X SpaceApril 17, 2026·4.0 hours·with @kle_mont

Bringing Class Back To the Black Community

Ian Malcolm introduces the topic of restoring class and sophistication to the Black community, questioning its decline.

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Chapters — 14
  1. 0:00Bringing Class Back to Black CommunityIan Malcolm introduces the topic of restoring class and sophistication to the Black community, questioning its decline.
  2. 11:55Claremont's Background and MotivationClaremont shares his upbringing by a traditional grandmother and his journey to Twitter, noticing societal degradation.
  3. 15:04Pop Culture's Degenerate InfluenceThe discussion highlights how pop culture has shifted from positive role models like Carlton Banks to promoting degeneracy.
  4. 31:32Lack of Black Male Role ModelsThe panel discusses the scarcity of positive role models for young Black men, contrasting with past figures like Denzel Washington.
  5. 43:37Jewish Control and Cultural DegradationClaremont asserts that Jewish influence aims to control and degrade Black culture, contributing to societal division.
  6. 1:05:39Slavery, Reparations, and the JQThe conversation delves into the complexities of slavery, reparations, and the role of Jewish power in historical and present-day issues.
  7. 1:27:39Weaponization of VulnerabilitiesRabbi discusses how biological and cultural vulnerabilities within the Black community are exploited for profit and control.
  8. 1:42:09The Disappearance of Uncle PhilThe panel laments the absence of strong, positive Black family figures in modern pop culture, contrasting with past shows like Fresh Prince.
  9. 1:51:19IQ, Education, and African IdentityA heated debate erupts over IQ, education, and the identity of African immigrants versus Black Americans, with differing perspectives on progress.
  10. 2:22:55The Blueprint of Cultural AttackForty details how gangsta rap and welfare policies were used to systematically dismantle the Black family and community structure.
  11. 2:50:59Exposing the Subversion MachineIan Malcolm and other speakers expose the tactics of subversion and propaganda used to divide communities and maintain control.
  12. 3:04:48The Return to Morality and HonorDavid Nietzsche emphasizes the importance of returning to morality, honor, and courage to combat the forces of demoralization.
  13. 3:12:59Spiritual Battle and UnityClaremont concludes by highlighting the spiritual nature of the struggle and the need for unity and honest conversation to overcome societal challenges.
  14. 3:21:59Winning the Cultural WarThe panel expresses optimism about winning the cultural war by exposing truth, fostering kindness, and uniting against common enemies.

The Transcript

Ian MalcolmWell, all right, ladies and gentlemen, this will be an interesting one. And hopefully the music came in decently, sometimes better than others. I haven't really figured out the why. I've tried a whole bunch of different speakers. Andy, so first and foremost, was the music able to come in? And if so, do you have any idea why it would have started off this space with that musical choice?

@joann_marieNo, but I did hear it. It was amazing. Thank you, Ian. And no, why did you choose this song?

Ian MalcolmSo Andy Bliss, Dean, nobody.

Ian MalcolmNo takers. Okay, so we'll try something. So really quickly, I'm going to introduce our wonderful guest speaker here. And I'm going to give him, just because he wasn't here at the opening, we will see if he has any idea why I might play. the following song to kick off this space and we'll go into uh some of these concepts but with that being said let's uh we'll play it again for anybody who missed the uh the opening here all right so somebody anybody

Ian MalcolmWhy would we go with Tom Jones? It's not unusual to kick off this space. Mr. Claremont, any thoughts, any ideas or suggestions?

Speaker 1That song's a banger. That's why all I hear is good music.

Ian MalcolmThat is wonderful music, and I bring it up. Can you recall any television show that might have made that song rather famous?

Speaker 1I know that there is one, but I cannot think of it right now.

Ian MalcolmAll right, so we'll have to go to the purple pill. We'll come back in a moment to that concept. Anybody that might have an idea, please put it in the purple pill, a little pop culture quiz. But like I said, why don't we do as follows? So we'll come back to the song here in a moment and this concept, which is going to take us through this idea of bringing class back to the black community.

Ian MalcolmAnd that's not to say that it's completely gone from anybody and everybody that's part of that community. But rather, how do we bring it back to the West in general? And in particular, how do we help if we really focus on inner city culture, which disproportionately, let's just say, has impacted the black community and whether it is through dress, perhaps a disregard for education, for how one carries themselves.

Ian MalcolmAnd this idea that having essentially Class and sophistication is something that should not be a part of the black community. It's something that obviously we need to reverse the tide on. It's something that obviously has been heavily influenced, if not full on propagandized by the you know who that run pop culture. Whole bunch of different reasons why that's been done.

Ian MalcolmBut we're going to try to focus on how do we discuss this topic with individuals that are aware of what's going on? Perhaps how do we try and help those that aren't? What can we do as just people at large to assist the black community in some of these, let's say, trying times that everybody is going through? And at the end of the day, ultimately, how do we, in perhaps reversing the propaganda and identifying the propagandists, how do we awaken the black community, not only to the background on the origin of, oh, I don't know, the slave trade, the drug trafficking that was done into the inner cities.

Ian Malcolmthe lifting up of rap culture, and in particular, the more degenerate aspects of it via producers that were disproportionately part of a specific group. And how do we perhaps raise awareness within that community that a lot of the animosity that is the result of these racial, let's say, differences, that they are not only a reality of perhaps things that the media would try and obfuscate, like perhaps black violence, but that

Ian Malcolma lot of the animus between the two groups is completely fabricated and it's artificial. It doesn't need to be there in the first place. If we go back just a couple of decades ago, what we find is a very different black community that had very different values, very different attire. And that perhaps would have been, perhaps those individuals in the past would have looked at the present, both the black and the white community and said to everybody, what the hell is going on?

Ian MalcolmSo with that being said, like I said, we will come back to the song, but Mr. Claremont, if you would not mind, and I know you're on a, uh, let's say you're on a social media tear, because I've seen a lot of great content coming from you, been in a lot of spaces. If you wouldn't mind introducing yourself, and then we'll kind of kick off some of the conversation.

Ian MalcolmBut we'd love to get background on you, your kind of efforts on this social platform, and what initially motivated you to speak out against some of these issues.

Speaker 1Hey, how's it going, everybody? As you can see in the title there, it says, with shady problems. Just as a heads up, I did change my at. this Sunday because I made that app from my Xbox username many years ago. So I decided it'd be time to switch it up because the problems aren't shady anymore. The problems are out in the open.

Speaker 1And I got on Twitter in 2022, right after the Russia war started just to kind of stay up to date because people told me Twitter was like up to the minute updates on everything. So that's kind of why I came to Twitter. And when I arrived to Twitter, coming out of my shelter farm life that I built for myself out here, I noticed that shit's going wild in these cities and I grew up in cities and I don't remember them being like that, you know?

Speaker 1And I don't know, I've responded to people on X and had little arguments here and there and had good talks here and there as well. And we had a space the other day where I was just given kind of a background on my upbringing and, raised by a single grandmother who was, she was raised in a different era than probably all of us here.

Speaker 1She was born in 1935. So she's the silent generation, but just a whole different type of parenting back then that she instilled in me because my parents were not able to be there. And I see some of my family members who grew up with Gen X and later parents, no offense, anybody in here with children, but The parenting's a lot different, and I think that's kind of what it goes to with the, not just black Americans, but just the degradation in society in the West.

Ian MalcolmAnd speaking of degradation, we will be going over a whole lot of the ways that that has taken place, and in particular, the cultural influences that have played into it. So going back to the song, I'll give hint number two. Let me see if in the purple pill, did anybody, ah, there we go. All right, somebody has it and we will, for everybody who missed that, you might recognize this one.

Ian MalcolmBecause Tom Jones, and it's not unusual, was the theme song, I suppose, not for the show, but rather for Carlton Banks. who I can't remember the name, Alfonso Riviera, there we go, who portrayed Carlton Banks, the very classy, sophisticated, rather nerdy black character that was kind of contrasted with Will Smith. And the thing that's so curious is by today's standards, not only would Carlton Banks be an extreme outlier, but so would even Will Smith's character.

Ian MalcolmBecause despite being cool and certainly very charismatic, Will Smith spoke like a very upstanding individual. He dressed, I guess, rather colorfully. And for anybody that remembers the show, he had his blazer inside out with a rather dramatic flair. But nonetheless, the show focused on presenting a strong nuclear black family.

Ian MalcolmAnd it just goes to show how far we have fallen when it comes to the pop cultural influences that are around us. And so that idea that you brought up about the silent generation, You know, if we think of what your grandmother who was raising you, that some of the influences that you had, I'm just kind of curious, aside from her, if you look at the external influences that were given to you as social signals on how to act in the world, right?

Ian MalcolmI'm kind of curious for just what some of those externalities might have looked like, how they might have either contrasted with or been identical to that which you saw in your own family. And perhaps how those were similar or different than those that were in your community. And that's just me presuming that it was a more black community.

Ian MalcolmBut if that's not the case, we'd be very curious for your thoughts on that.

Speaker 1So growing up in Albuquerque, New Mexico, there isn't many black people there. And I grew up in the blackest area there was, you know, the hood, as they say. I mean, one of my, I was in advanced placement classes growing up. You know, I skipped second grade, all that stuff. I was really smart for some reason. I don't know why.

Speaker 1It just came. But our next door neighbor was a German immigrant family. And their son was the same age as me. So, like, we kind of became best friends. You know, like, just, I don't know. We just hit it off. We became best. We're still friends to this day. was at their house literally all the time you know um he had uh his parents were older they had him when he was like when they were like 40 and 43 so much more mature parenting over there as well but uh you know being around a german immigrant family and not really having too much interaction with american families growing up i um

Speaker 1When I get around American family growing up, I'm kind of like, whoa, Americans are brash. They're, I don't know. I don't know. They're not quite as, I don't know how to describe it. Let's just say the German family has values that, I don't know, they're more traditional, I guess you could say, but even back in those times, the American families were pretty traditional as well.

Speaker 1I would say the main external factors for me growing up was my grandmother, my neighbors, of course, and family members who were deep into the crime scene, making me not want to be a part of that, just seeing what they were going through.

Ian MalcolmNo, that makes total sense. And so given that, it's kind of interesting, right? Because I would presume then that your lived experience was through this lens where you were amongst a largely, let's say, white populace growing up in probably what was a rather traditional community, probably rather traditional, not only when it comes to some of the economics, but also the religion, probably some of the politics, et cetera.

Ian MalcolmWhat was your experience then perceiving the black community via, let's say, I mean, obviously. social media, not necessarily perhaps a thing during that window, but rather the mainstream media and some of the other cultural influences that you were given as, let's just loosely think of it as pop culture. I'm kind of curious if that, did you feel like you were being represented in a way that aligned with your lived experience in the community you lived in, or was it drastically different?

Speaker 1Honestly, it's kind of weird because it feels like at times the community changes with how I want to say movie. It's hard to say which is first, the chicken or the egg. You see movies like Boys in the Hood and Friday, and then the community kind of like... I'm like, was the community already like this, or is it like this because they're trying to emulate this movie because that's how it's supposed to be like?

Speaker 1But the community we grew up in, there was always... I guess you could say drug dealers and criminals and stuff. One of the first crime experiences I had was when I was in karate class growing up. I was eight years old. I was out at the karate class and got back to the house because my godfather gave me a ride there and back.

Speaker 1But when I got to the house, there was police tape around my grandmother's house. And I was like, what the hell is going on in there? The police came out and talked to us and said that there was a drive-by shooting down the street and the stray bullets went through the windows of the backyard of my grandmother's house.

Speaker 1And I guess the windows had went through the bull... Bullets had went through the windows. A couple of them hit my bunk bed that me and my cousin shared when she stayed over. But yeah, it was terrifying. We ended up moving out of that house and out of that neighborhood. a year later once she saved up money and everything.

Speaker 1But, um, anyways, um, I think that like, it feels like sometimes the movies showing representation of the hood, it doesn't really help. It kind of helps to, to make it seem like that's okay. And that will cater a way to live, you know?

Ian MalcolmNo, absolutely. And that's, it is interesting because in a lot of ways, um, and this is, I thought about this for a long time, for a long time. And it is the idea that once upon a time, that essentially, in my belief structure anyway, that genetics largely would construct, let's say, a culture. As part of the culture, you might have things like religion.

Ian MalcolmIt would kind of flow from that. And then through the culture, you would out pops, let's say, you would produce the byproducts of the culture, which would be the manifestation of it's artwork, it's literature, it's music, it's cuisine, it's garb and attire, right? And that these things would all essentially come down from what someone was.

Ian MalcolmAnd what we live in today is almost the exact inverse of that, where people are now incorporating into their, not only their persona, their value structures at the most foundational level are defined not by themselves, not by their culture from a macro sense, not via their family and the, let's say the things that were passed down from their grandparents.

Ian MalcolmThe culture is almost entirely designed and defined now by a centralized source and then pushed out via the mainstream media, music, movies, and social media. And those things are all uniformly controlled. So now we basically have, and it's so backwards because now we have essentially, you could loosely call it art. And the art then begets the culture and the culture is now begetting the genetics in the strangest of ways.

Ian MalcolmIt's literally a complete inverse of what was for centuries on end. And I, I mean, I obviously have a worldview that would suggest that it is that very thing that has the massive spikes in depression and anxiety and all these other kinds of things, because we're no longer living in a world that's actually a manifestation of the people that are living through it, but rather it's being force fed onto them by.

Ian MalcolmLet's just say the usual suspects. But I'm curious for your thoughts on that. And in particular, within the black community, right? We could look back and I suppose there's probably a couple paramount windows that I could define. But I'd be curious in your mind, what were some of the big forks in the road socially as you perceived it amidst the black community when it comes to some of these drastic cultural changes that would have led from?

Ian MalcolmCarlton Banks being perhaps a role model for a Black kid in the 90s to today, where not just the Black community, but everybody is basically encouraged to just become an absolute degenerate and prostitute and anything and everything in between.

Speaker 1You know, I kind of, I'm a fan growing up, or I was a fan growing up, but I kind of feel like as far as the thug culture, Tupac... was definitely a catalyst and it didn't help matters much that he was killed because in him dying it was he was essentially a martyr for the thug life you know it's like people see that they took him out so they'd see him as oh he must have been on the right path he must have been doing something right and he was also a thug I'm gonna emulate that you know um I may be way off on that but

Speaker 1As far as you were saying about the modern day, I have no idea what's going on in this day and age, but it seems like everyone has lost their goddamn minds and sin has just taken over.

Ian MalcolmNo, and it's taken over. It's become normalized. And not just normal, it's now revered. And it sounds utterly insane, but if you think of the role models of today's young women, it's OnlyFans stars, prostitutes, and... let's just say, other rather degenerate individuals. And women are looking down the barrel where it's basically, you either become that, which is, I suppose, glamorous, or you go the more traditional route of the modern woman and you emulate something out of, I don't know, sex in the city, right?

Ian MalcolmLet's get your degrees so you can go off to the big city so that you can sleep around with everybody for 15 years before you decide to settle down, get married, and then realize you can't have kids because you're now 40 and your system doesn't work as well as it once did. which goes back to these macro level concerns. But you're absolutely right.

Ian MalcolmThose are the new things that are lifted up in particular for women. And then for men, it's so bizarre because if you think of a role model in today's world, I'd actually be curious for your thoughts on this. Who is the role model for today's young black man? Could you list off maybe five or 10 individuals that you think are

Speaker 1very strongly revered for black young men between the age of let's say 10 and 20 years old huh that's a tough one uh five to ten i'm trying to think of universally light uh black men that uh or at least the majority like i would say kendrick lamar would be one who is uh pretty well liked uh more than 60 of the community

Speaker 1um i want i really want to say kanye west but i don't know i feel like kanye he kind of appeals more to everyone not just the black community but i feel like within the black community it's kind of 50 50 and you get a lot of people that for some reason dislike what he said about jewish the days you know but uh which i don't understand uh but let's see besides kanye uh

Speaker 1I honestly feel like in the Black community, there's more Black women that are seen as role models than Black men. And I feel like that's because Black men within the Black community are kind of not put on a pedestal as much as Black women. I'm trying to say it in the most polite way possible. Yeah, I can't really think of a lot of Black men that are universally well-liked.

Speaker 1Maybe Shannon Sharp? Charles? No, not Charleston White.

Speaker 1Little Wayne? You know, it's like the names I'm thinking of aren't... aren't gonna run for president anytime soon, you know what I mean?

Ian MalcolmNo, well, isn't it curious that the first one that came to your mind was not Barack Obama? And I mean, perhaps that's because of political leanings or also just because his, I suppose, reputation in some ways was relatively squeaky clean according to the mainstream messaging. And then I think there's a whole other stuff about perhaps Michael in the West Wing with him and that whole theory.

Ian MalcolmBut there certainly are, right? There are, of course, black men that are out there that are doing wonderful things in the either professional world. There's obviously some scholars that have been very well regarded. But for the most part, you know, I think the names that you threw up, almost all of them are within mainstream pop culture, singing about stuff that for the most part is, I don't want to say it's awful, but a lot of it is clearly rather...

Ian Malcolmuh, degenerate. There certainly are some musicians out there that are trying to put out, uh, rap music with certainly more positive messaging. But if you think of, you know, some of the biggest people, uh, whether it's Travis Scott or Lil Wayne, right? Uh, I think Lil, please correct me if I'm wrong. I think Lil Wayne's lullaby that was the lollipop song, uh, maybe showcases some of the content of his music, right?

Ian MalcolmSo if that's the, If that's the person that's being revered, what does it say about the normal kind of everyday expectations of young men that are growing up in this society? So which brings me to the next question, right? If there aren't, let's say, role models, you know, it wasn't that long ago that Denzel Washington or perhaps Will Smith would have been very easy examples that people could have pointed to and said there are, you know, strong black and granted they're in entertainment, but they're actors.

Ian MalcolmAnd I got a lot of respect for Denzel Washington. I've heard him talk about a lot of things. The guy's obviously very, very thoughtful, rather conservative. And so kudos to him. But it seems like even a lot of those individuals today are kind of somewhat gone. I think you got Michael B. Jordan. But then curiously, Michael B. Jordan, who a pretty decent actor, I suppose.

Ian MalcolmBut the movie that he chose to be in Sinners obviously had some very overt. racial undertones that were, I mean, a guy walking out and using a Tommy gun to take down 30 white guys. It was very clear that there were some strange undertones with essentially all the, not just the heroes, but almost everybody that was good was black and all the vampires, actually not just the vampires, also all the people that were kind of nasty to them that weren't vampires, all of them of a different skin tone, of course.

Ian MalcolmAnd so it's just, it does feel like this is the new era new norm. And I don't, I don't, you know, harp on or single out the black community because I think the white community is in the same situation where you've got all kinds of degenerate people that are being thrown center stage for everybody to revere. But it does seem like a plight that is exacerbated within the black community.

Ian MalcolmSo I'm curious if, if it's tough for us to think of some of those role models, what do you think for young black men today? You know, if they don't have somebody that's easily identifiable as their guy, let's say, maybe it would have been Will Smith 10 or 20 years ago. You know, who is it then that they are looking up to, or do they no longer necessarily have a bias to look for a hero that might have a similar skin tone, if that makes sense?

Speaker 1Well, also to address your point on the lack of heroes too, I agree. As far as Hollywood and celebrities go, I think that's over. There's not going to be any more Hollywood celebrities now or in the near future. I think with Epstein and the world jewelry, that time is done. Same thing for anybody really that is like a lifer in politics that has been there for a long time.

Speaker 1I think the admiration time for them has come to an end. But the thing, here's the main difference I see, and this is someone who follows politics. I'm not some, you know, I'm not Nick Fuentes, you know, I'm not deep in the trenches like that, but for someone who actually cares about politics, the glaring difference I see is the lack of independent, let's say, I guess you'd call them influencers, like,

Speaker 1that are in politics. Like, for example, white guys, I mean, I know Nick Fuentes is Hispanic, but you've got that show, you've got Dan Blaziri, and you've got Dave Smith, who's actually Jewish, technically, so never mind. But there's plenty of, like, if you want to watch a show or a podcast about politics, most likely 9 out of 10 or 8 out of 10 times it's going to be a white guy.

Speaker 1And, uh... You know, I wish that would change. I mean, I'm sure there are shows with black folks talking about politics, but I don't know them. I mean, if someone could point me in the direction of one, I'd be more than happy to check it out. Maybe Myron Gaines.

Ian MalcolmI think it was Don Lemon until things went a little south there.

Speaker 1Nope. And that's the thing, you know, like... it feels like within the black community if you are black and you have a show um it's like like with don lemon for example he's gonna appeal to the gay blacks okay there's a niche within an ish you know and then you've got uh shannon sharp who uh i've heard him talk about the j problem kind of for like 30 seconds but when he said something about it i was like oh i might start watching his show and he never said anything about it again so i don't watch his show

Speaker 1But, you know, it's few far in between. And another black role model, I guess, that just popped in my head, who's also not a rapper, came up while you were talking. Kevin Hart. He's very well revered by the black community. I forgot about him. But it feels like you're either jester maxing or you're rat maxing in the black community if you want to be a hero.

Ian MalcolmAnd for what it's worth, Kevin Hart, a lot of credit to him, right? Because... I remember, I think it was the Oscars, if I'm not mistaken, that he was set to host. And the woke, the woke crowd, the wokes, whatever you want to call them, they went through his entire Twitter timeline to find something that had been like 10 or 15 years old about him making a joke about if his son were gay, he would buy him a Barbie house and then smack him over the head with it or something to that extent.

Ian MalcolmAnd I'm sure in, I mean, it's Kevin Hart. It was aimed as a joke. And yet they, had a huge public campaign. They demanded that he apologize for it and kudos to him. He said, no, it's a joke. And I'm going to stand by what I said. Now he might've actually, he might've gone back. I don't know if he did or didn't, but regardless, you know, he and, uh, and Dwayne, the rock Johnson, uh, you know, for all of the, the silliness that is, I suppose the fast and the furious and some of the other movies that Kevin Hart has made seem to put at least a, a nice wrapping paper on their public persona, uh,

Ian MalcolmI don't see a lot of them getting in a whole bunch of trouble, and it seems like Kevin Hart, to that piece on the Oscars, even when he was asked to back down, he stood his ground, and he did so in what seemed like a very mature fashion, so lots of credit to him. So those are the types of individuals that we would love to perhaps be able to bring more attention to, which would beget the question, why then?

Ian MalcolmRight? Because I think you'd hear a lot of individuals that are on... these types of spaces talking about Jewish privilege and Jewish supremacy. And they would say the Jewish media continuously, and you see this with advertising everywhere. It's irrefutable that, I don't want to say almost all, but the percentage of advertisements that feature interracial couplings, in particular with a black man and a white woman, it's sky high, right?

Ian MalcolmIt's a drastic over-representation. And yet, even though they do that, which feels like it's designed to perhaps demoralize at least in my belief structure, it's used to demoralize white men and to make them feel irrelevant, while it's used to propagandize both black men to want white women and white women to want black men, right?

Ian MalcolmBut at the same time, those are the commercials. Then when you look at the people that are being held up as the celebrities and the role models, it's just degeneracy aplenty instead of perhaps trying to lionize the Kevin Hart's of the world and say, look at this successful guy who's built a... wonderful career in entertainment and has done it without a lot of the degenerate aspects of, you know, some of these other individuals.

Ian MalcolmSo I'm kind of curious, what do you think is the intent and the design, knowing that it's the Jays that are behind a lot of this stuff? What do you think is the goal for them to construct within the Black community? So, and then how do we reverse that, of course?

Speaker 1You know, I think it's just, it's literally just about control. It's, it's basically, You know, if... Okay, let me rephrase that. I'm going to get real for a second. I think that they want to wipe out the white race. I'm just going to be completely honest with you. I really do. Like, just based on the facts and observing what's going on, and the only race I see, because, I mean...

Speaker 1know don't attack me but i dated a white girl in my life you know and uh i saw how much the white race gets attacked in america and it's actually insane to me because in the 90s it was not like that but ever since the year 2000 it feels like the attacks are on 10 you know dei i was never a fan of it or never a recipient of and i was in the military for most of the whole dei uh fiascos but

Speaker 1I just don't understand why in the 2000s DEI became a thing.

Speaker 1Some might say there may have been instances where someone didn't get hired because they were black, so they had to make DEI for that particular thing. But honestly, in my life, maybe it's because where I grew up in New Mexico, there's not really a lot of racism there. But I've never felt... discriminated against in here.

Speaker 1And, you know, I've traveled pretty much all over the world, pretty much everywhere. I've been to almost every continent almost. And I've definitely experienced racism in different countries and continents. But in America, I mean, maybe I just got thick skin. So I don't know. I don't understand the need for that. So I feel like these little things like DEI,

Speaker 1know putting a black mermaid little mermaid i feel like these are all things to just make us hate each other which is the psyop in itself uh to basically make it to where we don't revolt against who we need to revolt against and um you know if blacks whites native americans and hispanics united against that common enemy we could sort out with all of our own issues afterwards in my opinion

Ian MalcolmI couldn't agree with that sentiment more. And it begets the question then, right? What can we do to help bring awareness and attention to those individuals that are part of that PSYOP, that are locked into that matrix? And I have this belief system that the more the merrier, and any and everybody we can get to wake up to it.

Ian Malcolmof course, becomes an ally in this cause. And then once we get rid of the primary problem, well, then we can decide what we want to do in the aftermath. But we can't obviously get to that point until we're able to band together in some kind of meaningful way, which I think we're starting to see. And so I'd be curious for your thoughts on essentially the portion of those that are aware of Jewish supremacy, what chunk you feel like that is of the black community or vice versa?

Ian MalcolmWhat portion of the black community is aware of Jewish supremacy. And if, you know, regardless of what that answer is, I'm curious what the impact of somebody like a Myron Gaines, who obviously developed a massive following because of fresh and fit and some of his cultural commentary. But then when he pivoted and started talking about Jewish power, you know, and lost his YouTube channel.

Ian MalcolmAnd so kudos to that guy because he put his neck out there. And obviously, I'm sure it cost him a good amount of commercial opportunities and financial. wealth, right? And so I'm curious, is he kind of one of the biggest positive forces for bringing attention to that in that community?

Speaker 1You know, you would think so, but I honestly don't think many, maybe there's quite a few, but I don't think that Myron Gaines' audience is predominantly black. I don't think that it's, I don't think you could look at his audience and be like, he has a primarily black audience. I honestly don't really know if many people outside of X or maybe Instagram really even are talking about the Jewish problem.

Speaker 1Because to be honest with you, when I talk to people at work or try to or bring it up anywhere besides social media, nobody knows what the fuck I'm talking about when it comes to Jewish supremacy. So, I mean, it feels like it's a really well-known thing when you're online. From my experience, I was talking to my aunt the other day, and I was blowing her mind with some facts.

Speaker 1I'm showing her screenshots. I'm like, look at this page, read this document, check out this 30-minute podcast right here. But I feel like we're way too asleep in the West, and it's designed to be that way. People are just too poor, not poor, but too financially strapped right now to really... learn about anything. I think during COVID, a lot of people got woken up because they weren't working, you know, they're sitting at home, idle hands, you know.

Speaker 1But now that people are working again, it's just people just don't seem to care as much as they should, you know, and they're still stuck in the, oh, Democrat versus Republican, you know, and that's, it really doesn't matter at this point. Until you find out it's them, then, I mean, voting isn't going to do anything for us.

Ian MalcolmI mean, I couldn't, that's spot on. The voting, that's a curious thing. Somebody attacked me earlier today and it was so funny. They said, oh, you're one of those guys who says that voting doesn't matter. And it's like, wait, I'm pretty sure I just said, and just in two spaces with politicians trying to encourage exactly that.

Ian MalcolmAlmost as if these people just wanna try and attack or critique anything. But obviously voting does matter. But to your point, it doesn't matter if we're doing so within the confines of this system, right? It would be like just Neo going in and getting some of the people living within the Matrix to fight one another. Like that's not going to solve anything.

Ian MalcolmWe've got to address the Agent Smith and the architects of the system and kind of bring that to a screeching halt. Then once we do, we can, of course, make an actual difference in the lived experiences for everybody. So it is kind of curious, and I do think you're exactly correct. And it's why... when people on this application say, what are we doing?

Ian MalcolmWe need to do something more. There needs to be a dot, dot, dot. It's like, well, first thing we got to do is wake up like three to 5% of everybody in the country. And that's a pretty tall order when you really think about it, right? That's something like 10 million to 20 million people that we need to get to recognize what's going on.

Ian MalcolmThat's a lot of people. Right. So we need to take these ideas and kind of foster them both on this app where we're given a little bit more free speech and off it. And obviously, we're starting to see a rise of this on Instagram, YouTube and Facebook. But they're, of course, going to censor as best they can. And so, you know, that's exactly right there that we do.

Ian MalcolmWe absolutely need to wake up more people. And so within the the black community, if it's not Myron, maybe it is Nick Fuentes or some of these other individuals that are kind of leading that awakening. I'm kind of curious for your thoughts on the black community and for those that do start to recognize Jewish supremacy, what is the reaction to the concept of slavery?

Ian MalcolmAnd I ask the question because I have this belief structure that that is essentially, I don't want to say a silver bullet, but I mean, talk about a thing to awaken to, the idea that you... have been told for essentially your entire life by the television and academia and all these other things to hate all these other people because of this thing.

Ian MalcolmAnd then it's like, wait a second, you were actually lied to and the very people that still control everything were the ones that were controlling it largely or disproportionately back then as well. What's been your experience within that piece of this puzzle?

Speaker 1I was talking to somebody the other day who was saying that he is a, He's entitled to reparations. And, you know, I've never been a fan of reparations. I think it's literally, it just does not make sense for someone to get money from something that happened to two generations or three generations worth of ancestors 100 years ago, you know?

Speaker 1And what I asked him too, I was like, so how would reparations be paid? And he said that the government would pay it. And I'm like, which government? Would it be the American government or would it be a government in Africa who was the ones that enslaved the people, caught them and sold them into slavery? I was like, which government would it be?

Speaker 1And he said it would be the American government first. And I was like, all right, so the American government's going to pay the reparations, so it's going to come out of tax money. So it's going to be Black Americans paying reparations to Black Americans. So I'm just paying myself. You know what I'd rather do is I'd rather solve the J problem and then make it to where no Americans pay taxes, because I feel like that would be beneficial not only for race relations,

Speaker 1but just for the betterment of society. I feel like all of our tax money gets wasted. I feel like we're in a cyclical process of electing the best of two evils, but they're all the worst of the evils. I just think that... And like you said, the slavery silver bullet, it's like...

Speaker 1There were... White slave owners. There were Jewish slave owners. There were black slave owners, you know? It's such a thing. It's not a thing you can really be mad about 100 and something years later when none of us were there to see how it was. And when you really think about it, if I'm a black guy and slavery is going on right now, I'm living in Africa, and they show me pictures of what America is like, and I'm like, damn, that actually looks a lot better than here, you know?

Speaker 1But I don't know. I don't want to go over there. Then I get captured. I don't know if I'm based on my quality of life at the time. And this is going to sound crazy. Whoever's listening to this anonymously, probably going to talk some shit, you know, or down in the comments. But anyways. I don't know if my quality of life is better in Africa as a slave than it is in America as a slave.

Speaker 1I just, I can't say I wasn't there, you know? So slavery to me is a topic that none of us are really qualified to have any resentment over because none of us were slaves. None of us were slave owners. Our grandparents weren't slave owners. Our grandparents weren't slaves. You know, it's, we got to move past it.

@wagmiwanIs nobody speaking?

@malleusigOh shit, I was just going to... I was waiting to see if someone would last me. Anyway, look, that is fantastic. The people that are most likely to have ancestors that aren't slaves are literally black people and also Jews. But this whole generational guilt thing has to go.

@wagmiwanI mean, I'll say, because I wanted to say something on this, because I'm a half black white mother.

Speaker 2and a black father.

@wagmiwanI grew up very early on, like my whole life. I remember being like 10 years old and I was like, affirmative action, like that, that's stupid. You know, all of those things. And I think, Ian, you're asking about sort of, you know, where, you know, the black community, I'm not American, so my black community is in Sweden, but might be kind of similar, but...

@wagmiwanknow where are black people standing and not i think that black people and and women are almost the same level where they're slowly realizing that all this di stuff is not in their favor and you know kind of like how women are like okay hang on maybe this whole feminist movement which we all know who orchestrated was not in my favor, right?

@wagmiwanBut then you got the sunk cost fallacy of, you know, being indoctrinated with this. So I think the first step is just realizing that, okay, hang on, maybe this whole, you know, white guilt against black is not in our favor. Maybe this whole feminist movement wasn't in the favor of women. So I think... Some are starting to look at where it came from, but I think when it comes to black and women, it's sort of like a step one.

@wagmiwanBut, you know, there are obviously like Myron and I agree with, is it Clement? Yeah, I agree with Clement that probably Myron doesn't have a huge black audience, but I would know. But then, you know, there's like people like, yay, that was sort of, you know, it was very early. And there's people like Candace Owens. So there's like a few people out there that have sort of started floating this.

Speaker 1Can I just pause you really quick? Most black people I have talked to for some reason or another hate Candace Owens. And I just do not understand it. I fucking love Candace Owens.

Ian MalcolmDo you think, is that derivative of the fact that Candace presents herself with... perhaps, we talked earlier about this idea of acting white, right? I feel like Kanye is very buttoned up and does not necessarily try to placate to any of the stereotypes, right? She is who she is.

Speaker 1I think that's a part of it. Her husband and she wore the White Lives Matter shirt, which I thought was hilarious that she wore with Kanye, but it's like...

@malleusigCan I interject?

@wagmiwanSorry, can I just say one thing? I experienced this my whole life. My parents, my dad was an African-Eustanian student. He had a PhD. He came to Europe because he went on scholarships. My mom was white. I grew up in a fairly immigrant-heavy area in Sweden. I... grew up, you know, English is the third language that I speak.

@wagmiwanI was always interested in the language. I speak perfect Swedish, right? Like, you cannot tell, I sound exactly like a perfect Swedish. And I remember, like, there were white people in the area where I grew up that spoke with a broken Swedish. And a lot of people, when I grew up, they were like, you know, Obi, Obi's like, Obi's a fake black, and he thinks he's Swedish.

@wagmiwanI'm like, why the fuck would I speak incorrect Swedish when I don't have to. So, yes, there is that sort of victim mentality that, you know, black community or immigrant communities, they sort of built this identity around speaking shitty or acting shitty. And if you choose not to do that, you are sort of seen as like, oh, you're fake and you're not.

@wagmiwanAnd I'm like, you know, I... mom worked for the foreign department so she got stationed in africa in different countries not where my dad was from so i'm like i lived half my life in in africa with my parents and half my life in sweden i know all my family in africa and i have these people that are like you've never even been to africa and you're like oh obi's fake because he tries to sound swedish and you're like that

@wagmiwanFucking ridiculous.

@malleusigI was going to add that. And again, I don't know if you guys have covered this yet, but black people thinking Candace Owens is crazy or stupid or whatever. You have to take into consideration that a lot of the black community is idiots. So you really can't take what they say seriously. It's just they believe everything they see on TV or on social media.

@malleusigor from Tariq and Nasheed. And so I really stopped taking them seriously about five years ago.

Ian MalcolmIn all fairness, there's lots of people of all demographics that are stupid and asleep at the wheel.

@malleusigYeah, but it's a percentage of them. Yeah, but you also have to remember that there's so many black people.

@wagmiwanThere's so many, like the black community have been so heavily indoctrinated about, you know, you are victims, you are this, right? It's the same thing when you go, yeah, it's easy to go, There are rabid, like half of women are like rabid feminists right now. It's not because they're idiots. It's because they've been indoctrinated in such a crazy way.

@malleusigNo, no, no. Obi, listen to me. Why were they so successfully indoctrinated?

@blissfataleThey were heavily targeted. I mean, that's kind of the thing. I think the black community has been heavily targeted for decades now, especially in America. You know, going back to the start of this space, and this is exactly where my spidey senses was thinking this is going, and I love it. But, you know, environment does shape your behavior, right?

@blissfataleBehavior becomes that culture, right? And then it becomes your identity. Who benefits off of... leveraging your identity, right? The politics, politically motivated people benefit off of using your identity against you. And blacks have been heavily targeted for decades now. And I do think, I love that you're bringing up women as well.

@blissfataleI can remember in the 2016 election, you had Elizabeth Warren and Hillary Clinton trying to, that's when they really started trying to use women against women in the same way that blacks have been used against blacks. And so I think when you talk about this like polarization that happens, there is a polarization that is very beneficial to drive emotion.

@blissfataleAnd emotion is how you fill the polls, right? Emotion is how you get viewers. I think that's what this is all about, for sure.

Ian MalcolmAnd Rabbi, I'd be curious for your thoughts on this one, because obviously, and I could put it in the purple pill if anybody wants it, but Rabbi and I have had some very, they're not even heated. It's kind of comical. disagreements with, in particular, the the FBA segment about all kinds of things. And I say that because I'm I'm uncomfortably critical where I think it deserves merit.

Ian MalcolmBut there is certainly an irrefutably there is an element of not only cultural, but also economic, let's say, aggression that has been taken on to the black community, in particular by the usual suspects. And it wasn't just the degenerate media. It wasn't just Let's say some of the, what would you call them? Longstanding economic disparities, right?

Ian MalcolmThat are, it is, there is reality to that. But also the flooding- Gangsta rap. Can I jump in here, Cork? Gangsta rap, gangsta rap. Wait a minute. Who was behind that? Of course, gangsta rap, obviously. And then the, where I was going to go with all of it is, then you also add in literally the CIA and the drugs that they were pumping into the inner cities.

Ian MalcolmAnd you can start to understand how things have gotten as bad as they were, as quickly as they were. And we've got to be honest about the fact that you're now seeing certainly a chunk of whites that are absolutely due to the economic realities, the cultural realities, and the drug realities that not via maybe the crack epidemic, but rather you've got all of the Purdue Pharma and the Jewish Sackler family that just shoved essentially legalized opiates into largely the white middle class community, right?

Ian Malcolmthese things are able to impact everybody. I do think they had a far more significant impact on those with certain IQ levels and other things on that lines. But nonetheless, it's unreasonable to say that it's merely a result of any kind of genetic presupposition and that there wasn't a absolute weaponization of some of those things that I just mentioned in particular against the black community, right?

@malleusigOf course not. No, listen. And again, I want to make sure I'm very clear here. Okay. I'm not engaging some kind of low IQ racism. All right. I'm being very nuanced and that's why it's very easy for the discussion to go sideways. But what we're dealing with is a population level effect where you have lower IQ, lower mean IQ, right?

@malleusigWhich means you have more people at the low end of the spectrum than in other races. For example, I think the only race that scores lower than black Americans is native Americans. And that's, really not a terribly reliable thing because it's so few of them to start with so you have very small sample size but right now black americans are 85 mean iq which means that half of black americans are below 85 which used to be only i think only five points higher than the cutoff for mental retardation all right so that's one the second thing is that um you're dealing with a situation where this is

@malleusigIf you look at the way that black culture is, black culture is not only the result of black biology, because all culture is the result of biology, right? And environment. It's not only the result of black biology, but it's being purposely hijacked and curated and sold back to black people by, and I'm not going to get into who right now, but by people that do not have the black community's best interests in mind.

@malleusigYeah, I know, I know. But I want to make sure we stick focus on this one element for now, right? One topic at a time, right? But it's being curated and sold back to black people as their own culture for profit and also in what looks like nothing more than a deliberate attempt to make sure that black people remain uncompetitive, like as...

@malleusigat least competitive as possible, right? Because they don't want them competing for the good jobs, essentially, right? So you have one, you have a fundamental vulnerability that is biological. Then you have a weaponization or taking advantage of that vulnerability, in most cases for profit and also for, you know, what, for example, the FBI with their black desks, what they see as population control.

@malleusigAnd that's before you get into also, yeah, you have the the the economic benefits of making sure that black culture glorifies violence and crime, because guess what? The people that own stock in private prisons. make money every time one person goes into the prison and the government subsidizes their stay and the stock goes up right so um these are all things that it's a hugely hugely detailed problem i can go into it way more but i don't want to i don't want to like mob the stage right now but if you listen to my words and all you hear is blacks bad because stupid that's not what i'm saying

@malleusigI'm dealing with a very real, very biological, very reliably tested effect. And on top of that, you have a number of effects that are combining to make sure that black success is almost impossible. Not only due to outside forces, but due to the inside forces that are... making it impossible from inside the black community.

Ian MalcolmWell, and Rabbi, really, really, it's interesting that you say that because one of the things that I was asking Claremont earlier was if he could just come up with five current kind of black role models, right, in pop culture.

Speaker 3Yeah.

Ian MalcolmAnd it was very curious because it was very difficult. It's tough. And there are certainly lots of people that are famous, but to try and find some that are famous and also let's say beneficial to the zeitgeist, it can be difficult, right? And you've got the likes of Kanye West, who's got all kinds of things. And it's like, we can look up to him for his clearly extremely talented.

Ian MalcolmI think in some ways the guy is certifiably probably a genius. And I say that because I do think musically he is incredibly talented, but also the things that he did within, you could loosely think of it as art and fashion, irrefutably had a monumental effect on you know, a billion people, let's call it. Uh, but at the same time with the good, there comes some bad and he's got a whole, a whole lot of baggage.

Ian MalcolmRight. And we could point to not the JQ stuff. Cause for that, I give him a big thumbs up, but rather, you know, he brought his, I don't know if it's fiance or girlfriend or wife, whatever the dynamic is, but brought her to the fashion show wearing practically nothing. And what felt like a humiliation ritual. Right. So like we can look at something like that.

Ian MalcolmObviously that that's tragic, but some of the other examples that Claremont came up with included like Lil Wayne, uh, who I've actually seen in interviews, seems like a really bright, smart guy, but we have to keep in perspective some of the music and the degenerate aspects of the things that he was singing about, right?

Ian MalcolmSo it does feel like, again, it's trying to find, and by it, I should say they, right, the Jews, are trying to find people that they can lift up within the black community that they can point to as being successful, to give some kind of inspiration for people to try to aspire to that, but that... The ones they lift up are all designed to basically celebrate degeneracy.

@malleusigBut that's the kind of success they want young black men to aspire to, you see? They don't want their kids to have to compete with people for banking and finance jobs. So what they want to do is they want to make sure that black kids... see success within very tightly prescribed bounds. They want black kids to look at professional jobs and say to themselves, nah, that ain't for me.

@malleusigThat ain't going to work for me because I'm black, right? We need to hustle. We need to figure out some other angle, right? And they want black kids to look at basketball players, rappers, you know, what heroin slingers, I don't know what else, right? What other, what other jobs are being heavily promoted to black kids?

@malleusigThere aren't a lot. And all the things that are all like the quote unquote ways out that are being promoted to black kids are these like ultra saturated, highly competitive places where essentially what happens is the people that promoted this idea that these are your careers, they're the ones in management, in producing.

@malleusigThey're the ones that are selecting the talent and they want to make sure they have a huge talent to pull from. And they don't care what happens to the kids that don't make it. They don't care what happens if you're a failed rapper or a failed basketball player or a failed actor. They don't care if you end up doing gay porn right on sunset.

@malleusigThey don't care. They don't give a shit. You're outside of their calculus. You're an externality. All they care about is that they get the largest possible pool to choose from when they wanna pick next year's rapper, next year's actor, next year's basketball player, yada, yada, yada.

@wagmiwanThat's it. Another thing to remember, to piggyback on that, is when we moved to industrialization, poor people populated the center of major cities, which a lot of times were Blacks, but also other ethnicities. And then once they realized that, but now we want to populate those areas, they needed to find efficient ways of how do we destroy those communities so we can take over that real estate.

@wagmiwanAnd that's something that's happening in the US, in the UK, in France, wherever you look, it's been the same story.

@malleusigYeah, well, that seems to be the pattern. The pattern is to get into a functioning society, make a ton of money, make as much money as possible, put people in debt so you have this continuing revenue stream coming in no matter how the economy does afterwards. And then you crash it so that you can short everything on the way down.

@malleusigAnd then you can pick up real estate for pennies on the dollar, right? This seems to be the general play. This is what's happening in America, in Europe. It's probably going to happen everywhere else. It's like Jewish money is like a... It's like a wave of destruction that comes through a country and over the course of decades just destroys it.

@malleusigAnd then essentially farms the ashes. I'm sorry, Jordan?

Speaker 4Where's our Uncle Phil? Who's the new Uncle Phil?

@malleusigUncle Phil?

Ian MalcolmNo, so this is going to be a good question in a roundabout way. So, Rabbi, you'll appreciate this one. And I'm going to, I will bet a social media post that I am correct in my suspicion that rabbi is going to get the reference. And if I don't, then I'm just gonna make a post that says I was wrong. So I'm putting a lot on the line here, rabbi.

Ian MalcolmSo here's the question. When they say go fill, do they mean from Fresh Prince of Bel-Air? No, no, no, no, don't be influenced by that. Don't be influenced by that. So I started the space off in the space entitled Bringing Class Back to the Black Community. I started the space off with... A song by Tom Jones called It's Not Unusual.

Ian MalcolmNow, nobody could get the reference on the panel. I believe that you would have gotten where I was going with this.

@malleusigYeah, Carlton's favorite song, wasn't it?

Ian MalcolmSo that was the question, right? Because I was saying it's not that long ago. And I suppose you could go back probably 70s, 80s, 90s. And then there's a very weird cutoff that's probably late 2000s. where all of a sudden the Carlton banks of pop culture disappeared and uncle Phil. So to his question, right? Uncle Phil and, and the, that, that family, the, the, the banks family, you had the father who was a lawyer.

Ian MalcolmYou had the mother who was a working mom, but she was almost always there with the kids. You had the sister who was a little bit of an airhead, but at least an elegant one, I suppose, in some sense, you had Jeffrey who was the brilliant black Butler. You had Carlton, who was the straight-A student. You had Will Smith, who, despite being colorful and charismatic and all those things, was a good person.

Ian MalcolmAnd that's largely gone. And so the question that was being asked, and maybe to Claremont, to you, and to Obie, to throw this back to you, gentlemen, then we're going to go to Andy for a comment. Who is the Uncle Phil if there is one? And when we say that, we don't mean Uncle Tom as in a sellout, but rather, where is the nuclear family for the Black community that's supposed to be

Ian Malcolmlifting people up. And I know Claremont earlier, you said, uh, Kevin Hart seems to be a pretty solid, um, role model. Maybe Rabbi's going to negate that one perhaps, but, but OB, I'm curious between you and Claremont, is there an uncle Phil, is there a black nuclear family that's presented as what should be? And if not, it's certainly not in the black community because for what it's worth for everybody listening, there's not really one of those with the white community either for what it's worth.

Ian MalcolmAnd we know why, but. I mean, is there a single Uncle Phil in pop culture at this point?

@wagmiwanI just want to say right away. It's definitely not Will Smith.

Speaker 1Oh, no, definitely not. And I also want to say, even though I did say Kevin Hart was a role model, I personally would not consider him a role model just on, you know, just things I've heard. And I just don't trust him as a person, you know. I don't know what it is. I just don't. Honestly, I there's I don't know who Uncle Phil could be.

Speaker 1You know, you would have thought in the early 2000s, Jay-Z and Beyonce would be that power couple.

@malleusigBut oh, God, no.

Speaker 1Boy, did that turn out horribly wrong.

@malleusigCan I can I offer one suggestion? We had an Uncle Phil. His name was Kevin Samuels. And then he died. All right. The only person that I can think of in recent memory that was actively putting forward positive role models to the Black community was Kevin Samuels.

@joann_marieWhat about... Wait, can you guys hear me? Yeah, we can hear you. What about the guy, the Black guy who knows a lot about astronomy?

Ian MalcolmYou know who? Neil deGrasse Tyson? No, he's the worst. Rabbi for some color commentary on that, and then we'll go to Andy.

@wagmiwanI mean, okay, like, Neil deGrasse is the worst. The only thing I can think of, A, I like Samuel L. Jackson, because he just doesn't give a fuck. He does the movies, he'll do whatever movie, and he stays out of everything. Maybe... Who else can I think of?

@joann_marieFrom then, the one who asks a lot of people.

Speaker 1What about the guy who was supposed to be king, the conqueror? But then that didn't happen. What's his name?

@malleusigEven Samuel Jackson. I mean, Samuel Jackson does nothing to help. improve black stereotypes or give kids a role model that actually is positive. He glorifies violence. He glorifies violence. He glorifies profanity. He glorifies being essentially the same teenage mindset that is currently holding the black population back, even though he's very successful at doing it.

@malleusigSo I wouldn't recommend Samuel L. Jackson either. I don't know who came.

@wagmiwanOkay, fair enough. I mean, Jordan just doesn't do anything.

@malleusigMichael Jordan definitely doesn't.

Speaker 1And you had Tiger Woods, who was my idol growing up. Tiger Woods was my role model. He got me into golf.

Ian MalcolmIs Tiger Woods the most disappointing could have been of the last 20 or 30? It really feels that way.

Speaker 1I mean, when I was younger, I thought it was badass. He was going around hooking up with porn stars. But now, as an adult, I'm like, oh, man, what were you doing, dude? You had a wife. You ruin everything. What the hell did you do there?

@wagmiwanYou kind of look at Tiger Woods and you're like, it's the age-old story, right? Like, he was this prodigy. You know, his dad was super tough on him. You're like, he was a ticking time bomb. Like, there's no way that that was going to work out in any way. But I think, I mean, to answer your question, because I was watching this really dumb show.

@wagmiwanSo one of the things I do at night sometimes to wind down is that I like to watch extremely dumb shows, you know? I spend 45 minutes a night. And I'm watching this show called Resident Alien. I don't know if anyone has seen it. It's super stupid. But every show now is riddled with propaganda. So it's like, okay, there's like a little son.

@wagmiwanHe's a retard. His best friend is this like little Muslim girl. And she's so smart. And she's so brave. And then there's, you know, all the chicks in it are, like, a bit chubby, but they're girl bosses, all the dudes are lame, and you, like, it doesn't matter what you put on now, it's the same thing, it doesn't matter if it's, like, black or white, and just look at that shit, and I'm, like, you know, I've got a son who's 12 years old, and I talk openly about a lot of this stuff, so, like, he's a good dude, but I'm, like, if you're 12, and you're a

@wagmiwanlittle boy and you don't have parents that like actually talk to you about what's happening you're screwed like literally every tv show is like oh men are retarded and doofuses women are girl bosses uh you know why people are retarded like all of these of course so you're old and smart enough to realize when you're being conditioned right

@wagmiwanYeah, I mean, I'm 45 years old, but what I'm saying is, like, I got a son who's 12, and I talked to him about a lot of these stuff, so he's much more well-prepared, but, you know, there's probably a lot of, you know, majority of parents do not do this, so the kids just watch this and then get, you know, indoctrinated into this.

Speaker 1I also want to say, I love that you brought up Uncle Phil and The Family Matters, because when you really think about it, in the 90s, there was no YouTube, there was no, I'm gonna go stream on Peacock and my friend's gonna stream on Netflix. It was like, everybody's watching Friday night TV and it's Family Matters, The Dinosaur Show, and then it's Step by Step.

Speaker 1And it was like this, that was what American families were. That was a universal American family, no matter if you're black or white, because they had black and white families and they pretty much had the same lives. It was kind of like every Friday you tuned in to see how to be American, you know.

@malleusigYeah. Can we go to Bliss? I think that. Oh, shit. She went to listen.

@froemelandyLet's go to Andy.

@malleusigYeah, go to Andy. Yeah.

@froemelandyYeah. So, yeah, I was going to jump in. I mean, there's some people that have been addressing these issues, but unfortunately, they don't get quite the views you'd want. Like Jason Whitlock's been talking about some of these issues like, hey, we need to have families in the black community. We have these single moms running the community, and that leads to there not being role models.

@froemelandyYou can't have a community that's ran by women, which is what Clement's been talking about. And yeah, when you have the Black community, for all intents and purposes, in a lot of ways, kind of has been more ran by women with the lack of role models. And it is a problem. You have, I believe, the rate of single mothers is about 50% in that community.

@froemelandyIt's... a problem in the white community. It's like 13%. The Asian community, it's 8%. So a lot of the differences in academic outcomes in crime can simply be explained by the single parents. It's not this myth of systemic racism. It's simply a cultural thing. And that needs to be addressed. It needs to be called out like, hey, it's not acceptable to randomly hook up and

@froemelandythan just have kids out of wedlock with a random person that just needs to be frowned upon like it used to be. And then you just, and you see the culture, it's now gotten so rotted. You look at sports where a white athlete getting too much attention gets called out and they attack them for white privilege. Like I went to the University of Iowa at the same time as Caitlin Clark, and now she gets racially...

@froemelandyharassed in the WNBA because she's white. So you have all of these people online calling her fans the Caitlin Clark Ku Klux Klan just because they happen to like her because she was the best women's college basketball player of all time. I kid you not. that side of Twitter is literally a race war over women.

@wagmiwanBut WNBA is not a sport, just so we're clear.

@froemelandyWNBA is not a sport. Yeah, but for whatever reason, the algorithm seems to be really pushing it. And it's a full-blown race war. You get a clip of a player sitting on the bench, interacting with their coach, and then it gets 5 million views. And then they're like, oh my God, one of Caitlin Clark's teammates disrespected...

@froemelandythe black assistant coach, he was racist. And it's like, what are you even talking about? And it's like, they're just trying to push these narratives. And then you have everyone on Twitter fighting over and like, I'm still following it, but I'm like, I just realized I had to remove myself from that. And I can't comment on every post of that.

@froemelandyLike I used to, because I realized I have to focus more on other things that are a bigger issue. Like Israel, I can't weigh into that. Like I used to as much.

Speaker 4But you understand what they're doing to them, right, Andy? You understand what they're doing to them as a culture. They're destroying their culture and prying them away from their own people and trying to integrate them into us and that can't happen.

@malleusigOne of the things that's going on is what he talked about is this idea of black women raising kids, right? and the problem is that this is this is how she goes in africa this is how africans originally raise kids is you there was no marriage you have a you have a village some african societies still run like this out in the boonies they still have villages that do this you have a village and you have men and women there's no paired bonding men and women hook up they have a kid

@malleusigAnd then that father will stick around for a little bit when the kid's like a baby. But like most of the time, like the men are all outside hunting. They're all out doing man things together most of the time. They only come back at night and to hook out with the women. And so the women are in the village with the kids.

@malleusigAnd you see in these documentaries, you see little kids like three, four years old, right? If they're old enough to walk around, they don't be carried around anymore. You see them just kind of like walking around the village, like dancing, hanging out, playing with friends. And what happens is when one of them gets hungry, they don't even need their mother.

@malleusigThey just pull on the leg of like the nearest lactating adult female and she picks him up and nurses him. And this is like how they do shit down there, right? This is what's worked.

@wagmiwanOkay, but now you're being crazy. Now you're being crazy, dude. You're being crazy.

@malleusigObi, I need you to quiet down. Thank you. There's a distinct problem when that evolved psychology is thrust into a first world economy because now you have people that and again, I'm not saying this is an inevitability. What I'm saying is that the the cult, the biological genetic trend is for this to be the default. And so when society or like the things that keep people

@malleusigwhen they keep the essentially the things that constrain behavior, like rules, laws, like regulation, when that falls through, people are going to default back to their biological factory settings. And apparently for the black community, the factory settings are to reproduce as thickly as possible and not to engage in pair bonding.

@malleusigAnd that's an issue. That's a huge issue.

Speaker 4Well, the inevitability that you're talking about, Rabbi, too, like this could be exclusive to you. It could be exclusive to your community.

@malleusigNo, Asians engage in it. Middle Easterners engage in it.

Speaker 4No, Asians don't. Asians do.

@malleusigWhat are you talking about?

Speaker 4Chinese engage in pair bonding. How many Indians are in China? Let's be real.

@malleusigI'm sorry, Jordan, what?

Speaker 4How many Indians are in China?

@malleusigI don't give a shit how many Indians are in China. I don't know what you're talking about, Jordan.

@froemelandyJordan made it pair bonding. Going back to single parents not being fit to raise a kid, just look at Erica Kirk. In no way is she fit to raise anyone.

@malleusigHow many Erica Kirks are in China? For fuck's sakes, guys. Don't change the topic like this. We've got to talk about Charlie Kirk. Resist the urge to hamstring Charlie Kirk and Trump and everything.

Speaker 4No, I'm talking about nations that have borders.

@malleusigYour point was that... Wait, Jordan. I said...

@malleusigAsians engage in mated parent bonding, and you said no, and you brought up the Indian community inside of China as some kind of evidence of this. I want to hear what your reasoning was.

Speaker 3It was very strange. Me too.

@malleusigWas there no reasoning behind that, Jordan? Was it like, there's no payoff?

Ian MalcolmHang on, Jordan, because what basically happened, you went with Indians in China. to deny a comment that had nothing to do with either of those groups of people or that location. It was like Rabbi was up, I don't know, getting ready to kick a field goal and out of left field comes a golf ball. And you were like, what do you think of that?

Speaker 3Like, it just had no relevance to anything.

Speaker 4Fair enough. Fair enough, boys.

Ian MalcolmFair enough, boys. Well, fair enough. Fair enough. But no, Rabbi, and look, I do think it's worth, it is worth noting that, some of these macro level biological realities, right? And that being said, I do think that while you can't take one thing and just put it into another, a lot of people talk about magic dirt theory, which is basically anybody and everybody who comes anywhere suddenly becomes that thing.

Ian MalcolmAnd that's obviously just not, it's not correct. And it's the reason for a lot of the mixed up and it's why the people in control use that exact strategy to mix us up even further, right? But what I would say is for those, so let's, let's remove mass migration from the table and let's try to envision instead, let's say that, and I'll just call it for the way that I see it.

Ian MalcolmLet's envision that the Jews didn't go absolutely wild and insane with all of their battle plans somewhere around 2005, let's say, and let's instead say that the world continued on course. And today you had programming and culture and and things relatively similar to just, let's call it a more aged version of, I guess, Claire might call it the TGI Friday presentation of society, right?

@malleusigThe 1990s, yeah.

Ian MalcolmLet's envision that all of those things had just continued on with normalcy. I think it's perfectly reasonable to say, and this is what's so wild, is when you look back and you realize, in my opinion anyway, Barack Obama was not there to remove racism. He was there to throw every ounce of gasoline onto the fire. And the same timeline that he came to prominence, so too did the acceleration of a lot of the crazy town.

Ian MalcolmAnd then you got the woke stuff five, 10 years later, right? And so that's where I want to try to focus is how do we try and as we simultaneously bring attention to the JQ and remove the toxin that that is from the society, spiritually speaking, right? Let's say that we went back to programming that wasn't controlled by megalomaniacs.

Ian MalcolmWould the black community in your assertion be able to be just like it was with the Huxtables and with the banks if those were the cultural norms that were being shared instead of euphoria and absolute crazy town?

@malleusigYeah, so it's possible. Where's their land? Jordan, stop it. Hold on, Jordan. It's possible, but again, they were far from that, even when the Cosbys were a thing, right? The Cosbys were essentially hugely wishful thinking on the part of Bill Cosby and NBC. And I'm glad it was there, and I'm glad that, because again, you had the Cosby show, and then you had, oh shit, what was it?

@malleusigNot Higher Ed, Higher Ground? What was the name of the TV show with the college kids when Lisa went to college? They had Dwayne Wayne. And, uh, and, uh, shit. Oh, fuck. You gotta kidding me. I can't, I'll look it up when I'm talking, but these, these were all somebody in the purple pill, throw a life raft to a rabbi.

Ian MalcolmIf you know what he's talking about, it's the college.

@malleusigThey went to, um, a different world. Okay. They were a different world, right? That was all of this was Bill Cosby's kind of brainchild about giving the black community actual positive role models on TV. And it would have worked, but it would have taken a long time. If we just kept going, we would be closer. We wouldn't be like way farther away like we are now, but it wouldn't be anywhere near getting the entirety of the black population or even a large percentage of it on the right track.

@malleusigWe'd still be fighting an uphill battle because you're fighting against biology and you're fighting against decades and decades of lack of culture. And that takes a long time to fix.

Ian MalcolmBut we would be better off. Maybe a good way to think about it is, right, the- What is the original culture? What is the culture?

@malleusigStop, Jordan, just stop.

Ian MalcolmYeah, and perhaps, because that's one of the things, right, is that we can look at the differences, and maybe an easy way to think about this is that is non-inflammatory. People would suggest, and there is evidence certainly to support, that diet does have an impact, for example, on average heights, also average IQ for what it's worth.

Ian MalcolmYeah, somewhat negligible, but nonetheless, it does have an impact. And my point was just going to be that the externals can do one of two things. They can essentially increase that which is genetically predisposed, or they can do the exact inverse, right? You could take LeBron James' kid and you could just feed him up with cookie dough and chocolate syrup and everything.

Ian Malcolmfor 15 years and you could destroy the genetics that that child had that allowed him to now play in the NBA. And whether or not he's a charity case, that's a different question. But either way, he had a huge leg up relative to probably 99.9% of everybody else based on those genetics, right? And so my point is that what we need to be doing, obviously, as a society is to help, let's say the...

Ian Malcolmthe genetic expression of those things that are deep down. We need to try to help bolster everything for everyone. And that's not me cheering on endless diversity of everything, but rather saying, look, in the nineties, there was a, or the eighties or the seventies or whatever, there was a representation of a whole lot of people of different heights, capabilities, genetics, et cetera.

Ian MalcolmWe need those social signals to try to keep people on the rails. That's actually what the idea of class and honor nobility. So those things used to do is they served as guardrails and buffers so that people knew above and beyond the idea of the law, I should do this because it's moral, just and good. And now we live in a timeline where all of those things are basically completely averted and everything goes to hell in a handbasket.

Ian MalcolmSo even if we can't arrive ever at equality and equity and all that other nonsense that obviously is crazy, we can at least do the best that we can to give everybody, regardless of what they come to the table with, the best chance to of making something more of themselves or at least maximizing their potential, right?

@malleusigExactly, exactly. And I know Bliss came back up and I have a hunch Umar is a dissenting opinion, so I want to make sure we prioritize those two guys.

Ian MalcolmAnd we welcome all of those for what it's worth. Right, right. So feel free to request lots of, what's very curious, Rabbi, because we've got a panel here of all kinds of, let's say, creeds, colors, let's say the sexes, And so if you're down in the purple pill and you want to just hackle, that's totally fine. But feel free to request a mic.

Ian MalcolmCome on up. Tell us that we're all crazy or what have you. Certainly welcome that. But let's go to Bliss. And then we will check in with Umar and then 40. And then we'll check in with Mr. Obi-Wan again. All right.

Speaker 5So we're kind of past it. But I put in the purple pill and I cannot find it for the life of me. It's a documentary. on the prison systems and rap music and how well it was orchestrated. And it's nothing but, it's just all about commerce. And anyway, I found what I could find. I put it in the purple pill, but you're talking about TV shows and what comes to mind, The Jeffersons was a great TV show.

Speaker 5And it was about wealthy African-Americans that I think that I enjoyed watching. And I also find it interesting, maybe we can talk on this in the space, what you think about the NBA player that just came forward. and was opposing the LGBT situation that we have going on right now. But mostly I just wanted to, for everyone to share and watch is the documentary I put down in the Purple Pill.

Ian MalcolmLove it. I'll check it out.

@joann_marieOh, no, sorry. I just laughed, please. I'll check it out, please. Thank you. Sorry, go for it again.

Ian MalcolmNo, no. Let's, we'll go to Umar or Omar. I hope I'm pronouncing that properly. Feel free to jump in.

@joann_marieAnd guys, also please repost the space and follow Ian and Rabbi and please.

Ian MalcolmYes, lots of shares and send it out. Especially if you disagree with some of the things that are said up here, I would welcome that. Send this to your friends that you think will also think we're crazy or dislike what we're saying. Welcome them in here. We will not bite. Send us a trick machine.

Speaker 6Thank you for giving me the opportunity to defend my position. I heard a lot of nonsense about the black community. I'm originally from Africa, from West Africa, Senegal and Mali. I speak more than four languages. English is my fourth language. My official language is French. I'm fluent in French. I think I'm privileged

Speaker 6very good we are parents then hello everyone here

Speaker 6So coming to the United States is a completely different experience because I heard Rabbi talking about the villages in Africa. It's a completely different experience. It seems like a lot of people have a misconception thinking that Africa is all about villages. I speed went to a tour in Africa to show exactly what African city

Speaker 6looks like we have basically whatever you have in the united states but we you you leave the capital city uh you see the degree degradation because most of these african countries are controlled by the imf uh for example in west africa the 14 countries in west africa use a currency that's controlled by by france since the colonization

Speaker 6So coming to the United States, I went to Belgium to study. Coming to the United States, when I'm looking at the Black people, I see the pain that was transmitted from generation to generation from the slavery and when the Martin Luther King movement came in. After that, you have the FBI attacking the... nucleus of the family to just to make sure that there is not a functioning most of the dad went to jail that's that's sad to see all these kids growing up in a family where you don't have a father figure and valuing education for example so that's the difference it's extremely hard for me

Speaker 6be able to even have friends black american because they think that you know there's misconception that the one in africa sold them so when we come to the united states uh the first feeling is we are rejected the african are rejected because the black african things that you you know our ancestors back home sold them and you look at the black community over here there is no value of education

Speaker 6everybody else all these communities uh they they are nine to five they value education and then for whatever reason it was like a a plot concerted effort to be able to make sure that the black people are far away have interest in education and are just on the industry from 6 p.m to midnight the the the entertainment industry while everybody else you have

Speaker 6people coming from India, the white people, everybody else, are the industry from nine to five. If you look at the NBA, the one who are playing basically the majority, I would say 90% are black people. And if you look at the stadium around you, you are going to see a lot of white people, courtside and everything else, except at the exception of few entertainers who are making money and coming in and being on the courtside.

Speaker 6And I think the example you have mentioned for the black community are not even the good example for the black kids because these are just entertainers. They have no value. They are prostitutes to Hollywood. And we know the Jews control Hollywood. Basically, the rap music, everything in the rap music is dictated to these black kids, these black rappers.

Speaker 6And the first thing to correct the... the problem for this black kid is to me is completely poison. I, when I look at my neighborhood, when I go over here on Saturday afternoon or Saturday morning, I see the five to seven year old, 10 year old playing soccer. And you see the baseball field and everything else. You see every, everybody, excuse my, my, what I'm saying, it's all white.

Speaker 6They are valuing, making sure, From the get-go, the kids have all the privilege in the world to be able to be successful. As a Black person, I've been living here for more than 37 years. I came in with zero, and I don't have to hide it. I'm extremely wealthy. I'm extremely knowledgeable about everything else. I speak more than four languages.

Speaker 6I travel around the world. For the Black kids over here in the United States, it's almost as if they have been in a prison, and we have the system. that don't allow them to be able to go ahead. The amount of time I get pulled over by a police officer for no reason, it's unbelievable. You won't even understand it. For as a black person to get access to capital, to be able to set up my businesses, where the white person can go and show up just because of the color of the skin and get qualified,

Speaker 6It's unbelievable. So talking about, and there's no genetic about black people being inferior to anyone else. I can challenge anyone. I've been on spaces everywhere. Malcolm, I have been listening to you. I have been listening to Truth. I've been listening to Suleiman and everyone else. There is no genetic involved. We are all created equal.

Speaker 6There were only one set of Adam and Eve. We all came from the same genetics. The condition by which...

@malleusigI just want to say, when it's my turn, I want to tackle this first, because this is pure nonsense. Pure nonsense?

Ian MalcolmI agree with you, Rabbi. Well, not pure in the sense that everything that you've said, but I find the notion that everybody is one and the same, both reasonable and that we should all be treated... by the law and let's say by one another, we should be treated fairly based on the conduct of our character rather than the color of our skin.

Ian MalcolmTotally agree with that. But to say that we're all one in the same and that we are identical.

Speaker 6No, I'm extremely wealthy. I'm extremely knowledgeable. Hang on. You understand that that's a very low... No, let me finish. I'm going to learn my plan. I want to talk really quickly on that.

Ian MalcolmThat is a very strange way. And I don't know another way to suggest this. That is a very low IQ way to try and defend that my position is correct, which is basically what you're saying. Now, we could bring in Eric Trump, who, by all accounts, can barely bumble his way through a sentence. Or maybe an even better example is Alex Soros, who up on the stage at the World Economic Forum.

Ian MalcolmImportant diversity. And that guy's worth a billion dollars, right? So that's a very strange way. And I would almost say that it might be a little bit of insecurity that resulted in you kind of leaning back on that as a crutch. But anyway, you're welcome to continue.

Speaker 6No, I'm not insecure. I have knowledge. I am full of knowledge. My people, where I came from, if you go to Europe, most of the black people who went to Europe and studied... I can guarantee that none of you ever been to Africa, to a city in Africa. I can guarantee that none of you have a black friend. I can guarantee that none of you ever been to a city in Africa or to a black community to be able to interact with people.

Speaker 6You have been conditioned by the books that was written. and to ridicule the black people and thinking that we are inferior intellectually. It's nonsense.

Ian MalcolmI just want to ask a couple questions. So first and foremost, you believe that of the people up on this panel, many of which are not white and several of which are black, you think that nobody on this panel has anybody in their life or their circle or their friends group or their colleagues that is black. Is that what you're suggesting?

Speaker 6What I hear, the comment you have, everything you have talked about, the first minute when I came in and joined, everything you have said is purely nonsense. And what I'm deducting is having a panel of white people sitting down and don't have anything else to do and just trying to demonize black people thinking that genetically we are inferior.

Ian MalcolmUmar, approximately 180 seconds ago, the person that you were having a conversation with in a language that I do not speak, do you think that person was white or black?

Speaker 6The person from Sweden?

Ian MalcolmThe person that you were having a conversation with a little bit earlier. Yeah, you were having a conversation in Swedish. Do you think that that person is white or they are black?

Speaker 6He's a black person.

Ian MalcolmOkay, so now that you know that, I'm confused because you were just saying that... No, no, that person is not living in the United States.

Speaker 6No, he said he lives in Sweden.

Ian MalcolmHe doesn't live in the United States. You're missing the point of my question. He's a black guy in Sweden, but you're basically broad brushing everybody on this panel saying that they're all a bunch of racists while you're having a conversation in Swedish with a black person. I'm very confused.

Speaker 6Same thing, Ian. I'm a black person. You don't know me. I'm on the panel as well.

Ian MalcolmYes, but I'm not calling you a Chinese person.

Speaker 6No, at the same time, the gentleman is just joining from Sweden, just like I'm joining over here from California. It's the same thing.

Ian MalcolmDo you think Akunji, or do you think Claremont, or do you think Adi, do you think these are all white people?

Speaker 6No, Akunji just joined. In the beginning, he was not here.

@joann_marieOne more, I'm brown, and I'm here.

Speaker 6Yeah, but still. the panel would have been fair. No, the panel would have been fair. The panel would have been fair. If a bunch of white people are coming over here and trying to put a judgment, that's demeaning. Having black people coming over here and trying to defend themselves. Umar, Umar, let me ask you a question.

Ian MalcolmHang on, hang on, Rabbi. Umar, can you read the title of the space to everybody that's listening?

Speaker 6Everything I heard about you trying to pull out, entertainment kind of figure. No, I'm answering your question. Let me answer your question. It's not even a question. No, no. What I was listening to you, you were talking about entertainment, black people to be the leading figure of the black community. That's completely wrong.

Speaker 6Because most of these entertainers have no education to start with. They never even went to school to begin with.

Ian MalcolmI would agree with you on that. Why would you have entertainment? And I explain to you. And most of those entertainers are propped up by who?

Speaker 6By the Jews.

Ian MalcolmCorrect. There we go. Okay. So the point of the space is working with Claremont, who I had the pleasure of speaking with in a conversation, who I believe to be a very classy, sophisticated man who is trying to make his community better. We're trying to have a conversation on how to do that. Now, do you think somebody that would host that space is a bigoted racist?

Ian MalcolmJust out of curiosity.

Speaker 6No, you guys completely missed the point. Because when I was listening to you, you were trying to pull out an example for the black kids.

@joann_marieYeah, because there isn't any, there is no black role models. I wish there was, kind of like there was Malcolm X before and stuff like that. And now there isn't, and that's what we were talking about.

Speaker 6No, you guys are clueless.

@froemelandyI didn't say those were good role models, I just said those are the most popular people.

@malleusigOkay, can we get, listen, Omar, I want to engage with you, okay? Because I do not want to heckle you. I don't want to get into an argument. I don't want to like, I like you. You're not a bad guy, right? But you are speaking from unmistakable bias. I don't want to be loved. I don't want your love. You've done so much talking already.

@malleusigLet me finish my thought.

Speaker 6But please, please, don't love me.

Ian MalcolmI don't need your love.

@malleusigI don't want your love, please. Keep it for yourself.

Ian MalcolmThat is such a strange response after saying we're all hateful. I'm so confused.

@malleusigSeriously, like, Umar, just relax, dude, okay? Listen, I'm trying to engage you civilly here, okay? This is not hard. This is a very easy topic to discuss if we can leave the emotions at the door, okay? Now, just remember, you are speaking, and again, from my point of view, let's say from my point of view, you are speaking from your bias.

@malleusigYou have a very clear pro-African bias, which I understand. You are African, okay? It is the most natural thing in the world to be biased towards your own people, okay? But many of the things you are saying are simply counterfactual, right? First of all, you said that you are we are saying black people are low IQ, unsuccessful.

@malleusigAnd you said, but here I am. I speak four languages. I'm very successful. Guess what? You're revealing that you don't know how statistics work because the existence of a single outlier does nothing to disprove a population level measurement, let alone one as thoroughly documented as black IQ and success rates. What can you say to that?

Speaker 6You are completely wrong. Tell me why. But education is almost like you're telling us black people...

@joann_marieWe are not smart because there is a... We're talking about how they are psyoped and how they have subverted the culture. No, let me talk. I let you talk. Wait, wait, guys, guys.

Speaker 6Let me talk. I let you talk. Please.

Ian MalcolmHey, Rabbi, we're going to mute everybody for just a second. Rabbi, I've got a funny question for you. Do you know Yao Ming? Do you know Yao Ming, Rabbi? Are you familiar with Yao Ming?

@malleusigYeah, he's a Chinese basketball player, a huge outlier.

Ian MalcolmYeah, well, I was going to ask, are Chinese people on average taller or shorter than people, let's say, from Denmark?

@malleusigOn average, they're much, much shorter.

Ian MalcolmOkay, but is Yao Ming taller than almost all people from Denmark?

@malleusigHe is.

Ian MalcolmHow is that possible? I don't understand because you just said that Chinese people are shorter than people in Denmark. How is that possible, Rabbi?

@malleusigI know. And again, this is why I want to get into this without emotions, without over-talking, because this is one of those fallacies that can be taken apart very easily and very quickly if you can just engage dispassionately, right? I have a simple question. Any of you have been in Africa or Europe? For fuck's sake, I need you to mute after.

@malleusigYou are not disproving any of the stereotypes. at all with your contributions here, okay? Just relax, okay? We need to make sure we are being factually honest. And if we are going to be factually honest, I'm sorry, and I say this without animus toward the black community, but if we are going to be strictly honest with ourselves, the black community doesn't come out smelling gross, and you need to address that, okay?

@malleusigYou need to be honest with yourself and with us about the data behind

Speaker 6black performance and if you don't like that data that's okay we can discuss that too okay but the things you've said are simply counterfactual and i want to talk about that because i think you don't understand why that is i don't understand why am i muted all the time and it's almost like you don't want to hear the truth and you're thinking that i am an outlier i'm not because you guys probably never traveled to to europe probably never traveled to

Speaker 6Africa, you've never been to a black community to be able to engage with black people, real black people, other than the book your grandparents, you know, slave master have written and you are all conditioned to think that... Umar, I gotta jump in there.

Ian MalcolmThat our grandparents, the slave master, that was the suggestion?

@malleusigYeah. Yeah, he thinks we're all slaves. He thinks our grandparents are slaves.

Ian MalcolmUmar, do you understand how that undermines what you're suggesting and you're saying and it actually would lead me to believe that you have kind of a... an intrinsic emotional bias against us merely based on the color of our skin, which would make this whole conversation rather ironic.

Speaker 2Omar, you asked a question of the people on the panel. You asked a question, and that is, have any of you gone to Africa? I have. I've been to various places. Now, the other issue is that having listened to you for a little while... I'm now going to move to Africa because clearly a lack of intelligence and understanding is no bar to being successful in Africa.

Speaker 6Okay. Nobody asked you to move to Africa, Kanji.

@malleusigThat was not what he was implying. That wasn't what he was saying.

Ian MalcolmThat was very clever.

@malleusigThe point is you are becoming less of an outlier the more you contribute at this point, all right? Now, we need to make sure we are being honest with ourselves about reality. It is clear to me you are not being honest with yourself about reality because every time you are faced with reality, you default to some excuse or some kind of diversion like none of you have black friends, which, spoiler, I do.

@malleusigNone of you have been to Africa, but I haven't been to Africa. You got me there, but that doesn't mean in any way that I'm wrong. We're talking about black performance in the United States. None of these things that you're bringing up actually address the central point, which is that the black IQ, let's call it trend, is one of the most thoroughly documented effects in psychological science.

@malleusigNot some kind of a white supremacist trope or conspiracy theory.

@wagmiwanIt's also based on a bell curve. I'm with you there, Rabbi. Sorry to interrupt, but I just want to ask, because I do agree with you. I'm a little bit IQ test. Yes, they are Okay, so here's my question.

@malleusigNo, they're not. I think I know what you're going to say, and no, they're not.

@wagmiwanNo, no, no. Okay, no, you don't. You don't. I don't think you do. Okay, go ahead. Yes. Okay, so I do agree with you. And, you know, it is probably true that where the number lies, because I've seen some ridiculous numbers of, like, some countries in Africa, the average age is, like, 60.

@malleusigLiterally 60.

@wagmiwanYeah, but then, like, that means if that's the average, you know... it means half of the people are like down in 40. I don't believe that, right?

@malleusigWhich means that like... You don't believe because you don't want to.

@wagmiwanNo, no, no. I don't care. I don't care. But what I'm saying is then, okay, what is the efficacy of an IQ test if the ability to take one has an impact on what you score? Because, yeah, I'm not going to believe that like...

@malleusigbecause it doesn't. I need to address this is important because if you just keep going, we're going to skip over it. A lot of people don't know this, but in places where people don't know how to read or write, for example, they can administer IQ tests because reaction time has been has shown to be has been shown to be correlated enough with IQ.

@malleusigYou can use it as a proxy. So in places where people literally don't know how to read or write. They can't sit down and take a test. No, I totally get that. They can give them reaction time tests.

@wagmiwanBut again, it's like I don't believe that there are countries where half the population have an IQ of fucking 40.

@malleusigBecause you don't want to. No, I don't care.

Ian MalcolmI'm not aware of any where it is 40. No, no, no. What I'm saying is

@wagmiwanNo, what I'm saying is if the average IQ is 60, it means that, like, almost half of the population are, like, around fucking 50. That's all I'm saying. But, like, I don't care. Like, I don't have, you know, I don't have a, what do you call it? I don't have a skin in the fight or whatever. Like, I'm just saying, like, that's one part, okay?

@wagmiwanThe second part is you were mentioning something about families. And, yeah, I'm half African. I'm fine because obviously my dad was one of the few that were really smart. We've got scholarships to go everywhere. And like, yeah, I can see to the fact that there is probably a lower IQ among black people. I'm not contesting that at all.

@wagmiwanYou did mention something around families and whatnot. I spent, like I said, my mom, my mom's white. She worked for the foreign department as a diplomat. So she was stationed in Africa throughout my childhood. So I spent like a decade around in Africa. And one of the things that I saw there, and obviously I'm only a sample of one, but in most of the African countries where I live, not all of them, family is a very important thing.

@wagmiwanSo the issue that you're facing in America with dads that disappear and whatnot, not the issue that I see there. Now, one issue that I saw, And again, like I'm, you know, a proper dichotomy because, you know, I'm from, you know, my mom's from Sweden, which is like the most secular country in the world and whatnot, is one thing that we've lost.

@wagmiwanAnd I don't live in Sweden now, I live in Australia and I've lived here for over 10 years now. And, you know, I'm Western at heart. That's where my philosophy, you know, it's the part where I live most of my life. one thing that i see that the west is losing just on the topic that you were mentioning is the value of family so the nuclear family yes it is important and we need to get back to that but the value of wider family is something that the west is losing so hard and it's really heartbreaking to see and i'm lucky here where i live that um you know you know i've got a family on my own here and

@wagmiwanwe are a wider family that support and look after each other but it's it's one thing that i've seen that like the west is really really losing and we need to get back to what's that going to do with what i was saying nothing i was just responding to something that rabbi said before and then before that i didn't respond to this iq discussion

@joann_marieHow do you convince people to use different verbs and stuff, like the wrong verbs? I don't want to make this whole space about, and I think Ian also doesn't want to do this, make it about Black IQ.

@malleusigOkay, because that's not what it's about. No, no, no.

@wagmiwanOkay, so my, sorry, I just want to say, so what I said, you mentioned...

@malleusigThe only reason I even brought it up was because it's a factor we have to take into consideration if we are going to have any hope of success at improving the black community. Do you understand that?

@wagmiwanThat's why I went back, that's why I went back, because you were saying that there is a biological reason that certain races don't want to look after their offspring. And I was highlighting that there's a huge...

Ian Malcolmthere's a, there's a curious piece of just kind of the, the, the evolutionary biological reality that I suppose, uh, that rabbi speaking to, which I'm actually not familiar with the study that he was talking about. But, um, what I do want to make very clear is to rabbi's comment that the, while this is relevant, the reason it's relevant, I suppose, and we've gone down a rather long tangent on it is just because we should be

Ian Malcolmable to recognize the, let's say, attributes of a group of people if we're going to talk about how do we make things better. But the goal is within that frame of how do we make them better, and in particular, how do we bring back, that's a tongue twister, class and honor to a community that obviously has been plagued by a massive amount of propaganda and also just, let's call it loosely, chemical manipulation via the absolute influx of drugs that was 100%

Ian Malcolmat least in my belief system anyway, done maliciously by, let's say, the usual suspects, right? And so I just want to frame it that way. I don't think there's- That's why I conceded it. Maybe with the exception of Omar, who seemingly thinks that my grandparents, in his words, are slave masters and therefore I'm a bigot.

Ian MalcolmWith the exception of him, I think we're all otherwise in pretty good company. And so let's just keep it with that frame and with the white light at the end of this tunnel, in spite of the speed bumps we might have along the way. about some of these differences of opinions, that it's about making things better for everybody in particular.

Ian MalcolmHow do we do that within the black community, which can be very difficult because there's lots of externalities.

Speaker 6Can I talk? Hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on.

@nance726I've had my hand up for a minute here. I'm going to jump in here because you guys just keep going on about this.

Ian MalcolmLet's go to 40 and then we'll go to Claremont because this is a space with him as the special guest.

@nance726All right. Thank you. And so I want to kind of bring it back here to, you know, what started or not started, but what is a big factor of why we see the black community in America, where it's at right now? And you can look back in, you know, back in like the 50s, 60s, even 70s, the black communities, a lot of them were very church going people.

@nance726Right. They were very proud, very prideful. They had a great sense of family, a great sense of community. And they were building up, right? They were taking it back. They were rooted in faith. They were rooted in family. And that posed a threat to the people in power, right? They didn't want that. And they didn't also, because the people in power, mind you, as we talked about earlier, they want to have this racial divide, right?

@nance726So, and if white people started being like, oh, okay, you know, these blacks are actually just, you know, they're kind of like me. You know, they have their families, they're going to church, they're respectable people. then that gets rid of that divide and conquer aspect because they start actually assimilating. They start actually like the community start meshing, doing business, their kids are going to school together, et cetera, et cetera.

@nance726They want to get rid of that. So what you saw, and I've talked to some people in the rap industry, I've had them on my spaces in the past, talk about this, is in the 90s and into the 2000s, right, they started an attack. And when I say they, I do mean Jews, but I also mean a specific Jews because they owned, as Bliss talked about,

@nance726the exact same people, and again, not just saying Jews in general, the exact same people own the record companies that own the private prison companies. And what they did was they methodically went and they boosted gangster rap. And they didn't go and tell them they had to sing every song and it wasn't that, but what they did do, and there's people like Ice-T and people from NWA have come out and spoken about this, that they actually did show up and they didn't tell them, hey, you have to sing this song, but they said, hey, you have to include this content

@nance726in every album. And what it was, it was basically the blueprint of how to attack a culture and how to eventually get to the individual. So when you start with a proud culture that has, again, family, church, all of that, well, first you destroy the neighborhoods and you destroy the family. And you do that by, and music is always one of the greatest influences on people.

@nance726So gangster rap, what that did is it promoted gang culture And it promoted prison. It made prison into something cool. It was like a rite of passage. It promoted drug use. I mean, drug dealing. It promoted drug dealing. This is an important difference here. Drug dealing. And it promoted violent crimes, robbery, murder, et cetera, et cetera.

@nance726Things you're going to go to fucking prison for. And then what happened was, at the same time, they hit them with the different welfare laws about how you get more money if you're a single mom than you do if you have a family unit. And so then all these black men go to prison. Surprise, surprise, right? Because they're out there doing crime.

@nance726Well, now the people on the streets, the old ladies, the grandmas and stuff, they don't feel safe going outside anymore. And so you kind of lose that sense of community in these neighborhoods. And instead, now you have gangbangers. And now you have these kids growing up in single-parent homes whose moms are on welfare or probably addicted to drugs, maybe both, maybe not.

@nance726Maybe they're struggling, hardworking people, right? I'm not going to completely stereotype. But then those kids, what they have to look up to Is their dad's uncles who are in jail and who tell them it's a rite of passage to be in jail? Then and then they have nothing of no other opportunities because everything around their whole neighborhood has gotten destroyed But to join the gangs because that's who they have etc So then so what you have is a breakdown the community now you you can see the change, right?

@nance726They've gone past really the true gangster rap and they've actually now they're coming out and kind of Even a bigger sigh up telling us all they were all fags the whole time but My point being is now what they're pushing in the rap music and onto these neighborhoods is now they've destroyed the community. Now the individual is more vulnerable.

@nance726So the music has changed from selling drugs to doing drugs. It's gone from being a hard motherfucker on the street to, oh, it's cool to have mental illness and to be popping Xanax and all these SSRIs. It's cool to have mental health problems because now the individual is vulnerable. So now they're attacking the individual.

@nance726Now also you have all these – now the individual is vulnerable. Not only are the new rappers coming out in dresses and being all faggy, but now they're actually telling you that all of your previous gangster rap heroes, well, guess what? They're all fags too. And it's to completely destroy any kind of sense of self or image to mold these people to exactly what they want.

@nance726And that is they want them to be degenerate. They want them to be criminals. And they want them to have this feeling of victimhood. And they want the whites to look at them as... as as trash so to solve the further like so this divide and so this is all done intentional and you can really look at the music and really see the blueprint for how how it's worked and let's also just as my closing note here let's not forget that that same musical influence did hit white neighborhoods too it did affect the white children affected the people in my generation and it's still affecting white people as well so it's just so when you look at this they you can see how they they targeted one particular race in in in particular

@nance726But it did bleed over. And that's why we need to, you know, not just look at it as just a black problem because it bleeds over into the white culture as well.

@malleusigAnd actually, 40, what's important about that is what I think they understood is that the easiest way to get into the white population was through the black population, because you can condition the black population to believe in and embrace certain cultural values that you can't get the whites to believe directly. However, black adults.

@malleusigare some of the best markers of, let's say, ideology and culture to white teenagers. White teenagers look up to black adults as role models very easily because black adults are essentially professional teenagers, right? A lot of these people have been teenagers for 20, maybe even 30 years, and they are professionals at it.

@malleusigAnd so actual teenagers look up to them naturally. And that's why they use people like Jay-Z, they use people like, you know, Lil Wayne, whatever, to essentially market black culture because white teenagers are very vulnerable towards adopting it. And what happens is a lot of them will, you know, discard it when they become adults, but a lot of them won't, right?

@malleusigAnd now you've basically gotten that culture value into the white community. And so this, the black community is essentially, it's an on-ramp into the white mind

Ian MalcolmBut hang on, hang on rabbi, I'm going to push back a little bit on this. And I think the propaganda side is a hundred percent relevant. And it's the reason why all the commercials are designed the way that they are. The thing that I would ask, um, the comment that you just made that white teenagers are looking up to black adults because they behave, I suppose, in, in, in your statement, like teenagers.

Ian MalcolmThe reason I pushed back is because I don't believe that that would have been the case. prior to the propagandizing of quote-unquote this cool culture via the mainstream media, right? I don't think in the 70s and 80s, white teenagers were like, what is the black guy across the street who's 50 years old doing? I want to emulate him, right?

@malleusigOh, no, no, no. I'm not saying every black adult. What I'm saying is they market a certain subset, a selected subset of black adults, you know, via music especially, towards... white kids right and then these people become role models for those white kids not every single black adult is going to be a role model but you'd agree that for example the the normalizing of rap culture via uh eminem for example that that had a way larger influence on white community than the black rappers prior to him right no it did it did totally yeah no but i'm saying is this is a consistent thing that goes all the way back to elvis right elvis popularizes and i'm not saying there's anything wrong with good music right good music is fine but elvis got a lot of his music from black

@malleusigyou know, black performers, a lot of his style from black performers. And he became essentially in a very, you know, a very gray dated, but still an on-ramp that they were able to use to move up the next wedge. And every, with every generation, they, they simply increase the, you know, the angle of the wedge so that by the time you get to 2024, right.

@malleusigLittle Nas is being fucked in the ass by Satan, right. That's, you know, that's about as, high of a degree on the wedge I think you can get, but they got it in.

Ian MalcolmOh, no, just give it another five years. Who knows what's up next?

@malleusigYeah.

Ian MalcolmLet's go to Claremont and get some of his thoughts on this, and then we'll check in with Solomon, and then we'll come back to Omar.

Speaker 1Hey, I just want to say to 40, Alan, you had some banger points, like every single one I was agreeing with, and I gave you a follow. And as far as Omar, I feel like... I feel like you take personal offense to a statement that is about, it's a general statement based on facts, and it seems like you take personal offense to it.

Speaker 1And I'm not sure why, because it doesn't seem like it's directed towards you. I give you props. You're a very successful person. Allegedly, you have a lot of money and know these languages. And I give you props, black man to black man. You know, I respect that. but don't take offense to that. This doesn't apply to you.

Speaker 1Obviously, if the shoe doesn't fit, don't wear it. But I had a question that was directly towards you because I had said earlier that black slaves were originally slaves in Africa, and you said that that wasn't true. So I just wanted you to kind of expound on that because as far as I knew, that was the case.

Speaker 6No, I didn't even have to ask to speak today because... basically i'm from africa i'm not a black american american you know i'm an outsider coming over here basically i could have stayed as a listener i just came in and gave a different perspective as far as how you are trying to pick up the entertainers uh the nine to midnight the six to midnight industry as a

Speaker 6as the role model, to be the role model for the black kid. The black kid don't need those because those are the people who are bringing down the black kids and don't give them a future because the future for the black kids should be education and legislation.

Speaker 1I agree with that. I don't think those should be the role models, but unfortunately, those are the most popular people.

Speaker 6in black society in america well not all of them i mean giving what would who would you say would be a positive role model in black my kids went to ucla usc and uh there are a bunch of black kids right now in the school system the highest university and if you go to this university you you'll see that it's not what you see on on social media these people are

Speaker 6The people who are portraying the black community, these are the people who shouldn't even have a voice. They don't come from a typical family. They don't have anything to represent the black community. Unfortunately, that's what's being fed everywhere, thinking that all these black people are the majority of the black people.

Speaker 6you'll be surprised if you go to USC UCLA my kids graduated from there that's what we were criticizing literally that's why we were talking about that we were criticizing that and we were like why they don't have role models kind of like Malcolm X and stuff like that now they're all degenerates and stuff like that the majority of the black people don't see those you're just saying that we think all black people are the same that's not even true no one

@malleusigsaid that.

Speaker 1No one is even attacking black people in this entire conversation.

Speaker 6I heard about the IQ. Just give me 15 seconds. I heard the low IQ for the black people. But if I look at where the United States is standing right now, 350 million people, majority of white people, high IQ. 4 million Jews control the United States. I think you have a bigger problem than we black people with low IQ. You, the superpower, you let the Jews, 4 million Jews come and take control.

Speaker 6Hang on, hang on.

Ian MalcolmThis is going to be, this will be a good one. So, Umar, you would agree that the Jews control basically everything, right?

Speaker 6And you have the high IQ and you let the Jews control everything.

Ian MalcolmYou have no excuse. You have no excuse. Umar, calm down. Umar, let me ask you another question. Is Mike Tyson a wonderful boxer?

Speaker 6Yes, he is.

Ian MalcolmIf a short little Jewish man walks up behind Mike Tyson and stabs him in the back, does that make him the superior fighter?

Speaker 6Who raised Mike Tyson? Mike Tyson doesn't come from...

Ian MalcolmI'm not asking you the breakfast question. I'm giving you a hypothetical.

Speaker 6It's not a good example you're taking because Mike Tyson was not raised by his parents.

Ian MalcolmIt's going to suggest that you can be in control of something that's not demonstrative of either your intellect or your capabilities other than prospectively being ruthless and violating the laws and controlling all the things that would put you in a position to have all the control in the first place. It doesn't suggest that the Jews are unbelievably clever or all that intelligent.

Ian MalcolmAnd you know how I know that, Umar, is because I've had conversations with lots of them. And I embarrass them over and over and over again.

Speaker 6No, listening to you, the white people with the highest IQ in the world. I wouldn't actually say that. Umar, has someone here said that? No, let me speak. The people with the highest IQ in the world. Let me speak. Let me speak. Let me speak. the United States with all the universities you have, and when I hear some of the comments, it seems like the white people have the highest... No, collectively.

Speaker 6Hang on, Umar. No, no. Do you think education... Let me speak a little bit. Let me speak a little bit.

Ian MalcolmOh, I will mute you just because it's so erratic. Umar, do you think that a collegiate degree is going to increase somebody's IQ? Yes or no?

@wagmiwanYou've got to hit the- They're also not- That's what you guys have been saying.

Speaker 6You say you have the highest IQ. We didn't say that.

Ian MalcolmNo, just let me speak. Oh my gosh. Umar, I am trying to have a good faith conversation with you. I've asked many questions and you refuse to address them. And I don't know if it's because you're being disingenuous or because you can't follow the bouncing ball that is the dialogue. I tried to ask you a very direct question.

Ian MalcolmDo you think having a university degree is going to increase someone's IQ? Yes or no?

Speaker 6Can I talk? Can I address the question? Can I speak? Can I speak? Is that interesting? Of course you can speak, but can you address the question? It seems like you guys have low impulse. I told you black people have low impulse, but it seems like you guys have low impulse.

Ian MalcolmUmar, can you address the question?

Speaker 6And I'll break it down to you.

Speaker 2Umar, Umar, Umar. I've got a headache now. I was wondering why this headache felt so familiar. It's because my ex-wife used to argue like this. That's why she's my ex, right? And I'm getting this from a man. It's ridiculous.

Ian MalcolmUmar, that was wonderful, Akunji.

Speaker 6Maybe you weren't good in bed. Here comes some gaslighting. She left.

@joann_marieOh, my God. Wait a second.

Ian MalcolmWe're just going to move on. Here's the thing that's funny. Because Akunji made a rather comical little remark there. It's a pretty clever one at that. And, Umar, if I heard you correctly, you basically came back doing literally the internet meme that is my dick. You were like, well, maybe in the middle of the night, she, but really?

Ian MalcolmAnd you do this after you failed to address question after question after question. Now you said it was because of the universities with IQs. And so I asked a very reasonable question. Do you think that the education, especially at that level, is going to influence somebody's IQ? If you think that, you're a fool. I might as well ask you, do you think a college degree is going to make somebody taller?

Ian MalcolmNow you could say that it might have an impact on their lineage, on their progeny. but on themselves? No, your IQ is not going to go up. Your IQ is your intellectual horsepower. Now you can put it to use in a university. You can learn to think in different ways in university, but you're going to be able to think about as clearly coming out as you did going in, in terms of the raw horsepower of how your mind works, right?

Ian MalcolmThe movie, A Beautiful Mind with Russell Crowe, right? That guy was a brilliant mathematician and that brilliance was essentially intrinsic to him. Now, he was able to magnify that and to focus it into mathematics through education. Right. But a Ferrari doesn't, let's say, increase or decrease its horsepower because you put it on a longer or a shorter road.

Ian MalcolmIt just is better able to utilize the power that it has. Now, the reason I asked you the question and the reason that perhaps you dodged it is because maybe you don't understand that. And that's the real issue. And what's ironic about it is it goes back to the very idea of. Well, I'm not even going to tell you what it is.

Ian MalcolmI'm going to ask you, Omar, I'm curious. You've got all the money, you said, because you're very successful. If you didn't have breakfast and you didn't have lunch, wherever you are in the world, how would you feel at that point in the day once you got past the portion where you would normally have had lunch?

Speaker 6So the discussion is unfair. You ask me a question and you want me to answer to give you a certain answer.

Ian MalcolmThat's normally how a conversation goes, yes.

Speaker 6No, it doesn't go that way because you control, you're the host. Tell me how the conversation goes. No, you're the host. I let you speak. Ask me a question. Give me the time to answer the question. I might sound stupid. I might sound stupid. When I'm done, tell me, Umar, you are very stupid.

Speaker 2Oh, but that's literally what I said. That's literally what I said. My ex-wife would answer, I'd ask her a question, and she would answer to a different question that nobody asked.

Speaker 6No, because... And that's you. No, Akonji, I didn't get a chance to answer the question. No, because you're whining. You're whining. I'm going to answer the question. I'm going to answer the question.

Ian MalcolmUmar, is Akonji a white supremacist?

Speaker 6No, I'm going to answer the question because a rabbi was talking about IQ.

Speaker 6What was the basis of the IQ? The basis of the IQ? Yeah, the basis of the IQ.

@malleusigDecades of rigorous testing. Decades of rigorous testing is the basis of the IQ.

Speaker 6Based on what? On knowledge?

@malleusigBased off of IQ. I want you to go all the way back to the beginning.

Ian MalcolmNo, have you never done an IQ test?

@malleusigRelax, everyone just take a chill pill, okay? The IQ measurements that I was discussing previously are based off of decades. of rigorous testing across races in the United States. They are some of the most rigorous and well-funded measurements we have in the social sciences. What's your next question, Uma?

Speaker 6So you base the IQ on education, right? No, we don't base it on education.

@joann_marieNo, it's a test. It has little pictures and then they're like, where is the shadow? And then you have to point to the shadow. You have to press the button. If I'm understanding, if I'm understanding, I might sound stupid.

@wagmiwanI can tell you you're not understanding.

@malleusigOmar, Omar. No, no, no. That's fine. That's fine. That's fine. You can say I'm stupid.

Speaker 6It doesn't bother me. No, I didn't say you're stupid.

@joann_marieIt's a very different thing.

Speaker 6Believe me, I went to high university. Guys, you don't have to be like this. Omar. I understand the difference.

@malleusigSeriously, guys. Everyone relax. This does not have to be an emotional discussion, okay? IQ testing is not based off of education. IQ testing measures what they call G. G is not entirety of intelligence, okay? It is a specific thing and you can think about it as the ability to manipulate concepts in mental space. That's what IQ is, okay?

@malleusigThere are other things we can talk about such as memory. But this is to be clear. We have to be clear before we engage in any further discussion of this topic because I want to move off this. I want to move off this through right now. Umar, if you are going to insist on engaging in this discussion on false pretenses, on the pretense that IQ is some kind of...

@malleusigbullshit measure, that it doesn't measure what it says it measures, yada, yada, yada. We're just going to have to go past you, okay? So can you engage with me honestly?

Speaker 6I'm very fine. You can go past me. I made my point already. And I think you guys have a bigger problem because you have a few couple of Jews guys who control your economy and destroy it. And every night you're on spaces.

Ian MalcolmOkay, okay, okay.

Speaker 6No, that's true.

Ian MalcolmSo here comes the gaslighting, which is a result of being triggered, which is perhaps a result of impulse control. Now, at this point, what we're going to do to move past it, because, Rabbi, you tried to basically be polite and suggest that so that we could move along and maybe we could continue to have Umar participate in the conversation.

Ian MalcolmIt seems like that is not the case. And again, back to the question that was one of many that he just refused to directly answer. Anyone can walk up behind the strongest person in the world and stab them in the back. It's not indicative of skill in the least. The fact that the money printer, all of the politicians, all of the media, all of the social media applications, the big tech applications, and all of the AI is controlled by one centralized source of people makes it way easier for them.

Ian MalcolmThis is not difficult to understand. And again, if anybody thinks that these people are clever, I'm going to make a public decry. Please send them my way. Please find the smartest Jew you can possibly find. And ask him to walk into a space where I'm present. And ask him to try and disprove my worldview. There's only two things that are going to happen.

Ian MalcolmEither A, he's going to be smart enough to say, you're right. The Jews disproportionately control everything. Or B, he's going to get smoked. Because there's no way he can deny the worldview that I present. Because it is just factually irrefutably accurate at this point. We've all seen it. We've all witnessed it. And now even the most normal of people are starting to say something's a little bit off.

Ian MalcolmOkay, so please go find that person. Because for what it's worth, I believe that the reason that the Jews want to dumb everybody down is because they're not that smart. They're not clever. The thing they're good at seemingly is verbally twisting people into believing their point of view. That doesn't mean that they're right or correct.

Ian Malcolmor honest or intelligent. Because I can say, trust me, I'm the smartest guy that's ever been. And then when you say, well, can you demonstrate that? No, I don't have to. But if you question that, well, then it's because you're a racist and a bigot and you just hate me. And now I'm going to make a law that says you can't hate me.

Ian MalcolmAnd I'm going to define the law as anything that says I'm not the smartest person in the world. That is basically what the Jew would go about and do, right? They would manipulate and twist the situation to fit their scenario. It's been happening for a long time. So, Umar, you're welcome to go start your own space and say, wow, look at the white guy who was taken over.

Ian MalcolmThrough subversion, we shall wage war. That's literally the slogan of Mossad. Does somebody have to resort to subversion if they're all that intelligent and strong? No. If they were competent, they would meet us on the intellectual battlefield. They don't. They lie. They cheat. They steal. They assassinate people who stand in their way.

Ian MalcolmThey run Epstein Island. Did you know why I say these things? Because everything I just said, I can demonstrably showcase. It's utterly insane. And it's infuriating that you would come in here, you would gaslight everybody, you would run around in circles, that when I pushed back on something, you said, well, I'm rich, so I've got to be right.

Ian MalcolmYou are a walking trope. You demonstrate the very ignorance, the very lack of impulse control, the very perhaps low IQ. that Rabbi would say statistically might be a reality. Now, that's not said with any hatred or any animosity. We're trying to hold this space to make the world a better place, to try and lift up black individuals of all communities that are trying to make their citizens better, that they want to make the world better for their people.

Ian MalcolmYou want to come in here and literally just pick fights with people with low IQ playground rhetoric. Go start your own space. Go get your six people. And go say, oh yeah, those guys in Ian Malcolm's face are all a bunch of racists, as literally half the panel is not white. It's wild. I apologize, Claremont. I just had to put that guy in his place.

Ian MalcolmSo let's go to you, and then I want to check in with the always wonderful Nigro Damas, who's an absolute legend of this application. But Claremont, to you, my friend.

Speaker 1Oh, no, I was just, yeah, I really wanted him to answer that question about Africans not owning slaves because he seemed pretty confident that that wasn't the case. And, well, he's off the panel now, so I'll let... No, no, no, I'll bring him back up.

Ian MalcolmAnd Solomon, please request again. We'll bring you back up. That's true. Yeah, Claremont, you're welcome to ask him that. We will see if he will address one of your questions. He wouldn't address any of mine. But if not, we'll just remove him again. It'll be great.

Ian MalcolmGo for it, Claremont.

Speaker 1Oh, so yeah, Umar, so you said Africans did not own slaves. And I just wanted to, I just wanted, could you give me like, you know, why that's true or anything to back that up?

Speaker 6No, Africans used to own slaves. And because of the way the society is structured, you always have some kind of king.

Speaker 6A lot of people, I mean, almost everybody is underneath the king and the family and still going right now in Africa, where you have a bunch of people, things that, you know, everybody else, because their grandfather was a king that still to this point, everybody else is beneath them. We have that. We had slaves, even one of the kings from Mali, when he traveled,

Speaker 6from from mali to saudi arabia he had 60 000 subjects when when when we're talking about subject basically they are slaves so that's uh black people used to own slave we own it and when you go to our society you can feel different race basically we all have the same nationality, the same country, but some people, for whatever reason, they think that they're superior to other people and subjugate a majority of the people in our country.

Speaker 6That's the reality. We own it.

Speaker 1Thank you. Thank you for clarifying that. Yeah, maybe I misheard earlier, but yeah, I appreciate that.

Speaker 7Well... Can I just say something really quickly? Super quick, Rabbi. Super quick. Listen, I need to make everyone aware that we have a serious grammatical error in the heading, in the title. I don't know if it's a test or what, an aptitude test to pick it out, but bringing class black to black. Come on, boys. You might call me a grammar Nazi, but I'm not, you know, come on.

Speaker 7Anyway, just one quick... Quick little story.

Ian MalcolmI was saying funny about that. On two different occasions, I actually stumbled over reading it during the space itself, and I wonder if that was essentially psychosomatic, but thank you for that.

Speaker 7Yeah, I know. I thought it was a test. This was the aptitude test that Rabbi was putting us through. So, look, quick little story. It was.

@joann_marieYou passed, Funky. Good job.

@malleusigIt was a test and you passed.

Speaker 7One for the white boys.

@malleusigThis is the equivalent of writing the title in cursive.

Speaker 7I used to work on a farm a long time ago. And, look, I need to let people know, in Australia, we don't really have much African influence, although it is growing. It is beginning. And that's a UN agenda. You know, the Jews that run the U.S. I'm the first. I'm the first of the Aussie. Yeah. No, but anyway, you sort of come in with your heart.

Speaker 7Anyway, I'm not going to be rude. So, yeah. Anyway, it's new. It's becoming. It's new to us. So I was going to say, look, years and years ago, I used to work on this old farm, grape farm vineyard, and we had this old tractor. And it was actually a Lamborghini, which is cool. So I can say I've driven a Lamborghini. That was an old Italian bloke who used to own this farm.

Speaker 7And anyway, every now and then I used to have to cross the road. And these cops would always pull me over because I was on this run-down tractor. It had license plates and it was registered. But it was clearly unroadworthy. And so, Uma, I just wanted to let you know, mate, it doesn't matter where you are in the world. Police are always going to pull over old farm equipment, so you're aware.

Speaker 7With that, I will leave.

@malleusigAll right. I think we're going down to Nigrodamas next, and I just want to say, Nigrodamas, thank you for giving me the ability to say Negro by making that part of your username.

Speaker 8Go right ahead. Yeah, shout out to you, Rob. Good seeing you and Joanne and Ian. I see Muhammad in here as well. Beautiful, beautiful stage as well. You know, wonderful, wonderful room. Beautiful pace. I would just say, you know, a lot of times I think Omar was trolling a little bit. I felt it in there. I think that was part of the comic relief of the space.

Speaker 8So it was good. You allowed it to go on for a while and it came back to a head. So thanks, Rabbi, for that disclaimer form. And I think he took it. He just was already on that ride, so he wanted to finish it. But shout out to Omar as well. The thing about it is, is that, you know, when you're talking about it, I think Ian spoke on it earlier a little bit.

Speaker 8I think a lot of people don't realize, you know, if there's... And this is going to just speak to the heart of the matter, because, you know, I know Ian has a lot of people in there, but I don't want to go too long, but I do want to kind of exhaust it out. If you're not ready or willing to do, like... What happened between, I believe it was Gary Webb and Freeway Rick Ross, the real, the original one, over there at the San Jose Mercury.

Speaker 8And shout out to the San Jose Mercury. And shout out to Gary Webb. These people are real patriots in the black community. Not just the John Browns, but they're the John Brown essence, right? If you're not going to go out there and expose the government and be like, hey, the CIA is actually running these drugs. uh throughout through contra and guns to the black community specifically in america and this is not good because this is not just going to affect the black community because who's going to eventually start buying these drugs when they overflow out the black community and that's what gary rebb was writing and it was actually not just one newspaper article it was actually a series he was doing um and he was investigating uh the war over there and drugs and it led him to america and shout out to freeway rick ross

Speaker 8The real one who would sit down with a Gary Webb and explain and expose some things. And that's all I think the crux of the matter is that we've been missing. Oh, thank you, baby. Thank you. I think that we've just been missing communication effectively. Well, you're talking about the people who would change identities of persons who are en route to do communications and carry correspondences.

Speaker 8These are the type of people who would take that correspondence, kill that person, and then act as an in-person or impromptu of that person amongst another group of people who might not know them or haven't seen them, but actually is acting in concert with information they're not even privy to, but they're doing this under the sick pleasures that they have as a community.

Speaker 8And this is seen all the way throughout England. This is seen throughout Europe. This is seen throughout Africa. This is seen throughout America. When you look at the plantations, even in America, a lot of the most vicious and vile plantations were not just done by quote white people, but their most vicious and most absurd and vile and cruel dehumanizing plantations was Jewish people.

Speaker 8Whether they be Spaniard or whether they be Dutch or whether they be French or whether they be English, they all come from one stock. And I think that that goes so many times. Hold up. You don't want that? Okay. Sorry, honey. You want something to drink? Here you go. Take this. Take this. I think it comes from that. Okay.

Speaker 8It comes from that stock of folks. Go ask mommy and she'll get it for you. Okay? All right. Thank you. Sorry about that, guys. So it comes from that stock, right, of those people. literally who literally operate in a dehumanizing way so when we see what happened what's happening in gaza when we're seeing dehumanization from the industry from sports entertainment um being a past entertainment a professional athlete myself

Speaker 8The first person that was introduced to me after the black guy who was then brought down by the Jewish guy, by another black guy from Florida, and then he introduced me to a Bondarowitz guy. Now, at that time, I wasn't really familiar with Jewish people or whatever, but I understood that they was in certain circles. But this guy wasn't just overtly slimy.

Speaker 8He was slimy throughout the course of the relationship of business. And it revealed itself through business interactions. And I didn't have it happen to be revealed that he was Jewish. It was the interaction of business that revealed itself to be dishonest and improper. And him being Jewish was just the underlying factor of his own personal person.

Speaker 8When we go and look at general orders number 10. General Orders No. 10 looked at in history from General Ulysses S. Grant during the Civil War. He was willing to, and I think I passed that off to you too as well one time, Ian. He was willing to lock up Jewish people or get them out of America for selling slave cotton. during the Civil War because the Jews were looking to capitalize during war and they were looking to capitalize by way of the cotton because they realized that in the South now you can't go out due to the prize case

Speaker 8That stuff could be seized and then taken to the union. Well, the Jews was like, well, we're going to sell it and be able to get money for you for the Confederacy. And General Grant said they were doing it at such a rate he had to write a military order for it. When he wrote that order, they was crying and complaining because it said that any Jewish person seen selling enslaved cotton in America will be put on a work camp, mind you, not no Holocaust, a work camp, and then they will be deported.

Speaker 8Oh, no. So then don't make them do work. And that's what I was about to say. They complained to President Abraham Lincoln and formed the late. Well, they're hating us because we're Jewish. Now, mind you, I had to tell a story in the right context because that's how General Grant actually put it. Line by line item. What's worse, selling an enslaved person's slave labor or having to work for it?

Speaker 8And see, this goes down to the crux of the matter about the Black community. The Black community outside of slavery was willing to work all through the letters of the Union. You see them tell the Union and General Special Field Orders 15, commonly known as 40 Acres and a Mule. Go look at the conversation within General Sherman Tecumseh Wilms, who's a...

Speaker 8great man of god uh and then go look at uh edward m stanton who was the secretary of war at the time and look at the conversation that they had between slaves who were freed and and the federal government and they were able to speak for themselves articulate and when the government said how would you like to have your own land would you like to be calling would you like to live in colonies they said we would like to live on our own land till it and work for it and be able to uh uh own it forthright uh outright to be able to be good stewards of the society in america

Speaker 8After that, the general came back with Special Field Order 15, which not only gave them land from the federal government, but gave them an enclave of federal installment where they were going to supply gunboats and different things like that, even written out. And to the Jewish people, this was absolutely crossing the line.

Speaker 8This made them kill. abraham lincoln and then set out to kill the other guy uh the secretary of war as well now why is that important well you're talking about a people who came off a plantation ready to work and build a nation to going to looking at the desecration of what we might see as the nation or having to bring back that type of up righteousness uh with the class as we would see with dignity well what happened in the meantime in between time well uh to if you don't know just american history speaking from my experience you have to then go all the way back

Speaker 8towards when we left the plantations, what were the Jewish people doing in America? Well, we didn't have the race divide based off of white and black America because you were either enslaved or working or you were working on a plantation. Well, the Jewish people came up with a mechanism saying, if you give us these lands back, we'll work with them and then we'll be able to bring the money back to you because this is what we want to have as a government.

Speaker 8Well, they start coming into our community and they start first order of business to undermine a slave was sharecropping. sharecropping is no different than the jewish contracts with athletes entertainers the 60 what do they call it the 70 30 contracts these are the same things they do here and here now well what what am i what am i getting that for the people who don't need the whole history lesson well what i'm getting at is is that before you fully degrade a society you have to first understand that society if you don't understand that society you cannot destroy it first the first thing the jewish people have done in the black community was posed as friend and ally

Speaker 8They say that we marched with Dr. Martin Luther King, who was the ally to the black community. We worked with these people and we worked with all of the people in civil rights. And without civil rights, without the Jewish people, we suffer the same plight from a racist white America. Well, the Black people was also looking at it and saying, well, okay, this is something we probably could jump up with.

Speaker 8But at the end of the day, when you looked at the fruits of that tree, what do we get now? Welfare systems. We get overflow borders. We got all of this type of political backdooring where all of a sudden every Jewish person has a private office at the governor's offices and at the presidential offices, but the Negroes still outside saying, hey, I thought we marched here together with Dr. King.

Speaker 8Well, when you get to the reality of the relationship of America and you look at where we are now in 2026, you see the black community just look at it with a grain of salt and understand it didn't happen without the use of drugs biological and chemical warfare it didn't happen without the use of uh sterilization and forced sterilization known as planned parenthood which came from margaret singer who worked with dr cj gamble and said how do we exterminate the negro population in a letter she has in her estate

Speaker 8Dr. C.J. Gamble is of the Proctor and Gamble family, a famous Jewish oligarch powerhouse family that you will literally see in every hospital across America. Now, when you go ahead and look at crack cocaine and you look at all these drugs, you look at LSD, you look at all of these type of chemical things, well, all the Negro always wanted was some tobacco and some weed.

Speaker 8We never wanted to crack cocaine. We never wanted all this stuff. We didn't want all of this stuff that they put in our communities. We didn't even want the alcohol. We made our own shit at home. It was either moonshot or some wine. But at the end of the day, the best thing we could do for the Black American community as a white community, as an ally, is to have enforcement level protection that would make a Jew have to go out and work their own motherfucking sweat of their brow.

Speaker 8from the labor that they mistake from a Negro. No different than general Ulysses S. Grant did, which scared the shit out of them because God forbid they have to work and earn their own. And whenever it comes up to be a thing that the Negro says that they need from the white community, don't sit back and do what the Jew does and utilize it for propaganda.

Speaker 8Actually have a conversation I think like we're having now and recognize that the person who feels it knows it best. And if I'm in a situation, if you want to help me, the best thing you can do is recognize that I'm speaking to you from this position speaking me from yours. And if you want me to understand what you're saying, you don't have to come down to this level.

Speaker 8You just have to respect what I'm saying and vice versa. Thanks for the opportunity to speak. I hope I wasn't too long winded. God bless you folks. And I appreciate the space and the decorum that's in it. You got some great co-hosts. Of course, Joanne ain't going to let you guys get a little too crazy. But I definitely appreciate the wisdom, man.

Speaker 8And much respect. uh to the black americans who are my people i love you i love you so much uh and i understand how we got here but i also recognize that it is it is a it is important that some people in the room just recognizes that god gave us two ears better than one mouth and sometimes we need to listen more than we speak

Speaker 8And I love you to all of those people who are true allies and true patriots. And if you don't give a fuck about the black community, but you talk shit about them, you have a right to do so. But if I didn't give a fuck about you, the best thing I could do is not even talk about you. But to each his own. God bless y'all, man.

Speaker 8Appreciate it, Malcolm.

@malleusigHot damn. Thank you, Nigrodamas. I love him. I love this guy. Everyone, please follow this man. And I want to say, Nigrodamas, you are exactly the kind of person... that when someone says to me, like, oh, you don't have any black friends, you're exactly the black friends that I have. Like, this is exactly, like, I'm only friends with black people that have IQs over 120, right?

@malleusigAnd I know that's not a lot, but when you meet them, they are fucking gold, okay? Holy shit. All right, yes.

Speaker 2Can I do a really quick service just for the benefit of a moment? So what Nigra Dharmas was saying... in a very long way, in an incredibly eloquent way, was sometimes you need to shut the fuck up. Yeah, that's it. That's what I thought I'd do a translation there.

@malleusigThank you for translating for who? I'm not sure you're translating, but thank you. Wow, that's awesome, dude. Was it for me? I didn't know the details about Grant. Thank you for filling us in on that. That's really interesting.

Ian MalcolmYou know, Ulysses S. Grant, so I've made the argument in jest, this is not with absolute sincerity, but that Ulysses S. Grant, in fact, wrote a declaration banishing the Jews because they were so problematic. And so he sent them away, and then it was later overturned and all kinds of other stuff. But so technically... A person prior to becoming a sitting president, he did ban the Jews from at least from his local territory, not from the country.

Ian MalcolmBut so it was almost a precursor to 110 perhaps. But I'll put that into the purple pill. His direct quotes on the Jews are remarkable. He was very aggressive about that one thing. And Negron, as always. And that's why I was so excited to have you in here. One of the absolute most eloquent people and elegant for what it's worth, the delivery.

Ian MalcolmAnd I hope you don't mind. I would love to clip that tomorrow and get that turned into something perhaps with Vilek for AI. Because that was exactly what we need a whole lot more of. And this is the craziest part, right? And we talk about this all the time. You remove the degenerate aspects of culture by taking the reins of that out of the hands

Ian Malcolmof the psychopaths. And instead, you get people who want to make the world a better place. And you would find people like this wonderful individual and those that are up here on this panel, myself certainly excluded. I don't want any part of that, but you could build an entire program. You should have your own daily show, giving words of affirmation, of positivity.

Ian MalcolmI mean, you should be, if you're not, a preacher of some sort. That was absolutely spectacular. And so we just need more of that. We need it every day. We need it every way that we can get it. And if we do, we're going to be able to moralize our people who have been so long demoralized by everything around them. So, so well stated.

Ian MalcolmAnd Rabbi, I'm just so glad that you got to connect. And everybody, not just Negro Doms, also Claremont, give Akunji, give everybody that's up here a big follow. Lots of wonderful speakers. Very humbled and honored to be with everybody. But with that, let's go back over to Mr. Rabbi or Ms. Joanne.

@malleusigYeah, I just want to say if you do clip that, I want to copy because I want to make a meme where it's like, you know, the Twitter thing where it's like, you know, you don't like in quotes, like you don't have any black friends. Right. And like their response is like my black friend. And then it just plays that whole thing.

@malleusigRight. I want that to be the video. That is absolutely fantastic. But no, it's great. I think we should continue going. I see a lot of hands. I don't know who's next. I know Clemont sent him some emojis, but I don't see a hand up. All I see is Andy and Obi. So is that what you're seeing, Ian?

Ian MalcolmActually, I'm just seeing Obi, but I know Joanne always keeps track of everything, so I'll defer to her.

Speaker 1Hey, real quick, could we get this guy Thanos who's blowing up the comment section to take a mic? It seems like he has a lot to say.

@joann_marieHe posted a ton of things in the Jumbotron. I let him up for a second and then he posted like 20 things.

@malleusigOh, if people come up and just throw shit in the Jumbo, that's not cool, yeah. Well, and we've also, several of the comments were...

Ian MalcolmI can let him up if he promises not to spam the... Yeah, he was very excited to see the black Tucker Carlson Jr. hopefully join us up here on the panel. Would be curious to see what comes out of that. I've only engaged with Buckley Carlson. Tucker is not yet engaged with any of our content, but he's engaging with our ideas.

Ian MalcolmAnd I think that that may have something to do with Buckley. And so lots of love to him wherever he is. I know that he's... I think it's going to either be his second or third podcast that he's doing with Tucker is set to drop next week. And so lots of love to him. I think he's quickly becoming one of the biggest people speaking about this issue because Tucker talks about Israel.

Ian MalcolmBuckley is like, guys, it's the Jews. Come on. It's amazing to see his journey. It's been fantastic.

Speaker 8The famous word that came out from a famous man was... You could kill a revolutionary, but you can't kill a revolution. So they might not speak to you directly, but your idea is way bigger than you or any of us in this room, because that's the, that's the part that makes them have fear that can't sleep at night. The fact that they've killed so many people in the past, but this idea keeps seeming to growing and transfer generation to generation.

Speaker 8So the ideas, uh, and unfortunately the person who said that was only 20 years old and he died very young in his home. one of the founders of the Black Panther Party. But then we see now that we have this situation where you're like, he carries the idea without speaking to me, but that's the voice that kind of played in my head was Fred Hampton kind of just being like, you could kill a revolutionary, but you cannot kill a revolution.

Speaker 8And so that's what I wanted to say about your idea, that the idea transcends the person. So never forget that, that even what you said is bigger than just even... the person, but it's the idea of the person that goes to people. So I just wanted to say that real quick. And I'm going to free up some space because I know you got a slew of people probably trying to get up.

Speaker 8But great space, beautiful space, highly respected. And I definitely made sure I shared and retweeted it and will continue to do so. Joanne, great. As always, keeping the frequency vibe in the space good. Rabbi, as always, you know, anytime you want to come through, you always come through and grab a mic. You're always wonderful.

Speaker 8You bring up beautiful information, brother, and I appreciate you. So a piece of luck to you as well. I can pay up. I don't mind, but I know you guys really have a big stage and you've got a lot of people waiting. I don't want to have no problem.

@blissfataleI will drop for you 100%. I just got to say, I really appreciate everything you just said. Ian, I really appreciate you putting this together. This is a controversial thing at the end of the day. And to have some speakers up here that really just get it, you know, and aren't afraid to speak and are so eloquently spoken.

@blissfataleLiterally, Nicodemus, I just got to give you a thousand percent props right now. Like, Um, I, I just love it. I, I just love it. Everything that you said. And, um, you know, it takes one, like to really just start the movement and, uh, you're going to move mountains. And I think, you know, Ian, everything you're doing, bringing this to light, this, this kind of shit is going to just move mountains.

@blissfataleAnd, um, I, I just really dig it, but yeah, no, Negrodamas do not feel like you need to drop. I will, you can take my space a hundred percent of the day at the end of the day. If there's, if there's hands down there, drop me. before him, 100%. This is just amazing. So thank you. Thank you guys for making this happen.

@joann_marieThank you so much for being here. And I loved everything you said, Nicodemus. Yeah, you're awesome. So please stay up here. And we still have space there, so stay up here as well. And guys, please repost this space and follow Ian and Rabbi and Clement and Negrodamus and everybody in the panel is just absolutely brilliant.

@joann_marieAnd thank you so much, everybody, for being here. Let's go to someone who hasn't spoken and then I'll go back to Andy and Obi. Solomon, welcome.

@tigrayselaliaThank you, Joanna. Ian, always good to see you. You and as always, it was Joanna and I always pay attention to you. I always listen to you guys very, very... Good space, good conversation, good topic that you brought today. Actually, you know, earlier I wanted to comment to Omar. Omar, I'm also from Africa, East Africa, genuinely.

@tigrayselaliaI wanted to say that earlier, but I can't point it out. But I'm from East Africa, Tigray, which is the northern part of Ethiopia, which is where we also go through genocide. So that's why earlier when he was speaking, I think there's a cultural difference. Most Africans that grow up... I grew up in here, in America. So basically, we know about the crack babies from the 80s, how the FBI infiltrated the black communities.

@tigrayselaliaWe know this way back. And there is also a big stigma in our African community. The older generation, when they come in here, they don't understand the... big uh clement i would like ignite on this one uh also judah judah negro earlier what you said was amazing and rubai uh what you said about the divide and conquer was amazing so because like

@tigrayselaliaIn Africa, majority of the time, what they do is, like, they divide and conquer the people by culture, by race, and stuff. It's the same thing happening in... They do that in a smaller scale in America, and they do it in a bigger scale in Africa. So majority of Africans, when they come in here, they don't even respect black people.

@tigrayselaliaI know that, because they always use the same... The media uses... They're lazy, they this... You know what I'm talking about. You know what I mean? And... because they not trying to relate to understand the history, but because the black people fight for the freedom of the stuff that we got in here, is the main reason that all minorities got the freedom.

@tigrayselaliaBecause during the slavery, all that stuff happened because black people fought for the freedom. And a lot of, in our community, I'm sure Omar, you aware of that. When it comes to our community, I do not hide it. Earlier, Rabbi was saying, let's be genuine. He was right. The honesty is where it starts. In our community, I see that I grew up in here.

@tigrayselaliaI grew up with all black, you name it, it was everybody. But I see it in my own community, how they judge them toward the black community. They were like, they're lazy. No, you have to understand the system was... set up for them to fail. And which is like, we're talking about 1982 when, I think it was Reagan passed a law, the low income house tax credit, all that stuff.

@tigrayselaliaLike, you know, we understand all the stuff. So basically the main thing is we have to let the big elephant know in our community in order to move past that and acknowledge the differences of our culture to be able to, to be able to get across to this reality. But honesty is the good policy. So Rubai was saying earlier, he kept asking you earlier, like, if we genuinely don't speak about the reality, what's going on with our community, we can get past it.

@tigrayselaliaSo thank you, Joanna. Mike, to you.

@joann_marieThank you so much for coming up, Solomon. And I do not know a lot about this topic, so I won't comment. So thank you. Andy, go for it. Yeah, go for it.

@froemelandyYeah, so going back to the discussion we were having earlier about IQ, they definitely do want to dumb us down. And what Ian was saying, they do not want to engage in intellectual debate. Mark Levin had the chance to engage... Tucker Carlson at Turning Point AmFest and Mark Levin's like, no, I don't want to platform an anti-Semite.

@froemelandyTucker is way bigger than you. He'd be platforming you. And Ben Shapiro's been dodging Nick Fuentes. He was afraid of Nick Fuentes as an 18-year-old. Nick Fuentes has only gotten way more knowledgeable on the issue because anyone trying to defend the pro-Israel position is going to lose that debate against anyone with any semblance of intelligence.

@froemelandyBut someone like Tucker or Nick Fuentes or any of us would, clean their clocks in that debate. So yeah, they aren't really that smart. And we've seen them come into our spaces. We've seen Zico come into truth-teller spaces from Israel and act like he's some intellectual genius when all he does is come in and say, oh, Palestinian babies are future terrorists.

@froemelandyThis is why we should come in. This is why we believe we should be able to kill them. And they're not intellectual geniuses. He's just honest enough to come up with the views that a lot of them think out loud. So they just expose themselves over and over again, and that's why they want to dumb us down. And going back to the IQ conversation, a college degree does not make you smart.

@froemelandyIf you get a degree in gender studies... and believe in no 10 different pronouns, that does not mean you're smarter than the mechanic that can fix the cars. The mechanic that fixes your car that makes this economy run is way smarter than a person with a gender studies major, in my opinion, because they contribute useful skills to society.

@blissfataleNot only that, but I think a lot of us, if we're in the corporate world, we are surrounded by educated fucking idiots. A degree does not make you better than anyone else at the end of the day.

Speaker 1And honestly, with the rise of chat GPT and AI, I mean, most of the degrees are earned by the AI.

@blissfataleYour future doctor... Your future doctor is learning on chat GPT right now. That's what's happening.

@froemelandyExactly. They used to say, oh, go learn a useful skill like coding. Yeah. Well, they can't tell us that anymore because chat GPT is taking all of the coding jobs. So coding is not going to be a useful skill for the most part in five to 10 years. So it's getting a lot more limited.

@wagmiwanI mean, also, everybody here is talking about university, this degree, that. remember that it's Juneversity. It's Juneversity, right? Like it's not, you're getting, you're going somewhere to get indoctrinated. That's what you're doing, right? It's one of the institutions, they figured out that, you know, the smartest way to train the future of retards is controlling academics.

@wagmiwanAnd I'm on, I'm, you know, I believe that, The fact that people can find information on their own, the fact that people can use AI or even internet, like I was a high level executive at media companies. I didn't go to university, right? But I ran a P&L for like, you know, $20 million company. And the person that took over my job when I moved to another country was someone that had a finance degree.

@wagmiwanAnd I had to teach her how to fucking read a balance sheet. So like, and you look at everything that you're getting taught, it is indoctrination. So, I mean, there's been some great speakers here. So now I'm like, Negro damage, you fucking killed it. Ian Malcolm, you always kill it. But the one thing I wanted to say is,

@wagmiwanWhat we need to do, and what these spaces are about, is figuring out how do we end up here? Because we can look through history and go the Rothschilds, what, their first bank was in 1790-something, right? Herzl came up with the Zionist movement in 1890-something. We can look through history and identify when were those things that happened.

@wagmiwanWe can look now and go, Larry Ellison is a super powerful fucking Zionist Jew. And he bought, you know, he's got Oracle. And then we got Peter Thiel and everything. But what we need to look at is how do we end up here? Right? Because, you know, the most successful society is the Western society. And somehow we've been infiltrated.

@wagmiwanAnd we can point to certain people doing certain things. But what we need to do and what I think these spaces are fantastic is that we try to dig into how did we end up here? What do they do? And yes, we have kind of the overarching thing where it's, yes, they are a very insular group. They're very similar to like the Scientologists where it's like it's an inside group and they only look after each other and they've got, you know, culture loans and whatnot.

@wagmiwanBut we need to keep digging into how did we allow ourselves to end up in this situation? Because the pendulum is shifting now. It's very evident, right? We can see it by the AIPAC taking class. It's not only the Randy Fines, because there's loads of them that you can't even see, right? It's not only Randy Fines and Lindsey Graham and whatever.

@wagmiwanThere's loads of them that are still towing the line, but the pendulum is shifting, and our biggest thing now is to go, why did we end up here, and how do we make sure that we don't end up here again, and how do we make sure that we get out of this the fastest possible that we can? Because at the end of the day, whether you're a Christian, there's two billion Christians in the world, somehow,

@wagmiwanWe got taken hostages. The Western world is one of the most powerful societies in the world, both richness and in success. We somehow got hijacked. How did that happen? How do we make sure it doesn't happen again? And how do we get out of it as fast as possible? And I think that is what is really great about these spaces and these conversations that we do.

Ian MalcolmI couldn't agree with you more on that one. And it is rather curious. And to the comment, I thought that was kind of gaslighting before, where somebody suggested, oh, how did this happen? And basically blaming the people that it happened to. Not only can we look at that slogan, right? Through subversion, we shall wage war.

Ian MalcolmBut look how terrified they are of people merely recognizing that they have the control. They are freaking out. They are trying to pass laws saying, no, you can't say that because all they know is absolute control and because none of the power that they've grabbed the reins of was grabbed organically. In that lies the answer to this reality, which is this is not a particularly smart group of people.

Ian MalcolmYou could say clever or crafty. That's not because they have a superior intellect that is going to allow them to conquer the galaxies. No. They just lied to everybody and they lied to a whole bunch of people that were willing to believe a lot of the lies because they are derivative from high trust societies. This would not work if it were not the case that our people, the civilizations that we have built.

Ian MalcolmAnd when I say we, I mean everybody that's in this space, right? That we are all part of. We are trying to live and this space is an embodiment of it. We're trying to live to a higher power and a higher purpose. And with a regard for morality and all of these other things that would guide us to presume, well, given that we're trying to make the world better, I think it's reasonable to assume everybody else around us is doing the same.

Ian MalcolmAnd it's so wild because there's actually a movie. It was like the invention of lying or something like that. I don't, maybe a decade old. It was about the, imagine a civilization where everyone was just honest all the time. And you came along and you're like, wait, I can, I can lie. And you'll believe me because you don't know what a lie is.

Ian MalcolmThat is essentially the Jew. Like, think about this. They made a movie about themselves, right? Because our people just presumed, well, you're not going to try to pull one over. I mean, you're not going to say that you're going to do this. And in return, I will do that for you. And that will be a benefit to both of us.

Ian MalcolmAnd then you stab me in the back after I do the thing for you. Good people don't think that way. And so this is not a result of this being some superior group of people that we will forever have to be subservient to. And again, the way that we know that is because they're terrified of us merely noticing that they're the ones in charge.

Ian MalcolmThey're going to run away. They're going to flee to the greater Israel, which is quickly looking like the very mediocre Israel. And they're going to have to because we're all going to look around and say, look what you did. Look what you did to our beautiful civilization, our beautiful boat. You've demoralized our people.

Ian MalcolmYou made everybody fat, sick. dumbed down, we're done with it. We want our kids to live a spectacular life as they can. And you know who that includes and incorporates is our neighbor's kids and their neighbor's kids and the community across the ways kids. And for what it's worth, that's the other nation's kids. This has nothing to do with just me, myself, and I, or Irene, if we're going to reference Jim Carrey.

Ian MalcolmThis has to do with all of us. But the group of people that took everything, they only care about themselves. And we know that that's the case because even in a space where they don't like that we talk about the Jews, they come in and say, well, let's talk about what the Jews think about what you think about Jews. Because even they, in those conversations, they have to focus inward.

Ian MalcolmIt's all they know how to do, seemingly. And so we will try to keep making the world better. We'll try to keep having these conversations. We'll try to keep bringing these truths, some of which are very uncomfortable. And you know what? We will do it with anybody and everybody that's willing to just say there is a problem.

Ian MalcolmThe problem is almost universally derivative from this one collective that likes when we fight with each other. We're done with the fighting. We're going to stand arm to arm, and we're going to say we've got our differences, and those are totally fine. And you like one food, I like another. Your favorite color is blue, and mine is green.

Ian MalcolmIt doesn't matter. We're going to recognize that all of our collective worlds are getting worse, and the only way to make them better is to look at the common problem and to say we're done with that. And so that's the thing that is beautiful and is spectacular. And as a result, our ranks are going to continue swelling.

Ian MalcolmAnd it's going to be so amazing because as they do, all of the people that right now, and there's a lot of them. I want everybody just to think about this very quickly. There's a lot of people that are asking the question, why is everybody talking about Israel? There's a lot of normal people that are starting to ask that.

Ian MalcolmNow, they might not have recognized why that is. But they're curious about why everyone is talking about it. It doesn't matter if it's just the mainstream or if it's our fringe conversations where we talk more critically. They're starting to at least process that maybe there's something worth thinking about. So we are, for anybody who remembers, a bull start lawnmower.

Ian MalcolmMaybe you had a really good work ethic as a kid and you went around and you did that for your neighbors. You charged them $5, $10, $50 with inflation today, whatever it was. Sometimes it doesn't come on the first poll. It takes two, three, four, you hit a choke, get a little fuel, boom, thing fires up. That is what's going to happen with us.

Ian MalcolmI know it's felt futile for a long time. If you've been in this and aware of the JQ for let's call it five plus, 10 plus years, it felt like this would never, ever, ever materialize. And it's happening so quickly. And so I want everybody to recognize that as people become aware of the JQ, as they all start banding together, we will put down the pitchforks with which we've been

Ian Malcolmpoking one another and we're going to put them down. We're going to raise our hands in the air. We're going to say we don't need to be kinetic and violent against you because you are cowards. You're weak. You're wimpy. You're pathetic. That's why you have to resort to the subversion and we're done with it. You're not going to kill our president.

Ian MalcolmYou're not going to kill our ideas. You're not going to kill our morality. You're not going to kill our ideals or our creator. We are going to find the higher purpose. We're going to say we are so done with you. You do not get any more of this manipulation of the control. And we will not be shamed into pretending that we don't note the obvious.

Ian MalcolmSo it's going to be spectacular. And we're going to get there by having these conversations about uncomfortable and very comfortable ideas. And the comfortable one is that we should all be able to get along at least to address the common problem. And then we can decide, well, do we like chicken with or without the fried aspect on it?

Ian MalcolmI actually think fried chicken tastes really great for what it's worth, but right. We can have our differences in cuisines and all those things. And you know what? Even if I prefer it with the fried, well, then I'm going to set up my own little fried chicken place and people can come and visit if they like. And you can have yours and we can all agree to live in peace with the ideals that we can all aspire to, where we try to make one another's lives better by universally making all of ours aspire for something better.

Ian MalcolmBecause if we all do that individually as a collective, we soar. So that's what's going to happen. And that is why we are going to continue winning. With that, I want to turn things back over to Miss Joanne. I know we've got a bunch of hands that are up and a couple more people that want to come up. And I also wanted to quickly announce, I believe that Mr. Truthteller is going to be firing up a space.

Ian MalcolmIf he does, I've asked him, I sent him a little note to feel free to come in here, add a couple thoughts on this subject. And then if he does open that space, we'd love to be able to basically take the conversation and turn the reins over to him. But let's quickly go back to Joanne and Rabbi. I also know we have Ricardo up here.

Ian MalcolmI want to thank him for coming up with us, as well as everybody that's up on the panel right now. I feel like this is an absolutely all-star conversation.

@joann_marieYes, I love it. Today has been amazing, Ian. So thank you so much for hosting it. And everybody, thank you guys so much for being here. And guys, please repost the space. Follow Ian and Rabbi and Clement and Negro Damos. And everybody in the panel is just brilliant. And thank you so much for being here. Okay, Ricardo Rey, go for it.

Speaker 9Hey, thank you, Ian, for the space. First of all, I mean, I've got a point. Let me get to the point. You made a segue for me that was not... planned, which was culinary. So I'm gonna get to that in a moment. Yeah, look, you've got like right now about 1,028 people in this space. You've got about 73 retweets. So, you know, that's weak.

Speaker 9Come on, let's do that. You can do that easily. It's like, look, that's free. If you guys want to know how to support the resistance, retweet. It's like, okay, just like put, you know, I'll give you like a tutorial on how you do that. If you want me to, I'll do screenshots and stuff. You can just like, you know, you just go down there, a little purple pill and you just, anyway.

Speaker 9But your culinary segue was really cool because that's my background. And the one thing about the universal language of food, you kind of talked about that a little bit is, that during the dark ages, you know, you guys probably don't realize that the Arabs, they were the ones that came and saved kind of Europe because they didn't, like during the dark ages, they didn't know how to make, like even cultivate turnips or irrigation, you know?

Speaker 9And so the Arabs, and I'm not talking about Islam, I'm talking about like, you know, all that stuff you guys get are weird about, But they saved us during several periods of our history. Irrigation, cultivation, horticultural, and so forth. But I think that this space, you know, and when we talk about our friends, like Iran and what's going on in the world, that's why I like Ian.

Speaker 9I'm kind of new to you guys. I mean, I really am. He probably doesn't even know me. I know Joanne follows me. That's where we're going with this. It's not anti-Semitism. What it is, it's anti-Zionism. It's anti-them, these elites that have tried to take us over. But that's where the people that were from this part of the world have helped us out.

Speaker 9And I think Iran right now is kind of our ally. Anyway, that's all I wanted to say. I don't have a lot to say right now. I'll come back in a little bit. I've got to make dinner, but I just want to say thank you for inviting me up. Huge. The point I'm trying to make is when you guys come up here, if you have a few followers, follow people because they'll get into the space.

Speaker 9That's how they recognize the space, and that's how they get here. Anyway, that's all I wanted to say.

Ian MalcolmIsn't it curious, on the cuisine side, the spice of life, I believe anyway, that one of the beautiful aspects of modernity once upon a time was that you had, isn't that funny? Modernity once upon a time. Let's say the modernity that was the past, or we can just call it the past, that you had beautiful presentations of different cultures.

Ian MalcolmAnd I've referenced this at one point in the past, actually. I love, I love, love, love the Michael Jackson Super Bowl show that he did. And one of the things that's so weird about going back and watching that is you see the presentation of diversity in its most, let's say, overt fashion. And what I mean by that is they clearly showcase all of the children of the world, make it a better place, right?

Ian MalcolmHeal the world for you, for me, the entire human race. The thing that was wild about that halftime show is that you see all of the children who clearly have different ethnic backgrounds, different races. presented in different attire, right? You might as well have had them singing the song in different languages because they were respecting actual diversity, which is that all of the places of the world not too long ago were very different from one another, but had a mutual respect for the most part with one another's cultures, their cuisines, their heritage.

Ian MalcolmThat's why it was fun to go somewhere. Isn't it really weird that the people that control everything today want it all... to be essentially monolithic while they say that it is in the name of diversity. We're going to tear down all the actual diversity and we will build our Marriott's and our Starbucks and our McDonald's on every street corner so everything looks exactly the same.

Ian MalcolmYou will eat the same thing. We will tell you that you should all have children with one another. And then 50 years from now, you will all look alike. You will think alike. You will eat alike. You will go to the same restaurants, the same everything. That's their diversity. I don't want that in any capacity.

Speaker 9Yeah, I'm fortunate. I went last year. I went to Morocco. I went to Tunisia. I went to Egypt. I went to Malta. I mean, anyway, I traveled for about two months over there in the Mediterranean Sea before it got fucked up with – I'm sorry. I don't mean to cuss. But, yeah, I mean, if you haven't been outside of the world, the world is like –

Speaker 9Beautiful. And these people are beautiful. And it doesn't matter whether they're Sunni or Shiite or Christian or whatever. There's places where they get along. We have one enemy. I mean, like the world has an enemy. And it's unfortunate that we can't talk about it like you do. I appreciate what you do, but we do have an enemy.

Speaker 9And let's not just... you know i mean at some point we just got to not be ashamed of saying we have an enemy that we got to go against and it's going to save you you know don't don't don't think that we're like these uh outlandish people who are into conspiracies or whatnot and i used to think that that's what it was so they convinced us at some point in time because i'm an older guy they convinced us that that we were into some sort of conspiracy world but you know

Speaker 9You guys, the younger generation, have convinced me that what I knew years ago is true. And I thank you so much for bringing us back to humanity. Because I'm an older guy. Look, I hate to say it. I'm a boomer. But I'm a good boomer. I mean, I am like with you guys. I think that most of the people my age, I don't even have anything in common with them.

Speaker 9They're like gone. They're like in la-la land. you know, with, and so if you make fun of boomers, you're right, but there are some good ones, but we just gotta save them all. We gotta save everybody and don't give up on them and don't give up on humanity. And that's what INN does. That's what these spaces do. And I, you know, my job at my age, I took a job now and I get to meet with people and I just like, I turn them on.

Speaker 9I say, look, here's X, you know, follow me on X, you know, and they're like old people and they're like, okay, You know, but that's what you got to do. It's just one person at a time. But we can change the world. But it has to do with people like the people in this space. Anyway, I'm rambling, but thank you for letting me speak.

@joann_marieThank you so much for coming up, Ricardo. And I loved everything you said. Forty, go for it.

@nance726Yeah, thanks. So I just wanted to touch on what we were just talking about. And I always say this word wrong, but the Caligari plan, I can never pronounce that word.

Speaker 8Calergy plan.

Ian MalcolmCount Richard von Calergy. You could say it with the count from Sesame Street. You can throw it in there just to make fun of him. And actually not Jewish, but his wife was.

@nance726So with that plan, I feel like it gets talked about a lot in more kind of along the lines of just the white race. But I really think it's important, especially in the context of this conversation, to view it in the way that it's really worded, which is not to just get rid of white culture or European culture. It's to erase all culture.

@nance726And you can see that. And I've talked to people who are from Africa, who have moved, people who are still in Africa. It's the beauty of this app. And when you talk to them about how their culture is being degraded and how the image that they're being given of what white European culture is, is this degraded bastardized culture that that and what we what's called western culture is really just jewish degeneracy right they they fooled these people in africa and these other countries into thinking that western culture is really jewish uh you know just in in degeneracy so what happens is these people in africa and these other countries these who end up immigrating to to grow up in america and stuff

@nance726they think that we are. They think that we're degenerates because that's what they were given on TV. That's what they've been sold. And that's what they think Western culture is. But I mean, we know different, but at the same time, we're shown that their culture is degeneracy. And so we both are looking at each other like you don't have a culture, your culture is degenerate.

@nance726And then we act on that. And then when we mix our cultures, we're only mixing those kind of negative stereotypes a lot of times. And that's done on purpose to degrade all culture so that all of it we're left with is degeneracy because they can control degenerates a lot easier than they can control proud people of any nation, of any culture, of any land.

@nance726And when you boil it down to it, a lot of these cultures, right, a lot of, whether it's Africa or South America, European, American, at our roots, at our foundations, in our tribalness, right, we are good people. We are people who have honor. Like every culture has honor. They have systems of trust. And they have commerce and they have education and taking care of your family structure.

@nance726These are values that are found all across the world. But what they've done, and they've done it brilliantly, if we're being honest, is to slowly degrade that and then to just show the worst parts of every culture to each other so that that's all we see each other as. And so I think it's important that when we have some of these conversations, and this space is great because we're having this particular conversation, but even when we go out into other spaces and we talk about this in other settings, that it's not just European culture that's being degraded.

@nance726It is, right? I'm a proud man of Italian and French heritage, right? Like I want to protect my heritage and my people. But at the same time, I value, I've learned lots of things from people of other cultures. And I've studied other cultures and I've taken away some great takes. And I've met some amazing, very smart, compassionate, amazing people of other cultures.

@nance726And they are talking about the same problems that we are. And so I think we need to stop looking at this. I mean, you know, I'm not I'm not saying we don't need to be proud that we're white. You know, be proud of your heritage. If you're black, be proud that you're black. Be proud of your culture and carry it on and demonstrate it to the best of your ability.

@nance726What your culture is really about instead of giving into the degeneracy. And when you meet other people. treat them don't don't start out at a prejudice whether you're like all white devil or you're like you know dumb dumb uh african don't start out from a different standpoint and judge you know it comes down to you know judge a race by race a religion by a religion and a person by a person but realize that even when you're judging that race and that culture judge it don't judge what the jews have have made you think of it or the way that they've uh you know that they've played their evil little hand on it and also have a little bit of compassion i think when it comes to some of these uh

@nance726these Africans and some of these migrants and stuff that us Europeans and people, we have been fighting against the Jews for forever, right? And so we are, and it's only now that we're really waking up and really realizing exactly what's going on, you know, in mass. But we have these kind of built in, you know, mechanisms to fight back.

@nance726And we have the cultural references to fight back against it. But when you've only had connection to the internet and cable TV for like 20, 30 years, and what you're getting shown is nothing but degeneracy, then you think that that's all there is out there. So I think we need to really kind of have a little bit of compassion for some of the other people, but realize that we're all trying to fight for our cultures, and we're all trying to fight for our values, and the people who are trying to degrade it all and replace it with degeneracy are the real enemy.

Ian MalcolmAnd you know what's interesting about it? So two things. I'll give you the micro and the macrocosm. On the micro side... What's so wild, as you were saying that, Forty, I'm just looking through the purple pill, and there are three or four different accounts. I've just blocked them at this point because they're just spamming post after post after post, and these are accounts that are all created in April of 2026, have zero followers, zero following, but are here.

Ian MalcolmAnd everything that they're posting is like, hey, dumb white people, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. which is clearly trying to get white people to sit here and say, well, blacks do this. And then the rest of it are, well, the white people did all this stuff to black people, trying to get the black people to be angry with the white people.

Ian MalcolmIt's like, do you think we don't see what you're doing? Like, this is the machine. It is sitting there and it is looking and listening and is like, oh my God, no, there are white people and brown people and yellow people and black people. And they're all in a room. recognizing that we've all got our own faults and all of our people have done different things that we could do better or worse.

Ian MalcolmAnd we've got strengths and weaknesses, but we all recognize we got a common problem. We're going to stand in opposition to it. And so what do they do? They're like quickly, quickly send our subversives, make them hate one another, do it, do it. It's like the little meme with the little cartoon figure with the stick, like do something, go fight with one another.

Ian MalcolmAnd instead we're looking at their little ruse, their little tricks with their account was zero is brand new. It's like, wow, how incredibly clever. And so back to that original point, that's the wildest piece about it. Like, I do think at one point there were some very nefarious, very crafty people that were, let's say, subservient to Jewish supremacy.

Ian MalcolmI'll try to put it that way. I'm not going to say all of them were Jews, right? But there was a clever set of people that were very nefarious. They were very bad actors, and I would call them evil is probably the simplistic word. Right. And they grabbed control of a bunch of things through some really horrible activities, including likely killing JFK, killing RFK and all the other things that we talk about.

Ian MalcolmBut what's really wild is to recognize most of those people are gone. The system that they've left behind has all been inherited by essentially the low IQ midwits that have enjoyed nothing but the supremacy and the privilege that comes with it, that have a sense of arrogance and entitlement and also. are not all that, they're not all that clever.

Ian MalcolmAnd so the cat's coming out of the bag and the only thing that they know how to do is to replicate the things that worked for their perhaps more clever ancestors who did them a little bit more subversively and with a little bit more cleverness. And so all they know how to do, and David Nietzsche, I'm so glad that he's in here as a perfect segue, right?

Ian MalcolmBecause he talks about, it's basically like, imagine David Copperfield, also Jewish. Oh, by the way, also Epstein Island. Imagine David Copperfield, the world's greatest magician. Or I shouldn't say Epstein Island, but he's definitely in the Epstein files, I think. So David Copperfield, great magician. Maybe his offspring, not so great.

Ian MalcolmBut let's envision that his offspring inherits his entire empire. He gets his show in Las Vegas and the TV show and all the other things. But he's not good at his job. But all he knows how to do is to just try to pretend to be good at the magic trick. That is Jewish supremacy right now. It's like quickly, quickly throw more propaganda.

Ian MalcolmThey'll believe it. I promise it worked for us yesterday. No, we're done with all of it. We see the magic show. We see the magic trick. We know what you're doing. It's no longer interesting or impressive. We're exposing it. It's all going to come crumbling down. And as it does, you got to go find a new occupation. If your occupation can't be subversion and you can't win in a intellectual or spiritual sense on the battlefield with us, well, then you're going to lose.

Ian MalcolmAnd that's what's happening. That's why they push the subversion. That's why they're desperate to try and keep people out. And that's why they, at the microcosm, are spamming the nest with all this stuff, trying to get us just to hate one another and be really angry. It's remarkable how this is happening. So with that, Mr. Nietzsche, I know that maybe some words of perspective team you up there I was trying to offer.

Speaker 10Yes, I love the magician analogy. And I always say they've done the trick one too many times. And I would say that the last thing to add to what you said is we have to call it out we have to go no no no the the cards up your sleeve oh yeah there's the rabbit you know just talk to them stop being silent stop being reticent they're counting on that so we must stop doing that and the magic bullets of calling us names those just aren't working so we also have to stop responding to that no okay well

Speaker 10If I've come from the bowels of hell and I'm saying the exact same thing, it's still your job to tell me whether it's right or wrong. And yes, it is wrong. And who is in less of a position to lecture you on people that you have caught lying to you, inspiring fratricidal wars, deracinating everything that's good about your civilization, and then they're going to tell you whether you have a right to...

Speaker 10they're going to tell you that you don't have a right, I'm sorry, to respond that you don't have a right to call them out. Absolutely ridiculous. So this is why we're winning is because it inspires apostasy, just not believing in their nonsense. And I really think if I were them, if you turn the chessboard around, I'd be very afraid because they're doing everything they can do and it's just falling apart.

Speaker 10It's like the matrix itself is winding down. Forget left, forget right. The matrix itself is not even trying to uphold the lie anymore. That's why it gets meaner and nastier. It's gotten meaner and nastier with presentiments of more authoritarianism because they know the lie isn't working and all they've got left is threats.

Speaker 10And don't be afraid. Don't be afraid of their threats. You know, Caesar was right. A coward dies a thousand deaths, a brave man dies but once. Be courageous. Be brave. The greatest generation is us because we're the ones who aren't giving it all away. We're the ones demanding to take it all back. The only exception might be their founding fathers.

Speaker 10That was a pretty great generation. I'm talking about Americans here. But yes, absolutely. I agree with you, my friend. And it's fun to watch because you notice they're failing when they keep changing their rhetoric, changing their game, changing their responses. And we see Erica Kirk. and all of her followers now that she's sold out to israel after whatever she did that was so demonic in relation to them taking out charlie kirk when we see her saying well i'm afraid i'm i'm the victim now i've learned from israel to play the victim because no one is listening no one is showing up all of a sudden when that auditorium is empty they realize oh my gosh the great awakening is happening hey david let me ask you a question

Speaker 9I think our generation is actually the ones that are coming up. I trust them. I really do. What I see in Israel, and maybe it's just propaganda, but I see that they are becoming not better, but more degenerate. I trust in a lot of the younger generation.

Speaker 10Wait, who's becoming more degenerate?

Speaker 9The Israeli population.

Speaker 10How is that possible?

Speaker 9I mean, well, what I'm saying is they seem to be more right-wing. That's what I'm saying. I don't know if that's true, but that's what I'm reading.

Speaker 10I mean, describing people that openly support genocide and pedophilia as right or left-wing is kind of like describing the White Walkers as this tribe versus that tribe in Game of Thrones. I mean, doesn't their ability transcend the bicameral sort of idea of humanity?

@joann_marieRicardo?

@nance726Pardon?

@joann_marieOh, they did ask you, but I mean, it was rhetorical.

@malleusigDid you hear my question? I think his question was just basically, what use is the left-right paradigm when we're dealing with people who have essentially given up their humanity entirely?

@joann_marieYeah, they are not left or right. They are just fucking crazy people.

Speaker 10I mean, I'm sure I've never actually met a vampire, but I'm pretty sure he wouldn't really identify as one side or another politically.

Ian MalcolmYeah. He's definitely not a libertarian. It's not live and let live, that's for sure.

@malleusigIt's like being a human in the Lord of the Rings and having an argument over left-wing versus right-wing orcs at this point.

Speaker 10Yes, exactly. I like the thing you just said about, yes, a vampire is not live and let live. That's true. That's a great point. They need your blood.

Ian MalcolmAnd they always wear these strange amulets, and they have a proclivity against onions and a whole bunch of others, or garlic, and a whole bunch of other things that... I think the crucifix bothers people. Yeah, is that weird?

Speaker 10Who else hates the crucifix? I can't think. I can't think right now.

@malleusigWho hates the crucifix so much that they avoid writing it in math equations?

Speaker 10I don't know. I'm trying to think. You stumped me.

@malleusigWho can't see themselves in the mirror no matter how hard you try?

Ian MalcolmThat one is the most wild piece. The lack of any self-awareness or introspection. No, and David, I'm curious because we've had what has been a very comprehensive and lengthy, and yet I feel like we haven't arrived necessarily at a conclusion to the space. And I don't mean conclusion in terms of the timing and the end of it, but rather to an answer.

Ian MalcolmBecause this idea of bringing back class in the world that we find ourselves in, I was humbled. when Claremont agreed to have this conversation, talk about in particular within the black community, which he grew up as part of, but not necessarily within, is maybe how I'd loosely describe it, because largely grew up around individuals that were non-black.

Ian MalcolmBut as a result of growing up with a grandmother who had wonderful values, he kind of finds himself looking at modernity. It's like, what happened to this community? How did it get so... how did things go so wrong? And this is applicable for every community, right, and every culture, because everyone in the West is being propagandized just in different ways and to different ends.

Ian MalcolmAnd so, David, I'm kind of curious, as we awaken more people to the JQ, I do feel like there's going to be a return to not just morality, but also to religion. How do we also try to infuse in that a return to class and honor and maybe put the class back in our societies, if you will?

Speaker 10Well, of course, in a free society, we will tend towards that. You know, civilization actually evolves despite the fact that political states devolve. The story of history is evolutionary in terms of people's morals, their sense of goodness, and I know it doesn't seem that way. Well, why? Why would degeneracy be so impressed upon us?

Speaker 10And, of course, that's by Jewish supremacists, and we know this. But why is this the case? Well, you've heard me say it, Ian and Joanne. It's because... If you want to conquer a people forever, you have to demoralize them, which is literally taking their morals. You're demoralizing them, taking their morals away because their morality is their strength.

Speaker 10It's the way they fight back. During slavery, for instance, the way black people were able to rise out of it was reaching inside themselves. By the way, a lot of them were reading the Bible. By finding the moral courage, the moral strength, the moral rationale to say, okay, just because you have all the muscle, doesn't make you right.

Speaker 10That the veracity of a dependent point, especially on moral grounds, is dependent on neither the number of people who subscribe to it or the number of swords that they possess. So that really is an important distinction about moral legitimacy. And of course, now we've seen that they're not even trying, the people that are undermining society.

Speaker 10So I do say that if we throw these people away, if we cast them off, they will naturally tend to become to have higher human solidarity. And by the way, morals will matter more in terms of how successful you are. It's still true that in the Islamic world, if you betray a handshake, it can ruin you, your reputation. And that should be something that's universal.

Speaker 10So I really think that we're artificially suppressed in our moral sensibilities by the people that wish to immiserate us and reduce us to servitude.

Ian MalcolmAnd isn't it remarkable that certain civilizations and societies, and I have reverence for all of them for different things that they've been able to produce. And you go back to the idea of seppuku, right? And this concept that you have shamed yourself and your family to such a degree that the only way to fix something is to take your own life in a horrifically, a horrific fashion that's going to be extremely painful, right?

Ian MalcolmAnd that this was the thing that people would do because they recognize the significance of shame, which in modernity is basically gone, right? We've essentially gotten rid of the entire concept of, of the means and the ends. The only thing that matters is what did you come out the winner? And you look around at some of these crypto scams and the wildest piece about it is that some of the people doing the scamming are walking away saying, ha ha, now I've got the Ferrari.

Ian MalcolmI'm the winner. Aren't I awesome? And there's a lot of people that would agree. And they look and they say, wow, he did it. No, he didn't do anything. He stole from a whole bunch of people by cheating them. And what do you know, if we look at Celsius and FTX and Voyager, and there's got to be some commonality across. I'll find it one of these days, guys.

Ian MalcolmBut that's the thing that's so crazy is that we live in a society where the only thing that matters is the price tag of the car rather than any of the things that you did either to earn it or the ways that those things would have had any benefit or detriment to the society around you.

Speaker 10And people who are taught to think this way are practicing the worst kind of selflessness. They think they're being really selfless, but what they're really doing is engaging in absolute self-immolation, self-sacrifice in the worst way. Because that which constitutes your humanity, your soul, your capacity to be happy, I mean, this is everything that takes you further away from happiness is fool's gold.

Speaker 10That's why a wise man and your morals are the equilibrating factor that allow you to do this. A wise man holds his current actions into the context of his whole life. So the fact that you're out here money-grubbing, the fact that you're assuaging every whim and wish that you have, and every time you have that, of course, as Schopenhauer says, a thousand more whims and wishes pop up in its place.

Speaker 10Of course, wisdom and intelligence and, of course, great moral foundations in your soul compel you to say, wait a second now, I'm heading in the wrong direction. I am going to end up being a miserable person. I'm going to end up, as C.S. Lewis says, I'm going to end up cut off from all humanity, which is sort of the ultimate hell.

Speaker 10So it really is a dark path that we're teaching young people to go down. And it is a blind staircase of sorts. I mean, those people will, you know, hell really is something. If heaven is within us, as Jesus said, so is hell within us. And I can't think of a better hell than the whim-wishers who chase every desire. And you think how much money they have determines how successful they are.

Ian MalcolmThat's so beautifully and romantically stated. And I say that, David, just because the way that you deliver your ideas, it's intellectual poetry. And with that, I see that Mr. Truth Teller has opened a space. And so what I do want to do is I'm going to use this as an opportunity to do two things. Number one. In addition to bringing people's attention to that, I'll also be putting into the Purple Pill so we can continue some of these conversations in that room.

Ian MalcolmI know he's going to have a different slant, tends to focus on Iran, some of the updates on the war and the geopolitical fronts. But I do want to bring that to attention for anybody that is interested in continuing the discourse. Like I said, I will put that into the Purple Pill. The other thing I want to do, Claremont, and I want to thank you first and foremost, I want to advise everybody that's listening, please give a follow to everybody that's up here on the panel.

Ian MalcolmAbsolutely humbled to be with everybody. And Claremont, we've gone kind of around the block and around the town and maybe around the state to try to come to some thoughts, some ideas. There's been some points that had contention, some others where I think everybody universally agreed. I'm curious for your thoughts, not just to recap kind of the conversation and the topic and your positions on it, but also if you think in any way some of the things that we did here are actually...

Ian Malcolmperhaps microcosms for how we can better tomorrow at a macro level for everybody.

Speaker 1Hey, first of all, Ian, thank you so much for the space. And thank you for asking me to participate. You know, I was like, you know, a great throwback Thursday idea. I figured this title would be really eye-catching. And that was my intent. You know, I wanted Black Americans to see that and want to come hear this conversation because...

Speaker 1Ultimately, the goal isn't to be elevating a race above another race. The goal is to have honest, real conversations, racism aside, about how we can better ourselves and better our country, because it's falling apart right in front of our eyes. And we have the power to stop it. There's nothing stopping us from uniting and stopping it.

Speaker 1And this is like step number one of the ladder on the rungs to glory. And I mean, we just got to keep doing this. This is really nice. I felt the presence of God in this room tonight, real talk. And I just feel like that's really what it's a battle about. It's a battle of people who believe in God. Because you know damn well they believe in whatever they believe in.

Speaker 1I'm not going to say it. I'm not going to put that on them because I wouldn't want that put on me. I think it's a spiritual battle above all else because that's what they're attacking. They're attacking our spirit. They're attacking our third eye, as they say. They're attacking us in a place we really don't know how to defend yet.

Speaker 1And I feel like talking about these issues and talking about the uncomfortable conversations is how we address that and how we addressed our soul and how we communicate with each other. I appreciate everybody in here. It's been great. All the speakers were great. Just way more intelligent than me. I love and enjoy hearing David speak anytime he speaks.

Speaker 1You know, he's a genius. And 40 Allen, awesome. Everybody, Rabbi's awesome. Everybody. Ian always, he's like Captain America up here with these monologues, dude. We can go to battle, dude. We're like the new Avengers, bro. But thank you for the time. I'll let somebody else go. Appreciate everybody here. God bless.

Speaker 9Hey, can I speak real quick? Are you going to keep your space open? I've got like, I don't have that many followers, but I know that I just noticed that I went back through. I've got like 10 or 15 people that are my mutuals. Are you going to continue the space or are we going to truth space?

Ian MalcolmYeah, I'm going to wind this down. I thought what I would do is maybe go around and get a couple closing remarks. Would love to hear. not just from our featured guest with Claremont, but also with Rabbi, with David, with Forty, with Dee, with Nigro Damas. And I know we've got Jack Lyons up here if he wants to add in a couple thoughts as well.

Ian MalcolmAnd then what we'll do is we'll recommend to everybody continue the conversation. Again, it'll probably be a different flavor, but I put it into the Purple Pill, Mr. Truth Space, and I was going to wind us out with a little bit of light entertainment. Let's really quickly check in. Well, actually, Ricardo, let's go back to you if you have any kind of parting words on the subject.

Speaker 9No, just a quick comment. Claremont is, you know, I've been friends with him for a while. So, yeah, I'm just glad to hear him speak. So that's it. I just wanted to make sure that, you know, the people that I know, I mean, they're just, you know, we're just a small group of resistors and we just want to be with you and support where you're going.

Ian MalcolmNo, absolutely. And that's the thing. I like that idea of the Avengers. I keep going back to that visual, right? We're building our ranks. And it's so funny because I like the idea of aspiring to be like Captain America. And I say that not in the physical sense. I don't have the juice or whatever it is they put him in him before they put him in the little microwave that he pops out of all buff.

Ian MalcolmBut the idea of that character that I love is the... the eternal spirit that's within him. There's so many parts throughout that franchise where the guy gets back up, dusts himself off, and he just keeps saying, I can do this all day. And for anybody that likes the franchise, of course, there's the climactic moment where it's him versus literally everything.

Ian MalcolmAnd it's beautiful. And there's so much wrong with Hollywood, but that was a wonderful shot. And then, of course, things... Things come together at the end. I feel like that's what's going to happen with us. And so I love this little idea because I tend to be a little bit more clean cut and I try to keep my composure. Whereas my alter ego, Mr.

Ian MalcolmTruth Teller, I feel like is the Incredible Hulk. And he is Bruce Banner and has like a 250 IQ like Bruce Banner does. But you get him upset and you're not going to like Hulk when you make him angry. And Mr. Truth Teller brings the heat when he needs to. And I could do that literally about so many of us. I feel like David Nietzsche is Dr.

Ian MalcolmStrange and is understanding the world in ways that I wish I could and goes all throughout time in the process of it. But no, we're all part of this thing, right? We're all standing in opposition to that, which is clearly evil. And they are Thanos. They've got all their rings. They've got the various ones that in Lord of the Rings would be power, but with Thanos, they've got all the stones.

Ian MalcolmThey've got the media. They've got technology. They've got AI. They've got the politicians. They've got the academic institutions. They've got finance. They've got the Federal Reserve. They've got all of it. And we're like, we don't care. We're going to stand in opposition. And despite what you think, we're going to end up with that gauntlet.

Ian MalcolmWe're going to snap our fingers. And in the process, we are going to fix the world. And that's going to happen. And there's probably a lot of permutations. I'm sure they sit there and they've got Larry Fink from Blackrock and they bring him in and they're like, oh, Larry, tell us about your latest AI. How are we going to win the minds of everyone?

Ian MalcolmAnd then in walks Ben Shapiro and he's like, don't worry, guys, I got it. You're going to follow me forever. No, you're all going to lose. We're going to win and it's going to be spectacular. The Infinity War goes on and on and on. And we are going to be the victors.

Speaker 9What was Stanley's final comment on all his books? Oh, go for it. Nuff said.

Ian MalcolmNuff said. Well, nuff said out of me then. Mr. Nietzsche, any kind of parting remarks here? And then I'll check in with Mr. Forty and then go up to Rabbi.

Speaker 10No, I'm just sorry I didn't get here earlier, but wonderful space, my friend.

Ian MalcolmWell, God bless you, David, for being here. Mr. Rabbi.

@malleusigYeah, I just wanted to go back to the topic of the close it around with the topic of the space. uh with some thoughts i took some notes um essentially one of the things that somebody said earlier was we're looking for black role models and one of the things that i pointed out in previous spaces is that when white people make statues we make statues of the best of us that's what statues should be statues are there for people to look at and be reminded of someone who is being held out as the best of us of our community

@malleusigWhen you take down statues of Thomas Jefferson and you put up statues of George Floyd or some obese black woman looking at her smartphone while possibly shoplifting, God knows what she's doing, right? But what you're saying is that these are the best examples that black people can find to hold up. The best example is a drug dealer that tried to avoid being taken to the police station because he caught trying to pass a counter for $20 bill.

@malleusigWe teach black kids that this is the best of the black community. We teach white kids to look up to and emulate people that actually did something good, right? So my take on it is we need to find these black role models and start making statues of them. We need to find black role models. And I know it's going to be hard because there aren't a lot.

@malleusigAnd if there are, they don't get publicized. But we need to start finding these people and finding ways And the communists will hate it because the communists want to put up statues of criminals and idiots for black people, black kids to worship. But we need to find actual black role models and put them up. And I don't mean the guy that invented the doorknob.

@malleusigI mean, find examples of black people that have actually done something useful for either their race or for society as a whole. And when you find that, make sure you put it in front of as many young kids as you can. That's how I wanted to close it out, hopefully in a positive.

Ian MalcolmNo, and that's the big takeaway, right, is figuring exactly that out. And there's all kinds of differences amongst us, all kinds of differences of opinions, of capabilities. I don't think I am going to beat LeBron James anytime soon in basketball. And he could live to be 95 years old, and I don't think that the reality would change about that.

Ian MalcolmRight. The guy's unbelievably talented and gifted. Right. We all have our own unique gifts. We need to find those things. And that's what's beautiful about the human race is that we all do have our role to play there within. And if we just figure out what that thing is that we can unlock within our side ourselves to bring to the world to make it better.

Ian MalcolmWell, then everybody wins. And instead, they want everyone focused and fixated. on a couple specific things that tend to be almost always degenerate in nature that drag everything else down. They want us to be the perpetual crabs in the bucket, so we're not going to let that happen. Mr. Forty or Mr. Negredama, I'm kind of curious if you guys have any kind of parting remarks here on the subject or the space at large.

@nance726Yeah, so I guess just to kind of leave everybody with, I'll go through it kind of quickly, but a study I like to point out to you all the time about kindness and random acts of kindness. And that is that if you are somebody who does, if you're somebody who is a reciprocant of a random act of kindness, you're going to see a surge in your dopamine.

@nance726You're going to see a surge in your serotonin. You're going to see a surge in your immune system response. Now, it's interesting. If you're the person doing the random act of kindness, you're going to see those same surges in dopamine, serotonin, and your immune system is going to function better. Now, the really interesting thing that's about community here is that if you were just the observer of a random act of kindness,

@nance726your serotonin is going to go up, your dopamine is going to go up, and your immune system and your whole body is going to function better. And that just goes to show that just being kind and just building up our communities, despite race, despite what differences we might have, if we can just be kind to each other and just meet people where they're at and where we're at, then we can actually change lives.

@nance726And when you do that, it's contagious. So I'll end with just this, is that kindness is completely free to do, and it's the best investment you're going to make.

@blissfataleAnd I'll just really, I'll piggyback on that really quick. I just appreciate all of the speakers tonight. I just think it's important that we all really acknowledge, you know, communities, all different kinds of communities can be influenced, misrepresented, right? Exploited. And it's just important to reject, right? The division, right?

@blissfataleThat hatefulness, the framing of it all. And we all do have a common enemy. And I think we all know what that is. But I do want to say, like, there is exploitation going on on a massive scale, and no one is immune to that. And like I said, like, spaces like this where we all come together and really just, like, talk about it, it's just important.

@blissfataleSo thank you at the end of the day.

Ian MalcolmNo, absolutely. And, you know, one curious piece about it. So we obviously do a lot of space with a lot of different subjects, topics. We were blessed to have Mr. Bilzerian the other day. Obviously a big public speaker or public influencer, I should say, right, public persona. The crazy thing is if I look at the number of people that listened in on this space, there's almost 1,300 of them at the moment.

Ian MalcolmAnd the reason I bring that up is because there's this thesis that everybody runs to that which is filled with drama and hatred and all these other visceral emotional outbursts, right? And the people want that. Oh, I'm going to get in there. It's no different than somebody stopping on the side of the road to watch a fistfight.

Ian MalcolmYes, that's going to draw a crowd. But you know what draws a much bigger one is something that is loving, it's positive, it's uplifting, makes the world better, it puts good energy into the ether, right? And so it's very curious because I know a lot of people probably came into this expecting just the fireworks and all the interracial dynamics, right?

Ian MalcolmThe feuds that they would accompany. And instead we kind of found... what should be the guiding light for everybody, which is let's make the world a better place. Let's recognize, and this is what Rabbi was talking about earlier, right? Recognizing, sure, we're different in all sorts of different ways, right? And like I said, I'm not going to beat LeBron James anytime soon in the basketball court.

Ian MalcolmAnd there's lots of other things that everybody on this panel, I'm sure there are those that are, like I said, with David Nijay, far more intelligent, with Rabbi, far more musical, right? I can point to everybody on this panel and say they're way better at X, Y, and Z. I live totally in that, and we all should live in those things and recognize the ups, the downs, and everything in between, but to just understand that we're all part of this thing trying to reject the evil.

Ian MalcolmThe evil is pretty clear-cut as to what it is. And so some wonderful words there. Let's go, Nigrodamus, any final parting remarks? I feel like you had an absolutely beautiful set of statements earlier. I would love if you wouldn't mind kind of winding things down for us here.

Speaker 8Yeah, man. First and foremost, you had a great space. Today was definitely one for the record books, and it was interesting. As I was sitting here, my wife just left, and she was saying how it was a great space. You guys heard my children earlier. My son wanted my attention and stuff. And I think that, you know... just being real is an aspect a lot of people, you know, just seem to just lose, especially in the world.

Speaker 8And I think sometime on next, it gives us an opportunity to just kick back. And some people are more, a little more extreme than others on the wildness, but at the end of the day, they're themselves. And I think we could just recognize being ourselves and ask yourself at the end of a conversation, did you answer the Jewish, did you answer the JQ or did you become the Jewish problem?

Speaker 8Did you help? If the Jews were listening in this space... Oh, no.

@malleusigOh, shit. The Jews were listening in this space.

Speaker 10I beat you to it, buddy. You did.

Ian MalcolmI'm trying to send him... Oh, they're listening.

Speaker 1All right. They cut him off.

@malleusigThey're like, oh, shit. Whites and blacks are living together.

Speaker 10If the Jews are listening...

@blissfataleGreat space, Ian. Great space.

Ian MalcolmLet's see if we can get it back up here. That was too funny. Oh my goodness.

Speaker 10I will say while we're waiting for him, my friend here was talking about kindness. If you cultivate this quality within yourself, it is a way to conquer the forces we're up against because they need us to hate each other. And the second thing is it gives you a superpower to see kindness everywhere you go. If you cultivate it within yourself, then you and other kind people, kind souls, just have this ability to recognize each other and feel a sense of solidarity and fraternity or sorority with each other.

Speaker 10So just make sure you cultivate that within your own soul. Make sure you try to live life to where you're happy and you feel good. Saying that as someone who's a little under the weather is a bit of a hypocrisy, but still.

@malleusigand uh i actually i'm actually interested like ian you and i i think we spoke briefly about uh the possibility of maybe turning this into a regular thing with clemont and negra damas would you be interested in doing that do you think absolutely yeah clemont negra damas would you guys be interested in doing like a weekly weekly show like uh

@malleusigWould you be all right with that?

Speaker 8Can y'all hear me now? Yeah, I'm down, bro. Did you see how they showed their power? It's like, yeah, we are listening. That's right.

Speaker 10We were all actually joking about it.

Speaker 8I literally was like, the whole space literally just ended and I came back in and it wouldn't even let me take a mic. So I was like, what the fuck? But it's okay. Good. It's okay. Now since I know they're listening, since they wanted to make it known they were listening, because it's like they live. If you've never seen They Live...

Speaker 8You must see They Live to understand anything. You're not... I cannot say you're not woke yet. I can just say that you haven't understood the purpose of being awakened at this moment. You must watch They Live. And at the end of the day, They Live was with Rowdy Roddy Piper, him and the other brother that was on there. They were the two main characters.

Speaker 8It was their duty to help everybody see. And at the end of the day, the best... I say it's the longest fight scene in any movie, but Roddy Roddy Piper and him literally had like a six or seven minute, might have been eight minutes of a fight scene because he wanted him to see. He didn't sit back and try to do, he didn't demoralize him.

Speaker 8He didn't shame him. He just said, look, man, you're fighting me for trying to help you, but you're not recognizing that I see what you can't. So he was like, I'm down to your BS and this and that, and they got into an eight-minute fight scene, only for at the end of it, while both of them are fully exhausted and have beaten each other damn near to hell, he's actually like, holy shit, I can see what you're saying.

Speaker 8And then they became on the same side, and they became the most dangerous weapon. And I think what we're seeing is we're finally tired of beating each other to hell. How many more niggers or crackers do we have to go through in a space? before we get down to stop being entertainment comedy for a group of people who wins.

Speaker 8They're the house. They're winning. How can we both leave the house mad? And that's what I wanted them to hear. I want to make sure that at the end of a conversation, they're mad. They feel like they lost. They feel like the people who came to play walked out with the chips and the house got to figure out how they could get some more shekels.

Speaker 8When we know how to beat the house, I think we win. And I think that that's what this space is an example of. And I'm more than welcome. Uh, and it would be my humble privilege to join you guys as frequently as necessary, uh, to make sure that we win and leave the house smiling and leave the house and shambles or in shackles at some point in society.

Speaker 8Uh, but, uh, I digress and that was for entertainment purposes. Uh, but the captivity must also go into captivity. It is written. Maybe that's why they hate the scriptures and the word so much, but, uh, bless you. Ian, bless you, Rabbi. Bless Joe as well, and many of my sister Dee up here, Brother Clement. Peace and blessings to the rest of the wonderful Negroes in the building, and the non-Negros as well.

Speaker 8Much love to you, and I thank you for an amazing time, for an amazing space, brother.

Ian MalcolmNo, absolutely, and wonderfully stated. They live with Hot Rod, Roddy Piper. Rowdy Roddy, I think was his handle there. and what a fiery individual he was, both in and out of the World Wrestling Federation. People should go watch that movie, and I'm going to say it for the 8 millionth time. If you have not read George Orwell, please go do so.

Ian MalcolmPlease read Animal Farm if big books scare you. It's like 80 to 100 pages, very light read. You can get it on Audible. It might take, I don't even know, two hours? The whole thing's very, very short. Take the time. And listen to that. It's literally designed for children. And yet it tells an extremely powerful story in 1984, just expands essentially upon the concepts, but in a very, very different way.

Ian MalcolmAnd speaking of expanding upon the concepts, that is why Mr. Truth Teller is holding his face. I put it into the purple pill. If anybody's not following him, I don't know what you're doing on this platform. I'm going to be going and joining that conversation. I hope some of you do as well. I want to give a special shout out, not just to Mr. Claremont, the special guest.

Ian MalcolmPlease give him a follow. His handle is up in the title of the space. But please give a follow to everybody else that's up here. Mr. Nigrodamus, 40D, Jack, of course, Mr. Rabbi Malleus and David Nietzsche. A lot of love. to Joanne, who was in here earlier with us, to V, a whole bunch of others that came up that joined the conversation.

Ian MalcolmA lot of love to Mr. Omar. I know that we had our differences of opinions, but I appreciate you for them. And so for everybody out there, regardless of what your position is, if you're contributing to the conversation, if you're thinking about these ideas, even if you're not speaking about them on a panel, if you're thinking these things through and where it makes sense, if you're taking these ideas to your local community, you are making a monumental difference.

Ian MalcolmWe are winning. Not just in the public square. We're winning with the cultural zeitgeist. We're going to win on the political front. We will change the world. And I know that sounds like a very, very long shot idea. But if you look around, you know that it's happening. And if you don't take my word for it, you shouldn't.

Ian MalcolmBut go look at the rising trends and not just anti-Israeli sentiments. And I'm not saying that we need to go and kinetically get violent against Israel. But people are becoming aware of that problem. People are also becoming more religious. People are also starting to get away from alcohol, for what it's worth. Drug use is going up in other departments.

Ian MalcolmBut what we're basically seeing is a bunch of different things. The extreme rich are getting even more extremely rich in a fashion that we can't possibly fathom. The acceleration is insane. The acceleration of the inverse, where more and more and more people are becoming destitute, is also rapidly increasing. But the people that are still in the middle, that are holding on and hanging on,

Ian MalcolmThey are becoming more religious, less alcoholic, and they are ultimately looking for a reason why the world is getting worse. And that's the beauty. We're going to keep awakening them to why that is. We're going to make the world a better place in turn. And so with that, I want to wish everybody, wherever you are in the world, good morning, good evening, good afternoon, to everybody that's listening or that participated in any capacity in the present, in the past, or in the future of the recording of The Space, certainly God bless.

Ian MalcolmAnd certainly for everyone, Godspeed on our continued efforts to bring attention to these subjects, to make the world better, and to have a little bit of fun in the process. And so I want everybody, at some point, go back, give some old school music a listen. Go and watch a little bit of entertainment from the 80s, the 90s.

Ian MalcolmNote the difference in the tone, the morals, the people. It'll stagger you. And every now and then, just for fun, maybe turn on an episode of The Fresh Prince, and if you do happen to find one, you might hear a little bit of this song.

Ian MalcolmBut I do not want to die. Not going to die today. Not going to die tomorrow. Not going to die until we make the world a better place. We are going to do our part. We will all ultimately live forever with that creator. It's going to be spectacular. And so in the interim, it's not unusual to note patterns because they're out there.

Ian MalcolmKeep noting those patterns. Keep discussing those patterns. Keep trying to waken your neighbors, your friends, your family. And as Mr. Truth Teller would say, don't be fat. Don't be, well, You can choose your LGBT positions. I'm against them. But if you want to pursue that life, just do it in a way that's not offensive to children and all those other things.

Ian MalcolmAnd never, ever, ever fear the Jew. Call it out. Don't be afraid of the slurs and all the other Marxist nonsense. Consider those three Fs. Maybe live by them. You'll make the world a better place.