Episode Transcript
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0:00
Happy hump day, everybody. We're gonna
0:02
take it easy today. Breathe in. Breathe
0:04
out. I want everybody to stay calm.
0:06
I wanted to feel like a therapy session. Why?
0:09
Because I'd like to bring us to my conclusion that
0:11
therapy is ruining western civilization.
0:14
I'm serious, guys. I really do think it is. And I
0:16
guess that really is the question. Do you believe
0:18
that therapy, everybody taking
0:20
therapy, everybody receiving
0:23
therapy and talking about the therapy that
0:25
they receive What are your
0:27
what are the thoughts on that? Net
0:29
benefits or net
0:32
negative. I'm going with net negative. Plus,
0:34
later on we're gonna be talking about Greta Thunberg
0:36
who was caught being a Greta
0:38
Thunberg. Everyone says being a Karen, but I think
0:40
being a Greta is much more
0:43
strong. All that in Ward today coming
0:45
up on Candice Owens. So
0:58
I said yesterday to my team that I wanted to talk
1:00
about therapy, group
1:02
therapy, familial
1:04
therapy, couples therapy,
1:06
all of it because I have this idea
1:09
that it runing Western civilization. I really
1:11
do. I think that that is true. No
1:13
sooner do I say that and if somebody tweaked this morning,
1:15
I'm gonna share this tweet with you. They
1:18
tweeted men publicly expressing
1:21
vulnerability is a net negative
1:24
and ideological cancer to rob you
1:26
of your inherent strengths and it destabilizes
1:28
the world. Such people are not
1:30
to be taken seriously that promote this.
1:32
In response to this tweet, Gina said Gina
1:35
Bon tempo says, The very thing that
1:37
makes men both amazing and
1:39
attractive is their ability to
1:41
not be vulnerable in
1:43
public. Strong.
1:45
It's definitely a very strong statement. Some people
1:48
might think that it's too strong because it's
1:50
true when people don't like hearing the
1:52
truth, but there's no question that
1:54
therapy has rendered not just men
1:56
weaker, by the way, I would say, but women weaker
1:59
as well. I think it kind became millennial
2:01
thing. I think we started this trend
2:03
that it made you brave and it made you strong.
2:06
If you talked about how not brave and how
2:08
not strong you are, this is sort of the,
2:10
it's okay to not be okay thing.
2:12
Something that was thought up probably by
2:14
some psych psychology majors
2:17
and some people that graduated and said, you
2:19
know what? I've realized it's okay to not be okay.
2:22
And you sort of feel like people are going
2:24
into therapy and they're actually becoming
2:26
worse people likely because their therapist
2:28
is telling them that literally everything
2:30
they do is okay and can be understood. Right?
2:33
As long as you talk about all the
2:35
bad things that you're doing and all the bad things that
2:37
you're feeling, then it's
2:40
alright. It's totally fine. You are
2:42
a better human being for it. And we know that isn't
2:44
true, I guess, probably the
2:46
most prime example in recent memory
2:48
being Prince Harry who has quite literally
2:51
sold out his family for
2:53
money, and how did he get there, how did he go
2:55
from a dad prince that we all were wondering
2:57
about to a person
2:59
that is petty in talking about bridesmaid
3:01
dresses in his book, taking
3:03
down his father and his
3:05
brother and his little niece because she cried
3:08
over a bridesmaid dress. How do he do this? And how can
3:10
he do this? And actually think that it's okay? Well,
3:13
therapy. Prince Harry wants us all to
3:15
know that he's in therapy and it's rendering
3:17
him a better human being here from
3:19
his own words. IT'S
3:21
PRINCE HARRY'S THERAPY THAT HE'S SHARING
3:23
WITH THE WORLD. HE CROSSES HIS
3:25
ARMS AND TAPS HIS HAD ON HIS CHEST
3:27
while he closes his eyes and moves them
3:29
back and forth. He's instructed to
3:31
visualize negative thoughts. The
3:34
therapy is called EMDR
3:36
which stands for eye
3:37
movement, desensitization, and
3:39
reprocessing therapy. Prince Harry
3:41
is raw and open in this moment and he
3:43
says it's a kind of therapy that he has always
3:46
wanted to try and since starting it,
3:48
he's felt calmer and like 75 found this
3:50
new sense of strength. He wants to share that
3:52
with the world. That's part of the reason why he's opening
3:54
up morning. It's prince Harry
3:56
like we've never seen him. The Duke of Sussex
3:58
is opening up about his life and telling
4:00
Oprah Winfrey how therapy has
4:02
helped him get to a better place. Eyes.
4:09
Yes. This makes
4:11
me a better person somehow. I love how that
4:13
person says, it's prince Harry like we've never
4:15
seen him. Side note, it's prince Harry like
4:17
we've never wanted to see him. He
4:20
now seems like a weak man. We all feel
4:22
that and we understand that. And again, it is
4:24
not just reserved to him, that's just a
4:26
recent cultural example. You might even
4:28
understand this on a personal level. I mean, for 75, I
4:30
had a family member who began going to
4:32
therapy. She was attending therapy. It was
4:34
couples therapy. And she would tell us that, you
4:36
know, it was good because they were able to discuss
4:38
how to better communicate. Right?
4:40
The problem was that it made her rather
4:42
unbearable for a while because
4:45
what she was learning was that every
4:47
feeling she had was valid. So
4:49
when her and I would talk on the phone
4:51
or when she would reach out and wanna have a discussion, you
4:53
know, we've got something that was incredibly mundane.
4:56
She suddenly became an emotional bubble. Right?
4:58
She was gonna burst at any moment.
5:00
You never know when she was gonna overcommunicate
5:02
about things that just really you didn't need to talk
5:04
about. Give you an example, this didn't actually
5:06
happen, but, you know, let's say you were rushing out
5:08
of the house and you said something rather
5:10
Kurt to her. You know what I mean? Just just make sure the
5:12
door is closed. Just make sure my door's closed.
5:14
Okay? I gotta go. I gotta go. Now when you
5:16
get back home, she would look at you and she say,
5:19
do you have a second to talk
5:21
And I'd say, okay. Yeah. What's up?
5:23
You know, this morning, when you when
5:25
you ran out and you said
5:27
just make sure if the door is closed,
5:30
and you didn't say, please
5:32
and it just kind of felt to me
5:34
like you were taking out your
5:36
rush on me AND LIKE IF YOU
5:38
COULD JUST POSS AND SAY, YOU KNOW, COULD
5:40
YOU PLEASE, I WOULD FEEL BETTER.
5:43
Could I HAVE POTENTIALLY BEEN
5:45
ROOT IN THAT MOMENT? YES, sure,
5:47
racing out to work. Does it really require
5:49
a conversation? No. It doesn't
5:51
require a conversation. Some stuff,
5:54
you really do have to just let
5:56
role. It should be otherwise you become unbearable.
5:58
75 wanna talk about every single feeling you
6:00
have. You are entitled to have
6:02
feelings what you aren't entitled to
6:04
is to share them with everybody all
6:06
the time. And I think 75 is what therapy is
6:08
doing to people. It's encouraging them
6:10
to overshare right, to tell them
6:12
that every single feeling that they have is
6:14
valid and that somehow they're going to be stronger
6:16
if only they share it with the world we talked
6:18
about a few weeks ago, Adele, as
6:20
an example. Adele, who people
6:22
paid a lot of money to hear her sing,
6:24
deciding to go on stage and share with
6:26
her fans about, you know, therapy.
6:29
Here she is. So
6:34
I start having therapy again. Right? So
6:41
Before, like, obviously, when I was going from my home, so I
6:43
was like, basically, I'm trying very possessions of
6:45
juries. I
6:47
stopped holding myself accountable for
6:49
my own behavior and the things that I would
6:51
say, and it's because I could always fall back on my therapy
6:53
because the reason you did that was because when you attend
6:55
this happened, I'm like, love. I'm going
6:57
to just hold myself accountable for it.
7:00
But now I'm doing it because I just wanna
7:02
make sure that I'm not talking myself
7:04
up every week. To make sure I can give you everything.
7:08
Actually, you know what she says there is very
7:10
honest. When she says that she started going to
7:12
therapy, And then her
7:14
therapist would say to her, oh, well, the reason that you did
7:16
that is because you suffered this when you were ten years
7:18
old blah, blah, blah, that is what
7:20
happens in these sessions that I'm referring to. Right?
7:23
You have a person who does something
7:25
that is potentially wrong. And
7:27
rather than say to them, hey, you did something wrong,
7:29
It doesn't matter really why you did it, but
7:31
you need to take accountability and understand that it's
7:33
wrong. The therapist sort of says to them,
7:35
well, what you get is understandable. Because
7:38
what you suffered when you were a child
7:40
makes every horrible thing that you are doing
7:42
currently understandable. Now, I understand
7:44
that I am painting with a
7:46
broad a stroke right now. I'm
7:48
sure that 75 that listening to this going, therapy
7:50
made my life better. I'm sure that
7:52
there are plenty of examples of people who
7:54
can say, we went to therapy and it
7:56
saved our marriage because we were better
7:59
able to communicate. People that could say,
8:01
I went to therapy and I became
8:03
a better person because of this
8:05
that or this. Do not consider yourselves wrong
8:07
for going to therapy. I once once to therapy,
8:09
I had to try it out because my parents were getting
8:11
divorced and I was dragged into it. I hated it. It
8:14
wasn't for me. BUT IT IS FOR SOME PEOPLE
8:16
AND I DO SUPPOSED THAT SOME PEOPLE ARE COMING OUT AND
8:18
BEING BETTER PEOPLE. BUT ON THE WHOLE AS
8:20
WE MOVED TOWARDS THIS SOCIETY,
8:22
that believe that believes that
8:24
feelings, Trump facts. The facts don't
8:26
matter. That the feelings are so important
8:29
that we have to ignore the facts. We
8:31
have to assume that the majority
8:33
of the therapy sessions that
8:35
are happening are reflecting 75. Right?
8:38
That you have people sitting in a chair
8:41
telling people that their feelings
8:43
are all that matter.
8:45
That no matter what they do in this world,
8:47
it's perfectly okay because
8:49
of some tragedy or upset that they
8:51
75 when they were five years old and what is it produced?
8:53
Well, it's produced a society of
8:55
men like Prince Harry and
8:57
women like Adele who overshare,
8:59
who tell us way too much.
9:01
And it's not a society that I want to live in.
9:03
I want to live in a society, like the
9:05
one that my grandfather lived in, and people
9:07
this all the time, I never saw my grandfather
9:09
cry a day in his life. Even when I
9:11
knew he was positively destroyed and
9:14
heartbroken, when we lost my grandmother
9:16
surprisingly. Right? A woman that he was married
9:18
to from a time when he was seventeen. The
9:20
woman that he dedicated his entire life to and
9:22
built his entire life around. My grandfather
9:25
did not cry at her funeral. He was
9:27
one of those men that believes that no matter what you were
9:29
going through, you let it burn
9:31
in your chest. Right? And a lot of men
9:33
don't like that now, men don't know, men need to be
9:35
vulnerable. You actually don't need to be vulnerable
9:37
in public. You don't need to be vulnerable in
9:39
public. We need to see examples
9:41
of strength everywhere, strong
9:43
women and strong men. And of course, we
9:45
all assume that you have moments of vulnerability.
9:47
We all do. All I'm
9:49
saying is that we don't wanna hear
9:51
about it. Stop. Buttons
9:53
it up. Let it burn in
9:55
your chest. And that's all I have to
9:57
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smarter wireless. Okay. Now it's time
10:52
for some topics to do.
10:58
We can
11:01
hardly talk about therapy and
11:03
the over therapeutic environment
11:05
that we live in. Without discussing
11:07
social media. In previous
11:09
episodes, we had discussed what women are doing
11:11
for attention now. They're setting up their
11:13
cameras and crying, pretending to be
11:15
sick and some videos are just opening up about a bad
11:18
relationship and crying. It's crying
11:20
for likes. It's not because it actually
11:22
brings them any relief. To
11:24
cry on social media. It doesn't fix any other
11:26
circumstances, disabled. Right? When it
11:28
does give them a little dopamine hit
11:30
when they get attention. Right? And
11:32
so you're seeing this over and over again. I always talk about
11:34
TikTok being the main ground for mental
11:36
disorder. It really is just an online insane
11:38
asylum that some people are not insane than they're
11:40
on the app, but as a TikTok is
11:42
for crazy people. Well,
11:44
you now have individuals who are quite
11:46
literally dying for
11:48
clicks. You're not going to believe that this is a
11:50
trend, but there are people that are
11:52
feeding themselves. Right? We talked
11:54
yesterday about the seven cardinal
11:56
sins. Well, Guatney is now taking
11:58
place for clicks. I am
12:00
talking in particular about people
12:02
who have become famous by
12:04
binge eating in
12:06
front of the cameras. One
12:08
example is a young man named
12:10
Nicholas Perry. Now what he's interesting because
12:12
he actually arrived on the scene, did this
12:14
75 first video on YouTube talking about
12:16
how he was a vegan his whole life 75 he now
12:18
disavows veganism. And in that
12:20
video, of course, he was very 75, he
12:23
was spelled. He was small. We're gonna look at
12:25
this picture. If you're listening to this, he's just
12:27
a rather small person. And by the way,
12:29
I agree. With the divine
12:31
veganism. I do it is brings
12:33
you horrible effects to your health to
12:35
not eat meat. We are designed our
12:37
bodies are designed to consume
12:39
meat. What we not consumed to
12:41
do is to just consume everything
12:43
under the sun and a bunch of
12:45
calories for profit.
12:47
Right? So he began filming
12:49
himself doing the exact opposite extreme.
12:51
First, I'm not gonna eat meat, I'm not
12:53
gonna eat a ton of other 75. Now,
12:55
I'm going to consume hefty portions of
12:57
ramen or a stack of pancakes at
12:59
IHOP. This is back in two thousand and seventeen.
13:02
And today, he eats in excess of ten thousand
13:04
calories in front of the camera. In
13:07
videos that are entitled, I hate
13:09
myself as one example, goodbye,
13:12
YouTube, and 75, or celebrating
13:14
our seven hundred pound
13:16
milestone. Now of
13:18
course, when you eat like that and you are this
13:20
gluttonous, you it leads depression. So
13:22
obviously, what has also happened is that he's
13:24
doing this because he's getting attention, he's getting
13:26
clicks. But he's also becoming depressed in front
13:28
of the world. He's essentially killing himself on
13:30
camera slowly. You're not
13:32
allowed to say anything against the COVID vaccines.
13:34
75 forbid, you say, I feel healthy. I don't need
13:36
a vaccine. They'll kick you off of 75. Right?
13:40
But you're allowed to do this. By the way, you're
13:42
allowed to consume ten thousand
13:44
calories in front of the camera and look
13:46
at him now. Here he is in
13:48
front of so much McDonald's I
13:50
can't even explain to you 75 you're not looking
13:52
at this. He is just sitting in front of the
13:54
camera. And in one video entitled,
13:56
nobody likes me. I'm done.
13:58
He has seen sobbing while
14:00
shaping his hair off into a
14:02
plate of eggs. I
14:04
mean, this is happening. This is this is what
14:06
is allowed on YouTube when you weigh it
14:08
against people that are taken off
14:10
for wrong think. For not towing the
14:12
line, for questioning the election results.
14:14
Right? You can just go ahead and commit suicide
14:16
slowly. You can do that totally,
14:18
if you want to. In another video, he
14:20
filmed himself sneering Cheetos colored
14:22
ramen noodles all over his space.
14:24
While in others, he has seen
14:26
having screaming matches of his
14:28
ex husband, is now ex husband.
14:31
But here's the but because only in
14:33
America, so long as you tow
14:35
the big pharma line, you can make money.
14:37
Doing whatever he wants. His
14:39
emotional turbulence has paid off. He's now a
14:41
millionaire. He's a net worth of seven
14:43
million dollars. And it has
14:45
landed him in a two point three
14:47
million dollar penthouse in Las Vegas because
14:49
people will pay to watch
14:51
you die. How dark
14:53
is that? How dark is
14:55
that? He's he's he's dying slowly. Of
14:57
course, he's talked about he 75 suffering health
14:59
consequences. As you can see in
15:01
that photo that I just showed
15:03
you. He has a ventilator on. He's got a
15:05
he has this machine, which is called
15:07
the bi path machine, that is for obesity,
15:09
to help them breathe as they sleep.
15:12
Doesn't matter he's raking in millions and this
15:14
is going to go on. Clearly, he's
15:16
likely going to die if he
15:18
continues down this path. And that
15:20
is not something that hasn't happened before.
15:22
Of course, on TikTok, there was a
15:24
star. His name was Taylor
15:26
Lejune. He went by the handle Whoffler
15:28
sixty nine. Who gained Internet fame for
15:30
the exact same thing, eating
15:32
also sometimes expired 75. And
15:34
he died of suspected heart attack
15:37
last week. But before he died, just so you know he
15:39
boasted one point seven million
15:42
followers on the platform. Because
15:44
the more extreme your behavior,
15:46
the more followers you will
15:48
get on TikTok and on YouTube
15:50
we award people or committing sins
15:52
or 75 committing cardinal sins
15:54
like letting me. So there you have
15:56
it, guys. This is this is the
15:58
direction in which our nation is headed
16:00
toward. Anything for a
16:02
click, anything for a
16:04
dollar. Moving on,
16:07
in case you haven't seen this, it is going viral
16:09
because it's incredible. It
16:11
shouldn't shock you. Greta Thunberg,
16:13
obviously, I've discussed 75 many times on this
16:15
show. She's something about her is
16:17
incredibly dark. I can't I can't, like, pick
16:19
up on it, but she from the time she hit the
16:21
scene, she just seems to me to
16:23
be in need of an escortism. You look
16:25
at her and you're like, this is an unhappy individual.
16:28
Trump wants to call her an unhappy child while she's no
16:30
longer a child anymore. I think she's almost
16:32
twenty or twenty years old. If she still
16:34
looks like a child and she's still
16:37
got some weird, spiritual
16:40
weirdness about her. I can't explain it. There's just something
16:42
about her that have around her. I just I
16:44
just think this is the orphan. If you've seen that movie, she reminds me of
16:46
the 75, and I don't wanna be near
16:48
her. I just when I see her, I think I would not go
16:50
near that person because there was a
16:52
darkness over her. Let's set my personal
16:54
feelings aside. What is going
16:56
viral is the fact that she has
16:58
been caught staging her
17:00
arrest. And I I mean, there is no other
17:02
way to describe this other than these
17:04
hired actors. She
17:06
is a hired actress. She's
17:08
been a hired actress for a very long
17:10
time. And she is staging herself
17:12
pretending that she is being
17:14
arrested in Germany because
17:16
she was protests the expansion of a
17:18
coal mine. Now why would they explain that coal
17:20
mine? Because obviously, Germany and Europe
17:22
is facing an energy crisis at
17:25
this moment. And they've been bay facing
17:27
energy crisis for a while. And so
17:29
they were explaining a coal mines that elders
17:31
wouldn't freeze throughout the
17:33
winter. So citizens wouldn't freeze
17:35
forget it. You know, the climate activists don't
17:37
care about human beings. It's quite the obvious if
17:39
they hate humanity. Right? They want
17:41
everything to survive but human beings.
17:44
And so she staged herself
17:46
protesting. It didn't actually protest it. And
17:48
here is the video that has
17:50
emerged of exactly that. So
17:53
this is her
17:57
just laughing surrounded
17:59
by the four police that are holding her
18:01
arms as if they're about to say. It's
18:03
it's an old one. Oh,
18:05
shoot. So she's laughing. 75
18:08
your arm. There's a photographer standing behind the police
18:10
officer. Just shooting this
18:12
slowly, making sure they get the right
18:14
angles. He's holding her gently. Now
18:16
she has put on the face.
18:18
She's looking into the camera that
18:20
they are going to sell to the mainstream
18:23
media. And now they're
18:25
walking her. And the photographer is in front
18:27
and there's a videographer in 75. And
18:29
of course, this was sold to the mainstream media to make
18:31
it seem as if she was legitimately protesting.
18:34
This coal mine expenditure, no, she's not. She's just keeping
18:36
up the charade. The charade
18:38
of climate change, the charade
18:40
of climate activism, the charade that our
18:42
plan is gonna be over in ten years unless
18:45
we all do something and that something is
18:47
give more money to governments. Right?
18:49
That's what she does, like this girl at the end of the day,
18:51
works for your government, works for the powers
18:53
that be, and her job is to
18:56
make sure that there are people that are
18:58
fearful enough to give up more of their
19:00
individual freedom and their
19:02
comfort. You freeze, but give money to
19:04
your government more power and more
19:06
control. And Guy Benson, who is
19:08
an contributor on Fox News, responded by
19:10
posting photos of AOC,
19:13
smiley and putting her hands behind her back and
19:15
mimicking being handcuffed. Remember that that
19:17
went viral a couple of years ago.
19:19
The thing is, though, is yes,
19:21
it's the same energy as Guy Benson
19:23
says, but AOC is not doesn't
19:25
give me the same vibes as
19:28
Greta Thunberg. AOC, to me,
19:30
is somebody who's kind of
19:33
not that smart, but kind of believe what she said when she
19:35
first got started and caught a wave. And then
19:37
realized the loss of she was saying wasn't
19:39
true, but that couldn't kind of give up the
19:41
platform that she had. So she kind of went further
19:44
into the left this direction. AOC
19:46
will end up like a Bernie Sanders.
19:49
Greta Thunberg? I don't know.
19:51
Something about this girl is just dark.
19:53
There's a darkness in her. Is she Like, I I
19:55
just feel is she's like
19:57
brain from pinky in the brain. Right? I just I
19:59
don't know. She just I think she's just trying
20:01
to take over the
20:03
world. Every single day. So she
20:05
has been caught, but it's not going to stop people
20:07
that follow her because they're gonna tell us. It's
20:09
not about whether or not she
20:12
actually protested she made a
20:14
point that people should be
20:16
protesting. And so I
20:18
stand with Greta,
20:21
I suppose. Speaking of Greta
20:23
Thunberg, we always think about her connections,
20:25
the powers that be. I'm sure you guys
20:27
know that Davos is going on the annual
20:30
meeting. Where all the globalists descend and talk about things
20:32
that are wrong in the world. Among those
20:34
topics tends to be
20:37
women. Of course, we talk about gender,
20:40
inequality, of course, because people
20:42
love to talk about how women are
20:44
suffering, and they aren't. But
20:46
if they were suffering, and you
20:48
wanted to say that they were 75. You
20:50
might talk about the sex industry.
20:52
And sex workers, you know, people
20:54
are fighting to pass laws saying,
20:57
that we should not
20:59
criminalize sex work. There's some logic to it by the way
21:01
of saying that a lot of people that are doing sex work
21:03
are victims. And I've explored that on
21:05
my show. I've talked I I've hosted Tim
21:07
Ballard, who works with
21:09
operation underground railroad, and
21:11
they save a lot of sex victims who
21:13
are forced pornography. So you get that
21:15
angle of when you penalize when you
21:17
criminalize sex work, sometimes you're
21:19
criminalizing a person that's just been victimized and now
21:21
is being re victimized by the
21:23
court systems. Could we all
21:25
agree then it's a little hypocritical that
21:28
escorts are being booked right now into the
21:30
same hotel as these high powered
21:32
bosses and Davos, yeah, this came out. The
21:34
global elite that are tackling the world's greatest
21:36
problems, including gender inequality,
21:38
at the Davos Summit are fueling a surge
21:40
in prostitution in the
21:42
Swiss resort town. As Porsche being
21:44
booked into the same hotels
21:47
and their employees during the five day
21:49
summit, which started on January sixteenth.
21:52
One sex worker named Liana
21:54
said she dresses and business tires that she doesn't stand out among
21:56
the executives despite prostitution
21:58
being legal in Switzerland. She
22:00
said that she regularly sees an
22:03
American who visits but she'll
22:05
end multiple times a year and is
22:07
among the twenty seven hundred
22:09
that are of the twenty seven hundred of
22:11
the conference attendees. She
22:13
charges seven hundred euros for
22:15
an hour and twenty three hundred
22:17
euros for the whole night, plus
22:20
travel expenses. So that is what on
22:22
in a sleepy town in Switzerland because
22:24
a bunch of executives are coming in to preach
22:26
to you and die about
22:28
the more morality that we need to
22:30
invoke in our society. We are all immoral
22:33
beings. These creatures who fly their
22:35
private jets want you
22:37
to remember that you need
22:39
to suffer and have no heat during the
22:41
winters. These people
22:43
who tell you that, you
22:45
know, women are suffering in the workplace and we
22:47
need laws protect women are
22:49
also flying in their
22:51
host. What do they need? Because, you know, why
22:53
not? They're gonna hang out with the boys. You
22:55
gotta have some hoes back at
22:57
the hotel. So yeah, hypocrisy
22:59
is thy name. There is
23:01
no better time in the start of the New Year to start a
23:03
habit of prayer. Just like physical
23:05
exercise, daily spiritual exercise is critical to your
23:08
well-being, especially in a world where
23:10
a taxonomy, faith and religion are happening
23:12
all around us every single day.
23:14
75 we're going to keep fighting a fight against these crazy lemmasideologies, we'll
23:16
need a strong foundation that's rooted
23:18
in faith. 75, the number one Christian prayer
23:20
app in the United States helps
23:22
you maintain a daily prayer routine and it can
23:25
help you too. Download the app for
23:27
free at hallow dot com
23:29
slash canvas. You can set prayer reminders
23:31
and by others to pray with you, and
23:33
track your progress along the way. Not
23:35
sure where to start. Check out father Mike
23:37
Schmidt's Bible in a year available on the
23:39
hallow app. For brief daily bible readings
23:41
and reflections. Make this year
23:43
year year for spiritual growth and
23:45
peace. Get an exclusive three month free trial
23:47
at hallow dot com slash candace.
23:49
That's hallow dot com
23:51
slash canvas. Alright, guys.
23:53
I now want to get into reading
23:56
some of your comments from the last
23:58
couple of so is because there have been amazing ones. So let's
24:00
get into that. First comment
24:02
regarding the fast food worker at the
24:04
Atlanta airport. You remember yesterday we talked
24:06
about sloth I told you this
24:08
worker who drove me crazy.
24:10
And it was because she was just a
24:12
lazy individual who was probably never
24:14
going to get ahead in her life unless she
24:16
changes things about 75. Well,
24:18
all of the comments understood this,
24:20
I would say, on the whole, one person disagreed with
24:22
me, so I wanted to read this agreement. She
24:24
says, Mrs. Marina, Tolotchko,
24:27
pardon, say your last name wrong. Marina
24:29
says, she, that's me. She's
24:31
so missing the point. Two
24:33
things actually. The girl
24:35
at the airport was not intrinsically
24:37
interested in her work. She would get paid
24:39
minimum wage anyways, so I bother.
24:41
You know how it's called alienation from
24:43
the products of your work, and this happens
24:45
all across society in the capitalist world. People are
24:47
forced to do meaningful jobs for little
24:50
money that have no opportunity and
24:52
start capital develop internal interest.
24:54
The second issue is in fact psychological, but
24:56
not in a way Kandi Girl mentioned it,
24:58
as most of the people who grew up in toxic families
25:01
are psychologically damaged from the start and
25:03
have no awareness of their traumas. And that
25:05
influences their entire life. I don't need privilege
25:07
black girl who graduated from a private
25:09
school to tell me who is lazy and who is
25:11
not. I am happy you don't have this cardinal
25:13
sin candy girl. Okay,
25:15
Marina Girl. I'm gonna call arena
25:17
girl I think now. Actually, I
25:19
think you've arrived at my point. The fact that
25:21
you think that her not being
25:23
intrinsically interested in
25:25
her work means that she has a right to not
25:27
do it in 75 strong Instagram all day is what is wrong
25:29
with our society. You know what? Marina,
25:31
you you suffer from sloth, plus therapy.
25:33
Right? You believe if you have a
25:35
personal issue going on, you don't have to show up for work. Right? You just go, I'm
25:37
not intrinsically interested in what I'm
25:39
doing. Oh, if we
25:41
had to not
25:43
if we were allowed to not do anything
25:45
unless we were intrinsically interested.
25:47
What would we be doing? I'm
25:49
not intrinsically interested when
25:51
I change my son's Pamper. But you know what? I do
25:53
look at the job that needs to be done. You know,
25:56
I'm not intrinsically interested
25:58
sometimes when I have to get up and come to work and
26:00
do a podcast, I do because I have to
26:02
do a job. Right? And I love what I do
26:04
on the whole, but there are days where you have
26:06
personal issues going on. Maybe you're not intrinsically interested
26:08
to get up. Back when I worked, by the way, since you seemed to think III
26:11
went to a private school. Please stay in the private school
26:13
because I grew up with no money. So if I maybe you
26:15
have the wrong Candy Girl, it was different
26:17
Candy Girl. But back when I had to work to
26:19
put myself through school, as I mentioned
26:21
before, I had every bad job, every
26:23
job that gave me value, however, because
26:25
I was able to have money in a
26:27
bank account. And I gave it my best
26:29
effort because I wanted to
26:31
climb in society. Right? I
26:33
wasn't intrinsically interested, I
26:35
would say, at being a host to set a
26:37
restaurant. I wasn't like, this is
26:39
intrinsically interesting. I
26:41
wasn't intrinsically interested when I had
26:43
people there DVDs at
26:45
blockbuster back when that was a thing,
26:47
wasn't like you're really gonna
26:49
like this movie. I'm intrinsically interested.
26:52
I hope that you are too, but
26:54
it was a job. And I accepted that job under
26:56
the condition that I would perform it.
26:59
I learned a lot about what it means to work
27:01
and become a working individual in society and
27:03
being able to provide, which is why I'm able to provide for my family
27:05
today, which you seem a little buttered about
27:07
that a girl came from nowhere and made something of
27:09
herself. You know why it was? Because I didn't call it the excuse
27:11
that I needed to be intrinsically interested.
27:14
So try that Marina Girl.
27:16
Next comment. Actually, we received a couple of
27:18
comments. People were really angry when I when
27:20
I said, oh, I went to 75.
27:23
They were just aren't you saying which country in Africa?
27:26
And I'll give you a couple of these sample
27:28
comments. One, part of me not being able
27:30
to pronounce your name right. I think it's
27:32
ebonywulu ebvenu Loa?
27:35
Yeah, ebvenu Loa. She
27:37
said you keep referring to Africa as if it's a
27:39
country. Africa is a whole
27:41
continent with fifty three countries Which
27:43
of those did you go to? If you visited Thailand, would you
27:45
continuously say that you visited Asia? Or if you went to
27:47
Brazil, would you continuously say that you visited South
27:49
America? At least say, I went to a
27:51
country in Africa you don't wanna disclose the
27:54
specific location rather than referring
27:56
to the continent in a way that you and the other
27:58
daily wire hosts do respectfully.
28:00
Okay? We also had a second comment
28:03
and she said, I've noticed that
28:05
Americans, not all, but a lot of them,
28:07
they're quick to say, I went to Africa
28:09
instead of I went to this Pacific country in
28:11
Africa. As if the whole continent was a
28:13
country, it's very annoying. Candice,
28:15
I beg you. Name a country when you tell
28:17
a story that happens somewhere in Africa.
28:19
Thank you for the work that you're doing. A subscriber
28:21
from Quebec, and her name was Maya
28:23
Mona. And maybe I
28:25
don't know why this is bother some
28:27
to people. It's just you kinda say casually when you
28:29
feel like being 75. I also say I went
28:31
to Europe for the summer. I'm going to Europe this summer.
28:33
I never feel getting to name a specific
28:36
country in Europe, you just sometimes name the continent, you know.
28:38
It's just this is the region of the world
28:40
that I was in. I went to Europe this
28:42
summer, I went to Africa this 75, so I
28:44
think that you're looking a little too far
28:46
into it. You're being a little too non you know,
28:49
just thinking a little too hard about this. It's
28:51
just casual. You don't we're trying not to be
28:53
specific. You don't it's nothing that you're
28:55
fearful of. I have said in other episodes
28:57
that I went to South Africa specifically,
28:59
but I hope that no Africans
29:01
were harmed by me saying,
29:04
Africa on the whole as a continent. It's
29:06
just kind of, you know, something
29:08
that you say, sometimes, casually, I went to Europe.
29:10
I went to Africa. I went to South America.
29:12
You guys can maybe say, I went to North America, we
29:14
would not be too offended.
29:16
Maybe we would actually be like, don't loop
29:18
us in with Canada
29:20
and Justin Trudeau. Probably we wouldn't
29:22
care that much. So I hope to clarify
29:25
so that nobody else comments, I
29:27
went to specifically South
29:29
Africa which is upon the continent
29:32
of Africa. Now, the world feeling
29:34
better. I got a couple of comments
29:36
regarding me, finding 75 finding
29:38
out about event roller, told
29:40
you guys yesterday that I never
29:42
knew that the tape came off.
29:45
Story bolt says, be
29:47
honest, How rich do you have to be to just use a lint roller
29:49
one time and then throw it out without peeling off
29:51
a layer? I would say you
29:53
have to be ignorant In
29:55
terms of how rich I wasn't rich, this
29:58
was, like I said, back in my early
30:00
twenties when I was working for
30:02
a firm in New York City, they
30:05
paid. I was tasked with stocking office
30:07
75, among the things that I stocked the
30:10
office with instant rollers. And
30:12
I guess they were pretty rich because they never
30:14
flagged it as weird. And then I found out
30:16
that lint rollers could take a layer
30:18
of tape 75. So, there you
30:21
go. Same comment. Linden rollers are literally so expensive
30:23
and you were just throwing them away. I know it's bad.
30:25
I'd like to say sorry to people that I worked for.
30:27
I didn't know I was not intentionally
30:29
throwing away money. But I did
30:32
literally throw away your money. And I'm
30:34
sorry. Next comment. This
30:36
person says, Candice baby, don't
30:38
feel bad. I just found out there were
30:40
layers of tape on a lint roller from
30:42
you. Now I'm sitting in horror and shocked.
30:44
My world has been shattered. Thanks,
30:46
Candace. Thanks. Thank
30:48
you. The Rene God twelve
30:50
because I know that I can't think 75 didn't
30:52
know that. It's just I feel like where do you
30:54
learn that? You know, when you first see
30:56
someone using it unless it was used often in
30:58
your household and your mom showed you, you do
31:00
see them doing this. And you're like, wow, that totally
31:02
makes sense to get get
31:04
off of your shirt. And so you buy one and, like,
31:06
unless you see somebody peel off 75 layer as
31:08
I did in my early twenties,
31:10
then you go, oh my gosh, dumb, common sense. Now
31:12
it seems like common sense, but unless you
31:14
are shown, there's just no way that you
31:16
would know that. So The
31:19
next person, Georgie, says, I was in
31:21
my thirties before I found out
31:23
that bowls are just male
31:26
cows. I they were their own species
31:28
of animal. See, we all
31:30
learn things at our own
31:32
pace. Right? Toddlers and fifth graders
31:34
are sometimes smarter than us. Next
31:37
person, you're good. Judy says,
31:39
okay, I'll go. I knew
31:41
there was a difference between the sun and the moon,
31:43
but I thought there were several moons around the
31:45
world. Not in the solar system in the
31:47
galaxy, but literally around her. I thought
31:49
it was several several moons
31:51
shaking my head. Chelsea
31:53
handler wins again. We don't all
31:55
know everything. We can't possibly know
31:57
everything. And then finally, Melena
31:59
regarding that topic says the
32:01
other day, I learned the underground railroad
32:03
never actually took place underground.
32:08
You could argue some parts were underground. There were
32:10
definitely some illustrations of people
32:12
that created basement
32:14
type scenarios for the slaves
32:16
to stay in and when they were hiding
32:19
them. So you're going to get a pass on that,
32:21
just like, oh, yeah. No. I meant, like, you know, when they got
32:23
people's houses, they were sometimes kept
32:25
under hay you
32:27
know, or in a basement
32:29
or, yeah, I'm doing my best to help
32:31
you out here. You got a girl. You got
32:33
it. Keep going. We all learn at
32:35
our own pace. Now this, I think, I'm sorry, I did my
32:37
favorite comment yesterday. This
32:40
person says, being upfront and
32:42
honest would seem to be one of
32:44
Canvas's biggest fears. She has
32:46
difficulty combining the two in her quote
32:48
unquote journalism and often fails
32:50
at it. She's reduced to childish
32:52
tricks and distractions like
32:54
unbundling her top buttons on
32:56
her blouses to show more of
32:58
her cleavage, a sad
33:00
day, not a proud one, such
33:02
ethics. I'm not kidding when I say that this comment
33:04
was featured under
33:07
yesterday's commentary, yesterday,
33:09
my podcast yesterday. This is what I was wearing.
33:12
I was wearing a
33:14
white button up shirt with a
33:17
collar that is extended about
33:20
six inches and I did, but in the top, so I'm
33:22
not sure exactly what
33:24
this commentator was referring to. I could
33:26
try to dress more conservatively
33:29
I feel like I'm the most conservative dresser in the entire world,
33:31
but I now aspire to be even more
33:33
conservative because I know this is a distraction. These
33:36
blazers and that I'm just it
33:38
up out here. But I promise that
33:40
I 75 promise you John
33:42
Earnest kronkronk East. But
33:45
I will do my best to be less of
33:47
a horror, I guess,
33:49
whatever. Alright, guys. Next portion of the show is gonna
33:51
be a little exclusively on daily wire plus, I'm
33:53
going to be answering your questions and reading some
33:55
Reddit thread. So if you're not a member yet, go ahead and click the
33:57
link in the description and subscribe right
33:59
now.
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