Hake offers a provocative critique of modern tribalism, framing identity as a social limitation to be transcended rather than a destination to be embraced. It’s a sharp reminder that our sense of self is often just a collection of social scripts we have yet to outgrow.
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Everybody Has an 'Identity' to Get Past | HAKE Fri 5/22/26Added:
Oh boy.
All right. Let's see here.
Boom. And I'm gonna stay on here to see if YouTube kicks on. All right. Nice.
Finally started on It's finally started.
Well, yesterday it didn't start on time.
It's 9:01 here. Friday the um 22nd JLP's Bday as well as Camila's. I believe Camila being a super chatter on the Jason Lee Peterson show ad 2026 4477 doxed um take everything that you hear with a grain of salt info may be false I'm live on YouTube I'm probably live on Rumble let me gonna let me check that I'm definitely up there on uh punchy.tv TV.
Good morning to Jim in Alaska. I see your calls coming in. You can call in 18887753773.
It looks like I'm live on uh on uh Rumble. Yep. And video does appear to be going pretty I assume audio is going. Good morning to biblical scholar the bot old solacey Rob Denbro.
Thank you for the birthday wishes.
It's It was just my birthday just in July.
Zorak, slave to him. Hello to Cloud Bops. Jim in Alaska, the panel verse.
Everlazer, the faithful AAM's Razor.
Very fun. Okay, you can super chat right there on YouTube or Rumble if you like.
I'll set it to two hours even though I'm not going two hours. I go an hour and 55 minutes actually less than that even.
Okay. Um I end I have a hard out. Okay.
It's very important that I be done by 55 10:55 that is here in Los Angeles and we are in daylight saving time. So, we're UTC minus 7.
I've been having uh so maybe I shouldn't tell you today.
Today, my neck is a little stiff. My back had a hint hint hint of a twinge. Okay, so disclaimer.
I I'm I should be fine though. It's just that I I ought to sleep more and I I guess I shouldn't exercise so so hard.
I don't know. Uh something like that.
Maybe I'm fighting something.
Um but I have been betaback free largely. Granted, I do have to do some hops and, you know, squats in the morning, no weight, and squats, no weight in the afternoon, evening, stuff like that. That's helps, you know, a little little stretching, not too hard.
If I stretch too hard, maybe that was part of it.
And then I've been doing like little different things trying to get my make sure that my shoulders don't mess up because I have a pain right here in the front of my shoulder when I'm doing, you know, push-ups and things.
And I've been kind of just managing it and doing my slow push-ups or slow or slow uh pains in the neck. Pain in the neck, we'll just call it. But also back here, I don't know what it is exactly, but I do know largely what it is.
They say sleep is as good as roids, better than roids for gains, strength gains and health gains. It is a panacea practically good sleep. But as JLP rightly says, don't let sleep be too important.
Don't let it get into your head. You know what I mean? Jellybean.
Thank you to Jim in Alaska who gave a super chat already saying, "Have a great weekend." Thanks. and to you as well.
Jim in Alaska, nice to see you, sir. Oh, check this out.
Isn't that pretty? Oh, that sort of reminds me of uh of H Highleberg.
I visited German. This is not Germany, okay? But it looks like a bridge over water, forest, hills, stuff like that.
That reminds that part reminds me of Germany. But this looks like an Asian perhaps or Asian influenced place because those roofs been a little scoopish.
Anyway, we're going to get going here.
Um the lines are filling up. 887753773.
Um what's in the news? Are those Republicans before I get going, you know, I'm setting things up. Are those Republicans um who What's the deal with this situation with these Republicans senators according to Commie Nonsense Network defying our greatest President Trump's wishes? That's not right.
Doesn't seem right to me.
These people Oh, good. I have it um I have the volume muted. They seem like they are um they seem like they are sour grapes. And I wonder if it's the politics. You remember when the bipartisans, the evil people, because bipartisan tends to mean evil?
Oh, that's that was a cool picture of the moon, right? See that? Awesome.
Um they all conjoined forces including Vive, right? Ramos Salami to condemn the January 6th mostly peaceful protesters who are now dismissed universally as rioturs.
That doesn't seem right. Let me pause that. And so Trump started this fund for people targeted by um Hey, Seion. I love that song. How do you know that? How do you know I love that song? I probably sang it. Um people are People were persecuted by the government. Trump supporters, Trump too, and others persecuted by the government.
Political uh politically motivated targeting, right? Lawfair they called it, the Trump administration called it. And um I guess the the the establishment is not for a billion 1.4 four or however much billion dollar slush fund they call it to reimburse those people who are um who are wrongfully persecuted you know that's terrible I think I read this coffee from sea bill about hey Brady you don't speak for all Christians you sound like Mark Jr.
laughing face with tears. I think I'll go to base America first. Seesar Tori Seon. But it's crazy because they is that why they're Is that why they defied Trump and they just went home early for the Memorial Day holiday thing?
I'm a little irritated. You can you can tell in my body language. I'm not just hamming it up. It's It's shameful, but that's what they do. We already knew that these Republicans are lameos. Don't say that stuff, kids.
Don't name call in exasperation at uh evil people. Don't be surprised at at uh these rhino Republicans being evil. You know what I mean?
But that's what it seems like is going on. Yeah. Who cares?
Thank you, Jim in Alaska.
Um, I'm live on Rumble as well, y'all.
Let me just If there's one thing I hate, it's Rumble commercials. Rumble commercials are the most disgusting. And if you, God forbid, you have audio on.
It's like ear violation.
Ear Rword.
It's not right. They whisper, "Damn, I'm not gonna whisper in your ear because into the mic because that's basically whispering into your ear and I don't want to do that to you.
Violate your ears.
It's gross." So, that's my little rant.
Anti-Rumble ad rant. Disgusting.
Gross imagery.
an anti-republicant.
Rhino rhino rhinocerosi rhinos I hear are disappointing animals.
They're not that tough. Also, they're blind practically. They can't they can hardly see. Their uh horns are not made out of bone. They're made out of fingernail.
So rhinos are aptly named. They look all big, grand old party, but they're lameos.
Terrible.
We're looking at a beautiful Manhattan Beach, California. And y'all, it is the Friday AJ Gallardo original theme song of the Hake Report.
So y'all, let's just get right on with the show.
Oh, it's the hatore.
The H report.
La.
Oh, it's the hate report. The hate report. La.
>> Hey guys, I hope you're enjoying my Nicaragua shirt. Shout out. It's a different shirt than I wore a month ago, by the way.
And the AJ Gallardo original theme song.
Oh, it's the hate report. The hate report, la.
Oh, it's the hate report. The hate report. La.
>> So, how y'all doing? I'm fine. I like this shore. Don't you like kind of like low tideish times? Low tide is the best tide I say because you can walk on the wet, recently wet sand and you have and you can see the reflection. wet ground is more attractive than other grounds because you know if you take a picture of a car make sure you water the the don't waste water but water the road in around it so that you see reflections and shininess is shininess and gloss and reflection is beautiful very nice okay so I want to get to your calls y'all if you don't mind. I know you don't for the most part.
Michael in Canada on the line over here. How you doing, sir?
>> I was a little What's up, man?
>> Hey, it's nice to hear from you, Sam Cook. Gone too soon. You're the artist I miss the most.
>> For real. He's being shot. Is that right?
>> Yeah. He Sam Cook got done in by a mo hotel or motel manager woman whom he was confronting like half naked because some woman who uh he took to the motel with him allegedly like robbed him made off with his clothes and uh well she but she didn't seem to have robbed him after all But she was claiming victimhood by him. And then this woman, this guy, he thought that the motel manager woman was in on it.
And there was a struggle and she pulled out a went for her gun and a gun and shot him. He's like, "Lady, you shot me." in the chest, by the way. And then within a a moment or so, he was slumped over and gone too soon. And the blacks are many blacks are not happy with the results of the investigation.
But yeah, he's gone at the tender age of what, like 32ish, 33, 34.
>> Something like that.
>> Yeah. Woman always bringing problems everywhere.
>> But you know, lust is the biggest problem of the man. So >> it is. He was like, it was it's another Saturday night and I ain't got nobody.
I've got some money because I just got paid. Oh, how I wish I had someone, some chick to talk to. I'm in an awful way.
And then his friend, a fella, had a sister who looked just fine, but instead of being his deliverance, she looked a lot like a cat named Frankenstein.
So this man >> who said that's a song from the >> another Saturday night. Yep.
>> Another Saturday night and I ain't got nobody. I got some money cuz I just got paid. Uh Asoridor would play that song.
>> Oh, how I wish I had someone to talk to.
I'm in an awful way.
Poor guy. And but he he would have been in a perfect way had he just stayed in that awful way with nobody and then he could have overcome that maybe or at least he wouldn't have gotten shot. Terrible.
>> Yeah.
>> Anyway, >> but you know, he had money. He had everything in the quote unquote world.
>> Yep.
>> And uh he made the woman his god.
>> Yeah.
>> So that's what happened.
you know, um he his money he had a money clip in his car and they found like $108 in it. And in that um 100 I think it was 108, right? 108 $108 equivalent to $1,121 in 2025.
Uh crazy.
>> Wow. Only for that.
>> Yeah.
You know, >> beautiful Sam Cook. Yeah, we loved the black people for their music.
>> Ah, I love soul music.
>> Yeah, >> especially Marvin Marvin Gay.
>> Marvin Gay was another uh troubled soul.
>> Yeah. Another one who got shot.
Everybody's getting shot. What the >> Yeah. By his dad because his cuz Marvin Gay was living it with them, I guess.
And then Marvin Gay tried to intervene because between a uh conflict with I guess his mother and father.
>> His father was maybe yelling at the mother or getting crazy with the mother.
Mother was maybe getting crazy with him.
Something like that if I'm not mistaken.
I I didn't I haven't looked up that one in a while.
Terrible.
>> Terrible.
Oh yeah. So you got a little back problem.
>> Oh yeah. Poor H, man. But you know, I'm like a little monkey when I'm at work. So, I jump on the forklift like crazy, like we in a an action movie.
>> Yeah.
>> And uh this time, just today, I get off of the forklift like a ninja and my backs are done, man. I hit that big 30. Now I'm like an elder, man. What the >> Wow.
>> You know, >> terrible.
>> Yeah. So, >> um, is that because were you not have you not been sleeping enough or have you not been very active and you got active again? What what's different? Is it?
>> Yeah. I mean, this winter this winter I didn't do a lot of things. I did snowboarding, but I nearly died just doing it. So, >> wow.
>> And and I'm telling you, if you never did snowboarding in your in your life, >> don't ever do that. It's dangerous, man.
>> Yeah. Yeah. Yeah, man. It's dangerous.
>> Yeah.
>> Really dangerous. I I did a lot of things in my life, man. I did skateboarding. I did the free running. I did basketball. Everything. But this is crazy, man.
>> Yes. Snowboarding is you fall really easily. Or I did anyway when I did it one time.
>> Not only that, but when the board's going, it's going. You know what I mean?
>> Yeah. There's >> like >> true.
>> If you can't control it, you'll end up in a tree.
>> And if you end up in a tree, it's over for you. You know what I mean?
>> I do.
>> And uh Yeah. So, but yeah, you know, but uh I'm all right. I'm all right. I'm all right.
Good. And I wish you well.
>> Thank you.
>> But um yeah, you didn't think that was a a pretty funny super chat that I sent you. Michael from Tal, >> man. I thought that was hilarious, man.
I laughed at it for nearly two hours alone.
>> You were laughing for two hours from that one?
>> Oh, yeah. at least.
>> That's funny, man. Let's see if I can find it real quick. That's terrible. I I understand this. I I understand uh the notion of cracking yourself up with all these stereotypes, these these tropes, to use a liberal word. Terrible. I disclaim all this.
>> But you said something.
>> Yeah. You said, "I noticed something with these quote unquote Christ killers that they know so much things about the real Christ killers."
I just claim it's only a joke and I only I only think it's funny because Mark when Mark said that, man, I laugh my my guts up. You know what I'm saying? So, so it's not it's not really that thing they you know I don't call them that you know I don't call the Jews Christ killer. It's only a joke.
>> Oh, okay.
>> So when you So when you super chat me about Jews and you refer to them as so-called Christ killers. You're ju you just got that from Mark and you're just joking around. You don't mean it maliciously.
>> Exactly. Not religiously, but >> Yeah.
Do I think that these people are a problem in your country? Yes, I do.
>> Right.
>> So, you know, >> and I agree with I agree with you that they are a they're they're kind >> there's only really one problem people have, you know, like the root problem, the sin, the anger.
That's like the root problem. But but that allowed for us to be emotional and fall for their propaganda.
They have the same problem we do. You know, it's kind of like blacks complaining about whites.
>> No. No, they don't.
>> They have the same problem, sir.
>> Yeah, they do.
>> No, they don't.
>> They're not angry. They have no anger.
Are you trolling me again?
>> In this sense. In this sense. Maybe.
>> Yeah.
But they don't have the same problem as we do because if you got big problems like you need intervention from the government or a billionaire let's say you'll never found that in your life if you don't get family that get this but these tribe these people when they got problems they can go to a billionaire and this billionaire even though we don't know them he's a Jew so he has to help them. So it's not that bad and that's the thing that I you know I don't hate them because I think they're smart way smarter than us and like they like they say go to so when you say we are emotional and we go and protest like little go nothing going to change >> right >> they take their power by being uh by being part of the government you you know, by sneaky ways, but they did it and now they own it. So, I just blame the white for being not like them. You know what I'm saying?
>> Yeah.
>> Like, you y'all need to take back your country like real white powerful man and tell these people that's enough.
>> That's all.
>> I think I don't hate them. I don't I don't have hate for them.
>> I think Trump will do that.
Trump and BB will do that.
>> Say again.
>> Repeat that. Sorry.
>> President Trump and BB Netanyahu will are going to be the ones.
>> Stop with that, man.
>> They're going to be the ones to stand up and say, >> "My boomer dad if I had one."
>> They're going to say, "That's enough."
>> Oh man.
>> You said I'm like your boomer dad. Or they are.
>> No, you are like my boomer dad if >> you had one. Yeah.
Yeah, cuz I ain't got no dad.
>> No, because you don't ain't got no dad.
I thought what? He died or because you used to beat him up, right?
>> No, no, I never I got a dad like everybody.
>> But he's dead.
>> Jesus, but I I know I'm a 96. What's make What's that make me?
>> That makes you I think a zoomer.
>> Yeah. So, uh you know >> I think >> I'm like a black man, you know. I'm like a black person.
Uh, so yeah, I ain't got no dad, man. He left off when I was like two or three, man.
>> I don't even know him.
>> But I thought you beat him up.
>> And I told you he don't he don't want to talk with me. So you know why. So >> Oh, you're millennial. Actually, you're my generation.
>> All right. Yeah, >> I'm a millennial.
I can't say that.
>> That's right. Because you're the big three 0. Gen Z or 29.
>> Okay. Okay. Okay. Yeah.
>> But you know, I'm like in between, but >> Yeah. Yeah.
>> Yeah. Yeah. I'm in between, too. I'm like almost Gen X.
>> But anyway, um, no, the reason I say that, sir, watch watch and f watch watch and see >> and and I may be wrong about this, >> but I have a prediction info may be false. You hear me? that Trump is that Trump is going to >> that Trump and BB are going to remain >> allies maybe but they will um >> they will distance America and Israel will become more independent of each other. Nah man has nothing to do with that to do with Trump nothing to do with you know >> well I'm talking about as far as these people >> as far as foreign aid you know these people are here so that's that part's not going to >> no they just know that they won't ever have one ever other >> but you're not you're not just talking about the foreign aid you're talking about the corrupt culture yeah the corrupt culture is here we have fully embraced it we are swimming in it we don't even realize how embedded it is in our psyche and our mess because um that culture is in the media. It is in it was in Disney, not not Walt Disney maybe, but the other Disney stuff since then and it's in a lot of like the banking uh p practices I suppose and and everything. So I get what you're saying.
I think >> Yeah. the uh the immorality, the the sexualization of of everything, you know, how uh they turn everything >> so just dirty >> dirtier than like normal Christians would be comfortable doing, at least publicly. So, yeah, totally.
>> Yeah. And right now they're totally winning, you know, >> I I think that they're they're not winning. They're they think that they're winning. They're getting they're getting Satan's way, which they think is their way.
>> But the reason that we're not winning is because we're not perfect at being perfect. We're be we're e we're just evil pretending to be perfect. And but that but if you think about it, that's what they are, too. They're evil thinking that they're good.
>> Yeah. Well, they got money, bro.
>> That's But they >> Money doesn't solve anything.
>> Oh, yeah. Oh yes, people have Thomas Massie now. He's out. Now you gonna say he's a traitor.
>> Say again.
>> I know.
>> Look at Thomas Massie. He's out >> now. I'm happy with you.
>> I don't care about this man. He's a wimp, >> right?
>> To be honest.
>> Yeah.
>> Like I don't care about But there's 30 millions >> spend.
>> Oh yeah. That's that's a lot of money.
>> Lobby for for this man.
>> Yeah. They spent a lot of money to get him out of there and then Trump really bashed him. I think he hurt himself >> if you ask me by changing up and get going on an ego trip. And I really think that it was the woman >> that he did the good thing by not voting for these things >> that maybe >> he did not do the good thing by going all in. If you want to do a change, tell it like it is.
>> Yeah.
>> Don't go around in circles. like he did a a commercial in this district. I heard like uh instead of saying look beef lobby spending money to make sure that I'm out. No, he's like me and Trump don't really have a beef. It's just misunderstanding.
>> You still like me like what what are you doing man? You're licking the boots of the guy who's like >> spitting right in your face. He don't care about you.
That's funny, man.
>> Like you don't care about it. Oh, this man is the biggest liar I ever seen. I thought my prime minister was the biggest liar I ever seen. But now I I don't know. I don't even know what to tell you, man.
>> So, m >> your president >> Trump >> is a traitor just like my prime minister, >> you know, sir.
I think that's pure projection. I think you guys are the ones being who are traitors.
>> You guys are very disloyal.
>> I'm disloyal.
>> Yeah.
>> Never.
>> You know how you know how the how there's a it's a trope against Jewish people that they are very disloyal.
They're not loyal to the country they live in. Stuff like that. Um >> they are loyal >> like not not to America >> people, >> you know, to America. They're not loyal to America. And then Trump called them very disloyal because they're uh voting against Israel's interests by voting against BB and stuff like that and voting against Trump voting. But anyway, uh that's how you guys are because you guys who called Trump a traitor. It's because you guys are traders. It's not because Trump is a traitor. It's you guys are traders.
>> I think you need a little re memory refresh.
>> Okay, let's go back to 2016.
>> Donald Trump. Yes, sir. Let's see what he has to say and let's see how it's going right now. Where's the wall? We needed that wall in 2020. Y'all needed that wall in 2020. After that, Biden been the president. 20 million people as getting in because there was no wall.
But there was a corporate tax cut that you can be sure of that. Look, look.
Trump's wall was being built. Yes. The Trump administration constructed or replaced roughly, >> you said it was being built, >> 458 miles of border barrier along the US Mexico border, but less than 50 mi of it was built in locations where no prior barrier existed. Okay. And uh so they there was dilapidated areas. There were places where whole whole vehicles could get through or at least people and they built wall there. there was a lot of lawsuits to um stop him. So this is not a good example of calling Trump a traitor. Trump worked on the wall in both of his terms.
>> Wherever whenever I will say he was you will have something to say.
>> That's right.
>> So it's all right.
>> Yeah.
>> It's all right.
>> Do you accept that? Do you accept? Wait, let me ask you because you said that the wall you made a point about the wall, but that's not a good point of calling Trump a traitor. Or is it? Do you still think that Trump is a traitor?
>> Yeah, he is.
>> No, I'm I'm talking about regarding the wall. Do you think Trump >> betrayed our his promise to build a wall?
>> Yep.
>> Wow. That's just that's just a stubborn black type woman covering your ears and saying, "La, I don't care about the facts. Trump had no intention of building a wall."
>> No. had no intention to deal with it and he had no intention to take these people back to where they came from.
>> That's not true either. He's done more.
>> It will collapse the economy. But we don't care if we go to iron and collapse the economy this way. If we can do it for you know who?
>> Which island?
>> Iron.
>> Oh, Iran.
>> Who are right now?
>> He can do it even though there's like 30% approval. Yeah, because approval doesn't matter. It's when uh when courts and activist >> matters, man, because he told you that he can't no more deport people because of that.
>> Name name one court >> do it when it comes to Israel.
>> Name one court that told him to stop the war.
>> You can't name them.
>> They are all bought by these people.
>> No, no, no. But listen, I'm making a diff a point. There's one thing that Democrat and Republican will always be together in it.
>> You're not really You're not really going to listen to reason, are you?
>> Name one court.
>> Can you name one court decision that said he asked to stop the war?
>> Nope. But you can name many court decisions that have tried to stop him from building the wall and from deporting illegals.
>> Why is that?
>> Because the courts are able to stop him on the domestic thing, but the courts have not yet been able to stop him on the the foreign thing. And so he's continuing on the domestic thing despite the court decisions. He's still working away at the immigration and the economy and everything to fix things to make America great again. Meanwhile, he's also working, I believe in his mind, to protect us from uh a nuclear Iran and protect the world, honestly.
So, I think that he's he is consistent to what he was when he started out. You guys, on the other hand, when did you get based about the Israel's stuff? When did you turn based about the Jews? Were you raised hating the Jews?
>> No, not at all. I like Hitler since like 2015.
>> So 2015. So you were 20 years old or 19 years old. You you turned based against against the Jews.
>> Okay. So then you've been the whole you've been the same way for 10 years.
Trump's been the same way for 50 years or 40 anyway.
No, that's a lie.
>> Anyway, >> that's a lie.
>> Did Trump always speak against a Republican?
>> No. No. Everything's a lie.
>> No. Did Trump always speak against Iran?
>> Don't start with that, man. He didn't speak. It's a yes or no question when he when he was when he was on his presidential run. President I see. But >> yeah. Yeah. Running for presidential run. Yep.
>> At his rally.
>> Uhhuh.
>> Tell me one time he talked about iron >> a lot. I don't know. I I can't name any specific.
>> You can't find it.
>> Now you're lying. You're making stuff up. You don't know. You're speaking without knowing, sir.
>> He said he was going to go to war with Iron.
>> He didn't say he was going to go to war, but he spoke against Iran.
>> There will be no war.
>> He did say there will be no war.
>> War with Iron. It's like just a >> He said we're not going to go to war.
We're going to end wars.
>> Okay. Did Trump speak against Iran while running for president >> either term >> if election >> because he didn't talk about that in the 2016 one?
>> Yes, he did. Trump has consistently spoken out against Iran across his presidential campaigns in 2016. He made opposition to the 2015 Iran nuclear deal central to his foreign policy. 2024, he continued to condemn the Iranian regime's regional influence in funding of militant proxies and uh criticize his opponents for being weak or overly eager for conflict. So uh nice nice.
>> They he said he was going to war.
>> He did not say he was going to war.
You're supposed to surprise your enemy.
You know who's surprising his enemy?
Iron. You know why? Because who in the world was going to go to war with this country and not thinking that they will they would uh stop the straight of arms. Like there's no sense in in that. And now we're they're stuck there and Iran's completely winning, right? They >> You think Iran's winning?
>> Winning right now?
>> Yeah.
>> No man.
>> Oh yeah. Oh yeah man. They are >> What do they want?
>> They they want to they are winning right now. Saudi Arabia.
>> What are they winning >> from a week ago? A week ago. Saudi Arabia.
>> Yeah.
>> Told the US military that they cannot use their their a airspace or their base military base out there. I heard about that.
>> Why is that?
>> I haven't looked into why.
>> Because they they they're starting to go on the iron side because they they they they know right now they are losing.
Americans are losing in Iraq. All the military base have been attacked and now the the military people have to go at the hotel to be safe.
So, who's winning right now?
>> Uh, I would say nobody's winning right now.
I think everybody's losing right now.
>> But you can be sure of something.
>> Yeah.
>> If it's keep going on like it is right now. Iran will become a superpower and now we are going to have big problem.
I'm telling you >> who >> that was the >> repeat what you just said.
right now. If it continue like it is, Iran will become a superpower in this region >> because of the attack because of >> they will have the control of the straight of armies.
>> Right now, you have to pay $1 million in in uh in yen money, Chinese money >> to get out of there. and the insurance company made sure that the boat has the authorization of iron to go out there even if that they have paid the million dollars. So who's winning right now? The assurance company don't want the boat to go. So even even Trump can say whatever he want. If the insurance company don't want the boat to go, they don't go.
You understand, >> right?
Thank you, Michael and Kenned.
>> All right, I'm out.
>> Have a nice day.
>> You as well, sir. Heal up. That back got me with the click. Alas.
What a Iran winning. That's a new one.
Okay, this is the same guy. Keep in mind, info may be false on Hakes's part and Michael's part. It's the same guy who said that Trump had no intention of building the wall, even though he tried and was partially stopped, but he was partially successful.
William 7 was a uh one of the uh priority callers over the recent days, especially yesterday, I believe.
William 7, thank you for calling and holding, sir. Go ahead.
>> You're welcome. How's it going there?
Hey, >> it's going fine, thank you.
>> Excellent. Hey, I don't know if Jesse's an earshot, but I would like to personally shout out a happy birthday to the man to pause.
>> He's the founder of uh Bond, I believe.
>> Indeed, he is >> 40 years ago now. 39. Is it now 40?
>> No, it's 36. I think it was 1990.
Second Sunday in February.
>> Oh, okay. Maybe it's 35 years ago. I'm I'm trying to remember what he says >> uh in his thing, you know.
>> So, hey, just shout out. Hey, uh real quick, since my one of my best friends in the military when I first went in, he was actually from Iran. His family was from Iran. And so, it's actually pronounced Iran. That's how they pronounce it there. I know we pronounce it on Kind of like kind of like Kuron.
Kuron. Kuran. Quran. Oh, yeah. All right.
>> Not the Quran, but the Quran.
>> What do you think of me calling it the Quran?
>> Oh, you're you're just, you know, a white guy saying it. That's all.
>> I I I think of it as being kind of malicious and uh passive aggressive.
>> Is that what you think or is that >> That's what I think a little bit. But I but I also like saying things in like American accent like accents like Los Angeles instead of Los Angeles, >> right? And then you also what else do you say when you go uh when you talk like this and you say something and it's like you're putting you're exaggerating your sarcasm a lot of times.
>> Yeah. What is that word? Syro captains.
>> Syrac sarcasm.
>> Sarcasm indeed. Yeah.
>> You exaggerate it a lot. Uh, it's something whenever you say it, you always do it. It makes me laugh. I forget. I don't know.
>> Classified documents maybe.
>> Right. So that and you know there's other ones people I can't remember right now. But hey, you guys were talking earlier about I thought JLP had asked >> who do you miss who's no longer on the earth and we got turned to artist but uh I can't believe nobody said Chuck Norris. Oh.
>> Oh. I think Chuck Norris could beat every one of those people up.
>> Indeed. Wow.
>> At least at least according to the memes I I saw.
>> You know, he he fell out of my mind. I had forgotten that he died. I wasn't thinking about him.
>> Yeah. Just last this past March, he was 86.
>> He was supposedly security police like I was. In fact, I found out he was at Osan Air Base where I was at just uh let's see, I think it was 30 years in the future though. He was there 30 years before me.
>> Nice.
>> Yeah. So, we may have went to Mr. Kim Hop uh dojo, the same dojo near Osan Air Base.
>> Nice.
>> He uh I think he learned Hopito there, which is where I kind of dabbled a little bit in it. It was pretty crazy, man. some of the stuff uh Mr. Kim taugh t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t taught us and showed us and demonstrated it, it def it actually defied physics taught us.
>> Yeah, no joke. I uh I'll never forget that. That's why I think there's a lot of ancient uh at least in the Far East, I think they know stuff that they don't teach here in America or in the West about uh physics, the human body. I just saw him do stuff that was just literally defied uh just defied physics. I don't know what to say.
>> So, basically the story goes, we were it was our first time at the dojo and we were all brand new. We just got there and we were on the emergency service team and uh he wanted to demonstrate. I don't know if he said it was key, but he asked the biggest guy in our class, which was Dominic. He was big, big cornfed guy. He came up and lifted up Mr. Mr. Mr. Kim. He said, "Get behind me." And he lifted him up quite easily by his elbows. He kind of went stiff and did his elbows at 90°. And Dominic was able to pick him up pretty easily, like without even a struggle. Then he said how you could just concentrate and be like a mountain and a pyramid. And he said, "Try again." and and he tried and tried and struggled. He got red in the face. He got pissed. Could not lift him the second time.
>> And when I saw that, I was like, you know, later on like, dude, were did he pay you to do that? He goes, no. He goes, I could not lift him. And yet, uh, a minute before he easily lifted him up and he didn't know or understand how that happened.
>> That's cool.
>> It was really crazy. So, yeah. So, shout out to Chuck Norris, man. I don't really miss him. I never knew him. Yeah, that would be a fake missing. Okay.
>> But uh >> uh supposedly he died with a $70 million net worth when he passed away.
>> Not too shabby.
>> March.
>> Yeah. So anyway, so that was it. I was just wanting to shout out to JLP and uh we'll shout out to Maze and uh all the other callers and have a safe Memorial Day weekend everybody.
>> Right on.
>> In this in this great country. I still think our country is great. It's just what you make of it.
>> That's cool, >> right? All right, man. Indeed. Well, peace out.
>> Good point. You as well.
>> All right.
>> Bye.
>> Bye.
>> What a mess going on in this here world.
He uh great point William 7 about it's what you make it. Alex, Californiaia, how you doing, Alex?
>> Hey, Bear.
>> Hey.
>> Hey. Uh, I promise you today is going to be no combiveness, no agitation, no shenanigans. Okay.
>> Right on.
>> Oh, sorry if I uh only sorry to you if that caused you any uh issues.
Hopefully, it didn't.
>> No problem. Thank you. I accept. I appreciate that.
>> All right. So, I wanted to thank Ronnie because I believe that he has cured what they would call racism or he's at least relieved like a bunch of frustration and agitation that I had. I know I had that built up for the past probably six years since 2020. But I've been living with it so long that I've gotten used to it that I just kind of ignored it. But uh yeah, he he's basically helped me get rid of a lot of that and I'm feeling a lot better now. So I wanted to thank him for that.
>> Because you were able to get it off your chest, Adam?
>> Yeah. I think that's what this country needs.
>> Yeah.
>> Because I honestly I don't I don't even feel any aggression anymore. Like I got it out, you know? And it wasn't even everything I wanted to say, but it doesn't even matter at this point. Like just that I feel better.
>> So >> nice.
>> Uh yeah. So, I just wanted to explain, get straight to the point because I was being too vague. Um, my point was that white racists are created by the black reactions to certain things. And I have a small list here.
>> Okay.
>> So, the small things that don't really matter that are just kind of petty. Um, colonists, you know, like dog people from the Caucus Mountains, like, you know, dehumanizing us, >> right?
>> Um, the claiming of history, you know, that's up for uh debate, whatever the whatever is true or not, but >> inventions and things.
>> Yeah. I mean, those are two kind of small stupid things, but they are kind of important at the end of the day. Um, but the big ones, like I think Terry put it beautifully. Um, we have a white lived experience and that's where the impass is between us and the blacks. So the whites need to be able to explain like their white lived experience and I think maybe the blacks in return could explain theirs to us. And if we both try to meet in the middle and actually try to understand each other, maybe not like agree, but at least understand >> maybe we can kind of chip away at what a nightmare we've become. Um, so the big ones that I wanted to bring up, these are the ones that create racist white people, was the black reaction to George Floyd, George Timberman, Dylan Roof, Ireina Z, >> Carmelo Anthony, and Charlie Kirk.
Can you think of any other big-timers that I might have missed since 2020?
Um, Carmemelllo Anthony. I had to jog my memory briefly. That was the guy who >> the one who got stabbed.
>> Stabbed track me.
>> Yeah. Stabbed with a twin brother. One of the the white twin brother in the chest and killed him.
>> Yeah.
>> Uh, >> and just being on Oh, yeah. Sorry. Were there any that you >> Oh, um, uh, Mike Brown, Darren Wilson, that was a big one.
2014 after Trayvon. That was another major one. But yeah, >> would you say M Mr. Floyd was probably the the Kickstarter? Maybe one of the biggest.
>> That was the one where it went worldwide in a in the biggest way ever because Tray Trayvon leading into Mike Brown.
Mike Brown the Mike Brown protests were crazy. I don't remember. I don't know if you remember 12ish years ago.
>> I do. Yeah.
>> But uh yeah, George Floyd was way bigger. Not because it was realer.
None of them were real. Practically none of those things were real black victims.
But uh Yeah.
>> Right. And it was it was the black reaction. Not you know, not all, not all, but most it was the in general reaction that we all saw online. Now, Ireina Zerutska, the Ireina Zerutska, you I don't know where you were looking, but I saw a a lot of people, a lot of blacks were not happy with what happened to Ireina Zerutka. There was a guy who made a rap song.
>> I don't know if you saw this guy's rap song about it where he d like imagined stopping the guy from doing that.
>> Okay.
>> It was corny. It was dumb, but Okay.
Anyway.
>> Yeah. I mean, I'm not I'm not being uh combative today, so so fair enough.
>> And then Charlie Kirk, I didn't see black people as much as just the liberals in general, but that's people.
>> Yeah, I agree. But it was defined as like Hitler.
>> Yeah, that's true. Yeah. Yeah. You know what? You're right. Even the good ones like popcorn. popcorn. I wouldn't I don't believe he would hurt a fly, but he brought up that thing being used against Charlie Kirk to just about um oh, I get nervous if I see a fe a black female pilot and then he, you know, they they buy that is, oh, he was racist.
That's not right. Dumb stuff like that.
So, that was a um when blacks go to that uh right after uh he died and they don't know anything really about the guy, they didn't keep up with him. They didn't know about him. They uh just identify with the blackness and kind of go against him blindly >> because they're team black.
>> And there's there's one that I really want to hone in on for like a minute or two, but runner up to that would be Carmelo Anthony.
>> Yeah, that's true.
And I'm I'm bringing this list up because like I said, I'm not being combative. I'm trying to convey the white lived experience to black people in hopes that they can understand this list that I have here in front of me >> has changed our society within six years.
>> That is that's true. You're talking since George Floyd and and onward. It's like >> 2020 and >> it's wor it's the worst it's ever been in my lifetime that I can recall.
>> And it absolutely was initiated day one with Obama, but I I'm going to keep it to 2020. Yeah.
>> Because that's when it started really bad.
>> Okay. So, the one I really want to hone in on and u not to get all butt kissing with you and Jesse, but I think you guys could have saved this kid and that is uh Dylan Roof.
Yeah, Dylan Roof. He had a black friend.
Dylan Roof is the guy who went into the black church and shot up the black church down south in one of the Carolinas, including a black politics.
>> A race war.
>> Yeah. He wanted to start a race war because he had heard about all this racism in the media, right? And then he looks and he searches black-on-white crime and finds the Council of Concerned Citizens or whatever and realizes that that black-on-white crime is rampant and not white on black racism. And so like he gets this notion that blacks are wording raping the white women and there that is happening a a bit. And then there's this interracial stuff that bothers white people kind of understandably.
And uh so he wanted to start a race war not knowing he was already in the middle of one I guess. But he was angry. Yeah.
JLP wanted to interview him after the fact, but it was and he's he's dug in.
It seems like from what I've heard, >> you know, >> he would, you know, >> even afterwards. Say again.
>> He would, you know.
>> Yeah. Right. Yep. But yeah, not not to kiss, but I truly think like if if you guys had Dylan on with one of our blacks, they could have done some something possibly.
>> Yeah.
>> Or maybe even just Jesse, honestly. I think, >> but I mean, I don't know. I'm more of a hater to be honest. Jesse's cool, but I'm more of a haker.
>> Right on.
>> You could have saved. Um, is is that like a honest uh is that all honest and sounding like righteous and not from a place of hate or anger >> when you're when you're telling this list to the >> Yeah. Am I am I like conveying a little bit of the white experience?
>> You might be. I don't know. The only people who are going to understand are people who want to understand.
There's a lot of people who don't who really don't want to understand. They may pretend like they want to, you know.
So, an angry person like a m like kind of like a mother will play like they don't understand just to frustrate you, >> right? And and that's I think that's you know what I was up against. And it was a good thing because now I that broke a lot of uh pressure.
>> Yeah.
>> And I broke the ice.
>> But I don't know. I mean like honestly that it's within at least 2020. If you want to ask why white people like are the way they are. This is this is like black people this is really it >> and it's not coming from me. It's it's because uh we as whites have had to watch this stuff for years and be quiet about it. We called racist if we even speak about it. We've had to, you know, be all secretive about it. Especially uh Terry brought up a really good point.
women like men have had to literally go in the closet with this stuff. Even married men, you know, they'll get in trouble with the wife.
>> True.
>> Um, God forbid the the kids are talking about it >> or they won't or they won't even get a girl in the first place because they're too radical and then they >> they find out that these women are kind of liberal and you like >> you part of the problem woman type stuff. Tell you what, Hake, that's why that's why I don't say I gave up, but that's why I took a hiatus from it since uh since Trump because they lost their minds and they haven't they haven't snap back yet.
>> Yep.
>> That in the cell phone. Um I'm hoping there's maybe one reasonable or even unreasonable black who like heard that. Maybe they can throw in some two cents.
>> Nice.
Thank you, sir.
All >> righty.
>> Take care. Yep.
Speaking of Terry in Oregon, Oregon, not Oregon. How you doing, Terry?
>> I'm all right. How are you?
>> Fine, thank you.
>> Well, um I called in about um the new George Floyd.
I didn't know if you'd come across this yet. Um but in Ireland there was a black man killed recently. Oh, I thought you were talking about a white George Floyd in this guy.
>> Anchor baby might have covered it. Okay, never mind.
>> He's from uh he's Congolese. He's from Congo.
Um and he was living in Ireland and uh apparently he was a career shoplister and he was shoplifting the day that he was killed. Um he was detained by a couple of security guards.
Um, his name is Eve Tequila, I think.
>> Okay.
>> Uh, that's off the top of my head. I may have it wrong, so I apologize. But, um, yeah, he, uh, on his way out of the store he was robbing, he knocked over an elderly man and broke the man's hip.
>> Um, and the elderly man was actually collecting money for charity outside the door.
It was like really awful. Um >> the the elderly man was collecting his social security.
>> No, he was raising money for a charity.
He was like one of those people, you know, like with a little thing like donate to this cause, you know, like you know how old people are dogooders a lot of times because they don't work.
>> Yeah.
>> Yeah. He was doing that and he uh now he might I mean, you know, it's really bad when somebody in their 80s takes a fall and breaks something. True. Especially like their leg or hip. So, uh, there's not been much outrage about that and this poor man who, uh, may have had his life shortened because of the actions of a career criminal, but like >> Wow.
>> There's been protests and like all >> protest for the protest for the criminal who got killed, the alleged criminal.
>> Yeah. Yeah.
>> Yeah. So he was and how often nowadays I guess it is kind of shocking because usually with shoplifters they just let them walk free because most stores have a policy that you don't even stop them even if you're paid to do security. But there were security guards who did intervene in this circumstance and they ended up taking his life in the commotion.
>> Wow.
>> Um >> Eves. That's a nice name. Eaves. At least he had a nice first name. I mean, that's not good.
>> Yeah.
>> Nothing good about this situation.
>> Crazy.
>> Yeah. Now, it's being exploited by the wicked to uh fan the flames of racial tension in Ireland, which are already pretty bad.
>> Yeah. um cuz they've had a a great deal of immigration into their country and uh >> they called him an IT professional.
>> I know he has not worked in IT. I mean, what the hell does that mean? Like IT professional? What he he tinkered around with computers that he stole? Like what does that mean?
>> Yeah.
>> Apparently, he was known for stealing perfume and like reselling it. who's a booster. Like the guy was a scumbag who like stole for a living or to supplement his income because really he stole from the taxpayers in Ireland.
Um he never put into the pot, but he sure took out of it.
>> Wow.
>> Um and uh now he's dead because of the consequences of his own actions. And now it's uh being treated as some kind of, you know, racial incident. Even though like apparently one of the security guards who detained him was black as well, >> right?
>> So the facts of the case don't matter because it's it's convenient for people to use this to polarize the population, to turn, you know, people against one another and to divide and conquer.
>> Yeah. Yeah.
>> So, it's being used in that uh kind of cynical way.
>> I just think it's interesting because, you know, even years after George Floyd, like this tactic is still useful and still working. Doesn't matter.
>> Totally.
>> It seems like >> that's crazy.
>> I guess I don't know. I guess I too I guess I wanted to call about it too because you know that I have Irish heritage.
>> Oh, yeah. And uh yeah, I feel like some kind of way about it. And I guess I wanted to process that cuz I don't I like I'm an American through and through. I wouldn't belong in Ireland in any way. Um but I feel weird about the fact that like the country is being overrun with foreigners when like my ancestors left the country under duress, you know, >> right? like they didn't want to leave their homelands necessarily that they they could make a way or a life there.
So, they were forced off of their ancestral homelands and uh you know, times got better and now like they're having all these people imported into the land who aren't productive.
>> Yeah.
>> And they never bothered anyone like the I the Irish didn't like go around colonizing the world. they were a colony themselves and like that colonization has been used I think in the Irish like psychology to get them to identify with all these third worlders >> but they're not >> right >> um man it's kind of like I don't know it's just a weird one I'm kind of like sitting with it I'm like why does this bother me and I guess it's just because I feel like it's so unjust >> it's that communist It's that communism touching every country, if you will, you know.
>> I mean, that's how I feel about it, >> you know. And I've also seen too like there's been a lot of apparently Muslim attacks on like Japanese Shinto shrines.
I don't know if you've seen that happening, but there's been like >> in Japan.
>> Yeah. A lot of their like sacred Shinto shrines that people gone visit. I don't know much about the Shinto like faith or or what it entails. I think it's like spirit worship, but it's like their culture, you know.
>> Yeah.
>> And that's been attacked and it's suspected it's like Muslims doing it >> that are in the country.
>> So, I'm just I think it's interesting that like all these nations are dealing with this kind of stuff and it it doesn't make any sense why Yeah.
>> And I think it's a lot of lies that are perpetrated to get us to feel sorry for people for one, >> right?
>> That mama spirit.
And then yeah, I I it makes me wonder though about like all of history because you know we're told that this is a result of colonization and we owe these people something and like I don't think it's the case.
>> Yeah.
>> Um I you know I I've wondered a lot about history. Oh, this is terrible.
Okay, so this uh I'm looking at a Japanese man who took down an illegal African attacker in Shinjuku. I saw >> Michael Hearn reposted it and he's he had to wrestle him to the ground. The guy was beating on his head and so this Japanese man with nice shoes and a tan hat. He looks like he's an older gentleman, this Japanese guy who's subduing this black apparent attacker according to the story. South Asian digest. Japanese man bravely subduing an illegal African rufian causing trouble in Shinjuku, Tokyo. But um >> say again, ruffian, not rufian.
>> Thank you.
>> Yeah, it's pronounced ruffian.
>> Yeah, it's a nice word. But yeah, even Japan is suffering from not just these TE type people, but also even Chinese are kind of riff raff in their to their taste, I heard. But what a mess. Yeah, it's injustice in the world for sure and is bothering you, huh?
>> I guess. I don't know because I think about like nationhood and what it means to be a nation and like what happens when you have all these like black people from Africa identifying as Irish and like they're not and like and what is it doing to them as well because they're being disconnected from their ancestry as well.
>> Yeah. And then I think too broadly about like American identity because like um I'm an American, you know, for generations. My family's been here, but I still feel like some kind of connection to the ancestral homeland.
>> Yep.
>> And I feel like what the >> Totally.
>> What? Like is this is this just in us instinctually? like >> it it's um it's part of the ego, I think, in that >> that everybody's a person, right? And then they're they're a human body and they're of a of one race or another.
They're raised in that race usually or they're raised and brainwashed and indoctrinated into different prides.
women and men uh take on pride in their uh this identity that they that is put on them from childhood and that they adopt throughout their life. And that's partly why we don't like this diversity stuff because just as you're feeling that that way, blacks and Hispanics and different types of Hispanics because they don't all like each other or agree on everything and Jews and everybody is feeling the same way. Like I remember a Japanese friend of mine felt this um visceral reaction he called it when Fukushima happened and all those Japanese got hurt from the uh mismanaged the spill or accident with the Fukushima power plant. So, it's like people identify with themselves, with their bodies, and with their with people who are of their tribe, >> and they push that big time on blacks to the point where it's like ridiculous.
And the blacks really embrace that, but uh it's something that infects everybody. It's like if somebody were to talk about you personally, um you shouldn't identify with yourself and take offense, but it's like uh you see that happening to Ireland. It it is sort of a fine and reasonable instinctual thing to be nationalist as a as an Irishman woman.
But that's what this is the problem. We see this with Armenians come over here and march for the Armenian genocide and all that stuff. And it's understandable, but it's not it's not good. It's something that you want to overcome.
It's not right what's happening to Ireland, but you're not supposed to be overcome with evil.
>> Yeah. And what can I do about it? I'm an American. I have my own problems in America to worry about. Like we've got our own third world issues here.
>> Yeah.
>> But I don't know. I guess it's just kind of >> I don't know. I guess Ireland maybe to me points out how unjust this all is because like >> they don't they shouldn't be overrun with their boulders. They never took like the bu, you know, the supposed bounty from these nations.
>> Yeah. Ireland wasn't a col didn't colonize.
>> No.
>> They resisted being colonized. I thought kind of.
>> Yeah. Yeah. And they kicked the English out. Kind of. Sort of.
>> Right. So none of this none of this social justice stuff makes sense against Ireland. But they swallowed that liberalism and too many of them, I guess, voted or allowed for these traitors, if you will, to turn over the country.
>> Voted for it. They haven't voted for it.
That's the thing. It's like, >> right, >> nobody's voted for this. This, you know, if it was really put down to a vote, people wouldn't vote for it. when they have thought they were like in all these nations when people think they're voting against this stuff like it's the turnout's big >> right the powers that be are the traitors that be >> although Trump is not a traitor >> I agree with you totally that's ridiculous >> stupid >> yeah it is >> um like there was something else popped into my head did you see about the EU refusing to or they there was like controversy because so many nations refused to state that um they were taking a vote and they were it was about uh whether or not like African shadow slavery was the worst thing to happen to humanity.
>> Yeah. Okay. So the UN maize or somebody told me about that the UN took a vote saying uh that slavery was like the worst crime of against humanity ever.
and uh the United States, United States and Israel and maybe some other country voted no and then the EU the EU European nations many of them maybe the UK voted no too and then the eur many of the European nations they they abstained from voting but you're telling me there's something else go that's that they wanted to vote >> no it's the same it's the same thing I was just wondering because uh okay reminded me of that and like there's all this to do about it but like slavery like like why is it I I don't know. I talked to someone about it and he was like the reason it's a problem is because uh you know it's the African slavery uh gave everyone the idea that black people are lesser so that's why it's worse than anything else. And I'm like well >> chicken that did that.
>> Yeah I know. I was like was it slavery that did that? Because like it's not I mean everybody else >> how did they become slaves in the first place?
>> Nobody's looking at the German you know the Germans and like thinking like oh our slaves you know or like different people been enslaved.
>> It's nobody's looking at them.
>> It's people you could call it people's lived experiences that uh that causes them to look at blacks the way that people look at blacks.
>> Yeah. And propaganda of course like there's true and false propaganda against any group of people, whites for example that causes people to believe false things kind of about whites. So there's a little bit of that going on. I think like in terms of maybe you know maybe not in some of the other American countries but like in the USA like you're much better off having been the ancestor of a slave as a black person in the USA than you would have been if you stayed home >> right >> you know or ended up in like Cuba or something like you know you kind of had the best deal out of the situation like yeah your ancestors went through that but now you're an American citizen Um, correction, it was it was a it was Argentina that voted against United States, Israel, and Argentina >> base. Yeah. And I said, >> not the Argentina.
>> I think this was around the time that I said, "Isn't that great? See, Israel is for us."
Kind of in your face. Mark is like, "You're nauseating kissing up to Israel." This might have been the only thing I said about Israel was like, "Isn't that wonderful?
Anyway, uh so I wonder how the how did the UK vote? How did UK vote? Um wow, what a mess. Just perpetual propaganda about victimhood.
I don't know what a mess.
>> And maybe that's part of the Irish thing, too. It's like the victimhood is that they have in their identity also like feels this uh need to team up against the other whites and then like I think that's what's driving some of the people who support this stuff.
>> Yeah. So the so the Irish people in Ireland, not just the Irish people who are like maybe indentured servants in America feeling that a little bit of separation from normal whites, if you will. But the Irish in Ireland are like a victimhood uh country because they had to bear up under the oppression of the um British Empire, right?
>> Yeah. Yeah. There is a lot of that and I think that's part of why like so many of them are so insanely pro Palestine and like things like that like they you know um and you know a lot of them are support like you know causes to end like their world debt stuff like that which may or may not be a bad thing but anyway yeah I think there's that um that's exploited you know because they see the English as kind of a natural enemy. So, anybody else that the English may have problems with, they're like, isn't, oh, that's an ally, but they're not.
>> Yeah.
Interesting.
>> Anyway, yeah, human beings are horrible.
I guess the point of the call >> it is in they we are indeed.
>> We are all scum.
>> Thank you, Terry.
>> All right. Later. Bye.
>> Bye.
Kyle in Oklahoma is on the line here.
Kyle, thank you for calling, sir. Go ahead.
>> Hi, friend. Uh, just calling listen to your show sometimes. I just want had a few a little bit of beef with the Christian religion and I'm articulated enough to explain why now.
>> Sweet.
>> Oh, so just uh first of all, he came just for his lost sheep. So that's kind of racist.
>> Say again. He He just came for his He was just sent for his lost sheep of his tribe. No other tribe. Uh so it's kind of racist. He flipped over the text.
>> You're talking about Jesus. You're talking about Jesus came for his philosophy of his tribe, the Jews.
>> Yeah. He was a tribal messiah. Just came for lost sheep. He said, "I was sent only into the lost sheep of the tribe of Israel." That's his tribe. It's his lost sheep. That's his people. That's who he came for. He's a tribal messiah.
>> Okay.
>> He's not uh that's racist. He didn't never say he came for everybody. Uh but he flipped over the taxpayers table and you know that I I can't follow him like that. I'll go to jail if I deface any building or something. But uh he was angry about where the taxpayers were going. The dollars were gone. But he said he didn't come for peace. He said I came not for peace but a sword. And so you know he got he he he took up his arms against the soldiers when he was being persecuted. But uh the thing is is he even said to take up arms. But I can't follow him like that. I would go to jail. And so uh but he got up close with Satan. He didn't take a swing at him. And uh so I just have a little beast with that. He had to tell him to put down the weapons. That was kind of hypocritical cuz he was caught. Um and then he never acknowledged that that the female sacrifices been greater on this earth. And and he didn't even explain any earth science. And then the worst thing the worst damage that Jesus did was that he said to love thy neighbor as thyself, which that should be respect thy neighbor as thyself because it's a little bit of a syntax error to uh be loving. It's kind of coveting your neighbor's wife if you're doing that.
>> Sorry.
>> Uh >> go ahead. But yeah, the syntax issue should be respect thy neighbor and um but love love thy neighbor as being the highest commandment is a little bit too strong of an order and uh it's just a syntax error I think too and there's a lot of there's a lot of darkness in the Christian religion.
>> Were you raised Christian?
>> Yes, absolutely. baptized and raised properly, taken to church, fed right, and uh told love Jesus and God is good.
>> It just seems like a little bit of a deception because even in Jesus's uh Talmood, it gives uh the Jews the right to uh subject any gentile, you know, either Jew or Gentile. So, you have the right to subject them to death uh basically uh even the best ones u in their Talmood. So Jesus never even renounced that. So I just think there's a little bit of a archaic uh misnomer that it's good.
Uh Jesus himself said uh why are you calling me good? No man is good. Only God is good.
>> Yeah.
>> And so the Bible even said in the Old Testament that you're you're to be held accountable for your sins. Okay.
innocent bloodshed or some sacrifice isn't going to pay for any sinners to walk free because in the Old Testament, hey neighbor, uh in in the Old Testament, uh you're accountable for your own actions and uh if you repent, you shall live.
>> Okay. Yeah.
>> So, no one was going to kill you for sinning. Um but there would be consequences that you would have to pay not innocent bloodshed. So that's kind of what the the Christian religion is kind of paying for things with innocent bloodshed and uh that's the whole that's the whole religion is payment for sin uh sacrifice uh the sons sacrifice and that's what God called an abomination in the Old Testament.
So, it's just I think people aren't sure what they they're not quite sure. They just love their fantasy version of Jesus, like whether he had a thick beard or a dark beard or >> Yeah, true, man.
>> A level five or a level seven pan, you know, we you know, it's it's it's their own fantasy version because they don't study his words. They just have a a maybe a blondhaired, blue-eyed Jesus.
Yeah, those are cool, too, >> right? different flavors of him, >> right?
>> He's a brother, father, he's a son, uh, all of them, man.
>> So, what do you believe? What do you believe in now? If anything, or what do you believe in now?
>> Oh, I believe in the power of belief in terms of, you know, you could be believing the wrong things and the power of belief could get you to move a mountain. Uh, >> yeah. Your mind is very strong. Your mind is it it can it can make or totally break you.
Yeah. Oh yeah. AB belief is not a bad thing. I'm not a machine. I don't >> But what do you believe in?
>> And uh I absolutely believe in the majesty of uh the existence and if there being a supreme power it being known as the originator >> the originator and that is from within that even the god of Abraham taught us that the god is within but the god of Abraham is wrong and the uh Abrahamic religions are very deceptively corrupt.
You might be right.
>> They're not even good. There's not even one good ounce of good seed in them. I mean, like there it's it's pretty it's pretty dark and pretty like um I don't know. They try to really put God in a box in a book and just say this is what's good and right and the Holy Spirit. It's all really just it's all mythology. But there's some there's light in it and there's there's hope.
There's been good works in the church.
>> Okay. Out of all three of the Abrahamic religions, Christianity is is kind of the the innocent dove of the three. Um, >> but even even though it's the innocent dove out of the three Abrahamic religions, it's still like no good.
You're saying >> um it's still no good. Absolutely. It's not a platform for realistic uh um development of sentience.
It's just going to delude people and leave them to their next genocide every century. I mean, the history of Earth has been a Christian brother against Christian brother in war, man.
>> Over some over some potatoes they can't grow >> was going to be how you grow the potatoes or grow more, get more food.
But >> the back >> and you're a home you're a hometown Oklahoma boy speaking this way. Well, you you read these ancient scriptures and you find out like vine trimming is like how they call the masses and manage the population. Yeah.
>> Every century thousand years.
>> Yeah.
>> Someone has to consolidate wealth and power every six thou every millennium every for the past 6,000 years. So, it's just one of those things that uh you know um I I I didn't want to see another World War in my lifetime or it seems like they've already had World War II. It's just we've been slowly called one by one.
>> Interesting.
you know. Uh but uh >> is that is that you're referring are you referring to like the uh all these different wars that we've done over the past 30 40 years whether it be Iran or Iraq or Afghanistan or Ukraine and Russia and all that stuff that amounts to like a World War II. Is that what you're saying?
>> Yeah. Well, if you look at the numbers, there's a 100 million homicides the world war the war last century worldwide. 100 million a round number like that.
>> And so this century there's already been probably 20 million homicides to world to world genocide.
>> Brutal.
>> And but back to back to family back to uh being a traitor and what what causes all this is that if you're not loyal to your family, you're a traitor. But who is your family? It's not necessarily who who you're born in, who your family is that raised you. It's not necessarily who your family is.
>> Okay? But your family is someone and you do have one, it's important to find them. But it's hard to it's hard to be loyal to a family or know what your family is when you're told that somehow we're we're convinced just that oh, America is the family. The whole country is the family, but it's God, country, and family. So, um I just I hate to see people get taken advantage of because they're naive and uh benevolent. Um but um there is a God, country, and family. And I hope people recognize which one's which, what they stand for, because they're saying the the divide's not political, but >> Uhhuh.
>> But there really is uh those left-handed Democrats that really um I don't know how to explain it.
If if uh I mean there's just a right-handed person and a left-handed person, it pretty is clear. It it is pretty clear, >> you know. Interesting.
>> They got two left-handed gloves.
>> So, you're saying that that that there are two families. There's a left-handed family and the right-handed family. And you're speaking metaphorically, of course, not physically right-handed, but in terms of the path that they take. Is that what you're saying?
>> It's weird how Americans act like their vote doesn't count. Like I thought that is your party. Like it's like if you're Republican, say you're Republican if you're a Democrat. But there's like it seems to be this, oh well, it doesn't matter what you stand for.
Well, it's like, dang, why do I even vote at all?
But so there's a huge denial from the left that it's that life is one big pow-wow and if 50% agree it's cool they can bob on the the minority.
>> Yeah.
>> But that's the basis for their morality.
And when they talk about Jesus, they use that like it's a >> it's a character judgment on you because Jesus taught you to love everyone. But don't let those words deceive you because back to what I'm saying that that's just deceptive.
Do I understand how J Jesse Lee says you love all or you love none?
>> Yep. Do you agree with that?
>> You know, in a sense I do. But that's what we're working to achieve, right?
Like that's what every person wants is to live in this community of light and love and peace, you know, and harmony.
Uh so yeah, we're not working on like disagreeing with each other, you know, we're working on but it just seems like if there's if there is a a terrorist even in the uh in the midst um there's a there's definitely uh terrorism in our government and stuff.
So >> terrorism in the in our government.
>> Yes.
When did you arrive at these conclusions about uh religion about Christianity and and religion?
>> Oh, as soon as I read them and I've read the most I've read these uh I've read what scripture >> over the years I've read this uh this this info on this scripture. Did anybody did anybody tell you this to get you started on on this belief and like you were >> right? I mean a lot of whistleblowers uh have to like say this is what's corrupt about the the religion.
>> So who is your >> I'm judging anyone any people. I'm talking about the actual religious institution.
>> Who is your family?
Uh my family >> without doxing of course but the charact the character I I assume you mean by characteristics.
>> What is the character of your family?
>> Um oh just that uh yeah I was raised Christian but uh that >> no I mean like your real family not just your because you know you said loyalty to your family but not necessarily flesh and >> blood and define. I thought I thought my you know I thought Republicans are team Republican. That's why I'm confused. Are they?
>> So you thought they So you thought that Republicans, if you will, if they really adhere to the real principles of Republican.
>> Exactly.
>> They could be like your family. I'm sitting here saying Republicans just want representation and and uh you know what's each state to be represented right in the republic >> as it should and >> for the welfare of the people and uh but uh it's just that uh >> yeah it's kind of confusing when people start breaking down saying your vote doesn't matter in South >> Kyle you're Kyle you're you're you're a little all over the place. I don't know where you're coming from anymore. I asked I asked who's your family and you started talking about Republicans.
>> Yeah. Yeah. No, absolutely. I would actually think that uh my family would be the Republican. I vote Republican and uh >> Okay.
>> I thought that that side that side of the country shared my values, but >> Oh, so you had naive benevolence toward your fellow Republicans when it turns out that they're a bunch of rhinos, >> right? Well, exactly. including the voters, many of us.
>> I mean, uh, >> interesting.
>> There's beautiful blue-eyed white women in the Democrat party, you would hate to think of living in a separate country with them. But >> u, that's just how they are. With the mob mentality of if 50% agree something is right, it should be right. But that >> I don't agree with I don't like mob mentality for sure. I that's part that's why I'm against democracy. I want >> I want some protections for what's right, no matter what the mob thinks, you know.
>> And democracy has been operating this way for thousands of years. U >> Yeah. I mean, that's just it's in it's inherent in human nature. It's not just religion that's bad. It's it's human nature that that creates the religions and that creates the corrupt governments.
>> It's almost like it needs diversity to uh get it uh agenda.
Yeah. Right. Yeah. Especially in the white because whites per capita are not going to vote for this insanity to that level. Kyle, it's interesting hearing from you, sir, but I gotta I gotta run.
Thank you.
>> Appreciate you. Thanks. Bye.
>> All right. Bye. Before I get back to y'all's calls, everybody, I haven't got to any super chats. Gotten. I haven't gotten. Okay, Carlos, very interesting super chat the other day talking about judging by behavior.
Very cool. Um, C Bill made a good point about people getting offended. Very nice. Cesar or Caesar, I think I cleaned that up. C Bill said, "You don't speak for all Christians." Baed America first vak coffee saying regarding the Federal Reserve Board of Governors Trump appointed Steven Moran M I r an to finish our Adriana Cougler's Couglers Adriana Cougler's unexpired term through January 31st 2026 instead of Jerome Powell resigning and replaced by Kevin Worshan left so Worsh could be sworn in as chair today. Ah.
Aha. Spencer Pratt frames homelessness as drug and government problems.
Allegedly, over half California homeless are bust in for government funded nonprofits and NOS, non-government organizations, which are which are in cahoots with the government um and funded by the government apparently to make more money. Spencer Pratt's ideas and harm reduction kits use harm reduction kits are like needles and you know stuff to enable them you know basically because the idea being oh if we enable you and give you clean stuff then you won't use dirty stuff and get even worse so it reduces the harm mama spirit and so end those kits use existing California law for 5150 hold to put homelessness on long homeless on longlasting Vivitrol and le 5150 holds are when uh you're taken not put in jail but put in like a mental facility type of thing I think against your will. 5150. Okay, that's what that stands for, I'm pretty sure. A hold to put homeless on long longasting vivitrol, which sounds like a drug of sorts, but one to treat you, I guess, and treat addiction in remote recovery centers centers, repatriation, and hard labor. That sounds great. That sounds great. I would love for Spencer Pratt to do that. Thank you for the tips, the news tips.
Sir, did I put Did I save that one? Oh, yeah. Here's a case of this. There's this one guy. According to him, Pat Steedman, dating and relationship coach.
I'll repost this from Cernovich. He said that every DC Oh, I already reposted it.
No, I hadn't. Every DC judge so-called who oversaw these show trials upon January 6ers, not all of them were rioters or insurrectionists, should be impeached. every DC judge who oversaw this. This guy said, "I went into the capital and I shouted and that was the gist of all he did." He told this whole story, this Pat Steedman guy.
But I was looking, maybe I liked it. This is the guy who attacked allegedly uh piece of work who attacked Chud the Builder.
Chud may not have been innocent either, though. Don't know.
I wonder if I reposted it on James Ant and Hake. I don't really have time to dillydally, but I'm going to switch over here and check my likes.
Okay. Yeah. Here's Spencer Pratt.
>> Problem. We have a drug problem. The DEA will tell you that over 90% of the homeless population in LA are hardcore illicit drug users.
>> How many people are using illicit drugs in the homeless community? I would say it's incredibly high. 20% 30% >> of the overall problem.
>> Yeah.
>> Over 90%.
>> Cartels are operating in the open forcing addicts to traffic drugs and murdering them when they don't meet their quota. Dogs are being killed by methheads.
>> Okay. Fentanyl addict.
>> So that's uh Spencer Pratt's little >> test their drug.
>> I reposted it on X if you want to join X and follow James Antenhake as well as the Hake Report.
Nice. Nice. Thank you again, sir. I'll repost it on my the hakee report thing, too.
Let me see.
Nice. Okay, cool. Hey, look. Nerdy. Good old days of Thomas Massie.
Here's here's good old days.
>> Tik Tok is actually a Trojan horse. Some of us are concerned that they're first amend.
>> He's speaking against the tick tock ban back when he was cool and nerdy.
I know that's a contradiction of terms.
Okay. Thank you. Based America first coffees.
Um, uh, Pratt, Massie, etc. Right. Cesar says, "Sup. Hey, you may have addressed this, but do you care, want, or need to be able to say the so-called um N word in my ego? I do care. I I want to be able to say it, you know, in my ego. But um when I'm in my ego, you know, if you will, but no, I don't I don't actually care or want necessar you sometimes I want uh but not really, nor do I have any need to be able to say it. It's just uh the principle of the matter that they are mad only at white people for saying it. If not, why do some white people have the need so-called to say the word?
Is it for 1A purposes for the foist amendment? Yeah. Um the principle of the matter maybe get a rise out of people around not necessarily blank people. Um some of it is whites are becoming angry and wanting to get a rise out of people.
Some of it is you're told what not to say. That gets people ticked, sir. And that makes them want to say it more.
It's like God said, "Don't eat from the fruit." And so they wanted to eat from the fruit. Well, with the help of Satan and the woman.
I only ask because I don't care have care, want, or need to say any word that would provoke a certain race. I have back in the day. I have back in the day when I was in my fallen state playing Call of Duty or something like that. Oh yeah, those gamers say gamer words all the time to each other. What do you say?
Yeah, there is a culture, a corrupt culture of black people trying to get a rise out of one another and and other people. Um and then whites are buying into that stuff too, of course. But um my thing is criticizing the black people that to be provoked and criticizing the whites to want to provoke.
Yeah. And criticizing the blacks to want to provoke. I was looking at the Jason Lee Peterson show and this convict, murder convict, smoking a vape in the in the thing, blowing it out through his nose, making a scene and being sticking up his the wrong finger.
Um, and all kinds of stuff. It's like uh Ardan from Colorado.
um trying to trying to get under my skin, right? Or Maze gleefully laughing when somebody gets ticked at her mess, her stubborn mess. Tori says, "Are we still friends?"
Yes, Tori Seon. Starships were meant to fly.
Hands up and touch the sky. Oh, unicorn emoji, star eyes, black uh Ethiopian peace sign, which is hippie devil, but it's a or victory sign or two fingers up birthday balloon or balloon shooting star. Starship nice or I mean spaceship.
Thank you, Seion. Very nice. in a refresh because I I imagine it's possible I could have got got more coffees over here which I did. Um, Popcorn Taylor says, "I went to I went skydiving last weekend and I was waiting when I was waiting a van full of blacks pulled up to skydive. It blew my mind. I didn't know black people did that kind of stuff." I know, huh? We're known as like that's a white thing, Taylor. I thought that was just dumb stuff only white people did. Also, nice shirt.
Thank you. It was a gift.
Thanks, Taylor. I'm skipping popcorn just temporarily because his are always long, you know, and sometimes I react so long I might as well give them their own time stamp. CSRC's are breaking news according to the Wall Street Journal.
Perhaps a more reliable source than my competitor. Not sure. Tulsi Gabbard is preparing to resign as director of national intelligence, DNI. I told you, hey, Trump is it's getting rid of these women in high positions. his laughing face with tears coming out. It's almost as if he used them in order to make himself look good.
Yeah. Really?
Um I wonder if it's has to do with the war or what. She's resigning exclusive per Fox News. Resigning his DNI citing husband something or other husband's health. Okay. Uh maybe that's just an excuse. Who knows if it's the real reason. According to MS Now, formerly known as MSNBC, uh, latest Trump cabinet member to leave the administration after Christy Noom was fired, so-called as DHS secretary, oops, that's temporary, in early March.
Today, with great humility and sincere appreciation, I share the below the below letter with President Trump. It's been a profound honor to serve the American people or whatever she said, blah blah blah. And so I'll repost it for you guys on X, the hate report on X.
Thank you for your service, uh, Christian woman, Democrat, Hawaiian gal.
Interesting.
Very nice. Okay, so um, let me do these, uh, YouTube supers.
Okay.
Oops.
YouTube.
Michael from Canada. Time to grow up and leave mama's basement.
Oh lord. Low IQ. Alex is gone. Based Alex is back is Everlazer.
Thank you guys.
And again Jim in Alaska had said make have a great weekend. Thank you guys.
And uh I'll lump in popcorn, too.
Popcorn.
What are your thoughts on this $ 1.7 billion anti-weaponization fund being created by the DOJ? I don't know much about it, but I liked the sound of it. I liked the idea of it. Newsmax shares a Newsmax article headlined DOJ starts $ 1.7 billion dollar fund for Trump allies who have been hurt by weaponization of the DOJ and of you know quick reflection on it from the great white hope Pope's post uh from YouTube shorts let's see if this has >> justice department has this new fund that was announced today $1.7 billion why should taxpayers pay for the January >> well it's and very wellreceived. I have to tell you, I know very little about it. I wasn't involved in okay in the whole creation of it and uh and the negotiation. But this is uh reimbursing people that were horribly treated, horribly treated. It's anti-weaponization. They've been weaponized. They've been in some cases imprisoned wrongly. They paid legal fees that they didn't have. They've gone bankrupt. Their lives have been destroyed. And they turn out to be right. I mean, it's was a terrible period of time in the history of our country. and they worked on it. I know the Justice Department it's really been working on it uh very hard. There's been numerous other occasions over the years where things like this have been done, but these were people that were weaponized and really treated brutally by a system that was so corrupt with corrupt people running it and they're getting reimbured for their legal fees and the other things that they had to suffer.
>> Justice Department has this. Okay, so that's this reporter woman asking about the Justice Department announcing that and he says he was not involved.
Interesting. Fox 11 online little short there. Unfortunately, I don't know. Can I share a short? I can post I can I can post it on X for you guys. Boom.
Just follow the hake report on X. It's actually a Oh, let me not do that. Let it post first. Okay. So, where was I?
Popcorn says, "Do you know much about it?" I don't know much, but I know a little. Um, do you view it as a form of reparations? Yeah. Yeah, I do. I do view it as a form of reparations for sure.
Apparently, J6ers ones that are actually legitimate because they were personally harmed, you know. Anyway, apparently J6ers may be eligible for compensation from the fund.
Yeah. Since it's been said that Antifa were among the riers in J6, I don't think supporters of the Great White hope are going to love this idea of an Antifa members potentially pocketing bunch of taxpayer dollars. What do you think? Um, I don't know if there were any Antifa people. There may have been. There was a Black Lives Matter grifter who even they Black Lives Matter didn't even like him.
You know, that light-skinned black guy from one of these western states. Uh he he was over there saying burn this beard about the capital. No, but there's a lot of innocent people who uh you know, relatively innocent people who didn't even get violent. Now, there's some capital police officers who didn't want anybody who was violent. But let's say people got punishment that didn't fit the crime. Let's say even if you were violent, you were disproportionately punished because of this situation.
Anyway, if someone was wrongfully imprisoned and did nothing, I can see them being entitled to compensation. But someone who attacked an officer and given jail time, different story in my opinion, says Popcorn. It is, it's a totally different story.
But even still, let's say like a Jake Lang, according to him, he did like push or fight or punch or something officers maybe. I don't I don't remember. Um, but it had to do with oh, he was protecting a woman who ended up dying. I think she overdosed or something or anyway I would bet that people supporting this are against the things like the innocence project ironically enough says uh he yeah um I don't know much about the innocence project JLP has interviewed them and uh I imagine that there are people who are even blacks who are framed by other blacks or framed by cops or framed by whoever.
Anyway, Mike Lindell has and sometimes these are bogus. Kevin how I started to mention they're like, "Oh, they actually did it or you know."
Anyway, Mike Lindell has thrown his name into the hat for compensation as well. I know you don't like when I mention this, but I just think it's a sets a bad precedent.
No, this is not a case where I don't think this is a I you end up getting the oh no, I agreed with it for this, but now it's time for these types of funds arguments.
Well, let's say somebody was somebody was overzealous in cracking down on, you know, that that retired cop who was jailed over a Facebook reply allegedly.
I don't know the whole story, but he he's he I mean, he's already getting compensation, a settlement anyway.
Um, but I imagine like there might have been a little bit of injustice here and there for Black Lives Matter people who were suckers in supporting Black Lives Matter and they wrong place, wrong time.
But there's nothing like this popcorn.
Um, in terms of the establishment being against Trump, his supporters, you know, and whites, you know, I think that you may recognize that whites don't get as fair a shot anymore.
Lastly, according to the FBI, last the largest drop in violent crime and murder since 1937 has taken place. Ah, I've think that I've heard about that. You know, Trump is FBI reports largest drop in violent crime and murder since uh 1937 if the FBI is correct. I wonder what uh John Arlock Jr. thinks of that.
Homicides fell more than 18%. FBI director Cash Patel credits major transformations at the bureau under Trump. You know, part of it I heard may have to do with the um immigrants uh illegals staying uh home or getting deported or just kind of staying inside low profile, but also the crackdowns on in some of the cities with Trump going into did he go into Memphis, DC, you know, the stuff like that. Interesting. Sir, buying it, not buying it, not necess I I have a uh wait and see popcorn. I don't know if it's all true or not.
Thank you, sir. Very nice.
Right on. Right on.
Let me just double check, etc. Uh, etc. Yeah, I know, guys. I know. I know. Let me look at um Rumble. What's up, Rumble crew? Let me open up the treasure, not treasure chest. What's up to the dive crew? I'm gonna do the release the scratch offs on pled.net, y'all. Formerly dive, now pild.net. Some of my divers finally went over to pled.
What's up, Germaine and CT?
Alas, I have not been able to get to your calls. I probably Okay, so I have a I have screenshot I have um several callers to whom I will not be able to get.
All right, I would like to get to um David in Indiana.
David, how you doing, sir?
>> I'm doing good, sir. How are you?
>> Fine, thank you.
>> Yeah, I just called in because uh I heard one of the previous callers saying that he was getting a little hung up on the fact that some people think Jesus might have been white. He's saying it wasn't really possible.
Oh, is that one of the things that my caller Kyle from Texas or wherever Oh, Oklahoma uh said, >> "Yeah."
>> Okay.
>> I just wanted to respond to that.
>> Okay. Yes.
>> Okay. During co I was looking at a bunch of Egyptian stuff just being bored >> bored and I found out that uh they had found Ramsy's from Exodus's tomb and they actually found his body and they have it. And what's gonna shock you is he's a white guy with red hair.
>> Ramsy's was you're saying?
>> Yes. You can go look it up on Google if you don't believe me.
>> That is interesting.
>> Moses was the son of the pharaoh.
>> Okay.
>> Oh, sort of.
>> If Moses Hello.
>> Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Go ahead.
>> If all I was saying is if Moses was son of the Pharaoh, then he would have been white. And if they couldn't tell him from the Jews because, you know, difference, it kind of makes sense that he could have been white. And if Moses took the Jews out of Egypt and he was a white guy, there's at least a small chance. You know what I'm saying?
>> Okay. Um, now, uh, but Moses wasn't a blood son of Pharaoh, was he?
>> Or was he? Yeah.
>> Yes. because I know um he was a son of his sister was Miriam and his mother was a Hebrew gal, right?
>> Yes. But but here's the thing is wouldn't they have been to tell immediately he wasn't Jew uh >> oh yeah they would have they would have been able to be like oh he's >> Yeah that's not that's a different color than us.
>> Yeah cuz Pharaoh's daughter was like I like that kid. I want him right.
>> Yep. She she saw him in a basket on the Nile River or something like that.
>> Yes.
>> And then Miriam came and said Miriam, his older sister, was watching over the basket. She's like, >> "Oh, I can help you take care of him."
>> And not disclosing that she was really his sister, I guess.
>> Yes.
>> Ah, so Moses might have been redheaded and white like Xerxes. They did say >> if he spent a lot of time in the desert, his hair might have turned blonde.
>> Indeed. A lot of my uh a lot of uh my fellow white people, their their hair turns blonde even when it's kind of brown. It just gets kind of sun bleached when they're surfers.
>> I have very dark black hair and in the summer it turns red and blonde and all kinds of different colors.
>> Wow. Right on, sir.
>> I'm just saying I don't know. And I and I I'm fine with whatever color it was. I I love the knowledge, not not the the appearance of it. But I just thought if you think it's not possible, I have I I'm telling you it could be possible.
>> That's so funny. Well, thank you for your input, David in Indiana. Sir, fun hearing from you.
>> Yes, sir. Thank you. Hey.
>> All right. Take care.
>> Bye, buddy.
>> Bye.
You know, y'all, I'm just shaking my head. I My regrets to JC in Little Rock, Arkansas. Wanted to talk about the betrayal of my callers in a race war. Ryan in Illinois had a question about Trayvon Martin. Ross in New Jersey had a question about uh or a scenario about whites and blacks and um Jeff in Louisiana had a comment on an Illinois parking ticket or something and the rest of the super chatters and callers I cannot get to you. My regrets. The fallen state is up next and then American anchor baby later. Peace in the Middle East or at least in your hearts.
Adios America.
Catch you Monday. Church with Jesse Lee Peterson on Sunday. Take care.
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