people? No, it was Jews.

Speaker 14Who promulgated this idea that the success of everybody else comes at their expense? Was it... White people? Was it black people? No, it was Jews. So you can see in a very, very nasty and cynical way, there's been a lot of destruction in the black community perpetrated by people who don't give a shit about them. And the question is, how do we move forward?

Speaker 16David, I've heard you talk. Why do you guys think you're the center of attention? Why do you guys think that you just can pop up here and talk whenever you want? There's literally hands.

Speaker 10I didn't see the yellow hands.

Ian MalcolmI didn't see the Simpson-colored hands. Yitz clearly has his hand up, as does Ariel. And to Wealth's comment, and we're going to let Wealth go because I think he's exactly right. And Trey Day, every single time you've come into this room, you've done exactly what you just did yet again. And it's infuriating. It's childish.

Ian MalcolmIt's petulant. And the irony is, if we then remove you from the speaker's panel, you go down to the comments, oh, wow, woe is me. Why does nobody like me? And it's just, it's insufferable. Try to grow up. Try to develop an intellect. Try to act like an adult. And then we can have a conversation. Let's go to wealth. Then we will go over to Mr. Yitz.

Speaker 16Yeah, I just quickly wanted to comment. Thanks for letting me up. I was just going to comment on what was said earlier about the 85% mark. I saw... 32 to 37 in the um incarceration project um and so basically it's one in every three right but then you could propagate that it's kind of glorified for for black people to go to jail and all this other thing right it's this whole rhetoric in the culture that it's it's a proud thing to to go to jail and not snitch and on your on your homies or whatever the so i just feel like yeah that's

Speaker 16I don't even know where to take this from here. I'm sure there's more people in this room with intellect that can follow that. But I'm just not surprised at that. And it's good there's an honest conversation happening here. And you seem to have the full set. You now have a gay black Jew coming up. You have a black and a Jew.

Speaker 16So I suppose we're going to have all these kinds of conversations in the next few minutes.

Ian MalcolmYou know, it's wild. We've got a gay black Jew who moved to Israel. We've got a Jew who lives in the United States but defends Israel. We've got a FBA individual who seems to shill for the Jews. And then we've got a black American patriotic individual who fought for his country and fights for it today by speaking out against Jewish supremacy.

Ian Malcolmin Man of Lawlessness. So I do think we have a smorgasbord of individuals here in differing worldviews, and I'm humbled that we've got Joanne, that we've got V, that we've got David, we've got Sharon, we've got so many others that are in here with us. But that being said, let's go to Mr. Ariel, and then we will check in with Yitz, and then Orwell, and then we will accommodate F.B.A.

Ian MalcolmTrey, let's say.

Speaker 22You had a question. What's the opposite of black violence?

Ian MalcolmAre we talking in a literal sense of those words? Because I suppose you would call it non-black peacefulness, but it depends on how you want to take it.

Speaker 22I mean, to whomever it is that made the title, what's the opposite of black violence?

Ian MalcolmI think I just gave you what could be defined as a literal option in terms of an answer.

Speaker 22So what's under the proverbial microscope here is violence that is within the black community?

Ian MalcolmWhich is clearly silenced by the media that likes to suggest that it's not happening and scold you if you discuss it, despite extreme examples like the one that we talked about in Switzerland.

Speaker 22Okay. In Switzerland, are those blacks or are those Africans?

Ian MalcolmI think it's reasonable to refer to Africans as black, wouldn't you?

Speaker 22No, not at all.

Ian MalcolmOkay, so you would prefer if it said what instead of black violence if I'm referring to blacks in America and Africans at large?

Speaker 22I mean, I'd like for you to be as specific as possible.

Ian MalcolmNo, no, that's not an acceptable answer. The title has a character limitation. No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no. We're going to try and be very specific with you. That is obfuscation. Now, Ariel, what would you prefer instead of the word black?

Speaker 22Ariel.

Ian MalcolmDouble muted.

Ian MalcolmOkay, I will state, yes, we can hear you. I'll state the question again. What would you prefer in place of black?

Speaker 22Well, just no black, just violence.

Ian MalcolmWhat if I want to refer to black violence in America and to African violence via largely migrants in Europe?

Speaker 22Well, I'm pretty sure since you've been on these spaces, you would know how to, you know. put that in so that everybody knows exactly who we're supposed to be discussing.

Ian MalcolmBut I think everybody does know exactly what we're discussing and you're seemingly critiquing me for something that you can't provide a better alternative for.

Speaker 22So is black violence something that affects you directly?

Ian MalcolmYes, black violence would affect essentially anybody living in the Western world directly and indirectly.

Speaker 22How has it affected you within the last 72 hours?

Ian MalcolmDoes something that would be a strain on my people, is that affecting me directly?

Speaker 22When you say your people, do you mean Americans?

Ian MalcolmI would refer to my people, and I'm not going to dox myself for your entertainment. And I say that because it's lots of Jews, which you claim to be one of, that send me regular death threats. Now I will ask you the question again. Is it reasonable to refer to a thing that plagues my society as detrimental to me directly?

Speaker 22I mean, it would. if it affected you directly, but it seems- It does affect me directly. So how has it affected you in the last 24 hours?

Ian MalcolmAll right, let me ask you a question, Ariel, because you live in Israel, is that right?

Speaker 22Would you answer mine?

Ian MalcolmNo, no, I am the host. Now, Ariel, you live in Israel, is that right? You're a homosexual, black, self-identified Jew in Israel, right?

@joann_marieI'm a terrorist. He has killed four children.

Ian MalcolmI'm not, I'm not. Let me ask you a question. Have Iranian bombs directly attacked you?

Speaker 22Yes, they have.

Ian MalcolmAh, okay. How are you here? If you got attacked by a bomb, wouldn't a bomb have blown you up? That's not how it works. That you just demonstrated my very point for me. You perfectly illustrated that. Do you not realize that?

Speaker 22No, I don't.

Ian MalcolmHow do you not realize if a, let me ask you this way. If a rocket landed on your foot fired from the Iranians, what would happen to your body?

Speaker 22Well, sir, I wouldn't be on this space.

Ian MalcolmAh, okay. But you said that you were directly struck by a rocket. Did you not?

Speaker 22Where I was was directly struck by a rocket.

Ian MalcolmAh, but you are still here. So how can you make that make sense?

Speaker 22Well, because I took the proper precautions to stay safe.

Ian MalcolmOkay, so if I take the proper precautions to avoid black violence, but it is plaguing the area in which I live, is that not equitable to what you just suggested?

Speaker 22Ian, I'm trying to answer your question.

Ian MalcolmNo, you're trying to talk over railroad because I just made you look like an absolute clown.

Speaker 22Oh, no, no, no, no. I'm not the person who's complaining about that.

Ian MalcolmNo, I know you don't recognize it, but oh yes, I certainly did.

Speaker 22Ian, it's okay. I know your autism is at full tilt.

Ian MalcolmThere's no autism here, but you are embarrassing yourself completely.

Speaker 22Pull back a little bit.

Ian MalcolmAh, so folks, this is what you would call gaslighting, which is what is done by an individual who intellectually just got, I guess you'd call it stomped. What would be the term that you would prefer, Mr. Jew? Because I know you don't like the fact that I use black violence in the title.

Speaker 9I love how he... So that's what you did, Ariel, is you were to suggest that if Ian didn't, within the last 24 hours, get attacked personally himself, that it wouldn't be a problem to him and his people, right? Do you see how that might be?

Speaker 22Not so much him directly getting attacked, but has it... That is the definition upon which you tried to build an argument. Ian, I'm still talking, but it's okay.

Ian MalcolmNo, no, I don't need to talk to myself. What I did do is I talked to you and I embarrassed you and I made it completely illogical. The things that you were suggesting, you critique the headline. I then offered you the opportunity to give a better definition, which you could not do. We then went a different direction in which you insisted that black violence personally affect me in a way that is, I suppose, easily defined.

Ian MalcolmRight. That it has to harm me direct. I have to get stabbed in the back by a black person in order to cry about black violence. And instead, I then say, well, were you attacked by the Iranians? And you proudly said yes. And I said, well, how are you on the space? Because if a rocket hit you, you would be dead. And you don't see the double standard in the rhetoric that you are presenting, perhaps because you're either low IQ or because you're disingenuous and you're just lying.

Ian MalcolmWhen I caught you in it, you attempted to gaslight and everybody witnessed that. Now, this is a microcosm for the problem that is Jewish supremacy, for what it's worth, folks. Now, I can point to two things that might impact Ariel's IQ. The first would be perhaps based in genetics. And that is because individuals that are black Americans, average IQ is somewhere in the low 80s.

Ian MalcolmThat is the average. And as David discussed, that is directionally accurate. You can make assessments loosely based on that. There are all kinds of black individuals that are well above that threshold. That's how an average works. The individual we are speaking with is clearly not that. He is of low IQ. It might be because he is a black person from America that has an IQ on average that would be in the low 80s, but he has now transported himself over to Israel where the average IQ is 92.

Ian MalcolmSo now he is living amongst individuals who are also well lower than what you would call the average, the bell curve of Western Europeans. And so, Ariel, we will allow you to gaslight or say whatever else you would like for another 30 seconds before we move to the next speaker. But thank you for embarrassing yourself.

@joann_marieAnd also, he claims to have 147. Thank you.

Ian MalcolmWait, wait, was that Joanne?

Speaker 22Is this this guy? Oh, wait, wait, Ariel.

Ian MalcolmSo you are just so smart that we can't comprehend your intellect. Is that what it is?

Speaker 22I mean, you said it.

Ian MalcolmI guess I did.

Speaker 22It seems as if you'd like to be in harm's way so that you have what to complain about, but I don't think that that's a good idea for you or anybody.

Ian MalcolmThat I'd like to be in harm's way? Wow, it's just exhausting, isn't it?

Speaker 14Mama said not to run with the city. Yeah, it is.

Speaker 22The victimism says the black guy living in Israel amongst the Jews. Victimhood is exhausting. Oh, so victimhood now. Glad you fixed that. Weren't you just complaining about people trying to kill you on this little toy?

Ian MalcolmNo, I wasn't complaining about people trying to kill me personally. I'm talking at large about black violence. Do you understand how you can discuss a system?

Speaker 22You said that people are trying to give you death threats.

Ian MalcolmYes, no, Jews literally send me death threats. Yes, I've got multiple screenshots of this, many of which are public.

Speaker 22And you're concerned about that?

Ian MalcolmWait, so it's unreasonable to suggest that people who threaten violence upon me, I'm not allowed to be concerned about that? That's your new claim?

Speaker 22Over the internet?

Ian MalcolmHow about Gary the numbers guy who verbally threatened truth teller on a recorded space suggesting that he would give $10,000 to dock somebody so that he could hunt him down and hurt him? Is that a reasonable thing to be concerned about, Ariel the Jew?

Speaker 16How about Jonathan, who got targeted by a bunch of Jews on this platform, right, over words? How about that? Absolutely not.

Speaker 14Yeah, but the general idea— Wait, wait, wait.

Ian MalcolmAbsolutely not? You think it's totally unreasonable to find that offensive and, if not dangerous?

Speaker 22I mean, you can find it offensive, but should you be actually scared? No.

Ian MalcolmWait a second. Okay, so let me get this right. So the Jew— the black Jew living in Israel will shill for a group of people that want to criminalize the act of notating the number of Jews at the top of the media and let's say technology companies and at the top of COVID and that are funding the politicians. That type of speech should be restricted.

Ian MalcolmSo I shouldn't be able to say this person is a Jew, but a literal Jew should be able to threaten to dox and then violently harm an individual. And you see nothing wrong with that. Is that what I'm understanding here?

Speaker 22No, Malcolm, this is Twitter. You can say whatever you want.

Ian MalcolmActually, no, you can't say whatever you want, as I can't via my pinned tweet, which is marked as hateful conduct despite being literal statistics. Apparently, you cannot say whatever you want if it's critical of Jews. I can demonstrate that.

Speaker 22Does that hurt your feelings?

Ian MalcolmOh, my God. This is just insufferable. You are an absolute waste of time. Does that hurt your feelings? Folks, this might be why a lot of Jews go into therapy. And I don't just mean to receive it. I also mean to give it. Does that hurt your feelings? No, it doesn't hurt my feelings. You know what it does? It hurts my cause to bring attention to Jewish supremacy that more and more people are awakening to.

Ian MalcolmThat people like Dan Bilzerian are proudly, confidently, and competently standing up to in spite of the massive suppression, censorship, and harassment that they receive. Because apparently you get brought on TMZ for saying that a massively, morbidly obese Jewish individual who openly celebrates his Jewish faith If you call him a fat Jew, you attempt to get dragged by TMZ, which is brought to you via a host who is not only a Jewish guy, but a Jewish guy who's mentioned in the Epstein files on a Jewish produced program on a Jewish owned network brought to you by either Jewish run Verizon or Comcast, depending on where you're living, right?

Ian MalcolmYou can't say somebody is a fat Jew who is a dot, dot, dot fat Jew. But according to this black Jew living in Israel, it's unreasonable to take offense to literal death threats. But you should be criminalized for saying that Jews have too much power. Isn't that interesting? And then he gaslights and now he requests another mic.

Ian MalcolmI'm going to remove you from the space. You're an utter waste of time. At least FBA trade in some way with his egregiousness makes me laugh. That guy, that's just utter gaslighting. It's very uninteresting. Let's go to Mr. If I'm not mistaken, let's go to Orwell. And I feel like somebody must have dropped down because I don't see another one of the voices.

Ian MalcolmThen we'll go to Yitz, and then we will check in with FBA TradeA.

Ian MalcolmMr. Orwell, the floor is yours.

Speaker 3Let's circle back around to me. I got something I got to deal with real quick, if you can.

Ian MalcolmWe absolutely can do that. And Mr. Nietzsche, I will send you a co-host invite. I think V had to drop down. And that will expedite us right along. I think we're going to go to Mr. Yitz, who is clearing his throat. Thank you, Yitz, as you always do. And with that, the floor is yours.

Speaker 23All right. Thank you for giving me the mic, Ian. I want to say a few things. First off, the suicide rate in South Korea and Japan is extreme. It's even higher than the United States. And they don't have any minorities to speak of.

Speaker 14Yitz? Hey, get a little closer to your mic or maybe take your hand off the bottom of your phone. Just having a little trouble hearing you, my friend.

Speaker 23Can you hear me better now?

Speaker 14Not really.

Speaker 23Okay, let me take the earbuds off.

Speaker 14Oh, yeah, get rid of the earbuds. Those things kind of screw things up.

Speaker 23One second.

Ian MalcolmAnd Yitz, we're just trying to help.

Speaker 14We want to hear you in all your glory. I do want to say while Yitz is fixing things, I love it when someone goes into space and tells you that you shouldn't be talking about what you want to talk about. I mean, there's a little leave button right up in the corner.

Speaker 23All right, so everyone can hear me better now? Much better. Okay, good, good. So like I was saying, in South Korea and Japan, they have a horrific suicide rate. And yet Japan is 98% ethnically Japanese, no minorities whatsoever. Also, Ian, I would like, if possible, if you could invite me when you have Dan Bazarian or whatever his name, and Dale Partridge, if you get either of them on your space.

Speaker 23And if you're taking open mics at some point, I would like to jump in. I have some questions for them and, you know, if that's possible.

Ian MalcolmIt's truth's space, so I certainly can't make any promises, but if I have any ability and they go through hands, I will make sure that we get to have them.

Speaker 5Okay, my apologies.

Speaker 23I wanted to add a few more things. I wanted to say that the Artemis 2 crew, you know, David mentioned DEI and how it's so terrible. To be an astronaut, you have to have an IQ in Mensa. You have to have a 132 plus IQ. Chris Hadfield, who famously has courses on masterclass, is in Mensa. So I would imagine most astronauts are in Mensa.

Speaker 23And, you know, we have a great Black astronaut and a female astronaut, and then there's a Canadian for Artemis II. And these, maybe they are the best people on the job. I mean, after all, aren't we supposed to be under Donald Trump's America, where meritocracy is now the deal? So, you know, I don't have any problem with that.

@joann_marieAre you familiar with what per capita means, Yitz?

Speaker 23Yes, yes, of course.

Speaker 14I have a question for you about that, Yitz. Can I clarify your position? Yes. So you do understand that DEI has given a lot of people positions that they don't deserve. You understand that? Maybe in the past, but not under Trump's... Well, everything that's happened has happened in the past. That's how time works, right?

Speaker 14Okay, so I'm just making the basic point that... And you think that's wrong, right? Someone shouldn't be given a position for which they do not deserve. That's reality denial. Do you agree with that?

Speaker 23Yes. Somebody should be... They should own their place. That's true.

Speaker 14Good. Because I don't know, I cannot argue against you that an astronaut, for instance, didn't get his position because he deserves it. I mean, we know that there are highly intelligent black people, so it's certainly true that that's possible. It's just that we know that a lot of things, especially in scholastic and corporate environments, have been given to people precisely because of the color of their skin.

Speaker 14and not the content of their character or intelligence. You agree with that, right?

Speaker 23Yes, it has happened in the past under the liberals. But here's what's interesting, David. It's not, it doesn't, affirmative action doesn't necessarily have to fail. In the 1950s, Israel implemented affirmative action programs for the Israeli Albs. And now today, the Israeli Albs are Supreme Court judges. They're in the MK, Syndicate Neset.

Speaker 23The Christian population in particular earns more per income than anyone. They score the highest on cognitive exams. So it can be very successful at times.

Speaker 14What do you think affirmative action is? What do you think it is?

Speaker 23That's where you help out those who don't have the resources in order to compete.

Speaker 14No, no, no. Wait. Tell me specifically, what is it? So two people are competing for the same job. Why is affirmative action necessary?

Speaker 23Maybe one person has, they had less resources, they couldn't go to the best university, but they have something called grit, and they have a great personality, and they can learn quickly.

Speaker 14Wait, hold on. Why does someone go to a university? Why does someone go to a university?

Speaker 23It could be many reasons. It could be because they have scholarship. It could be because... No, no, no. What is the purpose of a university?

Speaker 14What is the purpose? It's meant to be a place of higher education, of course. Okay, so in order to learn, so you're saying two people are competing for a job and one of them didn't go and learn all of that stuff and the other one did and they should have an equal chance at the job? I mean, isn't one more prepared for the job than the other?

Speaker 23It depends. Some colleges, they teach underwater basket weaving nowadays. Maybe the trade school person is superior.

Speaker 14So let's say it's math. It's a job that requires lots of math, right? And you're saying affirmative action, right? is to give the person that didn't learn much math the same opportunity as someone who did learn math and got a degree in it.

Speaker 23Is that what you're saying? What if they're naturally gifted?

Speaker 14You're not coming up with one good example of affirmative action.

Speaker 23What if they're naturally gifted, David, in math and they don't have to go to school?

Speaker 14Okay, then why would you need affirmative action? Isn't output all that matters? You said resources, but if you're naturally gifted, then what do the resources matter?

Speaker 23That may be in some circumstances, but not in all.

Speaker 14Those are the circumstances you just gave me.

Speaker 23No, no, not everyone. I'm just going by what you're giving me, buddy. Not everyone, but here's the deal. I'm just measuring you by your own yardstick. I believe that intelligence is both genetic and by the environment. You could acquire high intellect through your environment.

Ian MalcolmOkay. Do you believe that there are individuals that are genetically predisposed to be higher or lower on the intellect side?

Speaker 23Yes, but it can change. Intelligence is fluid. It can change.

Ian MalcolmHow much do you think it can change, let's say proportional to the input that is genetic in nature?

Speaker 23I believe they say that about 50-50 genetic and 50 environment. So it's a good chance it could change.

Ian MalcolmSo just for something easy, for a frame of reference that people can really wrap their head around. So do you think that diet and other, let's say, external factors play into somebody's height?

Speaker 23Probably, yes.

Ian MalcolmOkay. So do you think Shaquille O'Neal's kids are likely going to be way taller than an individual who is, say, five feet tall? uh perhaps yeah okay so perhaps so what do you think is the probability that a seven foot tall person is going to have a child that is taller than a five foot uh person well i mean you have genetic factors of course and uh and like what you said it's both environment and genetic

Ian MalcolmBut in the case of Shaquille O'Neal, let's use him as an example, right? We could look at LeBron James. In fact, he's maybe a better one. I think LeBron James is probably something like 6'8", and his son, who's in the NBA, although a lot of people say he's a charity case, is maybe 6'3", which is still tall for your average person, but for professional basketball is short, right?

Ian MalcolmSo there is some variance there. But you would say that the odds that LeBron James, who, again, is, let's say, 6'8", the odds that his child is going to be taller than a person who is five and a half feet tall, regardless of their diet, you would say that the odds of that are what? They're low, they're high, they're somewhere in the middle?

Speaker 23I would imagine they're higher than average, but on the other hand, genetics can skip a generation. If he marries someone who is, I don't recall if he's married or not, if he marries someone who's four foot five, then it would be different.

Ian MalcolmThat's a very, so this is very interesting. cuz yes i think what you just said is you just actually implied the genetic variance in the application of those heights right you said well if lebron who even being tall has a child of somebody who's very short a woman that their kid might not be as tall right so wouldn't that lend itself to the very suggestion that i'm making that these things and it's not just height i think that i q is probably driven

Ian Malcolmin line with height, much more so than other things. And athleticism is probably also in the same ballpark. But my point is that these things have a very small nutritional or external impact, so little so that even people like Hitchlap that talk about this subject a lot will say that it's probably something like a half a standard deviation, which while maybe five or six or seven points on an IQ scale, it's not nearly as impactful as literally the blood that goes through your veins.

Speaker 23Yeah, I say that in my opinion, science hasn't progressed. This is a new science. It's only about 100 years old. And time will tell. I believe the environment does in the long term over generations can have an impact. I mean, you can look at the look at us. About about a thousand years ago, we want to consider it very bright at all.

Speaker 23And now everything's changed. So maybe it's more slow, more long term. But I believe the environment can affect genetics. By definition. I mean, you have epigenetics, for example.

Speaker 14By definition, IQ is an epiphenomenon of nature, right? I mean, it's obviously we all came from the environment and also our genetics come from the environment. So obviously that's true. But one misapprehension I think you have is You cannot do a lot to elevate your IQ, this idea that you can do a lot, but you can do a great deal to lower your IQ.

Speaker 14Like you could become a dipsomaniac, you could drink a bunch of booze or take drugs or this sort of thing, but you can't really do... Now you can benefit, you can maximize that which you have, your own native resources, but you can't really... And the thing is, IQ is also a predictive indicator. And if it weren't accurate, if it didn't have a high degree...

Speaker 14a high capacity to predict future performance and outcome, then no one would believe it or listen to it. But we can do a thing called a retroscore where we can look at the data, we can say, we measured this IQ, and then we can go back and say, okay, these people, how did they end up performing? And then all of a sudden we can say, yeah, it was very predictive.

Speaker 14So that's basically something that we do know about IQ. It's not a big mystery here.

Speaker 23Oh, no, no, that is correct. It is predictive of overall lifetime success in health. I believe that. I'm just saying maybe in the long term, maybe it takes 100 years, perhaps.

Speaker 23between ethnicities was closing, I believe, in the 80s and 90s. So there was something to be said about that too. And perhaps if we focused more on education, we could correct it. I mean, wouldn't it be a great blessing to the world and to this country if we could correct any gaps whatsoever? If everyone could be pretty smart, that'd be a great blessing.

Speaker 23We sort of strive for it instead of abandoning it.

Speaker 14Well, I would say this. I think what you might be agreeing with me about is when you say being pretty smart, you know, we're talking about black violence and I always think about it. The subject is only interesting to me in order to make black people happier. And I worry about the children in these poor communities. And I would say to be happier, we do need to leverage our native resources better.

Speaker 14And education would certainly be a way to do that. So I agree with you that way. I don't think we can really, like jack up people's IQ, but I think we can get people to expropriate their native resources in a better way. And of course that would require the crime rate to go down and require us to rethink entirely the way we think about education.

Speaker 14What do you think about that?

Speaker 23Well, yes, I agree with that. More education and awareness is superior in many ways to just, you know, writing a strict law.

Ian MalcolmWell, I'm appreciative, Yitz, that you're bringing the nature with us. We referenced When Nature Calls, the Ace Ventura film earlier, so I appreciate the birds that are in the background. And well stated. So, Yitz, but you would agree, if I'm not mistaken, so IQ, very large genetic factor. You do think that IQ is a very reasonable thing to evaluate.

Ian MalcolmDo you think that it's reasonable for societies to say that they do not want to be overwhelmed with individuals that are from places that historically have been tested to have low IQs?

Speaker 23Yeah, it's not going to work all the time. You're right, because if you're going to import people from the sword world, from the non-developed world, and throw them into the first world class societies, of course they're going to fail. It just makes sense. There would be more crime. So we could either commit resources in their home countries, or when they come here, perhaps work harder and try to find a middle ground.

Speaker 23But I would just say real quick, Ian, that, like, for example, take the Indian population or the Nigerian population. Those countries, on average, are pretty poor. So if you have someone from India coming over to the United States, they're probably the smartest person. It's like the Iranian people in exile. The people who left Iran are probably, in some ways, you could argue, the smartest, and that's why they left.

Speaker 23That's why they got out of the...

@joann_marieThe IQ of Iranians in Iran is higher than the IQ of Iranians in other places. Iran is the fourth highest IQ in the world.

Ian MalcolmDo you think it's reasonable to suggest that individuals that are capable and thriving in their homelands would not up and leave everything that they know to go to a new place and that perhaps it is actually the impoverished and the otherwise destitute that might not have the high IQ IQs that would be willing to make that trade?

Speaker 23Well, yeah, so that's a different argument. I was making the case from countries like... those who try to escape Cuba or North... I mean, not Cuba, but like Iran, North Korea.

@joann_marieThose are two different... Again, Iran is the fourth highest, thank you, in the world. It's like way higher than America. No, no, no.

Speaker 23You are correct. You are correct. I'm agreeing with you. About 80% of Iranians have a university... degree to one extent or another. That is correct. They are a very smart, proud people with a very rich heritage. And only 40% of them will see a Muslim. Most of them are actually secular. And, you know, that's why they want freedom.

Speaker 23That's why they want to usurp... They don't know.

@joann_marieStop lying, kids.

Ian MalcolmI mean, he, he had to throw in the, that's why they want freedom. Uh, and yet prior to doing that, he talked about how the Iranians seemingly have very high qualities of life, uh, very intelligent people, all sorts of other compliments. And then at the very end, he was like, that's why they want to be free because everything is so bad.

Ian MalcolmDo you see how that's maybe a little bit illogical?

Speaker 23I'll just, I'll just tell you quickly how bad it is over there. Um, the watch was turned on. It's only turned on like six hours a day in Tehran. They don't have any watch. And, uh, a million dollars in their currency equals just one dollar in the United States currency. Yeah, because of sanctions. Well, but why are the sanctions in place?

Speaker 23Because they want to build nuclear weapons.

Ian MalcolmThey don't, though. It's been 42 years. And we know that.

Speaker 23I wanted to say one last point, Ian, if it's okay, I wanted to mention... You certainly can, let's go for it. Thank you, thank you. I wanted to mention about the Ethiopian Jews. It ties into how come Israel is successful with its affirmative action programs, and maybe we in America could learn from it. So in Israel in the 90s, they transported tens of thousands of Ethiopian Jews, and they gave them free housing, free healthcare, education.

Speaker 23welfare programs to help grow large families and the population grows today and they're all great citizens and there's no problem with them whatsoever, just like the Israeli Arabs. So, you know, when you see England falling apart, France falling apart from all of these migrants from the Arab world, you know, sometimes you look to Israel and you think, well, how come it works in Israel?

Speaker 23How come it doesn't work?

Ian MalcolmBut you would agree that Israel has very strict borders and does not allow essentially anybody that doesn't meet a certain set of criteria to enter their country, right?

Speaker 23No, no, no, no. That is true. That is true. Yes.

Ian MalcolmSo it's the inverse of what you're suggesting, right?

Speaker 23Well, well, well.

@joann_marieYou keep talking about the Ethiopian Jews. You literally gave them birth control without their knowledge, like the Provera or something like that.

Speaker 23That's incorrect.

@joann_marieNo, it is correct. There's studies on this, and they even think... I'll post the evidence in the next, because it's just, well, like, stop lying, kids.

Speaker 23Well, why would we spend millions to help their livelihood if we wanted to sterilize them? That doesn't make any sense.

Ian MalcolmI mean, why does the United States spend billions on Israel when they seemingly do all kinds of detrimental things to Americans?

Speaker 23Well, you know, they say that Mossad in the Middle East is like the equivalent of five CIAs. You know, billions, if not trillions of dollars. of intelligence, intelligence that America gets for free. You know, if we want to cut off the aid to Israel, I'm a proud advocate for that. I think Israel should be more independent and have its own autonomy.

Speaker 23But then everything should be fair. So the next time there's an Arab terrorist, and he's in a hotel room, let's say, in London, and he has a bomb strapped to him, and the Israelis know where he is... you know, maybe before we tell the Buddhists where he is.

@joann_marieI mean, the Israelis probably know where he is because they put the bomb themselves, right?

Speaker 23Well, I mean, my point is the next time before we let them, let the English, the Buddhists know what's going on, maybe we'll say, you know, pay us some money. It will become a two-way street.

Ian MalcolmMany European countries, especially the Germans, are already paying Israelis lots of money, right? Yes.

Speaker 23Yeah, those reparations, it's a different matter.

Ian MalcolmI understand. So am I hearing this correct, though, that you would support an end to all ties from the intelligence community and agencies and all sorts of other things with Israel? Is that fair?

Speaker 23Well, not exactly like that. I support the end of the aid. But we can have a joint, we can cooperate jointly all the same. There's no reason.

Ian MalcolmWhat would you say to someone like myself that wants America to cut every last tie to Israel and say, go do things and deal with your own problems yourself?

Speaker 23Well, I would say you want to be careful with that, Ian, because, you know, Israel, we have a great high tech community and they create great technologies and medicine. And I'm so America.

Ian MalcolmHow many of those companies that they have R&D facilities in Israel for are actually American companies?

Speaker 23I don't know that off the top of my head.

Ian MalcolmIt's the large overwhelming chunk of almost all of them. And I've got a video of Benjamin Netanyahu talking about how he's got his R&D engineers that helped to lead the R&D for Amazon, Apple, and a litany of other technology companies. Why wouldn't the United States in this case? Yeah. So why wouldn't the United States just say we are done with all of that and detach all of the tech, all of the R&D, do everything in-house and say middle finger to all that is Israel and its supremacy over the United States?

Speaker 23I mean, I mean, I disagree with the supremacy part of it, but, you know, you could remove that. You could you could remove all of the R&D centers. I mean, you can. But if you have really intelligent people, you know, ask another pretty, pretty bright. Why not have us help help you out? You know. It can be a joint front step, is my point.

Ian MalcolmBut I don't want it to be joint anything. I want to say I don't care how intelligent those individuals might think that they are. The United States has obviously extremely intelligent engineers, and we want to take all of that back.

Speaker 23Okay.

Ian MalcolmIs that a reasonable position?

Speaker 23Well, I'm not going to say whether it's reasonable or not, or what I'm going to say. No, no, in your assertion, is it reasonable? We can test it. in the real world. You could run for Congress like Dan and you could promote these ideas and, you know, see what happens. I think they would fail.

Ian MalcolmI appreciate that. I think that is a very reasonable suggestion. And look, for anybody listening, this is why I will always give Yitz a microphone, if nothing else. And if we disagree on almost everything, nonetheless, it's very reasonable in the presentation. Most of the, almost all the time, I should say, Yitz.

Speaker 23Yes, well, I thank you for giving me the mic because I enjoy speaking in different spaces. and giving my thoughts on them. But yeah, you know, I mean, you know, like with Dan and Randy Fine, you know, I support Randy, but we'll see what happens. And, you know, you know, the American people would decide if we live in a democracy, you know.

Ian MalcolmHow about a real quick question, Honey Badger, real quick. Yes. So if you had to give in no context, I'm going to ask you as if I am prompting Brock or AI. If Randy Fine's positions were fundamentally prioritizing Israel and Jews globally, and Dan Bilzerian's position was fundamentally prioritizing America and Americans.

Ian MalcolmWould you vote for Dan Bilzerian?

Speaker 23I would say that... unfortunately for your prompt, Randy Fine has a big American flag in his office and he is... No, but he's also got a big Israeli flag and we both know that.

Ian MalcolmSo Yitz, I'm going to ask you again, if Randy Fine, the fat Jew, had a platform prioritizing Israel and Dan Bilzerian...

Speaker 23But he doesn't. If he did, you know, I would not vote for Dan.

Speaker 14Maybe a different candidate, but... Do you understand the concept of a hypothetical? So when you put the word if in front, it's a big hint. The hypothetical is coming.

Speaker 23Yeah, yeah, yeah. But you're not answering. Like, like, yes, yes. I'll reverse this for you.

Ian MalcolmYes, yes. I'll reverse this and maybe it'll make it easier. If Dan Bilzerian or anybody else had a platform that was prioritizing Israel and global Jewish interests over America and Americans, and they were running against a Jew who was prioritizing America and Americans saying, I'm indifferent to global Jewish interests in Israel, I would vote for the Jew.

Ian MalcolmI'm going like very clear. I'm going to prioritize individuals that are working in good faith for the benefit of their people. That seems like a reasonable position to take. So I'm going to ask you again, if a non-Jew was running against the Jew and the Jew was going to be detrimental to the country that you are living in and the non-Jew was going to prioritize you and your country, would you vote for the Jew?

Speaker 23It happens to be that I don't live in Florida, so I can't vote for him. Why can't you do it?

Speaker 14It always means yes, by the way. He's always answering in the way that he doesn't want to answer by punting. Like, for instance, watch this, everyone else.

Speaker 23That's your interpretation, David.

Speaker 14We're not stupid. I have to say, this is the big blind spot. that Jewish supremacists have. You think that we're so dumb, we don't see it. Like for everybody in the room, watch this. Yitz, if America and Israel were at war, which side would you take?

Speaker 23That's never going to happen.

@joann_marieJust answer the question.

Speaker 18David made his point. David made his point. Yitz, I mean, you did really, I mean, you did practice a lot of self-restraint today. And for that, I commend you. Ian did give you a lot of real estate, though, let's be honest. But at the same time, you know, like I'm surprised because you guys typically just come in and interrupt and blow up the space and make it all about yourselves.

Speaker 18But you really did handle yourself well. And we were going to like, but with amongst all of you guys, you get my vote for America's next top Jew. You know, we were actually going to bring you all into a space and just have you kind of like, you know, make your case for who is. America's Next Top Jew, but I think that, you know, with your showing today, I mean, you have my vote.

Speaker 18Maybe we'll still try it. I mean, we tried it. We tagged y'all, but we got botted and there ended up being like 22,000 listeners to my space. So we had to rug it, unfortunately. But yeah, I will invite you next time we do it and hopefully we won't get botted again.

Speaker 23Thanks again. Yeah, yeah. And I just want to clarify, you know, David's question. No two democracies have ever gone to war with each other. Hold on, hold on.

Speaker 14You're not clarifying my questions. First of all, Hold on, hold on. The American Revolution was fought by... The participants in the American Revolution were consanguineous. They were from the same blood, for goodness sakes. All right? The hypothetical is not unreasonable, okay? And it's hypothetical. You could easily answer.

Speaker 14So this idea that, oh, that's not going to happen... Okay, well, then wouldn't it be easier to answer the question? If you think that it's so, you can't say, unless you want to just punt on reason itself, that it's impossible, because we know that it's not impossible, right? So what you're saying is it's highly improbable.

Speaker 14Okay, so I'm asking you, if a highly improbable thing happens where America and Israel fight in a war against each other, which side will you take?

Speaker 23I'll answer it like this. If, God forbid, if America became an anti-Semitic hellhole... No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no.

Speaker 14I didn't say any of those things. If America and Israel, right, because obviously America's not anti-Semitic... because the majority of Americans are against you killing all the Semites, okay? So Israel is killing all the Semites around them. So as pro-Semitics, we want you to stop exterminating Semites. That's as pro-Semitic as you can get.

Speaker 14That's why the majority of Americans are against this war as well, by the way. But my question is, no other aspects to it, because I'm from America, so it's one country. This is easy. In fact, I'll try the question on Ian. Ian, if America and Israel get in a war together against each other, who would you support?

Speaker 22America.

Speaker 14Okay, good. See how easy that is? Now, let's go back to this. If America and Israel, the highly improbable, as you say, a war between America and Israel happened, which side would you take?

Speaker 23Well, like I said, David, I'm trying to be honest. No two democracies. No, you're not. You're not trying to.

Speaker 14Hold on. No, no. No, no. I'm not asking you statistics on the probability of it, okay? But hold on, hold on, hold on. But you understand, you cannot say that it's impossible, right? And still be a logical or reasonable person, right? No physicist would say something is impossible that's possible, right? So it's clearly possible.

Speaker 14And what you're saying is it's highly improbable. And what I'm asking you is... And by the way, one thing that people with low IQ can't do is they can't accept hypotheticals. They don't understand averages, and they can't do hypotheticals. I'm giving you credit with someone who can. So if the highly improbable, as you're saying, thing happens where America and Israel get in a battle together, get in a war together, whose side will you take?

Speaker 23Well, I prefer not to say.

Speaker 14Okay, all right, all right. I think that says it all, but listen. That's a good answer. I don't think I can get you any further than that. I don't think you can.

Ian MalcolmBut Honey Badger, so please ensure to send me a message. I would love to listen in. And Yitz, you could participate on America's Top Jew! And brought to you by the Honey Badger & Co. I'm going to be very curious for the, let's say, the exercises that they have you do to showcase if you are the top Jew. but yet, as always, I think you do a very reasonable job of being reasonable-ish, and I say the is just because the questions that David asked should have been pretty direct, and sometimes you obfuscate, but we expect those kind of things, and so at least you do it in a way that is polite and reasonable, so lots of love for you.

Speaker 23Yes, Ian, if I could just make one more point to what David said about the Gaza genocide real quickly, and then you can go to other speakers, if that's all right.

Ian MalcolmGo for it, and then we'll go to Orwell.

Speaker 23Yeah, thank you. Thank you. So I just wanted to say that, you know, David said, you know, that most Americans support, you know, Hamas rather than Israel now.

Speaker 14Hold on, straw man, straw man. I never said most Americans support Hamas. I understand. If Americans supported Hamas, they'd be willing to give millions and millions of dollars to them. Oh, wait, enough about Netanyahu. He did that. Benjamin Netanyahu gave Hamas all the money. Americans have never given any money. They don't support Hamas.

Speaker 14So that's incorrect.

Speaker 23Okay.

Speaker 14They just don't listen. Listen. Hold on. They just don't like genocide. So it's a weird, it's a controversial take, but it's not going to be one you understand, but most Americans are against genocide. Israelis are like, what? Genocide is a good thing. Americans are like, nah, not so much.

Speaker 23Yeah. A thousand and one apologies, David. But, but I want to explain real quickly why I don't think it is a genocide. Number one, the, the, The Al-Mawassi humanitarian zone was never attacked by Israel during the entire conflict. And then also in Rafah, for example, we gave weeks and weeks and weeks for the people to evacuate, even though that meant Hamas terrorists could take advantage of that and exploit that and save their own skins.

Speaker 23And then finally, you know, I would add that, you know, Israel, I believe it was 600,000, I believe, I think it was 600,000 of children under 10, they were vaccinated for the polio virus, for polio, by Israelis. And then, of course, you know, we sent, you know, 3,000, thousands of troops in door-to-door operations, risking IDF blood and treasure.

Speaker 23A genocide doesn't do that. You just bomb everyone from the air and be done with it. So, you know, these are good points.

Ian MalcolmHang on. You would agree that a genocide can take place without a nuclear bomb, right?

Speaker 23It doesn't have to be. Yeah, yeah, yeah. It could be a strike.

Ian MalcolmSo the degree of a genocide can vary, right?

Speaker 23Yeah, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 14But the idea that we would never knew you would you would suffer from the same nuclear fallout. No, no, that's true.

Ian MalcolmYou can recognize that there could be a degree of genocide and that saying they could have genocided them way harder does not negate a genocide, right?

Speaker 23Well, look, the civilian to combat ratio is about one to one, maybe two to one at most. But in Iraq, it was three to one. No, that's not right.

@joann_marieEven the IDF said that it was over 80%.

Speaker 23Yeah, well, you know, we live in a world of alternative facts because the world is from our interpretation subjective.

Ian MalcolmWe'll just sweep those facts under the rug, Joanne.

Speaker 23Yeah, it's a genocide.

Speaker 14Listen, we're not going to get Ted Bundy's lawyer to say he's a bad guy, but why don't we just go ahead and go to our next subject.

Ian MalcolmLet's go to the next speaker. Let's go to Orwell. Thank you for giving me the mic, Ian.

Speaker 23Thank you for giving me the mic. Thank you for giving me the mic.

Ian MalcolmOf course, and thank you, Yitz, for always being so polite. I really appreciate it.

Speaker 3Hey, what's going on? Thanks for doubling back to me, man. Holy shit, a lot has been touched on, so I'm going to have to try to work in reverse order here. But first out, a shout-out to David. Just came across him, obviously, in the last space that you hosted, and I appreciate the patience that he has with these thought experiments.

Speaker 3The first tell for me was that I'm trying to be honest. Anytime somebody tells me that they're trying to be honest, I kind of have an issue with that. It's like I dropped the remote and I'm trying to pick it up. Get the fuck out of here with that. Anyways, he was polite, and I'm not trying to insult him.

Speaker 14I always make that joke to my wife where I'll say, because, you know, you say, to be honest. I'll say, to be honest, you know how I normally lie to you? Well, I'm going to be honest now and tell you this. For some reason, she keeps thinking that's funny, you know?

Speaker 3Right, the implication. There's an implication there, whether some people realize it or not. It's kind of a tell, but, you know... So a lot of things were mentioned here while I was patiently listening. DEI was mentioned with the fucking Artemis mission for fuck's sake. All right, so we had that. We talked about affirmative action.

Speaker 3All of these things typically sprout out apologists. People want to be an apologist for the failure of the thing that they're so... invested in for whatever the reason that they might be invested in this thing right and so you look at the fruits that are born from these things that are are not um what they they claim to be by design they're masquerading as one thing while they're completely and totally a trojan horse um let's just touch on dei for a second with the united states of america for example um we have judges we have judges that were not they were not chosen on merit they were chosen

Speaker 3because of the way that they look because an artificial quota had been invented and we have people who have been arrested 60 70 times for violent crimes that are back in the community killing us right so again back to the diversity is our strength how strong do you feel with all this diversity um that that might have been well intentioned by the people you know that pushed the idea of dei same with uh

Speaker 3The same with affirmative action, right? That's the way that it's sold to you. But the root cause, right, is who's doing the selling? Who's doing the selling and what is the end game of selling this to a population when it is very, very obvious what the end result is, the fruits that it bore and what it has produced? And then we run into a situation where we're no longer allowed to talk about the fruits that your pet project bore.

Speaker 3So what is the root cause, right? Who? is the the who is the group that pushed these things upon the people and and we're bought and sold i apologize i'm losing my voice so i do hope i'm i'm coming through relatively manageable but it's it's one of those things um the subversives the jew i will name the jew and i'm not afraid to name the jew and i don't care are

Speaker 3they're pretty cunning, they're pretty sneaky, and they recognize back to another thing that we were discussing kind of at length here is, well, IQ and genetics, both very important topics for very important reasons. What is going on in Iran and what Joanne mentioned is the incredibly high IQ of the people native to this region.

Speaker 3You can see the same thing occurring in Europe through a different bioweapon, through a different channel, through a different means, right? But It's all pointing to the same end. It's all landing in the same place. The subversives recognize that their inferior and their jealousy and their rage is what fuels this bloodlust.

Speaker 3What better thing to do if you've decided that your enemy is somebody that is... superior to you in intelligence closure for example than to slowly but surely play the long game of eliminating that in one way or another whether it be bombing iran for whatever the pretext is to do that whether it be importing through the diversity is our strength campaign all of these migrants that have completely and totally transformed europe and the culture of europe into something that is completely and totally unrecognizable

Speaker 3that's what we have here and so you can you can it's very easy to get um caught up in the minutia with people who want to consume your time on on the uh the things that they want to be an apologist for the merits of it the intention was this the intention was that yeah that's how it was sold but no if you look a little bit further back that's it had nothing to do with the intention that was just a selling point and the people that bought it unfortunately were the people that

Speaker 3weren't smart enough to see it and here we are right here we are how many years later on affirmative action beyond my lifetime okay years were decades and decades and decades of this slowly but surely eroding our system of quote unquote justice right

Speaker 3yeah so hey i'm gonna wrap that up here and we can get back to i don't know the misdirection and the misleading that we get from speakers who want to be apologists for but at the end of the day the point that i'm trying to make is the people with the iq the ones in here raising these points that get attacked for pointing out objective reality are not the enemy they're not okay we didn't create the system we're pointing out that it exists

Speaker 3that we have to exist within it, and we're trying to rationally and reasonably discuss solutions to it, and the conversation gets derailed quite easily by people who just want to be a fucking time vacuum. Excuse the language here. And I don't know, I just find it very unproductive. But shout out to David for the patience, and I'll end it there.

Speaker 23We know what your solution is. It's another holocaust. It's not going to happen.

Speaker 14What, wait, you mean like the one that you committed in Russia?

Speaker 3Or, oy vey, what's with all of the being tired of genocide? Like, you don't want to be anti-Semitic. It's the same tired trope with you people. Stop it.

Speaker 14Yeah, well, you know, this is, and don't forget, this is a Holocaust denier. They killed 40 million Anglos, and it's the same thing they're doing in Ukraine right now. They killed 40 million Anglos in Russia, and he denies that. He's like, no, we didn't do that. So, you know, take it for what it's worth. I will say about DEI itself, though.

Speaker 14It doesn't help anybody. You know, Thomas Sowell tells the story. Thomas Sowell tells the story, black economist, obviously, and brilliant philosopher. And he says that before DEI, he said it was in the Marines, he was a photographer, and white guys, country boys, would come up to him and ask him, like, to fix their cameras or...

Speaker 14teach him about photography. He said, they just assumed that I had to work a little bit harder to get where I was than they did. So I must have really known my stuff. He said, fast forward to after the DEI stuff. And I'm a professor of economics. And I have this kid questioning whether I'm interpreting the textbook correctly.

Speaker 14He said, son, I wrote the damn textbook. So yeah, I think I am interpreting it correctly. He said, but I understand from his perspective why he would do that. because he's thinking maybe I got my job for some other reason than merit. Well, this is the worst thing. You know, F.A. Hayek, who wrote The Road to Serfdom, said that the four great qualities of Western civilization are Anglo-Saxon qualities, which are risk-taking, ingenuity, tolerance, and independence.

Speaker 14And what a worse affront to Western civilization than to say that you're going to get somewhere based on something besides your merit. And then the second part of it is it creates a sense of entitlement. So it's terrible for the people that are actually the supposed beneficiaries of DEI. You would never want someone to teach your son or your daughter that they're entitled to anything but their native rights.

Speaker 14You would never want that. you would be hamstringing them in a way that no sort of rigging against them or no sort of exogenous force could ever do to them. Because what you're telling them is they deserve something for which they couldn't otherwise earn on their own. So that's a really important distinction to make.

Speaker 23No, I don't deny that Stalin murdered millions, but I do have to go, and thank you for the mic.

@joann_marieAnd also, Yitz, I posted the evidence that revealed Israeli military-owned data indicates civilian death rate at 83% in Gaza. So I always have receipts, okay?

Speaker 14Yeah, and I would say that for Yitz, when he was talking about their immigration policy, it's entirely different than what his Jewish brothers and sisters that are supremacists his Jewish supremacists have done to Western civilization because they have been supporting the main proponents of mass immigration of Western civilization.

Speaker 14I will agree with him, admit to the fact that I'm sure that Israel has a very, very rational immigration policy because they operate in their own self-interest. But what they propose for the rest of, even Charlie Kirk said, why is it that the Jewish mostly Jewish donors, are inveigling people across our border to break our laws.

Speaker 14Well, you know they would never do that to themselves. So hypocrisy is a feeble word to describe that.

@joann_marieI have no state for me, but not for thee.

Speaker 3100%. And David, to your point, that's something I would never do to my children. I would never do that to my children for that very reason. I would be stifling their potential. I would be stifling their growth if I just told them they were entitled to something because of, well, fill in the blank, right? But we have a whole ethnostate and a subsect and a group of people who believe that that's the way that they get to operate, and they get to operate that way with impunity.

Speaker 3And anybody that has an issue with that is, well, now you're a naughty word. They attach a label to you. Well, the label no longer works. And Dan Bilzerian has pointed this out rightly. Your words have no power. You have literally... stolen any little bit of power that word might have ever had with your actions your blood thirst your blood lust and it's it's on display at large for the rest of the world to see but yeah i the the dei thing it's just uh it's another um it's another subvertive subversive tactic it's quite parasitic and it's detrimental to any society that would adopt it amen

@joann_marieThank you so much, Rowan. Okay, so guys, please repost this space. Follow Ian and David and our amazing, amazing speakers. And thank you so much for being here. Is Megalodon still in the speakers? Hi, I'm glitching because he was next.

Speaker 3Yeah, he's down there.

@joann_marieOkay, go for it, Megalodon. Oh, no, no, she's not. He left. Okay, hopefully he comes back. Okay, Audrey, go for it.

Speaker 15Hi everybody.

Speaker 15So I, you know, I'm from Holland, right?

Speaker 14You're from where?

Speaker 15Holland, from the Netherlands.

Speaker 14Yeah, I begreep it.

Speaker 15Like the ICC, where Netanyahu has been named as a war criminal.

Speaker 14That is deterrent, yeah?

Speaker 15Yeah. so uh oh my gosh where do i begin why does anybody invite this not jewish person into their country i don't understand it i'm sorry are you talking about netanyahu yeah you're right i i think we should invite him in slap the handcuffs on him and throw him in jail yeah because uh in the netherlands we have this icc this international criminal system in the hague where rita has now been uh evicted for uh being uh like this uh super national uh nato uh criminal with this

Speaker 15very long nose he lies to everybody but uh in in that way uh i invite this icc international criminal common sense for everybody in the world to arrest this criminal And I'm not the only one. It's written in The Hague.

Speaker 15He's being charged for genocide.

Speaker 15And it doesn't take intelligence or...

Speaker 15When somebody is being charged for genocide, they should be arrested.

@joann_marieYeah, but the West is protecting him. So hopefully soon, hopefully he will go.

Ian MalcolmWell, and to that point, right, the ICC made that statement and levied those charges. And then of all people, Donald Trump came out and said, we are going to sanction you guys. Right. The United States came to the aid of Israel, saying essentially, how dare you charge this man with genocide, which we all witnessed, which even Yitz just acknowledged resulted in the death of countless civilians and casualties, both women and children.

Ian MalcolmRight. So this is crazy. And to that point, why is no nation doing that? Well, because most nations are complicit in it. They're going to protect Netanyahu. They're going to protect Jewish supremacy. You know, Keir Starmer will talk. a big game from time to time, but he's not going to do anything because he's married to a Jew and his cabinet is disproportionately Jewish and his donors were Jewish and on and on and on.

Ian MalcolmRight? And so the good news is that's what we are essentially bringing light on. And I think we will ultimately assist in the, the demise of, and I don't say that kinetically, I'm not encouraging violence or any of that. Uh, but like Mr. Nietzsche would always say, you know, the lie needs to be told over and over a million times.

Ian MalcolmSo, and the truth can just be whispered. and shatter that entire illusion. That's what we're trying to do day by day, and our cause grows as a result. And so I think you're gonna see, and I said last year that this year we would see, actually no, at the beginning of 2025, I said that you would have a mainstream news program that would discuss Jewish supremacy.

Ian MalcolmAnd sure enough, we had Tucker Carlson doing exactly that. Granted, he wasn't on the mainstream networks, but it's impossible to not refer to him as a mainstream commentator. He's certainly even bigger than Candace Owens, who also, of course, discussed it. So now you're going to see Jewish supremacy, that was the prediction of this year, on the mainstream as a significant talking point.

Ian MalcolmAnd with Dan Bilzerian running for office, I don't know how that doesn't become the case. Because TMZ can try to drag Dan and say, how dare you say these naughty words? But the media is going to have to do one of two things, either completely ignore Dan Bilzerian's campaign against Randy Fine, or more likely to blast him as an anti-Semite from every microphone that they get, which is what they will do.

Ian MalcolmBut when they talk about him, it's the Streisand effect. And the more they discuss him, the more inevitably people will have to force the issue of Jewish supremacy. And so, David, I'm almost curious for your thought as we get ready to wind down the space here on how Dan Bilzerian, who, David, I hope you're able to join.

Ian MalcolmWe're going to be speaking with him, with Joanne, with Truth Teller on Tuesday about his campaign. I am curious, David, in your assertion, is Dan Bilzerian as big and famous as he is and certainly well-funded? Is he going to be the watershed moment where your average American, even if they don't accept our worldview, they're forced to confront the possibility that Jews have far too much power, prospectively not just over politics, but over just about everything?

Speaker 14Can I just ask you one question? Well, I mean, let me answer the question first. Well, divided loyalty is no loyalty at all. And I think it is going to be an important moment of something because it'll be demonstrative of that fact. We have someone who is loyal to a foreign country that immiserates us in a thousand different ways, ran a blackmail operation against our politicians.

Speaker 14and draws us into wars at our expense and to their benefit. So I think that if Dan can stick to that, and the second thing, and I am really interested in joining this space, is he has to be really heavy on the message of love and emancipation. I mean, that's it. Including maybe a message that inspires our Jewish brothers and sisters that agree with us,

Speaker 14like Dave Smith, for instance, to support him. So it really has to be that because they're going to try to paint him as someone who is anti another rather than pro us. And that really is going to be the defining moment of that interaction. I don't know what's going to happen in the debate. Obviously, I know the other side is well funded, but I will tell you something.

Speaker 14I'm sure that the other side is far more scared of this for the reasons that you just expressed again, they don't want a fair showing. They don't, you know, when truth and falsity share a stage with an equal opportunity to talk, guess who wins, right? I mean, guess, when he stands there and says, I'm against Jewish supremacy, I'm against the genocide, I'm against, you know, I'm not loyal to any other country besides this one, and the other guys, blah, blah, blah, you know, I think we're going to, I think we're going to see a lot of, a lot of

Speaker 14frantic sort of pre-responses by the media before that really gets down and dirty. What do you think?

Ian MalcolmWell, absolutely. And the wild piece, and I'm so glad that Dan brought this up when he talked to the TMZ folks, and they were kind of caught off guard because they accused Dan of saying these, you know, naughty words, essentially. And they called him, of course, an anti-Semite. And he brought up, well, does that make Randy Fine?

Ian MalcolmIs he anti all Islam, right? Is he an Islamophobe? Because he called for literally the genocide of all of these people. And so given that case, he just turned the mirror and held it up to them and said, this is what you are defending. And that's why Randy Fine, he's almost the perfect caricature of this absurd system, right?

Ian MalcolmHe's terribly out of shape. The guy can't walk up a flight of stairs. And he's contrasted to Dan Bilzerian, who can probably bench press 350 pounds and has made tens of millions of dollars. And I was talking about this with Truth Teller via messaging, that Dan Bilzerian, if nothing else, you can make all kinds of accusations about his lifestyle prior to the present iteration, right?

Ian MalcolmBut one thing you can't accuse him of is of being a loser. The guy was surrounded by the most beautiful of women, regardless of how they got there. Right. He's got his tens of millions, if not hundreds of millions of dollars. He's obviously done very, very successful things with his life. And as a result, his critics, they can't say, Dan, you're just unhappy about the state of things because it doesn't benefit you.

Ian MalcolmHe can say, no, I've won in the system. I got all the things. And this is one of the things that I hope to share with him that he can frame it in this regard, which is he got to the top of the mountain. He got all the social fame, all the money, all the finances, all the materialism, all the vanity, all the hedonism. And at the end of it, I saw him in an interview where he said all of it meant nothing.

Ian MalcolmAnd that he's now with a single woman. He's reformed his life. He's going back to what you would call a traditional nuclear family. He's trying to speak out against that which he finds evil. And his life now has meaning. And you put him up to fat Randy Fine as the contrast. who is literally celebrated the genocide of the Palestinians, who clearly prioritizes Israel and Jewish interests, and who will probably not be able to say straight face.

Ian MalcolmDan Bilzerian could just say, who do you prioritize, Israelis or Americans? And we know that because Stu Peters had that exact question asked of all these politicians who refused to answer it. So the same way that Yitz couldn't say that he stands with America over Israel in a war, well, then Bilzerian should ask the exact same thing.

Ian Malcolmof Randy Fine and to expose how preposterous the system is. It's no longer remotely subvert folks. This is an overt hostile takeover of your country, of your people and truly of your civilization because they're trying to terraform it in every aspect. And so David, I think this is, it will be comical to see the two of them.

Ian MalcolmI cannot wait to support Dan as he debates this guy. And all he has to do is to just live in the fact and to your point, not oppose let's say Jews carte blanche, but rather just to love that which he stands for, which is his country, his people and their prosperity. And I don't see how anybody could look at that and say, wow, that's a hateful bigot.

Ian MalcolmInstead, they're gonna say that is a proud patriotic person and will probably be inspired to get behind it.

Speaker 14Well, my advice to him would be take the cudgels they're going to hit you with out of their hand and hit them back. Accused them of genocide, accused them of being bigots. accuse them of not believing in equality because obviously you think you're the master race. Whatever cudgel you think they're going to hit you with, just snatch it out of their hand.

Speaker 14That's what Steven Seagal did, right? I mean, if you reached out the arm, he used that. He used that. He's got, oh, let me, oh, this is an arm. Oh, good. I'll take this snap. You know, whatever they're going to throw at you, use that, weaponize that instead of play defense. Never play defense against these guys. Never do.

Speaker 14Because if they accuse you of being a bad person and you say, no, no, I'm a good person. Well, you're already on the defensive, don't do it. Who least deserves to put you on the defensive than these people? I mean, they were in no position to lecture us about anything, being pro-genocide, pro-pornography, pro-deracination of everything that makes our country great, including our morals.

Speaker 14No, no, no. He should play offense all the time. My question to you is, do you really think there's going to be a debate?

Ian MalcolmThat is a wonderful question. And I think what will probably happen is Randy Fine will take the position. that he is above a debate with an anti-Semite, that he cannot dare to converse with Dan Bilzerian in his evil ways. I think that's probably what comes out of this. But what I would recommend as we wind down the conversation, I apologize for anybody that wanted to come up, but going to have to close this out.

Ian MalcolmIf there is going to be an afterspace, either via Joanne or any of the other wonderful speakers up here, I will certainly recommend they put that into the purple pill to continue the discourse. But as we wind it down, what I do want to recommend is for that space on Tuesday with Dan, I'm, I am just riding along. I am the Robin to Mr.

Ian MalcolmTruth teller and his Batman. And he is an absolute legend. And so I do not want to have any more direction or involvement than he would offer. And I want it to be his show. That said, what I would advise for anybody that might be able to attend is to bring essentially a question and a simplistic solution that Dan could prospectively.

Ian Malcolminject into his campaign, whether it's via rhetoric, whether it's people that he could connect with, organizations that he should be around. Because what I would love to be able to do is to basically have the collective genius and ingenuity of the wonderful speakers and individuals that we have as part of our movement to be able to put forward not only those questions, but also those recommendations so that we can harness our collective brilliance, that we can assist with his cause, with his campaign, that we can hopefully force someone like Randy Fiennes

Ian MalcolmA little waddling self to come up onto a debate stage to dare to take on the truth that Dan Bilzerian will share, the sunlight that is that truth, and the obvious nature that it demonstrates when anybody who is uncertain of these ideas is forced to confront it. And so we will win. I think Dan Bilzerian is a wonderful champion.

Ian MalcolmThere's a couple other individuals that are running for office. I also, I got a note from Casey Putsch. who wanted to have a conversation with us next week. So we'll be trying to set that up as well. Any and everybody, if they are taking a stance in the public, they need some eyeballs, they need some support. Please send them my way.

Ian MalcolmHappy to do whatever I can to try and construct conversations that productively advance our efforts. Because at the end of the day, whether you're white, black, or anything in between, We all benefit from a removal of the boot that is this one Jewish supremacist system. It is not only bringing down that which I would define as the white Western Christian world.

Ian MalcolmIt is also in the process, it's agitating and let's say weaponizing all of the others against one another. That's blacks against whites, that's whites against browns, that's yellows against white, everything in between. And what we need to realize is that humanity is beautiful. It is beautiful because it is so different.

Ian MalcolmThat's why all of you, if you have not done so, Try to travel. If you can't travel the world because of the cost and the finance, travel your community. Travel a couple states over, a nation over, whatever you can do. Talk to your neighbors. Because isn't it wild? It's a way to round this all out, despite the fact that, yes, we did talk about disproportionate violence.

Ian MalcolmAnd it is insane that 85% of the inmates in Swiss prisons are inmates that are either not Swiss nationals or aren't Swiss by ethnicity. They are being overrun by a group of people that are committing all sorts of crime and ruining their society. That same thing is happening across the entire planet. So I don't care if you're the Japanese, you're the Swiss, you're the Puerto Ricans, whatever you are, I will try to defend your world to make it better against this Jewish supremacist system.

Ian MalcolmAnd what we will realize is that in ending that enslavement for the West. Everyone will thrive because as that system is put to rest, I don't say that kinetically, but intellectually, financially, spiritually, everyone else will be able to thrive. The third world will be able to be the second world, not because it exports all of its poverty, but because it builds up its civilization.

Ian MalcolmYou remove the central banking system in the same way that it took shape in Germany as a post Weimar situation. The same way they had a labor-backed currency, they thrived. They economically soared. They became the German miracle. That was the revolution of their economy. So will the rest of the world. Let our wonderful people of all their various cultures, let them thrive.

Ian MalcolmAnd the world will be a far better place for it. And so I want to thank you. I want to thank everybody for coming in here, for being part of this conversation. A massive amount of thanks. not just to the always wonderful co-hostess with the mostest, Ms. Joanne, but the intelligent as anyone, Mr. David Nietzsche. The guy is an absolute mastermind.

Ian MalcolmI'm humbled that they are here with us. Also, a big thanks to Mr. V, who is up here with us, and some of the other wonderful speakers. That includes everybody who's up here. That includes everybody, for what it's worth, that came in and shared their opinions, even those that I tried to embarrass. Because at the end of the day, we should all revere and respect free speech.

Ian MalcolmThat is the ethos of our people. And when we allow individuals to come up, what do you know? Some of them make absolute fools of themselves. They just exemplify the very positions that we share. Isn't it curious? We did it with Yitz, who was very polite. So lots of love, even to Jewish Yitz that's out there, right? But he came up and David asked him directly, if Israel attacks the United States, where are your loyalties?

Ian MalcolmThat shouldn't be a difficult question, but it is for the likes of Yitz. It probably would be for Randy Fine. And as we continue to expose that, the psychology, that outgroup animus that clearly exists, right? We need to expose that because at the end of the day, it drags everybody down. It is the poison to our system.

Ian MalcolmIt is the parasite on our economy. We will win. We will thrive. And so for everybody and anybody that's out there that's listening, either present or future, I wish you nothing but the best of mornings, of afternoons, and of good nights. I wish you certainly God bless for everything that you are. Godspeed on our adventure.

Ian MalcolmAnd that it is, it will have its ups and downs. But right now we are clearly in the driver's seat, folks. This conversation will continue picking up steam. And as it does, even those that currently are unwary, maybe they're a little bit concerned. They're a little bit hesitant and reluctant to touch the third rail that is Jewish supremacy.

Ian MalcolmThey will see the likes of us and Dan Bilzerian willing to stand up and say, why? Why should we tolerate politicians that can't prioritize our own country? That is insane. And the masses will see it. And as they do, they will flock to our cause. And that's why you're seeing on the timelines of Instagram, on Facebook, on YouTube, and on X, you're seeing people questioning Jewish power.

Ian MalcolmThis is a conversation that three years ago was virtually non-existent. And I know because I tried to have it for a long, long time, but we are winning. We will get more and more support. We will garner more and more politicians that advocate our cause. And as David was saying, in the media, they're in a bind. They either talk about it openly and try and deny the things that we suggest, or they just avoid the conversation altogether.

Ian MalcolmAnd if they do the latter, well, then they essentially acknowledge that we've already won the conversation. So continue winning, everybody. Win in your communities. Win with your friends. Win with your family. Win with your place of work, with your place of education, enablement. Make yourself as strong, as competent, as intelligent, and as healthy as you can with every aspect of your body.

Ian MalcolmPray to your creator if you believe in one. And if you don't, ask why that is. And if perhaps it's Jewish supremacy and their push, their subversion of that which is religious that might have gotten you in the place that you're in. That's just my perspective. You're welcome to yours. But if you oppose Jewish supremacy, I don't care if you believe in a creator.

Ian MalcolmBecause what I do believe and I know with certainty is not the God above. That is my belief, not a certainty. But my certainty is that Jewish supremacy is destroying the planet. So let's protect it together. With that, I wish you nothing but the absolute best, all the love. We will see you guys in the next space, probably prior to that one with Mr. Bilzerian.

Ian MalcolmAnd in the interim, if anybody does host one on your own as a follow-up to this, please just put it in the purple pill so that individuals can find you. Lots of love wherever you are in the world, and we will see you in the next conversation.