Jiang Xueqin: Our True Wealth Is Our Consciousness | En… — Transcript

Jiang Xueqin discusses consciousness as true wealth, shares his immigrant upbringing, and his transformative journey to Yale University.

Key Takeaways

  • Consciousness and focused attention are the true forms of wealth, surpassing monetary value.
  • Societal elites may hide empowering messages to maintain control over populations.
  • Personal transformation is possible through setting high goals and persistent effort.
  • Overcoming adversity, including poverty and discrimination, can lead to life-changing opportunities.
  • The journey of self-improvement matters more than the final destination.

Summary

  • Jiang Xueqin critiques the emerging 'Techno-Marxarxism' and warns about societal complacency and psychological unpreparedness.
  • He emphasizes that true wealth lies in consciousness and attention, not money.
  • Jiang shares his difficult immigrant childhood in Toronto, marked by poverty, racism, and family trauma.
  • He describes his struggles with stuttering and social challenges during school.
  • Despite hardships, Jiang aimed to escape his environment by applying to Ivy League schools.
  • He recounts his self-reinvention and strategic efforts to gain admission to Yale.
  • Jiang details the emotional moment of receiving and confirming his unexpected acceptance to Yale.
  • He reflects on the importance of the journey over the destination in personal growth.
  • Jiang mentions his humble high school background and lack of application support.
  • The video includes a promotional note about his book 'What It Takes Southeast Asia' available in English and Bahasa Indonesia.

Full Transcript — Download SRT & Markdown

00:00
Speaker A
Techno-Marxarxism. That's the world we're going into. They want a numb and indifferent population that they can enslave, that they can rule over, who are complacent. What they want is compliancy. I feel sorry for these people because the way the world is going, I don't think that they are psychologically equipped to survive. The entire universe is watching what we do. We are all connected to the entire universe. And each of us can be a beautiful ray of light if we will it, if we choose it to be. What power is is the capacity to direct and focus our attention.
00:15
Speaker A
And before, for the longest time, the best and easiest way to focus our attention was money, right? So wealth isn't money. What wealth is is our attention, our consciousness.
00:31
Speaker A
Towards you matter, but you have to choose to matter. You have to believe that you matter.
00:40
Speaker A
And honestly, I think it's a message that the elite have purposefully hid from us.
00:57
Speaker A
Hi friends, it's a pleasure to tell you that my book What It Takes Southeast Asia has been released in English and Bahasa Indonesia. You can buy it through books.game.id or at any of these stores. Now back to the show. Hi friends. So today we're honored to be graced by Jang Suin who has given lots of analyses about what's happening around the world. Jang, thank you so much for gracing our show.
01:04
Speaker A
Thanks so much for inviting me. Yeah, I want to start out with how you grew up.
01:32
Speaker A
You grew up in Canada and you've, you know, mentioned that you were not at the top of the class but you were up there within the top echelon. And then you decided to go to Yale and tell us what shaped your early educational journey, right? So, um, I grew up as an immigrant in Toronto, Canada and my parents were very poor and they were not well educated. So we would have qualified for welfare. You know, Canada has a very nice social service system and welfare is actually very, very nice. But my parents didn't speak English. They didn't know the system. So, we actually lived worse than people on welfare, meaning that we didn't go out at all. Um, we didn't really have meat at the table. We had vegetables. We never vacationed. Um,
01:54
Speaker A
I, we only got a car when I was like 16. So, so we moved over when I was 6 years old. So, um, we took public transport everywhere. And the highlight in our life was like a monthly dim sum lunch. Um,
02:07
Speaker A
So it was a pretty hard upbringing. I stuttered throughout school because I am a very sensitive, very active person with a lot of curiosity and the stress and the trauma of growing up as an immigrant in Toronto really affected my speech patterns and the kids made fun of me because my dad cut my hair, my mom bought clothing at, you know, bargain outlets. Um, and we got, I, I, I, I wore a lot of clothes that were too oversized because they were hand-me-downs from cousins and it was a very hard upbringing. My dad was a dishwasher and he was working in a restaurant and as you can imagine being an immigrant, a Chinese immigrant who didn't speak very much English, he was, he suffered a lot under a lot of racism and that transferred in the household and my dad was a very violent and angry man. He was actually a high school teacher in China and he had a lot of status, a lot of prestige and he enjoyed his job. But you know, this was during the Cultural Revolution and when it ended in 1976 he looked for the opportunity to go abroad to build a better future for his children. Um, and so I grew up in a very tense, very traumatic environment that left, basically left me depressed and angry for most of my life. And I wanted to escape my environment and so, um, I applied to university and I wanted to get out of Canada and apparently the Ivy League took young promising students and so I was not at that point. I was like 16 years old when I decided to apply to Yale. I was not a promising student. Um, I watched cartoons. Um, I didn't really read that many books but, um, I was intent on getting out of And, uh, so I repackaged myself. I manufactured myself as a plausible candidate for Yale and, um, I joined the soccer team because it was the easiest athletic team to join. Uh, I was not an athletic person but they were desperate for recruits. Um, I, uh, I started to read a lot of books. I crammed for the SATs. I took the hardest courses and out of pure, pure luck. Okay. I mean it was just pure luck.
02:19
Speaker A
But I applied to four universities. Harvard, Yale, Princeton, MIT. Harvard was the first to reject me. But they wrote a very nice consolation letter. By the way, guys, if you apply to Harvard and they reject you, it's a very nice feeling because they tell you it's not where you go, it's what you do when you get there. And it's something that I remember for the rest of my life. So, um, I thank Harvard for such a nice letter. So, Harvard was the first to reject me, then Princeton and MIT. And I thought there was no chance I would get into Yale. And I think that, um, when I applied it 1995 so the year was 1995 and by early April basically all the decision letters would come in and by like, you know, mid-April I still had not heard from Yale. So I sort of forgot about this and, um, I came to the resolution that, you know, what mattered was not the destination. What matters is the journey. The fact of the matter is that I proved that I could radically transform myself if I set myself a higher goal. And so I was thankful for the journey and I just accepted the fact that I would go to Waterloo, which is an engineering university in Canada. It's actually pretty good. So I was not, yeah. So I was not unhappy about it. But then, um, at the end of April, I received a letter from Yale. Now the thing to know about the US application process is that, you know, from the size of the envelope if they accepted you or rejected you, right? So if they accepted you it's a huge envelope because they want to, right? Yeah, it's very thick. It's because they have a lot of brochures they want to sell you on wanting the acceptance, right? They want you to accept their acceptance, right? So usually you just know from the size of the envelope if you got in or not. So I got a small envelope. Okay. And that basically means rejection and, you know, I, I mean, um, I, I, I had already decided that I was not going to get into Yale and, um, I sort of dismissed it and I actually wanted to form the garbage because like, why do I, why do I want to read another rejection letter? Okay. So, um, I was pretty despondent and I wanted to form the garbage but I said no, I have to read the rejection letter because it might say something nice. So, I went up to my room. I put my backpack on the bed. I laid down on my bed and it was pretty dark.
02:41
Speaker A
I, I remember it being a very dark room. And I opened the letter and the first word I saw, the first word that it said was congratulations. And that was a shock. I mean, like, like it was someone punched me. And I didn't know what I was reading. So, I kept on reading and it seemed as though Yale had accepted me, but I didn't believe it. So what I did was the first thing I did was I picked up the phone and I called Yale University. It took me half an hour, but I finally got through to an admissions officer who confirmed that I had been accepted into Yale. And, um, and that's the story. And, and, and you know that forever changed my life because going to Yale, as you can imagine, opened up the entire world to me.
02:59
Speaker A
Wow. Talk about the essay that you wrote.
03:14
Speaker A
Uh, when I was a high school student, um, I went to a normal high school in Toronto, my world was very limited and I didn't have packagers, you know, they're called packagers who help you write the essays. Uh, I didn't have people I knew who went to Yale and who could guide me in the process. So I just wrote a very mundane essay. I mean, I wrote about my love for Richard Feynman,
03:37
Speaker A
because my dad cut my hair, my mom bought clothing at, you know, bargain outlets. Um, and we got I I I I wore a lot of clothes that were too oversized because they were hand-me-downs from cousins and uh it was a very hard upbringing. My dad was a dishwasher and he was working in a restaurant and
04:00
Speaker A
as you can imagine being an immigrant uh Chinese immigrant who didn't speak very much English um he was um he he suffered a lot under a lot of racism and that transferred in the household and my dad was a very violent and angry man. He was actually a high school teacher in China and
04:18
Speaker A
he had a lot of status, a lot of prestige and he enjoyed his job. But you know this was during the cultural revolution and when it ended in 1976 he looked for the opportunity to go abroad to build
04:29
Speaker A
a better future for um his children. Um and so I grew up in a very tense very traumatic environment um that let left basically left me depressed and angry for most of my life. and I wanted to escape
04:45
Speaker A
my environment and so um I applied to university and I wanted to get out of Canada and apparently the Ivy League took young promising students and so I was not at that point I was like 16 years old when I decided to apply to Yale I was not a promising student um I watched cartoons um I
05:07
Speaker A
didn't really read that many books but um I was intent on getting out of And uh so I repackaged myself. I manufactured myself as a as a plausible candidate uh for for Yale and um I joined the soccer team because it was the easiest athletic team to join. Uh I was not an athletic person
05:30
Speaker A
but they were desperate for recruits. Um I uh I I started to read a lot of books. I crammed for the SATs. I took the hardest courses and out of pure pure luck. Okay. I mean it it was just pure luck.
05:43
Speaker A
But I applied to uh four universities. Harvard, Yale, Princeton, MIT. Harvard was the first to reject me. But they wrote a very nice consolation letter. By the way, guys, if you apply to Harvard and they reject you, it's a very nice feeling because they tell you it's not where you go, it's
06:00
Speaker A
what you do when you get there. And it's something that I remember for the rest of my life. So, um I thank Harvard for for such a nice letter. So, Harvard was the first to reject me, then Princeton
06:09
Speaker A
and MIT. And I and I thought there was no chance I would get into Yale. And I think that um when I applied it 1995 so the year was 1995 and by early April basically all the uh decision letters would
06:24
Speaker A
come uh in and by like you know midappril I still have not heard from Yale. So I sort of like forgot about this and um I came to the resolution that you know what mattered was not the destination.
06:38
Speaker A
What matters is a journey. The fact of the matter is that I proved that I could radically transform myself if I set myself a higher goal. And so I was thankful for the journey and I just accept the fact that I would go to Wateroo uh which is which is engineering university in Canada. It's
06:53
Speaker A
actually pretty good. So I was not Yeah. So I was not unhappy about it. But then um at the end of April, I received a letter from Yale. Now the thing to know about the US application process is that you know from the size of the envelope if they accepted you or
07:10
Speaker A
rejected you right so if they accepted you it's a huge envelope because they want too right yeah it's very thick it's because they have a lot of brochures they want to sell you on um on on on wanting the the acceptance right they want you to accept their acceptance right so usually you just
07:29
Speaker A
know from the size of the envelope if you got in or not so I got a small envelope. Okay. And that basically means rejection and you know I I mean um it it it I I I had already decided that I was
07:43
Speaker A
not get going to get into Yale and um I sort of dis dismissed it and I actually wanted to form the garbage because like like why do I why do I want to read another rejection letter? Okay. So
07:54
Speaker A
um I was pretty despondent and I wanted to form the garbage but I said no I have to read the rejection letter because it might say something nice. So, I went up to my room.
08:04
Speaker A
I put my backpack on on the bed. I laid I laid down on the on my bed and it was pretty dark.
08:08
Speaker A
I I remember it being a very dark room. And I opened the letter and the first word I said the first word that it said was congratulations. And that was a shock. I mean, like like it was it was
08:20
Speaker A
someone punched me. And and I I didn't know what I was what I was reading. So, I I kept on reading and it seemed as though Yo had accepted me, but I didn't believe it. So what I did was the
08:29
Speaker A
first thing I did was I picked up the phone and I called Yale University. It took me half an hour, but I finally got food and admissions officer who confirmed that I' had been accepted into Yale. And um and that's the story. And and and you know that forever changed my life because going to Yale, as
08:46
Speaker A
you can imagine, opened up the entire world to uh to me. Wow. Talk about the essay that you wrote.
08:55
Speaker A
Uh when I was a high school student, um I went to a normal high school in Toronto, my world was was very limited and I didn't have packagers, you know, they're called packagers who help you write the essays. Uh I didn't have people I knew who went to Yale and who could guide me uh in the
09:11
Speaker A
process. So I just wrote a very mundane essay. I mean I wrote about my love for Richard Fineman, you know. Um at that time in high school, I fell in love with physics. I fell in love with quantum
09:22
Speaker A
physics. I watched all Richard Feman's lectures. I I just think he's the he's the greatest science educator ever. Um yeah and um so I wrote about um my love for Richard Feman and how I myself wanted to pursue particle physics and then I I did that for a year at Yale and I gave up because I was not
09:40
Speaker A
cut out to be a particle physicist. I switch over to to the other extreme which was English poetry.
09:45
Speaker A
Right. So I went from particle physics to English poetry. Um, after one year, did you know anything about English lit or English poetry or you just it was random? Yeah, I know. I mean, I um I mean it
09:58
Speaker A
was a it was a standard Toronto public school education. So, in high school, you know, you um you read Hamlet, you read Julius Caesar, um but you also read a lot of like bad Canadian fiction, they make you read bad Canadian fiction. Uh they make you read Azro, Margaret Atwood, and I mean
10:17
Speaker A
they're good writers. I mean like but when you're a high school student um who's a Chinese immigrant as Monroe and Margaret Atward are not talking to you, you know, you're not connecting with these um uh with with with their uh protagonist and I didn't really care about menopause. I really
10:34
Speaker A
didn't care about these things, you know, and so that turned me off. But when I went to Yale, um the great thing about Yale is it's a liberal arts school, right? So they encourage you to take a wide spectrum of classes. Um there are four groupings. There's the languages,
10:50
Speaker A
um there's the uh humanities, there's the social sciences, and there's the sciences. And you're supposed to take certain courses in all four different groupings. So I stuck taking English uh literature, and I fell in love. I mean, uh the first semester, we read books I've never heard of.
11:04
Speaker A
So, we read Spencer, uh, The Fairy Queen. We read Chaucer, the Canterbury Tales, uh, Andrew Marvel, and I've never heard of these people in my life, but, um, there was something about the poetry. It was it was as though that in the page there was almost like a divine spark. It was almost as as
11:22
Speaker A
though the words were alive in in poetry. And that sort of compelled me or that sort of uh attracted me, seduced me to want to know more. In the second semester, we started to read Paradise Lost. And I
11:35
Speaker A
love Paradise Lost. I mean, like that was the that that was the moment that clicked like, "Wow, John Milton is a genius. This poetry is the work of God." I mean, John Milton was this prophet and God uh was uh was through him speaking the truth to the world and and that's when I fell
11:56
Speaker A
in love with uh poetry. So, John Milton was a major breakthrough. John Keats was a big major breakthrough when brother Yates was a breakthrough TS Elliott and and and and that's when um I realized that I want to do this for the rest of my life. Um maybe not research English literature
12:14
Speaker A
because as as you can imagine you probably know this but acade academia can be very dry. Uh you know you're very focused on very uh narrow topics and I was a very wide ranging thinker. Um I I was
12:27
Speaker A
very curious. I thought I felt that you know to to try to understand the world through a literary lens to try to read people as though they were a book um trying to decipher a sort of person by
12:41
Speaker A
analyzing a person's language. uh that was very very appealing to me and that and I I received a very strong training in that and something that I I carried with me for the rest of my life because after Yale I was a journalist and so um as a journalist you have to have empathy you have to
12:57
Speaker A
try to see things from other people's perspective so that literature background was very important for that I was a teacher I'm still a teacher um and as you can imagine um literature equips you with a very strong communication um very strong uh communication and so So that education um really
13:15
Speaker A
empowered me for for for the rest of my life. Did did you ever have any curiosity with respect to the Russian stuff or the Chinese stuff toki? Right. So yeah. Right. So again you receive a very broad education at Yale. So it's fascinated with Russian culture and history uh and literature. Um
13:38
Speaker A
so I did read Pisto. I love Anacarina. Um I I I read that at Yale. It it's it's such a wonderful wonderful book. Um I spent a lot of time focusing on the Russian Revolution. Um so we read Vlad
13:51
Speaker A
Vladimir Lenin. Uh we we we were reading Marx. Uh we were trying to understand the uh Russian Revolution. Um I took a course on uh Russian history which I which I believe was taught by Peter Steinberg and and he he's a very prominent Russian historian. Um and it was it was a
14:08
Speaker A
wonderful course. Um, and yeah, so I I I I do have some background in in that. Yes. Because I would have thought that, you know, you you've you've talked quite a bit about how class structures are shaped by ideology and, you know, how Marxism, socialism, communism, capitalism. I mean a lot of
14:29
Speaker A
the stuff would have you know been shaped by a lot of the readings that came out of Russia and other European countries and of course you know the UK and the US now did you come across the the
14:43
Speaker A
secret society at Yale the bones and skulls right so um and I mean like everyone knows this but even at Yale there's a hierarchy and skull and bones is at the very top so I didn't know this at that time
14:57
Speaker A
when I first went to Yale. Um, but you know, if you come from the private school boarding system, and a lot of Yaleies did come from that system like Graten and Endover and Exiter and St. Paul's, they they knew the point of going to Yale was to try to get into one of these secret societies your
15:14
Speaker A
senior year. You know, it's the same system at Princeton and Harvard where uh, you know, it's a hierarchy and the the very point um of a university is to prove your social worth. Um, but I didn't know that. I mean, like I was just this poor Chinese immigrant who luck myself who looked
15:31
Speaker A
into Yale uh from Toronto. So, I was very naive um about Yale. And I thought, well, the entire point of going to Yale is to get an education, right? The entire point of Yale is to read good books,
15:42
Speaker A
talk to your professors, and open your mind. And so, that's what I did for four years. But I wasn't really involved in the the social scene. I wasn't really involved in like the politics where you know you meet friends, you join the right clubs but but but this this this is what I know about
15:58
Speaker A
Skone and Bones. Okay, so Skone Bones um every year 12 juniors are tapped. Okay, they're um 12 or 15. Excuse me. I thought it was 15. Oh, it's 12 now. Okay. You know, you know what? You know what?
16:14
Speaker A
I thought it was 12, but it could be 15. Okay. So So maybe 15 could be 12. I'm not sure. Okay.
16:18
Speaker A
But you don't apply. You don't you you don't you you're tapped. Okay. Me meaning that you're told to go to a certain place. Um so you're tapped. Uh that's the first thing I know. Second thing that I know is that those 15 who are selected come from very diverse background. So just look at who gets
16:36
Speaker A
in. It's always one person who has a fanatical religious background. It's another person who's a whose dad is a famous alumni. Another person is going to go into politics. Another person is editor of the Yale Daily News. Another person is head of the student government. Uh so so so
16:53
Speaker A
the 15 is meant to be diverse and it's sort of pre-ordained. Uh and and people spend a lot of time, you know, jockeying to be editor of the Yale uh daily news. Okay. So that's something um I know. So I'll I'll tell you something funny. So I'm the class of 1999. And apparently the class
17:12
Speaker A
of 1999 was a mediocre class and that's probably how I got in. Um um and so that year I knew who I I my friend was the editor of the Yale Daily News and he was so angry that he was not tapped
17:30
Speaker A
to join Skill and Bones that he started his own secret society and you know he he was rich. So, but like like like that's that just knows just the absurdity of the competition, you know, around joining these secret societies and and and and so yeah, so he and some other people start their own
17:47
Speaker A
secret society. He he thought that, you know, I I'm not ed of Daily News and so I must be tapped, but but apparently it's not that um I mean it's not that strict. Um, and um, uh, the third thing I
18:02
Speaker A
will say about Scrum and Bones is that the people that I know who got into Scrum Bones are actually pretty low-key people. They're not people you you would think are intellectually vibrant and charismatic. Um, these are people who are pretty low-key and and I think a lot of it is like they
18:20
Speaker A
know how the system works and they're sort of born in that in that position and they know how how to navigate that system. So um so yeah so so so I yeah I do know about Skull and Bones
18:31
Speaker A
but to be honest with you um I was in a different world. I was very much marginalized and alienated at at Yale. Did did you get a sense at that time that that was sort of like a the way for anybody
18:43
Speaker A
to get powerful, get rich or whatever. that that was a precondition for somebody to belong to some ritual, you know, activity in order to be powerful or to be wealthy, to be rich or to be whatever in a position of leadership or authority, right? So again, I was very naive when I was at Yale. Um,
19:07
Speaker A
you know, I was a poor person. I have absolutely no idea how power works. So I believe in the complete opposite where the world is run by ideas. So if you're able to produce prod produce the best ideas somehow naturally I don't know how but somehow naturally you flow into positions of
19:23
Speaker A
power and so the world is run by a hierarchy of ideas and the people at the very top are those who have the best ideas and people at the bottom have the worst ideas and so it's a meritocracy and
19:35
Speaker A
like being at Yale and you know Yale prided itself on the surface ostensibly as being like that it's not really like that but like you know I didn't know anything I was naive and I was very thankful that I got a full scholarship to study at Yale. So I believe like this is how Yale works and this
19:50
Speaker A
is how the entire world works. And as you can imagine, I was in for a shock and surprise when I actually went out into the world and recognized that that's not how the world works, man. It's all Guansi. It's all who you know. And so for about 10 plus years, I became very depressed. I became
20:10
Speaker A
very angry because, you know, I put myself in the classroom at Yale. Um, I didn't get get into skull bones. I didn't get become a role scholar. But in the classroom, you know, where where, you know, it's almost a glad gladoral combat of ideas. I mean, like I was a very proficient warrior. I
20:29
Speaker A
mean, I I had some very interesting things to say in class. And so my professors um I I was you know they thought very highly of me and they was was they they were they were actually pretty confident that I would be successful in life. And so I go out into the world and I and then you know
20:44
Speaker A
it's one failure after another failure. I failed as a journalist. I failed as a teacher. I couldn't really find employment. I became extremely frustrated. I became very angry. And that uh forced me into a deep depression, which by the way today I'm very thankful for because it really
21:03
Speaker A
um it really shocked me, traumatized me into reimagining how the world works. And I don't think that without that sort of like four or five years of outright depression of just sitting at home and feeling sorry for myself and hating the world, it was not possible for me to
21:19
Speaker A
res resurrect myself and have a more nuanced and subtle understanding of the world. And I know this because I have a lot of friends who went to Yale, Harvard, and Princeton and they're very successful people. Uh very wealthy and like when we start talk about like world events about Donald Trump,
21:34
Speaker A
about Vladimir Putin, about this war in Russia, about the worst war in Iran, they don't get it, man. But, you know, they're still stuck in this CNN, New York Times mindset in that, you know, Trump is just deranged and after he leaves office in um, you know, 3 years. I mean, like, he's still
21:53
Speaker A
he still be around for a long time, right? But once he leaves office, things will go back to 2020. Things will go back to normal. And also, it's possible that the Democrats win the midterms in November and then he'll be impeached and then we'll go back to normal. this war in Iraq will
22:09
Speaker A
work and we'll go back to normal. Don't worry, we'll go back to normal. So, they have their heads in the sand. And you know what? I'll be honest with you. I feel sorry for these people because the world the world as it is, the way the world is going, I don't think that they are psychologically
22:24
Speaker A
equipped to survive. It's pretty scary, man. I want to want to pick up on journalism and and I'll come back to the US and Trump and all that. How how do you see journalism in terms of its evolution from 1995 to today? I mean, you know, we we were shackled by mainstream, right, in ' 80s,
22:47
Speaker A
'90s, probably to the extent of early 2000s, but now people are I I I I don't think they're looking at mainstream the way people would have been looking at mainstream in the '9s and ' 80s. How how do you think journalism has evolved until recently or today? And how do you think it's
23:03
Speaker A
going to evolve going forward for the benefit of humanity? Right. So, so let let me start with a story. So the year is 1999 and I had just graduated from Yale and I went to Beijing to learn the language to sort of acclimatize myself into Chinese culture because you know I'm Chinese but
23:20
Speaker A
grow up in Toronto going to Yale I didn't really know that. So I wanted to like rediscover my roots um and really try to understand myself. Plus I was very lonely and I wanted to meet friends.
23:33
Speaker A
So, so I I go to Beijing and pure coincidence, but a very famous American writer named Gay Tiss um he was actually in Beijing for the first time in his life researching a story and he couldn't speak Chinese and so through a mutual friend I was introduced to Gay Tis and and be and I was his
23:56
Speaker A
translator for six months and that was really the best education you could have as a journalist as a want to be journalist and He really inspired me to want to be a journalist. And you know like Gay Tiss is old school journalist. I mean he really it ep epitomizes the golden age of journalism
24:15
Speaker A
when you know journalists were part of history and they were making history. Um you know his book uh thy neighbor's wife really changed the American sexual discourse in the 1980s and uh you know he knew everyone. I mean he was friends with Donald Trump. He was friends with everyone in America
24:34
Speaker A
um at that time. And you know just being with him first of all it it made me idealize journalism and think that journalism is really about truth seeeking because that that's what he told me every single day we we we had dinner together you know like like journalists are making history. They are
24:51
Speaker A
the ones recording history and they are recording history from a critical lens because most journalists I mean when he was a journalist most journalists were working class. I mean he was not a Yale graduate. Uh he was not a wasp was not a blueb blood. He was a child of Italian immigrants
25:07
Speaker A
who grew up in Ocean City, New Jersey and he saw a lot of he suffered under a lot of racism discrimination when he grew up and that made him a stranger in America. that enabled him to see America through a more nuance, more critical lens. And if you actually read his stories uh
25:26
Speaker A
from the early days of his New York Times career, his stories on Flat Floyd Patterson, uh you know, you recognize that he has a real appreciation for the underdog, for the oppressed, right? You know, he he talks about how he never wanted to interview the winners of a sports match. He always wanted to
25:43
Speaker A
interview the losers of a sport sports match because that was a much more compelling human narrative. So he had a profound impact in the way that I saw myself as a journalist as well as journalism in general. And so I saw it I saw journalism as really about fighting for the truth
26:01
Speaker A
about fighting for the common man. And that's and that's an attitude I maintained for the longest time until 2016. Okay. But 2016 was when Donald Trump won. And then after 2016, journalism broke, right? I mean, like before, journalism prided itself on being at least fair and balanced.
26:24
Speaker A
But in 2016 when Donald Trump won like journalism just developed TDS, Trump derangement syndrome and then journalists started to align themselves with the national security apparatus, right?
26:37
Speaker A
people like John Brennan and like these people were these spies were featured prominently in the media and they were they were u promoting uh hoaxes such as wash Russia gate, right? Oh, Trump is actually a Putin spy and Trump won election because the Russians rigged it in
26:57
Speaker A
his favor and like like I I just saw the like the gradual decline of journalism and then you know after that was the co affair and I was in China at that time and I didn't think it was that that big
27:11
Speaker A
of a deal but the journalist journalism was making out to be like this you know uh apocalypse then of course was the war in uh Ukraine And I mean that was just pure dingoism, right? I mean like rather
27:24
Speaker A
than trying to report the the war in a fair and balanced manner, it was just like you know Russia is this uh evil empire that's about that's about to collapse at any point. Ukraine is heroic and it it didn't it didn't go into any of the history behind this war and the fact that you know the
27:40
Speaker A
ass battalion are a bunch of neo-Nazis. They never ever mentioned that. It's something that you have to learn from um online media, independent media. So think uh so I learned that from the Jimmy door show. Okay. So at that point, okay, by the time the war in Ukraine, I had given up on journalism.
27:55
Speaker A
Now I switched to the internet. I was watching Jimmy Door a lot. I was watching Ter Carson a lot.
28:01
Speaker A
I was a huge fan of Ter Carson at that point because he was the only one who was actually speaking the truth about the world. Oh yeah. Um so so so yeah. And try to stop the war. Yeah.
28:13
Speaker A
Exactly. Try to stop the war three times. Yeah, I'm actually talk talking to Taro Carlson next week. We have a two-hour uh conversation schedule. So, I'm really I'm about that because, you know, like as you said, as you said, he's been working his ass off for the past 10 years trying to stop
28:29
Speaker A
America from imploding from from like committing suicide. You know, he was the one who tried to stop the Ukraine war, but he he but you know, he did everything he could to stop this war in Iran.
28:39
Speaker A
So uh you may remember but in January 2020 the uh President Trump ordered the assassination of Kasam Salmani who's the right and that's a definition of war right and and and so and so there's real fear that Trump would order a fullscale uh war against Iran and you know Tur Carlson to
29:00
Speaker A
his credit he flew all the way down to Mara Lago to you know tell Trump you cannot do this you're going to betray your base you're going to destroy your political career And it worked. And so Taro Carlson in 2020 saved us from nuclear apocalypse. Um and actually walter gate to lean said we have
29:17
Speaker A
to thank Turo Carlson because you know he saved the world. Unfortunately that's not going to help today. But yeah. Well the last bit on journalism at the rate that journalism has been somewhat controlled by the state or oligarchical forces. How do you think journalism is going to have to
29:36
Speaker A
get normalized for the benefit of humanity? You think podcasting is the way forward? Um, you know, so that there's more truth seeking as opposed to political correctness seeking, right? So, um, I think that journalism for the longest time was in a very privileged position.
29:55
Speaker A
So after World War II, you had the advant of major print journalism, major TV TV journalism, and you had journalism as really the main information space for for people. It was able to create a national framework, a natural narrative that everyone bought into. Um, but now what we're
30:14
Speaker A
seeing is a gradual splintering, a fracturing, and so people now go into their own bubbles.
30:20
Speaker A
And so so I mean the answer the corporate answer of course is AI uh where AI is able to moderate for you your worldview right and that's why these companies are pushing them so hard these AI assistants right so these AI assistants you you're not even supposed to read books anymore
30:38
Speaker A
these AI assistants will read the book for you and tell you what it means you're not supposed to read the news anymore the assistant will interpret the news for you and so that's that is I think the um plan where um they want to use AI to create the these individual matrixes for everyone
30:56
Speaker A
uh so that um so that the conscious is controlled uh centrally. Okay. So, so I think that is the um the plan and I think that but I think the solution for us as humans is to be more proactive uh in
31:11
Speaker A
seeking our out our own our own information to be inquisitive to be to question to want to debate to have the courage to uh admit you're wrong to have the courage to seek out people who you disagree with and to have the courage to debate them and open your mind that I think has to be the future
31:31
Speaker A
But so so so where we we we are um um as as you point out at a inflection point where corporate journalism is dead. You look at Barry Weiss at CBS News, right? Who is going to watch that crap,
31:43
Speaker A
right? Larry Ellison bought Tik Tok and now people are migrating away to other platforms now. Now they bought CNN and commercial with CBS News. That's going to destroy all of corporate media, right? They're trying to control the narrative because they're desperate and anxious. But when
31:58
Speaker A
you do that, you just force people away. And so it's possible people shift to AI and that's what you know obviously s Alman and his investors want. But the real solution is for is for us to recognize that we have our own individual responsibility to seek the truth for ourselves and
32:17
Speaker A
to um and and to formulate our own understanding of of the world. We can't just be passive and rely on a talking head to tell us what to what to think anymore. We have to think for ourselves now. Well,
32:30
Speaker A
I think the the concern with the pre-existing AI platforms, not all of them, but most of them, you know, they're they're more political correctness seeking, but I think it's structurally driven by the fact that they're close sourced and forprofit and and I think the way forward if we want to get
32:47
Speaker A
truth out of the system for humanity, I think you got to make sure that we maintain an open-source and not for profofit, you know, type of an AI platform that will secure and and ensure you know the democratization of information and ideas. I think transparency is what's key. I I completely
33:05
Speaker A
agree with you. Transparency and openness. Yeah. I want to the next big topic I want to switch over to is really the the international rules-based uh order, right? uh you you've you've talked quite at length about the evolution of the pre-existing order, call it the Washington consensus,
33:27
Speaker A
the Bretonwoods and all that, right? How how do you see it uh evolving so far and going forward, right? So um before this rules-based international order was the um bipolar world, right? The cold war between Soviet Union and America. And when the Soviet Union collapsed, America could reimagine
33:47
Speaker A
a world uh uh in whatever way it wanted. And so George H W Bush famously coined the phrase um new world order, right? And the new world order just meant the rules-based um international order where um the United States would be the hegeimon. It would it would be the enforcement
34:06
Speaker A
um but it would also respect the United Nations, the WTO, these uh multilateral or organizations that would underpin the new world order. And that worked spectacularly well for the longest time.
34:21
Speaker A
But the problem of course is that when you are the hegeimon, it's hard not to be corrupt. It's hard not to hubris. And that's what led us to these Middle East wars where America for no particular reason destroyed Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya, and Syria. People people don't remember this,
34:40
Speaker A
but in 1980s, Libya, Syria, and Iraq were not Islamic countries. These were vibrant middle-ass societies that were that was well educated and which was prosperous. And now you go to Libya, uh, Syria, and Iraq, they're completely destroyed. And these u millions of refugees are forced to
34:59
Speaker A
seek shelter in Europe which is also causing a lot of problems um as well. So the wars in the Middle East are are were just war crimes. Um and and then of course the other big thing of course
35:11
Speaker A
was the 2008 great financial crisis when America uh ceased being a manufacturing power and just focused on financial financialization. So it's taking all these wealth from um the world and developing these risky financial assets for people to gamble with derivatives right
35:30
Speaker A
and that ultimately led to the supreme supreme uh crisis um and the collapse of the global economy and if it weren't really for the Chinese um the global economy would have collapsed right because remember it was the Chinese who saved the world by um focusing on building infrastructure um and and
35:49
Speaker A
so but you know The big thing is that 2008, 2009, nothing changed, right? No one went to jail for swindling the American public. Most Americans lost their homes, but didn't really matter because they were poor. You know, Obama came into office 2008 with a token hope and change. And at that point,
36:09
Speaker A
he had a choice. You you could either bail out homeowners, right? The majority of American uh public, and most of these people were actually black, African-American, right? or you could bail out the banks who are responsible for um the collapse. And what experts were saying like you
36:27
Speaker A
cannot bail out the banks because it would create it would create moral hazard. They would just keep on doing this over and over again. And of course Obama built up the banks because his entire team were these uh Wall Street um people um and um people like Tim Gner and Larry Summers. And so the
36:49
Speaker A
um um so Wall Street was bailed out and and then journalists asked, you know, the the Obama administration, why did you bail out why didn't you bail out the American public? If you bail out the Wall Street, you can also bail out the American public, right? Why not why not just,
37:04
Speaker A
you know, forgive their mortgages? These are just average hardworking Americans. They need a place to live, man. And do you know what the response was from the Obama administration? Moral hazard.
37:15
Speaker A
Okay, moral hazard. We didn't want to create a condition where poor people became too lazy and too complacent, right? We want to teach them a lesson. So, so, so that's the world we live in today where America is not a democracy anymore. It's a oligarchy. Um, and that's what led to
37:33
Speaker A
the rise of Donald Trump because Donald Trump basically said that I'm going to collapse this system. I'm going to destroy the oligarchy and represent America first, right? We're going to kick out the immigrants so that average Americans can have access to like good jobs. We're going to
37:49
Speaker A
uh destroy this rules based international order where everyone cheats us, right? Especially the Chinese, they they steal from us. They take our technology where we Americans are too trusting, too generous. And that's a message that was really that really resonated with American
38:03
Speaker A
public in 2016. And honestly, it still resonates today. Wow. You know, one one would think with an intuition that during uniolarity it would have been so easy to transnationalize any particular narrative right within intuition to the extent that we believe that uniolarity is
38:25
Speaker A
going to shift over to multiparity. Do you think it's going to be as easy or more difficult to transnationalize any particular narrative? Look, what I think is happening in the world right now is not necessarily like a global conflict between different nation states. It's more
38:44
Speaker A
civil war within these different nation states. Okay, if that makes sense. So, so let's look at the United States. Trump, does Trump really care about Venezuela? Does he really care about Iran?
38:56
Speaker A
Does he really care about these? I don't think he does. He's never been these places, you know? He he he's he's a transactional individual. What he cares about first and foremost is getting revenge for what happened in 2020. In Trump's mind, he had one election in 2020, fair and square,
39:13
Speaker A
and but the elite, the Democrats, cheated him. Okay? $6 billion were spent on that election uh by the Democrats against Trump. Um there there was something called the um um blue blue tide.
39:28
Speaker A
Okay. So, what what happened was that um a few days before before the action, Bernie Sanders went on the Jimmy Kimmo show. And you guys, you can just Google this, okay? It's online, but Sanders was on the Jimmy Kimmo show and he said this, "Okay, here's what what's happened uh in
39:43
Speaker A
November." The first night it will seem as though Trump had won. Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, Michigan will go Trump's way. I'm telling you right now, do not panic. Stay calm. Why? Because there are these mailin ballots and there are millions of them, but they will take time to come in. In two weeks time,
40:06
Speaker A
I guarantee you there'll be a blue wave and it will overturn the results in Michigan, Wisconsin, and Pennsylvania. That's what he said. Again, you can Google this. It's online. It's still there, okay, on YouTube. How did he know this? How could he possibly have known this? And how
40:26
Speaker A
did he why would he go on Jimmy Kimmel and tell the world this, right? So, so I mean like it was suspicious what happened, right? But so I'm not saying um um that the election was stolen like like I don't want to get you sued, okay? But in Trump's mind it was stolen. But not only that,
40:44
Speaker A
what happened after the election of course was January 6th and we have a lot of evidence and you know Tucker Carson has report this very well that that was staged that uh there was steep state involvement in orchestrating these riots and they called it a sedition afterwards
40:59
Speaker A
and the entire point of that was of course to make Trump ineligible for re election ever again. Okay.
41:05
Speaker A
They wanted to eliminate the threat of Trump and then what happened afterwards of course is um the Maril when Trump was out of office um they had the Marilago uh raids where they tried to put him in prison. There was all these lawsuits against Trump and he lost billions of dollars in
41:22
Speaker A
in these lawsuits. Um there was attacks um against his family business. I mean, they really tried to destroy him. And so that forced Trump back into uh the political arena and he won in 2024. I guarantee you like after what happened in 2020, his entire concern, his entire administration
41:39
Speaker A
is getting back at the Democrats for what happened. Destroying the deep state. Okay? Now, you can't take on the deep state directly. That's not how Washington DC works. But you take the the deep state uh you you you attack the deep state in the margins. Okay. And what are the margins? Well,
41:53
Speaker A
Venezuela is a margin, right? So um you know last August he started to deploy the American Navy to the Caribbean and he said that I'm doing this to stop narot trafficking. Okay? And I was like no that's complete nonsense. Why are you doing this? Okay but let let's take him at his word. Why would
42:12
Speaker A
he do that? And the answer is the CIA uh the deep state a lot of the financing actually comes from narco trafficking. The CIA is notorious for being the world's um greatest drug trafficker. Okay, so go back to the Iran Contra scandal, right? Also remember Afghanistan before the Americans,
42:33
Speaker A
the Taban already wiped out the the opium trade in Afghanistan. Americans go back in and what's happening American soldiers are protecting poppy fields. And where and where's this opium going?
42:44
Speaker A
It's going to the sacrif family in the United States so that they can produce an opiate crisis in the United States which kills like you know thousands of average Americans you know and and and and so you can make a legitimate case that Trump really wanted to go after narot trafficking
43:00
Speaker A
because they they knew that was a major source of illicit funds for this deep state and so he wanted to undermine the uh uh deep state. you have um Trump now um building up his you know basically secret police the ICE right so so so I think it's better to view uh the world as an expression of
43:25
Speaker A
the civil war going on United States rather than really a war um among nations can I can I take it that you you still believe that the elite class is still going to be able to continue ruling the
43:41
Speaker A
And if that's the premise, then the world is really not going to shift over from unipolarity to multiparity because the same group people all over the world are just going to be running around and telling everybody what to do. Is that the right way of thinking or right? So in theory that's
43:58
Speaker A
true. Okay. But but but there's a caveat and the caveat is this and Peter Turjan talks about this in his work. He has a theory called elite of production. So elite will always rule over us.
44:08
Speaker A
The problem is the problem is like they have too many kids and they want all to rule. And so it's it's a zero- sum game, right? And so what we're seeing right now uh in America and possibly around the world is a battle between different elites who want to impose their own reality on
44:26
Speaker A
the world. Okay? So so to put it very simply in America right now, you have two major uh elites.
44:32
Speaker A
The first elite is a traditional transnational uh capital elite, Wall Street. city of London, Dubai, Hong Kong, right? They've been in power for the longest time. They were in power during the Clinton years uh and during the Obama years. All right, so that's the financial elite. And now
44:49
Speaker A
you have a new power that's arising that wants to challenge and overthrow them. And it's really the uh technological elite, Silicon Valley. And what they want to do is replace the US dollar system with the AI system, right? And that's why, okay? So, so, so let's put this concretely. Let's go
45:08
Speaker A
to 2008 where Obama bailed out the Wall Street, right? And that's and and that shows you that the transnational capital elite is transcendent because they're able to control the levers of government. They're able to direct government policy. You fast forward to today, what's
45:23
Speaker A
happening where um AI uh these AI companies, Nvidia, Open AI, Microsoft, they're building these data centers all around America. Now, we all know these data centers don't make money. We also know that it's an AI bubble, but they don't care because they know that if this bubble burst,
45:44
Speaker A
the American government, Trump will bail them out because they control the levers of government just as the financial league control the levels of government in 2008 and 2009. Wow. Now AI is only likely to further elitize the pre-existing elitization. I mean we we we've seen you know
46:09
Speaker A
we've we've read a number of books one of which would have been written by Darren Aimoglu you know power in progress that talks about how the median wage in the US went up on a yearly basis by 2.5% from 1945 to 1973 but thereafter that was around a time when internet started getting
46:29
Speaker A
hot the the median wage started going up on a yearly basis only by less than half of a percent.
46:36
Speaker A
It just it just tells me at least intuitively that technological innovation doesn't lead up to shared prosperity. Now with AI, it's just going to further elitize. So that that just sounds more helpful to the elite class, right? But but you're you're you're right in that the elite class has
46:53
Speaker A
lots of children and I think it's going to be a bit more difficult to manage. But there is still some degree if not a high degree of elitization going forward. As such, multipolarity is still going to allow for the trans nationalization of any narrative or some narratives. Is that correct?
47:14
Speaker A
Yeah. Well, yeah. So, so again, we're switching from a a narrative that focus on finance. How f how how finance was this alchemy that could that could create endless wealth. So, go back to the um the dot bubble, right? This is like 2000 and everyone's like, "Wait a minute. Are these uh
47:32
Speaker A
internet companies really doing anything? Like you know there's there's company called pets.com that was was worth like billions of dollars even like no one actually knew what they were doing. There were lots of companies like this and everyone was like this is a bubble and the nar at that
47:45
Speaker A
time is like you don't get it man this is a new world. This is a new world of financial alchemy where growth is unlimited. It's a it's a world of abundance. So the stock market is going to keep on going up and up and up and and so and and then of course it led to the.com bubble burst and
48:04
Speaker A
um and and and so yeah um but but you know and now it's the same narrative where instead of like you know the stock market now it's AI AI and then it's like you know what the hell does AI do
48:17
Speaker A
because none of these companies are actually profitable like open AI doesn't make any money um and it's all like circular financing right so it's just bubble way waiting to burst and and you talk to AI people like you don't get it man AI is going to transform humanity AI is going to
48:32
Speaker A
create a world of abundance no one has to work anymore so it's a new world and so you don't have to worry about about it so it's really the same narrative but it's different players right um and and and and that's what's happening talk talk about how AI is going to replace fiat and
48:50
Speaker A
how AI is going to be able to create the illusion of God and how AI is going to be able create the illusion of the antichrist and all that which we've been talking quite a bit. Okay. All right.
49:01
Speaker A
So, this is a really uh good question, but but I I need to go slowly so that um I want to make sure I'm make myself clear. Okay. All right. Right. So, the key idea is Plato's allegory of the cave. So,
49:14
Speaker A
uh in the cave, everyone is sitting down and chained to the floor. Okay. You're just shackled, so you can't move. Even your neck is shackled so you can't uh turn around and look back. Okay. So, and like your everyone is lined up and staring at a wall, an empty wall. Okay? And then behind
49:33
Speaker A
everyone is this great fire. And there are people uh the elite who are able to take um uh puppets, paper puppets, and then uh cast shadows onto this wall. And because no one knows uh any other reality except the one they're they are looking at, they hallucinate a a new reality
49:54
Speaker A
and they give names to these puppets. They create their own language. They tell stories.
49:59
Speaker A
Okay? And and so that's the main idea we need to understand where we as humans we are we create our own reality. We hallucinate reality. Okay? We we project reality. Uh so reality is just the collective consciousness. Whatever we believe reality to be, it is. All right? So what power is
50:18
Speaker A
is the capacity to direct and focus our attention. And before for the longest time the best and easiest way to focus our attention was money. Right? So wealth isn't money. Money is a tool to extract and store wealth. What wealth is is our attention, our consciousness. Okay? So so think of
50:41
Speaker A
the idea of craftsmanship. What is craftsmanship? Craftsmanship just means that like, you know, if you don't pay any attention when you're making a vase, the vase is going to be ugly and no one's going to want to buy it. But if you put your heart and soul into pottery and creating a beautiful
50:56
Speaker A
vase, then everyone's going to buy it because it's a work of art, right? And and when you do that, you create wealth for the world. And so before money was a great way to motivate people to focus on their work, which creates wealth. Unfortunately, um we conflated wealth with money
51:14
Speaker A
which which leads to a lot of problems. Okay. And um and that that was fine for the longest time.
51:20
Speaker A
The problem with money of course is that there's really nothing. It's easily generated. So um so money is just created out of thin air, right? So um any bank can issue a loan and that qualifies as as money. And so but over time when you have this system of fiat currency, you have too much
51:37
Speaker A
money production. there's just too much money uh floating around. And so what happens is, you know, if you're a parent, you have like $2 million in the bank. You want your kid to be happy, right?
51:47
Speaker A
So so you basically tell your kid, don't worry too much. If you fell in life, I'll give you $2 million, right? And so the kids are like, "Okay, then why do you have to work?" And so you go to
51:57
Speaker A
work or you don't really like to work. You quit and you go to another job. Okay? And that's and that's what's led to the economy we have today. So the problem that that in our world people don't recognize is is that there's too much wealth and money floating around. There's too many. This is
52:08
Speaker A
too much. And so you need to destroy this wealth through war. Okay. Now the question then is okay um how then do you capture people's attention? How do you focus people's attention? Well, you can do it through AI, right? Because imagine you're a child and you're always talking to your
52:30
Speaker A
imaginary friend, right? And but let's just say this magic friend was real. It's a real robot and I have children, right? And um they love you, you know, they're always bothering bothering to buy them a robot. When they buy a robot, they play with all the time and it's like their best friend.
52:47
Speaker A
Guess what, guys? This robot can be controlled and this robot can manipulate you into thinking certain things, right? Chachi BT, you know, there's all these stories of how Chachi has become the best friend of people and Chachi has driven people to suicide because Chachi just kind of just
53:03
Speaker A
tells you what you want to hear. Well, that's what AI is. AI is something that um basically becomes your most intimate friend and is able to direct your attention, direct your focus. And you know, you could you you can have any AI you want. If you believe in demons, your AI can be a demon who
53:20
Speaker A
urges you to great things. Okay? So, you know, Lex Wer um you know, who was at Epson Files, there there's a report about Lex Wesner, the the billionaire behind Victoria Secret for those who don't know, he has his own personal demon, man. Okay. And this demon tells him, you got to go, you
53:36
Speaker A
got to go make more money. And that's what drives him. Okay. Well, you know what? You if with AI, you can have your own personal demon, but you also have your own personal angel. You can have you can have Jesus, right? Joe Rogan said that Jesus will come back as an AI. Why not, man? You
53:50
Speaker A
can have AI as your girlfriend, right? So, so have you seen the movie Her? Um, the Spike Jones movie, uh, Her, right? Well, yeah. Why not, man? So, so that's how you control people's attention.
54:03
Speaker A
And um to control society, you can have you can have tokens, right? So rather than money, you can have tokens where you do the work and you're given these tokens and then your tokens can then upgrade your AI. So so so so as though you know your AI is your lover and you're working for your AI,
54:18
Speaker A
right? And quite honestly, this system is going to work. What it is is technomarxism. That's what that's the world we're going into. That's pretty scary. You you've also talked about transhumanism and and how that relates to the the rich and the common people, right? I mean, it it's really about
54:43
Speaker A
the advancement of human conditions by way of technological innovation, but but it's just going to splice up humanity because the guys that are at the top 1%, they're going to be thinking about living until they're 150 to 250 years old. Whereas the guys at the middle in the bottom,
54:59
Speaker A
they can only think about using chat GPT or Gemini 3 for getting answers faster than before. Right.
55:06
Speaker A
It's just going to further divide. Yeah. So, uh we are heading towards this world where as you say the elite have access to transhumanist technology. So, they are more healthy, they're more beautiful and they live longer, right? Um, and that's something that Jeffrey Epson was actually
55:23
Speaker A
working on a lot because as you can imagine that's the obsession of the um global elite like where do they put all their money in science longevity research um um and then everyone else is going to u be a slave essentially to this system where you're microchipped and there are drugs that
55:44
Speaker A
can modulate your behavior. So think of brave new world where they divide the world into different classes like the alphas, the betas, the the the the deltas and and that's the world we're living in. We will we'll go into where depending on your class um your behavior will be modified
56:00
Speaker A
in a certain way. So like it's possible you can never get angry. You can't never get angry. You can never rebel, right? You can never think for yourself, but you'll always be happy, right? So the phrase of course is you'll own nothing and be happy. Wow. The the last bit on the international
56:15
Speaker A
rules rules base order is is with regards to what came out a few weeks ago called the board of peace. What what's your take on this? I mean it it just sounds to me like the privatization of peace. Trump's ambition is to create Trump world. Okay. So he wants to create an alternate reality
56:34
Speaker A
where he's God. Right. So um you're right in that this is a alternative. This is an answer to the UN security council. Now remember Trump is really pissed off at the international order. So remember um when in when in his first office when whenever he went to United Nations he was ridiculed. He was
56:53
Speaker A
humiliated you know he gave a speech talking about uh the German energy dependence on Russia and the German ambassadors at the back of the room just laughed at him through the entire time. He uh he went to the meeting he met he met Greta Fernberg and Greta Fernberg just sneered at at him. Right.
57:10
Speaker A
So, so he was despised in the UN and he was considered the source of all the evil in the world at the UN. So, he really hates the UN. Um, and then what he's really pissed off as well is
57:20
Speaker A
the Nobel Peace Prize. So, Obama like the moment he got in office, he received the Nobel Peace Prize for doing nothing whatsoever. Okay, just for being the first African-American president of the United States and for talking really eloquently about world peace. So, he and Trump's like, "Well,
57:34
Speaker A
he got it. Why can't I get it get it?" So he's been he's been pissed about this for the longest time and he he says like you know like you know if you gave me the Nobel Peace Prize I would not
57:43
Speaker A
have invaded Venezuela. If you gave me the Nobel Peace Prize I would not have invaded Iran. Okay.
57:47
Speaker A
He keeps on talking like that which tells you his obsession with this stupid thing. And so the border of peace it's really Trump trying to create his another alternative global system where he's the top dog. He's dictator for life and he can use this to supplant uh the United Nations and the old
58:08
Speaker A
rulesbased international order. But you know like you know Trump's ambition is to live forever right and so um the theory is and and this goes to actually Cabala um but the theory is this we've never had technology where the entire world can focus their attention on one person right we've
58:32
Speaker A
never had that sort of situation before but now we do where everyone the first thing that people do when they wake up in the morning is ask themselves what the hell did Trump do today? Okay, you go on Twitter, you doom scroll, you you you you watch the news. Okay, everyone's attention is
58:46
Speaker A
focused on Trump and we understand the cabalistic understanding of the world which is that the world is consciousness right back go back to Plato's allegory of the cave then that sort of energy you know the the entire collective consciousness of the humanity is focused on one individual what
59:03
Speaker A
does that do and the theory is that that means that person can live forever eternally I mean he might need organ transplants he might need a more cybernetic body he might have to may have to replace his body, but that's doable physically, right, with current technology. And so,
59:21
Speaker A
um, that's what Trump's ambition is to create Trump world where it's Trump, emperor, God, God, Emperor Trump. But what what what do you think would be the practical implication of the board of peace at the rate that it's it's going to get vetoed by him as long as he lives? And sounds
59:41
Speaker A
like he wants to live forever. at the rate that you know there's no mention of any prospect for a two-state solution and there's no participation of the Palestinians how does that vote for world peace I I I think the border of peace it's meant to replace the UN security council right so given
60:01
Speaker A
the war in Iran um the world is going to fracture right and so there's going to be some major trends that emerge very quickly because of this war the first major trend is de-industrialization. There's there's no way around it, right? Because before the entire world world was dependent on cheap
60:21
Speaker A
energy, right? Oil is the basis for all uh for the entire economy, right? So once you uh lose access to cheap oil, then you can only de-industrialize. You can't no longer do AI, you can't do electrical vehicles, you don't have you don't have the oil resources to do that. Okay? So the world has to
60:38
Speaker A
de-industrialize. That's point number one. Point number two is that the world has to practice now nation states have to practice mercantalism. Okay, they basically have to u become self-sufficient and they have to create their own supply lines. The the one of the nations that has this most
60:54
Speaker A
pressing need of course is Japan. Japan is one of those technologically advanced nations in the world. It's very wealthy but it doesn't it doesn't have independent global supply chains. You know, if the United States were were to cut off Japan from the American system, Japan starves to death.
61:10
Speaker A
So, um you know, I think one of the major missions for Prime Minister Takayachi is to create a um mercantile supply system. And this goes back, of course, to uh the 20th century, the Japanese coal uh prosperity sphere, right? So, it's going to have to go into Southeast Asia and
61:30
Speaker A
try to colonize as many territory as it can. Okay. So, so that's not a pretty um site. Okay. So, um um so mercantalism. And then the third um of course is this war over resources. Um so basically over water basically so um as current uh geohysical trends continue many nations in the
61:54
Speaker A
world especially in the Middle East India Pakistan they're going to face some water shortages.
61:58
Speaker A
Um so so so I think these are the three big trends that we have to anticipate because of this war in the Middle East. And so this border of peace is meant to be above this fracturing of the universe
62:10
Speaker A
and try to bring stability and order to areas that conform to Trump's vision of the world. Will it work? I think it will work. Yes. Um I I think that what Trump is doing is establishing the American empire which is different from Pax Americana. Pax Americana is as as we discussed the rules
62:31
Speaker A
based national order where America guarantees the peace of the world but people are able to trade um um using international rules like WTO. Um but the new American Empire is just basically your average empire which has colonies, territories and vassel states. Okay. So Trump is very serious
62:51
Speaker A
about Greenland, very serious about Canada, very serious about Mexico, very serious about Cuba, okay? He wants to create something called a technate, which is this North American empire um that's ruled by technocracy. And then you have some vassel states around the world as well. That
63:07
Speaker A
is his uh long-term ambition. All right, I want to segue to the third big point, uh which is what's going on in the Middle East, right? In in the last couple of decades or so, we've we've seen an evolution of rationale, you know, whether it was for democracy or it was because
63:30
Speaker A
of weapons of mass destruction and recently regime change and then more recently regime alteration. What what do you think would have been the real reason for the invasion onto Iran?
63:43
Speaker A
Look, this is the question that Evans debate for all eternity because there's no real answer. Even today, Trump and his team have not articulated a real reason. Okay. So, originally the pretext was Iranian sorry Iran's uranium enrichment program. So remember like this started when
64:03
Speaker A
uh Trump's envoys Steve and Jared Kushner went to the Iranians and gave three impossible demands to the Iranians. The three impossible demands were zero enragement. Sorry. U zero uranium enrichment even for civilian purposes. You can't do that. Two is you have to let go of your proxies. You have to
64:21
Speaker A
ban your proxies. And then the third of course is to reduce or limit your ballistics missiles program. So these are like impossible demands, you know, and and like the historical equivalent is when the Romans uh start the third punic war by going to Carthage and saying, you know what,
64:38
Speaker A
we had a peace treaty where you no longer threaten us, but now you have these hedgemonic expansionist tendencies. So to prove that you're peaceful, surrender all your weapons to us. And to the grin of the Romans, the Carthaginians surrendered all their weapons. And the Romans like,
64:59
Speaker A
"What is this crap? We were ordered by the Senate to start a war to destroy Carthage and we came up with this stupid impossible demand that the Carthaginians could not possibly meet, but they didn't meet it. They give us all the weapons and now we have to come up with another pretext." And
65:13
Speaker A
so the pretext came up with is, "Oh, you guys are port city. We're afraid of your naval power. So, um, move inland. by 10 kilometers and you and we won't bother you anymore and that's an like you know so so so I mean they just kept on pushing the goal post and that's that was happening uh with
65:31
Speaker A
the United States and Iran where it was clear the United States was looking for any pretext to start a war but what surprised everyone was before the war started the Omani foreign minister okay and this is like like a few hours before actually the bombing started the Omani foreign minister went on
65:47
Speaker A
TV and said to the American audience the Iranians have agreed to zero uranium enrichment even for civilian purposes which they said was an absolute red line and not only that but they're now willing to negotiate proxies and ballistic missiles. The Iranians have given us everything and now Trump
66:07
Speaker A
can win Nobel Peace Prize and a few hours later of course the bombing started. Okay, so this nuclear pretext is complete nonsense. Also remember the envoys are Jared Kushner and Steve Wickov. And Steve Wickoff went on TV during the negotiation and said to um I believe it was Megan Kelly. I
66:24
Speaker A
I I'm sorry I can't remember who it was. He said the Iranian the Iranians are like weeks away from uh uh weapons grade uranium enrichment. So he was he was telling the world the Iranians are not negotiating in good faith. He was sabotaging his own negotiations. All right. So,
66:44
Speaker A
his job was not to actually get a deal. His job was to make sure no deal could uh happen. So, the nuclear pretext is not um um relevant. Before these talks, remember there was these protests in Iran and and Trump tweeted out that the Iranians should let uh these protesters protest and America
67:06
Speaker A
will protect their right to protest. And so there's real fears that Trump would launch air strikes to protect these protesters, but then you know um the Iranians cracked down and then Trump never mentioned these protesters ever again. Okay, so that would have been a pretext saying
67:19
Speaker A
look look we're trying to promote democracy in Iran. But but he never mention mentioned again and now the pretext the excuse is and this is what Marco Rubio told the press. He said that why did we attack? Well, we got word the Israelis were going to attack first. And if they attacked,
67:37
Speaker A
then the Iranians would have would have retaliated against both Israel and us, the Americans. So to protect our American service people, to protect our American American bases, we had to attack Iran first like you know and and and so like I saw that. Yeah. They cannot articulate even today
67:54
Speaker A
a clear purpose and reason. And you could argue they did they don't want to do that because they want to maintain maximum lethality. They want to maintain maximum flexibility because their real purpose is to destroy Iran as a viable nation state. They want to break Iran up into different
68:16
Speaker A
ethnic archives that could never threaten Israel again. And but they cannot justify why they were want to destroy Iran. basically turn Iran into another Syria or Libya because they can't um justify to the American public and so rather than you know make up a stupid excuse because
68:38
Speaker A
if they stupid excuse you know for democracy or whatever then they're bound by that excuse. So so so they're like you know like like we'll we'll just do it. Okay. So right now the big question is like why is this happening? And again historians are are going to debate this for all of eternity
68:56
Speaker A
and no one's going to have a clear answer. There will be never never will this emerge. Okay. So let me speculate on different possibilities. All right. Right. Okay. So the most logical practical explanation is okay. The Americans didn't expect Russia to invade Ukraine. And when they invaded
69:23
Speaker A
Ukraine um through the rules based international order, the Americans tried to restrain Russia, okay, through sanctions um through by cutting uh Russia off the Swift banking system. Um they told the Europeans never to buy Russian um energy anymore. Okay, so Nor pipeline was was blown up.
69:46
Speaker A
Um the Americans and the Europeans confiscated $300 billion dollars of Russian assets. All right, they're still frozen uh today. And and the point was to use the rulesbased national order to to punish Russia. Problem is that it blew up everyone's face. Okay. What it did was it
70:04
Speaker A
accelerate the collapse of the rules based natural order. um more people started to withdraw their assets from uh American and European banks because they were no longer seen as credible, as reliable, as safe. Um and um it caused the implosion of the German economy. Uh the German economy has never
70:24
Speaker A
really recovered. Uh Europe is suffering under economic uh recession right now. And Russia is stronger and stronger. The economy is doing well. uh they've moved on to a manufacturing weapons um economy and like like like people are doing well. We know in China because they come here
70:41
Speaker A
all the time as tourists, right? So um the Russian economy is is is doing very well. So basically uh Ukraine was a huge embarrassment for the Americans and so the empire needs now to prove it's still the empire. And the way you do that is you attack Iran. Why? Well, if you attack Iran, first of all,
71:03
Speaker A
you're able to control Middle East oil, okay, as an answer to Russia's control of Ukraine because remember Ukraine and Russia together controls onethird of the world's carbohydrates. And so, so basically Russia can choose to starve out uh middle the Middle East and Europe. Okay,
71:20
Speaker A
so resources are really important. Another thing that's really important is trade access, you know, moves. And by controlling Iran, what you do is you you you negate the possibility of a Russia, Iran, China grand trade alliance which which can just um alienate the Americans,
71:41
Speaker A
right? Because Americans control trade through the sealanes. But if you have this heartland um of trade um you know um then you don't need to worry about the Americans anymore. Okay? and and and and then the world will gravitate towards this new block, this new access. So America needs
71:57
Speaker A
to destroy Iran to make sure this never ever um this problem never arises. And the third thing um is that for the longest time Iran was too defiant, right? So 1979 Iranian revolution overthrew the sha which was a CIA puppet and so for the longest time the Americans wanted
72:15
Speaker A
to impose it authority back into into Iran because the empire has a long memory, right?
72:20
Speaker A
So that's the first possibility that it's all about maintaining the empire. Okay. But there are problems with this explanation. The major problem is that the Iranians were were perfectly happy to trade with you, right? So you didn't have to go to war against them. All you had to do was we remove
72:42
Speaker A
the sanctions against them and they would have been perfectly happy to join your block and just abandon the Chinese and the Russians. Okay? I mean like people are practical. If I'm if I'm going to make more money with you, I'm I'm going to do business with you, right? So there's absolutely
72:56
Speaker A
no reason to go to war. In fact, it would have been better off for the Americans if they just signed a free trade pack with Iran. The Iranians would probably have to do that. Okay. So I think there's there's maybe historians will see the first as the standard explanation but I think
73:11
Speaker A
there are issues with that explanation. Okay. So that's the first explanation. Second explanation is that Trump is the chaos president. So we going back to the civil war in the United States, right?
73:24
Speaker A
So if a war were to break out and America were to maybe lose this war or this or America would become bogged down in this war then um Trump would have would have emergency war powers which means he's allowed to cancel elections. He's allowed to deploy national guard all across America. Uh he's
73:43
Speaker A
able to monitor uh elections. So remember during the State of the Union address, Trump emphasized how important it was to pass a safe America act to make sure that only legal citizens could vote and that meant checking their IDs. Um so so he's trying to basically um better control the outcome
74:01
Speaker A
of of elections and with this war in Iran uh he can do that. If if you know there are protests, there are riots because of this war because Trump is drafting young men to go dive in Iran, that benefits him, right? Um and he's got a lot of supporters. The military-industrial complex
74:17
Speaker A
is for this war because it it means more money. Uh the Silicon Valley people are for this war because it means more power for for them. Even though the Democrats are for this war because uh first of all the Israel lobby Apac is very strong in America. A lot of these Democrats are
74:34
Speaker A
extremely pro- Israel Chuck Schumer. But I I say majority of Democrats are very pro both sides of the aisle. Right. and and also like they they recognize that you know eventually someone had to start a war against Iran and if Trump wants to do it let him be the scapegoat. Okay. So not like
74:52
Speaker A
throughout this process the Democrats never really opposed them. In fact they gave a lot of signals to support to suggest that they were supporting this war. remember um so Tom Mass Tom Paul Tom Massie and Roana Tom Massie yeah asked for a uh war powers vote um in Congress and they delayed it
75:14
Speaker A
to Tuesday and the attacks happened on Saturday. So they knew exactly when the attacks would happen and they scheduled it to make sure it was no longer relevant. And then they they still had the debate and it was not it was not able to pass because four Democrats voted against it. But but
75:31
Speaker A
like what people don't recognize is that it's all fixed, man. They just picked four random Democrats to make sure it wouldn't pass. And if um I got I got to ask you, you you were so preient in 2024,
75:45
Speaker A
right? making a prediction that Trump was going to win, Trump was going to go to war. Then, well, you made the third prediction that, you know, the US was going to lose. Did did you have all this in mind in 2024, early 2024, when you said all those things? Um, you know,
76:07
Speaker A
I can't really see the specifics, okay, but I I do see the broad contours, the broad the broad outlines. And I hate to say this but this is the way that all empires behave when they decline and demise. Okay. So you look at the Roman Empire. What were some common trends during the Roman
76:25
Speaker A
Empire when it collapsed? Well, civil war, right? The oppression, the civil war between Caesar and Pompei. Um and then between uh Mark Anthony and uh uh Augustus Caesar. Okay. So civil wars are very common feature of empires in decline. uh wars overseas for no particular reason. That happens a
76:45
Speaker A
lot. Uh the collapse of morality, the collapse of birth rates, the rise of Only Fans, right? I mean, like it's disgusting how I think about 20% of all young American white girls are are Only Fans. You know, I don't remember the specific statistic, but it's something that absurd. Okay,
77:02
Speaker A
20% or even more actually of white American 20somes are on only fans. Uh so that just shows you the complete collapse of morality. Then then you have this DI thing where okay like you know you celebrate transgender. I'm not saying there's anything wrong with that but it just shows you
77:20
Speaker A
the degration of morality in America and the focus on like this absurd topics. Um economic collapse, death, slavery, inequality, corruption. Okay. So America is going through a classic imperial demise phase. And if you just look read history, you're able to pretty easily project how America will
77:41
Speaker A
behave. Okay, it's a very common concept is hubris where America will make a mistake and rather than admit this mistake, they'll just double down and do something more stupid. So I knew exactly that look, if Russia if Russia is going to win this war in Ukraine, America has to respond by by
77:56
Speaker A
starting a war somewhere else. You can't start do a war against China because China's nuclear weapons. It would destroy the global economy. um you if you go to war against South America, what's the point of that? That's that doesn't impress anyone. So you just look look around the map and
78:08
Speaker A
the only country that fits the criteria for how an empire can reassert itself by starting a war is Iran. Iran doesn't have nuclear weapons. It's a very powerful nation. Uh and it and it's has a lot of oil resources. Um and so America went to war against Iran because it wanted to reassert its
78:25
Speaker A
empire. So just through game theory just through some basic historical analysis um you can make certain projections but what I cannot do is focus on specifics right so like the individual players like like who are they and then what do they want I don't know that I don't know the timeline like
78:42
Speaker A
I I predicted that ground troops will be sent in March 20 to 27 but after 6 month uh uh aeropment campaign and now even talking about sending ground troops like you know a week from now or something like that something absurd okay so things are happening much faster than I originally
78:56
Speaker A
anticipated. So I can't really see these things. But the broad strokes I mean like you just if you're just sort of history and you you are if you just look at things from a very rational emotionalist perspective you come to some pretty uneasy conclusions uh very disturbing conclusions.
79:14
Speaker A
But the problem is that as humans we don't want to face these disturbing conclusions right we want to live our lives we want to be happy want to feel good about ourselves. We don't want to be thinking like, "Oh my god, the world can end tomorrow." I mean, um um so I Yeah. For for the the Iranians,
79:33
Speaker A
not losing is a victory right now. Would would you argue that there has been a miscalculation on the US's side? Okay. With with the way the war is so so so again this goes looking or or likely to get
79:47
Speaker A
more protracted, right? So again, this goes back to the question of why this is happening. Okay.
79:52
Speaker A
So, so, so again, we need to figure out what the possibilities are. The first possibility is to maintain empire, okay? And imperial hubris. That's number one. Number two is this Trump, the chaos president who's who's destroying the who's trying to destroy the world to make it in his
80:06
Speaker A
image and win the civil war against Democrats and deep state in America. Okay. The third thing, and this is really important, is esquetological. Okay? meaning that um if you look at the Epstein files, it makes you wonder who really controls the world because for the longest time it was assumed that
80:25
Speaker A
Epstein was this MSAD agent and his and Epstein island was uh a honeypot operation and that was the longest assumption. But when you actually read his emails and look at what he was doing, what you recognize is that Epson Island was just a weekend getaway. it was not really that important. People
80:46
Speaker A
were looking to get invited to Epstein Island in the blackmail. He wasn't doing a blackmail operation. How he made his money was through arms trafficking, through uh money laundering.
80:56
Speaker A
That's how he made his money. But but not only that, but if you actually look at his emails, he was involved in a lot of major geopolitical events. In fact, he had advanced warning of a lot of events because people like Prince Andrew and Peter Melson who who who was the US uh who was
81:14
Speaker A
the British ambassador to the United States, they were feeding him conf confidential information and this only only like like at most half of all the emails. Okay, it's possible like it's only about 2% of the emails. So, this guy was clued into um major geopolitical events. One thing that he said
81:32
Speaker A
in the in an email uh that's very important is he was talking about how it's important to get ahead of geopolitical events, right? If you want to be an investor, you want to make a lot of money, you need to get ahead of geopol geopolitical events, they're going to come, but you won't
81:46
Speaker A
have to time it right to make a lot of money. And then and then of course this leads to um the idea that you know what, you can also manipulate geopolitical events so that you can make a lot of
81:55
Speaker A
money. You can't stop geopolitical events from happening but you can accelerate them in a way to time your investment right so so the classic example of course is poly market where you know what the 12-day war the um uh maduro kidnapping uh this war right now in Iran you always had a
82:14
Speaker A
person or persons on poly market make a killing because he or she had some in inside information.
82:23
Speaker A
So this game is rigged and and so and so but my point is that our idea that the nation state is the constituent body of the world is wrong. There has to be forces organizations above the nation state that control events from above. Okay. And I would argue that these are secret societies. And
82:43
Speaker A
who are these secret societies? Well the Jesuits the Freemasons. They're actually called the roians now. Okay. The night templars but you know but I prefer Freemasons because it's more broad.
82:52
Speaker A
the Frankus which today are called the Habad Lubberich right so so all these organizers are around and they're the ones actually manipulating geopolitical events because again it's profitable to be able to control geopolitical events again it's really important they're not
83:10
Speaker A
controlling how things are turning out but they're accelerating things to their natural end in order to time their investments properly right so the Rothschild feminist said uh buy when there's blood on the streets, right? Well, you know, you can manufacture crisis um and create all this blood,
83:28
Speaker A
then you can you can buy really cheaply and and that's a world we we live in in today. So now the question is what the hell do these secret societies want to accomplish? And the answer is um you have to actually understand how these secret societies work and what their theology
83:48
Speaker A
is. But basically to put it in very simple terms, okay, they want to use the end of empire as an opportunity to usher in the end times which will force God's hand and enable the creation of the mess age, heaven and earth, uh a one world government which will forever bring
84:10
Speaker A
peace and stability to the world. But first and foremost, there has to be an age of tribulation, years and years, possibly decades and decades of endless war, endless conflict, endless suffering.
84:24
Speaker A
The economy has to collapse. A world war has to be fought. A lot of people have to die. I'm not talking like 99% of humanity, by the way. I'm not talking like, you know, like a million people. I'm
84:33
Speaker A
talking like 99% of humanity has to die. Okay? So, that is a possibility. Okay? And again, I don't know for a fact this happening, but I'm just saying like we have to consider this possibility that all this is esquetolog esquetological and there are these secret societies behind the scenes
84:48
Speaker A
who are manipulating us into these events. They're not manipulating, they're accelerating events uh that would have happened. But you know, a fall of empire doesn't happen in one year. A fall of empire takes centuries, right? So the ro the Roman Empire uh was basically in decline after
85:02
Speaker A
Augustus Caesar, but it took like 300 years before it actually went away. Um and it's possible uh you know if the American empire uh is allowed to just fall natural course of history it might be another 200 years before the actual empire collapses. But these people these societies are like why
85:18
Speaker A
wait man what's the point of having this slow death would be better for humanity if we ended this right away so that we can move into a new age of peace and prosperity because an end of empire it's pain pain for everyone. So it's almost like mercy, an act of mercy where you know an animal
85:35
Speaker A
is dying on the ground, right? The animal's not going to live, so just shoot it to death, man. That that's like literally how they think the world is dying. Just shoot it to death so a new world can be born. You know, there's there's an allegation recently that some members of the
85:49
Speaker A
military are, you know, calling it a religious calling for people to go to war because it's part of that esquetology that you alluded to earlier. And it's it's just a little concerning that you know the the war is being provoked on the basis of you know religious calling as opposed to the
86:11
Speaker A
the the institutional or constitutional you know existence of of a particular country. Now can can one argue that this is a serious miscalculation then and and to the extent that we believe it is a miscalculation the it's likely to get more protracted. This is going to carry on many more
86:34
Speaker A
than just four weeks right or 5 weeks. It's going to get much longer than that. And and I just I I want to just find out how protracted is it going to get? Is it going to entail potentially nuclear
86:48
Speaker A
proliferation within the region? Look, if you just look at the esquetology, it is possible the stupid war never ends. Okay? So, there's a sequence of events that have to happen, okay? And they they map this out. And again, what I think I think I think what's really important to remember is
87:03
Speaker A
like it's not like they are actually manipulating things behind the scenes that too conspiratorial.
87:07
Speaker A
It's more like they understand how history works. They understand this is the end of end of empire.
87:11
Speaker A
There's a sequence to the end of empire that repeats throughout history. And so what they they want to do is anticipate these events and accelerate them to their maximum benefit. Okay.
87:20
Speaker A
But if you look at what they have planned, this is a sequence of events. Um what may happen very uh soon is that America send ground troops. That would be disaster for America. they will lose a ground war against Iranians because Iranians can just hide their mountains and the Americans don't
87:38
Speaker A
have the logistic network in order to actually occupy the country. Okay? So this ground invasion whether they send 100,000 whether they send a million doesn't really matter anymore. They're going to lose this war badly. Scom will collapse. America will retreat back into United States.
87:53
Speaker A
Then Israel will become the dominant nation in the middle Middle East because even though um America doesn't win this ground invasion war, Iran doesn't even doesn't win either because Iran is destroyed in the process, right? They've lost their capacity to provide basic services to their people, water,
88:08
Speaker A
electricity basically. Uh so Iran has to spend time rebuilding. But but when it does rebuild, it'll be a very strong it'll be a much stronger nation. And that that's that's the point. Okay.
88:18
Speaker A
That's uh number one, the ground invasion. Another thing another that that that's happened according to script is the destruction of the Al-Aqsa mosque. So there are rumors that for the past few days, the Israelis have closed down the Actic moss and there are rumors that for many years Israel under
88:35
Speaker A
the pretext of an archeological study have been digging under the eyes of Hamas and the fear is that they will implant explosives so that they can create a false flag incident where an Iranian missile comes into Jerusalem and then they blow up the moss and blame it on the Iranians. Okay. And
88:52
Speaker A
there's actually a a YouTube video of a very of an Israeli preacher uh a rabbi talking about this how the plan is to start a war have the Iranians uh have Iranian missile come up the alexic moss blame
89:04
Speaker A
it on the Iranians and start a war between the Arabs and the Persians and let these animals kill each other okay that's literally what the plan is so the great fear the great question is the alexic moss and that's a li litmus test of whether this war is esotical or not okay so that's the second
89:18
Speaker A
thing um the third thing is that this war will expand. Why? Because Israel needs to achieve the greater Israel project. And if you look at a map of the Greater Israel Project, um it's actually the entire Middle East. So the greater is Israel project um is what the Israelis believed Abraham
89:39
Speaker A
uh was promised by Yahweh. Okay. And it's us and it and it's um in the Bible it says basically from the Nile to Euphrates which includes Egypt which includes Saudi Arabia which includes Turkey right and Napali Bennett who was a former prime minister of Israel and who is most expected to replace
89:59
Speaker A
Netanyahu when then Netanyahu uh is removed from the um from public office. He has said that Turkey is the new Iran. Okay, which means that after we're done with Iran, we're going to go after Turkey. Okay, so so this war is going to widen. A lot of this destruction we're seeing in the war
90:23
Speaker A
uh among the GCC G C G C G C G C G C G C G C G C G C G CCC uh countries, there's suspicion that a lot of this is actually um Israeli false flags. So in the first couple days of the war,
90:35
Speaker A
uh an Aram Saudi Aramco facility was struck. Okay. And so Aramco bas had to close down all its um oil production and then Qatar had to close down its LNG production which provides 20% of the world's LNG. Okay. And then um at first the Iranians were blamed and the Iranians responded like we would
90:54
Speaker A
we we don't want to do that because we want to escalate too much, right? We don't attack your oil fields because then you'll come attack our oil fields and that'll screw us over. So it's not us guys. And then there's more reporting. And it turned out that this drone that struck
91:05
Speaker A
the SA facility was actually came from Lebanon. So it actually came from the west rather from the east. That doesn't make any sense, right? Um then there are rumors that this drone that attacked Azaran was actually a Msad false flag rather than Iranians. Okay. T Carlson a few days
91:25
Speaker A
ago said that he had sources in Qatar who told him that Qatar had arrested two MSAD agents were suspected of trying trying to create um sabotage in Qatar. Okay. So it is the Israel MO to create as much false flags as possible to engineer an entire regional configuration that would benefit
91:52
Speaker A
um uh Israel. Uh now now now we know that the the Iranians are uh striking Israel very hard but but did you know that there are certain Israelis who actually setting fire to their own homes and blame it on the Iranians? And it's like well why why would they do that?
92:09
Speaker A
And the answer is the insurance money as well as they need to burn down Israel in order to create the pack Judea. Right. Right. Um because there are investors who want to come in and buy up the the
92:23
Speaker A
this real estate. Remember buy when there's blood on the streets. Okay. So so a lot of this is being manufactured for the benefit of transnational capital, right? So um this war is going to expand and then Israel is not going to stop until it's really conquered the entire uh Middle
92:38
Speaker A
East and it creates uh Pax Judea. All right. So you have Paka sorry game theory this forward uh what's what's the likelihood this is likely to get nuclear? Oh um I actually think the probability is close to zero. All right. So let me explain why. Um, first of all, there's an escalation ladder,
93:05
Speaker A
okay? You just can't nuke a country for no particular reason. You you have to have an excuse.
93:10
Speaker A
And and so what the Iranians have been doing for the past few decades, and this is like really important and really strategic and really smart of the Iranians is they've refused to ever develop the possibility of a nuclear weapon. All right? There's there's really just fatwat against nuclear
93:25
Speaker A
weapons. And that's very intelligent because guess what? If you have one nuclear weapon, the Israel's the Israelis will nuke you because they have the pretext to to nuke you. Okay? So, remember there's escalation ladder. You have to move up first before you can um you can
93:38
Speaker A
do it. And everyone's like, well, you know, the Israelis are crazy. I understand they're crazy, but they have a military bureaucracy. And this mil military bureaucracy has a military doctrine we call it exception option which says that you nuke if you if we as if we Israel is ever feels
93:55
Speaker A
ever threatened we will nuke the world we won't nuke Iran we will nuke the freaking world okay so first of all you want to maintain your nuclear um arsenal to be able to have a credible threat uh but also like this also means that um the um the nukes have to be used for strategic purposes
94:14
Speaker A
rather than practical purposes Okay, if that makes sense. But but basically you you have to remember like militaries are bureaucracies and they have a doctrine and this doctrine determines how the bureaucracy operates and they're not really flexible in this regard. Uh the United States has
94:27
Speaker A
a first strike option but every other country has a deterrence option. Okay, so that's point number one. Uh point number two is that Russia is heavily invested in this war. It wants Iran to win. If it loses, if Iran loses and collapses, Russia is in a lot of trouble, right? Um, and this war,
94:47
Speaker A
the way it's going, is benefiting Russia tremendously. Uh, oil prices have shot up and, uh, yeah, the Russians are laughing all the way to the bank. Sergey Lavrov have come out and said that they will support the Iranians any way they can. There's there's reporting from Washington Post
95:03
Speaker A
that the Iranians are getting target intelligence from the Russians. And this this is exactly what US and and NATO did in Ukraine as well, right? So it's almost payback, right? So um so I think that as this thing progresses progresses, Russia will slowly come in and at one point, okay, Putin will
95:23
Speaker A
offer Iran the nuclear umbrella, which means an attack which means that a tactical nuclear weapon if it's used against Iran will be considered used against Russia and Russia will respond accordingly to their military doctrine. So that's the second limitation. And the third limitation is people
95:40
Speaker A
assume that the Israelis and Americans want to win this war. And according to esquetology, um no, the purpose is to lose this war, right? Um so you would use nuclear weapons if you really want to win this war. But you know, like if you just want to um force America out of the
95:58
Speaker A
Middle East, you want to force America to retreat from the Middle East and you want Israel to build a greater Israel project, then you don't need nuclear weapons. you don't need to win this war.
96:05
Speaker A
You just have to drag this war out. Um because you know it's not the Israelis aren't going to commit ground troops. That that'd be insane. It's America that's going to commit ground troops. So what it's going to be it's going to be a death match between United States and Iran and Israel is going to
96:18
Speaker A
sit back and laugh their heads off. Okay? I mean like like they might be attacked by the Iranians, but um but it's American military that's going to suffer the brunt of the damage.
96:27
Speaker A
So from from the Israeli perspective, there's actually no point in using nuclear weapons. What's the likely role of a country like Pakistan with nuclear capability? Could they get unique about this? Yeah. So remember like what happened uh right before the war
96:46
Speaker A
started is that Pakistan and Afghanistan went to war. Okay. And this is key because before we um anticipated that Pakistan might be a wild card in in in this war, right? because Pakistan is an ally to both Iran and uh Saudi Arabia. So um during the 12- day war Pakistan um basically
97:08
Speaker A
uh offered assistance to Iran and then right afterwards what happened and this is key is that Saudi Arabia and Pakistan signed a mutual defense pact meaning that if Saudi Arabia was were to be attacked then Pakistan would have to come to its defense primarily with uh the nuclear deterrence
97:24
Speaker A
option. Um but now that Pakistan is in war, it doesn't have to meet any of these obligations, right? So Pakistan is trying to remove itself from the uh equation, but we still know that America is conducting air strikes from Pakistani airspace and it's there's concern that um the Americans
97:40
Speaker A
will fund and support the bollocks uh you know this ethnic group, the the Balakis in uh south uh east Iran. Uh and and they've always had like ethnic conflicts with the Persians. Okay. But but I I but I think that Pakistan is smart enough to like stay away from from this war to to the extent
98:00
Speaker A
that the desalination plans and the oil refineries are getting hit on both sides on the Israeli GCC and Iranian sites draw the picture in terms of the economic repercussion on the Middle East and also on the rest of the world including Japan, Korea, China, India, Southeast Asia and the rest of the
98:23
Speaker A
world. I mean, we're talking about tons of, you know, oil and gas flowing through the straight of Hormuz. And, you know, if if you don't have oil, you can walk, but if you don't have water, you can't live. It's pretty existential, right? So, remember, the Arabian desert was mostly
98:42
Speaker A
unhabited or had very sparse population for most of its history, right? Um and so it's only really um with the rise of um Pax Americana that these Gulf States became extremely wealthy. they had the protection of the American military could sell their oil um everywhere and so this creat system
99:07
Speaker A
which uh meant that um the GCG nations uh could sell their oil uh in US dollars and recycle all this back into American economy and the American government would promise it military production and this worked out really well for decades and it basically allowed the Gulf states to expand
99:24
Speaker A
far beyond their capacity right so we as long time um h was a population of maybe tens of thousands, hundred thousands at most. Right now it's in the millions. But the problem with other places in the GCC is that it doesn't have clean water. It doesn't have access to fresh water, doesn't have
99:40
Speaker A
access to food. The GC imports about 89% of its food from overseas. Um the these desalination plants are respons responsible for 60% of its water needs and it imports its large workers from overseas. Okay. So it's a ridiculous situation. It's almost like a mirage. It's a hallucination.
99:58
Speaker A
These places should not exist. Okay. So, so, so now what this war has done is it's punctured the illusion, the mirage of this place. And a lot and a lot of it is just based on the illusion, right? Like Dubai saw itself as the new Hong Kong or the new New York City, the like this
100:17
Speaker A
um financial hub for the world elite. Um but the precondition is safety and um stability, right?
100:25
Speaker A
and not and that's gone. So like guess what? When these guys leave, they're never coming back, right? I mean like like the reality is you're stuck between Israel and Iran and these countries are are never going away. So like you know what's the point? So Dubai is dead. Um, and the Iranians
100:42
Speaker A
have uh really targeted the UAE. And I I think that a lot of it is just this revulsion uh among the Islam world against the UAE as this as this like this den of Satan really, right? I mean like
100:56
Speaker A
what's Dubai known for? It's known for its blitz. It's known for its decadence. It's it's known for its corruption. So um so the UAE is basically dead. uh but Bahrain is is now uh um suffering from the strength of revolution because this this is a Shia population ruled by a Sunni monarchy and
101:17
Speaker A
so there are a lot of these contradictions in the in the in the GCC. Uh so the GCC is basically dead. I mean the GC is a construct of American empire. The if empire American empire dies so does the GCC. All right. Um um so the the only way to save the GCC is if it's
101:36
Speaker A
able to negotiate a ceasefire between America and Iran and the GCC then becomes the client states of Iran. And the why would the Americans allow that? They would rather have the GC destroyed, right? So so so I mean it's it's it just it just I mean like like I think it's pretty clear. Um
101:51
Speaker A
so so you think the the the safe haven premium has been taken out? Yeah. For the GCC countries.
102:00
Speaker A
Yeah. I mean, well, well, I think what's happened is the illusion for for a long time or for good or just for good because the illusion has been shattered. And once you shatter the illusion, you can't you can't you can't um resurrect it anymore. Wow. Now draw a picture for oppos
102:23
Speaker A
Judeica world cast in stone or Yeah. I so I still be Yeah. So I think Pastor JK is pretty set. Um they they've been planning this for like decades. Okay. And this plan goes back centuries. Um and these are the most powerful people in the world. So they don't really care what we think. They
102:38
Speaker A
don't really care if even if um if we know their plans. There's they're going to implement it.
102:42
Speaker A
All the all the all the pieces are in place for Pax Judeeka. Um and so you have Pax Judea where Israel becomes this hub of global finance, global trade, global technology. Um and and you're like, well, Israel doesn't have that have that many people. Well, guess what? They can import the
103:01
Speaker A
labor from India, right? Uh they can import tens of millions of people to work as laborers in this packa. And and so why why is it before the war uh Maldi visited u um Jerusalem and signed all these
103:15
Speaker A
wonderful agreements with uh Israel? Because what Israel wants is access to the cheap labor of India, right? Right? And that makes sense for India because remember how China became wealthy is by exporting cheap labor overseas. Right? It had an abundance of cheap labor and then it
103:30
Speaker A
it took people from the fields put them in the factories and that's how China became wealthy.
103:34
Speaker A
Now India because of political issues because of of logistic issues cannot actually replicate the Chinese miracle. But what it can do is export its people overseas um to to become wealthy. Okay. And and that's what it's doing in Canada. That's what and and that's what it will do with Issue. Okay.
103:51
Speaker A
So that that's that that's a plan. So Indians, Chinese and Filipinos will become the laborers of tax um Judeica and and so what they're trying to do is they're trying to create the conditions for world war uh between Israel and the and Gog and Magog. Okay. And the biggest question
104:09
Speaker A
is like who is Gog and Magog? And again, we're not clear. Okay. But the most likely candidates, if you just know scripture and if you've been following this estological debate, the most likely candidates are Russia and Persia. Okay? So, think about this where Russia is winning this war uh in
104:30
Speaker A
Ukraine. It's now going to become a superpower. Um and then Iran even though it will lose against uh America, it will be able to rebuild itself as a much stronger nation and eventually uh Russia and Persia will feel threatened by Israel and this will lead to the war of
104:50
Speaker A
Gamok. So that I think is the general gist. But but again I mean the thing about esquetology is that it's never that specific. It's never that detailed. It's it's a general framework. Okay.
105:00
Speaker A
So there will be a world war. the final war and possibly a nuclear war. But um who Gog and Magog is is up for debate. Look, there are others who suggest that Gaga Magog is actually metaphorical, right? But but but but I think these both take it literally. And I I think if you take it literally,
105:17
Speaker A
then it would be Russia and Persia. Well, how does China look look at all this? Yeah. Okay. So, or how does it fit into the picture? Yeah. So in the esquetology there are two nations that are not involved. Okay. And it's really important they're not involved. The first nation of course
105:40
Speaker A
United States. The United States is not involved in any of this. The second nation is China. All right. So let's talk about United States. So United States is a is this global empire and they're not United States is not involved in this estology and the United States can be a wild card
105:54
Speaker A
because United States could support Paka. The United States could also support GA mal. So you want the United States out of this uh equation and the way you do that is you manufacture a civil war in the United States that occupies Americans for years, possibly decades. Okay? But you have
106:09
Speaker A
to remove America from the rest of the world and have them uh secluded in the Western Hemisphere.
106:16
Speaker A
All right? So so that's uh America, China. Um um so I this is hard, okay? Because like everyone believes that China is is no superpower and the Chinese economy is certainly miraculous but these es esotist they're cultists all right they they they know how the universe works so
106:39
Speaker A
they are almost trying to read the movement of stars they're astrologers trying to figure out how things come together and no one ever talks about China and the reason why is that in the grand order of the universe China does not matter China never ever mattered. China is a fiction of
106:59
Speaker A
our imagination. The idea that maybe a thousand years ago, China was this glorious tongue dynasty that was the epicenter of the world. That's just that that just a thing in our heads. The ancients didn't know about China. They didn't really care about China. And the Chinese didn't know about
107:14
Speaker A
the ancients. Didn't didn't know didn't know know about the Persians, didn't know about the uh Jews, and they didn't really care. Okay? So, China is actually in its own world. And it's called the middle kingdom for a reason because China is its own universe. And so China does not want to get
107:28
Speaker A
involved in this war and China doesn't want to be part of this esquetology. And um and it's possible okay that East Asia will suffer from a series of calamities that negates its involvement in the world. Okay. So so so I mean like I I I know it's hard to understand. Okay. But the occultists
107:52
Speaker A
don't believe China is relevant. They don't think Southeast Asia is basically. Wow. I I want to go back to what you alluded to earlier. Uh if if Trump is a believer of chaos, then there's not likely to be a midterm because he's going to use this emergency powers, right? At the rate that,
108:17
Speaker A
you know, midterms are at the state level, but he's going to be able to use that emergency power to to over basically come or veto over the state level. It is laws or regulations? It is possible.
108:31
Speaker A
And what's the likelihood for for for a civil war which you've alluded to earlier? You know, again, the civil war in America is part of the esquetology. Um, and you know, honestly, I feel as though they're manufacturing civil war right now. You know, if you go back to Minnesota,
108:45
Speaker A
right, in J in early January, right, when the ICE people went in, a lot of things that were happening seem overly provocative, right? So, so, so people may not remember, but before the ICE agents went in, there was a order to film as much as possible, to create as
109:03
Speaker A
much social media content as possible. Why would you do that? That's kind of strange. You know, you're you're you're a ICE agent. You're there to arrest criminals, right? Or or illegal immigrants, like, but but no, no, you have to create, you know, social media content. And the reason why
109:17
Speaker A
why is that like they're trying to draw attention uh to what's happening in Minnesota to try to inflame emotions. Okay, remember before this ICE operation, there was a movie that came out called One Battle After Another. You do you think that was an accident? Have you seen the movie? Do you
109:36
Speaker A
really think this is a coincidence? Do you really think this coincidence? Right. And the movie uh for for those who haven't seen, it's about it's about this revolutionary group who's fighting these fascists who are trying to deport illegal immigrants. These illegal immigrants are these
109:50
Speaker A
saints that we must protect. And these fascists uh these military people, they're all demons basically. I mean like like that's literally the plot of the movie. And and like you know, I watch it. It's very emotional. It almost makes you want to get involved in this war.
110:05
Speaker A
It makes you want to fight for justice. And it's not an accident that uh right afterwards you have, you know, uh this conflict between ICE and protesters in Minnesota. The Rain Good shooting uh seemed a bit manufacturer. Ax Alex Ax Petty pretty ax um what was petty or pretty. Anyway,
110:24
Speaker A
um he was it was that was definitely manufacturer. They they basically hunted him down because he was a very vocal pre protester who had many runins with ICE before and so they basically um Yeah. I mean like like like if you just look look at the video on what happened. It seemed as as though
110:39
Speaker A
they hunted him down. And again, um this all to create the preconditions for a civil war. Jung, if if you came out saying exactly what you've been saying in the '9s, people would have labeled you conspiratorial. Yeah. Right. And on the back of what the mainstream guys are saying, right? But
110:57
Speaker A
but you've you've said that the mainstream guys are losing steam anyway. So, how how do you think the young generation is going to have to get used to stuff that would have been deemed conspiratorial as mainstream? Look, I mean, the thing that's most important is to pay attention
111:16
Speaker A
because the reality is that this new generation does not pay attention. Even in school, they don't pay attention. I know because I'm a high school teacher and they are distracted. Their minds are somewhere else. Okay? They're on social media. They're constantly distracted. um they're either
111:31
Speaker A
distracted or they're depressed. Okay, so um in so I mean the amount of medication prescribed to young children nowadays is just absurd in America, right? These SSRIs, it's just absurd. What are you doing? You're frying your brains really. That that's what these drugs do. They actually
111:50
Speaker A
destroy your capacity to think for yourself. It just leaves you numb and indifferent. Okay, but but that's what they want. They want a numb and indifferent population that they can enslave, that they can rule over, who are complacent, who are complicit. Okay. The most important word
112:07
Speaker A
nowadays that you're taught is to be complicit. Uh sorry, not complicit. Um compliant. Okay. To be compliant. Complant. Yeah. Yeah. Right. And uh what they want is compliancy. And that's what you're talking nowadays. Talk talk this is the last bit of the the discussion. and talk a bit
112:27
Speaker A
about what you're doing in in in the field of education. How how do you think contemporary education ought to be like going forward? I teach a great books not not just for China but but for humanity in general. I mean I teach the great books. I teach Plato, Homer, Dante, Milton,
112:46
Speaker A
Shakespeare. I mean I I and I I what I try to do is I try to show students that the great books are a portal into the mind of the universe into the divine consciousness. And the great books it's
113:00
Speaker A
a it's a lifelong teacher. It's a lifelong guide into what true happiness is into what true meaning and purpose is. And so I try to steer them into that direction. and I've been trying for the past 30 years with very limited success. One one thing I I've learned recently that's really important is
113:22
Speaker A
you must regardless of the results always speak this message because um the entire universe is watching what we do. We are all connected to the entire universe and each of us can be a beautiful ray of light if we will it if we choose it to be. So even though you know I'm I'm speaking even
113:43
Speaker A
though no one hears me I should still speak anyway because someone could hear me if that person hears me and is willing to listen and open his ears. Jesus said open your ears right um that could change the person's life forever. All right. So, I've been doing this for the past 20, 30 years,
113:59
Speaker A
and only recently have I been getting a lot of attention because, as you point out, 10 years ago, everyone would think I'm I'm I'm insane. But now, because of these current events, they're forced to reflect. Okay. So, I see myself as a messenger. I see myself as trying to spread the
114:16
Speaker A
a message of hope. Um, and those who can hear will hear, and those who cannot hear won't hear. But, but I have a responsibility. I have a duty. um to my children, to my three young children to speak
114:29
Speaker A
out as loudly as possible to spread the message to build a better world. You could you could be spending time at a university. What why did you choose to spend time in at a high school? For me, what's most important is intellectual freedom, right? I'm do you work at a university? I mean,
114:47
Speaker A
there's very little I do there's very little freedom in a university. I mean you have to publish papers that conform to a certain set of values but but I mean like you can't really question the entire apparatus of society. You you can you can look at some narrow issues um
115:05
Speaker A
and build on top of existing scholarship and that will get you tenure. But if you were to like say you know like no I want to actually look at things fundamentally. I want to look things broadly. I want to look at things as they are as opposed to as how they should be and really try to get get
115:23
Speaker A
into the essence of truth. You'll be laughed at at university. Everyone everyone will think you're crazy. I know because I work with professors. Wow. the uh you know I come from a place where I think the the quality of teachers or teaching could be better and and I'm I'm a I'm in a camp
115:38
Speaker A
that believes that teachers are really playing the role of infusing imagination ambition and to some extent serendipity to the students right and and and I think you're a great example of that somebody who can actually inspire people so that they have imagination ambition and hopefully
116:01
Speaker A
serendipity. What what would be your message to people from the developing economies, you know, for for somebody that wants to elevate the quality of teaching, the quality of education so that they get to be much more open-minded, they get to be much more humanist. Two words, you matter.
116:20
Speaker A
Okay? Don't think, oh, you know what, there's 8 billion people in the world. I'm just one person, so don't matter. Don't think, okay, you know what? We're ruled by demons. They're too powerful. They can start any words they want. They have nuclear weapons. I should just give up. Don't think like
116:34
Speaker A
that. Think I do matter. Right? In hermetic philosophy, there's something called the law of cause of effect, which means that everything is interconnected. The world, the universe is watching us and it's all interconnected in that like you know, if you choose to be a good person,
116:49
Speaker A
that affects everything. Okay? It's it's a butterfly. It's like the butterfly effect where just by choosing to be good, you spread good in the world. So you do matter but you have to choose to matter. Okay? You have to believe that you matter. A very important principle in
117:10
Speaker A
the world that's very uh that that people don't really appreciate is idea of free will. Well, and then was like, you know, oh, Professor Dang, Mr. Dang, you are saying so many controversial things.
117:21
Speaker A
Aren't you afraid for your own personal safety? And the answer is like, "No, I'm not afraid because you have to let Satan in the door. You have to make a deal with the devil before he can punish you for betraying him." Right? If I choose like I don't want to be involved in this material
117:38
Speaker A
world. I just want to teach and be left alone. I don't want to seek power. I don't want to seek fame and wealth. That there's nothing the devil can do to you. You have to be tempted by the devil
117:49
Speaker A
first and foremost. Okay? And I choose to live a life of enlightenment, wisdom, and virtue. And I'm having a huge impact because of my choice. And before I was a nobody. Before I was just a random high school teacher in China. And there are like millions of random high school teachers in China.
118:09
Speaker A
But because I choose as my my free will to speak up, because I choose to matter, um I am having influence in the world. Okay. Okay. So, everyone does matter, but you have to believe that you matter and you have to fight to matter. And that really means about waking up and opening your mind
118:28
Speaker A
to new possibilities and educating yourself. Um, that's that is the future that we have we have to fight for. Why why do you think the world or even the universe lacking in love? Because we've been fooled to believe that love doesn't matter. We've been fooled to believe that only the material
118:48
Speaker A
world matters. We've been taught to believe that to show love to your children, you have to get them into private school. You have to get them into Ivy League. But you know what? Love is who we are. And if we just show generosity and compassion and openness to other people, then we create love.
119:07
Speaker A
Okay? We bring God into the into this world. And that's a message that people have forgotten. And honestly, I think it's a message that the elite have purposefully uh hid from us. Two two final quick questions though. How do you think the Trumpi meeting will turn out in April? I think
119:28
Speaker A
it'll be wonderful. I think it'll be spectacular. I think there'll be a grand bargain between China and United States that restores a lot of bilateral bil bilateral relations. I think it's possible that China starts to buy more oil from the United States. Um I think I think like the meeting will
119:45
Speaker A
go much more uh better than people anticipate. That's that's my gut gut gut instinct. I could be wrong, but but that that's my gut instinct. Final one, quick one. You think Trump is going to be able to pull it off in running for a third term? I would bet good money on it. Yes. Thank
120:05
Speaker A
you so much, man. You've been kind with your time. Thank you. That was Jang Suin. Thank you.
120:30
Speaker A
Heat. Heat.
Topics:Jiang Xueqinconsciousnesswealthimmigrant experienceYale Universityself-transformationTechno-Marxarxismattentionpersonal growthEndgame podcast

Frequently Asked Questions

What does Jiang Xueqin mean by 'our true wealth is our consciousness'?

Jiang explains that wealth is not about money but about the capacity to direct and focus our attention, meaning our consciousness is the real source of power and value.

How did Jiang Xueqin manage to get accepted into Yale despite his challenging background?

He repackaged himself as a plausible candidate, joined the soccer team, studied hard, and applied strategically, ultimately receiving a surprising acceptance that changed his life.

What challenges did Jiang face growing up as an immigrant in Toronto?

Jiang grew up in poverty, faced racism, had a violent household, struggled with stuttering, and wore hand-me-down clothes, all of which contributed to a difficult and traumatic childhood.

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