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Episode 306 - Cameron Reilly - The Psychopath Epidemic
27th July 2021 • The Iron Fist and the Velvet Glove • The Iron Fist and the Velvet Glove
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In this episode, I speak with Cam Reilly about psychopaths.

00:00 Welcome to the Podcast: Introducing the Theme and Special Guest

00:39 The Regular Rhythm: Panel Discussions and Special Features

00:59 Diving into 'The Psychopath Epidemic': An Author's Insight

02:10 The Impact of Psychopaths in Power: A Deep Dive

05:18 Exploring Psychopathy: Definitions and Distinctions

05:46 Understanding Sociopaths vs. Psychopaths: Clinical Perspectives

27:14 The Role of Capitalism in Empowering Psychopaths

35:39 The Power of Propaganda in Shaping Public Opinion

47:14 Unpacking the Echoes of McCarthyism Today

48:15 The Influence of Think Tanks and Media Narratives

51:35 Navigating the Maze of Information and Trust

52:54 Seeking Truth in a Sea of Opinions

56:02 The COVID-19 Debate: Experts and Contrarian Views

01:01:03 Addressing Psychopathy in Leadership and Organizations

01:02:31 Exploring Solutions and Ethical Considerations

01:14:53 Podcasting, History, and Finding Reliable Sources

01:23:07 Reflections and Future Directions

Find out more about Cam at https://cameronreilly.com/

Listen to his podcasts at https://thepodcastnetwork.com/

To financially support the Podcast you can make:

We Livestream every Monday night at 7:30 pm Brisbane time. Follow us on Facebook or YouTube. Watch us live and join the discussion in the chat room.

We have a website. www.ironfistvelvetglove.com.au

You can email us. The address is trevor@ironfistvelvetglove.com.au



Transcripts

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Hello, and welcome to your listener.

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This is the iron fist and the velvet glove podcast.

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This is a podcast where we talk about news and politics and sex and religion.

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And on this occasion, I have a special guest who I consider to be somewhat of an

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expert when it comes to sex and religion.

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And he's not too shabby on news and politics as well.

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Cam Riley, welcome aboard.

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I consider myself a bit of an expert on six to Trevor.

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Thanks for asking.

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Well, if boasted about it often enough that yeah, I think we all

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know we've got more to get up to and congratulations on your efforts.

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You got to advertise as you know, my marketing background taught me that.

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Very good.

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So if you're new to this podcast every second week, we have a little panel

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discussion where a group of us sit around, talk about the news and events,

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particularly in relation to Australia.

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And then the wider world.

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And then every second week I've decided to do something special, either a book

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review or an interview or something else.

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And this is that special weekend.

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Cam Riley is the guest this week.

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And cam amongst his many accomplishments is he's an author.

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And he wrote a book called the psychopath epidemic.

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Why the world is so fucked up and what you can do about it

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by the way, language warning.

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Normally we don't drop the F bomb too often in this podcast, but with cam

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on board, keep, keep the kids away until you've had a re listen to it.

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And so cam the psychopathic, bring your seat backs to their fully

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upright position and make sure your seat belts fully fastened.

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That's it.

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If you're.

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If you're watching this live, then make some comments and

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hopefully what you S comments.

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You might more peer in the chat room and they'll start to appear on

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the screen and we might answer some questions or whatever they come along.

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So feel free to make some comments there, and that will impress cam

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with the technology on his podcast.

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So have a go at that.

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So, Kim the psychopath epidemic what's the premise of the book.

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What's, what's the elevator pitch.

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What's it about?

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Oh, I know what you're doing here, Trevor.

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You figure throw a camera in a softball question.

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I can sit back, eh, put my feet up for the next 45 minutes while he just rattles up.

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But I'll I'll take the bite and run with it, nonetheless.

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So the, yeah, the psychopath epidemic, the premise is that the vast majority

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of the problems facing the world today caused by are the result of.

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Psychopaths in position of power and wealth in our major institutions,

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businesses, religions politics, the media, the military, the police education, the

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list goes on, but they're probably the big five or six that obviously direct

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a large percentage of the world's this.

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And I came to this conclusion after many, many years of thinking

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about really, really, if you're drill down to it, what's the real

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problem with what's going on today.

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And I remember I was, I was writing another book.

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And it was thinking about all of these, all of these stories that I've collected

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over the years for my various podcasts about people in positions of authority

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and all of those sorts of institutions, just doing really stupid, bad heinous.

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And thinking why, like, why, like I know humans do that, but why, when you're

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in a position of authority and, and trust, would you allow yourself Wally?

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Why, if you're bill Clinton, would you be getting blow jobs in the oval office?

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Like really why?

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I mean, sure.

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You want to get blow jobs, but there's plenty of other places as the president,

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you could probably do that outside of the actual oval office itself like that.

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The, the risk that you're taking on is insane.

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It's, it's ridiculous.

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Anyway, after I'm reading a number of books on psychopaths, coincidentally and

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thinking about bosses that I'd had and organizations that I'd worked in large

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organizations and small organizations, organizations like Microsoft,

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where I worked for six or seven.

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I came to the realization that when you look at the, the characteristics of

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people who rank highly on the psychopath test, people who exhibit the classic

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psychopath behaviors, and then you look at the people that are running these

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sorts of organizations, there's a very high overlap if you'd have Venn diagram.

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And then I started to think about, well, does it make sense that people who.

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Had these sorts of characteristics could rise to positions of power in management

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and these sorts of organizations.

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And I realized, yes, it does the fact that you that's what you would expect.

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You would expect a psychopath to be able to rise through the ranks because famously

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they're able to think one thing and say another they're the smiling assassins.

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They're the people who learn to exhibit the sorts of behaviors

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and say the sorts of things that they think people want to hear.

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Should we just give a quick and dirty definition for a

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psychopath and a sociopath?

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Yeah.

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Well, it's an interesting, like if you read the medical literature, if you

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read the DSM five, the, the, the medical establishments diagnosis of disorders

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there is, there's really no distinction between sociopaths and psychopaths.

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They all get lumped together in to antisocial personality disorder.

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Generally though, when you read sort of the more mainstream literature,

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there's a little bit of divisiveness around it, but I J I came to the general

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conclusion that most psychiatrists who've worked in this space and a clinical

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psychologists tend to think that the differences people are born a psychopath

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and they're all you're made a sociopath.

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If you experienced.

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Extreme trauma.

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As a young child ran the ages of 4, 5, 6, the classic fictional example

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I always use as Dexter and the decks, the TV series, or his mother brutally

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murdered, and then sat in the blood for hours before he was rescued.

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It fucks with your, your empathy center, your ability to feel empathy and express

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empathy towards others among others.

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Or you're born with that.

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And if you go back through history, you know, there's plenty of evidence.

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It's nothing that would stand up for a clinical psychologist is plenty of

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evidence that psychopaths have always been with us in one shape or form.

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It's just that in years gone by, we call them Kings and generals and Pope

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and you know various other titles rail barracks, railway barracks.

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Yeah, still, it's still just trying to get a quick and dirty definition.

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Would you, would you sign something like a psychopath would be somebody

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with a strong desire for power and, and a disregard for the rights of others?

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Like as the sort of willingness to just walk over and ignore the

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rights of others seems to be the key part of being psychopath.

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Is that, is that really a key part?

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Yeah, but I want to shout out to the people in the chat room,

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Tony and dire straits that were in Sydney for the screening of

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my film, because only you guys.

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Thank you.

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Appreciate that.

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You might've just before COVID that was the last thing ever screened

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in any cinema in Australia before.

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Yes.

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The key characteristics they have an immense an innate sense of . They innately

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believe they are better, smarter and deserve more than the people around them.

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And over time, they quite often a justified in thinking that because they do

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get away with more than the people around them get away with mostly because the

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people around them, I don't try and pull the sort of shit that a psychopath will

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pull, because we have a combination of empathy and guilt, which they don't have.

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And also because psychopaths just have the innate skills to bullshit their

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way through lots of situations where most of us would, would get caught out.

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So they have an innate sense of superiority.

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They have a very high appetite for risk.

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They're willing to take enormous risks predominantly because they are

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convinced they will succeed because they believe they are superior.

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They will get away with stuff.

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And again, the ones that you see as senior leaders of organizations

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typically have been successful, they have taken a lot of risks.

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They have gotten away with it.

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They're, you know, there are psychopaths with a very high IQ who, and quite

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charming who get away with all this stuff.

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And then there are the ones that don't, they burn out very early on, but those

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are the ones that get away with it.

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Tend to have a very high IQ just with our society at the moment.

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Cam, there seems to be very little accountability, at least in politics

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and in business where companies are failing and yet the CEOs move on and

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get a nice job as some other company at a similar or better pay scale or level.

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And the same with our politicians.

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They're there.

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They're right.

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Perhaps for downplaying the risk, because if you're looking at the way

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our society is running at the moment, people seem to just get away with stuff.

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But I don't know.

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I don't feel.

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It was as easy to get away with previously.

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So the risk isn't there.

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One of the things I explore in the book is what are the, what are the

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symptoms of a psychopath culture in an organization or in a country?

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Why, what are the, what are the symptoms when there's been enough psychopathy?

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For a long enough and the conditions are right, that you can bring an entire

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population along with you, or you can, you can erect the necessary foundations in

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sort of a business culture with business expectations that it becomes normalized.

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Psychopathic behaviors become normalized.

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And in fact expected, it's like, when, you know, if you'd say that a so-and-so

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politician is corrupt and people will say, well, that's all politicians are corrupt.

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You know, particularly if it's a member of their own party, it's a member of a party.

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They don't like it.

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They're like, oh yeah, they're corrupt.

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If you particularly talk to Americans, you're talking to American Democrat,

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the Republicans are all evil.

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If you point out corruption in the Democrats, they're like, well,

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every, all politicians are corrupt.

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Come on, least they're not as bad as that guy.

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Right.

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It's the normalization of these sorts of psychopathic behaviors that we've seen

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over decades and decades of capitalist democracies, which I think in particular

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make it easier for psychopaths arrives.

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But before I get distracted by that.

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The other key thing.

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And the thing that all of the medical literature will point to is a lack of

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empathy or very, very low empathy, not necessarily zero empathy, but very,

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very low empathy because most of them.

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If we hurt somebody or a group of people, if we have to, if we have to, you know,

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screw over somebody at work, if so we get the promotion and they done, or if we have

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to fire a thousand people on Christmas Eve, so we get a bonus and they'll get

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laid off for most of us, we could do that necessarily are John dyes straight?

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Is John.

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Hi, John.

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Good on you, John.

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John discovered your podcast through me, so you're welcome and

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never stop paying for my podcast.

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So, you know, you saw on the outs with the name junk.

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I'm kidding.

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Kidding, kidding, John.

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Love you time, John.

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Where was I going with that?

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Oh yes.

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If you do, most of us can do bad things.

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We can cheat on our spouse, lie about our taxes.

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We can fire people.

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We can do all this sorts of stuff, but we feel bad.

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And we you know, we, we lose sleep, we lose weight, we get,

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we, we have, you know, stress.

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We, we, we get sick sometimes when a psychopath does those things, they have

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the best night's sleep of their life.

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They feel like they've got hashtag tiger blood.

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And they're a hashtag winner because they're willing to do what

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the losers are willing to do to get ahead and to get more bear.

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And that's the key thing.

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I think that differentiates the 99% of us from the one to 4% that rank highly

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on the psychopath test, according to most clinical psychologists and

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psychiatrists who work in this field.

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Yeah.

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One of the theories long enough answer to your

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one of your theories.

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Organizations becoming psychopathic.

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You mentioned business religious political, but you talk about

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organizational Darwinism where where, and you can obviously expand on this canvas.

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I'm sure you will, but it talks about the culture is, is maintained because

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if you're not going to fit in with that sort of psychopathic culture,

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you won't even apply for the job.

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You ain't progress through the organization and you'll probably leave.

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So just want to describe how our organizations find it really hard

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to change because the people are sort of weeded out or filtered

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to match up the organism.

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Yeah, this is something that Chomsky and Herman pointed out in

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manufacturing consent back in the early nineties, I think which was

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based on the work of a Brisbane boy.

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But they call it the five filters, the way that organizations filter

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out troublemakers basically.

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But yeah, like if organizations, whether it's religious or corporate or

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political, whatever, obviously the first filter is the the application process.

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Like, they will tell you in the in the job ad what it is or the

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seek ad, what they're looking for.

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And so they're filtering out people who will read that and go,

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well, that's obviously not me.

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Then there's another, there's another filter, which is the interview process

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where obviously they're trying to weed out the people that they don't think of the

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right cultural fit for the organization.

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And if it's a psychopathic culture or a broken culture, they're obviously looking

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for people that will, will fit within that culture and won't make waves, but

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people will sneak through that, you know deliberately or accidentally though,

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they will, or sometimes they'll have certain hiring goals for diversity or

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something and people will get through.

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But then once you're inside of the organization, if you see behaviors going

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on inside of the organization, and I saw this at Microsoft, that your not.

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Comfortable with ethically or morally.

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Well, first of all, you need to know what your ethical and moral framework is.

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And most of us don't because we've never sat down and gone through that exercise.

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And I sort of walk people through how maybe to do that in the book, but most

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of us don't get taught that in life.

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But if you do feel awkward about the something, and you, you don't want

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to go along with a decision or make a decision, you kind of know that if you

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don't somebody else will and they will get the promotion, they will get the

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bonus and their job will be secure.

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So that quite often people will just go along to get along, as they say, or if

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you see somebody else doing something, you have to make this decision.

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Do I speak out about it or not?

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If you speak out about it inside of the organization, the dominant

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culture will usually shut you down in a number of ways either.

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In a very harsh way or in a soft and gentle way, but generally shut you down.

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If you're creating waves, then you have to make the decision.

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Well, do I ju you know, if you see this enough and you just decide, I

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can't be part of this, do you stick around and try and make change?

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Do you make waves inside of the organization, which, you know, there's,

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there's a lot of risks to your, both your, your broader reputation in your industry.

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If you do that, plus obviously your ability to take the job or will get

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promoted inside of the organization.

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Or if you just leave, if you quit, then obviously the culture

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just keeps ticking along.

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They just, you know, fill someone, fill that gap with someone else.

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If you become a whistleblower, if you, if you become a Snowden and

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you try and Snowden the organization or the, you know, the guy who blew,

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blew the whistle on the ATO, or, you know, we have a number of organized,

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a number of examples in this country.

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You know, the organization will come after you and try and destroy your reputation,

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hit you with massive lawsuits that as a, an individual punter, you've got very

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little ability to defend yourself against they will try and crush and destroy.

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And one of the things I pointed out in the book, I think you can tell a lot about.

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How healthy the culture of an organization is by the way they

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deal with whistleblowers and the way they deal with customers.

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Generally speaking businesses that treat customers like shit, probably have a

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fairly psychopathic culture organizations that genuinely care about their customers

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and go out of their way to make their customer's experiences positive,

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probably a sign of a healthy culture.

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And it's the same with the way they treat, treat, treat whistleblowers

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organizations with a healthy culture.

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If somebody goes, leaves the organization and goes and goes into the meeting and

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says, Hey, listen I worked there and they've got some fundamental problems,

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ethical problems, moral problems, et cetera, a healthy organization.

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You would like to think we'd go.

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Wow.

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That I'm really glad that you told us about that.

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We're going to bring in an independent, external investigations

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it team to, to go and look at this and we're going to do an inquiry.

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We would love you to be part of that because you know, the, the,

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the ethics of our organization is really important to us.

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And, you know, as well as the perception of our organization, let's, let's

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deal with this in a wholesome manner to make sure that we get a good

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outcome versus we're going to crush you and destroy you and turn you

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into sand beneath our boots, which is what most organizations tend to do.

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Yeah, so, so a psychopathic organization is quite adept at, at the, at the

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leadership that percolates to the top.

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We've gone through this filtering process to be psychopaths politically in tune

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with the nature of the organization.

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So, cam question for you, the former Soviet union was that

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a psychopathic organization.

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You think?

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Yeah, I think, well, you know that I've spent hundreds of hours talking

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about style and I'm like Porsche.

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I know.

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And so, so my question is if it was a psychopathic organization and

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Gorbachev comes along and basically says, looks around and goes, well, I

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don't like the look and smell of this.

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I think we call it a day and we move on to a different project.

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Have you got an explanation?

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Which in fact he didn't do Gorbachov never intended to shut down the Soviet union.

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That was never his intention.

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Never his plan, but anyway yeah.

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W w let me your first got your first question.

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Yes.

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I think particularly understanding, I think Stalin had a lot of problems he

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had to deal with inside of the USSR when he took over, they were facing some

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massive existential threats, but yes, he does seem to give exhibited classic

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psychopathic behaviors and his attempts to direct the ship in the direction that

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he thought it needed to go in in order to survive after him, the guys that

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came after him probably to lesser extent than Stalin, I think they were trying

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to manage the thing they inherited.

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Of course, when Gorbachev came along and decided to open it.

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So Glasnost and Perestroika were definitely things that go to the

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shelf wanted to do, he didn't want to shut down the Soviet union or

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get rid of communism or anything.

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Like I just, he wanted to make it better.

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He wanted to improve what they were doing a little bit like dong shall ping

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did when Mao died and he took over.

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Yeah.

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Yeah.

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He also sort of pulled back on the sort of authoritarian rule

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of neighboring countries though.

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Is that, is that true?

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Is the theory I'm leading to is that.

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Button I've got to the top, but nobody actually realized that he wasn't actually

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like the rest of them in some ways that he was kind of an aberration and then

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they'd promoted this guy out thinking he was a psychopath, like the rest of them.

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And once he got there was like, hang on a minute.

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That's not quite what we bag into poise a little bit different to what we thought.

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And that was, I don't know.

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I don't think he would have got there if Stalin was still running the joint,

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but we can down over the years, but I think everyone there at the time

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knew that, you know, they were, they were broke as a, as a, as a country.

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They were broke as a philosophy.

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They had, it was riddled with holes by, you know, the, the

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eighties when Gorbachev came in.

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So they were looking, they were looking for change, probably they

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didn't expect him to pull a golf Whitlam and just you know, rewrite

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everything overnight as he did make some massive existential changes to the.

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Hmm.

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So you've painted a picture where we've got at least turning back

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to the west where we've got in our political, our corporate, our religious

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organizations sort of psychopathic controllers in in many cases as an

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explanation of why we're in a mess.

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And these people are not doing what the rest of the

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community would like them to do.

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And the question is why don't the, the masses, the people

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rise up and revolt care.

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What's stopping people from saying, hang on a minute.

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We don't like this.

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We don't appreciate what you're doing.

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And we want you to stop.

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Why, why is there, why, why aren't we up in arms about it?

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Hmm.

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Yeah.

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That's, that's the big question, right?

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So I think there's a couple of answers to that.

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I think part of it is we still don't understand psychopaths.

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You know, I, I think that the majority of people out there today, when they

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think psychopath or sociopath, they think serial killer Ted Bundy, or they

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think Hitler or Starla or POL pot or something like that, dictator, mass

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murderer, or a, you know, lower level mass murder, or like a Ted Bundy.

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This is pre-Trump.

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I wrote the book sort of pre Trump came out late Trump, but he may

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have changed the scales on that.

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People, you know, I, in the book, I talk about the idea of garden variety,

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psychopaths, not your, you know, it's, it's the vast majority of psychopaths

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out there, the ones who do the most damage, aren't the Hitlers or the, the

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starlings or the Ted Bundy's, it's the Cardinals and the CEOs and the prime

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ministers and the people like that who do the vast majority of the damage.

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But we, we, we haven't, you know, the whole idea of psychopaths

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is only seven years old.

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It only really the, the, the early research was being done in the fifties,

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in the, in the U S and it's really only been in the last 20 years that

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it started to make its way into the mainstream lexicon that people think

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about it, but it's still hasn't filtered down where we don't look at it.

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Our manager or our priest or our wife or husband, or our next door

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neighbor or the police chief and say, oh yeah, they're a psychopath.

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You know, we're not familiar with the psychopath checklist.

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We're not, we're not familiar with the behaviors of a psychopath.

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So we w we, we don't, we, we still attract in this medieval view of

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evil oh, so-and-so did that because Hitler, Hitler, you know gas, the

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Jews, because he was evil Stalin allowed for the whole Lama door.

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Homola door.

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If one of the, the, the famine in the Ukraine, because he was evil.

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We, we think in terms of evil or bad apples, we don't think about, and this

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gets back to my earlier book about free.

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We, we don't yet think about human behavior in terms of biochemical events

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happening in the brain that every human action, every thought every action is

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the result of neurochemical events, biological events happening in the brain.

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We don't, we haven't yet mainstreamed normalized a

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scientific view of human behavior.

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We still are wrapped up in this homonculus religious view of a

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soul and a spirit, and even so.

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You know, atheist, secular people who listened to the show, I guarantee

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you, 99% of the people watching this right now, listen to your podcast.

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Still believe they have free will.

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There's absolutely no scientific evidence for free will never has been, never

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will be because it's scientifically probable in Paul's implausible and

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impossible, but people still cling to it even atheists because they just

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haven't adopted a fully scientific view of who they are and how they work.

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And it's the same with psychopathy.

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So we don't think in terms of psychopaths.

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So I want us to think about psychopaths in those terms.

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Like we're always going to have them.

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They're just a fact of life.

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It seems we need to prepare for them.

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We need to manage them.

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And the second part of it is just that bit where you said

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we've always going to have them.

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I think somebody I know once said, yeah, I just accepted.

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I'm not outraged.

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It's a common thought.

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Yeah.

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The, you are in fact the inventor of the right Harris

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soundboard, which I had forgotten.

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I don't get enough credit for that.

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I don't get enough credit for vending podcasting on your podcast

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and you don't get enough credit for inventing the right Harrison.

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I want to get onto, I want to get on to one of your theories.

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No, wait, wait.

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So the other reason we don't rise up is because we've had a

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hundred years of, of propaganda telling us the rising up is bad.

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Yes.

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Every, every revolution in the world, unless it's support.

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By the west is a bad revolution.

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The people should not rise up because rising up is a thing that

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terrorists slash communists do.

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And thirdly, why we don't is because we're fat and happy.

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Most of us in the west, we like, well, yes.

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Okay.

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Psychopaths are running things and climate change and bloody, bloody Blauer,

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coronavirus fuck-ups and vaccine fuck ups and all of that kind of stuff.

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But I've got a big house and a big TV and a couple of cars in the garage.

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And my kids go to a good school and I go on vacation while I used to before

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COVID really who wants to rock the boat when you've got a big middle class?

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No one wants to rock the boat.

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Yeah.

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Yep.

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On, on this sort of area, one of your theories is that capitalism has.

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Enabled psychopaths.

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You said we've always had psychopaths, but there's something about capitalism

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that brings them more power and makes it easier for them to operate.

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I think reading in your book, you mentioned that really in olden days,

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unless you were a prince or a high priest or somebody, there were very few people

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with actual power and most people were scuffling around in the mud planting

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some crops and tending to some cattle.

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And if you are a psychopath, there was a limit to the

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influence that you could have.

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And modern capitalism has, has sort of created a dynamic where psychopaths can

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flourish, where they couldn't previously, and they can do a lot of damage.

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I'm going to read a quote here, dear listener, as I'm reading this, you have

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to imagine who, who wrote this and Came, you'll not only have to answer because you

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know, the answer it goes on for people.

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And it goes on for a bit because I haven't a chance to say anything.

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I'll, I'll take this opportunity to say something and you can have a drink.

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Yeah.

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So private capital tends to become chatted in few Hanes, partly because

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of competition among the capitalists.

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And partly because technological development in the increasing division

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of labor encouraged the formation of larger units of production

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at the expense of smaller ones.

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The result of these developments is an oligarchy of private capital.

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The enormous power of which cannot be effectively checked even by democratically

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organized political society.

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This is true since the members of legislative bodies are selected

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by political parties, largely financed or otherwise influenced

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by private capitalists, who for all practical purposes, separate

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the electric from the legislator.

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The consequence is that the representatives of the people do

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not, in fact, sufficiently protect the interests of the underprivileged

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sections of the population.

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More either under existing conditions, private capitalists, inevitably

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controlled directly or indirectly.

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The main sources of information press radio education is extremely difficult.

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And indeed in most cases, quite impossible for the individual citizen to come

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to objective conclusions and to make intelligent use of his political rights.

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And who do you think said that?

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And cam and his book keeps possibilities, shag Rivera, Fidel Castro, and

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letting me and Lennon Noam Chomsky.

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I would've put Chomsky as a good one for that Julian Assange and

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the answer was none of the above.

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It was in fact Albert Einstein.

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So there you go.

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Ideal listener the sort of increased power of the oligarchy, their control of

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the political process and the difficulty for just the ordinary citizen to.

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To make intelligent use of his political rights summed up by Albert Einstein.

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Good.

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Quite defined cam.

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Yeah.

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There's if you haven't read Einstein's writings on social and philosophical and

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political issues, it's well worth reading.

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He He was very articulate and very passionate about those things, but

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people tend to forget or just don't pay attention to that aspect of Einstein.

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And he was writing that, I think in the fifties you know,

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obviously it's even worse now.

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And so to get back to the reason why I think capitalism has made it

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easier, you articulated it well, it's about social mobility, right?

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So if you go back a couple of hundred years ago, if you were born in a

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village somewhere, whether it was the U S or Europe or wherever and

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you are a psychopath, you, you will one of this one, two, three, 4%.

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There's born a psychopath psychopathic tendencies.

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Yeah.

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Like you could maybe end up being the Tarrant of your little village.

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Maybe if you're in Renaissance, Italy, what it ended up as a mercenary, you

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could have, you know, and there's some instances like Ludovico sports is fine.

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Who made himself the duke of Milan.

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He was a mercenary for hire to various Pope's and leaders of Florence let the

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Medi cheat until he was rich enough.

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And he could go and build a big enough mercenary army and take Milan

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and make himself the duke of Milan.

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But that didn't happen very often.

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You know, it was there, there were instances of that, but really, if you were

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a psychopath, you either got knifed in the back by the people in your village.

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Cause you were just a fucking swearing.

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If I can't swear freely, I can't articulate myself.

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Okay.

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If you're a complete cunt, you get, you get nothing by somebody

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in your village eventually, right.

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That, oh, if you survived, you, you would rise up and you'd be a mini tyrant.

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But it was very difficult to become you know a Baron or a king or, or,

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or a Bishop even, you know, they had a fair amount of wealth and power.

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Then along comes a modern capitalism, particularly American style capitalism.

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It doesn't matter where you're born in America or Australia or the UK,

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or most places of the world today.

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It doesn't matter what little village you're born.

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If you're a psychopath, you can you know, get enough money to get on a bus or

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get on a train and go to the big smoke.

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And then you get to the big smoke and you work your way up.

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You know, you, a Wolf of wall street, it, you start off in the

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mail room and you work your way up.

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You stab people in the back and you climb the ladder.

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Well, there are these organizations that will encourage psychotic

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behavior, psychopathic behavior.

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So in the village where you are sharing resources, to some extent, and you're

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sort of monitoring the commons and whatnot, Th that sort of behavior

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is going to be looked down upon.

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Whereas in, in some of these sort of organizations that have

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been created in capital yeah.

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That sort of behavior suddenly becomes valuable, whereas before

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it wasn't, that's, that's sort of a given ization sort of there.

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Yeah.

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The psychopathic behavior in the west now is encouraged and rewarded.

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As long as you don't go too far or get caught out.

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And that happens, you have the Enrons the guys, and I talk about Enron.

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I got like a whole chapter on Enron in the book.

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These guys were fated by the business media, the business establishment, the

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banking industry, politicians in the U S everyone loved Enron until it turned out.

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It was a complete house of cards and it collapsed.

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But you know, you look at the The, the transcripts of some of the conferences

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between the CFO of Enron and the financial journalists before they collapsed, where

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journalists were asking questions about their financial lives porting, and the

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CFO was just literally abusing them and calling them names on the call, just as

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an arrogant piece of shit that he was like, they were just super, super arrogant

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psychopaths, but that kind of behavior tends to be if you're willing to make the

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hard decision in for the sake of practice.

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Then organizations of all colors will snatch you up and it's left and right.

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It's not just Republicans.

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It's not just the liberal party.

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It's the labor party.

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You know, the plenty of people who worked with Kevin Rudd after he left office,

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the first time came out and said it was a psychopath, complete psychopath.

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It's all about him, right?

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It's it's not the left or right thing because psychopaths

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don't have an ideology.

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They w their only ideology is me.

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And they will look for the gaps, look for the holes where they think they

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can get in where they have a foot in the door and they will get in trouble.

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Work their way up through and, you know, classic Donald Trump supposedly

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was a Democrat 25 years ago.

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Then he just switched, became a Republican because he doesn't

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have an ideology outside of me.

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Right.

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Why w where can I get more wealth and power?

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That's the only thing that psychopaths care about.

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So they're, they're, they're left, right?

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Priests CEOs.

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They come in all flavors old colors but they do tend to be white men

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at the end of the day, the majority of them appear to be white.

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Hmm, cam white man.

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I w I wanna move on to concepts around messaging and propaganda.

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So this is important part of the whole idea, isn't it.

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So just reading a couple of excerpts from your book here as they have to do

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it, the elite, the psychopaths know that if we wanted to, the public could start

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a revolution and cripple the economic system that keeps them on top at any

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time to prevent that we need to be kept ignorant of the relevant facts, overworked

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poor, heavily in debt and distracted.

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So, and all of that tags, systematic brainwashing, and another part

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he's actually, you're quoting Alex Carey in this part and

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Australian social psychology.

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Is he the guy to do with named Tomsky?

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Is that the same guy, right?

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Yeah.

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So KA, Carrie wrote a book and then died very young.

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And he wrote this book in the eighties about 86 on this, and then he died and

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Chomsky and Herman were friends of his and they picked up his work and fleshed

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it out into manufacturing consent.

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And they, they, they give him credit in the foreword of the book as

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being the progenitor of these ideas.

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Yeah.

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There you go.

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So a couple of quotes from this Alex Carey the 20th century has been

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characterized by three developments of great political importance, the

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growth of democracy, the growth of corporate PR and the growth of corporate

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propaganda as a means of protecting corporate power against democracy.

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I like that.

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And then this other one corporate propaganda has two main objectives to

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identify the free enterprise system in popular consciousness with every charity.

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And to identify interventionists governments in strong unions, the

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only agencies capable of checking the complete domination of society by the

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corporations of identifying them with tyranny, oppression, and even subversion

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cam wins like to wax on about propaganda and how that's working in our society for

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a good five minutes while I have a drink.

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Thanks.

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Yeah, no only five.

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Yeah.

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Well, you know, Chomsky's got a great saying where he says when most people

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think I'm paraphrasing, of course, but, but most people think of propaganda.

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They think of.

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You know, a third world dictator star propaganda with the picture of the, the

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fear or the, the dictator up on the wall.

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And, you know, it's, it's very overt.

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It's very heavy handed.

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Whereas propaganda in the west is much more sophisticated and

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Chomsky actually, I think coined the phrase for a proper gender.

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So it doesn't tell you necessarily what to think, but it creates a small window.

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You know what we now call the Overton window in some ways about what's

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acceptable to think about, right?

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So if you read you know, the mainstream media on many issues, you'll see that

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there's a very limited set of parameters for what's acceptable discourse and

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anything outside of that is either scorned or ignored or just given very little.

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Thai very little coverage.

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So, you know, if you talk about, I'll just interrupt about this Overton window.

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So, cause there's a bit here in your book this is a analysis for media matters.

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So cable news channels used variations of the label far left or extreme

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in discussions about Democrats progressors and their policy ideas

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over six times more often than I used variations of the label far, right.

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Or extreme while talking about their conservative counterparts.

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So every four weeks, yes, every four week period, CNN and MSNBC and Fox news

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disgust extremism on the left or right.

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A total of 547 times, which was 86% of the instances frame the

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American political left as extreme.

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So that's part of that sort of proper agenda where.

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When talking about the left, it was the extreme left in 86% of cases.

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And very rarely was it the extreme ride, even though if you look at American policy

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and politics compared to the rest of the world, they were way over on the right.

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And the

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right is right of Gangas Kahn and their left is still on the right of Gangas card.

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Isn't it?

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Bernie Sanders is called the extreme leftover.

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There, here he'd be in the liberal party, you know, he's like, he's like, so, so,

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so mainstream for, you know, most of us you know, he just wants healthcare.

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So, yeah, look, there, there is a limited, like the other example of

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we're gonna use as that communism, when we're talking about, you know, our

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socioeconomic system here in Australia and the mainstream media and you know,

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what's right and what's wrong, there's never any discussion of, of, of socialism

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or communism in the mainstream media just isn't allowed to be a topic of discussion.

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That's just never comes up.

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Well, maybe we should think it.

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No, you can't even can't even have an intelligent conversation about it.

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It's just verboten you not allowed to go there.

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So, yeah, the, the, the propaganda has been very, very heavy and, you know, in

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my cold war podcast series, we've gone back and looked at in the United States.

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What happened in the thirties during, you know, when FDR came in.

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So Roosevelt came in, obviously the new deal even though he was a blue blood

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aristocrat, He realized that there needed to be some fairly fundamental changes

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to the way that the U S economy work, they needed to be a welfare system.

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He comes in a couple of years into the great depression.

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In fact he said to the wall street bankers several times, listen,

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I'm your best friend, because if I don't do this, the guys with the

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pitchforks and the torches are going to do this, like they did in Moscow.

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Right.

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So I am your best, have your first, last best line of defense against

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the great on wash because communism was becoming increasingly popular in

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the U S at the time as it was right around the world during the thirties.

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But the the business leaders.

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We're dead against any sort of changes happening, no government regulation

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no allowances for unions, no wealth sharing, all that kind of stuff.

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And so they figured out eventually it took them a couple of decades.

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It wasn't till the fifties that they really got good at this.

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They started aligning, aligning themselves with evangelical pastors

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and their selling point was listen.

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If Marika goes communist, if the people get what they want and

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it becomes a communist country communists don't like religion.

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So religion goes, so I feel it becomes communist your gone, right?

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Yeah.

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Even though before, you know, before that Simon actually Roosevelt

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himself was a member of a Christian Church that was pro socialist.

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It was a socialist religious organization that was arguing for more welfare and

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distribution of the wealth and, you know, you know, curbing the power of

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businesses and that kind of things.

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Anyway.

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So they started aligning themselves with the priests and the priests that

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got on board with this, not all priests did initially, but the priests that

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got onboard got a shit ton of money from business leaders in the U S they

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could use that money to build massive churches with, you know, big organs and

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big choirs and big car parks and all of the business elite, all the bosses.

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First guy who did it was a guy in Los Angeles, all of the elite of Los Angeles.

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Guy's church now, their employees were like, well, the boss is going to that

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church, so I should go to their church.

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So all of the, the church attendance left all these little churches that didn't get

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on board with the pro capitalist program and went to the big capitalist churches.

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So they, they reinforced in the minds of Americans that America means Christianity.

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Christianity means America.

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You know, Jesus, you know, his last dying wish was to create America.

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And capitalism is the last thing he said on the cross.

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Didn't make it to the Bible, but it was really, you know, and you know,

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Bless America and wealthy wealth became associated with godliness.

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So God was favoring you, if you were wealthy, it was a song it's clarity

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doctrine, all that kind of stuff.

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Yeah.

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And if you're not doing well, well, God's got a plan for you, you know, that's okay.

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You know, there's a plan for you, which goes right back to St.

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Paul actually, or perhaps you hadn't been godly enough and there must've

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been something you'd been doing.

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Yes.

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And the moments are a big part of this too.

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You know, the Mormons, you know, their whole shtick is where the

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richest best church in America, because God loves us the most.

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Right.

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We're the most American religion because God loves us the most.

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What would you know about Mormons?

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Mary I've been married to two ex moments in my life.

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I know.

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Well, so anyway yeah, so the propaganda lining a certain kind of a worldview

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has been very heavily invested in, in the United States and because

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the United States after world war two, took over global culture,

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particularly in the west, it's trickled down into all of our countries.

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Now in Australia, you know, Menzies tried to ban the communist party.

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I mean, we had just as much problem in this country with our, or.

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Thought you weren't allowed to be a communist in this country.

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He had two cracks at outlawing it, the Supreme court threw it out both

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times or whatever we call it here.

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The high court threw it out both times, but it eventually got sort of wound down.

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But he, you know, he had he spent decades trying to get rid of any

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sign of communism in this country.

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Well, there's, there's a reincarnation of that McCarthyism with the current

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China, anti China propaganda is just where I started with it started

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with Russian gut Russia gate.

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Yes.

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You know, Putin, you know, Trump was Putin's bitch and all of, you

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know, I, you know, I did many, many shows on that, on the bullshit filter

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over the years that Trump was in power, like this incredible media.

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Storm about, you know, Russia gate backed up by now, nothing nada Zinn.

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They had nothing.

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And yet even, even Mueller report eventually came out and said, I can

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find no evidence of collusion, but try telling that to Democrats today, like

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18 months later after the Mueller report came out, they still believe that Trump

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colluded with Putin to win the 2016 St.

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Legend electric.

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There's just no getting through because there was so oh much propaganda

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about that from the mainstream media and the Democrats over there.

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And now, yes.

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Now all of a sudden it's pivoted to China.

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China's the great evil China's going to come and eat your babies.

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China's I saw a statistic which was about.

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They, they surveyed countries about their fear of whether

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they would be invited by China.

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And Australia's fear of being invaded by China was higher than Taiwan.

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Now our fear of China was higher than Taiwan's fear of China invaded by Taiwan.

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It's fear of being invaded by by China.

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Yeah.

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Speaking Taiwan is part of China.

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I just want to say that.

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Yes.

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I think one would be to just point out that he never gifted

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Taiwan to the Kuomintang.

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They stole it and he just had other things to do at the time.

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But he's coming for the ghost of Mayo is coming for it.

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Thank you, Ken.

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Yeah, it's irrational because we've, we've just had yeah, for most.

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So thank you.

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Restream stream.

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I do mean, so it's originally.

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Yeah, look, it's you know, we, we've just been under this barrage

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of, of anti-Chinese media coverage in the last couple of years.

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It's astounding.

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And if you've studied McCarthyism and you've studied the red scare,

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like I've been doing for the last few years for the cold war show, it's just

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completely obvious what's going on.

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It's it's just a replay of that in the most blatant form.

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And people just fall for it again, as they always do, because.

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We're kept busy and poor and broke, who has tie out apart from

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us jobless, unemployed podcast.

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We don't have anything else to do.

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Then read books, you know, and embarrassingly, as my listeners know,

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I get all of my knowledge from books.

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It, you know, no one else gets the luxury to do that.

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They're too busy work and real jobs to put food on the table and a big house and

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a big TV and a couple of vacations a year and a couple of nice cars in the driveway.

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Right?

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Yeah.

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One of the podcast is generally I know you're the exception, but most

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of us don't have those things either.

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Don't mention that pizza oven.

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One of the sort of key parts in that cam is are these think tanks, particularly

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when it comes to China and defense issues.

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And when you're looking at.

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If somebody comes out and, and beat up what a threat China is to our

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sovereignty and, and our trade routes, you know, our trade routes with

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China, ironically, invariably, these people are part of some think tank.

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They, they, you know, that it doesn't matter if it's ABC or channel seven

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or Murdoch press or whatever, they'll trotting out these experts who will be,

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you know, with some think tank and you, people are under the impression that these

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think tanks are neutral entities, that they are actually sitting there thinking.

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And they're all of course just funded by Interestingly, the

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defense force contractors.

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And of course, they're going to come out with these lines.

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So there's just not enough recognition of the insidious role of these think tanks

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in a lot of this stuff, because they get reported in the media that you'd kind of

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like to trust like the ABC or, or groups.

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Yeah.

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Yeah, I've got a whole chapter or two in the book about lobby groups,

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front groups experts it's bad here.

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It's worse than the U S you know, you will see all of the media channels were

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tried out their former, you know, their military experts that are former Pentagon

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or CIA, or if it's local domestic issues, FBI people, they're on, you know, they're,

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they're part of the establishment.

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They're on the payroll.

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The thing that the, the front groups, which are the think tanks usually funded

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by a whole variety of nefarious, sources that again, unless you're a podcast

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too, and you have the ability to go and actually go, well, who the fuck is this?

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And you look it up and you spend an hour drilling down into it, which

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your average punter isn't going to do.

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You don't realize that these people are on the payroll.

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Yes, but the media, oh, we've got 30 seconds.

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We need to feel quick.

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Who do we have?

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And, you know, obviously these organizations are always putting their

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people forwards as available experts to be talking heads when you need one

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on TV and they're going to try it out, the establishments, a narrative on cue.

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And no one's going to question it because we don't even have any

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journalists anymore in this country.

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I see a Rupert's laying off more people this week it's, you know, it's been

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trimmed to the bone journalists have written their own epitaph over the last

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30 years as they've let this happen.

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They've become basically PR hacks for big corporations and not question

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it while you know what they were playing, playing violin on the

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Titanic while it was going down.

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And all of a sudden there.

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Below the water line, they're going, oh, this isn't right.

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What's going on.

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What's happening to my job.

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All of a sudden they give a shit when it's their jobs that are affected.

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But you know, for the last 20 years, while they've let the mainstream media

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just obliterate any sense of genuine, independent journalism and keeping the

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bastards honest, they just look the other way, took the Patriot and shut

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up because of the psychopathic cultures inside of our media organizations

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to see, I did see what I did there.

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That was a Larry David.

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I brought it for loop back psychopathic.

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Yep.

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And the way you're sort of tiny, the voice dropped off right at the end,

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indicating the end of your spiel.

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And for me to come in, it was, you're a real prize.

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So cam a part of all this then is where do we get our information from that we can

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perhaps trust more than other information.

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And I see in your book that you gave a little link to your own website,

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Cameron riley.com/news-sources.

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Forward slash, and they've got a list there of some independent

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investigative journalists who you kind of trust to some extent.

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So the sorts of groups you've got their investigative journalism, you've got

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international consortium of investigative journalists, Seymour Hersh, Matt

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Taibbi, strategic culture foundation dances with bays Alan McClain lab.

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So I recognize some of those names.

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U S news, you've got Noam Chomsky, Chris hedges, Dimmi DOR Australian.

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You've got Caitlin Johnston, middle east, Robert Fisk, sadly deceased a

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couple of Reddit areas in podcasts.

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You've listed background briefing within masters, useful idiots

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with Metta Amy, moderate rebels.

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There's a glaring omission in the podcast list.

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Cam.

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I think I've mentioned this before I've checked the bank account Trev.

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I didn't see the deposit.

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So there's a, there's a limit to, you know, my ethics

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and independent journalism.

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Now I will, I will, I will I can see the reason you have me on

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now was just to, to fix that up.

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That's all become clear.

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Yeah, look, I think, you know, I bang on a lot.

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Yeah.

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In the bullshit filter podcast about epistemology and heuristics, you know,

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we and I'm gearing up to do another show, big, long show on current state of COVID

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conspiracy theories in a couple of weeks.

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But you know, we, we can't all be experts on everything.

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Little, you know, I can't even be an expert on one thing.

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Let alone everything.

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So we, we need to have some kind of philosophy for where we're

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going to get our information from.

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And I think it starts with, you know kind of layman's epistemology.

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Like, how do we know what's true for us?

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What, where do I get truth?

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How do I think truth is derived?

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Where does truth come from?

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How do I know?

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What's true.

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And so for me, when it comes to looking at contemporary news issues you know,

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I'm trying to go back to the people that are qualified experts in their domain.

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If so, if it's, we're talking about COVID it's epidemiologists or, or people that

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represent the mainstream consensus view for, you know, an act of discipline, they

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actually know what they're talking about.

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Then there can be a lot of people in that sense, a lot of people with the

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training and the, the, the qualifications.

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So then it comes down to my heuristics, like in terms of my

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rule of thumb, who do I turn to for this particular subject matter?

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And why do I turn to that person or that group?

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So for me, it would have to be that they have a track record in, in, you

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know, being honest, having a high level of integrity you know Cohen,

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their views coinciding with what seems to be the mainstream scientific

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view or the view of the best thinkers in this space, as opposed to here.

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Cause there's a fringe view on everything.

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So everyone can find an expert these days, you have to try and figure out who do

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I trust and why do I trust that person?

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So if you come to me, if I, if I give you.

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Point of view on a subject and you say, well, where did you get it from?

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I'll tell you what my source is.

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And then if you give me an opposing view, I'll say, well, you know, and

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I often do this when I get people on to debate me on their podcasts

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and they go, well, what's your song.

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And if you can't give me a quick one, A credible source for where

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you're getting your data or your analysis of data from then the

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conversation's over to meaningless.

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If you don't have a credible source.

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And if you can't tell me why you trust that source and why you think

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that source is credible, I'm not going to waste my time talking to

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you because you're a flake, right?

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Yeah.

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I don't give a shit what your opinion is.

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If you can't back it up with data or analysis of data from a credible source.

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And tell me why that source is credible.

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I'm not interested, right?

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You're just another decade with an opinion.

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So it's important that we think about these sorts of things and we compile

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a list of sources and, you know, I encourage people to check out my

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list, share your lists with me and tell me why you like your sources.

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And let's come up with a list of sources that we think are worth paying attention.

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Did you find if this one you're doing on COVID did you find with COVID it was a

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little bit strange or disappointing or inexplainable to some of the people who

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on their face had good qualifications as epidemiologists who were coming out

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with some quite crazy theories that seemed to be quite contrary to the

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general community of fellow experts.

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Like I just sort of noticed myself in investigating these that you

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would see this name, say something, maybe it was that the great

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Barrington declaration or whatever.

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And I think one or two of the, the authors of that on the face of it

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seem to have, you know, a career as an epidemiologist, and then they've

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come out with these statements and you think, well, That's that's odd.

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I can, you know, I get it when a YouTuber with no experience in epidemiology, who's

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a self-described problem-solver has a million views and says something and

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you say, well, okay, you don't have any expertise, but I just found with COVID.

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Did you find that at all in your research that you had some genuine experts in you

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scratched your head as to, as to why they had flipped compared to the rest of them?

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Well, so then you need to ask the question why what's going on there.

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You need to have some sort of an answer to that question.

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If you have people that are on paper, qualified experts in their profession.

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And, you know, with that document, the last time I looked at it, which

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was a while back, but you know, a good percentage of the people who signed

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the document had, you know, were not practicing active epidemiologists.

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They were geologists expressing an opinion on COVID and that kind of stuff.

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But you know, the people that are eminently qualified, you have

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to ask yourself, well, why, why do they have an opposing view?

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And like people, you know, and I'm the first person to say that, you

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know, science progresses through once fringe, voices that then work

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their way into the mainstream.

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So there's nothing inherently wrong with fringe contrarian voices.

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That's how science works.

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We all understand.

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Hopefully those of us that pay attention, understand that that's how science works.

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But the way that science works is that those fringe contrarian voices need

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to make their case successfully to the consensus mainstream of scientists before

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the rest of us should accept that as being the best current version of the truth.

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The fact that a fringe person says it as true doesn't

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necessarily mean that it's wrong.

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But it also doesn't necessarily mean that it's true.

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So how do you tell what is most likely to be true?

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It's when you have the consensus.

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So yes, you'll get these documents where there will be a handful, Joe, you

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know, from the total global number of actively practicing epidemiologists,

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the ones that are signing documents like that is the vast minority of them.

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So yeah, there's still a fringe, voice and science at the end of the day where

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the whack job conspiracy theorists, or not like this is built around consensus.

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Like my film, I keep telling people, I don't care if you don't

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like what I said about how the Bible was written in my film.

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And I don't care if you've got some guy with a PhD in new Testament

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studies who disagrees with it.

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The view that we expressed in the film was the mainstream view of new Testament,

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PhD level, new Testament scholars.

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That's not necessarily meaning that.

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It's the mainstream view of the consensus.

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I don't give a fuck if you've got a fringe voice that says they're wrong.

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Congratulations.

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But that doesn't matter.

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It doesn't matter what a guy says.

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It's the same with COVID sites, right?

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Well, you've got to catch phrases.

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Is it QE, CUI bono, QE bono.

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What's what's the phrase you use?

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What's the Latin, come on, help me out.

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As the advocate, as Diablo saying, I need help with my CUI bono.

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Yeah.

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CUI bono.

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It's from Cicero used it, but Cicero got it from somewhere else.

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But I mean, to who benefits when he was, when he was working as a lawyer,

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he would often ask the question who benefits from this situation.

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Yes.

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Yeah.

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So I know when I'm looking at articles about these things, the first thing I do,

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you know, if we were going to do something on COVID or whatever topic we're looking

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at is for even reading the article, I would say, well, where's it coming from?

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What's the publisher.

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And then secondly, who is this journalist?

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Who's writing this who's this person, what's their story.

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And then I would begin actually reading the article if the headline has,

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has got me in with some clickbait or something, but and trying to work out.

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Yes.

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It's taking more podcasts you're taking.

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Yeah.

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You can take the time to think about these things.

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Yes.

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But a Joe blow.

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No, he's going to read the headline if that, and move on, you know,

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listen to Alan Jones and move on.

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Yeah.

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Now just finishing up with your book cam, cause I know you're a busy man

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and you've got things to get to.

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So I want to just so with the psychopaths and the problems they're

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causing and the infiltration into our powerful organizations, and it's very

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difficult for us to do anything about it because we're subjected to propaganda.

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So it's hard for the average Joe to even know what's going on.

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It's and as I was reading the book, I w you know, you're painting a grim

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picture and I kept thinking to myself, gee, I can't wait for the ending

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where there's a neat little package of, of a solution here to, but that

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wraps it all up and goes to today.

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Here's all we have to do to fix things.

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And unfortunately, there really wasn't one care.

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Yes, there was, it took a lot of time to write that last chapter, Trevor.

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Yeah, well, correct me if I'm wrong, but this is what I got

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from it, which was what can we do?

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Question mark.

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It would be basically.

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Getting our shit together.

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So we've got time to be informed by reliable sources so that we

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can work out whether we're being lied to or bullshitted too.

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It was kind of, did you read the whole chapter?

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I think you just, did you get some, did you get the velvet

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glove to read this for you?

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From Cairns or wherever the fuck did the top man do this one?

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It's like, it's got highlights all through it.

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No, I looked at the last chapter.

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What do we do about it?

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Yeah, the superversion is a lineup, all the psychopaths and shoot them.

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But you know, the sec the, the, the easier version is, yeah, look,

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there's, there's a couple of things.

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Number one, I think we all need to do our own analysis on our

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own ethics, morals, and values.

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We need to understand what we're willing to participate in and what.

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Willing to participate in, because if you aren't clear on that, it's very easy to

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do, go along with the flow and be part of the problem, not part of the solution.

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We also do need to think carefully.

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We about the sort of stuff that we put in our brain and the news

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sources that we pay attention to and why we pay attention to them.

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And, you know, as I posted on Facebook today, I think you know, the podcast

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that you listened to is very important.

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And you know what the world really is lacking.

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I think at the moment, more podcasts by celebrities, where they

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interview other celebrities about how great it is being a celebrity.

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I think that I don't think there's enough of those out there right now.

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I think this one we saw that we celebrities dire straights.

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No, I have not done an audio version of the book because not allowed

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to, because I signed a deal with my publisher, where they have the rights

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to produce the audio book and not me.

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And they sold that on to someone else who hasn't done it

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because of COVID and whatever.

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So there you go.

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I can't even do it if I wanted to.

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I'm legally not allowed to do an audio book of my own book, even

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though I'm a podcaster and I talk for a living you should seen.

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Yeah, I should have.

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Yeah, well, I signed it.

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I signed the contract, you know, what are you, what are you going to do?

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But the, the, the, the main and all of this that I took a lot of time to think

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about it for apparently pointlessly.

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When writing the book is that inside of our organizations, we need to figure

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out who the psychopaths are, and we need to ring fence the psychopaths.

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Now being psychopaths isn't necessarily a bad thing.

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Know, I think psychopaths have qualities.

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You know, you could argue that Steve jobs was a psychopath and I know

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not everybody is a fan of Steve jobs, but the flip side is I am.

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I love my iPad.

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I love my iPhone.

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I love my AirPods.

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I love my Mac book and I have Steve jobs to thank for all of those things.

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Now Steve also did some really shitty stuff in his lifetime.

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If you've read Walter Isaacson's biography on him or seen many of the films that

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have come out or whatever, you've also got the us military to think as well.

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Like there's that book about?

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So many of the inventions fanned in the iPhone.

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Out of public institutions.

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There was that book.

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That was my fucking book.

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I talk about that in my book that all of these inventions get

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funded by public money and then ended up in private Peyton's in,

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up in private hands and private.

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Well, anyway, fuck me.

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You didn't really read the book.

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Did you?

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I was thinking of that Mariana lady.

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She wrote a book a bit.

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The whole thing was about that, so yeah.

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Okay.

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Mariana, trench lady never heard of it.

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So anyway, yeah, Chomsky's been talking about that for, for decades.

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So we need to understand who the, so, so I want everybody easy for me to say, cause

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I didn't have a job, but everyone that has a job, whether you're in a business

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or politics or religion or whatever, Creative movement inside of the organized.

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Don't do it by yourself.

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Cause you'll get knifed, create a movement, get 20 people, 30

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people, 50 people give them my book, buy 50 copies of my book with

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corporate funds and handed out.

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Create a, create a psychopath committee.

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You don't have to call it that, but create a committee in your organization

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to try and get, or particularly management to sit psychopath tests.

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Everyone have a certain level inside of an organization should

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have to sit a psychopath test.

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So we know who the psychopaths are.

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Now I'm a bit skeptical about soccer pass tests.

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It's going to get that everyone will well, psychopaths will just lie.

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No, they won't lie on a psychopath test usually unless they really think

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something is hinged on this because.

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They don't give a, they don't give a fuck.

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What you think about who they are.

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They're proud of who they are.

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They're a winner and you're a loser.

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And then I give a shit what your little says they are because they're

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a winner and they're in control and they're in power and they're going

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to win regardless of what your little form says, they're going to win.

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That's what they think because they don't care.

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Secondly, they're proud of it, thirdly you know, that's, it,

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there's really only the two things they they're proud of who they are.

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There are the, you know, if they think they might lose their job, which they

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probably don't, if they're a senior manager in an organization, we need

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to, we need to figure out who they are.

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And ideally this should be, we've done, you know, during the hiring

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process, but obviously it's too late and all these instances yeah.

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We need to figure out and then we need to ring, fence them

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there, buy, ring, fence them.

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I just mean it could be as simple as that.

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If you have a senior manager who ranked highly on the psychopath

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test, you have a committee of people who are not psychopaths.

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We know this because they did the psychopath test who get to evaluate

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the decisions that the manager is making against a, an ethical framework.

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That's all.

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So they can continue to make decisions and continue to have power.

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We're just trying to avoid them, making decisions that are psychopathic.

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Let them make all the good decisions in the world.

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Just stop them from making so an extra layer of management over

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their decision-making to filter out the really bad stuff they might.

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Yeah.

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There's like a regulatory committee, a governance committee that just makes

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sure that they're not doing heinous shit.

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It's just too hard to get rid of these people.

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Cause I would have thought the answer was let's all get together and,

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and try and get rid of this person.

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No that's cause you're you know, church of Satan guy, you think satanic?

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Yeah, no.

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As I said, I don't necessarily think that would be a good thing.

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I think psychopaths particularly have qualities.

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Well have particular qualities.

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I mean, that, that could be beneficial.

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You know, if I go back and I look at Julius Caesar Alexander, or Napoleon

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or Stalin, or, or, or, you know, you name it jobs gates, I can rarely see,

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or somebody early in the common section bomber, you know, I've worked for Bama.

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Yeah, Baba definitely you know, these guys have strengths that we want

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to, you know, it's Atlas shrugged, it's iron ran Atlas shrugged, right?

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These guys have strengths that society might need to drag

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as forwards to make progress.

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Maybe it was only Steve jobs that could come out with the iPhone and the, I,

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you know, the, the, the, eh, the iPod where this, how beautiful is that?

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And like a 2004 model iPad.

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Whatever it doesn't work sadly, but I had kind of does have a charge that

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maybe he just can't, he can't get a charger like that anymore either anyway.

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But we just wanna, we want to enable them to make the good stuff, to stop them from

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making bad decisions into reply, to dive straight to said, I talk about Chomsky.

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Like he's the Messiah?

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No, he's just the world's leading intellectual and has been, you know,

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since I interviewed him in 2005 on gay world, he, I think the day or earlier,

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he'd been a call by the economist, the world's leading intellectual.

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And then I had to interview him the next day.

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So that wasn't stressful.

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But you know, I think Chomsky is a very, very intelligent

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guy who spent his entire life.

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Thinking about two things the way Americans America's political system works

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predominantly and you know, we're, you know, our foundations of speech come from.

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Can you think of a good example of a psychopath being dealt with well in an

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organization sort of either curtailed and reigned in, or can you, is there any

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public well-known example of that at all?

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Yeah.

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Well, I'll go back to Steve jobs.

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So, you know, you go back to the late eighties when Steve was kicked

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out of apple by the board, because he was, they thought a danger to

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the business that he co-founded.

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They removed him from the organization.

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And then the organization struggled for the next, whatever, 13 years 11 years,

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I think then he came back and he was a very different guy when he came back,

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he a lot more time and a lot, a lot of self-reflection I think possibly still a

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psychopath to work for difficult guy to work for, but he seems to have got it.

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Right.

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You know, I, I watched a clip of a, of him today, actually on YouTube or

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something from one of his early Mac worlds or keynotes, you know, after

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he came back and somebody got up in the audience and was criticizing some

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decisions that he made about a lot of the products he was getting rid of.

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And he said, You know, one of the things that I think makes great businesses great

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is that they are focused on customers.

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First.

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They think about how can we make customers' lives better.

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And then they go do that.

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As opposed to sitting around with a bunch of engineers saying, what kind of

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technology can we build then building it and then trying to figure out how

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to sell it to people, which is what apple has been doing for the last

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10 years and what we're going to do.

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From now on is we're going to put the customer first for the center of

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everything that we do now go into an apple store today and tell them that your

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AirPods have stopped charging properly, or that your iPhone batteries got a

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problem and see how long it takes them to replace it and give you a brand new pair.

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And tell me that, that message didn't make its way into the DNA of the organization.

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Right.

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He's been dead for 10 years and that is still.

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Very obviously at the center of their business culture.

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I mean, I can't tell you how many times I've still got an iPhone seven because

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every time I try and take it back to apple to get a new one, they just give

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me a new one to go, oh, it's this one?

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I'm like, oh shit.

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I was hoping you would give me just take this spot.

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It's fine.

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Don't worry.

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So yeah.

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Look, I think there was an example you know what Lee, the wizard

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says, Julie Caesar, I think Julius Caesar wasn't a psychopath.

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It was Brutus and Cassius who assassinated.

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He moved the psychopaths in that particular instance.

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But don't get me started on that.

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I can't think of many other examples.

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I mean, there's plenty of examples of the ones like somebody mentioned before.

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Elizabeth fan OSCE or whatever her name was from the blood startup

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that got shot down in flames.

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There's lots of examples of psychopaths burning out and failing, but in terms

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of curbing their worst behaviors and enabling to do good, I'm not exactly.

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I'm not exactly sure.

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I have any gray.

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I didn't come up with any for the book.

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No.

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And if you, and if you can't get rid of a psychopath here in

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your boss as a psychopath, and you're stuck there, just move on.

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If you can't get rid of him or if there were not going to be any overseeing of,

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of the decisions, then get away from them.

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Would that be finding another job?

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If you can just stop beating your head against a brick wall or they're

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just too dangerous to hang around?

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Well, you know, that's what happened to me in Microsoft.

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I resigned because my boss was a psychopath and I tried all

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of the legitimate internal.

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Mechanisms for dealing with that and just got nowhere.

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So I ended up getting a big, bad industrial relations lawyer to

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come and relieve me of the art, my obligations to the organization.

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But you know, when you do that, you just leaving the problem there.

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Like, if you can.

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Do something about it.

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I strongly urge people that use again.

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I said before, it's easy for me because I am my own boss.

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And I'm the only psychopath that I have to worry about on a day-to-day basis was Ray.

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But me and Fox, like surely don't get me started.

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That's a, that's a future problem.

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And you know, by elder boys, she'll one of them is a narcissist.

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I'm not sure he's a psychopath, but definitely a narcissist.

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Okay.

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So we'll wind it up.

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Can can we get to say, well, that's what I was going to say.

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Let's, let's divide the next five or 10 minutes to plugs because half

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the audience in the chat room, but X bullshit filter, sort of people who

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have come across and I've now joined me.

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So this is my, to sort of send them back in your direction as well.

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So say for the people who don't know you can, if, well, let's start with podcasts,

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you've got a number of history podcasts, and you've got the bullshit filter.

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And so if they go to the podcast network.com.

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And I will see a list there and go ahead, Cameron raleigh.com, but yeah,

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podcasts never for the, all the podcast.

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So we do a show, a regular show on ancient Rome.

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We started with Julie Caesar up to Nero at the moment.

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They're very deep dive stuff.

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We did we, we were doing it.

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We did a series on Alexander, the great, which went for 150 episodes or something.

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We're doing a very long series on the cold war.

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We're currently in the middle of the Korean war on that very

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deep, deep dive, sort of a series.

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We do a series on the Renaissance.

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We're currently episode 16 on Leonardo da Vinci, but that's hundreds of episodes.

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It we're into the Renaissance.

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The bullshit filter where I just talk about whatever's on my mind in any

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given month well, actually Sean had, Joel says, psychopath committee sounds

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like McCarthyism or witch hunting 2.2.

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Well, actually it is.

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But yeah, we, we need to, this is the, if I'm right, this is the great

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threat to civilization psychopath.

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So we, again, but I'm not saying that were blackballing them, like McCarthy

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tried to do, I want to get them fired.

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As I keep saying, they have good points, what sort of qualities we want to retain

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the positive qualities, just limit the, the, their ability to do harm really.

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And so then yeah, they're the podcast most obviously to QA V right?

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My investing podcast with Tony cornerstone, which we do every, every

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week where we teach people how to invest.

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Warren buffet basically.

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Yeah.

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And then I've got the film that came out and died quickly just prior to COVID

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we had a solid screening in middle.

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The Soledad screening in Sydney, but only half the people turned

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up because Sydney was half in lockdown on the night it happened.

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And then the Brisbane screening, which I know you were coming to didn't happen

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because the cinemas shut down the day that the screening was to be held at

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the barracks in March of last year.

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So you can, it's marketing the Messiah.

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You can see it, you can find it on YouTube.

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You can find it on Amazon prime.

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You can find it on the website, marketing the messiah.com.

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But I went out and I interviewed 12 experts on early Christianity.

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Most of them have a PhD in new Testament studies or biblical studies or ancient

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history or something like that.

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And I was really just trying to get them to help articulate the

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mainstream consensus view on how Christianity got started.

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Right.

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Who was there, who did it?

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What was the progression of events?

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That went from Jesus through to the new Testament.

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Being written basically sort of kept it with the writing of the gospels.

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Didn't go right through to, you know, the, you know Constantine and,

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and, Theodosius and all of those sorts of things, which I have done

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in detail in my Renaissance series.

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Because you can't understand the Renaissance without

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understanding the dark ages.

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And you can't, this is the Renaissance series that started in Yvette 180.

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Is that right?

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270 CA yeah.

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Yeah.

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With the persecution of Diocletian you can't understand the dark ages

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without understanding the rise of Christianity, et cetera, et cetera.

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So yeah, but the film is a, is a comedic like a slightly humorous, depending on

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who you ask, if you go to the reviews on Amazon prime, half the audience,

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give it five stars and think it's.

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The other half are Christians and give it one star and say it gets boring

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and terrible and factually incorrect.

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And I'm a complete tool.

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So there's nothing like being divisive, but it's it's, it was true.

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I tried to do a fair, balanced, nice feel marketing the Messiah.

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Sean.

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There's a poster behind me.

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And if you can see that the screen has been like that's the no.

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Yeah, yeah.

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I'll put a link in the shine nights.

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Poster.

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Yeah.

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Marketing the Messiah.

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Yeah.

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It's yeah.

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I tried to do I tried to be fair and, and nice.

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I tried not to be too offensive or nasty or mean so half the

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scholars in the film are Christians.

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Half of them are probably atheists.

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I, I think, I mean, I didn't really ask people, but I

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think they were half and half.

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I tried to make it half and half and they're all, there's no theologians.

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There's no.

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Rabid atheists.

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It's all.

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Well, 11 out of the 12 scholars are PhD level scholars, and

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then there's David Fitzgerald.

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Who's written a bunch of books on early Christianity and I liked Dave and I

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wanted him on to sort of you know, be my mouthpiece really in the thing,

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because originally when I shot it, I didn't think I would be on camera, much

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thought it would just be the scholars.

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But then in the editing room, it was obvious that somebody

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needed to string it together.

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And there's some, you know amusing, slightly offensive animations

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in there to helping tell the story, south Parky style stuff.

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So, yeah, that's the film.

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I'm probably quite, I'm quite proud of how it turned out.

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We should do a Brisbane screening at some point cam.

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Why not.

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Yeah.

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I mean, it's too hard to fucking do anything in COVID, right?

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Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.

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It might, my luck I'll organize it.

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It'll we'll go into lockdown the day it happens again.

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So yeah, when COVID is Hmm.

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I'll try it then.

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So of all those that came listed one of my favorites was in the cold

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war podcast where you were speaking about how men loved that stuff.

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So that was good.

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So, and we did a, did a really big, deep dive on the Vietnam war and

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Hoshi men and, well, we haven't really gotten to the Vietnam war yet.

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We haven't really got up to the American involvement, but we did the

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early stages of him trying to get rid of the French and the Japanese

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and then the French again, then.

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Yeah.

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Yeah.

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So yeah, the guy you described seemed in the end, quite an honorable guy

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and, and sort of, not really the psychopath that people might've thought.

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If you hear the name team, you know, he must've been a psychopath.

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And in fact, he was just, he was, he was Jesus man.

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He was really Jesus.

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He was like this nice.

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I mean, I say, no, I was gonna say nice old guy, but he literally spent his

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entire life from the age of 19 through to when he died in his late sixties,

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early seventies as a, a freedom fighter trying to free Vietnam from colonial

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oppression, there was dedicated, he was poor for the vast majority

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of it living in little mud hearts.

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I just watched platoon all of the stones platoon, if you haven't seen that since

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listening to my series on Occi men, it's worth going back and looking at

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it with those that viewpoint, you know These Vietnamese, just trying to kick.

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And yet another wave of colonial invaders out of their country

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led by Jose and his team.

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So, Hm.

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So there's my tip.

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Dear listener, get onto the bullshit filter if you're not sure amongst

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all those, which, which to support go to the cold war podcast and

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head to the one about hygiene.

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That was good.

Speaker:

So it's free to really well.

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What we're doing now is are all our archive episodes

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up until the current year.

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So all of the archive, episodes of Renaissance bullshit and cold war free.

Speaker:

It's only the current year of episodes, like 20, 21 episodes that are under

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the paywall with the Caesar show.

Speaker:

It's the reverse, the, all of the old episodes are under the paywall

Speaker:

and the current stuff is free.

Speaker:

I don't know why I'm just testing different economic formats models.

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Very good.

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Any to land, to investors, the QAV one.

Speaker:

So, all right, cam.

Speaker:

Well, I really appreciate having you come on and make life easy for me for

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a week where I can just let you, you gotta, you gotta return the favor.

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We ain't going to come on my show and talk about Leonardo

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da Vinci for a couple of hours.

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You could probably do the COVID one.

Speaker:

If you want help on that, I've been battling COVID

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conspiracy theories for awhile.

Speaker:

I'm sort of up to speed on a fair bit of that.

Speaker:

So yeah, he's going away.

Speaker:

Ray's going on yet?

Speaker:

Another vacation.

Speaker:

So right week after, next is going to be my COVID deep dive week.

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And when does Ray go away?

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Week after next.

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Yeah.

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He's away for a week or 10 days or something.

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So that's what I'm doing while he's away.

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Okay.

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Well, sign me up.

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There we go for that one.

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Good.

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Very good.

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Thank you.

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Dear listeners in the chat room, you've been magnificent for some reason, it

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didn't play on your Facebook page cam.

Speaker:

We're going to investigate why just the technology didn't work.

Speaker:

But anyway, we'll explain and Joe we'll work something out and alright.

Speaker:

I pay him my condolences for Peter to, I only met him once

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when we had lunch together and my kind of guy, I was a very fun.

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Yeah, that was really for tutors because did listen to my friend, Peter

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had a love of, of the Bible in terms of it's as a historical document, he

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loved talking about the letters of some poll as to whether that proved

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the existence of the historical Jesus.

Speaker:

And I was having either a coffee or a lunch with Peter every week.

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And in the back of my mind, I thought, gee, it'd be good

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to get paint with cam Monday.

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And I was driving to pick up paint.

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And at that moment you rang and said, what are we doing?

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You know, you want to have a cup of coffee?

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And I said, great, I'll put the three of them together.

Speaker:

And we went to a coffee shop and the two of you just going hammer

Speaker:

and tongs over chapter and verse literally of the Bible and all.

Speaker:

And and it was really good.

Speaker:

Pete enjoyed it.

Speaker:

I did, it was a really good conversation and one of the highlights for me.

Speaker:

So it was good.

Speaker:

It was great.

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Yeah.

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It's lovely.

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All right.

Speaker:

Enough reminiscing, dear listener, talk to you next week with the panel.

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We'll be back then.

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Thanks, cam.

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Talk to you later.

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Bye.

Speaker:

Okay.

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