The Men Who Destroyed The Church Part 2
Revived ThoughtsMay 28, 202601:28:3681.12 MB

The Men Who Destroyed The Church Part 2

Continuing from part two listen as we look at the wrap up of those who set out to destroy the church. Baby Factories, Snow Becomes Black, and the men destroying it today.

Thank you for listening to this series! I hope you enjoy it and we may possibly lead to a future series on this exact subject.



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00:00 --> 00:03 [SPEAKER_00]: Revived bots is a production of Revived Studios.
00:20 --> 00:23 [SPEAKER_00]: This is Troy, and you're listening to five thoughts.
00:24 --> 00:27 [SPEAKER_00]: And doing this part two, I hope you enjoyed.
00:27 --> 00:29 [SPEAKER_00]: I get, I'm recording this all together.
00:29 --> 00:36 [SPEAKER_00]: So I don't actually know what your response was to the first episode, but I'm walking through the philosophies, the ideas, the thinking that ended the church.
00:36 --> 00:42 [SPEAKER_00]: I don't even like to use the word philosophy, because it has such a negative immediate reaction where people get bored and they don't want to listen.
00:43 --> 00:45 [SPEAKER_00]: Um, we're on part two of that.
00:45 --> 00:52 [SPEAKER_00]: So if you enjoyed the first part, this is the kind of wrap up part where we kind of, we kind of take it all and put it together over time.
00:52 --> 00:57 [SPEAKER_00]: So several different thinkers I needed to bring us to before we kind of officially do this.
00:58 --> 01:02 [SPEAKER_00]: These notes come from a group of lessons I give to my students at the end of every year.
01:03 --> 01:06 [SPEAKER_00]: And I find that many of the students is very helpful for them.
01:06 --> 01:16 [SPEAKER_00]: I think it really helps them to seek their world around them more clearly and understand like, hey, the thinking and things that I hear out there are coming from something.
01:16 --> 01:20 [SPEAKER_00]: I'm going to open this episode with a poem.
01:21 --> 01:24 [SPEAKER_00]: And I just funny because I just spent like the last episode talking about how dangerous poems are.
01:25 --> 01:28 [SPEAKER_00]: But I think that this poem was good for a couple of reasons.
01:28 --> 01:35 [SPEAKER_00]: A, poems are, you know, as we mentioned in the, in the last episode, poetry is powerful.
01:35 --> 01:36 [SPEAKER_00]: It can, it can kind of reach us.
01:37 --> 01:42 [SPEAKER_00]: Art can reach us in ways that regular just talking, maybe can't story can as well.
01:43 --> 01:49 [SPEAKER_00]: And, but also, as if I'm going to talk about poems and stuff, I think even my favorite poem would be helpful.
01:50 --> 01:53 [SPEAKER_00]: And this poem was written during this time period we're talking about right now.
01:54 --> 01:56 [SPEAKER_00]: And I think it's actually fascinating in so many ways.
01:58 --> 02:00 [SPEAKER_00]: It's a poem by Rudyard Kipling.
02:00 --> 02:02 [SPEAKER_00]: I heard a person say it one time.
02:03 --> 02:10 [SPEAKER_00]: on the radio and I became just, I floored me and I want to share that with you because very related to what we're talking about here.
02:10 --> 02:16 [SPEAKER_00]: It's called the Gods of the Copybookheading by Roger Kippling, saying I wrote the Jungle Book, you wrote this one as well.
02:17 --> 02:27 [SPEAKER_00]: And now I'm going to read this poem and there's going to be lines and things in there and this I read this poem, my students and they know man, this sticks in their head, but also because in the whole point
02:31 --> 02:35 [SPEAKER_00]: So I'm kind of showing you, maybe, hopefully this sticks with you, like it's stuck with me.
02:35 --> 02:37 [SPEAKER_00]: Maybe it won't, maybe it's other poems and things that will stick with you, I don't know.
02:38 --> 02:42 [SPEAKER_00]: But there's going to be words we use throughout this poem that you remember.
02:42 --> 02:43 [SPEAKER_00]: What does that mean?
02:43 --> 02:44 [SPEAKER_00]: Don't focus on what it means.
02:45 --> 02:50 [SPEAKER_00]: The whole point of poetry, especially this kind of poem, these older poems, and this time period is not so much, what does it mean?
02:50 --> 02:51 [SPEAKER_00]: But what does it mean?
02:51 --> 02:53 [SPEAKER_00]: Can you feel what is it kind of creating in your mind?
02:54 --> 02:57 [SPEAKER_00]: So don't get focused on like, wait, I didn't understand that exact phrasing.
02:57 --> 02:58 [SPEAKER_00]: It's not about the phrasing.
02:58 --> 03:00 [SPEAKER_00]: It's about what the message overall is.
03:01 --> 03:04 [SPEAKER_00]: In this poem, there are two different gods that are talked about.
03:04 --> 03:20 [SPEAKER_00]: And the goddess of the copybook headings are, in the back in the old Britishy days, they would have, if you were learning to write, they would have little truths at the top of a piece of paper and they would say like, water is wet and stick to the devil, you know, and you know, God is love.
03:20 --> 03:28 [SPEAKER_00]: Things like that, those are called copybook headings and you would write those down as how you practiced your penmanship became a good writer as you would write those phrases down over and over.
03:28 --> 03:29 [SPEAKER_00]: And they would be little truths.
03:29 --> 03:33 [SPEAKER_00]: little things everyone knew, right, and that was the copybook headings.
03:34 --> 03:41 [SPEAKER_00]: So in this poem, the gods of the copybook headings, the gods of truth, and they're pinned up against another god, your regards, called the gods of the marketplace.
03:42 --> 03:43 [SPEAKER_00]: So I'll read this poem to you.
03:43 --> 03:44 [SPEAKER_00]: I hope you enjoy it.
03:45 --> 03:48 [SPEAKER_00]: Break down a little bit of it afterwards, and then we'll get back to our philosophers.
03:48 --> 03:49 [SPEAKER_00]: But I think you'll see it.
03:49 --> 03:50 [SPEAKER_00]: It is relevant.
03:52 --> 04:07 [SPEAKER_00]: As I've passed through my incarnations and every age and race, I make my proper prostrations to the gods of the marketplace, peering through reverent fingers, I wash them flourish and fall, and the gods of the copybook headings I noticed out last them all.
04:08 --> 04:18 [SPEAKER_00]: We were living in trees when they met us, they showed us each in turn that water could certainly wet us, as fire would certainly burn, but we found them lacking an uplift, vision, and breadth of mind.
04:18 --> 04:22 [SPEAKER_00]: So we left them to teach the gorillas while we followed the March of mankind.
04:23 --> 04:25 [SPEAKER_00]: We moved as a spirit-listed.
04:25 --> 04:36 [SPEAKER_00]: They never altered their pace, being neither cloud nor wind-borne, like the gods of the marketplace, but they always caught up with their progress, and presently word would come.
04:36 --> 04:40 [SPEAKER_00]: A tribe had been wiped off its ice field, or the lights had gone out in Rome.
04:41 --> 04:45 [SPEAKER_00]: with the hopes that our world is built on, they were utterly out of touch.
04:45 --> 04:56 [SPEAKER_00]: They denied that the moon was stillton, they denied she was even Dutch, they denied that wishes were horses, they denied that a pig had wings, so we worshiped the gods of the market who promised these beautiful things.
04:56 --> 05:00 [SPEAKER_00]: When the Cambrian measures were forming, they promised perpetual peace.
05:00 --> 05:04 [SPEAKER_00]: They swore if we'd gave them our weapons that the worst of the tribe would cease.
05:04 --> 05:08 [SPEAKER_00]: But when we disarmed, they sold us and delivered us bound to our foe.
05:08 --> 05:12 [SPEAKER_00]: And the gods of the copybook had it and said, stick to the devil you know.
05:13 --> 05:20 [SPEAKER_00]: On the first Feminine standstones, we were promised the fuller life, which started by loving our neighbor, and ended by loving his wife.
05:21 --> 05:29 [SPEAKER_00]: Tell our women had no more children, and the men had lost reason in faith, and the gods of the copybookheading said the wages of sin is death.
05:30 --> 05:37 [SPEAKER_00]: In the carboniferous epoch, we were promised abundance for all by robbing selected Peter to pay for collective Paul.
05:38 --> 05:44 [SPEAKER_00]: But though we had plenty of money, there was nothing our money could buy, and the gods of the copybookheading said, if you don't work, you die.
05:45 --> 05:56 [SPEAKER_00]: Then the gods of the market tumbled and their smooth toned wizards with Drew, and the hearts of the menus were humbled and began to believe it was true that all of us not gold that glitters and two and two make four.
05:56 --> 06:00 [SPEAKER_00]: And the gods of the copybook had he installed up to explain it once more.
06:01 --> 06:04 [SPEAKER_00]: As it will be in the future, it was at the birth of man.
06:04 --> 06:11 [SPEAKER_00]: There are only four things certain, since social progress began, that the dog returns to his vomit, and the so returns to her mire.
06:12 --> 06:15 [SPEAKER_00]: And the burnt, fools, bandaged finger goes wobbling back to the fire.
06:16 --> 06:27 [SPEAKER_00]: And then after this is accomplished, and the brave new world begins, when all men are paid for existing, and no man must pay for his sins, as surely as water will bet us, as surely as fire will burn.
06:27 --> 06:31 [SPEAKER_00]: The gods of the copy bookheadings with terror and slaughter return.
06:34 --> 06:36 [SPEAKER_00]: So in this poem, you see, he's talking about the same things we are.
06:36 --> 06:37 [SPEAKER_00]: There's a promise of future.
06:38 --> 06:46 [SPEAKER_00]: The gods of the marketplace, the smooth tongue wizards, he's genius guys with their great fancy words, like carboniferous and Cambrian and feminine.
06:46 --> 06:48 [SPEAKER_00]: They're so smart, they're so intelligent.
06:48 --> 06:49 [SPEAKER_00]: They promise you a great future.
06:50 --> 06:52 [SPEAKER_00]: And you chase after them every time.
06:53 --> 06:54 [SPEAKER_00]: But eventually, it falls apart.
06:55 --> 06:59 [SPEAKER_00]: And the gods of the copybook had in the God of Truth catches up with you.
06:59 --> 07:02 [SPEAKER_00]: and reminds you of what is actually true.
07:02 --> 07:06 [SPEAKER_00]: You get these great promises from the God of the copybook heading at the marketplace.
07:06 --> 07:09 [SPEAKER_00]: Oh, these great things, pigs have wings.
07:09 --> 07:12 [SPEAKER_00]: They can fly, wishes, or horses, and every time you fall for it.
07:13 --> 07:14 [SPEAKER_00]: they get you.
07:14 --> 07:17 [SPEAKER_00]: Oh, we gave up our weapons and we'd be happy and then we were destroyed.
07:17 --> 07:18 [SPEAKER_00]: Stick to the devil you know.
07:19 --> 07:23 [SPEAKER_00]: Oh, the on the Femony and Stan sounds the life of women.
07:23 --> 07:25 [SPEAKER_00]: We were promised to fuller life.
07:25 --> 07:27 [SPEAKER_00]: It starts with Levit and our neighbor and it ends with loving this wife.
07:27 --> 07:28 [SPEAKER_00]: Free glove, right?
07:28 --> 07:34 [SPEAKER_00]: Everyone will be so happy until women have no more children and men have lost for you than reason and faith.
07:35 --> 07:36 [SPEAKER_00]: He wrote this poem,
07:44 --> 07:57 [SPEAKER_00]: that if we start choosing and chasing after free love, we give up on marriage, love your neighbor, and really do whatever you want lovingly, before the sexual revolution, before the age of the hippies.
07:58 --> 08:03 [SPEAKER_00]: He said, women will stop having children and men will lose reason and faith.
08:05 --> 08:34 [SPEAKER_00]: uh... i don't know if you've heard about the demographic crisis right but he nailed it didn't he and we live in an age where young people women don't have children anymore statistically they've done polls and women today young women today want to have children less than young men how did we get like this read your kiple and he's almost prophetic with this poem there's another one we were promised a bunch for all all we had to do was rob Peter and pay Paul and then we had lots of money but nothing our money could buy
08:35 --> 08:38 [SPEAKER_00]: as we live in a world of inflation, right, taxation.
08:38 --> 08:40 [SPEAKER_00]: We're gonna take money from the rich in the poor.
08:40 --> 08:43 [SPEAKER_00]: Is there any, I mean, this is written in 1925.
08:43 --> 08:45 [SPEAKER_00]: The Soviet Union has only been going for a couple years.
08:46 --> 08:47 [SPEAKER_00]: And yet, is there any better explanation?
08:48 --> 08:52 [SPEAKER_00]: Is there a more poetical, beautiful way to put communism into it?
08:52 --> 08:53 [SPEAKER_00]: And here's let's keep going, right?
08:54 --> 08:55 [SPEAKER_00]: Here's another one.
08:55 --> 08:58 [SPEAKER_00]: When all men are paid for existing and no man must pay for his sins.
09:00 --> 09:01 [SPEAKER_00]: Okay, what's gonna happen?
09:01 --> 09:05 [SPEAKER_00]: And one of the biggest talks about AI Elon Musk has these big tweets.
09:05 --> 09:08 [SPEAKER_00]: So soon we'll pay people to not work because AI will do all the work.
09:10 --> 09:19 [SPEAKER_00]: I have a feeling, and Elon Musk is very intelligent, I'm not trying to hate on him or anything, but I have a feeling that the poet here in Redgerde Kippling is going to end up being correct.
09:19 --> 09:26 [SPEAKER_00]: The God of Truth is going to return, and that we can't just, we can't run truth.
09:26 --> 09:34 [SPEAKER_00]: No matter how much social progress begins, no matter how much we're so, Nietzsche marks in the poets, tell us happiness, happiness, we're just almost there.
09:35 --> 09:36 [SPEAKER_00]: Social progress is over there.
09:36 --> 09:40 [SPEAKER_00]: but the gods of the cut marketplace, these promises always fail in the end.
09:41 --> 10:00 [SPEAKER_00]: And we always, in the pain for these dreams, these philosophies, how many people in just, just because of Rousseau and Nietzsche and Marx, how many people have died, attempting to create the utopias these guys believed in, from Rousseau and the French Revolution, to Nietzsche and the Nazis, to Marx and the Communists,
10:01 --> 10:09 [SPEAKER_00]: And that doesn't even include the many, many people who have become depressed, suicide, ruin their lives, because these men, that they are not smart at God.
10:10 --> 10:12 [SPEAKER_00]: We've also been talking about them as a demolition team.
10:13 --> 10:16 [SPEAKER_00]: And they believed that they could blow up the church.
10:16 --> 10:18 [SPEAKER_00]: They could just, in their succeeding in many ways.
10:19 --> 10:26 [SPEAKER_00]: As a permeate society with their ideas, their beliefs and their twisted ways of viewing the world, the church becomes weaker.
10:27 --> 10:32 [SPEAKER_00]: Every one of these philosophers, we see church attendance and belief in the church in the place of the church shrink a little bit.
10:33 --> 10:35 [SPEAKER_00]: Even as their philosophies become undone,
10:37 --> 10:41 [SPEAKER_00]: And I'm actually staring right now, as we in my studio, we have here in Indonesia.
10:41 --> 10:45 [SPEAKER_00]: We have these super cool yeast, these paper, old newspapers.
10:45 --> 10:47 [SPEAKER_00]: I'm staring at one right now, it says the Atlantic Journal.
10:48 --> 10:50 [SPEAKER_00]: We only have two of them, but they're both from World War II.
10:50 --> 10:53 [SPEAKER_00]: This one says, not seize bloodily stalled, and drive on Paris.
10:53 --> 10:58 [SPEAKER_00]: This is an actual newspaper that somebody had and gave to us, and I think it's just amazing that we have it.
10:59 --> 11:03 [SPEAKER_00]: There's another one here, US troops in Manila, clean out snipers, just cool things to have.
11:03 --> 11:04 [SPEAKER_00]: Where were things?
11:04 --> 11:05 [SPEAKER_00]: I wouldn't have ever thought I would have found here,
11:08 --> 11:16 [SPEAKER_00]: And, you know, these horrible ideas failed these people and yet the people continued pushing the next batch.
11:16 --> 11:18 [SPEAKER_00]: Navy Utopia is just around the next corner.
11:20 --> 11:21 [SPEAKER_00]: The next guy to look at is Charles Darwin.
11:22 --> 11:31 [SPEAKER_00]: And I'm using right now, I'm using the scaffold from modern, the rising fall, the modern self, or the trying, rising triumph of the modern self, that was by Carl Truman, very good.
11:32 --> 11:43 [SPEAKER_00]: We're almost out of his scaffold, actually, we'll eventually break with him, because he was more focused on how did humans come to identify themselves in their sexual identity and things like that, where I'm more focused on how the church came down.
11:43 --> 11:45 [SPEAKER_00]: So we kind of follow the same line for a while, but then we diverge.
11:47 --> 11:49 [SPEAKER_00]: great book by the way, I do I really do recommend it if you can read it.
11:49 --> 11:56 [SPEAKER_00]: I think it should be read yet it had an easier version of Laman's version called Brave New World or something strange in the world.
11:56 --> 11:57 [SPEAKER_00]: I think it's what's called I've read that one.
11:58 --> 11:59 [SPEAKER_00]: I mean, it's got a few new books that I'm hoping to hit this summer.
12:00 --> 12:04 [SPEAKER_00]: Very good books and in terms of just understanding the chronology
12:05 --> 12:11 [SPEAKER_00]: of philosophy and how this world that we live in is main intention like I said I was talking with somebody today.
12:11 --> 12:24 [SPEAKER_00]: I said, you know, I think he's inspired a new podcast, horrible humans, we're going to just go through these guys one by one and tackle them because I was just thinking, you know, I don't just own the Christians or attacking philosophy, we're not really recognizing these things.
12:24 --> 12:30 [SPEAKER_00]: We recognize worldly values and the Christians preach against it often pretty well and people are pretty cynical.
12:31 --> 12:33 [SPEAKER_00]: When I opposed to the other day, I said, the Christians don't philosophy more.
12:33 --> 12:35 [SPEAKER_00]: So many people were like, Christians don't even know the Bible anymore.
12:35 --> 12:36 [SPEAKER_00]: You want us to know philosophy.
12:36 --> 12:37 [SPEAKER_00]: I'm like, why?
12:37 --> 12:38 [SPEAKER_00]: There are a lot of good Christians living.
12:39 --> 12:40 [SPEAKER_00]: Maybe I'm just, maybe I'm optimistic.
12:41 --> 12:44 [SPEAKER_00]: But I think we have some good Christians out there living and good job living for the Lord.
12:44 --> 12:45 [SPEAKER_00]: But I think we could be helped.
12:46 --> 12:48 [SPEAKER_00]: But I understand you were a lot of the bad ideas from the world come from.
12:49 --> 12:50 [SPEAKER_00]: It is a secret weapon, by the way.
12:50 --> 12:55 [SPEAKER_00]: In terms of arguments and discussions with people I have found that when somebody's talking to you, oh, you know, that's from or so.
12:57 --> 12:59 [SPEAKER_00]: They're their face blanks out, they don't even know.
12:59 --> 13:02 [SPEAKER_00]: You said, oh, that argument, that's a Thomas Pain argument.
13:02 --> 13:03 [SPEAKER_00]: Do you want to know what was answered at that in his time?
13:04 --> 13:04 [SPEAKER_00]: Do you want to know what?
13:05 --> 13:09 [SPEAKER_00]: Let's from Karl Marx, the tearing down the old replacing with the new, did you know why they thought that?
13:09 --> 13:11 [SPEAKER_00]: Because they wanted to create a permanent revolution where everyone was unstable.
13:13 --> 13:18 [SPEAKER_00]: Yes, you can, if you say it wrong way, you come off weird, of course, but nobody knows where their ideas come from.
13:19 --> 13:26 [SPEAKER_00]: We think of CS Lewis just said, the screw tape letters are, I think it wasn't a screw tape letters, where he said, you know, back in the day people would have one philosophy they led by.
13:26 --> 13:28 [SPEAKER_00]: Now, everyone has like 12, they don't even know where they come from.
13:28 --> 13:32 [SPEAKER_00]: They just constantly have contradicting thoughts roaming around in their head.
13:33 --> 13:33 [SPEAKER_00]: It's true.
13:35 --> 13:44 [SPEAKER_00]: If you can recognize those, you can tell them, it's a great, cool, it's a great, powerful weapon in your arsenal as you defend the faith, as you talk to people, as you reach into their lives.
13:44 --> 13:46 [SPEAKER_00]: I think naming that's coming from or so.
13:46 --> 13:51 [SPEAKER_00]: And it's very helpful for young Christians, young people, like they look at a world and they see chaos.
13:51 --> 13:55 [SPEAKER_00]: They see disorder, they wanna know, how do I understand this world I live in?
13:56 --> 14:03 [SPEAKER_00]: And when you can show them these thinkers and where these ideas come from, it is such a great comfort to them to go, oh, you know what, actually, that's where that came from.
14:04 --> 14:06 [SPEAKER_00]: Oh, I thought be yourself was just a good idea.
14:06 --> 14:09 [SPEAKER_00]: I didn't realize it came from a guy, ready to go.
14:09 --> 14:10 [SPEAKER_00]: Oh, are you saying you shouldn't be yourself?
14:10 --> 14:15 [SPEAKER_00]: No, of course, be, you know, yeah, yes, you're going, I don't want you to pretend to be somebody else.
14:15 --> 14:16 [SPEAKER_00]: And I mean, should, let me take Christ.
14:18 --> 14:20 [SPEAKER_00]: But don't look for yourself for all the answers.
14:20 --> 14:20 [SPEAKER_00]: OK.
14:22 --> 14:26 [SPEAKER_00]: Charles Darwin was mentioned a next up in Truman's book, and I think we should look at that.
14:26 --> 14:31 [SPEAKER_00]: No, Charles Darwin, he didn't actually spend much time talking about it, and I think it's because you don't really need that much to say.
14:32 --> 14:37 [SPEAKER_00]: Darwin takes away a humanity starting point where your god is, makes you and puts you in the garden.
14:38 --> 14:39 [SPEAKER_00]: Now, I'm monkey, makes you.
14:40 --> 14:44 [SPEAKER_00]: And Darwin, it took everything away from humanity that made it special.
14:44 --> 14:50 [SPEAKER_00]: And you could say, I'm an evolutionist, I'm a theistic evolutionist, or I'm a, you know, I believe God created the world in seven
14:52 --> 14:52 [SPEAKER_00]: I understand.
14:53 --> 14:54 [SPEAKER_00]: There are some people who think that.
14:54 --> 14:54 [SPEAKER_00]: I personally do not.
14:56 --> 15:00 [SPEAKER_00]: You may be surprised to find that the guy who runs church history podcast for fun.
15:01 --> 15:07 [SPEAKER_00]: takes a more traditional view at a shocking, I know, that we would be more traditional here.
15:07 --> 15:08 [SPEAKER_00]: That's surprising, isn't it?
15:08 --> 15:13 [SPEAKER_00]: But no, I believe God created the world in six days, rest on the seventh.
15:13 --> 15:19 [SPEAKER_00]: If you are of that theistic evolution is irrespective and that's what you're going to, you know, science, et cetera, whatever.
15:19 --> 15:24 [SPEAKER_00]: All I would recommend to you is say, okay, but can you agree that the philosophy idea behind it?
15:24 --> 15:29 [SPEAKER_00]: Even if Darwin didn't know he created this idea that our biology is propelling us to constantly change
15:30 --> 15:35 [SPEAKER_00]: The old versions of us are bad, the subspecies, the lower species are bad.
15:36 --> 15:39 [SPEAKER_00]: Survival the fittest demands that we'd be the fittest, right?
15:39 --> 15:44 [SPEAKER_00]: Just like the permanent revolution put in place by the Marxist, biology itself is a permanent revolution.
15:44 --> 15:45 [SPEAKER_00]: You're always evolving forward.
15:45 --> 15:48 [SPEAKER_00]: You're always becoming new, new is better, gold is bad.
15:49 --> 16:14 [SPEAKER_00]: The caveman done stupid walking around with a club or a dummy right new man is stripping further along we become smarter and better than our agent for assessors were literally fitter than them that's how we survived new is better old is bad evolution dissolves us down to just DNA spedters we just are here to spread our DNA that's it
16:15 --> 16:18 [SPEAKER_00]: You're only purpose is to spread and you're not complete.
16:18 --> 16:19 [SPEAKER_00]: You're never going to be good.
16:21 --> 16:24 [SPEAKER_00]: Because I think on use the evolution to create me.
16:24 --> 16:24 [SPEAKER_00]: I don't know.
16:24 --> 16:28 [SPEAKER_00]: Because by definition, shouldn't we be evolving to the next thing?
16:28 --> 16:30 [SPEAKER_00]: Aren't you then by definition not good?
16:30 --> 16:31 [SPEAKER_00]: God looked at creation and said it's good.
16:32 --> 16:33 [SPEAKER_00]: But evolution would say you're incomplete.
16:33 --> 16:35 [SPEAKER_00]: You're going to evolve into something else eventually.
16:35 --> 16:36 [SPEAKER_00]: Won't that be better?
16:38 --> 16:38 [SPEAKER_00]: It's a mess.
16:38 --> 16:39 [SPEAKER_00]: Look at my hair discuss.
16:39 --> 16:40 [SPEAKER_00]: I'm not evolution.
16:40 --> 16:40 [SPEAKER_00]: Okay.
16:40 --> 16:42 [SPEAKER_00]: There are podcasts and people who do creationism.
16:42 --> 16:43 [SPEAKER_00]: We're not here to defend that.
16:44 --> 16:44 [SPEAKER_00]: Okay.
16:44 --> 16:45 [SPEAKER_00]: Can we look at the philosophy?
16:46 --> 16:49 [SPEAKER_00]: I mean, look at the idea, you're an evolutionary strength.
16:49 --> 16:51 [SPEAKER_00]: Now, of course, let's not even get into eugenics.
16:51 --> 16:54 [SPEAKER_00]: We have episodes on eugenics here on Revive Stunts.
16:54 --> 16:58 [SPEAKER_00]: I did an interview with Joel Barry.
16:58 --> 17:23 [SPEAKER_00]: former managing editor of the Babylon B recently stepped down from his position to go work with Jeremy Boring and he did a whole episode with us on eugenics and it was just funny to me because you wouldn't think that like you think Babylon B funny guy it was funny very funny but on that episode it was on my eugenics it was quite depressing very cool guy though and we also talked about eugenics a lot in our episode on Woodrow Wilson and if you want a guy who really embodies
17:24 --> 17:29 [SPEAKER_00]: All of this stuff we've been talking about, Bruce O and Nietzsche and Andrew Woodrow Wilson is your guy.
17:30 --> 17:31 [SPEAKER_00]: He claimed to be a Christian president.
17:31 --> 17:32 [SPEAKER_00]: We took a two episodes to dive in.
17:32 --> 17:34 [SPEAKER_00]: Was he a Christian president and why wasn't he?
17:35 --> 17:35 [SPEAKER_00]: He should have been.
17:35 --> 17:39 [SPEAKER_00]: He was, you know, understood Princeton.
17:39 --> 17:43 [SPEAKER_00]: He was right there alongside Jay Gresham, Mason, and B.E.
17:43 --> 17:45 [SPEAKER_00]: Warfield, and yet none of those guys condemned him.
17:45 --> 18:01 [SPEAKER_00]: some of them were good friends of his to the end and yet you know the eugenics movement he pushed was terrible well eugenics was this idea that certain races were better than others coming from Nietzsche as well but Darwin Darwin pushed this idea that you know the survival of the fittest the best races must win.
18:02 --> 18:05 [SPEAKER_00]: In fact the name of the book is actually survival of the fittest races.
18:08 --> 18:17 [SPEAKER_00]: He very clearly tied, instead of going into all of that, I'm actually just going to tell a story from Alan Gardner's episode on Leviathan's or Mars' missionaries who also didn't have an episode on Alan Gardner.
18:17 --> 18:18 [SPEAKER_00]: He was a missionary.
18:18 --> 18:20 [SPEAKER_00]: He went to the bottom of South America.
18:20 --> 18:25 [SPEAKER_00]: He failed in Africa in other places, but he specifically went to Tierra del Fuego because of Charles Darwin.
18:26 --> 18:28 [SPEAKER_00]: Charles Darwin looked at the people living in Tierra del Fuego.
18:28 --> 18:31 [SPEAKER_00]: He wrote about them in his book and he said, these are not humans.
18:32 --> 18:34 [SPEAKER_00]: These are clearly a lesser species.
18:34 --> 18:36 [SPEAKER_00]: They run one of the coldest places in Earth.
18:36 --> 18:36 [SPEAKER_00]: They hardly wear clothes.
18:36 --> 18:39 [SPEAKER_00]: They cover themselves in oil and sat next to fires all day to keep warm.
18:40 --> 18:42 [SPEAKER_00]: And he said that these are these are not humans.
18:42 --> 18:43 [SPEAKER_00]: They're done.
18:43 --> 18:44 [SPEAKER_00]: You cannot educate them.
18:44 --> 18:46 [SPEAKER_00]: They're not the same species as us.
18:48 --> 18:54 [SPEAKER_00]: Alan Gardner wrote out on a boat with a crew when he arrived there as boat had all kinds of problems.
18:55 --> 18:57 [SPEAKER_00]: The crew didn't bring their fishing stuff.
18:57 --> 18:58 [SPEAKER_00]: It got left on the boat somehow.
18:58 --> 18:59 [SPEAKER_00]: I don't even know how that happens.
19:00 --> 19:02 [SPEAKER_00]: The boat those supposed to bring supplies didn't manage to come.
19:03 --> 19:05 [SPEAKER_00]: The boat they were on had no food on it.
19:05 --> 19:06 [SPEAKER_00]: You couldn't grow food on it.
19:06 --> 19:07 [SPEAKER_00]: Island they were on side of the net food.
19:07 --> 19:08 [SPEAKER_00]: You couldn't grow food on it.
19:09 --> 19:35 [SPEAKER_00]: The natives were far more hostile, those non-humans wouldn't let them, you know, that Darwin called them, wouldn't let them off the island, and they died, and then Alan Gardner wrote his diary, he was the last one to live, he was like, I don't regret what I did, but yeah, we're going to die out here, and they started to death, and they were found because of huge sensation in Britain, and Britain started a missionary organization to go to that
19:37 --> 19:50 [SPEAKER_00]: and took decades, but they brought people to Christ, churches were built, schools were built, and that area that Darwin once said could not be human, people were civilized.
19:50 --> 19:51 [SPEAKER_00]: And then you can say, oh, it's civilization good.
19:51 --> 19:52 [SPEAKER_00]: And I want to get into that.
19:53 --> 19:54 [SPEAKER_00]: Yes, but my schools are good.
19:54 --> 19:55 [SPEAKER_00]: Churches are good.
19:55 --> 19:56 [SPEAKER_00]: Hospitals are good.
19:56 --> 19:57 [SPEAKER_00]: Doctors are good.
19:57 --> 20:00 [SPEAKER_00]: But, yeah, they were civilized.
20:01 --> 20:02 [SPEAKER_00]: He didn't even believe they were humans.
20:02 --> 20:07 [SPEAKER_00]: And Darwin himself actually became a donor to that mission movement.
20:07 --> 20:16 [SPEAKER_00]: He actually ended up donating money to that movement because of how embarrassing he was.
20:16 --> 20:18 [SPEAKER_00]: He's not a Christian, he didn't believe in any of that stuff.
20:18 --> 20:19 [SPEAKER_00]: He was not a fan of gardener.
20:19 --> 20:20 [SPEAKER_00]: He didn't want to see missionaries thrive.
20:20 --> 20:28 [SPEAKER_00]: But he was so shocked by how what they were able to do that he had admitted defeat by becoming one of their missionaries.
20:29 --> 20:31 [SPEAKER_00]: Darwin believe that we only exist to propagate DNA.
20:33 --> 20:37 [SPEAKER_00]: It's obvious how this is a non-Darwin didn't actually write any major attacks against the church.
20:39 --> 20:50 [SPEAKER_00]: He clearly created theory, and some of his friends that he was very close friends with the Huxley family, I'll just Huxley and his famous for Brave New World, but before him, as Thomas Huxley his father and others, I think his father might be scared of that.
20:50 --> 20:57 [SPEAKER_00]: I have to look it up, I mean, the family, but these people, they were very strict on their attack against the church, and look, we didn't know all of it, so any genics.
20:57 --> 20:58 [SPEAKER_00]: You can go check that out.
20:59 --> 21:06 [SPEAKER_00]: I'm not gonna go rehash old areas, but I mean, this is, say, the followers of Darwin saw the church in God as a huge problem.
21:08 --> 21:10 [SPEAKER_00]: Next up is Sigmund Freud.
21:10 --> 21:14 [SPEAKER_00]: And that's the next one, Truman covers, and I think it may fit very well.
21:15 --> 21:16 [SPEAKER_00]: My family and I were once in Hungary.
21:16 --> 21:18 [SPEAKER_00]: We were welcoming some missionaries to the field.
21:19 --> 21:23 [SPEAKER_00]: By flying out there, we lived in China, but we had to leave China every two months because of these problems.
21:24 --> 21:26 [SPEAKER_00]: So we would fly every two months to somewhere.
21:28 --> 21:35 [SPEAKER_00]: As actually, I would travel most, we saw many countries here in the Taiwan to Japan, went to South Korea, went to Thailand, and went to Europe, and went to Hungary and Austria.
21:36 --> 21:37 [SPEAKER_00]: And when we were in Hungary, we were a visit.
21:37 --> 21:42 [SPEAKER_00]: We went there intentionally to welcome some new missionaries on the field that were old friends of ours from Bible College.
21:42 --> 21:47 [SPEAKER_00]: We sent two weeks with them, getting to know, helping them kind of get associated, just reading them and being friends.
21:48 --> 21:51 [SPEAKER_00]: And but then all of that, we took a little train trip out of Vienna, a couple of hours.
21:52 --> 21:54 [SPEAKER_00]: And if you've ever been to Europe, you know, everything's very close.
21:56 --> 22:02 [SPEAKER_00]: And we visited a few different spots, very cold, middle fair, not exactly the best time to visit these places, but it was fine.
22:03 --> 22:08 [SPEAKER_00]: And I mean, actually it was warmer than where we lived in China, which was like Siberian cold.
22:08 --> 22:12 [SPEAKER_00]: But we once did outside of a cafe.
22:12 --> 22:14 [SPEAKER_00]: That is what I don't know if any other place can boast this.
22:14 --> 22:24 [SPEAKER_00]: But it was a cafe that could boast in Vienna that in a summer, Hitler, Freud, and Trotsky would all go to the shop and drink there, which means at some point Hitler.
22:26 --> 22:34 [SPEAKER_00]: It mean, no no explanation needed, Freud, and Trotsky, these three people who completely shaped the world were all drinking coffee in the same shop at the same time.
22:34 --> 22:36 [SPEAKER_00]: Now, Hitler and Freud were young.
22:36 --> 22:40 [SPEAKER_00]: They were young guys still in the beginnings of their faces, but Freud was an old man.
22:41 --> 22:42 [SPEAKER_00]: I don't know that they ever talked.
22:42 --> 22:44 [SPEAKER_00]: There's no evidence that they ever had any conversations with each other.
22:45 --> 22:47 [SPEAKER_00]: And Hitler and Trotsky probably wouldn't have agreed.
22:47 --> 22:55 [SPEAKER_00]: Being that they were on offices in there, the little spectrum, although I do think fascism is a lot closer to Hitler, as to the communism that people like to admit.
22:56 --> 23:02 [SPEAKER_00]: Both require much bigger governments that want to censor you and put you in jail for disagreeing and all that kind of stuff.
23:02 --> 23:06 [SPEAKER_00]: And so I think they're closer than people like to acknowledge, but that's not what we're here to do.
23:06 --> 23:07 [SPEAKER_00]: We're here to focus on that.
23:07 --> 23:09 [SPEAKER_00]: But these three guys are in the same room at the same time.
23:10 --> 23:17 [SPEAKER_00]: And I just thought that was interesting and I went to go to that drink at that coffee shop just to be able to say I drink a little historic spot close for renovations.
23:18 --> 23:24 [SPEAKER_00]: So I stood outside the cafe that these guys wrap those and I only get a coffee from them and maybe for the better.
23:24 --> 23:25 [SPEAKER_00]: I miss something bad in that coffee after all.
23:27 --> 23:28 [SPEAKER_00]: What do we do with the guy like Freud?
23:29 --> 23:31 [SPEAKER_00]: You know, we kind of forget about him today.
23:31 --> 23:32 [SPEAKER_00]: I don't know many people talking about Freud.
23:32 --> 23:40 [SPEAKER_00]: And I guess I don't know any talking about Russo or Nietzsche either, but boy, howdy, Freud really take this stuff and up it up a notch.
23:41 --> 23:46 [SPEAKER_00]: Um, he looked at your, your, your broken, you're, there's something broken.
23:46 --> 23:54 [SPEAKER_00]: I'm to Rousseau said, hey, you know, society made you bad and Freud said not just society, your parents, right?
23:54 --> 23:58 [SPEAKER_00]: It was your parents said did it and you need an expert to fix you.
23:59 --> 24:03 [SPEAKER_00]: Somebody of science, like himself, a trained professional, can help you.
24:04 --> 24:05 [SPEAKER_00]: What are your dreams, right?
24:05 --> 24:08 [SPEAKER_00]: Psychotherapy, psychology, birth, out of this man.
24:09 --> 24:18 [SPEAKER_00]: Now, he was obsessed with the idea of sexual fulfillment, the idea that what makes you happy must come from this greatest feeling you can experience, which is that sexual fulfillment.
24:19 --> 24:25 [SPEAKER_00]: And that lacking that caused much repression, much suppression, much of society's woes and problems,
24:26 --> 24:27 [SPEAKER_00]: from this.
24:28 --> 24:30 [SPEAKER_00]: If you could fix this, you'd be fine.
24:30 --> 24:31 [SPEAKER_00]: But you can't.
24:32 --> 24:34 [SPEAKER_00]: So like an animal, you need to be trained.
24:34 --> 24:37 [SPEAKER_00]: You are, after all, Darwin and animal, and you're just an evolutionary piece.
24:37 --> 24:38 [SPEAKER_00]: And you can be fixed.
24:38 --> 24:39 [SPEAKER_00]: You can be trained.
24:39 --> 24:41 [SPEAKER_00]: You can be worked out.
24:42 --> 24:46 [SPEAKER_00]: Primitive man, quote, primitive man was better off and knowing no restrictions of instinct.
24:46 --> 24:50 [SPEAKER_00]: To count our balances, his proxfacts of enjoying this happiness for any length of time or slender.
24:50 --> 24:54 [SPEAKER_00]: Civilized man has exchanged a portion of happiness for a portion of security.
24:55 --> 24:56 [SPEAKER_00]: And that's a common idea by the way.
24:57 --> 24:59 [SPEAKER_00]: You give up happiness for security as common, but it's a quote from Freud.
25:00 --> 25:02 [SPEAKER_00]: But it also sounds like Rousseau, doesn't it?
25:02 --> 25:06 [SPEAKER_00]: Rousseau, you were happiest when you're at your most primitive formal Freud agreed.
25:07 --> 25:09 [SPEAKER_00]: Happy primitive man can do whatever he wants.
25:11 --> 25:14 [SPEAKER_00]: you are restricted by society to be secure.
25:14 --> 25:16 [SPEAKER_00]: You can't go around doing whatever you want in society.
25:16 --> 25:17 [SPEAKER_00]: You just can't do that.
25:18 --> 25:25 [SPEAKER_00]: But if we want to make you happy again, we need to free you from the inhibitions that society has placed on you.
25:26 --> 25:28 [SPEAKER_00]: And just like that, the world traded truth.
25:29 --> 25:33 [SPEAKER_00]: The church, God, for psychology, therapy, scientific studies.
25:33 --> 25:34 [SPEAKER_00]: It looks good.
25:34 --> 25:37 [SPEAKER_00]: Walks about an Alapco, and it replaced what was once main say.
25:38 --> 25:40 [SPEAKER_00]: It might find it hard to believe.
25:40 --> 25:43 [SPEAKER_00]: But there were a time where a lot of schools had pastors at them.
25:43 --> 25:46 [SPEAKER_00]: There was a time where when you had trouble, you went to the pastor for church.
25:46 --> 25:51 [SPEAKER_00]: Our pastor, where I'm in trouble, comes to us with lost a loved one, where I'm in trouble with my marriage.
25:52 --> 25:59 [SPEAKER_00]: That was a time when something was wrong with somebody, you know, in the early and the colonial America, they didn't call a psychotherapist, the analyzed their brain.
25:59 --> 26:02 [SPEAKER_00]: They called a pastor to pray and figure out what was wrong with their child.
26:04 --> 26:05 [SPEAKER_00]: Prisons, once they had a
26:06 --> 26:07 [SPEAKER_00]: pastors in them.
26:07 --> 26:08 [SPEAKER_00]: Now they have therapists.
26:09 --> 26:11 [SPEAKER_00]: I worked at a therapy center.
26:11 --> 26:15 [SPEAKER_00]: We worked at a rehab center in Florida and man let me tell you what a mess.
26:15 --> 26:22 [SPEAKER_00]: You see it from the inside I didn't look if you're in therapists and my students and guys are like whoa you can't therapy.
26:22 --> 26:24 [SPEAKER_00]: My refrigerator can't Christian is used therapy for good.
26:26 --> 26:30 [SPEAKER_00]: The therapy centers I saw, they were, and I kept going up to these and I, I'm on sleeping pills.
26:31 --> 26:32 [SPEAKER_00]: And I said, oh, I'm sorry.
26:32 --> 26:36 [SPEAKER_00]: I mean, it's a powerful, tranquilizer drugs we were giving these kids.
26:36 --> 26:38 [SPEAKER_00]: We were required to, by law, as it was a prescription.
26:39 --> 26:40 [SPEAKER_00]: And I guess I don't want to take them.
26:40 --> 26:45 [SPEAKER_00]: He said the therapist asked me, she said, are you, are you, do you have trouble sleeping?
26:45 --> 26:48 [SPEAKER_00]: She was like, yeah, I live in a house with five other guys.
26:49 --> 26:49 [SPEAKER_00]: Of course, I have trouble sleeping.
26:49 --> 26:51 [SPEAKER_00]: I get bad dreams and stuff.
26:51 --> 26:52 [SPEAKER_00]: I just thought she was talking to me.
26:53 --> 26:54 [SPEAKER_00]: Next thing, you know, I'm getting tranquilized.
26:54 --> 26:56 [SPEAKER_00]: She was telling me out, I don't want to take these anymore.
26:56 --> 26:57 [SPEAKER_00]: I couldn't do anything.
26:57 --> 26:59 [SPEAKER_00]: It's by law, I had to give him to him, but what did it, what a mess.
27:00 --> 27:03 [SPEAKER_00]: I did not last at that job, cause I didn't like that job.
27:04 --> 27:05 [SPEAKER_00]: These people come at these people.
27:05 --> 27:07 [SPEAKER_00]: These children, they have spiritual needs, clearly.
27:08 --> 27:10 [SPEAKER_00]: But we don't even think of sending them the pastors or churches anymore.
27:11 --> 27:12 [SPEAKER_00]: The government sends them the therapists.
27:13 --> 27:14 [SPEAKER_00]: And you're going, okay, come on.
27:15 --> 27:16 [SPEAKER_00]: There's something to go, to go, to go, to go, to go, to go, to go.
27:18 --> 27:34 [SPEAKER_00]: quote by him, man's discovery that his genital love afforded him the strongest experience of satisfaction and in fact provide him with the prototype of all happiness, must have suggested to him that to continue to seek the satisfaction of happiness in his life along the path of sexual relations, and they should make this eroticism, the central point of life.
27:34 --> 27:41 [SPEAKER_00]: I do the politics, this is gross quote, but this is Freud, the guy who founded psychology and therapy.
27:42 --> 27:49 [SPEAKER_00]: if students to take the AP psychology exam all the time, for what you really get to mention, why can see why it is not a good guy?
27:50 --> 28:02 [SPEAKER_00]: We all know a series that we are just thoughts towards women, or start thoughts, sort of, if infants, he literally believed children were born with these sexual needs that were being repressed, and that was why so much of the problems in society came from.
28:03 --> 28:08 [SPEAKER_00]: And it's gross, I don't like saints, I wish I did not have to bring this up, I do apologize for these things, but they are,
28:10 --> 28:21 [SPEAKER_00]: This philosophy went out into the world, and one of the biggest causes and attacks of the church for a long time even under Nietzsche when people had trouble they ran to their pastor for help, but no longer with Freud.
28:21 --> 28:24 [SPEAKER_00]: Freud took the pastor away and put the therapist in his place.
28:26 --> 28:39 [SPEAKER_00]: Uh, uh, the epic, the time period of cultural analysis, in which infancy in childhood were, regardless, in a sense, were ended by Freud's three essays on the theory of sexuality, said one of the commentators, and that's exactly what Freud wanted.
28:40 --> 28:42 [SPEAKER_00]: Now there's all kinds of things we could discuss here.
28:42 --> 28:43 [SPEAKER_00]: You could talk about sexual psychology.
28:43 --> 28:44 [SPEAKER_00]: There's a, uh,
28:44 --> 28:45 [SPEAKER_00]: Horrible path.
28:45 --> 28:46 [SPEAKER_00]: We're doing horrible humans.
28:46 --> 28:54 [SPEAKER_00]: We would talk about Alfred Kenzie and a whole list of things that these therapists and people in this psychological realm went after marriage went after things.
28:54 --> 28:58 [SPEAKER_00]: Many, many studies by people who hated God who intentionally gave out.
28:58 --> 28:59 [SPEAKER_00]: I mean, the one of the most famous is the whole idea.
28:59 --> 29:04 [SPEAKER_00]: Like, oh, did you know 50% of marriages in the divorce is a completely bunk statistic?
29:04 --> 29:06 [SPEAKER_00]: And based on if you knew nothing else about the statistic.
29:07 --> 29:11 [SPEAKER_00]: They asked people at five years after they were married, are you still married?
29:13 --> 29:14 [SPEAKER_00]: They said, have you been married for five years?
29:15 --> 29:20 [SPEAKER_00]: Some of the people in the study had only been married for four and a half years, so they would say, no, I'm not married.
29:20 --> 29:23 [SPEAKER_00]: And they go, oh, look, they started married, but they ended not married.
29:23 --> 29:27 [SPEAKER_00]: They had been married for five years because they were only four and a half years in the marriage.
29:27 --> 29:33 [SPEAKER_00]: Any, any a child could figure out what was wrong with a study like that, right?
29:34 --> 29:39 [SPEAKER_00]: but they put it out there because they didn't like marriage, they wanted to make it look like marriage was going down.
29:40 --> 29:45 [SPEAKER_00]: This is one of the many, many studies that came out of these people who didn't like God, didn't like marriage, shouldn't like these things.
29:45 --> 29:47 [SPEAKER_00]: And so they started creating studies like that.
29:47 --> 29:56 [SPEAKER_00]: Problematic studies, that would create problems for the world, would lead to, you can hardly watch a romantic comedy or something like that.
29:56 --> 29:59 [SPEAKER_00]: We're like, well, I don't know if I should get married half of marriage is in the divorce anyway.
29:59 --> 30:01 [SPEAKER_00]: It's a bunch of statistics, but it,
30:01 --> 30:07 [SPEAKER_00]: but it was created and then created, it added to our art, our music, our media, and it's now just a fact of life, right?
30:07 --> 30:12 [SPEAKER_00]: Everyone knows, 50% of marriages in the divorce, whether it's true or not, doesn't matter.
30:12 --> 30:15 [SPEAKER_00]: I mean, matters of course, truth matters, but not to the people.
30:17 --> 30:33 [SPEAKER_00]: We're even going to move past that, Freud helped evolve the idea, the idea that young people need therapy, you're young, you're something your parents broke you in some way and you had to figure out what that is, you figure out how they broke you, what's wrong with you and then you'll be happy and fulfilled.
30:34 --> 30:38 [SPEAKER_00]: How many young people are looking for a diagnosis to explain the awkwardness that they have?
30:38 --> 30:41 [SPEAKER_00]: How many people are chasing?
30:42 --> 30:45 [SPEAKER_00]: Some kind of label, something that used to be, I'm mad at Mom and Dad.
30:45 --> 30:48 [SPEAKER_00]: I think it was more common about 40, 50 years ago.
30:48 --> 30:49 [SPEAKER_00]: I'm going to rebel against Mom and Dad.
30:49 --> 30:52 [SPEAKER_00]: Mom and Dad hurt me, so I'm rebelling against society, right?
30:52 --> 30:56 [SPEAKER_00]: But now, people are just looking for something that's something I have this diagnosis.
30:56 --> 30:57 [SPEAKER_00]: This kind of thing, right?
30:58 --> 30:59 [SPEAKER_00]: Yes, are there people with real problems?
30:59 --> 31:00 [SPEAKER_00]: Of course they are.
31:00 --> 31:00 [SPEAKER_00]: Of course they are.
31:01 --> 31:08 [SPEAKER_00]: But are some people looking for these labels because it will give them some identity, some way to fix themselves.
31:08 --> 31:09 [SPEAKER_00]: Also, yes.
31:10 --> 31:11 [SPEAKER_00]: And some people, and you can see it.
31:11 --> 31:13 [SPEAKER_00]: There is literally a term for it now.
31:13 --> 31:16 [SPEAKER_00]: People have therapy speak where they talk like therapists.
31:16 --> 31:17 [SPEAKER_00]: It's a strange thing.
31:18 --> 31:20 [SPEAKER_00]: Even in movies, even in children's movies.
31:21 --> 31:30 [SPEAKER_00]: you can tell that the people who wrote them are very inundated in this world because the characters start using phrases and it's a bizarre thing.
31:30 --> 31:32 [SPEAKER_00]: If you haven't noticed it, all right, I won't tell you.
31:33 --> 31:35 [SPEAKER_00]: But there's a whole scene in Zootopia, too, that my children saw.
31:35 --> 31:37 [SPEAKER_00]: And I watched it in the movie theater with them.
31:37 --> 31:38 [SPEAKER_00]: And you can even imagine me, why are you watching that?
31:38 --> 31:41 [SPEAKER_00]: Maybe I don't know, maybe it's bad, maybe I just told you artists bad, right?
31:41 --> 31:43 [SPEAKER_00]: And then I wanted to take that to make it to that movie.
31:43 --> 31:45 [SPEAKER_00]: I personally see a very strong eugenics.
31:46 --> 31:48 [SPEAKER_00]: theme and you took the disutopia too.
31:48 --> 31:51 [SPEAKER_00]: By the way, the one species thought they were better than the others.
31:51 --> 31:53 [SPEAKER_00]: That's practically Woodrow Wilson right there.
31:53 --> 32:00 [SPEAKER_00]: But regardless of the Woodrow Wilsonian elements in Zootopia too, the int- there's a very long scene where they're just therapy speaking each other.
32:00 --> 32:01 [SPEAKER_00]: Where did they get like this?
32:03 --> 32:06 [SPEAKER_00]: And you're like, oh, come on, you're not one of those guys who hates all Christian counsel.
32:06 --> 32:10 [SPEAKER_00]: No, I'm not going to, I'm not going to make a statement when we're in the other.
32:10 --> 32:15 [SPEAKER_00]: It's not the point of revived odds to tell you those kinds of things.
32:15 --> 32:17 [SPEAKER_00]: The point of revived odds is to look at where did it originate?
32:18 --> 32:19 [SPEAKER_00]: It didn't originate in the church.
32:20 --> 32:21 [SPEAKER_00]: The Bible tells us to seek counsel.
32:22 --> 32:23 [SPEAKER_00]: The Bible tells us to seek wisdom.
32:23 --> 32:30 [SPEAKER_00]: But the Bible is very clear that pastors and elders are supposed to have that role of care for their people, shepherding their flock.
32:32 --> 32:37 [SPEAKER_00]: And the modern idea, we cover a lot of lives on revive thoughts.
32:37 --> 32:43 [SPEAKER_00]: We do people who in martyrs and missionaries covers even more, and 99% of them never went to therapy.
32:43 --> 32:52 [SPEAKER_00]: Okay, and that's not the say, oh, if you went to therapy or bad person or that, but I'm just saying, I think God has other weak means of helping his people through hard times.
32:53 --> 32:59 [SPEAKER_00]: Then this I didn't using the system created by a guy who thought all these terrible things.
33:00 --> 33:07 [SPEAKER_00]: Freud himself said, is it not true that the two main points and the program of the education of children today?
33:07 --> 33:09 [SPEAKER_00]: Notice again, we have to get children.
33:09 --> 33:14 [SPEAKER_00]: Children are the future that these, you cannot build your future society with the people today.
33:14 --> 33:15 [SPEAKER_00]: People aren't, they're broken.
33:16 --> 33:18 [SPEAKER_00]: We have to get children to create a new generation.
33:19 --> 33:24 [SPEAKER_00]: The two main points in the program and the education of children today are the retardation of sexual development.
33:24 --> 33:31 [SPEAKER_00]: It doesn't mean that as a way we use retard, say Amy says in the slowing down a sexual development and premature religious influence.
33:33 --> 33:33 [SPEAKER_00]: Put it in another way.
33:34 --> 33:43 [SPEAKER_00]: What he's trying to say is, isn't the two things stopping my ideas from going forward is that we're slowing sexual development down in children and we're allowing too much premature religious influence in them.
33:44 --> 33:47 [SPEAKER_00]: People are exposed to God at a young age and they believe it.
33:48 --> 33:57 [SPEAKER_00]: So for what he's saying, if you could have his way, people need to be pushed to develop themselves sexually at a very young age and they need to keep God away from them.
33:58 --> 34:05 [SPEAKER_00]: If Freud could travel to the future and look at the world in 2026, if you look at Western world, look at Europe, look at America, look at Canada.
34:06 --> 34:20 [SPEAKER_00]: You would see very, very young people are learning sexual characteristics about themselves, are taught in a very young age, they're anatomy, and they're not taught anything about God.
34:22 --> 34:24 [SPEAKER_00]: where once the Bible was a part of school was long gone.
34:25 --> 34:30 [SPEAKER_00]: And instead, a curriculum of anatomy and all these other kind of things are in his place.
34:31 --> 34:49 [SPEAKER_00]: And forward, we'd look at that and he would look at how every school is replaced them with guidance counselors and therapists where once pastors were, he would look at the role of the church today as many people don't care what the pastor is saying but psychotherapists, social workers there, they run the roost on day.
34:50 --> 34:54 [SPEAKER_00]: It was like a prisons that had been placed the pastor with the therapist.
34:54 --> 34:59 [SPEAKER_00]: Anyway, Freud would look at his system as a mass of success.
35:01 --> 35:01 [SPEAKER_00]: He did it.
35:03 --> 35:04 [SPEAKER_00]: He might not see a lot of cures.
35:05 --> 35:10 [SPEAKER_00]: He might see a lot of people with more mental diagnosis, he's an out of all time in human history.
35:10 --> 35:14 [SPEAKER_00]: Depression is way up and a lot of problems are out there.
35:15 --> 35:20 [SPEAKER_00]: He might not like the results, but clearly what he believed in was placed.
35:22 --> 35:23 [SPEAKER_00]: You know, we're at the demolition team.
35:24 --> 35:25 [SPEAKER_00]: We're starting to see explosions, aren't we?
35:27 --> 35:31 [SPEAKER_00]: And even taking children need to be broken away from their families.
35:31 --> 35:34 [SPEAKER_00]: You need to have them raised outside of it.
35:34 --> 35:40 [SPEAKER_00]: You see that I mean, look at places like, you know, I know people from Russia who have told me like, you can't raise your kids.
35:40 --> 35:42 [SPEAKER_00]: We have to let the state raise the kids.
35:42 --> 35:47 [SPEAKER_00]: They think it's crazy that Americans think they can homeschool or raise their own kids because it's the state's job.
35:47 --> 35:48 [SPEAKER_00]: It's the government's job.
35:48 --> 35:49 [SPEAKER_00]: Get them away from the family.
35:49 --> 35:52 [SPEAKER_00]: Get them educated by the state.
35:52 --> 35:53 [SPEAKER_00]: Someone who can actually do the job.
35:56 --> 36:08 [SPEAKER_00]: are we are we crazy is it is a crazy to see these people wanted to take down the church they put it in writing they said we got to get the church down and then a hundred years later the church is so diminished in his influence.
36:09 --> 36:15 [SPEAKER_00]: I think I think we're not crazy for pointing out that these these guys wished it and so it was.
36:15 --> 36:21 [SPEAKER_00]: I'm talking about a guy now we actually didn't wish for the church to change.
36:21 --> 36:25 [SPEAKER_00]: We've been talking about these guys up until now, all of the most of them were very blatant and they're anti-church bias.
36:26 --> 36:28 [SPEAKER_00]: Frederick Taylor is the next man.
36:29 --> 36:34 [SPEAKER_00]: He's, if you've heard of Karl Marx, you've heard of Charles Darwin, you've heard of, you've heard of, for Sigmund Freud, you know?
36:35 --> 36:38 [SPEAKER_00]: You probably remember learning about them and college, or if you're young, you'll hear about them soon.
36:40 --> 36:41 [SPEAKER_00]: Frederick Taylor, you probably haven't heard of.
36:43 --> 36:45 [SPEAKER_00]: Is the founder of Taylorism, right?
36:45 --> 36:47 [SPEAKER_00]: You know, is that how you tailored suit jacket?
36:47 --> 36:49 [SPEAKER_00]: No, actually, it's not.
36:50 --> 36:53 [SPEAKER_00]: Every time, though, you've ever heard, I'm going to go get a manager.
36:53 --> 36:56 [SPEAKER_00]: The Frederick Taylorism.
36:57 --> 37:06 [SPEAKER_00]: Peter Drucker, well-known student of management theory, says that Taylor, not Marks, deserves to be ranked with Darwin and Freud as the Trinity of Makers of the Modern World.
37:06 --> 37:07 [SPEAKER_00]: That's big praise.
37:07 --> 37:08 [SPEAKER_00]: Why would he put this by the way?
37:08 --> 37:11 [SPEAKER_00]: We've left Carl Truman's book right now.
37:11 --> 37:12 [SPEAKER_00]: We've entered a new area here.
37:13 --> 37:21 [SPEAKER_00]: The most powerful, as well as the most lasting contribution America has made to Western Thoughts since the Federalist Papers, says another person.
37:21 --> 37:27 [SPEAKER_00]: The coming of Taylor is a major age, and what is going to become anyway, only more so quickly and more irrevocably.
37:28 --> 37:39 [SPEAKER_00]: Wow, who is this guy, Frederick Winslow Taylor, whom you've never heard of, and yet, supposedly he's as powerful and more influential than Karl Marx making the modern world.
37:40 --> 37:47 [SPEAKER_00]: Frederick Taylor worked as a steel worker in the 1870s, and he saw what many bosses have seen from all over the world, right?
37:47 --> 37:50 [SPEAKER_00]: He saw lazy employees, didn't want to work hard.
37:50 --> 37:53 [SPEAKER_00]: People who just wanted to do the least, they could to get away with the job.
37:53 --> 37:53 [SPEAKER_00]: They get paid.
37:53 --> 37:57 [SPEAKER_00]: They do a little bit of work, but you know, we've all done it.
37:57 --> 38:05 [SPEAKER_00]: We've all been there, and I, you know, I worked a couple of different jobs when I was younger that I didn't always work my hardest absolute tip-top best.
38:06 --> 38:09 [SPEAKER_00]: And I imagine you may have also those experiences, right?
38:11 --> 38:12 [SPEAKER_00]: He called it soul-dream.
38:12 --> 38:14 [SPEAKER_00]: They just do what they have to do to get by.
38:14 --> 38:15 [SPEAKER_00]: He began to be science.
38:15 --> 38:16 [SPEAKER_00]: Good fixes.
38:16 --> 38:19 [SPEAKER_00]: That's where Frederick Taylor diverges from everyone else.
38:20 --> 38:23 [SPEAKER_00]: And I don't know how to describe him other than he just seems like a guy with a clipboard.
38:23 --> 38:25 [SPEAKER_00]: He kind of became super obnoxious.
38:26 --> 38:28 [SPEAKER_00]: For example, he claimed that a worker named Schmidt.
38:29 --> 38:32 [SPEAKER_00]: He could pit, he could he increased his pig iron loading.
38:32 --> 38:35 [SPEAKER_00]: I don't know what pig iron is, but I guess the type of iron they had a load.
38:35 --> 38:37 [SPEAKER_00]: And this guy Schmidt, he pushed him.
38:37 --> 38:38 [SPEAKER_00]: He pushed him and basically said,
38:40 --> 38:43 [SPEAKER_00]: And he averaged 12,5 tons of paid iron a day.
38:43 --> 38:44 [SPEAKER_00]: That seems like a lot.
38:45 --> 38:49 [SPEAKER_00]: But he pushed him and worked him and used science.
38:49 --> 38:53 [SPEAKER_00]: And Schmidt suddenly was loading 47 tons per day.
38:53 --> 38:54 [SPEAKER_00]: That is now put.
38:55 --> 38:57 [SPEAKER_00]: Of almost four times as much.
38:58 --> 38:59 [SPEAKER_00]: Ashman was doing before.
39:00 --> 39:02 [SPEAKER_00]: How did How did Frederick Taylor,
39:02 --> 39:18 [SPEAKER_00]: do such a magical thing while he is science, use the clipboard, he gave him the proper amount of rest, he encouraged him, he knew just how to work him, he tested different methods of walking from one room to the other and lifting strategies until he took one average worker and made him a super worker.
39:21 --> 39:25 [SPEAKER_00]: He, some of his followers, Taylor's followers, began to make headlines.
39:25 --> 39:30 [SPEAKER_00]: One of them stood kind of before Congress and said the American railroad is losing $1 million
39:33 --> 39:33 [SPEAKER_00]: Why?
39:34 --> 39:35 [SPEAKER_00]: Because it's not following Taylor.
39:35 --> 39:36 [SPEAKER_00]: Taylorism, well, what is Taylorism?
39:37 --> 39:41 [SPEAKER_00]: Taylorism is the proper scientific management of people.
39:42 --> 39:52 [SPEAKER_00]: People can be pushed to work hard if they are correctly motivated and if you correctly know how to scientifically use the principles of management on them.
39:53 --> 39:54 [SPEAKER_00]: He created the idea of the manager.
39:55 --> 39:57 [SPEAKER_00]: Someone to watch over the workers.
39:58 --> 40:03 [SPEAKER_00]: that he very specifically had the idea of dividing people.
40:03 --> 40:07 [SPEAKER_00]: The workers, the managers, and the elites, the people who run the show.
40:07 --> 40:13 [SPEAKER_00]: Another thing is, he changed society completely.
40:13 --> 40:14 [SPEAKER_00]: And some of his ideas are not bad.
40:14 --> 40:15 [SPEAKER_00]: Look, I read books on management.
40:15 --> 40:16 [SPEAKER_00]: Good to great.
40:16 --> 40:16 [SPEAKER_00]: It's a great book.
40:18 --> 40:22 [SPEAKER_00]: But also, he was full of it.
40:22 --> 40:25 [SPEAKER_00]: Historians don't even know Schmidt even ever existed.
40:26 --> 40:27 [SPEAKER_00]: The million dollars a day.
40:27 --> 40:31 [SPEAKER_00]: There was absolutely no proof that there wasn't a hymn that said that, but it was one of his followers.
40:32 --> 40:34 [SPEAKER_00]: And it was no proof that there was a million dollars being wasted.
40:34 --> 40:36 [SPEAKER_00]: They said, oh, the railroad workers are so lazy.
40:37 --> 40:39 [SPEAKER_00]: We could just use scientific management.
40:39 --> 40:40 [SPEAKER_00]: We could save a million dollars a day.
40:40 --> 40:41 [SPEAKER_00]: It's a catchy headline.
40:41 --> 40:49 [SPEAKER_00]: Absolutely no scientific study evidence or anything proving that America was losing $365 million a year on an efficiency by railroad workers.
40:49 --> 40:51 [SPEAKER_00]: It was just a fancy headline.
40:52 --> 40:53 [SPEAKER_00]: But it got inside people's heads.
40:54 --> 40:55 [SPEAKER_00]: We could make workers better.
40:56 --> 40:57 [SPEAKER_00]: We could make people better.
40:58 --> 40:59 [SPEAKER_00]: Humans are animals there.
41:00 --> 41:02 [SPEAKER_00]: You know, it's Freud's over there talking about how to fix you.
41:03 --> 41:06 [SPEAKER_00]: And you're only think, remember Mark said, the only thing that matters is your output.
41:07 --> 41:10 [SPEAKER_00]: Well, now Guy has shown up, who says I can make your output greater.
41:11 --> 41:14 [SPEAKER_00]: And leaders of businesses, you don't have to hire more workers.
41:14 --> 41:18 [SPEAKER_00]: You just have to scientifically manage the workers you have.
41:18 --> 41:19 [SPEAKER_00]: And here's the thing.
41:20 --> 41:25 [SPEAKER_00]: Even though he didn't really do a lot of science, he created an entire new thing that does use some science.
41:25 --> 41:31 [SPEAKER_00]: Every time you have to deal with a manager, you're dealing with the idea as he created, and there is some evidence it's somewhat works.
41:33 --> 41:35 [SPEAKER_00]: But, Ghana, the idea of you're talking to mom and pop shop.
41:36 --> 41:41 [SPEAKER_00]: Ghana, the idea that your business is run with people just doing their best.
41:41 --> 41:43 [SPEAKER_00]: Now, you have quotas, you have time.
41:43 --> 41:46 [SPEAKER_00]: We find that people work best for three hours of work in a 15-minute break.
41:46 --> 41:51 [SPEAKER_00]: So that's what everyone gets scientifically managing you.
41:51 --> 41:51 [SPEAKER_00]: And go to an airport.
41:52 --> 41:57 [SPEAKER_00]: Every airport has a 4 books on how to manage your people, and inspire your workers to get the most out of them.
41:58 --> 41:59 [SPEAKER_00]: All of this comes from Frederick Taylor.
42:02 --> 42:09 [SPEAKER_00]: Now, I think there is some good stuff in it, but much like the CEO who wrote the book about how he made his business amazing, he's cherry picking.
42:10 --> 42:13 [SPEAKER_00]: We don't see the CEO who worked just as hard as business failed.
42:13 --> 42:16 [SPEAKER_00]: And he remembers the good things he does, he doesn't remember the bad things he does.
42:16 --> 42:20 [SPEAKER_00]: He thinks that the things he did work, but doesn't actually know, right?
42:20 --> 42:21 [SPEAKER_00]: Could have just been that he was lucky.
42:22 --> 42:26 [SPEAKER_00]: They cherry pick it, it looks scientific, just do these principles and your business
42:32 --> 42:45 [SPEAKER_00]: quoting Taylor, you don't get the idea that this was a guy here, by the way, who was just, he just, he sounds so good, he's walking around the lab coat, maybe made up some of his examples, but the idea of business is becoming more efficient isn't bad, right?
42:46 --> 42:58 [SPEAKER_00]: And he wants an inefficient business, but listen to him and tell me that he, just listen, quote, one of the very first requirements for a man who is fit to handle pig iron as an occupation,
43:02 --> 43:11 [SPEAKER_00]: Is that he is shall be so stupid that he being more resembling an animal and his mental makeup than any other type.
43:11 --> 43:11 [SPEAKER_00]: Oh!
43:12 --> 43:13 [SPEAKER_00]: Oh is that all?
43:14 --> 43:15 [SPEAKER_00]: Let's say Schmidt is real.
43:16 --> 43:17 [SPEAKER_00]: Let's Schmidt's basically a dumb ox.
43:18 --> 43:22 [SPEAKER_00]: I got the stupid animal to work harder with my little scientific theories.
43:24 --> 43:25 [SPEAKER_00]: He's not sounding so nice anymore, is he?
43:26 --> 43:36 [SPEAKER_00]: You see whether or not the management theory people realize that are not the founder of their idea and really a lot of ways is the idea that humans are trainable animals, they're dumb.
43:37 --> 43:43 [SPEAKER_00]: The workers at the bottom are your dumb ones, they're their animals, they move iron around so they can't be too smart, right?
43:43 --> 43:47 [SPEAKER_00]: And if you're smarter, you move up to become an manager.
43:48 --> 43:55 [SPEAKER_00]: And if your smarter yet eventually make yourself to the executive suite where the truly elite rich and intelligent people are, the thinkers, the
43:55 --> 43:58 [SPEAKER_00]: See, the ones who pick up the books and read them, that's for that, right?
43:59 --> 44:03 [SPEAKER_00]: But not really, because they sell the books to you at the airport, because they hope you read it, because you're not one of them.
44:03 --> 44:06 [SPEAKER_00]: But, yeah, maybe you'll be a good manager though.
44:07 --> 44:27 [SPEAKER_00]: You see, you're an animal, and you're not smart, and you're basically dumb, and you have no value, remember your value according to Marx's, you're an instrument of labor, and if Freud and those guys are right, that we can fix your brain and train you, then let's use science to train people and get more out of them.
44:28 --> 44:35 [SPEAKER_00]: Another nice quote by him, all possible brain work should be removed from the shop and centered in the planning and laying out department.
44:36 --> 44:40 [SPEAKER_00]: There's no how businesses work, smart people go up, down people go down.
44:41 --> 44:42 [SPEAKER_00]: And we never never put it that way, right?
44:43 --> 44:54 [SPEAKER_00]: We would never say that the dumbest workers are on the customer service workers and the smartest workers are the CEOs, but even if we don't say it, is that what we kind of think?
44:55 --> 45:00 [SPEAKER_00]: We know what he thinks that the guy, you know, sometimes we'll kind of say, oh, we're smarter than the people running this shop, right?
45:00 --> 45:01 [SPEAKER_00]: But we don't actually think it.
45:02 --> 45:05 [SPEAKER_00]: The guys with big degrees don't apply for the customer service rep positions.
45:07 --> 45:13 [SPEAKER_00]: In the past, the man who has been first, and the future is a nice quote, and the past man has been first.
45:13 --> 45:21 [SPEAKER_00]: The shoprunner were tired for the employees, and we all worked together to run a nice business, and the future, the system must be first.
45:22 --> 45:22 [SPEAKER_00]: Oh.
45:23 --> 45:29 [SPEAKER_00]: You know, I wonder why business systems are so beholden, why is the world of business so beholden to the system?
45:30 --> 45:32 [SPEAKER_00]: Sorry, we have systems in place to deal with that.
45:32 --> 45:38 [SPEAKER_00]: We can't deal with your isolated issue, your unique circumstance because there's a system in place.
45:38 --> 45:40 [SPEAKER_00]: Well, Frederick Taylor said that's the way it should be.
45:41 --> 45:43 [SPEAKER_00]: The system should become the people.
45:43 --> 45:44 [SPEAKER_00]: Should we become before the people?
45:45 --> 45:48 [SPEAKER_00]: Yeah, I see your isolated case seems different, but the system is more important.
45:50 --> 46:00 [SPEAKER_00]: Under scientific management, the initiative of the workmen that is their hard work, their goodwill and their ingenuity is obtained with the uniformity to a greater degree than it's possible, a near the old system.
46:01 --> 46:10 [SPEAKER_00]: I can get the workers to work hard or all together, uniformly doing their best under my system, the old system just let it be wheely milling, we're not right.
46:19 --> 46:20 [SPEAKER_00]: Do we really as we're being trained?
46:21 --> 46:22 [SPEAKER_00]: Do you really as what they're kind of saying?
46:23 --> 46:24 [SPEAKER_00]: You're an instrument of labor.
46:25 --> 46:26 [SPEAKER_00]: You're an instrument you're a tool.
46:26 --> 46:27 [SPEAKER_00]: Your output is what matters.
46:27 --> 46:28 [SPEAKER_00]: And we need to fix you.
46:28 --> 46:31 [SPEAKER_00]: You can say, well, how else am I supposed to run a business?
46:31 --> 46:32 [SPEAKER_00]: I want to get the best out of people.
46:35 --> 46:36 [SPEAKER_00]: This weird thing, isn't it?
46:37 --> 46:42 [SPEAKER_00]: To be told that the people working the service floor, the people at the bottom are basically animals.
46:43 --> 46:59 [SPEAKER_00]: and that we built our system of business in this kind of idea that smart people are better than others, doesn't delete system built in, all systems have a weakness, but we're using science now to propel people forward, to get that ox, get that dumb person at the bottom to work a little bit harder.
47:02 --> 47:05 [SPEAKER_00]: He also said there is one best way to do every task.
47:05 --> 47:07 [SPEAKER_00]: Science will help you find as my awards.
47:07 --> 47:09 [SPEAKER_00]: Science will be fine that one best.
47:09 --> 47:11 [SPEAKER_00]: What's the best way to move a pig iron, whatever that is?
47:11 --> 47:12 [SPEAKER_00]: Well, he'll find it for you.
47:13 --> 47:15 [SPEAKER_00]: every business, every franchise.
47:15 --> 47:17 [SPEAKER_00]: This is the best way I remember working at pizza.
47:17 --> 47:18 [SPEAKER_00]: Here's the best way to put pepper on here's the pizza.
47:20 --> 47:23 [SPEAKER_00]: You didn't know that, but it was so important that you had best way to put pepper on here's the pizza, but they had one.
47:23 --> 47:28 [SPEAKER_00]: And we asked, because that's the maximum way to get the most pepper on here's per pizza, for profit, for bite.
47:29 --> 47:30 [SPEAKER_00]: All these things, right?
47:30 --> 47:31 [SPEAKER_00]: Anybody's ever worked fast food.
47:31 --> 47:33 [SPEAKER_00]: You know there's a whole bunch of systems in place.
47:34 --> 47:35 [SPEAKER_00]: You ever wonder who created that?
47:35 --> 47:38 [SPEAKER_00]: You think, oh, it was Ray Crook and the guys are made McDonald's or Colonel, the KFC.
47:38 --> 47:41 [SPEAKER_00]: Yes, but they were building off a Frederick Taylor.
47:42 --> 47:44 [SPEAKER_00]: Now there's some good to these ideas.
47:44 --> 47:46 [SPEAKER_00]: Look, it is not, I'm not saying it's all bad.
47:47 --> 47:48 [SPEAKER_00]: You might even be listening to this.
47:48 --> 47:50 [SPEAKER_00]: Say like this, this has some good to it though.
47:50 --> 47:51 [SPEAKER_00]: We make people work better.
47:51 --> 47:52 [SPEAKER_00]: We make them work harder.
47:52 --> 47:56 [SPEAKER_00]: But the underlying philosophy is that humans are animals.
47:56 --> 47:57 [SPEAKER_00]: That need to be trained.
47:57 --> 48:00 [SPEAKER_00]: That means to push by science to make them better.
48:01 --> 48:03 [SPEAKER_00]: Now Fred or Taylor doesn't actually attack the church.
48:03 --> 48:05 [SPEAKER_00]: She doesn't really bring up the church one way or the other.
48:05 --> 48:06 [SPEAKER_00]: And for all I know, you want the church.
48:06 --> 48:07 [SPEAKER_00]: I don't think you did.
48:07 --> 48:08 [SPEAKER_00]: But I can't even go to, I don't know.
48:08 --> 48:09 [SPEAKER_00]: I didn't mess it up.
48:10 --> 48:13 [SPEAKER_00]: Progressive, fascist, communist.
48:13 --> 48:15 [SPEAKER_00]: Can you see how they might react to this idea?
48:16 --> 48:16 [SPEAKER_00]: Of course, you can.
48:17 --> 48:20 [SPEAKER_00]: Humans are animals that can be trained and pushed, right?
48:20 --> 48:24 [SPEAKER_00]: Throw it as over there saying, look inside your brain and fix your brain with my ideas.
48:24 --> 48:27 [SPEAKER_00]: And Frederick Taylor's over here saying, you science to propel them.
48:27 --> 48:29 [SPEAKER_00]: People love to Henry Ford, immediately apply this to them.
48:30 --> 48:33 [SPEAKER_00]: Soldiers on the front line, generals, use these ideas, you're a soldier.
48:33 --> 48:35 [SPEAKER_00]: You've got to push the soldiers to get the most out of them.
48:36 --> 48:38 [SPEAKER_00]: All the time, how can we best maximally push these people
48:40 --> 48:41 [SPEAKER_00]: So they can fight their war the best.
48:43 --> 48:57 [SPEAKER_00]: The entirety of society was remodeled by these ideas, where once society is the enemy, now society can be the tool to fix the brokenness of humanity caused by your parents or society in the first place.
48:58 --> 49:03 [SPEAKER_00]: But the new society, the new scientifically managed society, can fix broken humans.
49:03 --> 49:05 [SPEAKER_00]: That was broken by the old ways of society.
49:06 --> 49:11 [SPEAKER_00]: He had four doctrines, science, not rule of thumb, analyze tasks scientifically rather than traditionally.
49:12 --> 49:16 [SPEAKER_00]: Scientific selection systematically select trained and developed workers for specific jobs or best suited for.
49:17 --> 49:23 [SPEAKER_00]: cooperation, management, and workers cooperate to ensure accordance with scientific principles.
49:23 --> 49:24 [SPEAKER_00]: Everything is run by science.
49:24 --> 49:26 [SPEAKER_00]: As you can see, managers are going to help you.
49:26 --> 49:30 [SPEAKER_00]: They'll eat at the top, learning CEOs, dreaming up visions.
49:31 --> 49:36 [SPEAKER_00]: Then the managers will come in and apply it and make sure that the workers scientifically are managed under the great ideas.
49:37 --> 49:39 [SPEAKER_00]: And the workers are there to be scientifically managed.
49:40 --> 49:45 [SPEAKER_00]: And finally, the vision of work, splitting work equally between managers who plan work and workers who execute it.
49:45 --> 49:49 [SPEAKER_00]: Personally, I'd rather be a manager planning things than doing the actual execution if I'm working out of factory.
49:49 --> 49:54 [SPEAKER_00]: I sit around and plan the idea or work at, you know, we're working equally, right?
49:54 --> 49:58 [SPEAKER_00]: But if I can equally work one of these two positions, I think I'd probably be rather the guy sitting at a desk.
50:00 --> 50:03 [SPEAKER_00]: Instead of the one who's bad, breaking his back over by the furnace.
50:03 --> 50:04 [SPEAKER_00]: A sequel, right?
50:04 --> 50:05 [SPEAKER_00]: They're both working hard.
50:06 --> 50:07 [SPEAKER_00]: And yeah, of course CEO is work hard.
50:08 --> 50:12 [SPEAKER_00]: I'm not saying these people don't often times they are hard workers, but they get paid more, don't they?
50:13 --> 50:16 [SPEAKER_00]: I'm not like, I'm not like, I'm not like, okay, it's not a little communist.
50:16 --> 50:17 [SPEAKER_00]: I'm not that at all.
50:17 --> 50:18 [SPEAKER_00]: I'm not going to attack our business.
50:18 --> 50:20 [SPEAKER_00]: Business doesn't amazing things for the world.
50:21 --> 50:26 [SPEAKER_00]: But also, if we act, we can't deny that these philosophies had an effect on people.
50:27 --> 50:32 [SPEAKER_00]: that they change people, that the way we treat them and business affects how they see themselves.
50:32 --> 50:33 [SPEAKER_00]: You are your output.
50:34 --> 50:35 [SPEAKER_00]: Once you can add to society.
50:37 --> 50:48 [SPEAKER_00]: Italy took this to an extreme, Mussolini, famous dictator in 1927 when the first things he did was have an international management conference in the exchange of photograph of himself for a Frederick Taylor.
50:49 --> 50:59 [SPEAKER_00]: This American guy, this consultant, we have such an impact that Mussolini wanted to apply his principles from the top down of Italian society, and he did
51:00 --> 51:07 [SPEAKER_00]: He created even what are called Italian baby factories, quoting breastfeeding and childbirth or cast as forms of mass production for the state.
51:07 --> 51:16 [SPEAKER_00]: At the next is a medical and design history, the state imperatives combined pieces of breeding general rules for mass media, the Catholic Church and medical literature, to a new model of industrial motherhood.
51:17 --> 51:22 [SPEAKER_00]: They would weigh children before and after feeding, to see the exact amount of a child of breast milk each child should get.
51:23 --> 51:31 [SPEAKER_00]: Essentially, they wanted women to have more babies, so they had more armies to invade Ethiopia, which is literally what they did.
51:31 --> 51:32 [SPEAKER_00]: Things like that, so they turned reproduction.
51:33 --> 51:35 [SPEAKER_00]: Humans literally became factories in Italy.
51:36 --> 51:37 [SPEAKER_00]: Where did they get the idea from?
51:37 --> 51:39 [SPEAKER_00]: Scientific managed principles of management.
51:40 --> 51:47 [SPEAKER_00]: Industrial motherhood, the mass rationalization of fertility was supposed to accelerate the production of more and more and better Italian children.
51:48 --> 51:54 [SPEAKER_00]: Such pronatalist eugenics were hardly unique to Italy, France, and Germany also went on in their ideas.
51:54 --> 51:58 [SPEAKER_00]: They actually, Mother's Day, came from this height here, a little bit weird.
51:58 --> 52:02 [SPEAKER_00]: We need to celebrate Mother's more, so more Mother's have children for the factories.
52:03 --> 52:05 [SPEAKER_00]: So it's not a hallmark holiday.
52:05 --> 52:07 [SPEAKER_00]: They have Mother's Day, it's not a hallmark holiday.
52:07 --> 52:10 [SPEAKER_00]: You know, it's a baby factory holiday.
52:11 --> 52:12 [SPEAKER_00]: Thanks, Frederick Taylor.
52:12 --> 52:22 [SPEAKER_00]: France wanted to increase the population heart hit by World War I. Germany had this racist agenda appear, I think, and Italy needed more armies as a invaded Ethiopia.
52:23 --> 52:29 [SPEAKER_00]: So, all in all, as we're going to have a colonized Ethiopia, Aertrian Somalia, and Libya, we need these baby factories.
52:29 --> 52:33 [SPEAKER_00]: France and Germany, we need mothers, we need more children for the society.
52:34 --> 52:35 [SPEAKER_00]: We're going to create these things.
52:36 --> 52:42 [SPEAKER_00]: Of course, they didn't, the fascists weren't as interested in, you know, women being treated as equals, as the communists weren't.
52:42 --> 52:58 [SPEAKER_00]: But the communists were also implying scientifically managed ideas, how can we manage people as very much a part of, and he part of Chairman Mao or any of them, they very firmly believe in these principles of you or can be managed scientifically and should be.
53:00 --> 53:29 [SPEAKER_00]: uh... in america market singer was creating plan parod by the way they were reducing the unwanted races that way so we're in germany and uh... the france the freder tailor method have more children and uh... america they had the market singer method also progressive of an idea if i'm doing horrible humans market singer definitely gets her own episode and only this year create plan parod but this she went to china and told chinese people is too many of you is too many children you should all have one child per family and you can guess all the common is the alay took that idea and ran with it
53:30 --> 53:38 [SPEAKER_00]: If there's anyone person with more death on her hands than Margaret Sanger, I'm sure there are, but she's up there for number of children that died because of her ideas.
53:39 --> 53:44 [SPEAKER_00]: In Berlin at the same time as Frederick Taylor's scientifically managing people, the Berlinese.
53:44 --> 53:45 [SPEAKER_00]: We did an episode and did your bon-offer.
53:45 --> 53:47 [SPEAKER_00]: What was it like to preach in Berlin at the time?
53:47 --> 53:51 [SPEAKER_00]: They're creating critical theory, de-constructionism, tear everything down.
53:51 --> 53:54 [SPEAKER_00]: That's just Marxism and theory, tear down the old building new.
53:54 --> 53:57 [SPEAKER_00]: Critical theory, look back and see what's wrong with everything.
53:58 --> 54:03 [SPEAKER_00]: They don't really create any great new ideas, but the next sinker won't be market singer, won't be any of those people.
54:03 --> 54:06 [SPEAKER_00]: We're going to look at a name man named George Bernard Shaw.
54:07 --> 54:10 [SPEAKER_00]: George Bernard Shaw was a member of a progressive group called the Fabian Society.
54:11 --> 54:12 [SPEAKER_00]: They wish to change society.
54:12 --> 54:14 [SPEAKER_00]: Today's remembered as a thinker in a playwright.
54:15 --> 54:18 [SPEAKER_00]: He wrote a play called Pig Malian, which became my fairy lady.
54:19 --> 54:22 [SPEAKER_00]: But he was also a hardcore eugenesis and famously said the following speech.
54:23 --> 54:31 [SPEAKER_00]: We should find ourselves committed to killing a great many people, whom we now leave, living, and letting die a great many people whom we now keep alive.
54:32 --> 54:37 [SPEAKER_00]: A part of Ugenic politics would finally land us an extensive use of the lethal chamber.
54:38 --> 54:42 [SPEAKER_00]: Very many people would have to be put out of existence simply because it waste other people's time to look after them.
54:42 --> 54:46 [SPEAKER_00]: You must all know at least to have a dozen people who are no use in this world except to trouble us.
54:47 --> 54:53 [SPEAKER_00]: Just put them in there and say, now sir or madam, would you be so kind to justify your existence?
54:53 --> 54:55 [SPEAKER_00]: By the way, this speech is on YouTube.
54:55 --> 54:55 [SPEAKER_00]: You can go listen to it.
54:55 --> 54:56 [SPEAKER_00]: It's very creepy.
54:59 --> 55:03 [SPEAKER_00]: Sir or madam, would you be kind enough to justify your existence to us?
55:04 --> 55:06 [SPEAKER_00]: What have you done in the last five to seven years?
55:07 --> 55:10 [SPEAKER_00]: To justify giving you five or seven more,
55:11 --> 55:12 [SPEAKER_00]: What did you create?
55:12 --> 55:13 [SPEAKER_00]: It was all about what you created.
55:14 --> 55:17 [SPEAKER_00]: What value he said, did you add to society?
55:17 --> 55:29 [SPEAKER_00]: If you're not producing as much as you consume, or perhaps even a little more, then clearly we cannot use the organization of society for the purpose of keeping you alive because your life does not benefit us and it can't be a very much use to yourself.
55:31 --> 55:38 [SPEAKER_00]: Maybe they won't kill you, some of them said, don't we won't directly kill you, but we won't help you at the hospital past the age of 60.
55:39 --> 55:42 [SPEAKER_00]: And some of them would say, actually, we also won't help you at the hospital if you're under the age of 15.
55:43 --> 55:46 [SPEAKER_00]: For after all, children don't produce anything for society.
55:47 --> 55:52 [SPEAKER_00]: You can see we're playing parenthood in abortion and things like that really stemmed from all of this, didn't it?
55:53 --> 55:57 [SPEAKER_00]: And George Bernard Shaw is a culmination of all these people, isn't he?
55:57 --> 56:01 [SPEAKER_00]: You are your economic output, you're just an animal, you need to be trained, you need to create.
56:02 --> 56:09 [SPEAKER_00]: We can manage you, but if you can't be managed, and you can't create anything good, well then maybe you're not useful for the rest of us.
56:09 --> 56:11 [SPEAKER_00]: Society is broken and we're trying to fix it.
56:12 --> 56:13 [SPEAKER_00]: And you're just a drag on that.
56:13 --> 56:15 [SPEAKER_00]: There's only so many resources.
56:16 --> 56:17 [SPEAKER_00]: What are you creating?
56:17 --> 56:20 [SPEAKER_00]: Of course, George Bernard Shaw's quite old when he gives a speech.
56:20 --> 56:21 [SPEAKER_00]: I'm sure he thinks he's safe.
56:22 --> 56:25 [SPEAKER_00]: After all, these guys never see themselves as the real threat.
56:27 --> 56:32 [SPEAKER_00]: Shaw also had a problem with one group, you guessed it, Christians in the church.
56:32 --> 56:35 [SPEAKER_00]: He said, quote, the church is mislearned humility as well as teaching.
56:35 --> 56:36 [SPEAKER_00]: That doesn't sound so bad.
56:36 --> 56:38 [SPEAKER_00]: It passed or say that.
56:39 --> 56:46 [SPEAKER_00]: Another one, quote, I load the mess of mean superstitions and misunderstood prophecies, rammed down the throats of children under the name of Christianity.
56:47 --> 56:48 [SPEAKER_00]: Well, that one's a little less nice.
56:49 --> 56:51 [SPEAKER_00]: Quote Christianity might be a good thing if anyone ever tried it.
56:51 --> 56:53 [SPEAKER_00]: Oh, ha ha, that's not very nice.
56:53 --> 56:54 [SPEAKER_00]: Here's another one.
56:54 --> 56:57 [SPEAKER_00]: What is wrong with priests and popes instead of peeing apostles and saints there?
56:57 --> 57:00 [SPEAKER_00]: Nothing but empirics who say I know instead of I am learning.
57:01 --> 57:03 [SPEAKER_00]: Pray for credually and inertia as wise men accept.
57:04 --> 57:05 [SPEAKER_00]: Pray for skepticism and activity.
57:07 --> 57:10 [SPEAKER_00]: At present, there's not a single credible established religion in the world.
57:11 --> 57:15 [SPEAKER_00]: All religions begin with a revolt against morality, and perish on morality eventually conquers them.
57:16 --> 57:19 [SPEAKER_00]: And no man ever believes that the Bible means what a says he has always convinced that says what he means.
57:19 --> 57:27 [SPEAKER_00]: Say he's not a big believer in God, he's not a big fan of Christianity, and he believes that you should be forced to justify your existence.
57:27 --> 57:30 [SPEAKER_00]: You can see how now we've kind of culminated at the end of their thoughts haven't we?
57:31 --> 57:33 [SPEAKER_00]: 5% of Canadians are now dying by youth and Asia.
57:33 --> 57:35 [SPEAKER_00]: They've gotten too old, they don't add anything anymore.
57:37 --> 58:00 [SPEAKER_00]: out, many other societies are legally and now you know you think recently a woman in Britain she was killed after a horrible care by the state government failed or over and over again and she was only 25 years old she was very depressed and she said just let me die and they did where did this idea that the state should be killing people come from well or did the idea that humans lack any value in the first place?
58:01 --> 58:08 [SPEAKER_00]: And where to the idea that you are, what you're economic output after all to the government, they're paying for these people that are medically not well to survive.
58:08 --> 58:09 [SPEAKER_00]: It's cheaper for them if you just die.
58:11 --> 58:12 [SPEAKER_00]: We'll just add future.
58:14 --> 58:40 [SPEAKER_00]: Bertrand Russell, I came across this person quite by accident, but he really sums up all of it in a way where we're at, I didn't know much about him though, personally I used to quote from him, but I looked into him, and my goodness gracious, we do horrible humans, he'll have an ill have his own episode, he is quite a mess, I'm not, I mean my goodness, his own personal life is disastrous, he left his wife after only being married for a short time, because quote, she was boring and she grossed him out.
58:41 --> 58:43 [SPEAKER_00]: He went on to have many women throughout his life.
58:43 --> 58:49 [SPEAKER_00]: He lived from 1872 and died in 1970, so he lived a nice full life of relationships.
58:49 --> 58:55 [SPEAKER_00]: Highly connected man, random and important circles, grandson of the prime minister of Queen Victoria Era.
58:55 --> 59:00 [SPEAKER_00]: Highly connected in the world, we get this whole episode could be completely derailed just talking about this one guy.
59:01 --> 59:08 [SPEAKER_00]: He was obsessed with population reduction, in fact quoting him, he said, and he wasn't joking when he wrote this.
59:08 --> 59:12 [SPEAKER_00]: I did not pretend that birth control is the only way in which we could keep the population from increasing.
59:12 --> 59:17 [SPEAKER_00]: There are other ways, which one might suppose, opponents of birth control would prefer.
59:17 --> 59:20 [SPEAKER_00]: War, as I remarked a moment ago, has been disappointing in this respect.
59:20 --> 59:26 [SPEAKER_00]: This guy lived through World War I in World War II, and he says World War I in World War II was disappointing in reducing the population.
59:27 --> 59:53 [SPEAKER_00]: The bloodiest wars of human history, he said if a black death could be spread throughout the world once an every generation survivors could procreate freely without the world being too full, there would be nothing in this to offend the conscience of the devout or to restrain the ambitions of the nationalist, the state of affairs could be somewhat pleasant unpleasant, but what of that really high-minded people are indifferent to happiness, especially other people's pleasant fellow, right?
59:57 --> 01:00:01 [SPEAKER_00]: He probably called him as famous for being a pacifist because he was against World War I.
01:00:01 --> 01:00:09 [SPEAKER_00]: And he had as a pastor to this, he regularly advocated the nuclear pomegranate of Soviet Union so that I'm such a pacifist.
01:00:09 --> 01:00:11 [SPEAKER_00]: I just wish we'd blow up those millions of people real quick.
01:00:12 --> 01:00:17 [SPEAKER_00]: And his book, The Impact of Society, Science and Society in 1952, he believes science would send a rule over us.
01:00:18 --> 01:00:19 [SPEAKER_00]: He called it scientific tyranny.
01:00:20 --> 01:00:21 [SPEAKER_00]: There's a very famous passage.
01:00:21 --> 01:00:24 [SPEAKER_00]: Now, I Google to AI, everything will say this is satire.
01:00:25 --> 01:00:30 [SPEAKER_00]: He's warning you of the future, but I'm telling you, I read through as much of the book as I could, just a prepped for this episode.
01:00:31 --> 01:00:34 [SPEAKER_00]: I don't see anywhere where his scientific dictatorship is a warning.
01:00:34 --> 01:00:40 [SPEAKER_00]: I think people are telling you this because they don't want you to admit that Bertrand Russell, this famous logician who's quoted all the time, was deseries.
01:00:40 --> 01:00:41 [SPEAKER_00]: By the way, you've heard of him.
01:00:42 --> 01:00:44 [SPEAKER_00]: because the ABC's relativity was written in my hand.
01:00:45 --> 01:00:48 [SPEAKER_00]: He's actually one of the main reasons people understand Einstein today.
01:00:48 --> 01:00:51 [SPEAKER_00]: Many, many science books were written by this guy for a layman.
01:00:51 --> 01:00:58 [SPEAKER_00]: People, you don't, you didn't read him, but the, you reason you understand and know about a lot of different things in the world today came from this guy.
01:00:59 --> 01:01:00 [SPEAKER_00]: But he did not like you.
01:01:01 --> 01:01:02 [SPEAKER_00]: He didn't like a lot of people.
01:01:05 --> 01:01:10 [SPEAKER_00]: He, this, again, all of the, all of the tech, all these just warning you about the future.
01:01:10 --> 01:01:14 [SPEAKER_00]: He doesn't mean this, but I, I'm telling you, I read through, I did not see a warning.
01:01:14 --> 01:01:17 [SPEAKER_00]: He's just stating what he thinks will happen, and he's a fan of it.
01:01:17 --> 01:01:19 [SPEAKER_00]: I'll read the ending in the book to show you what I mean.
01:01:21 --> 01:01:25 [SPEAKER_00]: I think the subject that will be of most importance politically is mass psychology.
01:01:25 --> 01:01:33 [SPEAKER_00]: Mass psychology is scientific speaking, not a very advanced study, and so far it's professors have not been in universities, they have been advertised as politicians and above all dictators.
01:01:34 --> 01:01:38 [SPEAKER_00]: This study is immensely useful to practical men, whether they wish to become richer to acquire the government.
01:01:39 --> 01:01:47 [SPEAKER_00]: It is of course as a science founded upon individual psychology, I see psychology, building on a segment for a way to subscience, psychology, we're all building on each other here.
01:01:48 --> 01:01:54 [SPEAKER_00]: Anyway, back to the quote, but hey, up until now, it has been employed as a rule of thumb methods, which are based upon a kind of intuitive common sense.
01:01:54 --> 01:01:59 [SPEAKER_00]: It's important to have been enormously increased by the growth of modern methods of propaganda.
01:01:59 --> 01:02:02 [SPEAKER_00]: Of these, the most influential is called education.
01:02:02 --> 01:02:03 [SPEAKER_00]: Look at this.
01:02:03 --> 01:02:13 [SPEAKER_00]: Rousseau said we have to educate the child, now Bertrand Russell seven years ago, if you want to mass psychology and people, the most influential thing, use your science, use your psychology to go after education.
01:02:13 --> 01:02:19 [SPEAKER_00]: He said religion plays that part by diminishing the press, the cinema, the radio play and increasingly important part, though.
01:02:19 --> 01:02:22 [SPEAKER_00]: He's noticing media is an important future here.
01:02:23 --> 01:02:26 [SPEAKER_00]: Compared to the quote, what is essential in mass psychology is the art of persuasion.
01:02:27 --> 01:02:35 [SPEAKER_00]: If you compare a speech of hitlers with say one of Edwin Burke, you can see what a strides have been made in this art of persuasion since the 18th century.
01:02:36 --> 01:02:42 [SPEAKER_00]: What went wrong formally was that people had read in books that man is a rational animal and framed their arguments on this hypothesis.
01:02:42 --> 01:02:49 [SPEAKER_00]: We now know that line-line in a bass brand do more to persuade people than can be done by a mass-elegant train of syllogisms.
01:02:49 --> 01:02:50 [SPEAKER_00]: You see that?
01:02:51 --> 01:02:56 [SPEAKER_00]: Art, poems, music, media, more persuasive than the mind.
01:02:57 --> 01:03:05 [SPEAKER_00]: It may be hope that in time anybody will be able to persuade anybody of anything if you can catch the patient young and is provided by the state with the money and the equipment.
01:03:06 --> 01:03:12 [SPEAKER_00]: This subject will make great, this subject will make great strides when it's taken up by scientists under a scientific dictatorship.
01:03:13 --> 01:03:17 [SPEAKER_00]: Once a famous philosopher, once maintained, that's so as black, but no one believed him.
01:03:17 --> 01:03:26 [SPEAKER_00]: The social psychologist of future will have a number of classes of school children on whom they can try different methods to produce the unshakable conviction that snow is indeed black.
01:03:27 --> 01:03:37 [SPEAKER_00]: Various results will soon be arrived at, you know, of course even I know, snow is white, but he's saying, scientists of the future will study and know how to convince children that snow,
01:03:37 --> 01:03:38 [SPEAKER_00]: is black.
01:03:38 --> 01:03:40 [SPEAKER_00]: Various results will soon be arrived.
01:03:40 --> 01:03:43 [SPEAKER_00]: First, the influence of the home is obstructive.
01:03:44 --> 01:03:47 [SPEAKER_00]: So if we're going to change the future, we're going to change and educate children in the future.
01:03:47 --> 01:03:48 [SPEAKER_00]: We must get on that on the home.
01:03:49 --> 01:03:53 [SPEAKER_00]: Second, that not much can be done unless indoctrination begins before the age of 10.
01:03:53 --> 01:03:55 [SPEAKER_00]: We have to get on the home and we have to get them young.
01:03:56 --> 01:04:00 [SPEAKER_00]: Third, that verses set to music and repeatedly entombed are very effective.
01:04:01 --> 01:04:07 [SPEAKER_00]: Boy communist use that don't they but don't we all music again back to art back to media in fourth
01:04:09 --> 01:04:12 [SPEAKER_00]: This one might be the most powerful and most underrated one that we see.
01:04:13 --> 01:04:18 [SPEAKER_00]: That the opinion that snow is white must be held to show a morbid taste for eccentricity.
01:04:19 --> 01:04:26 [SPEAKER_00]: If you want to convince people snow is black, you have to tell them that anyone who believes snow is white is weird, strange, off-old bizarre.
01:04:27 --> 01:04:28 [SPEAKER_00]: That's-oh, you think snow is white?
01:04:29 --> 01:04:30 [SPEAKER_00]: Oh, don't you know we don't.
01:04:30 --> 01:04:32 [SPEAKER_00]: We know snow is black, you foolish, silly person.
01:04:34 --> 01:04:46 [SPEAKER_00]: If you want to mass psychology people, you get them young, you get them out of the house, you put it in music, you use art against them, and you treat people who like the idea, the people who stand up and tell you, no, stone was white as if they're crazy.
01:04:47 --> 01:04:48 [SPEAKER_00]: You don't want to be one of those, right?
01:04:48 --> 01:04:49 [SPEAKER_00]: One of those backwards people.
01:04:51 --> 01:05:02 [SPEAKER_00]: I anticipate is for future scientists to make these maxims precise, and discover exactly how much it costs to make a child believe this is black, and even more, how much less it would cost to make them believe
01:05:04 --> 01:05:19 [SPEAKER_00]: Look at that, we're going to know using science, we're going to study all these principles, we're going to figure out how to get people to believe in lies, and we're going to know how much it costs, and we're not going to know how much it costs, and how much it costs to get them to believe it's dark gray.
01:05:19 --> 01:05:21 [SPEAKER_00]: It's not the full truth, but it's pretty close, isn't it?
01:05:22 --> 01:05:23 [SPEAKER_00]: We'll be able to save money.
01:05:24 --> 01:05:27 [SPEAKER_00]: After all, if I can get you to believe it's dark gray, it's close enough to black.
01:05:27 --> 01:05:28 [SPEAKER_00]: It's fine.
01:05:28 --> 01:05:29 [SPEAKER_00]: You don't believe the snow is white anymore.
01:05:31 --> 01:05:35 [SPEAKER_00]: Although this science will be diligently studied, it will be rigidly confined to the governing class.
01:05:35 --> 01:05:38 [SPEAKER_00]: The elites, the people, the thinkers won't take care of that for you.
01:05:39 --> 01:05:43 [SPEAKER_00]: The populists will not be allowed to know how its convictions were generated when the technique has been perfected.
01:05:43 --> 01:05:49 [SPEAKER_00]: Every government that has been charged of education for a generation will control its subjects securely without the needs of armies or policemen.
01:05:50 --> 01:05:53 [SPEAKER_00]: And yet, there is only one country that has succeeded in creating this politician's paradise.
01:05:53 --> 01:05:55 [SPEAKER_00]: At the time of writing that, he was talking about the Soviet Union.
01:05:56 --> 01:06:00 [SPEAKER_00]: Now, he was not a communist, by the way, Bertrand Russell was against a communist, but he had his own progressive ideas.
01:06:01 --> 01:06:05 [SPEAKER_00]: Now you'll read this and people online will say he was not serious.
01:06:05 --> 01:06:06 [SPEAKER_00]: He didn't mean it.
01:06:06 --> 01:06:08 [SPEAKER_00]: Look at one of the AI's.
01:06:08 --> 01:06:10 [SPEAKER_00]: I don't use AI much.
01:06:10 --> 01:06:11 [SPEAKER_00]: I just want to verify if this quote was real.
01:06:12 --> 01:06:13 [SPEAKER_00]: And it was just like, no, no, no, no, you don't understand.
01:06:13 --> 01:06:14 [SPEAKER_00]: Look at the body of his work.
01:06:14 --> 01:06:15 [SPEAKER_00]: Look at the body of his work.
01:06:15 --> 01:06:16 [SPEAKER_00]: And you'll see he didn't mean it.
01:06:17 --> 01:06:18 [SPEAKER_00]: He wasn't a fan of this.
01:06:18 --> 01:06:22 [SPEAKER_00]: And I was like, the body of his work, he wants to black death to kill people.
01:06:22 --> 01:06:23 [SPEAKER_00]: He's not a good guy.
01:06:24 --> 01:06:26 [SPEAKER_00]: On the body of his work, well, let's go down the end of the book.
01:06:26 --> 01:06:35 [SPEAKER_00]: In case you think this is just some random poll quote, but taking something out of context, and chapter seven, and the title of the chapter, can a scientific society be stable?
01:06:36 --> 01:06:40 [SPEAKER_00]: My conclusion is that a scientific society can be stable given certain conditions.
01:06:40 --> 01:06:46 [SPEAKER_00]: The first of these is a single government and the whole world possessing a monopoly of armed force, and therefore able to enforce peace.
01:06:47 --> 01:06:47 [SPEAKER_00]: Oh, saddle.
01:06:48 --> 01:06:55 [SPEAKER_00]: As long as there's one big government running military and science in police and enforcing peace, then we can create a perfect lease.
01:06:55 --> 01:06:57 [SPEAKER_00]: And by the way, in case you're wondering, is this a warning?
01:06:58 --> 01:07:00 [SPEAKER_00]: He wants a scientific society.
01:07:00 --> 01:07:01 [SPEAKER_00]: He thinks it's good.
01:07:01 --> 01:07:01 [SPEAKER_00]: Keep reading.
01:07:02 --> 01:07:04 [SPEAKER_00]: The second condition is a general diffusion of prosperity.
01:07:04 --> 01:07:07 [SPEAKER_00]: So there is an location of envy for one part of the other.
01:07:07 --> 01:07:09 [SPEAKER_00]: Oh, God is the copybook marketplace are here.
01:07:09 --> 01:07:09 [SPEAKER_00]: They're back.
01:07:09 --> 01:07:10 [SPEAKER_00]: God is the marketplace.
01:07:10 --> 01:07:15 [SPEAKER_00]: If everyone's happy, we will have Peter and give it to, you know, Paul or whatever it is, then we'll be fine.
01:07:17 --> 01:07:19 [SPEAKER_00]: As long as everyone has money, oh, we've never seen that before.
01:07:19 --> 01:07:22 [SPEAKER_00]: He's not a communist, they say, but I mean, good golly, it's the same idea.
01:07:23 --> 01:07:30 [SPEAKER_00]: The third condition, which supposed to the second, a low birth rate everywhere, so the population becomes stationary.
01:07:30 --> 01:07:41 [SPEAKER_00]: And the fourth birth condition is for the provision for individuals, both in work and play, and the greatest diffusion of power, combatable with maintaining necessary, make sure the power is stretched, as long as we can maintain everything.
01:07:42 --> 01:07:44 [SPEAKER_00]: The world is a long way from realizing these conditions.
01:07:44 --> 01:07:45 [SPEAKER_00]: Again, is he warning you about this?
01:07:45 --> 01:07:49 [SPEAKER_00]: No, listen, the world is a long way from realizing these conditions.
01:07:49 --> 01:07:54 [SPEAKER_00]: And therefore, we must expect vast upheavals and a polyensuffering before stability is attained.
01:07:55 --> 01:07:57 [SPEAKER_00]: The permanent revolution, pain will be out there.
01:07:57 --> 01:08:11 [SPEAKER_00]: But while upheavals and suffering have hitherto been the lot of man, we can now see however dimly and uncertonly a possible future in which poverty and war will be overcome and fear, where it survives will become pathological.
01:08:11 --> 01:08:14 [SPEAKER_00]: The road I fear is long, but that is no reason to lose sight of the ultimate hope.
01:08:15 --> 01:08:25 [SPEAKER_00]: And what is his ultimate hope again, a scientific society, a scientific one-world government, where the scientific dictatorship can tell you how to make snow be black.
01:08:28 --> 01:08:30 [SPEAKER_00]: You see how the speed he combines at all.
01:08:30 --> 01:08:33 [SPEAKER_00]: Birch and Russell's can any re-use or respectable or a noun to logician.
01:08:33 --> 01:08:36 [SPEAKER_00]: The loss for oh yeah, he just wants a scientific one-world government.
01:08:36 --> 01:08:36 [SPEAKER_00]: That's all.
01:08:37 --> 01:08:37 [SPEAKER_00]: Just that.
01:08:38 --> 01:08:39 [SPEAKER_00]: No big deal.
01:08:41 --> 01:08:43 [SPEAKER_00]: Un, I said this every time, but I'll say it again.
01:08:43 --> 01:08:46 [SPEAKER_00]: Who did Bertrand Russell, C.S.
01:08:46 --> 01:08:51 [SPEAKER_00]: Zendemy, who is in the way of the scientific one-world government?
01:08:51 --> 01:08:54 [SPEAKER_00]: This great beautiful future, you are, you know, you know, it is.
01:08:56 --> 01:09:00 [SPEAKER_00]: If we give everything, if we give everything over science, we'll be so happy even chapter six.
01:09:00 --> 01:09:05 [SPEAKER_00]: The reference to his population reduction goal, he sees the same group that's always in the way.
01:09:06 --> 01:09:11 [SPEAKER_00]: The nations which, at present, increase rapidly should be encouraged to adopt these methods in the West.
01:09:12 --> 01:09:14 [SPEAKER_00]: The increase of what relation has been checked.
01:09:14 --> 01:09:17 [SPEAKER_00]: Educational propaganda with government help could achieve it all in a generation.
01:09:18 --> 01:09:23 [SPEAKER_00]: There are, however, two powerful forces as posing his policy.
01:09:23 --> 01:09:24 [SPEAKER_00]: By the way, he wrote this in the 1952.
01:09:25 --> 01:09:27 [SPEAKER_00]: We have to stop overpopulation.
01:09:27 --> 01:09:28 [SPEAKER_00]: We have to stop overpopulation.
01:09:28 --> 01:09:29 [SPEAKER_00]: We must reduce population.
01:09:31 --> 01:09:33 [SPEAKER_00]: 75 years later, what is one of the biggest threats?
01:09:33 --> 01:09:37 [SPEAKER_00]: China, Korea, Japan, America, Europe, what is one of the biggest looming threats?
01:09:37 --> 01:09:43 [SPEAKER_00]: It is demographic collapse because people didn't have enough children.
01:09:47 --> 01:09:55 [SPEAKER_00]: You think that these books just stay in these ideas stay in books, but they don't, they become a part of our society, they become a part of our culture.
01:09:55 --> 01:09:58 [SPEAKER_00]: We are living in the wake of these ideas.
01:09:59 --> 01:10:01 [SPEAKER_00]: Anyway, what is stopping him?
01:10:01 --> 01:10:01 [SPEAKER_00]: What was his enemy?
01:10:03 --> 01:10:05 [SPEAKER_00]: The two powerful forces opposed to this policy.
01:10:06 --> 01:10:07 [SPEAKER_00]: One is religion.
01:10:08 --> 01:10:09 [SPEAKER_00]: The other is nationalism.
01:10:10 --> 01:10:21 [SPEAKER_00]: I think it is the duty of all capable of facts to realize and proclaim that opposition to the spread of birth control is successful, must inflict upon mankind the most appalling depth of misery and degradation in another 50.
01:10:21 --> 01:10:30 [SPEAKER_00]: If we don't stop the population from reducing, we will horrible misery and degradation the world will fall in collapse into.
01:10:31 --> 01:10:41 [SPEAKER_00]: Of course, even though the West stopped having as many children, we know that all around the world of population has gone up significantly since he wrote this and know the world was not pledged.
01:10:42 --> 01:10:47 [SPEAKER_00]: And to misery and degradation, but what can you expect from a guy who wants to convince the children that snow is black?
01:10:49 --> 01:10:49 [SPEAKER_00]: Scientifically.
01:10:50 --> 01:10:51 [SPEAKER_00]: And so it goes.
01:10:52 --> 01:11:02 [SPEAKER_00]: And another place he called Christianity, the fear doctrine, religion is based, I think, primarily on fear, fear is the basis of it all, fear of the mysterious, fear of defeat, fear of death.
01:11:03 --> 01:11:17 [SPEAKER_00]: Science can teach us and I think our own hearts can teach us, no longer to look around for imaginary supports, no longer to invent allies in the sky, but rather to look to our own efforts here below to make this world a fit place to live in instead of the sort of place of the church and all these centuries have been making it.
01:11:18 --> 01:11:19 [SPEAKER_00]: Who's his enemy?
01:11:19 --> 01:11:20 [SPEAKER_00]: The church.
01:11:21 --> 01:11:22 [SPEAKER_00]: A final quote.
01:11:23 --> 01:11:27 [SPEAKER_00]: That is the idea that we should all be wicked if we did not hold to the Christian religion.
01:11:27 --> 01:11:31 [SPEAKER_00]: It seems to me that people who have held it to it have been for the most part themselves extremely wicked.
01:11:31 --> 01:11:32 [SPEAKER_00]: You find this curious fact.
01:11:32 --> 01:11:37 [SPEAKER_00]: But the more intense has been the religion of any period, and the more profound has been the dogmatic belief.
01:11:37 --> 01:11:40 [SPEAKER_00]: The greater has been the cruelty and the worse has been the state of affairs.
01:11:40 --> 01:11:44 [SPEAKER_00]: And the so-called ages of faith, when men really did believe the Christian religion and all its completeness,
01:11:45 --> 01:11:47 [SPEAKER_00]: There was the inquisition with all his tortures.
01:11:47 --> 01:11:53 [SPEAKER_00]: There were millions of unfortunate women burn in this which is and there were every kind of cruelty practice upon all sorts of people in the name of religion.
01:11:55 --> 01:12:10 [SPEAKER_00]: You find as you look around the world that every single bit of progress and humane feeling every improvement in the criminal law, every step toward the diminution of war, every step toward better treatment of the color races, every mitigation of slavery, every moral progress that has ever been in the world has been consistently opposed by organized churches in the world.
01:12:10 --> 01:12:18 [SPEAKER_00]: I say quite deliberately, the Christian religion, as organized in its churches, has been instill as the principle and the me of moral progress in the world.
01:12:19 --> 01:12:29 [SPEAKER_00]: you may think that I am going too far when I say that there is still so I do not think I am take one fact you will bear with me if I mention it is not a pleasant fact but the church is compel one dimension facts that are not pleasant.
01:12:29 --> 01:12:39 [SPEAKER_00]: Symposing that in this world that we live in today and an experienced girl is married to a man with syphilis and the chase of the Catholic church says this is an indescribable indescribable indescribable indescribable indescribable indescribable
01:12:40 --> 01:12:46 [SPEAKER_00]: Sacrament, you must endure celibacy or stay together, and if you stay together, you must not use birth control to prevent the birth of staphilic children.
01:12:46 --> 01:12:53 [SPEAKER_00]: Nobody use natural sympathies have not been worked or by dogma, or is moral nature is not absolutely dead to all since the suffering can maintain that is right in proper.
01:12:54 --> 01:12:55 [SPEAKER_00]: That is only one example.
01:12:55 --> 01:12:59 [SPEAKER_00]: There are great many ways in which the present moment, the church finds insistence upon what it chooses to call morality,
01:13:03 --> 01:13:09 [SPEAKER_00]: And of course, as we know, it is a major part and opponent still a progress and improvement in all the ways that diminish suffering in the world.
01:13:09 --> 01:13:15 [SPEAKER_00]: Because as chosen, I label as morality a certain narrow set of rules of conduct, which I've nothing to do with human happiness.
01:13:16 --> 01:13:22 [SPEAKER_00]: When you say that this or that to be done, it would make for human happiness, I think it has nothing to do with the matter at all.
01:13:22 --> 01:13:23 [SPEAKER_00]: What does human happiness to do with morals?
01:13:23 --> 01:13:27 [SPEAKER_00]: The object of morals is not to make people happy, which I agree with that last time.
01:13:29 --> 01:13:31 [SPEAKER_00]: So put it all together, what do you get, right?
01:13:31 --> 01:13:32 [SPEAKER_00]: You get this guy, he hates God.
01:13:32 --> 01:13:34 [SPEAKER_00]: Oh, who is my number one enemy?
01:13:34 --> 01:13:39 [SPEAKER_00]: Is the church look this weird STD case proof the church is bad?
01:13:40 --> 01:13:43 [SPEAKER_00]: He may fail as the mention that was the church in slavery.
01:13:43 --> 01:13:45 [SPEAKER_00]: He fail as the mention, it was the Christians.
01:13:45 --> 01:13:52 [SPEAKER_00]: And while the Eugenicist scientists were separating the racist, it was the Christians who said all are made in the image of God and fought for them.
01:13:53 --> 01:13:56 [SPEAKER_00]: He rewrite history and makes it look like Christianity.
01:13:56 --> 01:13:58 [SPEAKER_00]: The church is the bad guy all along.
01:13:59 --> 01:14:01 [SPEAKER_00]: He sounds just like everybody else.
01:14:01 --> 01:14:04 [SPEAKER_00]: Look, you can say isn't just a coincidence that these people have to be atheist.
01:14:06 --> 01:14:13 [SPEAKER_00]: Not when they are stating that their enemy is the church and we want to replace the church with our scientific society.
01:14:13 --> 01:14:18 [SPEAKER_00]: And then when the enemy says, I'm going to do something over and over again, and they do it.
01:14:19 --> 01:14:24 [SPEAKER_00]: They all said we're going to take society and knock down the church and replace it with their own ideas.
01:14:28 --> 01:14:35 [SPEAKER_00]: aren't Christians, and Christians, obviously, we love the Lord, but even in the church, science is a way outwane power of thought.
01:14:38 --> 01:14:41 [SPEAKER_00]: If science says it, people have a hard time disagreeing with it.
01:14:42 --> 01:14:47 [SPEAKER_00]: The scientific dictatorship is, and full swing, snow will be black.
01:14:48 --> 01:14:57 [SPEAKER_00]: If we took him to the future, I think Bertrand Russell would look at our extreme faith in science and go, good job, we've done great work, put it all together, what do you get?
01:14:58 --> 01:15:02 [SPEAKER_00]: When you get from her cell, you get you all and you find happiness inside yourself.
01:15:03 --> 01:15:05 [SPEAKER_00]: When you're real, we know happiness comes from Christ.
01:15:05 --> 01:15:06 [SPEAKER_00]: So joy comes from Christ.
01:15:07 --> 01:15:14 [SPEAKER_00]: You're manipulate by a poet to feel feelings for things when you should be seeking truth, and you should be putting your feelings just like everything else under the cross.
01:15:15 --> 01:15:16 [SPEAKER_00]: You are a poetic animal.
01:15:17 --> 01:15:21 [SPEAKER_00]: Instead of a pinnacle of God's creation, that can celebrate and sing with joy to him.
01:15:22 --> 01:15:29 [SPEAKER_00]: U.S. experience new happiness according to Nietzsche instead of resting in God's complete work and experience him more fully.
01:15:30 --> 01:15:40 [SPEAKER_00]: U.S. tear down the old and build the new instead of respecting and loving the old and traditional things that God has given us that are good and creating something beautiful and new and good for good reasons.
01:15:41 --> 01:15:52 [SPEAKER_00]: You must never feel stable, instead of having the cornerstone in the build-on, but be a part of a permanent revolution, you should be feeling trust on the cornerstone that is Christ, but you're agitated by a world ever spinning.
01:15:53 --> 01:15:57 [SPEAKER_00]: You must evolve, you're just an animal, instead of something made in God's image.
01:15:58 --> 01:16:07 [SPEAKER_00]: You must be psychoanalyzed, you have something wrong with you, put there by your parents, instead of you are a sinner born into sin, and you need to just repent and turn to the Lord.
01:16:07 --> 01:16:08 [SPEAKER_00]: Let him fix you.
01:16:09 --> 01:16:10 [SPEAKER_00]: You must be managed.
01:16:11 --> 01:16:19 [SPEAKER_00]: Instead of loved, you must be, you are valuable, you must become valuable, instead of you are valuable.
01:16:21 --> 01:16:27 [SPEAKER_00]: You are just your lowest feelings chasing after sexual happiness as Freud said instead of being able to become something greater.
01:16:28 --> 01:16:29 [SPEAKER_00]: You can't be a Christian.
01:16:29 --> 01:16:32 [SPEAKER_00]: Those are the enemies that are always in the way of progress.
01:16:32 --> 01:16:34 [SPEAKER_00]: You must lie and say snow is black.
01:16:35 --> 01:16:39 [SPEAKER_00]: Instead of believing in truth, you are just one of many, and there are far too many.
01:16:41 --> 01:16:47 [SPEAKER_00]: These are the messages that these people have been pushing and dumping into society for hundreds of years.
01:16:47 --> 01:16:52 [SPEAKER_00]: The most intelligent of intelligent elites, and they stream it to society through music and media all day long.
01:16:54 --> 01:16:57 [SPEAKER_00]: Is it any wonder the world is such a mess?
01:16:58 --> 01:17:12 [SPEAKER_00]: Is it any wonder that people are struggling so much when this is I just stopped in the 1950s we could have kept going to the sexual revolution and all the weird stuff passed that but I think the point is made think birch and Russell sums it up all pretty well doesn't they
01:17:17 --> 01:17:22 [SPEAKER_00]: Is it a coincidence that the church collapse that these guys put out their hateful diatrives and made the church incretions their enemy?
01:17:23 --> 01:17:24 [SPEAKER_00]: No, I don't think so.
01:17:25 --> 01:17:28 [SPEAKER_00]: I think it's pretty clear that their fingerprints were all over the bombs.
01:17:29 --> 01:17:32 [SPEAKER_00]: And as we watched the last pieces of dust and rubble fly, do we think is it over today?
01:17:33 --> 01:17:33 [SPEAKER_00]: No, it's not.
01:17:35 --> 01:17:39 [SPEAKER_00]: One example is a man and you've all know a horror, he's a big deal, New York Times best seller.
01:17:40 --> 01:17:50 [SPEAKER_00]: He speaks to elite conferences full of bank, chief executive officers of businesses, bankmen that the most rich and powerful leaders of the world they come in here and speak.
01:17:51 --> 01:17:54 [SPEAKER_00]: His books, homodas and sapiens, nexus are everywhere.
01:17:55 --> 01:17:56 [SPEAKER_00]: And what does he say?
01:17:56 --> 01:18:02 [SPEAKER_00]: He's saying things like, I'm aware that many people might be upset by my equating religion with fake news, but that's exactly the point.
01:18:02 --> 01:18:07 [SPEAKER_00]: When a thousand people believe something made up, we've some made up story for one month, that's fake news.
01:18:07 --> 01:18:10 [SPEAKER_00]: When a billion people believe it for a thousand years, that's just religion.
01:18:11 --> 01:18:15 [SPEAKER_00]: You've all know her already says, not just atheists, you say that religions are filled with fictional stories in many of my people.
01:18:16 --> 01:18:18 [SPEAKER_00]: The only difference is that religious people make an exception for their religion.
01:18:19 --> 01:18:23 [SPEAKER_00]: When a nice guy wants to see he doesn't like religion, no surprise that fits with everything else we've seen.
01:18:24 --> 01:18:25 [SPEAKER_00]: What else does you all know?
01:18:25 --> 01:18:26 [SPEAKER_00]: Who are you say?
01:18:26 --> 01:18:29 [SPEAKER_00]: Well, he says, we human should get used to the idea that we are no longer a mysterious souls.
01:18:29 --> 01:18:31 [SPEAKER_00]: We are now hackable animals.
01:18:31 --> 01:18:31 [SPEAKER_00]: That's what we are.
01:18:31 --> 01:18:32 [SPEAKER_00]: Oh, look at that.
01:18:32 --> 01:18:33 [SPEAKER_00]: We're not souls.
01:18:33 --> 01:18:33 [SPEAKER_00]: We're animals.
01:18:33 --> 01:18:34 [SPEAKER_00]: We're hackable.
01:18:35 --> 01:18:44 [SPEAKER_00]: The most important question in 21st century economics may well be, what should we do with the superfluous people once we have highly intelligent, non-conscious algorithms can do most everything that better than a human.
01:18:45 --> 01:19:11 [SPEAKER_00]: And a lot of his predictions came before AI and Chad GBT actually he was writing that before Chad GBT was truly known to the world and the many people are saying I'll soon know what he will have a job AI or a place at all well what are we going to do with all the workers right the Frederick Taylor the the the the cogs you're only valuable because of what you create what are we going to do when you aren't valuable anymore he even says quote
01:19:16 --> 01:19:17 [SPEAKER_00]: He by the way had a strategy to deal with you.
01:19:18 --> 01:19:19 [SPEAKER_00]: Drugs in video games.
01:19:19 --> 01:19:20 [SPEAKER_00]: Make you happy, make you quiet.
01:19:22 --> 01:19:28 [SPEAKER_00]: Having raised humanity above the beastly level survival struggles, we will now aim to upgrade humans into gods and turn home with sapiens into homodas.
01:19:29 --> 01:19:34 [SPEAKER_00]: He believed we could hack our genet, he believes in the chairs that we can hack our genet, code and change our evolution.
01:19:34 --> 01:19:38 [SPEAKER_00]: That for the first time humans can make themselves evolve, we're truly playing the part of God now.
01:19:39 --> 01:19:46 [SPEAKER_00]: Homeless apiece is a post truth species whose power depends on creating and believing fictions like snow is black, right?
01:19:48 --> 01:19:49 [SPEAKER_00]: What will we do?
01:19:51 --> 01:19:59 [SPEAKER_00]: Each generation, people speak and plan the future and you can see, take into the future and they would be thrilled with how great their ideas were implemented.
01:19:59 --> 01:20:07 [SPEAKER_00]: The church is in shambles and ashes, and yes, the Lord is moving, but societally speaking, it's in a lot of trouble.
01:20:08 --> 01:20:13 [SPEAKER_00]: Right now we have another one of these guys speaking and saying with the plan of the future is, you've all know her are we?
01:20:14 --> 01:20:19 [SPEAKER_00]: Will we continue ignoring these philosophers and let their books guide these leaders into the future?
01:20:21 --> 01:20:25 [SPEAKER_00]: Or will we stop these horrible humans, these people with these horrible ideas?
01:20:25 --> 01:20:29 [SPEAKER_00]: That don't mean they're not main the image of God we all are, but their ideas are terrible and destructive.
01:20:30 --> 01:20:32 [SPEAKER_00]: Will we finally as a church start answering them?
01:20:33 --> 01:20:34 [SPEAKER_00]: reaching out and saying no.
01:20:35 --> 01:20:37 [SPEAKER_00]: Wait, we're not going to hack humans this time.
01:20:38 --> 01:20:45 [SPEAKER_00]: Wait, I don't want to, I don't want my grandchildren to Sunday be sitting around and going, wow, we'll go a few of all in the horror.
01:20:45 --> 01:20:58 [SPEAKER_00]: He said we're going to be useless class of people that are kept busy with Netflix and video games and drugs and then they're going to hack humanity and change our DNA and look at him if we could take you all in the row and horror into the future.
01:21:00 --> 01:21:00 [SPEAKER_00]: Look, he was right.
01:21:01 --> 01:21:01 [SPEAKER_00]: I don't want that to be the case.
01:21:03 --> 01:21:07 [SPEAKER_00]: I think when you start taking this seriously, I think when you start listening to these people and dealing with them.
01:21:08 --> 01:21:12 [SPEAKER_00]: I hope you see the point I've made through these two part episodes.
01:21:12 --> 01:21:13 [SPEAKER_00]: I know that long.
01:21:13 --> 01:21:19 [SPEAKER_00]: I mean, it really only scratched the surface, like I said, I think a whole podcast series could be dedicated to each of these guys each having their own episode.
01:21:20 --> 01:21:21 [SPEAKER_00]: Our world was created by people.
01:21:22 --> 01:21:28 [SPEAKER_00]: It wasn't an accident that 300, 400 years ago, the church once was so important to be where people were willing to die
01:21:29 --> 01:21:45 [SPEAKER_00]: Hi, for their interpretations of Christianity, people got on boats and sailed to the new world to create a chance a good Christian, peer-to-america, and now Now the church societal influence is almost non-existent How did we get there?
01:21:45 --> 01:21:48 [SPEAKER_00]: How did we do how did the the the church blow up?
01:21:49 --> 01:21:50 [SPEAKER_00]: It wasn't by accident.
01:21:50 --> 01:21:51 [SPEAKER_00]: It wasn't just that people drifted from God.
01:21:51 --> 01:21:53 [SPEAKER_00]: Yes, they did, but they were also under attack
01:21:55 --> 01:22:00 [SPEAKER_00]: By people with worldly philosophies that built our world, that we breathe the air of it all the time, we don't even know where they came from.
01:22:04 --> 01:22:04 [SPEAKER_00]: I hope we recognize them.
01:22:05 --> 01:22:09 [SPEAKER_00]: I hope you can teach these to other people because we can start recognizing where they come from.
01:22:09 --> 01:22:14 [SPEAKER_00]: Maybe we can do a better job of not being tricked by these deceitful philosophies as clashings too worn us about.
01:22:15 --> 01:22:19 [SPEAKER_00]: In the Greek world, Paul constantly was having to deal with these philosophical ideas.
01:22:19 --> 01:22:25 [SPEAKER_00]: We are the Western world as a descendant of that and as the Western world is moved further from God.
01:22:25 --> 01:22:30 [SPEAKER_00]: These philosophical ideas, these pagan philosophies are retaken over the world.
01:22:31 --> 01:22:32 [SPEAKER_00]: And they're very unkind.
01:22:32 --> 01:22:36 [SPEAKER_00]: Humans are basically animals and all these philosophers basically believe it.
01:22:36 --> 01:22:38 [SPEAKER_00]: They're all heading towards the utopia.
01:22:39 --> 01:22:40 [SPEAKER_00]: You've all know who are, is just the latest.
01:22:40 --> 01:22:42 [SPEAKER_00]: A utopian vision is here.
01:22:43 --> 01:22:44 [SPEAKER_00]: We just have to get rid of religion.
01:22:45 --> 01:22:52 [SPEAKER_00]: It's aren't using science to manage people, hack them like they animals that they are and do something with all the worthless people.
01:22:52 --> 01:22:55 [SPEAKER_00]: But then we will evolve and become the next thing.
01:22:56 --> 01:22:58 [SPEAKER_00]: It's amazing how much they all sound the same.
01:22:58 --> 01:22:58 [SPEAKER_00]: Don't they?
01:22:59 --> 01:23:28 [SPEAKER_00]: It's amazing how much it's just the same velocities repeated over and over again, whether it's Hitler's Superman, whether it's Russo, whether it's Nietzsche, they're all the same ideas, and they all have the same enemy every time, Christians and the church, maybe because ultimately, all of these ideas are from the father of lies, and maybe because ultimately, these are spiritual battles, and they're all the same, and they're all the same, and they're all the same, and they're all the same, and they're all the same, and they're all the same, and they're all the same, and they're all the same, and they're all the same, and they're all the same, and they're all the same, and they're all the same, and they're all the same, and they're all the same, and they're all the same, and they're all the same, and they're all the same, and they're all the same, and they're all the same, and they're all the
01:23:28 --> 01:23:40 [SPEAKER_00]: we Christians need to start raising up and fighting these spiritual battles and quit living in the quit living shocked and unstable and wondering where a world is tilting back and forth all the time.
01:23:40 --> 01:23:50 [SPEAKER_00]: How are all these bad ideas coming to fruition and maybe recognizing that they're coming from all of these ideas that have been around and they're getting the next batch is being created right before our very eyes.
01:23:52 --> 01:23:55 [SPEAKER_00]: If you enjoyed this episode, please send me an email, let me know.
01:23:55 --> 01:23:57 [SPEAKER_00]: There was a lot of research, a lot of thoughts.
01:23:57 --> 01:23:58 [SPEAKER_00]: I hope this was helpful for you.
01:24:00 --> 01:24:01 [SPEAKER_00]: Maybe this was a lot of stuff you already knew.
01:24:01 --> 01:24:03 [SPEAKER_00]: Maybe you already read college room and books.
01:24:03 --> 01:24:07 [SPEAKER_00]: So you see it inspired a lot of this, but I hope you also see a lot of it came from other places.
01:24:08 --> 01:24:15 [SPEAKER_00]: Um, if you like the idea of horrible humans and a series of Christians tackling these things, uh, let me know.
01:24:15 --> 01:24:21 [SPEAKER_00]: I think that I think could be so I really do think it could be a powerful tool for us, um, to put into the revised studios arsenal.
01:24:23 --> 01:24:24 [SPEAKER_00]: I hope you enjoyed listening.
01:24:24 --> 01:24:25 [SPEAKER_00]: Um,
01:24:25 --> 01:24:27 [SPEAKER_00]: Final thought, an end of where we started, right?
01:24:27 --> 01:24:30 [SPEAKER_00]: Uh, don't let the gods in the marketplace to see us again.
01:24:30 --> 01:24:35 [SPEAKER_00]: Now, this putter putt and truth of the gods, the copybook headings.
01:24:35 --> 01:24:35 [SPEAKER_00]: There's a god of truth.
01:24:36 --> 01:24:40 [SPEAKER_00]: He is really, in his word, his word is our light, it's our lamp.
01:24:40 --> 01:24:41 [SPEAKER_00]: It is what guides us.
01:24:41 --> 01:24:43 [SPEAKER_00]: He is our cornerstone that keeps us stable.
01:24:44 --> 01:24:49 [SPEAKER_00]: And as the world tells back and forth with the permanent revolution, all these things, these philosophers, promote.
01:24:50 --> 01:24:51 [SPEAKER_00]: Notice what they're really looking for.
01:24:53 --> 01:24:56 [SPEAKER_00]: Humanity was once good, and he's to get back to primitive state, no.
01:24:56 --> 01:24:59 [SPEAKER_00]: Humanity was good in the Garden of Eden, and we need to go back to God.
01:25:00 --> 01:25:02 [SPEAKER_00]: We have to get rid of the church, no.
01:25:02 --> 01:25:06 [SPEAKER_00]: We have to hear rid of these worldly philosophies, these horrible ideas, and turn to the church.
01:25:07 --> 01:25:08 [SPEAKER_00]: We need to come to a utopia, no.
01:25:09 --> 01:25:13 [SPEAKER_00]: Heaven is where we're headed because of God, and his salvationary work on the cross.
01:25:13 --> 01:25:16 [SPEAKER_00]: We are broken, but it wasn't by society that broke us.
01:25:16 --> 01:25:18 [SPEAKER_00]: We are broken because we're born that way.
01:25:18 --> 01:25:21 [SPEAKER_00]: Yes, society does break us in this own special ways.
01:25:22 --> 01:25:26 [SPEAKER_00]: Sure, maybe your parents pass down some problems here and there, but she's not gonna get fixed by science.
01:25:26 --> 01:25:30 [SPEAKER_00]: They're gonna only find your salvation and your fix, you're Christ.
01:25:31 --> 01:25:37 [SPEAKER_00]: These men can be chowed to the future out and say, said throughout these episodes, they would look and see that their ideas were successfully implemented.
01:25:38 --> 01:25:39 [SPEAKER_00]: Church has been beaten down.
01:25:40 --> 01:25:45 [SPEAKER_00]: Science rules the day, but they would also see that there are utopia hasn't.
01:25:46 --> 01:25:46 [SPEAKER_00]: People are not happier.
01:25:48 --> 01:26:01 [SPEAKER_00]: And as Yvonne O'Harrari, the version of this promises the next way to many, many rich people and powerful people around the world know that it's going to end the same way for them.
01:26:03 --> 01:26:08 [SPEAKER_00]: The only way to find truth is that you're truth into something old and true are older than all these enemies.
01:26:08 --> 01:26:10 [SPEAKER_00]: So the God created this world.
01:26:11 --> 01:26:14 [SPEAKER_00]: All right, this is Troy and this has been provided.
01:26:42 --> 01:26:44 [UNKNOWN]: Thank you for watching.
01:28:28 --> 01:28:28 [UNKNOWN]: You