1
00:00:00,060 --> 00:00:05,310
Over the weekend, July 29th, 2021,
mark the Centennial the hundred year

2
00:00:05,310 --> 00:00:08,400
anniversary of Hitler's rise to power.

3
00:00:08,670 --> 00:00:14,850
Now the terrifying news for you and I
in 2021 is that the path that we are

4
00:00:14,850 --> 00:00:21,630
walking on today as a globe has an eerie
resemblance to the path that gave way

5
00:00:21,810 --> 00:00:28,890
to Hitler and Nazi Germany coming to
power and all of the horrific atrocities

6
00:00:29,220 --> 00:00:32,839
that followed Hey it's Lucas Skrobot.

7
00:00:32,860 --> 00:00:36,089
And you're listening to the Lucas
Skrobot  show where we uncover

8
00:00:36,089 --> 00:00:44,730
purpose, pursue truth and own the
future episode 245 August 1st, 2021.

9
00:00:45,180 --> 00:00:51,120
And this past weekend, we missed the a
hundred year anniversary of Hitler being

10
00:00:51,180 --> 00:00:55,140
elected to the national socialist party.

11
00:00:55,170 --> 00:00:56,230
Now, now a lot of.

12
00:00:57,464 --> 00:01:01,834
Frame the nationalist socialist
party as being on the right or

13
00:01:02,014 --> 00:01:04,535
alt-right or ultra conservative.

14
00:01:05,914 --> 00:01:09,725
One thing to note about the
nationalist socialist party is the

15
00:01:09,725 --> 00:01:12,065
word socialist within that party.

16
00:01:12,604 --> 00:01:19,025
They did not hold onto the belief that the
individual is a Supreme expression of the

17
00:01:19,025 --> 00:01:21,424
state, but they were a collectivist group.

18
00:01:21,454 --> 00:01:24,424
They believed in top down approaches.

19
00:01:24,695 --> 00:01:29,555
They believed that the government
should solve all of the problems.

20
00:01:29,945 --> 00:01:33,394
They were not looking to the
individual, but they were saying the

21
00:01:33,405 --> 00:01:35,975
state will solve all the problems.

22
00:01:36,424 --> 00:01:41,464
Now, the context that gave rise to
Nazi Germany and give rise to Hitler

23
00:01:41,765 --> 00:01:52,385
being elected for the first time in
1921 was the Spanish flu of 1918.

24
00:01:53,610 --> 00:01:58,800
And as we all know, we are in a
somewhat repeat of the Spanish flu,

25
00:01:58,890 --> 00:02:03,330
very different, but it's still having
a global global effect, if not a

26
00:02:03,360 --> 00:02:08,730
bigger global economic effect than
the Spanish flu due to globalization.

27
00:02:08,940 --> 00:02:14,990
But that Spanish flu was one of the, a
big, or that we'll be talking about in the

28
00:02:14,990 --> 00:02:22,160
beginning of this episode, that led to a
society that wanted to adopt collective

29
00:02:22,370 --> 00:02:25,360
ideology to adopt adopt ideology.

30
00:02:25,430 --> 00:02:29,630
So it would keep them safe from the
other that would keep them safe from the

31
00:02:29,630 --> 00:02:35,450
stranger that would keep them safe from
the perils of the world, because the

32
00:02:35,450 --> 00:02:38,630
world is a dangerous, dangerous place.

33
00:02:40,230 --> 00:02:45,600
Now in 1931, Hitler had an
interview with Richard brightening.

34
00:02:46,290 --> 00:02:52,230
And in this interview, he, he said this
the good of the community pates priority

35
00:02:52,530 --> 00:02:59,130
of that over the individual, but the
state should remain and retain control.

36
00:02:59,790 --> 00:03:03,510
Every owner should feel himself
to be an agent of the state.

37
00:03:03,720 --> 00:03:11,250
It is, it is his duty not to misuse his
possessions to the detriment of the state

38
00:03:11,280 --> 00:03:13,560
or the interest of his fellow countrymen.

39
00:03:13,980 --> 00:03:15,390
That is the overriding point.

40
00:03:15,660 --> 00:03:21,600
The third Reich will always retain
the right to control property owners.

41
00:03:22,770 --> 00:03:27,240
This was the fundamental belief
that Hitler would repeat time and

42
00:03:27,240 --> 00:03:30,180
time again, that the individual.

43
00:03:31,305 --> 00:03:36,644
Is an agent of the state, not the
state, an agent of the individual.

44
00:03:36,825 --> 00:03:42,015
And this is an important, important
thing to lay a foundation piece to

45
00:03:42,015 --> 00:03:45,945
lay at the beginning of this episode,
because traditionally people think

46
00:03:46,545 --> 00:03:52,034
of Nazi, Germany as being far right,
or alt-right, or ultra conservative.

47
00:03:52,755 --> 00:03:58,545
When as on today's standards, if you
look at the conservative movement,

48
00:03:59,024 --> 00:04:03,765
one of the foundational ideas in the
conservative movement is that the state

49
00:04:03,855 --> 00:04:08,175
is an agent of the individual and the
individual has the Supreme, right?

50
00:04:08,175 --> 00:04:12,765
And the individual's rights should
be protected before the collective.

51
00:04:14,415 --> 00:04:16,005
But Nazi Germany was the opposite.

52
00:04:16,365 --> 00:04:20,595
They moved far far into collective
ism in collective thinking.

53
00:04:20,775 --> 00:04:24,495
And this is what we're seeing
with progressivism right now in

54
00:04:24,495 --> 00:04:28,545
the west progresses, progressive
ism and, uh, the latter.

55
00:04:29,420 --> 00:04:31,050
Is all about the group.

56
00:04:31,050 --> 00:04:33,870
It is all about the group's identity.

57
00:04:34,080 --> 00:04:38,280
Now, Lawrence Reed wrote this article
in the foundation for economic

58
00:04:38,280 --> 00:04:42,450
education where he's, he's talking
about Hitler's rise to power.

59
00:04:42,450 --> 00:04:47,730
He's talking about some of the factors
that led up to Hitler coming into power

60
00:04:48,060 --> 00:04:54,120
and the underlying worldview behind
Hitler's Germany and Nazi Germany.

61
00:04:55,500 --> 00:04:59,460
So the leading worldview
was not capitalism.

62
00:05:00,000 --> 00:05:05,190
It was not personal liberties and
freedoms, but instead it was socialism.

63
00:05:05,219 --> 00:05:10,500
It was the states will and should
control everything that you own.

64
00:05:10,500 --> 00:05:11,640
Everything that you have.

65
00:05:11,640 --> 00:05:15,360
And as this quote says, the
overriding point of the third

66
00:05:15,360 --> 00:05:20,789
strike will always retain the right
to control the property owners.

67
00:05:21,614 --> 00:05:27,404
The government will always have
control over your business, what

68
00:05:27,404 --> 00:05:31,184
you do, the way you spend your
money, how you price your goods.

69
00:05:31,364 --> 00:05:37,094
It is top down control, both on
both sides of the political spectrum

70
00:05:37,424 --> 00:05:40,184
can lead and lend itself to this.

71
00:05:42,284 --> 00:05:46,724
But in the middle is where we find
what has been classically termed as

72
00:05:46,754 --> 00:05:52,214
liberalism or libertarianism, where
it says that each individual has their

73
00:05:52,214 --> 00:05:55,784
own autonomy has their own agency.

74
00:05:57,194 --> 00:05:58,844
Now classically in the past.

75
00:05:59,729 --> 00:06:02,609
That was a position that
was more on the left.

76
00:06:02,609 --> 00:06:06,539
That individual freedom was something
that was more on the left, but we have

77
00:06:06,539 --> 00:06:11,659
seen progressive have, have pushed further
and further pushing their ideologies.

78
00:06:11,689 --> 00:06:17,089
They have become, um, more and more group
think and become more and more or afraid

79
00:06:17,239 --> 00:06:24,949
of outside ideas, more and more sensorial
and, and canceling ideas that contradict,

80
00:06:25,249 --> 00:06:28,069
or that might challenge their worldview.

81
00:06:28,909 --> 00:06:35,839
In, in many essence, the progressive
movement as from my, from my standards

82
00:06:35,899 --> 00:06:41,929
of view, from what I see is becoming
more and more of a conservative

83
00:06:42,139 --> 00:06:44,749
movement conservative in the fact of.

84
00:06:45,825 --> 00:06:50,445
Isolating itself from outside
ideas, isolating itself and echo

85
00:06:50,445 --> 00:06:52,034
chambers and isolating itself.

86
00:06:52,034 --> 00:06:56,054
And saying, if you are on the
outside, if you are not like us,

87
00:06:56,054 --> 00:07:00,765
if you do not hold our political
ideas, then you are dangerous and

88
00:07:00,765 --> 00:07:02,624
we should isolate and punish you.

89
00:07:02,624 --> 00:07:08,325
We should segregate you away from
society because you could harm society.

90
00:07:09,314 --> 00:07:15,135
Well, Lawrence Reed writes that Lenin
Mao, POL pot Castro, Hitler, and Mussolini

91
00:07:15,164 --> 00:07:22,424
were all anti-capitalist peas in the
same socialist collective pod, meaning

92
00:07:22,424 --> 00:07:28,844
to all of these dictators, we're all
anticapitalists in are all socialists.

93
00:07:28,844 --> 00:07:33,705
The argument that is made about fascism
is that it's rooted in capitalism.

94
00:07:33,705 --> 00:07:38,114
But when we look at fascists
like Mussolini or Hitler, we

95
00:07:38,114 --> 00:07:43,094
can see that their ideas, their
ideology is rooted in socialism.

96
00:07:45,120 --> 00:07:45,990
Morin's rights.

97
00:07:46,080 --> 00:07:47,940
They all claim to be socialists.

98
00:07:48,000 --> 00:07:53,099
The all sought to concentrate the power
of the state and to glorify the state.

99
00:07:53,430 --> 00:07:57,900
They stomped on individuals who
wanted nothing more than to pursue

100
00:07:57,900 --> 00:08:03,599
their own ambitions of peaceful
commerce, the all gender gated,

101
00:08:04,049 --> 00:08:09,690
private property, either by outright
seizure or regulation for regulating

102
00:08:09,690 --> 00:08:12,539
it to serve the purpose of the state.

103
00:08:13,380 --> 00:08:21,270
These, these leaders, these dictators,
these fascists were not about capitalism.

104
00:08:21,270 --> 00:08:22,950
They're not about free markets.

105
00:08:23,190 --> 00:08:24,840
They're about controlling markets.

106
00:08:25,080 --> 00:08:33,600
They were about controlling everything
from the top down in after world war one.

107
00:08:36,164 --> 00:08:39,525
Ended November 11th, 1918.

108
00:08:40,125 --> 00:08:45,425
We saw the Spanish flu come onto the
scene and it ravaged Europe, ravaged

109
00:08:45,445 --> 00:08:47,735
Germany, and it ravaged America.

110
00:08:48,275 --> 00:08:52,535
Now there are studies that have been
done between the connection between

111
00:08:52,655 --> 00:08:58,145
parasite stress in a region or
parasite stress among a population

112
00:08:58,145 --> 00:09:03,845
group and their tendency towards both
conservative, which is protecting them

113
00:09:03,875 --> 00:09:06,695
and isolating and collectivist ideas.

114
00:09:06,695 --> 00:09:11,365
I heard this clip it's been, this
interview has been floating around on the,

115
00:09:11,375 --> 00:09:14,825
the Interworld of Instagram and YouTube.

116
00:09:15,750 --> 00:09:17,430
And this is an interview that Dr.

117
00:09:17,430 --> 00:09:19,560
Jordan Peterson did with Dr.

118
00:09:19,560 --> 00:09:24,810
Randy thorn, who has been studying
parasitic stress levels and their effect

119
00:09:24,810 --> 00:09:27,870
on the social guilt political viewpoints.

120
00:09:28,110 --> 00:09:29,430
Here is Dr.

121
00:09:29,430 --> 00:09:30,990
Randy thorn.

122
00:09:31,950 --> 00:09:37,650
You know, if you take measures of parasite
stress across the world, Uh, countries or

123
00:09:37,650 --> 00:09:43,620
states in the United States or whatever
that, that will correspond to conservative

124
00:09:43,650 --> 00:09:49,050
or collective space measured by, uh,
measured by political scientists and

125
00:09:49,050 --> 00:09:53,730
these measures and put in the literature
for countries and states measures of,

126
00:09:53,790 --> 00:09:58,050
uh, psychologists of individualism and
collectivism put into the literature.

127
00:09:58,050 --> 00:10:02,550
So we pull those data and look
for the predictive relationship

128
00:10:02,580 --> 00:10:08,040
between parasite stress and, uh,
conservatism and liberalism and found,

129
00:10:08,070 --> 00:10:10,260
uh, what we expected and strongly.

130
00:10:10,260 --> 00:10:14,610
So the more parasites, the more
conservative said differently, the more

131
00:10:14,610 --> 00:10:19,940
parasites, the more collectivist, the
more parasites, the more conservative,

132
00:10:19,940 --> 00:10:22,310
the more parasites, the more collectivist.

133
00:10:22,340 --> 00:10:28,550
Why, why is that well in, in communities
and societies, where there are a

134
00:10:28,550 --> 00:10:33,470
lot of parasites, there are a few
different factors that come in one.

135
00:10:34,485 --> 00:10:36,255
We, we have infectious diseases.

136
00:10:36,435 --> 00:10:40,545
We want to draw closer to our family,
to our support system, because if we

137
00:10:40,545 --> 00:10:42,945
get sick, we need to defend ourselves.

138
00:10:42,945 --> 00:10:44,445
We need to protect ourselves.

139
00:10:44,865 --> 00:10:48,645
And our family is a support
system that can help us if we

140
00:10:48,645 --> 00:10:50,355
get sick, to help us recover.

141
00:10:50,895 --> 00:10:55,845
The other thing with parasites,
even when you look at TB is that

142
00:10:56,295 --> 00:11:02,325
different strains of TB or of
parasites can form enclosed collective

143
00:11:02,325 --> 00:11:04,215
communities, even within the same city.

144
00:11:04,485 --> 00:11:10,755
So with TB, for example, in one city, you
can have three or four different pockets

145
00:11:10,755 --> 00:11:16,035
of communities that have different strains
of tuberculosis, of TB, which is highly

146
00:11:16,035 --> 00:11:18,435
infectious and highly deadly disease.

147
00:11:18,465 --> 00:11:24,245
If not treated, it's totally
treatable, but it's very deadly.

148
00:11:24,245 --> 00:11:28,055
If it goes untreated well before
there was treatment for TB.

149
00:11:29,430 --> 00:11:32,040
People would isolate themselves
within their community.

150
00:11:32,040 --> 00:11:37,080
And they were developed a natural
immunity to the strand of TB that

151
00:11:37,080 --> 00:11:39,090
was going on within their community.

152
00:11:39,090 --> 00:11:43,830
But the moment that they moved outside of
their community of their neighborhood and

153
00:11:43,890 --> 00:11:51,690
interacted with other close knit groups
of people, the vector of transmission

154
00:11:51,690 --> 00:11:57,270
went up and their danger level went
up and they could then contract TB and

155
00:11:57,270 --> 00:12:02,910
bring that new strand back to their
community causing illness and sickness.

156
00:12:03,510 --> 00:12:09,030
So over time, people subconsciously
realized that the outsider, someone

157
00:12:09,060 --> 00:12:13,980
outside of my known family and community
is dangerous because they could be

158
00:12:13,980 --> 00:12:16,980
a carrier, a vector of this disease.

159
00:12:16,980 --> 00:12:21,360
So that causes people to be more
closed and it causes people to

160
00:12:21,360 --> 00:12:23,130
tend towards a collectivist.

161
00:12:24,460 --> 00:12:28,180
Viewpoint of looking, taking
care of the whole and making sure

162
00:12:28,180 --> 00:12:33,880
that the hole is protected in
the midst of this viral strain.

163
00:12:34,990 --> 00:12:40,900
And the converse is true that where
there were low risk or, or situations

164
00:12:40,900 --> 00:12:46,210
in society where there was not a lot of
viruses, there's not a lot of parasites.

165
00:12:46,210 --> 00:12:50,500
For instance, when we begin a better
sanitation system of indoor plumbing,

166
00:12:50,770 --> 00:12:54,400
when we were able to clean and chlorinate
our water and have clean water,

167
00:12:54,670 --> 00:12:56,890
people naturally became more liberal.

168
00:12:56,890 --> 00:13:01,690
And when I say more liberal, I mean more
open to new ideas, more open to travel,

169
00:13:01,690 --> 00:13:05,980
more open to talking to other people who
didn't look like them, who weren't from

170
00:13:06,190 --> 00:13:08,400
their community, who weren't part of.

171
00:13:09,435 --> 00:13:11,055
They're tight knit social group.

172
00:13:11,085 --> 00:13:11,655
Why?

173
00:13:11,895 --> 00:13:13,035
Because it was now safe.

174
00:13:13,275 --> 00:13:17,055
Cause people weren't worried about
catching different diseases that they

175
00:13:17,055 --> 00:13:19,395
might bring back to their community.

176
00:13:19,725 --> 00:13:24,735
But right now, of course, what
we're seeing with COVID is people

177
00:13:24,735 --> 00:13:28,305
are moving back into protectionism.

178
00:13:28,695 --> 00:13:36,225
There, the people are afraid of picking
up a virus, a disease from someone

179
00:13:36,225 --> 00:13:39,045
that they don't know, someone that
doesn't look like them from someone

180
00:13:39,075 --> 00:13:40,515
outside of their family, community.

181
00:13:40,515 --> 00:13:47,025
So many people, not just in America,
but across the globe are sticking

182
00:13:47,025 --> 00:13:52,995
closer to their family, ties the circles
that they know because it's safer.

183
00:13:53,895 --> 00:13:54,255
Now.

184
00:13:55,335 --> 00:13:59,715
After 1918, with the Spanish
flu, there was a hard swing.

185
00:14:00,705 --> 00:14:05,325
To collectivism and
conservatism in Nazi Germany.

186
00:14:05,325 --> 00:14:09,615
And they were the third
Reich kept crazy data.

187
00:14:09,915 --> 00:14:11,805
They were data fanatics.

188
00:14:11,805 --> 00:14:15,975
They recorded all of these
data, tablets, uh, tables.

189
00:14:16,305 --> 00:14:17,715
And so we have this record of them.

190
00:14:17,715 --> 00:14:23,865
So social scientists have gone back and
studied the correlation between the amount

191
00:14:23,865 --> 00:14:30,885
of deaths in a city, from the Spanish
flu and from tuberculosis and the amount

192
00:14:30,915 --> 00:14:38,715
of votes that Nazi Germany, uh, the,
the national socialist party received

193
00:14:38,715 --> 00:14:45,165
and Hitler received during, uh, this
critical time of Hitler's rise to power.

194
00:14:45,165 --> 00:14:46,195
Here is Dr.

195
00:14:46,195 --> 00:14:52,535
Grandy thorn talking about this, uh,
shocking correlation, recent study.

196
00:14:52,625 --> 00:15:00,270
You'd be interested to know as looked
at infectious disease in, um, German

197
00:15:00,300 --> 00:15:09,510
regions, CDs in relation to, uh,
voting for Nazi for Hitler's party.

198
00:15:10,920 --> 00:15:17,280
So these data, these data, uh,
have number of votes, uh, in

199
00:15:17,280 --> 00:15:20,610
the different cities for the.

200
00:15:21,375 --> 00:15:27,135
Uh, Nazi party, they have the number
of votes for the communist party and

201
00:15:27,135 --> 00:15:29,685
number of votes for various things.

202
00:15:30,105 --> 00:15:35,235
So the, the, the communist
party was considered extremist

203
00:15:35,415 --> 00:15:38,055
than, as was the Nazi party.

204
00:15:38,955 --> 00:15:46,905
Um, and, uh, the votes are from, uh,
the C the years, 1930 to 1933, I think.

205
00:15:47,475 --> 00:15:55,335
So the critical years, uh, for the rise
of, uh, really Nazi-ism to get big there.

206
00:15:55,875 --> 00:16:02,115
And, uh, the more, the more people
dying from the Spanish flu in 1918 to

207
00:16:02,115 --> 00:16:11,175
1920 in a city, the greater the vote
for the Nazi party in 19 30, 2 33.

208
00:16:13,335 --> 00:16:17,465
When I heard this, I was shocked
them more people that died, the

209
00:16:17,465 --> 00:16:20,735
more deaths that a city saw from.

210
00:16:21,435 --> 00:16:26,535
The Spanish flu or from TB, it
correlated directly to more votes

211
00:16:26,805 --> 00:16:30,135
for an extremist conservative.

212
00:16:30,135 --> 00:16:33,615
And when I say conservative, I don't
mean conservative as an, as in what

213
00:16:33,615 --> 00:16:38,565
we would tend to think of conservative
ideas today, but closed off group think

214
00:16:39,795 --> 00:16:42,585
identities and, and policies today.

215
00:16:43,515 --> 00:16:48,495
And so all of this then led
to more conservative ideas

216
00:16:48,825 --> 00:16:50,925
and more collectivist ideas.

217
00:16:51,225 --> 00:16:51,965
And it also.

218
00:16:52,770 --> 00:16:55,440
Because of everything that
was happening, it led to hyper

219
00:16:55,470 --> 00:16:58,110
cleanliness and hyper disgust.

220
00:16:58,140 --> 00:17:04,649
Now Mussolini, who is also rising to power
at the same time, as Hitler, as a fascist,

221
00:17:04,950 --> 00:17:11,310
they even in Italy, they even banned
handshaking as they found it disgusting.

222
00:17:11,579 --> 00:17:19,170
And a vector of transmission, there
was a headline from April 15th, 1928.

223
00:17:19,170 --> 00:17:23,940
The New York times ran this headline that
says handshake meets its doom in Italy.

224
00:17:25,410 --> 00:17:31,470
Fascist SMO finds that it is an hygienic
custom that should be replaced by

225
00:17:31,470 --> 00:17:36,720
germ proof, Roman salutes and goes
on to talk about how American as a

226
00:17:36,730 --> 00:17:43,470
horrible example of, of handshakes,
they were so hyper cleanli.

227
00:17:43,980 --> 00:17:48,720
There were so germ adverse
because they were afraid they

228
00:17:48,720 --> 00:17:51,030
were afraid of what those germs.

229
00:17:51,870 --> 00:17:56,490
Would do they're afraid of what those
germs would bring to their society.

230
00:17:58,440 --> 00:18:03,780
Now, this all then flows over
to deeper worldviews and deeper

231
00:18:03,780 --> 00:18:04,890
ways of viewing the world.

232
00:18:04,920 --> 00:18:10,080
It led to xenophobia because if the
person across the way from you, the

233
00:18:10,080 --> 00:18:14,250
person in the community across town
could be carrying a vector of disease.

234
00:18:14,250 --> 00:18:17,400
If you're not supposed to shake hands,
if you shouldn't trust your neighbor,

235
00:18:17,400 --> 00:18:21,900
if your neighbor could carry a vector of
disease, as they are saying in places like

236
00:18:21,900 --> 00:18:28,620
Australia right now, if that is the truth,
well then yeah, we should hunker down.

237
00:18:28,620 --> 00:18:29,940
We should protect our borders.

238
00:18:29,940 --> 00:18:32,370
Should we should make sure
that no one is able to get in.

239
00:18:32,370 --> 00:18:36,870
We should have a top down solution
because us as individuals, we don't

240
00:18:36,870 --> 00:18:38,490
know what is safe or what isn't safe.

241
00:18:38,490 --> 00:18:39,960
We don't know who we can and can't trust.

242
00:18:39,960 --> 00:18:42,450
So we're going to give our
power over to the government

243
00:18:42,450 --> 00:18:44,220
because we are staying at home.

244
00:18:44,760 --> 00:18:45,960
Why are we staying at home?

245
00:18:46,200 --> 00:18:49,740
Because outside is dangerous
because people are.

246
00:18:50,475 --> 00:18:51,135
Dangerous.

247
00:18:51,315 --> 00:18:59,175
Here's a clip from 2017, Jordan Peterson,
giving a lecture, talking about how, how

248
00:18:59,235 --> 00:19:05,445
Hitler was had such disgust and contempt.

249
00:19:05,605 --> 00:19:10,155
He, he wanted everything to be
ultra cleanli and how that actually

250
00:19:10,335 --> 00:19:16,754
then morphed and formed into these
xenophobic genocidal ideologies.

251
00:19:16,955 --> 00:19:20,195
One of the things about Hitler was
that he was very disgust sensitive,

252
00:19:20,524 --> 00:19:23,105
and a lot of his hatred for non Ariens.

253
00:19:23,225 --> 00:19:26,435
So imagine inside the area in
box, it was all uniform outside.

254
00:19:26,435 --> 00:19:27,995
It was all parasites and predators.

255
00:19:28,595 --> 00:19:30,695
Now now discuss sensitive.

256
00:19:30,695 --> 00:19:34,655
I need to add, he's talking about
the big five, a psychometric test

257
00:19:35,014 --> 00:19:40,955
where it's, it's one of the most
standardized tests to measure personality

258
00:19:40,955 --> 00:19:45,425
of, of openness or closeness, um,
introvert or extrovert as them.

259
00:19:45,605 --> 00:19:46,595
And one of them is.

260
00:19:47,505 --> 00:19:55,475
It's uh, discussed versus, uh, well, I
guess it's, it's more along the lines of.

261
00:19:56,685 --> 00:20:00,554
Being conscientious, wanting everything
to be orderly, wanting everything

262
00:20:00,554 --> 00:20:05,325
to be just so, and with that, if you
want everything to be just so you have

263
00:20:05,355 --> 00:20:11,235
high levels of discuss, if something
is unclean or, or someone is unclean.

264
00:20:11,534 --> 00:20:15,044
So it's important to know the
context in which Jordan is

265
00:20:15,284 --> 00:20:17,385
speaking in, in this clip here.

266
00:20:18,065 --> 00:20:22,054
And so, and that was a manifestation
of disgust, not a fear, it's

267
00:20:22,054 --> 00:20:23,195
a whole different thing.

268
00:20:23,435 --> 00:20:27,215
And if you read Hitler's table
talk, which is a collection of his

269
00:20:27,335 --> 00:20:32,014
spontaneous dinner speeches from 1939
to 1942, it's a very interesting book.

270
00:20:32,284 --> 00:20:37,415
You see that his metaphor for the
area and race was a body appear.

271
00:20:38,425 --> 00:20:42,595
On assaulted by parasites or predators,
and that he was trying to erect a

272
00:20:42,595 --> 00:20:44,215
border around it to keep all of that.

273
00:20:44,335 --> 00:20:51,524
Wait, now, remember this is all
happening post 1918, post the Spanish

274
00:20:51,554 --> 00:20:58,495
flu, where there's been this explosion
of death and parasites in a flu, and

275
00:20:58,885 --> 00:21:04,245
they have been pushing for cleansing
and health protocols to keep the

276
00:21:04,245 --> 00:21:06,855
collective, to keep the German body safe.

277
00:21:07,155 --> 00:21:11,625
So it's an immunological disgust like
metaphor, and there's some recent

278
00:21:11,625 --> 00:21:15,585
work that was published in Plaus one
about three years ago, showing that

279
00:21:15,975 --> 00:21:19,245
brilliant study should have gotten
much more attention showing that if you

280
00:21:19,245 --> 00:21:23,595
went around and, and sampled political
attitudes in different countries, or

281
00:21:23,595 --> 00:21:28,064
even within the same country, what
you found was that the higher, the

282
00:21:28,064 --> 00:21:29,595
prevalence of infectious disease.

283
00:21:30,855 --> 00:21:33,465
The higher, the probability
of totalitarian political

284
00:21:33,465 --> 00:21:35,025
attitudes at the local level.

285
00:21:36,095 --> 00:21:41,525
That's an important bit, listen to this
again, or even within the same country.

286
00:21:42,365 --> 00:21:47,375
What you found was that the higher, the
prevalence of infectious diseases, the

287
00:21:47,375 --> 00:21:51,395
higher, the probability of totalitarian
political attitudes at the local level,

288
00:21:51,815 --> 00:21:55,325
and you can imagine, well, what happens
if there's infectious diseases is you

289
00:21:55,325 --> 00:21:56,735
want to put borders around everything.

290
00:21:57,005 --> 00:22:00,095
You don't want free movement between
ideas or people, because that's

291
00:22:00,095 --> 00:22:04,505
partly how the disease spreads you're
going to have much more strict sex.

292
00:22:05,324 --> 00:22:09,044
Rules for example, because that's a
great way for diseases to be transmitted.

293
00:22:09,435 --> 00:22:12,915
And before Hitler went on his
rampage against the non Ariens,

294
00:22:13,064 --> 00:22:14,685
he cleaned up all the factories.

295
00:22:15,385 --> 00:22:16,935
Like he went in there and fumigated them.

296
00:22:16,935 --> 00:22:17,895
It was part of the law.

297
00:22:17,955 --> 00:22:22,365
He went on a public health campaign to
get rid of tuberculosis and he got rid

298
00:22:22,365 --> 00:22:23,985
of the bugs in the factories as well.

299
00:22:24,155 --> 00:22:24,425
Yeah.

300
00:22:25,084 --> 00:22:29,584
So before we go on with this clip, notice
what's happening right now across the

301
00:22:29,584 --> 00:22:32,044
globe, we have highly infectious diseases.

302
00:22:32,254 --> 00:22:36,995
That means that we're w we're C we're
in the midst of seeing a trend towards

303
00:22:36,995 --> 00:22:43,115
totalitarianism because people want to
keep the group at the collective safe.

304
00:22:43,774 --> 00:22:47,885
And with that, we're seeing places
like in the UK where they passed

305
00:22:47,885 --> 00:22:51,245
laws, saying you can't have sexual
relations with other people.

306
00:22:51,875 --> 00:22:55,205
They, they pass laws saying
you can't visit your family.

307
00:22:55,205 --> 00:22:56,284
You can't visit other people.

308
00:22:56,284 --> 00:22:58,475
They're putting boundaries
around everything.

309
00:22:58,625 --> 00:23:01,024
Now the UK, is it.

310
00:23:02,190 --> 00:23:04,830
Exactly the most
conservative place on earth.

311
00:23:04,860 --> 00:23:08,310
If you look at their, how
liberal they are in, in their

312
00:23:08,310 --> 00:23:10,560
policies, they're quite liberal.

313
00:23:11,010 --> 00:23:15,540
If you look in places in America like
New York or California, which are some

314
00:23:15,540 --> 00:23:21,210
of the most liberal states, you see that
they're taking the most conservative,

315
00:23:21,240 --> 00:23:25,920
putting borders around everything,
borders around communication, borders,

316
00:23:25,950 --> 00:23:32,070
around information that anything that
is outside of their borders is now

317
00:23:32,100 --> 00:23:35,340
deemed misinformation or disinformation.

318
00:23:37,650 --> 00:23:38,610
This all.

319
00:23:39,540 --> 00:23:41,160
We're going to go back to
this clip, as you can see.

320
00:23:42,495 --> 00:23:46,935
Hitler then took what was
happening, took his disgust.

321
00:23:46,935 --> 00:23:49,695
And they began to go on Peppa,
public health campaigns.

322
00:23:49,695 --> 00:23:54,705
They began to purify and
cleanse factories and schools

323
00:23:54,905 --> 00:23:56,495
for diseases to be transmitted.

324
00:23:56,885 --> 00:24:00,365
And before Hitler went on his
rampage against the non-Armenians,

325
00:24:00,515 --> 00:24:02,105
he'd cleaned up all the factories.

326
00:24:02,795 --> 00:24:04,355
And like he went in
there and fumigated them.

327
00:24:04,355 --> 00:24:07,535
It was part of the law and he
went on a public health campaign

328
00:24:07,535 --> 00:24:09,335
to get rid of tuberculosis.

329
00:24:09,335 --> 00:24:11,435
And he got rid of the bugs
in the factories as well.

330
00:24:11,585 --> 00:24:12,875
And he used Zyklon B.

331
00:24:13,905 --> 00:24:14,925
That's an insecticide.

332
00:24:14,925 --> 00:24:17,775
And now it's the gas that he used
in the gas chambers eventually.

333
00:24:17,775 --> 00:24:20,895
So first it was the bugs in the
rats, and then it was people

334
00:24:20,895 --> 00:24:22,485
who were that it was euthanasia.

335
00:24:22,485 --> 00:24:25,785
That was the next move
and forest you euthanasia.

336
00:24:26,205 --> 00:24:31,665
And the rationale for that was compassion
by the way, just so you all know it's.

337
00:24:32,105 --> 00:24:38,345
So to recap, what Jordan seen here,
the path that Hitler went on was

338
00:24:38,375 --> 00:24:40,715
we're going to Shopify the land.

339
00:24:40,715 --> 00:24:42,065
We're going to purify the factories.

340
00:24:42,065 --> 00:24:43,105
We're going to get rid of the bus.

341
00:24:43,125 --> 00:24:44,045
We can get rid of the rats.

342
00:24:44,045 --> 00:24:46,835
We're going to get rid of, uh, TB.

343
00:24:47,585 --> 00:24:53,465
And they use, uh, an, a pesticide
cyclo and B, which is the very thing

344
00:24:53,465 --> 00:24:58,805
that they used in the gas chambers
to genocide, millions of Jews.

345
00:24:59,525 --> 00:25:03,065
And then from there, he said, it moved
on to euthanasia out of compassion.

346
00:25:03,965 --> 00:25:07,025
We're going to euthanize
people with down syndrome.

347
00:25:07,205 --> 00:25:09,755
We're going to use denies the old
we're going to use tonight, the

348
00:25:09,755 --> 00:25:11,525
disabled, because it's compassionate.

349
00:25:12,450 --> 00:25:16,200
It's compassionate, the same
arguments that the same things we are

350
00:25:16,200 --> 00:25:21,960
seeing today, arguments in society
saying euthanasia is compassionate.

351
00:25:21,960 --> 00:25:22,980
We should have it.

352
00:25:23,310 --> 00:25:24,390
It is compassionate.

353
00:25:24,420 --> 00:25:25,110
We just covered this.

354
00:25:25,110 --> 00:25:29,850
In the previous episode, it is
compassionate to abort your child.

355
00:25:30,300 --> 00:25:32,040
It is the most loving
thing that you can do.

356
00:25:32,040 --> 00:25:38,430
We, we talked about this
in episode 244 goes on.

357
00:25:38,920 --> 00:25:43,720
It's merciful to put these people
who are burdens to themselves and

358
00:25:43,720 --> 00:25:47,440
their families and the state who
are living second grade lives.

359
00:25:47,530 --> 00:25:49,930
It's merciful to euthanize.

360
00:25:50,620 --> 00:25:54,700
That is the exact argument that we're
hearing when it comes to abortion.

361
00:25:54,850 --> 00:25:57,520
That it's merciful that
these, these children.

362
00:25:58,850 --> 00:25:59,810
That are being aborted there.

363
00:25:59,820 --> 00:26:02,120
They're going to be, they're going
to be burdensome to theirselves.

364
00:26:02,120 --> 00:26:03,590
They're going to be
burdensome to their family.

365
00:26:03,590 --> 00:26:05,240
There's going to be
burdensome to their states.

366
00:26:05,240 --> 00:26:06,830
They're not going to have a good life.

367
00:26:06,830 --> 00:26:10,520
It's actually merciful and
compassionate to abort these babies.

368
00:26:11,330 --> 00:26:12,790
I was a huge campaign in Germany.

369
00:26:12,790 --> 00:26:18,670
It was after that, that the
more racial purifications began.

370
00:26:19,210 --> 00:26:22,360
And so that's the disgusting,
that's unbelievable.

371
00:26:23,350 --> 00:26:24,730
Well, that's where we are today.

372
00:26:25,090 --> 00:26:29,650
This is the beginnings of that same
movement yet on a global scale due to

373
00:26:29,650 --> 00:26:34,150
globalization that we're seeing today,
the question is, will we stem this

374
00:26:34,150 --> 00:26:38,080
tide will, uh, ideas of liberalism.

375
00:26:38,260 --> 00:26:39,670
It's really ideas of liberalism.

376
00:26:39,700 --> 00:26:42,190
Will they succeed?

377
00:26:42,190 --> 00:26:47,260
Will they win out over,
over top-down control?

378
00:26:48,435 --> 00:26:53,985
And, and, and this sort of conservatism
that Jordan is describing here, this

379
00:26:53,985 --> 00:26:59,835
conservatives, and that puts the group
above the individual, which is different

380
00:26:59,835 --> 00:27:04,565
from the way that most conservatives
would describe their own ideology today.

381
00:27:04,805 --> 00:27:11,555
And what I see is conservatism is moving
and swinging court's classical liberalism.

382
00:27:12,335 --> 00:27:19,355
Whereas what was considered liberal
20, 25 years ago has swung to this

383
00:27:19,445 --> 00:27:25,145
progressive ism that is all about
controlling the individual individual.

384
00:27:25,265 --> 00:27:27,275
It's all about controlling speech.

385
00:27:27,305 --> 00:27:30,305
It's all about controlling sexual norms.

386
00:27:30,485 --> 00:27:31,215
It's all about.

387
00:27:32,229 --> 00:27:37,449
Control top down, putting the
croup over the individual control.

388
00:27:37,479 --> 00:27:39,040
Well, what does this mean?

389
00:27:39,550 --> 00:27:43,989
If we are seeing this on a global
scale, are we going to see a shift

390
00:27:44,110 --> 00:27:49,479
in the coming years currently and
in the coming years to more of these

391
00:27:49,659 --> 00:27:57,489
collectivism border driven, conservative
ideas, as, as we saw in Nazi Germany?

392
00:27:57,489 --> 00:28:01,110
No, it was 1918 and it wasn't until.

393
00:28:01,945 --> 00:28:07,585
10 20 years later that we really saw
the birth and the fruit of those ideas

394
00:28:07,855 --> 00:28:13,705
that have that social view point that
was formed during the Spanish flu.

395
00:28:13,705 --> 00:28:17,395
Well, here it goes back to
this first interview with Dr.

396
00:28:17,695 --> 00:28:18,505
Randy thorn.

397
00:28:19,235 --> 00:28:24,105
I think there'll be a swing towards
conservative political beliefs in across

398
00:28:24,105 --> 00:28:28,335
the world because of the, because of this
pandemic, will that shape the political

399
00:28:28,335 --> 00:28:32,925
beliefs of, of, uh, and is, is there a
crucial period for that to be shaped?

400
00:28:32,925 --> 00:28:37,245
So for example, will this have
a bigger effect on say 14 to 16

401
00:28:37,245 --> 00:28:40,305
year olds or 16 to 18 year olds
who are catalyzing their identity?

402
00:28:41,054 --> 00:28:43,814
Would you w would there be a cohort
that would be most disrupted?

403
00:28:44,985 --> 00:28:46,784
That's a really interesting point.

404
00:28:46,784 --> 00:28:47,955
And I've thought a lot about it.

405
00:28:47,955 --> 00:28:51,014
We don't there's no, there's
no, there's no data on that now.

406
00:28:51,605 --> 00:28:57,155
So we don't have data now on how the
timeframe and what demographics are

407
00:28:57,155 --> 00:28:59,554
really going to be shaped by this.

408
00:28:59,584 --> 00:29:02,985
But Jordan, in this interview, he
brought up another question, which.

409
00:29:03,810 --> 00:29:07,680
It's the question that I have been
thinking it's why is it that we're

410
00:29:07,680 --> 00:29:11,250
seeing across, across the globe?

411
00:29:11,280 --> 00:29:12,390
It's not just an America.

412
00:29:12,390 --> 00:29:17,480
Why are we seeing the fact that it
is more the left, those who, who

413
00:29:17,510 --> 00:29:21,050
tend to have more openness to ideas?

414
00:29:21,050 --> 00:29:25,070
Why are they the ones that are
reacting with more conservative

415
00:29:25,250 --> 00:29:30,430
or, or collectivist ideas versus
what we think we should be beat?

416
00:29:30,430 --> 00:29:33,770
Well, the conservatives would be the
ones that are trying to shut the borders.

417
00:29:33,920 --> 00:29:36,800
The conservatives would be the
ones that are, are trying to

418
00:29:36,800 --> 00:29:41,570
mandate the mass and trying to, to
force on vaccinations on people.

419
00:29:41,840 --> 00:29:42,890
But it's the opposite.

420
00:29:42,890 --> 00:29:44,990
It's the liberal side.

421
00:29:44,990 --> 00:29:45,440
That's seen it.

422
00:29:45,440 --> 00:29:47,270
Well, Dr.

423
00:29:47,270 --> 00:29:49,460
Ronnie thorn and I disagree with this.

424
00:29:49,520 --> 00:29:53,780
He, he thinks, and maybe this
is true for America, but he

425
00:29:53,780 --> 00:29:55,580
thinks well it's because Trump.

426
00:29:57,180 --> 00:30:03,390
Former president Donald Trump, because
he was pretty skeptical about some

427
00:30:03,390 --> 00:30:09,750
of the COVID stuff early on that, uh,
that caused the liberals to swing to

428
00:30:09,750 --> 00:30:13,260
the other side and the conservatives
to swing to a more liberal standpoint.

429
00:30:13,470 --> 00:30:14,880
But I actually think it's different.

430
00:30:15,060 --> 00:30:22,070
I think the reason is, is conservatives
are, are viewing the individual

431
00:30:22,070 --> 00:30:26,450
as the Supreme and rejecting
collectivist ideas because they

432
00:30:26,450 --> 00:30:27,980
want their individual freedom.

433
00:30:27,980 --> 00:30:33,230
As individually it's being able to run
their businesses, able to run their lives,

434
00:30:33,230 --> 00:30:35,330
able to make decisions for themselves.

435
00:30:35,600 --> 00:30:39,560
Whereas today liberalism
is about collectivism.

436
00:30:39,680 --> 00:30:43,970
It is about top down control of
that is their mode of operation.

437
00:30:43,970 --> 00:30:51,800
So we're seeing the collectivists
across the globe moving towards the

438
00:30:51,800 --> 00:30:55,190
control of society from top down.

439
00:30:56,790 --> 00:31:02,040
And that, and the reason I think it's
this, that is not because of former

440
00:31:02,040 --> 00:31:04,770
president Donald Trump is because
we're seeing it all across the globe.

441
00:31:05,189 --> 00:31:08,489
We're seen in France, we're seen in
Australia, we're seeing it in Italy.

442
00:31:08,489 --> 00:31:09,360
We're seeing it in Greece.

443
00:31:09,360 --> 00:31:10,560
We're seeing it in the UK.

444
00:31:11,580 --> 00:31:15,570
We're seeing it across the middle
east, across the middle east is a

445
00:31:15,570 --> 00:31:20,310
place that is generally, normally
considered very conservative.

446
00:31:20,310 --> 00:31:26,580
And, and yet they have some of the
highest rates of vaccine hesitancy

447
00:31:27,149 --> 00:31:28,679
across middle east, north Africa.

448
00:31:29,159 --> 00:31:30,000
Why is that?

449
00:31:30,300 --> 00:31:38,129
I think it's because there is a new
generation that is holding onto and

450
00:31:38,159 --> 00:31:44,070
stepping into these ideas, these
liberalism ideas of, of capitalism, of

451
00:31:44,070 --> 00:31:48,870
free market, of being able to make the
best choice for them and their family.

452
00:31:51,570 --> 00:31:56,850
And so I reject the notion
that it's, oh, it's a pushback

453
00:31:57,180 --> 00:31:59,580
against president Donald Trump.

454
00:32:02,010 --> 00:32:06,720
At the same time, we are seeing
the left and the progressivism,

455
00:32:06,720 --> 00:32:11,640
these progressive ideology is
becoming more and more totalitarian.

456
00:32:12,120 --> 00:32:18,480
They're becoming more and more controlling
of the way you live the way you think.

457
00:32:18,900 --> 00:32:25,710
And these are, are, are the dangers
that we are seeing within societies

458
00:32:25,710 --> 00:32:32,640
that are experiencing pandemics that
are experiencing, uh, viral vectors.

459
00:32:33,840 --> 00:32:35,280
Is that within those communities?

460
00:32:36,195 --> 00:32:41,895
Totalitarian and totalitarianism
rises to the top.

461
00:32:42,165 --> 00:32:45,945
And those who are once conservative
are now becoming libertarian

462
00:32:46,095 --> 00:32:51,105
or liberal and saying, actually
we do not want totalitarianism.

463
00:32:51,105 --> 00:32:54,435
We do not want the government
controlling our lives and

464
00:32:54,435 --> 00:32:56,475
setting arbitrary rules for us.

465
00:32:56,655 --> 00:32:59,565
We actually want open borders in that.

466
00:32:59,595 --> 00:33:05,534
I want the freedom to be able to travel
and do business and explore the world.

467
00:33:05,745 --> 00:33:07,754
And I want to have that
choice to be on me.

468
00:33:07,784 --> 00:33:10,754
I don't want that choice being
put on me by someone else.

469
00:33:10,754 --> 00:33:17,355
And that's where I think the path
that we are on and we'll have to

470
00:33:17,355 --> 00:33:19,335
see over the next coming decades.

471
00:33:19,725 --> 00:33:23,085
What will the fruit of all of this be?

472
00:33:23,085 --> 00:33:30,465
And how will society shake itself
out of this, this, this worldview.

473
00:33:31,830 --> 00:33:32,519
What will happen?

474
00:33:32,519 --> 00:33:37,530
Will we see more conservative ideas
that are, tend to be more libertarian

475
00:33:37,739 --> 00:33:41,790
or tend to be more of conservative
in the way that we say today?

476
00:33:41,820 --> 00:33:47,340
Or are we going to see a continual
push towards greater totalitarianism,

477
00:33:47,340 --> 00:33:54,689
greater collectivist laws and control
importers of society in attempt to

478
00:33:54,719 --> 00:33:58,679
control society and make every one safe?

479
00:33:58,679 --> 00:34:00,780
Well, where do all of
these laws come from?

480
00:34:00,780 --> 00:34:02,009
Where do we get laws from?

481
00:34:02,009 --> 00:34:07,649
I've been thinking about how about
this for a while, where all, all of

482
00:34:07,649 --> 00:34:14,399
our laws come from, the way that we
view morality, each law is based on

483
00:34:14,399 --> 00:34:17,040
morality and our worldview of morality.

484
00:34:17,069 --> 00:34:22,199
Now, all Abrahamic faiths, as I've
been pondering this with a varying

485
00:34:22,199 --> 00:34:27,719
degree, have, do two forms of loss,
one set of rules or laws or morals.

486
00:34:28,685 --> 00:34:33,775
Uh, for those who don't hold onto
their worldview and one, for those who

487
00:34:33,804 --> 00:34:36,655
adhere to their religious worldview.

488
00:34:36,925 --> 00:34:41,665
And so we see that with Judaism
and they have a secular court for

489
00:34:41,665 --> 00:34:43,945
the laws that applies to everyone.

490
00:34:44,215 --> 00:34:49,195
And of course those laws are, are
informed largely by, uh, Judaic,

491
00:34:49,375 --> 00:34:52,705
worldviews and Judaic writings.

492
00:34:53,275 --> 00:34:57,085
And then they have religious courts
for matters of marriage and divorce.

493
00:34:57,295 --> 00:35:01,085
They have go courts for Jews,
Sharia courts for Muslims and

494
00:35:01,085 --> 00:35:04,375
Drew's and  words for Christians.

495
00:35:05,545 --> 00:35:11,205
Now the same thing is in the UAE,
they have a different system.

496
00:35:11,275 --> 00:35:16,315
It's different courts for Muslims and
non-Muslims ones that operate based

497
00:35:16,315 --> 00:35:19,615
more on, based on Sharia law or Sharia.

498
00:35:19,615 --> 00:35:20,545
It just means the law.

499
00:35:20,545 --> 00:35:22,585
So based on Sharia and.

500
00:35:23,385 --> 00:35:28,975
Other systems that are for non-Muslims
or ex-pats that are based on their

501
00:35:29,295 --> 00:35:33,855
universal legal system, which has
been informed by the Islamic faith.

502
00:35:34,605 --> 00:35:37,125
Now in Christianity, we
see something different.

503
00:35:37,125 --> 00:35:41,745
Now my reading of the Christian
faith probably is going to be

504
00:35:41,745 --> 00:35:43,065
different than someone else's.

505
00:35:43,065 --> 00:35:46,275
So I'm sure someone's going to
leave comment or message me.

506
00:35:46,305 --> 00:35:49,335
He's like, well, not all Christians
think that way, but the same thing

507
00:35:49,335 --> 00:35:51,135
can be said for the Jewish faith.

508
00:35:51,135 --> 00:35:53,505
The same thing can be said
for these L'Amic faith.

509
00:35:53,535 --> 00:35:56,985
There are many different views
and expressions of those.

510
00:35:56,985 --> 00:36:00,795
So this is my reading of my faith.

511
00:36:01,155 --> 00:36:08,835
So in reading it, I see it to be much
more Christianity, to be much, have a

512
00:36:08,835 --> 00:36:14,205
greater tendency towards libertarianism
where the people who are outside

513
00:36:14,205 --> 00:36:19,575
the faith should not be judged fully
by the moral code within the faith.

514
00:36:19,875 --> 00:36:25,320
For instance, We are, we're told in the
scriptures not to associate with people

515
00:36:25,320 --> 00:36:31,980
who are full on embracing the lifestyle of
sexual immorality, greed, or drunkenness.

516
00:36:31,980 --> 00:36:36,780
It says not to even associate with
those people who at the same time

517
00:36:36,780 --> 00:36:39,450
claim to be followers of Jesus Christ.

518
00:36:39,960 --> 00:36:40,620
Wow.

519
00:36:40,680 --> 00:36:46,770
It also says in very same passage that
that doesn't mean to don't associate

520
00:36:46,770 --> 00:36:50,940
with anyone who is sexual immoral,
only those who claim to follow the

521
00:36:50,940 --> 00:36:54,900
faith, but do not actually follow the
tenants of the faith and therefore

522
00:36:56,070 --> 00:36:58,110
the sexual immoral of the world.

523
00:36:58,110 --> 00:37:00,480
Those who don't adhere to my faith.

524
00:37:00,720 --> 00:37:04,320
I'm not barred from engaging
with them from sitting down

525
00:37:04,320 --> 00:37:05,730
and having a meal from within.

526
00:37:05,910 --> 00:37:07,050
In fact, it's encouraged.

527
00:37:10,380 --> 00:37:16,560
It's encouraged for us to interact within
the world, but not be of the world.

528
00:37:17,790 --> 00:37:19,890
So there, there are clear standards.

529
00:37:20,970 --> 00:37:25,519
Within the Christian faith that
apply to those who believe in the

530
00:37:25,519 --> 00:37:26,990
faith and those who are outside.

531
00:37:26,990 --> 00:37:31,249
And we can't judge those people the
same way, because if you don't believe

532
00:37:31,549 --> 00:37:37,519
what I believe, well, then why should
I expect you to hold the same level of

533
00:37:37,549 --> 00:37:44,089
morality as I, now, this is where this is
libertarianism and everything that we're

534
00:37:44,089 --> 00:37:49,850
seeing right now, because this ties all
the way back to the way we view personal

535
00:37:49,850 --> 00:37:53,299
choice around things like vaccination.

536
00:37:53,660 --> 00:37:55,850
Is, should that be a personal choice?

537
00:37:56,569 --> 00:38:01,249
Is that something that depends on your
individual Liberty or is that, and

538
00:38:01,249 --> 00:38:06,379
infringing upon someone else's Liberty
and four it's a collectivist choice

539
00:38:06,499 --> 00:38:08,999
and that is able to be forced upon.

540
00:38:09,915 --> 00:38:11,625
These are all questions of morality.

541
00:38:11,625 --> 00:38:13,755
When people say, well, you
can't legislate morality.

542
00:38:13,755 --> 00:38:18,884
Well, these are every law is a question
of morality and that all comes from

543
00:38:19,065 --> 00:38:22,935
where do you derive your morality?

544
00:38:22,935 --> 00:38:24,315
What is the source of that?

545
00:38:25,125 --> 00:38:29,115
Well, this is very important because
when we look at, for instance, issues

546
00:38:29,115 --> 00:38:34,305
that we've been talking here, like
the trans agenda, there is this moral

547
00:38:34,305 --> 00:38:36,045
tension that we must all walk in.

548
00:38:37,545 --> 00:38:43,005
Now, the, the Abrahamic faiths, they
derive their morality from what Thomas

549
00:38:43,005 --> 00:38:46,065
Aquinas calls, the divine laws that is.

550
00:38:47,325 --> 00:38:50,674
The law is the systems of
law we're giving, given to

551
00:38:50,674 --> 00:38:52,625
them by divine revelation.

552
00:38:52,625 --> 00:38:56,015
Now all three Abrahamic faiths
go all the way back to Abraham.

553
00:38:56,315 --> 00:38:58,025
So why it's called the Abrahamic faiths.

554
00:38:59,884 --> 00:39:05,105
They believe, we believe that God
gave Abraham a set of divine laws.

555
00:39:05,134 --> 00:39:10,964
Now Judaism, Islam, and Christianity,
both walk those out in very different and

556
00:39:11,825 --> 00:39:15,875
nuanced, nuanced to non nuanced levels.

557
00:39:16,205 --> 00:39:18,815
Now, most of the laws are immutable.

558
00:39:19,415 --> 00:39:22,865
These laws of malaria that are,
are measuring rods for each

559
00:39:22,865 --> 00:39:24,875
person and they will be judged.

560
00:39:24,904 --> 00:39:29,165
Each person will be judged by these
laws regardless, but there are laws.

561
00:39:31,095 --> 00:39:36,585
Really, as far as in a court of law on
this earth, you can't be judged by, for

562
00:39:36,645 --> 00:39:42,015
instance, in Christianity, we have these
higher laws or higher callings that go

563
00:39:42,015 --> 00:39:47,265
beyond baseline morality, go beyond,
uh, do not steal or do not murder.

564
00:39:47,715 --> 00:39:49,575
So do not steal and do not murder.

565
00:39:49,605 --> 00:39:54,465
That can be judged in a court of law,
but we've been given a higher law to

566
00:39:54,465 --> 00:40:00,495
follow, which is, do not hate because
if you hate, well, then you're liable.

567
00:40:00,555 --> 00:40:02,325
It's the same as murder.

568
00:40:02,985 --> 00:40:08,375
Well, you can't, you go to a court on this
earth and accuse someone of hate and just,

569
00:40:08,435 --> 00:40:11,345
oh, that person hates me in their heart
and therefore they need to go to prison.

570
00:40:11,645 --> 00:40:15,905
I mean, how, how is the court going to
put you in jail for hatred that you have

571
00:40:15,905 --> 00:40:18,485
in your heart or the same, same ghost?

572
00:40:18,725 --> 00:40:19,625
Do not envy.

573
00:40:20,765 --> 00:40:22,835
It's a sin of the heart.

574
00:40:23,645 --> 00:40:25,715
Bow can a government legislate that.

575
00:40:26,775 --> 00:40:31,335
Can they, can they go and search through
every photo that you liked on Instagram

576
00:40:31,335 --> 00:40:36,915
and say, aha, you were jealous and envious
and therefore you have to go to prison.

577
00:40:36,945 --> 00:40:37,305
No.

578
00:40:37,515 --> 00:40:43,935
So there are moral codes that we are
called to follow in varying faiths

579
00:40:44,205 --> 00:40:48,495
that cannot be legislated, right?

580
00:40:48,495 --> 00:40:49,725
You can't legislate that.

581
00:40:49,725 --> 00:40:54,345
And the same way governments can't
legislate everything about your life.

582
00:40:56,625 --> 00:41:00,255
For instance, it's soda
and sugar is bad for you.

583
00:41:00,945 --> 00:41:05,985
Should the government be able to step
in and control exactly what you eat?

584
00:41:06,345 --> 00:41:10,695
Should we have dietary plans set
to each and every one of our doors?

585
00:41:12,255 --> 00:41:15,795
Or do we have freedom to make
bad choices for our life?

586
00:41:16,395 --> 00:41:16,995
Do we have freedom?

587
00:41:17,970 --> 00:41:22,620
Do you eat one piece of candy
because that's bad for you or one

588
00:41:22,620 --> 00:41:29,010
too many pieces of candy or does the
collective have the ability to step in?

589
00:41:29,010 --> 00:41:33,210
Well, this is really the, the questions
that we are grappling with right now

590
00:41:33,240 --> 00:41:36,990
across the globe in these culture wars.

591
00:41:37,590 --> 00:41:44,880
Is it an individual's agency to walk
that out or is it a group's agency

592
00:41:44,880 --> 00:41:48,900
to enforce their beliefs upon you?

593
00:41:52,390 --> 00:41:56,800
And we're seeing this when it, when
it comes to the sexual more sexual

594
00:41:56,830 --> 00:42:02,110
morality and the, the attack of
the family normative, what we'd

595
00:42:02,110 --> 00:42:03,970
consider normative family values.

596
00:42:04,210 --> 00:42:07,810
We're seeing that in the attack
of private property, and you've

597
00:42:07,810 --> 00:42:09,850
been able to keep what you earn.

598
00:42:09,850 --> 00:42:13,870
We see that in mandating of vaccines,
where governments are beginning

599
00:42:13,870 --> 00:42:19,155
to mandate vaccines, So what are,
what are the moral arguments?

600
00:42:19,155 --> 00:42:23,805
What are the, the positionings that
you and I are going to take between

601
00:42:24,285 --> 00:42:29,985
a collectivist viewpoint, where we
are all agents of the state or an

602
00:42:30,015 --> 00:42:35,865
individualist viewpoint, where the
state is the agent of the individual.

603
00:42:36,945 --> 00:42:38,565
Now here's the, here's the kicker.

604
00:42:38,865 --> 00:42:43,175
The thing that it really gets me it's
as we move away, as society moves

605
00:42:43,235 --> 00:42:48,185
away from the belief of divine laws,
as Thomas Aquinas would say, when

606
00:42:48,185 --> 00:42:54,695
we move away from the belief that
there is a creator, God who revealed

607
00:42:54,725 --> 00:42:57,575
what is the best form of society.

608
00:42:57,575 --> 00:43:03,455
When we move away from that's into
Post's face or human secular, or cosmic

609
00:43:03,455 --> 00:43:08,855
secular worldviews foundations that
have been built into modern society,

610
00:43:08,855 --> 00:43:11,825
modern civilization from centuries past.

611
00:43:13,169 --> 00:43:21,330
All of a sudden begin to erode because
our politics follow the culture, the

612
00:43:21,330 --> 00:43:24,589
culture true, and that the community
standards and norms that we are in,

613
00:43:24,890 --> 00:43:29,899
those are the things that dictate
what our policy and our politics is.

614
00:43:30,169 --> 00:43:35,419
So as culture shifts and changes,
it erodes the laws of the

615
00:43:35,419 --> 00:43:38,109
land for better or for worse.

616
00:43:38,120 --> 00:43:43,040
Cause sometimes as culture shifts, it
actually improves the laws of the land.

617
00:43:43,040 --> 00:43:44,899
And we can have arguments for both.

618
00:43:45,810 --> 00:43:49,890
Now here's an argument with when it
comes to this whole trans movement,

619
00:43:49,890 --> 00:43:53,520
when it comes to the things that
we're talking about of the fi erosion

620
00:43:53,700 --> 00:43:58,040
and the attack of normative family
violence, you use the progressive

621
00:43:58,160 --> 00:44:00,620
argument, is that what we call it?

622
00:44:00,710 --> 00:44:02,270
Quote, unquote, normative family values.

623
00:44:02,270 --> 00:44:05,210
As one mom, one dad stay
married, have babies.

624
00:44:05,660 --> 00:44:07,340
This is the healthiest for children.

625
00:44:07,850 --> 00:44:13,220
That standpoint, that belief, they
progressivism argues that that is

626
00:44:13,220 --> 00:44:18,920
a result of colonialism and Judeo
Christian moral values and ethics.

627
00:44:19,040 --> 00:44:22,100
And for most of history,
these have not in the norms.

628
00:44:22,400 --> 00:44:25,700
And they're absolutely
correct for most of history.

629
00:44:26,180 --> 00:44:31,790
One mom, one dad have kids
stay married as, as a standard.

630
00:44:32,360 --> 00:44:37,220
Obviously not one that is upheld
free well across the globe, but as a

631
00:44:37,250 --> 00:44:40,240
cultural standard and ideal to live.

632
00:44:43,470 --> 00:44:45,630
That has not been the
norm for most of history.

633
00:44:45,630 --> 00:44:51,180
In fact, that was only introduced
really into mainstream culture, about

634
00:44:51,330 --> 00:44:58,530
seven or 800 years ago in the 13th
century when Rome, the Roman empire

635
00:44:58,530 --> 00:45:04,170
fell and Christianity became the
state religion of constant noble,

636
00:45:05,220 --> 00:45:11,340
and that then began to form and shape
civilization around these normative.

637
00:45:11,700 --> 00:45:16,080
What are now what we would
consider normative family values

638
00:45:16,170 --> 00:45:22,500
before that in Roman and Greek
societies, women had no rights.

639
00:45:22,650 --> 00:45:23,550
They had no rights.

640
00:45:25,110 --> 00:45:27,480
And to bring that up, because
this is where we're going today.

641
00:45:27,840 --> 00:45:31,440
This is the direction
that progressivism is on.

642
00:45:32,340 --> 00:45:34,650
Is Socrates famously.

643
00:45:36,645 --> 00:45:40,754
That women should, you know, this was
the progressive idea of their day that

644
00:45:40,754 --> 00:45:48,045
women should be able to be educated with
the men handclap to Socrates, except

645
00:45:48,045 --> 00:45:52,634
he goes on to say, yeah, they should do
so without any clothes on with the men.

646
00:45:52,634 --> 00:45:55,395
And they should be the
common property of all men.

647
00:45:55,754 --> 00:46:01,095
In other words, you know, each man
is being able to share that woman

648
00:46:01,575 --> 00:46:09,725
just as the teacher would have
relations with his pupils, essentially

649
00:46:09,725 --> 00:46:11,795
saying her body is not her own.

650
00:46:12,395 --> 00:46:17,404
And they're all going to sexually
share in her body and in each

651
00:46:17,435 --> 00:46:23,525
other's body, this was, this was
the idea of, of, of Greek society.

652
00:46:24,335 --> 00:46:33,845
Women were, had no rights, same
with Roman society in Roman society.

653
00:46:33,845 --> 00:46:34,535
It was not enough.

654
00:46:36,150 --> 00:46:38,790
That your wife merely
regulated her sexual behavior.

655
00:46:39,720 --> 00:46:40,770
This is from Wikipedia.

656
00:46:41,430 --> 00:46:45,330
It is required that she
was virtuous in all areas.

657
00:46:45,660 --> 00:46:47,370
This is where we get kissing on the cheek.

658
00:46:47,370 --> 00:46:51,210
From when her husband would come home
in Roman society, they would kiss on

659
00:46:51,210 --> 00:46:55,230
the cheek to make sure that they didn't
smell alcohol on her breath because

660
00:46:55,410 --> 00:46:59,850
they believe that if a woman even had
one sip of wine, that instantly she

661
00:46:59,850 --> 00:47:04,650
would become pure miss promiscuous
and having an affair on the husband.

662
00:47:04,650 --> 00:47:06,150
And then the wife would be put to death.

663
00:47:06,570 --> 00:47:12,390
If the husband would smell wine or
alcohol on his wife's breast breath,

664
00:47:12,510 --> 00:47:18,300
while at the same time, men were
able to have live in mistresses.

665
00:47:19,260 --> 00:47:22,350
Men were able to be promiscuous
and, and sleep around.

666
00:47:22,350 --> 00:47:24,750
That was of no consequence.

667
00:47:25,800 --> 00:47:27,810
They even say that men were able to have.

668
00:47:28,935 --> 00:47:31,245
Pedophilia relationship
and sex with young boys.

669
00:47:31,245 --> 00:47:39,035
And that was a little, this is
Roman society and yet Christianity.

670
00:47:39,545 --> 00:47:45,575
So do establish standards, equal
standards, equal sexual standards for both

671
00:47:45,815 --> 00:47:51,605
men and women, whether young or old or
slave or free, they had a standard that

672
00:47:51,605 --> 00:47:57,905
was equally applied to all people, but
that standard is being attacked right now.

673
00:47:58,415 --> 00:48:03,875
That's standard that it took
many centuries for, to give the

674
00:48:03,875 --> 00:48:06,995
liberties, the rightful liberties
to women that we see today.

675
00:48:07,355 --> 00:48:12,365
But it was from that foundation, from
that foundation that both men and

676
00:48:12,365 --> 00:48:22,145
women have equal equal rights within a
marriage that ideal led to women rights.

677
00:48:23,205 --> 00:48:23,745
And freedom.

678
00:48:26,055 --> 00:48:32,255
It goes on in this article and Wikipedia
says Athenian women, legally classified

679
00:48:32,345 --> 00:48:36,005
as children, regardless of their age
and legal property of some men at all

680
00:48:36,005 --> 00:48:41,315
stages of her life, women in the Roman
empire had li limited legal rights and

681
00:48:41,315 --> 00:48:46,235
could not enter professions, female and
fantasize and abortion were participated

682
00:48:46,235 --> 00:48:48,905
by all classes and family life.

683
00:48:48,935 --> 00:48:52,955
Men could have lovers prostitutes or
concubines and wives who engage in

684
00:48:52,955 --> 00:48:57,485
extramarital affairs were considered
guilty of it and be put to death.

685
00:48:57,935 --> 00:49:03,635
It was not rare for pagan women to be
married before age of purity, and then

686
00:49:03,635 --> 00:49:10,085
forced to consummate marriage with her
much, often older husband, husbands,

687
00:49:10,205 --> 00:49:13,355
or divorced their wives at any time,
simply by telling the wife to leave.

688
00:49:13,565 --> 00:49:17,285
And wives did not have a similar
ability to divorce their husbands.

689
00:49:17,285 --> 00:49:17,615
And yet.

690
00:49:19,275 --> 00:49:25,484
What we see as normative relationship
normative family values was argued by

691
00:49:25,484 --> 00:49:29,745
the early church fathers who advocated
against polygamy against abortion,

692
00:49:29,775 --> 00:49:34,095
against infanticide, against child
abuse and against homosexuality and

693
00:49:34,095 --> 00:49:36,285
transfers, scientism and incest.

694
00:49:37,365 --> 00:49:42,225
These were all these normative family
values that we think are normative

695
00:49:42,525 --> 00:49:49,484
are actually quite new to society,
but progressivism does not want

696
00:49:49,484 --> 00:49:51,855
to see these be the norm anymore.

697
00:49:51,884 --> 00:49:57,615
They want to go back to that Hellenistic
to that Greek and Roman way of thinking

698
00:49:57,615 --> 00:49:59,805
because after all love is love.

699
00:49:59,805 --> 00:50:00,225
Right?

700
00:50:00,615 --> 00:50:01,455
Love is love.

701
00:50:02,234 --> 00:50:07,004
If you love someone, no matter who they
are and it's consensual, no matter what

702
00:50:07,004 --> 00:50:15,225
your age, then it is, okay, this is not,
this is not a slippery slope argument.

703
00:50:15,254 --> 00:50:17,174
This is not one thing leads to another.

704
00:50:18,644 --> 00:50:27,435
This is the worldview that is being pushed
on in society right now across the globe.

705
00:50:28,154 --> 00:50:34,964
It is a worldview that is rejecting these
norms that have built up civilization

706
00:50:34,995 --> 00:50:42,134
over the last 700 years to move back
to a time where it's really what we're

707
00:50:42,134 --> 00:50:47,415
seeing in the trans movement, where
the erosion of women's rights, where

708
00:50:47,415 --> 00:50:51,674
it's saying, if you want to be woman
of a year, well, then you need to

709
00:50:51,674 --> 00:50:53,805
be a man who calls himself a woman.

710
00:50:54,194 --> 00:50:56,055
That is what wins you woman of the year.

711
00:50:56,055 --> 00:51:00,975
If you want to be a woman athlete,
well, it's best that you were a man

712
00:51:01,995 --> 00:51:05,834
that became a woman because then,
you know, you have an advantage.

713
00:51:07,180 --> 00:51:09,790
That's what we're seeing in
this trans movement, where it's

714
00:51:09,790 --> 00:51:14,500
actually an attack against women's
rights and the same, same way.

715
00:51:14,680 --> 00:51:17,529
We're seeing a bunch
of girls becoming men.

716
00:51:17,529 --> 00:51:23,830
It's it's, as it's as if the
argument that is being made is that

717
00:51:24,040 --> 00:51:27,459
the best woman is really a man.

718
00:51:28,569 --> 00:51:30,250
And that the man is a Supreme ideal.

719
00:51:30,250 --> 00:51:35,350
An idea that I have, uh, poured
and reject, I think is ugly.

720
00:51:37,209 --> 00:51:40,660
And it, nothing could be
further from the truth.

721
00:51:42,990 --> 00:51:44,609
Yeah, that makes sense.

722
00:51:45,209 --> 00:51:46,020
That makes sense.

723
00:51:46,049 --> 00:51:49,919
In a post-truth society where we
have exchanged truth for lies and a

724
00:51:49,919 --> 00:51:54,930
reason for postmodernity rationality,
the absurd finally makes sense.

725
00:51:54,930 --> 00:52:01,140
Well, we have a new, all inclusive, at
least for this month, maybe next week,

726
00:52:01,439 --> 00:52:03,810
pride flag, a new inclusive pride flag.

727
00:52:04,845 --> 00:52:10,635
Includes, uh, before if you guys
and girls remember the pride flag

728
00:52:10,635 --> 00:52:12,555
was just, uh, a nice rainbow.

729
00:52:13,065 --> 00:52:18,825
And then we added, um, transgendered
colors of a white, pink and blue triangle.

730
00:52:19,215 --> 00:52:21,885
And then we forgot out people of color.

731
00:52:22,215 --> 00:52:26,055
I don't know about people of non-color,
um, you know, but there are the

732
00:52:26,055 --> 00:52:27,255
oppressors, they don't matter.

733
00:52:27,615 --> 00:52:30,945
But so then we added a light
brown and a dark brown Stripe

734
00:52:31,365 --> 00:52:33,765
to represent people of color.

735
00:52:34,215 --> 00:52:38,325
And now the new one, which is just
seems everything's getting overlaid on

736
00:52:38,325 --> 00:52:44,895
this rainbow flag is a red umbrella,
which represents sex workers, global

737
00:52:44,895 --> 00:52:53,265
sex work, sex, sex workers to raise
awareness about abuse among sex workers.

738
00:52:53,295 --> 00:52:56,715
And so I'm split on this one.

739
00:52:58,634 --> 00:53:04,785
I'm glad that people are raising awareness
of abuse, but what's happening here.

740
00:53:06,435 --> 00:53:10,875
It's not the raising of abuse and
saying, we need to, we need to stop this.

741
00:53:10,875 --> 00:53:12,225
We need to help these women.

742
00:53:12,225 --> 00:53:15,555
Most of them who come from
trafficking across the globe.

743
00:53:15,555 --> 00:53:19,984
When you look at the sex work as a
global industry, not just in small

744
00:53:19,984 --> 00:53:26,015
pockets of, of Europe or America or
amp or in Vegas and Amsterdam, whereas

745
00:53:26,015 --> 00:53:31,535
women who you are willfully and wanting
Lee going into these professions.

746
00:53:31,535 --> 00:53:33,875
But most of them are, are
victims of human trafficking.

747
00:53:34,535 --> 00:53:41,044
But when you're throwing this red
umbrella onto the flag, you're again,

748
00:53:41,075 --> 00:53:49,595
you're, you're embracing another
form of in my, in my view, making

749
00:53:49,595 --> 00:53:50,765
a woman, just a piece of paper.

750
00:53:51,585 --> 00:53:56,685
A piece of property for exchange
to be bought and sold going back

751
00:53:56,685 --> 00:53:58,634
to that Hellenistic worldview.

752
00:54:02,325 --> 00:54:07,694
But at the same time, as I said,
most, most women in trafficking

753
00:54:08,505 --> 00:54:10,115
are not there by choice.

754
00:54:10,325 --> 00:54:18,285
Some of the, the stats are shocking and
what's sad to me about this umbrella.

755
00:54:18,585 --> 00:54:19,845
It's not calling for it.

756
00:54:19,845 --> 00:54:24,585
The liberation, the freedom
of women from trafficking.

757
00:54:24,975 --> 00:54:31,005
It is the liberation of women to
practice sex work just hopefully

758
00:54:31,005 --> 00:54:33,075
without being abused by a man.

759
00:54:34,065 --> 00:54:37,755
If a man is going in buying sex,
work, sex work, then, uh, I,

760
00:54:37,875 --> 00:54:45,015
I, you know, you've gotten to a
pretty, pretty low place as it is.

761
00:54:45,045 --> 00:54:47,505
Well, here's some stats on
human trafficking across

762
00:54:47,505 --> 00:54:49,305
the globe, every 30 seconds.

763
00:54:50,174 --> 00:54:56,325
And another person is trafficked
40.3 million people across the

764
00:54:56,325 --> 00:54:58,845
globe are currently in trafficking.

765
00:54:59,025 --> 00:55:03,645
Some form of human trafficking, whether
it's sex trafficking or labor trafficking.

766
00:55:04,575 --> 00:55:07,545
71% of the people who are
trafficked are females.

767
00:55:07,935 --> 00:55:14,745
25% are children and less
than 1% are ever rescued.

768
00:55:15,435 --> 00:55:23,385
Trafficking represents eight generates
$150 billion in profit and 99 billion

769
00:55:23,385 --> 00:55:31,725
of that comes from commercial sexual
exploitation, $99 billion out of the

770
00:55:31,725 --> 00:55:35,115
$150 billion is sexual exploitation.

771
00:55:36,795 --> 00:55:39,345
Why, why on this flag?

772
00:55:39,855 --> 00:55:45,045
Are we seeing th th the further promotion
of the sexual exploitation of women?

773
00:55:45,855 --> 00:55:46,485
Well, I'll tell you.

774
00:55:47,340 --> 00:55:54,840
Because we're, we must, we must throw
away these Christian Judeo values that

775
00:55:54,840 --> 00:55:59,640
are based on divine revelation that
are based on Abrahamic worldviews.

776
00:56:00,150 --> 00:56:04,530
We must throw that away and liberate
ourselves back to the ways of the

777
00:56:04,530 --> 00:56:10,740
Greeks and the Romans back to the ways
of marks and Ingles, which says that

778
00:56:10,770 --> 00:56:16,590
well, every person should be free to
make love with every other person that

779
00:56:16,590 --> 00:56:22,050
there is no such thing as right and
wrong morality and guilt or innocence.

780
00:56:22,440 --> 00:56:24,150
It is all just power.

781
00:56:24,150 --> 00:56:28,140
And if it's all just power, then.

782
00:56:29,325 --> 00:56:34,545
We should let these people and we should
support and celebrate the trafficking of

783
00:56:34,545 --> 00:56:38,625
women because this is the way that women
can empower themselves when really it

784
00:56:38,625 --> 00:56:42,825
is further propagating of human slavery.

785
00:56:42,825 --> 00:56:45,825
Well, this show is
brought to you by viewers.

786
00:56:45,855 --> 00:56:46,335
Like you.

787
00:56:47,445 --> 00:56:50,265
I'm assuming that if you're
listening to this show, you're

788
00:56:50,265 --> 00:56:53,295
getting value out of this show.

789
00:56:53,295 --> 00:56:59,235
So I would ask if you'd like to, to
support the show in the same value that

790
00:56:59,235 --> 00:57:04,605
you get out of the show, thousands of
people turn to the show every month

791
00:57:04,995 --> 00:57:10,755
to help inform them and us against
the Simons that are being propped

792
00:57:10,785 --> 00:57:17,085
up against us to destroy our lives,
to destroy our, our purpose and our.

793
00:57:17,694 --> 00:57:22,855
Destiny, you can make a contribution
to the show to keep the show alive and

794
00:57:22,855 --> 00:57:28,105
well, and to improve it and to reach
more people by visiting Lucas, scroll

795
00:57:28,105 --> 00:57:34,194
bot.com, where you can give your heart
cold Fiat, or you can visit a new

796
00:57:34,194 --> 00:57:40,254
podcast apps.com and find a podcasting
2.0 certified app like pot friend,

797
00:57:40,315 --> 00:57:46,555
freeze, or Sphinx or pod station where
you can stream Bitcoin as you listen.

798
00:57:46,555 --> 00:57:50,904
And I like listening to my podcasts
that way, because I can boost,

799
00:57:50,904 --> 00:57:52,345
I can add a couple more seconds.

800
00:57:53,205 --> 00:57:58,155
Per minute as I listen as a way
to support independent creators

801
00:57:58,635 --> 00:58:00,825
in the midst of me listening.

802
00:58:00,825 --> 00:58:01,515
Well, don't go away.

803
00:58:01,515 --> 00:58:04,275
We'll be right back
with our short closing.

804
00:58:04,395 --> 00:58:05,685
We've around named segment.

805
00:58:13,505 --> 00:58:14,415
Welcome back to Weaver.

806
00:58:14,415 --> 00:58:17,645
Aluma part of the show where we take
ancient wisdom and we weave it in

807
00:58:17,645 --> 00:58:22,715
with our everyday lives so we can own
our future and weave our destinies.

808
00:58:22,715 --> 00:58:26,165
Well, last week I lost my wallet.

809
00:58:26,195 --> 00:58:28,205
I mean, I really lost it.

810
00:58:28,715 --> 00:58:31,415
I, this, this story has context.

811
00:58:31,445 --> 00:58:31,865
Believe me.

812
00:58:32,879 --> 00:58:36,870
I went to the gas station
Monday afternoon, I came, used

813
00:58:36,870 --> 00:58:38,729
my wallet came straight home.

814
00:58:38,939 --> 00:58:43,740
And the next day when I went
out, I could not find it over

815
00:58:43,769 --> 00:58:45,450
the next three or four days.

816
00:58:45,720 --> 00:58:50,399
I searched high and low
for hours and hours.

817
00:58:50,399 --> 00:58:55,140
I probably spent 10 to 12
hours looking for my wallet.

818
00:58:55,169 --> 00:58:56,729
I ripped apart the car.

819
00:58:56,729 --> 00:59:04,890
I tore up carpets and B you know, in
the most absurd places I looked there

820
00:59:04,890 --> 00:59:10,049
because, you know, we have four kids
and, uh, sometimes our kids will take

821
00:59:10,049 --> 00:59:14,879
stuff and you know, her, her almost
two year old will find something

822
00:59:14,879 --> 00:59:16,229
and take it and hide it somewhere.

823
00:59:16,229 --> 00:59:20,640
So we're, we're looking in
every single place possible.

824
00:59:21,689 --> 00:59:26,970
And I'm sure it's in the house
somewhere, but I can not find it.

825
00:59:29,040 --> 00:59:30,479
I was about to give up hope.

826
00:59:31,799 --> 00:59:35,850
When finally I rephrased the
question that I was asking

827
00:59:35,850 --> 00:59:38,220
instead of where is my wallet?

828
00:59:39,149 --> 00:59:45,270
I thought, okay, well, w the likelihood
of my youngest child taking my wallet and

829
00:59:45,270 --> 00:59:50,819
stashing it somewhere is probably greater
than my absentmindedness of just setting

830
00:59:50,819 --> 00:59:54,960
it on some obscure shelf in the kitchen,
which I've already searched 10 times.

831
00:59:54,960 --> 01:00:00,000
So instead of searching my shelf again
for the 11th time or under carpets,

832
01:00:00,000 --> 01:00:04,770
or in drawers in my office, which
I've emptied out, maybe I should

833
01:00:04,770 --> 01:00:07,410
reframe the question that I'm asking.

834
01:00:07,740 --> 01:00:09,899
And instead of asking, where is my wallet?

835
01:00:10,680 --> 01:00:16,740
I should ask if my child took my
wallet, where would he hide it?

836
01:00:17,009 --> 01:00:18,330
So I approached my kids.

837
01:00:19,830 --> 01:00:21,419
I said, Hey, it's my two oldest.

838
01:00:21,450 --> 01:00:23,879
I said, Hey, I have a riddle for you.

839
01:00:23,879 --> 01:00:27,569
Whoever cracks is, griddle wins a prize.

840
01:00:29,795 --> 01:00:36,305
If our youngest would steal
something, where would he stash it?

841
01:00:38,435 --> 01:00:45,545
And within 15 seconds, one of my kids
light bulb comes on in his, in his mind.

842
01:00:45,815 --> 01:00:52,955
He runs upstairs and 10 seconds later, he
is back downstairs with my wallet after

843
01:00:52,985 --> 01:01:00,845
hours and hours and hours of searching
over the course of days within a moment.

844
01:01:01,529 --> 01:01:03,390
Because I asked the right question.

845
01:01:03,629 --> 01:01:05,249
He found my wallet.

846
01:01:05,249 --> 01:01:12,720
Well, today's quote comes from Eugene
Nesco, who is a, Roman was a Roman

847
01:01:12,720 --> 01:01:18,390
French playwright who was considered
the avant-garde of theater in the 20th

848
01:01:18,479 --> 01:01:22,140
century, uh, famous for the anti play.

849
01:01:22,499 --> 01:01:27,950
And for coming in with the theater of the
absurd, the theater of the absurd is a

850
01:01:27,950 --> 01:01:34,129
term in theater in place that represents,
uh, plays that are focused on existential

851
01:01:34,339 --> 01:01:39,859
ideas and ideologies, uh, where the
human existence lacks, meaning there's

852
01:01:39,859 --> 01:01:42,859
communication, breakdowns, and enlarge.

853
01:01:42,890 --> 01:01:47,600
Those plays in the theater of the
absurd are cyclical, where they end

854
01:01:47,930 --> 01:01:50,089
in the same place that they start.

855
01:01:50,089 --> 01:01:55,930
Well, he was born in 1909
and died in 94 and he wrote.

856
01:01:56,640 --> 01:02:04,590
This, he said it is not the answer
that enlightens, but the question and

857
01:02:04,590 --> 01:02:10,950
I found that it's true this week after
searching for the answer, the answer,

858
01:02:10,960 --> 01:02:13,140
the answer, I changed the question.

859
01:02:13,530 --> 01:02:18,930
I stopped my path of insanity, looking
and looking and searching for the answer.

860
01:02:18,930 --> 01:02:22,550
And I said, okay, maybe I'm
asking the wrong question.

861
01:02:22,560 --> 01:02:26,130
That has happened over
the evolution of the show.

862
01:02:27,660 --> 01:02:33,810
We started years ago, looking, looking
for an answer, questioning and talking

863
01:02:33,810 --> 01:02:37,980
about purpose and to realize that
we were asking the wrong question.

864
01:02:38,670 --> 01:02:44,490
And instead, when we began to reframe,
I feel when we begin to reframe

865
01:02:44,910 --> 01:02:49,230
from, from looking at ourselves
and saying, what is my purpose?

866
01:02:49,230 --> 01:02:49,950
What is my purpose?

867
01:02:49,950 --> 01:02:50,820
What is my purpose?

868
01:02:51,420 --> 01:02:53,910
And we shifted to how
do we view the world?

869
01:02:55,270 --> 01:03:03,400
And how do I act and live in the world
that it changes the very path that

870
01:03:03,400 --> 01:03:08,440
we are on from something that is self
focused to something that is other focus

871
01:03:08,440 --> 01:03:14,560
from something that is, is narcissistic
in nature, that we always doubt do

872
01:03:14,560 --> 01:03:19,270
something that we can look at someone
else across the table and realize I have

873
01:03:19,270 --> 01:03:21,310
purpose because I'm able to serve you.

874
01:03:21,310 --> 01:03:25,990
I'm able to serve people around
you because I have a right

875
01:03:25,990 --> 01:03:28,090
way of viewing the world.

876
01:03:29,440 --> 01:03:36,370
And so that is our role to ask
better questions, not to continually

877
01:03:36,370 --> 01:03:40,180
ask questions, not to never get an
answer, but when we ask the right

878
01:03:40,210 --> 01:03:48,070
questions, we come up with answers that
actually are fruitful and productive.

879
01:03:48,610 --> 01:03:48,940
So.

880
01:03:49,634 --> 01:03:54,645
If you want to get more value out
of this show, ask better questions

881
01:03:54,705 --> 01:03:57,615
and help your community around.

882
01:03:57,615 --> 01:04:03,904
You ask better questions because it
is through the asking of questions and

883
01:04:03,904 --> 01:04:08,884
through the sharing of this episode with
other people so that you can dialogue

884
01:04:09,154 --> 01:04:12,904
and talk, you can then build a framework.

885
01:04:12,904 --> 01:04:17,225
You can build the perks in your
walls and strong gates to defend

886
01:04:17,944 --> 01:04:21,845
against ideas and pathogens that
might come to try to destroy you.

887
01:04:22,115 --> 01:04:22,745
Thanks for listening.

888
01:04:23,165 --> 01:04:23,765
See you next time.