The Sevan Podcast - Greg Glassman | Live Call In - #29
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It's Air Force, I think, right?
Oh, yeah, Air Force.
Bam, we're live.
Sorry I'm late.
Camera had turned off.
Good morning.
Good morning.
I got the lady who made Fall of minneapolis the documentary coming on tomorrow
did you by any chance get a chance to see that i did yeah did you like it well you see sure i mean
yeah it's you're gonna it's an important work it's for seeing. Were you going to say it was kind of like obvious?
Well, there was it was it was it was very well done and it's a bold thing to do.
And I didn't see anything that I didn't already know or hadn't heard from somewhere else.
Right. Right.
When I went into it after that, I read the she wrote a book also under a different name but same
story with more details and then we're just named a name other than her own no no uh liz
collins still named but the book wasn't called fall of minneapolis gotcha gotcha i forget what
the name of the book is i listened to the audiobook and what there was just there was
just crazy shit in there like the details like at one point a couple days before the police station fell
they realized that the police only had eight non-lethal rounds between between the entire
police station eight non-lethal rounds when i hear that i'm guessing that means like rubber
bullets or beanbags and they sent a uh they sent a request for more nonlethal bullets and they heard nothing back. And then another thing was, is they told the officers basically, hey, pack up all your shit and get ready. And they didn't say why they didn't say because get ready because we're about to in a couple of days, we're going to forfeit the police station.
couple days we're going to forfeit the police station and the head of the police station told the chief hey you know this police station is the armory for like the county like we have all the
guns and bullets for all the police departments stored here and they didn't even know that
they sacrificed the police station with all the guns and bullets for the entire county
just some of the details and nuances the book reveals, you can't even believe.
It starts making you...
I think they were just laying the groundwork,
the game plan for Biden's withdrawal from Afghanistan.
Same crew made it up?
I think that was where the idea came from.
Let's first take the personnel out
and essential
civilians and then
try to negotiate to get the weapons back
or something.
Another crazy thing, Greg,
was they built a fence around the police
station to protect it from
the rioters.
They locked the back gates where the police were told to exit from but they left the front gates where the protesters came in unlocked so when the protesters finally breached the gate
and started like molotov cocktailing the police station the cops couldn't get out the back
yeah i heard that too and so they had to use a car to ram the gate to get the gate open i saw
i actually saw the footage of that some of them fled on they were fleeing on foot yeah and there
was supposed to be a bus there to meet them and it wasn't there either so the cops had to like it shows the entire SWAT team
it's like 60 cops or something running from a mob it was it was just
it was kind of like they had set it up for the cops to turn around and just start shooting the
crowd it's it's there's no explanation for it other than I mean there were too many things
that went wrong to make me think it was an accident
you you think when they left everything goes everything goes wrong it's it's it's the
ineptitude so you don't think it was a plan you think it's just ineptitude i think that I won't even give attribution to the quote to defend someone,
but it's been observed, suggested that a liberal couldn't keep a 7-Eleven open for a shift.
Just due to a general lack of common sense.
Right.
A pervasive ineptness.
And they said the plan was that all along to give the rioters the police station as sort of, what's the word?
A peace offer.
Yeah, yeah, kind of like that.
Appeasement.
Yeah, hey, we're going to let you burn down this taxpayer – the taxpayers' papers.
Let him have Poland and he'll stop there.
Right, right, yes.
And I was just thinking about – think of the psychological implications of that on the,
on that whole city.
The fact that now,
you know,
that these people are supposed to protect,
you can't even protect their own base.
It's like an utter fail on every front.
As you're saying,
as I look over to Anthony Blinken's on TV,
it's perfect backdrop.
I think that the George Floyd thing is the more than just the catalyst, but the.
The.
I basically all the crime that's occurring now, all of these running into Nordstrom's and breaking into Apple stores and all
of this,
I think it's all because of the George Floyd incident.
I think it's all,
I think it all,
I think it's so simple.
I think it's just police officers are afraid to engage,
uh,
melanated people because they don't want to get in trouble.
Did you,
are you following what's going on at,
um,
USC?
Or is it UCLA? that's the bigger story?
I thought it was USC.
I did see, though, something really funny
that you would appreciate.
Across the street from UCLA,
someone's erected a giant movie screen
and is playing the October 7th attack
over and over again on loop.
Just on a big screen like here in case you for in case you forgot
in case you forgot yeah like as a celebratory thing yeah jerk it off to it
ma'am did you see the um last night there was some footage released and it shows um
it shows them pushing jews off campus have you seen some of that footage the two jewish girls
yeah
does this does this we're in a familiar place historically It's got some of the vibes of 1968.
The whole Chicago Democratic Convention, that stuff?
Mm-hmm.
Kent State, the campus unrest.
It was a free speech movement labeled as such at the time,
but it was disruptive,
and it ushered in Richard Nixon by a landslide.
Yeah.
He won every state except for one.
And then D.C.
And then interestingly enough,
the Watergate trial took place in D.C.
when that was like one of only two places
that he didn't win.
Or it was going to take place there. He stepped down before the trial occurred, right?
Yeah, he was going to get impeached and removed. He lost it. He lost the support.
How old were you when that happened?
When he finally stepped down, what was it?
Look it up, 72, is that right?
When did Nixon step down?
So that's just for 71, 72?
His resignation speech was on August 8th, 1974.
74, shit.
Resignation speech was on August 8th, 1974.
74, shit.
Yeah, so I just graduated from high school.
Was it scary then?
He was toast though.
I mean, he was walking dead.
It was crazy, the shit that was mounting on him.
Like the media?
Yeah, tapes from the Oval Office.
And he was losing court decisions and
it was kind of ugly.
And did it feel unstable in the
country then?
Yeah, because I
was 17.
What do you mean? Explain.
I was 17 years old.
Everything was fucking unstable.
Right. Were you scared
at all? Like your like like your psychology like oh
this is the fall of the empire no no
we're the adults i'm not i'm not i'm not excited now either though
by excited you mean you're not phased by it now you're just kind of like
i think some
of us are wired for for when up you know I mean if it the deplorable state of academic exercise
science created everything I have oh right right the opportunity right my buddy jimmy like what would if there were bad guys
what the fuck would he do right he's got his crazy talent for taking care of bad guys you know
yeah yeah and
nobody wants bad guys but you they're a fact of life. And thank God for people like Jim.
Yeah.
Same with plumbers,
right?
What do you mean?
Like you need toilets to go bad.
You're not like all of a sudden wishing God,
I wish all toilets never broke down ever again.
The toilet breaks down and you,
you know,
you need a plumber.
The guy makes a fortune off your misfortune.
But I get that.
It's how the world works.
I'm okay with it.
I tend to notice things that aren't working.
And if you can find a fix for it,
it's kind of cool.
Business opportunity.
For sure.
Trish, should i stop chewing tobacco no sebi are you gonna hang out with me or do i have to camp in your backyard there'll be no time to
hang out but i'm excited to see you heidi will be there uh may 9th at your house for the broken
science uh hang out hey i wanted to show you something that might
make, I'm curious how you're going to react to this, if it's
going to make you, maybe you've heard this story
before, but it's
a little lengthy. It's a couple minutes.
But
it's quite remarkable. I heard this last
night and I thought of you. Here we go.
This is one of the most famous photos ever
taken. Jesse Owens standing on the podium
having won one of his four gold medal 1936 Berlin Olympics in front of Hitler.
Next to him in silver position, Lutz Long, the German, doing the Nazi salute.
Both men had broken the Olympic record repeatedly before Owens jumped just over eight metres for them.
It was a new Olympic, an athlete of special courage.
He put his arms around him and we walked down the park.
Long was the first to congratulate Owens.
They posed together, they became friends,
they walked arm in arm around the stadium.
And Owens said it took a lot of courage for him
to befriend me in front of Hitler.
And he said it was the start of a 24-carat friendship.
That friendship endured.
Long joined the German army during World War II
and he wrote to Owens from North Africa.
I am here, Jesse, where it seems there is only the dry sand and the wet blood. I do not fear so much for myself, my friend
Jesse. I fear for my woman who is at home and my young son Karl, who has never really known his
father. My heart tells me that this is the last letter I shall ever write. If it is, I ask you to
do something. It is something so very important to me. It is that you go to Germany when this war is done. Someday find my son Carl and tell him about his father. Tell him, Jesse, what times
were like when we were not separated by war. I am saying, tell him how things can be between men on
this earth. Long was mortally wounded in Sicily on the 10th of July 1943, dying a few days later.
He was 30. In 1951,esse owens did return to germany
found long son carl and when carl got married owens was the best man and they even recreated
the famous picture of owens and carl's dad and their families are still friends to this day
this is one of the most famous photos wild right yeah what a story
This is one of the most famous photos.
Wild, right?
Yeah, what a story.
They were walking arm in arm after the Olympics.
Is that going to be in violation of community standards?
Showing the black guy and the white guy walking together, expressing love. A positive story without some horrific racial overtone of lynching or
disparity, no reparations talk.
Just an honest
friendship.
I think that would fly in the face
of community standards.
Right.
Doesn't hold up the narrative.
It's propaganda.
It's a propaganda piece suggesting that
a colorblind way of life is the best way.
Here's a black guy who achieved something solely on merit in front of the entire world while the entire world watched.
this is this is this is on um this is on a side subject but it's fascinating now like when i think of the woman who took who's now in the supreme court the black lady and i just i think of what
she took from people like jesse owens right who earned something completely on merit and then gets
the qualification of being the first black woman and yet she didn't earn it whereas here we have
jesse owens earned every fucking thing that was given to him.
His journey was probably wild, right?
And then he goes to Nazi Germany
and he competes against this guy
and this guy goes and ends up fighting
for Hitler in the war.
The bad guys.
It's a trip.
Yeah, it's a trip, right?
And if we believe Victor Davis Hanson,
it's because America projected
culture of pacifism
had risen above war.
And it was exciting to Tojo and to Hitler
and they miscalculated
our enormous strength because of
our
proclivity to hide it
in the sense of
in the sense of
trying to look enlightened
we did ohm love everyone in peace and just sat idly by trying to look enlightened. We did
love everyone in peace
and just sat idly by as fucking
millions were slaughtered.
Right.
It suggested to Hitler and Tojo they could take the whole
fucking thing.
It caused the
miscalculation.
On Hitler's part? Onler and tojo's part
oh who's tojo this is a japanese guy oh oh
um uh tank reeves sevan is glorifying Hitler. Boy, that's scary.
You think that there's probably a lot of people who think like that, right?
I don't know.
I missed it.
When did that happen?
That's what I mean.
Yeah.
God.
And that's the part that's so...
God, and that's the part that – it's examples of posts like that that make me realize we're surrounded by retards.
Clarifying Hitler.
Hey, was Jesse – so this happened in the 40s – or sorry, this happened in the 1936 Olympics.
I wonder when Jesse Owens died. Was he a big character when you were a kid growing up it was already kind of he was a historical figure
i think at that point oh he didn't die till 1980 wow
when i was a kid, the Olympics meant something.
Now I feel like they don't.
Ever since they switched to that every two years,
I feel like it doesn't mean anything anymore.
It's lost its luster, right?
It's lost its...
Or maybe it's because there's 600 channels on the TV now.
I wonder what happened to the...
Yeah, and as you get older i think you
probably your horizons broaden and it's a limited bandwidth for that shit i would think
i mean do you have do you have periods in the day where you just,
you know, when's the last time you put a baseball game or you watch fights?
Yeah. I, I don't hang out with really anyone who, well,
my closest thing now is now that we know Tyson Bajent and he's in the NFL,
I bought the NFL package. I still couldn't figure out how it worked.
I think I spent a thousand dollars last year000 last year trying to watch NFL games,
and I still never got to see one Chicago Bears game
because I couldn't figure out how it worked.
It was always like it's not showing in your region.
I think my games ruin me for all sports.
Oh, the CrossFit games?
Yeah.
Let me hear that.
What do you mean?
Like you saw behind the curtain?
You knew all the games were rigged for
rich to win you were kind of there some of it happened remember the the super bowl we went to
oh man and then dave and i got invited to fly to the super bowl with an owner of a team and
oh i mean the client suggested that was an honor befitting of someone who kind of gave a fuck about the sport.
Did you enjoy any of the events we went to?
Like when we went to the Rolling Stones, did you enjoy that?
In San Diego?
By enjoy it, I mean, I don't mean like hanging out with your friends.
I mean, as a musical, as a concert experience.
I remember it sounded better outside of the stadium than inside the stadium.
There's that.
We also went and saw U2.
It's a risky take, right?
We saw U2.
I thought that's been a more enjoyable thing.
But did you even enjoy that?
I felt like I couldn't even hear the music.
The acoustics were good.
Yeah, I did.
The road pull.
Were you there for that?
I saw U2 with you in Madison Square Garden.
I didn't enjoy that either.
I mean, I enjoyed it because I was with you and friends,
but I just thought it was just horrible.
It was like being in your friend's car with the radio too loud.
The only concert I ever enjoyed with you that I went to is when we saw Tosh
in Palm Springs.
You know, I'll tell you the public event I like,
and I don't like public events, but I really enjoyed this one.
When we got the Amber Alert that there was going to be killer waves at the
beach.
Oh, yeah. Sure. And we went down Amber Alert that there was going to be killer waves at the beach. Oh, yeah.
And we went down there and there was no parking and everyone was standing there wanting to see the killer waves.
That was recently.
That was just a few months ago.
Yeah, that was cool.
We were in Santa Cruz.
I don't even think I ran into you down there.
I don't even think you and I organized meeting down there.
We planned to go i think the the warning that came on all our phones said that it was going to be
your the gravest danger would be at noon and so we timed it perfectly yeah stay away from the coast
and you get down there and all your friends you haven't seen in 10 years are there yeah that was
amazing county went to the beach to see the deadly waves. Yeah, that was awesome. That was cool.
Yeah.
That was more fun than the Super Bowl.
And the audio was perfect there.
You had burritos.
You could leave whenever you wanted.
Right.
Right.
Hey, let's go to Mijos.
Oh, today?
Make sure they're good for the night. Yeah, I would love to do? Make sure they're good for the 9th.
Yeah, I would love to do that.
Has anyone contacted him for the 9th?
And hit the bike shop.
We'll bring him lunch.
Oh, that's thoughtful.
Has anyone contacted Miho's about the 9th?
Maggie did.
Oh, awesome.
So we'll check as well.
I'm excited for today.
This is my last day with you.
Are you coming back on the 3rd?
No, I'm going to the boat on the 3rd.
Me and Mikey Bender and Jim.
You want to go?
No, I do, but I got shit I got to do.
Are you going to fish?
No.
Is the third Friday?
Where's the third?
The third's Friday.
And then so the next day,
I want to be up here because my bees are ready.
Oh, shit.
Yeah, I got the good note on it that the queens are what was it let me look
here i'll tell you like they're in route or she already has the girl already has the
they're uh i don't know the process i shouldn't be yeah but just pretend like you do i want to
hear this i'm so excited it was something that queens had to mature. There's three of them, and they're going to bring 100,000 bees with each queen.
Those come by FedEx?
No, no, no.
They're here local.
They're actually in the Larkin Valley.
And her message was, hi, Greg and Mark, quick update.
New queen bees, three of them are all laying in solid patterns
and will be ready to transport by Saturday.
I'll close the hive Friday night to keep them all inside.
Planning to move them mid-morning Saturday.
They'll need to chill in their new location for a day or two
before I shake them into their new hive boxes.
Does Saturday around 11 a.m. work for me to come to the house?
Oh, shit. I want to go from the boat back i'm gonna go up here and see that and can i bring my boys to watch that yeah i think we should and even if i can't get up you ought to do it yeah i'll definitely
be there and then so it sounds like sunday or monday there'll be a big event too when she shakes
the bees into the hive yeah and you know what's cool this is concomitant with this prep they of
course put spaces out for the boxes going the right direction and we're going to plant a
ton of lavender in the on the hillside but uh we're going on a uh yellow jacket uh
murdering spree which which is entirely enjoyable.
And how do you do that?
Well, the way we, the way that I was doing it in that, of course,
there's just the traps, right? They'll fill.
Right. You got the pheromone you put in it and it draws them.
Those things we've done that here before.
And you can just load them up where there's no room for any more yellow
jackets.
But the fun thing is to put out a piece of sausage or meat
and take the salt gun.
Oh.
And you shoot them and it just adds them to the sausage
and they keep coming.
Oh, that's fun.
Oh, it's super fun.
Hey, that salt gun will change your your feeling about flies you like
seeing them in the house it's like sport now we all have it's it's the only thing we hunt
we we hunt and fish and our hunting is all musket domestica fucking house flies
yeah horsefly but and of course yellow jackets i was really surprised how fun that is
too shooting the flies and their wings and shit and everything flies all over the place
uh here's a video i think i sent jimmy one and he blew a hole in his screen and
like mr firearms can't have that in the house now.
I wonder what your... Have you seen your hives yet?
Do you know what they look like?
No.
I guess like that, right?
Totally new to the whole bee thing.
I've never been afraid of them, though,
and I've always enjoyed them.
Oh, so that's how
they come look at that's i think that's they come in a box like that god those look like big bees
like i got killer bees is that is that what kara said like hey we got to cruise around the property
and and get all the yellow jackets that's part of the setup i guess so because carlene was yesterday on yellow jacket patrol
putting up traps and looking for their looking for where they were you know they sent mark to
the hospital the yellow jackets on this lot oh that's right i remember that i was at the house
yeah they live in the ground i think you lived here then right no no no no i didn't but i it was more
recently i was just there at the house and i remember getting a phone call from him or something
yeah it was severe right i mean they worked him
he had like a shit ton of bites and he ended up in the ER.
I have that footage somewhere where you and I watched a yellow jacket grab a huge dragonfly and use his mandibles and cut the eyeball out of the dragonfly at the Rio Del Mar house. Do you remember that?
Yep. That must be the best part.
The tasty part?
Yeah.
Wow.
Look at that, shaking him in like she said.
And you just empty him in like that wow i wonder if we're there watching it if we have like an exit strategy you know what i mean like
hey if you see this everyone run into the house and jump in the shower.
Well, there's a, there's a famous dance you do, right?
Where you're slapping your head and spinning in circles and screaming.
Yeah. You jump into the koi pond with a straw.
No.
Where are these guys going to be?
Who the bees?
Yeah.
On the property.
They want a southeast slope.
And so we've got plenty of that, which is perfect.
So down below the hot tub.
Oh, down. Okay.
During flower blooming season here at my house,
I can see, like as the bushes flower at different house, I can see like,
as the bushes flower at different times,
I can see the traffic of the bees going to certain bushes.
I never see their hives,
but I can obviously see the direction they're coming from because it's just
like a highway, right? They're just going back and forth,
back and forth from a bush. They'll just be like a straight line.
So we'll have three colonies.
And Kara said that they'll just fly right through
each other like there's air traffic control completely fine with each other
i like all the tools that b people have you got a staple gun you got a brush
oh you know he's crushing some when you put those together he acts like he cares
look how oh no there's a little gap so is there i thought so pegs you put it on yeah yeah wild
that's what they come in like this tight organizational structure isn't
that kind of amazing yeah it may whenever i see bugs doing that like and for bees i just
assume that's how china models its government i think it might have been racist
i'm okay with it okay and models its government. That might have been racist.
I'm okay with it.
Okay.
What does this mean? What's a more difficult interview, Greg or Dave?
Yeah, we've defined difficult.
A hive and hive mentality.
A hive and hive mentality.
National Review used to refer to the collective voice of the left as the hive routinely. I got a funny one for you.
Is Dave tough to interview?
I wouldn't think so.
I have no trouble talking to him.
No.
No.
He's fun.
He's easy.
He's funny.
It's weird, but in a good way.
I want to show you this.
I saw this yesterday.
I thought of you.
There was someone that was that was killing it on the lecture circuit and i was like dave i mean i just don't care
shit i'm like i don't get it and he said yeah me neither he goes but that's you and i
he goes that's where it's we weird. And I go, okay, thanks.
Now I feel weird.
Do you recognize this lady right here?
From 1983? I don't recognize
her.
Who is it?
I don't know. Some news lady.
Yeah, she looks familiar. They both
do. Bernie Sanders.
Yeah, it's Bernie Sanders. Was that Diane Sawyer or someone?
I don't recognize her, but listen to this. You're going to love this. Here we go.
...today predicted possible catastrophic warming of the Earth by the 1990s with a strong climate change.
What the scientists are telling us, we don't get our act together within the next eight or nine years.
We're talking about cities all over the world, major cities going underwater.
A report today predicted possible catastrophic warming of the Earth by the 1990s with a strong climate change.
What the scientists are telling us is that we don't get our act together within the next eight or nine years, we're talking about cities all over the world, major cities going underwater.
Hey, this is religion, right?
Yeah, well, there's a.
This is religion.
Look up, look up doomsaying and doomsday cults.
You know, just do a Wikipedia dive on that shit.
doomsday cults.
Just do a Wikipedia dive on that shit.
It's a universal variant
of
a form of mental illness.
When I was a kid,
the standard
cartoon character,
the depiction,
the graphical depiction
of insanity was the guy standing
on the curb, looked like a hippie with a sign
that said, the end is near.
Where everyone else has got their business suits on,
walking back and forth,
living in the real world.
Remember that?
Look it up.
Pull it up. The end is near guy i mean
cartoon i'll you want me to find it the end is near cartoon when i saw that i'm like oh that's
religion i always heard oh yeah yeah okay i found it uh sure oh no this is um
this is uh this might be a little different but these are variations on it.
Oh, I got it.
It's all over.
I put the end is near cartoon, and it comes up a shit ton of images.
This stuff right here?
The end is near life.
Like and share if you agree.
The end is near.
Are we there yet?
The end is near the end.
Yeah, look at the character.
Oh, yeah, here we go.
Here we go.
Oh, and they even did the whole climate change one here.
Let me see if I can find this.
Oh, damn it. lost it it won't let me show it they could they couldn't figure out if we were all gonna freeze a la nuclear winter or if we were gonna boil over and so now they just got
climate change and so no matter what what detected, it counts. See?
And it's nice because it lets you live outside of the reality that there's never been a period without climate change.
The end is near.
The end is near, meteorologist.
The end is near.
Oh, yeah.
So this is kind of a spin on it.
The meteorologist is also, the religious guys are saying the end is near near and then the guy in the suit is saying the end is near and they're
on the same page but for different reasons my point is is that there's there's always been
doomsday cults and doom saying it seems to be a it's a it's like hearing voices and seeing things and having visions from the prophet and shit
it's a it's the institutions our mental institutions are full of those people
it's just wild when i saw that bernie sanders and her i was like that was the first i've always
heard that climate change is like a religion and i never got it until i saw both of them saying it and i was like holy
i see it now so when people say they don't have religion all you have to be is like well
do you believe that the uh in climate change and if they say yes well you do but you do have a I don't see less religion in the irreligious.
They got just a different God.
It's the state.
Right, right.
It's what the state's telling them.
Greg C., are they false prophets well that's always a nice
twist too
hey did you see Charlie
Kirk's
talk on Israel by any chance
no
he doesn't come out and say it but but one of the reasons, the implication is that basically people want to get rid of Israel to basically get rid of Christianity.
So if you get rid of Israel, you get rid of the amusement park that is the place to go see all of the highlights of the story,
right? You can see where Jesus cried. You can see where Jesus was born. You can see where
Bethlehem, you can see where he was raised, Nazareth. You can see all those spots.
And so if you get rid of it, you get rid of Christianity.
And I've never been a big supporter of amusement parks,
but boy, I think that one might be a good one to keep.
The Jews are symbolic.
Israel is emblematic of the best of Western civilization
and really the only kind of spot of it over there.
And it would be hated for exactly that.
For its success.
Because it's a fantastic expression of the values of Western civilization and culture.
From a low infant mortality to its wealth, to the amount of electricity it produces, the wealth it creates, it's all to be hated.
I still find the idea of Columbia University jews to be a laughable notion
because new york city is the the home base for jews for successful jews
because of their incomparable contribution to that institution.
I mean, let's talk about Nobel Prizes without Jews.
What do you want to look at?
What would that look like?
I wonder if I type in how many Nobel Prizes have Jews won.
20% of the recipients of the Nobel Prize have been Jews. Wow.
And they make up less than 0.2% of the world's population.
Two-tenths of 1%. Someone said they control the world.
I go, that's bullshit.
Just the arts and medicine and science and law and literature.
And entertainment.
Just the most important and beautiful things in the world.
That's where you'll find them
and that's the reason to hate them
because you hate all those things
of the 965 individual recipients of the Nobel Prize
and the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences
between 1901 and 1923
214 of them have been Jews.
Oh, how many Muslims have won the Nobel Prize?
Fifteen.
Half of them in the 21st century.
The Nobel Prize has kind of lost its luster too, right?
I think so.
Yeah. Anti-Semitism
is anti-Americanism.
What do you mean by that?
What's the connection
there?
There
have always been and remain an integral part of Western civilization, Western culture.
And divorce us of our Judeo-Christian, you know, classical foundations classical
foundations and you'll have what?
Libya? What?
What do you want? Saudi Arabia?
Iran?
Where's your cup of tea?
There isn't one over there.
Oh, the UAE, the United Arab Emirates.
I mean, as long as you're on the right side, they have 6 million servants and 300,000 citizens or something like that.
So as long as you're one of the 300,000, it's probably okay.
Do you remember those numbers they were telling
us how many services yeah yeah i i was i paid pretty close attention to what i could while
over there and i was for what it is i was impressed
i mean if you don't know the difference between there and Iran, you're stupid.
Remember, we could stand there and see Iran across the way.
Right.
Yeah, five million servants in the uae i don't see the pop uh
12 of the population is citizen 88 of servants
yeah
what were you gonna say
I mean they're there from where
from Pakistan and India
and shit yeah yeah from all over the world
yeah
looking for what a better way of life
right yeah a job
okay
and they have no crime there
like zero
you know when people talk about someone walking 600 miles to get a job making and they have no crime there, like zero.
You know when people talk about someone walking 600 miles to get a job making tennis shoes in Vietnam,
I don't, or you were with me when one of our affiliates
was talking about how horrible it was
that half of the people that worked at Walmart
qualified for welfare.
Yeah, that's crazy.
And I don't, you know, I'm supposed to wish for unemployment amongst the poor. I'd
let people on welfare get jobs and keep the money and the benefit.
Do you know that to get ahead?
Yeah, totally.
Yeah, yeah, totally.
I mean, basically, I mean, I mean, my parents came here and my dad drove a forklift.
He was a security guard. He did the servant's jobs.
He was here so he could get ahead and then scrape money together and opened his first liquor store. I mean, it's just your classic Middle Eastern story.
Super cool. And my family escaped. Obviously, you know, my family and Haley's family escaped real genocide, real Holocaust, not what's going on in Gaza.
Hey, do you know the story? Do you know? Do you know Malcolm Gladwell's take on the Jews?
Have you heard? Do you remember reading what he said, how they when they came to the United States?
states no but basically i i think it's in first just sort of on a parallel story the rothschilds i think it was frankfurt but i can't remember or maybe it was in um in hungary maybe it was
in hungary but the jews weren't allowed into the into the um inside the city walls and also they
were forced to live outside the city walls and in the ghetto you know in the deplorable conditions with all the shit and basically you weren't allowed to to live outside the city walls in the ghetto in the deplorable conditions with all the shit.
And basically you weren't allowed to lend money inside the city walls.
And so this guy Rothschild, he just said, okay, I'm going to start lending people money.
And he started a little fucking money lending organization, basically a bank outside the city walls. And before he died, he had sent his five sons to places like London,
Vienna, Paris, Naples, and they started lending money to these governments, to these nation
states to fight their wars, and they became filthy rich. Well, Malcolm Gladwell's take on the Jews is
when they came to the United States, they were basically fleeing Europe, right?
And they also had the low-paying jobs of being um they were uh is it called textiles they were basically seamstresses
they made clothing right for the rich people and in the foreign lands that they were they were
escaping and when they came to the united states i guess it was during the industrial revolution
when all of a sudden there was all of a sudden shitloads of textiles and materials
and so they all of a sudden in their poor their poor jobs all of a sudden there was all of a sudden shitloads of textiles and materials. And so they all of a sudden in their poor, their poor jobs all of a sudden became extremely valuable.
Right.
And so they became clothing manufacturers in New York and they took all their money.
And you know what they did with it.
They sent their kids to college to become doctors and lawyers.
And here we are today. My grandfather had a girlfriend named Lillian, whose husband had died years ago, long before we knew her.
But their family was in the clothing manufacturing business, Jewish family.
clothing manufacturing business, Jewish family.
And when World War II broke out,
they got a contract to make army uniforms and became filthy rich.
And were they not filthy rich before?
They weren't rich before. They were doing well, but the war was very good to them.
It's just interesting how these people culturally culturally just no matter what you do to
them they just keep coming back i met a guy in santa cruz who uh was an efficiency expert
during the war and got a chunk of of the savings he provided to the department of war
and it made him wealthy.
He got a chunk of what?
Of the savings he was.
So they look at tank assembly and go,
you know, if you did this and that and this,
you'd save this much money.
And he got a chunk of it.
He found enough inefficiencies to create personal wealth.
I don't think that's unusual.
I think that in the times of war,
isn't there a tremendous upside for somebody with all the weaponry we're sending to Ukraine?
Oh, great.
I mean, we had more billionaires created during the pandemic
than any other time, I think, in U.S. history.
Anytime that there's chaos, someone is making shitloads of money off it.
This gets to my everything that's wrong is wrong on purpose?
Yeah.
By the way, the CA Peptide site is down.
None of the hosts in the United States will host them.
There's no non-hosting site that will host their site uh so so basically if you want to get
peptides you have to email them now contact at capeptides.com i saw someone asking why don't
they set up why don't they set up their own server they are you mean offshore they are
no it doesn't you can do it in your garage yeah but i think for
some legal reasons you can't do it out of the united states what uh probably more control over
big pharma from big pharma right they don't want you putting peptides things on the net is that the
problem yeah and and and the ph farm is really against peptides like
really really really against peptides you know people finding their own way their own pathway to
to their health
interesting i got a buddy who's getting on jet to go to to uh cancun to get uh
To Cancun to get stem cells.
And he's perfectly healthy.
He just doesn't want to miss out, you know?
Is it he can't get it done in the United States?
Maybe they don't have the good ones here.
I don't know, buddy.
I don't know.
I feel like a lot of people go to Mexico for stem cells. I feel like I keep hearing that over and over.
I'm amused, just wildly amused at that.
That someone would go to Mexico for something health-related
when we're here in the greatest country in the world?
I can't help but snicker around any of the longevity movement
or longevity experts.
And they commit the same kind of epistemological sin.
In 2014, Harvard Medical School began investigating Pierre Anversa.
By the way, he's considered the godfather of stem cell research, a cardiologist and former leader in stem cell research for falsifying data in his papers.
And Versa claimed to have discovered stem cells in the heart that could regenerate cardiac muscles.
But in his 2011 study, the Lancet was retracted in 2019 after an investigation revealed fabrication.
I've looked into this story before.
I think 30 of the seminal papers on stem cell research were done by him.
And he's the godfather of stem cell research.
And all of them have been retracted.
It's crazy, right?
Harvard cardiologist.
When did this come out?
I don't know.
I've just, I've learned to not, I hear anything about stem cells and I just stopped listening.
So I could have stem cell research shattered after fabrication scandal needs
to rebuild says a E H J editor.
The fraud is well known net by now, Pierre Anvers, MD, PhD,
a former giant of stem cell research was found to have falsified and fabricated
data and more than 30 research. I think it's 2019, April 12, 2019.
Such an earthquake has rarely, if ever, shattered a research field.
Well, that's not true.
That was bullshit.
I know, right?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Where do we start we want to talk about cholesterol
the causes of obesity alzheimer's research anyone
entire fields entire fields of bullshit created by bullshit bullshit like women's studies no no no no no like pre pre-clinical oncology and hematology
uh tyler watkins uh a ton of funding is being committed to longevity and
anti-aging at my university we have hired a ton of faculty researching the matter. Hey, let's do a...
What's the Google effort?
What was it called? Calico?
Oh, to make people live forever?
Yeah.
They were going to crack the code.
They were going to use their extraordinary data methods to provide global health.
In 2018, an investigation committee from Harvard Medical School stated that the results from 31 papers published by Anversa Laboratory could not be trusted and recommended they be retracted.
More than a dozen of these papers have since been yanked by various journals, including the Lancet, New England Journal of Medicine,
Circulation and Circulation Research.
What was the method of fraud?
Is it fabricated data?
Is it Photoshop?
What are they doing?
Is it Photoshop?
That's my favorite.
I'm a super fan of that shit.
The line, there's no disease Photoshop can't cure, is like, it's just so fucking cool.
Let me see.
I'll type in, how was Anversa caught fraudulent?
And of course, it had federal funding.
Let me see.
Everything does.
I don't think you have shit unless you get NIH money.
Let me see if I can.
It's cold in here, Seve.
Let me see if I can find that.
Within a year of Riccardi's arrival in 2011, they grew suspicious.
The scientists recalled they couldn't replicate the seminal findings.
Yeah, we're not hearing the mechanism of bust.
And became concerned that the data and images of selves were being manipulated.
So it is Photoshop.
It was Photoshop. Yeah, there we go.
Anversa and his deputy gruffly dismissed their questions.
They took their concerns to Brigham officials, telling that the Anversa blockbuster results appeared to have been fake.
Talk right back.
Keep talking.
appeared to have been fake after an investigation lasting almost six years brigham and harvard wrote in a two-paragraph statement that they had found falsified or fabricated data in 31 papers
the fabrication of data and images
in the seeking of government grants and engaged in reckless and deliberately misleading record keeping
grants and engaged in reckless and deliberately misleading record keeping.
Oh, man, Greg, can you hear me?
Greg, you must be turning up the heat.
You ready for this?
Testing.
One, two.
I'll ask him this question in one second. Hold on. Hold on. I'll ask him this. Since 2001, the National Institute of Health, NIH, spent a half a billion on heart research.
Reuters found in its analysis of government data, more than a quarter billion of the total has been awarded since March 2013,
by the time the federal government had been informed of the fabrication allegations against Anversa,
according to documents and interviews with sources familiar with the matter.
Damn. Hey, do you watch horror movies
no i don't know any do you have any interest in them
yeah i mean i did when they were scary but i that doesn't i don't enjoy them at all the kids get nothing out of it either i
mean which surprised me because when i was little but they might be overstimulated with with real
horrors you know they're pretty they're they they don't they don't have too many like what there's
a b in the pool this is a child's play and they thought it was hilarious and they're all imitating Chucky and they just fucking loved it.
Oh, God.
That movie scared the shit out of me.
It did me too, but I was almost grown or grown.
And I thought it was scary.
I watched it with them.
They fucking loved it.
Greg, can you please comment on your mentality
never bringing up your polio and the effects?
Was this taught to you or did you adopt this on your own?
Yeah, I mean, like, I don't know.
It's, I don't have an answer for that.
It's just not a subject.
Did you ever fall deeply into research about it?
No.
It was never i guess
you didn't have the internet then as a kid yeah i don't uh i i'm
i'm not one to find excuse or – I think that the obstacles that prevent success on almost any front are mental.
Like self-implied?
Yes.
Who taught you that?
How did you know that?
You never felt sorry for yourself?
Well, I shouldn't say you never felt sorry for yourself.
You never used it as an excuse?
No.
I mean, like, what?
Like, get the good parking spot and shit?
Yeah.
Right.
Or just, like, get out of stuff in school or just shit like that no
you kind of went the opposite way with it right like hey fuck you i'm gonna do this because
you might think i can't yeah yeah i mean what else what else would you do
i mean i mean i've known all sorts of people. I mean, that kind of thing. I think from the outside, something like that looks heroic.
To never use it as an excuse.
To take what you have and do your very best with it.
Right.
And to find that what looks like a deficit to us may not be.
Right.
I mean, is it like, look at,
I enjoyed the example of Django Reinhardt
and his withered hand burned in fire in fire right
as a child okay and widely regarded by by many to be uh the world's greatest guitar player
oh with only one hand with three fingers no i mean, check him out. He had a fucked up hand.
And so would you expect that his,
do you expect his hand to be his favorite subject?
No.
Turn it up.
Django Reinhardt has been called
the greatest guitarist who ever lived.
Reinhardt remains the most influential
and famous European jazz musician to date.
There are arguably a few competitors
for this distinction.
Big name musicians like John McClure.
Let me see if I can find...
this distinction. Big name musicians like John McClure.
Let me see if I can find
Let me see if I can find him playing.
French traditional
gypsy music and
as if all else
left to play and
playing skills. With great determination
he invented a new way
of playing the guitar.
Okay.
I don't see him anywhere playing.
Maybe they couldn't get...
You're going all over it. A bunch of that
is there.
I'm just concerned if I play more than seven seconds.
My point is that
Django Reinhardt's
hand is a subject for
people probably... There's one simple vision hack. Django Reinhardt's hand is a subject for people probably...
There's one simple vision hack.
Django was.
Right.
I got to watch an ad for this one.
Why is that? crazy
yeah i totally see your point.
It's heroic.
Yeah, but from his perspective, it wouldn't be.
Because it's all he knows?
Yeah, I mean, what are you... Right.
But I hadn't... you know look at look at the people we call heroic and talk to them and they they they tell the same story i'm not claiming to be a hero but
things look very different from outside than they do inside
do you see the guy that just passed away that was like 50 or 60 years in iron lung?
No, no shit.
Yeah, he just died.
Wow.
And I guess he was a successful lawyer.
And he had a good attitude.
Wow. Wow.
Wow.
For those of you who don't know what an iron lung is, it's a machine that, I guess, through pressure inside the cage, pulls your chest up and down and basically does the breathing for you.
Are you ready for the interview?
I'm ready when you're ready.
What would you like to say to the world?
When I was six years old, back in the ancient times.
What year was it?
I'm sorry?
What year was it?
1952. I was six years old and playing in my backyard like every other six year old.
And I didn't feel good. So I went in, told my mom, Mom, I don't feel good.
And like every other parent in that day and time, she panicked.
Is it okay if I sit beside you? Pull up a chair?
Okay, please do whatever.
What was the environment around polio like back in the 1950s?
Was everybody worried all the time?
Fear.
Everybody was scared of polio.
It's a horrible disease.
Well, one at a time.
Can we leave you dead?
Or crippled for life?
He spent 50 years in that thing.
Is that the number?
Paul survived polio in the 50s
and has used an iron lung to breathe ever since.
More than 50.
60.
He passed away March 11,
2024.
Yeah.
First survivor of polio as a child.
He lived over 70 years inside an iron lung.
Wow.
That's his longevity secret.
Oh, that's what Calico should be looking up?
Getting an iron lung?
Our friend Tommy Hollenstein has exceeded uh, has exceeded his life expectancy.
He's quadriplegic by, by what? 30 years or something.
Yeah. And he, and you're right. He went to law school. Yeah. Has,
has that guy that's he's exceeded by 30 years.
Something like that.
Um, when I have, uh, uh, like, uh, adaptive athletes on here, like people, like, uh, I have adaptive athletes on here,
I had Tim Murray on here, the fittest dwarf in the world.
And basically, I got the impression from him that he feels like he needs to show
what can be done so that other people, I guess, now that we're talking about this,
other people in his situation won't feel sorry for themselves.
Like, hey, basically, look what I did. Stop feeling sorry for sorry for yourself look what i'm doing like to be an inspiration to others
yeah and you know so you got the guy in iron lung and he's being interviewed because he's
in the iron lung and so he has no choice to talk about the iron lung right but i think what what the the real him
is probably more closely related to what he's doing as a lawyer right right i said what a joy
be to share that use that vehicle for interaction right right if you, you know, talking about yourself, it's the,
the slipsism there, the curse of that. It's like,
I know Rodney Mullen has talked about,
about a removable fame, you know,
like he's, he's world famous at the skate ramp but he goes three
miles away from it and he's nobody and it's like ah he's got that detachable fame right
you live in an iron lung and you don't right worst thing about it would be everyone tripping on you
right um uh two two things on that note this is this is being an iron lung would be like being brad
pitt there's no there's never a moment of anonymity right can you imagine that hell
everyone's pointing at you look look oh my god it's brad pitt it's brad pitt it's brad pitt
wherever you fucking go right anywhere in the world.
That feels like some... I'm not saying it would cause mental illness.
It feels like a burden of the mentally ill.
And enjoying it would be would be insane right to never be able to escape from yourself
yeah just no one will let you right
um there's people uh you when i've interviewed certain – We find purpose outside of self.
Right.
And peace and happiness.
And peace and happiness.
Yeah, yep.
I've said it a million times on this show.
There's this Taoist saying, stop thinking and – I forget the exact thing, but stop thinking and you'll achieve happiness.
Oh, stop thinking and all your problems will go away.
It's some truth to that.
Yeah.
Someone gave me Rick Warren's book, A Purpose Driven Life.
And I didn't get past the first sentence.
And I closed the book and I go, he's right.
I don't even need to read this fucking thing.
And the first sentence was, it's not about you.
And I was like, ah, fine. Perfect. Perfect. read this fucking thing and the first sentence was it's not about you and i was yeah finally perfect perfect
it's not
um two two things that i've spotted is when someone is
i don't know has a ton of attention on them for a prolonged period of time
uh one of the one of the unfortunate incidents uh catastrophes that happens around that is that
they don't know how to have conversation anymore if you're not asking them a question about
themselves they don't know how to talk right and they're they're just horrible conversationalists
and then the other thing i
noticed in this crossfit in the crossfit space which is very interesting that you bring up
rodney mullen is some people get confused that they actually think that they're famous
because they either live on their instagram or they're always in a crossfit where everyone knows
them and they have forgotten that if they walk 100 feet away from the crossfit space no no one
knows who they are or gives a fuck.
And they can't get past that.
God, it must be.
I never thought of it so clearly like what you said about Brad Pitt.
That must be fucking crazy.
That must be horrible.
Insane.
Yeah. You're always Brad Pitt. You could never just be like, ah, I'm free. fucking crazy. That must be horrible. Insane.
You're always Brad Pitt. You could never just be like,
I'm free.
There's no people watching.
Right.
He can't watch people.
Heidi Krum, should kids still get polio vaccine?
Heidi Krum, should kids still get polio vaccine?
Yeah, I don't know.
For $1.99?
Heidi, there is an interview going around now that I just saw recently.
It's new.
And the author of the book, The Moth and the Iron Lung, the author's name is Forrest Maready, M-A-R-E-A-D-Y.
And he talks about his journey with vaccines in terms of through all the research he's done and he was a huge proponent of vaccines and you kind of he talks about his journey after writing the book the moth and uh in the iron lung
and it's pretty wild it's it's it's pretty damn wild
someone in here asked what you think about the cern i wonder where that question is
someone in here asked what you think about the cern i wonder where that question is
i i just give me a chance to recommend uh lost in math by a hoffenstetter yeah sabina's book yeah
if you want to know about the sermon to plug uh yeah, definitely. To plug E.T. Jane's probability theory, the logic of science,
on specifically the Solvay conference of 1927.
Look, I've got to...
I listened to this audio book, by the way.
If you have questions about the CERN, listen to this.
It'll really bum you out. Lost in Math. She's a physicist, a German physicist.
And as Greg said, I agree with him. I don't know if she knows what she uncovered. Oh, yeah. What about those guys? Well, that was the Solvay conference of 1927.
1927. And the problems at CERN and the problems in to describe that was at the heart of quantum mechanics, that that was ontological rather than epistemological. And Jane said it was a devastating mistake. And there's a kind of a beauty to this irony in that it's the smartest assemblage maybe of human beings ever. And they, reached a consensus and they came to the wrong conclusion, it looks.
and in Janes and Paglia and the whole of the probability theory and the modern expression of it is coming to terms with that.
And it was interesting at our little event in Scottsdale,
we just did, to have astrophysicists of some renown
speaking somewhat apologetically and defensively of the Solvay guys.
Hey, we know more now.
But still, it's interesting to me, fascinating even.
In fact, the beauty of the picture, I have a print of it framed.
What I like is that the method of consensus science is a failed method, even when you have a room full of the smartest scientists to have ever lived.
There's still an enormous opportunity to get it exactly fucking wrong.
And this relates to CERN.
It relates to very much so directly.
The problems were predicted by Einstein, by Bohr, and by E.T. Jaynes.
By the way, Jaynes, who wrote Probability Theory and the Logic of Science,
was the youngest invitee by Einstein to his 70th birthday party,
which is kind of an interesting little bit of history in physics.
Can you see the vote?
Was it unanimous?
I don't know the details of that,
but we have a pretty good sense of it being Einstein versus Bohr,
and there's a lot that's been said on it.
And it comes to this idea of whether probability inheres in nature. Is it ontological or is it in our heads? Is it ep that the probability is a is a measure of a
a logical rational measure of certainty
and that's what you believe also yeah i do
sounds logical it doesn't mean hair in the object no
it doesn't it doesn't
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it doesn't Everyone was there. All the greats. What's the number? I don't want to make it up. Was it 19 Nobel Prize winners there?
Past, present, future?
It's fun with the kids.
Just pick anyone from the pictures and look them up.
And Riley would ask, who's that goofy guy?
Let's learn about him.
And it was Einstein.
I go, this is rich.
So you can just put little biographies
on suitable for kids, you know? And one woman. Marie Curie was there and she's the only person
to be given a Nobel prize in chemistry and physics. She made a younger daughter a lab
assistant when she was a little kid. And that daughter got a Nobel Prize in physics.
Wow.
Her husband had a Nobel Prize.
Wow.
I mean, she's one of the smartest people who've ever walked the planet.
Brilliant, brilliant woman.
What was her name again?
Brilliant.
But they voted on something important, and it came out wrong.
What was her name again?
Marie Curie.
Her husband's there too, Pierre.
But what a great thing to share with kids and adults and physicists.
She was also the first woman to ever win a Nobel Prize.
Yes.
You know David Hassanens that showed up at our event?
He is also of that probability
and it's a measure of our rational uncertainty.
Rational certainty.
Damn, dude. Listen to this. You already said all this, but they worded a little different.
She was the first woman to win a Nobel Prize, the first person to win a Nobel Prize twice, the only person to win a Nobel Prize in two scientific fields.
first person to win a Nobel Prize twice,
the only person to win a Nobel Prize in two scientific fields. Her husband, Pierre
Curie, was a co-winner of her
first Nobel Prize, making them the
first married couple ever to win the Nobel Prize
and launching the Curie family legacy of
five Nobel Prizes.
She was the first woman to become
a professor at the University of Paris.
Is she a Jew?
It says she was born in Warsaw.
I don't know.
But it'd be a good guess.
Oh, she died in a street accident in Paris.
No wonder. I thought she died young.
Damn.
Both remain major medical research centers.
During World War I, she developed mobile radiography units to provide x-ray services to field hospitals.
Zach Sneed said, I just had stem cell treatment done on my labrum and AC joints this past Monday.
Had surgery on it in 2014 and tore it again leading up to the open.
Does Greg know of stem cells for injuries?
I mean, that's what it's for, right?
Yeah, man, I don't know.
How come you haven't used stem cells in your shoulder?
You got a wonky shoulder, right?
Yeah, I'm just, I'm not enthusiastic about any medical treatment of any sort, probably.
It would be fair to say.
There we go.
Should kids still get polio vax?
That's the second time that's come up.
I don't.
I didn't give my kids it if it's that if that I'm no doctor
turn table we're worried we're like divided even on whether you should spray off to keep Kim eaten by bugs or not.
Yeah.
And Maggie was devoutly anti-off and got Leishmaniasis.
Is she pro-off now?
Oh, yeah.
We're putting that shit on everything.
Yeah.
She doesn't want to get another tropical disease with a parasite that caused a miscarriage.
I mean, it gives you a different perspective.
Right?
Yeah, yeah, totally.
Anyone out there worried about Leishmaniasis?
Probably not.
You get it.
You'll have a different perspective uh turntable uh it's it's interesting you bring this up um i had uh he says is this similar to
why we see cultures living in poverty being great athletes being a kid you don't know you're uh
you're poor but your circumstances result in athletics being the only thing you have yeah also like if you're getting beaten at home or just there's all sorts of things
like you could be rich and be getting beaten at home you spend more time at the park or shit like
that or um it's interesting dave became a seal because he watched the rock and he told his daddy
want to be a seal and his dad laughed and said you could never do that. That's all he needed. And that's such a perfect fit for him.
That's such a
if I had heard that story from
other than him and you'd ask me who it was true of
I'd go, sounds like Dave.
He had some other circumstances
too.
He's a powerful
individual. Don't tell him what
he can't do.
But he kind of needed to get out of his house too.
What kind of father laughs at you and tells you you're never going to fucking achieve something that significant?
A good one, apparently. Yeah, right.
It's abusive and he overcame it um the the last i've had two conversations in my house in the
last six months um about abortion with liberals and um both of them ended up saying that the
reason why they think that the baby should be killed is because they would be raised into a
life of poverty that's where we got to and i didn't push back i just
listened right i kept just fishing and i said well what do you care i go don't you think it's
killing a baby and they said yeah but who cares about it if the baby is going to be raised in
poverty and i was like wow you know it's funny and this and and i know who you i know who you're
arguing with and and i would think that their poverty is one of the distinctive aspects of their existence.
Yes, one of them for sure.
I don't think you know the other one was my friend's wife, but the other one was a family member, and you're right.
What about the pair of them?
Yeah, well, one of them is the poorest person I've ever known by far.
Well, one of them is the poorest person I've ever known.
By far lived in a concrete hut with eight siblings and two parents and a 10 by 10 concrete hut with no bathroom and no electricity was raised in that life.
And yet finds it OK to kill a baby if you know that if you suspect it's going to grow up in poverty.
I mean, I was flabbergasted.
But once they take that stance, I don't know what to say.
I'm like, wow, you said that.
I think you have to just sit with that.
The fact that you said that out loud.
Like my job is done here.
You know what I mean? Like, what can I, what, I mean, you think it's okay to kill poor people?
I mean, but both Democrats, by the way.
I mean, but both Democrats, by the way. I don't think it's OK to kill people because of their poor or the circumstance that they'll be born into.
I don't. I don't think that's a justification for it. And I also and I also think I don't know if you if you're the one who presented this to me, but I think it was you. We were looking at a picture in a Mexican restaurant, and it showed the volcano, and it showed the guy putting the baby in the fire as sacrifice. In every Mexican restaurant, you and I would go and find that photo.
And then I think years later, I think… They throw in the volcano.
Yeah, they throw a hot chick too. Yeah, hot chick. Sorry.
A hot chick too. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Hot chick. Sorry. But okay, fine. A hot chick. But years later, I think you presented it to me and I think it was recently. I can't, I think it was you tell me if I'm wrong or not, but you were like, yeah, so you're a 25 year old woman and you want to go to law school, but you got pregnant. So you have an abortion. And I think you said to me, or someone said to me, what, what is that? And I'm like that. They said that's child sacrifice for yourself to get what you want.
And I was like, wow, I never thought of it like that.
Was that you told me that?
I don't think so, but.
Fawn doll CEO. Nice to see you fawn um coach is it possible that the nsca money
used to buy you is it i don't understand the question is it possible that oh you mean like
they settled the case got they bought got the money and then gave it to greg or that they
ahead of time they knew that they were going to settle the case and got the bought, got the money and then gave it to Greg or that they ahead of time,
they knew that they were going to settle the case and they would recoup
costs that they bought it from Greg.
I got,
I got paid before it settled.
Right.
I would,
I would recommend to,
to the caller to learn a diagram sentences.
And you can,
in the diagramming, you can tell if something doesn't make sense, you won't be able to diagram sentences and you can in the diagramming you can tell if
something doesn't make sense you won't be able to diagram it oh for him
but i i think that um the nsca didn't have any money to buy me out
they didn't have any money to buy me they couldn't come close to it they out. They didn't have any money to buy me. They couldn't come close
to it. They couldn't, they couldn't have, they couldn't have, uh, they were ordered
to give me four or $5 million and right away, and they didn't have it. We knew they didn't
have it. And then they all of a sudden came up with it and we had an internal
discussion is like are we is this illegal what we're doing because i got a foundation that
didn't have the cash on the books and now out of their ass they pulled out cash and they did some
kind of wonky loan through friends of their board and all of it would have been in my sense of things in,
in the way I viewed and my lawyers viewed our foundation is that what they
did on their end was illegal.
And I want to be clear, Greg, correct me if I'm wrong,
but that four to six million dollars that
they were ordered to pay crossfit was not had nothing to do with fines or money that greg was
going to get it was because the judge had already seen so much corruption and the legal fees were
mounting so big they they they hid hundreds of thousands of emails and then dumped them on us 30, 40 days before we needed to
be back in court. And rather than say it's impossible to go through that many emails,
we funded a global legal effort to go through that many emails in 30 days and it cost four
or $5 million. And the judge found that a reasonable thing for us to do in order for
them to pay it in immediately.
And we looked at each other like they don't have that money.
We'd already been inside out through their finances in suing them,
so they didn't have the cash, but they did come up with it.
How many times did the judge ask you, hey, do you want to settle?
Was that like on the regular? Like, hey, they lost you, hey, do you want to settle? Was that like on the regular?
Like, hey, they lost.
How much money do you want?
It kept coming up what we were after, and I taught everyone to say.
And by the way, I don't think it's understood, but we did an enormous amount of litigation.
And I was always in charge of the legal strategy, always.
The attorneys only worked tactically.
I watched that.
But the strategy was always mine. It was my decision to deny a $10,000 settlement
and spend almost a million dollars turning that $10,000 into zero.
You're talking about the case on the East Coast with the CrossFit gym?
That was a Texas Rabdo case in particular,
where the Rabdo attorney picks up his buddy,
they go to a CrossFit gym,
and the United States were being sued for Rabdo.
And at the end, they were willing to just take $10,000 and walk away.
And we told them to fuck off and that that was a million
dollar decision and in the end the verdict with the zero he got zero from the jury
but if you in in the end that's also because um the I had 15,000 affiliates.
I didn't want to settle for $10,000.
But that was also because you were smart enough to create the RRC also so that you wouldn't have an insurance company that's just settling shit based on economics rather than principle.
It was nice to be able to control that favorably for the affiliates.
Is the risk retention group still around?
I have no idea.
Maybe someone tells us.
Jay Wade, my wife is pregnant with our first.
I had seizures as a child that stopped at age five.
Could be Vax related.
Her brother's heart stopped after MMR shot his child.
We are partly on the fence about Vax.
I want to tell you this.
I can show you 100,000 people in 15 minutes who regret getting injections. I cannot show you one person, nor have I ever heard one story, anecdotally or not, of someone who wishes they would have gotten it. Not one.
Not one. I've never heard anyone say, hey, I wish I would have got any injection of any of any kind.
Even tetanus, the real scary one. I don't know. I do not know.
I do not. I've never heard anyone say, hey, I wish I would have got my kid that.
A matter of fact, all of my friends who don't whose kids don't have the injection, we all kind of look at each other other is there any vaccine you'd give your kid
no okay how about if they how about no there is it isn't i mean if if he got tetanus i probably
if like he stepped on a rusty nail we probably like re-examine it you know if you got it but
it's stuck with a rusty nail stuck with a rusty nail there's no there's no preemptive uh alteration
alteration is that the only thing
the only one i can think of off the top of my head there's no alteration uh is rabies considered a
vaccine i think it's like a treatment protocol right is it a vaccine i think i think you get
vaccinated yeah probably not there's no alteration by a rabid dog you like now i'm just gonna die
well do you know my story about the rabid dog i got bit by i was in india and i was in a slum
like a massive slum bigger than the size of la and much cleaner than la a clean slum and i was
over by the well the biggest well you've ever seen it was fucking 40 feet across and there's
100 kids there with buckets pulling water out of this fucking well and in a city built of um mud and uh i'm filming
there and i see this dog behind me sleeping and i say uh to myself hey don't step on that dog
and what do i do i back right up and step on the dog and the dog bites me through my pant leg and
draws blood on my calf there's a doctor with us who's the doctor of the of the slum who's hosting us right
and and i'm there with like four or five people and they're saying hey we got to get you to the
hospital to start rabies protocol and i said why they said rabies is very prevalent in india
it's a huge problem here and so i said okay i said um uh how long have you worked in this
village and he goes 13 years i go how many rabies cases have you seen in this village
in 13 years he goes zero i'm good i'm so why did you say the dog was rabid i just said that just
just as a story interesting sorry well good at least i got you through to the end of it you just got bit by a dog
yeah i just got bit by a dog so like i i don't um
you you know and the dog was sleeping and you stepped on it yeah
yeah i think you're pretty safe uh i'm not not. A wise man said earlier in the show,
I'm not enthusiastic about any medical treatment of any sort.
Probably would be fair to say.
Yeah, I'm not.
I'm not.
I don't want to be the first in line for any fucking thing like that.
Yeah.
I decided against the vaccine.
Absent any evidence of the horrible mistake it's been.
Right, me too.
I saw it in the lead up.
The presentation for it was seriously flawed.
The diagnostic standard,
the bizarre claims of sequencing,
all of it was just the numbers games.
What about the sequencing?
I never understood that.
What was the game around the sequencing? For me, it was just the comorbidities and like who was dying well they built a vaccine based
on the sequencing and the papers that claim to be to have found the sequencing the procedures
used aren't procedures used to sequence to sequence something and what was left out was the was the electrophoresis
in the and the uh differentiated a centrifuge centrifugation and the particle isolation that
has to proceed any kind of lysing for for a sequencing event sequence means to identify
it is that yeah to tell you what the genetic
structure of it was.
And it seemed to,
there seemed to be some confidence that we
had it, and the papers that were
touting that were
not, that is not what happened in
those papers. And it got called out
pretty clearly by some,
it was neat, one of the places that this shit
hid was,
hid, it was one of the places that this shit hid was hid it was one of the places it didn't get weeded out was in the comments of a youtube article on on pcr and so the the censors the censors at youtube i don't think they're smart enough to really read
the comments you know they got someone who takes offense at the video,
and there was nothing offensive in the video.
But there were people there that were claiming this study,
this study, this study, all where it was sequenced,
and people quickly came back with even a longer list of studies that were claiming to have sequenced it,
but then it was spelled out in wonderful detail
what it looks like to actually sequence with examples given of how that's done and what it
looks like and how much of the effort depends on the isolation of the particle that you're
going to sequence so you don't have anything else. And the process described was they took
sputum from people believed to be infected and sequenced that,
and it would have in it bacteria, fungus, all kinds of shit. And so the molecular biologists,
the lab people that called bullshit on that were early and strong on this thing. Now,
and strong on this thing.
Now, one of the reasons that you would be pretending to have sequenced it and to maybe be in possession
of that sequencing absent the work is that it wasn't
naturally occurring and you know the sequence
because you have the blueprint because you made it
in the fucking laboratory.
And that was all just drama for half for halfway to journalists. I think.
You knew the make and model of the car that the study says we've sequenced it. It must be,
it must mean that they've sequenced it. You know, the make and model of the car
that robbed the bank because you robbed the bank. It helps a lot.
Rob the bank because you robbed the bank.
It helps a lot.
Yeah.
I was just looking at the numbers for number of people who die in the United States every year from tetanus. In 2019, it was 7.5.
In 2018, it was 7.4.
In 2017, it was 7.2. And you could argue.4 in 2017 it was 7.2 and you could argue that
the reason why the people aren't dying from it is because that's the number of people that died
yeah yeah i know uh is tetanus 100 death rate uh um oh 7.2 percent of the people that got it died. No, number of deaths.
How can it be a fraction of deaths?
Who knows?
Okay.
Who the fuck knows?
I'm just telling you what Google is telling me.
It was as high as 20 people died a year in 1990.
But here's the thing. Once you start doing a little research, especially about polio and tetanus, it basically, if
it gets exposed to oxygen, it's toast.
Like to get it, it has to be fucking put directly into your fucking bloodstream.
And so you also have to think of this.
What are the chances if they give a million injections of tetanus a year, what are the chances that some percentage of those have some sort of – the dose wasn't correct or that the medicine was compromised or just all the things that lead to human error before someone injects something into you.
You,
you're not going to inject anything,
no matter how safe into fucking 300 million people and no one die.
Someone's going to like fall on the,
uh,
swallow the needle.
At least one person is going to accidentally swallow the needle and die.
I mean,
so you have to start like playing that numbers game.
At least that's what I do.
Uh,
if I got bit by rattlesnake,
I would rush to the doctor right away
and get the anti-venom.
I did not apologize to the dog.
Great question.
Maybe I did.
I was a dirty hippie.
Maybe I did.
You pronounced him rabbit.
Yeah, that was rude.
You got even with him.
Daniel Jennings, is my son an anomaly for getting him vaccinated and just turned 11 and is healthy and one of the top two kids on his competitive soccer team?
No, most kids are vaccinated.
He's not an anomaly.
Vast majority.
You're far from an anomaly getting them vaccinated
like all
including COVID
so here
polio virus can survive in water for long periods of time
it doesn't have to go into your
blood to get infected it does have to go into your blood to get infected it does have to go
into your blood to get infected you can drink it has to pass when you swallow it it has to
you you won't get polio unless you have leaky gut
it has to get into your bloodstream it has to be put into your bloodstream. It has to be put into your bloodstream.
It has to,
you have to have a leaky gut or it has to pass into the,
whatever the, the,
I don't know what the term is,
but,
but you can find,
I don't even know what the virus is,
what they call polio caucus or whatever.
You can find that in everybody.
Also had to get vaccinated when I went to Brazil.
They wouldn't let me travel unless I had it.
Some mosquito could bite me and kill me. Yeah, I had to do
all that too. I got all, I remember traveling to
Africa. I had to get all sorts of shots.
Yellow fever. I had to take some
live something or another.
Corey Leonard, if anyone brings a COVID vaccine anywhere near my kids they better have good
insurance hey did um when you were a kid did they used to give shots at the school i was trying to
remember if we used to get shots at school i think we did yeah i think we used to get shots at school.
All right.
Well, thanks for coming on.
Fun show with you.
Let's eat.
You want to see something fun here?
Let me see if I can.
You'll like this.
Let's leave on this note.
This is a really fun.
I played this yesterday on the show, but it never gets old.
Okay, here we go.
What percent of our atmosphere is CO2?
Repeat that question.
What percent of our atmosphere is CO2, carbon dioxide?
About 5%. All right.
We'll buy 5%. I'll see their five and suggest that we know that transportation causes 49% of CO2.
So that's why we're all working on energy transition.
All right.
So what number do you think it is?
Five.
Five.
Do you have one, Mr. Boyd?
So we've got a 5, 7, 8.
I'm going to hit the high end.
All right.
The answer is 0.04%.
Not 1%, not half of a percent.
It's 0.04%.
It's gone up from 0.00 to less than 0.00.
This is what we're being all contorted into doing is this tiny change in CO2.
If we get below 0.02,
plant life starts dying.
Panelist.
Isn't that amazing? The experts.
Yeah,
who was that asking the question?
I forget. I looked it up.
It's some hearing. I forget.
Let me see if maybe it says in here.
And that was
like the transportation secretary or something
back then if it drops below 0.02 plant life starts dying i heard that there's i read recently there's
15 percent more plant life on the planet than there was 10 years ago. I don't
know how they measure that. You worried about climate change? No, no, I didn't think so.
No, there's going to be climate change. There always, there always has been. When I drive
to your house, it's going to be significantly different than my house.
In our little micro climates.
Yeah, we're in an age of hysteria.
All right, good seeing you.
I'll give you a call shortly The boys are going skating at
At noon
Okay you taking them
No I think I'm gonna have Haley take them so we can hang out
Cool I'll see you in a bit
Okay bye
Bye everyone
Ladies and gentlemen
Greg Glassman.
What is today?
Today's Wednesday, garbage day.
I hope I took the garbage out.
Tomorrow, Liz Collin.
Oh, yes, Liz Collin.
George Floyd movie.
The fall of Minneapolis. If you haven't seen that, let me see. It's on YouTube. Fall of Minneapolis. I think I can finally say that word.
I'll put the link in the chat here.
Bam, there you go. I can't bring myself to watch it.
It'll just make me angry.
It's so bad.
I don't know a spot, a good spot for margaritas near the Carson Stadium.
I am going to, I am staying with all the boys at a big old house that,
uh,
CA peptides rented us.
And,
um,
I'm bringing down shitloads of podcast gear.
So that we can all podcast together. you know all i can think about um is yeah circle jerk yes all i can think about is uh saturday
last week we were supposed to have Tyson Bajan on with us
and
he got called into
training camp last minute, but he will be
here this Saturday unless he gets called
into training camp again.
Normally I think he has Fridays and Saturdays off.
So it'll be really cool.
I had to put Pedro
on ice for this week so we can get
Tyson on the screen.
So it'll be me, Hiller, Tyler, Tyson Bajent.
And then Taylor will just pop right on.
We'll do a quick recap of the previous week, very short.
And then after that, Taylor will do the workout,
and then someone can try to win $1,000 all right uh 10 at 10 a.m pacific standard time on um uh 10 a.m uh saturday pacific standard time
uh got an extra room in that house no we already had to kick killer out unfortunately
unfortunately
although it would be fun to have you there, Jeremy.
No, I don't know when the workout's posted.
For Kill Taylor, I don't know when that's posted.
I don't want to give anyone a heads up.
I don't want anyone getting the money.
But it's going to be cool.
This week's going to be crazy.
I can only imagine what...
We have 18 weeks between now and the games.
And before those 18 weeks are up,
I plan to get a contract with Netflix for a million dollars
and give away $10,000 a week for
Kill Taylor and have it roll over every week. So second week, it'll be 20,000. Third week,
it'll be 30,000. Next thing you know, it'll be just this crazy show. But run exactly the same
way. You got to just text your number in. So we have 18 weeks to make this show good.
in so we have 18 weeks to make this show good i mean the thing is it's already good we have 18 weeks for people to figure out how good it is
thank you i think it's genius too i think it's absolutely genius can you imagine this show live
does netflix do anything live the inspiration for this this was, is Jake Paul and Mike Tyson are going to fight live on Netflix.
And so I thought, shit, we should be doing our show live on Netflix.
Hey, it's not going to have to be high at all for people i mean this i have a feeling this week a lot of people are going to try the thing is don't forget it's gonna be hard to get in no
matter how good you are you're going to be competing with people like heidi you'll be
trying to get in at the same time fucking noah's trying to get in you know what i mean
so the chances of noah getting picked every week become slimmer and slimmer as the show gets bigger and bigger
here's the phone dude look at here's the phone
this phone right here and you text into it i got a wire i got this wire that plugs into it
the bottom so you text into the phone saying hey i want i'm ready to do
it and when you're ready to do it i send you a link i don't even know who you are what your
name is it doesn't matter but the show is only an hour long i was hate uh how did you come up
with the kill taylor idea i was just hating on kill tony i was just hating on it hating and then
finally i'm like why are you hating on that show that's like the most like
you need i was laying in bed and i was thinking to myself i need to shut the fuck up and then i
was talking to suza it just because like hey it's a successful show i should be learning something
from it instead of hating on it so i i shut that story down and then then I was talking to Sousa. And then it just hit me like a fucking.
I was like holy shit.
How crazy will it be.
And all these people were like.
Well what if no one calls in.
And I was like well what do I care.
I don't need anyone to.
Yeah it's a great show.
It's just awkward.
Yeah.
Everything I do is awkward.
Maybe that's why I didn't like it.
Because I was seeing too much of myself in it
Jesus
criminy any chance of doing
kill Taylor on like a Saturday yes
Saturday at 10 a.m. douche canoe
10 a.m.
Pacific Standard Time don't be nice
to him yawn
crying out loud 10 a.m. Pacific Standard Time. Don't be nice to him, Jan.
Crying out loud.
Yeah, exactly.
Bernie Gannon said,
won't be like an old boxing manager handpicking tomato cans to go against Taylor.
What I'm really hoping,
what's really going to get crazy
is the show's going to get huge.
And then what's going to happen is people are probably going to start coming on like doing weird shit, right? shows too i think i was telling you this like wouldn't it be cool like if we took a break from the show and then casey acree was there and he did like you know 10 cleaning jerks with one arm
with like 155 or some crazy shit like that just like kind of like freak show shit just in between
but anyway oh god oh god 10 a.m saturday see you guys there love you guys talk to you soon
oh oh oh i always screw this up let's let's just see really quick uh coffee
pods and wads let's see what he has going today. I always forget to plug these guys.
Okay.
So today there's a show on coffee pods and wads at 12 noon.
It's called around the whiteboard.
High rock founder says CrossFit is injury heavy. Is it?
Oh,
Oh,
wow.
And it has Sam Schweitzer,
Adam Clink,
and some chick named Harriet Roberts, Scott Schweitzer, Adam Clink, and some chick named Harriet Roberts.
Scott Schweitzer, Adam Klink, and Harriet Roberts
all go against each other.
Okay, that'll be cool.
Adam Klink's the five-minute-mile,
500-pound dude who...
I want to say he's like...
He's like the CEO of...
Rad or something?
He's somehow heavily involved in the
narrow shoe company.
Okay, so that's cool.
So that's at noon.
Coffee, pods, and wads.
Okay, now let's see what some of my other friends are doing.
Get with the programming.
And Get with the Programming also has a show today.
Oh, at 11 a.m.
So in two hours.
And that's Bill Grundler and Chase Ingram, both regulars on the show.
And it's called Analyzing the 2024 CrossFit Quarterfinals Programming.
By the way, we scheduled Paige Powers is coming on.
How sad that Paige somehow didn't make it to the games.
That's the one.
Her and Nick Matthew are the ones that really like...
I don't know what's right and wrong, but they need to be there.
Okay, so get with the programming.
So 11 a.m., get with the programming.
Okay, let's see.
A barbell spin.
A barbell spin has a show today too.
2024 CrossFit Quarterfinals Recap Show.
That's at 4.30 p.m. Pacific Standard Time.
Holy shit, they had Andrea Nistler on.
Damn, that was a big show.
They got a lot of views from that.
Damn, the barbell spin is murdering.
That station is killing it.
Okay, so 11 a.m. Pacific Standard Time.
Get with the programming.
Then when they're over, go to Coffee Pods and WODs.
Then get back to work for a couple hours or work out.
And then you come back to the barbell spin.
Let's just see.
Let's just see one more.
Let's just see.
Let's see. And Andrew Hiller more let's just see uh let's
see uh and andrew hiller let's see if he has something new that you can watch while you work
out uh videos uh his last video was four days ago this is what we asked for sort of oh i watched it all right there you go
uh andrea uh nistler interview was good she's quirky yeah she's crazy quirky
i had a weird interview with her but i liked her
can we get amy kringle on yeah i'd love to have amy kringle on
oh jeffrey burchfield ben massey is the ceo of rad oh can we get Amy Kringle on? Yeah. I'd love to have Amy Kringle on.
Oh,
Jeffrey Bershwell,
Ben Massey is the CEO of rad.
Oh,
it may be Adam Clink's the CEO of noble.
He's some,
he's involved with some shoe company.
I know that.
All right.
See you guys tomorrow morning.
Uh, Liz Collins,
don't forget to watch fall of Minneapolis.
It's a great movie
And watch it with someone who
Had sympathy for George Floyd
Watch that
And just watch their face
That'll be funner than watching the movie
Love you guys
Thank you
Good show today as always
Talk to you guys soon
Bye bye