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The speaker discusses the victor of an election and expresses uncertainty about who it is. They mention that the election was corrupt, but do not provide any specific details.

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Congress is currently holding a hearing, which comes just 24 hours after the passing of John McCain. The speaker refers to the hearing as a circus.

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Is this truly a democracy? A functioning democracy requires a strong feedback loop between the people and their government. Without it, if unelected bureaucrats hold the power, the meaning of democracy is lost. The weight of leadership can be challenging, but open communication is essential for a government to represent its citizens effectively. A government without responsiveness to its people isn't truly democratic.

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Cachistocracy is defined as government by the least suitable or competent citizens of a state. The speaker suggests this term is applicable to the current situation.

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In a republic, the larger issue at hand is who governs. It is believed that We The People, under the constitution, hold the answer to this question.

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America is not sending their best and brightest to watch. It's hard to believe that these people are making decisions that determine our government. It's actually scary.

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The speaker criticizes the Democratic Party for potentially choosing an unqualified candidate, Suckalotta Cox, due to diversity policies. They suggest Cox lacks intelligence and capability, but may still be a contender for a high office. The speaker warns of the dangers of prioritizing diversity and inclusion over qualifications in politics.

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My definition is this.

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Inflation is a long-standing tax used by governments to take resources from their people for centuries.

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The speaker suggests that the standards for leadership have been inverted, with the least competent and obviously unqualified individuals becoming leaders. They propose a thought experiment, asking if the mentioned individuals, including Biden and Kamala Harris, would be hired to coach a small town high school football team. The speaker argues that if the answer is no, it is laughable to think they should be running the government.

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I believe the scariest words in English are "I'm from the government and I'm here to help."

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Democrats falsely praised Joe Biden for his abilities, but it's now clear they were lying. The American people are witnessing the chaos and lies of the Bidens. They are falling apart, and Joe Biden is not fit to lead. It's a disgrace.

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The speakers agree the current system is "pretty bad," and Speaker 1 attributes this to a lack of competition, stating the government has a monopoly on governing. Speaker 1 clarifies they are not advocating for privatizing government. The speakers then discuss corruption, with Speaker 0 stating they know some individuals involved. They then consider focusing on incompetency and waste instead of fraud. Speaker 0 agrees there is waste in the system.

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This election is about those who want a country run by the people and those who prefer a government run by the government.

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US presidents have been undermined by their agency heads, suggesting a system not controlled by elected officials.

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We're facing a situation of corporate and medical oppression, which feels like tyranny. The question arises: when do we take a stand? How many elections must be compromised before we take serious action?

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People are too small-minded to govern themselves. Progress requires individuals to give up their rights to a powerful ruler.

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This repetition emphasizes the extreme danger this poses to our democracy.

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The speaker claims the United States is rapidly moving in the direction of oligarchy. They state the country is increasingly becoming an oligarchy and evolving into an oligarchic society. The speaker asserts that under Donald Trump, the country is hurtling rapidly toward oligarchy, and a handful of billionaires are moving the entire planet toward an oligarchic society. They also claim a particular budget moves the country rapidly in the direction of oligarchy.

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The state is the self-determination of being Argentine. The state is the protection of the national patrimony. Why do I tell you this? Of the 278,000,000 hectares of the Argentine Republic, 16,000,000—look who owns them, the one with colors, the one with French fries, the one who has a lake—has hectares in Argentina. Zoros, the one with chocolates. Yes, well, of course we are talking about protection. In September 2011, the land protection law was enacted. What did this land law say? Law 26,737. It placed limits on foreign purchase, limits on corporate participation to buy national territory. It prohibited what were permanent water mirrors, you know that one already bought it. And then a limit of 1,000 hectares in the wealthiest zone of the Argentine Republic. Why do I tell you this is a government of surrender? Look, look, the decree, Decree 20,70, 23, which has been in effect since December 2023, that decree, in its Article 154, repeals this land law. Yes, ladies and gentlemen, yes, gentlemen. Javier Milei does not want the state because his government is a government of surrender.

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The people here are smart. I'm running against someone with a low IQ.

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The speaker claims that the people running the country are stupid and lack common sense, adhering instead to an ideology. The speaker singles out Kamala, asserting that every place she has been involved with has deteriorated.

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America is not sending their best and brightest to make important decisions for the government. It's hard to believe that these people are the ones in charge, and it's actually scary.

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Speaker 0: Have you seen local news anchors reciting it verbatim, as if democracy is the greatest thing ever? It’s become a social engineering propaganda tool that democracy is the greatest thing ever. We weren’t founded as a democracy. This country is founded as a constitutional republic. Speaker 1: There’s a line from Sweatshop Union: if democracy is so good, why are we running all over the world down people’s throats? Speaker 0: Exactly. Spreading democracy by dropping bombs just doesn’t make sense. Speaker 2: The political apparatus is set up such that government is not merit-based, but private institutions select leaders on merit. What happens if, in the future, micro sovereignties are run by the most competent person rather than a personality? Look at Lee Kuan Yew in Singapore in the 80s. His government was compensated based on economic returns and performance. Singapore is widely regarded as one of the best places to do business and as one of the freest, most open micronations. Speaker 0: Let’s start with The Sovereign Individual, the book on the table. Difficult read? Speaker 2: One of the hardest reads, in my view. It’s dry and painful, with dismal subjects. Speaker 0: An eye opener—unplugging from the matrix. It’s an orange-peeling book and was written in 1997, about twenty years before Bitcoin. Speaker 2: It predicted the emergence of anonymous digital cash, i.e., Bitcoin. It predicted the rise of narrowcasting rather than broadcasting, i.e., social media. It predicted government use of a plandemic to reinforce border integrity when things started to get weird. Speaker 0: It was prescient. Imagine reading it in 1996. The book’s first five to ten years—how successful was it? Speaker 1: I imagine they’ve sold enormous numbers more recently. The book’s sales figures suggest a Pareto effect: 10-to-1, 15-to-1 in rankings. The necessity of a post-nine world has made the authors’ insights profoundly prophetic. Speaker 2: It’s a book ahead of its time. How would you pitch it to someone who hasn’t read it? Speaker 0: The easiest pitch is to tell them upfront that it’s impossible, font too, and that it’s dense. In a short-time-preference society, reading long-form is niche. The value is unplugging from the matrix; if you have the courage to unplug, this book will ruin your life in the best possible way. It’s the one-way door toward Bitcoin. Speaker 1: Would you suggest that someone with a strong Bitcoin understanding read the book? Speaker 2: Yes. The audio is easier for some; the density is akin to a Peterson-level experience. A few have read it and shared the same unplugging moment. The book’s central idea is that after a certain realization, you cross an event horizon toward a brighter future, where finances and sovereignty are rethought. Speaker 0: The book’s numbers show how compounding matters: if you’re paying tax or inflation on savings, opting out into self-sovereign regimes like Bitcoin or jurisdictional optimization can be transformative. The example: for every $5,000 in taxable income, a 10% compounded yield over a forty-year career costs you more than $2.2 million. The answer, as the book highlights, is to move to Bermuda or switch to Bitcoin, eliminating inflation’s tax on your purchasing power. Speaker 2: The analogy: a 100-dollar bill on the ground—someone will eventually pick it up. The book frames incentives as simple, primordial drivers: people seek the easiest path to preserving wealth, and Bitcoin creates a powerful magnetism toward sovereignty. Speaker 0: The discussion then moves to a digital future: the sovereign individual, information aristocrats, and the rise of digital nomad visas. In 2020, 21 countries offered digital nomad visas; by 2025, between 43 and 75 countries are inviting people to live there for up to eighteen months, bringing income and economic value. This reflects the shift toward the “digital heaven” where physical location is less limiting, aided by crypto finance, multisig, and portable wealth. Speaker 2: The concept of “digital Berlin Walls” and border controls is challenged by the rise of nomad visas, tax competition, and capital mobility. As the state’s revenue base weakens, micro states or micro nations question how to finance themselves; land can be sold or leased to new sovereign enclaves, while existing nation-states become more like a la carte governments. Speaker 0: The discussion then turns to Moore’s Law and bandwidth, and how faster processing and information flow empower sovereign individuals. As information becomes easier to transport, people can conduct business from Bermuda, Japan, or Florida with equal ease. That power accelerates the move toward self-sovereignty. Speaker 1: The rise of cyber warfare is a counterpoint: a single actor can strike on a scale once reserved for nation-states. This creates a need to treat citizens as customers to encourage them to stay, while individuals can also defend themselves with cryptography, multisig, and secure digital infrastructure. The book’s framework contrasts magnitude of power with efficiency: the transition from medieval power projection to high-technology, efficient defense and commerce. Speaker 2: The Luddites are discussed as a historical example: when a new machine threatened skilled labor, some resisted, but the Luddites did not riot against all technology—only against those jobs at risk. The modern parallel is AI and data-entry work: will the losers and left-behinds revolt against technology, or will they adapt? The answer may lie in new governance forms where governance is more responsive to the needs of citizens who are themselves mobile and empowered. Speaker 0: The conversation returns to “government as a service” versus the nation-state. Open-market competition among micro-nations could yield better service ethics, as governments compete to deliver what citizens want, when they want it. The book emphasizes that the market should decide governance efficiency, not centralized coercion. The nation-state’s cost of enforcement rises as sovereignty disperses, making it harder to extract taxes or project power. Speaker 1: The panel discusses the role of education and personal responsibility. Reading the Sovereign Individual remains a duty, but so does practical action: multisig setup, hardware wallets, off-ramps, and building digital sovereignty with practical steps. The speakers stress the importance of small, incremental steps: five minutes a day of reading; gradual exposure; and helping others gain exposure to Bitcoin through accessible tools. Speaker 2: The “orange pill moment” is repeated: once you see the future, you cannot unsee it. The book is a catalyst for readers to pursue self-sovereignty, not as a cynical rejection of government, but as a practical shift toward a voluntary, customer-based governance model in a world of mobile populations and robust tech. The speakers emphasize that this is not a call for doom; it’s an invitation to participate in reform through education, prudent financial choices, and deliberate, long-term planning. Speaker 0: The closing notes insist: read, educate others, and become the change you want to see. The conversation underscores three pillars: information technology’s accelerating power, the emergence of micro-nations and digital sovereignty, and the imperative to align incentives toward cooperative, merchant-like behavior rather than coercive domination. The speakers leave the audience with a hopeful vision: a world of decentralized governance where governments as “customers” compete to serve, and where sovereign individuals use Bitcoin to protect and grow wealth, enabling a future with less violence and more abundance. Speaker 1: If you want to connect with the speakers, you can follow them via their channels (noting their emphasis on privacy and selective presence). The discussion ends with renewed energy: fight for the future, protect your digital life, and explore the bright orange future responsibly, with education and preparedness as your guides.

Tucker Carlson

Chris Moritz: How Kamala Gave California to the Cartels, & the Psychopaths Ruling the Democrat Party
Guests: Chris Moritz
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Tucker Carlson and Chris Moritz discuss the decline of California, highlighting the state's transformation from a prosperous region to one plagued by crime and dysfunction. Moritz attributes this decline to several factors, including the influence of criminal justice reform movements and specific legislative changes, such as the Supreme Court ruling in Brown v. Plata, which mandated prison population reductions. This led to laws like AB 109, which transferred nonviolent offenders to county jails, ultimately resulting in increased crime rates and recidivism. Moritz points to the rise of juvenile crime, with gangs recruiting children as young as ten for violent crimes, and discusses the impact of Proposition 47, which reclassified thefts under $950 as misdemeanors and decriminalized drug possession. He argues that these laws, supported by figures like Kamala Harris, have contributed to a culture of impunity for criminals and have eroded public safety. The conversation also touches on the role of the Mexican drug cartels in California's criminal landscape, with Moritz asserting that they exert significant influence over the state's criminal economy. He describes how the cartels have taken control of drug distribution and violence, leading to a situation where local gangs are forced to adapt to survive. Moritz expresses concern over the political landscape, noting that California has become a one-party state characterized by corruption and inefficiency. He criticizes the lack of accountability for politicians who enact harmful policies and suggests that the current system is unsustainable. The discussion concludes with Moritz emphasizing the need for a return to effective governance and the importance of civic responsibility in preserving civilization.
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