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18 February 2024 Sunday Morning Live!

Philosopher Stefan Molyneux dives into the darkness of why bad women reject good men.

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Transcript
00:00:00 Good morning everybody. It is 11 o'clock on the 18th of February 2024.
00:00:07 Ah, so nice to chat with you guys this morning. I had one of these nights, you know,
00:00:12 where you fly by sleep, your body's like, "Well, we could go to sleep or I tell you
00:00:18 what we could do, we could just doze and be groggy for 20 minutes and then just
00:00:22 kind of wake up. How's that?" It's like, you know, when you're trying to land that
00:00:26 plane on the aircraft carrier and you're like, "I don't, I don't have enough, I
00:00:30 don't have enough carrier. I don't have enough to..." You gotta go back up again.
00:00:34 So that kind of happened last night.
00:00:35 So I lay there for about 20 minutes.
00:00:37 I got up and, um, I did some reading and, uh, I had, I had a piece of toast and
00:00:45 then, cause you know, snacking at night, it's a drag cause then you got to brush
00:00:49 your teeth again and floss and all.
00:00:50 And then I'm like, so I went back to sleep and then crashed well, woke up
00:00:54 with a bit of a headache and that's the problem with the night stuff.
00:00:57 Uh, for the most part, sleep is great.
00:00:58 I don't know what happened last night.
00:00:59 It was just like, we could or not.
00:01:02 And turned out to be not.
00:01:04 What do you need to know about these details?
00:01:06 Hey, I'm an oversharer.
00:01:08 What can I tell you?
00:01:08 So, uh, thank you everyone for dropping by today.
00:01:12 I'm looking forward to your questions and your comments.
00:01:15 Uh, don't forget, of course, I'm going to put the link in here just on the off chance.
00:01:19 I'm sure you are subscribers, but just on the off chance you're not.
00:01:23 Premium philosophy community on the web.
00:01:25 You can even try it out for free.
00:01:27 Truth about the French revolution.
00:01:29 Truth about sadism now gone out to the public.
00:01:31 Access to the audio book reading of my new book, peaceful parenting.
00:01:34 You get the multi-language staff, what AI private live streams, premium
00:01:38 call-in shows, the 22 part history of philosopher series, and oh, so much more.
00:01:42 And we are working away on Emmanuel Kant.
00:01:48 And, uh, that's a, he is an emesis, man.
00:01:52 He is a really, really challenging.
00:01:54 Nemesis.
00:01:54 He's the guy who said that if you gain any benefit, if you gain any benefit from
00:02:01 an action, it's not moral, right?
00:02:06 That you have to do the moral action has to be the thing in itself.
00:02:09 So if you give a 20 bucks to a homeless guy and you feel good about it, then
00:02:18 it's not a moral action because you're not doing it for the homeless guy.
00:02:20 You're just doing it to feel good yourself.
00:02:23 Uh, he's a, he's a tricky guy, man.
00:02:24 I find those arguments really, really challenging.
00:02:27 I mean, logically I can say this, that, or the other, but so he said, basically
00:02:32 in order to make sure that something is moral, you have to really hate doing it.
00:02:35 It's not enough to be neutral.
00:02:38 You actually have to hate doing it and that which you hate the most, but which
00:02:43 is the best for others is likely the most moral, it is really like a brain
00:02:47 virus that is really, really powerful.
00:02:50 And I can do the logic stuff, but somehow, and I'm still trying to sort
00:02:54 of work, work out all of this somehow it, it, it worms its way into my brain and
00:03:00 becomes almost impossible to overthrow.
00:03:02 It's just a, it's a real challenge.
00:03:05 It's a real challenge.
00:03:06 All right.
00:03:11 Let's get to your questions and comments.
00:03:16 Do you think YouTube channels that promote the multiverse theory, the idea
00:03:20 that objects have consciousness, reality being subjective are amusing
00:03:23 distractions or a danger to society?
00:03:25 So crazy ideas, of course they're dangerous, but you wouldn't want to put
00:03:36 that in a neutral sense of danger.
00:03:38 You want to make, wouldn't want to give that to sort of a neutral, like, you
00:03:41 know, if you release some sort of a toxic gas, uh, then that's dangerous,
00:03:46 like for everyone in the vicinity.
00:03:48 So the lure of bad ideas is like a sorting mechanism.
00:03:56 You know, it's like the sorting hat in a sense, right?
00:03:58 It's a sorting mechanism.
00:04:00 And the people who follow down the path of objects, having consciousness,
00:04:11 reality being subjective, um, the multiverse theory, the simulation
00:04:15 theory, and all of that, the people who go down that hole are being
00:04:21 neutered fundamentally, they're being neutered and it is a temptation
00:04:31 to believe that if I manipulate ideas in my mind without changing anything
00:04:40 in the world, that that is a productive use of my precious life.
00:04:44 All of this stuff really is an appeal to vanity.
00:04:50 And that's what Platonism is as well, Kant's new mental realm.
00:04:55 The idea that the Buddhists have, of course, of Nirvana.
00:04:59 It's a great temptation.
00:05:01 Just push stuff around in your brain, man, just shuffle ideas and
00:05:08 concepts and try to reach the perfect abstract consciousness and just,
00:05:15 it's like throwing the meat off to one side when there's a dog you want to
00:05:22 invade and take over someone's house or steal from these, throw the meat to one
00:05:26 side, it's a great temptation.
00:05:28 Don't change the world.
00:05:30 Push useless shit around in your brain.
00:05:37 Apologize to the rock before you move it out of the way.
00:05:40 Dream of the ghosts within the trees and what they have to say to you.
00:05:45 Look around to see, to find the glitches in the matrix where you can reveal the
00:05:52 falling green text of the programming of the multiverse.
00:05:56 Imagine alternative lives and go in, like it's a form of neutering.
00:06:01 It's a form of intellectual castration.
00:06:03 You can be good by avoiding challenges.
00:06:11 You can be good by avoiding risk, by avoiding danger.
00:06:15 You can be good without provoking the ire of any immoral people.
00:06:20 Is the greatest and most devilish temptation of those of us drawn to virtue.
00:06:32 Because you fall into your own mind and end up pushing around concepts in the
00:06:39 solitary confinement of your own skull prison and bad people who score and
00:06:46 reject all of that chicken entrails nonsense run the world.
00:06:51 It is a form of neutering.
00:06:59 I mean, at least somebody who plays a video game knows that he's not
00:07:03 achieving anything in the real world.
00:07:05 And of course everyone's like, what if he's a, he's fatality, like an expert
00:07:12 video game player who wins a million dollars.
00:07:14 No.
00:07:14 And what about all the people who fall out of planes and land somehow safely?
00:07:25 It's like, yeah, don't fall out of planes.
00:07:26 Right.
00:07:26 It's not even acknowledged as a bad habit.
00:07:33 Well, I'm going to lock you up in your own mind, but I'm going to tell
00:07:40 you that in there is infinity.
00:07:42 So you won't feel constrained.
00:07:44 You won't feel trapped.
00:07:47 You won't feel confined.
00:07:50 I'm going to lock you up in a holodeck of futility.
00:07:56 That's right.
00:07:57 That's the evil people will do that kind of stuff.
00:07:59 Right.
00:07:59 Regularly.
00:08:01 Right.
00:08:01 It's a great temptation.
00:08:04 I'll give you the illusion of doing something.
00:08:07 You give me the world.
00:08:08 I'll give you the safety of pushing around bullshit in your own mind.
00:08:14 You give me rule over the planet.
00:08:19 And a lot of people fall prey to that temptation.
00:08:28 A lot of people fall prey to that temptation.
00:08:33 They're selling a drug of vanity.
00:08:36 Reality being subjective means it gives you a sense of power over
00:08:43 reality that doesn't happen.
00:08:44 Listen, when I was a, how old was I?
00:08:46 Yeah.
00:08:49 I was probably 11 or so.
00:08:51 So this would be in 1977.
00:08:52 I was about 11 and in the seventies was, it was a huge mystical era.
00:08:59 People don't, I mean, they remember the disco, the flared
00:09:01 pants, the polyester stuff.
00:09:03 The, but, but they don't remember is a lot of people don't remember
00:09:07 is how incredibly mystical and superstitious the time was.
00:09:10 It was everywhere.
00:09:14 It was everywhere.
00:09:18 And I heard about all of this stuff.
00:09:21 I read about it.
00:09:22 My mother, of course, was very much into mysticism and I tried it.
00:09:26 I tried it.
00:09:27 I tried telekinesis.
00:09:28 I mean, you know, I'm a, I'm an empiricist.
00:09:30 Let's, let's see if this works, see if this is like a thing.
00:09:32 And I remember lying on my bed after my little 10 CC album, uh, 45, a little
00:09:39 45 of the things we do for love after it finished playing boy, that thing had an
00:09:43 endless outro boy, they really bad at that thing.
00:09:45 And I tried to lift the needle and move it back to the, like lift the
00:09:50 needle and move it back to the holder.
00:09:51 And, you know, I put, put heart, soul and mind and effort into it and tried my
00:09:56 very best and, you know, tried, tried these things, right.
00:09:59 And of course nothing ever worked.
00:10:01 And so, yeah, you, you try these things and then you realize that people
00:10:04 are just kind of lying to you.
00:10:05 And then when it fails, you say, okay, well, let's think about it.
00:10:08 Right.
00:10:08 You saw, I mean, back then I didn't think theory.
00:10:10 I thought empiricism and then went to theory.
00:10:12 So, okay, well, why, why would this be nonsense?
00:10:14 Well, of course you think that, uh, psychic abilities like telekinesis
00:10:18 would have such an evolutionary advantage that if they were possible,
00:10:22 uh, that everybody would either develop them or be displaced by
00:10:25 those who had developed them.
00:10:26 So it's, it's a form of intellectual self castration to go into
00:10:33 reality is subjective, man.
00:10:35 It's like, so then you feel like you have power over reality, which
00:10:39 means you have no power in reality.
00:10:41 Right.
00:10:41 If you think mentally, you have power over reality, you give up power in reality.
00:10:46 And of course, because you have the fantasy of infinite power, you don't
00:10:51 actually try to develop any real power or authority or influence in the world,
00:10:56 which means the bad people who fed you this drug have locked you up in a tomb
00:11:01 of your own delusions and you pose no particular threat to any of the
00:11:04 evil doers anywhere in the world.
00:11:06 So, uh, is it dangerous?
00:11:09 I mean, yes, but the danger part is not the essence of it.
00:11:15 What's the essence of it is the emasculation part.
00:11:19 Mysticism had to do with why star Wars was popular.
00:11:24 So a star Wars was popular in many ways because it was passive, right?
00:11:35 Star Wars was, so, you know, the typical way this story works, right.
00:11:42 This is sort of Joseph Campbell stuff.
00:11:43 The typical way this story works is there's a boy who's discontented.
00:11:50 He feels, and of course Disney heroines, I want more, all these sorts of things.
00:11:55 Right.
00:11:55 So you've got a boy who's discontented.
00:11:56 He's frustrated.
00:11:58 He has particular abilities that are underutilized, right?
00:12:03 In Luke Skywalker's case, of course, what he used to bomb the
00:12:06 wamp rats or something like that.
00:12:08 And he was an expert flyer, an expert driver.
00:12:10 So he had martial abilities and was stuck on a farm, right.
00:12:15 With repressive, productive parents, but he's, he's frustrated, but he, he
00:12:22 doesn't, he's not going to do anything in particular, but what happens then
00:12:27 is that an older man recruits him into a grand adventure of violence.
00:12:33 Right.
00:12:33 And he's kind of taken along, he's kind of dragged along.
00:12:41 Right.
00:12:42 So Obi-Wan Kenobi recruits him.
00:12:45 I mean, Obi-Wan Kenobi is the equivalent of the army recruiter, right?
00:12:48 Adventure across the galaxy.
00:12:51 Right.
00:12:51 And he's drawn into this grand combat.
00:13:01 And he, he fights and he wins.
00:13:04 And usually he gets the girl though, in this case, he couldn't
00:13:06 because spoiler, she's his sister.
00:13:08 So it was popular because of Luke's peculiar passivity.
00:13:14 And I remember when I watched Star Wars as a kid being really annoyed at Luke.
00:13:18 I mean, he is kind of whiny.
00:13:21 He is a very passive.
00:13:23 He is credulous.
00:13:24 He is naive.
00:13:26 And he is, and of course the latent powers thing, that's really common, right?
00:13:32 That, that a stranger helps you unlock all of your latent and magical powers.
00:13:38 A circumstance happens that unlocks all of your latent and magical powers.
00:13:42 That is, you know, Peter Parker with the radioactive spider, that's a Superman
00:13:47 landing on the earth in the fireball.
00:13:50 That is Obi-Wan Kenobi grabbing Luke out of obscurity and putting him in the
00:13:56 center of, of combat, it is, it's a story about how, if you're heroic, you should
00:14:05 be passive and I mean, Luke can't even disagree practically with Uncle Owen,
00:14:15 right, Uncle Owen says, do this, do that.
00:14:17 He's like, I'll do this, do that.
00:14:18 I'm going to live and die on this stupid rock, but the two sons and I dream
00:14:22 of adventure in far off places, but Luke is so annoying because he can't
00:14:27 even stand up to his uncle and then he helps destroy, well, he
00:14:30 destroys the Death Star, right?
00:14:31 So this is the daydreaming of the person who can't stand up to authority.
00:14:36 And he daydreams about all of these wild battles he's going to get into.
00:14:40 So, I mean, he's a, a whiny kind of pathetic character and, uh,
00:14:49 complains and is inactive and then basically he has all these fantasies
00:14:54 about all of these great things that he's going to do.
00:14:59 So, uh, the, the mysticism was certainly part of it, right?
00:15:05 Oh, it looks like, wow, look at this.
00:15:07 It turns out I have all of these latent powers.
00:15:10 Well, fantasizing about powers is a way of avoiding achieving expertise.
00:15:19 Right.
00:15:19 So there's a difference between envy and ambition.
00:15:25 Right.
00:15:25 So when I was a kid, I saw, you know, I mean, I knew kids in my high school
00:15:31 who had, you know, good families, decent middle-class lives and so on.
00:15:35 And I was of course in one of the poorest kids around.
00:15:38 And I just remember thinking like, okay, well, I, I want that.
00:15:44 Like I want that.
00:15:45 So I saw that and I was like, that that's what I want.
00:15:47 And I remember when I was a kid thinking, what am I going to be in the year 2000?
00:15:50 I'm going to be, I'm going to be wearing a nice suit or at least nice clothing.
00:15:54 I'd work in some office, making some decent coin.
00:15:56 And then that's what was happening.
00:15:57 So there are things that I wanted, but I also was willing to stand up against
00:16:05 authority, willing to stand up against injustice and work towards these things.
00:16:09 But Luke, he just fantasizes about adventure.
00:16:15 And if Obi-Wan, he's so morally empty that if Obi-Wan Kenobi had simply
00:16:19 been Darth Vader, he would have joined the dark side.
00:16:21 I mean, he isn't no particular morals.
00:16:23 He just follows the authority figure.
00:16:25 He's a weapon.
00:16:28 He's a tool.
00:16:28 And of course he finds out about all of these, the force, right?
00:16:32 All of this, he's got all of these fantasy abilities that just are innate within him.
00:16:38 And an external, it's none of his work, right?
00:16:40 It's, it's the external authority, whether it's Obi-Wan Kenobi or Yoda,
00:16:44 it's the external authority that needs to bring his powers to the forefront.
00:16:50 It's not his own will.
00:16:51 It's not his own choice.
00:16:52 He didn't even know he had them and so on.
00:16:53 Right.
00:16:54 And so it's, it's, it's really boring.
00:16:56 Like the, the, the powerless hero discovering his latent powers.
00:17:00 This goes all the way back to Thomas Covenant with his white ring, his white
00:17:08 gold ring, all these latent powers.
00:17:09 He doesn't know how to wield them.
00:17:10 An authority figure shows him the way, and this is being trained
00:17:14 in martial combat as an amoral person and being pointed at the King's enemies.
00:17:18 Right.
00:17:19 So, all right, let's get on with the question.
00:17:23 Hey, Steph, thank you for the tips.
00:17:25 I appreciate that.
00:17:26 What are your thoughts on alone time?
00:17:29 Alone time.
00:17:31 And the need for personal space, especially when you have a family.
00:17:34 Is alone time an escape from responsibility or a recognition that our
00:17:37 social group doesn't share our interests.
00:17:39 So we are better off pursuing them alone.
00:17:43 Is alone time a natural need arising from a desire to not just lose our
00:17:46 individuality or is it sometimes a sign of dysfunction in relationships?
00:17:49 So that's interesting.
00:17:51 So you go from family to social group.
00:17:54 I'm not sure what that means, but it means something.
00:17:57 Alone time, the need for personal space, especially when you have a family.
00:18:01 I mean, you are an individual in a family.
00:18:08 You are a person who negotiates.
00:18:09 You are a person who compromises.
00:18:12 You are a person who finds shared goals and interests.
00:18:14 So you are still an individual.
00:18:17 I mean, you will always be a part of a family, but you don't, obviously
00:18:20 you don't flesh melt, borg melt or something like that.
00:18:23 Is alone time an escape from responsibility or a recognition that
00:18:29 our social group doesn't share our interests so we're better off pursuing them alone?
00:18:32 Well, if your social group is your family and your family doesn't share
00:18:35 your interests, then you have a problem.
00:18:38 I don't know if you're talking like here.
00:18:40 We've got three things, right?
00:18:42 Four things, really.
00:18:44 So social group from the past, you don't choose as your kid, as a kid, you,
00:18:47 you're, I mean, you choose it in school to some degree, but your extended
00:18:51 your family and extended family, is it your family of origin or is it the
00:18:54 family you, you marry a woman or a man?
00:18:58 You have kids, right?
00:18:59 Is it, is it your family as an adult?
00:19:00 I don't know what you're talking about.
00:19:01 Social group doesn't share interests.
00:19:03 I mean, I spent a lot of time alone as a kid, uh, which I loved.
00:19:08 And, uh, there are times as adults, uh, I will absolutely, yes, I will do,
00:19:12 I will do things on my own.
00:19:13 I will absolutely do things.
00:19:15 I mean, one of the things of course is working out, but sometimes I'll play a
00:19:20 video game, actually it's pretty rare.
00:19:21 I'm not playing anything at the moment, really, but sometimes I'll, I'll read.
00:19:26 Sometimes I'll just go for a walk and listen.
00:19:28 Sometimes I'll listen to music and yeah, of course you need, you need alone time.
00:19:32 I mean, everybody needs that.
00:19:33 There's nothing wrong with that.
00:19:35 So, yeah, I mean, your family should not want you to spend time with
00:19:41 them if you want time on your own.
00:19:43 The last thing that I would want is for someone in my family to spend time with
00:19:48 me because they felt they should, or they're obligated in some manner, right?
00:19:53 If, if, and of course you do need a little bit of time to recharge and figure
00:19:57 out yourself and your own thoughts and your own goals and your own ideals.
00:19:59 My alone time tends to be, you know, like I've been doing this series.
00:20:03 I hope you'll check it out.
00:20:04 It's a freedomain.locals.com.
00:20:06 I've been doing this series on philosophical paradoxes.
00:20:10 So I found a list of philosophical paradoxes and I've been working through
00:20:15 them from a rational empirical perspective.
00:20:18 And so for me, I wake up in the morning.
00:20:20 I don't really eat usually till mid afternoon, sometimes even late
00:20:24 afternoon, but I wake up and I'll strap on a headset and we'll, I'll do
00:20:30 philosophical paradoxes and it's kind of cold to walk, but you
00:20:34 know what I mean, like I'll stroll around somewhere in the house
00:20:37 and work through those ideas.
00:20:40 It's a great way to start the day.
00:20:41 Is that alone time?
00:20:42 I don't know.
00:20:43 I mean, I'm alone with my thoughts, but I end up sharing them with the world.
00:20:47 So yeah, nothing, nothing wrong with that.
00:20:49 You should not, you should not be in relationships due to obligation.
00:20:55 I mean, obviously, right?
00:20:58 Did this is so in your relationships, if, if my wife says I'd like to go out and
00:21:03 have a coffee, I mean, I'll say, would you like some company?
00:21:06 I can't remember the last time she would have said no, cause she really, I mean,
00:21:09 we really love each other's company, but it would be, yeah, I mean, fine.
00:21:12 Enjoy.
00:21:13 Right.
00:21:14 I mean, so, uh, and of course, you know, my daughter's at the age now,
00:21:19 he's 15 and change, uh, peers are very important and parents are less important.
00:21:24 That's exactly how it should be.
00:21:25 Peers are her future.
00:21:26 Her parents are her past.
00:21:27 And so when she wants to do things with her peers, fantastic.
00:21:32 How can I facilitate that?
00:21:33 Right.
00:21:34 No.
00:21:34 All right.
00:21:35 Uh, somebody says in regards to alone time, I think it's important
00:21:40 to have some time to yourself.
00:21:42 You want to show your kids how they can set boundaries.
00:21:44 Logistically, you will need to work with your wife and family friends
00:21:46 so that your kids are in good company.
00:21:47 Yeah.
00:21:49 I mean, it kind of, it's a bit of an insult to people to say, I'm going to
00:21:53 spend time with you out of obligation rather than pleasure.
00:21:55 And if you feel like the need, you have the need for some alone time, so take it.
00:21:59 All right.
00:22:01 Well, that's a, uh, that's a question and a half.
00:22:04 Well, let's start another question.
00:22:09 More than a year ago, I was part of a private invitation based Christian
00:22:12 group that met to discuss poetry, theology, and prayer.
00:22:15 Uh, one woman leading this group late twenties was slightly overweight and
00:22:19 smoked, but was very intelligent and well-read.
00:22:21 She ended up getting pregnant and said this, I'm having a baby.
00:22:24 No one is surprised about this as I am.
00:22:26 The wee lad is Jew in mid June and the past few months have been spent
00:22:30 recalibrating life around this Copernican event, hence something
00:22:33 of a silence on the group line.
00:22:36 She gave birth to a healthy child.
00:22:38 And in some of the pictures she shared, she showed the father holding the child.
00:22:42 It looked like he was play a role in the child's life, but there
00:22:45 was no mention of marriage.
00:22:46 In a previous meetup at a pub, I had a chance to meet the
00:22:50 mother and have a chat with her.
00:22:51 I forgot how the conversation developed, but the mother ended up telling me
00:22:54 about her son who didn't want to talk to her.
00:22:58 And she was asking me for advice.
00:23:01 Wow.
00:23:01 How old, like she has a kid and now he doesn't want to talk to her.
00:23:04 Is the kid a couple of years old at this point?
00:23:07 Anyway, naturally I felt like this wasn't something I could comment on honestly,
00:23:10 but I could see that the family situation wasn't good.
00:23:13 The father didn't appear to be in the picture and the daughter has now ended
00:23:17 up in a different, difficult situation relationship wise, just like her mother.
00:23:21 What?
00:23:22 Uh, her son who doesn't want to talk to her.
00:23:29 And the daughter has now ended up in a difficult situation relationship wise.
00:23:33 The father and the daughter.
00:23:36 Okay.
00:23:39 So the daughter is the mother here.
00:23:40 So the father didn't appear to be in the picture and you mean the mother has now
00:23:45 ended up in a difficult situation.
00:23:47 I assume so because I, there's no mention of a daughter.
00:23:49 I'm just asking you people, please, please proofread your stuff.
00:23:53 I shouldn't have to puzzle this shit out in real time.
00:23:55 Come on.
00:23:56 I mean, I'm not trying to translate the Rosetta stone here.
00:23:59 Just, just proofread stuff and make sure it makes sense.
00:24:01 It's clear to me that the daughter who led this Christian group alongside two
00:24:05 other people hasn't processed her childhood and ended up repeating
00:24:09 the same mistakes as her mother.
00:24:10 She gave birth to a son and I'm not optimistic about the future
00:24:13 relationship these two might develop.
00:24:15 These two being her and her son.
00:24:19 I assume fast forward to today over a year later, after the group has been on hiatus,
00:24:23 they are now going to be continuing their activities.
00:24:25 One of which involves writing some contributions to a private journal
00:24:28 shared among the members centered around the theme of Christianity
00:24:31 and the narrative of progress.
00:24:32 Right.
00:24:33 That's the big issue.
00:24:34 I find myself wondering if I should continue to participate in this group
00:24:37 or if it is compromised because one of its founding members
00:24:42 is in a questionable situation.
00:24:43 The other two members are a similar age, but married.
00:24:46 Nonetheless, I find myself wondering what a group should do when faced
00:24:50 with a situation like this.
00:24:51 I'm sure they've had discussions about this together in private.
00:24:55 But to me, it just looks like there's an elephant in the
00:24:57 room that hasn't been addressed.
00:24:58 Personally, I also feel a desire to distance myself from the lady who
00:25:02 was with a child, but unmarried, because I don't want to normalize
00:25:06 her situation within my mind.
00:25:07 Regarding the theme of Christianity and the narrative of progress, I would
00:25:12 probably write my observations about the pressure that people in Christianity
00:25:15 feel to forgive those who have harmed them, particularly parents, as well
00:25:18 as the consequences that arise out of having dysfunctional or
00:25:21 underperforming people in your life.
00:25:24 If you were putting together a private Christian group, would you allow people
00:25:27 who are overweight or smoking to participate?
00:25:29 What about people who still had dysfunctional or underperforming people
00:25:34 playing a large role in their lives?
00:25:35 What would you do if one of the members of the group ends up
00:25:38 making an irreversible mistake?
00:25:39 How do you move forward?
00:25:40 If you are unable to speak the truth, you know and understand about these
00:25:45 matters, is there any utility in participating in such a group?
00:25:48 Given that religious gatherings tend to have people with such situations,
00:25:51 how do you give these people a road to redemption while
00:25:54 sustaining a healthy distance?
00:25:55 Well, I mean, welcome to the endless quagmire of female-run groups.
00:26:04 Right?
00:26:08 Because it's all about don't judge and, you know, she's made mistakes, but
00:26:11 she's doing her best and we should honor and respect her journey and like, you
00:26:15 know, don't, don't add burdens to her.
00:26:17 She's already has difficulty enough.
00:26:19 And right.
00:26:20 I mean, this is again, the, the empathy and the sympathy, which is a beautiful
00:26:23 thing about women gets pathological when you're talking about adults, the sympathy
00:26:27 and empathy that women have towards children is beautiful when applied
00:26:32 to adults, it is claustrophobic.
00:26:33 Because in order for women to manifest the sympathy towards adults, they have to, in
00:26:39 their minds, pretend that they're children.
00:26:41 And so the way that people who make huge mistakes with no excuse, right?
00:26:46 People who make huge mistakes will always present themselves as helpless
00:26:51 victims to women to elicit the toddler response and the maternal response from
00:26:55 women.
00:26:55 And then if you criticize someone who's triggered the toddler response in
00:27:00 woman, which is not that the woman is a toddler, but she's responding to that
00:27:03 person as if they're a baby or a toddler.
00:27:05 If you criticize somebody who's evoked the toddler response in women, the
00:27:09 woman will react to you as if you are criticizing a baby or a toddler.
00:27:13 Right?
00:27:16 If a baby drops something, you wouldn't say the baby is clumsy.
00:27:21 If the baby falls down, you wouldn't say that baby must've gotten
00:27:24 into some kind of alcohol, right?
00:27:26 I mean, it would be crazy.
00:27:27 If you say that the baby has, uh, the baby has, has pooped its diaper.
00:27:33 That's incredibly rude.
00:27:34 And the baby should damn well be toilet trained, right?
00:27:37 The people would be like, that's outrageous.
00:27:39 What are you doing?
00:27:40 This is a baby.
00:27:41 This is a toddler.
00:27:42 How dare you come with your like weird adult judgments.
00:27:46 When you're talking about baby or a toddler.
00:27:49 I mean, so women's toddler response, again, it's why we're all alive.
00:27:58 It's a beautiful thing.
00:27:59 And we should love and respect women in my view for having the toddler response.
00:28:03 And it's generally the man's job to point out that the toddler response
00:28:09 is inappropriate to an adult.
00:28:11 Don't infantilize adults.
00:28:15 But again, when, when women are in charge of a particular environment,
00:28:18 and it's not always the case in tons of exceptions in general, there is a
00:28:23 huge amount of resources, whether it's sympathy, time, energy, money,
00:28:27 uh, support, food, uh, whatever.
00:28:30 There's a huge amount of resources available to anyone who can trigger
00:28:34 the toddler response in women.
00:28:35 Which is to say that I'm a helpless victim.
00:28:40 I have no control and to pretend that whatever happened to
00:28:45 you, wasn't your choice.
00:28:46 Right?
00:28:46 So what did this woman say?
00:28:49 Right?
00:28:50 One of the women leading the group, how did she program
00:28:54 the toddler response from women?
00:28:57 She said, and you quote right here, she said, I'm having a baby.
00:29:01 No one is surprised about this as I am.
00:29:03 What?
00:29:07 What do you mean no one is surprised about this as I am?
00:29:10 No one really, no one is as surprised about this as I am.
00:29:14 It just happened to me circumstances.
00:29:17 And this is the old, you know, my boyfriend lied and he, he said he, I
00:29:22 was the world and then he ghosted me.
00:29:23 Right.
00:29:24 So I'm just shocked.
00:29:24 I mean, I'm a victim and things happened to me and I'm just kind of pushed around.
00:29:28 I'm a, I'm a trapped by circumstances.
00:29:31 I have no free will, which is the toddler response.
00:29:33 Babies are trapped by circumstances.
00:29:34 They have no free will.
00:29:35 Same thing with toddlers and so on.
00:29:36 Right.
00:29:36 The wee lad is due in mid June.
00:29:43 So they're immediately going to the birth.
00:29:45 So she says, I'm totally helpless.
00:29:48 Something happened to me.
00:29:49 And then she says the wee lad is due in mid June.
00:29:51 So that she's saying I'm a toddler and my baby is, so she's absolutely
00:29:55 programming the other women's unconscious thing, I assume.
00:29:58 I don't know, obviously this is just my sort of theory, but.
00:30:01 The wee lad is due in mid June that gets women's sympathy for the pregnancy and
00:30:12 the baby and the past few months have been spent recalibrating life
00:30:15 around this Copernican event.
00:30:16 So she's just, you know, something happened to her.
00:30:20 She has to recalibrate her life and, and so on.
00:30:23 Right.
00:30:24 Uh, somebody left a baby on my doorstep and there's no other place to put it.
00:30:28 Like this kind of stuff.
00:30:29 Right.
00:30:29 So something happened to her and she is, Copernican event, of course, the
00:30:37 planets don't have any free will.
00:30:39 The solar system doesn't have any choice.
00:30:40 So she's saying that I'm a victim of physics.
00:30:43 I guess in a way she is, but I'm a victim of physics.
00:30:47 Right.
00:30:47 So she is, she's playing helpless and provoking the toddler response or the
00:30:58 baby response, the maternal response is, uh, is key to exploiting, uh,
00:31:03 female lead groups, right?
00:31:06 I have a whole, I mean, the, the, I listened to this just not, not too long
00:31:11 ago, the scene between Oliver and his mother later on in my novel, the
00:31:18 present is searing with regards to this.
00:31:26 Are people responsible for their own choices or are
00:31:28 they victims of circumstances?
00:31:29 Men say people are responsible for their own choices.
00:31:36 Women will often say that people are responsible for their own choices,
00:31:42 but they're easily high, their brains are easily hijacked with the toddler
00:31:47 response without, you know, men around to remind them, right?
00:31:54 So when you evoke the toddler response in a woman, then if a man comes in and
00:32:02 says, wait, you're having a baby out of wedlock, what do, that's not, that's,
00:32:06 that's a sin, right?
00:32:07 That's right.
00:32:07 Then what happens is the women experienced the man calling the quote
00:32:13 helpless woman, a sinner, or has done something wrong or has done something
00:32:17 bad as a man holding a toddler or an infant morally responsible, really,
00:32:23 it's, it's more of an infant because toddlers can be criticized for their
00:32:27 badness by mothers as well, but it really is more of a baby response,
00:32:30 but the maternal response, right?
00:32:32 Nobody says that a baby is immoral.
00:32:35 That would be insane, right?
00:32:36 So when somebody evokes the baby response and then whoever
00:32:39 criticizes them, the women will work to shield that mental baby from any
00:32:46 harsh criticism or moral criticism.
00:32:48 Right.
00:32:51 Hopefully this makes, make some sense.
00:32:53 So Christianity is, I mean, it's pretty, pretty easy.
00:32:58 It's not easy to do, but I mean, like philosophy, but Christianity
00:33:02 deals with this very easily, right?
00:33:05 Which is, thou shalt not bear false witness.
00:33:09 Thou shalt not bear false witness.
00:33:11 If somebody is doing something that's a sin, if someone is doing
00:33:14 something that is irresponsible, you say, you, you, you're doing something wrong.
00:33:19 You're doing something immoral and it's, uh, it's sinful.
00:33:22 And we need to talk about this as a community, right?
00:33:26 I, I, I don't know all these complications.
00:33:31 I just, why would I want to be part of a group where I have to lie?
00:33:34 And why, why would I want to be part of a group where I have to lie?
00:33:37 That's not being part of a group.
00:33:39 That's self abandonment in the face of others, which
00:33:44 means that nobody's there.
00:33:45 Nobody's, it's not a group.
00:33:46 It's a circle of ghosts.
00:33:49 All right, let's get on with your comments and questions.
00:33:53 Uh, did I see the video of the comedian breaking a guy free from the friend zone?
00:34:03 Well, I have, I've seen videos like that.
00:34:08 Are you guys effing, you know, that kind of stuff, right?
00:34:11 Uh, it's, it's going to be a disaster.
00:34:13 It's going to be a disaster.
00:34:16 I mean, he'll just get put back in the friend zone or some guy will come along
00:34:21 who sweeps her off her feet and then, right.
00:34:22 Uh, did you ever have to play corporate games or adjust your natural personality
00:34:29 to survive when you were working as an entrepreneur?
00:34:31 How did that go?
00:34:32 Well, am I in the business world anymore?
00:34:35 Well, I mean, I, I guess I run this business, freedom.com/donate.
00:34:39 But, uh, was I working?
00:34:42 Uh, yeah.
00:34:43 I mean, you, you, you do have to adjust things.
00:34:45 Yeah, of course.
00:34:45 I mean, you are living in a world of hyper-reactive normie zombies.
00:34:50 So.
00:34:52 All right.
00:34:59 Uh, let's see here.
00:35:00 Somebody says, uh, I'm finishing listening in our, sorry.
00:35:09 I'm finishing listening.
00:35:14 Oh, two arc.
00:35:15 Oh, so this is somebody I had a call with.
00:35:17 I'm finishing listening to our call this morning.
00:35:18 My dad also listened to the last hour and a half when it got to
00:35:21 where I broke down crying.
00:35:22 I cried again and it brought my dad to tears as well.
00:35:26 Uh, it's been over half a decade since we were both so vulnerable
00:35:31 and emotional about our relationship, had to get up and give him a long hug.
00:35:34 As we cried together, thanks again for all you have done for me in my life.
00:35:37 This morning's moment with my father included.
00:35:39 Well, I hugely appreciate that.
00:35:41 And I am incredibly grateful that you've given me that follow up
00:35:46 and big hugs to you both.
00:35:47 I really, really appreciate that.
00:35:49 And the fact that you have that kind of connection with your father is
00:35:52 a magnificent, beautiful thing.
00:35:53 Just don't make it a moment.
00:35:55 Make it a continuum.
00:35:56 All right.
00:35:57 Good morning, Jared.
00:36:01 The typical Zoomer thing.
00:36:03 Yeah, they do this, right?
00:36:04 There's hold the mic right up to your mouth.
00:36:09 Thank you, Steph, for the advice on the Thursday live stream.
00:36:12 Oh, this is the fellow who I said was kind of passive aggressive.
00:36:15 Nice to have you back.
00:36:16 Thank you for coming back and thank you for the response.
00:36:19 Uh, thank you, Steph, for the advice on the Thursday live stream.
00:36:22 I have rewatched it many times and there is so much self
00:36:26 knowledge to take from it.
00:36:27 I already noticed my communication being more direct and
00:36:29 polite in the days since.
00:36:31 Right.
00:36:31 So I, this is a, uh, just for those of you who weren't there,
00:36:35 I'll touch, touch on it briefly.
00:36:36 So I was talking about a show I did, How Not to Hate Women,
00:36:40 and talking with this guy.
00:36:43 And because I was talking about the show, James, who works with me,
00:36:47 kindly posted a link and this guy lashed out at James, calling him an incel
00:36:51 because he thought that James was posting the How Not to Hate Women because he
00:36:56 thought that James thought this guy hated women and it was really volatile.
00:36:59 It was kind of nasty and unpleasant.
00:37:01 And I called him out on it and, uh, was, was fairly firm, obviously
00:37:07 trying not to be rude, but that's, I'm not going to bear false witness.
00:37:10 If I think that, obviously, if I think anyone, but let alone a good friend
00:37:13 of mine is being unjustly attacked.
00:37:15 I mean, James doesn't have the microphone.
00:37:18 I do.
00:37:18 It's not like James can't talk for himself, but I have the microphone.
00:37:22 So yeah, I mean, if you see a friend being unjustly attacked, you're
00:37:24 going to, you're going to have to just say, so I appreciate that's a great
00:37:28 message, but the person you need to talk to most is James.
00:37:31 And maybe you have, so.
00:37:32 Where is Mike now?
00:37:36 That is a fine question.
00:37:38 That is a fine question.
00:37:42 Closing your eyes and lying down is almost as good as being asleep.
00:37:46 I do not find that to be the case.
00:37:48 Uh, what if you give $20 to a homeless guy, feel terrible about it,
00:37:58 then he buys drugs with it.
00:37:59 Yeah.
00:38:00 Yeah.
00:38:00 Yeah.
00:38:00 With AI getting so advanced, I'm really looking forward to the
00:38:04 future being told via AI.
00:38:06 Oh yeah.
00:38:06 I mean, uh, the idea, I mean, I've thought of this, uh, of course, you
00:38:09 know, if I ever was a zillionaire, I would, you know, make one of my novels
00:38:13 into a movie, I mean, the really expensive one would be, uh, almost
00:38:16 probably be a $50 million movie, but you just wait for AI and I mean, if you
00:38:23 look at Will Smith with spaghetti versus what's happening now, I mean, it's
00:38:26 just a year, it's incredible.
00:38:28 It's incredible.
00:38:29 All right.
00:38:34 The YouTube CEO banned YouTubers because her son was being exposed
00:38:43 to quote radical content.
00:38:45 Susan Wojcicki, Wojcicki, Susan Wojcicki.
00:38:49 Yeah.
00:38:51 Her, uh, she, I think she's got five kids and her son was found
00:38:55 dead in his dorm room yesterday.
00:38:57 I think he's new to college.
00:38:59 And, uh, there seems to be some indication.
00:39:01 I don't know.
00:39:02 They'll find out with the tox report, but there seems to be some
00:39:05 indication that, um, he overdosed.
00:39:08 And I don't imagine that he overdosed.
00:39:09 If this is what happened, I don't imagine he overdosed because he took
00:39:14 too many drugs or too much of a drug.
00:39:16 He probably just took something fairly innocuous, which
00:39:19 was laced with fentanyl.
00:39:20 So that's, I mean, it's just, it's a horrible story.
00:39:25 It's a, it's a really, really tragic story.
00:39:27 The death of a child.
00:39:27 I mean, he was an adult, but the death of an offspring is, is, uh, you
00:39:32 know, my heart goes out to her.
00:39:33 It's it's a, it's just terrible.
00:39:34 It's just awful what she's going to have to deal with.
00:39:37 Um, I mean, it's a shame really, because I mean, I did a lot of work on addiction.
00:39:42 I did a lot of work on child abuse.
00:39:44 I did a lot of work on how to think for yourself, how to stand up to others.
00:39:47 I mean, I've never taken a drug.
00:39:50 Someone's handed me, people have handed me drugs and it's like, no, no, thank you.
00:39:56 I don't muck with the machinery of excellence.
00:39:58 Uh, and, uh, and you know, this is the new warfare is it's not like the new warfare
00:40:03 is drugs across the border.
00:40:05 I think she was open borders person.
00:40:07 So yeah, it's, it's really, it's really sad.
00:40:09 It's really sad.
00:40:11 I mean, to, to be that, you know, to be the CEO of one of the largest and most
00:40:22 influential corporations around while trying to raise five kids.
00:40:26 Uh, it's tough.
00:40:27 It's tough.
00:40:27 And, you know, I mean, censorship of anti-drug, uh, stuff, you know, it's
00:40:34 obviously not causal, but it is, it is very tragic.
00:40:36 Yeah, that's true.
00:40:43 That's true.
00:40:44 I'll get it next time.
00:40:45 I'll get it next time.
00:40:46 Right.
00:40:46 There's a great song by Peter Gabriel.
00:40:49 Growing up, looking for a place to live.
00:40:52 All right.
00:40:55 There is a sci-fi short story where the multiverse exists, a company trades
00:41:09 with other timelines to bring things that don't exist in their own.
00:41:11 But there is a plague of self-deletion.
00:41:12 A man in the casino in Vegas wins big, took a heavy blow to his
00:41:18 head, took a header off his hotel balcony.
00:41:21 The problem is nihilism takes hold.
00:41:23 Nothing matters because every choice you make, every outcome exists somewhere.
00:41:27 So why bother doing anything?
00:41:28 Very dangerous idea.
00:41:29 All right.
00:41:35 I'm sorry.
00:41:36 I'm a little bit behind the, uh, the chats.
00:41:39 Thank you for the tip.
00:41:40 Uh, and in star Wars, I mean, nobody has any kids, right?
00:41:58 I mean, nobody has any kids and the women are all warriors
00:42:04 and there's nobody maternal.
00:42:06 And in star Wars, I mean, obviously the death star is the giant female egg and
00:42:11 the sperm is the torpedoes that go in and destroy it and all of that.
00:42:16 Right.
00:42:16 So it's about abandoning childhood for the sake of eternal, the
00:42:21 eternal adolescence of adventure.
00:42:22 And of course, one of the most popular characters is Han Solo, literally Solo.
00:42:26 Uh, he's on his own.
00:42:27 He's he's doesn't have kids.
00:42:29 He doesn't want to get married.
00:42:30 Right.
00:42:30 Uh, and, uh, love is all about lust.
00:42:35 It's not about pair bonding and procreation.
00:42:37 Right.
00:42:37 I mean, who, who are the happy families?
00:42:39 Who are the productive, positive families in star Wars?
00:42:42 They don't exist.
00:42:43 It's just training people to prefer stimulus and adventure to family and
00:42:50 children as usual depopulation crap.
00:42:52 All right.
00:42:59 Uh, I asked the question on alone time because I saw a video short by popular
00:43:04 psychologist called teal Swan, where she said alone time arose out of inauthenticity.
00:43:08 And it got me thinking about the different contexts in which alone time arises.
00:43:12 Alone time arises out of inauthenticity.
00:43:16 And I think that's a really good way to put it.
00:43:18 I think that's a really good way to put it.
00:43:19 I think that's a really good way to put it.
00:43:20 I think that's a really good way to put it.
00:43:21 I think that's a really good way to put it.
00:43:23 I think that's a really good way to put it.
00:43:24 I think that's a really good way to put it.
00:43:25 I think that's a really good way to put it.
00:43:26 Alone time arises out of, you know, Oh, I see what you mean.
00:43:29 So, uh, you have to fake who you are when you're with the people around you.
00:43:34 And therefore you need alone time in order to escape the inauthenticity
00:43:40 that is demanded by those around you.
00:43:42 Okay.
00:43:43 Yeah.
00:43:47 Yeah, I get it.
00:43:48 So if you, if you, if you're a deep thinker, which is to say a thinker, if
00:43:53 you care about thoughts and ideas, the world, truth, virtue, uh, integrity,
00:44:00 and you're around, I mean, have you ever been around these kinds
00:44:03 of people on a regular basis?
00:44:05 My gosh, it is almost beyond stomaching.
00:44:09 Hit me with a why, if you've been around a little bit of ham,
00:44:15 a little bit of toast people.
00:44:16 Oh, this is what I had for lunch.
00:44:19 I had a little bit of ham and a little bit of toast.
00:44:22 And so lovely little plate of side olives.
00:44:24 I do think the gardenias are coming in beautifully this year.
00:44:27 And how did you notice the Robin is back and he's in the bird feeder and he's just
00:44:31 pecking away like nobody's business.
00:44:33 And I'm concerned my dog is developing a slight limp.
00:44:36 I really should take him to the vet, but I'll guess I'll get round
00:44:39 to it at some point in time.
00:44:40 And, uh, I'm just trying to think what it is I might want to have some dinner.
00:44:44 And oh, isn't it rather chilly for this type of year?
00:44:46 And oh, I saw this lovely little documentary on seals on the television yesterday.
00:44:51 It was really special.
00:44:52 And oh my God, just draining away any depth or life or passion.
00:44:59 It's just like the endless drivel of little nothings.
00:45:03 Oh my God.
00:45:05 Oh my God.
00:45:08 And did you see what the princess of Monaco was wearing yesterday?
00:45:14 It was really quite a delightful outfit.
00:45:15 Nothing I would have thought would have ever gone together, but she somehow
00:45:18 managed to pull it off.
00:45:19 And isn't it interesting?
00:45:20 Oh my God.
00:45:23 Just the drivel.
00:45:27 They're just, and you know, I don't mind a little small talk from time to time.
00:45:31 I don't, you know, but it's just absolute drivel that washes away anything of depth.
00:45:39 It fills you in like sand with grating nothingness.
00:45:43 So, yeah.
00:45:47 So if, if you're around those kinds of people a lot, and you know, it's, it's,
00:45:54 it's, it's very passive aggressive.
00:45:56 It's driving away any depth or meaning.
00:45:58 And it's usually the small talk is, relentless small talk is usually entered
00:46:04 into and maintained by people with a very, very bad relationship to their own conscience.
00:46:09 They, they are guilty as shit about something and they got to keep everything
00:46:13 on the surface because in the depth is hell.
00:46:15 And you know that because the moment you start talking about anything deeper,
00:46:18 they get really freaked out and panicky.
00:46:19 Oh, let's not get into that.
00:46:21 Religion and politics.
00:46:22 I was always raised things.
00:46:23 You don't talk about the dinner table.
00:46:25 Oh, this is going off into your deep, dark Russian mindset again.
00:46:30 No, let's not talk about that.
00:46:31 Just, they got to stay up.
00:46:32 They got to stay at the top because down at the bottom is a pile of fiery shit.
00:46:37 So.
00:46:39 What are your thoughts on nagging?
00:46:52 Hey, speaking of nagging, freedomain.com/donate.
00:46:57 If you'd like to help to share that, I'd really appreciate it.
00:46:59 What are my thoughts on nagging?
00:47:01 I mean, I've talked about it before, but I'm fine to talk about it again.
00:47:09 If it is helpful to you, I will do.
00:47:12 If it is helpful to you, I will do.
00:47:15 Right.
00:47:17 So.
00:47:20 Nagging is more of a female phenomenon.
00:47:25 We're going to talk about it as if it's exclusively female, just for the
00:47:28 sake of convenience, though, of course it can happen the other way too.
00:47:31 And nagging is the substitution of negative economics or positive economics
00:47:40 for people who can't make a good case as to why you should do what you do.
00:47:43 Right.
00:47:44 So when a woman is young and pretty and fertile and attractive and all of that,
00:47:49 then she doesn't need to nag because men will do what she wants because she's pretty.
00:47:53 When women go past the wall and they become less attractive, then they switch
00:47:58 from being pretty to nagging because the positive economics of, if you do what I
00:48:04 want, maybe I'll go on a date with you, to, if you do what I want, I'll stop
00:48:07 destroying your life with endless whining nagging, it's just a way for people who
00:48:12 can't make a good case as to why you should do what they do when they women
00:48:15 switch from the positive economics of desirability to the negative economics,
00:48:19 which is the punishing economics, not the carrot of sexual access, but
00:48:24 the stick of endless complaining.
00:48:26 They just don't have a good case as to why you should do what you do.
00:48:29 And rather than you as a man saying, wait, wait, this is like, you keep, you
00:48:36 keep nagging me to take out the garbage.
00:48:37 Are you upset about something else?
00:48:38 Like, obviously we don't want to live our life complaining about the garbage.
00:48:42 And of course, men resist.
00:48:45 They resist being nagged at.
00:48:48 Of course.
00:48:48 Right.
00:48:48 I mean, if you ever want to demotivate someone, just nag them.
00:48:57 Just promise irritation and hostility.
00:49:00 If they don't obey your will.
00:49:02 And a man who lies to a woman is always doomed.
00:49:10 A man who lies to a woman is always doomed.
00:49:15 Listen, guys, guys, guys, you may think you're all that and a slice of bread,
00:49:21 but, um, if you think you can out subdiffuse a woman, sorry, out subdiffusing
00:49:31 a woman is like a man trying to be out arm wrestled by a woman.
00:49:35 Like we all have our strengths and weaknesses as sexes and we compliment,
00:49:42 but, okay, let me, let me ask you this.
00:49:46 This is to the guys.
00:49:46 All right.
00:49:47 This is to the guys.
00:49:50 Um, as men, as men in your life over the course of your life, as men, how many
00:50:01 times have you had to lie to a woman?
00:50:06 Oh, no, no, let me get this.
00:50:08 I won't say how you did it.
00:50:09 How many times as a man, have you had a woman insistently ask you out?
00:50:19 How many times as a man, have you had a woman insistently and directly ask you out?
00:50:28 I just got to wait for this.
00:50:34 This feedback is really important.
00:50:36 And thank you for the tips.
00:50:37 I appreciate that.
00:50:37 Never zero, right?
00:50:43 Uh, twice, never three times.
00:50:48 A few zero, right?
00:50:55 I currently have this problem at work.
00:50:59 Yeah.
00:51:00 Never zero.
00:51:01 Oh, uh, always indirect.
00:51:05 Never.
00:51:06 Right.
00:51:06 Yeah.
00:51:08 I mean, I've had, when I was younger, I had some women who were insistent that I
00:51:11 go out with them, but it was very rarely direct, right?
00:51:13 There was one woman who promised to get one of my short plays produced on the
00:51:17 national radio station, but I would have to date her, uh, didn't go for that.
00:51:21 There was another woman who said that she was having big trouble with her
00:51:24 roommate and just wanted to sleep on my couch for a couple of nights.
00:51:27 And, uh, she also was a publisher and basically it was like, she'd get my book
00:51:32 published or work to do it if I would sleep with her or date her or whatever.
00:51:36 But it was never direct.
00:51:37 It was like, so I don't, you know, I asked girls out and some of them said
00:51:42 yes, and some of them said no, but.
00:51:44 Uh, it's usually not direct.
00:51:46 They usually will put themselves in circumstances where the evidence is kind
00:51:49 of clear, but it's not particularly direct.
00:51:51 All right.
00:51:52 So, um, to the lovely ladies, appreciate you being here to the women on the
00:51:58 live stream, to the women on the live stream, if you can recall over the course
00:52:03 of your life, roughly how many times have you had to deal with, and maybe it's a
00:52:08 positive thing, right?
00:52:09 How many times have you had to respond to a man who asks you out,
00:52:13 invites you somewhere directly, right?
00:52:16 How many times as a woman have you had to deal with a man asking you out?
00:52:22 This is just for the women.
00:52:30 Usually from women that I've talked to as a whole, usually for women, it's
00:52:43 usually in the hundreds, hundreds of men over the course of their life have,
00:52:50 yeah, lots, right?
00:52:52 At least five.
00:52:54 Okay.
00:52:54 So usually for women over the course of their life, right?
00:52:57 Um, it's hundreds of men who've asked them out or at least dozens, right?
00:53:01 I don't know quite a lot.
00:53:04 Yeah, it is a lot, right?
00:53:05 And it's, it's tough.
00:53:07 It's tough for women.
00:53:10 Uh, how do you say no without upsetting the man too much without crushing his
00:53:15 dreams or his hopes, but without giving him encouragement, it's, it's a tough,
00:53:19 it's a balance, right?
00:53:19 It's a tough balance.
00:53:20 And you should ask these kinds of questions for the women in your life.
00:53:25 You can learn a lot.
00:53:25 I mean, if you, if you want to understand the female experience, you need to
00:53:30 understand just how incredibly different it is from the male experience, at
00:53:33 least when I was younger, right?
00:53:34 As a male, I had to fend off much more men than women.
00:53:39 That's for sure.
00:53:40 Oh yeah.
00:53:40 Oh yeah.
00:53:41 I remember, um, when I was doing my master's, I lived in a house with, uh, uh,
00:53:47 four gay guys and a woman who was lesbian.
00:53:49 And there was a guy who moved in.
00:53:52 He was a dancer from out of town, really good looking guy.
00:53:55 And man, it was just like a feeding frenzy on, on this guy.
00:54:00 I remember him telling me sort of late one night, like it's like, my God, like
00:54:03 it's just constant, it's scrappy, it's cornering, it's like.
00:54:06 So it's tough, right?
00:54:11 As a woman, you want to attract a quality man, but that's going to mean
00:54:14 you're going to attract unquality men with delusions of grandeur, and you've
00:54:18 got to let them down easy because it can be kind of destabilizing for some
00:54:21 men to be rejected by women.
00:54:22 You don't want stalkers, particularly in the public sphere.
00:54:25 It can happen quite a bit.
00:54:26 If you've ever talked to women who have a public presence, young, attractive
00:54:30 women in particular, who have a public presence, there's almost always some
00:54:33 stalker story that's quite horrifying that they've had to deal with.
00:54:35 So, so it's tough.
00:54:37 So, uh, in terms of subterfuge and say, look, I'm going to tell you straight up.
00:54:42 I don't blame women for this at all.
00:54:44 It's just the fact of life that it's almost impossible for women to be direct
00:54:48 in the face of constantly being asked out.
00:54:49 Right.
00:54:51 It's very, very tough for women to be very direct and say, I'm sorry, you're
00:54:55 just kind of creepy and unpleasant.
00:54:56 I, I'm not at all interested.
00:54:58 And please don't, don't ask me again.
00:55:00 Right.
00:55:01 Can be really, really volatile.
00:55:03 She says, I guess if we're talking about flirting with the intention of asking
00:55:09 out, that would be way more, no idea how many, right?
00:55:11 Like where, you know, the intention and, uh, and all of that, the
00:55:15 guy's looking for an opening, right?
00:55:16 Because if the woman responds in a positive way to a guy being very
00:55:23 friendly with her, then he will almost certainly ask her out.
00:55:25 You will almost certainly.
00:55:32 So you, you can't even be that friendly, right?
00:55:35 Oh, you had to deal with a stalker for many years.
00:55:38 Grows up.
00:55:40 I don't know what that means, Ben.
00:55:41 As a, as a grown up, you had to deal with a stalker.
00:55:47 Maybe that's what you mean.
00:55:48 Yeah.
00:55:49 It's tough.
00:55:49 I mean, it's really, really, uh, it's a bit appalling for women and
00:55:53 men, it happens for men as well.
00:55:54 Right.
00:55:54 So it's really, really sad.
00:55:58 So women are trained in subterfuge and they, they have to be, and I,
00:56:03 I'm glad that women are that way.
00:56:05 But, uh, the idea that you can out subterfuge a woman, uh, is, is not good.
00:56:12 So, uh, don't, don't do that.
00:56:14 So a man who lies to a woman is like a woman who arm wrestles with a man.
00:56:18 I'm sorry, you're just dealing with a whole different order of things.
00:56:22 Uh, it's hard because I like being friendly and men see it as flirting.
00:56:27 Yeah.
00:56:27 That is a, that is a very big thing.
00:56:28 Oh, growing up.
00:56:30 Uh, you had to deal with a stalker for many years growing up.
00:56:32 Oh, as a kid.
00:56:33 Oh my gosh.
00:56:33 That's really tough.
00:56:34 Um, yeah, I mean, women, uh, of course, I mean, I like being friendly and the
00:56:44 good thing, I mean, I love chatting with people, I'm very sort of friendly
00:56:47 and positive person, I love making jokes.
00:56:48 I love making people laugh.
00:56:49 And of course I'm happily married and I'm 57.
00:56:55 So it's not like, uh, well, I can't be nice to, I can't be nice to this
00:57:00 young woman serving me coffee because she'll think I'm flirting with her.
00:57:04 It's like, no, I mean, it could be a grandfather or my son.
00:57:07 No, it is.
00:57:07 So I can just, it's actually kind of a nice point.
00:57:09 I'm in love.
00:57:10 I could just be friendly and nobody thinks I'm flirting.
00:57:12 So, uh, yeah, you like being friendly and it is tough.
00:57:15 It is very tough.
00:57:16 It is.
00:57:17 Now this of course is why we should pair bond early.
00:57:21 Right.
00:57:22 You pair bond and get off, get married and get off.
00:57:24 We should pair bond and get married when we're young.
00:57:26 Of course.
00:57:26 Right.
00:57:27 Of course.
00:57:27 Because, uh, that way, uh, people, women, women are protected, men are
00:57:32 protected from, uh, this kind of stuff.
00:57:34 And, uh, women can be friendly and be themselves and all of that.
00:57:38 But when you're in this sort of singleton planet for decades, uh,
00:57:41 friendliness comes sometimes at great cost, right?
00:57:44 There's this one, you know, maybe it's one guy in a hundred, but there's
00:57:47 this one guy in a hundred you're friendly to, and he'll obsess about you.
00:57:51 And he'll cyber stalk you or stalk you.
00:57:53 And it's just like, it's, it's a big, it's a big cost benefit risk.
00:57:56 Right.
00:57:56 A friend of mine said she received long texts for months of sycophant praise
00:58:01 from a male coworker, despite her never replying.
00:58:03 Yeah, for sure.
00:58:04 Finnish soprano, Tarja Turunen wrote a song, 500 letters, never signed all
00:58:15 from one man who she would leave letters, who would leave letters in her mailbox.
00:58:19 That was scary.
00:58:20 Yeah.
00:58:21 Well, yeah, yeah, for sure.
00:58:24 And, uh, but it wasn't, there was that, um, Alanis Morissette song about all
00:58:32 the men she'd had sex with, that was a rough man.
00:58:36 That was, that was, uh, that was a rough song for young women to listen to.
00:58:48 It's so true.
00:58:49 Uh, X was like a lie detector, even better.
00:58:51 Yes.
00:58:52 So women have to rely on a man's integrity and women will, I mean,
00:59:04 think, think of, think of the wild West.
00:59:07 Let's just talk about the wild West.
00:59:08 Right.
00:59:08 So in the wild West, a man could get a woman pregnant and leave, go to some
00:59:17 other state, some other town, nobody would know who he was, nobody would be
00:59:20 able to track him, nobody would know his history, nobody, she'd never be
00:59:23 able to get a penny out of him.
00:59:24 Right.
00:59:24 So a woman creates a child, which leaves her vulnerable, half-wounded,
00:59:34 breastfeeding, chained to the baby and the toddler, unmarriable.
00:59:40 And the only fundamental thing she has throughout a lot of human history is
00:59:45 the man's attachment and commitment.
00:59:47 So she has to very cold eyed, evaluate his capacity for bear, for pair bonding.
00:59:52 And this is why when the women say, well, I had no idea he was a bad guy.
00:59:55 It's like, you know, I understand evolution, right?
00:59:57 That if women had no idea who was a good guy or a bad guy, we would never have
01:00:01 evolved, certainly we would never have survived.
01:00:02 And we certainly wouldn't have survived to have these giant brains.
01:00:05 And right.
01:00:05 So when women say I had no idea, it's like, you know, that we're only here
01:00:09 because women were incredibly accurate at perceiving who to have children with.
01:00:14 And if it wasn't the women themselves, then it was the community.
01:00:18 And then they would have to respect the community wishes, their
01:00:20 parents' wishes and so on.
01:00:21 Right.
01:00:21 And of course it is, you know, bad guys are constantly turning women against
01:00:26 the wisdom of their elders, right.
01:00:27 So that they can exploit them.
01:00:29 So our, our, our survival, our life, our existence, our ability to
01:00:40 survive, our survival, our life, our existence is predicated on women
01:00:47 knowing when men are lying, right.
01:00:50 It's absolutely predicated on women knowing when men are
01:00:53 lying and when they're not.
01:00:54 So when women say, well, he just fooled me.
01:00:56 I'm like, no, he didn't.
01:00:57 He didn't.
01:00:59 He didn't.
01:01:01 It's, you know, the women pretending that they were fooled by men is like, it's
01:01:08 the equivalent of men pretending that hot, crazy women have virtues, right.
01:01:12 It's just like, no, you never thought that you just, right.
01:01:14 So yeah, don't lying to women is entering into an arena where they have
01:01:26 evolved to be past masters in a way that we can't even understand.
01:01:35 Ah, yes.
01:01:36 She says I gave out a lot of fake numbers in the nineties before the
01:01:39 immediacy of cell phone verification.
01:01:40 Right.
01:01:41 Hey, I remember you.
01:01:43 I remember calling and thinking, I'm going to talk to this gorgeous woman.
01:01:46 And it's like, what do you want on your pizza?
01:01:49 Ah, bust it again.
01:01:52 Long texts for months, but didn't block him.
01:02:01 See, this is the thing, right?
01:02:03 It's tough.
01:02:04 It's tough.
01:02:04 If somebody's obsessed with you, any engagement, including
01:02:08 blocking the person can cause them to escalate.
01:02:11 I think in general, what for a lot of people appears to be the best strategy.
01:02:17 Some women have said that this kind of works for a lot of people.
01:02:20 What appears to be the best strategy is just don't engage and hope
01:02:24 that he attaches to someone else.
01:02:26 Hope that he gets bored.
01:02:27 Hope that he moves on.
01:02:28 Hope that he gets hit by a bus, like whatever's going to happen.
01:02:30 It's just awful.
01:02:33 It's like their lies.
01:02:34 Okay.
01:02:37 Yeah.
01:02:37 It's like their lies constant and lie detectors are on constant alert.
01:02:41 Yeah.
01:02:44 I'm sorry.
01:02:44 I, I'm not going to respond to that.
01:02:46 I'm just, you know, I'm just going to read stuff ahead of time.
01:02:48 So yeah, I'm just gonna read stuff ahead of time.
01:02:56 If it doesn't make any sense, I'm just going to ignore it.
01:02:58 Cause it's, I can't waste people's time this way.
01:03:00 I mean, if you know, the question can't be that important to you, if you're not
01:03:03 going to proofread your, your question, like it just can't be that important to
01:03:06 you if it's not even, honestly, it takes literally five seconds to proofread
01:03:10 something.
01:03:10 So if it's not that important to you, that it's worth proofreading, it's not
01:03:13 important enough for me to answer.
01:03:15 But it's tough.
01:03:18 Uh, it's tough.
01:03:20 Uh, for women, because of course, you know, uh, women, we, women evolved, excuse me.
01:03:29 Women evolved with male protectors, right?
01:03:35 So women evolved with male protectors.
01:03:36 So if you tried stalking some farmer's wife, you'd end up being pig meat, right?
01:03:43 You'd end up being fed to the pigs or he'd engage in a, in a form of carbon
01:03:48 based gardening with shin bones.
01:03:49 So, uh, women, uh, generally unprotected, a husband or a boyfriend is a better
01:03:57 protection, obviously, than the courts and the police and so on.
01:03:59 So that's very tough.
01:04:02 You know, it helps judging people being sober and knowing them, their friends,
01:04:10 family for more than a few hours.
01:04:12 Well, of course, female, this is the question of who's more sexual men or
01:04:18 women, and I think that female sexuality used to be restrained by consequences,
01:04:26 right?
01:04:27 If you take away consequences, you take away discipline, right?
01:04:30 I mean, if you have a job that requires a lot of hard work and discipline to
01:04:34 maintain and achieve, then if you win the lottery, you'll quit that job, right?
01:04:38 You have no consequences to quitting the job.
01:04:40 You won't be broke.
01:04:41 You won't be starving.
01:04:41 So you don't have, well, you don't have consequences.
01:04:46 You don't have discipline.
01:04:47 And because the consequences of getting pregnant and having children are no
01:04:52 longer dire for women, in fact, can be advantageous in terms of income.
01:04:55 There is no restraint.
01:04:57 Female sexuality could be very strong because it was restrained by consequences.
01:05:01 You can see now the strength of female sexuality, like a tsunami, like this
01:05:05 estrogen wash of nudity and cleavage, right?
01:05:09 Only fans and, and, uh, half naked Instagram pictures and a constant sexualization.
01:05:16 So women's sexuality has been the dam of consequences has vanished and
01:05:24 fall, you can just see this, this thunderous, you know, and I mean, until
01:05:30 the consequences return, I mean, you can say all you want, I mean, it
01:05:34 doesn't really, doesn't really mean anything.
01:05:35 And so, I mean, with the welfare state, alimony, child support, all this kind
01:05:39 of stuff, uh, the, the natural restraints on female sexuality, which allowed
01:05:45 female sexuality did build up to a very high amount that has, um, uh, all
01:05:50 vanished and in fact, now, um, instead of there being negative consequences,
01:05:54 there are often positive consequences.
01:05:55 All right.
01:06:00 Do you think guys suddenly abandoning their male friends with no explanation
01:06:08 is an unattractive trait for women because it's a sign that
01:06:12 the woman could be abandoned?
01:06:14 Interesting.
01:06:19 Interesting.
01:06:20 That's a, it's a, I mean, this is a very common thing, right?
01:06:28 Do you think guys suddenly abandoning their male friends with no explanation
01:06:31 is an unattractive trait for women because it's a sign with no explanation?
01:06:36 I don't know.
01:06:36 I don't know what that means exactly.
01:06:42 So in general, one of the reasons why men need friends is that there's
01:06:51 usually a particular attribute of female sexuality that will overthrow a man's
01:06:58 reason, I mean, whatever your body part, or it could be a particular type of face,
01:07:03 or it could be a particular hairstyle, or it could be whatever it is.
01:07:06 Right.
01:07:06 And so men, a men's group don't share all the same fetishes or whatever it is.
01:07:11 Right.
01:07:12 And so if a man is losing his mind over some woman's accidental attribute in her
01:07:20 flesh, then her, his friends need to be around to bring him back to reason, to
01:07:26 bring it back to some sort of wisdom.
01:07:27 Right.
01:07:28 And so if a man is abandoning his male friends, when he's in a new relationship,
01:07:35 it's probably because either she's not good enough for him and his lust wants
01:07:43 to get rid of his male friends who are going to interfere with the pursuit of
01:07:45 his fetish, or he is not good enough for her.
01:07:50 In other words, he's objectifying her and not looking at the qualities of
01:07:53 her character, but rather the conformity of her flesh, in which case, right.
01:07:59 His friends are either going to warn him about her or her about him.
01:08:02 And so it could be because of that.
01:08:04 So apologies about the poorly worded comment earlier.
01:08:08 I think it was just typos.
01:08:10 It's not poorly worded.
01:08:11 All right.
01:08:13 A young woman with older brothers, a loving father, uncles, grandfathers,
01:08:20 all with access to firearms.
01:08:22 Well, you best mind your P's and Q's as suitor.
01:08:24 Right.
01:08:25 Right.
01:08:29 And this is why the strong independent woman stuff is, is pushed, right?
01:08:33 So that women are fundamentally unprotected by men, which is not,
01:08:40 it doesn't work out well, does not work out well.
01:08:45 All right.
01:08:48 So let me just see if there are any other comments elsewhere.
01:09:02 In today's day and age, could it be better if the unwritten rule for,
01:09:07 were for the woman to approach a man for dating to avoid confusion
01:09:10 of misreading signs and such?
01:09:13 Great show as always.
01:09:19 Thank you, Vince.
01:09:20 I appreciate that.
01:09:21 Tips are always welcome.
01:09:22 So, do we dip into this?
01:09:33 Deep pond.
01:09:35 All right.
01:09:41 Looking at this from another side, getting a girl's Instagram to find out
01:09:52 she immediately blocked me was tough as well.
01:09:54 Is it tough because, oh, I see.
01:10:00 It's tough because you don't view rejection as a call to wisdom.
01:10:04 You view rejection as humiliation and it is in a way, but
01:10:12 rejection is a call to wisdom.
01:10:15 It is humiliation for being an idiot.
01:10:17 And I say this with all deep knowledge of being rejected and so on.
01:10:22 Right.
01:10:25 So in general, men are rejected because they're being idiots.
01:10:31 Come on, man.
01:10:33 Getting a girl's Instagram.
01:10:35 Why did you want her Instagram?
01:10:37 Cause she was pretty.
01:10:39 Okay.
01:10:40 She was pretty.
01:10:40 And she knew that.
01:10:43 She knew that you only cared about her flesh.
01:10:45 You didn't care about her character.
01:10:47 See women who aren't nice.
01:10:51 Ooh, I'm going to give you something really, really important here.
01:10:55 Oh my.
01:10:56 All right.
01:10:57 And ladies, if I get any of this wrong, please correct me.
01:11:01 I'm stepping into the estrogen depths.
01:11:03 I hope I don't drown.
01:11:04 Women who aren't nice.
01:11:07 Don't feel pretty on the inside.
01:11:10 Women who are nasty women who are vengeful women who are petty women who are vain.
01:11:15 Women who are delusional women who are volatile women who are
01:11:22 women who've exploited men, women who've stolen women who've attacked or lied,
01:11:27 destroyed people's reputations, women who are nasty, never feel pretty inside.
01:11:32 Never feel pretty inside.
01:11:37 So when a man, see the woman knows if she's nasty, we'll just call her a witch.
01:11:47 Although you can substitute whatever word you want.
01:11:49 At the beginning.
01:11:49 So a woman's who's a woman's who's a witch.
01:11:51 She knows she's a witch.
01:11:52 She knows she's nasty.
01:11:53 She knows she's cruel.
01:11:54 She knows she's mean.
01:11:55 She's knows she's volatile.
01:11:56 She knows she's crazy.
01:11:57 She knows, she knows all of this.
01:11:58 What do you mean by pretty inside?
01:12:03 In a beauty, virtue, consideration, kindness, moral courage, fortitude, integrity, honesty.
01:12:13 So a woman who's heaven on the outside, but hell on the inside knows for an
01:12:19 absolute certainty with an absolute base of the brain, bottom of the
01:12:25 spine, marrow of the bone certainty.
01:12:27 But the man doesn't care that she's a witch.
01:12:35 He only wants to have sex with her body.
01:12:39 So you go to this Instagram girl, she knows she's a total witch.
01:12:43 She knows she's horrible.
01:12:44 And you want her contact number anyway.
01:12:49 So she hates you.
01:12:52 She has, well, to put it this way, she has absolute contempt for you.
01:12:58 She hates you.
01:13:00 She doesn't care that you're a witch.
01:13:01 She doesn't care that you're a witch.
01:13:04 She doesn't care that you're a witch.
01:13:06 She doesn't care that you're a witch.
01:13:07 She doesn't care that you're a witch.
01:13:08 She has absolute contempt for you.
01:13:09 She has absolute contempt for you because you're lying to her face.
01:13:18 Oh, I like you.
01:13:18 Oh, can I get your, oh, you're interesting.
01:13:20 Oh, like, no, I'm not.
01:13:22 I'm not nice.
01:13:23 I'm a harpy.
01:13:25 I'm a witch.
01:13:26 I mean, I'm nasty.
01:13:27 I'm petty.
01:13:28 I'm vengeful.
01:13:28 I'm shallow.
01:13:29 I'm status oriented.
01:13:31 I'll screw men over for money, men for money, whatever.
01:13:33 Right.
01:13:38 If you're asking out a woman who's nasty, but pretty, you're lying to her.
01:13:42 She has nothing but contempt for you.
01:13:44 And it's a call to wisdom.
01:13:46 It's not rejection.
01:13:48 What's being rejected?
01:13:49 Your lies.
01:13:49 Good.
01:13:50 Your lies should be rejected.
01:13:51 Your shallowness, your physical obsessions, your fetishes, your whatever.
01:13:55 They should be rejected.
01:13:57 Absolutely.
01:13:58 Cause that's not the foundation of a healthy, long lasting relationship.
01:14:00 Thank you, Alan.
01:14:03 It's not, that's not, that's not the foundation of a long lasting
01:14:06 relationship is, "Nas-rack."
01:14:08 Oh my, oh my, oh my.
01:14:15 She's rejecting that which should be rejected.
01:14:21 And she's warning you away from the hell inside.
01:14:29 Boy, you think it's tough to be rejected by a nasty woman with a pretty face?
01:14:34 Imagine what it's like to not be rejected by a nasty woman with a pretty face.
01:14:37 Just imagine.
01:14:40 The thing is, I don't understand.
01:14:49 If a woman knows that she is not virtuous, honest, good natured, et cetera, like you
01:14:53 said, why wouldn't she try to work on that?
01:14:55 Honest question.
01:14:56 Seems like she has introspective, introspective, she is introspective and
01:15:01 would realize she needs to work in it rather than remain ugly on the inside.
01:15:05 If you are rejected, you, I'll get to that in a sec.
01:15:15 If you're rejected, you're either going after someone of too high status
01:15:17 or is a poor judge of you.
01:15:20 If you are virtuous and stable, okay, feed information into the database, not
01:15:23 personal failing, unless you really are that awful.
01:15:25 So, uh, this is a big question.
01:15:27 I mean, it's a foundational question of philosophy.
01:15:30 Uh, thank you.
01:15:32 My lady cat.
01:15:32 Thank you for that.
01:15:33 That question.
01:15:34 I'm going to read it again because that's why I like I short circuited
01:15:37 because it's such a great question.
01:15:39 Given that it's such a great question.
01:15:41 It means it's really hard to answer.
01:15:43 So I'm just going to go back to looking pretty.
01:15:44 All right.
01:15:47 If a woman knows she is not virtuous, honest, good natured, et cetera, like
01:15:51 you said, why wouldn't she try to work on that?
01:15:53 Honest question.
01:15:54 Seems like she has introspection and would realize she needs to work on it rather
01:16:00 than remain ugly, why do people who know that they're bad choose to remain bad?
01:16:06 That's a big question.
01:16:12 That's a big question.
01:16:14 That's a big question.
01:16:16 That's a good question.
01:16:24 What do you guys think?
01:16:27 If a woman and this could be men equally, I'm just talking about women.
01:16:30 If a woman knows she's not virtuous, why would you try to work on becoming virtuous?
01:16:34 Why would they choose to be bad?
01:16:37 If they know they are the rejection because it hurts too much to look
01:16:44 in the mirror and self-reflect.
01:16:45 I'm not saying that she consciously knows she's evil and has defined
01:16:49 it as evil or bad or whatever it is.
01:16:51 She might just say like, I'm a, I'm a bad bitch who speaks her mind.
01:16:55 I'm a this, I'm like, I'm a bad bitch.
01:16:56 I'm a this, I'm like, why would a person who senses he's bad, not choose to become good?
01:17:10 A lack of negative consequences leads people to continue along the same path.
01:17:16 It helps them make money without having to put much effort in, for example,
01:17:31 shaking their ass in a club.
01:17:33 The benefits of being bad outweigh the benefits of philosophy for the
01:17:36 foreseeable future, because up to that point, it has been beneficial
01:17:39 to be bad, hurts too much.
01:17:41 Would have to abandon peer group.
01:17:52 Yeah.
01:17:52 I mean, there's a whole social circle that's set up when you're bad.
01:17:55 It boggles me.
01:17:58 She says, they know they're rotten.
01:18:01 The results are rotten.
01:18:02 They know, yet they continue to do the same thing expecting a different result.
01:18:10 If she could choose to be good, it would highlight how her parents didn't choose
01:18:12 to be good and that's quite painful to confront.
01:18:14 Yes.
01:18:14 But I think most of us have done that.
01:18:16 Sacrifice too much power in the here and now.
01:18:19 Because all their friends are hoes.
01:18:31 They're stuck in Instagram group.
01:18:33 Think narcissism.
01:18:33 I remember your theory that at some point people just become living
01:18:38 bad examples of what not to do.
01:18:40 And that serves some societal purpose.
01:18:44 Real change takes terrific effort, sacrifice, and humility.
01:18:48 So do you know why bad women reject good men?
01:19:00 I mean, I'll tell you all this.
01:19:01 It's dark as hell though.
01:19:03 I'm telling you, this is dark as hell.
01:19:07 Do you know why bad women reject good men?
01:19:10 Why do bad women reject good men?
01:19:37 All right.
01:19:37 I mean, this is, yeah.
01:19:40 Because bad women reject good men because good men are not useful
01:19:47 tools for punishing themselves.
01:19:48 Yes.
01:19:53 To punish themselves.
01:19:54 Good men will reject them.
01:19:58 No, a lot of good men will try to save them.
01:20:01 No.
01:20:03 So you'll notice that bad women end up with bad men and the bad men treat them
01:20:10 terribly and the bad women believe that they're worthy of punishment and believe
01:20:16 that all they deserve is punishment and a good man won't punish them, which is
01:20:20 why they won't go after a good man.
01:20:24 They will instead go after a bad man because they're trying to free them.
01:20:28 The women are trying to free themselves from their own immorality by punishing
01:20:31 themselves out of being crappy, right?
01:20:35 The bad women will be drawn to a bad man in the desperate hope that somehow
01:20:40 negative consequences and punishment will shake off her evil.
01:20:43 Does this make sense?
01:20:45 But that would imply that they know they need correction.
01:20:54 Like they know they deserve punishment.
01:20:57 Yeah, for sure.
01:20:58 Yeah, for sure.
01:21:00 But the conscience is UPP, right?
01:21:02 Universally preferable behavior.
01:21:04 We exhibit that all the time, always, right?
01:21:07 In order to do this live stream, show up on time.
01:21:09 Actually, I tried turning on my amp, the plug had fallen out.
01:21:12 I thought I was doomed.
01:21:13 You got to zoom in the camera, got to get the right SD card in, got to get the amp
01:21:17 going, got to hit the record button on the camera, on the, all these things I got to
01:21:21 do, all universally preferable.
01:21:22 And so we all survive on universally preferable behavior.
01:21:26 So the conscience is always there.
01:21:28 Now it gets darker.
01:21:45 I mean, it's a hit me with a Y if we want to go darker because it does get darker.
01:21:53 Hit me with a Y if we want to go darker because it does go darker.
01:21:57 Uh, yeah.
01:22:06 Women, women get tattoos, um, to show that they want to be punished, right?
01:22:12 They want to mortify their flesh.
01:22:14 I mean, it's like the monk who can never feel in grace with God who whips
01:22:21 his flesh, mortifies his flesh.
01:22:23 Yeah.
01:22:23 I mean, tattoos are Marx's self mutilation that says I want to be punished.
01:22:27 Dark as that coffee.
01:22:31 Now I'm going to talk about adults here.
01:22:38 I'm not going to talk about childhood.
01:22:40 I'll tell you why after I just want to let you know ahead of that, ahead of time.
01:22:45 All right.
01:22:50 So you can only throw so many bodies into the grave before you join them and can't
01:23:03 get out as a tipping point.
01:23:07 You can only throw so many bodies into the grave before you follow them
01:23:13 inexorably and can't get out.
01:23:15 So if you do harm to others, if you exploit people, if you break their hearts,
01:23:36 if you lie to them, if you cheat on them, if you manipulate them,
01:23:46 you are throwing bodies into a big hole.
01:23:49 And the number is different for everyone.
01:23:57 But at some point, one of those bodies that you're throwing in a hole grabs your leg,
01:24:10 pulls you down, and you can't get out.
01:24:14 Ever again.
01:24:15 Ever.
01:24:17 You know, is this a cliche in horror movies, right?
01:24:22 You bury some guy, you turn away and the hand comes up and out and grabs your leg.
01:24:27 Right?
01:24:27 Every time you harm someone, and I don't mean doing good in the world
01:24:38 where evil people get upset.
01:24:39 I mean, every time you harm someone, you're rolling the dice.
01:24:48 Now it depends how sensitive your conscience is.
01:24:52 It depends how sensitive your moral idealism is.
01:24:56 It depends to some degree on your childhood.
01:24:58 Every time you harm someone, you're rolling the dice.
01:25:05 Sooner or later, you're going to roll a one.
01:25:09 I say it to 20, every time, every time you harm someone, you're rolling the dice.
01:25:13 And one, when you roll a one, in Dungeons and Dragons, it's called a critical fail.
01:25:17 Right?
01:25:18 So you roll a one, you're in the grave.
01:25:21 You can't get out.
01:25:22 So when you think of, and this is again, not specific to women, you
01:25:32 think of the rancid pretty people, the rancid pretty people, rotten on the
01:25:42 inside, pretty on the outside, they're literally a dime a dozen in the modern
01:25:47 culture, they are exploiting the evolutionary attraction of the natural
01:26:01 mammal flesh for their own personal vanity.
01:26:05 And they feel they have value because other people lust after their
01:26:08 flesh, which they did not earn.
01:26:10 The lust they did not earn.
01:26:12 The male instinct to provide resources they did not earn.
01:26:15 So they are stealing.
01:26:24 They're stealing.
01:26:26 The male urge to give resources to women is to lay the foundation of
01:26:31 pair bonding for family and children and culture and continuity and life.
01:26:36 Women hijack, not all of course, right?
01:26:44 But some women hijack.
01:26:45 It demands courage and generosity, not for the sake of building a home for
01:26:51 children, but for the sake of social clout, money, attention, being lusted
01:27:00 after.
01:27:01 You see, desire, love, lust are not gifts for us, but for our children.
01:27:16 So women who focus on lust and looks and thirst traps and male attention
01:27:25 and resources for being pretty on the internet, they are stealing from that
01:27:32 which is designed to create a safe and happy environment for their children.
01:27:37 It's stealing from an inheritance.
01:27:48 Male attention, male resources, male pair bonding, male lust, male love is
01:27:54 there for your children to create a stable, happy, pair bonded household
01:27:59 for the security and protection of your children.
01:28:02 That's what it's for.
01:28:02 That's it's all for children.
01:28:04 A woman who diverts the resources there to protect and nurture children and
01:28:15 uses it for her own income and vanity is robbing from the mouths of babes.
01:28:24 Does this make sense?
01:28:30 She's like somebody who steals from an inheritance meant for a child and
01:28:39 diverts it to herself and spends it on crap.
01:28:54 Tell me if this makes sense.
01:28:55 They're stealing an intergenerational inheritance and diverting it to their
01:28:59 own vanity and ego.
01:29:00 She's stealing from what nature has provided us for the protection of
01:29:15 children and using it for her own vanity and consumption.
01:29:24 Can we imagine what we would think of any parent who took the food that kept
01:29:36 children alive and ate it himself and let his children go hungry?
01:29:39 So when you steal from children, when you steal from the future, when you
01:29:48 divert natural forces designed for the care and protection of children to your
01:29:52 own vanity and bank account, when you turn that vampiric and predatory that
01:29:59 you're willing to steal from children, do you feel good inside?
01:30:07 Or do you feel kind of demonic?
01:30:20 Then a man comes up and says, I love you.
01:30:24 And the woman says in her heart of hearts, no, you don't.
01:30:32 It's impossible.
01:30:35 I've stolen from children.
01:30:38 I'm hateful.
01:30:46 You could say the same, says someone about men who casually date beautiful
01:30:50 women with no intention of marrying them because it's too much responsibility.
01:30:54 Yeah.
01:30:59 Redirect to men, redirect to men, redirect to men.
01:31:01 What about men?
01:31:02 What about men?
01:31:02 What about men?
01:31:03 What about men?
01:31:04 God almighty.
01:31:06 It's so predictable.
01:31:06 Well, but, but, but men, but men.
01:31:14 The one time women don't like getting attention is when their flaws are exposed.
01:31:18 Suddenly it's like, don't look at me.
01:31:20 No, look at men, look at men.
01:31:21 Imagine some woman doing some OnlyFans and she has her fat
01:31:34 gardener stand in front of her.
01:31:36 Oh, but look at men.
01:31:39 No, she wouldn't do that.
01:31:40 But suddenly when women's faults are being talked about and men have their
01:31:44 faults too, right?
01:31:44 When women's faults and weaknesses and not all women, right?
01:31:47 When some women's faults and weaknesses, Oh, but men look at men, look at men.
01:31:50 I'm sorry.
01:31:54 It's just so ridiculously predictable.
01:31:56 Women love attention unless the attention might be on any potential flaws, in which
01:32:00 case, please pivot to men and don't look at me.
01:32:02 Come on, man.
01:32:05 I get your mom couldn't take criticism, but don't bring that shit to this
01:32:09 conversation, please.
01:32:10 We're trying to talk about intelligent things, right?
01:32:12 Yeah.
01:32:22 The name of the site, OnlyFans couldn't be more obvious.
01:32:24 You only get fans.
01:32:26 You don't get a husband.
01:32:27 You don't get children.
01:32:29 Don't get grandchildren.
01:32:30 You don't get extended family.
01:32:31 It's just you and a webcam and a hollowed out soul and useless shit all over the
01:32:42 place that gets buried with you when you die.
01:32:46 Is it so wrong to want men to have the same self-awareness that you expect women
01:32:57 to come on, man, come on.
01:33:02 If I'm criticizing male nature, which I do on a regular basis and not all male
01:33:12 nature, men and women are susceptible to various sins.
01:33:17 Male sin is often aggression.
01:33:22 Female sin is often vanity.
01:33:23 This is nothing new, nothing I've alone said.
01:33:26 It's very common.
01:33:26 How many times over the last 18 years that I've discussed both male and female
01:33:33 virtues, uh, vices, how many times when I talk about male vices, do the women say,
01:33:44 yeah, but what about women?
01:33:45 Right.
01:33:48 It almost never happens.
01:33:50 I mean, I can't think of a time.
01:33:52 I'm sure it has, but we're talking about male vices as a woman say, well, forget
01:33:57 that, what about women?
01:33:58 What about female vices?
01:33:59 And yet, whenever we talk about female vices, half the men in their own
01:34:03 universe, well, what about men?
01:34:04 Right.
01:34:07 That's very sad.
01:34:10 Yeah.
01:34:19 I mean, it's, it's like this, uh, meme, which is like, okay, hear me out.
01:34:24 It's only fans, but you only have one fan and he takes care of you for life.
01:34:29 See, you rush to divert my attention to men because you're trying to offer a
01:34:44 kind of weird protection to women so that women will view you as a savior and sleep
01:34:50 with you, just so you know, I mean, that's what's going on.
01:34:53 I do think men are too weak to go along with women, not enough public criticism.
01:35:08 So the blame is at least equal.
01:35:09 I think men are too weak and go along with women.
01:35:13 I mean, again, men, men, men, men, men, men, men.
01:35:18 There's money spent on a sports TV subscription steal from the future as well.
01:35:23 Well, that's just, I mean, I don't mean to sound harsh, man.
01:35:29 That's just, I don't even know what that means.
01:35:30 There's money spent on a sports TV subscriptions deal from the future as well.
01:35:35 I don't, I don't even, I there's so many category errors there.
01:35:42 I don't even want to bother.
01:35:43 Yeah.
01:35:50 Good point.
01:35:54 But this show is primarily about criticizing women and peaceful parenting.
01:35:57 So it wouldn't be as interesting to bring the conversation back to women.
01:36:01 This show is primarily about criticizing women.
01:36:03 This show to a large degree is about warning you guys about evil.
01:36:11 Male evil.
01:36:12 It's pretty obvious.
01:36:13 Like I have a more male than female audience.
01:36:15 Love to have the women here.
01:36:16 It's great to get your feedback, but it's a bit more male than female.
01:36:19 So is female evil openly discussed?
01:36:22 My job is to help you avoid evil.
01:36:25 And male evil is pretty obvious.
01:36:27 It's pretty in your face.
01:36:28 It's pretty clear.
01:36:29 Uh, it's very openly discussed.
01:36:31 Uh, female evil is subterfuge, right?
01:36:36 Male evil is a guy wanted to beat you up.
01:36:42 Female evil can be a poison in your coffee.
01:36:44 Right?
01:36:44 So.
01:36:46 Yeah.
01:36:47 I just, yeah, I just released several shows celebrating women
01:37:01 correcting unfair appraisals of women.
01:37:04 Yeah.
01:37:04 I just, just literally just released a show pushing back hard against
01:37:07 the guy with negative views of women.
01:37:09 I'm not talking about all women.
01:37:10 I'm talking about how evil manifests in women slightly differently than it does
01:37:13 for men under certain circumstances.
01:37:16 So anyway, I don't need to be defensive because I know my
01:37:19 conscience is perfectly clear.
01:37:20 But this is why, like, you know, there's one cigarette, right?
01:37:28 If you're a smoker.
01:37:42 Also, also just to remind you, cause I know you're like white knighting
01:37:47 for women and protect women, right?
01:37:49 But you know, when a woman, a caller could be male or female
01:38:03 calls into my call-in show.
01:38:04 And she says, um, my dad was great, but my mom was bad.
01:38:17 I'll say no, no.
01:38:19 I mean, there's a team, right?
01:38:21 And if a, if a man or a woman calls in and says, my dad was great, but my mom was
01:38:28 bad, I'll say, no, no, no.
01:38:29 Right.
01:38:30 Your dad chose to marry her.
01:38:31 Your dad chose like, remember your dad's part of the immorality.
01:38:34 If, if you were abused as a child and so on.
01:38:36 Right.
01:38:36 So, I mean, I'm constantly pointing.
01:38:43 I'm in this case, if she's blaming the mother, but not the father, I will point
01:38:46 out that the father is equally culpable.
01:38:47 Sports players, men, especially are using their bodies to get money that could be
01:38:58 spent on raising children and parent bonding, like attractive women who are
01:39:01 strippers.
01:39:02 The hell are you talking about?
01:39:05 Sports players, men, especially are using their bodies to get money that could be
01:39:13 spent on raising children and parent bonding.
01:39:15 So men who earn their living by using their body in a productive fashion are
01:39:25 exactly the same as women showing their buttholes for tips.
01:39:30 So a guy in an oil rig who's producing the valuable substance that keeps us all
01:39:34 alive is exactly the same as a woman putting a pickle someplace unmentionable
01:39:40 for tips.
01:39:41 Yeah.
01:39:42 I don't, I don't really understand what, what that means.
01:39:46 I don't really understand.
01:39:48 I'm sorry.
01:39:49 Like this is such a stretch.
01:39:50 Like, so me using my, I'm using my body, right.
01:39:54 I can't do shows without a physical presence.
01:39:56 I'm using my body to talk about philosophy for tips.
01:40:00 That's exactly the same as me running an OnlyFans channel and testing my
01:40:04 flexibility.
01:40:05 Oil rig workers are different to sports players.
01:40:09 Okay.
01:40:12 Mistake.
01:40:12 I didn't, come on, man.
01:40:14 Saying, uh, saying, saying that they're different is not an argument.
01:40:19 It takes some conviction to push against the group.
01:40:25 And I don't see men doing that as a whole.
01:40:27 Isn't one of the differences between men and women, neuroticism.
01:40:29 Therefore men are more equipped to speak up.
01:40:31 This is just an argument.
01:40:32 I'm trying to white knight.
01:40:33 But why, why are we talking about men, male sports players, men who do this,
01:40:39 men are too weak to do that.
01:40:40 Right.
01:40:41 You understand, like, do you, do you, do you guys even know the level of
01:40:47 discomfort that you have about any criticism of women's susceptibility to
01:40:53 immorality, like any pointing of this out?
01:40:55 Do you all know how freaked out you are?
01:40:59 I mean, do you know that you're anxious about this?
01:41:07 I don't know if you know this or not.
01:41:09 I mean, do you, there's a kind of panic here, right?
01:41:11 It's a kind of collective panic.
01:41:13 I don't know.
01:41:13 The women can probably see it because now it's like, well, Steph, you're, you just,
01:41:17 all you do is criticize women and men are weak and men and male sports.
01:41:21 But, but I mean, you understand that this is precisely why we talk about this stuff.
01:41:28 Like I, if I was criticizing men, which I do and myself as well, right.
01:41:32 I'm a man and I do things that are wrong, I've criticized myself.
01:41:35 If I criticize men, people don't freak out.
01:41:39 So yeah, I mean, you just need to have the self-knowledge to recognize
01:41:48 that I'm talking about something.
01:41:50 I'm, what I'm doing is you had punitive mothers, right.
01:41:52 Just so you know, you're punitive mothers or punitive
01:41:54 teachers or both or whatever.
01:41:56 And you were punished and escalated against for criticizing your mother.
01:42:01 So when I criticize some aspects of femininity, then, um, it, it activates
01:42:11 the punitive mother in your head.
01:42:13 And you want to ally with the mother and attack or criticize men or me.
01:42:19 So that I stopped doing and saying things that are activating
01:42:22 your endocritical mother.
01:42:22 Like, you know, all of this stuff, right?
01:42:26 Uh, yeah, I'm probably anxious because my sister who I communicated
01:42:29 with regularly is an exotic dancer and I'm trying to defend her.
01:42:31 Right.
01:42:32 Uh, sports, uh, serves the family in many ways.
01:42:51 Now sports teaches competition.
01:42:53 It teaches a resolution, strength, training, willpower, excellence,
01:42:58 expertise, physical control, uh, health, um, good lungs, good heart, good muscles.
01:43:04 Uh, so it, it serves the family.
01:43:07 Sports serve the family.
01:43:08 And I'm talking about not just staring at other people doing
01:43:11 sports or whatever, right.
01:43:11 But, and I know you said sports subscription, but then
01:43:14 you switched to sports players.
01:43:20 But yeah, teamwork.
01:43:21 Absolutely.
01:43:22 Yeah.
01:43:22 But depends on the sport, but yeah, in general.
01:43:24 Your argument about bad women wanting to be punished was spot on.
01:43:30 Oh, that's reply to someone else.
01:43:32 People who can't control their own negative impulses are looking
01:43:42 for punishment to wake them up.
01:43:49 You can always tell when a guy has never played sports or worked
01:43:52 with his hands in a physical world where there are consequences for failure.
01:43:54 Yeah, for sure.
01:43:55 Like, I mean, I do lots of physical labor jobs, go panning prospecting.
01:43:59 I've talked about before.
01:44:00 You, you screw up there.
01:44:02 You're dead.
01:44:03 Like you screw up, you're, you're two days away from a hospital.
01:44:05 You think you can get value from watching sports, like
01:44:11 learning to think tactically.
01:44:12 Sure.
01:44:12 Yeah.
01:44:12 Yeah, of course.
01:44:14 If it's a sport you play.
01:44:16 I mean, I grew up playing tennis, got fairly good and I would have some
01:44:22 lovely memories with my family watching Wimbledon on a tiny little black and white
01:44:28 TV, I think it was David Attenborough who said switch to yellow balls because
01:44:31 there'll be more visible on a black and white TV.
01:44:33 One day we can talk about female evil without it being redirected to men.
01:44:44 And you understand if you, if you can't think about female evil,
01:44:48 you can't get a virtuous woman.
01:44:49 Right?
01:44:50 Like I'm, I'm really trying to help you.
01:44:51 I'm trying to help you get to a virtuous woman and you all want to
01:44:54 stay down defending the baddies.
01:44:56 You're staying down there defending the baddies, in which case you're
01:45:03 going to get stuck with the baddies.
01:45:04 Yes.
01:45:06 I feel anxiety discussing the topic of women's evil doing exactly because
01:45:09 of the reasons you described.
01:45:10 Well, I appreciate that, Chris.
01:45:12 And you all, I mean, I hope you've read real-time relationships.
01:45:16 Did you ever mention to Peter Schiff that you called pant?
01:45:22 I imagine his pupils get a huge.
01:45:23 Oh, that guy's had it rough.
01:45:25 Um, so, okay.
01:45:28 So come on, this is real-time relationships, right?
01:45:31 What is the, right?
01:45:33 So you guys are white knighting and gaslighting and attacking me and
01:45:37 attacking the show and, uh, attacking men and so on, right?
01:45:41 Because you feel anxiety about talking about female immorality.
01:45:45 Instead of all this nonsense, right?
01:45:49 We want to be, you're bearing false witness, right?
01:45:51 Counterattacks, ad hominems, insulting the show, insulting me, insulting men, right?
01:45:56 That's all nonsense.
01:45:57 That's all gaslighting.
01:45:58 And it's all, it's kind of cowardly, right?
01:46:00 So thou shall not bear false witness.
01:46:02 What's the most honest thing that you can say if what I'm saying
01:46:05 is making you really anxious?
01:46:06 Right?
01:46:10 If what I'm saying is making you really anxious, how about you just tell the truth?
01:46:15 It's just a thought, you know, how about instead of acting out, you just take a
01:46:20 deep breath and stop lying and just tell the truth, right?
01:46:28 Because if you can't tell the truth and all you do is act out,
01:46:34 you can't get a good woman.
01:46:35 Yeah.
01:46:35 You're anxious.
01:46:36 I get that.
01:46:36 And look, I understand that.
01:46:37 So yeah, I'm uncomfortable.
01:46:39 Uh, this is really making me tense or whatever, right?
01:46:42 I'm really feeling the strong urge to redirect your attention to something else.
01:46:47 And right.
01:46:47 I get that.
01:46:49 I mean, you understand that this is a training ground for you guys to be in love.
01:46:54 This is a training ground for you guys to be in relationships that are
01:46:56 productive and happy and healthy.
01:46:57 Don't act out.
01:47:00 Tell the truth.
01:47:00 Don't redirect.
01:47:01 Don't confuse.
01:47:02 Don't fog.
01:47:02 Don't.
01:47:03 Right.
01:47:04 Just, just tell the truth.
01:47:06 Honesty is the first virtue.
01:47:09 I feel uncomfortable.
01:47:11 I want you to stop talking about this stuff.
01:47:13 I feel uncomfortable.
01:47:14 Isn't that the most honest thing you can say as opposed to manipulating me like a
01:47:21 bunch of girl guides wanting to buy some cookies or trying to manipulate me, right?
01:47:26 Yeah.
01:47:26 What you're saying makes me anxious.
01:47:27 Yeah.
01:47:27 It's an honest statement.
01:47:28 I sympathize with that.
01:47:29 I really do sympathize with that.
01:47:35 The reflexive defense of women might be the reason for all this brain dead
01:47:39 re-imagining of great female villains into being just misunderstood anti-heroes.
01:47:42 Wicked Witch of the West, Maleficent, Cruella de Vil.
01:47:45 Yeah, for sure.
01:47:46 For sure.
01:47:46 Well, and you know, if, if the man cheats, it's his fault.
01:47:50 If the woman cheats, it's the man's fault.
01:47:52 Like, I mean, it's all very, very boring stuff.
01:47:55 Uh, very predictable.
01:47:56 And you guys are sorry.
01:47:58 You're too smart and philosophical to be boring and predictable.
01:48:00 And you shouldn't be.
01:48:01 Just tell the truth.
01:48:03 If you can't tell the truth to me, or you can't tell the truth to this community,
01:48:07 where we value the truth and respect the truth and you won't be attacked.
01:48:10 Right.
01:48:11 He won't be attacked.
01:48:12 So if you can't tell the truth here, where, where, where can you tell the truth?
01:48:18 Where are you?
01:48:18 Where are you going to tell the truth?
01:48:19 If not here, at least to start to practice, to get used to, to write,
01:48:23 where are you going to do it?
01:48:24 So
01:48:32 people
01:48:33 who do bad things,
01:48:35 who exploit, who steal, who lie,
01:48:39 who prey upon, who manipulate.
01:48:44 It harms their conscience.
01:48:52 It harms their sense of self.
01:48:53 They're doing bad things.
01:48:56 Now,
01:49:02 they lack the cultural feedback, the wisdom of their elders, strong people
01:49:07 around them to redirect them from the terrible course they're on.
01:49:10 They can't be, these women, they can't be with a good man because a good
01:49:20 man won't be attracted to them.
01:49:31 The only way that a man will be attracted to them is either he's a bad man.
01:49:34 Who's open about being bad, or he's a good man or claims to be a good man,
01:49:38 but he lies to them.
01:49:39 You see a woman who feels rotten on the inside.
01:49:46 If a nice man is nice to her, she doesn't feel seen.
01:49:50 The feeling seen thing is very important to women because feeling seen, pair
01:49:57 bonding is more important for women than it is for men because they're at higher
01:50:00 risk of negative outcomes for pregnancy or from sex.
01:50:03 So feeling seen, like you say, I just need you to see me.
01:50:07 I just need you to understand me.
01:50:08 I just need you to listen to me.
01:50:09 I don't want you to solve my problems.
01:50:10 I just need to be perceived by you.
01:50:11 The real me, like being seen is absolutely essential for women and
01:50:17 absolutely essential for men because we can't survive without women's pair bonding.
01:50:21 Right?
01:50:21 So being seen, being visible, being understood, being accepted, being visible
01:50:28 is absolutely essential for women.
01:50:29 So if the woman feels rotten on the inside and a good man claims to like her,
01:50:38 she doesn't feel seen and therefore there's no even twisted pair bonding.
01:50:43 It's not seen.
01:50:52 Now the bad man who treats her badly and says, you know, you're a real witch.
01:50:56 Sometimes you can be a real nasty piece of something, something, something.
01:51:00 Hey man, she feels seen.
01:51:03 She feels visible.
01:51:04 He ain't bullshitting her.
01:51:06 And women will in general choose feeling seen and understood over some guy
01:51:19 blowing smoke up their ass about how wonderful they are.
01:51:21 Right.
01:51:25 Cause it's kind of incomprehensible to a lot of men.
01:51:28 Like why would a woman who's, you know, attractive and all of that end up with
01:51:31 some terrible guy who treats her like crap?
01:51:33 Well, I think I'm trying to explain it because she feels like crap.
01:51:55 Uh, she says, yes, women actually feel protected when a man won't bullshit them.
01:51:59 Right.
01:52:00 I mean, who's more immoral.
01:52:07 This is an interesting question.
01:52:08 Who's more immoral.
01:52:09 The woman who's openly a witch or the man who lies to her about how wonderful
01:52:14 she is just to get into her pants.
01:52:17 Like who's the real bad guy.
01:52:18 Who's the real bad person here.
01:52:20 I mean, do you want me to criticize men?
01:52:22 Man, I'm down for that.
01:52:25 I'm down for that.
01:52:26 If a woman's openly like I'm a boss, babe, bitch or whatever, like she's
01:52:34 just openly caustic and kind of mean and surly and whatever, right.
01:52:41 Who's worse.
01:52:46 Oh, thank you for your tip.
01:52:49 I'm glad you enjoyed the series about sadism.
01:52:54 I think there are two sides of the sad, sad, bad coin.
01:52:57 Okay.
01:52:57 Who's lying more, the woman who's openly witchy or the man who lies to her and
01:53:02 tells her she's wonderful just so he can bang her and move on, who is lying more.
01:53:10 And as men, come on, man, as men, we've all been in the situation.
01:53:25 Where we have pretended to be attracted to a woman of questionable
01:53:30 character because she's pretty or hot.
01:53:33 Maybe we have done that.
01:53:35 I mean, most men have done that.
01:53:37 I know I have.
01:53:39 Yeah, absolutely.
01:53:40 Well, the man is lying, but maybe the woman isn't really a witch and she's
01:53:53 lying to herself, but if she's lying to herself, then she's already a problem.
01:53:58 Right.
01:53:59 The man, but lying isn't the worst or evil.
01:54:03 They're as bad as each other.
01:54:04 Women by surrounded by simps act bitchier.
01:54:08 Says this woman, because they feel unprotected, surrounded by jackals, but
01:54:12 she is addicted to the attention, vicious cycle.
01:54:14 Yeah.
01:54:15 Yeah, for sure.
01:54:16 Okay.
01:54:19 Ladies, come on.
01:54:20 Let's be honest.
01:54:21 We can close on this and any tips for this crackerjack of a show are gratefully
01:54:25 appreciated.
01:54:25 Come on, ladies.
01:54:27 Can you ever be attracted to a man who's frightened of you?
01:54:32 Can you ever be attracted to a man who's frightened of women?
01:54:35 Can you ever pair bond with a man who's scared of you or scared of women or
01:54:41 scared of the feminine or who lies to you or who manipulates you because he doesn't
01:54:46 want your negative opinion?
01:54:48 He just can't handle your negative opinion.
01:54:49 It's the worst thing in the world.
01:54:50 Can you ever pair bond with a man who's scared of you?
01:54:52 Can you ever surrender yourself to a man who's fearful of your nature?
01:54:57 No, of course not.
01:54:58 So I'm trying to help you not be scared of women by saying there are good women
01:55:09 and there are bad women.
01:55:10 You think I'm criticizing women as a whole?
01:55:12 How many times do I have to say it's not all women, only some women, maybe it's a
01:55:17 little bit more women than men.
01:55:18 Like how many, I can't spend my entire life putting caveats in every
01:55:21 single time I open my mouth.
01:55:22 If he reveals he's scared, I'd never look at him the same.
01:55:30 Yeah.
01:55:30 Thank you, Kairos.
01:55:32 I appreciate that.
01:55:33 That's very kind.
01:55:34 I'm telling you about some women's susceptibility to immorality so you can
01:55:44 differentiate the good women from the bad women.
01:55:46 So you're not scared of women.
01:55:48 So you can fall in love, be loved, pair bond, have family, have like,
01:55:51 yeah, God, you don't understand how much I'm turning myself inside and out.
01:55:55 Risking endless possibilities of missing, being misinterpreted and lying about
01:55:59 because I want to deliver unto you the possibility of love and family.
01:56:02 You have a wife and daughter who are awesome women.
01:56:11 They are.
01:56:11 Is that fear shown primarily by a lack of eye contact?
01:56:16 See, you're looking to change an exterior behavior, Dave.
01:56:18 Well, if I have more eye contact, no, you've got to deal with the fear, Dave.
01:56:21 You got to deal with the fear deep down.
01:56:23 And listen, a lot of us have known some bad women.
01:56:26 I mean, most men have known some bad women at one point or
01:56:29 another in their life.
01:56:29 Absolutely.
01:56:30 And criticizing sin in women is praising virtue in women.
01:56:36 And criticizing sin in women is praising virtue in women.
01:56:41 Female nature lends women to be susceptible to particular type types of
01:56:49 dysfunction and sin.
01:56:50 The same thing is true of men.
01:56:52 I'm hesitant around women because I don't know if they're a crazy feminist or not.
01:56:58 That's how I pick women apart.
01:56:59 What do you mean?
01:57:02 You don't know if they're a crazy feminist?
01:57:04 That's easy.
01:57:09 Come on, man.
01:57:12 That's easy.
01:57:12 You just bring up some news article, you bring up something, you bring up,
01:57:17 Oh, a friend of mine, his, uh, his wife cheated on him or like, I don't know
01:57:21 whether it's appropriate in the business world or not, but you just, you just
01:57:25 bring up something and people will tell you right away exactly who they are.
01:57:28 You understand?
01:57:29 There's no mystery.
01:57:29 There's a mystery.
01:57:30 There's no mystery in people.
01:57:31 They'll tell you exactly who they are.
01:57:33 Exactly who they are right away.
01:57:39 I won't put up with any bad behavior from women, says someone.
01:57:42 But you do from men?
01:57:44 I don't know what that means.
01:57:46 Just don't put up with bad behavior as a whole.
01:57:50 Yeah, I did a whole show about triage.
01:58:00 It's not been released yet.
01:58:01 I think it's philosophical paradoxes part two or three, but yeah, I did
01:58:05 a whole show about how to triage.
01:58:06 You just don't know if they're a crazy feminist.
01:58:08 It's easy.
01:58:09 Just bring up something to do with men and women and see how they react.
01:58:12 That's all.
01:58:13 If you seek out women primarily because of their appearance, it
01:58:18 makes sense why you'd be jumpy.
01:58:19 I don't know if he does, but yeah, for sure.
01:58:23 For sure.
01:58:24 A woman who focuses too much on her appearance, right?
01:58:27 It's an Aristotelian mean a woman who focuses too much on her appearance is a
01:58:32 woman who is covering up for most times a negative personality.
01:58:36 Yeah.
01:58:36 Brought up abortion when the Roe v.
01:58:41 Wade stuff was going on, she went ballistic.
01:58:43 Yeah.
01:58:44 I mean, that may be jumping in on the deep end, but yeah, just anything
01:58:46 to do with men and women, right?
01:58:47 Steph's right.
01:58:54 Deal with the fear.
01:58:55 Women can just sense it.
01:58:56 Even if you maintain eye contact.
01:58:57 Yeah.
01:58:57 You'll blink less.
01:58:58 Your cheeks will color.
01:59:00 Your posture will be a little different.
01:59:01 Uh, women don't want you to be scared of them.
01:59:07 I mean, good women don't want you to be scared of them, right?
01:59:09 It's possible to fear good women because of the pressure of messing up
01:59:13 and losing the love of your life.
01:59:14 It's possible to fear good women because of the pressure of messing up
01:59:22 and losing the love of your life.
01:59:23 Do you think that I have that pressure?
01:59:27 Like every day I'm like, Oh my God, I hope my wife doesn't divorce me.
01:59:29 God.
01:59:31 What can I tell you?
01:59:32 If you idolize women so much, they sense it and it puts them off.
01:59:41 Yes.
01:59:43 If you pour your heart and soul into someone when you've just met, then it's
01:59:46 probably going to be kind of negative, right?
01:59:47 You're in Vancouver.
01:59:52 The majority of men are liberal.
01:59:53 It's always a surprise for both parties to encounter conservatives.
01:59:56 Yeah.
01:59:57 Well, that's interesting.
01:59:58 Of course, are they liberal?
01:59:59 I doubt it.
02:00:01 I doubt it.
02:00:01 They probably just don't exercise.
02:00:02 They're probably low.
02:00:03 Like, you know, that if you exercise and if your testosterone goes up, or if you
02:00:06 take testosterone supplements, you generally stop being a liberal.
02:00:09 I don't know if they're liberal or if they just have a hormone, hormonal
02:00:12 deficiency, I don't know if they're liberal or if they're just conforming
02:00:16 to what they think women want because women say they want liberal men.
02:00:19 Right.
02:00:19 So who knows?
02:00:21 I don't, I mean, how many people are reasoned into their beliefs?
02:00:25 Very, very few.
02:00:26 I don't, I don't view people as having beliefs.
02:00:29 I view beliefs as having people.
02:00:31 Right.
02:00:33 People don't have beliefs.
02:00:35 Ideas possess people and use them as vehicles through which to spread.
02:00:40 Right.
02:00:40 Like a virus uses you to spread to somebody else, right?
02:00:43 Which is why it inflames the nasal passages and you sneeze.
02:00:45 And right.
02:00:45 So you don't have a virus in a sense the virus is using you to spread.
02:00:50 So, you know, most people don't have ideas.
02:00:52 The ideas are just using them.
02:00:53 But the idea is that you're using them to spread.
02:00:54 Ideas, the ideas are just using them as stepping stones to spread.
02:00:57 So when you say this person is a liberal, it's like, to me, it's
02:01:04 like saying this person is a cult.
02:01:06 Now this person has a cult.
02:01:09 The cult is using them to spread.
02:01:11 This person isn't a cult.
02:01:13 So is a liberal?
02:01:14 No.
02:01:14 Person has liberal indoctrination and the liberal indoctrination
02:01:18 is using that person to spread.
02:01:19 And so.
02:01:21 Most people are possessed by propaganda that was written in blood
02:01:28 centuries before they were born.
02:01:31 They don't have ideas.
02:01:34 Conclusions possess them and use bullying and manipulation to spread
02:01:40 because they can't be spread through reason and evidence.
02:01:43 So yeah, when, when I meet people, I don't view them as individuals.
02:01:47 For the most part, I view them as inherently liberal.
02:01:49 Individuals for the most part, I view them as inhabited by various
02:01:51 cliches and ideas that were around long before they were born and
02:01:55 were programmed into them and they don't.
02:01:56 You know, if, if you start up a candy crush on your tablet, you don't say.
02:02:06 My computer, I guess my computers has chosen candy crush.
02:02:09 It's like, no, your tablet has done what you've told it to.
02:02:12 And that's what most people are.
02:02:13 And that's why you don't, it's not worth debating with most people because.
02:02:18 They are simply programmed, right?
02:02:20 The NPC thing.
02:02:21 Jonathan hates work suggests that libertarians, unlike liberals and
02:02:29 conservatives actually reasoned their way into their positions due to high
02:02:32 levels of systematizing and higher concern with liberty.
02:02:34 It's hard for me to trust anyone that isn't an anarchist.
02:02:37 Yeah.
02:02:37 Yeah.
02:02:38 Mind virus.
02:02:39 Yeah.
02:02:39 Most of them, but mind and virus in a sense are opposites.
02:02:42 It hijacks the brain and it destroys the mind.
02:02:45 And it destroys the mind and it turns it into programming, right?
02:02:49 Mind and virus are kind of opposites this way to have a mind is to think for
02:02:53 yourself and most people are just vehicles to repeat lies and
02:03:01 substitute empiricism with falsehood.
02:03:04 All right.
02:03:06 Thank you everyone so much for a great show.
02:03:08 If you're listening to this later, a few minutes later, if you're listening
02:03:13 to this later, free domain.com/donate to help out the show massively,
02:03:16 massively, massively appreciated.
02:03:18 Uh, one last question.
02:03:20 Hit me with a Y and I will take this very personally, very personally.
02:03:24 Sorry.
02:03:26 If you dropped that early, hit me with a Y.
02:03:27 If you would like me to do a movie review, I hesitate to even mention this.
02:03:41 If you would like me to do a movie review of Madam Web with Dakota
02:03:46 Johnson and Sydney Sweeney, should I do a movie review of Madam Web,
02:03:54 which has a cozy 14% approval score?
02:03:59 Should I?
02:04:02 Come on, peer pressure me.
02:04:05 It's going to be rough, man.
02:04:08 Yes.
02:04:11 Okay.
02:04:11 You've not heard of this movie.
02:04:13 I've heard it's great.
02:04:15 Okay.
02:04:19 Well, the, the, the, the yeas have it.
02:04:21 The yeah, take one for philosophy.
02:04:23 All right.
02:04:24 I will, uh, I will go and do a movie review of Madam Web.
02:04:28 Madam Web.
02:04:30 It's a long way from Charlotte Web, but you don't know that movie.
02:04:33 All right.
02:04:33 Well, it looks like the ayes have it.
02:04:35 I will take this very personally and I will, um, please more movie reviews.
02:04:39 Okay.
02:04:40 It's fun if I, it's fun as they do it.
02:04:42 Okay.
02:04:43 Uh, I will do that.
02:04:44 Uh, I will do that.
02:04:44 So, all right.
02:04:45 Have yourself a wonderful afternoon, everyone.
02:04:46 Thank you so much.
02:04:47 Of course, as always.
02:04:48 Lots of love from up here.
02:04:49 Uh, I'll talk to you soon.
02:04:51 Bye.
02:04:52 Freedomain.com/donate.
02:04:53 Take care.
02:04:53 [inaudible].
02:04:59 [inaudible]
02:05:04 [inaudible]