Human Rights: Debate Between Positive & Negative Rights

Are human rights about freedom—or free stuff? In this explosive episode, we tackle one of the most controversial debates in political philosophy: positive vs. negative rights. Should rights be limited to protections against government interference, like free speech and property rights? Or do they also include entitlements, like free healthcare and education, that demand someone else’s labor?
We break down the history, the philosophy, and the real-world consequences of both perspectives. Do positive rights lead to a stronger, more just society, or do they pave the way for government overreach and forced redistribution? Is a right still a right if it requires taking from someone else?
Prepare for a heated discussion on freedom, responsibility, and the role of government in your life. Where do you stand? Tune in, challenge your beliefs, and join the debate!
Outro: ”Goodnight, Sweetheart, Goodnight” – This score is in public domain and may be freely downloaded, printed, and performed. The sound file may be downloaded for personal use. For more information see https://lincolnlibraries.org/polley-music-library/

Transcript:

(0:00) Well, gentlemen, welcome to another league of ordinary friends. (0:04) Oh, we are live. Oh, so we are live.(0:07) We’ve been live for a while, man. (0:08) And I’m glad to say, wow. (0:12) I mean, you know, three seconds in, we had faggot.(0:15) So that worked out great. (0:18) It’s like, oh, my God, we’re going live, guys. (0:20) Oh, I stayed faggot.(0:22) All right. Well, I mean, I’m not one. (0:25) Ohio is the landfill of the of the United States.(0:30) And I know you’re I disagree. (0:33) I think I think South Detroit is (0:36) South Detroit’s close to Toledo, dog. (0:38) Be careful.You can have Toledo. (0:42) No, we took the UP for that. (0:44) But anyways, I digress.I digress. (0:47) Wisconsin should get the UP back. (0:51) Well, we’ve got some milestones this week because Andrew and Zach (0:56) were on a show that had a thousand viewers concurrently.(1:00) Is that right? Yeah. Awesome job, man. (1:03) A thousand.I’d like to I’d like to say thank you to Sal and Rachel, actually, (1:08) because people just they love what they have to say. (1:13) Really? That’s beautiful. (1:15) So it was really awesome, man.(1:16) It was cool because we were watching. (1:18) We’re watching it and we saw like you message us. (1:21) You’re like, oh, my God, we’re like four away.(1:22) We’re like four away. (1:24) And then you hit it, man. (1:25) That’s pretty cool, because like, you know, we’re like, let’s be honest, (1:28) like we we know we are.We’re nobody’s. (1:30) We’re just yelling at clouds. (1:31) And it’s fun to just share the message.(1:33) And if somebody like that gets something like that, a thousand views, (1:37) like that’s a huge milestone. (1:38) Oh, yeah, that’s awesome. (1:40) Yeah, I got a hundred and I’m sitting here gushing, you know what I mean? (1:43) So congratulations.Really awesome job. (1:45) Yeah, really awesome job. (1:46) So we just we just have some of their podcasts (1:49) to subscriptions on YouTube, too.So. (1:52) Yeah. So today we’re going to we made it to a hundred and one.(1:57) Didn’t didn’t we answer? Yeah, finally. (2:01) You love that, right? (2:02) You’re like, come on, just one more. (2:04) Just get it.Get that one over. (2:06) Get us to five hundred. (2:09) All right.Well, we had a viewer on and then they disappeared. (2:12) So I want to share a little bit about their day before we get started, (2:15) before we get started into natural rights and wait. (2:18) Who when, where and how you’re busy, you’re busy, Sean.(2:22) You’re you’re shutting it down, my friend. Is that correct? (2:25) Yeah, man. It’s well, that has a lot to do with it is I’m extremely busy (2:30) with my real work life in my business.(2:33) I do have a business (2:37) and I was on that, though. (2:39) Yeah. No, I appreciate that.No, it’s awesome. (2:41) It’s much needed. (2:42) Last year was kind of a joke.(2:43) Actually, kind of. It really was a joke, man. (2:46) You know, but, you know, that’s that’s part of the deal.(2:49) It’s all about being smart with your money when you’re making it. (2:53) And that’s that, really, because there’s there’s peaks and valleys (2:56) and everything, whether it be work, relationships, whatever. (2:59) So like when you’re peaking, you need to put some of that money away (3:04) for when you go down to a deep dive into a valley.(3:07) You know what I’m saying? (3:08) I guess it’s one of those things that I do. (3:10) But like also like, you know, for me, shutting down the podcast, (3:14) Buzz in reality was was a no brainer. (3:18) It didn’t make me happy anymore.(3:20) A lot of it had to do with the content. (3:24) You know, you can only do so much black pill politics, you know, (3:28) and before it’s black killing yourself, you know, it’s not good (3:31) for the mental health. (3:32) So like and to be quite honest with you.(3:36) Nobody wants liberty, man. (3:38) Nobody does. Nobody.(3:40) They want their team to win. (3:41) That’s all they care about. (3:42) So why scream into the why do it? (3:45) Why keep doing it all the time? (3:48) You know, when at the end of the day, nobody gives a shit.(3:51) Like I gave the Libertarian Party my absolute best. (3:56) I don’t. No, you don’t.(3:59) And that’s good. (4:00) And I’m glad you did, because they can’t even give themselves their best. (4:05) No, their best ended up turning around and supporting status.(4:08) So, yeah, go figure, whatever. (4:10) Well, I just agree on I think there are people that want liberty, (4:15) but the liberty mindset is literally an Andrew. (4:20) You can agree with this is literally trying to find a place (4:24) in the world that you can relate to.(4:27) So go where you’re treated best. (4:28) So if you’re moving your assets around, you have to work. (4:32) It takes a lot of effort to be able to afford that measure (4:36) to be able to go to where you’re going to be treated best.(4:39) But that’s if you’re a liberty minded person, you’re going to work. (4:44) You’re going to put in the effort and put in all the work (4:46) to get the hell out, in my opinion. (4:50) Well, and you’re exactly right.(4:52) That’s, you know, getting the hell out is the ultimate goal, right? (4:56) Like it’s not a political party that you think is going to come (4:59) and save you from yourself or whatever the fuck you’re doing (5:02) with your life or whatever your finances like. (5:04) There are no political solutions. (5:06) There are not.(5:08) Otherwise, they would have had them by now. (5:12) You know what I’m saying? (5:13) The free market is the only solution at this point. (5:17) And unfortunately.(5:19) Most don’t even know what a free market is, so they don’t believe in it. (5:25) It’s the gimmick. (5:26) That’s what they go and blame because it’s convenient (5:29) or they’re misled on what it is, right? (5:32) I mean, yeah, and there isn’t there isn’t a free market.(5:35) I mean, there’s always whoever has it. (5:36) Well, I mean, there is a free model, not only over legal. (5:40) The free market is illegal.(5:41) It’s called the black market. (5:43) There’s only one free market, and that is the black market. (5:46) Our Zack would like to say some gray market market.(5:49) You know, the Zack attack loves exactly. (5:52) And I’m not I’m not opposed to the angry style of life. (5:56) As a matter of fact, I’m entertaining it, you know, a little bit.(5:59) But like there’s some things I don’t like about it, and it doesn’t matter. (6:02) It doesn’t matter. (6:02) My my liberty doesn’t.(6:07) Matter to anyone else, (6:09) and nobody else’s liberty matters to me at this point. (6:13) What do you do for a living this job? (6:15) I paint houses, dog. (6:17) That’s what I do in real life.(6:18) I got you’re an agorist. (6:19) You’re an agorist. (6:21) Why, because I accept money.(6:26) It accepts, though, what you you (6:28) you’re working within a market that is much needed (6:31) and you can you can gravitate towards another level of (6:36) of what the state allows you. (6:39) You can go down deeper and accept (6:43) your you can give you can give your labor and your produce (6:47) your good of painting houses to somebody (6:51) for other means, not necessarily just dollars. (6:55) Well, I mean, it’s not even about dollars like I’ve literally traded (6:59) a quarter of a cow.Mm hmm. (7:03) For some gold and silver. (7:05) You know what I’m saying? (7:06) Yeah, it’s all about a medium of exchange.(7:10) You know, and what besides that is the market. (7:12) And that’s where anarchists and agorists can agree. (7:16) There’s certain things where where agorism and anarchy do not set well.(7:22) But I mean, we don’t have enough time to get into all that. (7:25) But like at the end of the day, we’re very, very, very close. (7:28) Very agorism.(7:30) There is no such thing as an agorist and an anarchist separate. (7:33) They’re all they’re both together. (7:36) The only difference is people don’t understand the mindset (7:40) that agorism is a practice for an anarchic means.(7:46) We’re all anarchists. (7:47) It doesn’t even matter. (7:48) Philosophy than it is a practice.(7:50) I will say that. Yes. (7:52) Because we haven’t seen much anarchy (7:55) outside of people like you and I or whoever it may be.(7:59) Like, you don’t see a lot of that in the world, but you actually do. (8:03) And that’s the funny thing about it. (8:04) I was going to say, yeah, like you’re about that.(8:07) No, no, no, no. (8:07) Because people don’t know that they’re practicing anarchy on a daily basis. (8:12) You know, they’re clueless.(8:13) They just think they’re doing whatever. (8:15) If you’re going to work and providing for your family (8:19) and and and bringing home the bacon, per se. (8:22) Ah.Without hurting anybody, (8:26) taking their stuff or violating private property. (8:30) You’re doing anarchy things like every day. (8:33) You’re not drawing attention to yourself like you want to be left alone, (8:35) like you’re doing anarchist things on a daily basis when you do shit like that.(8:41) And then every April 15th, you stop. (8:45) Yes. (8:46) Depends on who you ask.(8:48) I’m talking about tax revolt, 25 tax revolt, 2025, (8:54) because if you are paying taxes at this point. (8:57) For the orange man to kiss the ass of Benjamin Netanyahu, (9:03) here it goes, I mean, if you’re doing it, (9:07) they turn to the Trump Zionist, (9:09) they turn to the Trump Zionist with his rhetoric talk. (9:12) Goddamn.Oh, my God. (9:14) You sound like Alex Jones and you do it so perfect and not me. (9:18) But no, seriously.(9:19) If you really want to prove true liberty minded person, (9:24) stop paying taxes, stop voting immediately. (9:27) It’s not doing you any favors. (9:29) They’re taking your money and giving it to the enemy or the enemies (9:35) while your family starves or people are living under bridges.(9:39) That’s where you’re at. (9:40) This is where the state gets you. (9:43) Hey, I think that is the most agoristic thing to do is to live under a bridge.(9:48) Yeah, I’m sorry. (9:51) 1984, 1776. (9:53) And it was an agorist.(9:57) Every troll’s an agorist because they’re all under a bridge somewhere. (10:01) But but that’s the thing, man. (10:02) I’ll admit like I’m against paying it, but I’m a I’m not a rule breaker (10:06) to that extent.I’m not willing to risk that. (10:09) I’ll admit. Well, it’s about being flexible.(10:12) It’s not breaking the rules in a country where they don’t care. (10:15) to (10:21) and (10:23) go to Mexico where they run drugs, and you can do all the business you want. (10:30) Or you join the CIA.(10:31) Where there’s a rope, there’s a rope. (10:32) That’s true. (10:35) Only in downtown Los Angeles.(10:40) Well, look at what that asshole’s doing. (10:42) He’s literally eminent domaining all those people who had those fucking houses burned (10:47) down in order to house quote unquote illegal immigrants, right? (10:53) You mean Mr. Shouldershake? (10:55) I don’t know. (10:56) Maybe we’ll bring some guys in.(10:57) We toss around some ideas. (10:59) I don’t know. (11:00) It looks kind of cool.(11:01) All right, boys. (11:03) So we came together today for an actual reason, and it’s about rights. (11:09) So in the light of RFK’s whatever’s happening with him, this guy decided to talk, and he (11:18) decided to talk, and he had some points that he wanted to make.(11:21) So I’m going to share this video with what initiated this whole thing, and then I’ll (11:26) put up the Facebook post, because the Facebook post, I shared the link with you guys. (11:30) I know that Zach read through it, and he’s like, who are these people? (11:35) And it’s like, I was one of those people, probably in a different way. (11:40) So let’s use some grace here, but I did want to share this first video.(11:44) It’s hugely important. (11:45) This is the one that got it all started for us. (11:47) Thank you, Mr. Chairman.(11:49) Mr. Kennedy, thanks for being with us. (11:53) I very much like the slogan that you coined, Make America Healthy Again. (11:59) And I strongly agree with that effort.(12:04) Despite spending, as you indicated, two or three times as much per capita on healthcare (12:09) as other nations, we have 85 million people who are uninsured, underinsured. (12:15) We have all kinds of chronic illnesses. (12:18) Our life expectancy is lower than other countries.(12:21) And for working class people in this country, they are living six, seven years shorter lives (12:26) than the top 1%. (12:28) We got a problem. (12:29) Okay.(12:29) And I’m going to suggest some ideas that I think can remedy that. (12:34) Last year, the insurance industry in this country made over $70 billion, while at the (12:42) same time, 85 million Americans are uninsured or underinsured. (12:46) Do you agree with me that the United States should join every other major country on earth (12:52) and guarantee healthcare to all people as a human right? (12:58) Yes? (12:58) No? (13:02) All right.(13:04) So. (13:04) Yes, Bernie. (13:05) Welcome to everybody’s home.(13:06) I’m feeling the Bern. (13:07) We’ve got 12 eyes on it. (13:08) But go ahead, Zach.(13:09) Go ahead. (13:10) No, I said yes, Bernie. (13:11) I’m feeling the Bern.(13:12) Let’s give everybody healthcare and let this country collapse. (13:16) Yeah. (13:17) So.(13:18) What happened was. (13:20) So, you’re advocating for positive rights. (13:24) Holy shit.(13:24) Yeah. (13:24) Right. (13:25) Which is crazy, right? (13:26) Because the names are so crazy.(13:26) You’re advocating for positive rights right now. (13:29) What really cracked me up is the meme that comes up is Bernie yelling at RFK going, should (13:37) the US guarantee healthcare as a human right? (13:39) And then RFK going, I can’t give a yes or no. (13:43) It should be fuck no.(13:47) How about that? (13:48) That’s what it should be. (13:50) Right? (13:51) So, real simple. (13:53) I make the post on Facebook.(13:55) Healthcare is not a human right. (13:56) If it requires someone else’s labor, it’s not a human right. (14:00) RFK Jr. doesn’t have the right kind of balls.(14:03) He’s as misguided as Bernie because he’s afraid to answer whether he should just say no. (14:08) It should be a hard no without question. (14:11) And gentlemen, what are your thoughts about that? (14:14) Oh, RFK is, he’s trying not to agree with Bernie, but he agrees with Bernie.(14:20) But the narrative at the moment is, is he’s against the Democrats at this moment, or I (14:27) guess Bernie’s an independent, but he’s a Democrat. (14:31) So he can’t really say no, but at the same time, he wants to say yes. (14:37) Healthcare is a human right.(14:38) It’s not. (14:40) I wish it was, but it’s not. (14:45) So let’s go, let’s pick a little bit apart.(14:47) We’ll go, we’ll go a little bit back, right? (14:49) Sean mentioned a great thing. (14:51) Positive rights versus what was called negative rights. (14:54) So ask backwards if you really think, yeah, you brought it up, man.(14:59) Yeah. (14:59) So why, why positive right? (15:02) What’s weird is it’s not what the intended outcome is. (15:05) It’s what we use to make it happen.(15:08) Well, positive. (15:08) Why don’t you explain what that says? (15:10) What a positive right is. (15:11) Positive rights are something like a socialized healthcare and socialized housing and stuff (15:17) like that.(15:17) Like everybody deserves these things, like to where like negative rights are your, you (15:25) know, right to, you know, property rights and, and, and a right to life and, and, and, (15:34) and deliver a prosperous life or whatever. (15:36) You have a right to those things, but with those rights come responsibility, the negative (15:43) rights. (15:43) Do you, do you have a right to life? (15:47) I mean, there’s a thousand ways to die.(15:49) I have a right to life, liberty, and property. (15:52) Those are my God given rights given from the almighty. (15:55) And those are actually considered negative rights, which is insane.(16:00) They haven’t asked backwards. (16:02) Like I said, they want you to, those things I just listed off. (16:05) They want those to be negative, but to have socialized healthcare, socialized housing, (16:12) you know, and socialized everything, food, all of it, that’s considered a positive.(16:18) Yeah. (16:19) So let’s go, let’s go into this. (16:20) What this means is basically a positive right is where an outside force, government, basically (16:29) impale some kind of behavior on you to force you to act a certain way.(16:35) Fascism. (16:36) When we, when we talk about healthcare as, as this, as a positive right, it requires (16:42) someone to force the doctor, the nurse, the administrator, all those people, the people (16:48) at the hospital, even the people cleaning the hospital to use their labor to give that (16:53) to someone. (16:55) Where a negative right is more just the avoidance or the removal of a force, like something (17:01) that the government is not allowed to do.(17:03) Right. (17:04) So to your point, one example. (17:07) Okay.(17:07) You have a user, think of user attacks, a positive right imposes a user attacks, and then a negative (17:14) right is an absence of a user attacks. (17:17) Exactly. (17:18) So it’s, it’s, it’s almost like a negative reinforcement, right? (17:21) Taking something away.(17:22) Exactly. (17:22) So once again, to that point, we’ve got the healthcare, housing, these types of things (17:28) that are, that would require positive rights, right? (17:31) Because they require some kind of force. (17:33) Whereas a negative rights, liberty, life, the, the ability, the opportunity to do it, (17:40) right? (17:40) As long as you’re, you’re not imposing on others, that would be the negative rights.(17:45) And this country, as flawed as we can look at it, the constitution, the bill of rights, (17:50) it’s the first time that was really written down, right? (17:54) It’s something the government couldn’t do. (17:56) So it was kind of baked in piece. (17:58) You guys want to expound on that a little bit? (18:01) Well, it’s like the concept.(18:03) Go ahead, Ed. (18:04) Yeah, go ahead. (18:05) It, it, it, it, it ties into the concept of consequentialism, where if you don’t have (18:10) consequences for your behavior, then you’re gonna, it, it, the, the malbehavior is going (18:18) to continuously gain interest, and eventually the consequence, it can be so significant, (18:24) it can potentially up to, in fact, ruin your life, or even end your life.(18:29) It just depends on the context of every situation. (18:33) Hold up. (18:34) So are you saying that without consequences, there’s communism? (18:41) To a fact, yes.(18:43) That’s fair. (18:44) That actually makes a lot of sense, because that’s where society grows to being so large (18:51) and amassed to a collective thought that nobody really cares about what anybody does (18:58) to anybody else. (18:59) They just want, want, want, and you get starve, starve, starve, and Stalin, or Bibi at this (19:07) point.(19:08) Woo, baby. (19:10) Yes. (19:11) There it is.(19:12) Man. (19:13) Coming from a Jew at that. (19:16) Coming from the apostles.(19:19) All right, so to touch a little bit about this, what we talked about is why, why are (19:25) positive rights not acceptable, right? (19:28) You know, what, what rights should we have? (19:30) They, they, they literally take away from your neighbor. (19:34) Your neighbor is paying for your right, per se, to have what you want, which is bullshit. (19:41) That, that is not how life works.(19:43) If you want something in life, you have to work for it, period, end of story. (19:49) And so when they say negative rights are, are life, liberty, and property, are you kidding (19:54) me? (19:55) What’s so negative about life, liberty, and property? (19:58) This is why I have a big problem with positive and negative rights is because they’re asked (20:05) backwards and the way they’re worded is asked backwards. (20:07) And it makes people who are not in the know, very confused.(20:14) And that’s not a good place to be either. (20:16) I think that’s how, I think that’s what they want, want it to be. (20:20) I mean, Andrew, actually, let’s play this, but Andrew, if you want to actually step in (20:24) and, and tell everybody your definition, why it’s called positive and negative rights.(20:32) Well, the only, the only real negative right you have is the right to leave because everything (20:38) else is them soliciting an emotional reaction to the way you’re behaving and it’s, and it’s, (20:44) it’s reinforcing it on a societal scale. (20:49) They oppose their ethical point of view on you and you don’t have any, any other options. (20:57) Which would still be considered a positive right at that point.(21:02) Oh yeah. (21:02) That’s ethical positivism. (21:05) Right.(21:06) So Zach, thank you so much. (21:08) Zach dug into some video files and pulled this one up. (21:11) It, I, I, well, I think, I think he played it cause it’s Shapiro and Sean loves Shapiro.(21:19) He’s just, that’s one reason. (21:21) So, but it’s, it’s, it’s funny that what he’s about to explain is he, he, he defines positive, (21:30) positive rights or positive law and negative rights and they’re on either incompatibility (21:38) with each other to a T and it’s coming from Ben fucking Shapiro. (21:44) I’ll let it be known.(21:45) I would love to meet this motherfucker in an octagon. (21:48) Seriously. (21:49) Anytime he wouldn’t do it for charity and I would beat his teeth out of his face.(21:55) Would you be willing, would you be willing to consolidate for a rap battle? (22:00) I would be willing to do that also, but no, for real, like Ben Shapiro, anytime you want (22:05) to get into an octagon, if you ever see this ever, and I hope people see this and show it (22:10) to them anytime you want to get into an octagon and try to say the shit you’re saying with (22:16) me out in the open, I will break you, man. (22:20) I will literally break you. (22:21) It would take me less than 30 seconds.(22:23) I promise you that. (22:25) Knock yourself. (22:25) And we’re canceled.(22:27) Let’s get ready to rumble. (22:30) All right. (22:31) So to that point, these guys like Shapiro, Peterson, they weren’t bad guys.(22:38) They have still good ideas. (22:40) Like I’ll accept a good idea. (22:42) It’s kind of like, what’s a, uh, Frederick Douglass.(22:45) He’s like, I’ll work with anyone to do good and with no one to do harm or something like (22:49) you, this is where I could sit here and I’m nodding when I’m watching this video. (22:53) Yeah. (22:53) It’s Ben Shapiro.(22:54) He doesn’t get it. (22:56) All right. (22:56) We know that.(22:57) So I’ll take it where I can get it. (23:00) So let me, let me hit play on this guy. (23:04) Right.(23:04) The, the idea that he’s saying there is that the country is only just if you force (23:09) some people to pay the bills of other people. (23:12) Now the positive rights argument places obligations on others that they don’t (23:15) actually have in a world of negative rights. (23:18) So when people say there’s a right to healthcare, it sounds really nice.(23:20) It means that healthcare is going to be provided, right? (23:22) Well, not unless you’re actually willing in the end to point a gun at a doctor and (23:26) force that doctor to provide care at a price of your choosing. (23:29) Because if there’s any opt out, then you don’t have a right to healthcare. (23:33) If you have to force people to do this, the same thing is true with regard to the (23:37) so-called duty to duty to serve at bakeries.(23:40) For example, it’s in the left say that I have a duty to serve you. (23:42) You walk in my bakery, I have to serve you violating my own religious precepts in the (23:46) process because I have a right to your services. (23:48) You don’t have a right to my services, but according to the positive rights advocates (23:51) you do, and this is supposed to fix all of your problems.(23:55) OK, none of this actually fixes everybody’s problems because here is the problem with (23:59) this. OK, the essence of positive rights is force. (24:03) The essence of civil society and social fabric is voluntarism.(24:06) You want a happy, thriving society. (24:08) You allow people to do what they want. (24:10) You want an upset, angry society.(24:12) You force people to do what you want. (24:14) The positive rights argument forces people to do the things you want at their expense. (24:19) Their individual rights become less important than your desire for credit.(24:23) You don’t get to do that in a free and open society. (24:26) So when politicians promise you they’re going to provide you a right to health care, (24:29) understand they can only do that by forcing somebody else to do something that they do (24:33) not want to do. Furthermore, force tends to erode the (24:38) entrepreneurial spirit and to achieve the opposite of its intended effect, because if (24:42) you believe there’s a right to something, it turns out that forcing people to do it (24:45) means less of it.And when you force people to do things, they don’t want to do it (24:48) anymore. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez today, for example, she was railing against Amazon (24:53) moving into Queens and she was doing it on one basis that was actually rather solid, (24:58) which is crony capitalism is bad. (24:59) Governments shouldn’t be paying off corporations to move into their areas.(25:03) That’s that’s correct. She’s correct about that. (25:05) And then she was doing it on a basis that was not solid, which she was saying it was (25:07) going to force up the price of rent.(25:09) Well, the reason it was going to force up the price of rent is because people like (25:11) Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez believe that everyone has a right to housing. (25:14) And the way they then establish that right to housing is by trying to force (25:17) corporations to pay for the housing. (25:19) Corporations don’t want to pay for the housing, so they leave.(25:22) So no one pays for the housing. (25:24) And then they say, well, there’s not enough housing. (25:26) So what we really ought to do is rent control.(25:27) We ought to force people to rent out at a price that we want a piece of property to (25:32) you. Except what happens then is that no one builds any new properties because if (25:36) you can’t make a profit on a new property, why the hell would you build it in the (25:38) first place? So the actual policy that was intended to make things more just and (25:43) more equitably distributed ends up with fewer units of housing and fewer people (25:48) with actual housing. The positive rights argument ends up with less of everything (25:52) unless you are willing to tax a bunch of people at exorbitant rates and violate (25:56) their rights in doing so.(25:58) The rent is damn high. (26:00) The rent is high. (26:02) And it’s a shame because now this is Ben Shapiro and this is Israel.(26:09) You mean the Twin Towers anyways. (26:14) Well, hey, I can’t I can’t help what the Jews did. (26:18) I can’t do that.I can’t help. (26:23) Can we at least say Zionists because like it’s kind of an ideology. (26:28) No, it’s not a people, man.(26:32) I got to I got to step in and defend my Jewish friends, man. (26:36) It’s kind of an ideology. (26:38) I get it.I get it. (26:40) My bad. (26:40) I’m with you.Yes, I am an asshole, by the way. (26:44) I don’t care. All right.(26:45) So it came out again. (26:47) Trump goes in and goes, we’re going to go in and remove the mines. (26:50) You think he’s going to have like volunteers do that? (26:54) But who is he sending in there to follow the mines? (26:58) Anybody? I wonder what he’ll wonder who’s going to go down there.(27:02) He’s probably the Mexicans. (27:06) Like, I love these people who like once again, let’s let’s go. (27:11) Let’s go into a positive right now.Negative. Right. (27:13) Here’s a negative.Right. (27:14) The Fourth Amendment, illegal search and seizure. Right.(27:18) Let’s go into it. So we want to get rid of migrants. (27:22) What a great idea.(27:23) We all want to get rid of illegal migrants. (27:26) Just take one step past that. (27:29) What would it take to get rid of every single illegal (27:34) migrant in the United States if we decided to put our efforts? (27:38) It would require a door to door search in every house, (27:42) every basement, every attic.(27:44) And to think that I’m willing to give up that right (27:47) that you can come into my house just to look, (27:51) you can go pound **** sand. (27:54) We have a we have history on that. (27:59) President, you can watch what happens.(28:01) Boston Marathon bombing happens and they got away with it. (28:05) Yeah, it’s called Boston Marathon. (28:08) But we also have history with.(28:12) I like this guy. I am for I am. (28:15) Future Gaza equals casino offshore rigs.(28:18) Thanks. I love this guy. (28:22) Zach, keep your keep your thought, man.(28:23) I want to hear what you have to say, Zach, after you’re done. (28:26) After we’re done laughing. (28:27) Here it is.Future Gaza equals casinos. (28:29) Offshore casinos. (28:31) Offshore oil rigs, banks, pawnshops, slaves, (28:34) usury, human trafficking and no Palestinians.(28:38) I am for my in the world. (28:40) I **** love you. (28:41) Except for hotel maids.(28:43) Cardi, Cardi, thank you, William. (28:46) You’re a good man, dude, or a woman. (28:49) I don’t know if you’re a man or a woman.(28:50) It’s a William. (28:51) It’s it’s William. (28:53) It’s a man, baby, man.(28:55) Definitely a man. (28:55) Are we doing the he, him, she, her, all that bullshit? (28:59) Are we done with that or what? (29:00) I am right now. (29:02) And you’re hilarious.(29:04) The Zionist is to be quite bad. (29:06) I’m going to eat that. (29:07) My bad, my bad.(29:08) No, that’s OK. (29:09) Hey, once again, like we have to we have to be very clear with our words (29:13) and very careful because we are not against a people. (29:16) We’re not against anything.(29:18) We’re against ideas that aren’t good. (29:20) That’s who we’re against. (29:21) I hate everyone.(29:22) That’s it. (29:23) I want to talk. Right.(29:25) Exactly. (29:26) I hate everyone. (29:27) But we’re not against it.(29:28) We’re just against their ideas. (29:29) But I love the greatest. (29:32) Yeah, the greatest anti-Semite is when you hate yourself.(29:37) There you go. (29:38) Poor taste. Right.(29:40) So here’s what comes up. (29:43) I got this Facebook page. (29:45) I’m going to read some of the Facebook posts, because once again, all I said, (29:48) if it requires labor of someone else, it’s not a human right.(29:52) It’s not. Now, once again, guys, let’s have a little grace here (29:56) because I was a great a neocon. (30:00) I thought Iraq had weapons of mass destruction, (30:03) and I believe that they could add nuclear.(30:05) You know, I am capable of being misled as well. (30:09) So I have a lot of grace when it comes to trying to help others, (30:13) you know, guide other people to different ideas. Right.(30:17) So I wrote it’s not a human right. (30:19) So this person wrote, so if I’m sick and going to debt and can (30:22) no longer pay for my child’s expenses, (30:25) should they put into should they be put into government care? (30:28) If not, what, in your in your opinion, should happen to them? So (30:35) I mean, this is like the first jump from the question of just like (30:39) we aren’t even addressing whether it’s a human right, (30:41) like what you’re taking from someone to give to someone else. Right.(30:45) Now, we’re coming from the victim side. (30:48) Someone had something happen to them. (30:50) But somehow, where did the idea come that? (30:55) People that they don’t know should be responsible for that.(30:59) Can I chime in? Because I absolutely actually live this. (31:03) OK, 2022, Thanksgiving of 2022. (31:08) I got extremely ill.(31:11) And little did I know how ill I was. (31:14) I just really thought I had to go to the bathroom, meaning I had to poop. (31:18) I really thought I just need to get a good poop out and we’re going to be fine.(31:22) A long story short, Thanksgiving 2022. (31:28) I was in so much pain that I couldn’t even deal with myself. (31:32) And mind you, I have I have family here for Thanksgiving.(31:35) We do it at my house. (31:37) And anyhow, I didn’t have insurance at the time. (31:42) It was one of those things where like my wife had just quit her job to go to school (31:47) and we’re like, what’s the worst that could happen in a few months? (31:51) Everything’s going to be fine, right? (31:52) Yeah.Not so much. (31:54) Anyways, this hospital that I went to (32:00) happened to be a Catholic hospital that had voluntary charities. (32:05) OK.They took care of me (32:11) the best they could. (32:12) I ended up having surgery later on. (32:16) But my insides were giving out.(32:19) I mean, my insides, I had a perforated colon (32:22) and I had an abscess draining inside of me. OK. (32:27) No insurance, by the way.(32:29) They took me in. (32:30) They took care of me the best they could, whatever. (32:37) Now, I could have taken some Medicaid.(32:40) Actually, the paperwork was in place like I could have done it. (32:43) And because I am who I am, my health is not somebody else’s responsibility. (32:51) So the fact of the matter is I spent eight days in the hospital.(32:57) With constant doctor’s care, IVs, you name it, you name it, I got it. (33:02) You know what I’m saying? (33:03) It happened with no insurance. (33:06) They knew I didn’t have insurance.(33:08) It was it was very open thing. (33:10) Now, this hospital’s voluntary charity (33:14) took care of 90 percent of my hospital bills. (33:18) I’m responsible for the other 10 percent.(33:22) Anybody who has a problem with that is fucking insane (33:27) because nobody had a gun held to their head, (33:30) saying that they had to pay for my hospital bills. (33:33) This was all done through a voluntary charity through the Catholic Hospital. (33:39) And why shouldn’t you be a little bit or whatever, a lot of it (33:44) responsible for your own health care that’s on you? (33:47) That’s not on somebody else.(33:51) But the fact that they had this charity involved, (33:54) which I think all hospitals should have some sort of charity (33:57) because it would be a godsend to people like me (34:00) in that situation at that time. (34:03) I got I got insurance at the first of the year. (34:06) Oh, yeah.(34:06) I had insurance by that first of the year, 100 percent, (34:10) which I paid almost $700 a month for, by the way. (34:14) You know what I’m saying? (34:15) But like the fact of the matter is this hospital took care of. (34:20) If anybody who’s ever been to the hospital in their life (34:23) for days on end through constant medical care procedures, whatever, (34:27) I did get a bag shoved in my stomach for crying out loud during all that.(34:31) It wasn’t a shit bag. (34:33) It was a bag to drain the frickin (34:36) the abscess that was draining inside me. (34:38) I got pictures if you want to see it.(34:40) I swear to God, I do. I’m good. (34:42) Yeah, I would like to see him.(34:44) I’ll have to see it all through. (34:48) Yeah, I got to be the first. (34:50) But but they had a voluntary charity (34:52) that people voluntarily donated to that helped me out.(34:57) This could be across the board. (34:59) This could be everywhere if they wanted it to be. (35:03) Funny thing is.(35:05) That same hospital just got bought out by a bigger hospital. (35:10) And there’s no more voluntary charities. (35:14) Because they’ve gone corporate.(35:19) So subsidy. (35:20) So tell me again that voluntarism doesn’t work. (35:25) 10% of $90,000.(35:30) Is huge. (35:32) And you could pay you could pay $5 a month for that (35:36) for the rest of your life if you wanted to. (35:38) They can’t put it on your credit report.(35:39) That’s what I’m trying to tell you right now. (35:41) But that was a voluntary thing. (35:43) This wasn’t something that they stole.(35:46) Like, think about this, y’all. (35:47) We have people in the UK. (35:49) I have people in the UK.(35:51) You have people in the UK, Zakatak. (35:54) Where they take 80 to 90% of your pay. (35:59) For taxation to give you shit health care.(36:04) And good luck trying to find a if you really are in need, (36:08) good luck trying to get an ambulance to your house. (36:11) Good luck. (36:12) All trying to make an appointment.(36:14) Yeah. (36:15) To where, like, like, let’s and let’s even just take a step back. (36:19) It’s like shit happens.(36:22) And an unknown illness (36:26) is not dissimilar from getting hit by a car. (36:30) Like the it’s I it’s some accident of nature, right? (36:35) Like it’s an accident. (36:38) It is an accident.(36:39) But they’re taking how life works. (36:41) They’re in the health care system. (36:43) They’re doing it by the day.(36:45) It just happened here. (36:46) That hospital that helped me out so much. (36:49) They’re gone.(36:51) It’s over. (36:51) It’s corporate now. (36:53) There’s no more of that.(36:56) And basically what what’s interesting is like we’re talking about (36:59) this is like I’m trying to share this with people is like (37:02) health care is not the problem, but it’s not a human right. (37:05) Compassion is great, except when it’s weaponized. (37:09) Yes.(37:09) You’re implying it’s OK to do the labor of certain people (37:13) to provide care for other people. (37:16) I oppose this food. (37:18) Food is not a human right either, as it requires another’s labor.(37:21) Nor is clothing, you know, et cetera. Right. (37:24) Yeah, but nobody is a star of either.(37:27) Like nobody like, look, y’all, I live literally a mile and a half (37:32) just down the road from that infamous eight mile you saw in the movie. (37:36) And there’s beggars every day when I go to work. (37:41) Bangers are beggars.(37:43) Both. And guess what? (37:47) They’re getting money. (37:49) They’re getting money because people care about them.(37:52) Literally getting money. (37:54) Yeah, yeah. Holding up the red lights.(37:57) They’re literally holding up red lights and traffic to help somebody (38:02) who’s in need, whether it be a veteran or whoever. (38:04) There’s a guy out there that stands outside with a sign (38:07) every once in a while. (38:08) This is me.My wife took my house and my money. (38:11) I need help. (38:12) And people give them all kinds of money out of their very efforts.(38:17) I bet every time he’s standing out there, he has. (38:20) I’m getting money by Tupac in his ear every night, every day. (38:25) Wrapping it to.(38:26) But what I’m saying is that like everything can be funded voluntarily. (38:31) It happens on a daily basis, dude. (38:34) Nobody’s going to like for all the people who are like, oh, my God, (38:37) they took away school lunches.(38:39) Do you think somebody is going to let a child starve? (38:42) They didn’t let this piece of shit die in the hospital. (38:45) So they’re definitely not going to let a child starve in school, man. (38:51) I got in Iraq in 2018 and I broke both my legs (38:55) and both bones in my left leg, like my shit and stuff.(39:00) When that happened, I didn’t have insurance. (39:02) I mean, and I had a $50,000 bill, a bill just from the hospital. (39:09) I couldn’t afford that.(39:10) They had somebody donate to pay for it as a tax write off. (39:14) And it was a public public hospital, a state hospital. (39:18) It happens.People have ways of stepping in to help. (39:23) You just have to be willing to, you know, bite the bullet and say, yeah, OK, (39:27) as as long as there’s some kind of benefit for them as well. (39:31) That’s that’s great.(39:32) Thank you very much. (39:35) Totally. Yeah.(39:36) So so once again, to this point, (39:39) falling off like I’m like, hey, this is the point. (39:42) They weaponize our compassion against us. (39:44) This is how government does it.(39:46) What about the children? (39:47) What about your safety? (39:49) What about security? (39:51) This is how they sell this stuff to you guys. (39:53) And this is the 50000 foot view, guys. (39:55) This isn’t like I’m not admonishing people for believing what they believe.(39:59) You have to take a step back when they tell you something and ask, (40:03) what are they really trying to do? (40:05) It’s not protecting. (40:06) It’s not protecting children. (40:08) I can almost guarantee it’s not.(40:10) I can almost guarantee it’s not for your security or your safety. (40:13) It’s just to take and spread out to make other people weak. Right.(40:17) So in the conversation, the person replies, (40:22) we disagree about what we consider weapons and weaponization. (40:25) I know that my way brings joy and light into this effing world. (40:30) And yours brings darkness and misery.(40:35) So it took a turn. (40:37) Took a little terrorism is darkness and misery. (40:41) Yeah.Voluntarism is darkness and misery. (40:45) Yes. Love of God.(40:46) Make this make sense, because guess what? (40:50) Oh, man. (40:53) Voluntarism is a positive to society. (40:56) We see it every day.(40:57) No, like people are not going to let their fellow man starve. (41:01) They’re not going to let their fellow man freeze. (41:03) It happens all the time.(41:04) And then anytime somebody tries to help, look at what happened in Appalachia. (41:09) Now I’m going on a rant, sorry. (41:12) Look, we’re not even letting people go back to their homes in California.(41:15) They’re not allowed to go back to their properties. (41:18) Look at Lahaina. (41:19) Look at all these places where we’re talking about sweeping (41:24) Gaza and building up Gaza.(41:26) How about building our own home state luxury, gorgeous place called? (41:31) I don’t know. Lahaina. (41:33) How about rebuilding that fucking place? (41:36) Like, seriously, right? (41:37) How about we’re going to rebuild a place of all the places (41:41) that are beautiful and like Riviera, like (41:45) maybe Hawaii would be one of those beautiful fucking places.(41:49) I don’t know. Call me crazy. (41:51) They want to talk about positive, negative, right? (41:53) Shit, this, that or the other.(41:55) Like you are literally robbed on a daily fucking basis. (41:58) They steal your fucking money on a daily fucking basis (42:03) and give it to all their friends. (42:05) Meanwhile, when something catastrophic here happens in the United States, (42:09) you get a 700 dollar check.(42:12) Fuck off, man. (42:14) The state is not only a parasite, they are fucking Satan, period, (42:20) because there is nobody in their right mind (42:24) who is going to sit back and watch their fellow man (42:27) fucking freeze, starve or anything like that. (42:32) Nobody’s going to do that.(42:34) But the state will intervene. (42:35) Look at what they did. (42:36) Look what FEMA did in Appalachia.(42:38) I will never forgive this and I will never forget this. (42:42) FEMA turned down help in Appalachia (42:45) after the quote unquote hurricane, right? (42:49) Yeah, because it wasn’t their country that happened in the mountains (42:52) where mountains flooded, right? (42:54) Quote unquote, because that happens allegedly, right? (42:58) Because I elevations flood, right? (43:01) But anyways, they turned around (43:04) and told people who were trying to help them to kick rocks or pound sand. (43:10) And they’re literally trying to help their fellow human.(43:13) This is how evil the state is. (43:15) This is vile. (43:16) And meanwhile, in California right now.(43:19) That asshole, uh, uh, what’s his name? (43:23) I don’t know which one Gavin. (43:26) Gavin Newsom is literally at this point (43:30) telling the people who lost their homes and fires (43:33) that they’re going to eminent domain them and give them a little bit of cash. (43:39) Oh, they want to build 15 minutes.(43:41) Tell me, tell me your state is your friend and that you voted for this. (43:47) Tell me that right now. (43:48) And if you are one of those people, (43:50) you’re going to be the first ones walked onto a fucking boxcar.(43:56) Interesting. (43:56) I’m already on doesn’t have a podcast, everybody. (43:59) Sean is no longer podcasting.(44:01) He’s quit for good. (44:03) I can tell because I love it, man. (44:07) This shit.(44:07) It’s all I know. (44:08) I know. (44:09) It is not what they do to the American people on a daily basis (44:15) while they rob you and I and everybody else watching this show blind.(44:21) And they can’t even take care of the one I got people (44:23) living under bridges on eight mile and across all the United States. (44:28) There’s homeless people, but they’re going to send billions (44:31) of fucking dollars to other countries. (44:33) And you’re going to have the president of the United States (44:36) pulling out the chair for the literal fucking enemy of this country.(44:41) No, man, I am on a roll right now and I don’t feel bad about it. (44:46) I love I love. (44:47) All right, I’m sorry.(44:50) No, no. (44:50) Go ahead, Andrew. (44:51) No, you’re good.(44:52) They’ve got a history doing this, especially in Appalachia. (44:55) During the Obama administration, there was like a (44:59) I think a tornado or a series of tornadoes that hit the west side of the state. (45:04) And it was monumental amounts of destruction, just like the, you know, (45:08) the hurricanes that just recently happened.(45:11) And they just said, sorry about your luck. (45:13) We’re not going to help you. (45:15) That’s because Obama was too busy banging a guy.(45:18) They might. Yeah, I like, like, like, like, like. (45:22) Oh, man, I’m just saying.(45:25) I mean, it’s it’s this is what politics is. (45:29) It’s it’s visceral reactions, whatever you can get them. (45:33) That’s what I told you.(45:34) That’s how that’s how I don’t get blackmailed with politics. (45:37) I just troll it and then move on with my life. (45:39) You ain’t going to change anybody’s minds.(45:42) But what you can do is you can educate people to (45:45) stack up and figure out different means (45:49) to diversify in their wealth and hopefully get the fuck out. (45:54) It was as much. (45:56) Obviously, there’s there’s no way to decouple completely become self-sufficient (46:00) 100 percent, but just do those little things.(46:02) Put a little bit aside, put a little bit, you know, put a little food aside. (46:07) Put a little bit of money aside. (46:08) That’s not that’s not paper currency, you know, actual some kind of money.(46:12) You can become self-sufficient. (46:14) Oh, you could. (46:15) I’m not even talking about self-sufficiency.(46:18) No, but I mean, right. (46:19) We’re talking about base. (46:20) Right, because we’re talking about how many people live in the city, (46:22) like how many how many people are actually living in the city and stuff.(46:25) It’s not practical to like farm and out and to like (46:28) literally become completely self-sufficient. (46:31) But we can certainly direct people. (46:33) And we’re this is educational, guys.(46:35) Once again, I grow gardens, I rarely rely on the stores. (46:40) Beautiful. That’s awesome, man.(46:42) I would love to do that. (46:44) I don’t have that where I live, per se. (46:46) So I’ll have to move to something like that, which I’m looking for.(46:50) I will help you. (46:51) I will help anybody do that. (46:52) Like, you could do this beautiful.(46:54) I had a bad crop last year. (46:55) And you want to know why? (46:57) I didn’t. Oh, yeah.(46:58) The bees, the bees, man. (47:01) Raised bees, I swear to God. (47:03) Oh, well, but like your your your your negative rights (47:07) are growing your own food and hunting, by the way.(47:10) That’s what they call a negative, right? (47:13) So we’re right. (47:14) It’s like, hey, man, is not allowing you making you take every piece of cattle, (47:18) making you not be able to sell raw milk. (47:21) Those are your positive rights, right? (47:23) Forcing you to not be able to sell that stuff.(47:25) Another way to look at it is this. (47:27) There’s different eras like the antebellum era in the United States. (47:31) It depends on which area you’re looking at.(47:34) You have positive and negative rights that are just commonly associated (47:38) and that that you could practice without, you know, social pressure. (47:44) And it just goes out the window and into the backlog, (47:47) into like a political playbook. (47:49) They reintroduce those decades later as something new.(47:53) But it’s not. It’s it’s just something for them to make money off of. (47:59) And that would be a positive, right, man, that’s so positive, let me tell you.(48:03) So let me let’s go back to the conversations. (48:07) Once again, I was just told basically that (48:10) our way of thinking brings darkness and misery. (48:16) OK, when we when we left our when we left our friends, (48:19) we were nothing but darkness and misery.(48:21) So I wrote back. (48:22) I wrote back family and community, no power for our government to start wars. (48:28) No power to force us to do things, not stealing our money.(48:32) Those bring darkness and misery. (48:34) I’m sorry, I don’t understand. (48:38) Any thoughts on her smile on that response? (48:43) Well, obviously, you need to put more money on your (48:45) on your end so that you can now compete their idea.(48:49) I was going to say, just just start robbing the stores, (48:53) start robbing the hospitals. (48:55) Hey, if you can get robbed and everybody can rob them, why not? (48:58) Why can’t I just go run down and just go rob the pharmacy? (49:01) That’s a everybody’s coming. (49:03) You can.Well, that’s a positive. (49:05) Right. You can do it.Exactly right. (49:08) Right. Well, the government does it all the time, right? (49:11) Exactly.The government does it all the time. Right. (49:14) Yeah.So why can’t I get why can’t I go ahead and commit robbery? (49:18) Why can’t I kick in your door? (49:20) Andrew, while we’re gone, Mark, why can’t I show up, (49:23) kick in your door and hold you at gunpoint? (49:25) Well, I’ll be in jail, right? (49:29) Exactly. It’s kind of the point, right? (49:31) So here it is. (49:32) Let me finish out this last two points, because we got a couple more things (49:35) to talk about because it’s real important.(49:37) But basically, so. (49:40) I replied with my reply, and then the response I got was (49:44) you can’t force family and community. That’s correct.(49:47) You can’t force it. You voluntarily do it. (49:49) You’re right.You can’t force family and community. (49:51) What happened when we had little regulation, massive pollution, (49:55) mafia, crime, corruption and more. (49:57) You need government.(49:59) Otherwise, you wouldn’t have clean water or air, (50:02) and it wouldn’t be closer to the it would be closer to the purge every day. (50:06) Now, let me just finish mine before we comment, (50:09) because I just want to finish this part. (50:10) I wrote the government merely replaced mafia.(50:13) We required governance, not government. (50:15) Those are different things. (50:16) We disagree regarding government’s need for existence.(50:19) It’s not required. (50:20) Nation states brainwashed us to think government is required. (50:23) I used to think government was required just differently than you at one point.(50:27) We’re on philosophical ends of the spectrum. (50:30) So I go, I’m open to changing my mind. (50:32) Can you offer a book? (50:34) I offer Spooner, Rothbard, Mises.(50:38) And Justin jumped in. (50:39) We all know Justin. (50:40) He goes, what about Marx? (50:42) And I’m like, how’d that work out? (50:45) That’s the book you’re going to offer me is Marx.(50:48) Damn it. So. (50:49) So, guys, have that conversation.(50:52) Now, these are all people we all know and we we talk to every day. (50:57) And then you see this kind of response, (51:00) and it’s not anyone’s fault that you’re just not completely educated the way we are (51:05) because we had the luxury of digging the way we do. Right.(51:08) So what are your thoughts about that entire? (51:11) Like, how do we educate someone or how do we share our message (51:15) to someone like that who’s literally governments needed without it? (51:20) We would suck. (51:21) Like, what are like, what are those thoughts? (51:24) What are your thoughts on that? (51:28) Take it sack attack. (51:29) You better take it first.(51:31) Oh, oh, oh, oh, he’s leaving. (51:34) You made him walk off. (51:36) What the shit, man? (51:37) No, I’m just kidding.(51:38) Well, that’s what you do. (51:39) That’s literally what you do with somebody like that (51:41) because they’re not going to listen to you. (51:43) And sometimes why? (51:45) Why beat a dead horse? (51:46) So if they’re not going to listen and you’re not going to, (51:49) you’re not going to listen to them, you don’t agree with them.(51:51) They don’t agree with you. (51:53) You’re not going to come find common ground. (51:57) Just divorce, just walk away.(51:59) Was it worth so is it worth having the conversation to the level that we did? (52:03) And the reason I ask that is some other people are going to read that. (52:06) Right. Because other people see it.(52:08) Now, is it even worth engaging with that person? (52:11) Not necessarily because that person is, but because (52:16) but because like a bigger message can be sent as long as you keep kind of calm (52:20) about it, because there’s no character assassination needed here. (52:24) It’s like, oh, you’re just some stupid person who doesn’t think, you know what? (52:26) It’s like, no, you that’s just what you believe. (52:29) So let’s help.(52:30) Well, let’s say something different. (52:32) I would answer that question with a question and a reply. (52:36) And my question would be, what’s the difference between government and mafia? (52:41) And the answer is, at least the mafia takes care of their community.(52:47) It’s a very good point. (52:49) That is a good point. (52:51) It depends on who you’re speaking with.(52:53) Some people that they want to reduce risk as much as possible (52:58) so that they’ll feel they’ll appeal to the state at every level. (53:03) Your your best option in a situation like that is to, you know, (53:07) instead of having, you know, one state where everyone’s on the same page, (53:12) wouldn’t it be better? (53:14) We had multiple states that competed against each other (53:17) in order to make sure that, you know, there is a viable alternative (53:21) to your to your concerns. (53:24) And then, yeah, why do you need two states when you have three states? (53:28) We have 50 members of the United States, (53:32) but we’re all on the same page when it comes to the language we speak.(53:36) We all speak U.S. dollar (53:38) and we’re all suffering because we speak the U.S. dollar. (53:43) We have to have competition in order to guarantee (53:46) that something and a black swan event doesn’t take us all down. (53:52) Hold on.Are you saying that you would rather have 10,000 Lichtensteins? (53:58) Yes. Awesome. (54:03) I’d love a Lichtenstein.(54:05) I’ll tell you what, so it’s just a little tiny nation (54:09) with a monarch. I mean, he leaves you alone. (54:12) You pay you pay an interest fee lump sum and then you’re left alone.(54:16) Do your business. (54:20) All right, so one of the fun responses I got (54:24) from some person said the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (54:29) adopted by the United Nations General Assembly in 1948 (54:34) addresses health and access to health care services in Article 25 one, (54:40) which states, blah, blah, blah, blah. (54:41) Everyone has a right.(54:44) So I look at North Korea does to (54:48) North Korea has a bill. All right. (54:50) Right.It’s beautiful. (54:52) Right. So I wanted to share this because once again, (54:55) there was some shift in ideology generally.(54:58) Like, I think classic Democrats. (55:03) Had compassion. (55:05) And but they still worked and they contributed, (55:08) and then it got to a point where it’s like they want you to have compassion (55:12) for them, but they don’t want to contribute anymore.(55:15) And that’s not just like a sect of it, but it’s like they’re really loud. (55:19) You know what I mean? (55:20) They’re like super loud and they yelled top of the lungs. (55:22) So I’m going to play this and this is where it gets interesting.(55:25) Remember the U.N. (55:26) This person just told us that we should adopt the U.N. (55:31) Rights as Americans. (55:32) Right. It’s laughable.(55:34) It’s OK. I’ll play it because it’s just too fun. (55:39) And all of this work, we must put human rights at the core.(55:45) One of the greatest successes of the United Nations (55:48) is the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, (55:52) forged in those early days, in part by the leadership (55:56) of no other than Eleanor Roosevelt. (55:58) But as the former first lady argued, it isn’t enough that they put it down (56:04) on paper. They must exist in the world to the level of the individual person.(56:11) And she said, unless these rights have meaning there, (56:15) they have little meaning anywhere. (56:19) We must work to ensure universal human rights have meaning everywhere (56:25) in every country and context, including online. (56:35) All right.(56:37) So, I mean, you have you do have the right to go get Canadian health care. (56:43) How many things are wrong with like that? (56:46) Just her statement like, oh, the great Eleanor Roosevelt. (56:50) Oh, FDR was such a fucking great guy at times, right? (56:54) This is beautiful.(56:56) All right. Someone share with me what’s going on. (56:59) So this woman’s clamoring for the UN for these rights that we have to.(57:04) They can’t just be exist. (57:05) They can’t just exist. (57:06) Someone has to somehow force them on people.(57:11) This bitch is literally asking for outside interference to our country, (57:17) which is all stop like full stop at that point. (57:21) The UN, the UN is not an American country. (57:25) It’s not an American entity that is a League of Nations (57:28) who is an enemy to literally everyone, including to themselves, (57:32) except people don’t realize that.(57:35) But hey, it’s the end of stuff. (57:39) It’s the end of sovereignty that as we know it. (57:42) If you’re asking, I’m going to pull it up as we go here, (57:45) I’m going to let you guys try to read this and try to chime in on some of these (57:48) rights that the UN put on us here.(57:52) Let me let me make sure I got it. (58:03) I’m sorry, guys. (58:04) I hope you don’t hear hear that.(58:05) But some asshole just drove past with no muffler. (58:10) I did hear that. (58:12) That was interesting.(58:14) Yeah, I got another bean burrito in my old eyes. (58:19) Everyone has that. (58:21) And I had a bean burrito everywhere as a person before the law.(58:26) All right. Here it is. Here it is.(58:27) I’m going to share this guy. (58:30) Can you guys read that? (58:32) Or you guys need to zoom in a little bit more. (58:35) All right.Let me try. (58:35) What is this, a post for ants? (58:39) All right. Hopefully that’ll help.(58:42) That’s good. (58:42) All right. (58:43) Right to equal rights and freedoms.(58:45) Born and equal and dignity and rights. (58:48) Dude, all of us are born equally. (58:50) Yes, we are.That’s OK. (58:53) So check this out, y’all. (58:55) We are all born equally.(58:58) But it’s up to you. (59:00) You’re the individual to take yourself to a destination. (59:05) Not anybody else.(59:06) So, yes, we are born equal. (59:09) And then from there on out, it’s up to you to get yourself (59:12) where you want to be. Nobody else.(59:14) So, meh on that. (59:17) Well, we’re born a psalm of Rasa, but then, you know, our experiences guide (59:21) the way we our biases and that settles (59:25) with our within our personality and that guides us for the rest of our life. (59:30) Freedom of from discrimination, no discrimination based on race, (59:35) race, color, sex, language, religion, political opinion, national (59:39) or social origin, property, birth or status.(59:44) But let me ask you guys about that discrimination. (59:47) What is discrimination? (59:48) So we have the baker, right? (59:52) They don’t agree with someone, the same sex getting married. (59:56) So they refuse to bake the cake for that person.(59:59) Is that discrimination or is that is that just a stupid business decision? (1:00:07) Oh, I can take that from there as a business owner. (1:00:10) Most definitely. (1:00:12) Look, if you don’t want to bake the cake for the gay person, (1:00:16) you don’t have to bake the cake for the gay person.(1:00:20) That is within your right as an individual, as a business. (1:00:24) You don’t have to cater to that nonsense. (1:00:26) There’s many other places that will bake the cake for said person.(1:00:31) That’s the beauty of the free market, right? (1:00:35) Just just bake the fucking cake. (1:00:37) But if it’s against your religion or something like that, like I like, (1:00:41) there was one point where I refused as a painter to paint somebody’s prayer room. (1:00:48) I wasn’t going to paint it.(1:00:49) And I told them exactly why. (1:00:51) And I was with my rights to do that. (1:00:54) And if you want to take me to court for it, so be it.(1:00:57) I wasn’t painting his prayer room. (1:00:58) I wasn’t doing it because I don’t pray the way he does. (1:01:02) Right.So like that, then that’s that’s a real unique point, right? (1:01:05) Like where where does that become your choice? (1:01:08) And like discrimination, because discrimination just seems such a broad. (1:01:13) And it’s a it’s it’s it’s not a situation where you can, you know, stick (1:01:21) stick the landing. (1:01:22) It’s something that maneuvers and transitions to pay (1:01:26) depend on the context of the situation and how they can spin it for political gain.(1:01:32) That’s all the termination is. (1:01:34) If you’re talking liberty, liberty means the exact meaning of liberty, (1:01:40) not the bullshit they give you in the dictionary (1:01:44) or whatever faggot that decided what liberty was or whatever. (1:01:47) The true we got canceled again.(1:01:50) Is that people have the right to do things that you don’t agree with. (1:01:54) And as long as nobody is hurting somebody, (1:01:57) taking their stuff or violating private property, (1:02:00) it’s none of your goddamn business what they’re doing. (1:02:03) That’s what it is.(1:02:06) Well, Pete, this is a real quick per sex point. (1:02:11) I’ve read this before in North Korea for going through the U.N. rights. (1:02:16) OK, now, once again, I’m scrolling through this (1:02:18) and this next group just looks kind of reasonable.(1:02:21) The the legal stuff. OK, sure. (1:02:23) Then we get to this kind of stuff.(1:02:25) And I’ll wait. I’ll wait till you guys go ahead, Zack. (1:02:29) Oh, what I was going to say is (1:02:31) with discrimination, we all discriminate.(1:02:35) We all discriminate every day. (1:02:37) Like everybody’s judgmental. (1:02:39) Nobody wants to be around certain individuals.(1:02:43) Does it? It’s not a good or a bad thing. (1:02:45) It’s just a personal preference. (1:02:48) I mean, whether it’s with your business, whether it’s with your personality, (1:02:52) we all discriminate and to for enforce something upon (1:02:59) somebody else to do something that you don’t necessarily have to (1:03:03) nor want to do is just going to cause issues in the long run.(1:03:08) Typically what we call social decadence, (1:03:11) when you convert so much cultural confusion (1:03:16) into a diverse melting pot, you’re going to have some issues (1:03:21) and you’re going to eventually going to have a call for violence. (1:03:25) So you’re going to discrimination. (1:03:27) You enforce discrimination as a goal to end it.(1:03:31) You’re going to get more discrimination. (1:03:34) Yeah, well, I mean, it’s it’s true. (1:03:36) It’s like the race thing.(1:03:37) If if you’re going to base on race, (1:03:40) then you’re going to become more focused on race. (1:03:45) Yes, is the exact opposite of what you’re trying to do. (1:03:49) Exactly.Yeah. (1:03:50) So it becomes that over or boros, right? (1:03:53) The self-feeding market would would weed the bad shit of that out, though. (1:03:58) The free market, the actual free market.(1:04:02) Would weed out the bad seeds, it really would, because there’s (1:04:06) you have access to social media, there’s X and Facebook and Instagram (1:04:11) and all the other fucking books there are. (1:04:13) You know what I’m saying? Like, right. (1:04:16) It’s not like it’s, you know, I understand a lot of people’s arguments (1:04:20) about the free market 100 years ago, right? (1:04:24) Before social media and all that stuff.(1:04:26) I do understand a little bit of that, a little bit of that. (1:04:33) Because it was taking advantage of people, per se. (1:04:37) But nowadays, there’s so much media (1:04:41) and so much clapback in a situation to where like.(1:04:46) Nobody’s going to get away like hypothetically. (1:04:51) Hypothetically, I own a business and I do, but like I’m just saying (1:04:56) hypothetical at this point in my business is only going to. (1:05:02) Cater to people who look like me, per se, right, (1:05:07) or talk like me, act like me, whatever, maybe political philosophies, whatever.(1:05:12) My business is only going to cater to people like me. (1:05:18) Right. But then you somebody could go on Facebook (1:05:25) or Instagram or X or fuck book (1:05:29) or whatever book is out there at that point, there really is a fuck book, (1:05:32) by the way, it sounds like.(1:05:34) Wait a second. What? (1:05:36) Oh, yeah, there’s a fuck book there. (1:05:38) It’s a hookup site, most definitely.(1:05:40) Cancellation number four. (1:05:43) But like, but like I’m just counting. (1:05:45) I’m counting all the strikes against me.(1:05:47) I think YouTube’s going to fucking cancel me today. (1:05:49) I think we’re just done. (1:05:50) Well, no, no, no.(1:05:52) People can get on their social media platforms to be like, yo, (1:05:56) this guy only caters to these people. (1:05:59) Don’t use them. (1:06:01) And then my business is going to suffer for that.(1:06:05) That’s the solution. (1:06:06) See, that’s what the free market provides. (1:06:09) Right.So government exactly market. (1:06:12) You’re not allowed to be like, yo, unless it’s for the gays (1:06:16) and be like, you should bake that cake for the gays or whatever. (1:06:20) No.In a true free market, you don’t have to bake the cake. (1:06:25) And oh, by the way, there’s no bank bailouts either in a true free market (1:06:30) and free market capitalism. (1:06:32) There is no bank bailouts.(1:06:34) Those businesses fail. (1:06:36) All of the oil companies, everybody who’s failing fails. (1:06:40) But what if they’re too big to fail? (1:06:43) Now, that’s where you get your corporate (1:06:46) ism, crony capitalism bullshit, (1:06:49) which is what you just provided just now.(1:06:52) So here we are. Right. (1:06:53) So here’s the thing.(1:06:55) Zach brings up the point. (1:06:56) Selective discrimination is really just it is being a type of selective. (1:07:02) Now, that’s going to burn you.(1:07:05) If I knew that you were not going to bake the cake, I’d be like, (1:07:08) I bake a freaking I’d be like a fucking cake for anybody. (1:07:11) I’ll bet you you’re a Nazi. (1:07:13) Come on over.I’ll put swastikas all over that. (1:07:14) Let’s just go. (1:07:15) You want me to put a hammer and a sickle on this? (1:07:17) I’m walking to it because for you, because I speak green, bitches, (1:07:21) I speak green, right, or silver or gold, whatever you speak, right? (1:07:25) I speak anything.(1:07:27) And that’s because that’s what happens. (1:07:30) You don’t just you don’t knock down the business. (1:07:32) You don’t regulate the business to force them to do something.(1:07:37) You just the niche will come where someone will compete (1:07:40) and destroy that market or their myopic ideology, right? (1:07:44) The market will always provide. (1:07:46) Read Rothbard, read Rothbard, read Rothbard. (1:07:50) All right, so we got all this.(1:07:52) Oh, right to marriage and family. (1:07:55) They have the right to do that. (1:07:57) What the fuck does that mean? (1:07:59) I have no clue what that means.(1:08:01) Help me understand what the right to. (1:08:03) Isn’t that just like the pursuit of a positive right? (1:08:07) Are they trying to? Yes. (1:08:09) Actually, in a weird way, I mean, the U.N. (1:08:12) Charter is kind of doing this anyway.(1:08:14) Go ahead. Let me try to define that. (1:08:16) The right to marriage and family.(1:08:19) I think that’s just another way of saying (1:08:23) you have the right to be taxed. (1:08:28) Jointly or as an individual (1:08:30) or in their solo or solo, that’s basically it. (1:08:35) There.Of course, there’s no. (1:08:38) Yeah, you’ve any merit, right? (1:08:39) You have a right to be identified as a couple or as a single (1:08:42) when we tax you for your exactly the government. (1:08:46) It’s probably.But those are positive. (1:08:49) Those are positive rights. (1:08:51) Oh, they are.(1:08:52) They’re so have a right to own a property, everybody. (1:08:56) You have a right to property (1:08:57) as long as you pay your tax on it, this country once again. (1:09:01) Yeah.Well, this is the thing, like the right to own property (1:09:06) isn’t that you are given property. (1:09:10) It’s that you have the opportunity (1:09:13) to acquire property. (1:09:16) Isn’t it a different conversation, right? (1:09:19) If you can settle it, you can build upon it.(1:09:22) You can make it a home or a place of business or both. (1:09:26) Then that gives you property rights to the standard of the law. (1:09:32) But nobody actually has a right to own property (1:09:36) because you have to get out there and acquire that property.(1:09:42) So how do we manage? (1:09:44) Yeah. So how do we manage everybody to have some sort of home to own (1:09:49) unless they just want us to be a nation of renters or a world of renters? (1:09:54) With the RDR, though, that’s the problem. (1:09:57) We already are.Right. (1:09:58) That’s what they’re pushing. (1:09:59) We already are.(1:10:02) And they’re doing it through taxes, too, guys. (1:10:04) It ain’t not just it’s not just culture. (1:10:07) It’s not just millennial van life culture.(1:10:10) It is through taxes and regulations because every year (1:10:15) my property tax keeps getting more and more. (1:10:18) My home insurance gets keeping getting bigger. (1:10:20) Every repair costs more.(1:10:22) And it’s like, at what point is renting worth owning at that point? (1:10:27) Right, because you talk about keeping an asset and growing (1:10:29) and it almost becomes self-defeating to a point when you get taxed (1:10:34) the hell out of it. (1:10:35) I got I’ll add that on there because I have on my mortgage. (1:10:40) I actually have my taxes paid out through the equity, which makes it easy.(1:10:44) It fucks you on the equity, but whatever. (1:10:47) I’d rather just deal with it. (1:10:49) Almost had a heart attack because I looked at my bill.(1:10:52) I looked at my bank account three days ago and I was like down to like 100. (1:10:58) I’m like, what? (1:10:59) And I’m like, nine hundred and fifty dollars. (1:11:02) Like, this is like three hundred and fifty dollars more than my mortgage.(1:11:05) I’m like, what? (1:11:07) And I look at the bill. (1:11:08) I’m like, it’s because of the taxes for this year. (1:11:10) But like it’s gone up because I mean up.(1:11:13) For the quarter or whatever, because you just I just paid an extra (1:11:19) like 70 to 100 dollars. (1:11:23) And it’s only February (1:11:25) and we haven’t even gotten to the end of the year yet. (1:11:28) That’s going to probably be all that.(1:11:31) I’m fucked. (1:11:32) I’m going to have to work overtime. (1:11:34) Here’s a real hot take for all of you.(1:11:38) Slavery was never abolished. (1:11:39) It was national. (1:11:40) It wasn’t see tax became debt.(1:11:43) It became a nation. (1:11:45) We’ll see the 13th Amendment. (1:11:47) I mean, taxation is basically repeating debt.(1:11:52) Even every year you owe. (1:11:54) It’s like a debt that you owe at the end of every year. Right.(1:11:57) So really, taxes is not any different than a debt that you owe (1:12:00) or that they are. I’m sorry that you owe. (1:12:03) I’m sorry that they bill you, that they charge.(1:12:06) It’s not one that you actually owe, right? (1:12:09) It’s like they charge you five. (1:12:12) Do not pay your taxes. (1:12:14) Stop voting.(1:12:15) Stop consenting to this shit, (1:12:19) because every time you become your own bank. (1:12:23) Become your own bank. (1:12:25) Decentralize yourself.(1:12:26) Get into gold. Get into silver. (1:12:28) We have a big difference of opinion when it comes to the block chain.(1:12:32) I understand that. (1:12:33) And that should actually be a debate for a show. (1:12:36) Well, just diversify and diversify.(1:12:40) Yeah, we’ll bring diversity is a plus. (1:12:43) That’s a net positive when it comes to your portfolio, (1:12:47) because even the people in the know within the fiat (1:12:50) nonsense are telling people to get out of fiat currency (1:12:53) and get in themselves and into bonds. (1:12:57) But which bonds? (1:12:58) Most likely government bonds, which is extremely scarier.(1:13:03) You know, just get out of it completely like I’ll tell you what, y’all. (1:13:08) Gold is the rich man’s game. (1:13:10) That is that is something that will get you killed most likely (1:13:13) if you have the money to do it in a world where (1:13:18) it was important.(1:13:21) So that’s why you go after silver. (1:13:23) Silver is actually the peasant’s gold. (1:13:27) That would be copper.(1:13:29) No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no. (1:13:30) Silver is the middle class. (1:13:32) Let me finish.(1:13:34) Let me finish. Go ahead. (1:13:36) Silver is the poor’s gold (1:13:39) because they’re silver in your stupid-ass phones.(1:13:44) Like who doesn’t have a phone? (1:13:46) You know what I mean? (1:13:47) And it’s very, very much economical (1:13:52) for anybody who’s in the working class. (1:13:55) Now, copper, copper’s for the poor. (1:13:59) Copper- (1:14:00) But you just said silver is for the poorest.(1:14:02) No, for the working class. (1:14:04) Oh. (1:14:05) Well, copper is for the poor.(1:14:08) All right, all right, all right. (1:14:11) Enough already. (1:14:13) No, I’m just kidding.(1:14:14) I’m just fucking with you guys. (1:14:15) Keep talking, man. (1:14:17) Well, no, because copper, (1:14:18) copper’s actually outperforming gold and silver (1:14:21) percentage-wise.(1:14:23) It’s also- (1:14:24) But it’s like at 2013 Bitcoin levels of purchase. (1:14:30) So yes, buy copper. (1:14:31) And it’s easier to find.(1:14:33) Buy copper, buy copper, buy copper. (1:14:37) If you’re- (1:14:37) Find it out of everybody’s- (1:14:38) Buy copper. (1:14:40) Out of every boarded up house.(1:14:41) Exactly. (1:14:42) Why do I need to buy it when I can just steal it? (1:14:44) Go to Detroit and steal it out of every copper, (1:14:46) out of every- (1:14:47) Do not come to my house in Detroit, though. (1:14:49) I will kill you.(1:14:50) I’m coming to Sean’s house. (1:14:51) If you come to my house and try to rob me, (1:14:53) I will fucking kill you. (1:14:54) So guys- (1:14:54) Oh, there’s no robbery about it.(1:14:57) You won’t be home. (1:14:59) It’ll be sad. (1:15:00) My dogs are home and they will eat you alive.(1:15:02) I promise you that. (1:15:04) They’ll love me. (1:15:05) I’ll play with David Bowie.(1:15:06) There are only 10 total here left. (1:15:08) Look at the rest of this list, guys. (1:15:11) The right to rest and leisure.(1:15:16) I like that one. (1:15:17) What the hell does that mean? (1:15:19) I like that one. (1:15:20) What is that? (1:15:21) The right to be a lazy ass.(1:15:23) I mean, go take a nap then, motherfucker. (1:15:25) Like, what the fuck? (1:15:26) What does that mean exactly? (1:15:27) The right to have a siesta. (1:15:30) Have a- (1:15:30) I mean, I get that that’s like what people like.(1:15:34) What is the right to free and fair world? (1:15:37) Positive blame, at least. (1:15:40) George Carlin’s best lines. (1:15:42) Oh, God.(1:15:43) Duties to the community, (1:15:44) responsibilities toward the community, (1:15:46) and respect for the rights of others. (1:15:48) Okay. (1:15:50) Well, no, but they’re positive (1:15:53) because they’re forced upon you.(1:15:54) Yeah. (1:15:56) I mean, it’s common sense, but it’s- (1:15:58) The right to rest and leisure? (1:16:00) But this is the point. (1:16:01) How did- (1:16:02) Okay, declaring that as a right, (1:16:07) see, like, to me, right is all, (1:16:09) is just opportunity in some cases, (1:16:11) whereas we have fricking birthrights.(1:16:14) Like, we are born free. (1:16:17) Like, you cannot oppress me. (1:16:20) That’s it, right? (1:16:21) That’s a birthright.(1:16:22) So what are your thoughts on these weird, (1:16:25) these things at the end here? (1:16:26) Like, what’s going on? (1:16:29) Well, what they do is they make it very vague (1:16:32) so that they can have justification (1:16:34) to implement an invasion, like in Iraq. (1:16:39) Like, they need language that’s not terribly strong, (1:16:43) but it’s just strong enough that they say, (1:16:45) oh, well, you’re doing this. (1:16:47) It’s violating our charter.(1:16:50) Gaza. (1:16:51) Actually, that’s an excellent point. (1:16:52) So what I want to share is this Australian thing.(1:16:55) Now, we saw what happened with COVID. (1:16:58) In Australia, right? (1:17:00) They gave up their guns, (1:17:02) and then they got quarantined, right? (1:17:04) Like, literally, Australia is like America 2.0. (1:17:08) It’s as close to America as- (1:17:09) Well, they gave up their guns in 1996, though. (1:17:11) That’s the big- (1:17:12) Well, yeah, but I’m just saying, (1:17:13) like, this is a culture, like, over time, right? (1:17:15) It wasn’t like the day of, right? (1:17:17) It wasn’t like they surrendered the gun (1:17:18) and then went into a camp, like- (1:17:20) Increments.(1:17:21) I’m just saying, like, the culture over time. (1:17:24) Watch the way this propaganda video (1:17:26) explains the rights. (1:17:28) And it’s like, it’s just two minutes, (1:17:30) but it’s like, imagine you’re a kid and you watch this, (1:17:33) and you don’t have, like, the message like we do.(1:17:35) You’re going to start getting programmed, (1:17:38) and this is why we need to deprogram. (1:17:39) This thing sounds great, (1:17:41) but it’s like, it’s so propagandist. (1:17:46) Human rights.(1:17:47) What are human rights? (1:17:49) Human rights are the fundamental freedoms and protections (1:17:52) that belong to every single one of us, (1:17:54) regardless of race, gender, sexuality, (1:17:58) religion, or beliefs. (1:18:01) Rights are about being treated and treating others fairly (1:18:04) and ensuring everyone can make choices (1:18:06) about their own lives. (1:18:08) They’re about justice, freedom, and equality.(1:18:10) Here’s a quick breakdown of your rights. (1:18:13) The Universal Declaration of Human Rights (1:18:15) states that all humans are born free (1:18:18) and equal in dignity and in rights. (1:18:21) They’re endowed with reason and conscience (1:18:22) and should act towards one another in a spirit of kinship, (1:18:26) which means that no matter who you are, (1:18:28) the very fact that you’re a human being (1:18:30) grants you these rights.(1:18:32) Your life is your life, (1:18:34) and it cannot be unjustly taken from you (1:18:36) just because some people don’t like you, (1:18:38) and that is regardless of what nationality you are, (1:18:41) cultural background, religion, or political views. (1:18:45) You may not be forced into slavery, (1:18:47) and you’re not required to follow any social obligations, (1:18:50) constraints, or restrictions (1:18:51) others might feel you have due to your race, (1:18:55) sex, gender identity, or sexual orientation. (1:18:59) You have the right to start a family and own property, (1:19:02) and nobody can say that you can’t.(1:19:05) If you become sick, you have the right to healthcare. (1:19:08) You also have the right to education (1:19:09) and any other necessary social services, (1:19:12) such as disability care, for example. (1:19:15) No person or entity can ever take these rights away from you.(1:19:19) If your government infringes on any of these rights, (1:19:22) you have the right to seek asylum and refuge (1:19:24) in another nation. (1:19:26) At work, you have the right to fair working conditions, (1:19:29) fair and equal pay, (1:19:31) and the right to join and form trade unions (1:19:33) to protect your interests. (1:19:35) You also have the right to rest and leisure, (1:19:37) including holidays.(1:19:38) If you have a run-in with the law, (1:19:40) you may not be subjected to any cruel or unusual punishment, (1:19:44) and you cannot be punished before first being proven guilty (1:19:47) in a court of law. (1:19:48) If you feel a law is unjust, (1:19:50) you have the right to protest, making phone calls, (1:19:53) writing to your leaders, (1:19:54) or by peacefully taking it to the streets. (1:19:56) These rights are there to protect you and your loved ones.(1:20:00) They also exist to protect your neighbours, (1:20:02) your friends, your rivals, (1:20:04) and even people whose opinions or lifestyles (1:20:06) you don’t agree with. (1:20:08) These are some of your human rights, (1:20:10) yours and everyone else’s. (1:20:12) Together, we can protect them.(1:20:14) When we do, all our lives are better, (1:20:16) and we create a better world for everyone. (1:20:22) This sounds like some socialist bullshit (1:20:25) out of the 1840s experiment (1:20:28) of the Republican rip in Wisconsin. (1:20:31) That’s right.(1:20:32) You know, to protect you, (1:20:34) we’re gonna have to make you do good things under our gun, (1:20:38) you know, at the end of our guns, right? (1:20:41) Truth be told, I mean, (1:20:42) the, it, honestly, it’s Marxist thought (1:20:47) woven within the fine line of everyday ideology. (1:20:53) You have the right to this if you can maintain it (1:20:56) and be responsible for your freedom, (1:20:59) but due to the, I don’t know, how do I explain this? (1:21:06) Just due to the topsy-turvyness of what Marxism (1:21:10) and how it has used culture to bring the world to its knees, (1:21:19) I don’t know where I’m going with this. (1:21:20) It just, it flip-flops.(1:21:22) It just, it’s a cause for- (1:21:24) No, totally, because it’s like, it’s permeated. (1:21:25) It’s permeated through culture. (1:21:27) Like, this is the thing that they would play for children.(1:21:30) And you’re like, Mommy, Daddy, (1:21:32) I just found out I have a right to healthcare. (1:21:34) And you’re like, what, what is, what? (1:21:35) You have a right to healthcare? (1:21:37) Like, I have a right to start, like, (1:21:40) the only, the right we have is for you (1:21:42) to get out of our fucking way. (1:21:43) Stay the fuck out.(1:21:45) Like, that’s it. (1:21:46) All these rights, like 90% of the rights (1:21:48) that they wanna force on us are more leave us alone rights. (1:21:52) Basically, leave us alone.(1:21:54) But then they sprinkle in that one or two (1:21:56) where they can rule you and they can control you. (1:21:59) You know what I mean? (1:22:00) By like, by making healthcare a right, (1:22:03) who they’re robbing from, (1:22:06) they’re stealing from their own people or someone else, (1:22:08) another culture to provide medicine, (1:22:11) to provide the labor for the doctors and the nurses (1:22:14) and all the blood work and all the testing (1:22:16) and the equipment. (1:22:19) And it’s funny, because per Sean’s point, (1:22:23) he had an injury and someone was able to help (1:22:27) and he was able to repay it or however, you know, (1:22:29) however that worked out.(1:22:31) But there are groups like that. (1:22:33) And like, to think that people don’t have compassion (1:22:37) is ridiculous. (1:22:39) Because we feel like you shouldn’t take from someone else, (1:22:42) I don’t know, doesn’t make me compassionate.(1:22:44) It makes me compassionate for the person (1:22:46) that you’re stealing from. (1:22:48) I just have a different compassion than you do. (1:22:51) And I think that everyone gets what they get.(1:22:53) It’s just shitty, but that’s life. (1:22:54) Like, that’s how it works, right? (1:22:56) Well, it’s also, it kind of reminds me, (1:22:59) it’s the same type of rhetoric that the radical, (1:23:03) the radicals of the new Republican Party (1:23:07) forged in politics of the day in the 1850s and 60s. (1:23:11) We need to eradicate slavery.(1:23:13) We need to force it and we need to amend it (1:23:15) to the constitution. (1:23:17) And it’s interesting that they said, (1:23:19) they brought up that idea that you have the right (1:23:23) to not be enslaved. (1:23:24) But in this world today, we probably have (1:23:28) the highest percentage of slavery in this world today (1:23:31) than we’ve ever had at any time (1:23:34) in the history of human civilization.(1:23:37) And I don’t know if it’s percentage, (1:23:38) but it is definitely number. (1:23:40) I think it’s by actual number. (1:23:42) We have more slaves than we did.(1:23:45) We are all slaves. (1:23:46) We need to stop this right now. (1:23:48) We are all slaves.(1:23:50) All of us, every single one of us who go to work every day (1:23:54) to have half our money stolen from us, (1:23:56) we are all slaves, period. (1:23:59) It’s a 100%. (1:24:01) I think that’s serfdom.(1:24:03) You’re bound to the land, you work that land (1:24:07) and the rewards of your work goes back (1:24:10) to the landowning elite. (1:24:12) That’s the same as slavery. (1:24:14) It’s the same, like there’s no difference.(1:24:17) Nobody is entitled to your money ever, ever. (1:24:20) But the difference between a slave and a serf though (1:24:24) is at least you have the freedom of movement. (1:24:26) You can still go to town as a serf.(1:24:30) You’re still just gonna be robbed by your gang. (1:24:35) Everyone’s got a trade-off. (1:24:37) Also, nobody’s cracking whips.(1:24:39) Thomas Sowell strikes again. (1:24:43) Crack whips, nobody’s robbing you, that’s fine. (1:24:46) It’s all good.(1:24:49) Americans have gone full retard, like straight up. (1:24:53) Americans have gone full on retard. (1:24:57) Strike eight.(1:24:59) Does anybody know when healthcare (1:25:01) became this thing to champion? (1:25:05) Like literally, can anyone go back to when- (1:25:07) They tried to push it significantly after World War II. (1:25:10) Yeah, especially after World War II, (1:25:12) but you could theoretically go even earlier and- (1:25:16) Is it because they were gonna have (1:25:17) a baby boom moment after the war? (1:25:19) I mean, is that what they were looking for? (1:25:20) Well, they had all this excess capital (1:25:22) and they thought they could pull it off. (1:25:25) Another thing is, oh, go ahead, Andrew.(1:25:29) I’ll finish my thought when you’re finished. (1:25:31) No, it’s fine. (1:25:32) I was just saying, like I said, (1:25:33) they had all this excess capital (1:25:35) and they thought they could pull it off, (1:25:38) but they couldn’t there in that moment.(1:25:41) So what they did is put it on the back burner (1:25:42) and try to invest in it politically for a long time. (1:25:48) And this is all that they’ve been trying to do, (1:25:51) is make it universal like they do all over the world. (1:25:55) Yeah, and the other just irreparable, (1:26:01) disgusting reason for the universal idea (1:26:06) transcending over the West (1:26:07) and how Western medicine has become what it is today, (1:26:10) which there are positives, (1:26:14) just like there’s pros and cons in everything, (1:26:16) but the rise of the pharmaceutical corporations (1:26:21) and the big pharmaceutical innovation (1:26:25) came with the consolidation of Rockefeller (1:26:30) basically giving the middle finger to the government.(1:26:34) Like, oh, well, you wanna break up my monopoly (1:26:38) into all these little types of brands? (1:26:40) Whatever, who cares? (1:26:41) I still own them. (1:26:43) I’m gonna enmesh into contracts (1:26:45) with different medicinal sources (1:26:49) and I’m gonna use my standard oil (1:26:51) because we’re starting to realize- (1:26:53) Yeah, it actually made them like vein in throughout (1:26:55) and fester throughout the rest of the- (1:26:57) Yep, fester. (1:26:58) And we can utilize petroleum-based medications (1:27:02) to get people sicker and yet treat them and they get well, (1:27:08) but they keep coming back.(1:27:10) So you have this thick twisted conspiracy, I guess, (1:27:15) you could say, so you can put your tinfoil hat on, (1:27:17) but it really is real history (1:27:19) if you go back to Rockefeller and big pharma and oil (1:27:23) and big oil and just government tyrant. (1:27:28) Get one of those underwater. (1:27:32) Yeah, oh, Alex, since you’re here.(1:27:35) They’re making the progs gay. (1:27:36) They’re making Trump gay. (1:27:38) They’re playing YMCA on repeat.(1:27:41) I repeat, they’re playing YMCA on loop. (1:27:43) It keeps playing throughout (1:27:45) and it keeps doing the jerk off that it do, guys. (1:27:47) It’s crazy.(1:27:48) It’s turning them gay and he’s turning Zionists (1:27:51) because he wants to sweep the Gaza. (1:27:55) I’m just here to make America gay again. (1:27:58) All right, guys.(1:28:00) Listen, if they’re trying to make Trump (1:28:03) suck a golf ball through Gartner Owens (1:28:05) in order to stop World War III, (1:28:07) I’d suck a golf ball through Gartner Owens. (1:28:10) Just trust me. (1:28:12) He’s got the jaw strength (1:28:15) and the succular capacity to do such a thing.(1:28:19) I’m just here to make America hate the enemy again. (1:28:25) Oh, God, is that Iran or China? (1:28:28) China, it was China’s fault. (1:28:31) Everything is China’s fault.(1:28:33) Everything is the US’s fault except the US’s. (1:28:37) All right. (1:28:38) I just want to put a bow on this (1:28:39) before we bullshit some more.(1:28:41) Human rights, guys, natural rights. (1:28:43) We’re pretty much all in agreement here. (1:28:46) We recommend Spooner to read.(1:28:48) We didn’t get into too many quotes, (1:28:50) but we all, I would like to argue that we have compassion. (1:28:54) And I’d like to think that we could help people out. (1:28:56) We would.(1:28:57) And if people could help us out, they would. (1:28:59) And if we could go back and forth, (1:29:01) we would help be reciprocal. (1:29:03) That said, I understand there are bad people (1:29:05) and try to steal your money, (1:29:06) but that doesn’t mean a bigger entity (1:29:08) should steal all of our money (1:29:09) and spend it incorrectly as well.(1:29:13) So final thoughts on that before we call, (1:29:15) before we just have some more bullshit session. (1:29:22) Nobody owns you. (1:29:23) Nobody owns your life.(1:29:25) Nobody owns your property. (1:29:26) So that being said, move on. (1:29:30) If you’re falling for a political party (1:29:32) who simps for a statist, you’re a retard.(1:29:37) If you’re falling for somebody who is trying to, (1:29:44) huh? (1:29:46) Eight, five. (1:29:48) Yeah, I was wondering how many times (1:29:49) that’s like eight or nine cancellations. (1:29:51) Now, we’re like, how many strikes we got? (1:29:54) You went retard on us, man.(1:29:56) You went retard, okay? (1:29:58) Well, you don’t have me on your show and not expect me. (1:30:01) No, I’m just, that’s how the show is. (1:30:05) Hey, hey, Rumble is free speech.(1:30:07) Don’t expect me to behave. (1:30:08) I don’t know how to behave. (1:30:09) I give you a big hug.(1:30:10) Big hug, big hug, man. (1:30:11) You know I love you. (1:30:12) I love you a long time, but faggots are retards.(1:30:15) What are you, gay? (1:30:15) It’s not okay. (1:30:17) Are you gay, Sean? (1:30:19) Do you love another man? (1:30:21) No, Trump does, the same as Bibi. (1:30:24) They fuck each other in the ass on the fucking daily, dude.(1:30:28) Because, hey, we’re just gonna bow down to the enemy. (1:30:31) My name is Donald Trump. (1:30:35) My name is Donald Trump, (1:30:36) and I’m gonna bow down to the enemy of America.(1:30:40) That’s what every Libertarian has bowed down to (1:30:44) at this point, is we’re, (1:30:46) and we’re gonna double down on him sleeping with the enemy, (1:30:50) even though the enemy is somebody we have spoken against (1:30:54) for many, many, many years at this point. (1:30:56) But hey, I digress. (1:30:58) It doesn’t matter.(1:31:00) Look, get out of the Libertarian Party as fast as you can. (1:31:04) Grow up and become an agorist. (1:31:07) Grow up and become an anarchist (1:31:09) and get the fuck out of that situation, (1:31:11) because that political party is not coming to save you, (1:31:15) just like the Republicans and Democrats are.(1:31:17) There’s no political solutions to what is happening today. (1:31:22) The only solution is free markets and liberty. (1:31:28) I don’t care.(1:31:30) Sean, call it the alt-right pipeline. (1:31:33) Amen to that. (1:31:35) And with that, (1:31:37) let’s bring up that clip with David Friedman.(1:31:40) What about the poor? (1:31:41) What about, we all have compassion, right? (1:31:44) So we all have compassion. (1:31:46) So what is the difference between positive and negative (1:31:48) rights and what can we do to help those that are lower? (1:31:54) What would a different system that involves, (1:31:57) like Sean said, free markets do for the poor? (1:32:03) All right. (1:32:04) You guys all ready? (1:32:05) Yep.(1:32:06) Here we go. (1:32:08) It’s about four minutes, just so everybody knows. (1:32:11) Some people have no money, no friends, and no heirs.(1:32:14) Would these people also have no rights (1:32:16) in an anarcho-capitalist society? (1:32:19) Now, if you have somebody with no money at all (1:32:21) and nobody who likes him and is willing to help him out, (1:32:24) he may not be able to afford (1:32:26) to have a rights enforcement agency, (1:32:27) and so he might indeed be perfectly helpless. (1:32:30) But of course, people in the equivalent of that situation (1:32:32) can be perfectly helpless now, (1:32:34) and they can even be the people (1:32:35) that the government goes after for one reason. (1:32:38) I think it’s very hard in any system (1:32:40) to prevent mistreatment of people (1:32:42) who really have no friends and no assets.(1:32:45) The anarcho-capitalist system allows the option (1:32:48) of not paying for rights protection and not getting it, (1:32:52) whereas the present system, (1:32:53) the only option is pay for rights protection (1:32:56) the price we decide to charge (1:32:58) and get whatever level of rights protection (1:33:01) we choose to give you. (1:33:02) Under anarcho-capitalism, (1:33:04) would the rich have more rights than the poor? (1:33:07) Bob would like to be free to steal from Alice. (1:33:11) He’d like to have legal rules agreed to (1:33:14) between their two agencies, (1:33:15) which say that when Alice comes to complain (1:33:18) about the fact that Bob has just mugged her (1:33:20) and he’s taken her purse, (1:33:22) the agency will ignore it and say, (1:33:24) that’s not against the law.(1:33:25) And then the question is, how much is it worth to Bob? (1:33:27) The amount it’s worth to Bob (1:33:29) is the amount he can steal from Alice (1:33:31) minus the cost to him of the effort of stealing it. (1:33:35) If Bob believes he can steal $100 from Alice, (1:33:39) he’d be willing to pay something less than $100 more (1:33:42) to his rights enforcement agency (1:33:44) if he can get a contract which specifies (1:33:46) that it’s not illegal for him to steal from Alice. (1:33:49) From Alice’s standpoint, (1:33:51) his stealing $100 is the cost of more than $100 (1:33:54) because there’s also all the efforts she makes (1:33:56) to hold it down to $100, stealing 200.(1:34:00) So that means the value to her of being protected (1:34:02) is greater than the value to him (1:34:04) of being able to violate her rights. (1:34:05) So I think you would expect in any case (1:34:08) that involved violations as it were of a monetary sort, (1:34:11) such as stealing money or objects, (1:34:14) that you would end up getting the legal rule (1:34:17) that maximized the sum to benefit (1:34:19) to all of the parties involved, (1:34:21) and that’s typically gonna be rights respecting. (1:34:24) The mass market is not the market of very wealthy people (1:34:28) or very poor people, the people in between.(1:34:30) So if you look at the auto industry, (1:34:33) it spends very, very little of its resources (1:34:35) making gold-plated limousines for Bill Gates (1:34:40) or his equivalent, and spends most of its resources (1:34:44) making cars in a range (1:34:46) that the mass of the population can buy. (1:34:48) And I would expect that probably rights enforcement agencies (1:34:51) would follow a similar strategy. (1:34:53) In terms of actual bribery, (1:34:55) it would be a very serious problem (1:34:58) for a private court to accept bribes.(1:35:03) People will start refusing to use that court (1:35:05) because either of us want to have a court (1:35:07) where you know that we’re gonna be bidding against each other (1:35:10) by giving offering money to the judge, (1:35:11) and we’re gonna lose that money, (1:35:13) and one or the other of us will win. (1:35:14) So my guess is that the risks of bribery are largest (1:35:18) when the people who you are bribing (1:35:20) are as it were spending someone else’s money. (1:35:23) So if you imagine a fairly common pattern, (1:35:26) I think a government regulation which says (1:35:29) that in order to start a restaurant, (1:35:31) you have to be approved by the relevant authorities.(1:35:34) You can see the people controlling those credentials (1:35:37) would have a very natural incentive to say, (1:35:40) well, you’re gonna be better off if I approve of you, (1:35:42) therefore, how about you make it worth my while (1:35:44) to approve of you? (1:35:45) But you’re much less likely to have problems (1:35:47) with bribery and corruption (1:35:48) when you’re dealing with private firms (1:35:51) rather than government agents. (1:35:54) If you’d like to see more video. (1:36:01) All right, Zach, you brought it up, man.(1:36:02) Please share your thoughts on that, my friend. (1:36:06) Honestly, in a more freer society, market-based, (1:36:11) I don’t care, call it ANCAP, ANCAPistan, whatever. (1:36:14) I’m not, whatever.(1:36:16) It would be more privy for all of us. (1:36:21) I mean, nobody’s gonna be able to, (1:36:28) I’m having a brain fart, Andrew. (1:36:35) Nobody’s gonna be able to anticipate (1:36:36) the consequences of a behavior.(1:36:38) There you go. (1:36:39) But when you acquire insurance, (1:36:43) you basically offset that consequence. (1:36:46) Exactly, and this is insurance in a more positive means, (1:36:50) not positive rights cartelized.(1:36:54) Bullshit, subsidized by government, (1:36:56) but actual insurance that where you have (1:36:59) a competitive means or reach, (1:37:02) and you may not even have a competitive means (1:37:03) depending on where you’re at. (1:37:05) You may only have one or a couple insurance companies, (1:37:08) but everybody in the community ends up going (1:37:11) to that insurance policy, (1:37:13) and then somebody else goes to this insurance policy. (1:37:16) Maybe somebody else just decides to get themselves (1:37:19) an armed gang and just arm up their property (1:37:22) with just a bunch of armed guard.(1:37:25) Who knows? (1:37:26) I mean, but there’s so many different options (1:37:28) that you can gander. (1:37:30) So you can be protected financially, (1:37:33) and at that point, you can also be protected (1:37:37) within just being able to live your life. (1:37:42) And it would be market value.(1:37:44) It wouldn’t be fiat price controlled bullshit (1:37:47) because we’re all experiencing inflation (1:37:50) because they keep printing more money. (1:37:54) Well, it’s so funny about the point (1:37:56) about like bribery and stuff. (1:37:57) You know, like, yeah, if the one person’s (1:37:59) a central point of making it happen, (1:38:03) of course you’re going to give them something.(1:38:06) And we see what the outcome is. (1:38:08) Look at Congress. (1:38:09) Look at all that stuff.(1:38:10) They’re talking about how easy it was to buy. (1:38:12) I mean, I’ve watched like O’Keefe, right, O’Keefe Media, (1:38:14) and he’s got those guys on those hidden cameras, (1:38:17) and it’s like, oh yeah, it’s like 10,000 for a senator, (1:38:19) and it’s this for that. (1:38:21) And you’re like, first of all, that’s real cheap.(1:38:24) I’m a little ashamed that Americans are that cheap. (1:38:28) But secondly, it’s just shitty (1:38:30) that they can be bribed at all, you know? (1:38:35) Yeah, and that’s the thing is like in a monarchical system, (1:38:40) it’s much easier to sway one person to your side (1:38:45) than in our system where you can have (1:38:48) a multitude of different groups (1:38:50) and individuals sway, say, 3,000 people. (1:38:56) I know we don’t have 3,000.(1:38:58) Well, we do, actually. (1:38:59) We have thousands of people in government. (1:39:01) It’s not just the federal government.(1:39:03) But it’s easier to flip somebody that’s won. (1:39:08) So if you wanted to go that route. (1:39:10) So theoretically, a monarchy would be kind of better, (1:39:13) but not really.(1:39:15) There’s more people employed by the government now (1:39:18) than the entire population of the United States (1:39:20) and when the Constitution was ratified. (1:39:24) Look at Andrew. (1:39:27) There it is, nerd.(1:39:29) Cheers. (1:39:32) That would be dork. (1:39:36) So that’s kind of most of our stuff (1:39:38) on the human rights stuff, natural rights.(1:39:40) Clearly, we’re like, let us just, (1:39:43) give us the opportunity to prosper. (1:39:45) That’s it. (1:39:47) We’re not asking a lot, really.(1:39:49) Stay out of war. (1:39:50) Stay out of war and we can all make more money (1:39:53) and then we won’t have to worry. (1:39:55) We can all afford, actually, more things (1:39:57) because all of us will make more money (1:39:59) and it’ll be worth more value.(1:40:00) I mean, we keep printing this money away. (1:40:02) We’re at, what, 3% of the original value? (1:40:04) So once again, alternate currencies. (1:40:08) Take care of yourself and do little things.(1:40:12) Take a vitamin C tablet and a vitamin D, (1:40:14) a couple vitamin Ds a day. (1:40:16) That’s like, it’s not crazy. (1:40:18) It’s not crazy.(1:40:18) It’s really easy, accessible. (1:40:20) It’s not expensive and it’s really helpful. (1:40:23) It really is beneficial.(1:40:24) Drink some Sonny D. (1:40:26) And that’s another strike (1:40:27) because I already got one for my health thing (1:40:30) about correlating. (1:40:32) Nah, I’m not gonna get into that. (1:40:35) I’m not getting into that.(1:40:36) But wait, wait, wait. (1:40:37) What does the Sonny D give you a strike for? (1:40:39) Because it’s D. (1:40:40) Sonny D. (1:40:42) Sonny D. (1:40:42) Sonny D is like, (1:40:44) just don’t replace gin and juice with Sonny D. (1:40:46) I did that in college. (1:40:47) I could not drink gin again.(1:40:48) I’ve not touched gin. (1:40:49) Don’t do it. (1:40:50) Don’t do it.(1:40:52) It was early Snoop Dogg. (1:40:54) It was like night. (1:40:55) It was the chronic had just come out (1:40:57) and they were like, (1:40:57) gin and juice had just come out.(1:40:59) And we’re like, (1:40:59) we have Sonny D and we’re like, (1:41:01) let’s just use Sonny D. (1:41:03) Yes. (1:41:04) Bad idea. (1:41:06) Bad idea.(1:41:07) Another bad idea is don’t replace the Coke with rum (1:41:11) with tequila and rum. (1:41:16) To Jose. (1:41:18) Oh yeah.(1:41:19) Jose and Kevin. (1:41:20) No, no, no. (1:41:21) It was something.(1:41:22) It was a cheaper tequila, (1:41:25) but yeah. (1:41:26) Another bad idea is listening to the state, (1:41:29) but I actually got to boogie you guys. (1:41:31) Like I got to get off here.(1:41:32) Yeah. (1:41:33) We’re going to take off, man. (1:41:34) All right.(1:41:35) Well, thank you everybody else for joining us. (1:41:37) We’re going to say goodbye, everybody. (1:41:39) Sean, man.(1:41:39) Thanks for making it. (1:41:40) We’re going to still do this once a month. (1:41:42) We’re going to try to hold you to it, my friend.(1:41:44) Let’s go. (1:41:45) Hey, everybody, share your stuff. (1:41:48) Share your stuff before we say goodbye.(1:41:49) Sean, you share your stuff and then jump off (1:41:51) and then you guys can share before we go. (1:41:54) AdBuds and reality on Instagram and X. (1:41:58) That’s all I got at this point. (1:42:00) There’s no more podcasts.(1:42:02) Podcasting is not my thing anymore. (1:42:04) So that’s that. (1:42:06) I’m going to, I’m going to, (1:42:07) I’m going to try to get them back though.(1:42:09) So this fall, everybody, (1:42:11) Scarlett and Mae’s podcast, Scarlett Mae’s podcast. (1:42:14) College football. (1:42:17) Where, yeah, fuck politics.(1:42:19) Ohio State’s gay. (1:42:21) Michigan likes cock. (1:42:24) You like it more.(1:42:26) And AI Conan. (1:42:27) This is what it’s going to be about. (1:42:30) And I’m going to put them over anywhere I get a chance.(1:42:33) Free Roger Ver, freerogernow.org. (1:42:37) There you go. (1:42:38) Yes. (1:42:38) Yeah, hey, can you, (1:42:39) can anyone, Sean, if you got to jump, (1:42:42) if you got a boogie, please feel free.(1:42:44) Thank you so much for joining us. (1:42:45) I do got a boogie, I really do, man. (1:42:47) Okay.(1:42:48) Take care, man. (1:42:48) We’ll see you. (1:42:49) I want to hear about this Roger Ver stuff (1:42:50) because once again, this is about education and messaging.(1:42:54) So take care, man. (1:42:56) Take care, Sean. (1:42:57) Be good.(1:42:57) Thanks. (1:42:57) Thank you, brother. (1:42:58) Thank you, appreciate it.(1:43:00) Andrew. (1:43:01) So Roger Ver, man, tell me about him. (1:43:03) What’s the whole story? (1:43:04) What happened? (1:43:05) I mean, there’s a 20 minute video.(1:43:07) We can just watch that and close it out (1:43:09) if you want. (1:43:10) I could send it to you real quick. (1:43:11) I’ll post it here real quick and you can play it.(1:43:13) 20 minutes, man. (1:43:15) All right, why don’t we, you know what? (1:43:16) We can make it a separate, (1:43:17) we’ll make it a separate one. (1:43:18) We’ll make it part of the next one in a month.(1:43:19) How about that? (1:43:20) Okay, that’s fine. (1:43:21) Because he’ll still be in trouble. (1:43:24) Trust me, he’s not getting out.(1:43:25) Yeah. (1:43:26) It’s not going to happen overnight, so yeah. (1:43:29) All right.(1:43:30) Well, gentlemen, any final closing thoughts on anything? (1:43:34) Thank you so much for joining (1:43:35) for this League of Ordinary Friends. (1:43:37) I think it was a really good program. (1:43:39) Thanks for having us on.(1:43:42) No, for real. (1:43:43) Thank you everybody who joined us. (1:43:45) Oh, go ahead, Mark.(1:43:46) Oh, I was going to say, (1:43:47) thank you for letting us get together and start this. (1:43:50) So it’s a shame Jason couldn’t make it, (1:43:52) but we got next month. (1:43:55) Very much a shame he couldn’t make it, (1:43:56) but you know, we’ve got our little unmasked consciousness (1:44:00) or Consciously Unmasked.(1:44:02) So we like to have people on. (1:44:03) So who says we can’t have you guys on? (1:44:06) We’re pretty flexible. (1:44:07) So it did suck that Jason couldn’t join us (1:44:10) because I think Jason would have contributed a lot (1:44:11) to this conversation.(1:44:13) Because I think he knows a lot about this stuff. (1:44:15) And he’s got a family (1:44:16) and he can definitely talk to that a lot more. (1:44:18) But gentlemen, thank you so much.(1:44:20) Everyone who checked us out, thank you so much. (1:44:23) Once again, this has been a League of Ordinary Friends. (1:44:26) I will send you guys a link (1:44:27) so you guys can put it up as well.(1:44:28) But we are so grateful for everyone who joined us. (1:44:31) And I hope this gave some information. (1:44:34) Once again, I’m not here to tell you what to think.(1:44:37) I’m here to deprogram whatever you’ve been taught to think. (1:44:40) That’s my biggest thing is I’m chipping away (1:44:44) because I don’t need you to believe what I believe. (1:44:47) Because if I can chip away what they programmed you to think (1:44:51) you’re just gonna think something different.(1:44:53) And it’ll probably be closer to reality (1:44:56) and your experience and what you’ve lived through (1:44:59) because that’s where we go (1:45:00) when we haven’t been told and programmed. (1:45:01) So it’s one of these really amazing things when it happens. (1:45:05) So that’s all we can do.(1:45:08) I’m wrong too. (1:45:09) I’ve been wrong before. (1:45:10) I’ll be wrong again.(1:45:11) I promise I’ll take the wrong side of an issue (1:45:13) and find myself questioning (1:45:15) and then going, oh man, I really screwed that up or something. (1:45:18) So everyone, thank you again for joining. (1:45:20) I’m gonna hit end stream (1:45:21) and we’re gonna have a great night, everybody.(1:45:24) Take care. (1:45:25) ♪ Good night, sweetheart, well, it’s time to go ♪ (1:45:35) ♪ Good night, sweetheart, well, it’s time to go ♪ (1:45:41) ♪ I hate to leave you, but I really must say ♪ (1:45:47) ♪ Good night, sweetheart, good night ♪

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