THE BIG MIG SHOW
DECEMBER 04, 2024
EPISODE 433– 7PM
James Lindsay is an American-born author, mathematician, and professional troublemaker, Dr. James Lindsay has written six books spanning a range of subjects including religion, the philosophy of science and postmodern theory. He is a leading expert on Critical Race Theory, which leads him to reject it completely. He is the founder of New Discourses and currently promoting his new book "Cynical Theories: How Activist Scholarship Made Everything about Race, Gender, and Identity―and Why This Harms Everybody," which is currently being translated into more than fifteen languages. https://newdiscourses.com
Please be sure to click the THUMBs UP button when you check in!
HELP SUPPORT OUR SPONSORS,
Genesis Gold Group, Empowering Faith-Driven Stewardship https://thebigmiggold.com https://prepperbar.com
Unveiling the Hidden Cause: The Facts About Detoxifying & Alleviating Inflammation
Use Code Big Mig: https://www.mineralking.life
Original Glory Beer https://wefunder.com/originalbrands https://www.drinkoriginalbrands.com
FOLLOW US:
LINKTREE: https://linktr.ee/GeorgeBalloutine
LINKTREE: https://linktr.ee/LanceMigliaccio
LINKTREE: https://linktr.ee/rich805916
RUMBLE: https://rumble.com/c/TheBigMig
YOUTUBE: https://www.youtube.com/@RealBigMigShow
FRANKSPEECH: https://frankspeech.com/channel/The-Big-Mig-Show
X: https://x.com/TheBigMigShow
TRUTH SOCIAL: https://truthsocial.com/@TheBigMigShow
GETTR: https://gettr.com/user/TheBigMigShow
WEBSITE: http://thebigmig.com/
_______________________________________________
SUPPORT US:
00:00:00
All men are created equal that they are endowed by their
00:00:04
Creator. With certain unalienable rights
00:00:08
by. Liberty.
00:00:13
If liberty means anything at all, it means right to tell
00:00:17
people what they do not want to hear.
00:00:32
Make America great. Again.
00:00:54
Well, there's you know, you always are nervous when a show
00:00:56
starts off with an hoops coming from George, especially if I say
00:01:00
oops, it's not as bad because George is obviously the tech
00:01:02
guy. Well, welcome back to the big
00:01:04
big show. I'm your host, Lance Miliaccio
00:01:06
with my Co host George Ballantine doing what we do.
00:01:09
Of course, tip of the spear. And if liberty means anything at
00:01:11
all, it means the right to tell people what they do not want to
00:01:13
hear. And you know, on this show, we
00:01:15
always plan on giving you the facts, the evidence of softs,
00:01:18
the receipts. We do the research so you don't
00:01:20
have to. Hopefully we've done it right.
00:01:21
We make a mistake where it was open to you guys telling us and
00:01:24
we'll make sure we correct it because we're not mainstream
00:01:26
media. We're not going to lie to the
00:01:27
American public. And of course, on this show,
00:01:29
it's better to be hurt by the truth and comforted with with a
00:01:32
lie. Bro we got morals and values
00:01:34
what are you talking about? Morals and exactly some
00:01:36
integrity. I think the words integrity and
00:01:39
no woke ISM on this show. George, how are you, my brother?
00:01:42
I'm good. I'm good, you know, making sure
00:01:43
everything's working properly. It is, thank God.
00:01:45
But you know. Good, well, hopefully the oops
00:01:48
wasn't too serious. No, it was just me not paying
00:01:51
attention to oops, it's. My fault, it happens.
00:01:53
All right, let's just start off by thanking our sponsors.
00:01:55
As always, we appreciate everything they do for us.
00:01:59
And again, let's start with Genesis Gold Group.
00:02:04
Of course, the 62.2g Prepper bar got to appreciate with Christmas
00:02:10
right around the corner, easily broken down.
00:02:11
Your choice of three different denominations to fit in a
00:02:14
multitude of needs, whether it be for asset protection from
00:02:17
inflation, economic turmoil, or its unique utility for barter
00:02:20
and trade. Prep Bar makes a perfect gift
00:02:22
for all those precious metal lovers out there.
00:02:25
And you know, I know you can't see it.
00:02:26
It's very thin. It will fit in your wallet.
00:02:28
And there are three others, a smaller denomination, the
00:02:30
smallest one being on top. Of course, this is if any kind
00:02:33
of additional turmoil happens to the US dollar.
00:02:35
You want to pay attention to this because of course this is
00:02:38
something that can make a difference in your life life Go
00:02:41
head over to bigbigbar.com. That's right, the big bigbar.com
00:02:44
and that's how you'll get your best deal from the guys in
00:02:46
Genesis. And you can take a picture of
00:02:48
that QR code. George makes it easy.
00:02:49
He does the tech save it for later.
00:02:51
Don't leave the show now and then head back over here and of
00:02:54
course don't forget Genesis go group.
00:02:56
We have the global Finance Forum, which is a weekly finance
00:02:59
forum wrap up show every Friday, so 12:00 PM.
00:03:03
That's outside of our regular show.
00:03:04
So of course, and sure enough, soon enough we'll be doing the
00:03:08
but you know, the new crypto show crypto power hour with
00:03:12
solemn global. So that'll be an interesting
00:03:14
show. You're not going to want to miss
00:03:15
it. So tonight really interesting
00:03:18
show with a really interesting guy.
00:03:20
George throw up the thumbnail just so they can see this.
00:03:22
If you guys aren't familiar with this website, new discourses, I
00:03:25
go there quite a bit. James Lindsay is a proficient
00:03:29
author. Not only he's written many
00:03:30
books, co-authored many books and had his own books.
00:03:33
He's also writes regular articles and does a podcast over
00:03:37
there. Really interesting topics, deep
00:03:40
topics. He's an interesting guy.
00:03:42
He's an American born author, mathematician and professional
00:03:46
troublemaker. I called him a provocateur.
00:03:48
I don't know if that matches with troublemaker, but I think
00:03:50
it does. He's actually written six books
00:03:53
spanning range of subjects including religion, the
00:03:56
philosophy of science and postmodern theory.
00:04:00
He's a leading expert on critical race theory.
00:04:02
And I've got to tell you, he's got some really interesting
00:04:04
insights because when you start to understand the operation
00:04:07
that's working behind in the scenes, he really exposes it for
00:04:11
what it is. He's the founder of New
00:04:13
Discourses, like I said a minute ago, and currently promoting his
00:04:15
new book, Cynical Theories, how activist scholarship made
00:04:18
everything about race, gender, and identity, and why this harms
00:04:21
everybody. There's no reason to leave him
00:04:24
backstage, George. Let's bring in James.
00:04:26
All right, welcome to the big, big show.
00:04:28
James Lindsay, how you doing? Great.
00:04:31
How you guys doing? I think you had a better day
00:04:33
than us with that story you just told us earlier, but that.
00:04:35
Was a pretty good one, yeah, so let me just.
00:04:38
Line it out for the audience here.
00:04:40
So James, we appreciate you joining us.
00:04:42
We know you had a hectic day. You had stacked up interviews
00:04:46
because you just went viral. And I think it's a really
00:04:48
interesting story and I think you should share it with the
00:04:50
audience. So the timing for you coming on
00:04:52
the big Big is perfect because we didn't know you were going to
00:04:53
go viral. But let's talk about that for a
00:04:55
minute and give some people some background on what happened.
00:04:58
Yeah, I didn't know I was going to go viral either.
00:05:00
Actually, I spent half the week. I mean, I know I was going to do
00:05:02
this on Tuesday morning. And so isn't like the weekend
00:05:05
thinking and it won't be that big of a deal.
00:05:07
You know, it's like 1.8 million views on Twitter right now and
00:05:11
massive controversy. So I mean, I knew it'd be a
00:05:13
little controversial. So what I did was, you know,
00:05:15
I've been been dealing with the woke left, as we call them the
00:05:19
Marxist woke left for a long time.
00:05:22
I don't know if you guys or your audience would know, but it back
00:05:25
in 2018, I exposed the woke left in academia by writing a series
00:05:30
of hoax articles. I've been trying to criticize
00:05:33
them in the 1516 kind of ahead of everybody else or almost
00:05:37
everybody else, and they didn't want to hear it.
00:05:39
So we thought, me and my buddy Peter thought it'd be fun to
00:05:42
write a bunch of hoax articles, submit them to academic
00:05:45
journals, and we got a bunch of them published.
00:05:47
And one of the ones we got published was a rewrite of a
00:05:50
chapter of Mein Kampf. We took Hitler's memoir and, you
00:05:55
know, manifesto and we took the chapter about how to build the
00:05:59
Nazi party and why to build the Nazi party.
00:06:01
And we rewrote it, putting in intersectional feminism in place
00:06:05
of the Nazi Party. And that got accepted by a
00:06:08
feminist social work journal. And this got a lot of fanfare.
00:06:12
I mean, there were a bunch of other papers too.
00:06:13
We don't have to get into all that, but seven of them actually
00:06:16
got accepted in peer reviewed journals.
00:06:18
We end up front page of the New York Times, end up on Joe Rogan,
00:06:21
you know, a ton of attention for this.
00:06:23
And I've been trying to criticize for actually a couple
00:06:27
of years now, but more in the last three or four months.
00:06:30
The radical right as well, because I'm very worried that
00:06:33
I'm seeing kind of woke behavior with right wing values
00:06:37
allegedly, you know, being promoted from the radical right.
00:06:39
So I thought, well, I'll criticize them.
00:06:41
Well, that didn't work. They didn't want to hear it.
00:06:43
I started getting attacked by bots like everyday on social
00:06:46
media. They didn't know people were
00:06:48
like, I'm not interested in this.
00:06:49
And I was like, well, how do I get people's attention on this?
00:06:51
I said, Oh, I know what to do. Well, write an academic hoax, an
00:06:55
article hoax. So I wrote, I took 6 pages out
00:06:58
of the Communist Manifesto and which you know, you, you
00:07:02
wouldn't associate with right wing behavior.
00:07:04
And I rewrote it. I took out Marx's complaining
00:07:07
about the bourgeoisie and how terrible it's been for, for the
00:07:10
world to take out the bourgeoisie and replace it with
00:07:12
classical liberalism and the post war liberal consensus they
00:07:17
call it. And then I take out the
00:07:18
proletariats. That's Marx's good guys, right?
00:07:21
That's the workers. I take out proletariats and
00:07:23
workers and replace that with this thing they call themselves,
00:07:25
which is the new Christian right?
00:07:27
And they call themselves a lot of times the new right.
00:07:30
And I was like, well, let's see if they'll publish a section of
00:07:32
the Communist Manifesto that flatters their ideology.
00:07:35
And so I send this off to a magazine called The American
00:07:38
Reformer, which is not big, but it's big in their circles and
00:07:43
they published it. They published 6 pages of
00:07:45
communist rhetoric, communist, you know, conflict theory,
00:07:51
analysis. And then not only that, not only
00:07:54
did they publish it, I finally come public with this and they
00:07:56
stood by it. It's still on their website.
00:07:59
They changed, I gave the fake name Marcus Carlson because it
00:08:01
sounds like Karl Marx, but they changed the name to James
00:08:04
Lindsay. So that's me.
00:08:05
And they put an editor's note and said this actually
00:08:09
represents our thinking. It says this represent.
00:08:11
This is a reasonable wait. How did they figure out was you?
00:08:17
I told the world yesterday and that's what I went viral for.
00:08:20
So yesterday morning while I was at breakfast, because my tech
00:08:24
guy had to make a long drive, so we had to do it while we're at
00:08:27
breakfast. And he pushed play on the on the
00:08:30
article that we had written over the weekend.
00:08:33
And or I had written, I guess he didn't write it.
00:08:35
He pushed play on that. And so I'm sitting there trying
00:08:37
to eat breakfast and like explain myself on the Internet
00:08:40
at the same time. And this thing was started to
00:08:42
blow up immediately. And it's been really interesting
00:08:46
because now I've got all these like hardcore right wing guys
00:08:49
coming out and saying, you know, like, well, Marx was right about
00:08:52
about liberalism. He had a lot of good critiques.
00:08:54
You know, he was a really great writer.
00:08:56
And I'm like, Oh my God, what's going on?
00:08:58
I didn't think they were going to do this.
00:09:00
You know you've. You've started a new cult.
00:09:03
Yeah, apparently. It it's interesting is your is
00:09:06
your next project. Maybe you're going to do a
00:09:07
rewrite of The Red Book of Mao. Maybe that's your next.
00:09:10
Move. You know, I actually had thought
00:09:11
about that at one point. I'm.
00:09:13
Not oh, did you? But it turns out a lot of people
00:09:16
don't know the Little Red Book is just a it's just a book of
00:09:19
quotations. It's things Mao said.
00:09:21
It's 56 little tiny pages or something like that of quote
00:09:25
from Mao. It's really boring, but you
00:09:28
know, there are some really good tracks from Lenin and Stalin
00:09:32
about how decadent liberalism is that I totally could stick.
00:09:35
And I got three or four more publications that could end up
00:09:38
publishing some Stalin before the end of the before the end of
00:09:42
next year if if this keeps going all sideways.
00:09:45
Be careful you you might be running a gym Jim Jones rhetoric
00:09:50
kind of new cult. It might be frightening what can
00:09:52
happen, but it's. Interesting, right, You would
00:09:54
think. They would have ran in the other
00:09:55
direction when they knew what your your actual plan was.
00:10:00
And you're, by the way, you bring up Jim Jones.
00:10:01
A lot of people don't know Jim Jones was a communist.
00:10:03
When that? Was all about to go down like
00:10:06
Angela Davis. All the hardcore commies of the
00:10:09
70s were like writing letters to him.
00:10:11
And like, we got you, comrade. You know, a lot of people think
00:10:14
it was like some weirdo religious thing.
00:10:16
It wasn't. It was commies.
00:10:18
No, he was communist, there's no doubt about it.
00:10:20
And you're right, a lot of people don't know that.
00:10:21
That's just, it's a weird story, old Jones.
00:10:24
A lot of people don't really understand what was going on
00:10:26
there really, although it was, you know, not a great story at
00:10:30
the end, but the, but the, but the process, there were a lot of
00:10:34
celebrities communicating with him that thought he was just
00:10:36
amazing and incredible. Of course, they, they were
00:10:39
hopeful. I'm sure that none of their
00:10:40
letters got published during that time period because it
00:10:43
would have been pretty horrendous for their careers.
00:10:45
But you're kind of you're an interesting guy because you have
00:10:47
a PhD in math. And I got to ask you, this is
00:10:50
what I do with most people. If there's anything you want to
00:10:52
add to your bio that I left out because I, I used the
00:10:55
abbreviated version. I took it off there.
00:10:56
But what, what sent you down this path?
00:10:58
Because as a PhD in, in mathematics, it seems like you
00:11:01
were pretty well set to continue in that road.
00:11:04
And I, and I can see that the, the thinking process, I, I call
00:11:08
you a modern day philosopher. I think that you have a really
00:11:10
interesting tilt and the mathematics I think is why.
00:11:15
Can you explain to the audience what got you started in wanting
00:11:17
to expose this kind of insanity that's going on?
00:11:21
Yeah, I wish I could tell this story quick, but I'll try to do
00:11:24
it as far as short as possible because it it's one of those
00:11:26
things, it wasn't like one day I woke up and I want to do, you
00:11:28
know, take on woke politics. It was kind of like a series of
00:11:31
little things. So you are right.
00:11:32
I was. I was a mathematician.
00:11:34
It's usually only women who tell me I'm an interesting guy
00:11:36
because I was a mathematician. I'm just kidding.
00:11:38
No woman has ever said that. I don't think you study math.
00:11:41
You're interesting. Yeah.
00:11:42
That never comes up. What you hear back is I hate
00:11:45
math, but I was studying math and basically what happened was
00:11:50
I got sick and tired of the university.
00:11:53
Not there wasn't woke yet or not to my not in the math
00:11:56
department. So I didn't know it was woke.
00:11:58
They were changing all these policies where they wanted us to
00:12:01
not fail guys or kids that were in classes under, you know, the
00:12:07
200 level. So if they're in their 100 level
00:12:09
or maybe some 200 level introductory math classes, they
00:12:11
just have to take to get their major or to get their degree not
00:12:14
part of their major. They were like, you know, only
00:12:17
fail the worst student in class if they deserve it.
00:12:20
If you're going to fail more people write it up and you have
00:12:22
to explain why. Like all this reports and stuff.
00:12:25
And I was like, what are you talking about?
00:12:26
Like wrong is like, I'm a mathematician, right?
00:12:29
And I was like, math is hard. A lot of people fail.
00:12:31
That's OK. That's what it's supposed to do.
00:12:34
Everybody doesn't need like a participation diploma at the end
00:12:37
of college, but the university needed them paying tuition.
00:12:41
So don't make them feel bad. Don't demoralize them, keep them
00:12:44
in school, keep their scholarships.
00:12:46
And I was like, I don't want to participate in this.
00:12:48
I already didn't like how bureaucratic it was.
00:12:50
And there was, I don't want to keep doing this.
00:12:52
So I finished my degree and I just leave.
00:12:54
I did not pursue, you know, the whole postdoc tenure track,
00:12:59
blah, blah, blah. I could have, I had a family
00:13:03
also and it's like, do we want to move around 3 or 4 times in
00:13:06
the next six years? Not really.
00:13:09
You know, that's complicated. The kids are getting ready for
00:13:11
high school. It's like that's complicated.
00:13:13
They're going to be the new kid at like 2 schools.
00:13:15
You know, that's gross. So all things to put together.
00:13:19
I decided not to continue my academic career, left academia,
00:13:23
got a regular job. In fact, I became a massage
00:13:26
therapist, which the Internet sometimes decides to make fun of
00:13:28
me for women. Do think that's interesting?
00:13:30
As it turns out, that's awesome. That can come in handy.
00:13:35
It comes in handy. Yeah, that's a pun.
00:13:38
So, yeah. So I became a massage therapist
00:13:40
and I needed an academic outlet. I needed something to keep my
00:13:43
brain twirling. So I started to study philosophy
00:13:45
of science and kind of like reading these books about
00:13:48
psychology and how that plays in because I think that you've got
00:13:52
to understand some of the social sciences to do philosophy
00:13:54
because it's really a studying the human condition.
00:13:57
And so I was, I was getting involved in these discussion
00:14:00
boards and everything else. And they all just just got
00:14:02
ransacked by feminists. And so my introduction to woke
00:14:06
was like trying to do discussion about religion or trying to do
00:14:10
discussion about philosophy of science or whatever.
00:14:13
And it was like, if you're not putting feminists in charge of
00:14:15
everything, somehow you're a sexist.
00:14:17
And so that led me to start reading woke literature, start
00:14:20
reading and looking at the woke academic literature, which is
00:14:23
where they said they got those crazy ideas.
00:14:25
And one thing led to another. And I already told you the kind
00:14:28
of other part of the story. Eventually, in 2016, these guys
00:14:32
published a paper. This is a real paper.
00:14:34
You can go look it up. It's about glaciers and the
00:14:38
glaciology, The science of studying glaciers has to be
00:14:41
feminist or else it's sexist. And I was like, what?
00:14:46
And I read this paper and it's the craziest thing I ever read
00:14:49
in my life. I mean, it's insane.
00:14:50
It's way out there. And I mean, it's saying, like,
00:14:54
these feminist art projects have to be evaluated by scientists to
00:14:57
improve their studies of glaciers.
00:14:59
It's talking about indigenous myths about glaciers having sex
00:15:02
with one another. Like, it's really weird.
00:15:05
And I thought, this is terrible. What are they doing?
00:15:07
And so me and my buddy Peter that I mentioned, Peter
00:15:10
Boghossian, got talking and decided let's hoax these people.
00:15:13
Like they'll publish anything, right?
00:15:15
And so that led us to writing the the hoaxes.
00:15:17
And then halfway through that, the only part of my, you know,
00:15:20
origin superhero story I didn't tell.
00:15:23
Halfway through that we write this paper about education and
00:15:26
the peer review comments come back and they don't want the
00:15:28
paper yet. They want us to do more work on
00:15:30
it. But they the comments we had
00:15:32
said we're going to abuse kids out of their privilege.
00:15:35
I mean, that's the short version of the what this paper is about.
00:15:37
We're going to, you know, bully them in class.
00:15:39
We're going to make them wear chains and sit on the floor and
00:15:41
like all this stuff if they're privileged and we said, but
00:15:44
we're going to do it with compassion.
00:15:46
And the peer reviewer said, you can't use compassion.
00:15:49
You need to study this thing called the pedagogy of
00:15:51
discomfort. You're going to recenter the
00:15:53
needs of the privileged kids, whatever that means.
00:15:55
And we were like, holy crap, you know, that's evil.
00:15:58
And I got thinking about it and I was like, this is the kind of
00:16:00
logic that undoes a civilization like this ends in genocide.
00:16:05
Some people, because of their skin color or because of who
00:16:07
they are born as or who they're sexually attracted to or
00:16:10
whatever, whatever it is some characteristics are, they're
00:16:14
intrinsically bad and we're going to re educate them through
00:16:16
pain and discomfort and struggle.
00:16:19
And then you can't use compassion because that just
00:16:23
multiplies the original crime in the 1st place.
00:16:26
And I didn't know enough about Mao at the time to know that
00:16:29
that was like struggle sessions. I didn't know.
00:16:31
I just knew that that looked like the kind of thing that ends
00:16:34
in genocide if it's allowed to play out.
00:16:36
And I was like, whatever's going on in academia is really bad.
00:16:39
So I asked my wife if I could quit my job as a massage
00:16:41
therapist and dedicate all my time to finding out what's going
00:16:44
on in academia and exposing it to the world.
00:16:46
And then it's just been one thing led to another.
00:16:48
I just committed myself to studying and exposing this stuff
00:16:52
at literally full tilt ever since.
00:16:54
That was in February or January of 20/20/18.
00:16:58
So that's a long time ago now, getting on 7 years ago.
00:17:02
And I've done, you know, full time independent research ever
00:17:06
since. Reading as much of this as I can
00:17:08
read in my spare time or my working time too, and writing
00:17:12
about it, getting my head around it, communicating it, traveling
00:17:15
and talking all over the world. Oxford, Japanese Parliament,
00:17:18
European Parliament, I mean, everywhere.
00:17:21
You've done a. Lot of public speaking.
00:17:23
I looked at that and I was impressed by the amount you'd
00:17:25
done and a lot of interesting places you did it.
00:17:29
So like I'm, I'm assuming that why you were doing this was new
00:17:33
discourses in existence yet or this LED you to that.
00:17:36
And let's explain to the audience newdiscourses.com.
00:17:39
It's his platform and it was founded by him.
00:17:41
Of course, you guys know and you want to look at the they always
00:17:43
critique, they analyze, critique you contemporary social justice
00:17:47
ideologies and their academic roots like critical race theory.
00:17:50
So I think that gives you a very Cliff note, very short of what
00:17:53
they do, I think. Yeah, that is, that's a good
00:17:55
Cliffs Notes. The, the, I mean, honestly, what
00:17:57
I mostly do, it's not the only thing I do, but I mostly do is I
00:18:02
read and digest these academic materials, whether it's, you
00:18:05
know, the Communist Manifesto or whether it's something, you
00:18:08
know, like some weird paper in, in sexuality studies or
00:18:11
whatever. And I usually actually read most
00:18:14
of the paper to the audience and explain what they're saying.
00:18:17
So people can understand leftism, you know, all the way.
00:18:20
They can hear the actual leftist words and then hear what they
00:18:23
mean. And I mean, it's somewhat
00:18:25
advanced sometimes. It's pretty easy other times.
00:18:27
But that's basically what I do. So no, New Discourses didn't
00:18:31
come into existence until February of 2020.
00:18:33
So I met these guys that I still work with.
00:18:37
Mike O'Fallon in particular is pretty famously who is this kind
00:18:41
of big, big character in the kind of Christian apologetics
00:18:46
and ministry world who reached out to me 'cause he heard me
00:18:49
talking about the woke as a religion on a YouTube video.
00:18:53
So he listens to me say that it has some Augustinian construct
00:18:56
and it's built, you know, this way with original sin and you
00:18:59
know, the whole kind of permanent confession model that
00:19:02
they, we all know that they have you confess, but you're never
00:19:04
actually healed of your sin, never redeemed.
00:19:08
And you're supposed to keep confessing.
00:19:10
And so he thought that was really interesting because he
00:19:13
had been arguing similar things in his circle.
00:19:15
So he started diving into my work, reached out to me.
00:19:17
We met and had dinner one night and just went out.
00:19:20
He was on his way to drive to C pack and just stopped by
00:19:24
Knoxville where I lived and took me out to dinner.
00:19:26
And so we sat down and talked and we thought, you know, he was
00:19:29
like your work. He's like, you really get it and
00:19:32
you need a platform. And my company, one of the
00:19:35
things that his existing company at the time did was build
00:19:39
Internet platforms. He's like, we'll figure out a
00:19:41
name, we'll build you the website, you can publish your
00:19:43
material, you can push your own research.
00:19:46
And when he was like, we have to make it cancel proof though.
00:19:48
It has to be so that you don't have like 1 donor who's going to
00:19:51
get mad at you and tell you what to do or you know, bail out.
00:19:56
So it's got to be cancel proof. We can't have like bosses as
00:19:59
the, you got to figure that out. So we spent most of 2019
00:20:02
figuring out how to do that, and we built this.
00:20:05
Highly diversified model for to bring in income and built the
00:20:11
thing and released it early 2020 with a huge kind of backlog of
00:20:16
information, very fortuitous, huge backlog.
00:20:18
The first thing I populated the website with was an analysis of
00:20:21
critical race theory that the world nobody actually really
00:20:24
cared that much what it was in February of 2020 because George
00:20:28
Floyd died in May of 2020. Yeah.
00:20:32
Your timing couldn't have been more perfect.
00:20:33
And I have to tell you, if he's the one that's responsible along
00:20:36
with your obviously guidance, the website you've got is
00:20:39
incredible. It's a great website, really.
00:20:41
Well, together. Easy to navigate.
00:20:44
You know, George, as a matter of fact, let's throw the website up
00:20:46
for the audience right now so they can see it.
00:20:49
I think it's, you know, I go to a lot of websites, you know,
00:20:52
when you do what we do in investigative journalism and
00:20:54
you're on the Internet literally from Ding to Dong from first
00:20:57
thing in the morning till on, you know, when you're doing
00:21:00
research, you come across a lot of sites and I have to say a lot
00:21:03
of them are garbage. They're terrible, badly crafted,
00:21:07
hard to navigate. They don't really, I mean, so
00:21:10
just scroll a little bit George. But I think if, if you guys, if
00:21:13
he's the one responsible, great job.
00:21:15
Like my hat's off to him. You know, I think your work,
00:21:17
it's interesting because it resonates with a really, really
00:21:19
interesting. So it's got an audience that's,
00:21:21
you know, concerned with free speech, you know, academic
00:21:23
freedom, you know, and of course, I would have to say
00:21:26
perceived overreach of identity based ideologies.
00:21:29
So it's interesting how that how that audience and how they seem
00:21:33
to be so loyal to this topic. And yet the topics that you
00:21:37
cover are relatively, like you said, new your timing.
00:21:41
You know, I'd almost say you were you were Kreskin or
00:21:44
something. You might have been a little
00:21:45
psychic in in the coordination of.
00:21:48
You know, I'll tell you since you brought that up.
00:21:50
It's really funny. I was just reading the tea
00:21:52
leaves, right? I don't think it was psychic,
00:21:55
but I was in that when we launched New Discourses, we
00:21:58
actually had gone to DC to be together as a group and that we
00:22:01
plan to do a little event. So we were all at the Trump
00:22:04
International while Trump still owned that hotel there in DC.
00:22:08
And we put on a little event. We launched New Discourses that
00:22:11
weekend from the hotel and then we put on a little event one
00:22:14
evening and we had a bunch of guys, you know, some White House
00:22:18
people, a bunch of think tank guys from DC, some Pentagon
00:22:20
guys. And we sat and I gave a talk in
00:22:23
front of this room of people, this very interesting motley, I
00:22:26
mean, literally like White House high UPS, right?
00:22:29
And Pentagon guys. And I was like in the middle, I
00:22:32
was about CRT, You want what critical race theory is?
00:22:34
And in the middle of it, I said that it was my guess that was in
00:22:38
six months there would be something like the Chinese
00:22:40
Cultural Revolution that would kick off in the United States
00:22:43
using critical race theory. And when George Floyd died,
00:22:47
literally 3 months to the day, three months later to the day,
00:22:51
that's exactly what happened. And I was, I look back at that
00:22:53
was like, holy crap, I can't believe I called that.
00:22:55
I was really just taking a risk for some flourish and a talk
00:22:58
there. Some people would accuse that
00:23:01
George Floyd must have worked for you at that time period.
00:23:03
Yeah, right. Wait a minute, George flashed on
00:23:08
the payroll for now and all the now it's how do.
00:23:10
You think he got that $20 bill? Exactly where was he?
00:23:14
Where was his connect, You know, So I think it's interesting, but
00:23:18
the titles and I, I'm not, I didn't do these in any
00:23:20
particular order for the audience.
00:23:23
I used the querying of the American child because I thought
00:23:25
it was a hook. That's why I used that in the
00:23:27
ad. But the other topics and of
00:23:29
course your new book are just as relevant.
00:23:31
But maybe we'll just start in the order.
00:23:33
Yeah, that's great. Like we've got the book covered
00:23:35
here so we can show the audience also.
00:23:38
Let's. Start let's start there.
00:23:40
Let's talk about that because the the difficult thing for
00:23:44
people that do investigated jurors on it or, or or
00:23:47
intellectually looking through massive amounts of information.
00:23:51
You start to wonder, you start to see patterns if you have any
00:23:54
kind of I have a moderately voted memory and you start to
00:23:56
see things that are recurring theme and you ask yourself,
00:24:00
well, who's behind it? What is going on here?
00:24:02
Because we talk a lot about the woke agenda on our show and what
00:24:06
they're doing to our children. When I look at things like Drag
00:24:09
Queen Story Hour and I believe George, what's the guy?
00:24:13
What's the one? The rainbow butt monkey.
00:24:15
Rainbow butt Monkey. Oh my God, another one that if
00:24:18
you do you remember that? Do you remember when he was
00:24:19
reading? Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
00:24:21
Rainbow dildo. I'm sorry, the rainbow dildo
00:24:24
butt monkey. You can never imagine how any
00:24:26
parent would want their kids seeing that young kids.
00:24:29
I just. Yeah, I can't either.
00:24:31
I don't I don't know what these what's going through these
00:24:33
parents minds like are they that dumb or just miss not know
00:24:35
what's going on? I don't.
00:24:38
Well, let's start here with you, James.
00:24:39
Let's talk about this book. Great topic, great title, catchy
00:24:43
title. And of course, this explores how
00:24:46
children and childhood are constructed and understood in
00:24:48
American Society through the lens of queer theory.
00:24:51
Even that description makes me cringe.
00:24:54
Yeah, me too. Yeah, so let's talk about this
00:24:58
because many adult, we have a lot to people, we get a lot of
00:25:01
feedback in our direct messaging and we put our, you know, emails
00:25:04
out because I don't care what people send me.
00:25:05
Of course we get a lot of death threats, but we get lots of
00:25:07
other good stuff. And people are worried.
00:25:10
I mean, they really don't understand why our education
00:25:12
system has stooped to the level it is.
00:25:14
And it seems that between Netflix and Disney and Amazon,
00:25:18
it it's a constant session of grooming that I don't think any
00:25:22
parent has the time to really police.
00:25:25
Yeah, we cover the the aspect of that with the schools.
00:25:28
We don't get into the media stuff too much in the book
00:25:31
because it was originally a book just about education.
00:25:34
But the idea actually of queer theory is that being normal is
00:25:38
not acceptable. So you it is, it's in fact a
00:25:40
form of oppression. And once you say the magic O
00:25:43
word, enough people are now cluing in that they understand
00:25:46
that this is probably Marxist and it is.
00:25:48
Queer theory is Marxism built up around the idea that the people
00:25:52
who are normal have social privileges and the people,
00:25:55
people who are weird or abnormal or deviant or perverts or queer
00:26:01
are restricted from social privileges.
00:26:03
In other words, you have an oppressor versus oppressed
00:26:05
dynamic. For the for your viewers that
00:26:07
haven't read the Communist Manifesto like I had to do
00:26:10
recently, the first paragraph of the 1st chapter of the Communist
00:26:14
Manifesto says that the the basic summary of Marx's entire
00:26:19
view of how history itself works is that it's the antagonism of
00:26:23
the oppressed versus the oppressor.
00:26:25
It's all class conflict all the time.
00:26:28
So you're always trying to find some line.
00:26:30
You draw the line, cut the population in half, and there's
00:26:32
the good side that's oppressed by the bad side.
00:26:35
That's always is how Marxism works.
00:26:38
That's the first telltale sign of Marxism.
00:26:40
And instead of using economic status like Karl Marx did with
00:26:44
queer theory, they use, Do people consider people like you
00:26:47
to be normal? And so the idea is to groom kids
00:26:51
into rejecting the idea of normal to get them to act out
00:26:56
being trans, being a minority sexuality.
00:26:59
I would normally just say gay or bisexual, but now we have
00:27:02
hundreds of those. You know, they're these really
00:27:05
weird descriptions for a lot of times, very normal behavior that
00:27:09
put them into that spectrum. So they can view themselves as a
00:27:12
political activist, in other words, as queer.
00:27:15
Here's an example of something normal demisexual, right?
00:27:18
So this is one of these stupid words, you know, came out of
00:27:21
academia, they came out of queer theory, Demisexual.
00:27:24
What does demisexual mean? Demisexual means that you only
00:27:28
want to have sex with people that you have feelings for,
00:27:32
which is like being a girl, right?
00:27:34
This is normal, girl. And a lot of guys are that way
00:27:38
too, right? So it's a very normal thing.
00:27:40
But no, it has to have a special term.
00:27:41
And that's a way that you're queer.
00:27:42
So now let's teach you what it means to be who you really are,
00:27:45
and let's get you on this disruptive program.
00:27:48
Queer is defined in their literature, as we explained in
00:27:50
the book, and we quote the guy at length, the definition of
00:27:54
queer is that it is whatever is opposed to the normal, the
00:27:59
legitimate, or the dominant. And so just being not normal on
00:28:03
purpose, being like a drag queen or whatever, but where that
00:28:07
really comes from, what the big objective with that is, is to
00:28:10
radicalize kids, to make kids feel like weirdos and outsiders
00:28:14
who have this only they only get social value out of seeing
00:28:18
themselves through this lens. And also to break down the bonds
00:28:21
to their family and to their religion, which both will reject
00:28:24
this analysis. Like you guys said, you know,
00:28:26
you want to hear the Q word next to the child, right?
00:28:29
It's uncomfortable. Queer theory itself is an
00:28:32
uncomfortable name. It's hard to talk about and you
00:28:34
think about it with children and what parent you said would you
00:28:37
would want their kid near this? That's the idea is the parents
00:28:40
are supposed to get upset. The kids believe this is really
00:28:42
me. Now my parents reject me and
00:28:44
then the cult at school accepts me.
00:28:47
So when you switch over to the media, they're pumping it in
00:28:50
through the media to get the kids the same way you get the
00:28:53
kids all primed on this. Then the people at the school
00:28:55
are like, we're your safe place. Your parents are probably not
00:28:58
going to like this. So let's keep some secrets.
00:29:00
Let's hide it from your parents. We're on your side.
00:29:02
They're not and you're tearing apart the family, just like Karl
00:29:05
Marx said again and in the Communist Manifesto said
00:29:08
explicitly in Chapter 2 that one of his objectives was to abolish
00:29:12
and tear apart the family. So that's, that's what this
00:29:17
program is about. I mean, we could talk more if
00:29:19
you want, about why the companies are doing it.
00:29:21
The schools have been captured, though.
00:29:22
Parents don't understand this. Well, here's something I'd like
00:29:24
to get to because this is, you know, for a, for a person that
00:29:28
hasn't investigated as deeply as you have, when it's any parents
00:29:31
or family members or even us that are on social media.
00:29:35
And let's say you're, you're looking through material.
00:29:36
And all of a sudden there's something on TikTok where
00:29:38
there's some guy dressed as a woman telling kids that if you
00:29:41
can't talk to your parents, you can talk to me and you can meet
00:29:43
me in a private chat room. You look at the grooming.
00:29:46
So you look at the piece that's happening in the school system.
00:29:48
And to me, it's kind of a fomented plot.
00:29:50
Because if you look at these educational spaces and, and you
00:29:53
know, and, and you think about the role that schools play in
00:29:56
curriculum and reinforcing or, or, or teaching children at a
00:30:00
time when I think, you know, you have to talk about this time as
00:30:03
what purity and innocence, right?
00:30:04
I mean, these are people that they're, they're, they're in
00:30:06
their really formative years and they don't understand a lot of
00:30:08
things and they're being funneled all this material that
00:30:11
had it been in our schools. I went to private schools.
00:30:14
I was pretty lucky. My parents put, you know, went
00:30:16
out of the way to send us to private schools when I was
00:30:17
young. Not because they had the money.
00:30:18
They just spent all their extra money on sending us to private
00:30:21
schools to make sure we got a good education.
00:30:23
Public schools weren't that great in New York, so they
00:30:25
didn't want to take that chance. But you would never have seen
00:30:28
material like what we're seeing now, whether it's about
00:30:30
masturbation and all these other topics, which to me is just
00:30:34
straight up grooming. You know, children aren't, you
00:30:35
know, can't buy a gun until they're 18.
00:30:37
They can't vote till a certain age.
00:30:39
Why are they being funneled this kind of information at this age
00:30:42
when we know that they're in the formative years?
00:30:45
It seems like it's a plan and a plot.
00:30:47
And I always wonder who's behind the DEI, who's behind the
00:30:50
wokeness that's happening in the educational system.
00:30:53
I mean, you know, last night, like I told you, when we were
00:30:56
backstage, we had somebody on talking about fluoride and how
00:30:59
that really lowered the IQ of people and that they've proven
00:31:03
that it directly impacts the, the, the children's brains.
00:31:07
So clearly it was a bad idea. You know, they don't have any
00:31:09
idea what the dosages are supposed to be.
00:31:11
But here we are now looking at the other side of this.
00:31:13
So now we've got the chemical issue that we're doing.
00:31:15
I mean, like, you know, they, they made so much fun of of
00:31:20
Infowars, you know, Alex Jones when he said it's turning the
00:31:22
frogs gay. But at the end of the day, we
00:31:24
take what we think is chemically happening and now you add this
00:31:27
piece and this is so dangerous. Do you feel like there's some
00:31:30
kind of an organization or this is a planned plot to destroy the
00:31:33
country from within? Is this really part of this and
00:31:35
who's funding it? Any idea?
00:31:37
I think it is. And I've actually like, I'm, I
00:31:40
go back and forth on how coordinated I think it is up to
00:31:43
very, very coordinated down to much less with a bunch of
00:31:46
independent actors taking advantage of certain
00:31:49
circumstances. Because you talk about like the
00:31:50
chemicals in the water. Well, think about the chemicals
00:31:53
that you put directly into the children in the forms of
00:31:55
psychoactive drugs like Ritalin and SSRIs and all of that stuff.
00:32:00
So, you know, the, they've been medicating being a boy, like
00:32:04
it's a psychiatric problem since basically when I was in high
00:32:08
school, you know, probably started then in the 90s when the
00:32:12
Ritalin became like what everybody had to take.
00:32:14
Then it's now it's Adderall and then all these others.
00:32:17
So these kids are, you know, warped out of their minds.
00:32:19
A lot of them are on SSRIs, a lot of the girls are on hormonal
00:32:23
birth control. All of these things are screwing
00:32:25
with their, their brain, their chemical environment, their
00:32:28
mental faculties, their, their mood.
00:32:30
A lot of it's emotion driven. So there's that chemical aspect
00:32:34
too. Just to bring it on the table.
00:32:35
But for the, for the woke agenda, I got 1:50 answers.
00:32:38
One answer is that what I started to say a minute ago,
00:32:42
which is that the, the Marxists, and I don't, I don't mean this
00:32:46
glibly. I don't mean this to be like
00:32:48
scaremongering. I mean, literally.
00:32:49
Marxists using this new Marxist theory we call woke had captured
00:32:54
our colleges of education in their own telling by the early
00:32:57
1990s. They give the date as 1992.
00:33:00
We controlled America's colleges of education.
00:33:03
So every teacher, every administrator, every everything
00:33:06
after that had to go through some program, even if it's just
00:33:09
one class or one year or some re up professional development in
00:33:13
order to get to their job, to get their license, to get their
00:33:17
license renewed or to get it approved from year to year.
00:33:20
Had to get the school accredited.
00:33:22
Had to go through an indoctrination program that
00:33:24
involved at least some degree. You know, heavier at some
00:33:27
places, lighter at others, of Marxist indoctrination in terms
00:33:32
of A, how things, you know, how the world works, and B, how to
00:33:35
teach it became Marxist brainwashing.
00:33:37
They call it critical pedagogy, which became the dominant mode.
00:33:41
In fact, it's the only mode of educational theory taught in
00:33:43
colleges of education today and has been now for at least 20,
00:33:47
but arguably almost 30 years. So you have that those people
00:33:51
are activists who want to do this to children because they
00:33:54
want to transform kids into being Marxist.
00:33:57
Now there's the other side. Nothing gets off the ground like
00:34:00
this without lots of money, without lots of institutional
00:34:02
support. And if we're talking about the
00:34:05
the queering of the American child specifically, not the full
00:34:07
blast woke agenda, but it's all related really where the
00:34:11
especially the sexualization stuff is coming from.
00:34:15
I can give you a simple 1 acronym answer, which is UNESCO.
00:34:19
UNESCO created the program we call Comprehensive Sexuality
00:34:22
Education. They created it in 2003.
00:34:25
They created it in conjunction with the International Planned
00:34:28
Parenthood Federation and the German Guttmacher Institute,
00:34:31
which is basically the same thing.
00:34:33
But in Germany. They created this sexuality
00:34:37
education that expanded what we called sex Ed, which was already
00:34:40
controversial back in the day. They expanded sex Ed to include
00:34:44
all kinds of new stuff, sexual citizenship, pleasure based sex
00:34:49
education, all the gross stuff that we're looking at and
00:34:51
thinking about today. All a lot of that gender bred
00:34:54
person material, the gender bending curriculum, the gender
00:34:59
Unicorn material is coming down the Pike from UNESCO.
00:35:03
And I thought that that was the case when I was starting to do a
00:35:06
lot of my research into this, which UNESCO is the United
00:35:09
Nations Educational Scientific Cultural Organization.
00:35:11
So it's a United Nations program.
00:35:14
But I was just last year, about this time of year, I went to
00:35:16
London and I was with some friends and we were in, you
00:35:20
know, was at a conference and we were talking to this guy from
00:35:22
Kenya. And so we're all talking about
00:35:24
education because some of the people are teachers and working
00:35:26
in parent organizations in our little circle that we're
00:35:29
standing and talking. And the Kenyan guy's like, oh,
00:35:31
you should see what we have in Kenya's schools.
00:35:33
We have all this sex stuff. We have all the sexualization
00:35:35
stuff. And it's this and it's that, and
00:35:36
there's a gender this. And he's saying all the same
00:35:40
stuff we have here. You could say, you know, I like
00:35:42
to use the example, for whatever reason, it's like what they
00:35:44
teach in New Jersey, they're also teaching in Kenya with
00:35:47
regard to this. Why in the hell is it in Kenya,
00:35:50
right? And then you realize Kenya is a
00:35:52
major United Nations in UNESCO member state.
00:35:55
That's why it's in Kenya, It's in all of them.
00:35:58
It's in every single country that signs up for the UNESCO
00:36:01
program for their education. And so you can guess then that
00:36:05
that's where you're getting pretty close to the head of the
00:36:08
snake. But it's coming down from major
00:36:12
international organizations that believe that their job is to
00:36:15
transform children into what they call global citizens and
00:36:19
that this disruption to their development is necessary to make
00:36:23
them something different, which is classic communism in a new
00:36:26
form. So, you know, I think it's
00:36:28
coordinated. When you think about the power
00:36:30
that the United Nation has here in our own country, they're
00:36:33
fortunate I'm not the president of the United States.
00:36:35
They'd have 30 days to move out of their facility in New York
00:36:37
and never come back. I don't think Trump's agenda.
00:36:40
Yeah, I don't like their agenda. I don't like what they're doing
00:36:42
at the border. All right, that music means
00:36:44
we're going to take a short break.
00:36:45
When we come back, we'll be here with James Lindsay.
00:36:47
We'll be talking more about. But we're really going to get
00:36:50
into some of this, the marks of vacation of our education
00:36:53
system. He wrote a book about it.
00:36:54
He's an expert. Stay tuned.
00:36:56
Big Mcmafi and subscribers, this is great information.
00:36:58
If you really want to understand what's going on in our country,
00:37:01
we're being destroyed from within.
00:37:09
If we lose freedom here, there is no place to escape to.
00:37:15
This is the last stand on Earth. As an American who keeps up with
00:37:21
the real news, you know by now the severity of the economic
00:37:25
issues that are plaguing our great nation.
00:37:27
My name is Jonathan Rose and I'm the CEO of Genesis Gold Group,
00:37:31
the only major faith driven company in the industry. 2024 is
00:37:36
a year full of uncertainties. With trillions of dollars in
00:37:39
national debt, inflation impacting your savings, and the
00:37:43
pivotal election year, your Peace of Mind is more valuable
00:37:47
than ever. Now is the time to use physical
00:37:50
gold and silver to preserve your hard earned retirement savings
00:37:53
with a gold IRA. Call Genesis Gold Group today.
00:37:57
Our team has decades of experience helping folks just
00:38:00
like you take their first step on the path to true financial
00:38:03
freedom with a gold and silver IRA.
00:38:06
Call Genesis Gold Group today at 1-8 Hundred 200 Gold for a no
00:38:10
commitment informative consultation with one of our
00:38:12
experts to find out if we can be a fit for you.
00:38:14
Call now at 1-800-200-4653 or visit genesisgoldgroup.com.
00:38:20
In a world of uncertainty, be prepared with silver pepper
00:38:23
bars, your ultimate hedge against political instability
00:38:27
and economic turmoil. Introducing the Silver Pepper
00:38:30
Bar crafted from pure silver and proudly made in the
00:38:34
USA, this tangible, divisible asset can come in handy even in
00:38:38
the toughest of times. Portable, perforated, and easily
00:38:42
tradable, the Silver Pepper Bar is your lifeline in times of
00:38:45
crisis. When facing inflation, currency
00:38:48
devaluation, and financial meltdown, Silver Pepper Bars
00:38:52
provide Peace of Mind. Don't wait for disaster to
00:38:54
strike. Secure your future today with
00:38:57
the exclusive Silver Pepper Bar, the only silver bar on the
00:39:00
market, divisible into three different size pieces for
00:39:03
maximum utility, all while fitting in your wallet.
00:39:06
The smart choice for savvy investors and preppers alike.
00:39:10
With Silver Pepper Bars, you're ready for whatever tomorrow
00:39:13
brings. They would run up to the bamboo
00:39:16
fence and they would be shooting between the bamboo at the
00:39:19
buildings, you know, just shooting inside.
00:39:22
The Wanted man is Joseph Kony, charged with abducting huge
00:39:26
numbers of children, forcing them to kill and mutilate
00:39:29
innocent victims. Somebody had to pay the price.
00:39:32
Sam did that. Sam Childers never stopped,
00:39:35
because the bad things never stop.
00:39:38
There is only one Sam Childer. There is no one else like him in
00:39:42
the world. And I said to him, I said.
00:39:44
Would you go? Now to get Kony in the Congo.
00:39:47
He says without a doubt. In a second, now it's the DRC.
00:39:50
Tell us what's happening to children in the DRC.
00:39:53
You have ISIS there, you have Islamic State and you have ADF.
00:39:57
Hey, Sandy. Joseph Kony's still alive.
00:39:59
He's in the Congo. And now God has me in the Congo,
00:40:02
you know, So hopefully we'll meet up one day.
00:40:06
But maybe I can lead him to the Lord or send him there.
00:40:10
One or the other, huh? All right, welcome back to the
00:40:30
big, big show. Here we host George Valentin,
00:40:32
Lance Migliaccio, and our guests, badass author James
00:40:37
Lindsay. I'm going to call him the Mad
00:40:39
Troller now too, because he just trolled them and he got him
00:40:43
pretty good. I got to say, that's a.
00:40:44
That's a beast of a. Troll troll.
00:40:46
That's like 1. Of them Trump trolls.
00:40:47
He does. You know, like that was.
00:40:48
Like a but that was like a sophisticated troll.
00:40:51
That wasn't just throwing out a meme.
00:40:52
That was that was very sophisticated.
00:40:54
That was an operation. That was that was troll OP when
00:40:57
you know. You would think something the
00:40:59
way he did it. He did have like other people in
00:41:01
the mix of it helping him, this and that.
00:41:02
He was a one man show. Would you expect anything less?
00:41:05
Would you expect anything less from a map of the petition with
00:41:07
PhD? Wouldn't you expect that his
00:41:09
trolling would be sophisticated? Yeah, what we're talking about
00:41:11
here. I mean, kudos.
00:41:17
We got some some lowbrow stuff. Well, let's.
00:41:19
Jump into your next book, James just, and I think for the
00:41:23
audience, you know, some of this, you're like, well, what
00:41:25
the heck does this mean for me? Well, I think what it means for
00:41:27
you is that you really ought to be paying attention to what's
00:41:29
going on in the school system. You, you really ought to read
00:41:32
James Lindsay's books. Maybe you maybe it might be
00:41:35
content might be a little deep for you at first glance, but the
00:41:38
idea would be that you'd understand that this is an
00:41:40
extremely organized plan to corrupt our children.
00:41:44
This is not just some, you know, they, they're just doing, oh,
00:41:47
they made a mistake. They put that book in the
00:41:48
library about masturbation. That was just an error.
00:41:51
No, it's not. It's all part of it.
00:41:53
This grooming is going on. You know, it's going on on
00:41:56
social media. It's all over TikTok.
00:41:58
It's all over lots of the big, you know, media companies like
00:42:02
Netflix and and Amazon. If you look at the show and
00:42:06
movies on there, it's it's hard to find a movie that doesn't
00:42:09
have some of this garbage in it anymore.
00:42:11
And I assume it's because of the funding sources require a
00:42:14
certain amount of this crap to be pumped into them.
00:42:16
So let's talk about your next book.
00:42:19
Let's go into the details of kind of where this started and
00:42:22
and why you felt like this was important to get out.
00:42:25
Yeah, I mean, education is, is honestly, it's like this weird
00:42:28
issue people always forget about, but it's really the most
00:42:31
important issue because, like, if we fix everything else, let's
00:42:34
say that Trump has a magic wand and can wave the magic wand and
00:42:36
fix everything wrong with our country right now, which even if
00:42:40
that's not going to happen, right, if he gets 20% of
00:42:42
everything, that'd be astonishingly good, right?
00:42:46
But imagine he could fix it all. Except that we don't fix the
00:42:49
schools, right? So in 10 years, all of the
00:42:52
graduates coming out of the schools are going to put us
00:42:55
right back in the same position again.
00:42:57
And within 20 years that's we're right back where we are now.
00:43:00
We're all the way back in trouble again.
00:43:02
Even if Trump could fix it all with a magic wand way beyond,
00:43:05
you know, like what he can actually do with his powers as
00:43:07
president up against a hostile Congress and whatever else.
00:43:11
So education is a really important issue.
00:43:14
And So what I was hearing and what I was studying was that,
00:43:17
and I hear this, I work with the grassroots organizations
00:43:20
primarily. So I'm always down on the
00:43:23
ground. I'm always working with everyday
00:43:25
Americans, moms and dads. Well, sometimes they're
00:43:27
Canadians and sometimes they're Japanese or whatever.
00:43:29
But everyday people on the ground trying to solve real
00:43:32
problems at their local community level, at the state
00:43:35
level, whatever it is. I do a little bit in DC, but I'm
00:43:38
mostly work on the ground and I'm talking to these people and
00:43:41
that, you know, they're like, I can't figure figure it out.
00:43:43
I can't figure out how they're getting the CRT in the schools.
00:43:45
I can't figure out how they're getting the sexual.
00:43:47
I don't know why it's there. Doesn't make sense to me.
00:43:50
And it's one thing to sit up at the higher level and say, well,
00:43:54
it's Marxism and they have an agenda.
00:43:56
But it's another thing to say, here's how the magic trick is
00:43:58
performed. Here's how they are actually
00:44:00
stealing your children's education so that you and you
00:44:02
can't see it. And so this was that book
00:44:05
Marxification of Education explains the role of a British
00:44:10
or sorry, a Brazilian Marxist named Paulo Fredi in his
00:44:13
creation of what became called critical pedagogy and how it
00:44:17
works. It's, it's just his methodology,
00:44:19
which is like I told you a little bit ago, the dominant
00:44:22
methodology in all colleges of education now hands down the
00:44:26
most important methodology that they all teach.
00:44:28
And it amounts to stealing education.
00:44:31
So it's not this, it's not always as an overt as some of
00:44:36
the stuff that we see where the drag queen or the monkey butt or
00:44:39
whatever it is. A lot of times what they do is
00:44:42
they, they, what Paulo Freidi called it is, and this is fancy
00:44:46
big words we don't have to dwell on, but he said that the
00:44:49
academic material is a mediator to political knowledge.
00:44:52
And so the idea is that the math lesson, the reading lesson,
00:44:56
history lesson, whatever the subject of the study or some
00:45:00
word in the in the paragraph or in the word problem, if it's a
00:45:04
math problem, is used as a setup to have a political,
00:45:07
radicalizing political conversation with your kids.
00:45:09
And I'll give you an actual example from a math problem.
00:45:12
This is a real example from the state of Indiana and a real
00:45:14
teacher training. I'm not making this up.
00:45:16
This was given to me by a teacher who went through the
00:45:18
training. And this is a word problem for
00:45:21
second graders. So you don't have to fret about
00:45:22
the math. But it's Johnny's riding in the
00:45:25
car with his with his mom and dad on the way to the amusement
00:45:28
park. The amusement park is 50 miles
00:45:30
away, and they've driven 30 miles so far.
00:45:33
How much further do they have to go?
00:45:34
And so obviously as a math teacher, I would tell you what
00:45:36
you're going to do is we're going to teach the kids to pull
00:45:38
the subtraction problem out of the words, show them where the
00:45:40
subtraction problem is, solve the subtraction problem, and
00:45:43
then say they have 20 miles to go.
00:45:45
Right, No big deal. Well, here's what critical
00:45:49
pedagogy does. The word problem is do me a.
00:45:51
Favor let me just give the audience, 'cause you, you, you
00:45:54
used that word a couple of times.
00:45:55
I'm not sure 'cause it's an unusual word.
00:45:57
I really didn't become familiar with it until I started reading
00:45:59
your material. That's the method and practices
00:46:01
of the that the teacher uses you guys.
00:46:03
So, you know, and it's how they. Approach the teaching.
00:46:05
Style, you know, and it relates to different theories, so yeah.
00:46:08
Go ahead. Go from there.
00:46:09
No, No thanks. Yeah, pedagogy means theory and
00:46:11
practice of education. So what the what it teaches is
00:46:17
that you're going to take some word in that word problem and
00:46:20
that's going to be your reason, your excuse, your mediator, so
00:46:23
to speak to a political conversation meant to radicalize
00:46:27
people in the class. And so there are three of those
00:46:30
in that little word problem. That's if you saw that in your
00:46:32
kids homework, you would never blink, right?
00:46:34
You'd never think there's anything wrong.
00:46:36
So what you know, what's the big deal?
00:46:38
Johnny's riding in the car with his mom and dad on the way to an
00:46:41
amusement park. Well, the teachers are being
00:46:42
taught to engage the students by saying, hey, how many of you
00:46:47
guys have ever been to an amusement park?
00:46:49
And then some kids, they're seven years old, if it's second
00:46:51
grade, are going to raise their hand.
00:46:52
And some kids won't. They're seven, right?
00:46:54
So not every kid at 7 years old is going to go there.
00:46:56
So now you found a difference. And once you find a difference,
00:47:00
now you have something you can exploit for political
00:47:02
radicalization. And the teachers taught to say
00:47:04
something like, wow, some of you guys have been, but not
00:47:07
everybody has. That's not fair.
00:47:09
And so now you've got their emotions about fairness.
00:47:12
If I got to go. And oppressed.
00:47:14
Here it comes. Just right there, right,
00:47:16
oppressor and oppressed. And then you're supposed to say,
00:47:19
how could you know? How could we make it more fair?
00:47:23
And then you just let the kids say whatever kids say one after
00:47:26
you call on them until somebody says something like it should be
00:47:30
free. And then all of a sudden you
00:47:34
start talking about, well, the government could, you know, pay
00:47:36
for the amusement parks so everybody could go.
00:47:38
And now you've got socialism on the table and you got the kids
00:47:41
seeing that what you have in in real life is not fair.
00:47:45
But if we had a socialist government making the amusement
00:47:47
park free, if it if we nationalized the the amusement
00:47:50
parks, then it would be more fair.
00:47:53
And you can do this. It turns out there were three
00:47:55
different radicalizing points within that.
00:47:58
And you can take each one a different way.
00:47:59
With amusement park, you could say, wow, some of your some of
00:48:02
you get to go and some don't. Is that because your parents
00:48:05
won't let you go? And now you get to set up a
00:48:07
dynamic against the parents. Oh, wow.
00:48:09
Well, maybe the school should decide instead of the parents
00:48:11
who gets to go to an amusement park.
00:48:12
Wouldn't that be more fair kids, right.
00:48:14
And so, but also obviously mom and dad.
00:48:17
Do all families have a mom and dad guys or car?
00:48:20
Is it really a healthy use of the environment?
00:48:22
Think about science classes. Is it good for the environment
00:48:25
to drive in the car 50 miles just to go to the amusement
00:48:28
park? This, this, this, this, this.
00:48:33
It's gotten really complicated. This one this one equation.
00:48:37
But this is what they're talking.
00:48:38
About I mean, when you think about I'm sure they're going to
00:48:41
run out and want to name one of the amusement parks Joe Biden
00:48:44
land. I'm sure we're going to have
00:48:45
that, you know, that way he can have I'm.
00:48:47
Trying to put a statue up of him while.
00:48:50
Unlimited child sniffing. But you think about it, the the
00:48:52
problem is just supposed to be math.
00:48:54
And now they've turned it into this complete, you know, weapon.
00:48:58
Really. I mean, is that not what it
00:48:59
isn't? Can I ask you, are there manuals
00:49:01
that they receive that that's the way they're supposed to
00:49:03
craft these questions? They get a bunch of tips on how
00:49:06
to manipulate. So these manuals, who's printing
00:49:09
these manuals? Who's responsible?
00:49:10
Where do those come from? Is that the Board of Education,
00:49:13
the incredible, the incredible, illustrious Board of Education?
00:49:17
Is that them? Sometimes, but probably not for
00:49:21
the most part, the schools know they're going to get caught and
00:49:23
that parents aren't going to appreciate this.
00:49:25
Especially in the last few years.
00:49:27
A lot of that stuff is now provided by third party private
00:49:31
entities, which will either be nonprofits or companies that
00:49:34
produce these materials and then contract with the school.
00:49:36
Because it turns out that if you FOIA the school or if you as a
00:49:40
parent go and ask the teacher to see the teacher's manual,
00:49:43
they'll say that's copyrighted information and I can't give you
00:49:46
a copy of it. And they that will hold up in
00:49:49
court. So they can hide it even better
00:49:50
by using third party proprietary material.
00:49:53
So most of it's now provided by nonprofits and by private
00:49:57
companies. Now, what I think is that that's
00:49:59
a very easy legal fix, which is all you need is a transparency
00:50:02
law that says if it's used in a school, anybody who is a direct
00:50:05
stakeholder in the school, like a parent or, you know, a
00:50:09
journalist looking at it has the right to see it.
00:50:13
If it's used in the school, it's transparent and these third
00:50:16
party proprietary laws no longer apply.
00:50:18
You forfeit that right once you bring it into the school.
00:50:20
That's a very simple fix, but no states are taking that action
00:50:23
yet. I recommended it to the USDOE,
00:50:27
to the transition team specifically, so hopefully
00:50:30
they'll take it up and be able to do something.
00:50:32
Great, If you were on that transition team, because I think
00:50:35
you know what steps need to be taken by educators and policy
00:50:38
makers, you know, to restore education, focus on knowledge
00:50:42
versus whatever the hell we would call this.
00:50:44
It's not. It's not what I would want.
00:50:46
It's called brainwashing is what it's called.
00:50:48
Yeah, there's no. Doubt you and.
00:50:50
And we talk about that a lot in our show.
00:50:52
We, you know, let me just top one thing here.
00:50:54
And, and you see it when you look at certain topics, you
00:50:57
know, and especially during when everybody was campaigning, you
00:51:01
could see the, the plan when they would release information,
00:51:04
it would start maybe in DC and then it would quickly work its
00:51:07
way through Washington Post, New York Times, New York Post, you
00:51:11
know, and then, of course, right onto the social media
00:51:14
influencers, they're paying and the celebrities they were paying
00:51:16
and the musicians they're paying.
00:51:17
And you know, whether they're paying Oprah to give what she
00:51:21
act like was an independent town hall, not realizing she'd be
00:51:23
paid $10 million to do it. But it's the same thing.
00:51:26
It almost seems like we look at education.
00:51:28
Can you compare it? Is, is it the same?
00:51:30
Are we, are we seeing these massive amounts of money that
00:51:33
when they want to manipulate it and push it in the direction and
00:51:35
UNESCO decides there's a policy, is the money foundation money?
00:51:38
Where does the money come from? What organizations are back in
00:51:41
this besides UNESCO? Most of its foundation money.
00:51:44
Bill and Melinda Gates pour literally billions into this.
00:51:48
The Bill and Miller Gates Foundation, Chan Zuckerberg
00:51:51
Initiative put a lot of money into this at different times.
00:51:54
The Tides Foundation, the Rockefeller Foundation have put
00:51:57
a lot of money into education. I mean, Rockefeller goes way
00:52:01
back doing this. I mean, they're, they are, I
00:52:03
think, the first philanthropic organization that dumped lots of
00:52:06
money into education to kind of twist its purposes, I mean, 100
00:52:10
years ago, more than 100 years ago.
00:52:11
And so, yeah, a lot of its big foundation money.
00:52:14
And I'm sure there are others. You know, open society probably
00:52:17
does some of this to a degree do.
00:52:19
You think foundations are paying organizations like TikTok for
00:52:23
example? I believe TikTok is really
00:52:25
created to corrupt our youth in a lot of different ways and
00:52:28
dummify America. We know that TikTok in China
00:52:31
doesn't look like anything like the TikTok here in the United
00:52:33
States. Do you think these foundations
00:52:34
are funneling money into social media also?
00:52:37
They very well maybe, I don't know.
00:52:39
I know that they are more likely for certain.
00:52:41
I would know that they're paying are more certain.
00:52:44
I don't I couldn't name names, but that I mean you've named
00:52:47
some already that they're paying influencers to make sure that
00:52:49
that material is there. But as far as how the algorithm
00:52:52
is is organized, it's plausible there are other mechanisms there
00:52:56
too, like they're the company's ESG scores will prioritize.
00:53:00
If they do this, then the score goes up.
00:53:02
They have more access to short term capital and all the stuff
00:53:04
that businesses need to run. They get favourable interest
00:53:06
rates. They don't get delisted so
00:53:08
they're public traded stock is worth more blah blah blah.
00:53:12
This index fund manipulation through ESG is one of the
00:53:14
primary ways, as is ESG is environmental social governance
00:53:18
policies for companies. The social stands for social
00:53:21
justice, so the companies have to be social justice compliant
00:53:24
in order to have an ESG score that's worth anything.
00:53:27
Yeah, we. Saw that with the funding
00:53:28
sources they manipulated, they had lots of policies that there
00:53:31
had to be a certain amount of the money that was, you know,
00:53:34
raised by corporations, had to be put into DEI, had to be put
00:53:39
into. And we saw that.
00:53:41
So really, really, you know, prevalent during the pandemic.
00:53:45
It seemed like they really upped the ante during that time period
00:53:48
'cause I think they figured they had kind of a captive audience
00:53:51
that was watching a lot of media, and that was the time to
00:53:53
double down. You know I want to make.
00:53:55
Sure. About a president worth assault,
00:53:57
then let me just say real quick, that's got a name.
00:54:00
And a president worth assault with a good Department of
00:54:02
Justice behind him could, could push on that.
00:54:04
That's called racketeering is what that's called.
00:54:06
It doesn't matter if you're using, you know, guns or if
00:54:08
you're using financial capital or clout.
00:54:11
That's racketeering by these big passive investment firms.
00:54:15
Yeah, concurrent criminal enterprise, you know, and, and,
00:54:18
and if you trace, trace the dollars down and look at three
00:54:20
or more or five or more individuals, that's how you get
00:54:22
to that racketeering charge. And I do agree with you.
00:54:24
It doesn't have to be, you know, force at the end of the day,
00:54:29
money is just as big a weapon when it comes to organizations
00:54:32
like that. And I do believe what I'm
00:54:33
noticing is that a lot of the the worst of the sharks are, are
00:54:37
trying to pool around and school around the administration.
00:54:41
We've already seen Zuckerberg and and and Gates trying to
00:54:44
wedge their way in to make sure they're not on the target list.
00:54:47
I heard today, I had to jump on it the second it happened that
00:54:51
Biden's got this theory that he can the people that are
00:54:54
potentially targeted by Trump, you know, and we can think of so
00:54:57
many of them. He's going to give pre emptive,
00:55:00
you know, which I'm still trying to figure this out.
00:55:03
Pre emptive presidential pardons, somewhat like what he
00:55:06
gave Hunter that Hunter has. The way that was written, it was
00:55:09
like an envelope pardon. That said, he was clear of
00:55:13
anything he'd basically done from 2014 Ford.
00:55:15
Now, I don't know how you do that.
00:55:16
I don't know how you get a pre emptive pardon, but I offered to
00:55:18
give pre emptive pardons the second.
00:55:20
Blanket pardons. Yeah, well, but now he's talking
00:55:23
about preemptive pardons and the fact that and, and there's only
00:55:26
a blanket pardon. Preemptive would basically mean
00:55:28
you haven't been charged yet, you haven't been found.
00:55:30
They haven't even, you know, discussed it with you, what you
00:55:32
might have done. And he's talking about the
00:55:34
people that Trump he's going to give those.
00:55:35
I, I, I did that today. I volunteered to get everybody
00:55:37
on XA preemptive pardon. And I mentioned that let let the
00:55:40
crime wave begin. He bypassed, he bypassed the
00:55:43
pardon office on this on on that pardon for his son.
00:55:46
He didn't even bring it to him, ask him about it.
00:55:48
He just did it himself. All the other pardons, he's
00:55:50
done, done. He brought like he let the
00:55:52
office handle it. So I mean, yeah.
00:55:55
Remember, his big line was nobody's above the law, and a
00:55:58
preemptive pardon would literally make somebody above
00:56:01
the law he. Don't care.
00:56:02
He he, he didn't win his election, he didn't run.
00:56:05
We don't care at this point. But the theory of it, you know,
00:56:08
you take the rule of law and you might as well just flush it down
00:56:11
the toilet. My theory, my, my statement on
00:56:13
that is, OK, well, if everybody's, if everybody that
00:56:16
was guilty of crimes against the United States and we're talking
00:56:18
about treason, seditious conspiracy, you know, we're
00:56:22
talking about some pretty serious charges.
00:56:23
If that's the case, Well, I want my preemptive pardon and I want
00:56:26
a lifetime preemptive pardon. So that way I can just go on a
00:56:28
crime wave and do whatever I want because it's basically what
00:56:31
he's offering these people. He's offering the ability to do
00:56:34
whatever they want. Let's let's switch gears.
00:56:36
Let's go up to, and I think this is important because I want to
00:56:38
make sure I don't want to run out of time here.
00:56:40
And I want to talk about race Marxism and I want to talk about
00:56:43
what's going on with this because I think this is really
00:56:46
this goes hand in hand with your your other book.
00:56:50
You should have just put book 1 and book 2 because I think these
00:56:52
are so well connected. They should have just been it
00:56:55
should have been two point O or one point O.
00:56:57
But let's talk about this book, James.
00:57:00
Yeah, so race Marxism, the the it's my book about critical race
00:57:03
theory. This is my longest and hardest
00:57:05
book. It it really, you know, peels
00:57:08
back the curtain of critical race theory plus all the in the
00:57:12
middle of the it's got 6 chapters, the middle 2 chapters
00:57:15
3 and 4 go way back and explain the whole philosophy, where it
00:57:19
came from going, you know, back to the German idealists and all
00:57:23
this fancy philosophical stuff. A lot of people don't don't know
00:57:27
and understand, but the goal was to explain what critical race
00:57:30
theory is to people. And the title tells you what it
00:57:32
is, race Marxism. It's Marxism that uses race
00:57:36
instead of class. And I gave a lecture series in
00:57:40
summer in July of 21 down in Tampa, FL and I decided to take
00:57:45
my notes and flush them out into a book.
00:57:49
And the book is race Marxism. So what is critical race theory?
00:57:54
It's race Marxism. Where did it come from?
00:57:56
Tell the history. Tell the history deeper.
00:57:58
Tell the history deeper. The Neo Marxists, the Marxists
00:58:00
before them, the German idealists before that, the
00:58:03
Rousseau, French Romanticists before that, and deep dive the
00:58:08
whole thing and then talk about how it works and what we might
00:58:11
do about it here in the United States.
00:58:12
You know how basically, you know, we have the in the 14th
00:58:17
amendment, we have this thing inside the 14th Amendment that
00:58:20
called the equal protection clause.
00:58:21
It says that the laws are going to be applied equally to all
00:58:25
citizens of the United States. And we don't have an equity
00:58:28
protection clause, right? We don't have this thing that
00:58:30
says we're going to make sure all the outcomes are equal for
00:58:32
all the people in the United States.
00:58:34
We say that the laws are going to be applied equally, not that
00:58:36
we're going to adjust outcomes to make people equal.
00:58:39
And that right there got subverted, not specifically with
00:58:44
the passage of the Civil Rights Act, although that gets more
00:58:47
complicated as we get into the 90s.
00:58:49
It got subverted right after the Civil Rights Acts.
00:58:52
So the Civil Rights Acts were most famously, obviously, in
00:58:55
1964. There's another one in 6568.
00:58:59
And then in 1971, you have a court case called Griggs versus
00:59:03
Duke Power. And this was the Duke Power
00:59:06
Company had a test to get into management.
00:59:09
So if you worked on the floor and you wanted to get into
00:59:11
management, you had to pass this test.
00:59:13
And it turned out that proportionally speaking, white
00:59:16
people pass the test at a higher rate than black people did at
00:59:19
the power company. So somebody sued and said it was
00:59:21
discriminatory to have this test.
00:59:23
And they looked up and down, hard discovery everywhere they
00:59:26
could look and find no evidence of any racial bias or animus
00:59:30
anywhere in Duke Power Company. It was just a test.
00:59:33
And it just happened to be that for whatever reason, that white
00:59:37
people were passing it more often than black people were.
00:59:40
And the court and its lack of wisdom, the Supreme Court
00:59:43
decided that if there is disparate impact, meaning that
00:59:48
there's a different proportion and inequity is the modern
00:59:52
language for that in something like hiring or admissions, then
00:59:56
there must be discrimination somewhere, even if you can't
00:59:59
prove intent to discriminate or can't prove discrimination is
01:00:02
anywhere. So if there's a difference in
01:00:04
outcomes, there must be discrimination.
01:00:06
And it became legally actionable.
01:00:08
Under civil rights law, and that was 1971, so just 3-4 years
01:00:12
after the civil rights acts really get going, you have this
01:00:15
going on, perverting it. So now that it's, it's equity,
01:00:19
it's affirmative action is what it actually is.
01:00:22
No longer I, you know, equal protection under the law.
01:00:26
So the act, the equal protection clause died with Griggs versus
01:00:29
Duke power. This got backed up more or
01:00:32
increased more under a couple of cases, most famously probably
01:00:36
Baki versus Board of Regents of the state of California in 1978,
01:00:40
which was the same thing basically for college
01:00:42
admissions. And they said there's a
01:00:44
compelling educational advantage to a diverse campus.
01:00:47
So the diversity industry comes into being.
01:00:50
Then Baki versus Board of Regents has mostly been
01:00:54
overturned with the Harvard discrimination lawsuit in the
01:00:56
UNC discrimination lawsuits from last year, Griggs versus Duke
01:01:01
Power still going strong. And in the early 90s, I forget,
01:01:04
91 or three, something like that, they actually wrote a new
01:01:07
Civil Rights Act that puts the disparate impact logic directly
01:01:11
into the federal statute, which means they have a
01:01:13
unconstitutional piece of civil rights legislation from the 90s
01:01:17
that needs to be brought. You know, a suit needs to be
01:01:21
brought, needs to land in front of the Supreme Court and needs
01:01:22
to be declared unconstitutional. In order for us to get out of
01:01:25
this mess, we have to start treating all people equally.
01:01:30
A lot of conservatives don't understand this.
01:01:32
They think, well, the Civil Rights Act is the problem, so we
01:01:34
got to get rid of the Civil Rights Act.
01:01:35
No, we need Civil Rights Act reform because there's no better
01:01:39
weapon against this woke stuff. If they're discriminating
01:01:41
against white people using an affirmative action or diversity,
01:01:44
equity and inclusion program, the lawsuit is a civil rights
01:01:48
lawsuit. That's going to going to turn
01:01:49
that back over and it becomes the most potent weapon, legal
01:01:53
weapon in our hands if we get the equal protection clause back
01:01:58
on the table and get this disparate impact equity crap out
01:02:02
of the out the door. And that's, I mean, I'm not
01:02:05
joking. That's literally 1 smart Supreme
01:02:07
Court decision away from happening.
01:02:10
That's all it would take. You know, I think I've got your
01:02:12
next big troll move here. And we had Sabo, the artist, he
01:02:16
works in bronze. We get a bunch of these books
01:02:18
made-up in bronze, and we go around and we start gluing them
01:02:21
to all the George Floyd sculptures and statues around
01:02:24
the country. And I don't know if you saw the
01:02:26
Pelosi desk that they have on the National Mall right now that
01:02:29
somebody decided was a great idea and somebody looks like
01:02:31
they defecated on the Pelosi desk.
01:02:33
Have you seen that? But we glue this right to the
01:02:35
front of that. That way it actually has some
01:02:37
real value versus what it is right now.
01:02:39
I think that's your next big troll move.
01:02:41
We put this book everywhere all over the country as a bronze add
01:02:44
on to all the George Floyd statues.
01:02:46
But. I didn't.
01:02:47
You know what a big argument. In bronze, but I left one on the
01:02:50
George Floyd monument in Minneapolis last year.
01:02:53
Did you take a picture? No, I I meant took a picture.
01:02:55
Come on. James that was gone viral.
01:02:59
Yeah. So I ran up to the I ran up to
01:03:01
the monument. Everybody told me I was going to
01:03:02
get killed for going to the George Floyd Square.
01:03:04
And they were like, what's your security?
01:03:05
You got to have security. And I was like, why?
01:03:07
I'm planning to go at 8:00 in the morning.
01:03:08
And then they were like, you don't need insecurity, never
01:03:10
mind you're. Fine, yeah.
01:03:12
There was no. Great mind stink alike,
01:03:13
obviously. I didn't know you'd done that.
01:03:15
So, I mean, it wasn't bronze. That's the only place I've ever
01:03:18
visited where I wanted to do some real civil disobedience and
01:03:20
go rent a bulldozer and just knock the thing down.
01:03:23
It's terrible. I mean, if you look at the guy's
01:03:25
history and who he really was and look at the number of drugs
01:03:28
in his system, and I think that was a real injustice.
01:03:29
I don't think that police officer, you know, I'm not
01:03:32
suggesting he was a good guy or bad guy.
01:03:34
I'm suggesting that what happened to him was on just as
01:03:36
unsavory as what's happened to the J sex fed surrection
01:03:40
defendants. So, but I'm going to ask.
01:03:43
You this this is a recurring thing that happens over and over
01:03:45
again when it comes to critical race theory.
01:03:48
How do you respond to those people that go CRT is necessary
01:03:51
tool for addressing systemic racism?
01:03:54
What do you say to them? Marxism has never solved any
01:03:57
problems. It only makes those problems
01:03:58
worse. And if you think you know it's
01:04:00
going to help some racial minorities, you should look at
01:04:02
the history of communism. And it's working with racial
01:04:03
minorities because what it does is it uses them and it makes it
01:04:07
always uses them and makes their situation worse and then uses
01:04:10
the problems it causes to push it further.
01:04:12
And if I'm talking, usually if I'm talking to somebody who's
01:04:14
racial minority, I'm like, read Manning Johnson.
01:04:17
A lot of people don't know who Manning Johnson was.
01:04:19
Manning Johnson was like one of the black leaders of the
01:04:21
Communist Party USA in the 30s and 40s.
01:04:24
And he figured out that they were using him.
01:04:27
They figured he figured out that it was all evil, it was all
01:04:29
crap, it was all lies. And he wrote, he wrote a book in
01:04:33
the 1950s explaining this whole thing.
01:04:35
So, you know, don't take it from me.
01:04:37
Go read Manning Johnson reporting on how they how they
01:04:40
were still super racist, how they used black people, how they
01:04:44
made the situation for the black communities that they came into
01:04:47
worse and then exploited the problems they created like
01:04:52
they're doing now. Look at what they've done, you
01:04:54
know, defund the police. Well, a lot of crime happens to
01:04:57
be in in neighborhoods that are predominantly minority or black
01:05:01
or sometimes Latino. And then what?
01:05:03
What are they doing? Well, now we need to do, you
01:05:04
know, we've got this huge crime problem.
01:05:06
So now we have to have all the surveillance cameras.
01:05:08
We have to have all this other stuff, you know, so they create
01:05:11
the problem so that they can justify putting in more
01:05:13
communism off of the pain that they cause in people's lives.
01:05:18
You know, George, I'm going to throw this to you for a minute
01:05:20
because we talk about this a lot on the show.
01:05:22
We always talk about the the real tool because we believe
01:05:25
it's a unit party in DC. Our show is unique in the fact
01:05:28
that we go after both sides of the aisle on the show.
01:05:31
I'm not comfortable with what either the Democrats or the
01:05:33
Republicans do because I feel like one side is effectively
01:05:36
trying to destroy us. Why?
01:05:37
The other side stomps their feet, makes a bunch of noise,
01:05:40
holds committees and then does nothing with it.
01:05:42
We don't really have any accountability and consequences,
01:05:44
but you know, George, we've talked about so many times that
01:05:47
what they're causing is intentional division and chaos.
01:05:54
Intentional division and chaos. Yeah, Well, I mean, how many
01:05:58
times we discussed that on this show that what they do on the
01:06:00
left, We, we just. Try to create.
01:06:03
Division A unified America is 300 million deep.
01:06:06
You see that just on social media and we'll just take X for
01:06:09
that instinct. There's there's paid
01:06:11
infiltrators that, you know, all of a sudden they're in the
01:06:14
movement and also matter against certain people and you know,
01:06:16
they're getting paid. They just want to create chaos.
01:06:19
Why? Because that creates division.
01:06:20
And what does that do? It makes us weaker.
01:06:24
So either just call them out, get rid of them.
01:06:26
But there's that old saying, Together, stronger, we're
01:06:31
united. So that brings me, I think that
01:06:36
this, I hope I've got this in the right order.
01:06:38
James Counter Woke Craft. That's your new book, correct?
01:06:41
No, no, no. The the the Queering in the
01:06:43
American Child's the newest one, Counter Woke Craft was actually
01:06:47
a fairly early book that another guy, Canadian guy, wrote for
01:06:51
him. He wrote it and he wrote it for
01:06:53
me and, and then he used a lot of my work to write it and then
01:06:57
I helped him edit it into the final form.
01:06:59
And he says, like I said, he's a, he's a Canadian university
01:07:02
professor and he wanted to figure out how to how to solve
01:07:05
the problem of DEI commissions and things in to solve that in
01:07:12
in universities and other institutional settings.
01:07:14
So he wrote kind of a how to guide how to fight back against
01:07:19
that in these institutional settings.
01:07:20
It's probably not going to help the average dude, you know, at
01:07:23
his, at his, you know, small business or whatever, his
01:07:26
management meeting or whatever. But if you're in some big, you
01:07:29
know, institution like universities where there's
01:07:32
faculty meetings and, and you know, Senate meetings and
01:07:35
whatever, he has a pretty handy guide put together for how you
01:07:38
can get in there and fight about it, fight it out.
01:07:41
And basically it's kind of how you can step by step take power
01:07:45
back. So it's been very useful for
01:07:47
people like parents who decide they want to get on school
01:07:50
boards. That's why I.
01:07:52
Brought it up because I think this the way that I that I
01:07:55
looked at this book, it looks to me like this would be incredibly
01:07:58
helpful for parents that are trying to take a position
01:08:00
because you describe it as a field manual for combating the
01:08:03
woke in the university and beyond.
01:08:06
That's right. That's right.
01:08:07
And so it's really been useful. Like I said, I work mostly with
01:08:10
these grassroots for people that are getting into like city
01:08:13
councils or county commissions or even just committees off of
01:08:17
those things for people who are trying to get involved in in
01:08:22
school boards and in in school commissions, and they've been
01:08:25
very successful. You know, first of all, just
01:08:27
understanding that personnel is policy is just a blanket
01:08:31
statement of things of something to understand.
01:08:34
If you don't want bad people to govern you, you have to suck it
01:08:39
up as a good person and go serve at, you know, possibly some
01:08:42
point in your life in public office.
01:08:44
Even if you're just, you know, you're like, well, I don't
01:08:46
really want to commit the time to being on school board.
01:08:49
Well, just remember, if everybody that's a decent person
01:08:51
doesn't want to be on the school board, what you're going to get
01:08:54
is people who want to abuse that position and you're going to get
01:08:57
grifters. You want to make money off of
01:08:58
being there for doing illegal stuff.
01:09:00
It is the duty of good citizens to take the spot away from
01:09:04
somebody who's going to try to abuse their power when they get
01:09:07
that, because those people, that's people who want to abuse
01:09:09
power, go to where they're going to have some power they can
01:09:11
abuse. So we're always going to have to
01:09:13
work to keep them out. It makes a lot of sense.
01:09:17
So, you know, let's. I don't know what's next.
01:09:19
Do you have another new book up? I know I saw a clip and I tried
01:09:22
to grab it, but you had moved it.
01:09:23
It was your pinned post. And I went back to get it this
01:09:25
morning. Oh, yeah.
01:09:26
Which was for a documentary. And all of a sudden it was no
01:09:29
longer there. I'm like son of a what The I?
01:09:31
Put my control on my pinned post earlier today.
01:09:33
Yeah, sorry. No, it's OK.
01:09:35
So let's that documentary. Yeah.
01:09:38
And everybody should read this. I thought this was great.
01:09:40
I grabbed this off your feed. Let's talk about that
01:09:45
documentary. I'm not sure what the project
01:09:48
was. If you were behind me.
01:09:49
They just had somebody feature you in it.
01:09:51
What was the whole tell us? The whole thing on that, I mean,
01:09:53
I was helpful to the project. I'm mostly I'm featured.
01:09:56
I'm very heavily featured. The documentary is called
01:09:58
Beneath Sheep's Clothing, and it's, I mean, I maybe I should
01:10:04
go find it or whatever and send it to you because the trailer is
01:10:07
really cool, but it's at Beneath Sheep's clothing dot movie.
01:10:10
We can probably dig it up more quickly that way.
01:10:13
The idea was that we wanted to communicate with this lady,
01:10:16
Julie Bealing, who led who who directed the the documentary,
01:10:19
had written a book called Beneath Sheep's Clothing,
01:10:21
talking about the infiltration of communism and Soviet Union
01:10:25
into education and and religion, and especially into what it did
01:10:29
in the churches in the Soviet Union.
01:10:31
And then she was comparing that against what the woke movement
01:10:34
was doing in American education and it also in American
01:10:37
churches. So she wanted to expose that in
01:10:39
this book. Turns out a guy, there's a whole
01:10:43
neat story to it, but ends up getting, you know, that they're
01:10:46
going to make a documentary. They asked me if I'd be in the
01:10:48
documentary. And then we just kind of like,
01:10:50
how can we make this bigger? Because, you know, the deal is
01:10:54
some people read, some people, you know listen to podcasts,
01:10:57
some people sit down and listen to interviews and discussions
01:10:59
and conversations. Nothing moves the ball for more
01:11:03
people faster and more powerfully than a film.
01:11:05
A movie gets the job done right. And so you sit down for 100
01:11:09
minutes and watch a hard hitting, good soundtrack,
01:11:12
emotionally engaging, overwhelming imagery
01:11:16
documentary, and you come away like, holy cow, this is a thing,
01:11:19
this is real. We've got to do something right.
01:11:21
And so we wanted to get that medium out there with what's
01:11:25
going on in the world. So beneath Sheep's Clothing was
01:11:27
was a documentary designed to tell the average person that
01:11:31
what's happening in the country today is a communist revolution.
01:11:35
It's communism in a new form that uses fascist economics.
01:11:38
It has fascism worked in. We all know the big banks and
01:11:41
the big corporations are involved.
01:11:43
Doesn't matter. It's still got a communist
01:11:45
program and they're trying to take over everything, not just
01:11:48
the United States, but the world.
01:11:49
You know, the United States is ultimately it's like the link in
01:11:53
the whole chain if they how. Goes the United States.
01:11:56
Goes the rest of the world. That's exactly right.
01:11:58
And where? Where are you going to run if
01:12:00
the United States falls? It's just maybe your country
01:12:03
last two more years before they get there.
01:12:05
But nobody's going to last long without the US Constitution
01:12:08
protecting literally, in this case, the whole world from
01:12:10
tyranny. And so we wanted to get that
01:12:12
message out and we wanted to get it out ideally before the
01:12:14
election. We wanted to make, you know, as
01:12:16
bold a statement as we could with it.
01:12:18
And so that started last fall. And we just cranked on it to get
01:12:22
it done and put it out. And I'm like I said, I mostly
01:12:24
was, I'm a talking head in the film a lot.
01:12:27
I was in an advisory role here and there.
01:12:29
I helped them with the script a little, like, you know, looked
01:12:32
at some early cuts and edits. But mostly, you know, kudos to
01:12:35
the director and the filmmaker and the producer who really were
01:12:38
the ones who put this thing together the way that it is.
01:12:41
It's great. I'd love to have him on the
01:12:42
show. We'll have to talk about that.
01:12:45
Let's do this, James, because I want everybody to know where
01:12:47
they can find you with the time we have left, you know, tell us,
01:12:50
you know, again, we know about your website.
01:12:54
You can mention that again, but of course where they can buy
01:12:56
your books, where's the best for you and any other material
01:12:59
including your social media share it all with.
01:13:01
Them. Sure, sure.
01:13:02
Yeah. The best place to buy the books
01:13:03
actually is is is on the big site that's named after a jungle
01:13:07
in there with the rainforest. Amazon has all the books you can
01:13:12
you can get them there. That's the best place to go and
01:13:14
most convenient and get a decent share off of that.
01:13:16
So it's all good. You can find a list of all the
01:13:21
books on a tab on the website, the website
01:13:23
againisnewdiscourses.com. And you can follow New
01:13:27
Discourses as a company anywhere you want on social media.
01:13:30
At New Discourses. I personally am the person, the
01:13:34
professional troublemaker provocateur that you started out
01:13:37
with. I, I play my games at conceptual
01:13:40
James. So that's a lot of letters, but
01:13:42
at conceptual James, one word, no underscores or any, any
01:13:46
symbols. And I primarily am active on X.
01:13:50
I'm aggregated everywhere else except for Facebook.
01:13:55
Facebook banned me for life for a for a pretty good joke, and we
01:13:59
have to live with that. Yeah, we've got some of those
01:14:03
ourselves. We lost a couple of accounts.
01:14:05
We had a pretty decent account on YouTube.
01:14:06
We're back on there. But it, you know, it's a slow
01:14:08
grind now. They didn't like us putting up
01:14:11
any of the CDC's or Vera's information up during our.
01:14:14
Show. That was a direct no, no, of
01:14:16
course, I've been permanently banned on linked Diane.
01:14:18
They didn't like me streaming our shows over there either.
01:14:22
That's funny. You know, you, you, you know,
01:14:24
you get attacked. You know it.
01:14:25
It's usually because you're over the target and just like you,
01:14:28
you know, you're a fed, you're this, you're that.
01:14:31
That seems to be the fall back. In fact, we see so much of that
01:14:33
division. George, you got any other
01:14:35
comments here before we wrap this up, brother?
01:14:37
No, I don't think so. You good?
01:14:39
Everybody in the chat loved all the information you put out.
01:14:44
Great. Well, thank you everybody in the
01:14:46
chat. And your link's been my MoD's.
01:14:48
Been putting your link in the chat the whole night.
01:14:50
Well, you know, listen, there's one thing I can tell you, James,
01:14:54
people in this country are fed up on both sides of the aisle
01:14:57
when it comes to our kids. Sure, there's this extreme far
01:15:01
left and extreme far right that I would call mental health
01:15:04
crisises, whether it's Trump derangement, you know, syndrome
01:15:08
on one side, or whether it's neo Nazi, you know, hardcore racist
01:15:11
rhetoric that those people really believe it on the far
01:15:14
right. I think that's not what
01:15:16
America's about. I think America's Got to come
01:15:17
together. Our show is always about taking
01:15:20
the division and chaos and unifying the country.
01:15:22
That's our plan. So number one, I want to thank
01:15:24
you for the work you're doing. I think it's important and I
01:15:27
think the way you go about it is really unique.
01:15:29
So people that haven't gone over the website, please do follow
01:15:32
James on his conceptual James over there on X.
01:15:36
You want to find him because he he puts a lot of great
01:15:37
information at and you'll see him.
01:15:39
Of course, I missed this troll move because I was too busy
01:15:41
today if I'd caught it on the early side of it.
01:15:43
But I'm happy you were here to shoot.
01:15:44
Share it. So of course, the big, big mafia
01:15:46
subscribers in our mods. We always appreciate you guys
01:15:48
and everybody in the chat. If you're not already a
01:15:51
subscriber to the show, even if you can't do the page
01:15:52
subscription, please make sure you hit the subscribe button.
01:15:55
Thumbs up, comment, share. You know, on our show, we want
01:15:57
you to take the short form and long form.
01:15:59
George does a great job. Also your friends in foreign
01:16:01
countries, you know, you can catch the big, big closed
01:16:04
caption. You'll get this episode in 25
01:16:06
languages closed caption after George does the editing.
01:16:09
And of course, you can find us on all the podcast platforms.
01:16:12
So if you haven't already subscribed to us on Spotify or
01:16:15
Apple or anywhere else you watch your podcast, please go over
01:16:19
there and hit the subscribe button.
01:16:20
Share our content comment. We're trying to get to the top
01:16:23
of those engines. And of course, Rumble as our
01:16:25
home base, as is locals. You can always find our shows
01:16:28
there. And of course, our main social
01:16:30
media is over on X and True Social.
01:16:32
But we're on all the other platforms.
01:16:34
You can always find us. It's Lance Miliacho, George G
01:16:37
Ballantine on X and of course, the big link show.
01:16:39
Join the community. You'll know about these great
01:16:41
interviews like we had with James and I.
01:16:43
So God country family know it's all about let's unify and let's
01:16:46
stop the chaos and the division. James, stick around for a
01:16:49
second, George. He's out.
01:16:52
Love you all Genghis Khan. Hope your knee feels better.
01:16:55
Good night. If we lose freedom here, there
01:17:01
is no place to escape to. This is the last stand on Earth.
01:17:08
As an American who keeps up with the real news, you know by now
01:17:11
the severity of the economic issues that are plaguing our
01:17:14
great nation. My name is Jonathan Rose and I'm
01:17:17
the CEO of Genesis Gold Group, the only major faith driven
01:17:21
company in the industry. 2024 is a year full of uncertainties.
01:17:26
With trillions of dollars in national debt, inflation
01:17:29
impacting your savings, and the pivotal election year, your
01:17:33
Peace of Mind is more valuable than ever and now is the time to
01:17:37
use physical gold and silver to preserve your hard earned
01:17:40
retirement savings with a gold IRA.
01:17:43
Call Genesis Gold Group today. Our team has decades of
01:17:46
experience helping folks just like you take their first step
01:17:50
on the path to true financial freedom with a gold and silver
01:17:53
IRA. Call Genesis Gold Group today at
01:17:56
1-8 Hundred 200 Gold for a no commitment informative
01:17:59
consultation with one of our experts to find out if we can be
01:18:02
a fit for you. Call now at 1-800-200-4653 or
01:18:05
visit genesisgoldgroup.com. In a world of uncertainty, be
01:18:10
prepared with silver pepper bars, your ultimate hedge
01:18:13
against political instability and economic turmoil.
01:18:16
Introducing the Silver Pepper Bar crafted from pure
01:18:21
silver and proudly made in the USA, this tangible, divisible
01:18:25
asset can come in handy even in the toughest of times.
01:18:28
Portable, perforated, and easily tradable, the Silver Pepper Bar
01:18:32
is your lifeline in times of crisis.
01:18:34
When facing inflation, currency devaluation, and financial
01:18:38
meltdown, Silver Pepper Bars provide Peace of Mind.
01:18:41
Don't wait for disaster to strike.
01:18:43
Secure your future today with the exclusive Silver Prepper
01:18:47
Bar, the only silver bar on the market, divisible into three
01:18:50
different sized pieces for maximum utility, all while
01:18:53
fitting in your wallet. The smart choice for savvy
01:18:56
investors and preppers alike. With Silver Pepper Bars, you're
01:19:00
ready for whatever tomorrow brings.
01:19:02
They would run up to the bamboo fence and they would be shooting
01:19:06
between the bamboo at the buildings, you know, just
01:19:08
shooting inside. The Wanted man is Joseph Kony,
01:19:12
charged with abducting huge numbers of children, forcing
01:19:16
them to kill and mutilate innocent victims.
01:19:19
Somebody had to pay the price. Sam did that.
01:19:22
Sam Childers never stopped, because the bad things never
01:19:26
stop. There is only one Sam, children.
01:19:28
There is no one else like him in the world.
01:19:31
And I said to him, I said, would you go now to get Kony in the
01:19:35
Congo? He says without a doubt in a
01:19:37
second. Now it's the DRC.
01:19:39
Tell us what's happening to children in the DRC.
01:19:41
You have ISIS there, you have Islamic State and you have ADF.
01:19:45
Hey, Sandy, Joseph Kony is still alive.
01:19:47
He's in the Congo. And now God has me in the Congo,
01:19:51
you know, So hopefully we'll meet up one day.
01:19:54
But maybe I can lead him to the Lord or send him there.
01:19:58
One or the other, huh?