The shore, the paper one of the fool should should shot the should the shore show? I show, the show, the mind sation cover the showing place the show, the showfsion. All right, what's up? Welcome? We are on the road. We had pressing business. It's business. It's business. Isn't this time drinking little business? Juice? As Jamie sleeps away to night? It's business. It's business juice, and no it is not. What's you got a rooming to coke? What you go to jerk and
coke? Hell no, that's a straight ice espresso with extra espresso and no ice. Welcome. Why are we doing tonight? When I said this, when I said what we would do is that I got my sipping jug. I gotta sipping jug. Why are we doing this? Why is it looks kind of dumb in the background? Why has you got a big jug or something in the background. Well, I'll because us I'm about halfway through the
Patrick Wood book and I know everybody requested that next. But the thing is Patrick Wood said he would come on, but he had had surgery, so he's not feeling great. So then it was like, well, I'd rather have him on when we talk about it. But we need to wait till he feels better from his surgery, So pray for Patrick Wood. I think he had some pretty serious surgery, but he did say one to come on and that'll work out better anyway. Because turns out I got a hold of
doctor John Coleman's Tavistock book. Now, this is the classic Tavistock expose. It's the first one from two thousand and five, years after he wrote his Committee of three hundred book, which we've already covered. So why are we covering this well? Because, as some do you mentioned, why are we doing this again because there's a lot of information in doctor Coleman's Tavistock book that
is not in Daniel Esland's book. Now, Daniel Esland's book is a good book and utilizes doctor Coleman's book, But there's a whole bunch of stuff in doctor Coleman's Tavistock book which gets into the history of British psychological warfare, the Office of Intelligence, wartime intelligence, on and on, on special Operations Executive, a lot of information that we don't find in other texts which cover other
elements. Esceland's book is a lot more relevant to things like pop culture, which is fine because he gets into that, you know, in the latter chapters of his Tavistock book. So, and we just did the interview with Daniel Esland. If you didn't see that, that's on Rockfin. I put it up on here, but then the algorithm immediately killed it. I was like, just forget it. So I moved it to Rock Fin and it's
on my rumble, in my YouTube, in my website. So Daniel Eston, of course one of the most well known journalists of Latin Central South America. Most of his stuff is in Spanish, so if you go to his channel, he's got almost three hundred thousand subscribers. We had a great discussion for about an hour on religious corruption, the mafia, the Vatican. So go watch that, and then, um, yeah, it's pretty wild all the stuff with Tucker, isn't it. So I'm guessing. I guess Klaus
just made a few calls. Right, we went too far in my spoof and Klaus got on the I got on the horn, I've on gets Ridge of the Mountain, place him on the unemployment puts Tuck on the Universal basicdn't call them. I was joking, by the way, somebody I think thought I was serious when I was saying Klaus got Tucker fired because I was on
that Tucker special. That was a joke. But to be serious, if you heard Lord Voldemort today and he played the AOC clip where like two days ago, and that crazy AOC sexy little communists, She's not the sexy communist by the way, I'm just joking. AOC was like he's calling for violence, clearly calling for violins. It's like, nobody called for violence. What are you talking about? Just lies? Obviously crazy lies. So they're making
their move. All right, let's get into doctor John Colema's Tavistock book, and this is I didn't get a hold of a physical copy. By the way, if you get the physical copies, they're ridiculous. There's one on Amazon for four thousand dollars. Obviously that's not what I bought. So yeah, hope, hopefully I didn't bring the curse. It is pretty wild, though, what do you mean, where's the best place to check the Dire show? You mean the Tucker Carlson Special with me? If you I mean,
we put the link under literally like fifty clips. So doctor John Coleman, now we know he's the supposed. I'm not. When I say supposed, I don't mean that he's lying. I just mean I don't know the supposed former British intelligence writer who wrote the famous Committee of three Hundred book which argues that there is a three hundred or so people at the top of Bieber. You know, these kinds of things right in that top three hundred of
CFR and Trilateral Bburg and all that. I don't know if you all just assumed it was Michael Frenzies. I'm not dissing Michael Frenzies, but I'm saying people just assume that's how I'm talking about. Who has been as a famous gangster longer than Michael Frenzies, who's had movies made about well, not totally
about him, but who else is it? There's only two options, literally only two options of two famous living mobsters that we did the interview with, and half y'all got half y'all got it right, half y'all got it wrong. You'll know your mobsters by the way. I've been going deeper and deeper into mobs stuff. So I'm gonna be a mob this story, and I guess eventually, but calling about five years Dan Bonginot was he in the mob It's not Dan Vongino. But how many mobsters are that are famous out there?
I'm talking about super famous. There's only two that are super famous. Um. Anyway, I don't know when they'll post it, and you guys are gonna it's gonna blow you away. When they posted an interview, it'll be posted on his channel, probably in a few weeks. So No, it's not Martin Scorsese, it's not Leo di Cappuccino, and it's not it's not Alpaccino, the most famous living mobster. It's not Orston or Marlon Brando.
All right now. The first thing that was really interesting, by the way, if you want to support the show, you can do so by the super chat function, was the references too. It's not Joey Diaz, the references to Oswald Spangler. I didn't expect doctor him and to get into Oswald Spengler and he says that. And you know, we've done videos on
this channel years ago about the decline of the West and Spengler's thesis. For those that don't know, Spengler's thesis is that every civilization has a life cycle to it. So there's a birth right, a growth, flourishing apogee, and then a decline and then it collapse, and then there's a transition to a new civilization. And he characterizes past civilizations like the Babylonians or whatever he took with the Magians, right, this was I think that the Chaldeans and
Babylonians are the Magian society. And then he talks about the Greeks. I forget what term he uses for the Greeks, something to do with their emphasis on eternality or something, you know. And then Western realization, according to Spangler, is Faustian. Right, man makes a Faustian bargain, bargain with technology, and Spengler predicted and he didn't just write a decline to the West.
He also wrote about socialism in Prussia, and he wrote some other books about how other groups and other peoples would end up taking over the West and its civilizational technology to rule over the West. The West would collapse and give rise to other powers that would run the West. That's Spangler's thesis basically. And so what I what surprised me was that Spangler wasn't writing a book that
was like a cookbook on how to destroy society. But Tavistock ended up seeing the legitimacy to weaponizing the section of Spangler's thesis about the decline of the West that we're we're going to see the declineate wood. And so basically the tabis stocure saying, oh, yeah, let's take that and make it happen. Make it happen. Do what, Let's do it. This is that thing.
Let's make it happen, Make it happen. I'm gonna make it happen, right Liam, not Liam Neathon Liam Gallagher style quote no old Otis songs. So Tavistock becomes fascinated with and we're gonna get into more of the history of right the nineteen thirty six text of Spengler and the idea of creating the conditions for the collapse of the older orders to bring in the new technocratic world, the technocratic order. And guess what, Coleman's Tavistock book, it's all
the same usual suspects in our right to you Milliner Fabian book. So it's all the Milliner Fabian crew that are behind Tavistock. And so that confirms that I think Coleman's thesis is probably pretty much correct every now and then in these kinds of texts, And I would class Coleman's books kind of with quite silent weapons for quiet wars. That's what's another one we just covered like this, Oh, the Rakovsky interrogation. Right, These are supposed insiders who are giving
us this spill. Right. And it's not that there can't be whistleblowers, but we often have to be measured in our We don't want to immediately accept every whistle blower because sometimes the establishment puts out fake whistle blowers or disinfo agents. So we don't want to immediately jump on every so called whistleblower. We want to have a bit of a measured consideration and hesitancy. But we also don't want to be totally black piled. Oh no, nobody ever, you
know, divulges the truth. That's neither of those is the case. So in the books that we class in this kind of potential leak category, the
likely been right, silent webs are quiet wars. Doctor Coleman's books, these kinds of texts, they're going to be I think determined, Oh the day tapes, right, the day tapes or another example list, they're going to be classified on the basis of how accurate are their predictions and how accurate is the information in so far as it jives with other similar types of texts, or other texts that are more substantial. For example, Tragian Hope is more
authoritative than doctor John Coleman's books. Why because doctor John Coleman is a whistleblower. Ker Quigley is not. Doctor Quigley is a defender of the existing power structure and system, so his book counts more authoritative. You see, So what were we gonna do? Are we gonna so what we said, Well, let's look through the text and let's see if doctor Coleman's analysis holds up. And certainly the Committee of three hundred book had many elements that were correct.
But not everybody's going to get everything because nobody knows exactly even the elite the power structure itself, they don't know. They don't they're not infallible, they're not omnipresent. Not everything that they roll out goes their way. So just because not everything that doctor Coleman said was exactly what happened, doesn't mean
that it's false. If we're looking at you know, eighty nine percent of what he talks about being correct and corroborated with what we read in Quigly and all the other global elite writings, then we can class this as a reliable leak. So he begins by talking about the Committee three hundred three hundred and the same people behind the Fabian Socialist Millner group that wants to engineer the decline
of the West. And so this is a stronger thesis than what I'm really getting tired of hearing, which is the oh, it's all incompetent people, everything's incompetent. We're at an airbnb, so you're not. This is not my kitchen. This is a kind of a small airbnb, so there's not really any other place to be. I could be in the closet with you, but then if I come out, I'm coming out of the closet with you guys, and that might be a little facing Gray Milner. Fabians decline
to the West. We need a new model, and that new model will be the technocratic Fabian model. External powers will be used, according to Spangler,
and according to this plan, to intentionally collapse. So Spangler's academic thesis actually becomes a weapon for the Fabians and for the Tavist against According to doctor Coleman, how do they do this well, the study of civilizational collapse at all levels is done in the nth degree to figure out how to create division in the fracturing of society at all levels and in all ways promote division and fracturing in all forms, and by so doing, pushing alien elements and alien
ideas into the civilization will then create the complete collapse of the civilization. It doesn't have to happen overnight. It's a gradual model, as we know. That's the Fabian slow kill model, which is much more effective than do everything you know overnight, heavy handed dictatorship. No, no, do it slow. Now you might end up with a world socialist dictator like we see in Brave New World right, when you might get them must off them on.
But that's at the end goal. You're going to gradually erode away civil liberties, this kind of stuff. Freedom of speech, freedom of commerce, freedom of religion, right, all of those things that make up the existing order. And I'm not saying that every one of those is perfect, but the existing order has to give away to the new order, is the point. So civilizational collapse has studied in an nth degree to weaponize the collapse. And
that's key. And how has that done by simply doing a few key things, not just division of society, but provoking the division of society and the collapse society, by inverting society and intentionally placing unworthy individuals and people in positions of power. Catastocracy, government by corrupt people, government by thieves, government
by just total degenerate oligarchs. Basically, and that's not president level only, that's basically all of the powerful positions, the judiciary, Congress, Senate, president intentionally get more and more ridiculous till we get you know, burrito supreme or beef supreme, right, idiocracy, civilizational collapses and studied, as you
said, through these means and methods. And one of the key things that popped up that he spends a lot of time on is this item here, and this is called Wellington House. Wellington House is the predecessor to task. So before we had Tavistock studying shell shock and then being promoted into something at Sussex University and then becoming its own clinic with Rockefeller money, it was first
Wellington House, the name for Britain's war propaganda bureau. Now this is all World War One era, So we're gonna go back to World War One. We're gonna go back to you know, the Black Hand and our assassination of our Stuke friends Ferdinand done according to the thesis of Coleman exactly what Christian Rokovsky, the socialist, interrogated under Kabed. He said, this was done by the same people, by by this group, this elite Milner Fabian circle,
and it was done to intentionally create and cause that war. Why was this war? Well, this war was due to firstly Britain's distaste for German engineering and economic superiority. Germany is on the rise and Britain didn't like that. Britain, of course, being a seafaring empire, and so Wellington House was tasked with going full bar with a lot of new, sort of revolutionary for the time propaganda methods. And this leads to a bunch of characters cooking up
cartoons, spitting out countless. There was a name for these weird cartoons they would do in Britain, kind of like pulp cartoons. They have a weird British name. I don't know what they're called. Or motorized rolling Hams. No, I'm joking. I don't know what they're called, right, some kind of weird Harry Potter style name. And they would they would portray the Kaiser as this horrible barbaric figure, the hun That's something that ah Wells cooked
up as a propagandist. And so they put out eleven hundred and sixty pamphlets throughout this time period, all kinds of pamphlets published by Hotter and Sulton, Oxford University, McMillan, Thomas Nelson, like everything was just just spitting out the crazy propaganda. And they would like picture different German eyes as butchering and chopping up, you know, in cartoon form, random citizens. It was
all made up. It's all fake. But the propaganda wasn't that sophisticated this time It worked well enough, right H. C. Wells, As you see as mentioned here, including G. K. Chesterton who was invited. So the Bureau of British Propaganda Bureau invited twenty five leading British authors to Wellington
House to discover how to promote Britain during World War One. And then it's so even Arthur Conan Doyle, So this is uh, I just Charlotte Colmes, M. Thomas Hardy hd Wells and Rudgard Kipling who didn't attend but was invited, but G. K. Chesternon did, which is odd. Hold on about I gotta put the air on because I'm gonna start sneezing again. Oh man, So there is your history of the origins of Taoist pride or tabistae, which is Wellington House, the British propaganda bureau of for World War
One. And one of the things they cooked up that made this successful was they weaponized and created this term isolationist. So America wasn't interested in this war, and they created a term to demonize people that didn't want to go to war. And that term, at this time they made up was called isolationists. So if you don't want to be in the war, you had this negative term attaching. And this is similar to other strategies that they cooked up.
The white feather heard of this, right, There's a movie with Heath Ledger called The Four Feathers Heath Ledger and Kate Hudson, And basically, if you didn't want to go to war, people would give you a white feather and submit you are a coward. But that was actually something cooked up by early British propaganda strategists to de incentivize people not signing up for the war effort. So isolationist is one of the first terms, according to doctor coleman I,
weaponized by Tavistock as a kind of sagop. So the earliest figures that begin to really be key when Tabstock becomes its own entity is the figures of Edward Burney's and Walter Lippmann, doctor Kurt Lewin, and John Rawlings Reese. These are the most important characters at Tavistock, and they're important because if you are familiar with Lewin, then you know that this is also a Frankfurt School
guy. So yes, absolutely key overlap between Frankfort School and Tavistock. And that's not by accident, because some of these figures, including doctor Kurt Lewin and others, will work hat in hand with the US academic, psychological and
industrial complex as well. In fact, Kurt Lewin will be invited to the United States, he will lecture and work at MIT, he will lecture and work at Rand Corporation, which is basically like America's version of Tavistock in a way, and in fact Tavistock is involved in the creation of Stanford Research Institute. So all these figures are basically going to mirror and set up the same
things in the United States that they have going on in the UK. And this is no different than the mirroring projects that we see with Pratt House and Chatham House. Right, Pratt House in New York is the model based on the model of Chatham House in the UK, and those are all modeled on the Roundtable Groups, the role in super International Affairs CFAR, trilateral, they're modeled on those same structures, same thing, same model for different countries.
They work together. You see other key figures at this time in the earliest days of Tapisson conclude Walter Lippmann, Arnold Toynbee, Burns and Lippman, for example, really helped get Walter helped Woodrow Wilson get a lot of his unpopular controversial plans through. And so Woodrow Wilson apparently wrote a book. I didn't know that, but it was something about something to do with justice. I fear in the name of it. But it turns out this was actually written
by some other Fabian socialist of course, to doctor Coleman. So doctor Coleman argues that it wasn't Woodrow Wilson that wrote this book. Woodrow Wilson had a ghost written by this Fabian socialist guy, I forget the name, but this is this is what explains so many key elements coming into play for where we
are today in the technocratic order under the Wilson administration. It's really the period of Woodrow Wilson, not just in terms of like World War One and that stuff, but the Federal Reserve Act and all that stuff, with Colonel Edwin mandel House being the agent of the Fabian Socialist in England, working and using Woodrow Wilson and pushing those policies, not just the freedoms, all of that. And it's the four freedoms right, and that right going from Marry and
they were also involved in helping to set up the Inquiry. So all these same people set up the first pro intelligence group prior to the OSS. Okay, so yes, nineteen forty two OSS, didn't you get what forty seven CIA prior to all that go back to Woodrow Wilson. The intelligence apparatus is called the Inquiry and we've covered this many many times, but a lot of these people come out of SO September nineteen seventeen, set up by Woodrow Wilson.
This is a proto intelligence group for America heads of research. We're look at that who Walter Lippmann. Who's Walter Lippman, ad Man right, public opinion, the creation of public opinion, and a Tavistock man. So prior to OSS and prior to CIA, Woodrow Wilson's era of intelligence was all of these academics, one hundred and fifty academics, including Colonel Edward mandel House who was the operative of the operative of the Milner Fabian circles, and these other
individuals who are Tavistock people. Now, they also are the ones that draw up the post World War One reparations, Give me my reparations post World War One, which basically means Germany forever in debt. Right, are you starting to see how the stuff works now? If you would hit like and share, thank you guys so much. So Wellington House outlines anti German propaganda.
They pioneer a lot of stuff, and he makes a claim. I don't know if he meant to make this claim, because this Tavistock book is from two thousand and five so it's right after or you know, Bush, the Big nine event in the Iraq War and invasion of Afghanistan. But he says that Wellington House came up with this idea of creating manifestos, so manifest destiny, the manifesto um. Woodrow Wilson's manifesto, he says, was cooked up
by Wellington House. Right, the fourteen points right, that's these people peace in our time. Okay, this goober didn't come up with any of that. It was all these people. Does that make sense? You understand that? So there's that. Doctor Coleman argues that Woodrow Wilson himself embodied the strategies
of Bikunen. They were consistently propagandist strategies and lies. Of course, the Feeder Reserve being the biggest element of this, and the idea would be that eventually at this time with League of Nations, there was a move then to transition America into a Fabian socialist country. Now that didn't work right, Woodrow wilson schemes didn't end up working out. They did get the Federal Reserve, but the rest of it didn't pan out. The League of Nations failed,
but it was intended to be the Fabian Socialist revolution. Then one thing he noticed, it was a note that was pretty exciting that I didn't know about, was that the propaganda that Wellington House cooked up against the Kaiser is the exact same propaganda for Saddam Hussein, which is insane. That's Saddam insane. He was called the butcher, right, They called the Kaiser the butcher. And the Kaiser was like just this kuki dude. They like to wear military
outfits, and he certainly wasn't any kind of butcher. But the propaganda called him the butcher, the beast, and then it called, of course, they called Saddam the beast a Baghdad and that was He says that Tavistock drew up both of those. It's the same, the beast, right, and we see that in the last twenty years, you know, post Saddam, and they called Saddam tiny mustache man too, right, every enemy, every villain is tiny mustache man, Putin is tiny mustache man. That is all
basic Tavistot propaganda. Now you say, well, wait a minute, what about Gebeles. Wasn't he a tiny mustache man. Girbels was a big fan of Lewin Gebels liked and appreciated the strategies and techniques of Tavistock Future shocks. As we said, where does that come from? What is that? We've
been covering that? But he covers it as well. Future shocks are the idea of psychological operations that are psychologically destabilizing to the extent that you are put into a discombobulated state that makes you easier to accept the next phase of the propaganda. So future shocks again, that is of course one of Toffler's books, which we will eventually get to. And I know somebody so it's a trig I know, I know, it's a trilogy. The next big discovery
of these people. And this is pretty wild of this time. That was also first used by Woodrow Wilson was public opinion. The notion of public opinion didn't exist prior to this. Public opinion is created under Woodrow Wilson, Vaya, Burne's and Lippmont. Now you can begin to see why the admen are really important for this. Right, we get the Great Depression not too long
after some of these events, especially the Fredal Reserve. No shocker, post Federal Reserve would get the stock market crash, great depression, and he claims, I'm not seen this, but I wouldn't be surprised. But you know, we've covered Lord Halfred mckender's heartland theory heartland versus rimland. Mckender is repeating the British imperial attitude of how to understand and control the world from their naval perspective, right because they're a c nation versus a land nation. So controlling
the Eurasian heartland heartland versus fremland. Controlling the Arasian heartland is the British imperial model of how you control the world. That's famously from Lord Halford mckinder. But he says that no elsewhere. Halfred mckinder noted that it would be absolutely necessary to bring in a global government to preserve the whatever remnants of the British Empire. Well, the British Empire failed and then we get the American Empire.
But the American Empire was reconquered by the Millner Fabian society via these people and their British intelligence establishment setting up the American Intelligence apparatus. That's how it was reconquered. And so he argues that Lord Halfred mckinder's statement of we must have world government and we will have it via any means is applying to the plans that they rolled out via the creation of the OSS and the CIA. Now he even says, apparently this is this is I have not read this
in mckinder. Het mckinner has that famous essay on Hartland men Land theory in that book on democracy or whatever. But he says that mckinder also said that if we have to create a world socialist dictatorship, that's also fine. But that doesn't seem far fetched because that's what John Ruskin also said. And John Ruskin was one of these characters, right, one of these Millner characters who wanted to set up this world socialist, a fabian world socialist system. I
was gonna look and see if it listed his his ideas of socialism. But I know this is correct because it comes up in uh comes up in a lot of these texts. Well, it turns out his this thing is huge. So Ruskin turned to spiritualism and seances essentially. I think that's mentioned in Tragedy and Hope, by the way. But yeah, if I recall right, he explicitly favored a world Socialist Federation was the view that UM Ruskin had. And Ruskin, if I recall, was buddies. He was part of
the Rhodes thing right, so he was contemporary with Cecil Rhodes. But Um, getting back to the Coleman texts, he notes that Wellington House, one of the key figures there was Arnold Toynbee, another one of these historians who British historian guys who's part of the Tavistock early phases and structure. Toynbee was running Wellington House, so toy was kind of the key guy at Wellington House before it was Tavistock. And Toynbee also a Fabian. Socialists wanted this one
world order that we talked about. UM Toynbee ended up going to who was close to Halfred mckinner working at Wellington House, ended up going to the Royal Insta for International Affairs and the London Universe London University. UM and then quote from I don't know if this is both of them. Probably we us have world state and it doesn't matter by any means. Basically, world state by
any means is their motto. Basically, Toynbee said, the mass mind control would be necessary to bring in this world state and ultimately would end the family. So he's explicit about ending the family. And he said that if you read H. G. Wells, H G. Wells as open Conspiracy is talking about this, well, wouldn't you know? Guys, guess what we've lectured through open conspiracy basi Wells. We've lectured through New World Order by Wells.
We've also lectured through Edward Burnees's propaganda. That's one of our classic old school global elite texts that we've lectured through. But Bernese didn't just write that. There were also books that he wrote about. There's one I gotta get that I wasn't familiar with. He wrote no Excuse me Lippman, because Lippman and Berne's were working together Walter Lippman Public Opinion in nineteen twenty two. That's
at the creating of and steering of public opinion. And that's one of the key things they really do in this early period is nineteen twenties, they start to work with and perfect the science of social and social engineering public opinion. And so if we're going to get people to a single technocratic role state and no family, it's gonna take a lot, and it's not going to be done in one generation, hence the slow kill Fabian male. It's gonna take
time to do that. It's gonna take time, a whole lot of precious time. It's gonna take patience and time. It's trying to take money, a whole lot of spending and money to do it, to do it, to do it, to do it right. Tavistock's got it's mindset on you, all right. Who put the money into Wellington House, The Rockefellers and the UK monarchy. No surprise there. What's one of the first things they cooked up beyond the creation of public opinion, groupthink, groupthink and group mind.
Now, it's not just creating the idea of it. It's getting everybody into consensus reality. That's all. That's all tabisock stuff. And they realized that engineering social and mass consent is not just a matter of effective propaganda. The best way to do that is to control the leaders of groups, because those are the opinion makers. I can't read my note. Something is fake. Something is fake and made it by tavisuck rolling. I don't know what
that means. One of the key things that Tabisuk would be decided would be necessary. Actually coincides with what you may have heard Rachel talking about recently, the degrading and destruction and women. So Tabisto was actually really interested in the early phases of the nineteen twenties and thirties. We'll talk about this a minute there. Did you know there was a mini sex revolution in the twenties and thirties. Absolutely, twenties and thirties were like a proto nineteen sixties, and
Tabsta was very interested in this and studied it. In fact, they even studied to a scientific degree women's hairstyles, the women cutting their bobbing their hair, flappers, the dresses, and the hymn lines coming higher and higher up on the dresses. That was all studied by Tavistok no joke. And so for those who for many years who've heard us talk about culture creation, this is it, okay, pop culture. There's an element of it which is
organic. Things, trends come about, they pop up, things get popular. A lot of it is not organic, A lot of it is created. And there's even movies about this. If you watched Josie and the Pussycats, you'll notice that there's all these scientists in labs study and creating the pop culture. In this goofy comedy movie, that's pretty close to the truth when it comes to Tavistock. And in fact, if you read the Space Trilogy of C. S. Lewis, the third Space Trilogy is basically Tavistok.
The Nice Institute is Tabiston. But in order to completely change society, one of the key focal points of society reproduction, femininity, would have to be completely altered. And you do that through any and every means of attacking and degrading femininity, classical femininity, right feminine virtues, feminine traits, and thus also by doing that, the men will fail as well, because right men typically are doing things historically speaking, right to gain a wife, gain a
house, gained land, right provide for offspring. Well, if you destroy the women, dudes are screwed, and dudes will just become you know, I NCLs or whatever. And so you can see then that Tavistock was very interested in liberating people in every Skittles way, and they studied the nineteen twenties and thirties Skittles stuff. So you think that the societal changes that are occurring now that oh, they're just random and we've never seen anything like this.
No, we've already seen this Babylon Berlin. Babyl On Berlin, which is a modern German TV show which takes place during the time of what I'm talking about, right, nineteen twenties thirties Berlin. I mean, it looks like San Francisco now, So these things can be organic, not saying that everything is planned, of saying that, however, it is not always organic, and particularly the society that we live under, the pop culture, the culture
is completely designed and rolled out and promoted. And hopefully every one of you that has some degree of discernment left can see that, because isn't it odd that all the Fortune one hundred and the Fortune five hundred have rolled all the same things out in the last few years. Why is that? Is it just market shares? But it hurts their market? Go well, go broke? Why they keep doing it? Because as an agenda, it's not incompetent
people. It is a strategy of hastening civilization will collapse that Tavistock pioneered and has as their game plan, including the pushing of everything crazy. Now, why would they push everything crazy? Well, one of the one of the key tap side figures. Doctor Kurt Lewin came up with a psychological warfare strategy called changing identity a long time ago, way before the idea that you can identify as whatever you want. Nowadays, this is all old stuff. Did
you know that you think you're part of some new trend. We've never seen nothing like this before. Yes, yeah, twenties and thirties. So you have to understand that countless think tanks, countless foundations work around the clock to create the situations for social revolution and social change, to create the situations for civilizational change, culture change change agents, culture change agents, culture revolutions, color revolutions. It's all from the same people, Okay, And again it
does not mean everything is controlled. Plenty of musicians out there who make music and have fun and they're not they're not told what to do but some dude on a phone from Tavistock. But it's a symbiotic relationship where the pop culture indoctrinates the youth and the people immersed in it, and then the people immersed in it then repeat back in a feedback loop what they're indoctrinated with through the culture. But who moves the culture it's these people, the social engineers.
It's the people like John Rowlings, Reese, Walter Littmont Edward Burnet's. Okay, so we've all heard the famous quote from Burnet's The Beginning of Propaganda where he says, we are ruled by an invisible, secret government and secret elite whose names no one knows, but who determine our desires through mass advertising, mass communication, etc. Etc. Do you know who he's talking about. He's talking about Tavistock, these people, that mysterious quote. I wonder what
it's about. It's about British intelligence who set at Wellington House and then who set up Tavistock. That's who he's talking about. So key, let's see. I'm trying to figure out if I should keep with his pace or jump ahead. Let's keep with his pace. So for example, he mentioned he mentions, not me, but backing up what we saw in the raw Tou book, which we lectured through at least the first three or four hundred pages of that book. We're almost done with it, but it's like a five
hundred page book, but for five und page. But you know, Ratti had said that the EU was a Fabian institution. Yes, doctor Coleman says, correct, the EU is a Fabian institution. World War One was hashed, as we said by Lord Gray due to British Enbian hatred of Germany. And this is all done via sciaps from Wellington House. We already said all that, So let's get down this. A lot of this again parallels well with quickly and so one of the things that that Tavistock cooked dot, which
is this is pretty wild. Well, before we get to the to the strategies of the three system response, let me back to the nineteen twenties thirty stuff. So the nineteen twenties and thirties were a as we said, a pre sixties sexual revolution. So there's a lot of economic collapse, moral collapse, and rot in the nineteen twenties and thirties. And this is part, part and parcel with the not just the US stock crash, but also a
war depression. World depression feeds into the moral chaos, right. Tavastar played a key role in a lot of this, and even Spengler noted that the nineteen thirties were twenties and thirties were a period of loose morals and revolution where we started to see basically the only fans and the mass prostitution of that time on a wide scale. And he says that you can see this in the Flappers. You see this this time in the in the writings of James Joyce,
D. H. Lawrence and F. Scott. Fitzgerald's Gatsby is really trying to capture this decadent period. Also, skittles became very open and popular, particularly as we said in bat in Germany, Berlin, but also in the United States as well. And this was meant to be a shock. So the shock of that was intended to be conveyed at that time by young people in their revolution, was a shock that would part and parcel be why
they would call them future shocks, these cultural revolutions. And we think back to women like I didn't actually realize that Joan Crawford was one of the first IT girls. Did you know that? So the first two it girls and that I don't even know, but probably IT girl was probably cooked up by Tavistock, because if I recall, it is a thing from from Britain, the term it girl. So are you beginning to see that these pop culture things like it girl. Remember Paris Hilton was an it girl. Do you
think she was the first? No, the first was back in the nineteen teens and twenties when Joan Crawford was first a famous actress. She was the it girl of that time in the nineteen twenties. And then at the same
time, the other it girl was Louis Brooks. And so you can see that she, right, she had this kind of unique bobbed haircut, right, and that was a style revolution at that time that conveyed this kind of you know, wild and crazy party attitude, and it was it was revolutionary for women to have, you know, hair this short, right, whoa and to you know, to dress in this kind of a way at that
time. But and again I don't know this is the case, but I feel like Tavistock had to be behind it girl, right, I mean, they had to be something they came up with. So anyway, and then, as you can imagine, Hollywood, Hollywood actually plays a key role in this as a utilizing a lot of these Tavistock ideas because Hollywood then project this
into the mass mind and all the girls began dressing like this. You say, that's studied in manufactured via Tavistock, that's the point here, a lot of the pop culture and the music at this time that was some of us getting really weird and experimental, that was all studied. I feel like German expressionism was probably part of that as well, with these really weird and sort of proto satanic films that were being made. And this was also a proto
feminist period. As you've heard Rachel probably discussed in her talks, this was the feminism of this time, and many of these girls were also you know, hardcore feminists, so not by accident but by design. Now, a lot of these people didn't know that they were following a trend by design.
They were just thought they were being cool and hip hipsters of the time or whatever, but they were actually following a created, designed military psychological warfare strategy right from Wellington House, Kurt Lewin, Walter Littmann, Edward Burney's, John Rawlings, rees on and on. There's tons of these people. Eventually, Tavistock I think at one point gets they have an old committee where it's like a hundred people just on this stuff on culture change back in this day.
So you understand, you think what you think is quote conspiracy theory has nothing to do with conspiracy theory, it has to do with control, and it has to do with what is it. What was Littman's first book, Public Opinion. So this is prior to propaganda, right, and this is about again from Tavistock, this is about not just steering but creating public opinion. And then one of the first things they did was study and master of the
technique of poles, polling and polsters. Gallop poles comes from Tavistock. They created tasts polsters. Now we don't really care about this much anymore in the Internet age, but in nineteen thirties, forties, fifties, and sixties, they figured out that if you just put up fake ass poles saying eighty percent of America and support the war, you don't want to be a weirdo in the twenty percent? Are you you weirdo? Are you a weirdo in the
twenty percent? And it was just made up. They just said eighty percent, and all the people at that time just defaulted because people were a lot more trusting of authority. Well off, eighty percent of people said that I guess I believe you. I don't want to be on the outside of it. I want to be a part of the group. And they said, Ahi, you see, this is how we get something to be potas a group's a group think group think group thing, which is the thing they came
up with, a group thing. So they studied the fact that people wanted to be part of groups. They don't like to be outsiders typically, And so you just tell people that be a part of the group, support the effort. Why are you supporting the evil foreign barbarians? Are you a foreign agent? Do you work for Putin? You? Are you an agent of Saddam? The butcher of Backdan. It's funny they didn't use that line,
right agent. Nobody had called anybody an agent of Saddam like in the nineties, you're an agent of Saddam saying but by the way, the cias who trained Saddamo, do you remember that? Has everybody forgotten this classic our buddy over there? Hey, wait a minute, how's he our buddy when the CIA trained him? In the CIA armed him for his Iran Iraq war. Oh well, see he was He was cool then, but we decided he
wasn't cool a couple of years later. Right, So there's Rumsfeld chilling, chilling with Saddam and that mega stache must that Saddam's got a damn mustache. Dude, that could give any eighties black dude mustache or run for his money. But that's Saddam mustache anyway. So this is the creation of the star. Okay, so you think celebrities, Oh, that's some new thing.
No, this was studied in the twenties and thirties and they figured out, let's just take these chicks and put them up there with wild haircuts and tell them that they're feminists, and the whole culture will follow them. And they studied it as a science. It's not a conspiracy theory. It's a science, the science of molding and shaping public opinion and perception, and not only that, changing identity. Changing identity is something that Kurt Lewin was a key
figure in perfecting. Now, a couple of the techniques I want to talk about that he highlights is Kurt Lewin came up with this idea what he called topological psychology. This is the most advanced form of behavioral modification. So it's a very precise technique of behavioral modification. And believe it or not, many generals back at this time CEOs university heads. Okay, so they basically took the cream of the crop. They would send them to study under people that
ran the Ford Foundation, people that run the Rock. They would go and study under Kurt Lewin to learn behavior modification, not any old behavior modification, but specifically topological psychology that Lewin was a expert at. And in fact, according to the arguments of doctor John Coleman, that classic text that we've all heard about changing images of Man, willis Herman, that's actually a Kurt Lewin
spawned text. So yes, it is Willis Harmon. But Harmon is getting a lot of this, according to doctor John Coleman, from Kurt Lewin, and that is one of the most important I'm not talking about the Joseph Campbell book. I'm talking about the this book. So do not get this confused with Joseph Campbell's book. Chenu. Image is a Man is the Stanford re Search white paper that is of crucial importance put out by a program on Press
Oxford. You can't hardly find it nineteen eighty two. This actually comes though from the means, methods and models of Lewin, according to doctor John Coleman, and that does make sense because you'll notice that humanism humanist psychology. Humanist psychology is the journal of Kurt Lewin's collaborator, doctor John Rowling Reese, who was a British spot I think he was British intelligence and then also a psychological warfare expert. Yes, this character, so this is also one of the
key Tavistock figures. Cbe what is this one of those, oh, order the British Empire. Yeah, you can always when you see people order the British Empire, you know they are part of this inner core. Usually. Reese was director of Tavistock Clinic for many years in the World Federation for Mental Health. And by the way, if you wonder, if you're wondering, yes, this is why many of the m Kiltra doctors were part of the
psychiatric establishment. Is because America's m Kiltra comes out of Tavistocks research. Reese was also a Freudian, so there's a lot of Freudian stuff in this. This also ties in with um oh Phoenix program, So Reese has a connection to the Phoenix program. Let him know that or no, Operation Phoenix, what is that? Oh, let's see what this is. After the war Tavistock underwent considerable changes, and Rees played a key role. Who's a member
of group. They referred to themselves as the Invisible College. There you go, eliminating confirm in reference to the seventeenth century precursor to the Royal Society. The role study used to be called the Invisible College. This group or orchestrated Operation Phoenix, making plans for Tavistock to rise from the ashes of the war. Okay, so post World War two you get the rise to prominence of
Tavistock, and they called that Operation Phoenix. After the war, this group, including Rees and five others that would also probably be doctor Kurt Lewin, formed the Interim Planning Committee for Tavistock, chaired by Wilford Bayon, meeting twice a week, based on their wartime experience, Reese's planning for the Institute of Medical Psychology We're never realized. Instead, the group went on to be Tavisto Institute through Rockefeller Foundation money. There you go. So another one of those
key figures. Now, yeah, changing images of man got to that part. One of the things that the Tavistoc had to do, though, was also sell American involvement in both wars, so we know about World War One, while they also were involved in convincing a popular opinion to go along with and join in the World War two war efforts. So it wasn't just the British intelligence operatives that came over like Noel coward, Ian Fleming, William Stevenson,
that's set up the oss with Bill Donovan. It was also they also needed beyond that, beyond setting up that proto CIA, the ability to influence the mass American public mind, particularly on the war effort. Thus all of that Burnet's propaganda, Lipman public opinion research, playing into polling, playing into using the Hollywood stars, right, all of that music pop culture to get America behind the war efforts. It was all those things thus the culture creation.
Other key figures that played a role at this point were Margaret meat and Gregory Bateson. Margaret Mead, of course, being the pseudo anthropologist fraudster who was exposed as a phony bullogny, but she was successful enough even as a phony bullogni in convincing people to you know, she actually come up with these Tavistock type terms like the noble savage. Right, I'm pretty sure that's that's a Margaret Meat idea, right, and that the idea that indigenous people are
better, their society is superior to any others. Most stutual good done to Peru participant in the Bruho Iowasco ceremonies because it's more special than like America or whatever. These that's all this kind of stuff. And Mead and Bateson and Bateson was one of the key people who she was married him, right, Yeah, she married Bateson. Gregor Bateson was a name culture doctor and he's
one of the big pushers of LSD. So all of the anarcho primitivism and archaic revival that comes from these people, Mead and Bateson and these characters. But you think that the sixties countercultural revolution is a counterculture, No, No, it's a Tavistock designed pseudo counterculture from Mead and Bateson and based on the nineteen twenties and thirties pseudo countercultural revolution of that time, which was studied by
Tavistock as well. Remember we were talking about the eighteen nineties. Even in the eighteen nineties, the Fabians were ahead of that. The Fabians were pushing degenerate art in Britain in eighteen nineties, so they were twenty or thirty years ahead what forty years ahead of the nineteen twenties and thirties, and that was thirty years ahead of the nineteen sixties revolution. Three system response is one of
these methods that Tavistot came up with. And this is when you hear people talk about problem reaction, solution or crisis management future shock in terms of steering the public. This is a three system response model, according to doctor Coleman, of contrived crises that are created or control or co opted to direct to a desired outcome. So for example, we want to manage the crises in
order to get to a already predetermined outcome. So in this model, it's not This doesn't mean there are no natural disasters, there are no crises, there are no you know, crazy people to go out and do crazy things. Yet that happens. But this model is a specifically engineered model. For example, sinking of the Lusitania for example, right Gulf of ton Keene for example, Big nine event not happenstance events, big catalyzing events intended to get
people on board with an end goal that's the purpose of those events. I mean, they serve other purposes too, but you know what I'm saying. So basically, the three stage the three system response is crisis and panic. Stage one, big event occurs. Okay, people don't know what's going Oh what's going on. The system is fluid, we're waiting on updates. Let's go to Zip Zimbler in the field. Zip, are you there, I'm here, Chris. The bombs are going off right now over my head.
Right. This kind of vising that being televised is a Rand Corporation Tavistock thing, twenty four hour war televised war desert storm that was cooked up by Rand Corporation. And by the way, the people from Tavistock went and lectured at Rand. So it's the same people, same stuff. So Stage one of the three system responses panic crisis. This throws everybody off, and this leads to a fragmentation. Stage two of the three system responses fragmentation where people freak
out, they divide, they argue with each other. We don't know what's going on. Let's have a fight, let's argue over it. And then the third fifth phase, for what they call passive maladaption. And this was a guy named doctor Emery from Tavistock who cooked this up. Crisis response crisis management models which are able to steer violent social changes in future shocks to a desired outcome. The third stage is fantasy trip and association, so essentially trauma
based mine control. So a giant catalyzing event, Big nine. Everybody's panicking, Ah, what's going on now? Everybody's arguing it was the Muslims, it was Osama bin Law, and it was Saddam Hussein, it was this, it was that, it was, it was blah blah blah, George did it? Freaking out fragmentation. Then the next phase is people are so upset and distraught that they retreat into fantasy worlds. They don't want to deal with it, They walk away, and then their price named for where they
wanted to steer you from the outset. So, and we've covered those events elsewhere other than YouTube my rock Fin channel. I have a whole you know, lectures on the Big nine event. If you want to see my take on that. Everybody should be able to figure out right what the Big nine event does. The Big nine event allows for the giant security state we get homeland security, we get TSA, we get all of that and more right, we get Oh, we gotta go into Afghanistan. We gotta run poppy
fields. Right because of the Big nine event, it makes no sense, but it doesn't matter because the three system process of crisis response management has been effectively engineered. And that's why the same things that happen in say, World War One, people don't aren't America's isolationist tab stock term. We have a big catalyzing event. You don't want to sit on the sidelines and let the the Kaiser and all these evil people get away with their butchery, do you.
You don't support the beast, the Kaiser, the Beast, do you? So you got to get on board. Your opinion has been formed and shaped. You thought you had a public opinion that was your own opinion. No, the opinion was given to you by Tavistock. Passive maladoption is. It's called welcome everybody. If we would hit, like and share, we have a nice nine hundred and thirty. That's a nice intimate little almost thousand people on a Monday night. I like it. Thank you so much for
joining me. We're talking about the classic doctor John Coleman text which I did get a hold of, not the physical form, unfortunately, it is problem reaction solution, but this is a more sophisticated psychiatrist version of it for psychological warfare, so the making of public opinion, right, we talked about that. By the way, I don't remind you guys too. If you want
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That's Jay five three l ife fifty three percent off. And then you know you can just have it recurring, have it coming back every every month, also every three weeks. If we want to get to take us to our event, we will be live in Nashville. Our next upcoming event is June third and fourth. It's a two day event. Look at all these interesting people. You see that guy right there, that big boy right there, he's gonna be there that we can't name. I don't know. Some of
these people you might know these people you recognize them too. You probably recognize them too. Ryan, you recognize that dude. We all know that guy, Scott Armstrong. Some musicians you probably recognize, Matt Baker, doctor Ben Marble, Suzie Corgan this. Some comedians that are coming are Buddy Steve from Slow Newsday that we just did an interview with his co host Craig Jardula, Chase Haggard. You guys ever heard of Chase Haggard. We'll look at that.
Chase Haggard and Pablo Cardona, the Gypsy Swing duo. Yes, they will be performing. And you guys may remember my interview with John Clicheck school World World Order a couple of years ago. John going to be there. I don't know these people, not being a dick, I just honestly don't know who these people are. So what you say you don't know me, man? I know. I'm sorry, man, I just don't know who you are. I'm sure you're a cool dude. So there you go.
There's tickets for that two day event heading over there to Rebels for cause that's Courtney's event and as you guys know, our big, big, big event La Baby Jamie Kennedy, Jay Dyer Jamie Henshaw July six in Los Angeles. It's going to be a cool event Van Nuys Airport. It's a super neat venue, a lot of Neon signs everywhere. Heading over right there and get tickets to our event in Los Angeles July six And you guys know our events. A lot of people in the audience have been to our live events.
They're like a party basically. It's like basically it's five hours of chilling, joking around, having fun impressions. And then you get me doing serious lecture, you get Jamie doing a serious lecture, and then you get Jamie Kennedy doing stand up. You get to meet Jamie Kennedy. I mean, that's gonna be a blast. And Jamie's a badass dude. So get those tickets. Those are also in the show description, and I want to say, and they're also right here in the chat July sixth, So come on out
there. If you're in the Los Angeles Burbank area roughly any if you're anywhere in California, come, I don't I don't care if you're not in the Burbank area. If you're in the freaking Malibu to Pinego Kenny. If you're in b Rads, if you're maliboote b Rad area, still come because you're gonna get to meet b Rad. How could you pass that up? Get your tickets, dude, And yes we will sign books. I will have books there. Absolutely, it's all there. So you get my cringe core
call comedy for forty five minutes. Can't beat that. You get Jamie's lecture on Hollywood hour and a half, you get my lecture on my philosophy book hour and a half. You get Jamie Kinney doing his stand up. You just can't beat that. And yes, book signing, autographs all that. Also. Our shows sponsor, as you guys know, is not just chog dot com. It's also Grand Theft World. Our buddy Richard Grove has one
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but everybody has paid content. And Richard played some of my clips last night, the Tucker clip, so they were having a good time playing that. So head on over to Grand the World, Richard Grove on rock Finn and subscribe there, and I will put that link here as well. Again, guys, please, you gotta get over on rock Finn because a lot of the content that you can't do over here, you can go get it over there. All right, So let's get back to some of the key
points here. The term invisible government that's used by H. G. Wells, it's used by Bernas. We mentioned that earlier Lipman's public opinions written in nineteen twenty two, these are key Tabisac texts. So in other words, we didn't even realize it, but now we know. The two HD Wells books that we've lectured through New World Order and Open Conspiracy, those are actually
Tabisact texts. And Lippman, I think he came up with this idea of the pictures in the head and the outside world, and the question is every human being has these pictures in his head of how the outside world works and what's going on in the world, and most of the time those things aren't actually correct, especially as we get into big world scale events. Right, the average person kind of doesn't really know what's going on, and they have
a relationship to more localized events or to their people that they know. They have a better sense of those things obviously, but these pictures in the head don't always match up to the pictures in the real world, according to Lippmont, and so the key way to manipulate the individual is to manipulate the pictures, to change the pictures in its head. So the external world, the external stimuli Pavlovian type of stuff, right, manipulates and changes the individual's mind,
and the individual has a role in also changing society. So that's that feedback loop that these guys are so interested in. Picture, how do we change But it's not it's about individuals. It's about changing the pictures, the imagery and iconographies of a society to change the thoughts and the pictures in the
head of not just individuals, but the herd. The herd mind literally called the herd mind, okay, And they said early on h Wells a TV TV's key and that is why Burnet's and William Paley went to be the key guys at CBS early on. So when they created the networks, basically oss Cia and then Tavistock people went to run the networks from the beginning of the networks Princeton Research Project. I covered this in my book. You guys probably
have heard of this. This is the Orson Wells radio project. So when Orson Wells broadcast, as a joke, quote unquote, the World the World's Broadcast on the radio, many people freaked out. People thought that aliens were really invading. Orson Wells did a broadcast of HD Wells's Were of the Worlds and I don't know how people thought this was real, but goofballs thought it was real and they were freaking out. That was part of the Princeton Research
Project. And one of the key figures at Princeton who was connected to him working with Tavistock is Hadlee Cantrill. I've mentioned this. It's in my first or second book when I talk about alien Bologna, and it's called Invaders from Mars Invasion for Mars Kidney in nineteen forty. So here is a Tavistock individual connected individual writing for Princeton Research Project It's not a science fiction book. It's a study in the psychology of panic. Do you see that it's not a
conspiracy book. Idiots out there that think this is some dumb conspiracy, This is Princeton Research Project, a study in the psychology of panic. What might we study the psychology of panic for? Can you guys think what modern type of warfare might we study panic for? The war on Do you need George Bush's out the terror war on chair and have war on chair and just declare a war on Isham, declare a war on How do you declare a war
on a place that's not a country? War legally is declared via Congress on a country. You can't declare a war or an ideology. But if you are at Tavistock mind control operative, then absolutely you can. And this allows for all kinds of amazing psychological warfare manipulation techniques. And that's exactly what the last twenty or so years of the War on t e R or to War on tear mustard gashes WMDs. But as doctor Coleman arguments, actually Tavistock declared
war on the UVS. That's what's really going on, and that's why I always hear me saying that, no, actually, the actual target population is not a foreign population, right, it's not Iraq. I mean, yeah, you get the death of a million iraqis probably right. So I'm not saying there's not a real war. There is, but I'm saying that the real subject is you, the viewer of the twenty four hour televised war on Iraq, America at war. Right, You're the target the wars against you
because of the psychology of panic. All right, Well, in the second half, we're gonna get into a lot more of this than making a public opinion. We're gonna get into characters like Gorwin Cartwright. We're gonna get it more into Burnet's the Notion in nineteen fifty five, a key text called Engineering Consent. We're going to talk more about John Rolling Reese and his Institute for
Social Research, which is Tavistok in the United States. We're going to talk about the Aspen Institute, which is one of the key CFR type things. It's one of these high level think tank committee type groups in America. We're going to talk about Hadley Kentrell's Office of Public Opinion Research. Oh Poor. We are going to talk about Willis Harmon. We're going to talk about British intelligence again and this system of identity change that doctor Kurt Lewin came up with,
which is a He called it a two phase space. I don't know if you just made this up to sound fancy, but there is a two phase space approach that Tabisaw cooked up with relating to the environment and the self and the third variable they call it, which is used by British intelligence for all extraction or information extraction processes. It's used in dealing with foreign enemies, to foreign dignitaries. It's an approach to any kind of situation where you want
to get a person to change their mind, to change their identity. So it's beyond changing your mind, it's actually changing your identity. And it has to do with environmental and external pressures by the time of Kurt Lewin. But this actually changes later on to be more about the manipulation of the self. And this actually plays into Guantanamo Bay actually, so doctor Coleman makes a big point of explaining how Lewin's phase space model for identity change is used in the
operations Guantanamo. Babe, all right, super chats, what's up? Let's see we got several here. If you want to support the show, guys, you can do so via the super chat function, which is via stream labs, so use the stream labs linked. So cool that we got right out about a thousand. I think we almost touched a thousand earlier on. That's great for a Monday night. But yeah, so I've been I was
talking about this book this week. So if you guys want to get my red book, it is all of my geopolitical, philosophical, theological essays compacted together in six hundred and sixty pages. So it's pretty cool to get all of them, I guess for forty five dollars. So if you go to the shop of the website, which I think is linked in the show description, you can get signed copies of the totality text all of what I wrote, probably from twenty twenty ten to twenty thirty I think is no. Twenty
to twenty twenty. Basically, it's like all of the essays of ten years of what I wrote. So it does not have the movie stuff, right, so the movies none of them. There's no movie stuff in that. It's just theology and philosophy essays for ten years. All the movie stuff is in the Ester Hollywood books. So I don't have the bookcam because I'm not at home. I'm on the road in an Airbnb, so we don't have the book cam. And I would, I would be more ridiculous. But
I'm tired because we had a long drive. So Kristen five dollars, thank you so much, and she says pay Piggy with imagery. She uses hieroglyphics and imagery to say pay Piggy. Kentucky Scuirrell ten dollars. I want to say thank you. Your debates helped me come to orthodoxy. Stay based. I will not. I'm going to be completely bluepill for no one. I'm quitting Based and joining team Bluepill. Just kidding. Thank you, Kentucky Scrorel.
Kevin Farrell five dollars, thanks always, Jay, Thank you Kevin Farrell much appreciate, BM duper five dollars. Jay was too mean to Klaus. Klaus called up Fox and said, con you made a bond villain Cope and Seethe use the chalk advertisement and promote insertain victory. Chalk advertisement here, Yeah, chalk and myself fueled the seething of Klaus Daddy five dollars. I appreciate you. May thank you, Daddy, Kompod Polly T. I don't know,
I don't know t Kompod Polly Polly Walnut's eight eighty eight. Have you seen Mickey the Clown skateboard surfing? Mickey the Clown sing skateboard surfing. I do not no idea what that is. It is in nineties psyop funded by the Ralph Childs. Okay, I will have to see it. What is it called Make You the Clown Skateboard Surfing? I'm afraid to look it up,
mark five dollars. Are there other organizations the same scale sophistication as House like Absolutely, but they're not a rivalry you're I mean Rand Corporation, Okay, Brookings Institute, Albert Einstein Institute. I mean, you guys understand, there's like a million of the top think tanks and foundations and they all do the same types of stuff. All right. I can't I can't tell what
these are. Um. I mean a lot of these are just like a lot of these are created for certain areas, like the Korean Development Institute. I mean, I have no idea what that is, but obviously it's dealing with Korea. But I mean typically when we talk about this, we're talking about um the most powerful think tanks like Brookings Institute, Carnegie, Yeah, c Sis, right, these kinds of things. That's not what I'm looking
for. Rand Corporation, somebody. There. Used to be a helpful UM diagram that somebody had many years ago that had all the top ones on it. Let's see what this is. No, that's not that's not not helpful because a lot of them are like, what is this? It's just relating to something in China. But um, let's see Brookings, CFR, Carnegie, Ford, Sorosum, Rand. But yeah, I mean you could look this up on your own. It's not that this doesn't even listen anything.
It was just worthless essay. Anyway, you get the idea. So I mean, m I T. I mean it's they're all interconnected. Jalis in nineteen eighty seven five dollars Tavistock be gossiping throw it down with Tim Capello. Well, Tim Capello used to be like super buff dude, right, Like that dude would probably whip me easily. But is he still super buff dude? He looks pretty buff, even as a full on boomer Man like he's he's full on boomer but he's still buffs saxophone man, so he might still
be able to beat me up. What do you guys think? Probably, surplus guy. I saw a video you did with long hair. Yep, that was a long time ago. It looked cool. I never expected that. Now you're growing along again. Yeah, ironically, it was back when I did the Tragy and Hope lectures, So it was all the way down my back in the I don't know, twenty sixteen, somewhere in there.
I think I did the Tragy. Know we lectured through the totality traging of twenty sixteen, So that's probably when you're referring to it through human eyes. Twenty dollars, Thank you, Jay Dyer, thank you through human heighths. You sound like a British synth pop band, so I'll take that. I'll take it. You probably made millions of dollars in the nineteen eighties from your brit pops sent the pop hits through human eyes, through human eyes, I
see you through human eyes, right, something like that. Anyway, if you guys would like and share, comment and Part two of this will be up in the next few days. I did get the part two to the Huxley lecture up, and as soon as Patrick Wood feels good, if he recovers from his surgery soon enough, he'll be on and we'll talk about his technocracy books. I mean, I'm enjoying his Trilateral's book, so it's it's
got a lot of information I didn't know. And there are a lot of a lot of corporations that were pushing all the same, you know, technocratic stuff in the seventies.
