Afleveringen
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Kirsche joins Based Camp for an in-depth conversation on her journey from TERA PvP gamer to one of the most influential conservative VTubers. She discusses surviving a major cancellation attempt by Vice, her deep research exposing āBridgeā (the successor to DEI initiatives), why boycotts alone arenāt enough, and how the VTuber community helped turn the cultural tide.
Malcolm and Simone Collins dive into tactics for defeating woke capture in gaming and corporations, the power of parallel institutions, AI tools for creators, building alternative economies, and why nerdy weirdos are winning the culture war. Topics include abortion radicalization stories, pronatalism, free speech, and practical ways conservatives can create better systems.
Episode Transcript
Malcolm Collins: it Hello, everyone. I am so excited to be here with you today. Today, we actually are doing a collab with Kirsche, which is so exciting, ācause Iāve wanted to do this one forever. Itās like everythingās coming in at once. And the context on Kirsche, if you are not familiar with who she is or her cultural relevance, because itās m- hugely outsized, I think.
My entire life within nerdy cultural niches, we had the wokes and the proto-wokes come in, whether it was video games, whether it was, you know, cons, whether it was trading cards, whether it was y- you know, anime. Theyād come in, and they would screw it all up, and they would take it over, and theyād push us out.
And every time it happened, it just felt like th- there was this endless tide, and it was gonna forever happen to everything I ever had an interest in. And then one fateful day, a sort of the [00:01:00] last wave, this happened in the VTuber community. And it happened specifically targeted at Kirsche. And when this happened, we did a number of videos on it.
And Kirsche, unlike every other person before her, h- held her ground and held it in a way where they actually holistically retreated. And they retreated to such an extent that post this, a conservative VTuber scene has begun to grow. And I mean, it was there beforehand, but now it feels much livelier and much more like a core part of the wider conservative movement, and itās been beginning to regain crowd.
So, like, after your attempted cancellation, you then had the guy who tried to do this to the horror space in, in favor of shadows. I donāt know if you remember this whole controversy. I do. But he tried to claim the horror space, and he got absolutely eviscerated immediately. Yes. Absolutely thrown out i- i- immediately.[00:02:00]
And so her being in this, it felt very much like
Speaker: And then weāll know how to beat them. One day it will all be over, and everyone will forget that this was the moment. This is when it turned. And it wasnāt the mighty
Daily Wire
Speaker: , it wasnāt
Some fancy
Heritage Foundation report
Speaker: Thereās a
Speaker 4: Vtuber
Speaker: named
Speaker 4: Kirsche
Speaker: Do
Speaker 2: now! Yeah.
Good job,
Speaker 4: Reporter.
Speaker 3: Thank you, sir. That would be
Speaker 4: fox girl
Speaker 3: , sir.
Speaker 2: Carry on, .
Speaker: Yes, sir.
Malcolm Collins: or,
Malcolm Collins: But, but after this point while... And, and this is something w- I, I wanna talk about. While culturally we seem to be winning more, like, our ability to do something like boycott Harley Davidson or [00:03:00] Tractor Supply...
By the way, theyāre super woke, Simone. I donāt know if you know this. Oh, yeah. To the extent that theyāve actually changed their policies has not been effective. But in the spaces weāve been closer to, like the video game space, like the Ubisoft boycotts basically we learned we have to put these companies out of business.
Mm-hmm. And so I wanna talk with you about that experience, like you getting into this space before the, the big cancellation attempt How you thought about and managed that and how the culture has changed post that
Kirsche: All right. Okay. So I guess the starting point is, like, how, how did I feel during the cancellation?
No,
Malcolm Collins: no, howād you get into VTub- Like, when you got into VTubing, did you intend to be a political Vtuber?
Kirsche: No, not really. I mean, I first got into VTubing back in, like, 2018, and I w- I wasnāt even, like, a Vtuber proper then. I was just, like, a PNGTuber. I or- originally started, like, without even a microphone.
Like, two weeks of streaming, [00:04:00] no microphone, no nothing ācause I had just quit my job at an insurance company after an elongated period of my anxiety being incredibly bad. And so at this point in time I was hopped up on, like, three different anxiety medications and I was just like, āWell, I donāt wanna just sit around and do nothing all day.
I feel like I should at least try to do something that could help my anxiety get better.ā Well, my name is pretty well-known in the Tera community, so if I started streaming I would already have, like, a small audience of people who would be there, and then I could use that as, like, Iām gonna interact with people more frequently.
Iām gonna, you know, get a bit out of my safe bubble of, like, I only wanna do text communications. And so, like, eventually, you know, obviously I started using my microphone. I got a PNG. So, so basically- I d- got a, like, animated GIF
Malcolm Collins: How did you know the Tera community? What, what, w- w- what was your, your experience there?
Kirsche: I was one of the best PVPers on the server for many, many years. I was frequently rank one on the rank board whenever like, Fraywin Canyon would have its, like, [00:05:00] rollovers. I didnāt do threes as often, but I absolutely loved Fraywin Canyon and I loved doing like, guild PVP and whatnot. Like, it, it was really weird, like, coming into a streamer scene and seeing people like Lakari, who I had healed for, like, years before, already being huge streamers, right?
I was just like, āWhat the heck?ā Zenosas Vex, I, I played with him in, like, Final Fantasy XIV raiding as well. So, like, to see all these people who, like, had been in, like, raid groups or PVP groups before in different games with me, I was like, āOh. I was streaming. Streamingās got pretty robust, is it not?ā
So it
Malcolm Collins: was like a- āCause, like,
Kirsche: previously I never paid attention to it ... social thing.
Malcolm Collins: It, it was like an alternative to what people used to do. Like, Iām, Iām gonna get out there and, and build a social life. It was like-
Kirsche: Yeah ...
Malcolm Collins: that... Okay, so thatās fascinating. Okay, so now describe how you go from there to, like, what radicali- what, what got you on the Iām actually gonna start talking, because we didnāt start talking about politics either.
We, we had no interest in that to start. A- in fact, we started with pretty progressive political beliefs, Ooh ... getting into the space and everything. So what w- what hap- [00:06:00] was it that you were a conservative during this time or you had conservative-like beliefs, or were these beliefs that you developed over time in the space, or you just felt more comfortable talking about over time?
Kirsche: I would say I was probably already on the conservative path at this point. For the 2016 election I had been registered independent basically since I could register to vote, and for the 2016 election I changed my registration from independent to Republican so that I could vote for Trump in the primary And I, I guess I had been talking about, like, the nonsense with transgender targeting children probably since about 2011, 2012 or so.
Oh, that was impossible back then. Like, just in my personal life. Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, that was like- And I- ... youād get canceled, fired for talking about that- Yeah ... like, 2011.
Kirsche: Yeah. And, and I, Iād post about it, like, on my Facebook, you know, which I didnāt have many p- friends on Facebook, ācause Iām not a huge social media person.
So I would just, like, post about it occasionally there. And so when I started streaming when my friend who would come and voice chat with me, my [00:07:00] old head moderator, Tangerine, he he would get our groups together. So he would either put us in Duty Finder and we would wait for ages, or he would, like, put it up in an LFG and weād get other human beings.
While he was doing that, I would just read articles on stream. And so sometimes I would get through, like, a paragraph. Sometimes Iād get through, like, half of it. Sometimes I would have enough time to finish it. But it was like I would read that in between, like, waiting for dungeons because I just, I enjoyed reading the news in my off time.
Mm-hmm. And I didnāt have anybody in, like, real life to talk about the news with because they were all, like, either apolitical or like, āYeah, I just donāt care. I just... It doesnāt matter to me.ā So it was nice to like, you know, talk to this few people in my audience then who were also interested, like, in what was going on politically in America.
And it kind of shifted once a lot more of, I guess, leftist policy kind of stuff started being her- heralded in the VTuber community as apolitical. And so itās like you could see all of the leftist rot coming in like it did to comics, like it did to video games- Yeah ... like it did to other things, and everyone being like, [00:08:00] āWell, thatās not political, but Kirsche is political.ā
And itās like, you know what? Letās talk politics even more now because I donāt want what happened to all of my other favorite things to happen to VTubing.
Malcolm Collins: Thatās fascinating. So, one story Iāve heard from some other VTubers weāve talked to about this is there was like, there was a big shift after the release of the Harry Potter game.
Mm-hmm. Because a bunch of people hadnāt realized how captured the space had become-
Kirsche: Yeah ...
Malcolm Collins: until they just tried to stream what they thought of as a fairly innocuous game. But it sounds like you broke the seal even before that based on, and I think a lot of people donāt realize this about a part of American culture because I, because I talk about this with, with very specific groups often, where Iām like, when you are calling out a group for something that feels very justified to you and then they start yelling at you saying, āOh, thatās, you know, anti-Mormon or anti-Jewish or anti,ā you know, whatever.
And Iām like, no, this is like a reasonable thing. I think a lot of just like a culturally American thing to do is to double down on it. Be like, you [00:09:00] canāt police me for something thatās a perfectly reasonable thing to say. Iām gonna double down because you attempted to do that. And thatās sort of what drove you into this.
Kirsche: Yeah. And, and itās like, and people, people like to be like VTuber purists, and I think thatās fine, where theyāre just like VTubers will only play games, theyāll only do like cute girl doing cute things, like idle activities. And I think itās fine to be a VTubing purist. Obviously, Iām very much outside of the typical idle culture since I do talk politics.
Yeah. And itās like I feel like once, once we start making more gains and we stop having like the colonization of our spaces, then I can kind of finally be like, okay, I still enjoy talking politics, but I can actually go back to playing more games like I used to instead of having to talk about politics all the time
Malcolm Collins: Well, you do a very good job, and for people who havenāt watched her stuff, I often describe her as the top of the funnel for our sort of intellectual ecosystem.
Which is to say you often do the original research, which then drips out of all the various taps [00:10:00] who watch all of whateverās trending right now. ?
Speaker 5: Federal scientists are working around the clock to probe its secrets. Once we understand the bug, we will defeat
it
Malcolm Collins: When did you begin to get into the deep research? āCause that must take a ton of time ...
Kirsche: for the Bridge stuff specifically, man, I, I donāt have a ton of time to watch content creators like I used to, just ācause Iām a creator myself now.
Yeah But I used to watch a ton of videos and stuff from, like, ItsAGundam and Tim Pool and The Quartering. Yeah. And I originally even started watching Tim Pool way back in the day because he was, he was, like, firmly on the left. And I was like- Yeah ... this is a guy that, like, has some things in common with me, but I disagree with a lot of other things.
Letās watch him, because thatās a great way to expose myself to, you know, the other side of ideas, and sort of solidify how I feel based on his arguments, you know? So it was, it was really nice. And then over time, obviously, he became more center and left a lot [00:11:00] of the left-leaning stuff behind. But The Quartering had made a video, and he had a sponsor, and I canāt even remember what the sponsor was for, but it basically, like, told you how woke a, a, a company was-
by using it. So you could, like, scan an item and it would give you, like, a woke score for the company. And they were like, āHereās the top 10 most woke companies of, like, 2023,ā I think it was or something. And Campbellās was in there, and I was like, āThe soup company? I like their soup. I li- I like their chicken pot pie pub style soup.
Thatās good.ā And I hadnāt, Iād never heard of anything about Campbellās, even in all of my, like, going through other basic DEI stuff. Yeah,
Simone Collins: yeah.
Kirsche: And I, I looked them up, and one of the first things I found was that Campbellās was spearhead funding a project called Bridge. And I was like, āOh. Well, whatās Bridge?ā
And I found out that there are, like, two different Bridges. Thereās one set up by Social Impact, and then thereās the one that Iāve been digging into by Sharyl Attkisson. And I thought at first when I first found them that they had something to do with each other, because Social Impact was [00:12:00] called, like, Bridge Project 2.0, and Sharyl Attkisson had referred to her project as, like, a, a 2.0 of DEI before.
So I was like, āMaybe,ā but I couldnāt find any solid connections between those two specifically.
Simone Collins: Okay.
Kirsche: But going through Sharyl Attkissonās was like- Wow. And I, I literally could only contribute or attribute it to having watched that, the quartering video. If Iād never watched that, I would have never looked into Campbellās.
Simone Collins: Wait, what, what does, what does Bridge do? Iām out of the loop.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. Simone, Simoneās not in this, this conspiracy also. I didnāt
Simone Collins: know.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. So John, shock her in our audience.
Simone Collins: Please.
Kirsche: So a lot of people when I try bringing up Bridge, theyāre just like, āOh, this is just another renaming of DEI, like Jedi or whatever.ā
And itās like, well, no, itās not. Bridge is a company that is working with tons of other very, very strong, huge corporations. And they have a ton of these corporations who are signed on to like their board of directors or their other like actual, like willing to be publicly associated with Bridge page.
Simone Collins: Huh.
Kirsche: But a lot of companies who arenāt even on Bridge, they follow the [00:13:00] same exact trajectory of hiding the DEI. And there was an interview with a, a lady who runs a podcast called like DEI After Five, and she was talking to another DEI acolyte saying that a lot of people donāt realize how good DEI is for them.
And so you have to hide the DEI vegetables- Oh my God ... in order to get people to eat them to realize that theyāre good for them. Itās like the entire purpose for like for years before we started seeing it, Bridge was informing companies on how to obscure DEI, how to make it less public. The entire point of having like a DEI team after 2020 was to obviously showcase like, āHey, weāre woke.
Weāre doing the Marxist thing.ā
Simone Collins: Yeah.
Kirsche: Bridge comes in and says, āThis is gonna be a problem. You need to dissolve those DEI teams, and you need to embed those DEI acolytes in other parts of the company.ā Whoa. Because if people see the like DEI outright, thatās gonna be an attackable vector. Thatās gonna be a way to get yourself in legal trouble for discrimination.
100%.
Simone Collins: Oh,
Kirsche: whoa.
Simone Collins: Yeah. Yeah. Whoa. Like [00:14:00] first, so thereās this implicit recognition that it is discrimination, and it is gonna get caught, and it is gonna get stopped, but then thatās so interesting ācause I listen to still so many leftist outlets. And of course- Mm-hmm ... thereās always the, I mean, just as there were accusations of greenwashing when environmentalism was at its zenith, then thereās the accusations
Malcolm Collins: of like- I, Iām so frustrated
Simone Collins: DEI
Malcolm Collins: washing My, my brother retired from Doge recently, and that I, I, I should have sent him this, been like, āHey, just tear-ā Oh ... ātear into this.ā
Simone Collins: Doge did not go far enough. It did not. Oh my gosh. That is insane.
Malcolm Collins: But so one of the things that you frequently talk about, and I think itās an interesting meta conversation to have.
Actually, no, weāre gonna wait. Iām gonna be disciplined. Before we get into this- Discipline ... I do wanna get the full history. Oh, yes ... of how, how... Okay, so you began going into the Bridge stuff, w- you, so you got into the Bridge stuff before the Anna Vale thing?
Kirsche: Yeah. That was, I started the Bridge like research, I wanna say the end of 2023, and then my first posts about it were beginning of 2024 [00:15:00]
Malcolm Collins: Wow.
Okay, so thatās when you begin to get into the, the sort of intellectual deep dive. And she does this not just with research on companies, which you do a lot of, of, of great stuff on, but also research on, like if you wanna know about like Joe Money, like go watch her episode about that, right? Like- Yeah
sheāll go, weāll do an hour long episode. Youāll have like three hours going into it, right? Oh my gosh. Like really deep stuff.
Kirsche: And I, I super appreciate my audience as well, because itās like when I do this Bridge deep dive stuff and I, I wanna like show what Iām looking at so nobody can be like, āOh, sheās just making it up,ā itās like, no, you can see how I found it while Iām live.
Hmm. But it, it is a lot of corpo speak. It is a lot of like dry, āHey, this is really good information. Theyāre telling us what theyāre gonna do. Theyāre telling us how theyāre going to subvert us,ā but itās very dry, very boring language
Malcolm Collins: Wow. Wow. This, and then this is when, So, so in this part of the timeline, now weāre at the Anna- and the Anna Valen thing was a complete sea change for a lot of people, one, because I think it validated the VTube community for the wider [00:16:00] conservative movement that before it was unsure, like Fox Girl, right?
Like, āWhat? Ugh, I donāt know. That looks weird. Thatās like a furry- Yeah ... thing or something,ā right? You know? And we see the outlets that were used to sort of affirming, āOh, you can trust this,ā because theyāre mad at it, and then all of a sudden I think a bunch of people were like, āOh, okay. Okay. Iāll, Iāll take a, Iāll take a look at this.ā
Because the story did so well. I, I donāt know if, if y- so on our video on this, I donāt know if you ever, have you ever dove over Anna Valenās personal diaries?
Kirsche: I donāt know what the personal diaries are, but yeah. We, we found quite a bit on their degenerate interests, I guess you could say.
Malcolm Collins: Theyāre, theyāre really sad. Like, basically- ... their, their life falls apart. Thatās our episode where we, we call them a cenobite. I donāt know if you know cenobites from Hellraiser.
Kirsche: Yes.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. Theyāre like the life of a cenobite. This is what happens.
Kirsche: Thatās a, thatās a good word to use.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. We, we, we, we had, like, AI videos where we have, like, cenobites doing book readings with kids and, like-
āWhy, why are you having trouble with this?ā You know, like, chittering [00:17:00] their teeth. Ah. Yeah, right.
Simone Collins: But,
Malcolm Collins: Then, then post this a really interesting thing happened which was in a huge part because of the, the Vtuber community. W- we go into this deeper in some other episodes, but the Vtuber community is intrinsically more nerdy than other parts of the right.
Like Tim Pool, I, I used to be a big Tim Pool fan myself. I, I donāt find his new stuff as interesting as his older stuff, but he you know, heās still, like, a n- a normal not nerd guy, right? Yeah. But the Vtuber community, almost intrinsic in its identity, is not gonna crash out on anime, like Matt Walsh or something like that.
Yeah. Itās not gonna crash out on girls in bikinis.
Kirsche: Michael Knowles interviewed a furry recently, so itās not yet over for me. Maybe I should reach out again
Simone Collins: as well.
Malcolm Collins: Wait. Who, who interviewed a furry?
Kirsche: Michael Knowles. Michael Knowles. Heās part of the- Oh, what furry
Simone Collins: did he interview?
Kirsche: I have no idea. I just saw some-
some video of him on Twitter with, like, a guy in a fur suit in an interview setting, and I was like, āWhat the hell?ā
Simone Collins: [00:18:00] Glass ceilings broken.
Malcolm Collins: Cra- crazy lore on us. We were supposed to be on the last episode of Tucker Carlson. Oh,
Kirsche: wow ...
Malcolm Collins: but he was canceled. Yeah, his booking team and everything. Thatās crazy.
We set up a date and everything like that, and then he got canceled. F*****g S- so angry about that. I mean, I wouldnāt wanna be on Tucker Carlson now. I wouldnāt care as much, but I mean, I still would. Heās big enough, I still would.
Simone Collins: Yes, you would. Come on. Yeah.
Kirsche: I have no idea what happened to Tucker Carlson.
I just know that I like his soundbite of, like, āY- youāve been a bad girl, and youāre gonna get a vigorous spanking.ā What? Why did you say that? Why did you say that? Oh,
Malcolm Collins: we gotta, we
Kirsche: gotta
Malcolm Collins: drop you in on our conspiracies here. So this is one of our biggest conspiracies. It is and I, I donāt know, like, I say it as a joke, but, like, also I wouldnāt put it past him.
Itās that whenever somebody starts being mildly critical of Israel, Mossad poisons them so they go crazy. And then, like, three years later, theyāre, like, gibbering insanity. This happened to Tucker Carlson. This happened to Candace Owens. This happened to Nick Fuentes. Like, they all start just m- being mildly critical.
Three years later, crazy.
Kirsche: So itās like this is the prototype [00:19:00] of the mind control chip, but if you have it in you for too long you just go crazy?
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. Yeah, oh yeah, that, thatās probably it. Oh, like in The Fall Out where they, they turn it on too much and their heads explode.
Kirsche: Yeah, the technology just isnāt there yet.
They only get a good couple of years.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. I know weāre laughing at this, but it did turn out that the Southern Poverty Law Center was the KKKās major donor. I
Kirsche: mean- So like- It was crazy to find out ...
Malcolm Collins: yeah. They definitely-
Kirsche: Thereās so little right-wing extremism, the left has to fund it.
Simone Collins: Yep.
Malcolm Collins: āCause thereās just no- Someoneās gotta do it
really any extremists anymore. Thereās no- Yeah. But it ended up pushing this sort of like nerd version of right-wing culture, which I think has, has done a lot to create this sense of community. And itās one of the things that weāve noticed as well, where when we started as like right-wing content creators and actually Iād be interested in your thoughts on this all of a sudden because of the VTuber community, weāve gotten into like this community where like we interact with other people a lot more, which didnāt happen in our early days.
But I guess you never were in that, right? Like, you [00:20:00] always have been interacting with people. Or did it like feel to you like this wider fringe group began to appear all of a sudden? Or
Kirsche: was that only true of me? It definitely, it definitely began to feel like a wider fringe group began to appear. I always kinda kept to myself.
Like, there were only like a few handful of people that I would collab with, especially regularly. I just like, I donāt know, didnāt, didnāt really like reaching out to people too often, and especially once I started going in a more political direction. I was just like-
Malcolm Collins: Yeah ...
Kirsche: well, a lot of people just wanna, you know, play games and, and do, do normal stuff, and I donāt wanna have like the effect of, well, their audience is gonna revolt and cause issues for them.
And so like I you- itās just not, it s- it sounds like a headache, right? Yeah. So I just, I just didnāt do that all that much. And itās also interesting, I agree with you definitely that the, the Vice situation blew things too outside of the VTuber sphere because in 2024 I was supposed to be on a panel at OffKai, and I got told that [00:21:00] I canāt be on panels because I make volunteers feel unsafe.
And they showed me a handful of tweets like making a joke about Sam Hyde entering a womanās weightlifting competition or explaining the difference between the LGBTQ extra long acronym between Canada and America, ācause we have two different really long acronyms. And apparently me explaining that to people is problematic.
And also like me telling Tim Poole that he was wrong about the Charlemagne clip when, when he was saying Charlemagne wants DEI gone. Itās like, thatās not what he said, Tim. Right, they had, they had a handful of like posts and clips, like my, my pronouns on Discord being burger queen. Mm-hmm. Theyāre like, āThis is why you make people feel unsafe.ā
Malcolm Collins: And this is why they feel unsafe. Yeah. No, I mean, these are the tactics they use to control organizations, right? Like-
Kirsche: Yeah. And I mean, I- ... Iāve shown proof of, of like OffKai not only playing these kind of political games where theyāre like, āYou donāt believe in the things we do, you canāt have a panel here, but weāre gonna have identity politics panel about like being Black and Vtubing.ā
Malcolm Collins: Oh my
Kirsche: God. āAnd weāre gonna actively sabotage people like in Phase Connect on their, on their stage [00:22:00] debuts.ā And itās like, no, people were just like, āWell, Kirsa should have just kept her mouth shut. Kirsa shouldnāt have caused any of this drama. Kirsa shouldnāt have said anything.ā Right? Like, this is causing a huge issue for something that like everyone likes going to and itās like, why do you wanna give money to people that hate you?
Like, yeah, you wanna support your Oshi, yeah, you wanna do things, but shouldnāt you demand like a change in the venue, the people who run the venue? Mm. Because they clearly dislike you. Why would you give them money?
Malcolm Collins: Yes. Well, I wanna, I wanna Iām gonna say this for the end, the, the, the, the going into how we actually fight and win-
Simone Collins: Mm
Malcolm Collins: and where we fought and then not won, and the tactics that we use and the tactics that they use at work. But one interesting tidbit that I thought youād find fun remember how I said we started this podcast much more progressive? One of the first guests we had on this podcast, I, I doubt youād be surpri- you, youād ever be on the same podcast as this person, but was Aella.
Oh,
Kirsche: the f*****g sex lady.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, yeah. We had
Kirsche: a- Oh my God ...
Malcolm Collins: an early podcast with her on how to do a consensual non-consent orgy
Kirsche: Didnāt [00:23:00] they just have a tweet recently where, like, somebody got pregnant at a consensual non-consent orgy? Okay, so, yeah, Romy- Like, I
Simone Collins: donāt- Romy- Yeah ... who helped organize her gang bang birthday met her now f- I think future husband also father of her first kid as a fluffer at the p- at the party. And they
Kirsche: moved on to- That is a story you literally cannot tell people.
That is so disgusting.
Simone Collins: Romy, no, in the Bay Area, in the Bay Area, I, I grew up in the San Francisco Bay Area. In the Bay Area,
Malcolm Collins: thatās romantic.
Simone Collins: It is, it is so normative. But- Like, I- you just think that BDSM equipment is part of peopleās everyday furniture, and Iām not kidding about that. Like, itās just- She grew up in San
Malcolm Collins: Francisco, so
Kirsche: yeah.
Yeah, but, like, imagine their kid being like, āOh, you were the f*****g orgy baby. Do you even know who your real dad is?ā
Malcolm Collins: Hold on, we gotta the, the, the funnier thing about all of this is in a recent episode of our show, Romy, the girl who youāre talking about, who met the father of her child at a gang bang, wrote a piece against abortion that radicalized my [00:24:00] wife, Simone, against early stage abortion, like, last week.
Kirsche: That is crazy.
Simone Collins: I was previously against, like, after week 12. So basically when you develop neural tissue and youāre capable of feeling pain. Yeah. Like, no, weāre not doing this. Then itās about a conversation about euthanasia if, like, youāre gonna die painfully anyway. But, like, before that, whatever, who cares?
I th- I didnāt have any understanding that there was anything wrong with misoprostol or anything like that. And then she writes this incredibly articulate Substack about her experience trying, like, going through a chemical abortion, early stage abortion, and itās so horrifying. And she develops- It, it, probably, like, postpartum psychosis. Oh, wow. And itās horrifying. And then she, like, when she talks about it with other people, other women, ācause of course this happens a lot in the Bay Area. Like my mother didnāt think that sheād be able to get pregnant around the time she was trying to have me because she had had abortions and they had, I think, been complicated and other things like that.
So I[00:25:00]
I- apparently a lot of women were like, āOh yeah, Iāve had that terrible, harrowing experience as well trying to, like, get a kind of- When you
Malcolm Collins: talk about harrowing, the piece includes eating babies. If, if we just wanna talk about like- What?
Simone Collins: No, well, not eating bab- Like, a- another woman had passed her, her baby, like, after taking it, like a- after taking misoprostol, and passed the baby in, like, the, the like a dive bar bathroom.
And was like, āThere it is.ā And then sheās just like, āWell, I have to eat it now.ā And she- No you donāt. What the f**k? But like, Rosieās like, āI completely understand.ā And, like, unfortunately Iām so ... I get it too. Iām like, yeah, I ... Like, where are you gonna put it, in the toilet? Like, you have to reintegrate it.
I donāt know. But, like, itās so heartbreaking and, like, when you actually think about, like, even though this is a very early life, itās still a life, and itās still this thing that youāre destroying. And itās-
Malcolm Collins: Talk about radicalizing. You should read the piece, by the way. Itās radicalizing. You should read it.
Simone Collins: Yeah. Itās- Can I, can
Kirsche: I- Like, I think, I think my, like, least conservative opinion is Iām still on the, like- it, sa- safe, [00:26:00] rare, whatever the f**k it was. Like, or the original reason- Yeah ... for abortion. Itās, like, very early on, very rare, in, like, certain circumstances, like incest, rape. Like, Iām, Iām okay with those kinds of things.
Like, in the case of motherless- Thatās how I feel ... the baby is not viable, right? Like, itās, itās not- Yes ... going to survive to term.
Simone Collins: Yeah.
Kirsche: That makes sense to me. Mm-hmm. But, like, if, if I was in a position where I was getting a chemical abortion, which is obviously, like, you donāt have to go into the doctor for that.
Simone Collins: Yeah.
Kirsche: Iām not gonna go out to, like, dive bars or other... Iām like, āIām gonna stay home as much as possible,ā right? āCause, like, why the, why the f**k would I take that risk? Yeah. Thatās insane to me.
Simone Collins: Yeah. The,
Malcolm Collins: the, the piece starts with a, an abortion party, right? Just to sort of highlight how little she thought of this at the beginning, but I think it shows, like, people are getting radicalized.
Like- Yeah ... like, even the people you wouldnāt expect.
Simone Collins: Yeah.
Kirsche: Yeah, there shouldnāt ever be something called an abortion party. What the f**k is wrong with people? Holy Christ.
Malcolm Collins: Oh.
Simone Collins: And [00:27:00] yeah, I mean, itās, weāre getting to this point where I think people are now, like, ironically, even if theyāre really in far progressive culture, making fun of it from within it like, sort of realizing how sick it is, but then not fully internalizing that until they come face to face with it in some personal way.
And then theyāre like, āOh, wait this really isnāt working out.ā And hopefully that will happen before too much damage is done to, to more of society, but weāll see.
Malcolm Collins: Societyās been pretty damaged, Simone.
Kirsche: Yeah. Yeah, Iām gonna have to agree with that one.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. Okay, so, the, the, the direction I wanna go with this is now letās talk about, like, tactics.
So one of the things that you keep putting, pointing out is that we have these warriors out, like Robbie Starbucks, right? Who will go out and do a piece on a company and be like, āAh, you see, I exposed them for being woke.ā And then a bunch of newspaper articles will come out saying theyāre, they said they wonāt be woke anymore, and, and they donāt even say that.
And then people on the right just, like, believe it, right? Yeah. And everything goes back to normal, largely speaking. And the policies donāt change. Because once you, you get these [00:28:00] people into companies, itās very, very hard to cut them out. And in fact, there is only one instance I am aware of, of them being effectively cut out and that was the Twitter acquisition.
Yep. And that required a, what was it? Like 89% reduction in staff.
Kirsche: Yeah, it was a huge reduction, and that, that is the only way to cut them out, is to fire them. Because again, Bridge has been informing companies, like, this should not be a siloed approach. You cannot have DEI just in your marketing or just in your HR team.
Any kind of, like, DEI consultants or DEI teams within your company need to be dissolved, for one, to protect your company from lawsuits against conservative activists like America First Legal. Yeah. And two, because this needs to be a company whole approach. This needs to be completely holistic. All of your employees need to be on board with the DEI work.
And eventually they will just naturally take it home and bring it to their communities and bring it to their dinner tables. This is, this is the ultimate goal. And so whenever these like DEI teams are being dissolved and Robbie [00:29:00] Starbuck was like, āYeah, weāre winning. We did this.ā Even in their press releases theyāre like, āWe are committed to diversity, equity, and inclusion.ā
And itās like, why canāt anybody read? Just, just like Iām not a genius here, I just have eyeballs. They barely work and I can still read. Like,
Malcolm Collins: So, so letās, letās, think through. So the, and I had mentioned before we started recording, like the one instance where like weāve really successfully won against DEI is in the video games industry.
And that is not, a- and, and we need to talk about like how radical some of these win cases were. We had video games that people were spending like $400 million on that had like a top player count of like a few hundred people.
Kirsche: Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: Or like 20 people pl- playing a couple weeks post-launch. And this didnāt happen once.
This happened like, itās still happening today. Like this has been happening for years, itās still happening today, and itās like the entire industry. And I think that what I take away [00:30:00] from what happened to the video game industry is boycotts alone will never convince a company thatās infected with DEI to remove the DEI.
Kirsche: Yeah. I-
Malcolm Collins: if, if you couldnāt, I mean, keep in mind when L- Ubisoft like fails, thatās like real people losing hundreds of millions of dollars. Mm-hmm. Right? Like this isnāt like a small thing. When these giant Sony games fail, this is like real hu- And the, even they canāt wake up enough. And so letās try to think through, why canāt they wake up enough?
Because the people at the very, very top, I donāt feel that theyāre actually... I think they think going after DEI, āWell, what if somebody says Iām a racist?ā And, and being called a racist in todayās soci- even still, even after all the work weāve done is still this absolutely toxic thing, when it, when itās like, even when itās like not true, right?
That can get you fired, that can lose you LPs. I mean, that happened with us. We were in the private equity space, right? Like [00:31:00] thatās Simone and my background in this sort of thing. We canāt get hired at a major mi- private equity firm now. So itās wielding that against... What are, what are your thoughts?
I, Iād love to hear your thoughts before I ramble more.
Kirsche: I think that a lot of it is the people in charge of these companies, they understand the maliciousness in their lies, but they are people who believe like once the cultural transformation takes place, we will be positioned in part of the like elite class.
Weāre not gonna be like the plebs down there on the bottom. Weāll be in a good position because we have ownership of these companies. People will want us to promote their messages. Weāre gonna be part of the ruling class. And then all of the little people who work on the video games who are like, āYes, DEI is necessary.
You just hate games with women and Black people in them,ā theyāre like the true believer useful idiot types where they actually believe that theyāre doing something good thatās going to have a good effect and is going to help them reach the like utopia that theyāre dreaming of in this regard. And so, like, one thing Iāve always been saying ever since I discovered [00:32:00] Bridge was that they are basically foregoing short-term profit for long-term cultural dominance.
So- Still, yeah ... even though we see all of these, all these games and companies losing money, and itās great, and itās a win, and I love to see it, definitely keep voting with your wallet, theyāve planned for this. They, they know that theyāre going to be losing money because the modern audience doesnāt exist yet.
The modern audience is what theyāre striving to create. By transforming all these IPs into something horrendous with Marxism and all this DEI nonsense, the younger generations will mostly have the exposure to these remakes, to these retellings, and to these other stories that are being made right now that we all make fun of and donāt buy.
And that is where the problem lies. Yes, some of us will go to libraries. Some of us have our own, like, VHS or DVD collections. Some of us are smart enough to be like, āWe donāt wanna show our children that. Weāre gonna only show them the original IPs.ā That... You have to think like the average normie. The average normie- Yeah
isnāt gonna be hunting down the classics. Theyāre gonna be showing their kids whatever [00:33:00] slop exists, which is why we have an entire generation of iPad children in the first place, because that made it much easier to just offload your child to TV.
Malcolm Collins: And so itās very- Can you imagine how fucked we would be if they were actually competent?
Like-
Kirsche: Yes ...
Malcolm Collins: if, if they could actually make good games or tell good stories, right? Like, we, we actually have an episode on this called the, The Wachowski Effect, which is why do trans peopleās ability to tell good stories seem to ch- like, just tank after they transition?
Kirsche: Thatās a great question ...
Malcolm Collins: because, like, Dragon Age: Veilguard, the writers for it were the same writers as Mass Effect 2.
Mass Effect 2 was awesome. Wachowsk- the, the Veilguard was terrible, you know? Mm-hmm. And w- I mean, we... It, it could be any number of things. We, we go over a few hypotheses in this. But yeah, weāve... The, the... And I think this is a core to our eventual victory, is that there... It turns out theyāre, like, really bad at their jobs.
Like, once they stuff these companies with DEI people, they are comically inept. M- I mean, weāve seen this from the [00:34:00] games that theyāre making and stuff like that. These are not particularly impressive games. And look at, like, Har- Harley Davidson. What innovation has Harley Davidson made since it, since it w- w- what, what new interesting thing?
What has Campbellās done? What has... They, they win by capturing institutions, and we can only subvert them by creating counter institutions that are strictly better than the captured institutions. Mm. And I think that this is partially why we have this huge freak-out around AI because AI is allowing for that.
You know, if you look at something like The Skybrow Cinematic Universe. Like, in terms of like the music I listen to on a day-to-day basis, you know, it, it, it includes something like Skybrows or Holy Ball or, you know, any of the, the creators that are directly downstream of our ecosystem. Because the songs that theyāre creating are as good as any other song Iām getting out there right now.
And I think with AI in programming hopefully we can see, and Iād really [00:35:00] like to see this in our space, itās something Iām beginning to work on, is people in our space making video games. And then eventually hopefully we can move to making products. Like, Leaflet had to move to making her own plushies and making plushies for other VTubers because the plushie company wouldnāt work with her because sheās a conservative.
What, what are your
Kirsche: thoughts? I, I would also, I would also say, like, M-Make- Makeship dropping conservative creators was really interesting to me, and throughout my cancellation campaign I was, I was talking to, like, YouTubeās people. They were completely fine working with me again. I just did another plush with them.
So like there are still companies that are like, āYou know, we donāt care about the cancel mob. Weāre, weāre going to work with people that we think are decent people
Malcolm Collins: Mm-hmm. But does that not, I mean, do you... O- okay, so a, a side question before this because there was something you said at the beginning that I was a little confused by.
Do you think the people who actually run these large companies, not the people who run, like, the DEI firms, like Bridge and stuff like that, but the large companies, are they actually committed to the DEI mission, or are they just not thinking? Are they just [00:36:00] sort of like the scare tactics are working against them?
Kirsche: I, I think itās probably a little bit of both. Depend- it depends on the company, but some of them definitely will have the, like, CEOs who are like, āYeah, this is all b******t, but Iām gonna push it anyways because it will position me as, you know, a, a person in the ruling class rather than to be ruled over like the other little pleb useful idiots.ā
And then thereās also gonna be the people who are like, āWell, Iām terrified of people making a stink, so we should just capitulate to them.ā And when, when you encounter one of those, like, āWeāre terrified of them making a stink,ā you just have to make sure that the counter stink is worse than the initial cancel stink, right?
If companies are more afraid of the backlash that they will get from cutting creators or cutting people from a regular job for just no f*****g reason because everyoneās like, āI hate them. Theyāre a big meanie pooh-head.ā Yeah. As long as companies fear the result that happens after that, then theyāll stop doing it.
At least the ones that are just afraid of that cancel mob anyway.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. Well, I mean, we, we did see [00:37:00] a change in company policy if we talk about the victories weāve had around overly woke advertising after the Dylan Mulvaney thing. Yeah. Like, I have not seen things that bad in advertising since then, but theyāre still within the company.
Theyāre still preventing who can be hired.
Simone Collins: Mm-hmm.
Malcolm Collins: Right? Like, the statistic that came out about the gaming industry, what was it? There, there was, like 45% of, like, new hires in the gaming space over the last year were LGBT. Thatās crazy. Itās like thatās, you know, active and aggressive discrimination, right?
You know? Yeah. And w- I mean, once you get that in there, you canāt fight back without creating lateral institutions. Now youāve mentioned still wanting to work with people if they just cancel s- like, have you thought about what... Yeah, whatās y- whatās your battle plan? Youāre, youāre the chief here.
Youāve been at this for longer. Youāve y- youāve been doing this. Whatās, whatās the battle plan here? How do we actually win?
Kirsche: That, that is a great question. In my opinion, what needs to happen in order to get the DEI rot out of companies is either you starve [00:38:00] them for money for so long, like Ubisoft, that they just have to fire everyone and they end up closing down, which, I mean, they havenāt yet, but they might be.
And other than that, it, itās just like you have to make sure everyone gets fired whoās involved in pushing DEI stuff. And that should be easy to tell based on what their roles used to be at the company, what they did in their positions, the kind of materials they would push, right? Like, you just have to make sure those people cannot be there.
And thatās why, like, colleges, when colleges would be like, āOh, weāre getting rid of our DEI department,ā and then they would just reassign their, like, DEI people to other places. Iām like, they didnāt do anything. They did what Bridge told them to do. They, they reassigned people to embed them elsewhere so itās less noticeable what theyāre doing.
The DEI is still there, and you canāt believe them that itās not there until they fire these people
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. Okay, so how best to starve them? So one of the things that, that Iām seeing so this is a trend weāve noted among conservative women in our circles. And this happened [00:39:00] after we learned that Leaflet buys from the same f- clothing manufacturer Simone does which is weāve learned that a lot of conservative women are just buying, like, medieval clothes on Etsy.
Kirsche: Yeah, pretty much. Yeah, yeah, actually.
Malcolm Collins: Oh, God.
Simone Collins: They work. Theyāre good.
Kirsche: Yeah, they, they are.
Malcolm Collins: But I think that across brands weāre in a world where we can do that now, right? Like, if a stuffy company isnāt good enough, a, a, a single VTuber like Leaflet can figure out how to make it herself. If a- Mm-hmm ... a clothing brand, theyāre annoying, we can build our own supply chains.
And with AI, increasingly we can make our own products. So I was talking to you before the stream, but, like, if you look at the AI system that weāve built, ācause weāre just constantly building new systems, weāve built best chatbots on the market. Weāve built best AI both not safe for work video and image generation on the market that uses every mainstream model.
VTuber creation, recipe creation, an auto stalker and,
Kirsche: I think itās also really funny how, like, the people on the left have gone from, āHa ha, no one wants to work [00:40:00] with you, you stupid chudā to, āHa ha, you have to use AI because no one will work with you, you stupid chud.ā
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. And itās like, but AI is awesome.
I like
Simone Collins: the AI stuff. And also, yeah, like, ha ha, I will never use AI, and then their lunch is eaten by all the people who are just building better companies. Itās like-
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. The, the product weāre working on now thatāll hopefully be done in, like, a week or something like that is we also have a vibe coding software that weāve built, but is gonna be an integration for, like, email and Discord and WhatsApp, and all of the places where people reach out to you just because of us as, like, famous content creators, and Iām like, āI only want this in one place.ā
Mm-hmm. And then complete automation for that. And Iām like, Iām really annoyed that no one has done that very well yet, so I just decided to do it myself. But, like, people in our space can just build stuff, like build games, build s- And I wanna really encourage that, ācause I think that thatās the only way for us to realistically eat at their money.
Like, if somebody- Mm-hmm ... in our space starts creating motorcycles, I bet they would be much better motorcycles than Harley motorcycles. And I think itās probably doable. I [00:41:00]
Kirsche: mean, thereās definitely a barrier of entry to doing stuff like that, especially whereas, I mean, it, itās starting to get a bit better, and I know some companies that Iāve worked with are looking to get more manufacturing back onto the American side instead of having to use China for everything, which is great.
I love that. Yeah. I would love more, like, American-made products, especially to offer to my audience. And, and so itās like there, there is a barrier of entry to, like, making physical stuff like that. But yeah, I agree. If, if somebody has the wherewithal to do that, like, absolutely set up a competing company.
Try to... Like, you, youāre probably not even gonna have to try too hard to get business away from a company that people have to begrudgingly buy for, from because thereās, like, not- Not really m- much else to go for, right? Like, a company- Yeah ... Nas- usually, like they control so much, you know?
Malcolm Collins: Well, people hate these companies now, and, and, and they are increasingly...
I mean, if they become increasingly inefficient and when I talk about them being inefficient, look at the cost of, of food these days. Look at the cost of the things- Mm-hmm ... you buy out there these days. Mm-hmm. The cost of the raw components have not gone [00:42:00] up that much. What youāre paying for is corporate incompetence.
That, thatās been the primary point of inflation. You, you talk about this on your show but like, if you look at the education system in terms of like putting money into public schools, and you look at a graph of like increasing costs over time, the amount of money thatās going for teachers over like the past 20 years has been about the same.
Mm-hmm. The amount of money going to administration has increased like 20x.
Kirsche: Yeah, the useless daycare jobs.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. And so, itās, itās... I, I guess burn this stuff down, but also on the right, r- we need super doge. I think youāre right about that. Thatās what I want from the next president is super doge.
Kirsche: Yes.
Malcolm Collins: I
Simone Collins: donāt know.
I donāt, I really donāt know if thatās possible. Part of me is just like let these systems... I mean, they are financially unsustainable. With demographic collapse, they will crumble. Like they, they will, they... Their days are numbered, so just let them collapse. And more important it is, itās, it is more important now to invest in and focus on the alternate systems that weāre going to have to [00:43:00] all adopt- Mm
as those systems crumble and fall apart. Like just today, Iām so excited about Midjourneyās medical announcement that they have this new scanner that is faster and hopefully in the future less expensive than an MRI that can be integrated with like a spa experience. And itās coming from like the company that I use to generate AI anime images.
Like itās, itās amazing. And itās... I, I think that we are going to see, to your point, like we donāt necessarily have to think, well, I donāt know if weāre ever gonna see US manufacturing again. I donāt think weāre ever gonna see like armchair scientist control of medical technology again because AI is weirdly and disruptively going to make a lot possible that we didnāt think was possible.
Kirsche: I think thereās also something to be said for like building your own ecosystem and getting together with other people to help build them things as
Simone Collins: well. Absolutely. Yeah.
Kirsche: But not just like waiting for the old giants to fall apart. This is, this is the point where itās like you have to be aggressive in at the bare minimum being like, āDonāt buy [00:44:00] products from these people and hereās why.ā
Like not doing the same preachy thing that leftists do where itās just like, āIf you buy these things, youāre an evil Hitler.ā But itās like you wanna get that information out so people know like, āThis is what this company is doing. This is what theyāre gonna continue to do. Theyāre lying to you, and theyāre trying to subvert you.ā
Malcolm Collins: Absolutely. Well, and I think, and I think for my audience, this is... I, I, I... One thing I like about this space is, like, you obviously were a big motivation for, like, Sky Browse to do some of his early videos and stuff like that, right? Like-
Kirsche: His videos are so freaking good, man.
Malcolm Collins: Arenāt they? Theyāre fantastic.
Amazing. Have you seen it all, by the way?
Simone Collins: Oh.
Kirsche: Iāve seen- Yeah ... a good chunk and Iāve, Iāve left some to play while Iām working. Theyāre like-
Malcolm Collins: Our kid sings them all the time. Now our kid is, is singing the, the, the Mormon one, the, the Bricks and Mini Pigs. Cool. You know, like...
Kirsche: I havenāt even gotten into that situation.
I had a few people in my chat tell me about it, and I was like, āOh, I should look into it.ā But then so much information kept coming out about it, I was like, āHow am I going to- You- ... digest this?ā
Malcolm Collins: Itās, itās incred- It will, it will [00:45:00] piss you off so much. Like, like so many times, and I think that this is, is, is, is important w- more widely in our community, is be like, look, I like Mormons, I want Mormons on, on the in, but, like, we do need to get in some sort of intra community policing, right?
Like, we, we, we sometimes go into this with, like, Iām a big fan of Jews, right? But like everyoneās always like, āMalcolm, Greater Israel,ā and Iām like, I donāt much care about the countries around Israel. Like, okay, Greater Israel, f- whatever. But, Iām
Kirsche: kind of just like, thatās not my sand, not my problem.
I donāt care about anything that exists- Yeah ... in the sandbox. I just donāt want American people or American money going to any wars over there.
Malcolm Collins: Oh, absolutely. We, we need to cut off funding for Israel. And I, and I was like, I donāt understand why we donāt just do that. Itād be such a win for the Trump administration.
It-
Kirsche: I would love to cut off aid from everywhere. Like, holy s**t. At least, like, I understand if we wanna maintain our position as, like, a super world power that nobody can f**k with. Like, occasionally weāll have to just, like, throw money at some p- places. But for the [00:46:00] most part, I think we should cut that off entirely.
Cool. Like, zero aid to anywhere for at least a little while.
Simone Collins: Well, and itās really, itās not even our aid that matters. Itās, itās our supply chains and buying power. Right. So, like, we donāt even need to provide aid. We can just change small incentives here and there with where things are shipped- Well, and see-
and how things are shipped ...
Malcolm Collins: w- I think weāve gotta be aware of the consequences of cutting all aid. Like, look, when US aid was cut, the, the, the thing was cut look at all the elections of Latin America since then. Rightists keep getting elected.
Kirsche: Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: Like, clear- clearly this has had a huge- Not enough
huge impact on these countries.
Kirsche: Clearly ...
Malcolm Collins: some of, some of them are putting people in jail and, and now have lower rates of homicide than theyāve ever had before.
Kirsche: Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: Some of them are cutting major social programs. Th- this is horrifying.
Kirsche: Horrifying for whom?
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, right. I love that Trump and Argentina are, they get along so well now that theyāre like, āHey, letās, letās hand back those islands from the UK,ā right?
Like- Oh
Simone Collins: my
Kirsche: gosh. And everyone was just like, āOh, I thought people on the right wanted foreign aid cut. What about all this money he gave Argentina?ā Itās like, well, [00:47:00] Argentina paid it back after, like, six months or some s**t, so...
Malcolm Collins: thatās true. Thatās also awesome that like the in, in Latin America we are seeing a lot of projects work.
Like whatās happening in El Salvador is amazing.
Kirsche: It is. And I, I wish we could do like El Salvador and just start arresting activist judges who keep f*****g things up. I wish we could just do that.
Malcolm Collins: And the El Salvador prison system is apparently like really, really cool and good. They really focus on like, getting people jobs and stuff like that, and like- Huh.
Simone Collins: Yeah. Well, theyāre, theyāre nice. They have, you know, they have the nice prisons and they have the less nice prisons. But the nice ones are super nice. Well, the, for
Malcolm Collins: the kids anyway. Yeah. You just, you know, I, I, I donāt mind the, the, the Trump policy of just like instead of prison, just like e- the, the sending migrants just like where- wherever they can.
Like when they- Make public bathrooms great again ... when they canāt send them back to their own country, theyāll just be like, āAh, weāll send them to Haiti or whatever.ā
Simone Collins: Yeah. Just-
Malcolm Collins: But I, no, I mean, I think the point I was making earlier is if youāre a fan of this show- [00:48:00] With AI and stuff like that. Iām not saying go out and white label some existing product and make it conservative or something like that, right?
Iām saying and, and AI can really help you with this. Figure out how to buy beans from a local farmer somewhere and ship them in a means thatās cost efficient. If you can do that using a network of AIs, you can get a cheaper product on the sale shelf than Campbell has, and a better product on the shelf than Campbell has, right?
Like, this is true of all of the products all the way down. With AI, we can just do things better now. I, I know with something like, okay, putting together a motorcycle. Yes, Iād love if you do it in the United States, but you know, you talk to the right shops across like China and Shen- Shenzhen and stuff like that, you can get the parts made inexpensively enough, stress test them, then have them constructed in the United States to get over the tax and, th- like, I, I want...
I think for so long weāve been trapped in this life of you go to college, which doesnāt help people anymore and is one of the core sources [00:49:00] of rot- Yeah ... and you then get a day job. And I think what I wanna radicalize people into doing is like at least look into the alternatives. And I love Leaflyās music video about this, like donāt go to college.
Like, like put that money into trying to start a job because youāll learn more in the-
Kirsche: Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: But yeah. W- thereās, thereās so many opportunities out there now. But anyway, so- g- continue to go on. I, I donāt mean to-
Kirsche: No, no, youāre fine. I tangent all the time. Itās great. And itās like I, I agree with you as well, like we should be setting up our own-
like parallel systems if we can, but it, itās harder in certain areas than, than in others. Like, when, when Stream Elements announced that they might be shutting down or theyāre being bought out by nobody knows yet, but when Stream Elements announced that, a lot of us went, āWait a minute, what are we gonna do now?ā
That was like the- What are Stream Elements gonna do? ... the link to use to like get donations without YouTube or Twitch or anywhere else taking a cut. And now what are we supposed to use? What, what else is there?
Malcolm Collins: Itās, itās a donation platform. Well- I mean, okay, so [00:50:00]
Kirsche: itās a donation platform ... basic- basically, itās a donation platform, and what they do is they have it so you can pay with PayPal, and obviously you can use, like, a credit card and PayPal or whatever, and thatāll go to your PayPal, but it obscures, like, your personal information.
And then they also have something called SE Pay, where if the person doesnāt wanna use PayPal, thereās a lot of people in my community especially who are like, āScrew PayPal, I donāt wanna use them. You need to have an option to dono that doesnāt use PayPal or require a login.ā
Simone Collins: Yeah.
Kirsche: So SE has SE Pay, and so you can just use your card or, like, a prepaid card or whatever to, to pay through SE Pay, and it bypasses...
It has nothing to do with PayPal whatsoever. And so it was nice to have this, like, donation link-
Malcolm Collins: I could build you
Kirsche: that ... that did that and obscured, obscured your information so nobody got your name, nobody got your address, nothing like that.
Malcolm Collins: I, I, I can probably build you that in a week or so.
Kirsche: Yeah, thatās...
So, like, that was, that was something where people were just like, āWell, what am I gonna do?ā And, like, thereās Streamlabs, but Streamlabs had a problem years ago where they tried, like, infringing on OBS, where, like, [00:51:00] OBS was like, āWe donāt care. Everybody can use our, our code and everything.ā But Streamlabs was trying to be like, āWell, we made this.
This is ours,ā and everything was just, like, copy-pasted from OBS
Malcolm Collins: No, Iām, Iām being serious Is there an
Simone Collins: alternative now? Like, what are people using instead? Yeah.
Kirsche: No, everyoneās still on either Streamlabs or Stream Elements- Yeah ... because thatās, thatās what there is. Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: But yeah, I can build this for you. That
Kirsche: would be crazy. And so many VTubers would use it ... I can
Malcolm Collins: build this for you. Yeah, so- I just
Simone Collins: feel like thereās spe- like what your, what your m- m- most important and, like, desired things are. No, hold on- āCause if you do
Malcolm Collins: that- Hold on, hold on, Simone. I, I need to explain something.
So the way... The big challenge in putting something like this together is that the credit card companies will try to get to you, because the credit card companies are very aggressive. Yeah. Yeah. But, essentially what we do is you donate to our nonprofit. And- ... if you use your correct email address, it then accredits points to a separate site- Hmm ... sort of behind the scenes. Interesting. And so the payment providers donāt see this. So- Mm-hmm ... we would still lose any margin that we lost on the payment provider, and then weād probably add some [00:52:00] small, like, one or 2% margin on this.
And then the- ā
Kirsche: Cause I was gonna say, I think when it comes to Stream Elements, the SE pay, the only percentage taken out is the processing fee from the card companies, which is why everybody uses it.
Malcolm Collins: Oh, okay. Well, I mean, I could do it without taking out any money as a good favor, but... If people mention our site.
Okay, so Iāll do it without taking out any money. Yeah ... so weāll just take out the, the card processing fees and just have it go directly to whoever the streamer is. I- in terms of obscuring user information, all of that will obviously be captured by the payment provider. Mm-hmm. But I can obscure it on our end, if that makes you feel better.
Kirsche: Yeah, I mean, if you havenāt used Stream Elements before, I can always, like, take some screenshots and, like, show you what the dashboard and stuff looks like internally.
Simone Collins: That would be really
Malcolm Collins: helpful. How do they make money if theyāre not taking any
Kirsche: The way that Stream Elements made money is Stream Elements was, first and foremost, before they came out with SE pay, a sponsorship platform.
Yeah, yeah. So they would go and find sponsorships, and they would post them on their website, and then streamers could go and sign up for them. And when you got big enough, you would have, like, a Stream Elements representative who would personally contact you and be like, [00:53:00] āHey, we have these sponsors available.
Thereās this many seats. We wanted to reach out to you. Do you wanna do these?ā And so they would make their money from the sponsorships, because, you know, theyāre probably taking a cut from those before we get paid out.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, okay. Another thing to note is the company that does all this is actually a nonprofit, so people can donate to it as a tax deduction as well.
So- Oh ... Iāll, Iāll try to get this set up for you.
Kirsche: No, that would be interesting. Iām sure a lot of people would be very nice to have something. āCause, like, when, when Stream Elements announced that, like, we donāt know whoās buying them yet still. But itās like- Yeah ... I can only imagine all of us are just like Well, is it gonna work the same way?
Like, we donāt know whoās buying it, so we donāt know how they might f**k it up. Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. Very exciting. Okay. Yeah, sure. Just send me what you want and... But this is what Iām talking about, right? Like, if, if somebodyās leaving the space and theyāre being a jerk, Iām like, āOkay. I, I can build this for, for...
Operate it for free in exchange for a promotion for our site,ā right? Like, Yeah ... thatās, thatās an easy thing for me to do. And itāll work for as long as it doesnāt explode and get big. I mean, obviously our platform is very [00:54:00] chud, so all the progressive VTubers are still gonna be on it. Great. B- because, yeah, we have... Like, one of the features that we have is a feature that searches every not safe for work image gallery at the same time. What the heck? ... just to annoy the, the the people who, who freak out about that stuff. But yeah, thatās really cool. What other bottlenecks do you have? I, I built the VTuber automated creation system because Leaflet said that people would appreciate that.
Mm-hmm. What, what other issues do you have?
Kirsche: I mean, me personally, I have issues with artists being reliable. Like the illustration artists Iāve worked with, theyāre amazing. I love them, love every single one of them Iāve worked with. But model artists Iāve basically been waiting on my main model to be finished since 2020.
It was supposed to be finished in 2020. I have another model thatās been being worked on for several years now as well. Itās like my, my riggers or my artists just kinda disappear or donāt finish their work, and then Iām out thousands of dollars.
Malcolm Collins: Oh, yeah. So we have a system that can get you a new... So I, Iāve got to improve it.
Like weāve obviously got to improve the end-to-end system. We donāt [00:55:00] have hand movement yet. Iām still working on boob physics. But you, you... Iāll send it to you and you can, you can try the beginning of it. But it works for a low-quality model now, and I can get it working for a high-quality model with...
Like what you would probably wanna do is generate something with our system, then hire a rigger to refine it. And with the refinement and an artist to refine it, like- Mm-hmm ... refine the eyes and stuff like this in a few areas. And I, I think you can get a model thatās as high quality as the model you have now with just a few additions to what we have.
Kirsche: This, this was given to me by a community member, Fumetsu no Tora. He makes things very fluffy. He has a very distinct art style. I like it. And he, he made this as like a gift for me, and Iāve had a few of these gift models because people in my community have just gotten like, just so- Annoyed ... frustrated.
And, and itās, I, I appreciate that they get frustrated on my behalf because itās like I, I canāt even show the extent of frustration I feel for how long some of this stuff has taken. Like I understand that being an artist is not, you know, a traditional job, but if youāre making your money off [00:56:00] of it, you should be treating it professionally in my opinion.
And in the VTuber sphere itās kind of, taboo to call out artists. Like even if an artist has like taken your money and fled- ... you are still considered the one starting drama by bringing- The riggers,
Malcolm Collins: man. So this is something Iād like a callout in my audience for because itās something that I donāt have the time to make my skill and it would really help make this an end-to-end cycle is the RFAB VTuber creation system.
If anybody wants to specialize on post-output improvement of our models because it gets most of the way there Iād be happy to intro you to people who need that service and even advertise you on the website if thatās something that you wanted to, to build as a skill set if youāre like, āI need a Some- but, but no being flaky.
Weāre gonna be pretty strict about, like, actually getting things done within short time windows.
Simone Collins: Weāre also actually pretty good at being go-betweens between commissioners and artists, ācause that was literally our first startup as a married couple. [00:57:00] Oh.
Kirsche: See, that is, thatās incredibly... Thatās pretty much what VGen is.
And I, I like VGen as opposed to SKEB, because with SKEB, like, youāre not allowed to contact the artist at all. And so if you get given something and youāre, like, missing something youāre basically up s**t creek. Whereas on VGen, you, you can message them and be like, āHey, you forgot this file,ā or, āHey, you didnāt make the background on this transparent.ā
And itās like Iāve, Iāve never really liked SKEB, and I used them once. And the one time I used them I had asked for, like, transparent backgrounds so that I could use the stuff Iām paying for in streaming, and I wasnāt given the transparent backgrounds, and obviously I canāt contact them, so I canāt get it fixed.
Oh, my gosh. And there wasnāt any way to get rid of the entire background, so it just looked really s**t with trying to, like, edit the background out myself. And so I, I could never use those things that I got.
Simone Collins: Thatās so
Malcolm Collins: frustrating. That is incredibly frustrating.
Simone Collins: Yeah, what we used to do was we had a platform that had artists and then clients, and we would match them.
And we would do all the communication. So, like, a client would say [00:58:00] something really, that would really make an artist, like, sad and not wanna work on it anymore. And then weād, like, say it in the nicest possible way and be like, āThey love it so much. Thereās just this one adjustment that they realize would make it
Kirsche: so
Simone Collins: much better.ā
See, like, I
Kirsche: need... āCause, like, cucking the artist is terrifying to me now, ācause itās like-
Simone Collins: Yeah ...
Kirsche: I donāt, I donāt want, I donāt wanna be that client thatās just, āOh, you need to fix a million things.ā And I, I- Yeah ... havenāt been thus far, thankfully. But itās also, like, Iāve had so many issues that I just I just donāt like talking to artists much anymore.
Simone Collins: Yeah, like you just want someone to, like handle it and make sure the thing comes out good, and we did that. Itās just that there wasnāt a market for it, so it wasnāt a business that could survive on its own. But like, I totally get it, and yeah, it all came from- Itās so weird ... Malcolm, Malcolm proposed to me on Reddit using commissioned art.
Aw. And then he experienced like how hard it was to work with artists, ācause he tried to commission, I think he commissioned like 21 pieces- Oh my God ... and discovered, like firsthand, āOh, this is really hard.ā It
Kirsche: is really hard.
Simone Collins: Artists are super unstable.
Kirsche: They are. I mean, I guess [00:59:00] you have to have some kind of instability to be like super creative and bring out like images from your brain.
That makes sense, but like, have, have the kind of volatility that makes it so you still get work done.
Malcolm Collins: Well, itās, itās so funny that people are like, āAI replaced all of the things we didnāt want replaced first,ā like art and music and everything like that, and Iām like, no, what AI did is it made it so that average jackoffs like myself can be good at art and music, right?
Like, it democratized
Simone Collins: art. Yeah, like theyāre doing... Weāre, weāre using AI to make art that artists just refuse to make for us. Theyāre like, āOh, Iām busy. I canāt do it.ā Yeah, itās like- Like, how dare you take our jobs? ... artists are
Kirsche: refusing. Weāre not even, like, taking work away from artists, right? Itās like-
Simone Collins: Yeah, they werenāt t-
they didnāt do- They werenāt accepting our requests. Yes. I mean, they were busy. I, I, weāre making
Malcolm Collins: a VTuber model of Muhammad, right? Who am I gonna get to do that, right? Like, I almost did that. I, I do- Oh,
Simone Collins: come on. Itās not even that. I mean, ācause I had to deal, of course, with our, our, our commissioning platform for like all the excuses from artists if like something didnāt happen, and we would, you know, refund our clients.
Like, the money wouldnāt disappear ācause it was being held- Yeah ... in escrow by us. Excuses I got included, āOh, I [01:00:00] canāt take this on, Iām pet sitting for the next month.ā Like-
Kirsche: What the heck? ...
Simone Collins: how is watching someoneās cat going to prevent you from drawing a very simple anime line drawing? Like, thereās This doesnāt make
Kirsche: sense.
It doesnāt. It really doesnāt.
Simone Collins: The- these are-
Kirsche: And itās like Iāve, Iāve had a problem with an artist before where I was like, āHey, itās been like a year and a half, and I see that you consistently reopen your commissions and take on new projects, and you finish those new projects before mine. If you donāt wanna work on my project, please just let me know so I can find another artist who can.ā
And theyād be like, āNo, no, I wanna do it.ā Itās like, itās like they wanted, I guess like, maybe clout from like working with a bigger person, but then like never finishing it. So itās like, what, what am I suppo- like... And when theyāre delayed this much, I lose opportunities. Yeah. I lose ability to do certain things.
Yeah. If I had like stuff planned out, I canāt do any of that. And so like Iāve stopped planning anything around models because I just canāt find artists to finish them.
Simone Collins: Yeah, thatās really frustrating.
Malcolm Collins: Well then, okay, Iāll get back to-
Simone Collins: Malcolm, make it better. Make it better.
Malcolm Collins: Okay. Iāll, Iāll work on the [01:01:00] VTuber thing.
Iāll send you some of the models that weāve made already so you can get an idea of like how high quality they are. Mm-hmm ... theyāre, theyāre decent enough. And Iāll, Iāll continue to improve on the rigging system and everything like that. But what I really need is somebody whoās just like a specialist in this.
So any of our audience who wants to take the time to do this, itās, itās... The problem with this versus everything else on the website is I need to go through with every algorithmic change and then load up, add the textures on the model, which all happens automatically but takes time. Mm-hmm. Then load it into VTuber Studio and test if the ears wiggle right.
And if the ears donāt... And, and I have to have different wiggles for animal ears, and elf ears, and human ears. Mm-hmm. By the way, all of this is handled algorithmically. We have a different way of handling snouts- Mm ... so like furry models work and, you know, the, the-
Kirsche: Thatās really cool ... I,
Malcolm Collins: I spend way too much time trying to get this right.
Yeah. Well, because I want people to have something that they can use, but,
Kirsche: Yeah ...
Malcolm Collins: itās, itās with, with all of these fields, we can make something better. Thereās nothing that prevents us from [01:02:00] creating the, the better version of these various things. And after this weāll wrap things up. After this with you do we have like an open chat on like Discord, or where, where do you talk to people?
Where, where do you
Kirsche: like- Dis- Discord is the best way to get in touch with me. Like Iām still, I have like probably 40 DMs unchecked right now, but itās still the best way to get in touch with me. Okay.
Malcolm Collins: Are we, are we friends on there?
Kirsche: Yeah. Yeah, what she said.
Simone Collins: Mm-hmm.
Malcolm Collins: C-H.
Simone Collins: Mm-hmm. Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: And I will build you this thing that you need. It ju- it just was sent to you. Okay ... and, and, I mean, itās basically nothing to build. Itās literally just a payment sub-system that goes to you, so really all it needs is like- Yeah, with attribution
a way to manage the payment to you. So I, I can handle that.
Simone Collins: Thatās very- Itās
Kirsche: just
Malcolm Collins: no one else in the world will do it for free, but I guess Iāll do it for free for clout, ācause,
Kirsche: Thatās, thatās what, thatās what Stream Elements had. Iām like, Iām, Iām guessing, right? Iām guessing the way they made money is, like, when companies would approach them, like Raid Shadow Legends, and theyāre like, āHey, we have 500 slots for this kind of sponsor thing,ā Iām assuming [01:03:00] they would pay Stream Elements before Stream Elements, like, pushed out that sponsor to the rest of us.
āCause, like, we never get sponsor money taken out. Whatever we make from a sponsor, like, we keep that under Stream Elements. Oh. So, like, the o- the only thing I could figure is, like, companies pay them for the advertising. Thatās the only thing I could think of the way that they were making money.
Malcolm Collins: Wait, hold on.
Hereās what I donāt understand. Why donāt you guys just set up a payment processor that goes directly to you?
Kirsche: I asked. I have guys who work on my websites, like Kirsche.com, and I asked them about adding a page that has, you know, kinda like what Stream Elements did, where itās just a donation link that obscures all of my, my personal information from, like, PayPal or whatever.
And they were like, āWell, that could be done, but then it gets a little dicey because then weāre holding on to all of that money for you until you withdraw it. And for tax time, that could make things a little weird as well.ā
Malcolm Collins: I guess thatās true
Kirsche: I mean, I donāt know. Iāve never set up a payment processor. I donāt care about how the money- Iām, Iām just relaying what Iāve been told
Malcolm Collins: goes through at all. Yeah. I, I, I donāt care [01:04:00] about that. We already handle really complicated taxes for the nonprofit, so whatever. If something can be used... What? You handle it, Simone. Iām sorry. I d- I saw that- Yeah,
Simone Collins: I just... No problem That
Kirsche: face
Simone Collins: of- As the man who has not touched a single receipt related to this entire thing.
We have no accountant. Itās just me over here. No problem. Ooh. But itās just accounting. Oh, that
Kirsche: made me remember. During my GamerSupps merch drop last year they had a separate gifting website where people could, like, buy my merch items- Oh, cool ... and they would, like, be floating around in the ether that people could claim as, like, a gift.
And you, you had, like, a limit obviously. Like, s- no- no one could claim, like, every single thing. But, like, my community has been asking for that for my website, and I asked my website guys, and they were just like, āThat would cost so much to host.ā I donāt, I donāt know what it would cost to host. I... My community has really wanted something like that.
Malcolm Collins: Wait, explain the feature to me again. Explain the feature?
Kirsche: Iāll have to go find screenshots, ācause I took screenshots of it when I had it. But basically it was a, [01:05:00] an adjacent site to the official GamerSupps website, and it was, like, a gifting platform. And so you, like, you logged in via, I think, Twitch, and they were talking about maybe integrating, like, YouTube or whatever with it later, but it was just Twitch integration for now.
And so, like, people could go to the website and buy, like, a Kirsche cup or a Kirsche desk mat, and they could either pick a person on Twitch to specifically claim it- Oh ... so itād be, like, tagged to that personās Twitch name, and that person could go and claim it. Or if they just wanted to buy, like, 20 cups and have, like, anyone redeem them, they would buy, like, 20 Kirsche cups, and those would be floating around in the ether, and you could go to the gift page, and you could hit claim cup, and then you would put in your shipping information, and youād have to pay for shipping.
But everything is given to, you know, different people. That
Simone Collins: sounds like so much fun. I like the
Malcolm Collins: idea.
Kirsche: Yeah. I c- Everyone loved it. And I like the idea. I wanna do that. Yeah, I like the idea because, like, there, there are some community members who, like, you know, they might be in a bad financial place. They might want something to support the creator, but they, they donāt have the money to do so.
Malcolm Collins: Itās a great idea.
Kirsche: And then the giga whales come in and theyāre just like, āHere, my children. Have the gifts. I am Santa,ā you know? Yeah. [01:06:00]
Malcolm Collins: I can build this. I can build this. I got... Yeah, d- br- just when you have things you want, come to me in the future, and Iāll just
Kirsche: give you what you want. Oh, hell f*****g yeah.
Hell yeah. Yeah, I- And Iāll try,
Malcolm Collins: Iāll try to make some of the screenshots for you ... remember there was a, there was a LeetBit stream where we had people come in on the stream and they were like, āI want an AI DM for, like, dungeon, dungeon master that, like, handles that.ā And I was like, āIāll make it. Itās done.ā
The, the the, the stalker feature I made for Simone. She goes, āI wanna stalk people more easily online.ā I was like, āOkay, Iāll, Iāll build that for you.ā
Simone Collins: Call it Super stalk and then The recipe maker
Malcolm Collins: I, I put together based on the
Simone Collins: Yeah, but no,
Kirsche: but this is exciting. I love hearing that, like, you wanna get in the nitty-gritty and, like, build these kind of platforms that either only exist in, like, tiny little bubbles or weāre excluded from because weāre chuddy buddies.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, chuddy buddies. The chuddiest of platforms, right? You know, everybody comes in and... No, no, I love doing it because it annoys the leftists, okay? If I can make a good- How
Kirsche: dare you build your own things.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, if I can make a good VTuber rig [01:07:00] system, and then a bunch of VTubers start using it and the leftists will witch hunt their own, Yeah
infinitely, āAre you using the chud VTuber system? Are you using- Did you get chud
Kirsche: rigging?
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, yeah. Itās hilarious.
Kirsche: And so Iāve, Iāve been told by a couple illustration artists Iāve worked with as well, like, theyāve, theyāve had large VTubers come to them and be like, āYou canāt work with Kirsche. You have to reject her if she ever comes and tries to get artwork from you.ā
And theyāre just like, āWell, why? Like, I want money. I donāt care.ā
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, yeah. Well, I mean, one of the funniest things is AI, and I donāt know how much you use AI on a daily basis anymore. How, how much do you use AI?
Kirsche: I really donāt use AI much at all for anything. My, my head moderator uses AI a lot to, like, double check things or get more sources if I need them or whatnot.
Yeah. And heās, heās been great with AI. He makes my thumbnails with AI just because it would, you know, take forever to get an artist to finish- Works great ... different thumbnails as often as I like to change them. But I mean, Iād be willing to use AI [01:08:00] for most things. I think my, my hard stop at the moment is, like, when Iām selling merchandise, I want the artwork on that merchandise to be from a real person that I paid money to.
Yeah. I would feel weird, like, putting AI art on merch. And so for everything that I sell, I, I try to find an artist that kind of matches up with, like, the head image that I have. Because, like, I also would not want to go to an artist and be like, āHey, change your entire style. Make it this way.ā So I try to find an artist that matches with, like, the vision that I have.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. Well, but with AI, this is one of the big areas where we have a huge advantage against the corpos and the average leftist is itās like the leftists are trying to fight us without beautiful women and without AI, right? Like, th- we should have no trouble cleaning up against this.
Kirsche: Oh, I just thought of something as well.
Your, your, like, VTuber model creation thing is also going to fix another issue some VTubers have fallen into. So back in the day you guys know who Project Melody is, right?
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. [01:09:00]
Kirsche: So Project Melody her model artist DMCAād a lot of her videos and was trying to strong arm her to pay him more money to use her model that she already paid for- Oh
because she didnāt have a contract saying that she had, like, full IP rights to the model from him. And so there have been a, a couple of other, I think, smaller VTubers who had a similar issue, but itās like- Oh, okay. Oh my ... whenever, whenever you get your model, like, you need to have an airtight legal contract just in case, just in case that artist decides, āWell, now youāre huge.
I made your model when you had, like 500 viewers, but now you have, like, 5,000, and I want more money,ā right? So, like, so they canāt harm you after the fact.
Malcolm Collins: Thatās very frustrating. Yeah. Well, anyway, itās been absolutely great to have you on. I- Sorry if
Kirsche: I ran just a bit over your time.
Malcolm Collins: No, I, I love this.
I love this. This is great. And Iām happy to do, you know, if you wanna come on again, if you want o- one of us on ever. I mean, usually itās just me ācause Simone canāt handle weird times. But
Kirsche: This is true. Under- I mean, she has a baby, you [01:10:00] know? So,
Malcolm Collins: Yeah.
Simone Collins: It makes it tough, you know?
Malcolm Collins: We got, we have five-
Kirsche: I can imagine.
Simone Collins: Yeah, with five itās complicated.
Malcolm Collins: Trying to replace them. Yeah. Thatās, thatās our goal. We have a, a live, laugh, love poster in our house that says, āWe will replace you,ā i- in, in live, laugh, love style.
Simone Collins: Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: So when the reporters come over- Beautiful ... they always get really freaked out. Theyāre like, āWhat?ā
Kirsche: I, I got...
When I had my PO box, which I, I shut it down because a lot of stuff was just getting kicked back return to sender, like my mail wasnāt being delivered for some reason. Yeah. But one of the things that got delivered was a like Korean flag with Kim Jong Un on it, and it said, āLive, laugh, love.ā Thatās so
Simone Collins: good.
Oh my gosh. Where do we get one of those? That is amazing. I
Kirsche: have no idea, but I saw that, I was like, āWho sent this? What the heck?ā Yeah.
Simone Collins: Thank you, kind stranger. Yeah. Thank you.
Kirsche: Thatās a beautiful gift. I love this. Wow.
Malcolm Collins: Oh,
Simone Collins: we
Malcolm Collins: should do something like that, Simone.
Simone Collins: That sounds legit amazing. Heās a very
Malcolm Collins: creative little dreamer or whatever.
Yeah. And also I, the main reason I wanna connect with you on, on, on Discord is just to build, because the stuff that you, you say you need built is not difficult for me to build. It might be difficult for my wife to handle the [01:11:00] accounting on.
Simone Collins: Itās just accountable. I, I think I can figure it out as long as, yeah, the, the reporting.
I mean, the reporting has to be clear for each creator to see what theyāve gotten. So as long as I can see it and keep track of it, itās okay.
Malcolm Collins: All right. Well, fantastic. Thank you so much for coming on the show. Yeah. And itās completely amazing. Thank you guys. It
Simone Collins: was
Kirsche: fun.
Malcolm Collins: Youāre, youāre amazing. No, I mean, I, I- itās fun, but also just, like, youāre such a legend.
Aw ... you are really the, the buck at which the cultural tide began to turn. It really
Kirsche: broke- I donāt know if I would say, like, legend, but I, I am very happy that I kind of, I guess, held a stronghold door and made other creators feel more comfortable about coming out and talking about things that they care about, that they believe.
Yeah. And seeing, seeing me... Like, Iāve had so many people say, like, seeing me stand up the way that I did to something like Vice, it made them all feel like maybe we can actually have an effect on something. It is true. And so that, that makes me happy. Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: You didnāt just stand up. You clowned on them. You [01:12:00] crushed them.
It was a complete retreat to the extent that I donāt think, like, Vice even has an audience anymore, right? Like, not, not because of you, but I think that these institutions- Mm ... that we grew up thinking of as important, like Vice, weāve realized that Vice versus Fox Girl- ... Vice is toothless. They have- I
Kirsche: love how some of them tried downplaying it like, āOh, this canāt be real.
Like, she wrote it so unprofessional.ā And I had a lawyer, man, come on,
Simone Collins: dude. Oh my gosh.
Kirsche: I just treated Vice the exact way that they should be treated.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. And it worked. And ever since then, there has not been a single, that Iām aware of, successful cancellation of a right-wing internet figure th- that- that was, that was the last of it.
That was
Simone Collins: the last- It was the turning point. It was the turning point. It was, it was
Malcolm Collins: huge Like it, it never ha- do you know how f*****g crazy that is? Like, obviously Elon buying Twitter had a huge effect on this, right?
Kirsche: And I, I also love, like, the, the wave of encouragement that came after [01:13:00] that. Yeah Like, as weāve seen with like Advanced GG dropping Rev and Straub.
Any time Advanced GG tries to post something- ... everyone just inundates them with like, āWhy would anyone work with you when you just drop your creators in the face of a cancel mob, and you keep on other people who harass others, like, objectively?ā
Malcolm Collins: And I love wh- when you look at individuals like Rev and Straub, thatās the other thing I really love about the culture thatās come out of this.
And how itās affected right-wing culture is I think for a while we werenāt sure whether the new version of right-wing culture was actually accepting of people who are, like, different and weird as long as they ch- are, are, are part of our larger... And then, you know, I think Anna Valens affirmed, you know, you and Leaflet for the mainstream wife right audience.
And then GamerSupps affirms Rev. Like, Rev genuine- I think for a long time a lot of people on the right were like, āI donāt know, itās like an anime, vampire- Well, Gamer- ... all theseā GamerSupps
Kirsche: is different from Advanced GG.
Malcolm Collins: Oh, wait, sorry. Advanced GG. Sorry. I know that
Kirsche: theyāre all pretty weird and stuff. Yeah.
Advanced [01:14:00] GG were the ones who dropped, who dropped Rev and Straub just for no reason.
Malcolm Collins: To, but they, they, the, the backlash to that I think really affirmed the, the Rev and Straub for a while. The
Kirsche: change, yeah.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. And now itās like weāre all, like, just, like, nerdy weirdos, right? Like, the, the nerdy weir- And thatās the other thing about the nerdy weirdos, the, the nerd scene.
Itās not even weird. Weāre nerds. Weāre just f*****g nerds. Is, is, is we are winning this for the right. Like, we donāt have internal fighting with each other. We donāt have any real scandals. We donāt get married in front of the Pope and then randomly- ... cheat on our husband a bunch of times.
Kirsche: Yeah, right?
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, like, we are, like, the wholesome part. And we- Mm ... and itās like, no sh- theyāre, the only shots fired Iām aware of is, like, a year ago Rev was annoyed at Knucks about something and then got over it, right? Like, but generally speaking, itās like none of us ever attack each other. And I really love that wholesome feeling to this.
As well as creators like you [01:15:00] who are significantly larger than us, creators like Knucks who are significantly larger than us doing collabs. Itās such a wholesome feel to a community.
Kirsche: Itās, itās really nice and I, I, I enjoy that thereās not as much infighting and I wish that Especially when it comes to Bridge stuff.
Like, even, even if other larger right-wing creators donāt wanna talk to me because Iām anime, I wish they would at least showcase the research that Iāve done. Because I think itās a very important conversation, and itās very important to show more people.
Malcolm Collins: Okay, so hereās, hereās what I have. So any of our fans who either work at the White House or have connections at the White House I think getting...
Where would you tell them to go for the, the biggest condensed, your research?
Kirsche: My pinned tweet on my Twitter profile is an article of every single source of everything Iāve found researching into Bridge since 2024. The only thing not posted there, because Iām not a journalist, so I donāt know how to go about doing it, is Iāve recorded the monthly meetings Bridge has had, or one of my moderators has when I canāt, [01:16:00] for the last two and a half years.
And I have all of these videos of them saying exactly what theyāre gonna be doing, exactly what their plans are, the companies theyāre specifically working with, the CEOs and the CMOs and the CFOs that come to these meetings from places like even McCormick, the freaking spice company. Like, I have all of these recordings, and I just, I donāt know what to do with them because I donāt wanna go afoul of, like- Okay, so-
some recording laws- Yeah ... or whatever.
Malcolm Collins: We can also... So I tell our fans, send that to anyone you know. Simone weāve been, weāve been asked to speak at the White House before, so weāve, weāve done that. And- Oh ... we should reach out to our contact there, Simone, just as a task item. We should reach out to our contact there about this to see if we can get them to look into this at all.
Because it could be an interesting win for them.
Iām connected with them.
Simone Collins: Well, I know,
Kirsche: yeah.
Simone Collins: Yeah, itās- And theyāre very big, and theyāre often very overwhelmed, so maybe they just need to hear about it from our angle, so we should. Let
Kirsche: me... Maybe, yeah. Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: So I think, I think get Heritage Foundation in front of Bridge. We have connections at, like, Claremont and stuff like that, right?
Like we could- Mm-hmm ... reach out.
Kirsche: Yeah, that would be great. I would love to. Like, anybody whoās willing to talk, just give them my Discord. Give me, like, a hundred- Yeah, ā
Malcolm Collins: cause I, [01:17:00] I remember talking- ... people to contact me ... with Dustin about starting, like, a, a nerd right or new right, like, institutional, like, fund similar to Heritage- Mm-hmm
or something like that, and heās just like, āI donāt see what benefit.ā But at the very least, we should be handing this sort of information to people.
Simone Collins: Well, yeah, because youāve done, like, reams of research on this. Yeah. Which is invaluable. And so that, like, they could take that and run with it. āCause they have the lawyers, and you did the research, and they can just plug and play.
Itās like, āOh, look, I can start here, here, and here.ā Like, that much- Yeah, exactly ... time.
Kirsche: And, and especially- Do you know who- ... more so that, like, obviously everything in my, my Twitter article is for public consumption, but, like, the, the videos of these internal meetings where they speak freely because they believe no one who doesnāt believe other than them is watching- Yeah
it, itās insane some of the stuff that they say.
Simone Collins: Gosh.
Malcolm Collins: Oh. Who do we... Who else do we know that could, I, like, Iām thinking whoād be interested in going deep on this. You know, Louise Perry talking with you could be pretty good. Sheās got a decent audience. And I think sheād be interested Do, do you know Louise Perry?
Kirsche: I do not.
Simone Collins: Sheās based in the UK. [01:18:00] She is one of those, like, I- canaries in the coal
Malcolm Collins: mine Sheās, sheās really big. She is in the UK. So, you know, weāre known as like the pronatalist couple. Mm-hmm. Whatever we are to Elon- Mm ... JK Rowling. Yeah. In the same way that like JK Rowling canāt spend all day railing against trans people online, Louise Perry canāt
Does that for her, right? You know? Yeah, yeah. She also goes really deep on a lot of stuff and former leftist and everything like that. Yeah. I mean, a, a lot of our government connections are in the UK because like weāve been better at infiltrating governments there. Which is- I donāt know why thatās the case.
Thereās just, I, I guess, a larger nerd government faction in the UK.
Kirsche: I guess maybe. Yeah. I, I moved back to, like, where Iām from, so Iām back in New England, and Iāve, Iāve been meeting with a lot of like libertarian party and free state party people in New Hampshire, and that gives me, that gives me great, great hope for the future, at least out here.
Thatās so wonderful. Which
Malcolm Collins: usually Iām like a doomsday party and hope for the best, but- Oh, I used to live in New Hampshire. I love, I love that stuff. Yeah, we, weāve done weāve done speaking at [01:19:00] some of that, and weāve been asked to come speak at something in New Hampshire. Do you know what it is, Simone, the group?
They wanna fly us out.
Simone Collins: H- have you spoken with them? Like, some new s- society and they reached out on X, and I canāt remember the name. I can look it up really fast, but like... yeah. I know there are a lot of, like, free state related societies that itās like a membership based private society.
Kirsche: Heck yeah.
Malcolm Collins: But yeah, awesome. This has been so great. And Iām gonna get building those things, and hopefully I can have them done in a couple weeks.
Kirsche: And I will try to get screenshots of the SE backend and the GamerSupps gifting platform.
Great,
Malcolm Collins: great. Amazing. Iāll try to mimic, Iāll try to mimic them. Just so you know our system runs on Stripe, so that would be the payment processor.
Kirsche: That makes sense. That makes sense. I think God, whatās it called? Sidescrollers plus Locals, I think they also run on Stripe.
Malcolm Collins: Oh, oh, a- also important for you to know, the reason I use Stripe is because you can use Stripe with Privacy.
Mm-hmm. Privacy is a app that you can sign into that creates- Mm ... a fake one-time use credit card using your credit card that [01:20:00] uses a fake name and address. Thatās pretty cool. So if people wanna be, like, totally anonymous, even to me, that can be done.
Kirsche: Thatās pretty neat.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. All right. Well- Well,
Kirsche: all right
Malcolm Collins: spectacular. Have a wonderful day.
Kirsche: You too. Thank you again for having me on, and bye bye.
Speaker 6: Okay, so you wanted to show the fans the toys that you bought?
Yeah
All of the places that are, that are trying to destroy the United States of America, or just trying to, or just trying to shoot a nuclear bomb at, at America. Okay? So Iran, for sure, right? Iran. What about China or Europe? Who do you, who do you dislike more?[01:21:00]
So youāre going to handle both China and Europe?
Octavian Collins: And, and on, and on both islands there will be Chinook helicopters drop, dropping snipers to shoot people- ... very fiercely and, and very invisible. Wait, only, only the bad people or the civilians too? Oh, only the bad military people. Or- But the civilians-
Speaker 6: And what are you gonna do with the civilians after you get rid of the military people?
Oh, so youāll, youāll bring freedom to China and [01:22:00] Europe?
This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit basedcamppodcast.substack.com/subscribe -
Malcolm Collins breaks down the Iran conflict and the Trump administrationās surprising diplomatic masterstroke that most pundits on both left and right completely misunderstood. Instead of āgiving away moneyā or weakness, the deal creates powerful economic incentives and on-the-ground leverage from Iranās angry neighbors (Saudi Arabia, UAE, Qatar, etc.) that makes cheating far more dangerous than the weak Obama deal.
We also discuss why boots-on-the-ground predictions failed, Israelās role, the collapse of Iranās military and leadership, and the long-term strategic wins for America. Later in the episode, Malcolm makes a provocative case for allowing Sharia law applied specifically to Muslim communities in the West as a way to reduce crime, create a forcing function on integration, and let communities see the real preferences of high-fertility Islamic subgroups.
A raw, high-signal conversation that challenges mainstream narratives on both foreign policy and domestic cultural issues.
Show Notes
Headlines on June 17th
https://drudgereport.com/
OBAMA DEAL BETTER?
TRUMP HUMILIATION
MAGA HAWK MUTINY
TEXT LEAKS
NY Times Above the Fold on Iran:
Live Updates: Trump Speaks at G7 Sumit After Renewing Threats on Iran https://www.nytimes.com/live/2026/06/17/world/g7-summit-trump-france
Stars of Israelās TV Channel for Bibi Fans Turn on Trump https://www.nytimes.com/2026/06/17/world/middleeast/israel-channel-14-trump-criticism.html
You have to click through on NY Times to get any āwhatās going on with negotiationsā update, and the headline is: What to Know About the U.S.-Iran Framework Agreement: The full text of the deal that could pave the way to ending the war has not been published. Initial details suggest that it defers the most contentious issues.
Generally, from only scanning headlines, one gets the impression that Iran may be reaching some sort of conclusion, but itās one unflattering to the Trump administration.
What has happened as of June 17th
A preliminary framework agreement (memorandum of understanding or MoU) was reached and virtually signed around June 14ā15, 2026, between the US and Iran to pause the ongoing conflict.
Key elements (based on public statements and reports; the full text has not been widely released yet):
* Immediate ceasefire extension: Halts military operations on all fronts, including in Lebanon. This builds on earlier shaky ceasefires (e.g., from April).
* Reopening the Strait of Hormuz: Iran agrees to clear restrictions/mines; the US lifts its naval blockade of Iranian ports. Shipping has begun resuming, contributing to falling oil prices.
* 60-day negotiation window: For broader issues, primarily Iranās nuclear program (e.g., enrichment freeze or limits, sanctions relief). A formal signing ceremony is planned for June 19 in Switzerland (or possibly another venue).
* Other reported aspects (with some conflicting claims): Possible phased sanctions relief, asset unfreezing, and a reconstruction fund (potentially $300 billion, mostly from Gulf states/private sources rather than direct US payments).
The key point per Malcolm: The powers surrounding Iran being directly invested in its recovery and improvement, and Iranās stable future being contingent on not pissing them off.
Primarily Gulf Arab states (Iranās key neighbors across the Persian Gulf), through a proposed private ~$300 billion Reconstruction and Development Fund, will be involved in Iranās reconstructed and therefore directly invested in Iran going forward
Details from the Framework Agreement
* The fund is not direct US government money or reparations but a private investment vehicle designed to attract capital for Iranās postwar recovery (infrastructure, energy, logistics, manufacturing, etc.).
* Gulf states (Saudi Arabia, UAE, Qatar, and others in the GCC) are positioned as primary backers or facilitators (āGulf Coast Coalitionā). They were attacked by Iran during the conflict and have a strong incentive for regional stability. Contributions could include loans, credit lines, or direct investments.
* Why these neighbors?
* Economic interdependence: Rebuilding Iran reduces future conflict risks, secures energy routes (e.g., Strait of Hormuz), and opens markets.
* Mediation role: Qatar and Oman played key diplomatic roles; broader GCC involvement aligns with their security and economic goals.
* Already committed: Over half the fund has pledges from companies in Gulf states, Asia, US, etc.
Other international private investors (Asia, Europe, Africa, South America) are involved, but Gulf neighbors are emphasized for their direct stake and proximity.
The fund unlocks only if Iran complies with nuclear limits, inspections, sanctions relief phases, and other terms. Full details await formal signing (expected ~June 19) and implementation. This structure gives neighbors leverage and investment upside in a stable Iran.
What remains pending:
* Israel getting on board: Netanyahu has indicated Israeli forces will not fully withdraw from Lebanon, creating friction.
* How to work out sanctions and rule enforcement going forward: Loose ends on nuclear talks, sanctions, regional proxies, and enforcement. Trump has noted dissatisfaction could lead to resumed action.
* Iranās future armament: Iranās nuclear capabilities, ballistic missiles, and broader regional influence are deferred.
Is Iran Less of a Threat Today?
Yes.
Various ways Iran is nerfed:
* Nuclear Program Setbacks:
* US/Israeli strikes heavily damaged key enrichment facilities
* (Natanz, Fordow, Isfahan) and related infrastructure.
* While Iran retains some highly enriched uranium stockpiles and knowledge (underground elements were hard to fully destroy), its ability to rapidly advance toward a weapon has been delayed by months to a year or more.
* The framework agreement includes commitments to non-proliferation and further talks on limits, reducing near-term breakout risk.
* Ballistic Missiles and Conventional Forces:
* Large portions of Iranās missile launchers, production facilities, air defenses, naval assets, and drone capabilities were destroyed or degraded.
* This limits its ability to project power, threaten US assets/bases, or sustain prolonged attacks.
* Proxy responses (e.g., from Hezbollah, Houthis) were limited and ineffective in shifting the balance.
* Economic and Logistical Pressure:
* The conflict devastated Iranās economy and defense industrial base. The recent agreement reopens the Strait of Hormuz (previously restricted by Iran, causing global oil disruptions) and lifts the US naval blockade, but under monitored terms with sanctions relief tied to compliance. This reduces Iranās leverage via energy chokepoints while exposing it to ongoing oversight.
* Leadership and Regime Strain:
* Strikes targeted senior figures, command structures, and internal security (e.g., Basij bases), contributing to morale issues, desertions, and recruitment problems.
* The regime survived but is in a more defensive, weakened posture.
Episode Transcript
Malcolm Collins: Hello, Simone. Iām excited to be here with you today, and this is one of those days where I just need to be like- Everybody doesnāt seem to understand what happened at all, and Iām talking about on both the left and the right with this current deal with Iran, which is actually one of the more brilliant negotiated deals that Iāve seen maybe in the past 100 years in terms of us getting pretty much everything that we really want.
And itās shocking to me that you keep hearing, well, outright false claims that weāre giving them money, which weāre not. But money is involved, but in a way that really, really matters, and in a way that has a lot more teeth than the Obama deal did which is another thing that people are getting really wrong.
So a bit of context, because I- I donāt even know if you fully understand, and Iām gonna get the, the gist of this out of the gate. The big problem we have with Iran and wanting to pull out of the war, right, is that Iran, due to something called a Mosaic Defense Force, [00:01:00] essentially split into independent warlords who donāt exactly follow whatās coming from the top.
We know this because there was one instance where the president said that he apologized for all the strikes on other countries that are their allies presumably, and then the, a few days later he was like, āI, I, I didnāt say... I didnāt mean that. Weāre not even doing that.ā You know, which implied that one, theyāre not listening to him, and two, the independent warlords have more power than he does in this arrangement, because he had to back down from this position.
So this has led to a scenario where even when we do negotiate with people at the top, right? They can then th- they need to be able to, and in a, in a strong and forceful way, have a reason to tell all the people below, āFollow along and stay in line.ā Right? And then we have the secondary problem with Iran, which is even if you make a deal with them like Obama did, they basically just ignore it, like they did with the Obama deal.
Because the enforcement of that deal was that you know, the [00:02:00] UN or whatever would send its inspectors in, and Iran just wouldnāt show the inspectors the, the places where this is at, freaking obviously, right? Like weāre, how are they gonna figure that out, right? So that creates a huge negative incentive.
Speaker: Mr. Eel, I was supposed to be allowed to inspect your palace today, and your guards wonāt let me into certain areas. Hans, Hans, Hans, weāve been through this a dozen times. I donāt have any weapons of mass destruction..
Iām sorry, but the UN must be firm with you. Let me see your whole palace or else.
Speaker 2: Or else what?
Speaker: Or else we will be very, very angry with you, and we will write you a letter telling you how angry we are.
Malcolm Collins: Okay. So functionally, what Trump created was a scenario in which and Iran helped him do this. They made a number of enormous miscalculations that made this deal possible that is just so bad for Iran and people donāt get it at all. So, [00:03:00] the miscalculation, the big one that they made that is almost baffling unless you understand that there were rogue actors within the country o- operating this Mosaic Defense Force and just basically trying to The, the, the reason why they were sending more missiles at, like, Qatar and the UAE and Saudi Arabia and, like, their, their freaking allies than even Oman, whoās been one of their closest allies forever, than Israel, is because that didnāt get you scorecards in the, in the battleship of the dictators, right?
And so this led them to attack. A- and keep in mind, by the way, what the, the right grifters who lie to you all the time, like the anti-Israel right grifters and the leftist said it this word, they said, āThis is gonna end up with boots on the ground, huge, hundreds of thousands of American soldiers dying in Iran, that the stock markets are gonna crash,ā highest theyāve ever been.
That oil is gonna go to $200 a barrel. Did not happen. You know, and, and when I came out here with all of this, and I told you where I thought this war was gonna go, Iāve been pretty much exactly accurate. Okay? Yeah. So keep this in mind when youāre thinking of your [00:04:00] sources and where you take, like, interest- like, your information from, right?
Right. Because some people are manipulating you and playing you for stupid. But anyway, so it ended up with a scenario where- A lot of these countries have historically ... Well, they were in conflict. Like, Saudi Arabiaās not Iranās ally. Like, they, they do hate each other. But other players like Qatar was.
Qatar is where, like, Al Jazeera is, which is basically Iranās global mouthpiece. Yeah ... the reason why Qatar is so close with Iran is because they share the gas field that is the basis of all of Qatarās wealth. This is the natural gas field. And Iran and Qatar have to get along otherwise they end up fighting in a way that would be mutually destructive.
But now even Qatar doesnāt like them because Iran bombed the main refining facility of Qatar. So- Okay ... all of these other Middle Eastern countries really hate, hate Iranās guts now. And what theyāre saying under the table is, āWe want what Israel wants. We want Iran a failed state or functionally eradicated,ā okay?
Simone Collins: Right,
Malcolm Collins: yeah. Trump doesnāt want this. This would cause a major refugee [00:05:00] crisis and it has- Yeah, yeah ... some other negative externalities. Israel, this is Israelās endgame, I think. But, you know, Israel is at the moment partially serving us. Theyāre doing some stuff with Hezbollah. I think Trump secretly approves it.
Weāll get to that in a second. But- Okay ... so Iran closes down the strai- the strait. Weāve said if, in terms of large geopolitical players, we point out that that basically only helps the United States. While it may hurt us economically in the short term, like, like, in an absolute sense, in a relative sense against all other parts of the world no country on Earth is helped more than the United States by a shutdown of the Strait of Hormuz.
Because we produce all of the stuff that comes out of there, and are exporters of it, and just basically captured Venezuela, which is one of the other major exporters of it. And so, like, that just makes the value of all that stuff that we own and export and is a major part of our economy go up. And so the people who get hurt by that, as Iāve said, are Europe and China primarily, China the most.
And, and some other East Asian countries. But nobody gets hurt by this [00:06:00] more than who, Simone? Who gets hurt the most by a closure of the Strait of Hormuz?
Simone Collins: Europe, the EU, right? No. China.
Malcolm Collins: It closes ... uAE- Russia ... Saudi Arabia, and Qatar.
Simone Collins: Because- Oh, for this, their oil sales ...
Malcolm Collins: they canāt export their main product if that strait is closed.
And Saudi Arabia has some other ports they can use, but, but minor stuff there. Okay? So all of these people, one, hate Iranās guts right now. They want Iran functionally eliminated long-term. And th- because keep in mind theyāre, it, most of them are a different branch of Islam and the, nobody hates each other more than the two branches of Islam, right?
Those are the two big... y- you think they hate the Jews, you know, theyāre, theyāre, theyāre, theyāre chomping at the bit to g- go at each other. But anyway, so, they, Iran pretty isolated, right? And this is why Iran, in terms of how they built out their global power projection, had to do it through terrorist networks rather than through alliances with states like the Saudi Arabians did.
So, we [00:07:00] wanna get this strait open, but thereās this Mosaic Defense Force saying, āAnd we donāt really care that much.ā Like, we donāt want the US to put a bunch of money in getting this open. Okay?
Simone Collins: Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: So who is most motivated to get the strait open? The other powers in the Middle East right now. So what did the deal functionally do?
It did two things simultaneously that have people pissed off. Both of them are kind of irrelevant. One is releasing Iranās frozen funds. For people who act like this is us giving Iran money, you guys have the mentality of Josh of Bricks and Minifigs thinking heās giving the guy a big gift by giving him his Legos back.
Itās like, no, you f*****g seized those Legos. Youāre not doing some big f*****g favor by giving them their own Legos back. You just seized them because they had diplomatic sanctions on them. Right? So thatās really irrelevant, and it wasnāt even that much money. Itās like $20 billion or something like that
Simone Collins: Okay.
Malcolm Collins: The $300 billion deal [00:08:00] is what everybody is talking about.
Simone Collins: Yes.
Malcolm Collins: This has nothing to do with US assets. No- nobody in the US is involved in this deal. Okay. So what is actually happening with this deal? What this does is it allows for up to 300 million, which by the way a lot of people... Billion. A lot of people are leaving the up to out of investment.
Keep in mind this is not like a donation. This is not for infrastructure. This is for direct investment by all of these countries that Iran just pissed off inside of Iran. All right? So youāve gotta keep in mind what that functionally means is going to happen in Iran. All right? So a bunch of countries now that want Iran gone in the long term wouldnāt want something like this again, and would want to be able to act against Iran with more force if this happened again, now basically have a blank slate to build up private operations with private militias, [00:09:00] private everything like that all throughout Iran.
And not just all throughout Iran, but at every key economic node of Iran, because what are these powers going to be investing in? If the UAE, if Saudi Arabia just got a bunch of billions of dollars to invest in Iran, what are they gonna be investing sprucing up? What are they gonna b- be buying? Oil.
Yeah. Oil creation assets, oil creation facilities. And they have a lot of experience in making these very defensible once they get them in place, right? Sure. This actually puts Iran in a terrible position long term, but itās worse than that for Iran. Because now what theyāre saying is, āOkay, I know that you have this Mosaic Defense Force which is going to want to, like, show off and just randomly attack ships and blah blah blah blah blah,ā right?
But, this is such a potential boon to the future of Iran because it is still money flowing in, it is still dollars going to [00:10:00] Iranians at the end of the day who will be employed at these facilities, right? That thereās a reason to say, āHey, we actually lose something very big, this continued investment, if we continue to act bad.ā
So now they have an active reason to not do the bad thing with assets on the ground. Now this gets very, very different than the deal that Obama put into place. Because the deal that Obama put into place was sort of like, āWeāll have bureaucrats go there and check your numbers and see whatever,ā right?
The, and the bureaucrats donāt really even have a vested interest in making sure Iran doesnāt have nuclear weapons. Now under the Trump deal, which is interesting because the Trump deal on its surface feels like it has a lot fewer fangs in it. But because itās directly tied to these new assets within Iran owned by all of these countries around Iran, right?
Mm. It is way harder for Iran to do two things. One, attempt to nationalize this [00:11:00] stuff. If Iran attempts to nationalize this stuff, theyāve now pissed off every country around them, and given countries that for a long time have wanted to seriously kick butt on Iran a casus belli for a war. And a casus belli for a war that even if the United States doesnāt enter, Israel certainly will, because Israelās been waiting to do this forever.
And they now know that Israel versus Iran looks really bad on the Iranian side.
Simone Collins: Hmm.
Malcolm Collins: So functionally in terms of, like, the actual motivations that Iran has in terms of moving forwards, this is a pretty powerful deal. Now, this isnāt to say that, you know, Iran could be so much of a failed state at this point that they just canāt control their military, that their military decides to go out there, strike random ships, whatever.
At that point, weāll see what ends up happening. Iām not saying that that wonāt end up happening, because that could happen. The other big hitch in this is that Hezbollah s- is still sending missiles at Israel. So Israel decides you know, because theyāre trying to, [00:12:00] to provoke Israel, basically. They donāt, they donāt want this to end, right?
Like, a lot of, a lot of these other Iran state actors donāt want this to end. This, these are the, the guys in Lebanon. By the way, if youāre like, āOh, w- w- killing innocents in Lebanon, how could this happen?ā I wanna give you a a just, just a, an overview of Lebanonās history for people who arenāt aware of it.
So, if you go back to the 1895 census that we have, okay? Okay ... lebanon was 80% Christian. They were, by 1930- Holy,
Simone Collins: wait, what kind of Christian? Catholic?
Malcolm Collins: I think Catholic. Or they mightāve been an Eastern Orthodox branch.
Oh. Or 79% Christian. Okay?
Simone Collins: Whoa.
Speaker 3: They were Catholics, it turns out, which makes all of the de-sucking that the Pope did and Vatican II did not long after this look particularly ghoulish
Malcolm Collins: You go to today what, what is, what is Lebanon today?
28% Christian. You wanna know what happened to, to, to their Christian population?
Simone Collins: What?
Malcolm Collins: Well, mass [00:13:00] murdered. So, specifically we have things like the Damascus massacres, where 5,000 to 12,000 Christians were, like, just pulled out of churches and monasteries and murdered in the streets. And then you have the Lebanon Civil War.
Simone Collins: By whom? Like, what is, what, what contingent was so anti-Christian?
Malcolm Collins: Muslims
Simone Collins: Okay, great. Great, great. Okay,
Malcolm Collins: Muslims. Yeah, I think people, like, when people are like, āBut a Jew spit on a nun once.ā And itās like, bro, itās a completely different scale. A Jew - besmirched a statue of Jesus. Itās like, what, what are you, what are you on about?
Speaker 5: The one that always gets me when people are like, āDid you know that Israel bombed a, a church in Gaza?ā And Iām like, āOkay, how many people were attending that church?ā Itās like, āWell, there was like three or four.ā And itās like, āUh-huh, and there used to be hundreds. What happened to them? What happened to them?ā
Oh, you, you, you, you, are you willingly unaware or are you just like you like cucking yourself? Because these people, like itās, itās worse than being cucked. [00:14:00] Itās like youāre actively out there seeing somebody murder your countrymen, your children, your wife, and youāre like stanning them
Speaker 6: I am fairly confident that these people have some weird NTR fetish and that weāre gonna find out one day when Nickās, , folder leaks that that was his thing all along
Speaker 4: And for those who are unaware, , if youāre like, āWell, but Jews I guess functionally do the same thing because they vote Democrat,ā itās like actually Orthodox Jews, the ones having kids, the ones who will be represented in the future, the ones weāll be partnered with long-term in Israel, , they vote Republican overwhelmingly.
So much so that they are one of the key reasons we win the swing state of Florida and have moved that into the easy area to win for the Republican Party
Malcolm Collins: And note here, there are decent Muslims, right? But a lot of them, and the Muslims that have cultural power in Lebanon right now are not [00:15:00] that group. Okay? Specifically Hezbollah, which is essentially holding the country hostage. For 40 years, Israel has told the, the government in Lebanon, āStop these people on your borders just shind- sending missiles into our country.ā
They havenāt done it, so Israel says, āOkay, weāre gonna handle it. Weāre gonna, weāre gonna get this. We have greater Israel. Letās, letās...ā You know? If, if they get rid of the Christians in Lebanon, you know what? Greater Israel all the way. Make it Jewish. I donāt care, right? But Iran wants to include a protection for Hezbollah, or Lebanon in their minds in this because they donāt wanna lose the last state asset that they really have, which is really in tatters anyway at this point because of the pager bombings and stuff like this.
But Israel is saying to Trump, āWeāre not gonna do this.ā And they go in and they attack Damascus. Which I under- I mean, from their interests, they really donāt want this to happen. They, there have been right-wing Israeli pundits that you can find just railing about the peace deal. Because again, Israelās best interest is the complete destruction of the [00:16:00] Iranian state.
Simone Collins: Uh-huh.
Malcolm Collins: They do not care long term-
Simone Collins: Scorched earth, nothing there, yeah. Which is-
Malcolm Collins: Yeah ... yeah Destroy all their economic assets. Not
Simone Collins: great. I mean-
Malcolm Collins: Anything like that.
Simone Collins: Yeah. No. Thatās not what we want. No.
Malcolm Collins: And thatās generally not what America wants. No. So, so you could say, okay, so why is Trump not being harder on Israel, just saying theyāre being stupid, basically?
I think itās because he wants them to do this. So the important thing to remember with the deal-
Simone Collins: Okay ...
Malcolm Collins: is that you need to make it look like youāre doing a lot in terms of your part of the deal. Sure. If Trump can go and talk Israel down and get Israel to get out-
Simone Collins: Oh ...
Malcolm Collins: while this is completely- He
Simone Collins: has more leverage
Malcolm Collins: active. Yeah, he has way more leverage in the negotiations. Itās like, āLook, they donāt wanna do this. Iām trying to get them to do this,ā right? Itās, itās really a
Simone Collins: lot- Itās good cop, bad cop. I- yeah. Okay.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. So by the way, is this at what you understood of what was happening, or were you just completely with me?
Simone Collins: No, no. My understanding was allegedly there are [00:17:00] talks but this doesnāt do anything to stop any long-term nuclear threat from Iran. Like, yes, weāve decimated their nuclear capacity, but within a year they could be back up and running. Yes, weāve ruined, you know, their lower tech ballistic missiles and stuff, but sure, they could just buy new ones.
And this- ... this alleged a- agreement or plans for an agreement, theyāre just plans. W- no one has seen the full written agreement. Nothing has been agreed to formally. And by the way, Israel doesnāt wanna back out of Lebanon and who knows whatās gonna happen with Iran? Itās all fragmented. You canāt even get it to agree in the first place.
So basically, if you look at what, I think, the surface of mainstream media and general reporting tells you, nothing is happening. This war is terrible. Weāve wasted money. Weāre no better off than we used to be, and-
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, so thatās just basically- ... Trump
Simone Collins: is embarrassed ...
Malcolm Collins: completely wrong at every single point.
So first of all, remember how I said that, like, we [00:18:00] canāt get Iran to stop making nukes by sending bureaucrats in? Yeah. You know what, what,
Simone Collins: and- Yeah. No, thatās, itās, itās like telling, itās like telling our kids, like, āDonāt do this. Itās against the rules. Youāll get a timeout.ā
Malcolm Collins: Yeah.
Simone Collins: And you just have, you have to change the incentives.
Everythingās incentives, not punishments.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. So you- You it, a, well, no, punishments matter too. What, Iran functionally and finally got punished for decades of flagrantly ignoring our they almost have a nuke freak-out, right? By this lore. And people were like, āOh, itās always been they almost have a nuke.ā
And itās like, yeah, and they almost got it multiple times. And then we did Stuxnet, and Iran, Israel did Stuxnet, which was really clever, by the way. Again, Jews and their sneak stat. Theyāre just like speccing into a race with like a plus 25 to sneak. Like, the Hezbollah bombings were crazy. Stuxnet, if youāre not familiar with this, it was a completely offline centrifuge, and they ended up tricking somebody [00:19:00] into taking a USB drive, putting it into the completely offline device, and then destroying this super expensive centrifuge automatically.
Like, the mechanical parts of it. That is the wildest thing Iāve ever heard of in terms of... Thatās, thatās some, thatās some Jewery right there. Thatās,
Simone Collins: thatās- Next, next level ...
Malcolm Collins: cucking Jew. But anyway, so, Stuxnet set them way back. Like, over and over again, they get set back. They get set back. They get set back.
And now They almost had it finally. And they were basically telling us that. They go, āWe have enough to make, I think it was, what? 25 nukes within two months they said, or something like that. Like, like basically theyāre just like, āYeah, weāve pre-refined it.ā Thereās no, thereās no reason to have it refined to this amount other than military-grade weapons, and it only takes a few weeks to get it from the amount of refinement they had to nuclear grade and then use it, right?
Mm-hmm. So theyāre basically saying, āYeah, we, we have the capability to nuke.ā Theyāre a country that regularly trans- death to America at political events. This is not a controversial statement there. Thatās the party line. [00:20:00] Thatās, thatās in the national charter. And thatās obviously a threat to America, right?
Especially given that they have even recently funded you know, the killings of 250 Marines at one of our embassies through, through Hezbollah, right? Like, they, they are willing to nuke American assets, right? Like, theyād probably start with the Jews, but, but you know, weād, you know, be on the list.
In fact, I wouldnāt be surprised if they tried to do an Israel America at the same time sort of thing, just as like a big show of force and how great they are and try to... and of course, Hasan Piker and all the leftists at universities, even if it was Manhattan being nuked, would still be doing these big parades, ācause thatās how they are these days.
But, so they almost get the n- the, this material, and itās like what can we do at this point, right? The only thing we can really do is bomb their military into the Stone Age, and you look at what we were able to achieve with this. We destroyed basically all of their military assets. Their entire navy, which was, by the way, I think four exercises of British Navy,
Simone Collins: Was it really?
Oh, I donāt remember- Yeah, yeah, yeah ... hearing about a big navy.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. Wow. Well, itās more that Britain has a super small navy [00:21:00] now.
Simone Collins: Thereās that.
Malcolm Collins: Super small and incompetent. But anyway thatās at the bottom, thatās at the bottom of the, the, the ocean now or the, the sea there. But anyway, so we got rid of their navy, we got rid of a lot of their land assets.
We really hurt them in terms of their ordinance stockpiles that they have access to. And but, yes, they can restock, but in the meantime, we also did a lot of physical destruction to nuclear facilities that, that weāre aware of. But more than all of that, we really up the countryās leadership organization.
Like we basically killed Two generations of leadership. Well, not we. They, the Israelis are way better at the targeted killing stuff. We helped, okay? We, we threw a few bombs in there, but they, If you look at the, the, the level of the destruction that happened within the leadership of Iran itās, itās genuinely astonishing, and itās gonna be very hard for them to bounce back from this.
Mm-hmm ... w- when you consider that, as well as the asset damage. And anything that looks like, [00:22:00] from the perspective of other Middle Easterners, re-arming themselves is gonna be bad, and I think that they, they... because they, theyāll withdraw the money. And this is where it gets really good, because the thing that I think that weāve learned in the United States more broadly, and I think this is what we should learn in the UK, I think this is something that we need to, to come away with, is there was a, the, the, the one of the heads of Qatar, heās got this speech where heās talking about how the United States and Europe, he specifically, he was calling out here Europe, he goes, āWeāre gonna have to deal with, in the next generation, many a Muslim extremist attacks,ā because Europe is not dealing with its Muslim extremists, right?
Like, they are, as weāve seen in recent episodes, thereāll be, like, a gang rape, and the, the kid, the minors who did it, so they can say, āOh, itās not a big deal,ā they, they got fines of, like, community service. They didnāt even get jail time for it. They posted it on Snapchat live. Like, the, the level of degradation, and with the new files, which weāre not gonna cover, by the way, of all the grooming gangs, was so much worse than anyone thought.
And they were [00:23:00] 98% Muslim, turns out. So much worse than anyone thought that, that, And these also, these groups target Muslim communities as well. Like, keep that in mind, right? Like, Absolutely horrifying that this has been al- allowed to metastasize. And the, the guy in Qatarās like, āYou and America need to d- need to deal with this.
You and y- Europe need to deal with this.ā And when they say deal with it in Qatar, what they mean is drag them out in the street and chop their heads off. Okay? And this is where Iām gonna say something a little controversial. I think we should allow for Sharia law in the UK and in the US applied to Muslim communities.
Oh. So, so here how this works. Okay. I think that we should still be subject to all of the other laws of our country, but in addition to the other laws of the country, if Sharia law would ever have a harsher punishment than the countryās laws, then the Sharia law punishment is applied to any practicing Muslim.
And this is done at the level of local Muslim councils. So for [00:24:00] example, what would happen to these men under Sharia law? The smallest fine that they wouldāve had to pay, the smallest thing that may have happened to them as an unmarried man involved in a grape is 100 whip lashes from a whip.
If youāre unfamiliar with what 100... Thatās, thatās what Johnny Rico was given for accidentally leading to one of his teammates being killed in a a live fire exercise in Starship Trooper. That is a brutal thing to do to someone.
Speaker 8: I was wrong. The Johnny Rico scene is only 10 lashes for an example of how extreme Sharia law is compared to other, , legal systems. , Just in case youāre wondering how many lashes is generally considered fatal, in ancient Roman and Jewish tradition, 40 lashes was often seen as the point where death became likely, hence the common practice of limiting it to 39 lashes to avoid accidentally killing.
In British military flogging, ,. A famous case in 1846 involved a soldier dying after 150 lashes. Sentences were later reduced to 50 or fewer. A Russian knout, , far [00:25:00] deadlier.
100 lashes were typically fatal. The heavy wire-reinforced tool could break bones in the spine, with some deaths reported as few as 20 strokes. , Modern judicial flogging in the Middle East, sentences of 50 to 100 lashes are common and often survived without serious injury, though deaths occur
, examples include a boy dying after 85 lashes due to a mishit
Speaker 7: recruit trainee John Rico is sentenced to administrative punishment Ten lashes Carry out the sentence
Speaker 9: So if we had Sharia law implemented for Muslims in the West, , and you had something like this gang rape and then they posted on, , you know, X or whatever, , we know it was a Snapchat, you know, you would have ended up with maybe a quarter of these kids just being whipped to death in public. And I [00:26:00] think that would be a very strong deterrent, , both to importing more, , Muslims who want this to be the punishment for everyone and for the Muslim population in these countries.
Speaker 10: Just a few logistical points if youāre confused as to, āOh, well, how do you determine whoās a Muslim?ā Right? The, the answer is easy. Itās by, , mosque,
Records. , Basically you are, , if you go to a mosque and that mosque, , ascribes to Sharia law, then you are put on the records as being a Muslim who ascribes to Sharia law, right? Like, it would be very, very simple. And if you are a kid under 18, , somebody who goes to one of the mosques, then you are counted as on those records
Speaker 11: And if youāre like, āOh, but thatās so inhumane,ā you understand that this is what will become the law of the land in these countries if we allow current demographics to play out. , If you look at the United States, , the Center of Security Policy poll, , found that fifty-one percent of [00:27:00] American Muslims thought that Sharia courts should be allowed in the United States.
, A twenty-twenty-four Heritage Foundation -- poll found thirty-nine percent of Muslims in the United States thought that Sharia law should be the law of the land. Um, in the UK, we have polls ranging from, , forty-three percent., There was a two-thousand-and-sixteen poll, Policy Exchange IMC, , forty-one percent showed it.
In twenty-twenty-four, Henry Jackson Society showed thirty-two percent wanting it. And you can be like, āWell, this isnāt the majority,ā or, āItās only the edge majority in some cases,ā but the ones who want it are having vastly more kids than the ones who donāt want it, so they will be the majority of the population in the future.
If youāre like, āOh, this is... How could you do this? This is mon-ā Youāve gotta understand, if you do nothing, if you just allow things to play out, this is the way people of the future will be tried in these countries. So you are, through not allowing this to be engaged with, causing it to be engaged with at a much larger level in the future based on current statistical [00:28:00] trends.
Speaker 13: And again, I have nothing against Muslims or Islam or anything like that. , I just think that there is a version of Islam that is leading to much higher birth rates within certain parts of the community, , that I do find distasteful, the same way I find certain versions of the ultra-Orthodox Jewish community that are extremely unproductive, , distasteful.
, And I think that when we look at this version being the high fertility version, this version being the version thatās been resistant to the low fertility aspects of Western culture, , and is, is not integrating, , because the ones who do integrate donāt have as many kids, , that, , , we see many people in the West not understand what the real long-term implications is if they become a majority anywhere.
, And I think that through changing the law system to the one that they want, the one that theyāre asking for, for the members on their mosque rolls, , that could help people grok that when they say they want these sorts of punishments, theyāre serious about it.
Malcolm Collins: On the high end, depending on which version of Sharia law youāre, youāre looking at, that would be a [00:29:00] public crucifixion.
Now you wanna see gang grape stop really quickly in Muslim neighborhoods? Start having teenagers being publicly crucified in those neighborhoods in Britain, and itās gonna stop mighty fast.
Simone Collins: Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: A- and better- Well,
Simone Collins: you make a fair point that, like, maybe thereās a lack of Sharia law at play among communities
Malcolm Collins: that are- These people co-evolved with these incredibly harsh punishments, right?
Right. Like, we, we point out that, like, m- different people evolved alongside different social norms, and when you take them and put them in a completely different set of social norms their behavior... Like evolution affects personality, behavior, how you relate to things, and humans have undergone an enormous amount of recent sociological evolutionary pressure.
Mm-hmm ... and if you take somebody whoās used to these incredibly strict rules that they use in places like the UAE, and Qatar, and, and Iran, and Saudi Arabia, right? Like, all of these countries have incredibly harsh punishments. Whenever you have a Muslim country that actually has a degree of [00:30:00] law and order- itās because they are applying these punishments as they should be applied.
So Iām coming up that Iām for Sharia law going forward, just only applied to the Muslim community. And, and they canāt say, āWell, this Muslim did something and it doesnāt violate Sharia law.ā If secular law ever give the punishment worse than Sharia law, then the secular law punishment a- applies.
Simone Collins: Well, I mean, Iām in, Iām in favor of any religionās laws being properly enforced.
Malcolm Collins: Well, I know, but theyāre, youāre not even legally... I mean, the, the other thing, if itās a married man who, who grapes someone in Sharia law, that, thatās just a stoning anywhere. Thatās the minimum you can get. They donāt even allow us to stone Muslims in, in the United States or the UK. Like, itās their own law that they should be stoned.
Letās f- let their people stone them, you know? And I think, the second thing I think, is I think that pretty soon once we kill-
Simone Collins: Well, okay, sorry. Just to, to- criticize this approach, then youāre also saying that honor killings are okay of young women who have been assaulted. And thatās-
Malcolm Collins: Thatās actually not Sharia law
super not
Simone Collins: [00:31:00] cool, right?
Malcolm Collins: Thatās not... Thatās explicitly in violation of Sharia law.
Simone Collins: It is?
Malcolm Collins: It is. It is. In Sharia law, the woman who is raped, it... Now, there have been local customs where this has been applied. Okay. But Sharia law itself is very explicit that the woman is innocent.
Simone Collins: What about a woman whoās just being slutty, letās say, by their standards?
Oh,
Malcolm Collins: well, you know, maybe we can let them handle... Maybe we could create some negative externalities for that behavior as well. Okay. But what I think is thereās the secondary benefit to this. One, Muslims
Simone Collins: believe- Now, we, we spend all this time around, like, very progressive people, so Iām just hearing them say, āSo Malcolm, you believe that a young lady who chooses to be sexually intimate with someone, possibly someone who emotionally manipulated her at a time in which sheās very emotionally vulnerable and immature, that she should be stoned to death if she chooses to become sexually active before getting married as a teenager?ā
Malcolm Collins: Absolutely.
Simone Collins: Are you saying that?
Malcolm Collins: Because there are- Oh, my God ... a number of positive effects of this for society. Okay. The first, we give the [00:32:00] Muslims what they want. The ma- majority of Muslims in the UK want Sharia law- Mm-hmm ... at this point, right? Mm-hmm. In the United States, I think itās 36% of Muslims. So many Muslim communities want this, right?
Simone Collins: Thatās a minority, but okay.
Malcolm Collins: No, in the, in the UK itās a majority.
, I went through the statistics above listing the polls, but actually in one poll itās the majority in the US as well
Speaker 12: And as I said, itās also somewhat irrelevant because the ones who believe this are the ones who have demonstrably more kids, probably about double the rate of kids. And so they are the ones who will be represented in future populations
Simone Collins: Okay.
Malcolm Collins: And in the US it might be a majority. Now, I need to double check, but yeah.
Simone Collins: I feel like this needs to be opt-in. You know, you have to, like, waive your- No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no. Not
Malcolm Collins: an opt-in for the Muslim communities who have their own mosque and everything like that.
Okay, so, so now you have two-
Simone Collins: How would this be practically enforced? Like, letās say-
Malcolm Collins: It would be,
Simone Collins: Enforced by Sharia law ... my parents were Muslim, but Iām not. Like, Iām an, Iām an atheist wiccan whose parents are Muslim. What laws apply? I ha- Iāve chosen- So, so- ... to not opt into that
Malcolm Collins: culture ... so it is applied...
First of all, if youāre an atheist wiccan whose parents [00:33:00] are Muslim, youāre an apostate and Sharia law says you should be killed.
Simone Collins: Oh, my God. So,
Malcolm Collins: That, by the way... So letās talk about why this is such a positive thing, why this would
Simone Collins: be such a positive thing to allow. Yes. Why is this such a positive thing?
Malcolm Collins: First, you give the Muslims what they want. Second, the Muslims who donāt want this would now have a very strong reason to deconvert, right? So what you say is basically you have the right to deconvert from Islam, and the state will protect you after the age of 18. If at the age of 18 you want to deconvert you can deconvert from Islam, and you no longer need to play in this system, and the state will protect you and maybe even open up shelters for people who are doing this specifically.
I, Iād be okay with state funding that, okay? The-
Simone Collins: Oh, for like shelters of a minor who wants to escape?
Malcolm Collins: I said 18 If youāre a minor, in Islamic law, the parents kill you if you leave Islam, okay?
Simone Collins: Oh my God. Okay.
Malcolm Collins: But the secondary benefit to this, I think minors should have to follow the laws and religion of their parents.
Absolutely. If their parents are paying to support them, [00:34:00] theyāre n- the stateās not paying to support them. I mean, in a lot of these Muslim cases they are, letās be honest, but letās just say the parents, right? So the second thing, okay, is that visibly, now all of a sudden people in the UK, the leftists in the UK, the, the leftists in America have to visually see that the group that theyāre bringing into their country doesnāt want the, the world that they want.
When they see the gay guy being stoned in the street to death, some gay, some, some twinky teen literally being hit with stones until heās dead, crumpling to the ground in the middle of the street in Manhattan or something like this where they sanction this off or their Sharia law stoning, real quick theyāre gonna want these people out of the country.
Yeah. Real quick weāre gonna get immigration,
Simone Collins: Bans in place. Oh, so youāre just saying itās, itās a forcing function thing.
Malcolm Collins: Itās a forcing function. We give them what they want.
Simone Collins: And people see what, what... Like, okay, right. Because I guess your broader argument is people are not willing [00:35:00] to intellectually wrap their heads around what many Muslim communities actually for really, like, for real really want.
And if we accelerate that and just give them a preview of where things are headed and say, āThis is literally what youāre gonna get,ā then this can be staved off from happening. So either it happens at, like, a 10% level now if we make it happen, or it happens at a 100% level 50 years from now-
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, when they vote
Simone Collins: it into national law
thereby ruining countries. Uh-huh. Uh-huh. Uh-huh. Which is what they want. They want this to be the national law. Yeah. So
Malcolm Collins: letās make this the
Simone Collins: law- And youāre just making it a 10% thing I think ... and
Malcolm Collins: then the final externality is you know how quickly the Muslim grape gangs are gonna die out when this gets implemented? You know how quickly a lot of this negative behavior we see, oh, y- w- letās see, whatās the punishment for, for stealing in Sharia law?
We gonna get some hands lopped off here or something? l- weāll see what the f- punishment for sluttiness is okay, so for a woman who sleeps with somebody out of wedlock itās 100 lashes. So itās the same as a man graping someone, which you know what?
Iām okay with [00:36:00] that. Stoning to death is if, if the woman is married, which Iām also okay with. For stealing, itās the amputation of the right hand. I am 100% okay with that. Yeah, as for male and female thieves, cut off their hands. So yeah, you, you know how quickly the, the Muslim crime waves weāve been dealing with are gonna stop when we start cutting off their fricking hands?
Real fast. And the great thing is, is this wonāt be done by conservatives. Thisāll be done by Muslims of their own communities, which will make their communities less externalities to other groups, and I bet conservatives might be able to get along with Muslims right fast when they start enacting their own punishments on their own group, right?
Like, I could... Iām, Iām being totally honest here. If Muslim communities were allowed to punish their own members in these incredibly strict and severe ways in, like, Canada, in the United States, in the UK, in Germany, a, a conservative like me, I, I honestly think... Because right now the Muslim community, like, why do I have a beef with the Muslim community?
They keep [00:37:00] graping my people, and then it gets covered up by the local police forces. Because they keep going out there and stealing from my people, right, from our government, right? From, from the local stores, from the... They create these enormous the, you know, thief games. They have your externalities when you look at, at, at, at, at, at rates of, of, of being involved in crime.
You see really high rates. If all of that dropped off a cliff, Iād have no f*****g problem. Iād have no problem with Muslims, right? Like, if, if, if, if... And I think it would drop off a cliff if we let them enact Sharia law.
Simone Collins: Well, I guess what youāre saying a lot, is a lot of this is downstream of our broader- At least personally st- very strongly held rule of we are cool with any cultural group that does its own thing, so long as it does not curtail on the rights or liberties or property of other groups.
And the problem- Right, like ... is that youāre saying this particular group is infringing upon the freedom, rights, liberty, and property of other groups that it sh- you know, has [00:38:00] no right to do. So they, they have become in a, or, and/or are becoming an increasingly existential threat to non-Muslim groups, and therefore- And I, and
Malcolm Collins: I wanna be clear here.
Your average Muslim in Britain, like, the, the average, the, the Muslim who wants Sharia law, your religiously observant Muslim, they do not like that these grooming gangs are happening.
Simone Collins: Sure. Of course not. No ...
Malcolm Collins: they,
Simone Collins: they, they want these- Theyāre, theyāre horrible bad actors ...
Malcolm Collins: people punished because it makes them look bad and they want Sharia law in Britain, which may be antagonistic to our goals, but they donāt just, like, want every bad actor out there doing every bad thing, right?
Simone Collins: Like- Well, and I d- I do like, I do like the reframing of Sharia law. Like, Iām just a law and order citizen. Like is that so bad? Yeah. Like, in, in this era- Maximal law and order ... when I think about, like, one of the big sort of Asmongold points of, of our day and age is, hey, wouldnāt it be great if we actually enforced our laws?
That is a- ... itās an interesting take and an angle that I hadnāt thought about before. What if we just... Like, is, is [00:39:00] Sharia law so bad in an era in which one of our biggest problems is a refusal, a, a broad, a refusal to in- impose laws that we have established and agreed upon as a, a base of citizens? Th- that we want these laws.
They should be here. But no. Yeah. No.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. And well, and I, I think, I mean, even conservative Americans, if it ends up working and ha- having the Muslim community become positive actors in our countries, I think many Americans, you know, they, they see the guys, the thievesā hands being chopped off instead of being released back on the street over and over again, theyāre probably gonna be like I didnāt think I liked Islam that much, but I mean, if itās only Muslims this is happening to, Iām fine.
I mean, that works for me, right?
Simone Collins: Well, I donāt know. But Iāve, Iāve listened to so many horrific stories of the mistreatment of especially children and women within this culture. But thatās
Malcolm Collins: common i- within
Simone Collins: Islamic countries. The problem though is, is well, the, itās, and, and that itās happening now without Sharia law.
In, and to your point I guess in many cases in [00:40:00] violation of Sharia law. So in, I think in a sense because theyāre in these gray zones where theyāre outside nations with Sharia law, nations that wouldnāt even take them as, for example, as, as refugees in some cases that are also sort of accommodating them and, and turning a blind eye to bad, bad actors and crimes being committed.
Perhaps there are, thereās an argument to be made, itās possible that there are more atrocities committed against even Muslim, practicing Muslim women and children without Sharia law and with the law of the governing country turning a blind eye toward those communities and being like, āIām not gonna look at this, la, la, la, la, la.ā
Like, and, āIt would be racist for me to notice anything,ā which is screwed up. Yeah, and in a way that- Because even within those communities theyāre like, āNo, this is not okay,ā and yet we have been defanged of the tools that we would use to police this among [00:41:00] people.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah.
Simone Collins: Okay.
Malcolm Collins: Islam has the tools baked into it to police Muslims.
Simone Collins: Right. But then of course those tools are illegal within, for example, the United Kingdom, so the United Kingdom refuses to impose its own laws on many of these groups for fear of being accused of racism or bias, but then these own groups donāt have the tools they require to enforce those laws themselves if they were to just do it without the UK.
So okay, I see your point. My goal, I mean, so obviously, like my number one goal is, you know, promote longterm human flourishing. Our general ideology is, hey, any group should be allowed to do its thing as long as theyāre not- An existential threat to other group or impinging on the ability of another group to pursue its, its, you know, prerogative and, you know, have its stuff and do its thing.
But then, like, number three, I really, I donāt like people being harmed. I, I donāt, especially kids.
Malcolm Collins: But, but hold on. I mean, I think that, that you, you frame this in a way that confuses people [00:42:00] sometimes.
Simone Collins: Okay.
Malcolm Collins: I am totally okay with a group cucking with another group when that other group is net less productive than the group whoās f*****g with them less moral than the group whoās f*****g with them.
Because if, if you have a, a negative bad actor on, on your doorstep thatās constantly messing with you, right? Because a lot of people would take the things that youāre saying and saying, āOh, when Israel defends itself against Hezbollah, thatās, thatās Jews being a negative externality for another
Simone Collins: group.ā No, no, no, no, no, no, no.
Because we per our morality at least, if another group is infringing upon your ability to do your sovereign thing within your own borders, y- you have every right to bop them, as we would say, to, like, retaliate. Because they are not allowing you to, within your own house, do your own thing. Mm. So that, I, I agree with you on that
Malcolm Collins: So, I mean, I just wanna end this with a, you know all those people who said weāre gonna have tons of boots on the ground in Iran?
Iāve always said Iām okay with Karg [00:43:00] Island. Iām okay with Karg Island as, as a limited military thing, but boots on the ground in Iran is stupid and Trumpās not gonna do that, and he didnāt do that. And people lied to you. Now, or they didnāt lie to you, they just have no f*****g idea how the world works and theyāve got a bu- an audience of third-worlders whoās totally captured them into these stupid anti-Semitic positions that are just not useful in terms of long-term human flourishing when weāre thinking about, like, useful allies.
āCause right now, Europeās not a long-term useful ally for us. They are, they are incredibly cucked, and Israel actually goes out there, and when somebody acts a fool, they handle it. And I think that we in the United States, in Europe, need to take a l- a line from Israelās book going forwards. And that that is why Iām totally okay with building this stronger alliance with them and seeing where things are going.
Right, right now I think Israel is actually acting with tacit approval of Trump to help in the negotiations. We can see how this ends up turning out or leaks that come out of the future. But broadly speaking, no, the stock market didnāt crash, the economyās doing better than ever. No, oil [00:44:00] didnāt hit $200.
No, all of the, no, they, they said that all of the countries in the Middle East would start hating us, when the exact opposite has happened. All of the countries in the Middle East started hating Iran more, started liking us more. There, there has never been a PR campaign so successful for America in the Middle East as Iran deciding to randomly bomb its former allies.
Simone Collins: Right, but you are, you are one small voice whispering within a mosh pit of raging-
Malcolm Collins: Idiots ...
Simone Collins: people.
Malcolm Collins: Idiots. No
Simone Collins: one- The world is just raging ... no one is going to understand this. The message everyoneās gonna come away with is, āI canāt travel this summer because airline prices are insane. My gas prices are higher.
My food is more expensive. People in Europe have even higher prices.ā And everyone else is just like, āOh, and Trump has humiliated himself,ā blah, blah, blah. So, like, I think even a lot of Republicans are gonna come away feeling like this was a net loss. No,
Malcolm Collins: I mean, a lot of Republicans have been incepted by these idiots who, like Tucker Carlson and Nick Fuentes, who have giant third-worlder audiences, who have a...
I mean, thatās why, thatās why [00:45:00] Tucker Carlsonās moving to Qatar, right? Like, th- this is, this is where his, his, his butter is backed, by the way. Th- this is the position- His
Simone Collins: bread is buttered.
Malcolm Collins: His bread is buttered. Theyāve got these giant audiences. As we pointed out in our episode, this changed everything, but the, the internet became significantly majority third world over the past 10 years.
The third world, this is why they stopped caring about, this is why the left stopped caring about, like, American blacks and, and, and the environment. The third-worlders donāt care about those things. And they all got- caught up in these idiot cycles, and they completely believe them. And when you look at rightist influencers, you would get the opinion that people are, are falling for this.
But when you look at the actual right, like MAGA MAGA, MAGAās 9- 90% pro this war since the beginning, right? Like, MAGA has always been about this. It was never fooled by the captured parts of the influencer class that are acting on behalf of leftists and honestly anti-American interests. And it, itās, itās like do people step back and think, āOh, they, they were just...ā
They, [00:46:00] they donāt. They donāt remember. You were like... Like, I was talking to Simone in the car about this in the morning. I go, āWill anybody take a step back and be like, āNick Fuentes had no f-ing idea what he was talking about when this war started.ā?ā And who was right? People like Nux and Malcolm who, who actually was right about where things were going.
And that maybe- Yeah,
Simone Collins: but whatās, whatās... I just, Iām just trying to say, like, whatās really frustrating is that you guys were right, but thatās not going to change the narrative of how this is gonna work. Like, the people writing the
Malcolm Collins: history of this- No, I, I think, I think we on the right need to be harsher both in terms of our time and our views of the anti-American voices on the right which have been growing.
And I think, I mean, Nick Fuentes isnāt on the right. Heās a Democrat now. He says heās a Democrat now, just people are so stupid they think that heās like a right-wing, which heās not. Heās just a Democrat. But Tucker Carlson still claims to be on the right, right? L- these people... A- and thereās these people with, th- th- you, you see them over, over, who was it?
There was some b- w- Republican influencer whoās all mad about this deal and is saying whoās got a thing on Russian state [00:47:00] TV
Laura Southern is who I was thinking of here. I saw it on nux
Malcolm Collins: like literally paid by the Russians, you know, to try to... And as we pointed out, the Russians, behind BLM, see our episode on that if you are unaware of this they funded a...
Nine out of every ten dollars that went to influencing US politics, one would go to, to quote-unquote pro-Trump stuff, nine would go to b- pro-BLM stuff. Russia has been the party thatās just like we need to f- with Americans. Like, sow division, everything like that. You guys donāt need to do that, right?
Like, when we work with Jews, we get things done, okay? Like, this was pretty cool. You know, actually winning a war. Actually getting what we wanted to, which was a degradation of their military resources to the extent that theyāre not gonna be able to move forward, and more eyes and ears in their country by people who donāt want them to develop nuclear weapons.
And those people having a vested interest to continue to invest into the country and own more assets in the country, which makes it harder for Iran to operate independently of the interests of these other Middle Eastern countries. Mm. Which is, again, in our interest because [00:48:00] these guys are our...
Theyāre, theyāre actually pretty useful allies. They can, I mean, like Saudi Arabia, 9/11, right? Like, they can, Be backstabby, certainly more than the Jews. But recently at least, Saudi Arabiaās been pretty good. And so, you know, will that work forever into the future? Hey, all we need to do is keep developing technology, because itās not coming out of these regions, and the future is all AI, okay?
So the more automated drone swarms we get, the less we need to worry about these peopleās opinions. And so in the meantime, letās let them handle their own, and thatās something we need to be doing more of when it comes to dealing with, I think, Muslim populations. So you heard it here first, base camp, we need sharia law.
Simone Collins: Okay.
Oh, my
Malcolm Collins: God. Yeah, this, is this where you thought I was gonna go with this?
Simone Collins: No. This is not where I thought you were gonna go, but I love that you always surprise me. After all these years together, you never cease to shock and surprise. I love you, Malcolm.
Malcolm Collins: I love you, [00:49:00] too. Iām really excited to see this direction.
Obviously, things could still blow up. I mean, Iran is, as Iāve said, a bunch of rogue actors, and if any of them decide to act basically all the central government can do is to either call in outside assistance or go scorched earth on the rogue actors. Unless the rogue actorās action gives him more political influence, and then it becomes this whole...
So, you know, so weāll see.
Simone Collins: Yeah. But I, I do... I would feel a lot more comfortable just personally, like, all right, how soon is it gonna be until Iran, you know, uses its continued tacit knowledge, or at least, like, documented internal knowledge of, like, developing nuclear weapons to just get back where it was.
And if thereās some sort of way to align incentives in such a way where, like, they just really wouldnāt wanna do that because they are better served by not, then I would feel more comfortable. I donāt care what the treaties are. I donāt care what the agreements are. I care about the infrastructure thatās going to be set up after this conflict that would dissuade them from doing that.
So the fact that there [00:50:00] may be some of that from what you said has me excited. Hopefully, thatās what happens.
Malcolm Collins: Yep, hopefully thatās what happens. I donāt see where weāre gonna get a better carrot that we donāt have to pay for than this. So fantastic scenario.
Simone Collins: All
Malcolm Collins: right. Thank you, and to our audience do something to improve yourself today.
Yeah, snap that in. You have to learn to use a new AI product or something.
Simone Collins: Yeah.
Do it.
Malcolm Collins: All right, bye.
Simone Collins: .
Weāre so close to getting those new mics. Just, just waiting for a potential discount. Just bear with me. Okay.
Malcolm Collins: Well, and weāve gotta get personal audio
Simone Collins: for you guys. Yeah, no, Iām, Iām excited for this conversation because again, I, I looked... Like I thought I was crazy, you know, when I was talking with you in the car this morning, but then I look at the like Drudge this morning āObama deal better, Trump humiliation, MAGA hot- MA- MAGA hawk mutiny, text leaks.ā
Like it just sounds horrible and then I go to The New York Times, their front page
Speaker 15: No, Indy. No, Indy. No, [00:51:00] Indy. It says area closed Remember, Toasty, yesterday you saw pictures of lily pads and, and flowers? Now youāre seeing them in real life
Speaker 16: Well, some plants grow in water. Theyāre aquatic plants Mommy. Yeah? Why do-
Birds like water too, donāt they?
Oh no, thatās what they like to eat Well, what if the alligatorās gotta eat something? You eat birds, toaster, you eat chicken nuggets. Yeah Yeah. That says area temporarily closed. We could just go in there ācause alligators donāt eat kids. What does temporarily mean? What does temporarily mean? Uh, you look yummy to alligators,
Speaker 14: Titan.
No. What does temporarily mean?
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Dive into the controversy surrounding the Los Angeles mayoral election with Malcolm and Simone Collins on Based Camp. Spencer Pratt appeared to be on track for a runoff spot but was suddenly overtaken by a third Democratic candidate amid massive late mail-in ballot surges. Was this organic voting patterns, or something more suspicious?
The Collinses review claims of election irregularities, including the puzzling vote count updates that showed zero votes for Pratt in one batch, Skid Row vote harvesting (with residents allegedly paid in cigarettes and cash), ballot collection practices, and the broader issues of mail-in voting in deep-blue LA. They explore both the mainstream counter-narratives and on-the-ground reports while discussing voter ID, election integrity, and why local races matter.
Episode Transcript
Malcolm Collins: [00:00:00] Hello, Simone. Iām excited to be here with you today. Today, we are going to be discussing the latest LA election and the shenanigans that- that may or may not have occurred around that.
Shenanigans.
A couple of our fans were like, āThis is the most blatant cheating I have ever seen in an American election,ā and they wanted us to look into it.
And I will say that this is an interesting thing for me to look into, because I really donāt know... Like, obviously, if there was election fraud that happened The New York Times, NPR, all the major leftist sources are not going to admit it, because they didnāt want Pratt to win, right?
Simone Collins: Well, and what I did hear from my broad leftist news sources was
Malcolm Collins: Yeah,
Simone Collins: you gotta go, buddy.
What I heard from my broad leftist news sources was something along the lines of the Republicans are butt-hurting because Pen- Spencer Pratt didnāt even come close to winning, but he never would because heās a Republican running in LA, and that seems totally reasonable, so I didnāt think to look further.
How can this be a [00:01:00] thing? I, I donāt understand why there could be any weirdness-
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, and then the, the secondary thing is obviously, and I, I, you know, I hate to say this about our side, but our side, like if he if, if there was actual election fraud, they would all be saying that regardless. So we donāt actually gain any new information from what they say there.
But we donāt gain a lot of new information from our side because obviously no matter what happened, if he legitimately lost at the last second our side would of course come out and say thereās election fraud, right? So that doesnāt exactly give me additional information
so what weāre going to do is we are going to review from both sides pieces on this particular alleged fraud.
And
Simone Collins: then weāre going to- Wait, so the fraud ācause you had told me earlier that you thought that the issue was... I mean, itās inevitable that a Democratās gonna win in Los Angeles.
Malcolm Collins: No. Itās not so itās kind of fraud. So there was a, a two-tiered runoff, okay? Okay. This is the gist of it, right? So thereās this runoff system, itās called, like, a jungle primary where they decide whoās gonna run, and it means- Okay
you can have multiple Dems running against each other- Sure ... or a Dem versus a [00:02:00] Republican. Yeah. The leading candidate was this terrible Dem candidate. The, the Black woman, whatever her name is. Anyway she, she was coming in first. Then Pratt was coming in, and then there was a third Democrat that had about half the votes that Pratt had- Okay
in terms of sentiment polling, in terms of what they were able to measure, in terms of, like, at the ballots, bold, voter exit polling. And then at the very last moment, all of a sudden this flips. Mm. And all of a sudden- Mm ... Prattās getting no more votes- Uh-huh, uh-huh, uh-huh ... and all the votes are going to the third candidate.
This is something that the, the narrative of I have laid it out is the narrative that even the left disagree with. Everyone agrees Pratt was demonstrably in the lead i- in terms of spot number two. And then now was he ever gonna win the full election? I, probably not. But the having him i- be in the final runoff was scaring people, right?
So Pratt was demonstrably in [00:03:00] the lead, then all of a sudden this socialist candidate flips it up, right? And-
Simone Collins: Doesnāt it have to do more with the fact that mail-in voting was very heavy in the Los Angeles election, that ballots could be posted quite late, and that it could be that this particular third candidate had a really heavy and also late mail-in voting campaign push?
Malcolm Collins: Well, that is the only plausible thing, except from at least my reading of this, they didnāt have a heavy and late mail-in voting push. So the explanation that leftists have been using
Okay. The explanation that leftists have been using for this is that, okay, yes, she didnāt have a coordinated mail in voting campaign that could explain this, but mail in voters are overwhelmingly Democratic in nature, right?
And so if the mail in voters are overwhelmingly Democratic in nature-
I donāt even remember what I was saying.
Simone Collins: So I had asked you it, [00:04:00] my, what I had heard was, oh, the Republicans are butt hurting about Spencer Pratt being in a minority lead for a little bit and then losing a bunch of ground all of a sudden seemingly. But what theyāre missing is that Republicans are heavy with in-person voting, Democrats are heavy with mail-in voting, and in Los Angeles and in California in general I think even postmarked- Ooh
maybe even possibly up to the day of the election you can still submit mail-in ballots, and that what is happening is that possibly this third candidate or Democrats in general were just doing their last minute thing and sending in their mail-in ballots- Yes ...
Malcolm Collins: and thatās what was
Simone Collins: happening.
Malcolm Collins: So we will explore this theory, but thereās- Okay
a problem with it.
Simone Collins: Okay.
Malcolm Collins: The problem goes that in this last minute push that happened all of a sudden for this Democratic candidate, the votes should have, right, like if it had been like a normal election, should have continued to go disproportionately to the Democrat who looked like they were going to win the first place, right?
The voting [00:05:00] shouldnāt have shifted between Democratic candidates late in the process like this. That doesnāt make mathematical or narrative sense. So weāre going to get it- Because, yeah, it could just be that a bunch of Dem votes came in at the last minute, right? But then those votes would presumably proportionally still be for the person who won top ticket first, and then for the person who ended up beating out Pratt second, not almost all exclusively for the person who edged out Pratt.
So weāre gonna look into both of these explanations because there are, you know, plausibles and then itās like, okay, yeah, but whatās really happening here?
Simone Collins: Yeah. Like, my, my standing plausible theory is that whatever that third candidate that got a surge after, you know, the, the, then overtook Spencer Pratt was just one who heavily focused on last minute mail-in ballot-
Malcolm Collins: Yeah
voting. So weāre gonna see if thatās true, and weāre also going to go into what the leftist counter-narrative is. So Iām gonna start with the leftist counter-narrative, okay? The leftist counter-narrative goes like this. And [00:06:00] Iāll be reading from a piece, How a Misreading of Data Fueled False Claims About LA Mayoral Vote Count.
Okay?
Late on election night, an update of vote counts in Los Angeles mayorās election appeared on electoral results pages of various media outlets, including the Los Angeles Times. It showed leading Democrats Mayor Karen Bass and Council Member Neda Rahman receiving tens of thousands of new votes, and leading Republican former reality TV star Pen- Spencer Pratt from receiving no new votes.
So basically, on the screen, there was this big, like, huge number of votes to these two Democrats, and then literally zero votes for Spencer Pratt. Some voter, observers of the vote tally immediately took the screenshots with some shouting fraud. I mean, that looks a lot like fraud. Others ran statistical analysis that showed it would be impossible for a candidate such as Pratt running second in the race to receive zero votes in such a large batch of bal- ballots.
In fact, the update that showed zero Pratt votes was [00:07:00] followed one minute later by another update that showed tens of thousands of votes for Pratt and none for Bass or Rahman. There was no batch of votes that included zero votes for any candidate, and LA Countyās own data shows that plainly. But the claimās fit was the broader false narrative being pushed relentlessly by Trump and other Republicans in recent days that California Democrats were cheating.
Voter data pushed out by the Associated Press came as two separate updates one minute apart, with Bass and Rahmanās votes in the first and Prattās in the second. The AP vote count receives updates as provided by election officials and adds them to our vote count. What happened in this case is that there was some log in an automated update, such as that one candidateās votes were added in an update, and the other candidates were followed about a minute later, the Associated Press told The Times.
Specifically, an elec- electronic update from the Los Angeles County website pulled in votes from only one cro- group of candidates, including Karen Bass and N- Rahman. [00:08:00] Exactly one minute later, the electra- the electronic update picked up votes from another group of candidates, including Spencer Pratt.
Taken together, the updates included the 21,000 votes for Pratt, the 12,000, et cetera, et cetera, et cetera. Okay. Does that sound plausible to you?
Simone Collins: I donāt know with this election stuff. Like, the way stuff is counted and the way stuff is reported to me feels very opaque even though itās designed to allegedly be trackable and, and transparent.
And I know that thereās a ton of shady stuff, and also very inconsistent stuff that comes with mail in ballots. For example, we just voted in the Republican primary election in our local area, right? And we had requested due to sometimes unexpected travel to have mail in ballots. You received your mail in ballot.
I did not even though I requested mine. And I know that I had requested one because- Well, thereās been a
Malcolm Collins: lot of it. When you say I received, you didnāt receive your mail in ballot, what weāve seen, and somebody might have voted under your name by the way just so you [00:09:00] know whatās been a common form of voter fraud recently is going around houses and taking the mail in ballots as they come in-
Simone Collins: Yeah
Malcolm Collins: and then using them to vote. And people have been filmed doing this. This isnāt a conspiracy.
Speaker 20: On Tuesday just before midnight, David Sprouseās surveillance cameras captured this man stealing not just his mail but his neighborās as well. It was a younger-looking man, uh, happened to come down the sidewalk. He was wearing a ball cap, face mask, gloves. Uh, carefully opened up our mailbox, took out all of our mail.
Simone Collins: Yeah, and yeah. Itās, this is, this is entirely possible because in the last election your ballot was missing. Remember when you had to fill out the provisional? āCause I, then I went to the polling station this year.
I had to go to to
Malcolm Collins: vote. Yeah, I did not, and all these replies-
Simone Collins: And I was like, āWell, okay, maybe I forgot to request my mail in ballot. Maybe it was my mistake so Iāll just go and vote.ā So I go and vote. Theyāre like, āWell, you requested a mail in ballot so now you have to fill in a provisional ballot instead.ā
And so I did that. And remember last time we voted you had to do that because your mail in ballot went mysteriously missing. So e- if you and I are [00:10:00] experiencing this,
Malcolm Collins: but the point being is that it, itās happened in multiple election cycles with our house, which makes it to me seem highly plausible that we are looking at systemic election fraud happening in this way in our area.
I- given that the, the, their systems all show the vote went out, right? Like, thatās why weāre having to fill in these provisional ballots. Itās not, like, a mistake that we made or something like that, and itās happened multiple times. Mm. So- Yeah. And, and we do know that the, the, the wider Philadelphia area is one of the areas where, th- that has had serious allegations of this.
It has? And note now for the people who are like, āElection fraud never happens,ā we now have videos... What? Oh, the kids. We now have videos of people stuffing the ballot boxes and stuff like that in some past recent American elections.
Speaker 16: This surveillance video, showing a supporter of Mayor Joe Ganim and a City Hall employee stuffing envelopes into the dropbox outside the Bridgeport Government Center. Now, the other [00:11:00] investigation will look into the use, distribution, and possession of absentee ballots at the Fireside Apartments, which is a senior and disabled public housing here in the Park City.
The Commission says even before last Tuesdayās primary, there was a significant attention in allegations of ballot abuse.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. Mm. Have you seen these, Simone? Theyāre crazy.
Simone Collins: No. And also, like, these days I donāt know whatās fake and whatās real, and-
Malcolm Collins: Well, it, it becomes, it
Simone Collins: becomes a blur of real
I, I mean, like, when, when I ran, when I ran for office here- Like- ... remember, like, I, I spoke with a lot of people who were super involved in elections- Mm ... who were getting out the vote, who were trying to help the... In, in my case, of course, since I was a Republican candidate, I was talking with people doing the Republican stuff.
And they were talking about their experiences watching elections, watching the votes come in, and then seeing these strange and sudden changes in vote count and jumps in favor of a different candidate at the last minute. But again, like- I donāt know. You know, in the end, like
Malcolm Collins: thereās- But no, Simone, what Iām telling you, is there have been confirmed videos- Mm
of people stuffing [00:12:00] vote mailboxes. This is not a maybe itās AI generated or something like that. This is a, this is coming from police who have gone through security videos that have shown people showing up in the middle of the night with big bundles of ballots, looking really shady both ways, stuffing them in the box, then coming back 30 minutes later and doing it again.
Jesus.
Simone Collins: Oh,
Malcolm Collins: my ... th- th- there, there have been elections in the United States where this has happened. We know from the Texas issues that there were I think it was, what was it? At least like 50,000, 100,000 fake votes. And, and this is just in Texas that were confirmed. So like we know that this is happening in the United States.
Like, these are questions. The idea that you should never question an election, I think as soon as Trump won again, that went out the window because then all the Democrats started saying-
Simone Collins: Well, hey, thatās... See, Trump is just doing Godās work, all right? Heās getting them to be critical of election integrity.
They sh- I mean, again, like itās, itās so funny. I grow up thinking like, āOf course vote by mail is fine. Of course we donāt [00:13:00] need voter ID.ā And now Iām like, wait a second, like this is actually super shady. Like, I, I even donāt like the idea that... Again, like when I went to the polling station to do my provisional ballot this year, I I w- I was like, āOh crap, I donāt have my ID with me.ā
Like, it... Of course I assumed as any, like, normal person that if Iām going to vote in an election, and if this is something where itās like, oh, you know, I verified this, verified that, like theyāre gonna ask me for my ID. And yet, no, itās just like your, your name and a signature or something.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. So the, the biggest coun- counter to this piece is that it doesnāt focus on the core instance of election fraud that Republicans are claiming, right?
It doesnāt explain either of the... It basically focuses on one glitch that would make anyone suspicious, right? Why, why were the two Democratic candidates in one grouping and the Republican candidate in a different grouping in the way that they were handling the ballots in the first [00:14:00] place, right? Like, presumably they would all have their own groupings if thatās the way it was being done, where they would be updated individually, not in groupings like that.
That makes very little sense. I can see why people were suspicious of that. But then it doesnāt even mention the other claims that people are talking about- Mm ... with the Skid Row vote harvesting. So weāre gonna get into that in a second, but I also wanted to, before I go further- Skid- oh, theyāre
Simone Collins: going to, like, vagrants living in tents and stuff and getting them to vote?
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, and paying them to vote
Simone Collins: Ah.
Malcolm Collins: And there have been, lots of people have reported on this. Thereās been a lot of on the ground reporters who have gone and asked the people in-
Simone Collins: Yeah, thatās just the, the sort of thing that would be great for YouTube views. I could totally s- yeah.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, and theyāre, theyāre, theyāre, itās, theyāre all saying like, āOh yeah, of course.
Like I got cigarettes for voting this year. I got, I got $2 for voting this year.ā You know? Or for filling out these forms. You know, and people have been saying in the comments and stuff like this, that this is actually a very old practice in LA County that they use. Specifically things like [00:15:00] teachers unions and stuff like that use it whenever they wanna get something through, you know, like, the, the, itās, itās like... Well, whatās wrong, buddy?
Simone Collins: Friend? Friend? Whoa. Okay, here we go Friend, did we... Weāre not missing any threads. I think he just, like, deep throated a thread and then it came out and ignited his gag reflex. You okay now, buddy?
Malcolm Collins: He wants it back immediately now that heās choked on it
Simone Collins: Oh,
Malcolm Collins: God. Going straight at it again. Okay. Oh, God.
Simone Collins: Okay. Yeah. Tripping on voter fraud.
Malcolm Collins: So what weāre gonna go, and, and I will put some of these videos in here
Simone Collins: Yeah ... for you people. I, yeah, I, I would, yes. I wanna-
Malcolm Collins: But the problem with this is, like, nobody cares. And itās been interesting, Jimmy, because we can [00:16:00] see this vote buying happening.
Everybody knows that Democrat, like, on the ground people would do this. It doesnāt even need to be institutionalized. But this wouldnāt explain the last minute change in mail-in voting, right? Because the Skid Row voters are not the mail in voters. You, you donāt have a lot of mail in voters who are homeless people, right?
The homeless people who are being paid to vote are coming and voting in person likely. So that doesnāt really fit the broader narrative here. But letās go into this. Here we have a piece called Spencer Pratt Pack uncovers disturbing new mystery in Skid Row. Okay? And this is from the New York Post. A Spencer Pratt volunteer team has claimed they found lots of ballots that were sent out to Skid Row, but few were actually voted in the mayoral l- race.
The California Post joined four members of the Pratt pack on Sunday as they spent hours touring the rundown neighborhood. Former California State Senate candidate Susan Collins, interviews a resident on Skid [00:17:00] Row. They asked dozens of local about voter registration, mail in ballots, and the petition gatherers who had worked in the district for years trying to get them to vote.
It comes just a week after Pratt was dumped out of the race for mayor after Karen Bass won and Nayan Ramak received a huge pile of mail in ballots that saw her dramatically overtake him. Susan Collins, a former California State Senate candidate, who was part of the Pratt pack on Sunday, told the Post, āWeāre finding a lot of people being registered to vote, a lot of ballots being sent out, and nobody actually voted.ā
Oh, so that would explain how they did it Okay, so, so this is what basically is being alleged, Simone. Itās that they are going in and paying these people to register to vote, and then basically keeping their information, and because these people are homeless anyway, like, the voteās not gonna go to their house.
They just send it to their own houses and then mail on behalf of these people. I think the... [00:18:00] No one can hear you. Youāre muted. Youāre muted.
Simone Collins: Okay, so I am me, whatever, right? I, and I care about getting X candidate registered, so I just walk along Skid Row and Iām like, āHey, can I, can I register you? You can just use my address,ā and they donāt even necessarily know what I-
Yeah
and then I give them a pack of cigarettes, probably just a cigarette, maybe three. I donāt know. Whatever. And then I just get their, their thing. I, w- I, I, I forge their signa- I mean, they, they do this weird thing where, like, the signatures are supposed to match, so how do, how do you think that would work?
Malcolm Collins: You just- I donāt think they check or care if itās a Democratic candidate. I mean, come on. Theyāre not, theyāre not really checking right now. The thing that people keep asking for, Republicans keep pushing for, is the voter rolls. And- Mm-hmm ... the fact that they are not releasing the voter rolls, like, I can understand if they believe that there is fraudulent voting going on- Yeah
Why they wouldnāt release these voter rolls, right? Because it would look really bad for them to do.
Yeah.
And Iād point out here, you, youāre like, āYeah, LA is heavily Democrat leaning,ā which [00:19:00] is true, but Prattās campaign was astonishingly good, and Democrats have done an astonishingly bad job running LA for a while at this point.
Simone Collins: People are getting pretty fed up.
Speaker 11: Please, Iām begging you. Thereās homeless drug addicts in front of the schools. My children arenāt safe. Look, if you were a transgender migrant, I could get you a free pussy. Letās move the drug addicts closer. Bass already solved crime. I endorse her. Next!
Speaker 14: I just wanna rebuild my home. Itās been over a year.[00:20:00]
Speaker 15: This is a machine. If we wanna burn this town to the ground
Feels so close to you right now You can do it, Spencer!
Simone Collins: Iām, there, there was, there was a lot of of smear campaignage to try to make Pratt look bad, of course, as well But yeah, sure
Malcolm Collins: Also to your question of whether she did some big [00:21:00] genius last-minute mail in campaign what AI said is, no, she didnāt. It said the most realistic answer is Rama is a sitting council member who is well-known among progressive LAs.
Her base, younger, more liberal urban Democrats, is much more likely to vote by mail closer to the deadline.
Simone Collins: Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: The problem, again, is why did they switch from voting from the front runner to her all of a sudden the moment it looked like the front runner was going to beat Pratt?
Simone Collins: Maybe because once you know theyāre gonna win, why give them pity votes when you could show support for an underdog that you really like?
Malcolm Collins: Thatās a good possible explanation. Theyāre
Simone Collins: waiting. Like, I, I could see myself doing that as a young Los Angeles voter trying to... I, I guess she gets nothing out of it, but she has a less- ... a less embarrassing loss. And, and certainly getting more votes, it could be a starting point to future campaigns. You know, it shows future campaign donors that she has the capability of gaining traction even when running up against [00:22:00] better funded, more famous opponents, right?
So-
Malcolm Collins: Yes. So to go back into whatās f- f- fuddy here. Okay A review of public records identified more than 7,600 registered voters linked to shelters, supportive housing projects, addiction to their treatment centers, and social services agencies, including one of 160 registrants contacted to the Midnight Mission in Skid Row.
One longtime local told volunteers on Sunday he personally knew the Mariana Del Rey woman recently charged by federal prosecutors was paying homeless people to register to vote. Brendan Lee Brown Armstrong, also known as Annika, was charged in May with paying another person to register to vote. So people have been charged over this as well.
This isnāt just a conspiracy theory. The question is, are they still doing it? According to federal prosecutors, Armstrong worked for years as a paid petition circulator collecting signatures for California ballot measures, and has agreed to plead guilty. Wow. āShe was right on this corner,ā they said. This was her area,ā Titus Brown told volunteers.
Brown [00:23:00] claimed people were routinely offered money or cigarettes to sign forms. āShe gives them $3 to $5. Some of the cheap people sheād give $2 and a cigarette,ā he alleged. But Brown told LA Times- Dude, thatās
Simone Collins: so little
Malcolm Collins: Our elections are being sold for very little. But you know, they pay more per vote if youāre talking about, like, the main elections in the United States.
Simone Collins: Yeah. For sure. Thatās crazy.
Malcolm Collins: Throughout the years residents remembered registering to vote. They remember petition gatherers. What many didnāt remember was actually casting a ballot which is interesting. They, they remember people coming around and trying to get them to register. They just donāt remember then voting.
Speaker 3: Videos posted online by LA Needs Spencer Pratt shows multiple Skid Row residents claiming they received around $2 in exchange for voting in the recent Los Angeles election. Karen Bass, yeah? Yeah. Or, or Nithya Raman? Uh, Karen.
Speaker 5: Karen. They told you to vote for Karen? Yeah. They had to sign the little thing. Thatās, uh, and how much they pay you? Itās, like, two bucks. [00:24:00] Two bucks? Oh, to sign off on a, on a thing to vote for her? Yeah. And so they do this for everybody out here? Yeah, they come out here all the time. Several residents made similar claims.
Speaker 3: One man alleged he was not registered to vote in Los Angeles County but was still encouraged to complete paperwork. Iām not in this county. Iām in San Bernardino County, but they just said, āWho cares?ā They gave me a name to, to write. They gave you a name to sign? They gave me everything to sign. They gave me a whole paper of, like, who, what to write and who to sign and everything, so.
Another resident alleged people were sometimes instructed how to complete voter paperwork and ballots. But we know that they gotta answer to somebody by what they said, so it ācause itās not authentic. I donāt wanna have to scratch it out. And donāt let your signature look like the other signature. Can you use your other hand, or can you write with your foot or your nose?
Speaker 7: Iām serious. They ask you to do that? Yeah. For ballots? And I was doing it just so I could get the money.
Malcolm Collins: The volunteers moved through the tents, shelters, and service centers, sidewalk encampments, interviewing people, residents about their experiences with the drives. āA [00:25:00] lot of people never voted,ā Brown said. āThey did register, but they just wanted the names.ā Thatās interesting. For Collins, a- and ap- apparently this was still happening in this election, and they know people have been arrested for doing this in past elections, so it sounds like itās still operational.
For Collins, who had spent the year raising concerns about ballot collection practices, the most striking part of Sundayās visit was hearing the same story repeated block after block. āSo what Iāve been hearing from a lot of people is that theyāre registered to vote,ā Collins says. āIāve not found anyone, anyone who has actually voted.ā
Simone Collins: Wow.
Malcolm Collins: The big question is what happened to all those ballots? People remember getting them. They donāt remember voting. So where did they go? And Julio, who was visiting Skid Row for the first time, described that experience as eye-opening and said it strengthened her determination to be involved rather than watch from afar.
āIt was really intense,ā Juliano said. āWe saw a guy chasing another guy with a shovel and attack him.ā Juliano said she came to sh- Skid Row looking for answers and convinced there was more to the election story than the voters were being told. Wow. āI guess I was part of [00:26:00] trying to figure out what happened.
The numbers just donāt make sense. Thatās why Iām digging deeper into the sidelines. One thing I would like to say is I think this election fraud has forever changed Los Angeles,ā she said. āAt least thatās my hope, that people will feel empower- empowered to talk about the truth and keep looking for the truth.ā
And there have been other reporting on different types ... So from a different New York Post piece, bombshell photo unveils damning Nithan Raman link with homeless voters as fury erupts over LA vote count. Thousands of homeless voters are registered to vote in LA shelters, and Sprint Sir Pret was eliminated by Nithan Raman.
So they, they, they then did a review here. And it said the ... so here theyāre looking to see, Yeah, this seems to be, it, it seems to be the same thing. Theyāre just going over video evidence of this that they found. So hereās where I come at the end of this. Like, what, what do I think on all of this?
Did Democrats do this in the past? Yes, we know they did, and theyāve been charged for it in the past. Is it the [00:27:00] type of thing that Democrats would do? Like, consider the size of, like, Antifa and stuff in LA. Youāre not asking, did the Democrats organize this from the top down? Right. Youāre asking, was there any rogue group of Democrats, extremist leftists in LA with motivation and means and opportunity to do this?
There was definitely manifold of those.
Simone Collins: Well, okay. Hereās where Iām gonna push back, right? So the person who got the surge in votes was someone who wasnāt going to win anyway, and it was very clear that they werenāt going to win, correct?
Malcolm Collins: Yeah.
Simone Collins: And then suddenly these votes appeared. When you do pay someone to buy you votes, right, illegally, sure, this person, you know, people like this are paying one or two cigarettes, three bucks per person.
Mm-hmm. But they in turn are charging probably quite a lot per voter because of the legal liability to which theyāre [00:28:00] subject, as is shown by the convictions we see here, right? Mm-hmm. People are doing time. People are really paying a lot in terms of when you get caught. So when theyāre weighing the odds of getting caught theyāre, theyāre ultimately gonna charge a lot more.
So why would this one particular candidate or people supporting this one candidate pay that much for votes that werenāt going to help them win anyway? That doesnāt make sense to me. Iām more likely to believe a conspiracy theory- What do you mean votes
Malcolm Collins: that did help them win? Iām confused.
Simone Collins: My understanding...
Oh, sorry. Itās the fragility company.
Malcolm Collins: So anyway, what was the point you were making? Why, why do you not believe that there... You, you said the amount it costs- So my understanding was that
Simone Collins: the surge of votes that came in, that were presumably bought, were for a candidate that was never going to win in the first place, that was not the Democratic front-runner, right?
Malcolm Collins: Right. It
Simone Collins: was- So why would someone pay the non-trivial cost to buy voters? Because what youāre paying, you know, the people to commit a, a crime is pretty high. Like, the premium [00:29:00] is high.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, but what you are forgetting is the, the crime was already committed either way. So, presumably, the way that this works, given the various points that weāve heard, is I, a Democrat, go and I ask homeless people to sign up to vote.
And I give them my address, right?
Simone Collins: Okay, so itās, itās like a subscription. Itās like I, I have on offer every single voting cycle, these are my homeless people. Would you like my homeless people this
Malcolm Collins: year? Yes, every single voting cycle- Would you like my homeless people? ... I have on offer a list of votes that I can choose how they go.
Simone Collins: And then who, who knows how itās administered, right? It could be like Iām this one person, this crime boss of Democratic politics or whatever polit- like, who knows? And it could be apolitical, whoās just like, āIām gonna decide how I deal with these votes.ā It could even be someone whoās not paying someone else.
It could be a totally third party whoās like, āWho do I want to have my votes go toward?ā Yeah. This is my little kingdom. So
Malcolm Collins: the crime would have already been done. Uh-huh. They wouldāve been sitting on votes that they have to cast either
Simone Collins: way. Yes. Theyāre like, āHow do I want my votes to go?ā [00:30:00] They could have decided, āWell, I know that the, the, their...
We donāt have to worry about Spencer Pratt. This Democratic front-runnerās gonna win. I want to place this, this up-and-coming Democratic candidate.ā
Malcolm Collins: Well, the wording would be, āI wanna make sure that Spencer Pratt isnāt in the final election,ā ācause thatās what wouldāve happened otherwise.
Simone Collins: Oh. Oh, Iām sorry. I totally missed that.
So if he had not been surpassed by this other Democrat, he wouldāve been on the,
Malcolm Collins: the- Yeah, he wouldāve been on the ballot for the
Simone Collins: final then Oh, and then there actually was, he ha- would actually have a shot, instead of just two Democrats.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah.
Simone Collins: Oh, okay. Well then, okay, yeah. The, the incentives are more clear then.
Okay, thank you. Now I know. Yeah,
Malcolm Collins: so now you understand the incentives, yeah. Yeah. So, basically Iām in a position of the people who are saying, like, basically at this point weāre at a point where I say demonstrably we know that voter fraud happened. Mm-hmm. The question is the scale of the voter fraud.
Simone Collins: Correct.
Malcolm Collins: And the, the, it, it really bothers me [00:31:00] that like weāre seeing mainstream Democratic outlets that are supposed to be like out there searching for truths completely uninterested in this. De- despite the overwhelming, I mean, weāve got a conviction already, right? Like,
Simone Collins: the- Right. Well, the problem is all sides do it.
I mean, even arguably sides that people who donāt have a side. Mm. People who are just making money because this is a way to make money are doing it. Like, it, itās one of those things where-
Malcolm Collins: Iāve never- ... I
Simone Collins: think a lot of people are- Itās all sides ... are concerned. Also, journalists are, journalists in mainstream media have this, thereās, like, there are two tiers, right?
Mm. Of like, is this a good story? Will this perform well? But also they have this whole, like, you know, I, I need to decide what the people can handle or not, right? Like, Iām not going to touch this conspiracy theory because it might incite racism or conspiracy thinking or- I was
Malcolm Collins: talking to the other day, one of our friends couldnāt believe the conspiracy theory that Michelle Obama was a man.
Simone Collins: Yeah. Itās
Malcolm Collins: like, and Simone, Iām like, āSimone, thereās a lot of evidence. You gotta,
Simone Collins: you gotta believe.ā Thereās not. Thereās that, that, that, that dance... There, thereās nothing in her pants. You guys donāt [00:32:00] know female slacks. Iām sorry, but, like, womenās pants are
Malcolm Collins: weird. There, there is something hitting her pants from behind.
Simone Collins: Thereās nothing hitting her pants from behind. Thereās nothing. Not, itās, itās the way they crease. There is, there
Malcolm Collins: is-
Simone Collins: You donāt know what flowy pants... Men donāt wear pants like that. They donāt understand how they...
Speaker: Michelle
Simone Collins: mm, mm. Anyway, anyway, so I feel like this isnāt necessarily people trying to cover something up.
I think that thereās this journalistic, like, āI decide what the public can and cannot handle, and I believe that the public cannot handle this. Therefore, Iām not going to cover it because the, the nuance will be lost, and theyāll just, you know, it will undermine democracy, and Iām not gonna play a part in that.ā
And I think that a lot of people see us as being irresponsible for feeding into the conspiracy theories when it, like, is, there are really [00:33:00] serious issues of voter fraud. But I also see the point of journalists who are like, āIām not gonna bother co- cover- covering this,ā because what are you gonna do, Malcolm?
Like, we canāt uncover these people. Like, we canāt find them. This is a lot harder to uncover than, like, daycare fraud, you know? Like, th- this is much more hidden, much more insidious. People have been trying to find this forever. Itās really difficult to uncover because of the way the systems work, because thereās no voter ID, because you can just take a ballot out of a, a, a thing.
And like, it, like, even if, even if every signature is checked for a match, you can easily find what someoneās signature looks like. Like, it, this is one of those very difficult situations, you know?
Malcolm Collins: N- I donāt, I donāt think it is. I, I think weāre dealing with a scenario where, I mean, I understand w- why theyāre doing what theyāre doing.
Like, every, I think, sane American knows that even if there was demonstrable and large voter fraud, they wouldnāt cover it. Because it goes against their political interest, right? Like, we havenāt really seen them cover many things that go against their political interests.
Simone Collins: Well, no, no. I mean, it goes in their political interest when itās about, [00:34:00] like, a, a Republican candidate winning.
Malcolm Collins: Oh, yeah, a Republican candidate, yeah. But the point being is youāre like, I, both sides are d- I donāt think in LA Spencer Pratt or even the LA Republican Party has enough institution to commit voter fraud at this size.
Simone Collins: Right. Right. But I mean, Iām, Iām sure thereās Republican voter fraud in other areas.
Look, itās, itās,
Malcolm Collins: this is
Simone Collins: a system they do it.
Malcolm Collins: I doubt itās at the same scale. Highly
Simone Collins: I donāt know.
Malcolm Collins: I donāt know I mean, it- itās, itās there. Itās just when we look at... And, and the reason why I doubt so strongly itās at the same scale- Hmm ... is if you look at the Republican apparatus, because weāve been involved in it at, like, the grassroots level, right?
They are fighting rabidly for stricter observation and oversight to prevent voter fraud. If they were the ones-
Simone Collins: Oh ...
Malcolm Collins: still committing voter fraud, they wouldnāt be doing that. And the- Thatās
Simone Collins: pretty damning. Thatās pretty
Malcolm Collins: damning ... the louder damning thing is that the left has been fighting [00:35:00] rabidly against investigation of voter fraud.
Simone Collins: That is moderately susp- okay, more than moderately suspicious. Thatās a really good point.
Malcolm Collins: Okay, that should get- Yeah.
Simone Collins: Yeah ...
Malcolm Collins: not just that, but
Simone Collins: with the
Malcolm Collins: Save Our Country Act or whatever, the,
Simone Collins: weāre, weāre- Thatās someone whoās like, āHey, letās be more careful,ā and the other side being like, āNo, what do you mean careful?ā
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. If, if I have one team out there whoās like, āWe should have ID, in-person only voting,ā and then another group out there thatās like, āThat would be a end of American freedom,ā right? Like, Iām like- Okay ... āWhat are you talking about?ā
Simone Collins: When you put it that way, the look is not good. Itās a, itās a bad look.
Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, so, my general takeaway from this is itās happening. Itās probably pretty big. There isnāt a lot you can do once they capture a region. Just based on the evidence that we have access to, I mean, it seems that, like, everyone whoās involved is saying, āItās happening, just whatās the scale,ā right?
And I think the scale is probably pretty big. If you look at the, And, and here Iām not even looking at, like, the observed statistics. Iām just thinking about the number of radical leftist groups in LA that [00:36:00] donāt care a damn about the law and would have motive, means, opportunity, and time to do something like this.
If they have time to, like, stage these giant protests, somebody in the org has time to do something like this. And then I think what we learn about this is you canāt let them win, ever, right? This is the thing with, like, Nick Fuentesā dumb strategy of like, let, g- letās let the left win and then the right will get angry enough that it ri- Generally, when the other side l- wins, our side moderates.
Thatās how it works. If you want our side to become more extreme, what you need us to do is win a number of times in a row, not lose. Because the average Republican voter doesnāt then say, āI guess we need to be more extreme.ā The average Republican voter says, āI guess we need to be more moderate to pick up some of those swing voters,ā right?
So, but itās not just that. Itās that once we lose an area, when you look at the map, and Iām gonna put the two maps here,
of states where you are allowed to vote without an ID and states where Democrats [00:37:00] win or won in the last election itās like one for one at this point, right? I think that weāre entering a place where we cannot give an inch of ground because theyāre realizing that the demographics are shifting against their favor.
And there will be a point, you know, once we have the 2030 redistricting, where it essentially becomes impossible for them to win going into the future. And after that, what do you do, right? When you look at the the higher fertility rate among Republicans and we look that people vote like their parents vote, when we look at the shifting right-wing vote in the youth of these days, you know, if these trends continue this is, itās over.
Itās game over for the left. And I think that theyāre behaving in a way that seems rational to them and, and ethical to them because they believe that the right are literally Nazis. Thatās why itās important that they define it that way because it gives them whatās called a psychological license to do whatever they want to combat it[00:38:00]
Simone Collins: Yeah, okay. I, I, yes. You, youāve also changed my view on this. It is worth covering this because it is worth to explain why itās very important to push for voter ID laws.
Malcolm Collins: Voter ID laws, theyāre never backing down. No, no election is unimportant. Not your local elections, not your national elections, every election matters.
Yeah. And if you, if you vote by mail like us to try to make it easy, just keep in mind youāre gonna have the person drive by and steal your ballot.
Simone Collins: Not great. Not great.
Malcolm Collins: But thatās, thatās you know, just, just the state of America right now and why we need to be so overwhelming in the legitimate votes that weāre putting out there.
Simone Collins: Well, friends, be careful and make sure your ID is current.
Malcolm Collins: Anyway love you, Simone. Have a fun day at the dentist, and thank you for your time
Simone Collins: Love you [00:39:00] Youāre beautiful. But that should come as no surprise.
Nice one, Tex. Nice one Okay
Camera is- Mary,
Malcolm Collins: can you hear me okay?
Simone Collins: I can. However, I need a moment
Malcolm Collins: to find where my camera is.
Okay.
Here we are. Found it. Oh, no, no, no, no, you donāt. Donāt even think of it. I
do feel- I do- ... good being able to do this with you again today.
Simone Collins: I know. I, I miss it, and thatās, you know, why I -
Malcolm Collins: Oh, we got a close-up of a baby.
Simone Collins: Oh, no.
Malcolm Collins: Oh, no.
Simone Collins: Frank.
Malcolm Collins: All the women out there now need babies. [00:40:00]
Simone Collins: I donāt know. I donāt know if close-ups help or hurt.
Malcolm Collins: Got me in my pirate shirt today.
Simone Collins: No, actually-
Malcolm Collins: New, new Evil Maxx
Simone Collins: aimed ... I meant to get a proper, like, Mr. Darcy shirt. Rawr, rawr, rawr, rawr, rawr. God, Tex, Iām so sorry. Someday youāll look back on this fondly, or not, Mr. Demaison.
Malcolm Collins: I donāt know. I, like, either Iām still with you, or the thought of losing you has destroyed me someday.
Simone Collins: What do you mean?
Malcolm Collins: Well, I wouldnāt look back on this, because I will just go talk to you.
Speaker 25: First one, actually, Iāll just light it for you
Speaker 26: Back, back. Here, Torsten.
Speaker 25: Hold it away from me so you donāt get hurt. All right, Tagan, come back. Go, go play over there. Itās gonna fall. Do not do that, Torsten. Octavian, come back here[00:41:00]
What happens if- If you w-, if you, do not let that touch anyone or itāll hurt them Why is it going down the thing?
Titan, do not let that touch anyone or you will never get to play with these again Toasty, why are you putting it on the deck? Why? Youāre burning the deck. Thatās bad, Torsten. You have to hold it up in the air. It says that it might burn me. Octavian, come here. Thatās why thereās the metal part at the bottom.
Speaker 28: There you go. See, look, it stops at the end right there. Can, can I try it again? All right. Go play, Octavian. When youāre done you can give it to me. What? Just never put it on the deck. Itās not burning. Oh, itās empty. No, weāre done. Weāre done? Mm-hmm. Oh, Octavian, you got yours.
What do you think, Professor?
Speaker 26: How do I know? How do I know?
This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit basedcamppodcast.substack.com/subscribe -
Malcolm and Simone Collins discuss a surprising realization about why many leftists accuse pronatalists of having a ābreeding kink.ā They explore how some in the trans community appear to structure major life decisions around arousal patterns and identity fulfillment, leading to projection onto families who have many children (often via IVF).
Topics include: why breeding kinks donāt actually drive real family-building, the difference between fantasy and daily life, identity-maxxing vs. objective function living, Techno-Puritan sins, power dynamics in kinks, furries, Lia Thomas, and much more.
This episode dives deep into psychology, sexuality, culture wars, and how different worldviews shape behavior.
Episode Transcript
Malcolm Collins: [00:00:00] Hello, Simone. Today we are going to be talking about basically a very weird phenomenon that has happened to us repeatedly, and I didnāt understand it until today, and I had this, like, shocking realization when I was just thinking through this today, and I was like, āThis explains so much of a leftist mindset that I didnāt fully understand before.ā
Which is when we initially would go viral people would say, āOh, like, why do they have to, like, bring us into their weird breeding kink?ā You know, and this was a common... I, Iād say itās, like, 1/5 or 1/8 of comments whenever we used to go viral.
We, we had a journalist come to our house recently, so, like, a trans individual whoās a journalist, and he was interviewing us or she, whatever. I, I, I never know with these people. She was interviewing us over, And by the way, if, if youāre trans and annoyed by that, just know how annoying it is for the rest of us when we canāt tell, we donāt care, and you act like itās the biggest effing deal in the world, [00:01:00] and yet you dress and act in a way that intentionally makes it hard to tell, right?
Like, I would gender you right if it was obvious to me, right? Iām not, Iām not, like, out there actively trying to be a... But you are intentionally dressing in a way to make it difficult for me to know, right? So why am I supposed to... Youāre just being a jerk to people. You have made your existence a jerky existence to other people.
But anyway, so the, the, she comes here and she gives us an interview, and in the interview she asks us something along the lines of, like... And, and this was the thesis of the interview. Like, is this all really just a kink? Like, is there a kink thatās motivating you guys to want to have lots of kids?
And I was just, like, sitting there like, does, do they really believe that, like, I would have five kids because of a kink, right? Like, the amount of my life I would have to dedicate [00:02:00] to something as simple as, like, something you masturbate to, right? Like, a, a simple arousal pattern would be genuinely astonishing to invest so much that I have five kids over it.
And I, I was just thinking today, like, do they really think that Iām doing all this? āCause I was, I was, like, playing with my kids. Iām like, do they really think I have kids over a kink?
Simone Collins: Well, and then they get super, super shocked when they discover that weāve produced all of our kids with IVF.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, that we produced all of our kids with IVF.
Theyāre like, āOh, that... Well, that undermines the entire thesis.ā But- They they, th- which they were very confused about, right? Like it, is it... And, and, and then today I had this realization. Oh my God, I assumed that they just didnāt understand, or they were trying to cast aspersions on us, or they were trying to be edgy in some way about this.
[00:03:00] But then when I started to think about it more, I was like, but wait a second, this is a trans person. If theyāre trans over a kink, which a good portion of the trans community appears to be in their own stated things. Theyāre like you- if you go to the, you know, trans Reddit and stuff like that, theyāre like, āWell, of course, like arousal is part of this,ā and blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
Now they have tried to define it as not a kink, tried to define it, but if you look at the actual written experiences of trans people going through gender transition many of them talk about it as something that is partially arousing to them. This is incredibly well documented in trans people talking about their own lives, right?
And in addition to this, we have entire trans communities where when you ācause I actually read like the Transmaxer Manifesto, right? Trying to get people to Transmax. And this is clearly a, a, a gender transition modification transformation kink in, in, in even the way itās structured. Itās like, wouldnāt it be so hot if X, Y, and Z, and D, right?
You know. So [00:04:00] I read through these things a- and Iām like, if this person transitioned over partially an arousal pattern, yeah, thatās actually how they live, right? They really are living their entire life, their entire reproductive future, which I guess to me, I think of as like one of the core impacts you have with your life, was decided potentially downstream of an arousal pattern.
And I saw this and I was like... I had just never considered to take what they were saying at face value. It just seemed so insane to me that an individual could say all of this, that it didnāt enter my mind as, no, they might actually mean this. And I think once we accept that yes, they do actually mean that, you can begin to understand so many other things about modern [00:05:00] leftist philosophy.
Thoughts before I go further, Simone?
Simone Collins: No, although I am curious if this ties in with your concept of the techno-puritan sin of, of living to fulfill an identity versus living to maximize an objective function.
Malcolm Collins: Well, I mean, I think itās, itās both. I mean, transness is obviously it breaks, like, all of our sins.
I mean, one, theyāre living to fulfill an identity and other peopleās perception of them, which I see the fundamentally fai- vain way to live. You can just, you know, choose to live however you wanna live, right? And, and say, āWhat matters is my effect on the world, not whether or not I appear a certain way in other peopleās minds.ā
Like, obsessing over that, we argue is sinful, where sinfulness are just things that f**k up your life in the long run. But second itās sinful in that itās... And, and I think that it- it- itās, itās living your entire life after an arousal pattern. Like, we donāt even, we donāt even put into our sins living your whole life in the pursuit of [00:06:00] happiness because we say happiness is a choice, right?
So you donāt need to pursue it. Itās something that you should sort of grab and subdue. You choose how you interpret the things around you in life. And when you realize that this sort of, like, higher form of happiness, like am I content with myself, am I moving forward, that itās a choice, well, then the only sorts of happiness you have are the basal forms of happiness.
You know, this is, like, eating whatever food you want all day, every day, right? Or just having constant orgies or engaging in huge life-changing behavior to fulfill arousal patterns, right? Which are just a, a basal sort of breeding thing in the background of all human biology that really shouldnāt affect any sort of a daily choice.
And this is where it all got really interesting for me. Because if I am listing, like, my unusual arousal patterns or kinks or anything like that and I have argued in the past that a breeding fetish is about the only thing in the world that is not actually a fetish.
Simone Collins: Right.
Malcolm Collins: [00:07:00] Itās what the entire arousal system is built to get you to do.
About anything else that arouses you is ancillary and something misfiring.
Simone Collins: All non-procreative sex is a fetish. Or some kind of weird kink, I guess.
Malcolm Collins: But anyway, of my list of, like, things that really turn me on, the wider category of breeding fetish content is actually one of those things for me. Itās not my top thing but itās probably number two.
But with
Simone Collins: that being- Well, based on its popularity, like, if you look at just sort of top ranked tags and stuff in erotic material, for men specifically, thatās kind of the thing. In women, I just donāt see it that much, actually, for, like, female content, which is interesting.
Malcolm Collins: And do you not see it a lot in female content?
Mm. I mean, sort of being forced to breed you see in female content, like, Not
Simone Collins: really,
Malcolm Collins: actually ... in The Handmaidās Tale and stuff like that, like the-
Simone Collins: No. Because even then if you actually look at the [00:08:00] books most or most if not many of the men are themselves infertile, so-
Malcolm Collins: Oh, really?
Simone Collins: Yeah. Yeah, like, there are issues with, like, some of the doctors being like, āWell, I will.
I will inseminate you ācause I know for a fact this guy is infertile and he doesnāt know it. But, you know, you should just therefore let me F you,ā and then, yeah. So itās, itās a whole thing, actually. Wait, but
Malcolm Collins: isnāt that a kink in itself? Isnāt that part of the breeding kink?
Simone Collins: No, I donāt think so. Yeah, anyway, I, I donāt- Does,
Malcolm Collins: does, does she go with
Simone Collins: the doctor?
Does she- In Handmaidās Tale I just donāt think that... I havenāt read the books. I, I only know from, like, some summaries and stuff that Iāve heard.
Malcolm Collins: Of what?
Simone Collins: But, like, thereās not a lot of actually getting pregnant going on. Like, some, some of the ancillary characters go through pregnancies and stuff, but-
Malcolm Collins: I guess it, it, it, like, once you get pregnant and have a kid, all of the sexy stuff after that
Simone Collins: begins to- Pregnancy is, yeah, thatās, that, that is where for m- m- maybe a majority of women, I donāt know, like, sort of arousal and, and, like, stuff being sexy just dies with [00:09:00] pregnancy and with newborns being around.
So typically with female erotic material, it is, there are-
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, but especially if itās, like, multi-books ... no
Simone Collins: children around.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. Like, if she gets pregnant in book one and now in book two sheās raising a newborn, like, all of the other sexy stuff starts to get weird.
Simone Collins: Well, and you have to keep in mind pregnancy is while a beautiful thing, often very uncomfortable.
Like, youāre not aroused when you want to vomit. Youāre not aroused when you have intense nerve pain. You are not aroused when you feel incredibly large and when your- Right ... legs are swollen and when you look like, you know, a, a watermelon, right? Like, noth- thereās nothing. Like, now first, Iām sure thereās always exceptions, right?
Iām sure thereās some women who feel incredibly sexy and have really high sex drive and everything when theyāre pregnant and when they have newborns and whatever, right? Like, all these things are possible. However no. Like, and Iāve, Iām, Iāve c- Iāve consumed, like, so much erotic material both targeted at men and targeted at women.
Women, itās power dynamics. Itās getting high-powered men. Itās high-status men. Itās and, and, [00:10:00] and a lot of, like, just the more general focus i- like, really hot men, Yeah ... men whoāve always had a crush on them, men who really like pleasuring them. Itās never, āIām going to get you pregnant.ā Like, that actually if anything could possibly be on average a turn-off for women, which is really interesting.
Yeah. Yeah, so- but yeah, I, I do not, like, itās super common in male-oriented stuff, not in female-oriented stuff.
Malcolm Collins: That, that makes sense. That makes sense. So the, point I was getting to here is even as somebody who like would just admit if you consider the idea of impregnation being hot a kink, right? Or your partner being pregnant a kink, right?
Like, I, I always think she looks better when sheās pregnant. If you consider that a kink and Iām saying me, even as somebody who would have both of those things being in like my kink category, they have never activated around my actual childrenās birth, right? Like-
Simone Collins: Thatās true, yeah.
Malcolm Collins: They, they have [00:11:00] never, because I donāt like, even
Simone Collins: me- Well, no, and then I, I will point out, and this is maybe getting a little bit too TMI, but like even before we realized we had to do IVF and we were just, you know, timing and trying to get pregnant naturally- Yeah
like it actually felt kind of unsexy to, when we were actually trying to get pregnant- Oh, oh ... ācause it was like, oh God, this is like the ovulatory window, like we have to do it now. And
Malcolm Collins: like- I, no, I completely agree. It was- Yeah ... really unsexy. Like-
Simone Collins: Yeah ...
Malcolm Collins: having sex to conceive is like-
Simone Collins: Stressful and not sexy
Malcolm Collins: yes, youāre on a schedule.
Simone Collins: Super
Malcolm Collins: not sexy. Youāve gotta work it into unusual times.
Simone Collins: Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: Youāve gotta like, it is, it is
Simone Collins: actively- Itās typically like women aggressively like when men arenāt ready for it, being like, āI need you to like come inside me now,ā and like just getting really intense about it. And like I, you, you, like even I remember your, m- again, not TMI, but like I remember your dad at a steakhouse being like, āYeah, like it was really stressful when your mom was trying to conceive ācause sheād just be like call me up and be like, āYou have to come home from work now.āā
And like, just like itās not [00:12:00] fun for the men. Like itās very clearly not fun for anyone involved.
Malcolm Collins: Itās, itās not. But Iām, the point Iām making here is even with somebody with all of the layered kinks that could be associated with a breeding kink, right? Mm-hmm. Never was that process unusually arousing for me.
Mm. If anything, it went in the exact opposite direction. Because-
Simone Collins: Ironically ...
Malcolm Collins: it, it fell into, and this might have been a competing like anti-kink I have of, of the long procedures and everything like that- ... and a lot of you know-
Simone Collins: Anti-kink ...
Malcolm Collins: but whatever the point being is it never- Yeah ... influenced me or wanting to have kids.
Even though I may feel like my wife looks even more beautiful when sheās pregnant-
Simone Collins: Aw ...
Malcolm Collins: right? That would never, ever in a billion years factor into my decision to get her pregnant. Because thatās just like a minor modification into how attractive I find her. Maybe like a I find her 10, 20% more attractive for nine months, and then- She has [00:13:00] a child I need to raise for the rest of my life.
Simone Collins: Right. Like, and then, and then 18 years and she-
Malcolm Collins: That would be f*****g insane.
Simone Collins: Yeah.
And just to hammer this home further, even though I find her more physically attractive when she is heavily pregnant, I do not have sex. We do not have sex when she is heavily pregnant. And people can be like, āOh, itās totally safe for the baby,ā whatever. Iām like, āMm, actually, there have been cases where baby has, have died or suffered injuries during it.ā
It is incredibly rare, but it is absolutely possible. Um, and I would never in a million years forgive myself. In a million years. Imagine you knew that. Like, I, Iām not going to do something where I might have to live with the fact for the rest of my life that I know I killed one of my kids because I wanted to get off, and she couldnāt even get pregnant that day.
What are you talking about? Thatās so disgusting. Um, I, I know some people are like, āWell, I just wouldnāt have sex if I [00:14:00] couldnāt have sex with my wife all the time when sheās preg-ā Whatever. Okay? Iām just pointing out here that itās actually instances in which I cannot have sex with her because Iām worried about the safety of my children.
Even if itās a one point zero zero zero one thing, Iām not taking that chance
Malcolm Collins: That would be absolutely insane.
Simone Collins: Mm-hmm.
Malcolm Collins: But then weirder than, and I, and I actually, like, I want to communicate this to these people, and I w- I, when I originally was thinking through this, I was like, well, think of it this way.
Like, even if you have like some BDSM related kinks. Personally Iām aroused by being in a dominant position when Iām with my partner. Weāre like getting a list of kinks I have today. Oh,
Simone Collins: boy. Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: Iām aroused. I have never been aroused by being a boss, right? I have never been aroused by having to fire someone.
I have never been aroused- ... by being in a real world position of authority over someone.
Simone Collins: Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: For the vast majority of kinks, to activate them, you need to engage in scenarios that are so [00:15:00] divorced from anything that actually happens in real life that theyāre not gonna accidentally activate during normal daily stuff.
Simone Collins: Hmm.
Malcolm Collins: And I think a, a lot of people would get this, right? Like, when I talk about the BDSM thing, most people, I think most people probably have some level of arousal to submission or dominance.
Simone Collins: Yeah. I mean, that, in, in our research, that was just so- Yeah,
Malcolm Collins: like
Simone Collins: the
Malcolm Collins: vast- ... pervasive. So if youāre one of our followers and youāre aroused by submission or dominance, have you ever actually been aroused by, like, being someone elseās employee-
or being someone elseās boss? Yeah, someoneās
Simone Collins: like, āGo clean the toilets.ā Oh, yes. Say that again, slowly.
Malcolm Collins: Y- youāre like a f- yeah I mean, surely somebody is. But I realized- Yes ... whatās different for me in them-
Simone Collins: Yeah ...
Malcolm Collins: is there are ways that some people with submission fetishes or dominance f- fetishes relate to being an employee or boss that [00:16:00] is sexualized.
Like, we do see people engaging in relationships with their boss where, like, thatās clearly a component to it. No,
Simone Collins: but thatās, it, itās the power dynamic. Itās not the bossing, itās the, the fact that he is the boss and Iām the secretary. And there are definitely plenty of female fantasies around that in terms of, like, the material thatās popular.
That is certainly common in female- Or- ... or in general erotic material ... you see this in the
Malcolm Collins: case of, like, teacher-student, right? Like, where a teacher is in a relationship.
Simone Collins: Yeah, no, teacher-student, boss, and... Well, and, and you see it w- with male erotic materials, too. A common one, of course, is nurse, right? Itās, itās one of those places where itās acceptable for a man- Well, no,
Malcolm Collins: but that,
Simone Collins: the,
Malcolm Collins: the point Iām making is Iām not talking about in erotic material, Iām talking about in real life stuff.
Simone Collins: Oh, sure. Or- Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Malcolm Collins: But what I realized is that these people who are actually aroused because of this position they have relative to somebody who they are the boss of- Hmm ... or who are in a submissive position because theyāre [00:17:00] somebodyās employee, they relate to their daily duties in a way that is totally foreign to the way I relate to my daily duties.
Simone Collins: Oh, sure.
Malcolm Collins: It would never accidentally arouse me to be somebodyās teacher, right? I would never mistake that for this other type of relationship.
Simone Collins: Yeah, good point.
Malcolm Collins: And then I realized, oh my God, itās not just in those instances. Itās also likely in the instances of how these people like the whole trans thing, the, the idea that, like- Oh, well you couldnāt possibly just do something every day all day thatās primarily intended to arouse you, right?
The idea of transition itself as being in that category, right? Itās like this is why they do all this weird fetishy stuff all the time that I have found so confusing, right? Mm-hmm. Like, Iāve always been like why, why, why do we have, Who is the, the, the swimmer? [00:18:00] The trans swimmer? Lia
Simone Collins: Thomas.
Malcolm Collins: Lia Thomas.
I always talk about Lia Thomas. Iām like, why did the trans community support her flashing male genitals at girls in the girlsā locker room when neither male or female locker rooms is it normal to fully undress yourself, and it hasnāt been for the past 20 years. It wasnāt when I was in school. Itās definitely not today, and weāve been drifting further in that direction.
So that means that this is somebody who is intentionally flashing people. I was like, why did the trans community make this person a role model for the community, stand this individual, make them the figurehead when they were clearly acting in a way that I would think is a bad action? And then I realized I didnāt understand it.
Simone Collins: Hmm.
Malcolm Collins: Lia Thomas made every moment about what aroused her. Walking into the locker room and being like, āI am gonna make my entire life a sexualized reframing,ā is actually very, very normal to people with this mindset [00:19:00] And Iāll note here, I think we see this in the conservative side as well. In the conservatives who are just doing this conservative LARP and donāt seem to have actual, like, values.
Theyāre just like, āIām the most conservative person out there.ā And thatās why when people try to, like, front on you with this stuff, like, āOh, Iām more conservative ācause Iām more...ā whatever thing they wanna push on you. Like, āI hate the gays more, the Jews more,ā the, you know. And itās like, come on, the communists did that stuff, too.
Youāre bad at being a conservative. Youāre an idiot conservative. But the, the the conservatives who, who go with that, āIām a more trad version of a Christian. Youāre just, like, really involved in being a scripture nerd. So, like, what are you? Some nerd about study- the trying to get the exact right words in a way that makes sense?
Why canāt you just believe whatever I was told Christianity was when I was growing up?ā And Iām like, āWell, because I actually wanna believe whatās true.ā And theyāre not interested in whatās true. Theyāre interested in what fits this theming, and then we see it affect in their actions. [00:20:00] Like the couple, the famous conservative couple where their marriage was blessed by the Pope and she was cheating with her boss the whole time, right?
Simone Collins: Blessed by the Pope.
Malcolm Collins: Blessed by
Simone Collins: the Pope. Apparently, though, there, itās... What, what happened actually in that case is apparently you can, like, show up in a certain place when you get married, like, at, at, at, in the Va- in Vatican City, and the Pope will be there and, like, bless a bunch of people all at once.
So itās not like they made some kind of special appointment with him. They like- Well,
Malcolm Collins: right, but
Simone Collins: it
Malcolm Collins: was
Simone Collins: still a very performative- ... showed up. Itās like showing up at a Mardi Gras parade and getting Mardi Gras beads thrown at you. Just, just to, like, put that in context for
Malcolm Collins: our listeners. No, no, no, no. I, I, I...
Look, and again, I wouldnāt even... As much as I might be anti-Catholic, Iām not gonna besmirch the Pope for accidentally blessing somebody who wasnāt true to their belief system, right?
Simone Collins: Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: He had
Simone Collins: no way of knowing. Well, plus with the Catholic Church thereās always redemption, so donāt worry about it.
Malcolm Collins: Right, right.
But Iām just saying even, even if it was personally organized, I would still... That, thatās not... But the point is is it was still a big show of, āLook at [00:21:00] how X I am.ā Mm. And what I realize is that actually when you live your life based around maximizing an identity rather than a consequentialist value system, you can be aroused by these sorts of positions even if youāre a conservative, right?
Mm. The reason why a teacher may be aroused by being in the role of a teacher relative to a student or the role of a boss relative to their employee is because they are maximizing and they identify as teacher. Thatās what theyāre doing. Iām trying to be the most teachery teacher right now. And so that allows me to, if, if thatās whatās hitting the arousal pathway, then that hits it for me, right?
But if Iām going out there and as a boss, as Iāve always done as a boss, my job is to make money for my investors, right? Like, never, and, and, and not screw over customers and not screw over my employees, but like thatās always the calculation running in my head. Itās [00:22:00] never, āIām a boss.ā I, I can do the, you know, Iām a, Iām a boss song here.
Speaker 9: Direct workflow. Like a boss. My own bathroom. Like a boss. Micromanage. Like a boss. Promote synergy. Like a boss.
Malcolm Collins: But like I, yeah, Iām never thinking like, āIām the bossiest boss.ā
Speaker 2: Hey, Iām Buddy. Iām the boss.
Thatās my sister, Grace. Sheās not the boss. Iām the boss.
Malcolm Collins: Iām the boss.ā But anyway, for making, about making cakes. But anyway it, itās never how I perceive myself in those moments. Iām just a tool of trying to achieve a specific outcome.
And I realize that I think many progressives, so thereās sort of two people here who get sucked into this in ways that were, one, before foreign to me, but now make a lot more sense. One is the progressives who just like intentionally are pleasure maxing their lives.
Simone Collins: Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: And, and I think you see this sometimes as conservatives, but itās fairly rare.
Just like the [00:23:00] only thing I live for is what arouses me and what makes me feel good. Yeah. And if, if, and these people can fall into various categories. Obviously if they are most impacted by arousal systems, they may go down the trans pathway, they may go down some other lifestyle pathway, like the furry pathway or something like that.
Simone Collins: The furry pathway.
Malcolm Collins: Or they may go down, you know, all these various things that they could go down. And actually this is an interesting point to me, which is really important for me in terms of how I see something like furries. When people tried to, the left tried to take Lola Bunny and make Lola Bunny less sexy, there was a big online outrage that predominantly happened on the right.
And what that showed me is A lot of people find anthro characters attractive, right? Like apparently this is normalized enough that like right-wing influencers were like, āHow dare you desexualize Lola Bunny?ā
Simone Collins: Is this true? I mean, it just... They, they made a humanoid character sexy. Like, [00:24:00] how is that... A sexy character- Well, so the point Iām making here-
thatās humanoid is sexy. Like I, how is that... Itās not like people are into animals
Malcolm Collins: The point Iām making... Well, yeah, they dr- thatās what theyāre trying to do. Theyāre trying to make the character activate the part of your brain, for at least people without very strict counter systems look like a slightly modified version of a human.
Yeah. And because people like diversity in sexual partners, which weāve actually seen from genetic selection events that happened in environments where mate selection was really important, like in Northern Europe. We have another episode where we go more into this, like are redheads monster girls.
But like, in
Simone Collins: these- Forgot about
Malcolm Collins: that ... in these environments you begin to have these really unusual dimorphic traits, like bright red hair and different eye colors. Which by the way you donāt have in most of the world. You do not have varying hair colors, you do not have varying eye colors. You only have these in these very explicit Northern European environments.
Mm-hmm. And because of that, or that just shows me that, you know, [00:25:00] historically, at least within populations that Iām related to liking somebody who looked in some way novel. Like a ginger looks very novel. Mm-hmm. You know, to, to a, a Roman, you bring a red-headed ginger in and th- they wouldnāt look any more different from the average human woman than a, a girl with horns or elf ears.
In fact they probably wouldāve looked more different from the average human woman to a Roman who captured a red-headed slave with, with, that was a ginger than your average elf in fantasy fiction looks to your average human in fantasy fiction. But the point I was making here is that there is something very different from just saying like, āOh, somethingās arousing to me.ā
Like, thatās a category of like anthro figures is arousing to me, and being a furry. Because itās how youāre relating to this arousal pathway. Mm-hmm.
Simone Collins: Mm-hmm.
Malcolm Collins: When youāre a furry youāre saying, āThis is going to be my identity. Iām gonna go to cons around this, Iām gonna invest a ton of money in this, Iām gonna incorporate [00:26:00] this thing that arouses me into my core idea of who I am.ā
And I would say of, of the list of techno-puritan sins, letās definitely add this one as, like, one of the higher sins you can commit of, of trying to incorporate a, an arousal pathway. Well,
Simone Collins: no, I think trying to incorporate any emotional pathway into your identity is- Right.
Malcolm Collins: True ...
Simone Collins: toxic. It- thatās not the point.
Your identity should be something that is meant to maximize your objective function. Thatās it.
Malcolm Collins: Yes. But there are two, ... Well, by the way, for people, when she talks about objective function, that means the things that you believe have intrinsic value. Mm-hmm. Like a weighted list of things you think are good for humanity or that youāre commanded to do by God or, you know, whatever else, right?
Like, you have a, a, a thing that you as a human are made to do, and you believe that, right? Mm-hmm. And even, even if you think the thing that youāre meant to do as a human is maximize your own pleasure- Pursuing [00:27:00] pleasure in the way that these communities do rarely maximizes your own pleasure. Actually, like letās look at furries as an example of this.
If you look at the suicidality risk you look at the unaliving risk among furries, itās incredibly high. You look at the depression risk, itās incredibly high. When you do this form of hedonism maxing, it ends up eating away at your actual contentedness because itās just not how humans were designed to live.
Mm-hmm. Itās like even if I enjoy candy, if I do nothing but eat candy every day for breakfast, lunch, and dinner, I am going to feel much worse. You know, like pleasure maxing, even though candy make me feel good, candy not route to long-term pleasure maxing.
Simone Collins: Well, in fact, when it, when we discussed like is there a cure for gay in The Pragmatistās Guide to Sexuality, from what we could see in the research, the only way you could really make someone not want [00:28:00] to indulge in any same-sex activity is to just inundate them so much with gay sex that they like just canāt take anymore.
Malcolm Collins: No, no now obviously same sex attracted people can suppress this arousal pathway. Yeah. Right? Like, thereās arousal pathways I suppress all the time, but the, the point Iām making here is weāre, weāre building out three categories. So category one is the people who are captured by an identity, and this identity can be tied to an arousal pathway or not.
Mm-hmm. But I think even if you donāt go into it as tied to an arousal pathway, like the Christian influencer who saw himself as like a boss or a superior to this person, and like the big tough Christian influencer guy, he became captured by this identity in a way that ended up trow- triggering arousal pathways that made him move against his core moral thesis, right?
Or his objective function as we would say. But then the second category is the true Iām gonna eat candy every day person, and this is, this is where you get, you know, the, [00:29:00] the haze influencer. This is where you get the healthy at every size people. This is where you get the ex- the, the trans extremists, right?
Where itās just Iām gonna live my entire life based around whatever can make me... This is where you get the people crashing out on Twitter because the government wonāt give them, Pre, pre... We had a whole episode. It was one of our craziest- Oh, PrEP. PrEP, yeah. We learned about how much the government pays on PrEP, which is only useful if youāre having orgies.
Like if you have a, a monogamous partner, because of how good anti-AIDS medication is now, but PrEPās just largely
Simone Collins: irrelevant. Well, yeah. So not, not exactly orgies, but more specifically, like, a lot of one-off partners, new partners who you canāt really vet who you canāt necessarily trust to say, āYeah, Iām taking the correct medication,ā et cetera.
Yeah. Then thatās what PrEP is for. Yeah, itās for, like, the most unsafe and irresponsible form of sex that you could have, regardless of your orientation. And the fact that the governmentās paying for that is somewhat annoying.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. Well, no, government isnāt paying for it, youāre [00:30:00] paying for it. You, the viewer of Base Camp, are paying for it.
Simone Collins: Well, if you live in the United States, yeah.
Malcolm Collins: Well, I think most of Europe gives PrEP too, for free. You
Simone Collins: think? Hmm.
Malcolm Collins: You know. Thanks. De- definitely need to cut PrEP. And people are like, āWell, the, these people canāt control them. They should be able to control themselves.ā And then theyāre like, āAnd what if they get AIDS?
And we shouldnāt pay for that either, then they can die,ā right? Like, w- w- whatever can happen to consequences, right? Like, donāt do X thing because it can lead to Y thing, right? Like, that should be on them to know, āOh, gee, I shouldnāt have the orgy. I should just step back from the orgy,ā right? Like, a little less orgying.
But yeah thoughts, Simone?
Simone Collins: Yeah. I, Iām, Iām trying to reconcile this in my head with the stated purpose of becoming trans, which is, you know, you feel like youāre born in the wrong body, and youāre just trying to resolve severe body [00:31:00] dysmorphia. The, the mainstream opinion on the left, as I understand it, is that this has nothing to do with your sexuality and it has everything to do with who you feel you are, which I guess we would probably say is a misnomer.
Like, your identity doesnāt matter anyway. It doesnāt matter who you are. You should just make the most of whatever youāve been dealt and optimize it around your objective function. And if youāre suddenly born tomorrow, or, like, you wake up tomorrow and youāre totally different, itās not like, āOkay, well, I need to fix, fix this to, to how I feel.
I need to just live,ā like, and, āOkay, this is my body now,ā like, āOkay, now Iām a rabbit person. Okay, then Iāll just do that.ā In fact, I think you could argue that everyone has to do this throughout their lives, because one day youāre gonna wake up and youāre gonna be 40. And I think a lot of people are, like, trans young, right?
Like, theyāre 40, and they act like theyāre 12. And thatās just not, not ideal. You know, they should be leveraging the identity that theyāve woken up [00:32:00] in, in an optimal way. And I think- Nevertheless what the argument is with identity and, and being trans is that they feel like theyāre in the body of someone with a different n- natal sex, and they have to fix that.
That it has nothing to do with sex. And Iām
Malcolm Collins: trying to- Yeah, nobody ever, like, the, the, itās, itās like, it, itās very normal to not feel like youāre an adult, right? Like, this is a normal thing. Just because I donāt feel like- Yeah,
Simone Collins: or to not want to be an adult. Like, I mean, all the women who are getting elective cosmetic procedures to look younger are trans young.
You know? They, they are also getting gender affirming surgery and, and youth affirming surgery.
Malcolm Collins: Well, and identity affirming surgery,
Simone Collins: right? Uh-huh, exactly, which again, we would say is sinful. But I donāt, I, for, for women, I, m- many would, you could argue, oh, theyāre doing it for sex ācause they wanna attract partners.
I donāt think theyāre doing it for sex. I, so I donāt know if, if the trans thing is really about sex. I mean, so Iām trying to parse that out. āCause also thereās this very common thing in, in, like, trans [00:33:00] discourse to say, āNo, being trans is not expressing autogynephilia. Theyāre totally different things.ā
Thereās almost this, like, disavowal of people with autogynephilia. Like, itās not a sex thing.
Malcolm Collins: There, there is not at all a disavowal in the actual trans community. So, this is something that they, that they signal very loudly to outsiders. But to insiders, itās widely accepted.
Simone Collins: Okay, but you donāt deny that itās signaled loudly to outsiders.
Malcolm Collins: No, it is signaled loudly to outsiders, but if you actually hang out on their forums, theyāll talk about this arousing them all the time. In fact, there was even a giant fight within the trans community like 10, 20 years ago, so, like even before it blew up between the the people who said, āBeing trans is about gender dysphoria,ā and these were called true scum, and the people who said, āNo, being trans is about whatever I want,ā which is the people who are called the two Qs.
And the whatever I want, while it often wasnāt explicitly laid out, was generally autogynephilia. Or some [00:34:00] form of kink or arousal pathway, right? Like, if they, that, that was well understood if you look at the leaders of the whatever I want community and the stuff that they were caught with, whenever they had leaks or anything like that, right?
You know. But yeah. What was the point you were making around this? I mean, my, my point is, like, the, the community- That
Simone Collins: itās not about sex. That youāre saying, well, a breed- people who have a lot of kids donāt have a breeding kink. But people who are trans have a kink that theyāre exercising every day, which is why they think that people who have a lot of kids have a, a breeding kink.
And Iām trying to push back and say, āI donāt know. I donāt know if people who are trans think itās very sexual at all either.ā In fact, I would argue that especially people who are- Read the forums ... male to female trans are, if anything, experiencing a significant drop in sexual arousal because itās testosterone- They, we just read a thread about this yesterday
thatās the huge sex driver, and theyāre, like, trying to kind of nuke that out. Have
Malcolm Collins: you read, have you read or spent any time reading, like, the trans subreddit or any community which would- Not
Simone Collins: in a very long time, to be fair ... talk to other
Malcolm Collins: [00:35:00] trans
Simone Collins: people? Not for a
Malcolm Collins: long time.
Simone Collins: Itās,
Malcolm Collins: itās very common to talk about this in those communities, and they are not shamed for talking about this in those communities.
Simone Collins: Mm.
Malcolm Collins: It is seen as a normal part of transition, and people would say itās very wrong to shame somebody for being aroused due to something tied to their transition. And theyāll always say, āWell, like, of course we donāt signal this to outsiders, but within the community, we know whatās up.ā Right? Like, I think that to, to over-buy into this externalized like the too cute versus true scum war obviously happened.
If you do a, an internet search, it obviously happened. Itās, it, it, itās one of the biggest parts or cultural fights within the growth of modern leftism and the movement that came out of Tumblr, right? And pretty much no one denies that the, the true scum lost. True scum now are seen as adjacent to TERFs, right?
Like, theyāre, theyāre seen as sort of similar in the same way that, like, [00:36:00] TERFs were sloughed off by the feminist movement as the wrong kind of feminists, the true scum were sloughed off by the trans movement as the wrong kind of trans. So I, I think that y- yeah, theyāre aware that this is for them, and this actually even came up in the conversation with the journalist.
And I was like, āYou know, obviously I wouldnāt wanna live my entire life just to maximize the amount of pleasure I, I, I s- feel.ā And they said something along the lines of, āWell, you know, speak for yourself,ā implying that, like, this is actually how they structure their life.
Simone Collins: Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: So even in that context, Simone, you saw the individual doing this.
Simone Collins: Thatās fair. That is fair. Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: So I think that the, the, the thing is, is even if, or the, the wider context here, even if somebody has all of the fetishes around th- that presumably this lifestyle should be activating, it doesnāt work to activate them. Itās a very ineffective way. If you out there as an individual are [00:37:00] thinking, āI wanna have a lot of kids because of a fetish,ā thereās places for that.
Thereās, like known sperm dono networks appear to be primarily fetishes from what Iāve seen.
Simone Collins: Oh. Yeah, thatās true. That is true. Yeah, the people who just make themselves available for sperm donation. Totally.
Malcolm Collins: That seems to be about a breeding kink. I like Elon. What heās doing seems to be partially potentially motivated by a breeding kink.
Just the way that heās doing it. Instead of doing it all with one woman and surrogates, which he could do if he wanted to he does it with lots of women who he treats as disposable, which is often part of a breeding kink, right? So that looks like... I- I know he doesnāt treat all of them as dispo- but some of them he clearly does.
Like, itās like I hit up a girl on Twitter, sheās interested, I impregnate her. Thereās other ways he could achieve the same scale with significantly less legal liability with the money that he has, right? So thereās something motivating this outside of just logic. That said, maybe heās, like, ideologically [00:38:00] against using using w- w- whatās the word?
Simone Collins: Surrogates?
Malcolm Collins: Surrogates. Yeah, ideologically against surrogates. No. No? Okay. So, yeah. ā
Simone Collins: Cause heās known to have used surrogates, so.
Speaker: Like if I had Elon level money, I would have a, uh, uh, like a facility in some third world country, like in India, I donāt know, South America, Brazil, something like that. Um, thatād be like Enderās Game, raising like 50 kids per year, , in the best conditions I could afford for them, but at scale. , Which is obviously very different than the path Elon has taken
Malcolm Collins: Or maybe it allows him to operate at a scale that, like, even weāre unaware of that would make this make sense. I donāt know. But the point Iām making here is- is that the- the breeding kink is generally not tied to and then you raise a family of like 10 kids.
Very
Simone Collins: true. And
Malcolm Collins: I, and I, and Iād actually point this out to the trans community, like the trans community that is watching this and crashing out over me saying this. You kn- you kn- like, breeding kinks are common in the trans community. Like for example, Ana Valens had a, a [00:39:00] breeding kink. Remember? She wanted to like, she, she- There were,
Simone Collins: there were so many.
There were so many things ...
Malcolm Collins: This is a writer who w- dunked on Leaflet and Kirschner. But anyway, so Ana Valens was like, āOh, I have this fantasy where I free use women and impregnate them.ā Like, that means just having sex with lots of women and impregnating them. Oh. And then tran- trans women should have free access to cis women to just use them and impregnate them.
Now, this is clearly a breeding kink, but it is antithetical to and then I raise those kids. Itās, itās the exact opposite of that. Breeding kinks are, at least from what Iāve seen in terms of like whatās out there, almost always tied to and then I move on.
Simone Collins: Itās almost more a correlated with sneaky copulation than it is Like anything you do with a partner, a long-term partner, pure bond partner Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: Where that stuff is often much more motivated by āI really like kids and letās make the kids,ā right? Like thatās, [00:40:00] thatās the point of the sex, and then the sex is all schedules and everything like that. And as weāve said, then you, then you basically get to a point where, you know, having a nanny is just like a prostitute by proxy, right?
Because- Yeah.
Simone Collins: It, it might be different for religious couples who are just open to having kids, meaning that like every time you have sex, youāre not necessarily trying to have kids. You know, God chooses, right? Jesus takes the wheel on that front, and then itās not stressful in that way because youāre not trying to make it happen.
Youāre just open to it happening when itās meant to happen.
Malcolm Collins: Mm-hmm.
Simone Collins: In which case perhaps then itās- More s- of a turn-on for the... I donāt know. Because I b- they also like, people who are you know, open, open to having kids and, and having families in that sort of very natural way tend to also not talk about what arouses them and their sex lives.
So who knows whatās going on in their heads, right? Like-
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. Well- ...
Simone Collins: who knows if they find it a turn-on or not. But I [00:41:00] think what, when you also look at just sort of how itās described biblically, like becoming one, which really just means, like, as we interpret it, combining your genetics with someone and basically taking what feels like to us shards of our soul and, and, like, seeing them in children combined.
You know, really you see yourself, both of yourselves in one person after you have a kid, in that person. You do become one in that kid. I think thatās more, like, where you see the expression of love. Itās not really in the sex act itself or the sex act itself- Well, I also know here where- ... has more to do with sort of increasing-
a
Malcolm Collins: trans person may push back and say, āWell, itās not just breeding kinks.ā You know, you say that the breeding kink is never associated with a wanting to raise a child, right? And theyāre like, āWell, what about, like, daddy dom little girl stuff,ā right? You know, thatās tied to wanting to raise a child, and I push back super hard on that.
I, I would bet even, even people maybe we could get Shu on head sometime because we know that she was into this kink for a [00:42:00] while and now has a kid. I would bet to anybody whoās ever been into that kink, th- this is not one of the kinks Iām into but for anybody whoās ever been into that kink, having their own kids has never been arousing to them.
Like interacting- Yeah ... with their own kids. A, a, a one, the western mark effect is super strong. Thatās the thing that makes you unaroused by anyone who sort of is growing up around you at certain developmental milestones. But in addition to the western mark effect which is usually with siblings, but also affects parents, because I mean, there, there, there is something that tells you and needs to tell you from a biological perspective people can have hot daughters.
Like, people can have daughters that are just objectively attractive, and you need to know at some sort of internal level, āOh, I shouldnāt be procreating with this thing that happens to be
Simone Collins: my daughter.ā That system doesnāt seem to work in everyone.
Malcolm Collins: And when you... Well, no. Where people end up with their daughters most frequently, itās because youāre also more attracted to people youāre genetically related to, is when the father didnāt raise the daughter.
Oh. And this one we actually see [00:43:00] quite frequently is when a daughter raised by
Simone Collins: a dad gets called. Yeah. And, and when, when you have people raised separately because they both have the same, like, father through IVF ācause their, their father is a prolific sperm donor.
Malcolm Collins: Right. But, but even more than that is when the dad, like, divorced the mom young or something like that anyway.
Simone Collins: Sure. Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: Weāre not gonna talk about that right now. The point Iām making here is the daddy dom little girl fetish is very obviously to me in the category of fetishes of power exchange. This would be the ex- same as, like, a nurse fetish or a teacher fetish or, like, a Iām in control over you in some other way fetish and you have less control than me.
This is about signaling submission and dominance, which is not actually something you do with your kids very frequently. I, I think that people would be surprised about that. Signals of dominance are just not a part of n- normal interaction you have with your kids because thereās almost this, like, intuitive understanding with children, until theyāre teenagers at least, and thatās, you know, thatās a whole other thing, right?
[00:44:00] That the, the parent is in the authoritative position that it doesnāt need to be signaled. Itās not, itās
Simone Collins: not part of your relationship. Well, it, basically if you have to signal it, that means youāve, youāve failed already, right? Like, you know, the, itās a show, donāt tell kind of thing.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. Yeah. So, that, that was sort of my wider thought.
It, it just made me realize, like, oh my God, they actually see the world this way, and I had just always bro- brushed it off as, like, a-
Simone Collins: Yeah, very confusing. Yeah. Genuinely ...
Malcolm Collins: it was either confusing or, like, they didnāt... And, and theyāre, oh, you know theyāll clip this and see, like, he admits it, that, you know, the whole breeding fetish thing is something that, that turns him on.
I mean, yeah, of course. Itās what the entire arousal system is meant for. But I also have been very clear, and I think weāll get other people in the comments who will mention this around whatever fetish theyāve experienced, that there is a big deal difference between something that is a conceptual fetish and something thatās [00:45:00] going to be accidentally activated by your daily life.
Mm-hmm ... and I doubt... I, I, w- w- I mean, one of the easy ones, ācause this is even... Anyone whoās into, like, the daddy dom thing ever accidentally been aroused by that with one of their kids, right? Like, presumably it should, if it, thatās the actual system youāre trying to activate. But I donāt think it is. Itās the authority figure non-authority figure system, which isnāt really the relationship you have with your kids.
The relationship I have with my kids is nothing like the relationship Iād have with, like, a pupil or something like that.
Simone Collins: Yeah. Yeah. No. Thatās, itās a good point. Iām, Iām glad you brought it up, ācause that, that has always kind of befuddled me, and Iām just like, I donāt know, I donāt know what to say. I just, itās not.
But this was worth going into. I love you. Anyway,
Malcolm Collins: love you, Simone.
Speaker 13: Heās really good at alligators[00:46:00]
What do you think, buddy?
Thanks, friend
Speaker 11: Yeah, you know to push with your knuckles, right? Yeah. Why? So you donāt get your fingers dirty, because you eat with your fingers
This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit basedcamppodcast.substack.com/subscribe -
In this episode of Based Camp, Simone and Malcolm Collins dive into the viral meme: āIām just a normal person from 1995.ā They explore how mainstream 1990s views ā including those from Bill and Hillary Clinton on immigration, welfare reform, and borders ā are now branded as āfar-right extremism.ā
Using data from Cremieuxās Substack analysis of the General Social Survey, Pew Research polarization graphs, and cultural shifts, they discuss the leftward drift on race, gender, sexuality, institutions, and more. They argue that what was once normal (family values, personal responsibility, evidence-based thinking) is now demonized, while the modern Right has become the side of data, science, realism, and genuine societal progress.
Topics include: the Overton window shift, trans issues and science, immigration realities, political tolerance, why many 1990s Democrats would be āMAGAā today, and the divorce between āprogressivismā and actual improvement. Plus lighter moments on Hunter Biden, AI waifus, and mashed potatoes.
Show Notes
To set the scene, here are some quotes:
* From our xenophobic, far-right president, saying: āI want to talk with you about the problem of illegal immigration. Itās a problem our administration inherited, and itās a very serious one. It costs the taxpayers of the United States a lot of money, and itās unfair to Americans who are working every day to pay their own bills... Our immigration policy is focused in four areas: first, strengthening border control; second, protecting American jobs by enforcing laws against illegal immigrants at the workplace; third, deporting criminal and deportable aliens; fourth, giving assistance to States who need it and denying illegal aliens benefits for public services or welfare.ā
* Or this from our capitalistic first lady, advocating for a āwelfare reform plan that will dramatically change the nationās welfare system into one that requires work in exchange for time-limited assistance.ā
What do they all have in common? They come from left-leaning public figures in the 1990s.
* Bill Clinton
* Hillary Clinton
The Rabbit Hole on X posted āFar right is often just a propaganda term for normal personā alongside a cartoon of a woman and man in a car, with the woman saying: āWhy are you so far right politicallyā and the man saying āIām just a normal person from 1995.ā
Andy Hatfield posted another meme that reads: āRecognize the warning signs of a far-right extremist:
* Full time employment
* Literacy
* Loves his family and country
* Common sense
* Obeys the lawā
Inspired by the meme, Cremieux wrote A Normal Person 30 Years Ago A normal guy in 1995 probably believes a lot of things that are unacceptable now on Substack and his post about itāplus the resulting discourseābecame a trending topic du jour on X.
Cremieuxās Observations
In his Substack article, Cremieux broke from the sentiment-based memes and looked at the data.
āI opened up the General Social Survey and had a look around. To get started, I defined a few sets of political views: Institutional Confidence, Criminal Justice & Guns, Political Tolerance, Economic/Pro-Government, Racial Liberalism/Civil Rights, Gender-Role Egalitarianism, and Sexual & Moral Liberalism, and then I outlined a set of important social views.ā
The data shows that:
* āPeople have become less confident in Americaās institutions over time.ā
* āWhen it comes to criminal justice and firearms, more people think courts are too harsh on criminals, more people oppose the death penalty, and fewer people think we ought to requires permits to buy guns. The last of these didnāt change that much.ā
* āPolitical tolerance has somewhat increased since the 1970s, but itās somewhat down since the 1990s. This general trend masks something interesting: more acceptance of gays and atheists, less acceptance of racists and militarists.ā
* āMovement on economically left-wing views has been generally pretty flat, which is roughly what we also see for economically right-wing views.ā
* āWhen it comes to racial liberalism, people have shifted far to the left. People have become more likely to ascribe Black-White gaps to discrimination and less to a lack of effort, among other things.ā
* āWhen it comes to gender roles, egalitarianism has greatly increased.ā
* Diana Fleischman recently made an interesting observation on that front vis a vis male postpartum depression
* āFinally, when it comes to sexual and moral liberalism, views on sex education, divorce, marijuana legality, and so on have, in some cases, quite radically shifted towards left-ward positions. Abortion legality for serious defects is the only exception among the bunch.ā
He concludes that āthe nation has moved considerably, but not overwhelmingly, to the left.ā
His editorialization is thoughtful: āWhat can we say about the normal person from 1995? In many ways, he was much like us. In other ways, he was what most people would now regard as kind of a dick. He didnāt like interracial marriage and he wasnāt too keen on gays either. These social views arenāt alone: plenty of things now considered taboo were, at the time, wholly acceptable, even in polite society, and sometimes these were the majority view.
Right or wrong, I donāt think appealing to normal people in the world 30 years ago is likely to make many friends after realizing the sorts of things people used to believe.ā
I largely agree but also think he is not extrapolating sufficiently from the data. āLet a racist speakā has gone down in the General Social Survey, but also the definition of āracistā has changed significantly, from something that is, we would argue, blatantly racist, to someone who, for example, believes genes dictate skin color and other traits.
In short, I think he was looking at the wrong thing to measure change.
Additional Observations Shared on X
NC Phycicist observed that āPew Research illustrates this nicely. What the left calls the āfar rightā is just the left moving further left.ā sharing a pretty illustrative graph showing diverging median democrats and median republicans in 1994 vs 2017:
HF responded that: āSociety always changes and moves on. By definition, a progressive (someone on the left) is either ahead of, or keeping up with those changes. A conservative (someone on the right) wants things to stay the same and not change.
Society always changes and moves on. By definition, a progressive (someone on the left) is either ahead of, or keeping up with those changes. A conservative (someone on the right) wants things to stay the same and not change.ā
But Charles Pontificates pointed out that āItās mostly leftists who want deindustrialization and the stagnation of energy production, and thatās hardly progress.ā sharing a graph of electricity and income per capita that makes it clear thereās no such thing as a low-energy rich country.
People also tried to make slippery slope arguments:
* Rikki Schlott: āHow far do we wanna go back on this one though? Iām just a normal guy from 1960? From 1850?ā
* Posterior Malone: āYeah itās certainly true to some degree, but 30 years is a very long timeā¦imagine saying in 1995: āIām not far right, Iām just a normal person from 1965āā
* Martin Stepan: āIām just a normal person from 1895.ā
Thereās some pondering to be done about progress and time fixing everything versus toxic ideologies spreading.
Episode Transcript
Simone Collins: [00:00:00] Hello, Malcolm. Iām excited to be speaking with you today. I want to set the scene with some quotes. Letās start with one from our xenophobic far-right president saying, āI wanna talk with you about the problem of illegal immigration.
Itās a problem our administration inherited and itās a very serious one. It costs the taxpayers of the United States a lot of money, and itās unfair to Americans who are working every day to pay their own bills. Our immigration policy is focused on four areas. First, strengthening border control. Second, protecting American jobs by enforcing laws against illegal immigrants at the workplace.
Third, deporting criminal and dep- deportable Americans. Fourth, giving assistance to the states who need it in denying illegal aliens benefits for the public services or welfare.ā And then hereās, and just another one from our capitalistic first lady advocating for, āA welfare reform plan that will dramatically change the nationās welfare system into one that [00:01:00] requires work in exchange for time-limited assistance.ā
Oh, but crap. I used the wrong accents ācause, because I was actually quoting our different president and first lady from the 1990s, Bill Clinton and Hillary Clinton. And thatās kind of the whole thing thatās been bubbling up on X recently. I think
Malcolm Collins: we saw this meme thatās like, āIām just a normal- Yeah, the, the-
person from 1990ā Yeah, the, the
Simone Collins: Rabbit Hole on X specifically posted this on X. Far right is just often a propaganda term for normal sent alongside a cartoon of a woman and man in a car with this woman saying, āWhy are you so far right politically?ā And the man saying, āIām just a normal person from 1995.ā
Speaker: Weāre just normal men What do you mean normal men? Weāre just innocent men. Eh?
Simone Collins: And Andy Hatfield also posted another meme under that that, that reads, āRecognize the warning signs of a far right extremist. Full-time employment, literacy, [00:02:00] loves his family and country, common sense, and obeys the law.ā And,
Malcolm Collins: There, there was actually videos that were put together at one point.
Oh,
Simone Collins: really?
Malcolm Collins: Iām probably gonna be too lazy to look for them.
Speaker 3: Your son is not just lifting weights. Heās lifting the crushing weight of toxic masculinity. This is not fitness. Itās a silent scream for self-worth.
Malcolm Collins: But this became a thing where they were leftists- Weāre creating warning signs if your son was being radicalized by the far right.
Simone Collins: Oh, are you serious? Like, that this is drifting off the thing? And it was stuff
Malcolm Collins: like... Yeah, it was stuff like, āHas he been working out more recently?
Has he started cleaning his room more?
Malcolm Collins: Has he-ā Oh,
Simone Collins: no. No, no, no, no. No.
Malcolm Collins: I- I- yeah, no, actually it was like, āHas he started consuming less pornography? Has he started-ā
Simone Collins: Youāve got to be kidding me ...
Malcolm Collins: Has he started playing less video games and working more? He might be being- No ... radicalized by the far right.ā Oh, my God. Has he started... No, another thing that was cited was, like eating [00:03:00] healthy.
Like that was a, a warning sign. Like,
Simone Collins: I did... Oh.
Malcolm Collins: No, but the irony is, is that these are all actually pretty good warning signs-
Simone Collins: They are, they are legit good warning
Malcolm Collins: signs ... that a young man is being radicalized by the far right, right? You know. Oh, my God, Malcolm. He, he, they, if I, if I was a leftist and I saw my kid start exercising, Iād be like- No,
Simone Collins: then you know.
Thatās how you know. Itās true. Itās, itās actually true. That is, that is the funny part. Anyway though, Cremieux, who we love to follow think heās a cool guy- just saw this post and decided to write a Substack article. He, in this, he broke from the sentiment-based memes around this subject and looked at the data.
Per his article, quote, āI opened up the general social survey and had a look around. To get started, I defined a few sets of political views: institutional confidence, criminal justice and guns, political tolerance, economic, pro-government, radical liberalism/civil rights, gender role egalitarianism, and sexual and moral liberalism,ā and then I outlined a set of important soc- [00:04:00] social views.
I sent you, Malcolm, the graphs. Iām gonna put all the graphs and Iām gonna link to everything Iām talking about in the show notes for this on Patreon and Substack. But this is what he generally shows.
Malcolm Collins: I love Cremieux. Heās like a meme. A b- a friend of ours, by the way. I love him. You know, follow him on X.
A great, great right-wing tweeter. And heās like, āLetās break down the data. Letās, letās-ā Yeah. Letās look at
Simone Collins: it. But also, you know, his take is gonna be different from what I think a lot of people, even when you look at the discourse on X, ācause this ended up as one of sort of the trending topics that got surfaced as something on X, I think even just this morning as, as our time of recording.
What a lot of people assumed he was gonna be saying is not actually the conclusion that he reached after looking at the data, and I actually think he, he was missing important things in terms of the data he looked at. But anyway. Oh,
Malcolm Collins: oh, ooh.
Simone Collins: So the data shows that, and Iām just gonna quote his findings vis-a-vis all these things, but you, itās better for you to look at the graphs, I think.
They, they really help to sort of hammer it home. And again, just go to Patreon and Substack. The data [00:05:00] shows that, quote, āPeople have become less comf-ā Oh, my God, the screaming. quote, ā
People have become less confident in Americaās institutions over time. When it comes to criminal justice and firearms, people think courts are too harsh on criminals.
More people oppose the death penalty, and fewer people think they ought to require, Wait, and fewer people think we ought to require permits to buy guns. The last of these three didnāt change that much. Political tolerance has somewhat increased since the 1970s, but itās somewhat down since the 1990s.
This general trend masks something interesting. More acceptance of gays and atheists, less acceptance of racists and militarists. Movement on economically left-wing views have been generally pretty flat, which is roughly what we see economically for right-wing views. And when it comes to racial liberalism, people have shifted far to the left.
People have become more likely to ascribe Black-white gaps to discrimination and less to a lack of effort, [00:06:00] among other things. And when it comes to gender roles, egalitarianism has greatly increased.ā On this front, by the way our friend Diana Fleischman on X shared an interesting comment vis-a-vis this article that came out on, On postpartum depression for dads.
Specifically like a lot of people on X were like, āOh, dads canāt have postpartum depression.ā Like, thatās super screwed up, and like sort of gatekeeping around postpartum depression. And what she observed, and I think this is actually really astute, is that probably thereās a rise in postpartum depression specifically because while women have this sort of insane hormonal thing they go through-
Malcolm Collins: Yeah
Simone Collins: when babies are born, that, and Iāve, Iāve witnessed this, like actually makes them pretty tolerant of all the sleep deprivation and not super stressed about getting... āCause I was super phobic about waking up in the middle of the night, for example before I ever had a kid, and in my, in my un- unparented life.
And now it means nothing to me to like get up at 1:00 AM, 3:00 AM, [00:07:00] like whatever. I donāt care. Like, Iām really not stressed about it, and Iām sleeping a lot less now. But Iām, it super doesnāt bother me. And when I sleep, I sleep more deeply. Men donāt have the same kind of hormonal balance or shift. Yeah.
And yet, these days, especially in, in like sort of educated progressive families, men are expected to like get up and, and, and feed babies in the middle of the night the same amount, or like be there for their wives when their wives are up and breastfeeding. In many cases, obviously not in all, but when they take a gender egalitarian approach to newborn care, men who did not go through this hor- whole hormonal revolution, who, you know, have not experienced this bodily change that has given them the ability to be more flexible in these ways, and itās well documented that womenās brains go through a lot of changes and their bodies too, obviously hormonally as well that probably allow for this to be tolerable.
And again, Iāve experienced it personally and I didnāt believe it could be possible. Is it any surprise that men are getting depressed when theyāre like thrown into like this situation that theyāre not [00:08:00] equipped to handle? So anyway, I thought that was interesting. And then he writes finally, when it comes to sexual and moral liberalism, views on sex education, divorce, marijuana legality and so on have in some cases quite radically shifted towards leftward positions.
Abortion legality for serious defects is the only exception among the bunch. So he clu- he concludes however-
Malcolm Collins: Yeah So hold on, hold on.
Simone Collins: He concludes, and this is whatās most interesting that, that the nation has moved considerably but not overwhelmingly to the left. His editorialization on the issue is what can we say about the normal person from 1995?
In many ways he was much like us. In other ways, he was what most people now regard as kind of a dick. He didnāt like interracial marriage and he wasnāt too keen on gays either. These social views arenāt alone. Plenty of things now considered taboo were, at the time, wholly acceptable even in polite society, and sometimes these were the majority view.
Right or wrong, I donāt think appealing to normal people in the world 30 years [00:09:00] ago is likely to make many friends after realizing the sorts of things people used to believe. So I somewhat agree with him, but I also think that heās not extrapolating sufficiently from the data. So when you look at one of the graphs about like sort of racial views let a racist speak has gone down in the general social survey.
But also the definition of racist has changed significantly, and thatās not gonna get picked up in this survey. So like it changed- Right ... in the ā90s from something that like we would genuinely even today argue is blatantly racist to-
Malcolm Collins: Yeah ...
Simone Collins: like let a racist speak means let, let someone admit that like genetic differences might lead to a difference in skin tone as you personally, Malcolm, experienced when being interviewed by an MSNBC journalist last year.
Like thatās what- Yeah ... racism is now, and thatās not gonna get picked up by this general social survey. So what I think Krimuw is missing is that he doesnāt understand that you canāt look at the general social survey and take this data-focused approach to this [00:10:00] issue, though I love the premise, because the definition of the words have changed rendering the survey data inadmissible.
What I think was more compelling was what NC Physicist observed which is I think a much more compelling graph which Iāll also send you on X to look at, and Iām also gonna post in the show notes of course. So this Pew graph I think is a lot better at illustrating what has happened. What NC Physicist observed and wrote was, āWhat the left calls far right is just the left moving further left.ā
Sharing a pretty illustrative graph showing a diverging median Democrats and median Republicans in 1994 to 2017. For those who are just listening, basically 1994, thereās a median Democrat and a median Republican basically-
Malcolm Collins: High degree of overlap ...
Simone Collins: shown.
Yeah, theyāre very close. Like, the medians are like this.
And then when you go to 2017, the medians suddenly diverge significantly. Theyāre quite far apart. And the, the graph goes from looking like two mountains [00:11:00] almost next to each other to, like, two quite different mountains with a very significant valley in between the two of them. Mm-hmm. And I think that thatās, thatās more what has happened.
Malcolm Collins: Well, hereās what Iāve begun to notice. And I think that this ... When I talk to your average, like, older boomer progressive about most of my beliefs, they donāt see them as particularly extreme, right? Theyāre like, āOh, those are really normal things to believe.ā Until I get to something like, you know, my beliefs on trans people or something like that, and theyāre like, āWell, you know, what, what, what about, like, their rights?ā
And Iām like, āWell, what about the rights of, like, religious people or people who dis- disagree with this,ā right? And theyāre like, āWell, yeah, thatās not, like, an extremist position to take.ā What they donāt realize is functionally this average person from 1995 is today in the eyes of the normal progressive an absolute radical, an absolute extremist.
And [00:12:00] I think what we on the right do not fully realize is how many people who vote Democrat would actually support us if you could just get through ... Like, as I pointed out, when the thing I was shocked about was only sorry, that 40% of Democrats think that gender transition is immoral, right?
Like, like, like, that is astonishing to me, right? Like, when, when you talk about those numbers there, right? It, the left ... And yet, and yet you could be fired from saying that from a mainstream job too, right? Like, that itās one, both such an unpopular opinion among the masses, but two, that itās seen as labeling you as an extremist, right?
And I think a lot of the conversation is about waking people up to this reality, right? You know, that-
That th- that everyone who is really still sane is on the [00:13:00] right at this point. There, there is not... Like, the, the leftist factions that, that control whatās left of, of the left, when they go out there at their protest and say, āShoot a Nazi,ā and then, and this is a frequent mainstream talking point on the left- No,
Simone Collins: the, the, itās punch, punch a Nazi.
But yeah.
Malcolm Collins: Punch a Nazi. Assault a Nazi. Okay, great. This is a normal mainstream talking point on the left. Itās also a normal mainstream t- talking point that if you sit at a table with a Nazi, youāre also a Nazi. And itās also a mainstream talking point that MAGA is Nazi, which by the way, over half of Americaās voted for.
They, it is... W- when you take these together and you ask, why are there so many leftist mass shootings these days it, it becomes immediately obvious. It is normal for them to believe they have a license to kill the vast majority of Americans for different belief systems. And the moment you wake up a leftist often, often, like one of these sort of sleeping boomer leftists, this is what their party is [00:14:00] now.
I, I think a lot of them are like, āOh, I guess I, I guess Iām MAGA.ā But then theyāre like, āBut if anyone ever found that out, Iād, Iād lose my job, Iād lose my friends, Iād lose my...ā āCause thatās the way that the left operates at this point, right?
Simone Collins: Well, one thing I thought was also interesting from this discourse and some of the, the discussion that people had, is this tension between the idea of progress and people shifting cultural views in the face of just better evidence, like learning, getting better, just the idea of progressivism being a concept of society progressing and improving.
And, and, well, this tension of that with like, to- I wanna say toxic culture and messages that actually isnāt making society better. So, HF responded in this general, like, about this subject, āSociety always changes and moves on. By definition, a progressive, someone on the left, is either ahead of or keeping up with those changes.
A conservative, someone on the right, wants things to stay the same and not change. Society always changes [00:15:00] and moves on. By definition, a progressive, someone on the left, is either ahead of keeping up with those changes. A conservative, someone on the right, wants things to stay the same and not change.ā But Charles Pontificates pointed out that, quote, āItās mostly leftists who want deindustrialization and the stagnation of energy production, and thatās hardly progress.ā
And he shared a graph of electricity and income per capita that makes it super clear that thereās no such thing as a low energy rich country. And where I felt like thereās this tension is I mean, a lot of people are trying to argue in response to this whole like, āOh, well, theyāre just reasonable people.ā
Malcolm Collins: Well, I, I think that thatās just fundamentally not what the left-right divide is anymore. Uh-huh. And I think that saying that conservatives... If you go to a conservative and you ask them, like letās say the trans stuff. My opinion on transition was changed predominantly by changes in the scientific evidence.
Simone Collins: Oh, okay. Thatās a really- like- Yeah, thatās a good example of like where the left isnāt progressing with modern science and [00:16:00] understanding. Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: Right. Yeah, like with modern science it looks like the left should be- Or like
Simone Collins: climate change, right? Like, we learn different things about cli- But- And population is a good one, right?
Climate change, population. There was a belief
Malcolm Collins: that
Simone Collins: there were gonna be too many people, and now we know that weāre okay with a higher level of population. Okay.
Malcolm Collins: The right now is the side of data and statistics- Mm ... and, and c- climate realism and genetical re- realism, right? Like, we are the side that is engaging with information, and the left has just stopped doing that.
Simone Collins: Right. It- So this argument that itās just that the left is the, is the, is the party of data and reality, and the right is, and conservatives are... I guess, and thatās maybe why we donāt call the it, the new conservatives. We call it the new right because-
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, because itās not small C conservatives.
Simone Collins: Uh-huh. There are often- Itās not just go back to the old ways
y-
Malcolm Collins: quite radical people who are often open to a large diversity of ways of potentially fixing things.
Simone Collins: Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: And-
Simone Collins: Yeah ...
Malcolm Collins: the reason why itās not just like go back to the old ways or donāt change is there isnāt just [00:17:00] like one unified image of the past that weāre fighting for anymore. Itās a better future that weāre fighting for.
And, and that obviously involves a lot of things. Like right now the right is a pro-AI party. The left is the anti-AI party. The right is the pro-nuclear party. The left is the anti-nuclear party. The right is the pro-genetics party. The left is the anti-genetics party. On almost every meaningful scientific i- issue
The, the right is the people coming to the, to the table with statistics. And when I talk about, like, with the trans stuff, itās like, you know, if you follow the WPATH leaks or the data that the Travis Stark Clinic was hiding that you know, putting people on puberty blockers was increasing their unaliving risk, and now that itās been banned in the UK, we havenāt seen any increase in unalivings in the UK, even within the trans community.
We now know that, like, the, the, those things are not true. And so now that we have that information, we can say, āOh, we were wrong,ā right? Like, the data that we were looking at was coming out of clinics that were making the majority of their money off of gender transition, which weāve seen all of the pro-trans studies were.
[00:18:00] They had somebody involved whose life depended, life, livelihood depended on this being normalized, and that those institutions were covering up the data that was showing this wasnāt working. And we have historic evidence where a real... This happened in the past too, with Joe Money, right? Like, this is a repeated phenomenon, and when the phenomenon comes to light, you update your opinions, right?
We have changed our opinion significantly on a, you know, immigration because now if we look at the numbers, even three generations in,
Hispanic immigrants are over 50% on welfare, right? You know, you canāt support that, right? That eventually that ends up breaking the, the welfare system. They do not assimilate, right?
And with that being the case, and itās, and itās funny because, like, the leftists will even say, āWell, the goal isnāt assimilation.ā If the goal isnāt assimilation, like, if you see that as a bad thing, them losing their heritage or, you know, culture, then we will become like the countries that theyāre coming from, right?
Like, the, presumably the reason we donāt is itās not that we have magic soil or something, itās that [00:19:00] we see and perceive reality and ethics differently, and when they come to this perception, then they become productive like us, even if you are a blank slates. If youāre throwing that out the window, then weāre...
What, what conversation are we even having here?
Simone Collins: Yeah, this is really helpful for me because I, like I grew up just loving like the West Wing Democrat. Like this like we are patriotic, we love our country, we, we want everyone to thrive, we believe in science. That, that, like thatās the Democrat to which I anchored,
Malcolm Collins: And thatās what the right is now.
Simone Collins: I know. And, but like, but then I think thereās still a lot of people who remain Democrats today who still think that theyāre West Wing Democrats, but they donāt... They hate America- ... and they wonāt listen to science. And Iām, I, gets so confusing to me sometimes because weāre, I think weāre often confused of, or, or weāre, weāre being accused of being so something that weāre not.
When I think Iām, Iām certainly not the only person who is now on the right who [00:20:00] like grew up obsessed with West Wing Democrats because theyāre wonderful. I love that show.
Malcolm Collins: Well, I mean-
Simone Collins: So thatās helpful. But, because I mean, what people kept saying is like, āOh yeah? Yeah? Like well Iām just a normal person from the 1830s.ā
Like do, is that where you, is that what you want? Is that what you want? Like you want Jim Crow? Is that what you want? And like, y- it, it just didnāt sit right with me.
Malcolm Collins: But this helps- Well, the reason why- ... sort of reframe it
Simone Collins: for me ...
Malcolm Collins: people say, āIām just a normal person from 1995,ā and it hits so hard for people in a way that
Simone Collins: these- 1995.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. When these people say, āOh, Iām from the 1930s,ā or whatever, is pretty much everyone agrees society, or at least America and Western countries, were demonstrably better in 1995, right? Like things were working better. There was less actual racism in our society, there was less you know, of the conflicts that weāre dealing with now as a society.
So when a person presents to you, āI am an average person from 1995,ā m- people who hear that, the reason itās effective is theyāre like, āYeah, letās [00:21:00] go back to something that worked,ā because this, what y- what weāre doing now, the left isnāt working.
Simone Collins: That Disney pastime is yeah. I, I really just need to wear my bonnet more. Heās going for it. But yeah, I that, th- this has been really helpful for me then because itās, itās helping me actually come to terms with this cognitive dissonance Iāve had around like the right being framed so readily as anti-progress, and even Cremieux being like- Yeah, the
Malcolm Collins: Cremieux-
Simone Collins: āOh, the left hasnāt really changedā ... heās a
Malcolm Collins: right-wing scientist. Whatās he doing?
Simone Collins: Well, so this was a timed post, so I think maybe he was like, āI donāt know. Letās see if the data backs it up.ā And per the data he chose for this particular thing,
Malcolm Collins: Oh, he does that stupid timed writing
Simone Collins: thing ... that US general survey.
Yeah, I mean, like, ācause when that other person on X looked up the Pew results, like itās very clear that thereās been a change. I think a lot of this comes down to definitions, but I think in that also is something interesting in that like itās not necessarily that, [00:22:00] like, peopleās reported views havenāt actually changed that much, and I think thatās meaningful.
Itās more that like maybe, maybe the radicalization is, is in definitions, is in like the way that people... The, the way that people have been radicalized, like the, the, the lobster or frog being boiled phenomenon had more to do with like not, not radicalizing people, but fundamentally and subtly changing definitions of like letās just redefine you know, mental health as this, of of harm as no longer like physical assault, but of, you know, triggering someone, making someone feel bad.
You know, letās, letās r- reframe body positivity as not like, āHey, you know, you donāt have to be perfect,ā to like, āOh, itās okay to be morbidly obese and like deeply unhealthy.ā Like maybe thatās where the, the societal harm or like the radicalization has taken place, and of course in certain measurement [00:23:00] formats thatās just not gonna show up.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, I just think his entire framing is wrong about what, what, what conservatism is in a, in a modern context, like what the right is in a modern context. Because itās, itās, itās not just like, wrong. Itās an inversion of reality.
Simone Collins: I think youāre right. Yeah, it, itās still interesting. And I, I mean, I keep hearing that whole, like, 1995 Democrat thing bandied about. It is so striking to see these quotes from Bill Clinton that are like, āHey,ā like, āLetās, letās control our borders and, you know, curtail social services for, you know, immigrants in our, in our cities.ā
And, and that being, like, just the same simple stance that our current president has, and yet such a different view of how theyāre categorized even today. Itās, itās wild.
Malcolm Collins: Well, I mean, I think the left back in the day was having a conversation where [00:24:00] the left and right had different values, right? But they both still wanted the best interest of the country, right?
And its people. And I think that now, very openly, the left is antagonistic towards the count- whatever country itās in and its people. And this is, this is a fund- That means the conversationās fundamentally different. Theyāre asking, āHow can I destroy you?ā Weāre asking, āHow can we build you up?ā
Simone Collins: Yeah, maybe itās connected to that, that sort of communist or, like, socialist Americans association plan that you de- outlined in a separate episode where they were like, āOkay, weāre gonna, you know, get people to collectively think that theyāre super mentally unwell.ā
You know, foment a- a- encourage the development of hideous art. Like, all these things. Maybe thatās kind of also itās whatās happened is this collective plan since at least the ā70s to basically make Americans hate America and be miserable, has also seeped in and taken over in a way that has been incredibly damaging.[00:25:00]
But I donāt know. You know- Thatās, thatās more, what more or less what I wanted to discuss. This is, this is a short one, but,
Malcolm Collins: Itās a short one. Well, I mean, I think the thing that we need to get away from is the perception that we are... because in a way, yes, it is that we are 1995 Democrats, and that we are fighting with a collection of widely diverse people against the culturally dominant force, which at that time was the Judeo-Christian community.
And now itās the urban monoculture. But I, I think outside of that, n- n- the, the two things donāt share that much in common. Like, the wider political ideology of, like, staffing the White House with a bunch of entrepreneurs and like, like, Founders Fund people and you know, actually cleaning things up, and I guess itās...
But, like, everybody always kind of wanted the government to be and be doing who wanted a better future.
Simone Collins: But is it- I think actually Clinton had a, an effort similar [00:26:00] to DOGE.
Malcolm Collins: Oh yeah, he did. It
Simone Collins: was executed quite differently, but again, like, the similarities are insane. Plus, Trump at that very same time was a Democrat and openly known for being, like, a liberal Democrat public media figure.
So, like, I, I donāt know. I donāt know. I,
Malcolm Collins: I, by the way, fun, fun aside here, People have been talking about, and I, and I think that theyāre right about this, about what was his name? Who, whoās the last president? Joe Bi- Hunter Biden. Hunter Biden running for office in a few years.
Simone Collins: Like- Oh, heās on his comeback tour.
Yeah, I mean, I think the odds are long
Malcolm Collins: for anyone- Heās on his comeback tour. You know what? He could, he could I think do pretty well in terms of bipartisan support.
Simone Collins: Another glass ceiling. Yeah, you know?
Malcolm Collins: I mean, heās a crazy crackhead, but he, he does it so he really captures the, what... Like, Gavin Newsom tried to do the Trump irreverent thing- Mm-hmm
and it didnāt work at all. Like, it looked so fake. When you know, Hunter Biden on, like, the Democratsā main website has one [00:27:00] of his photos
with a crack pipe in his mouth- ... like, that is f*****g hilarious. Thatās like, Iām not a Democrat, and Iām like, āThat is hilarious that on the list of, like, whoās supporting who, youāve got a, Hunter Biden with a crack pipe.ā
Speaker 5: Hereās Hunter Biden reacting to this image. ā I know it may sound petty, but I canāt stand it when people Photoshop a meth pipe in my mouth. A crack pipe doesnāt have that little bowl at the end. This is why you canāt trust AI. Please make the appropriate edit. Thank you for your attention to the matter.ā
Simone Collins: Well, in an age in which weāre just so fed up with inauthenticity, I think itās one of the reasons why Trump did so well, is, like, Trump is exactly who- ... you think he is. He does not hide or try to obscure anything. Yeah. I mean, like, what- Heās proud of who he is, hides nothing. Hunter Biden is like, āYeah, I did this.ā
Like, it, it, like, the stories he told when he interviewed with Candace Owens were insane. And- Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: Well, people are like, āWhy, why arenāt you in, why arenāt you in jail?ā And heās like, āWell, my dad got me pardoned.ā
Simone Collins: Yeah. Duh. Like-
Malcolm Collins: Like, what, what-
Simone Collins: Yeah, it, itās super... And, and thatās, thatās, [00:28:00] thatās all we needed to hear.
You know, that just heās not trying to virtue signal. Heās like, āYep, thatās what happened.ā Yeah, and then- And like, look at all this other crazy stuff. And I think especially, you know, in, with all the blowback that, that is arising in the face of, like, the Epstein revelations not being what we expected and all these things just not playing out the way we expected heās got a lot going for him.
So yeah, if I- They should, yeah, they should just run him 20... I mean, it would be a tough run. Honestly- Yeah, running would be a tough run ... if it were Hunter Biden versus any of the... I mean, certainly, like Marco Rubio, thereās no way. Thereās no way.
Malcolm Collins: Marco Rubio would struggle against Hunter Biden.
Simone Collins: Yeah, because Marco Rubio is all polished and perfect, and he looks like heās hiding something.
He represents establishment. Yeah, I donāt, I donāt
Malcolm Collins: say, I donāt think Marco Rubio is a good candidate to run at all. Like, he comes across as very- I
Simone Collins: know, but people keep talking about him. Iām just
Malcolm Collins: saying ... people keep talking about him, but he just doesnāt, he comes off as so inauthentic c- compared- Yeah ... to, like, JD Vance.
Simone Collins: Right. But not everyone... Look, there are still many people who [00:29:00] weirdly want the inauthentic. Theyāre like, āJust give me my inauthentic politician and they have the authentic.ā No,
Malcolm Collins: I just get that they have the opinion of Marco Rubio based on the things that heās done in the administration, which I appreciate.
Simone Collins: Mm.
Malcolm Collins: And they have the opinion of JD Vance based on his history. I used to hate JD Vance for his whole Hillbilly Elegy and all that, and all his NPR-
Simone Collins: You didnāt even read it.
Malcolm Collins: No, but I saw his NPR apology tour. It was gross.
Simone Collins: Mm-hmm. Oh,
Malcolm Collins: okay. But when I listen to his speeches now and I see him talking now, and I know, āOh, this is a guy who watches Asmongold.
This is a guy who knows Hasan Shocks his dog. This is a guy who is eviscerating the UK for, like, whatās happening there in angry social media posts.ā And the UKās are like, āWe, how dare you say that the UK is a garbage country and, like, the people should revolt.ā But, like, I donāt see that from Marco Rubio.
Iāve never seen a speech where, like, afterwards I was like, I wanted to cheer for him, or I felt, like, a connection with him. Mm. But, you know, that, that, thatās- We shall
Simone Collins: see. We shall see. But no, youāve... Th- this has been an important conversation for us because at least [00:30:00] now I understand That thereās been a divorce between, from the concept of progressivism and actual societal progress, which requires a reconciliation with inconvenient scientific truths and, and just, like, realities.
Plus just a- adapting with science. A- and adopting science, to your point. AI shifts in our understanding of how to best contend with climate change just realities of, of genetic differences realities of gender transition not being what we thought it was. Yeah, all these things are a divorce from what the natural, like, progress of history is going to be.
Malcolm Collins: It turned out that, like, sleeping with whoever you want whenever you want doesnāt lead to positive outcomes,
Simone Collins: right?
Malcolm Collins: You
Simone Collins: know? Right. Right, right. And I actually think, like, yeah, truly a true progressive has to, by definition, change their mind because we are going to try new things as society evolves, and some of those things weāre gonna try out to not be so good.
Like, theyāre gonna turn out to be kinda damaging. And itās like, okay, well look, we tried that. It, [00:31:00] that, that is, like, the scientific method, right? You, like, hypothesis, and then you do an experiment, and then you see if your hypothesis is null or if, if the... Youāre like, āOh, okay, I was right. I was wrong.ā Like, okay, now we need to adapt.
We need further research. And then you, you, you, you, you refine, you iterate. And a true progressive society must be iterative, and the left has become a lot less iterative. Whereas on the right what you actually see is what feels like a modern version of a much more broad and distributed academic framework of, like, different schools of thought actively competing and seeing how their experiments turn out.
Itās super cool. Itās like a bunch of people, like, all trying to cure cancer and being like, āWell, Iām gonna try this weird form of gene therapy.ā āWell, Iām gonna try this weird mushroom derivative.ā And, āIām gonna try, like, this targeted, like, weird bacteria.ā And, like, all these different groups are trying and seeing what works best, and then when a group discovers that, like, āOh, my weird mushroom solution actually causes the cancer to grow significantly more,ā guess what?
[00:32:00] They drop it. And then on the other hand, we have, like, this one group thatās like, āI only do this one therapy. This one therapy is perfect.ā And then it turns out the therapyās, like, totally killing people. But who cares? No, we only do this one therapy, and how dare you suggest anything else? Anyway, Iām going to go.
Assuming it would be good for you, ācause I know youāre not feeling really great, I was gonna make heavy, creamy, smooth mashed potatoes, but I need to go now.
Malcolm Collins: Oh, that would be great for today, yeah.
Simone Collins: Yeah. Okay, well then...
Malcolm Collins: Just mashed potatoes.
Simone Collins: Just mashed potatoes. Iām okay with that because the amount of cream and butter in them is, like, a little bit of protein plus a lot of, of fats, so Iām like, okay, fine.
I
Malcolm Collins: donāt eat that much. You know that, Simone,
Simone Collins: right? I know. But especially on days where youāre not feeling so well, I feel like creamy mashed potatoes. Like, I w- I want... Iām envisioning, itās not gonna turn out this way, but Iām envisioning the kind that you get on the instant mashed potatoes- box where it looks like a snowy mountain at sunrise with a pat of butter slowly sliding down a beautifully whipped- I think with
Malcolm Collins: AI youāre gonna be able to make [00:33:00] great mashed potatoes.
Simone Collins: I, I pulled up a, a recipe and I... it looks good, so... with AI, of course.
Malcolm Collins: Remember to use rfab.ai recipe generator or-
Simone Collins: Yeah, it even creates really... Like, the images are also great motivation, ācause it shows you what you can get. And, and, like, pretty good, ācause youāre using Nana Banana for the images, and Nana Banana is, is the accurate AI image generator, whereas Grok is, like, the sexy, fun AI image generator.
So I like it.
Speaker 6: Or as a crazier feature, , and this one just came out, so itās gonna be undergoing lots of updates. Itās got some stability issues now, but itās a feature that allows you to search every not safe for work site that doesnāt have real humans on it, because I think thatās immoral, , at once. , So all of the, , not safe for work drawing sites can be searched simultaneously, and not just searched simultaneously, but from them you can, , download entire galleries with just a click, , without having to go through each individually with some, , useful [00:34:00] time-saving buttons like the no homo button, which just immediately removes all of the gay or male related tags from the search.
Or the, , English button, which instead of just searching for English, it searches for other languages, so you also get things without any, , language attached to them
Simone Collins: Yeah. Anyway.
Malcolm Collins: I love you.
Simone Collins: Off to potato land I go. God
Malcolm Collins: willing. Off to potato land I go soon enough.
Simone Collins: Hopefully. Yeah. Weāll see.
Malcolm Collins: All right. Bye.
Simone Collins: Bye. lap. Heās, he does this thing where he likes
Malcolm Collins: to- Okay. Roseanne
Simone Collins: Yes.
Malcolm Collins: We gotta make the AI waifu a, a thing. I think, I, I really wanna go harder with this. Like, the idea- Oh my God ... of, I, I, I wanna make it, like, even a meme on the right. I, I think it would be fun of you know, y- you, you can still... Being on the right doesnāt mean you canāt be, like, when I make sexy pictures of my AI waifu, which is just my wife done in, like, a Puritan AI anime style,
Simone Collins: You mean when you make AI pictures of [00:35:00] your wife waifu- Ah
not your actual
Malcolm Collins: fake wife. Yeah, yeah. Like, I do not understand, like, the people have gotten... Itās my wife, okay? Like, this is my property, okay? There is n- And itās not like sheās semi-closed in these or something. Itās not like sheās you know, showing off some sort of sexualized asset like breasts or something.
You know, itās literally my wife drawn in a way that is appealing enough to you, the watcher, you know, with, with yandere face or whatever, where youāre like, āOh that, that, thatās, thatās Weāre have- like, we need to be the side of fun, not the side of curmudgeonliness, okay? And I wanna put m- m- more pictures of myself.
I, I did some Duke of the North ones of, of me.
Simone Collins: Yeah, I wanna see those. Give me more of those.
Malcolm Collins: More of Otherworld Malcolm. More,
Simone Collins: more Malcolm fan art. Thatās what Iām here for. Well,
Malcolm Collins: they had the, the fur on them, and I w- we were thinking about that
Simone Collins: before. Yeah, and I keep sending you those outfits, [00:36:00] and you just never wanna choose them.
You- Letās
Malcolm Collins: get one. Letās get one. Iāma b- make a note right now. No, you canāt. I will stay up late to find fur.
Simone Collins: No. D- you are going to bed tonight. Youāre going to bed early, or you might discover that key electronics in your room have just started to disappear randomly.
Malcolm Collins: This is the way you treat our kids.
Simone Collins: Itās true, actually.
Malcolm Collins: But I mean, I mean, I wanna make it, like, a... I want it to be not just us, but I, like, want the wider community to... Because I think, you know, we did this with Emilia to an extent, right? But the problem with Emilia is if youāre an older woman, like, letās say 40 or something like that, and youāre dressing like Emilia, or 35, 36, and youāre dressing like Emilia youāre gonna look like a creep or a, a loser, right?
Like, that, that looks try-hard and empathetic. Yeah,
Simone Collins: itās so tried, yeah. Women need to dress their age. Letās bring it back, people.
Malcolm Collins: We need to show that being a Christian mom is not uncool or unsexy. And, like, if [00:37:00] you were Jewish- you- Y- you could draw,
Simone Collins: like- They donāt have to be sexy. Letās be clear. They can just be cool.
No,
Malcolm Collins: but th- women want to be desirable, and we do not have an archetype of a desirable woman with, like, five or six kids who tries to live a moral life. But thereās no reason we... We can fight asymmetrical warfare with the left because we can have sexy women and anime, right? So letās buckle in and start fighting this.
You know, if y- if youāre Jewish, you can do, like, hot Hasidic women, right? You know, you can do the, the hot Hasidic family. Oh. The, you know, if, if youāre- And if youāre Christian, you know, post, post the, the, the, your, your wife. And I think that making it of, you know- Your wife ... your wife or, or your ideal wife if you donāt have a wife is, is also a fun way because you know itās going to trigger the leftists soaking hard.
When they see- Yeah. Letās do this ... us having fun, thatās gonna trigger them. Donāt let it trigger you, okay? We gotta, we gotta win this.
Simone Collins: All right. [00:38:00] Okay. As long as I get more Malcolm fan art, Iām down with it.
Malcolm Collins: Okay.
Simone Collins: I like, I like the Malcolm fan art you create for me. I mean, obviously I should be creating it too, I just donāt...
Thereās no time for fun. Thereās no time for anything. Gotta... Anyway, shall I start?
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, letās get started.
Simone Collins: Okay.
Are the apples wet? They, they have a lot. All apples
No, no, apples are just naturally a bit wet, Toasty. Washed them in the sink to wash off the dust- Come on, Toasty ... that youāre always so worried about, right?
Torsten, eat an apple. What are you doing?
She didnāt lick them all
I want it back to zoo. Itās true I know itās true. I, I promise you she- Jackson, you were-[00:39:00]
See, Tyne didnāt. That would be a really long thing for her to do, Josie You make her too much fun. We went in the-
This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit basedcamppodcast.substack.com/subscribe -
In this episode of Bricks and Minifigs 2, Malcolm and Simone Collins break down the Coffeezilla investigation into the Bricks & Minifigs Lego controversy. They explain what Coffeezilla allegedly got wrongāespecially around accounts payable, business acquisitions, liabilities, and ownership of consignment inventory.
Malcolm and Simone (experienced business buyers/sellers) dive into why the previous owner wasnāt being shady, how stock purchases transfer liabilities, why the āmissing Legosā narrative misses the bigger picture, and the legal realities of taking over a business with existing obligations. They also discuss the broader saga, corporate responses, Brian Mansellās history with the company, and why the focus should now be on properly resolving things with investigator Ben.
A must-watch for anyone following the Bricks & Minifigs drama, Lego collectors, business ethics enthusiasts, or fans of deep-dive investigations. What do you thinkādid Coffeezilla miss key business 101 details?
Episode Transcript
Malcolm Collins: [00:00:00] you had watched the Coffeezilla piece and were convinced by it on Bricks and Minifigs. And- I mean- Oh my God, I thought that you with your business background would immediately see what he was getting wrong.
Simone Collins: What was he getting wrong?
Malcolm Collins: So there were two big things he got wrong. Okay. The, the really big glaring one is when he said the previous owner sold some of the sets without sending the money to the guy, right?
And yet we see from her own words when theyāre doing the transition of ownership, she goes, āYouāre going to-ā Yeah,
Simone Collins: Iām worried about... Yeah. ā
Malcolm Collins: Youāre
Simone Collins: gonna close out-ā And they, theyāre like, āWeāre gonna have some- Thatās gonna get handled by someone else.ā
Malcolm Collins: Thatās what I heard. No, no, no. But she wasnāt worried about the inventory.
Mm-hmm. She, she was worried more about closing out the accounts.
Speaker 2: These are ones that havenāt-- he has not been paid his percentage yet, and if I donāt have the tickets, I wonāt know how much I need to pay him. That, thatās a business thing and not necessarily yours. If, if taking on the business, he takes on all that comes on that [00:01:00] part.
Speaker 3: Whatās extremely funny about this piece in retrospect is you can see that the person, if not the CEO, at least somebody at Bricks & Minifigs properly understood the law that when you buy a business, you take on accounts payable
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. What that means in business speak is she knew part of the money that was meant to go to him had been unpaid. Oh. And sheās like, āI need to go over my notes.ā She even specifically says, āI need to go over my notes to see those amounts.ā And then they say, āNo, weāll take on that responsibility.ā
Simone Collins: Mm-hmm.
Malcolm Collins: This is a normal thing in business. Yeah. This isnāt her being shady. Itās not like-
Simone Collins: Well, thatās... When you acquire a company if it is not- an asset acquisition. If itās a stock acquisition, you also acquire their liabilities
Malcolm Collins: Liabilities.
Simone Collins: And that, one of the liabilities- You acquire their liabilities
is your accounts payable, and that is accounts payable. Yeah. Yeah,
Malcolm Collins: thatās, thatās accounts... Th- this is the most 101 thing in business, and you were like, āOh, there werenāt that many Legos in the store because she had sold some before,ā and itās like, n- that doesnāt, that doesnāt matter. And then the second thing- No,
Simone Collins: what, what Coffeezilla said is that, that I [00:02:00] thought was most notable was that the amount thatās sort of pending was much smaller than people thought.
Itās more, like, in the $20,000 range. Thatās
Malcolm Collins: because he wasnāt inc- including the accounts payable in the amount pending.
Simone Collins: I thought thatās what the amount was, that the accounts payable- No ... oh.
Malcolm Collins: He was talking about the physical sets that were still in the store, because he didnāt seem to understand accounts payable.
Simone Collins: Hmm, I... Th- that canāt be. Thatās too obvious.
Malcolm Collins: No, itās obvious to you because youāre a business person. He very clearly, if you watch the piece, and he was calculating the amount of money that he said Bricks and Minifigs owed the , the guy, he just did an addition of all of the sets he could find in their inventory.
He didnāt- Oh ... include accounts payable, which would have, from what weāre hearing, maybe doubled that amount. So that was the first thing that really annoyed me.
Simone Collins: I just figured if that was the case, then they would have included, featured prominently in that particular investigative episode, Coffeezilla, I mean.
Like, i- she would say, āAnd the accounts payable amount was, like, $34,000.ā She
Malcolm Collins: [00:03:00] literally says that. She goes, āI need to check my records so I can settle accounts with the people who have order-ā
Simone Collins: Yeah, in, in... I know, from the recorded clip, but she doesnāt say how much that was. In the, in the subsequent interview that she had- Why?
In
Malcolm Collins: the subsequent... Because sheās being an idiot ...
Simone Collins: with Coffeezilla, she would have stated that amount. ā
Malcolm Collins: Cause sheās being an idiot. But in the, i- when sheās having the store taken over, she literally says, āI need to settle the accounts,ā implying thereās a large amount of accounts payable specifically to him.
Because, the,
Simone Collins: Then why has no one stated that amount?
Malcolm Collins: When we did our first episode, people were like, āMalcolm, itās crazy that you saw things in this case that I just didnāt understand.ā I think a lot of people are just ātards, Simone. Thatās, thatās the, the- Well,
Simone Collins: no, but I mean, it, it, at the very le- oh, I guess the Brian, the original owner would not know the amounts because he wouldnāt have been aware, aware of what was sold and not.
Do you
Malcolm Collins: think Ben or Brian understands what accounts payable is? The, the, these-
Simone Collins: Yes, I, I imagine they do. But I also imagine they couldnāt know. Like, ācause i- if Iāve, if Iāve given something to a shop for consignment, I donāt know at any given day what [00:04:00] has sold and what hasnāt. Yeah. Like, thereās not... Thatās just for us to know.
Malcolm Collins: Yes, which is why she said, āI need to check my records.ā Okay. So that really annoyed me.
Speaker 4: Just so you understand why the law works this way, imagine if the law didnāt work this way and accounts payable magically disappeared or was transferred to the old owner of a business, , whenever the business changed hands. Now keep in mind, the owner of a business can be a business, , or not a specific individual.
So suppose, , one individual, , , , accrues a large amount of accounts payable in a business, , and they just then transfer that business to themselves for like a one dollar sale, right? , And they say, āOh, all the money that I owed people with this business...ā , N-no, or letās not say themselves. Letās say their brother.
, They say, āAll the money this business owed immediately disappears because it transferred hands.ā , That would be completely stupid. , Th- that would be like the easiest business trickeroo in the world. Like, itās very obvious why n- you cannot have the law work this way
Malcolm Collins: And then the second thing that really annoyed me- ... that we can go further on-
Simone Collins: Oh,
Malcolm Collins: [00:05:00] God. Crap ... is they keep focusing on whether or not she, she had the right to enter into the consignment deal, which is just totally irrelevant to any of the facts of the case.
Whether or not she had that... So think of it this way, Simone. Uh-huh. Suppose I own a garage right? Or let, letās, letās make this different. Iām leasing a garage from somebody else, okay? To make this even clearer. And then I use the garage Iām leasing in violation of the terms of my lease to do what, what do you what do you call that where you, like, pay somebody to s- park your car for you at, like, restaurants?
Well, I d- I donāt know the term. You pay somebody at a restaurant to park your-
Simone Collins: Valet ...
Malcolm Collins: valet. Okay, yes. So I use it for valet storage in violation of the agreement, right?
Simone Collins: Oh.
Malcolm Collins: Then the owner comes back and they go, āYou didnāt have the right to run valet service here.ā So then what they do is they take possession of...
Because Iām only subleasing the asset, right? They [00:06:00] retake possession of the garage, and then they turn around and start selling all of the cars that I had been- Yeah,
Simone Collins: like you parked a Ferrari and theyāre like, āSo this is mine now.ā
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, theyāre like, āThis is m-ā. That is not remotely how the law works.
Simone Collins: Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: You donāt take possession of an asset- Mm
, Just because itās in a location that you took possession of.
Speaker 5: Again, to understand why it would be comical for the law to work this way, suppose I owned a, , storage locker that I rented to someone, and then the moment they moved in all their stuff, I then went to, , my brother, and I sold the storage locker to my brother. And then he now said, āNow I own everything in the storage locker.ā
Or I own a, a hotel, and I wait until a bunch of really rich people come there for a trip, and then I sell it to somebody, and, , now they own everything. All you would need to do to ste- legally steal stuff from somebody is to own something where you expected something of high value to go across, and then [00:07:00] immediately sell it to somebody who youāre close with the moment the person with high value walks across a w- five-foot square of land that you own
Simone Collins: Yeah, I wonder how the law works with that. Like, if someone puts stolen goods or, like, someone elseās goods
Malcolm Collins: in your home. No, itās, itās, no, itās not how the law... Itās the clear... Okay, so m- suppose I walk into a building and I set a, a, a diamond ring I own on a table in the building.
Yeah. And then that building sells. The person who buys the building doesnāt own my diamond ring. Thereās
Simone Collins: no finders keepers law?
Malcolm Collins: Y- thatās not remotely how it works. That wasnāt included in the assets of the purchase. It wasnāt neg- And this is all laid out when you make a purchase of a company.
Simone Collins: Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: But yeah, sorry, that really gets me as well, but it continues.
Simone Collins: How does US law work with ownership of lost items? For example, if I lose a diamond ring at a restaurant and someone picks it up Are they legally in trouble for not giving it back to me if I [00:08:00] return to the restaurant and say, āIt was mineā? What does that
Malcolm Collins: have to do with anything?
Simone Collins: Iām just curious about it.
āCause now Iām just curious about finders keepers law. Itās not a law. Itās not a law. Iām just wondering like-
Malcolm Collins: This is the... I mean, itās clearly how the Bricks & Minifigs guy think the law works
The, the, the principle of finders keepers
Simone Collins: So b- basically property is yours unless you abandon it. A finder- Yeah ... generally has a right to possess an item that is good against everyone except the true owner. Okay, so there is kind of a finders keepers. But they have to give it back to the true owner if the owner can prove owners- so there kind of is a s- a finders keepers law.
Malcolm Collins: No, if the owner can prove ownership. Mm-hmm. Which the original contract proves that the person that they
Simone Collins: took the property from- Yes. No, 100%, yeah. W- yeah, with, with bricks and minifigs, of course. Thatās, thatās obvious ...
Malcolm Collins: didnāt have ownership
Simone Collins: Yeah, and then itās a civil issue if you refuse to give it back. Interesting Mm. Many systems distinguish lost from [00:09:00] mislaid, AKA, like, deliberately set down or forgotten. Property left on the premises is often treated as mislaid. Huh. Law is so interesting. I totally can understand why that one famous housewife women write to work, like, female equality... What was her name?
She has a, a difficult to pronounce, unflattering style name who became a lawyer.
Speaker 6: Note here, , while I say I w- donāt hold it against, , Coffeezilla for not understanding accounts payable, , maybe he did understand it and it just slipped his mind in this case because he has done really complex financial stuff into some of his other videos. So itās, itās almost sort of baffling to me that this wasnāt just like immediately top of mind for him.
But maybe -- he knows what accounts payable is, he just doesnāt know what happens with accounts payable during a business transaction, ,
Like even if she was being shady, even if the accounts payable she had had accrued for a year or two years, it would still transfer to Bricks and Minifigs. , Itās, it, itās [00:10:00] irrelevant.
Although it appears very clearly that she wasnāt being shady because she specifically asked for her books before being kicked out to ensure that she did make the payments to him
Speaker 2: These are ones that havenāt-- he has not been paid his percentage yet, and if I donāt have the tickets, I wonāt know how much I need to pay him. That, thatās a business thing and not necessarily yours. If, if taking on the business, he takes on all that comes on that part.
Speaker 6: because very few people... Simone and I have bought businesses before. That was our job in the past, to buy and sell businesses, which is why this is so incredibly salient for us and just seems like the simplest thing in the world.
, Which it should have been for the Bricks and Minifigs corporation. , And it seems to have been, because when the guy was making the transaction, he explained to her accurately, āWhen you do a acquisition, we take on the accounts payable.ā , āThatās a business thing,ā as he said. You know, thatās a, you know, simple understanding.
, Second here is, i-itās not that Coffeezilla did nothing in their video. They did some really cool work. It was really cool when they showed the guy that he had all [00:11:00] this stuff in his own corporate records from his own corporate Google Drive, and the guy was like, āWhat?ā And then, oh my God, thatās so cool, the, , U-Haul thing was really neat
Speaker 9: See the window, but the problem is itās night outside, so you canāt see. And so Iām looking at everything I can, and thereās just nothing, you know? And I have this alternate angle, Iām looking at that. And then wait a minute. Zoom in on that photo. Bring up the brightness of this photo a little bit and my gosh, thereās a U-Haul in the parking lot right outside of the store the night of November 14th, 2024.
This is something that Matt said he had seen footage of, and it couldnāt be true. And again, I, I believe I have seen footage from that night that shows clearly out into the parking lot, and thereās no U-Haul. After seeing this, I said, āI really have to make a call.ā And thatās when the story changed. So last night I talked with Matt McNeff.
I brought up this question of the U-Haul. He told me [00:12:00] emphatically there was no U-Haul. Yāall came to me this morning. You said, āHey, we looked into it. There actually was a U-Haul there that night.ā Can you clear up what thatās about?
Simone Collins: Actually, it, it is a good idea to do the, the Lego mini fig one, just to give people an update on what everyoneās missing, because thatās actually what everyoneās missing.
Yeah,
Malcolm Collins: I was, I was so annoyed by the Coffeezilla piece on it. I was like, it, it did- theyāre obviously talking about keeping accounts payable, and the other company, you take on accounts payable. That is normal when you acquire a business. That is like Business 101
Simone Collins: If you do a stock purchase, the question is,
Malcolm Collins: we- we- If you do a hostile takeover of a store, you obviously take on that asset.
You, you take on liabilities and assets. If y- during a hostile takeover, you absolutely do.
Simone Collins: Yeah, I donāt know. I donāt know how it legally works with franchise agreements, like, how the corporate entities are related
Malcolm Collins: or not. Hereās another way to put it, Simone. It doesnāt matter how you took over a company.
If that company had a bunch of stolen [00:13:00] goods, goods that were legally not theirs in a storeroom- Yeah ... you donāt all of a sudden own all of those stolen goods just because you own the company now. Mm. That is functionally what the company did. They said, āYour paper only proves that the woman who we took over the store from didnāt own it.ā
Itās like, no, it proves that you donāt own it because you only acquired her assets. Mm-hmm. You didnāt acquire other peopleās assets simply because they happened to be around. That is the wildest thing ever. Like, I ... To think that you o- like, when you think about it with the stolen stuff, I think it becomes so much more clear.
To think that, āOh, I bought a warehouse full of stolen goods, now I own all of the stolen goods,ā everyone would be like, āW- no.ā Or even worse, right? Somebody was renting a, a, a storage locker from me and stole a bunch of goods, and they defaulted on their payment so I took all of those goods. Itās like, th- thatās not how this works [00:14:00] at all.
And youāre like, āBut it was illegal for them to have the goods there in the first place.ā And Iām like, āThat does nothing to help your case.ā
Simone Collins: So you think for proper resolution, the accounts payable just needs to be paid out to this guy?
Malcolm Collins: Well, no. But the framing of the Coffeezilla where he tried to make it seem like it was over a very small amount of money, and thatās the- Yeah, I
Simone Collins: guess his framing, if I recall correctly, was just, like, the, the big thing is where are the missing Legos?
They either were stolen by a disgruntled employee or
Malcolm Collins: one of these- No, thatās literally not the thing, and thatās what Iām trying to explain. No, no,
Simone Collins: no. I, what Iām, what Iām trying to do is recap what his argument was, and I think thatās what his argument
Malcolm Collins: was, right? And itās a stupid argument. We know where the missing Legos are, functionally speaking.
They were either sold in those early books, or they were inherited by the store. What he uncovered is that the vast majority of the money to be paid for this guy may not have been in the Legos in the store, but in accounts payable. Mm. That doesnāt mean the [00:15:00] previous owners did anything wrong. The, w- basically we know where they were.
They were sold. And we know the previous owners didnāt do anything wrong because we have the video where she explicitly says, āI need the books to settle my accounts.ā Settling your accounts means paying out accounts payable. Thatās what that means. They said, āNo, donāt settle your accounts. We will manage it.ā
That, that is, that was literally them. And then somebody could say, āOh, thatās a low-level employee saying that,ā or something like that. That low a level, even if it was a low-level employee, when they took custody of the books which managed what had gone out and what hadnāt gone out without going through with her, as you always do during a biggest acquisition, and she was trying to be nice in those videos and stuff like that.
Like, she was literally like, āHey, letās get on the same page about the accounts payable, about the the, the co- consignment stuff.ā And theyāre like, āNo, I donāt want to get on the same page with you.ā Mm. Because they knew, I think functionally what happened is they knew that the way they were shutting down the store was very immoral- Mm
and they felt really uncomfortable about it. So
Simone Collins: they- [00:16:00] Oh, like, āIāve been told to do this. Iām just doing my job. This is corporate.ā Yeah. Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. They basically knew corporate had sent them to do something absolutely demonstrably immoral. And so even though she was willing to, and we see in the videos, obviously willing to talk them through everything they didnāt want to be talked through everything, right?
And that, that is on them. If I since, so like, if theyāre like, āOh, thatās a low-level employee. He doesnāt represent corporate or anything like that,ā itās not even the fact that he affirmed to her, āOh, I know whatās in these books.ā Corporate at any point could have gone back to her to get better accounting, and it appears that they never tried, right?
And it appears that she wanted to give them the better accounting. What corporate does, if I send letās say I send an employee, and the employee is the one who actually shuts down the storage locker thatās full of stolen goods, right? That doesnāt mean that I, of a [00:17:00] company, am now not legally responsible for the fact that those goods are stolen and need to get back to their rightful owner.
Even if itās an employee who shuts down the garage thatās full of cars that somebody had you park for them, right? That, that doesnāt absolve corporate from the basic financial accounting responsibility of determining the ownership of the assets of the property, especially when multiple people are telling you these assets are not what, you know...
Speaker 14: And a day or so ago, corporate released a, their timeline of events, and their timeline of events clearly shows that from nearly the very beginning, they were very aware of this consignment Lego set. So they canāt say, āWe were unaware that she didnāt own this.ā
Malcolm Collins: and the thing that always gets me is they keep saying, āWe tried to give Brian Mansell all of this in the past.ā Mm. Why canāt they provide proof of that? That would be very easy to provide proof of. Presumably itās in an email, right? Emails are easily recorded. So [00:18:00] if they donāt have that email, then I donāt believe that.
And I donāt understand why they havenāt presented that email of them trying to give them back in the past. It seems like an obvious lie. But also one thing
Simone Collins: that- Thereās, the, thereās disorganized stuff on both ends. Like, why did the original franchise owner s- provide spreadsheets of records so late as well.
I donāt know.
Malcolm Collins: Well, so the other thing that weāve learned since the, the co- well, this was before the Coffeezilla piece, but he didnāt include it, is the way that Brian Mandzel originally acquired Bricks & Minifigs was through, in a really scammy way, suing his father for control of a company that his father had built.
And it appears that pretty much since day one, Bricks & Minifigs has been bleeding money. So he basically- Oh ... stole his fatherās assets and used that to build his pet project company that he has never been able to get financially stable, truly. And that might also explain why they cared so much about such a small amount of money.
One, theyāre just not good at their jobs, and then two, they feel [00:19:00] really pinched on money.
Simone Collins: Right. They, they actually- When you, when you- ... donāt have the money.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, like when you look at his house, when you see, you know, his, it, it doesnāt look like a house with someone with that much money, right? So it, it may have been thatās why he felt pressured to steal this stuff, but itās still stealing.
Simone Collins: Yeah. Yeah. Well, and I mean, also, if the companyās not immensely profitable- You know, it, it probably isnāt run well. They donāt have good records, like all that kind of thing. You know, like itās not... Itās just kind of falling apart, so. That, that makes sense.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah.
Simone Collins: Poor things.
Malcolm Collins: Anyway r- I mean, not poor th- th- the CEOās not a poor thing.
He seems like a truly evil person. The, the way that heās acting and the way that heās responding, that he still has Ben under a gag order, you know, thatās why I have to release this episode. Mm-hmm. Maybe, maybe you can let Ben talk, right? This isnāt a normal thing to do in the world of YouTube, and I think he thought talking down to a YouTuber, he didnāt realize in the world of the actual world today, YouTubers are significantly more powerful than these big CEOs who think [00:20:00] they can talk-
Simone Collins: No, thatās why he did that.
He did that because he was getting severe amounts of harassment because
Malcolm Collins: of everyone getting his talk. Well, yeah, but cutting down the YouTuber only makes it worse. He needs to basically get on his hands and knees and beg the YouTuber. He
Simone Collins: can- Well, he doesnāt seem to understand that ...
Malcolm Collins: you know, he made- He thinks he
Simone Collins: can shut it down
Malcolm Collins: Brian, like everything with Brian. Itās like itās not Brian you need to settle this with anymore. Itās Ben you need to... Itās Ben who you need to prostrate yourself to. And I know that that hurts your ego, but fundamentally, thatās the only way this gets right. But
Simone Collins: anyway. Sorry. No, no, no, itās not Ben. Itās Brian.
Malcolm Collins: No, itās Ben. Itās Ben. Itās the YouTuber that the CEO needs to be prostrating himself to, not the old man. He thinks he can make this right with the old man because itās no longer about bricks and minifigs. The core issue now- Oh,
Simone Collins: itās, itās about the cover-up ... is
Malcolm Collins: about- Itās destroying
Simone Collins: FanTheFacts ...
Malcolm Collins: the way that he tried to stifle Benās investigation and Benās honest efforts to try to get this, and then tried to destroy Benās life through jail time, through these court [00:21:00] cases.
These are targeted, personalized court cases, right?
Simone Collins: Thatās true. He
Malcolm Collins: could choose not to do this, but he didnāt. So, no, absolutely. It is... And this is what heās getting wrong. He needs to get Ben to accept his apology to even begin to get anywhere with this, not Brian. Ben is his problem here. Ben- Mm-hmm
is not some kid anymore. Ben is the victim in everyoneās mind, and the core victim in everyoneās mind.
Simone Collins: Well, especially the way he filmed that I canāt talk anymore video against this dark hostage style background. But anyway- Yeah ... I have to go get the kids. I love you so much.
Speaker 12: What needs to be done next? What does that say? Itās saying we gotta use the wrong screwdriver to do it. Oh, no. Itās okay. Where did the wrong screwdriver go? I see a screwdriver right there. Iām [00:22:00] talking about the wrong one. See? Thereās a Phillips head and a flathead. Do you know the difference between the two?
Speaker 13: What? One has an X at the end and the other one has a line at the end. I donāt- The one with the red handle- Oh, hereās, here- Thatās a wrench. Oh. Oh, hereās, here
Speaker 12: you go, Tayn. This is the thing. Wait. Yeah, Octavian, itās true that screwdrivers and wrenches are easier. No. Like, if you use that to turn- No, I donāt ... the screw in. Hey
This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit basedcamppodcast.substack.com/subscribe -
Malcolm & Simone Collins sit down with Nux Taku for an epic, wide-ranging conversation on the evolution of the online right, anime-to-politics pipeline, faith, culture war, and building a better future. From hentai reviews to biblical literalism, technopuritanism, abortion, consent morality, AI, demographics, and why the right feels like the āfun sideā ā this is one of the most unfiltered and insightful collabs in the nerd/tech right space.
Topics include:
* The journey from 4chan/anime degen culture to political commentary
* Why repentance & forgiveness are biblical traits that define the right
* Critiques of consent-only morality, abortion, and leftist degeneration
* Optimism, family, pronatalism, and raising based kids
* Conspiracy theories, Candace Owens lore, and truth-seeking
* AI, progress, and performative subversion on the right
If you enjoy Based Camp, Nux Taku, or discussions blending anime, theology, and red-pilled culture ā hit like, subscribe, and share!
Episode Transcript
Malcolm Collins: Hello, Simone and Nux. This is the collab that was promised 3,000 years ago. We are so excited to be here with you. And what I wanna go into with Nux is exploring the evolution of this sort of new online culture that we share that has become, I donāt know, the nerd right, the tech right, the new right, whatever people wanna call it.
Because if you were to go to me five years ago, right? E- even five years ago, I mean, imagine 10 years ago, and youāre like, āOkay, so who are, like, the right-wing thought leaders on the internet?ā And itās like, āWell, the one weāve got on now is a, a Jewish VTuber who used to do hentai reviews.ā ā... And then weāve got fox girls.
Weāve got, like, five fox girls.ā And Iād be like, āAre they furries?ā And theyād be like, āNo, theyāre not furries, but they are fox girls. And then weāve got, like, this slime girl, but itās very important that you know that sheās a chimera slime. Then weāve got Commie Mommy,ā and people would say- Elf
Simone Collins: slime. Yes.
Malcolm Collins: Simone, am I not coming through?
Simone Collins: No, no. Just elf and slime girl. Like, itās
Malcolm Collins: chimera. Oh, elf and... Oh yes, Iāve [00:01:00] got to get it right. Yeah. So Commie Mommy, and then people would be like, āWell, she, she canāt actually be, like, a socialist.ā No, sheās actually a socialist, and sheās well-liked within our community.ā And then itās like, and then you got the top of the, the, the pack, and itās this guy who, who lives like a homeless guy.
And Iād say to myself, like Iād be like, āLives like a homeless guy? How does he not have any money?ā Itās like, āOh, no, he has tremendous amounts of money. Tremendous amounts.ā But itās so weird, this sort of world, and itās a path that is not... Like, we, we in the past have tried to trace it from, like, the early online atheist communities to, like, the anti-feminist communities, then to, like, the anti-woke communities, and then to the modern right, and then it sort of, like, combined with parts of the red pill.
But you represent a different strand which comes out of the anime degen 4chan world, which we also come from as well. And I wanted to take this to sort of explore this journey, you as one of the leading content creators who sort of lived it, [00:02:00] and how your mind changed and the various points you had major inflections.
Nux Taku: Yeah, no, itās de- itās definitely a weird a weird area on the internet, for sure. I, I donāt know. For me it was, for me it was like, āWow, I, I like making fun of retards and most of the retards are in politics. We have to start doing that.ā I mean, that was the, that was kind of the thought process. Among other things, for sure.
I mean, I have to say, one of my biggest inspirations was Hasan Piker shocking his dog. That was, that was huge for me personally. Like, I, Iām like, this guy, heās very well accepted in like the, the streamer world. You know, the, the pop culture. And Iām like, you know what? I, I want it to be as uncomfortable for radical leftists as for radical right-wingers.
Mm-hmm. And thatās what I did. I dedicated... And now no one wants to collab with Hasan. You know? Hasan was on The Ben Shapiro Podcast and no one wants to touch him anymore. You know, they got obliterated for it.
Malcolm Collins: You, you did a great job nuke- I mean, the JD Vance was like, āOh yeah, of course. You know, the dog shocking guy, right?ā
Like. Itās [00:03:00]
Nux Taku: cinema. Itās amazing. Yeah. The we-
Malcolm Collins: I actually
Nux Taku: think- I, I think- Okay,
Malcolm Collins: take it ...
Nux Taku: no, I think putting, making the face of the left like, you know, dog shocking, you know, womanizing, brothel enthusiast, terrorist supporter, thatās like the face of the left and itās like, you wanna be on that side? So like you mentioned- You have, and I
Malcolm Collins: love that like on our side you have Asmongold, who literally, I donāt know any other human who would do this, doesnāt kill a cockroach growing, crawling on him, picks it up.
Who is that nice to a cockroach? Who is that pathologically nice? All right. And then leads it outside, right? And Hasanās shocking his dog. But I think-
Nux Taku: Okay, I think, I think youāre taking the, the Asmongold thing like, a, a... Itās like, loves cockroaches, supports like late term abortions, right? That, thatās Asmongold.
You know? Itās-
Malcolm Collins: He still-
Nux Taku: You got a lot of interesting characters out
Malcolm Collins: here ... does Asmongold support late term abortion?
Nux Taku: Asmongold, he supports abortion a moment before birth. He supports it.
Malcolm Collins: Oh, really? I did not know that. We- Yeah. Itās interesting ... we have changed our views on abortion significantly recently.
There, there was a recent video on that.
Nux Taku: Really?
Malcolm Collins: People [00:04:00] should watch because it was the craziest video ever. It starts with a gang bang where like people got together
Simone Collins: and then- It starts with a, yeah, basically you know about Ailaās birthday gang bang, right?
Nux Taku: Who?
Simone Collins: Oh my God. So Ayla, a very famous sex researcher for her birthday one year in like 2024, so a bit ago I think decided to have a, a gang bang for her birthday because thatās how one celebrates in certain circles in the Bay Area with 42 men.
And one of her friends who helped to organize her organize it met her now future husband and, and father of her child at this gang bang. She was a fluffer. But, but, but
Malcolm Collins: in
Simone Collins: between- But she had this really terrible,
Nux Taku: Wait, y- you called her a sexual researcher?
Simone Collins: She is. Is that like a nice way to say a w***e?
She possesses some of the worldās best- Like, Iām trying to figure
Nux Taku: this out.
Simone Collins: No, so she, she has probably
Malcolm Collins: the worldās best data set. If youāve ever seen those data sets of kinks and what they correlate to and like how they c- cross correlate, the trans community hates her ācause she always just says whatever she thinks is true. Yeah. Weāre not promoting her lifestyle. But anyway, in between, in between this party [00:05:00] and her friend getting married she had this horrible abortion experience that she wrote about that radicalized a lot of people like us, because before I was like, āWell, u- up until they have neurons Iām okay with it.ā
And now Iām like, āNo, not even then.ā
Simone Collins: Yeah, itās,
Nux Taku: Look so- You should check it out ... so one thing, I, I hear you guys discuss a lot, like, your philosophy. I, I donāt remember. You have, like, a name for it.
Malcolm Collins: Hmm.
Nux Taku: Itās, like, about having lots of peers. Technopuritanism.
Malcolm Collins: Like, Evan- Itās
Nux Taku: our- Technopuritanism ... itās
Malcolm Collins: our crazy religion.
Nux Taku: Okay. All right. Could, could you describe it in a few sentences, and then Iāll, Iāll let you know my... Like, i- if this is still part of the previous conversation.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, yeah. Well, okay, okay, Iāll, Iāll, Iāll, Iāll say it before we go on with this, ācause one thread I wanna pick up on what you said earlier, and then Iāll get into this really quickly is you were saying you liked making fun of retards on the internet.
And I think in reality- Passion ... this was what was the through line between these various communities. If you go back to the very early days, where you had the people who are now, like, right-wing influencers who back then were, like, atheist influencers or whatever, right? [00:06:00] They just liked dunking on anyone they could see as, as stupid, and then they started to feel like the Christians arenāt as fun to dunk on as the feminists.
And then they started to be like, āOh, the wokies are the most fun to dunk on,ā or the Tum- the Tumblr people are. And it drove sort of this political chain. But as for us and our theological beliefs, the quickest version is we think that the... We have a biblically literalist reading of the Bible that is materialist and monist.
Meaning that we a, a, we think that when the Bible says in the distant future humans are gonna be raised again that itās talking about like, a, a, a super advanced entity in the distant future that is all-benevolent because humanity keeps evolving a billion years from now. And wants to give everybody who lived a virtuous life as long of a good life as possible, so it resurrects them.
And we try to go through. And weāre literalist, too. Like, we try to take the, the, go through all the translations and show how it could mean this. Itās crazy, I know.
Simone Collins: I think more succinctly, itās, itās an accelerationist tech-forward, [00:07:00] descendant worship religion that is based on a literal interpretation of the Bible
Nux Taku: Interesting.
Wow. Okay. So I, I thought it was a lot more like materialist focused, right? Like, you know, we want- It is ... humanity to survive, so therefore... No, no, I obvious- so I think that if you follow the Bible, itāll have the best outcome for your life anyway, right? So- Yeah ... even if you were, like, the ultimate atheist, you know, utilitarian, you should still follow the Bible because itāll give you the best lifestyle regardless.
Malcolm Collins: Th- thatās one of the things that we, we did a video recently when I was like, being an adult is recognizing that sins are just, like, a list of things that will F up your life. Itās basically like God gave us a list of like, you know, donāt, donāt cheat on your wife. You know, donāt, donāt have gang bangs.
Donāt-
Nux Taku: Okay, so-
Malcolm Collins: you know, ... I
Nux Taku: donāt wanna, I donāt wanna- ... murder ... correct you here or anything. I donāt, I donāt mean to cor- there is no Bible verse saying donāt cheat on your wife.
Malcolm Collins: Oh, okay. No, th- there isnāt because in- I, Iām just saying ... early Judaism you could have multiple wives, and we talk about that.
[00:08:00] Correct. Youāre absolutely right. But, Correct ... Iām sure thereās some line you could take to mean that. But the point
Nux Taku: being is that- Yeah. You know, donāt be, donāt be adulterous. I mean, I guess you could, you could read into that.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, yeah, yeah. Yeah. I, and I actually agree with you on this. We point, we have whole episodes on the Bi- the, the when monogamy became a norm in Judaism.
But I donāt wanna... Th- thatās a, thatās a tangent. But the point being is, like, itās just a bunch of stuff thatās gonna make your life worse. And it, it, as an adult as a kid I always felt like, oh, sins are things that are tempting, right? And itās like humanity was given a list of like, donāt piss on the electric fence, and then immediately, like, a big portion of us just went immediately and pissed on the electric fence.
Because, I donāt know, weāre, weāre not supposed to do it or something
Nux Taku: Yeah, I suppose. But yeah, no, I, I agree with that. I actually think that morals come from there actually, you know. And, and in regards to Asmongold, like, I think Asmongoldās a really honest guy. So when, when I discuss the whole abortion thing, why my view has never changed really on abortion is ācause it says thou shalt not murder in the [00:09:00] Bible.
All right? So regardless, if, if a fetus is a human life, then killing it is murder, so therefore itās bad, you know? So- And, and... Yeah? Sorry. No,
Malcolm Collins: so youāve always had these views? Like all the way back to your early
Nux Taku: days or did you- Okay, so even in my early days, yeah, I had these views for sure. I, I definitely fleshed them out, my faith got a lot stronger.
But you know, basic stuff like donāt murder and donāt steal are pre- pretty consistent I think.
Malcolm Collins: Well, no, itās, itās very interesting because what Iām realizing from this conversation is a big part of the online transition has been people not coming to views they didnāt have historically, but feeling comfortable talking about them.
Nux Taku: Exactly. Exactly. A-
Malcolm Collins: actually, the irony is that you were less at risk of being canceled talking about pure degeneracy, like Metamorphosis or something like this- Absolutely ... than saying you shouldnāt have abortions.
Nux Taku: 100%. That, that, thatās the thing. The entire online space, be- it became super comfortable to hate God.
And it became super comfortable to follow, you [00:10:00] know, if you look at like leftist policy, itās like a checklist of what Satan would tell you to do. You know? Itās like, you know, abort your babies and groom children and castrate them and, you know- Well- ... take money from people that earn it and give it to people that donāt.
I- thatās the list.
Malcolm Collins: And look at the toll that it leaves on these people. Itās not like theyāre... I- if you look at like GDC and you see the people screaming at the sky, right? Like, thatās not a normal response. Like, that is somebody whoās had everything good taken from them in their life, and itās
Nux Taku: really- Okay, but define normal.
Define normal. Sure. Y- your, the, your barometer only operates ācause you have a belief system. See, I define normal and morality based on God. All right? But, but if you view things as, well, I just want a good outcome for the most people, what does that even mean? What is good in that case?
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. Well, I mean, I think the, the, the morality thing that youāre talking about here is, is interesting because by the definitions of society right now, you and us are weird because we donāt follow the, the normative cultural ethical set, which seems to be highly [00:11:00] deleterious to people living, like, fulfilling lives.
Nux Taku: I, I agree with you. I, I think that if you ask your average, like, liberal, enlightened liberal what, what morality is, itās just basically if thereās consenting adults, itās fine. That- thatās their only tenet- Yeah ... basically, because they donāt want bad things to happen to themselves. Itās selfish inherently.
They wanna be able to live whatever debaucherous lifestyle they could come up with, and they donāt want anyone to step on them. So therefore, their belief system based on this preference is, āOh, if everyone consents, itās fine.ā
Malcolm Collins: Well, I think it, it... W- I, I really like that youāre drawing attention to this because you can see from this view of consent being the core of morality, where we keep seeing leftists get in hot water ideologically.
W- one of the episodes we have, we go over communist regimes and how many of them tried to lower the age of consent to, like, super low ages, like 11 or 12 or something like that. And- Yeah ... some socialist parties did. And, and the reason is, is because in reality, the reason we donāt sleep with children isnāt about consent.
Like, we [00:12:00] allow mentally disabled people to have sex. We allow elderly people to have sex. If youāre talking about a 15-year-old or something like that, they have a mental i- intelligence thatās higher than a, a nine-year-old. N- nobody has a problem when a nine-year-old has sex. Itās not about consent. Itās about what it does to that person and the effects it has on their life, right?
And I think that w- we see the famous Ch- Chuck clip where heās like, āI donāt see anything wrong with having sex with an animal if you were like the one in...ā Do you... Are you... Have you seen this clip? Sure.
Nux Taku: Go ahead. Yeah, I love that clip. You re- you mean to tell me that the inbred Islamist thinks that you can have sex with animals?
Weird. Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. Funny
Nux Taku: coincidence.
Malcolm Collins: No, you donāt have sex with animals ācause of the negative effects that has on your life, and, like, the diseases and all of the other negative effects. See,
Nux Taku: but you know what? Y- you, you bring us to a fantastic point because if you forget God for a second. Mm-hmm. Try to explain to me under a liberal worldview why you should not have sex with an animal
Malcolm Collins: You, there, there isnāt a good explanation.
Thatās what these people are realizing. They just know-
Nux Taku: Because [00:13:00] they, because they canāt consent? Is that it? No, obviously not- Thatās, no ... ācause you can eat meat. You could literally kill it- Yeah ... and eat it.
Simone Collins: Yeah, but
Nux Taku: then- So consent
Simone Collins: is not the issue Most of them donāt eat meat. Like true-
Malcolm Collins: No, they eat- ... true vegans donāt
Nux Taku: eat
chunks,
Malcolm Collins: freaking veals, Simone Chunk does. Chunk eats meat They torture babies cows. This is business. And even if theyāre m-
Nux Taku: not
Malcolm Collins: m-
Nux Taku: And even, even if they didnāt eat meat ... if theyāre eating dairy ... it, itās irrelevant. If itās all consent based, then whatās wrong with having sex with a corpse? Itās dead. It canāt consent.
Whatās the difference?
Malcolm Collins: Thatās a good point. And- That is a
Nux Taku: good
Malcolm Collins: point. I, it- There is
Nux Taku: no reason- Itās, itās not ...
Malcolm Collins: as a progressive.
Nux Taku: Isnāt it illegal to have
Simone Collins: sex with corpses? But from a
Nux Taku: progressive mindset, theyāre... I donāt think so. But why? Why not? Like, they, th- thereās no consent required. Okay, why is incest immoral according to the leftist worldview?
Why is it immoral to have s- y- you consent and your sibling consents. Really true.
Malcolm Collins: That makes sense. I hadnāt thought about all of the things this breaks, but it breaks a
Simone Collins: lot. Yeah, but, but it is, I think itās immoral-
Nux Taku: It does ...
Simone Collins: because it- Because- ... itās, itās rural coded, and rural coded is conservative coded, and if itās conservative itās bad.
So incest- Okay, well- ... has to be bad.
Nux Taku: Okay, to be fair, incest happens [00:14:00] mostly in like Muslim countries, which is left wing at this point. So like, I donāt know.
Simone Collins: Right. But no, no, no. Like, in, in the leftist mind no one thinks about the life of someone in a Muslim or Islamic country. They only think in terms of the United States, and then if someone is Muslim or other, theyāre just good.
Theyāre just good. Oh. Trust me. I
Nux Taku: forgot
Simone Collins: about that. Yeah. So like, like I donāt know who they are. Theyāre better than I am. Their culture is enlightened. Mine is bad. And my extra bad people are the hicks in the countryside who screw their cousins, so you know.
Nux Taku: But, but the point Iām making though is from their logical standpoint that as long as everyone consents itās fine.
There is nothing wrong with this.
Malcolm Collins: Absolutely.
Nux Taku: Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. Well,
Nux Taku: that- And, and thatās, and, and thatās the degradation of every value and... Look, I think that itās bad to have sex with your sibling ācause it says in the Bible not to have sex with your sibling. God said it actually.
Malcolm Collins: The Itās actually
Nux Taku: pretty simple
Malcolm Collins: the it, one thing I found pretty interesting that Simone said there is how leftists are not allowed to look at the reality of what itās like in many of these countries, and I think we see an embodiment of that was Greta Thunberg [00:15:00] when she wouldnāt watch the voto- the, the video that like literally Hamas film- October 7th
Nux Taku: video.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. Just like I donāt want to see reality because that interferes with the fantasy that Iām living in That was one
Nux Taku: I completely agree. If, I think, okay, so I mean, thereās a, a Bible verse, right? Torah Emet in Hebrew, right? That, Right ... the Torah is truth and or the Bible, the Torah is the Old Testament.
So essentially my, my perspective is if you are gonna continue going on your like anti-God path, you are going to consistently have an issue with truth. Reality is a major issue if youāre a leftist. You know, men could be women- Yeah ... and words donāt actually mean anything. And and Islamic countries are really actually based and good to gay people.
And you know, hon- and you donāt even need to live in reality at this point. Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah.
Nux Taku: Because reality is bigoted.
Malcolm Collins: So when did you first feel comfortable? Like explain, was there a moment when you first felt comfortable saying this stuff or like [00:16:00] voicing this and
Nux Taku: what
Malcolm Collins: changed?
Nux Taku: So I, I, I feel like Iāve always tried to be honest.
Iāve just decided on things that Iād rather not get into because, you know, why... Like if Iām making anime videos, Iām not gonna start talking about abortion, you know? Like why divide my, my audience in half by, you know, talking about something thatās completely irrelevant to whatever content Iām making is.
But as time went on and I started talking about like internet drama and Hasan Piker, you know, advocates for me to get killed by Hamas terrorists ācause he says Iām, Iām an Israeli Nazi even though not. But anyway, so a- as time went on, now that Iām talking about politics and things, Iām, I feel a lot more comfortable saying the things.
Iāve been backstabbed by enough people that I donāt, I donāt really care if you disagree with me. Thatās your American God-given right, you know? So
Malcolm Collins: yeah. So if you were gonna like, how much of it was the people attacking you for saying things that you thought was reasonable that radicalized you to want to say more of that stuff?
Nux Taku: To be honest, itās not that they attack me that makes me wanna say it, itās that itās considered [00:17:00] inappropriate to say. Like it is super inappropriate in public in American like- Yeah ... probably not in like houses and closed doors ācause everyone would pro- like a lot of people would agree with this, but if I say that gay sex is degenerate, that is considered like a, a super taboo in American online culture.
That is very true,
Malcolm Collins: yeah.
Nux Taku: Right? Because itās two consenting adults, so whatās the problem, right? Thatās the, thatās the through line. But but so I donāt really care if people come after me for my opinions. Itās, itās- So, so for you- ... just that itās not acceptable to say
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. Oh, that is, that is really fascinating.
I mean, itās, itās very different from us. We sort of got radicalized by the left or, or radicalized by your channel. But like, ... it was like us originally going viral over just being like, āHey, birth rates are low.ā And then people freaked out about that, and theyāre like, āWell, then you must be a racist.ā
Nux Taku: Yeah. Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: And then-
Nux Taku: Because you canāt live in reality ...
Malcolm Collins: the thing that changed me the most was, like, the first time I started hanging out in [00:18:00] right-wing spaces or going to right-wing conferences, and I went and I was, you know, weāre... You know, youāre, youāre, youāre not... I, I donāt think youāve done, like, a big face reveal or anything, so, so you donāt get noticed at conferences and stuff like that.
But like, going to conferences, having beliefs that I know are really outside of a lot of mainstream conservative norms, and I was afraid that I would be sort of grilled on them or made to feel like I wasnāt welcome or made to feel like an outsider, and instead I have felt the exact opposite, where when we were in leftist spaces, and we even did, like, leftist campaigning, politics, everything like that, it was a constant litmus test.
And I donāt think people on the right realize how much our side benefits from being nice to people who did things in the past that they regret now or are, w- in the process of changing and still being accepting of them
Nux Taku: So do you know my opinion on why that happens among right-wing people but not left-wing people?
Malcolm Collins: I, yeah give me your opinion. Thatās
Nux Taku: [00:19:00] Because I think repentance is inherently a biblical trait. And forgiveness and repentance only exists if you could believe in God. Hmm. And if you are on the other side where itās all about, you know, weāre all just a whole, a clump of atoms that are whizzing through a point, a purposeless space, then why ever repent?
Why ever do better? Why would I assume that you regret your mistakes and become a better person? I wouldnāt. Itās so much easier- Yeah ... to just throw you in the box. Whereas on the other side which, and more right-wing politics, obviously itās not, not nearly conservative enough. Not, man, I wish Trump was the guy that the left thought he was, you know?
But- Yeah, right ... yeah.
Malcolm Collins: Actually, this is an interesting point in terms of making the lived sort of right-wing parties more conservative. One of the things that I think a lot of people a little, in our wider faction are annoyed with is in UK, you know, how progressive even parties like Reform or the AD- or A- A FDR in Germany or you know, MAGA in the United States and how do [00:20:00] you realistically shift the Overton window of whatās normal?
Like, whatās, whatās your thesis?
Nux Taku: That... So I, so ultimately every- all change takes time. Like, every time I see, like, the the accelerationists being like, āOh, we have to vote for leftists so they can rape our country, and then- ... and then weāll swing the other way,ā itās like, no, no, no. No, no. Trump is the swing, okay?
He is the swing the other way, and Trump is kind of a ā90s liberal, you know?
Malcolm Collins: Like- Heās a very ā90s liberal. He holds the- Yeah, we were
Simone Collins: just talking about this yesterday. He 100%
Malcolm Collins: is. Itās not just that heās a ā90s li- liberal, itās that every one of his, like, top lieutenants was an anti-Trump leftist the first time he ran for office, whether itās- Yeah
J.D. Vance or Elon or RFK- These-
Nux Taku: Yeah ...
Malcolm Collins: th- were all anti l- anti-Trump leftists, and now
Nux Taku: theyāre all- And they, and they were all, they were all Democrats, and so d- you know, Joe Rogan was a Democrat, he endorsed him, you know. So I agree with you, and I think itās mostly ācause the left completely went insane that you know, what, what was considered a [00:21:00] left of center person from the ā90s is considered, like, the far right fascist today.
But I, I- Yeah ... think this stuff takes time, you know? I think that the, especially our generation is a lot more right wing than, you know, the boomers that are in Congress. So I think it takes time, you know? You keep electing more and more radical people as time goes on. You see someone betrays the, the tenets and, you know, you just get, get rid of them.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. Get them out. Well, I mean, we, we are seeing this at rallies. I mean, obviously the famous saying, and I think youāve covered this, is you go to the Biden rallies, the Su- No Kings rallies, and itās a bunch of old people. Yeah ... and I, I hear this from our Israeli fans as well. Theyāre like, āAll of the liberal parties in Israel are just like their parades are all super old people.ā
Yeah ... a- and-
Nux Taku: Mostly women ...
Malcolm Collins: what, outbreeding them works. And in the- True ... United States we actually have a fairly decent fertility rate. This is, this is actually one of my biggest consternations about Nux, is you said that you were gonna stop streaming when you have a kid. And I was like, āI really want you to have a kid, but I donāt want you to stop streaming.ā
Nux Taku: Well, when I said stop streaming, I [00:22:00] meant, like, live streaming. I would still be making videos probably. Oh,
Malcolm Collins: okay, okay ...
Nux Taku: itās just, you know, when youāre live y- you wanna play with your kid, you know? You wanna, you wanna be there. So if youāre live streaming, youāre gonna be there for f- four hours in a row streaming.
You donāt wanna stop, you know. Iām not gonna pause, say, āOh, sorry, gotta go play with my kid.ā Iāll... So yeah.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah.
Itās, itās awesome,
Nux Taku: man ... so whatever.
Malcolm Collins: But anyway, I, we gotta, What would be the, a, a, a, a good place? Well, another thing I wanted to ask you about is your thoughts on the sort of online right being as ideologically diverse as it is. Mm. Like when you, you look at somebody like Asam Gold and his beliefs on abortion, or Shoe0nHead and her beliefs in communism or socialism and stuff like this, w- why do you think that we are this intellectually diverse?
Nux Taku: Again because I think to some extent repentance exists. You know, obviously I think that Asmongoldās takes on abortion are terrible. I think She Want Headās takes on communism are terrible. You know, Asmongold because of thou shall not murder and you know, She Want Head ācause of thou shalt not steal.
But, Yeah ... [00:23:00] that said, I have faith. I have faith theyāll see the light because on the right youāre a truth seeker. You know? And thatās why- Yeah ... you have all the crazy conspiracy theories, ācause ultimately these people wanna figure out the truth.
Malcolm Collins: Thatās
Nux Taku: a, I never thought about that ... they might get lost along the way, but on the left the truth doesnāt matter.
Men can be women on the left. N-
Malcolm Collins: The point that you made there that Iāve never thought about before is Iāve often joked to people when I first started going to, like, conservative conventions, the thing that shocked me the most is, like, everyone would just stop me and hand me, like, a printout of their private conspiracy theory.
It was like a conspiracy theory- ... like share lot. And I was like, āW- why are conspiracy theories so big?ā And a lot of them turned out to be true, mind you. A lot. Like, a stupid amount that- They can be ... Caleb Tate was being funded by the Southern Poverty Law Center.
Nux Taku: I could not... That was crazy.
Malcolm Collins: That just-
Nux Taku: Oh, my G- Worth, worth electing Trump just for that.
Malcolm Collins: That just- Really ... like happened and went and we donāt talk about it anymore.
Nux Taku: Yeah. Oh, my God. Itās insane. Insane.
Malcolm Collins: That, but- Like,
Nux Taku: there was so little racism that they had to pay for it. Unreal.
Malcolm Collins: They I, well, and I think [00:24:00] that itās important, I mean, this is something we always fight for in our video, that like, yes, like racial groups, there may be reasons to have animosity or ethnic pride or pride in your culture, but if we make the right a space where other people donāt feel comfortable, then weāre not gonna win elections.
And I think itās really important to- Also true ... counter those sorts of narratives. But fortunately weāve done a good job. I mean, we pushed Nick Fuentes out of the party, right? Like, heās a Democrat now. So thatās... No, he said, āIām a moderate Democrat.ā Yeah. Do you see that?
Nux Taku: Yeah, I saw that. And then he said that if the left ever wins I have to flee the country ācause theyāre gonna kill me.
So, you know, whatever. I, I-
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. All liberals ... a lot, a lot of
Nux Taku: what he says is hyperbole anyway, so you know.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. Actually, how do you think about this? Because one of the things that I see the most in your channel, that I also see in his channel, is really sort of high, positive, happy energy. Is this something you do intentionally?
Is it just the way you are 24/7?
Nux Taku: I, I am generally a positive guy. I have faith, okay? I have faith [00:25:00] itāll... It, itās all part of the plan. You know, even, even the bad news is, like, secretly part of the good news. We just didnāt figure that out yet. So, no, I, I have a lot of faith that things are actually looking up.
I am generally an optimistic guy, and again, it says in the Bible to be happy. Itās like-
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, the thing that Iām most surprised about on this stream that I was not aware of, of you is one, just how much youāve always held these beliefs, and two, that these beliefs are all downstream. I donāt want to say like a, a, a, a, a wind-up Jew, but like they are what...
If you just followed all of the stuff that it said, all the stuff the religion said, itās where you would come ideologically.
Nux Taku: I, I am a Pentateuch extremist. You had such a cool name for your ideology, I had to come up with one.
Malcolm Collins: But, Yeah. Make one up and con- convert people. Give it... I mean, our ideology is very heretical to the right, so you know, weāll see.
But we got, we got followers now, too, so thatās, thatās cool.
Nux Taku: Yeah ...
Malcolm Collins: I mean, I belie- Look, I... If you go back, Jewish teachings, they often talk about heaven as a place in the future. They talk about, like, the sons of [00:26:00] man. Why would you need to talk about the sons of man? Thatās a weird word, unless we were destined to colonize space one day and have different genetic variants of humanity.
Anyhow, I get too... but-
Nux Taku: I love this stuff. I could nerd out on this for sure. Yeah. Yeah. I, I have theories. I, I do too. Iām with you. If you think-
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. Oh, what, whatās your craziest theory? I w- c- letās go craziest Bible theory.
Nux Taku: Craziest theory? I donāt think I have a craziest theory. Whatās
Simone Collins: like any theory?
Any theory.
Malcolm Collins: Oh,
Nux Taku: a like Bible theory? The, dude, I, Iāll come up with one, Iāll tell you
Malcolm Collins: Iāll give you my Adam and Eve crazy
Nux Taku: theory.
Malcolm Collins: Sorry? Iāll give you, Iāll give you my Adam and Eve crazy theory, okay? All right,
Nux Taku: go for it. So,
Malcolm Collins: In Adam-
Nux Taku: All right, and then Iāll, Iāll give you one. I thought of one. I thought of one of mine.
Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: Go for it. In Adam and Eve when I first started becoming, like, religious again and rereading these stories, I wanted to go to the ones that seemed on the face I didnāt understand it. I didnāt understand why God would punish man for wanting knowledge of good and evil. That didnāt sit right with me.
So then I went to the story, and I looked at what actually happened in the story, and we know that the first thing that man did when he got the knowledge of good and evil [00:27:00] was to clothe himself, yet I donāt think anyone thinks itās sinful to be naked in front of God and your wife. So, and we know that God allowed him to be naked in the garden as well, so it, it said that he had the type of knowledge of good and evil that God had.
So clearly thatās not exactly what it meant. And then I thought about, oh, what is the idea of, like, shame around nudity around your wife and God? Thatās man making up his own rules about whatās good and evil in opposition to God. And then I noticed that actually up until that point, man only had one rule, which was donāt eat from that one tree, and it said that he like, the, the, the, he, basically the curse sort of applied to him the moment he reached for the tree.
Thatās when he gained the knowledge, not when he ate from it, because that was the moment he decided to disobey God and decided that man knows more about what good and evil is than God does. Thatās my-
Nux Taku: Thatās a good theory. I like it. Thatās cool. No, thatās really cool. Thatās a good- so, I mean, kind of on a tangent on, on yours though, before I, before I tell you my really kooky one.
Good [00:28:00] and evil is free will.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah.
Nux Taku: Because if, if there would be no such thing as evil then, you know, we wouldnāt have some sort of- Oh, thatās a good way to put it ... evil inclination telling, telling us to do bad things all the time. We would just do the good things all the time. We wouldnāt even have the will to do bad things.
So evil, the existence of evil is the existence of free will. Hmm. And the reason why we exist at all in this world, like if you think about it, why, why did God need to create us at all? Like, what, whatās cool about us to exist? Iāll tie it into my cool, my other theory. If God- Tie it
Malcolm Collins: in. Iām interested to hear
Nux Taku: if God is everything, right? āCause Go- God is, he fills all things, he surrounds all things, you know, he is everything, right? So that means technically we are all part of God as well. Heās everything. Now, he, he hides himself from us so that we have free will, but weāre also s- weāre still part of God to some extent.
So y- you ever hear like the the, like the God paradoxes? Like, okay, so if God could do anything, could God repent? Could God get better at things? And itās like, no Godās perfect. I,
Malcolm Collins: Iāve heard these- But wouldnāt repenting- ... but I donāt [00:29:00] find them very compelling.
Nux Taku: Well, I, I, I have a way to... All right. So Iāll, Iāll finish my, my thing.
Malcolm Collins: Okay.
Nux Taku: If we are part of God, then us repenting is the part of God that could repent. So we are part of the perfection of God due to us being imperfect.
Malcolm Collins: Oh, thatās really clever.
Simone Collins: Hmm.
Malcolm Collins: Thatās really clever. Thatās really clever. You should be proud of that one. I also have never heard that one in my life.
Simone Collins: Never, yeah.
Nor have I.
Malcolm Collins: Thatās a good... Damn. Y-
Nux Taku: That, that, that oneās like a bit- Thatās a good- Itās a bit of a mind f**k. Like if... Th- the issue with this one is like I feel like it sounds almost heretical. What, would you perfect God? Itās like, no, no, I donāt perfect God. Godās perfect. And all of his creations are exactly what he wanted them to be.
So all of his- Yeah ... creations are pa- part of Godās perfectness. And so our imperfection is part of Godās perfectness
Malcolm Collins: Wow. Okay, so hereās a, hereās a side question, right? You, in the early days, were into [00:30:00] stuff like anime and the, you know... I mean, youāre still into it. You watch Adventure Time. Adventure Timeās great, by the way.
Have you not actually watched all of Adventure Time?
Nux Taku: Yeah, itās great. No, I havenāt. I havenāt.
Malcolm Collins: You gotta-
Nux Taku: Iām working on it. Iām working on it.
Malcolm Collins: When you have kids, you should watch that with your kids. I
Nux Taku: will.
Simone Collins: Our kids really like Adventure Time, but they also, I think they have, like, or ā90s and ā80s cartoons more, if weāre being honest here, so.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, we basically- Yeah ... only play ā90 and ā80s cartoons for our kids, like G.I. Joes and stuff. Makes sense. So they get the- Everything else is,
Nux Taku: like, gay.
Malcolm Collins: Truly though. They, they literally, like weāll show them a globe and weāre like, āThis is China,ā and theyāre like, āOkay, well maybe one day we should, we should take China and make them fight for us,ā he said.
Nux Taku: Yes. Dude, kids are awesome.
Malcolm Collins: They really are. Awesome. Okay. Like,
Nux Taku: you ask a kid, āShould you win wars?ā And your kids will be like, āDuh, of course you should win wars.ā And then you ask, like, some UN politician, āShould you win wars?ā āNo.ā Winning wars- For real ... is terrible. For
Simone Collins: real. Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: But, like, what drew you into the sort of antimate- anime and performatively subversive [00:31:00] world?
Nux Taku: Originally YouTube was a hobby. Like, you know, I liked anime and I, I needed an outlet. And and I started making videos on it, and I liked it. And then I started making fun of retards, like, in the anime world. And that evolved into, like, actually we could broaden our horizons. Thereās a lot of retards.
, And, and here we are. But, but originally it was just a hobby. Like, I never expected to make money off this or anything.
Malcolm Collins: So itās just like... Yeah, we have a, a larger theory on this. I donāt know if youāve ever heard our theory on, like, what happened here, but if you go back to the ā90s in the United States the conservative faction had two key cultural groups.
There was the the, the... What were the, what were the Southern people again called, Simone?
Simone Collins: Cavaliers.
Malcolm Collins: The Cavaliers which was a, a Deep South sort of aristocratic culture. And then you had the greater Appalachia region, which was the backwoods people, which had sort of an anti-aristocratic culture.
And when we look at, like, what this represented in the ā90s, this is what we call truck nut conservatives or something like that, right? Like, the guy whoās obviously a conservative but puts, like, sexy women on mud flaps on his trucker, right? You know. He had this sort of performative subversion to him.
And what weāve seen, we [00:32:00] can even see this in voting patterns, is that the right has moved more to this truck nut conservative type. And the reason is, is that the left- I have a theory ... the, the, yeah, the urban monoculture as we call it, ended up figuring out it could control people by saying, you know, āThis is degenerate,ā or bad or harmful to society.
And then as soon as you said, āWell, Iām not gonna do the things that are, you know, bad,ā right, they can just grab that and constantly expand that category. So the only way that we as a movement were able to subvert that and even signal to other people within the movement, āNo, Iām chill, bro,ā is through su- subversion of, of cultural norms that are not inherently actually bad.
A, a good examp- You could... You were gonna say something?
Nux Taku: I, yeah, I, I think that, I, I thought what you were gonna get to is, like, itās so weird how, like, you have all these, like, you know, trucker guys and, you know, they like sexy women and stuff, and itās like theyāre conservatives. Like, youād think that they would [00:33:00] be, like, prudish.
I thought thatās what you were getting to.
Malcolm Collins: Well, no, thereās always been a part of American culture that was conservative in an anti-a- authority sort of way, at a, an anti-aristocratic sort of way, a way where-
Nux Taku: I think masculinity is inherently right wing.
Malcolm Collins: W- I agree. R- r- I agree with that. But I think that there there, there was sort of this fear of anyone, because the left uses this so powerfully, of anyone being able to call rank on us, you know?
I have the X degree. I have the X qualifications. I decide whatās right. I have
Nux Taku: X chromosomes.
Malcolm Collins: Right, yeah. And to fight that, we had to be subversive so that people would understand that we werenāt... Like, you donāt, Asmongold does anywhere in any of his videos, anywhere in your videos, do you signal that you think youāre better than other people.
And-
Nux Taku: I donāt think Iām better than other people. Yeah ... I think that everyone was created in the image of God. But I think some cultures suck s**t and we donāt need to import them here.
Malcolm Collins: That is true.
Nux Taku: And itās not, you know, that, that is not, like, a [00:34:00] contradiction.
Malcolm Collins: But this is- Yeah ... super common on the left.
Like, Hasanās outfits, if you look at the cost of, like, his basic outfit, his dog being the most expensive dog breed in the world. Right. Right?
Nux Taku: W- which he electrocutes, by the way. Donāt
Malcolm Collins: forget. Which he electrocutes, yeah. And itās caused really interesting phenomenon that have given us a cultural edge in the current landscape.
One really big one is the left somehow became the anti-AI party and the rightās, like, a super pro-AI party. And weāre the ones that g- have our sky brows and our, all of these AI music videos- Yeah, yeah ... and stuff.
Nux Taku: Again, I, I think, I think, I feel like so many of these things are, like, the same issue just repackaged.
Itās because the right realizes that reality is real. AI is not leaving, okay? So yeah, artists are gonna lose their jobs, and that sucks for them, but thatās called progress, and Iām sorry that happened, but life moves on. You know, a lot of seamstresses lost their jobs when sewing machines were invented.
Yeah. Does that mean we should not have sewing machines? And the left, [00:35:00] because the left has decided that you know, they, they basically, you know, have become the party of the, you know, anti-reality retards. All right? They, they hate AI because they would like to still make believe that AI is not happening, and thatās not real life.
True.
Malcolm Collins: No, and, and thatās, I mean, thatās a strong argument for AI. Thereās just nothing we can do about it. And if we do do something about it, then we become like Europe and we drop off the, the global economy- Yeah ... and China ends up crushing us.
Nux Taku: Yeah, absolutely. AIās here. Itās here to stay. Itās not going anywhere.
People are gonna use it. Make the most of it. Yeah. Donāt be a victim.
Malcolm Collins: Well, I, I think that thereās also sort of the, this sort of also performative, performative subversion that we see in AI, like Skybrowās Cream of the Slop, this idea of like, yeah, okay, itās AI slop. Whatever. Itās still fun. And-
Nux Taku: Thereās a self-awareness there
Malcolm Collins: yeah. Well, I mean, itās become the part... It reminds me of the scene in Madagascar, a childrenās cartoon. I donāt know if youāve seen it where they- Iāve seen it ... th- th- youāve seen it? Mm. Yeah. Where they, they divide a, a, an island into the fun side and the not fun side. And in the [00:36:00] not fun side- ... heās just sad about being trapped there, and his sign collapses to say, āHell.ā
And in the fun side, theyāre all having fun, right? Like theyāre, theyāve made a little tiki hut. Theyāre drinking their fake drinks, spitting them out afterwards, of course, ācause itās all seawater. You know, none- everything isnāt actually perfect, but they get to have fun and pretend like it. And coming to the right, for me, felt like coming to the fun side.
Like, y- yeah, you know?
Nux Taku: Yeah. You know, you donāt have to t- not everything is super serious. I mean, like, on the left they think mental illnesses are superpowers, you know? So th- theyāll sit there and collect mental illnesses like theyāre Pokemon and and youāre gonna be surprised that these are, like, the most miserable people on the planet?
Malcolm Collins: A- a- admittedly, Candace Owens probably does too, right? You know. But we- You
Nux Taku: assume sheās right-wing ...
Malcolm Collins: Fair. Very, very fair. Yeah, she has a lot of leftist positions. Yeah. But I would s- I, it
Nux Taku: w- She, she used to run a website called Social Autopsy. Did you hear about this? Y- you
Malcolm Collins: know, that- [00:37:00] Yeah ... she, she, was it, like, anti-bullying?
Go, go into, go into the lore.
Nux Taku: Yeah. So, so anti, Social Autopsy was, like, this website to basically dox right-wing people. Like, you know, of course, this is the classic leftist tactic. Itās like, oh, right-wing people that believe in literally anything, oh, they must be bullies, so we have to destroy them and ruin their lives.
And she was a leftist, like one of these crazy radical leftists that would actually dox people until she realized that the grift was better to be, like, the, the Black woman against BLM, you know? And and that was her new grift, et cetera. Y-
Malcolm Collins: you know she thinks Charlie Kirk was a time traveler
Nux Taku: Well, she does think that Israel and E- Egypt are working together with Sumerian time travel technology to kill Charlie Kirk ācause he was an X-Man.
Simone Collins: Someoneās got to.
Nux Taku: Yeah. Yeah, I guess.
Malcolm Collins: We have an episode on this, Psychosis Maxxing, if you guys wanna watch it. Itās f*****g crazy-
Simone Collins: Oh, that should be so great ... her world perspective. But no, truly, like her unholstered schizophrenia has actually been very profitable. I mean, unfortunately she is a case in which some form of, I donāt know what it is, but itās working for her, like really [00:38:00] well.
God. Whenever we criticize her- Yeah ... like people are coming into our comments being like, āWell, but I love it.ā
Nux Taku: I
Simone Collins: get those too ... āSheās got some great points.ā
Nux Taku: And, and then I, then I had to make like a whole like hour and a half long video just piecing apart all of her... She says that the Jews invented dinosaurs to trick Christians into thinking God isnāt real.
Malcolm Collins: That-
Nux Taku: There are so many layers to that one sentence- Jews invented dinosaurs ... itās
Malcolm Collins: unreal ... itās unbelievable. Like what? All that-
Simone Collins: That is a yes and. The only response to that is yes, and. Come on. To give
Malcolm Collins: her credit, she doesnāt just rehash old conspiracy theories. Her world is almost like Tolkienās world, where like she invented a totally new world of conspiracy theories.
Yeah.
Nux Taku: Okay. You are giving her way too much credit. She takes every old conspiracy in the book and then just blames the Jews for it. Okay? Actually, itās the oldest style conspiracy theory.
Malcolm Collins: That is an
Simone Collins: interesting twist. It adds color. Itās more fun with Jews, though. I mean, letās, itās, it
Nux Taku: just- Yeah, Jews, theyāre great.
Simone Collins: Itās like adding salt to a dish. Jews. Like you need it. Itās, itās the MSG of, of lore, you know? Itās just-
Nux Taku: Sure, sure.
Malcolm Collins: I mean, but [00:39:00] realistically- Great ... this, I mean, this is where we are on our channel on this, and everyoneās always like, ācause we get some people on our channel who are like anti-Jew or whatever.
Iām like, bro, the only people who matter in the future are the people who have lots of kids and still have technology. Some groups have a lot of kids and they do it by give, give, not having technology or not being economically productive. Thereās only two groups on earth that have that right now, and one of them is the Jews, and theyāre even beating us at fertility rates, right?
So, weāve gotta take that seriously, right? Like the, the, being partnered with them is a lot better than being on their bad side, or that becomes the new human war, US versus Israel. But-
Nux Taku: I mean, I, I feel like there is a reason why there are so many foreign governments that are doing everything in their power to kind of be like, āOh my God, do you, do you believe Israel is, you know, killing terrorists that are trying to kill them?ā
Itās like, what? You know? And you know, doing everything. Like you have Russia promoting Candace Owens and, and Tucker Carlson, and you, k- Tucker Carlsonās buying a house in Qatar. I love America so much. Iām buying a house in Qatar . [00:40:00] You know? Itās like, all right, dude. Crazy. Yeah, sure. Right? Well, I gotta- And so many of these
Malcolm Collins: I think a part of it is and we have an episode where we go over this, is that the internet has shifted of who the primary viewer is over the past 10 years, and now your average internet viewer is a third worlder.
And a lot of these people donāt realize, like, theyāre... W- why, why, like why all the, the weird Indian hate in, in the United States? Like, yes, thereās problems with them and jobs and everything like that, but theyāre not as big a problem as the people, like, murdering us on the streets and stuff like that, right?
And itās like, well, because this matters to third worlders. Jews matter to third worlders. Like all these, you know, M- Middle Eastern countries, the, the Jews is what they think about every day. And so I think some online influencers donāt realize that they have really just captured a third world audience.
Nux Taku: Donāt realize or donāt care?
Malcolm Collins: Donāt care. Youāre right. I mean- I mean,
Nux Taku: you have someone with the million views. Yeah, itās from packing-
Malcolm Collins: Sneako, right? Hey. Sneako just, just speed running that.
Nux Taku: Bro, Sneako, heās like, actually [00:41:00] retarded. Itās amazing.
Malcolm Collins: Heās like, āI wa- I wanna be s-ā Oh my God ... specifically make all of my content maximally appealing to third worlders.
Nux Taku: He, heās amazing. Heās amazing. I- Sneakoās incredible. Itās a, itās train wreck in slow motion. You know, bro goes out there to piss off the Christians and heās like, āOh, Jesus wasnāt white. Oh, Jesus was a Jew from Palestine.ā Yeah, Iām sure he was. Iām sure he was. Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: Youāre, youāre,
Nux Taku: So you mean to tell me that the Jews are indigenous to Palestine, Sneako?
Malcolm Collins: āNo, no, what do you mean?ā That, thatās wild. Yeah, no, I... Your, your video on him, this, this was one of the fun things for me recently is, i- you were looking at his numbers and youāre like, āLook at how terrible these numbers are,ā and I was like Weāre, weāre not that much bigger. But Iām like, āBut I guess heās in decline.ā
And then when I heard that he- Okay,
Nux Taku: hold up, hold up. Th- thatās not fair. First of all, you cannot compare. Sneako has millions of subscribers, heās well-known, people talk about him, heās like public, he- p- in the public discourse, he was on every big show. You know- True ... he was col- he collabed with every big guy on the planet.
Adin Ross, and Andrew [00:42:00] Tate, and Nick Fuentes, and he was on Piers Morgan, and he hung out with- True ... Kanye West. He was with all the big guys, and no one wants to watch his slop.
Malcolm Collins: That is true. Which is stupid as f**k ... but the thing that gave me heart recently was learning that you didnāt get to 100,000 views until your fourth year of doing this, and weāre only at year three now.
Thatās true. So weāre, weāre- Yeah ... on track to hit your numbers if we just never stop.
Nux Taku: Yeah ...
Malcolm Collins: which is okay.
Nux Taku: Look numbers are ... l- it was definitely a big trade-off when I decided, you know what, Iām gonna be Iām just gonna say all the things that I like instead of just become, be generic normie slop.
Like, at some point I was just like, āIāll just do all the YouTube drama. I wonāt, like, have any edgy opinions.ā And I was like, āWhy? F**k that s**t, dude.ā I want, I want the world to be better for my kids, you know?
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. No, I mean, the, it, itās fas- when we first came, even with our reboot in this channel our entire, like, theme with the channel and goal with the channel was just, like, basically, like, effective altruist philosophy, right?
Like, r- r- r- really basic leftist high-minded philosophy, because back then I still had this desire to be [00:43:00] seen as, like, this intellectual, and I think shedding that desire and realizing that I wanted to be seen for who I was and, and, and as a culture warrior it was something that I was only able to do.
And again, I really want to just emphasize this to people on the right, because when we started to make those transitions, people on the right supported us and they were nice to us even though we had only just begun to transition. And well, I mean, look at you coming on our show, for example, and youāre so much bigger than us.
You have no reason to do this other than just being completely magnanimous, right? It, it, it-
Nux Taku: Itās
Malcolm Collins: really
Nux Taku: nice of you ...
Malcolm Collins: it only- No, itās
Nux Taku: purely selfish. I just think you guys are cool and, Oh ... I wanted to do this.
Malcolm Collins: But I want to... Actually, what I wanna talk about before we close this out, because this is something I talked a, a little bit about, and we can see if we can get fans involved if theyāre interested in this.
But Iāve been thinking about setting up some form of formal sort of political organization for the- wider sort of cultural movement that we represent. Because, you know, when I go to my friends at like the Heritage Foundation or whatever, and [00:44:00] Iām talking to them about like, āYou know, like I, I donāt think like censoring furries is gonna play well among a lot of right-wing people.ā
And theyāre like, āWhat are you talking about?ā Iām like, āWell, you know all the fox girl VTubers.ā And theyāre like, āWhat are you talking about?ā And Iām like like maybe we need like- ... some, some form of i- even, even an outreach group.ā So I was thinking like, what if we try to set something up and get some buy-in from the various big name voices in the movement so that they can guide.
Because I donāt want something where like Iām guiding policy. Something like a, a Turning Point USA, but thatās focused on this sort of nerd right faction. What are your thoughts on putting something like that together and even the utility of something like that?
Nux Taku: It sounds really cool. I, I, I wonder what the major purpose is, and I, and Iāll explain what I mean.
Turning Point USA is successful and incredible because frankly itās an alternative to the college slop.
Malcolm Collins: Mm-hmm.
Nux Taku: Right? You know, you go into- Mm ... the college system, and youāre literally, th- they put the, the, [00:45:00] you know, the, the hypnosis screen in front of you and they, they just replay images of whatever the f**k they want to in- you know, install in your mind.
So I think Turning Point USA is an alternative. Itās like, āHey, you could follow that path and be an incredibly unhappy cat woman with debt at the age of 60. Or you could follow our path, and you could like have a family and be successful.ā And itās like, wait a second. That makes- Hold up. You know?
Actually, I, I- So Turning Point USA is really effective there. When it comes to I, I guess our movement or the, the new right, the online right, I, I donāt know if it needs a grass gr- grassroots idea.
Malcolm Collins: Thatās actually a really good point. I, I think you just need to- Those things are... Now that I think about it, youāre right.
Theyāre sort of over and useless now. We, we actually were going over how if you look at Ben Shapiro, he appears to just be buying everything now or buying ads on things. Yep. And treating... His organization is just like a fundraising organization that pretends to be able to influence policy. And this reminds me, one of the anecdotes I say is when the new administration was being [00:46:00] staffed, this version of the Trump administration, the network they were tapping was the Founders Fund network and not like the Heritage Foundation and stuff like that.
Like, we had to make the intros for the Heritage Foundation people. And what I realized is I think even like the ins- the, the true MAGA, like who are staffing things, theyāre like, āWeāre not staffing. Weāre not allowing these people to influence our policy anymore. Weāre just taking like based Doge kids.ā
By the way, you know, my brother worked at Doge.
Nux Taku: No way.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah,
Nux Taku: yeah. Dude, thatās awesome.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, yeah. Huh. That was,
Nux Taku: Iām a big fan of Doge. I wish they wouldāve been like even more successful.
Simone Collins: Same.
Malcolm Collins: They, they did some really cool stuff. Now
Nux Taku: to something
Malcolm Collins: completely different.
Nux Taku: But thatās where like
Simone Collins: Iām hesitant- They, they shut down-
about policy in general. I, I, I have my doubts that like- Any, any sort of policy change is gonna make a, a difference at this point or like going into politics matters I
Nux Taku: mean, I think we, we need to get rid of the government. Okay? I
Simone Collins: only
Nux Taku: want the government- Thatās, thatās my only conclusion here ... to exist for law and order.
I just want law and order. Arrest the criminals, [00:47:00] close the border, win wars if you need to fight them. Other than that, I really donāt wanna hear about you guys
Simone Collins: Well, and the writing is kind of on the wall. Like what we talk about a lot is demographic collapse, and when you look at just how tax bases are going to crumble, how social services wonāt be able to be supported anymore, how our governmentās basically going to start printing currency in really unsustainable ways- Yeah
until it no longer matters like there, there will be a point at which there is going to be actually very significant various forms of turnover in the government. So Iām kind of like, well, I guess Iām just gonna- So
Malcolm Collins: like Social Security, how long till it goes broke?
Simone Collins: I think 2032. 2030 something.
Yeah, 2032. Well, my concern is, like thereās two ways it can go. Either at, at that year the trust fundās gonna run out to the point where y- the existing senior citizens receiving Social Security payments will have like 32 or something percent less of their monthly checks. So theyāre gonna be super pissed while like Gen Z and Gen Alpha and millennials and everyone else is still paying into it knowing that theyāre not gonna get anything, and the people who are getting their money are mad about it and resentful.
So everyoneās [00:48:00] gonna be really angry about it. Or theyāre gonna do something where they just totally throw the rules out the window and theyāre like, āOh, never mind, everyone gets to keep their money,ā and they just kind of print it out of nowhere. And- Itās
Nux Taku: almost like Social Security is a form of communism that doesnāt really work.
Simone Collins: Yeah. We live in a huge, like just in terms of social services, like we are in such a socialist state now. If you are at or near the poverty level, the amount of support that you get from your state and the federal government is, is kind of humbling, and we didnāt realize this until we looked into it. But like in most cases especially if you ca- have kids, food assistance home assistance, free childcare, i- like really in- intense levels of support that are, are, are...
Oh free healthcare, which is like huge. So you kind of do live in a socialist utopia if you are at or near the poverty level. We
Malcolm Collins: offer many times the social services cost adjusted than China does.
Simone Collins: Yeah. Like in China- Which is another- ... public school isnāt free. In
Nux Taku: fact, our, our social services, Iām pretty sure they, they out...
Like th- if you combine the military budget and the foreign aid budget, itās still [00:49:00] dwarfed by the social services.
Malcolm Collins: Oh,
Simone Collins: yeah. Yeah. Yeah. And then of course pensions and then of course like debt servicing. Like it just- I mean, the true
Malcolm Collins: enemy of civilization-
Nux Taku: Again, I, I mention I am a, a Pentateuch extremist, okay?
All right? Like the- Yeah ... it, there are, there is no communism in the Bible. None of it, actually, you know? Thatās unfair. You give whatever-
Simone Collins: What is your point? ...
Nux Taku: 10% to charity, okay? Charity, whatever, whatever you wanna define as charity. And other than that, what you make is yours. From the sweat of your brow you should eat bread.
Simone Collins: There you go.
Nux Taku: And thatās it. And Iām tired of it. The, one, one of the first chapters in the Bible is like Abraham, he goes to Ephron to buy a, a plot of land where he could bury his wife. And heās like, āHey, I would like to buy the land.ā And Ephronās like, āNo, no, you donāt need to buy the land. Just bury your wife here.ā
And heās like, āNo, no, no, Iām buying the land. Weāre not, weāre not getting into this.ā This like, āOopsie whoopsie.ā And heās like, āOkay, itāll cost X amount.ā And and he bought it, and it was his. And you know what? We still know where that land is exactly in Hebron. We know where it is. We know that you know, all the patriarchs and matriarchs are buried [00:50:00] there et cetera, et cetera.
And itās like itās still there, you know? Thereās no, no repossessing- Yes ... you know, redistributing. I-
Simone Collins: And in,
Malcolm Collins: I did not know that that was still known or wasnāt. The the I- I mean we also know from, you know, Adam and Eve and everything like that, that like we are supposed to live with having to, to work the land.
Like, weāre supposed to have to work to support ourselves, and it
Nux Taku: makes- And so do you wanna hear another theory?
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, o- ca- continue.
Nux Taku: Yes. Another theory. So God, all right, th- this is the same topic. God cursed both Adam and Eve when they ate from the tree of knowledge, right? Mm-hmm. So Adamās curse was the sweat of, from the sweat of your brow you shall eat bread, all right?
Meaning you have to work to eat, as opposed to just, you know, Godāll just give you all the things for free. And Eveās punishment was, you know, men will rule over you and it, you know, itāll be painful. The child birthing process will be painful, right? So that was Eveās punishment. Now I would argue not only, first of all, obviously true, right?
Yeah. That, that actually did happen to humans for, since then. Thatās one. But [00:51:00] two, itās necessary. Itās part of our psyche to feel fulfilled as people to exist in a system where the man works and where women are ultimately respecting men.
Malcolm Collins: We- and we actually, this is another one of our spicy takes, but we, yeah, we argue that as well, that like God was not being capriciously cruel to humanity by giving what we interpreted as curses, but giving us a way of living that is fulfilling, and that as we have shaken off this way of living, we realize that this was more like training wheels than a genuine punishment.
Simone Collins: Yeah. And things
Nux Taku: like, And now you have, and now everyoneās depressed. Yeah. Like, the men donāt work and theyāre depressed. Now the women donāt have kids and theyāre depressed, and itās like-
Malcolm Collins: And theyāre not a little- Yeah, yeah ... depressed. Right now the average kid at school, during COVID it was one in four, now itās one in five, the average girl makes a plan to un-alive herself on any given year.
That is how sa- that is how-
Simone Collins: Well, the weird thing is, is- Damn ... women in the absence of pain crave pain
Malcolm Collins: This
Simone Collins: is CDC
Malcolm Collins: stats, by the way. Not,
Simone Collins: like, a,
Malcolm Collins: a right-wing conspiracy
Simone Collins: Yeah, [00:52:00] but I mean, if you look at just anecdotally, women in the absence of pain crave pain. When women live in... Like, if, if you look at spoonies, theyāre majority affluent teen girls who basically have no other pain in their lives, and theyāre like, āIāve been developed-ā Well, look at, look at womenās books
āThis mysterious diseaseā Itās all, like, dystopian futures where they, they live in- Yeah. Yeah, women growing up in, in peaceful times with no conflict love to read dystopian teen novels. Iām reading Lena Dunham, L- Lena Dunham, Dunhamās fame sick biography now, and, like, she had horrible partners who would do violent, awful things to her ācause she grew up in a, like, loving family that always supported her.
Like, thereās... Itās kind of sick how people respond when, yeah, they grow up in sort of the absence- ... of pain and strife. It, it is one of those things where like, yeah And if, if you
Nux Taku: ever wanna get radicalized, you go into, like, a Barnes & Noble womenās section-
Simone Collins: Yeah ...
Nux Taku: and itās like, yo- Yeah,
Malcolm Collins: we
Nux Taku: talk about
Malcolm Collins: that. I get
Nux Taku: so- We- You know, woman was raped by a werewolf billionaire and fell in love with him.
I, I- Itās like-
Simone Collins: Living the dream
Malcolm Collins: We, we get so annoyed by... Because thereās some right-wing influencer, women especially, who are like, āOh, itās all of this [00:53:00] male porn that, like, radicalized men.ā Iām like, āMen didnāt make 50 Shades of Gray a bestseller.ā Yeah. Men didnāt make The Monster at Barnes & Noble, right? Like-
Simone Collins: No, l- legit, men donāt wanna do that on average because itās too much effort.
This is definitely a female fantasy. Men are like, āI donāt have... I donāt, no.ā I
Nux Taku: mean, I, I think also because men, men are mostly stimulated by, I guess, superficial attributes, I would say. You know? Mm-hmm. A sexy woman, and thatās it. Men, heās good. You know, you see some curvy piece of driftwood and, you know-
men are like, āWe can figure this out.ā But for women-
Simone Collins: No, no, like literally- ... I think a lot, a lot of itās- ... Malcolm and I had a conversation last night ...
Nux Taku: you have to get emotionally
Simone Collins: invested, you know? Yeah. We were... I, I... Like, Malcolm walked up to me last night and I was like, āMalcolm, how do... With sex dolls, how do they deal with, like, the off-gassing scent?
Like, doesnāt that really... Like, there must be some way.ā Malcolmās like, āNo, Simone, they donāt care. Like, it looks like a woman.ā Like, Iām talking about for real dolls, like, the, the life-sized ones. Yeah. And Iām, like, thinking about how, like, well, it must smell too much like plastic. Like, how do you deal with that?
And heās like-
Nux Taku: Men do [00:54:00] not care. Men do not care.
Simone Collins: Oh, well. Anyway.
Nux Taku: You know- So I think w- a- get- the Monster F****r Island Barnes & Noble, thatās just as porn as any male porn. Oh,
Simone Collins: it- Oh, yeah. Yeah. Like- Yeah ... but not, not even that, just, like, all, all the erotic materials. Women consume way more erotic materials, period, than men.
And pay way more for it. And the, and the industryās bigger. Itās, itās more, thereās more money there. Thereās more time there. And women are just openly reading it like, in public. Itās just no shame. Theyāre, theyāre learned women. Itās book talk. Itās great. They, they talk about
Nux Taku: it. The whoreification of society.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. True. True. Well, it has been great. I do not want to take up too much of the time of, of Nux. I want to have a channel where you can reach out to us whenever. One thing I want to end with, with people, because I think the, what one of our goals should be to make peopleās lives better, and thatās, you know, if, if youāre watching this, go out and try to learn something new.
You know, learn how to use AI in a new way. Learn how to use some tool in a new way. Society right now is changing faster than [00:55:00] anyone could imagine, and weāre seeing it in our community to an extent that astonishes me, because I get so excited when I see, like, Sky Browse and stuff like this, or Holy Ball.
You know, when I see these, these content creators who are pioneering entirely new ways of doing stuff and you, you can be that. Any of you can be that in, in, in new ways. And look for a sp- a s- a spouse, a partner. Try harder.
Nux Taku: Yeah, that, thatās what I was gonna say. You know? Yeah. Yeah. Yeah, get married, have babies.
Itās awesome.
Simone Collins: Totally.
Malcolm Collins: Really makes life awesome. Well, spectacular. Iām gonna turn the recording off and, Oh, anything you wanna say at the end? Any-
Simone Collins: Yeah, anything you want people to go to, check out,
Nux Taku: whatever. Iām, Iām good, Iām good.
Malcolm Collins: Everybody knows who you are. Iām
Nux Taku: the Blue Jew. I wander over YouTube.
Malcolm Collins: Right there. Like, we have, like, youāre, like, our fifth most over subscribed channel, so just... End recording? Oh,
Nux Taku: hell yeah.
Simone Collins: Oh. Iām trying to get Tex to eat, and I, I took a little video ācause the one thing that he actually does wanna put in his mouth, ācause I, I keep giving him stuff obviously he immediately just, you know, like they fall out of his mouth, right?
Thatās what... [00:56:00] It always happens, right? They look kind of,
Malcolm Collins: afraid,
Simone Collins: and then it falls out of their mouth. And the, the one thing that he likes that Iāve noticed he chews on is veggie straws. So Iāve, you know, let him chew on like the odd veggie straw here or there, and he was chewing on them this morning, and I was taking this video of him, and he just starts-
Malcolm Collins: Octavian thought it was the funniest thing ever.
He came in. He had to tell me. He goes, āMommy was filming.ā
Simone Collins: I thought, āOh, letās capture his first moments eating.ā I donāt want our kids to, like, think that... You know how thereās the trope of, like, the first kid has, like, a billion photos. You get bored after the first few? Yeah, okay. Yeah, like, yeah, like second kid, no photos of anything, you know?
And I donāt wanna be that mom, and Iām trying to capture these precious moments. And what does Tex do? What does Tex do when I try to capture a precious moment? Heās like... Immense amounts- Iām sorry you had to deal with that ... of liquid. He, he doesnāt like drinking that much, so I donāt know where itās coming from.
Malcolm Collins: I am very sorry you had to deal with this.
Simone Collins: Itās a pleasure
Yeah, see, [00:57:00] he doesnāt wanna drink. You have no interest in drinking. You just wanna wave your hands and grab my headphones.
Oh, heās here. Hey. Oh my gosh, thatās a good background. Oh,
Malcolm Collins: we got an American flag in the background. Thatās fantastic.
Simone Collins: Thatās perfect.
Malcolm Collins: Okay.
Simone Collins: Okay. Can we hear him? Yeah, I was thinking,
Nux Taku: like- Go ahead ... do, do I put an Israeli flag in the... No, Iām kidding. Yeah.
Simone Collins: Oh. That wouldāve been-
Malcolm Collins: I would, I would troll people
wonderful. Theyāre gonna get some, Yeah ... spicy comments from that. Oh. For
Simone Collins: real.
Malcolm Collins: Okay.
Nux Taku: Yeah. Iām
Malcolm Collins: gonna dive right in. Well, itās such a
Nux Taku: pleasure to meet you guys.
Malcolm Collins: Oh, yeah,
Simone Collins: likewise. Itās really good to meet you, too.
Malcolm Collins: Itās, itās so huge to be doing something, because weāve done, like, peers. Weāve done bigger people before, but Iāve never done anyone who I watch as much as you.
Yeah. So,
Simone Collins: like- No, youāre, like, liter- like, literally part of, like, the wallpaper- ... of, of our every... I mean, you know how it is. Like, you, youāre just, youāre always on. So we hear your voice all the time, and itās, itās really weird. Wow. Itās one of those things- Thatās crazy ... I think we havenāt even thought to do
Malcolm Collins: that.
E- even today you helped me win an argument with my wife. Yeah, itās true. Because she got big mad- Letās go ... about a title card that I made today. Yeah. And sheās like, āThat implies that Black people, thereās a portion of Black Americans that want [00:58:00] white Americans dead.ā And Iām like, āItās true.ā And then you said the same thing in your title, and I was like, āSee, Simone?ā
Simone Collins: Yeah. I was like, āWell, if Nux says it, okay.ā But also, yeah,
Nux Taku: I mean- Listen, Iām not, Iām not an authority here, but what other interpretation would there be to these guys crashing out that Carmelo Anthonyās going to jail? Like-
Malcolm Collins: That-
Simone Collins: Yeah ... is there another explanation? I hadnāt seen that footage, and now I have.
And now Iām very alarmed. I know.
Malcolm Collins: I mean, I, I do, I think that they think that they should be treated differently by the law. I think that thatās, like... W- weāll get into that later.
Speaker: Yeah, I think he likes it. Oh, heās still figuring out how to swallow solid foods after he chews them. See? Heās kinda going through it. He doesnāt really know how to swallow food. Oh, it d- oh, okay. Oh, dear. Well, you know.
Speaker 2: He threw up. Oh, boy. There it goes. He threw up. Oh, God.
You think itās so freaking funny. [00:59:00] You donāt have to clean it up.
This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit basedcamppodcast.substack.com/subscribe -
Malcolm and Simone Collins break down the growing public anger over glaring double standards in interracial violence, media coverage, and the justice system. They dive deep into the Kamelo Anthony case (the stabbing of Austin Metcalf at a Texas track meet), European migrant crime incidents, fundraising scandals, jury selection disparities, crime statistics, and the disturbing normalization of anti-white violence.
This episode explores why many feel the law is applied unequally, the oppressor/oppressed worldview driving it, immigration realities, and what a realistic path forward looks like ā including building a broad, accountable coalition rather than narrow racial politics. A raw, data-heavy discussion on race, crime, culture, and civilization in 2026.
Watch the full Based Camp episode for unfiltered analysis.
Show Notes
The Flash Point Cases
2026 Karmelo Anthony Murder Judgment
* On June 9, 2026, a Texas jury found 19-year-old Karmelo Anthony guilty of murder for fatally stabbing 17-year-old track athlete Austin Metcalf at a high school track meet in Frisco, Texas, on April 2, 2025.
* Anthony was subsequently sentenced to 35 years in prison
2025 Dublin case
* A 20-something illegal migrant from believed to be from Africa (with prior deportation orders) allegedly sexually assaulted a 10-year-old Irish girl in state care at a hotel housing asylum seekers
* This triggered riots, vehicle burnings, and clashes
June 2026 Belfast Knife Attack
* On 40-something white Stephen Ogilvy by Hadi Alodid, a Sudanese refugee granted status in 2023
* Hadi Alodid was charged with attempted murder (but there was immediate unrest over immigration)
What people are saying online
Media angles (echoed on social): āIs the far right exploiting the attack by a refugee?ā with focus on disorder rather than root causes like vetting. (e.g. FRANCE 24 - Europe posted: āIs the far right exploiting the āsickeningā attack by a refugee in Belfast?ā
Depa wrote: Kristallnacht in #Belfast begins:
Masked thugs smash windows of houses of black& brown people after Sudanese immigrant tries to kill (Scottish?) man in a brutal knife attack
Houses were also torched, mobs attacked POC in Glasgow after far right influencers called for protests..
iResist wrote: Anti-immigrant far right thugs in the city of Belfast in the UK have torched vehicles and buildings after a Sudanese man was arrested over a knife attack that left one person with serious injuries.
Masked men are hunting immigrants in the city.
April 2026 Belgium Kortrijk gang rape
* Nine migrant minors (from various non-Western backgrounds) gang-raped a 14-year-old Belgian schoolgirl (āloaned outā among them).
* āThe abuse took place during the Easter holidays in April 2024 in the Kabouterbos, a wooded area in Kortrijk. The victim was 14 at the time, while the suspects were aged between 11 and 16ā (ReMix News)
* She was lured into the woods by her then-16-year-old boyfriend
* They filmed her rape and posted videos to snapchat
* All were found guilty but received no prison
* Instead, they got probation/community service (30 hours max).
* Their lenient treatment was criticized as emblematic of soft juvenile justice for migrant offenders
What people are saying online
Critics of outrage call it disproportionate or ignoring similar intra-native cases.
Per Al Jazeera, Sikh/Muslim/immigrant advocacy groups are distancing themselves from the perpetrator while documenting rising hate incidents.
December 2025 Henry Nowak Stabbing Case
* 18-year-old White university student Henry Nowak was stabbed to death (multiple times with an 8-inch Sikh ceremonial dagger/kirpan) by 23-year-old Vickrum Digwa (Sikh).
* Digwa and his brother falsely claimed to police that Nowak had racially attacked him (grabbing turban, slurs).
* Police initially handcuffed the dying Nowak based on this.
* Digwa was convicted of murder in 2026; the judge called the racism claim a āwicked lie.ā
* It sparked major outrage, questions from PM Keir Starmer about how racism accusations influenced police, and reviews of policing. Critics argued initial response prioritized the false hate claim over the victimās life
What people said online
Hebb Rule is Enough fir AGI/A Creative I - Jayan wrote: āThe Sikh man and his family are not walking around looking to stab people. Henry Nowak was a drunk racist abusing the Punjabi and got what he deserved. The police correctly identified the drunk aggressor and just didnāt realise he was stabbed.ā
Bakara Amuri wrote:
šØš³SIKS ARE FIGHTING BACKā¦. UNPRECEDENTED MOVESš¬š§
Innocent Sikhs have been targeted, while the elderly and vulnerable are
being urged to stay indoors, following the sentencing of Vickrum Digwa.
Amarjeet Singh, from Hounslow in west London, has launched a website for Sikhs across the country to report incidents of hate crime.
The site has received numerous reports in the past five days, with many respondents believing the abuse they experienced was linked to Digwaās conviction.
Will you report any anti sikhs ācrimesā?
The British Sikh Report 2025 found:
49% of British Sikhs were already worried about rising antiāSikh sentiment.
Many reported being mistaken for Muslims or targeted simply for wearing a turban.
according to the report here is the reason why:
āfarāright mobilisationā
Is There Really a Policing Double Standard?
The standard understanding is that there is a double standard, but itās in favor of whites and to the detriment of non-whites.
Per organizations like The Sentencing Project: Evidence from policing, sentencing, and media coverage shows racial double standards do existābut they do not take the form of ānonāwhite offenders being treated more leniently on average.ā Instead, the consistent pattern in U.S. research is harsher treatment of Black and other nonāwhite suspects/defendants, especially when victims are white, and more sympathetic social treatment of white offenders.
A 2021 study of coāoffending partners found that Black offenders were significantly more likely than white coāoffenders to be arrested for the same incident, especially in assault cases. That is, when a Black and a white suspect commit an offense together, police are more likely to formally arrest the Black suspect, indicating differential enforcement rather than equal treatment.
Interracial Crime Realities
One thing people are discussing online is the reality of mixed-race attacks/crimes
First: Most violent crime in the U.S. is intraracial: people tend to victimize members of their own racial group. In 2020, about 69% of violent incidents against white victims and 66% against Black victims involved an offender of the same race or ethnicity. That means āwhiteāonāBlackā or āBlackāonāwhiteā crimes are a relatively small subset of overall violence, not the dominant pattern (as reported by the US Department of Justice)
Per a 2024 Department of Justice Report, which provides counts and percentages of violent incidents by the race/Hispanic origin of victims and offenders, based on victimsā perceptions:
* Whiteāonānonāwhite* (white offenders, nonāwhite victims):
* Whiteāonāblack: 57,370
* WhiteāonāHispanic: 334,770
* Whiteāonāāotherā: 217,140
* Total whiteāonānonāwhite ā 609,000 incidents.
* Nonāwhiteāonāwhite (nonāwhite offenders, white victims):
* Blackāonāwhite: 536,120
* Hispanicāonāwhite: 271,410
* āOtherāāonāwhite: 262,120
* Total nonāwhiteāonāwhite ā 1,070,000 incidents.
*Here ānonāwhiteā = black, Hispanic, and āotherā race categories.
These tallies exclude incidents where offender race is unknown or mixedārace groups that the table pushes into āotherā; they are best understood as approximate patterns rather than precise totals of āall interracial incidentsā.
General Findings:
* The authors highlight that the share of violent incidents with white offenders (47%) is smaller than whitesā share of the population (60%).
* They also note that the share of incidents with black offenders (28%) is more than double blacksā share of the population (12%).
* Asian, Native Hawaiian, and Other Pacific Islander persons are underrepresented as both victims and offenders relative to their population share.
Key interracial/intraracial findings in their terms
From table 13 (incidents by victim and offender race/Hispanic origin):
* White victims experienced about 3.42 million violent incidents in 2024.
* Of these, about 1.71 million incidents involved white offenders (intraāracial), while about 0.54 million involved black offenders and about 0.27 million involved Hispanic offenders.
* Black victims experienced about 0.77 million violent incidents.
* Of these, about 0.40 million involved black offenders (intraāracial), vs about 0.06 million with white offenders and about 0.12 million with Hispanic offenders.
* Hispanic victims experienced about 1.16 million violent incidents, with roughly 0.27 million involving Hispanic offenders, and substantial numbers involving white or black offenders.
These joint victimāoffender counts allow you to identify which victimāoffender race pairings are more common in terms of incident counts but still are not presented as ārates of interracial crimeā in the reportās framing.
Key incident counts from Table 13 (2024 NCVS legacy)
All numbers below are counts of violent incidents, based on victimsā perception of offender race/Hispanic origin.
* Total violent incidents involving white victims: 3,421,720.
* White offender: 1,706,750
* Black offender: 536,120
* Hispanic offender: 271,410
* āOtherā race offender: 262,120
* Offender race unknown: 645,320
* Total violent incidents involving black victims: 773,420.
* White offender: 57,370
* Black offender: 402,960
* Hispanic offender: 121,880 (flagged āinterpret with cautionā)
* āOtherā race offender: 54,360 (caution)
* Offender race unknown: 136,850
* Total violent incidents involving Hispanic victims: 1,160,980.
* White offender: 334,770
* Black offender: 288,130
* Hispanic offender: 274,230
* āOtherā race offender: 36,930 (caution)
* Offender race unknown: 226,920
* Total violent incidents involving āotherā (Asian, NHPI, AIAN, multiracial) victims: 719,720.
* White offender: 217,140
* Black offender: 144,420
* Hispanic offender: 128,240 (caution)
* āOtherā race offender: 106,310 (caution)
* Offender race unknown: 123,600
Limitations of the report
* The NCVS relies on victim self-report and perceived offender race, so all offender race numbers are based on perception, not official records.
* It does not publish a simple table that directly says āX% of white victims were victimized by nonāwhite offendersā or ārate of interracial victimization per 1,000 by victim raceā; you would need to derive that from the incident table and separate population denominators.
Episode Transcript
Malcolm Collins: [00:00:00] hello, Simone. Crazy times we live in. It seems like weāre heading right into one of these.
Speaker 2: It seems to be a survival guide of some kind. Survival of what? From the looks of it, a contagion outbreak of the worst kind.
Speaker 4: Oh my God.
Malcolm Collins: But we are right now, and what weāre going to take this episode to go over is a sea change in public opinion around racial relationships, and I think the beginning of a realization that a portion of America and the wider Western world simply did not at all care when white people died. And, and this is kind of shocking to say, but we right now had a situation where basically being a white American was beginning to feel like this
Speaker 10: This is about protecting people, ,
Speaker 9: somethingās wrong.
Speaker 10: Look [00:01:00] out! You did what you had to. Youāre a hero. That may be true, but Iāll have to live with this the rest of my life, even though Iāll be walking around a free man.
Hey, wait a minute. This kid
Isnāt just white
Is a Mormon with a large Lego company
Speaker 10: Wait, what?
Speaker 9: Guilty.
Malcolm Collins: My God. A- and, and when people are like, oh... Because you see on a lot of the conservative bloggers, and Iām, Iām not gonna rehash all this, have shown you the protesters outside of the Anthony trial.
Speaker 19: What do you want us to do? Thatās right. What, what do you want us to do at this point? What? I, I, Iām, Iām lost for word. I donāt know what to do. I got five boys. I donāt know what, I aināt got nothing to tell them no more.
Speaker 21: play out since then and what weāre watch happening now is because
Malcolm Collins: Mm-hmm. Which weāll go over which was very, very open-and-shut case and really i- [00:02:00] insane.
They ended up raising $600,000 for the case moving into a $900,000 house and then-
Simone Collins: Wait ... the- The family of the attacker?
Malcolm Collins: Yes. Then he had to be, he had to s- s- basically sue the court and say, āIām, Iām destitute,ā and be repor- like supported by a public defendant. Yeah.
Simone Collins: Wait, wait, wait, wait, wait. So wh- Oh, okay.
The attackerās family raised a ton of money but said they were destitute?
Malcolm Collins: Y- basically, they raised a ton of money. Uh-huh. They spent all of the money on personal things- Oh ... and then they said they didnāt have- And then they couldnāt afford- ... enough money to get like a defender. Oh. And they have personally reported to the media, āOh, we didnāt do that.ā
And so like Snopes will say like, āOh, this isnāt true,ā but itās one of those things where Snopes is so ideologically captured at this point, if you just... Then why is he [00:03:00] using a public defendant if he raised $600,000? Why do they have a new house? W- like, a- and why are, do they admit they have a new house in their own social media postings?
There, there, there was a, a incorrect accusation at one point that they had done this, which is the funny thing, is basically the right accused them of doing this before they actually did it. Oh, and they
Simone Collins: were like, āThatās a great idea.ā
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, but theyāre like, āYeah, we can prove we havenāt withdrawn the money yet.ā
And then like literally just weeks later, āNow we withdrew the money and bought a new house.ā Oh,
Simone Collins: huh.
Malcolm Collins: But anyway, so, we have people like Cardi B saying I donāt know if you saw... Like, so itās not just the crazy people outside of this place, like, a- and, and saying that he got a new car by the way.
Simone Collins: Oh, no.
Malcolm Collins: Where
Simone Collins: is- Is, so is this his brother? Because just to be, to be clear, I know, and most people have heard about this, but what happened was in December of 2025, a, an 18-year-old white university student named Henry Noak was stabbed to death multiple times with an [00:04:00] eight-inch Sikh ceremonial dagger.
So this was also like specifically a- What are we
Malcolm Collins: talking about? Thatās, thatās not what weāre talking about right now. Weāre talking about the Anthony- Wait,
Simone Collins: which case are you talking about?
Malcolm Collins: The Anthony case.
Simone Collins: Okay, sorry. The- There are so many. Who is, who is, where-
what, who, Anth-
Malcolm Collins: sorry. I- Weāre talking about the Anthony case, the Black guy who stabbed a white track star to death.
Simone Collins: Oh, God. I didnāt even come across that. I have all these other cases that I looked at. This is becoming way too much of a pattern Wait, do
Malcolm Collins: you even, there are so many random killings of white people
Simone Collins: Yeah, no.
So thereās the 2025 Dublin case where a, a 20-something illegal immigrant believed to be from Africa allegedly assaulted a 10-year-old Irish girl, and then that triggered a bunch of riots. And then thereās a, the June 2026 Belfast knife attack
Malcolm Collins: where
Simone Collins: a 40, a 40-something white, Stephen OāGifley, and, and was, was stabbed by a Sudanese refugee who was granted status in 2023, and then he was charged with attempted murder.
But after, immediately [00:05:00] after that stabbing took place, obviously there was a lot of unrest over immigration. And then there was the April 2026 Belgian case of group unplanned surprise sex in a forest. H- I donāt know how else to put this. Basically nine migrant minors from various non-Western backgrounds gang- the prize sex attacked a 14-year-old Belgian schoolgirl who they filmed a- attacking in a forest after she was lured there by her 16-year-old boyfriend.
And then posted it on Snapchat. And they were, they were found guilty, but they didnāt receive any prison sentences. They, they got 30 hours max of community service.
Malcolm Collins: No prison sentences?
Simone Collins: Yeah. Just, you know, clean the f- clean the highway for 30 hours and weāre good. Weāre-
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. Youāre not even finding the ones that Iām finding.
Like, did you- Yeah.
Simone Collins: Then, then thereās the, the, the Henry Nowek case, which, which Iāve been hearing about the most on social media-
Malcolm Collins: Thatās the most famous- With the, this huge- But weāll go over that later ācause everyoneās aware of the [00:06:00] details of it ...
Simone Collins: dagger. And then thereās w- well, wait, so who, whoās this tracker?
Wait,
Malcolm Collins: hold
Simone Collins: on. Iāve never even heard of
Malcolm Collins: this- You didnāt even find the Sudanese guy who just yesterday attacked- No ... a mentally disabled man in Ireland?
Simone Collins: No, and I look at the headlines every single morning. I look at X, I look at Drudge, I look at New York Times- Or
Malcolm Collins: the four- I look at Twitchy ... Iraqi guys who did a drive-by, killed a 14-year-old girl, in I wanna say Germany.
No. They then moved her body off the road. The police lied to the girlās mom, saying that it was a German who did it.
Simone Collins: And- Oh, for the love ...
Malcolm Collins: and then when the mom basically found out and did an investigation, she found out that none of the men even served any jail time. They, they said, āOh, itās a, itās a regular hit and run,ā even though they knew that they had moved her body off the road.
Oh, for the- Right? Like, they, they are actively covering this up.
Simone Collins: Yeah, not e- not even a hit and run, a hit and hide.
Malcolm Collins: My God. So what Iām talking about, this is happening so frequently in our society now, like
Simone Collins: we, we even- Like, the, the news cycle canāt even keep up with it. Itās like, I donāt know.ā No, news cycle canāt keep up with it.
Itās, itās, now, now itās like that South Park episode on school shootings of like, āWait, you [00:07:00] got an F on your math test?ā
Speaker 34: Stanley, well, do you want to tell your father about what happened at school today?
Speaker 35: I flunked my math quiz.
Speaker 34: No, the other thing.
Speaker 36: What other thing?
Speaker 35: Oh, the school shooting? Yes, the school shooting! Oh yeah, some kids shot up the school.
Speaker 36: Was it you?
Speaker 35: No.
Speaker 36: Did you get shot?
Speaker 35: No.
Speaker 36: Oh. Well, whatās this about failing a math quiz?
Malcolm Collins: Well, and the expectation that there will be no repercussions if you kill a white person- Mm ... has gotten so extreme that you will even have not just these crazies, like, outside a courtroom, but Cardi B tweeted, āWow, just wow.
Disgusting. This is not justice. This is trying to make an example.ā
, So weāll go over the case of, of the Anthony case, which a lot of people are talking about now, and youāll get to hear about for the first time, Simone.
Simone Collins: Yes, tell me about this track star?
Malcolm Collins: No, the core thing that everybodyās whining about with the Anthony case, like the other side, is they [00:08:00] go, āThere were no Black jurors.ā
Hereās the problem. Only three Black people showed up for jury selection in this case. Oh, dear. That we are aware of.
Simone Collins: Yeah, thatās-
Malcolm Collins: Black people, it turns out, show up for jury selection at an extremely low rate. They show
Simone Collins: up- Oh, like even disproportionate to their share of the US population?
Malcolm Collins: Yes. So 44% of the time, Black people are non-responsive to jury summons.
While this is a-
Simone Collins: Well, I think also they dis- disproportionately may serve in jobs that are, like, hourly, and itās really hard to get time off. You lose shifts, you lose your job. Like- It
Malcolm Collins: could be. I mean, it, it could also be less a sense of civic duty. Like, we donāt know, right? But they, they donāt show up for jury nearly as much as...
What, whites show up, they only have a no-show rate of 12%. Okay Extremely low.
Simone Collins: Okay.
Malcolm Collins: And the three Blacks that did show up were dismissed for normal reasons, which is they were educators. And in cases involving minors, it is normal to dismiss educators. Thatās just a normal part- Why is that? What?
Simone Collins: Why would that [00:09:00] be?
Malcolm Collins: Because theyāre seen as being overly sympathetic to minors.
Simone Collins: Oh, I thought theyād be overly prejudicial. Itās like, āIām fed up with these kids. Put them in jail.ā Like, minors are now This is my chance to fight back. Oh,
Malcolm Collins: okay. Well, and another thing I wanna talk about that weāll get to in the end here is all this sort of performative racism weāre seeing from the conservative side, where itās, like, obvious theyāre not real racists.
Itās like, on our channel, us pretending to be racist, and Iām gonna do that whitest kids you know skit- Oh, God. Not again ...
Speaker 12: all right. Guess Iām just gonna have to come out and say it. Now, donāt be mad, but Iām a little bit of a racist.
Speaker 11: Oh, really? Youāre a racist?
Speaker 12: Yep.
Speaker 11: No, youāre not.
Speaker 12: What?
Speaker 11: No, youāre not.
Speaker 12: I am. Iām racist every day, all the time.
Speaker 11: Well, call me the N-word.
Speaker 12: What? Why?
Speaker 11: Call me the N-word.[00:10:00]
Speaker 12: I, I would. I love slaves.
Speaker 11: You love slaves? -
Speaker 12: ery I love slavery.
Speaker 11: And what is it exactly that you love about slavery?
Speaker 12: I, I think itās awesome that you people... Not you people. Yes, you people have to work for free all the time.
Simone Collins: Which I forget on cue again. Oh, yay.
Malcolm Collins: But letās go over the, It, it, oh, Iāll, Iāll, Iāll quickly go over the, the money and the fundraising. So they raised 634, 4K. What it appears happened is first they were accused of buying luxury things with it before they actually withdrew it.
Then they withdrew it, hired a lawyer, right? Who was a real lawyer who they did use for a period. But then after that period was over, and it seems that, like, through most of the middle of the trial, while they were able to retain him, they donāt [00:11:00] appear to be able to have kept him on board throughout the entire trial as the main lawyer.
This is Mike Howard. And then they had a state defendant. So it is, it is, thereās no way that could happen other than spending the money. Because they would need to prove to the courts that they donāt have enough money to continue to hire a lawyer. Oh,
Simone Collins: thatās true. Yeah. That they just donāt... Right?
Yeah, so I believe- Or I, I think, I think, canāt anyone request a, a public defendant? Let me quickly check that, ācause it could just be even not based on
Malcolm Collins: financial- Yeah, they need to prove something called, Resisting public despite the fundrai- in indigent status and indigent status means... I mean, itās very similar to the Black Lives Matter scam where they, they bought mansions and stuff like that with the money that was meant for Black Lives Matter and blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
It, it, it, it, it designates an individual as impoverished
Simone Collins: but verify. Weāre, weāre, weāre peer reviewing this. You ask Grok, Iām asking Perplexity. Like, as Mingold does. In the US, you only get a court-appointed public [00:12:00] defender if, one, you are facing a charge that can lead to jail or prison. Oh, thatās this person. Or two, the court finds you cannot afford to hire your own lawyer.
You are indigent under the jurisdictionās rules. So no, this, this person was facing a charge that could lead to jail or prison. Presumably then they could choose to have a public defender. Well,
Malcolm Collins: th- whatever. They claimed were indigent. They claim to be impoverished. Thatās th- th- they- They
Simone Collins: really, like, thatās, thatās, that is attested.
It is, it is- That
Malcolm Collins: is whatās attested by them, is they donāt have any money left. And I get really annoyed that even Snopes now is, like, going to bat for them when, like, the fact, why would you hire a court-appointed attorney if you still had the money? And they had the money at one point. So where did
Simone Collins: the money go?
That is true. That is true. Regardless of what theyāre saying, it- if theyāre choosing to not spend this money... I mean, I, I, if Iām really trying to steel man this, maybe they had a, a falling out or they lost faith in the lawyer and were like, āLook, I just, we have to keep going. Thereās an- another hearing. We canāt miss it.
We donāt have time to [00:13:00] find another lawyer. You know, no oneās willing to work with us. We gotta use a d- public defendant.ā
Malcolm Collins: No, they could have hired another lawyer. They had plenty of time. They didnāt have the money. Oh.
Simone Collins: Wow.
Malcolm Collins: S- anyway, to the points of the case, and, and, and, and this is where-
Simone Collins: Hereās, hereās another thing, though.
And ācause I was th- when I thought you were describing the Sikh family, but it could just be a case of a family cutting their losses. Like, āLook, I know that my kid- We- weāre just gonna write this kid off? The best thing we can do is, like, raise money for the rest of our family and do the best we can
Malcolm Collins: and- Well, and the familyās raising money again now after the conviction, by the way.
So theyāre like, āOh, the great way to raise a bunch of money.ā
Simone Collins: Look, you know, if you have a fail son, and your fail sonās gonna get locked away for life-
Malcolm Collins: Thatās generational wealth right there.
Simone Collins: I mean, the reparations. Itās... I donāt know. Like, maybe thereās some psychology to it all.
Malcolm Collins: Anyway, to continue on April 2nd, 2025, at a high school track meet in Frisco, Texas during a rainstorm, 17-year-old Kamiller [00:14:00] Anthony from Centennial High sought shelter under the tent of Memorial High Schoolās team.
Austin Metcalf, 17, and others told Anthony to leave. It was their teamās tent. Words were exchanged. Anthony reportedly said something like, āTouch me and see what happens,ā while reaching into his bag.
Simone Collins: Oh, boy.
Malcolm Collins: Metcalf pushed or grabbed Anthony to remove him, so he intentionally tried to physically try to remove him.
And note itās been attested that they asked him to leave something like 20 or 30 times-
Simone Collins: Oh ...
Malcolm Collins: beforehand, and it w- he clearly wasnāt supposed to be there. It was not his tent.
Simone Collins: Okay ...
Malcolm Collins: and while they, note, they didnāt hit, they didnāt beat him, they, they merely tried to- They just tried
Simone Collins: to, like, pick him up and-
Malcolm Collins: to physically remove
Simone Collins: him,
Malcolm Collins: yes, from their property, right? Mm. A- Anthony pulls out a folding knife and stabbed Metcalf in the chest, then fled. Metcalf died from the wound. But note, note, Anthony did say, āIs he okay?ā at some point after fleeing. So- Oh ... he, heās capable of experiencing s- s- remorse that something may happen to him?
Like, I [00:15:00] canāt even... I cannot believe- Mm ... like, the one Black lady whoās like, āHe, he said that.
Well, you donāt know that heās not just interested in his own...ā Like, they, they... It shows that she thinks that if you are Black and you kill a white person and you express remorse- You feel bad
Simone Collins: about it. ...
Malcolm Collins: That you shouldnāt be punished Which is astonishing.
It w- the court case was so bad and biased that there was apparently a moment when the jury gasped- Ooh ... because the person defending the guy tried to suggest that the guy stabbed himself accidentally while pushing him out of the tent.
Simone Collins: Oh, that, that the victim stabbed him- Yeah. The public defender tried to argue that?
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, I, I mean, I love that, like, the courtroom actually gasped upon hearing this.
Simone Collins: Mm.
Malcolm Collins: Now, as to why everybody considers this such an open-and-shut case for self-defense law, which is what they tried to say, which is the wildest thing ever. You canāt go onto somebody elseās property and then claim self-defense when theyāve repeatedly [00:16:00] asked you to leave.
Simone Collins: Oh, isnāt that kinda how states that donāt have stand-your-ground... A- actually, isnāt that even kinda how stand-your-ground rules-
Malcolm Collins: This, this was a stand-your-ground state.
Simone Collins: Oh, okay.
Malcolm Collins: So for a stand-your-ground state, a reasonable belief of imminent unlawful force or deadly harm, which obviously wasnāt the case here.
Yeah. The response must be proportional and involve provocation by defender. Obviously the court clearly- So they
Simone Collins: should each be trying to pick each other up here.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah.
Simone Collins: Yeah, okay.
Malcolm Collins: No duty to retreat from some situations, but you canāt escalate or bring a weapon into a minor dispute. Again, like, he fails at literally every level of what you need for a stand-your-ground law to, to work.
Anthony , had the knife ready and issued a threat. Like, he basically brought a knife and issued a threat, right? Like, you canāt do that with stand your ground. Witnesses said he reached into his bag and warned, āTouch me and see what happens,ā before physical contact.
This looks like premeditated escalation rather than pure reaction. He didnāt just happen to have the pocketknife with him. A pole is not a deadly threat. And we have multiple consistent with [00:17:00] witnesses.
So to go over some other cases that have looked like this where we sort of see the opposite reaction of this you know, instead of, like, the person of color automatically you know, having to face any repercussions that I think created the assumption of no repercussions.
You have Tamar, 14, from Marken, this is near Amsterdam, oh, so it was in Germany left home at night after an argument with her parents about going to bed. She was walking along a dark road. She was struck by a gray Mazda car, but her body was found dragged to the side of the road just, like, dragged into a ditch after murdered, a 14-year-old kid.
The car contained four Iraqi men one of whom was the driver. And they were seeking asylum status. In Germany with German plates. Police initially told the m- mother of the, of, of, of the girl that it was a German driver, even though they knew that it wasnāt. When asked why they had deliberately lied to the parents of a dead and grieving girl, they said, āOh, it was we didnāt want the Wilders effect.ā
That is a politician, Geert [00:18:00] Wilders. Thatās like saying we donāt want to boost Trump or MAGA, like a mainstream political movement. Itās not even, like, racism. We are afraid of it helping a mainstream politician in the Netherlands, and they just never got any repercussions for doing this. You know what the Iraqis had to pay?
A single 1,500 pound euro fine now-
Simone Collins: That, that canāt be in, in like concurrence with law in Germany, right? Like, thatās not what happens. Thatās not whatās supposed to happen with males. Well, itās
Malcolm Collins: not what happens to Germans, but... And this is what Iām talking about, where itās actually gotten to the point where the law is just being applied completely separately.
If you see our episode in the... I mean, and, and especially when you look at all of this and then you look at, at instances where the law is, you know, protecting rich white people. Oh, oh, theyāre fine. Like, look at the bricks and minifigs situation, right? You know? But when you look at the, the way that itās being applied to like average people.
When we had the case of you know, the guy trying to defend someone [00:19:00] on the subway and ends up killing the guy, right? And everyone was just like, āHow could you do that? How could you defend yourself? Youāre just supposed to lie down and take it.ā And what I want to sort of go through in this episode is just sort of normalize how far weāve come as a society.
That you are just supposed to let yourself be stabbed at this point. And th- this is what some communities have normalized to. And itās leading to really bad action in mass. You know, we have instances, like during the Black Lives Matter protests, that we now know that people were burned alive in that protest, right?
You know, bodies have been found in, in some of the stories. I, I know at least one, I think more than one.
Speaker 23: Yeah, , a man, , Oscar Lee Stewart, had his store looted and was locked inside, and it was deliberately lit on fire, and he was burned alive. , And so i-if, if you didnāt hear about this, this, this is huge. 19 to 25 people were killed in the riots. N- nobody talks about it. Nobody cares about it. Itās insane
Malcolm Collins: You know, they, they... we... And this wasnāt widely report- like, this wasnāt something that [00:20:00] the progressive media covered, right? Like we- Yeah,
Simone Collins: this is my first time hearing about that. Thatās terrifying.
Malcolm Collins: We have allowed society to enter a degree of just pure degeneracy that cannot be allowed to stand. And in Europe, thereās not even really parties attempting to fight this in a big way. Like, w- when you talk about the mainstream, like the Wilder party or Reform in the UK or the AFD, these keep being called fringe movements.
They frame centrist rightism, like the AFD run by a lesbian in an interracial marriage with kids you know, as a, a, a far-right party is, is, is comical. They, theyāre like, āWell, theyāre far right because they want to get rid of immigrants.ā And itās like, how could you not want to get rid of immigrants if this is the case?
If theyāre making up... In some of these countries, Iāll, Iāll read after this, but I think itās like 80% of rapes in some of these countries, right?
Speaker 24: A Lund University 21-year study showed that of grape convictions, only 37% had Swedish parents. If you look [00:21:00] at a country like Germany, despite being only 10% of the population, immigrants account for 40% of SAs. And we see this all over the place throughout Europe. Itās just horrible.
Malcolm Collins: You know, and we do need to, in the United States, even with the Native American Black population you know, we do need to get more realistic in how weāre having these conversations.
They make up a rate of homicides that 6x their population, right? They-
Simone Collins: Yeah, so if you look... Like, this is something people are discussing a lot in this discourse. Like, especially for this one 2024 Department of Justice report that gives counts on percentages of violent incidents by the race- Of origin of victims and offenders based on, based on victimsā perceptions, so thatās a caveat there.
But it reports 57,370 white-on-black incidents, but then 536,120 black-on-white incidents. [00:22:00] That is-
Malcolm Collins: And did you see the rates? The rate stats were almost comical when they came out. Mm-hmm. Where it showed that there wasnāt, in the year of recording, a single instance of white-on-black rape in the United States during that year.
This was the National Crime Victimization Survey, a mainstream nonpartisan crime survey
Malcolm Collins: Iām gonna find those statistics to read them, because itās just, it, thatās where it just gets comical, right? Like, oh, so this is really a unidirectional violence that weāre dealing with here.
Simone Collins: But I also, I, rather than, I, I wanna make sure that we donāt just straw man the other side while youāre looking at those stats.
Malcolm Collins: Well, no, hold on. If you look at- So- This is, this is from Penn, an Ivy League university in the United States. There was also a Harvard study that showed this, but Iāll just go into the Penn one. Mm-hmm. Regardless of socioeconomic status, Black communities face higher gun homicides. Well, and it
Simone Collins: says- Yeah.
And to be clear, like 60, in the 60s for both whites and Blacks and, and other groups, 60%-ish, or, like between 60% and 70% are, of crimes are race-on-race. Like white-on-white, Black-on-Black. Like the crimes are, are typically [00:23:00] concentrated in your own group.
Malcolm Collins: Right. But the point Iām making here is that these are higher rates even when youāre...
So you canāt be like, āOh, itās because of historic discrimination,ā or something like that. It, it is- No ... because of... And, and why not? If, if you are a Black person and youāre growing up, like, and you see everyone in your community being like, āOf course a kid shouldnāt go to jail for stabbing a kid when he was asked to be re- like multiple times to be removed from the property and they had to eventually physically remove him.
Thatās a totally normal thing for someone of our community to do.ā When they act with shock at this they, they then for young Black kids, they grow up and they think, āThis is a type of thing I do. This is a type of thing thatās normal for me to do.ā
Speaker 15: Webster defines a
Speaker 15: moment as a moment when ignorance overwhelms the mind of an otherwise logical
Speaker 15: male.
Speaker 14: What did you say, b***h ?
Speaker 14: Hey, squeeze it, .
Speaker 15: Causing him to act in an illogical, [00:24:00] self-destructive manner, i.e.,
like a .
Speaker 15: But they all end up bad. If they had their own category,
Speaker 15: moments would be the third leading killer of Black men behind pork chops and FEMA. Itās a fact.
Every
Speaker 15: moment begins with a .
Speaker 15: Without that key element, all youāre left with is peace and quiet
Malcolm Collins: And itās, itās true within the immigrant community, itās true within these, these Sikh communities with these Muslim communities that are immigrating into these countries.
When they see these communities have these protests about like, āWe should be able to do this,ā which weāve actually seen counter-protests. When people have gone out there to protest, like the, the guy the, weāll talk about this case now. The white kid who was stabbed and then the, the Sikh kidās family tried to hide the wea- the weapon.
His mom hid the wea- weapon. His, his brothers were complicit in this. The police believed him even though he told them multiple times, āI, Iāve been stabbed, Iām dying.ā And we now see these anti-discrimination procedures that they have to go through, [00:25:00] and what the anti-discrimination procedures basically say is you need to always presume the white person is at fault.
Well, it
Simone Collins: would explain why what happened happened. I, I donāt know if youāve seen footage from that particular incident, but like Yeah, it, it, it does kind of feel like theyāre acting on procedure of like... That, plus also it genuinely seemed like they didnāt believe the white kid. Like, they were like, āYeah, sure you have been.ā
Like, āI donāt see anything.ā Like, whining.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, well, I mean, police in the UK are awful, generally speaking. Like my- I havenāt
Simone Collins: had any encounters with them, so I donāt know.
Malcolm Collins: My experience is theyāre like, well this is what happens when you take away their guns and you put them in the far left environment of the UK, is they begin to act like ultra Karens.
Simone Collins: Well, I wouldnāt wanna be a police officer in the UK. I mean, to be a police officer without a gun, Iād be terrified. Yeah. But what, it, it is, like that is, I think in terms of the, the social media posts that were made online that Iāve seen, the worst are around that case. Like, this one guy on X posted, āThe Sikh man and his family are not walking around looking to [00:26:00] stab people.
Henry Nowak was a drunk racist abusing the Punjabi and got what he deserved. The police correctly identified the drunk aggressor and just didnāt realize he was stabbed.ā Like, that is not
Malcolm Collins: good. This, again, what Iām saying here is they genuinely... We need to move, because I think it can sound like people are being hyperbolic.
And I, and I wanna go through some articles where, where people talk about, like, the, theyāre so concerned about the rise in reportings of these crimes. And like, The Guardian of course has a piece, panicked that these crimes are being reported at higher rates now. And we need to go from the they want you dead isnāt hyperbolic.
Itās what they when, every time they cheer when they say... Because historically this is how it started. Itās like, oh, the number of you know, whites will no longer be a majority in the country. White populations are going down. And you would see at leftist rallies they would cheer. This really happened, right?
We would see them cheer. Eh, that means, [00:27:00] oh, this is exciting for us. Like, we are getting rid of this population. H- A, a generation raised singing that and normalizing for that is of course not going to mind as much when they see white people being killed, and is going to react absolutely in panic when they see white people defending themselves, which is what we repeatedly see.
Of a continuous post here.
Simone Collins: So an- another response thatās really common with, like, this specific Si- Sikh stabbing incident is, āSikhs are fighting back. Unprecedented moves.ā This is from Baakara Amri. āInnocent Sikhs have been targeted while the elderly and vulnerable are being urged to stay indoors following the sentencing of Bikram Dhingra.
Amrit Singh from Hounslow and Mas- āwest London has launched a website for Sikhs across the country to report incidents of hate crime. The site has received numerous reports in the past five days, with many respondents believing the abuse they experienced was linked to Dhingraās conviction.
āWill you report any anti-Sikhs crimes?ā The British Sikhs 2025 [00:28:00] report found 40 thou- 49% of British Sikhs were already worried about rising anti-Sikh sentiment. Many reported being mistaken for Muslims or targeted simply for wearing a turban, according to the report. Here is the reason why. Far-right mobilization.ā
So what, what... And this is a really common pattern across most of these incidents, which is instead of respond to the actual crime or to condemn the actual aggressors- Mm-hmm. Yeah ... in these crimes, theyāre like, āYou know what? This is just the right trying to use this to radicalize people.ā And instead of having a real conversation about whatās going on of, like, this is not acceptable.
We have to punish these people. They cannot be lenient punishments. We need to reconsider deportations. We need to reconsider immigration. Instead itās like, āNo, no, no. Youāre just, youāre just hating on people.ā And that, I think, is where I feel like the conversation is just people screaming across the bow to each other, is that there has, from what I can tell, actually been a policing double [00:29:00] standard in favor of white populations in majority white countries, and to the disfavor of non-whites.
Like per organizations like The Sentencing Project, evidence from policing and sentencing and media coverage shows a true racial double standards, at least historically, have existed. They just happen to be, you know, a- against, you know, the favor of-
Malcolm Collins: Well, I mean, we can, we can... So one-
Simone Collins: I think whatās happening, though, what Iām trying to say- We know that this happened-
is maybe right now people are over-correcting for hysteric- sorry, historical favoritism toward white people, historical bias, and theyāre going too far. And now what needs to happen is a market correction. But one side, the progressives, people on the left, are just so, like, stuck in the there is discrimination.
There is discrimination that they canāt see that maybe theyāve over-corrected at this point. And then on the right, theyāre just so angry that the left isnāt even listening to them that theyāre getting more and more extreme and shouting louder and louder.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, and that, the entire point Iām making is I think that that is the [00:30:00] wrong takeaway from all of this.
Simone Collins: Really? Okay.
Malcolm Collins: Yes. Yes. I think that for a long time that has been my position. My position has been this is just marginal over-correction. But when I look at the posts and the people, when I look at how incensed they were that Anthony was charged, when I look at them saying, āOh, itās good that the Sikh killed this kid in the street and that the police let him die,ā what Iām seeing, when you see mainstream figures, not just online crazies, like Cardi B saying that this is disgusting, that, you know, justice was carried out, what we are seeing here is a m- a large part of the left, and especially these minority communities, genuinely believe that The law should not apply to their communities.
They, they, they, their communities should be allowed to kill this other group with impunity because this other group is so beneath them, so beneath in, in the long for- This is why we [00:31:00] saw, and I think we should have assumed this, when we saw the people having the parties for the October 11th attacks, you know, before the IDF did anything in response or anything like that, on college campuses around the United States they really believe, and watch our video on Zoran Mandani where we break the psychology and politics of this that the world exists in two classes: the oppressor and the oppressed.
And anyone whoās in oppressed class, even if they functionally have societal power which they do today if theyāre in the oppressed class, they can do anything they want to the oppressor, and it is never immoral. So when they go and, you know, Hamas is dragging girls away from a peace protest, right, which was what it was, the big concert that they had, and gang raping them and murdering them in horrific ways, this isnāt bad because girl was of oppressor class, the other side was of the oppressed class.
And I think that this is hidden from a lot of, a lot of people under the mindset that you are going right now, which is just [00:32:00] like, āOh, we over-corrected.ā This isnāt over-corrected. This is cheering when people are brutally graped or murdered and things alike, like the police actively lying to a girlās parents about the ethnicity of who just killed a 14-year-old girl.
That isnāt like,
Simone Collins: Yeah, no, that, that is, that is something thatās atrocious Thatās
Malcolm Collins: like the height of like Jim Crow South and stuff like that when I went through-
Simone Collins: Yeah, oh, and also correction, I completely mixed up in my head Nicki Minaj and Cardi B. Cardi B is very anti-Trump. Nicki Minaj is the person who, like, showed up s- with some support for Trump, and people on the left defenestrated her for that, of course.
So itās Nicki Minaj whoās being boycotted.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, when you have something like a teenage girl being gang graped in the woods and, and, and no one is sent to jail for this.
Simone Collins: I mean, to be fair, they were like age 11 to 16, so it might just be about like minor offenses, but I think there are plenty of cases- Thatās not a
Octavian Collins: minor offense.
Simone Collins: No, no, no, but [00:33:00] they are minors, and they are offe- They murdered a girl. They are a threat. I n- Malcolm, they are minors. They are below the age of 18. Yeah, I
Malcolm Collins: know. They should still go to jail. Theyāre clearly a threat to their community.
Simone Collins: Right. I mean, there are certainly exceptions in which minors are tried as adults.
I just donāt know
Malcolm Collins: You donāt need to be tried as adult. Thereās prisons for minors. What are you talking about?
Simone Collins: Oh, well, I, I mean, who knows how it works in other countries. I, I mean-
Malcolm Collins: No, you can go to jail as a minor. There,
Simone Collins: thereās entire prison- Theyāre extremely
Malcolm Collins: lenient in many European countries And you donāt get to just murder or grape someone because youāre a minor.
And the mindset it shows to not only video... This is what Iām talking about when I say
Simone Collins: they think about- No, itās so sick, and itās, itās truly sick. Itās, itās, itās horrific. It, yeah ... to video it,
Malcolm Collins: put it on Snapchat. To do that shows you donāt believe youāre going to be punished.
Simone Collins: Yeah, they, they, they expected some level of impunity, and they got it.
And- I mean, like, they werenāt wrong to do that ... and then they got it. Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: This is the thing thatās changing. When youāre like, āItās a m- itās a minor changeā- Yeah,
Simone Collins: I guess if we live in a society in which young [00:34:00] teens believe that they can do such a thing, post it to Snapchat, and, and not be that at high risk and actually get caught, and then only get 30 hours community service shows how bad it is, I guess.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. And I think that w- I think the wrong takeaway from this, right? Which I think some of the right is going to have, is that this means that we need to exclude all members of these communities from our faction. And that, that is a huge mistake, because you donāt have enough white people to win elections.
The, in, in, in fact, a lot of this mindset, while it is prevalent in some of these minority communities, is coming downstream of, of white women. Okay? You donāt have the votes to win if you try to take a racialist perspective, like, say, a Nick Fuentes does. If you want to win, you need to get on our team- P- people who want their group to behave respectably and want their [00:35:00] group to be held accountable.
That, that, once you get that, then, then it works. Itās okay. Bring them over, right? But thatās the world we need to move to if, if weāre gonna win, realistically. And then with everyone else, I think we need to get dramatically harsher. And I think that we are seeing a model of the way that the West or the United States at least, should reorient the way it sees people who...
And, and, and groups that are acting bad. I think Israel is sort of modeling the direction we need to go. And I think that thatās one reason why they make such a natural and strong ally right now, is some people are like, āWell, you know, Jews see themselves as a distinct group,ā and yes, they have, you know...
I can go to Israel and have a great life. Like Iāve, Iāve, Iāve been to Israel before. Itās a really nice place. You donāt face... At, at least when I was there, I never got any sense of any discrimination. Itās not that there arenāt parts of Israel you canāt go where you will face discrimination but thatās true of anywhere, right?
You know, there are white communities where youāll face discrimination in the United States. Thereās Black [00:36:00] communities where youāll face discrimination in the United States. But the, the overall, theyāve created a multi-ethnic society in Israel and a multicultural society. But it is still a society where there is a, a ethnic identity and cultural identity and religious identity sort of recognized.
And I think that that is the direction that we can go in the United States that will be sane. And we actually see, like a lot of people can think, āOh, youāre not gonna peel off, you know, Black voters.ā We actually have a significant Black fan base, first of all, for people who are unaware of that. And in addition to that when the left tries to do all these crazy things like de- go, defund the police and stuff like this, on average Black people, when I talk about like wh- whites donāt have enough money not enough votes to win on their own on average, Black voters were more anti-defund the police than the average white voter.
Note here, Iām not talking about like Republican white voters. Iām talking about the average white voter. That means you can peel off people easier [00:37:00] from the Black side than the white side on this particular issue. And the a- answer is, is because when you recognize, oh, this community is more violent, because as Simone said, they are disproportionately the subject of that violence And you say, āOkay, this means we need to act in a different way when engaging with this community,ā the, the, the, the people who benefit from that the most are the people from that community.
Thatās why Blacks didnāt want the police defunded, right? Like, a- and if you, if you look at... Well, I mean, youāve, youāve obviously got different portions of these communities, but the Blacks who still have healthy families and are having lots of kids are, from what Iāve seen, universally in this conservative camp.
It is, a- a- and note, there are a lot of, you know, raised without dad stuff in the Black community. The, the rate is astonishingly high. But I donāt think that that is going to continue to be a problem going [00:38:00] forwards, because weāve seen the Black fertility rate drop below the white fertility rate in the United States.
If youāre not aware of that, that, that happened. Not controlling for income, just raw numbers dropped below the white fertility rate. I, I remember when I mentioned that on the stream, people were, like, confused. They thought it was like... Watch our episode on it. Like, we go over all the data. Like, like, if you look at native-born Blacks, they have a desperately low fertility rate in the United States.
Most of the Black fertility rate is pumped up by immigrants. Native Blacks mainly have a fertility rate of, like, 1.3 at this point. And so, what, what basically what Iām saying is this is a community we can eventually get on team.
Speaker 22: Reverend Jordan Wells. Iām a Black man, proud conservative, and a follower of Jesus Christ. When I see protesters outside the Collin County Courthouse chanting, āF**k white lives,ā after Karmelo Anthonyās sentencing for murdering Austin Metcalf, my soul grieves. This isnāt justice. This isnāt community. This is a demonic hatred, plain and simple.
All lives are made in the image of God, every single one, Black, white, brown, doesnāt matter. Celebrating the loss... This is, this is [00:39:00] true. Celebrating the loss of any innocent life or cheering on evil because of skin color is straight from the pit of hell. And hereās the truth they donāt want to say out loud.
When Black conservatives, Christians, or truth tellers like me call this out, we get labeled as traitors, Uncle Toms, or betrayers of the community. Itās true. Let them talk. Iād rather be disliked by some in my own community than stand before a holy God and be found guilty of excusing evil, hating my neighbor, or twisting justice for racial points.
My allegiance is to Christ first, not color, not tribe, not political pressure. Woe to those who call evil g- good and good evil, Isaiah 5:20. I ch- I choose truth over tribe, light over darkness, God over man. Who else is tired of the hate? Drop a prayer hands if you stand for real justice, not skin color
Malcolm Collins: You know, reacting with hostility to everyone in the community.
But when it comes to the people who are doing things like protesting the Anthony ver- verdict or stuff like that, you know, the people [00:40:00] who we see, you know, the Cardi Bās and stuff like that, the level of anonymity we need to have to these people should be as if, you know, th- like, like they have genocidal intentions.
The people who cheer when the white population is falling, theyāre doing that because they want to get rid of this population. In every other context we call that genocide, and they have violent genocidal intentions. And thatās the way we need to reframe how we see who we are up against. We need to be the side of true and genuine diverse groups working together to win and preserve civilization against the racist spastics.
And the left has become the team of racists. I mean, youāve got Nick Fuentes on the left now saying heās a moderate Democrat, voting leftists since forever. Youāve got the Islamists there. Youāve got the, the the gay extremists there. Watching the Islamists and the gays fight over pride was hilarious.
But the point being is every one of the mainstream racist factions, like David Duke went to the left, right? Like the, the, the head of the KKK [00:41:00] went to the left, right? Every one of the major racist factions in the United States has naturally drifted to the left because the left has become a coalition of supremacist groups that are simply living in denial about the fact that theyāre not at the top of that particular coalition, or that think that once they knock society down, their side will rise from the ashes.
And th- this is what weāre seeing. Like, obviously the gays know that the Islamists want them, you know... I think itās, what? 35% of American Muslims, and these are the ones who are having the majority of kids in Muslim communities, want Sharia law. Like, thatās literally want them dead. Thatās not like a, a figurative thing or something like that.
But they, they are aware of this. And same, like Nick Fuentes is aware of this as well, right? Like David Dukeās aware of this as well. But they just think that, oh, well, once they knock things down, once they, they, they donāt wanna be in a faction that allows Indians in. They donāt wanna be in a faction that allows Jews in when theyāre willing to play ball, right?
But we need those groups to win, right? D- even [00:42:00] just, like outside of the morality of this and everything like that, we need them to win because the right is the side of the honest conversation. And if the honest conversation says w- we are going to create a society where you are treated, you know, in, in, in a way that is demonstrably unfair or something like that then theyāre gonna be like, āWell, I donāt, I donāt wanna be a part of that coalition,ā right?
Whereas the left, they can have these conversations where one minute they say something Islamist and the next minute they go to Pride, right? Because it, thereās no inter- it doesnāt matter whether theyāre being logical or, or not. But as long as we are the logical conversation, we canāt play that game, and we need to push back against people who are performatively racist not to show
Because thereās, like, the jokey performative racism, which a, a lot of people on the right do to sort of show in group where theyāre not truly being spiteful about a group, right? But theyāre saying something thatās edgy, and so you know, āOkay, yeah, heās one of us,ā right? Like I can, I can take [00:43:00] what heās saying seriously.
An, an example of this, Leaflet actually had a really funny joke, is she was looking at all the protesters outside the Anthony trial, and she said that she should start a stand for you know, that juice-soaked pineapple trend. Have you not seen the juice-soaked pineapple trend?
Simone Collins: I heard thereās something about pineapples and Kool-Aid and the CIA thatās floating about the internet, but not this.
Black people
Malcolm Collins: apparently, like, invented this thing where they sort of pickle a pineapple in heavily sugared juice.
And itās an extremely high calorie thing, and thereās videos of, like, fat Black woman eating it, and then Asmongold tried it, and he said itās disgusting. But itās become, like, the, the joke, the Black thing, right?
And, and so she said thatās not genuinely being mean to that group or anything like that. Itās just being edgy. Like- Itās like the, I donāt know, the, the w- w- with the watermelons of our generation or something like that. Oh. Or the fried chicken of our generation. Itās like,
Simone Collins: if you- Well, isnāt it kind of like making fun of [00:44:00] a basic white b***h for liking pumpkin spice lattes?
Malcolm Collins: Yes. Itās exactly like a, a basic white b***h l- And, and itās so weird that for a while in our society you could say, āOh, pumpkin spice latte,ā like, as a joke about white women, right? And everyone would laugh. And you say fried chicken, why, why, why is that a problem to say? Like, fried chickenās a tasty thing, right?
Like, itās not like- Really good ... disparaging a community to say that they like fried chicken. Itās not like saying they like
Simone Collins: being- Itās a testament to good taste. Now all I want is Wing Bucket. No.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, like if, if, if, if you were talking about, like, okay, maybe if you say that, like, Indians smell like curry or something.
I mean, I generally think curry smells good, but, like, I could see that being disparaging. But saying you like fried chicken is just like- Saying you have to- Duh ... is disproportionately true in the community. Itās like a known- Yeah ... bla, bla, bla. But we as- Yeah, yeah, yeah ... a society just, like, acted like, āOh my God, you canāt do that,ā which shows one thing- Yeah, I
Simone Collins: guess itās-
exactly ... maybe thereās an episode in that on its own. Iād kind of like to explore, [00:45:00] like, why kind of teasing a, a racial, national, or ethnic group about food sometimes is okay and sometimes not. Like, if someoneās like, āOh, those natto-eating Japanese,ā like, I donāt really know anyone who eats natto whoās not Japanese.
And itās really- What the heck is natto? I think itās really gross. Most people, even, like, a lot of Japanese people think itās really gross, but, like, talking about it isnāt gonna make it get me in trouble, whereas, like- What is natto? Natto is a very, very healthy but kinda st- like, really, like, mucusy fermented soybean.
Really good for you, like incredibly healthy food. But-
Malcolm Collins: Okay ...
Simone Collins: yeah, Iām, Iām not for it
Malcolm Collins: Are you workshop slurs here? Natto eaters, is that too much of a-
Simone Collins: Na- natto, N-A-T-T-O, natto. People
Malcolm Collins: arenāt even gonna be able to pronounce this. This is ridiculous. Youāre- Well, anyway- Youāre
Simone Collins: not even- I, I donāt get it.
Like, itās, itās one of those things of, like, can, can you not? Like, like, I know that... Like, I stayed with a Japanese family once where, like, one, one family member would eat it every morning for breakfast. He was a doctor. He knew how good it was for you, and itās like a [00:46:00] very traditional Japanese, like, breakfast food over rice.
And, like, the rest of the family was like, āThatās nasty.ā But, like, but but then Iām sure there are lots of people per this, like, pineapple dish youāre describing, within communities where itās popular who are like, āThatās nasty.ā And I think that there are lots of people in the white community who are like, āI am not ever going to touch a pumpkin spice latte.
I, I am, Iām a purist. I only drink espresso from the specially sourced coffee bean.ā Right? Like- Right ... why is it weird to... Anyway, weāre getting off topic. Well, because itās weird because
Malcolm Collins: we created a racial caste system. That is what happened. It was a caste system where different social norms applied to different groups.
This is historically what we called racism where one group had specific social norms around their behavior that was expected to be followed, and they got, they, they got used to it being the case that they couldnāt be criticized as a group.
Simone Collins: Oh, Germans and krauts. So there, there was that against white people, and doughboys.
Well,
Malcolm Collins: potato [00:47:00] eaters, you know,
Simone Collins: I donāt... Was potato eaters this? Iāve never heard potato eaters. Iāve heard krauts. Iāve heard doughboys. This is for the Irish Well, yeah, but Iāve never heard someone say that. Iāve heard people say krauts. Iāve heard people say-
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, but it, th- those terms are horrible.
But the point being is imagine when youāre trying to understand how somebody could, like, be like, āOh, itās disgusting that this person was tried for a crime they obviously committed,ā right? How you end up with that mindset is you first have to live a life where your group is never responsible for the things it does, and this is genuinely the world they lived in.
When you could not talk about Black crime statistics without being yelled at for being a racist, that means that they grew up without hearing that at equivalent rates of incomes, Black have significantly higher rates of homicides, right? Like a, a, a per- when... Because that wasnāt part of the conversation, it warped their brains.
Because they grew up seeing, like, āOh, I can just Snapchat myself graping someone, and I get off scot-free,ā right? Like, it warped their perception, and itās funny that the left [00:48:00] n- normalize this term, but when you grow up with privilege being treated equally feels like persecution. And we as a society, even on the right, even you, a sane person, I think didnāt realize how much privilege many of these people grew up with.
The feeling that whenever they are... And we see this in our society. Whenever they you know, suppose they, like, run a scam on a place and they get caught. Now all of a sudden they can scream racism, right? You know, with, with, with bricks and minifigs being like, āOh, this is anti-Mormon bigotry,ā right?
You know, getting so used to claiming this group status means that you personally, maybe your entire life, never really felt what responsibility feels like because it was always the other personās fault because you were always taught to make it the other personās fault. And that allowed you to violently escalate like this.
And I think that we, like, when you talk about how do you, and every, every, [00:49:00] I think, like, Black person or a Muslim who actually cares about the future of their communities. Well, Muslims are a bit different because they have a different long-term goal, but Black person at least in the United States. When they think about how they wanna fix their community, they know step one is responsibility.
Like, when theyāre being... Because you canāt begin to teach anything else until you can teach responsibility. And if you watch older Black content, this was the core thing that they were trying to teach. They were like, āThis is the direction we need to go as a people.ā And it was something that was even core to Black culture, as we point out.
In the 1950s, Blacks had half the rate of out-of-wedlock births that the white population had. But anyway, thoughts, Simona. Am I, am I going too far here?
Simone Collins: I still feel like thereās something missing in the discourse. Like, thereās something missing in How, like what, these people who are posting like, āWell [00:50:00] good, Iām glad that this person did this.ā
āCause what, what theyāre saying is, I think what I worry about is that weāre just seeing an increased escalation where itās like a Chinese finger trap, right? Where like one side is like really, really mad and then the other side starts pulling away too, and then like we just keep doing this and it gets tighter.
No, no,
Malcolm Collins: no, no, no, no, no, no. Youāre completely misinterpreting what you, what, what youāre seeing. What you saw was one side that secretly had really, really atrocious, abhorrent, evil perspectives, opinions, and goals, but that didnāt publicly voice it. And the other side now being like, āWait, youāre not actually saying itās okay to just stab a white kid, right?
Like, and itās, you donāt actually think he should face... You donāt actually think that you should be able to kill a white girl then have the police cover for you, right?ā And the other side being like, āNo, that is our position.ā And you hearing them say, āNo, that is our position,ā [00:51:00] your confusion comes from the fact that you feel like they have reactively backed into this position when thatās not what happened.
This is just their revealed preferences for a long time finally being forced to be put on the table
Thatās, thatās... And I, I think if you think about these positions, if you look at the writings of Dorhan Montani, the way they talk about colonizers versus colonized the way that they, they talk about any of this, right? Like you even talked to me about this where you, thereās this phenomenon of white progressive women feeling like they have to go ask people for permission to have children ācause they do not want to accidentally increase the white population, right?
Like, that is an, a racial underclass when youāre at that, that point. And I think that we as a society overly tried to think of them as just sort of like a more extreme position of like whatever Democrats were in the ā90s or whatever, and thatās not what weāre seeing here, okay? Weāre seeing a political ideology [00:52:00] that needs to be responded to with, I think, a level of force that we in the United States are not used to needing to use.
But it, it-
Simone Collins: So explicitly then, what is your proposed solution?
Malcolm Collins: As Iāve said, I think the politics of right-wing I- Israel is the politics the right-wing United States needs to move towards. I think that that is the, the realistic... Like basically a lot of people are gonna have to be deported. A lot of people are gonna have to be deported, and itās not gonna look nice.
But we need to stop sympathizing with obvious bad actors and understand that the enablers of the bad actors are as bad as the bad actors themselves because they prevent punishment from being handed out. If youāre the person who lets go of the grapist, right, like the gang grapist and then they go out and do that to somebody else, youāre as responsible as they are for that, and we need [00:53:00] to be applying that responsibility throughout society.
To people like Cardi B, to people like the people who are tweeting this, to The Guardian, to these leftist organizations and politicians. While ensuring that we do not normalize an environment where people of different backgrounds do not feel comfortable because they can help us, right? They can be our biggest enforcers.
And the, you know, the Sikhs, like, yeah, we, yeah, we need to get rid of the bad actors in the Sikh community. We need to get rid of these immigrants who are coming here, taking all the... Thatās a person who you can get to vote for you, and now you can win, you can win elections, right? Or you can have run on your side and win an election, right?
Like, I know you may not like it. You may have to hold your nose now that youāve developed some sort of like racial consciousness, but your racial conscious ideals will never win in an environment where you act as an eth- an a, an antagonistic ethno-nationalist rather than a team [00:54:00] player.
Simone Collins: Yikes.
Malcolm Collins: And I feel strongly about this ācause we can never do anything about the bad actors as long as we enable the bad actors on our side that prevent us from winning the big tent.
Simone Collins: Yeah. Yeah, no, thatās true because, well, theyāre, theyāre the primary blocker of genuinely moving forward as long as they, they get to, like, represent the movement or become, at least be accused of being a face of it even if theyāre not.
āCause thatās the, I think the big problem is all these people on the left are refusing to even engage with any critical thinking because a single person who is genuinely racist is showing up in the protests, right? And then, like, that, the presence of that one person- And
Malcolm Collins: that allows them... Th- I mean, think about what the leftās saying.
They say if one racist person comes, we can just kill them. Yeah,
Simone Collins: it renders everyone elseās opinions entirely moot. They, they donāt count. But remember,
Malcolm Collins: itās that it renders everyone else, because they say, you know, kill a [00:55:00] Nazi, right? E- everyone else now, because anyone who goes into a room with a Nazi is a Nazi, as they say.
So if one bad actor shows up at a protest, and remember theyāre considered, like, just MAGA Nazis at this point which is more than 50% of the American population they, they consider everyone there a target to be murdered, right? Like, as weāve seen from their repost. And I think that we on the right just need to wake up and realize that.
Theyāre not just saying it. It is, it is, theyāre doing it, right? Like, itās, itās, itās, it, th- theyāre cheering for it. You have to stand up in a way that can allow you to win. Yeah. And the way that... And thatās the other thing. I just get so angry. I have as much anger at an individual like Nick Fuentes as I do against one of these people because he is functionally protecting them through his politics.
And I think you should view him with as much disgust as somebody like Cardi B.
Simone Collins: Does he express racist,
Malcolm Collins: like- He wonāt build partnerships with, like, Indians or [00:56:00] people in interracial relationships like JD Vance.
Simone Collins: You know? Oh, right, I forgot. Right, even that was too far for him.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, so- Okay ... youāre never gonna win.
Youāre never gonna win in the United States with those views. So itās stupid and it prevents us from actually creating an accountable country Anyway Love you. Hopefully I- This is depressing because I
Simone Collins: donāt see this resolving anytime soon.
Malcolm Collins: I love we had a, w- Iāve been posting instead of just the boring gear, I was like, āOh, letās post some RFAB images,ā right?
And Iāve been posting images of my wife, and somebody thought they were a sexualized Catholic nun, and Iām
Simone Collins: like- Two, two people thought that they were nuns and as- Did you respond
Malcolm Collins: to them?
Simone Collins: I did. Th- that is disappointing because nuns and Puritans do not dress the same at all. Like, thereās a very big difference between a habit and a bonnet, but-
Malcolm Collins: No, a habit and a bonnet look nothing alike.
Your outfit looks nothing
Simone Collins: like a nun. Well, there, there are many different types of habits with different forms of cowls or no [00:57:00] cowls, and some, some habits I know of some orders do look quite minimal, but they never look like bonnets, but I donāt know. I mean, what are you gonna do? Yeah,
Malcolm Collins: you can tell by your outfit.
It had a clear Protestant church behind it in multiple of the images, right? You know, a, y- your, your outfit is incredibly distinct. You dress like a medieval woman. Which by the way, we want to make more of a thing. When I learned that Leaflet in real life dresses this way, and, like, a bunch of other people dress this way-
Simone Collins: Yeah, it seems like other people in the, the base camp world also have wives who dress this way.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, we
Simone Collins: need to make this, like, the, the conservative womanly- Or themselves dress this way ...
Malcolm Collins: way of dressing going forward. I, itās fun. I like it. Itās you know, itās, it, itās cool and aspirational, and doesnāt, like, try hard to, like- Try hard ... be a goth or something like that.
Simone Collins: Well, the argument I was making to Malcolm is that itās I think thereās this point of peak enshittification of modern clothing.
At which people are going to have to just have this reckoning of either they are going to admit that theyāre wearing the equivalent of hospital gowns, of, like, just Kleenex thatās going to fall apart after a couple wears that they have to keep rebuying or [00:58:00] theyāre going to declare bankruptcy and, and take a totally different approach to clothing.
And one of those approaches is just to go back and, like, you know, Iām just gonna wear a chemise and a skirt and cinch it in with stays or a girdle or a belt. And, like, that works, because it, it fits all sizes. It changes as your size fluctuates. Itās great in all weathers. Itās just so useful.
Especially if you get more durable natural fiber fabrics of higher quality. So letās make it a thing. Yes.
Malcolm Collins: I love it and agree, but yeah, I, I, I, I was, like, personally offended that they watch you every day and they, th- that wasnāt immediately... She has big circular glasses, a Puritan outfit, and wears a bonnet, which Simone wears on occasion.
Anyway, the... But I wanted to, the reason Iām posting her, by the way, is Iām like, āLook, we on the right can be cool and sexy and alluring. Thatās not the same as being promiscuous.ā
Simone Collins: Maybe not. I donāt think everyone-
Malcolm Collins: No ...
Simone Collins: thinks that deranged looking Puritan woman is cool and sexy. [00:59:00]
Malcolm Collins: I, I think fun anime girls is, is part of how we win this.
AI anime girls is a weapon the left doesnāt have. So letās have fun. Letās be the side of the party, and stop policing everything, and stop yelling- about everything because if we make our side not fun, weāre not gonna be able to pull people over. There is a difference between degeneracy and a fully clothed long sleeve AI of your wife with a yandere face.
You know? That, that, those two things are as far apart as possible, and I think we need to reflectively not attack things that are not actually in any way immoral or bad. Getting people on board with the idea that Christianity can be fun and alluring is, is the... Even the Catholic Church made an anime girl, right?
You know? Something we should do. Anyway, have fun, Simone. Love you to death.
Simone Collins: Love you too, Malcolm Okay. Hello, Simone. You
Malcolm Collins: look beautiful today.
Simone Collins: So do you. You look sharp- Yeah ... even though I know [01:00:00] you need to sleep. Did you sleep today? Did you sleep? I did.
Malcolm Collins: I slept for like an hour and a half.
Simone Collins: Oh, yeah. I did. Yeah. Even though you, like, woke up at 2:00 AM. Thatās not gonna help you. āCause you stayed up later than I did, pretty sure.
I think your light was still on when I went to sleep. Ugh
Malcolm Collins: Well, thereās so much to do. I, I know- Yeah, but what happens if you, I mean, Iām
Simone Collins: dead or if you die or get dementia, like, what good are you to any of that work, right?
Malcolm Collins: Well, Iāve gotten everything I needed to done.
Simone Collins: So youāre gonna go to sleep super early tonight?
Because you were staying up way too late. You need to start chilling earlier so you can be relaxed
Malcolm Collins: and up for sleep. Well, guess what we have working on the site now, is better not safe for work image-to-image model systems.
Simone Collins: Well, thank you. Thatās what I
Malcolm Collins: was killing myself over, is
Simone Collins: getting those- Now people can goon more efficiently.
Thank you.
Malcolm Collins: We need money.
Simone Collins: Yeah. Well.
Malcolm Collins: You know, and this is what people pay for, okay? The, the, that is the world we live in. Yes, Jerome ... and so if, if I can, I will make money doing that. Itās RFAB, by the way, dot AI, for people who wanna try it. The, I mean, the main thing that people use [01:01:00] it for is narrative storytelling, like a choose-your-own-adventure type story.
Itās where you can build your own narrative engine and play through them with any frontier model you want.
Simone Collins: And I primarily use it for vibe- Image ... any vibe coding Iāve ever done has been on RFAB, and then I, lots of image generation. It has such a good image generator.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah.
Simone Collins: And recipe generation now.
Malcolm Collins: And we charge a- across the board, a 50% flat margin on any model that youāre using which is, like, way less than almost any other site.
Most itās 5X margin. Itās enormous. Well,
Simone Collins: the best thing about it is its latest video tutorials, which I donāt think youāve brought live yet. I, I wanna be able to post them next to- No, theyāre all live. Video tutorials are all- Did you upload them to the folder that I can use to post them elsewhere online, because
Malcolm Collins: they- Do you like how angry I look in them?
Simone Collins: Theyāre, theyāre very angry tutorials. Like, heāll be like, āOkay, and how to use our recipe tool. Actually, never mind. If you canāt figure that out yourself, youāre mentally deficient.ā Heāll, like, go through steps and be like, āYou know what? Just figure it out.ā Like, itās, itās, itās great. I agree. And theyāre actually helpful.
To be clear, these [01:02:00] are very helpful. They walk you through the process. Theyāve made things that Iām like, āI donāt wanna try this. I donāt know how to do it.ā Like, I donāt, oh, and thereās... āCause he- The VTube- ... he puts in a lot of options. It can be kind of overwhelming to look at the screen. I think the video tutorials are genuinely useful.
I just also find the delivery extremely entertaining because heās so irritable about it. So-
Malcolm Collins: Because I have tooltips explaining
Simone Collins: this to people. I know, itās just Iām so used to, like, very tedious tutorials. You know, itās like, āDa-na-na, next you do this,ā and here itās, like, actually both funny and useful, so thank you.
Malcolm Collins: So yeah, on the on the, This is for the VTubers where we have the, the biggest tutorial. We also have one for ImageGen, and we have one for, Oh. Whatās the other one for? We have one for the new AIDubber. Thatās the one thing that doesnāt c- take a 50% margin. Itās just, itās so expensive to dev full anime episodes.
Itās, like, 10 bucks or something. So for that reason we only take a 20% margin on that.
Simone Collins: Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: Because I wanna be magnanimous or whatever.
Simone Collins: Well, you wanna be practical. I mean, anime [01:03:00] watchers need their time or money for merch tables at anime cons
Octavian Collins: Mommy, I running, I ran downstairs and I fell b- before.
I was trying to place in the stairs, and now I need a replacement.
Simone Collins: Well, I will give you a replacement after weāre done recording. But now you can just leave that here, and Iāll fix it when Iām done recording, okay?
Octavian Collins: Okay. You can let me use one of the pins from that
Simone Collins: like- That is exactly what- Yeah ... Iām gonna be doing.
Octavian Collins: Yeah, you can get, like, another of these, like, from the other finger thing.
Simone Collins: Yeah, just leave it on your desk, okay?
Octavian Collins: Okay.
Simone Collins: Thank you, love. Have fun. Be safe.
Speaker 26: A ravine A ravine? Yeah. Thatās scary. Do you want the kids to survive? Yeah. Do you want the evil hacker to survive? Yeah. Oh, well, letās see what happens. Uh-oh. Doesnāt look good for him, does it? I donāt think- You donāt like him very much? Whereās the ravine? The ravine? Well, heās kind of in it now
This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit basedcamppodcast.substack.com/subscribe -
In this Based Camp episode, Simone and Malcolm Collins explore an expanded framework for personal morality and āmodern sinsā designed to maximize mental health, personal efficacy, and long-term human flourishing. Framed through a Christian and Techno-Puritan lens, they discuss how biblical morality has iteratively improved over time and why we need updated rules for todayās world.
Topics include: avoiding busywork and performative suffering, rejecting pride and status signaling, the dangers of inaction and moral absolutism, self-flagellation, empty words, corrupted mercy, and living with aplomb. They emphasize consequentialist ethics focused on future human (and post-human) flourishing through science, technology, and disciplined living.
A practical guide to building a better life, overcoming common traps, and aligning daily actions with higher purpose. Applicable to Christians, secular listeners, and anyone seeking a high-agency value system.
Techno-Puritan Sins, Summarized
Sin, per Techno-Puritanism, is any pattern of behaviorāmental, emotional, or practicalāthat wastes your capacity or undermines long-term flourishing for yourself or humanity.
All Techno-Puritan sins are derived from a single principle:
* Maximize long-term human flourishing and effectiveness
* Minimize:
* Wasted effort
* Short-term thinking
* Self-indulgent or performative behavior
1. Acting from social expectation (performative living)
It is sinful to:
* Do things just because theyāre expected (e.g., ceremonies, reunions).
* Especially when they donāt align with your goals or values.
Why? Obligation without purpose is wasted life energy.
2. Pride as social comparison (āproving others wrongā)
It is sinful to motivate yourself primarily by:
* Showing others youāre better than them.
* Seeking validation through superiority.
Why? External validation distorts decision-making. Seeking it may produce shallow or misaligned decisions.
3. Living to fit an image or archetype
It is sinful to:
* Make decisions to match a role (e.g., āideal Christian,ā āalpha male,ā ātradwifeā).
* Prioritize appearance of virtue over actual outcomes.
Why? Doing so drives one to āperform goodnessā instead of doing good and leads to inefficient or even harmful choices.
4. Wasted effort / misaligned roles
It is sinful to do things that:
* Donāt actually help others
* Arenāt valued by those theyāre meant to serve (e.g. Performing āideal spouseā behaviors that your partner doesnāt need or want.)
Why? Effort without impact is morally wasteful.
5. Busywork (major emphasis)
It is sinful to:
* Spend time on on tasks that feel productive but arenāt meaningful (e.g. Working 12 hours but accomplishing less than 2 focused hours.)
* This Includes:
* Overwork without output
* Performative productivity
* Inefficient labor
Why itās considered especially bad:
* Reduces overall effectiveness
* Crowds out meaningful work
* Worse than leisure because it gives no recovery or benefit
6. Pure indulgence without purpose
It is sinful to
* Do things solely for personal pleasure with no broader benefit (e.g. indulging in excess entertainment or sexual behavior detached from long-term outcomes)
Nuance:
* Some indulgence is tolerated if it supports long-term function (rest, motivation).
7. Performative suffering / overwork signaling
It is sinful to:
* Show off stress, exhaustion, or hardship as a badge of honor.
* This includes:
* Bragging about long hours
* Glorifying burnout
Why? Suffering is not inherently virtuousāonly meaningful outcomes are.
8. Emotional indulgence (lack of āaplombā)
It is sinful to adopt unproductive emotional states, such as:
* Self-pity
* Anger
* Excessive grief expression
* Cynicism or snark
Why?
* Emotions are (to a degree) controllable and reinforce themselves.
* Indulging in negative emotions:
* Harms others
* Weakens self-control
* Reduces effectiveness
* Conversely, maintaining calm, forward-moving resilience, especially in hardship, imparts strength to oneself and others
9. Self-deception about morality
It is sinful to convince yourself that:
* Youāre being virtuous when youāre not
* Busywork or image-performance equals goodness
Why? Mislabeling behavior prevents improvement.
10. Failure to pursue meaningful contribution
It is sinful to not direct effort toward:
* Long-term human progress
* Knowledge, science, or societal development
Why? Immediate charity often distracts from long-term impact and can actively run counter to efforts that would maximize long-term human flourishing.
Episode Transcript
Malcolm Collins: [00:00:00] Hello, Simone. Iām excited to be here with you today. Today we are going to be discussing personal re- morality as it relates to, one, this is going to focus on just general advice for living a good life. Hmm. And a good way to structure your life to overcome many of the challenges that people face.
So this would be applicable to people of Christian perspective, non-Christian perspective, techno-Puritan perspective. But Iām gonna be couching it within the framing of Iām talking to Christians here. Okay? And the reason Iām couching it in that is because when we look at something like the Bible, people often get hung up.
Theyāre like, āWait, so I read all these parts about morality and, like, the seven deadly sins in the Bible and the Commandments, and then I read stuff like, āIf a man sells his daughter as a slave, she is not to go free as male slaves do. If she does not please the master who selected her for himself, he must let her be redeemed.
He has no right to sell her to other foreigners because he has broken faith with [00:01:00] her. If he selects her for his sons, he must grant her the rights of a daughter. If he marries her to another woman, he must not deprive the first one of food, clothing, or marital rights. If he does not provide her with these things, she is to go free without any payment of money.āā
And people are like, āWait, is that a bunch of rules about how to sell your daughter into slavery and then treat her afterwards?ā You know, like, they do seem like nice rules about selling your daughter into slavery, but it would seem like it might have been better to just not do that, to just be like, if youāre thinking of selling your daughter into slavery, and, like, pretty clearly because it, it talks about potentially marrying her sex slavery is what we would call that today donāt do it.
And the way that Christians and Jews get around this is they go, āWell, iteratively, that was a more moral way of dealing with slavery than other common traditions of this period.ā Hmm. And we have a whole episode where we go through that. And if you look at our last tract where we also went into morality at the societal level, we talk about the [00:02:00] many...
Like, you, you remember me going over them. It was a number of them, places in the Bible where God commands people to kill infants, and lots of infants. Like, the number of infants is very, very high, right?
Speaker 7: If you want to go through that, check out the episode, āChristianity Was Never a Religion of Peaceā that we released, last week. Itās a great episode. , We cite all the verses where this happens, , and itās a pretty frequent thing throughout the Old Testament
Malcolm Collins: And so people are like, āOkay, well,ā he told people to do that because those societies were practicing child sacrifice.ā
And I was like, āThatās not a very moral answer.ā Thatās like saying, āOh, we rescued a bunch of children from Epsteinās island, so we killed them all?ā Like, presumably if youāre saving the children who might be child sacrifice, right? Like, you donāt kill the... And note here the term used in some of these instances.
You canāt be like, āOh, heās only talking about toddlers who has absorbed the culture.ā They use terms meaning, like, breastfeeding infant, like suckling infants, right? Like, [00:03:00] very young. So itās like, okay Whatās going on here, right? Was this just like iteratively more moral than what came before it? Do these types of things still hold?
And how does this hold at like a personal level? And what Iāll note here is what we see, if you take the stance that God said all of this because it was iteratively better than the way things used to be done before he laid those things out, then presumably itās been a pretty long time since the New Testament was written.
More is expected of us or a more advanced understanding of morality is expected from us than what- Yeah ... was laid out in the New Testament
So what are those things? And thatās what weāre gonna go into today, is basically a new and expanded understanding of sins that will help you be like, āHmm, if I just make a personal commitment to never do this list of [00:04:00] things, I will be both a much more mentally healthy person, I will be a much more efficacious person, and I will be able to do a lot more to push human civilization forwards.ā
And note here when we talk about pushing human civilization forwards, obviously this is a wider, like, technopuri- puritan track series, but itās, we try to make them more applicable to general Christians now as well. One of the fun things that you see in regards to us talking about the sons of man, which you also see all over the Bible.
You know, by the way, I didnāt make up the term the sons of man. Thatās all over the Old Testament. Very weird way to talk about people. Why would you talk about people as the sons of man, right? Like, thatās a... W- why in
Simone Collins: the world- Yeah, why not just, you know, humans or people?
Malcolm Collins: Why not just man, right? Well, suppose that these rules were supposed to apply to not just the humans we have today, but when we become a space-faring species, when we take our manifest destiny among the stars, weāre going to need to use genetic technology.
You basically have to. You canāt easily have people live their entire lives in zero G without some [00:05:00] form of gene editing, and most other planets are gonna require some gene editing to live on. And how extensive that goes could be bigger than that. Youāre gonna eventually have some humans that are AI integrations.
Youāre gonna have some humans... weāre gonna have AI working alongside us. So we take the sons of man to mean all of the intelligences which are downstream of humanity be those AI intelligences, uplifted animals, human intelligences of the far future that are genetically modified and stuff like that, and thatās why it says the sons of man.
I like that fun little, like, weird prediction of the applicability that that would have to have, but it tracks with the way society looks like itās going. So if weāre looking at that and weāre asking, okay, so if Godās sort of broader moral framework and at least how itās expressed seems to shift over time how can we find out what he really wanted with those frameworks?
Like, what was the point of the frameworks as they were laid out? And it appears [00:06:00] fairly clear, because we can look at the effects that these frameworks had on individuals and society at large. Okay. Which is an increased amount of human flourishing, right? This is human technological, civilizational flourishing, right?
The reason why you would want to create more humane rules around the selling of your daughter into slavery
Speaker 3: I was on a stream with Leaflet and somebody was asking, āWhat are sins?ā āCause we were talking about them more broadly, and I was like, āWhen you boil it down, sins are just a list of things that will up your life.ā
Some of them may seem like a good idea in the short term,. In the same way eating candy every morning for breakfast might.
Speaker 6: Whatās going on? Maybe itās all this stuff that you both eat. Oh, you get off that? No, honestly, itās true. Okay. Moss, what did you have for breakfast this morning? Smarty Cereal. Oh my God. I didnāt even know Smarty made a [00:07:00] cereal. They donāt. Itās just smarties and a bowl with milk.
Speaker 3: But in the long term, youāre going to suffer from it. Itās basically a long list of... And we saw this in one of the recent episodes we did on, , you know, rampant consumerization of human sexuality leading to the normalization of things like abortion and this destroying peopleās lives, right?
, The, the sin that they were committing, , ended up having this absolutely huge deleterious negative impact on them. The women who go out and w***e themselves when theyāre younger, the effect that this is gonna happen when they hit the wall, and then nobody wants them anymore, and then, , you know, you see this with pride, lying.
, Look at whatās going on with the Bricks & Minifigs CEO right now, right? , There is no sin, thereās no, like, rule that weāre given that isnāt long term in our own best interest. Sins are just a really [00:08:00] long list of, āDonāt piss on the electric fence.ā , And so if we are increasing the number of sins or expanding our understanding of sin, , itās basically expanding this.
Good rules to live by, good things to look out for. And when I pointed this out on, on stream, some people were like, āWell, no, you know, sins need to be, like, this really difficult thing to deal with. This really, like...ā And itās like they are insofar that anything you do purely for your own self-interest is a sin.
, EG playing video games or something like that. , And e- and even those things can eventually have negative effects on you. , But in terms of the more, like, explicitly labeled sins, , for example, sleeping with another dudeās wife, right? Like, it may feel good in the moment, but not even... Y- you donāt even need to say, like, civilizationally this is a bad idea to normalize.
Itās just obviously gonna come back and cause you more pain in the, in the long term.
And I would also [00:09:00] note that this seems to be a core thing that differentiates Christianity from other Abrahamic traditions. Like, I donāt think thereās anything actually negative, at least within a modern context, , where like a Muslim canāt eat pork, right? Like, I donāt think pork actually has any negative externalities in a modern context.
Or where a Jew cannot mix, you know, linen and flax in a single outfit. but in Christianity, I am unaware of any Christian sins where Iām like, āThis is just an obscure thing that was totally unique to a specific era.ā
Malcolm Collins: Sorry, what, what does he want?
Simone Collins: He wants to tell the viewers what he learned.
Octavian Collins: Like Germs can go in your body and some- theyāre, theyāre like tiny little dots, they can multiply. Multiply. Wait.
Malcolm Collins: So germs
Octavian Collins: get into you- White blood cells kind of have like mouth thingies that eat the [00:10:00] like germs that are like the other things I was talking about recently, the green things.
Simone Collins: Smart. Smart
Malcolm Collins: so first, how do you determine , , and the fact that the way that God expresses his morality has changed over time shows that the intentionality of God on humanity through these systems as they have evolved is that is, itās consequentialist in its framing, right?
Like it, it, it is based on some outcome, right?
Simone Collins: Well, and as you framed it in a different conversation when you discussed morality on the societal level, you argue that the New Testament was made for a point- At which human civilization had become much more globalized already, and you had different cultures interacting more, and you needed to begin to mask the brutality of Christianity to appear to be symbiotic so as to not become an existential threat to other cultures and obligate those cultures to completely [00:11:00] take out Christianity.
Malcolm Collins: Exactly. But it, but even, I mean, during the early period when they enter it ended the period where that was necessary. When they began to take over the, the Roman Empire they did not forget how brutal their religious teachings actually are. Mm. They just that, that only became sublimated later.
That only... I- in like the last 100 years, I wanna say, is really when the, all those parts of the Bible were forgotten. But to continue here. Except by some groups like the Quakers who, they annoy me, and the Anabaptists who I generally like. But anyway, to continue here. So whatās a good way to build your life in terms of like moral rules and everything like that?
So first, and you can see how to do this in The Pragmatistās Guide to Life, is build an objective function. That is, think through whatever it is, whether itās because God, you know, youāre coming at this from a Christian perspective or youāre coming at this from a completely secular perspective the collection of things that you think is of intrinsic good to maximize with your life.[00:12:00]
And then build a set of functions around that. By that what I mean is it might be like, well, within my life, maybe some of these things will be purely indulgent. I think I need X level of happiness, and once thatās satisfied, then I will put all of my effort into X or Y. You know, thatās the way functions are constructed.
Like 50% into doing this, 50% into doing this. Now if youāre a techno-puritan, youāre just gonna have one framing coming from what I was talking about here, which is what is Godās plan? Godās plan is continued human flourishing, so itās probably some level of comfort. And then once you reach that level of comfort thatās needed for, you know, maximum personal efficacy and not distraction then focus on maximizing future human flourishing.
And this is often best done through scientific advancement, which weāre gonna get to in a bit, right? Which is to say, generally speaking there are many places where you could, for example give money to the poor, right? And over, in 100 years, [00:13:00] in 200 years, because God doesnāt love somebody in 200 years and I donāt care less about somebody in 200 years than I care about a human today which is going to help more aggregate people?
Almost always things that help the civilization continue developing are going to have a bigger impact. And, and note thatās not just technology. Thatās things that help it economically develop. Thatās things that help it develop in terms of its moral systems how it deals with outside or parasitic groups that are exploiting systems.
So weāll get into all of that. And also note here this line I think highlights what I think is expected In terms of dedicating yourself to an extent to continued scientific progress. When we did our episode on Genesis not being incompatible with science one of the things we, we, we kept getting in the comments is, like, people forgot that, like, all of the early scientific advancements were made by people who were trying to understand God better.
Yeah. Right? Like, they, they... And, and even the Bible, like, goes into this. So, if you look at lines like, ā It is the glory of God [00:14:00] to conceal a matter. To search out a matter is the glory of kings.ā Mm. Which is to say you, the best of you, the best of humanity your greatest endeavor is the search of knowledge of things that God has not made immediately obvious, right?
Mm. So when somebodyās like, āOh, well, you know, God didnāt exactly and very cleanly lay out evolution in the Bible,ā why didnāt he do that, right? Why, why wasnāt that done? Itās like, oh, itās the glory of God to conceal a matter, and to search out a matter is the glory of kings. Which is to say that if you take a approach to everything that does not update post Jesusā time perspective on our understanding of nature and the world, youāre literally acting in rebellion to what the Bible is telling you to do.
Simone Collins: Right.
Malcolm Collins: All right. So- If youāre just inventing a religion for, like, savages, telling them, like, āDonāt give yourself to lust, donāt give yourself to gluttony, donāt give yourself...ā You know, like, seven deadly sins, stuff like that. Original Ten [00:15:00] Commandments. Very easy rules. But there are so many deleterious things that trap humans today at a significantly more socially and morally developed standpoint.
I think itās worth laying out additional sins so that you can easily categorize these in your head. So letās jump right into these.
Speaker 4: Note, , I think the majority of the additional sins Iām gonna be laying out are things that we are warned against at some point or another in the New Testament. , Itās just that the warnings are often not as explicit or salient in the way that the New Testament is often taught today.
, So if I give one of these out and youāre like, āOh, actually, , this line here could be used to mean that,ā yeah, I know
Malcolm Collins: And do try to keep track as weāre going, Simone, so you can add any that you think I miss here. Okay. āCause we now have, like, actual people who follow our religion. Iām like, well, if weāre doing that, we should do more to help them live a good life,
Simone Collins: right?
Well, we need to make our... I mean, weāre gonna be following these rules, too. Weāve been discussing this all week, so we need to have our own internal... [00:16:00] Well, we need a list we can publish somewhere. Yeah. Well, this
Malcolm Collins: actually came up with me this week, where I was like, should I go to my high school reunion, or should I not go to my high school reunion?
And it would have been, like, a 24-hour car ride, right? And I was like, one, no, that is against my objective function. It is cleanly against my objective function. It is purely indulgent, but itās not even an indulgence that will make me happy. And this here comes to the first sin of modernity, which is doing a thing because of societal expectation.
Simone Collins: Mm.
Malcolm Collins: You... Anytime you do a thing just because you think that it is whatās expected of you, like a graduation ceremony. How did the graduation ceremony actually help you, right? Or is it just a waste of time? Now, if you are doing it because your parents paid for you to go to college, and theyāll be proud, and thatās why youāre going, fine.
But if your parents arenāt showing up, why are you? Right? That is time that you could be [00:17:00] spending on doing something productive that moves yourself forward, educating yourself more, or moves human civilization forward. A second one here, which Iām really, this comes to the graduation thing. I wanna go to the graduation and I wanna show all these people, look at, look at me.
Look, look at how great I am these days, right? Iām doing so much better than you. I have a Wikipedia page. I have all these followers. A that, that makes me amazing, and look at you and your sad lives th- that arenāt doing anything, right? That-
Simone Collins: Which, and this, this is a big motivational factor for many people.
Malcolm Collins: It is. Is what, what the Bible was trying to warn us about was pride. But I think people have recontextualized it. People motivate themselves, and I motivated myself when I was younger in a big way by owning the people who thought they were better than me. And this is a unique, I think even genetically baked in problem with people of the backwards tradition.
Yeah. Is we just love, get deep satisfaction of owning people who think theyāre better than us. And Iām not [00:18:00] saying you should never indulge in that satisfaction if you can use it to motivate efficacious and moral behavior. However I am saying that you shouldnāt do it if itās leading you to do something which is purely indulgent.
Simone Collins: Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: This is the same way where, like, feeling good during sex isnāt bad if youāre using it for procreation, obviously, right? ā
Simone Collins: Cause thatās the point. Thatās what is, it was evolved to motivate.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, but it can still pull you down a path of evil, right? If you approach it the wrong way. All right, so, tho- f- first two sins laid out there.
Next, living to maximize your image in somebody elseās eyes. I have noticed many people-
Simone Collins: You mean to look good to other people?
Malcolm Collins: No
Simone Collins: Maximize your image. What does that mean?
Malcolm Collins: They build their heuristics for making decisions. We have an episode where we talk about Honza, who is an example of somebody who does [00:19:00] this, where we notice that this m- male thought leading influencer in, like, the red pill-ish diaspora community was basically saying when he was making major life decisions, like, what decision is the more mannish decision to make?
What decision is the more masculine decision to make? He is optimizing his major life decisions around fitting some image that he thinks is the image that he needs to be living. Not towards- Mm-hmm ... the effect that that image will have on society, not towards the effect that image is gonna have on other people, not towards anything thatās efficacious, but entirely based on an image.
Simone Collins: Right. So, okay, the, the, the distinction here is, is that itās, itās about an archetype, fitting an archetype, and that being really not, not cool. Yeah. Donāt live your life to try to fit an archetype, like the sexy woman, the desirable man, the tough guy, the, the saintly caretaker, if thatās just what youāre trying to satisfy without understanding the moral [00:20:00] fundamentals, the, the values that youāre working to serve.
Malcolm Collins: Yes.
So, and, and where this can become really dangerous for people who otherwise would frame themselves as good Christians is they attempt to fit the image of a good Christian. They abandon actual morality for a social role in maximizing that social role
Simone Collins: Okay, yeah
Malcolm Collins: This can be a big problem for like trad wives,
like, if itās the self-image of a tradwife, if itās the self-image of a tradhusband, if itās the self-image of a good Christian woman, for example. And people can say, why is that a bad thing to do if itās a positive self-image? And itās because attempting to maximize positive self-images is something that can lead to immorality.
So letās- Well,
Simone Collins: I think whatās worse is, like, letās say that your goal is to serve God, and then the way you think you can moor to that is by [00:21:00] invoking in your mind the image of the most holy, saintly person, and if I just sort of cosplay maximally well as that caricature, then presumably I- Iāve got my bases covered.
The problem is then you will think that you are actually doing morally good things, when instead you are just putting on the costume of someone who does morally good things and congratulating yourself for it and, and assuming that itās all working out just fine when itās really not.
Malcolm Collins: Exactly. And, and to, to, to give examples of how this can, for example, destroy a marriage.
If one person is, rather than being a good wife because they want to serve humanity and society by serving their children and their husband, for example they can say, āWell, these are the strict roles and things that a tradwife is supposed to do, and you as a husband are supposed to make all of these things doable for me,ā right?
And so then the family ends up in a scenario where they may, for a childās medical bills, require a second [00:22:00] income or something like that. Mm-hmm. And the woman doesnāt end up doing that, and it causes the man bitterness, and then they end up fighting with each other. The woman doesnāt under- Like, the, the, the things that sheās doing arenāt even really appreciated by the husband.
Like, the reason youāre supposed to do all these tradwifey things are because it is for the behalf of the husband, right? Like, they, presumably they like these things. What if they donāt even value these things, right, and they would prefer you did something else that is difficult for you to do? Now itās just completely wasted effort.
And waste-
Simone Collins: Yeah, thatās a really good point. What a lot of tradwife influencers are things that, like, women want to do for themselves and that men donāt really care about.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. And, and wasted effort is inherently sinful because every amount of effort that you waste is time you could have spent on something else.
Mm-hmm. Here I guess Iāll just go into the next sin which is busywork busywork is as sin as doing something that is [00:23:00] directly immoral without societal externalities. Hmm. So I, I guess e- examples here, right? I think anything you do thatās, like, personally indulgent and doesnāt move society forwards is sinful because we see from Romans, Okay, so
Simone Collins: that could just be, like, doing a spa day instead of working toward something you value.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. Anything you donāt do for God or anything you cannot say to be doing for God is a sin, and if Godās goal is the long-term flourishing of humanity, anything thatās not contributing to that is sinful. Now, we are all sinners. You shouldnāt expect to live a sinf- sinless life.
Simone Collins: Sure.
Malcolm Collins: However, many people confuse themselves and lie to themselves by acting as if they are doing something less sinful by doing pointless busywork than by doing something like playing video games or masturbating,
Simone Collins: right?
Well, yeah, I think something uniquely common in the United States, where you see a lot of performative suffering and performative exhaustion, is people... And actually, this, I think, happens a lot in Asia too, where you see, like, the six-day workweeks and people who work extra long, and the norms [00:24:00] of you canāt leave your office in Japan until your boss leaves, and your boss stays way long that, well, if youāre suffering and if youāre not happy and itās really not fun, then youāre working really hard and youāre doing good things, when really, like, okay, great, youāre miserable and youāve just wasted a ton of time.
And why-
Malcolm Collins: Like,
Simone Collins: that
Malcolm Collins: is- Yeah, why busywork is strictly a higher form of sin than- Hmm ... pure indulgence
Simone Collins: than- Yeah, like you should have just played a video game for- Yeah ... three hours that day, spent one hour actually doing meaningful work instead of being so sleep deprived and stressed out that you could only do 15 minutes of actually productive work that day.
Malcolm Collins: Exactly,
Simone Collins: because it lowers- Even though youāre in an office for, like, 12 hours ...
Malcolm Collins: it lowers your overall efficiency, right? Yeah. Like, at least f- forms of indulgence can help you stay sane- Yeah ... feel rewarded, feel motivated. Busywork does not do that, right?
Simone Collins: Thatās a really good point.
Malcolm Collins: A- and so it is a worse sin and more of a sin to call out in your partner, in yourself than other forms of, of [00:25:00] sin.
It is, it is truly a- This is
Simone Collins: for sure my biggest, like, I, I struggle with this. Itās
Malcolm Collins: your biggest sin by far. Yeah. Itās your only sin, really. I donāt see you d- sin in any other way than busywork.
Simone Collins: Well, I think itās... And but this is where I need advice on this sin is I feel like often I lack the judgment in really understanding where I should be putting my time and focus.
I mean, thatās
Malcolm Collins: my- I think that you know perfectly well when youāre doing something that doesnāt actually need to be done as frequently as youāre doing it, but you do it as an indulgence in the same way that I play video games as an indulgence because you feel that you wonāt be able to hear yourself think, as you say, if you donāt do it.
The question is, are you on, being honest with yourself about how much of that busywork you need to do to hear yourself think and how much of it is just performative?
Simone Collins: Hmm.
So- Well, I guess what we do is I check in with you a lot. I should check in with you more on, like, help me balance this out and sanity check this.
And probably having a third party. It could be a person, ideally, you know, like your spouse or something, but it could [00:26:00] also probably be an AI- ... if youāre operating independently.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah,
Simone Collins: busywork. Just evaluating it. Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: Which I, which I... And one of the things was, like, thatās not in the Bible. Like, the Bible, they didnāt have busywork at the time of Jesus.
It just wasnāt a sin that he needed to warn people about, right?
Speaker 10: So Simoneās gonna mention a passage that could be taken to mean this, which I love that there are passages, and then in addition to that passage, you could also take the parable of talents from Matthewās to be about this, or you could take Luke 10:38-42, Martha and Mary, to mean this. , And this is just really cool.
But, but, but you do actually see this in parts of the Bible with
but Martha was distracted with much serving, and she went to him and said, āLord, do you not care that my sister has left me to serve alone? To her then to help me.ā But the Lord answered her, āMartha, Martha, you are anxious and troubled by many things, but one thing is necessary. Marsha has chosen the good portion, [00:27:00] which cannot be taken away from her.ā
But again, even if this is a parable against busy work, itās often not in a salient context when Iām in like a church. Have I-- And I used to go to church every week. , Did I ever come away thinking, āBusy work is a sin. Gotta make sure not to do thatā?
Simone Collins: No, I think the... There was a passage you read when we talked about societal morality about not suffering publicly.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, not suffering performatively.
Simone Collins: That is an extreme vice in the United States. Again, like bragging about sleep deprivation.
Malcolm Collins: Well, this is, this is not in the busy work category of sin. This is in the Iād say- No ... a plum sin.
Simone Collins: No, because people brag about the hours. They go, āOh, I work 60-hour weeks, blah,
Malcolm Collins: blah, blah.ā Right, but this isnāt, this isnāt that. This sin is very different. So this is the aplum sin which means not acting with aplum is sinful.
Iām sorry,
Simone Collins: weāve moved on to a new one.
Malcolm Collins: Yes. Okay, [00:28:00] yeah. So this covers a number of emotional states which are adopted for purely indulgent reasons- Mm-hmm ... and donāt actually help you.
Simone Collins: Oh, like acting exasperated or-
Malcolm Collins: Yes ... snarky. You are taking on a negative emotional state- Uh-huh ... which causes negative externalities for everyone around you.
Mm-hmm. It causes your children, your spouse, your coworkers to be less happy, to be less productive. It causes you to be less happy and less productive, when at the end of the day, emotions are generally a choice. You can choose how you contextualize. You know, you get fired from a job, for example. You can say, āOh, woe is me,ā right?
Or you can say, āOh, well, this is exciting. Now I get to try to look for something new. Now I get a change of pace. Now I get a new challenge.ā And people are like, āWell, what if something truly bad happens? Like, what if Simone died,ā right? Then it is extra upon me to not act with sadness and with grief.
Because if I do [00:29:00] that, who suffers? Who suffers from that?
The people who are going to suffer the most are going to be my kids, and they just lost a mom Okay?
Simone Collins: Yeah That- Do they also want to have a, an absent, emotionally ruined, angry, grieving, sad, bereft father? Like, you donāt wanna lose two parents, you know?
Malcolm Collins: The, the implication of this sin is proportional to the severity of the loss that you have undergone.
Right. Itās the severity, the time when you need to act with the most aplomb. And note this isnāt generic happiness aplomb. Th- this is, you know, acting with plucky continued diligence and move forwardness like a happy soldier. Those are the times when it is the bleakest for you. Yeah. When can you least afford to have self-pity is when you just got fired and have a family to support.
Simone Collins: Exactly.
Malcolm Collins: When can you least afford to act [00:30:00] with these other forms of indulgence, it is when you most feel them, right? And so donāt wait until something really bad happens to adopt this. And Iāve, Iāve noted here, Iāve watched some Mormon influencers, and they complain that Mormons are told to do this, right?
That theyāre
Simone Collins: told- Oh, yeah. El- Alyssa Grenfell explicitly goes on about how itās really messed up that thereās sort of a limited amount of grieving that is considered socially acceptable within the LDS church. And like per, like traditions and the way that funerals go and memorial services. Yeah, and itās really interesting to hear her talk about that when w- we would see that as such a s- like a huge, huge sign of the churchās good taste.
There are other moral rules- Right ... that weāve been talking about internally that weāre like, āMan, this backfired.ā Like, they, they completely did this the wrong way. Like setting certain standards, either contemporarily or historically, that just are being completely misconstrued or have been outsized to [00:31:00] out- sorry, outsourced to outside authorities.
Like saying, āOh, we donāt watch rated R movies,ā but then having this completely unassociated non-Mormon body determine what the R rating is based on. You know? This is,
Malcolm Collins: this is actually where this, this todayās sort of tract because we, we donāt number the tracts anymore. Mm-hmm. This is technically a techno-puritan tract, but itās applicable to all Christians or people more broadly came from, which is we were talking about the words of wisdom, which is where, like, donāt do this stuff is laid out by Joseph Smith.
And some of this is useful, like the be happy thing. Other of it is just wasteful. Like, donāt drink hot liquids, like coffee and stuff like that. Like, at the time, they thought that it had, like, negative health effects, but we now know that it doesnāt. It actually has positive health effects, and itās been very well studied.
So itās like, oh, like, we should have a techno-puritan words of wisdom. We should have something where I try to go through and future-proof these, so I can try to-
Simone Collins: Well, yeah, I donāt, I donāt know if it was negative health effects. M- it might have been that it was recognized that caffeine was addictive, or that it was- Right
un- an unnecessary expense That didnāt yield, you know, caloric [00:32:00] benefit. But for whatever reason, now even if, like, caffeine is the thing to be avoided which from a health perspective doesnāt make sense because itās, itās broadly seen as having health benefits on the aggregate aside from being addictive, though it is quite addictive.
Now you have all these Mormons drinking heavily caffeinated, often dirty sodas, you know, very high in calories, not helpful calories and, and not drinking coffee, like a zero calorie m- you know, moderately healthy drink if you donāt put a ton of stuff in it. It, itās clearly something thatās not being optimally construed as a word of wisdom.
Malcolm Collins: Absolutely, yeah. So weāre like, āLetās, letās build these, but try to make them better and future-proof.ā So also you guys can warn me if I ever do something in a track and youāre like, āThat could have really long-term negative ramifications.ā
Simone Collins: Yeah, we wanna know ...
Malcolm Collins: if, if the community becomes, like, really big and fanatic, ācause I always try to think, āHow is a fanatic gonna operate on this,ā right?
Mm-hmm. Like, if, if [00:33:00] somebody goes down that pathway 200 years from now, right? And thatās also why the tracks take so long to produce, is because I need to go through, you know, everything Iām saying and think, āHow could a fanatic twist this?ā But the happiest thing I just see is... And for people who arenāt aware of this, they can be like, āWell, isnāt it, like, a part itās, like, useful to grieve?
Itās useful to experience negative things. Itās useful to experience anger and sadness.ā And itās like, itās strictly not. Mm. We know from studies that, like, if you punch a wall when youāre angry, you have a harder time in the future controlling your anger. If you, if let yourself cry, like just have a cry when youāre sad, youāre going to cry at lower thresholds in the future.
The reason for this is when you stop yourself from these forms of emotional indulgence is you are activating the inhibitory pathway in your prefrontal cortex, which gets stronger with each activation. If you have not frequently activated it, you are incredibly susceptible to intrusive thoughts and intrusive emotional states.
Mm-hmm. Which [00:34:00] puts you... Like, itās just, this isnāt even just a for your family thing, itās just worse for you. Because presumably being sad or being stressed or going over about how hard youāre working these days I probably... Would you say I work harder than anyone you know, or in terms of
Simone Collins: like- yeah.
You absolutely work harder than anyone I know. You wake up at 2:00 AM in the morning to start working, and you work through every moment of the day that I ever see you. Like-
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, I mean, people could
Simone Collins: see- ... you might take an hour every day to chill, and I mean, th- this is also, like, itās not that you have some kind of period where youāre unwinding while, like, making dinner, ācause I do that.
Like, you have almost zero wind-down time unless youāre, like, hauling out trash or hauling in groceries for the family. So- Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: So, but do you ever see me complain about how overworked I am or how
Simone Collins: stressed I am? No, never. Nev- Or- Iāve never heard you talk about being overworked.
Malcolm Collins: Whistle while you work, right?
I work with happiness. I work constantly and I work with happiness, and thatās an [00:35:00] easy thing to do. Because there is no moment in your entire life will you were- ever feel as good Is when you are s- suffering and sacrificing for a well-thought-through value system. Yeah. That is the greatest happiness that any human has access to, and the people who chase directly after hedonism- Mm
even when they have all of the resources they could ever want, as Iāve pointed out, they live the most tortured lives. Who are the people I have met who live the most tortured lives? They are the famous actors and actresses. Mm. You know, theyāre, they, they have everything they want- For
Simone Collins: people who live pure lives of leisure itās-
Malcolm Collins: All the fame-
very scary ... all the hedonism, all the sex, all the partners, all the respect, and yet they are mentally destroyed, and they often die of drug overdoses and stuff like that, and are seeing a thousand therapists, and are living states of mental terror. They are terrorized by their own mind because of this, because they went down a pathway that was not based on sacrificing through hard work and with a [00:36:00] plum for attempting to make the world better.
And when you see actors who clearly do live by that, you typically see them live very happy, fulfilled lives. Consider, like Mr. Rogers, for example. Like, he wasnāt like... He, he clearly had, like a moral value system, and he attempted- Yeah ... to push it through his show to advance human society. Mm. And you didnāt see him, like, get addicted to drugs and crash out in a, a parking lot somewhere, right?
We are rewarded for making these sacrifices and exhibiting this self-control, and you will be rewarded for fighting sin, even within this expanded category.
Speaker 5: So a lot of people, we did a video recently about people who did like gang bangs and the horror shows that their lives can descend into, and people wanted us to be like angrier or speak about them with more disgust. And itās like this is-- Oh, itās not something Iām drawn to. Itās not a sin that Iām tempted [00:37:00] by, thankfully.
, But in addition to that, like their lives compared to the lives that Simone and I and my kids live are literal hellscapes. Like I know some of these people and even my friends in this group, I know the mental torture they go through being like, āHow am I gonna make this work?
How am I gonna have a family? How am I gonna...ā And I want to help them, and I can offer them guidance, but thereās only so much I can do. And so I think, you know, when you see the end state of what happens to these people and what itās like to be them, , itās a lot harder to be-- to, to look at them with so much anger
When you accept that the additional rules that we live by are not arbitrary restrictions that make our lives harder and are just meant to make society a better place or something, but actively improve our own lives, itās a lot harder to hate somebody for breaking those rules, for being a sinner.
Malcolm Collins: So next. Moral absolutism [00:38:00] is the next sin.
Simone Collins: Hmm.
Malcolm Collins: This is allowing primitive- ... or overtly extreme signs of acting moral to override what is actually moral, right?
This is where the Vatican says, āOh, just bring in endless immigrants-ā ā... because the Bible said you should feed foreigners and you should feed the poor, and so weāre gonna maximize that line out of context. And through that, weāre gonna bring in endless foreigners and- ... who cares what long-term impact this is gonna have on the people weāre bringing into the country, right?
Who cares what long-term impact- ... this is gonna have on their family when the citizens get pissed off and they decide to deport them and they have kids in the country- ... and all the kids are separated from their parents, and that all couldāve been avoided if you just hadnāt brought them in in the first place.
Or you leave them in the country and they end up overtaxing the social safety net, and then pensioners donāt get their pensions, and people who relied on Social Security in the country donāt get their Social Security and they starve to [00:39:00] death like there are negative externalities from this. And this sort of moral absolutism you see whether itās coming from the Vatican, because itās often very indulgent, right?
It is, it is moral hedonism as weāve defined it. Itās saying, āOh, Iām the good guy here,ā right? Like, āIām doing the good thing,ā without considering the consequences. Itās saying I have some deontological... This is why I always crash out about the deontologists, because what deontology really does is push the cost of your moral purity onto outsiders.
When you say, āI wonāt ever kill,ā and then an intruder breaks into your house and rapes one of your kids because you wouldnāt fight back. And this, like functionally really happened when there, like pirates happened in in, around Philadelphia, and the Quakers wouldnāt, wouldnāt send forces
Simone Collins: to deal with them.
Oh, yeah. A long, historically,
Malcolm Collins: yes. And people were terrorized and brutalized because a- at the cost of their moral purity, right? That is functionally evil, right? Because, a- and they [00:40:00] are as responsible or more responsible for those atrocities than the pirates themselves.
Speaker 12: And there, there are ways of approaching
non-consequentialist frameworks that prevent the extremes, like Thomism, which Iām not particularly against. It just feels like a weasel out for me. It feels like a way of framing morality where you donāt have to deal with the potential extremes of either consequentialist or non-consequentialist world perspectives.
And I guess thatās good in that it doesnāt have the extreme negatives, but I also feel like it doesnāt accept the full moral weight that is important to accept of a moral framing. It just uses a bunch of rules to carve off the extremes
And the rules feel arbitrary and non-morally weighty to me. I think any real and good moral system is going to push you to positions that a normal person would be mortified by because I, I think real moral [00:41:00] conviction looks like that. It looks like something where other people say, āOh my God, like, why?
Why, why are you doing this?ā And itās like this, this, then this. , If something removes through whatever amount of thing any choice that goes against a personās intuitions, , I, I think itās removing moral complexity
And I think we can see in the Bible that Godās clearly not a Thomist when he punishes someone like Saul for not killing literally everyone and their animals of the enemy tribe. Thatās not within the bounds of Thomas ethics. Yes, self-defense is, but something like that isnāt
Malcolm Collins: Because they said and note here people had asked on a call, so I should lay this out here.
There are times when a group having these beliefs, these moral absolutist beliefs, exerts a negative externality on society and times when they donāt. And the difference between the two is whether or not they are power hungry and why they are exerting the moral absolutism. Mm. So a good [00:42:00] differentiation here is Amish pacifism does not exert an externality on society because Amish donāt seek power for themselves.
They almost never hold elected office, and they often donāt even vote unless theyāre actively being victimized as they have been in the most recent few election cycles. Whereas Mur- Quakers disproportionately historically held positions of power. And so theyāre able to say even though itās not Quakers who the police would be intervening on behalf of, āOh, donāt, donāt go do that.ā
And we see this not just from the Vatican, we see this from wokes all the time, you know, with this- Mm ... this, āOh, Iām doing the more moral thing,ā because on a surface level it looks more moral and Iām just maximizing these surface level rules. Or we can even see it on a when people go and spam racism or antisemitism in ways that isnāt like, this is where we need to be asking some serious questions about Israel, but where theyāre trying to show off, right?
This is a very smoothed brain thing to do because these are groups that weāre going to have to work with in the future, right? Like [00:43:00] clearly if you look at their fertility rate, their level of influence youāre going to need to find a way to work with places like Israel and the Jews long-term, whatever cultural group you are.
And there is a big difference between just spamming something like, āOh, Iād go to war with them in a second if I could.ā The dumbest thing America could, could do, but some conservative influencers have actually said that. Iām like, āYou idiot.ā Like, d- think about the long-term implications of that. Yeah.
Simone Collins: Not smart ...
Malcolm Collins: yeah, itās, itās extremely stupid. And you could, oh, even if you what, purged... W- whatās your real end game? Even if you purged every Jew, right? Do you know what happens when you purge every Jew from a country, right? They go to other countries. And do you know what those other countries do with those now angry Jews?
They build atomic weapons. Thatās what we did, okay? When we look at leaders historically, what they have said is, āYes, the Jews might be an outside group. Yes, they might not always be aligned with us, but there are ways that I can utilize that community for my long-term benefit,ā [00:44:00] which we saw with people like Oliver Cromwell bringing the Jews back to England to better fight the expansion of Romanism.
And I think that that shows, like, whe- how, how to think about this stuff without, even if you have an outside group, even if you have a group that has at times victimized you is worth considering. Okay, with all of that being true, whatās actually the best long-term path going forward for me to signal?
Octavian Collins: Hmm.
Malcolm Collins: Next, inaccurate. Inaction is a massive sin in the modern age, and very, very important to note. Itās when you say, āI will do,ā and this is the most common form of it, āI will do X thing after Iāve accomplished Y thing,ā when Y thing is not a necessary prerequisite for X thing. This is very different from traditional sloth.
Mm-hmm. Because when you think about traditional sloth, youāre not doing it because [00:45:00] youāre lazy. Inaction is something like saying, āWell, once I have the right body, like once Iām skinny enough and hot enough-
Simone Collins: Mm. Mm-hmm ...
Malcolm Collins: then Iām gonna start dating.ā
Simone Collins: Or, once Iām certain that no oneās going to make fun of me if I do this, or that Iām 100% certain that Iām right.
Like, weāre not certain about anything. Weāre, weāre just trying to move in the least incorrect direction possible, but we believe that itās sinful to not move forward at all. Mm. Whereas a lot of people are like, āWell, if Iām not absolutely certain that I can move forward in the morally perfect way, Iām not going to move forward.ā
And we think that that is, that is worse.
Malcolm Collins: That is that PA form of inaction, right?
Simone Collins: Yeah. You know, even if weāre moving forward in, like, a slightly wrong direction, in the end weāre gonna be closer to the morally good thing than you are if youāve not moved at all.
Malcolm Collins: If you are like, āBut I donāt have the information yet,ā right?
Like if youāre in a state like the one thatās going... Come up with what test do you need to run to get that information?
Simone Collins: Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: [00:46:00] Not having enough information should never be a reason to not move forward anymore. If youāre a boss, youāve had the employee who you come to them, you gave them a task, and they go, āOh, sorry, I stopped like 20 minutes into the task when I realized I didnāt know how to do, like, stage two or something, or stage three.ā
And youāre like, āWhat the f- is wrong with you,ā right? Like genuinely I feel this way sometimes. Iām like, āYou should have either immediately come to me when you stopped, right, and I wouldāve told you what to do next, or figured it out.ā But we are all- No,
Simone Collins: heās talking about me. Heās, heās just talking about me.
Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: Oh, you have done that a few times recently. Mm-hmm. Iām not... I actually wasnāt thinking of you, but it is
a-
Simone Collins: Yeah, you were. Itās okay ...
Malcolm Collins: massive because it, itās something that you... I, I wasnāt. I was thinking of other employees. But you have done this a few times recently, and itās a massive sin when done to yourself, because ultimately weāre all our own bosses.
And if you ever reach something and youāre just like, āIām not sure,ā then develop a heuristic for how you get to the next step when youāre not sure. It can be as simple as asking your favorite AI model.
Simone Collins: [00:47:00] Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: Just go to your favorite AI model and say, or two out of three models. Go to Reality Fabricator thatās our AI site, and type in, āHey, we have some that run, like, multiple models on a thing, X or Y, and it will run multiple models, and itāll cross-check the answer for you for the best answer, right? Like, thatās a fun way to approach this, and you can do that, right? Like, we have the technology that you should never, ever be stuck on any question.
And this is where Iāve got annoyed at Simone when I, like, came back to her and I was like, āOkay, so where are you on X task?ā And sheās like, āI got stuck at, like, stage three.ā And Iām like, āWell, then go to an AI, right? Because Iām just gonna go to an AI when you kick this back to me, so why donāt you go to an AI, right?ā
But oh well. This was on getting the RFAB component ready for Apple computers, which she had to do. Mm-hmm. And now it works, by the way, for Apple, for people who wanna use it for, like, coding on Apple and stuff.
Simone Collins: And to be fair, the, our third stage of doing this, I did finally get around to just doing that and not giving it back to you until it was done- [00:48:00] Yeah
no matter how many times it failed.
Malcolm Collins: But A- So ... but this is, and this is why Iām expanding the list of sins. This form of inaction is functionally as bad as sloth, and is more of a temptation for most people than sloth.
Simone Collins: Well, and, and again, like, it, I think the big theme that differentiates your sins is that you have this extra prejudice, justified, toward virtue signaling sins.
Well- Anything that, you know,
Malcolm Collins: people- The Bible had that in it. If you read the freaking New Testament like we did in the last chapter-
Simone Collins: Yeah ...
Malcolm Collins: Jesus was like, āYeah, make sure when youāre giving money, you donāt do it in a way that is overly performative. Make sure when youāre fasting, you donāt fast in a way where other people can tell that youāre fasting.ā
Mm-hmm. āBecause thatās overly performative. Make sure when youāre praying, you donāt do it in a way thatās overly performative, because thatās really bad.ā Like, this is made cl- this is in the spirit of whatās listed out there. Itās just not explicitly listed out so people have-
Simone Collins: Well, yeah, [00:49:00] I think itās maybe people missed it because itās not so explicit.
Itās more just like, āHey, donāt be flashy when you do, when you engage in self-deprivation or, like, active acts of piety.ā It doesnāt have an explicit proactive prohibition on general virtue signaling.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah.
Simone Collins: Itās just like, āOh, when you do these things, be, be subtle about it.ā Which of course, people miss that too, but this is a whole different level of stuff.
Malcolm Collins: Next sin, self-flagellation. This is when you are hard on yourself or allow yourself to experience negative emotions when in the past you acted either... It, thereās, thereās two types of self-flagellation, justified and unjustified self-flagellation. I think even justified self-flagellation is a sin, but weāll get to how in a second, okay?
Mm. So if within any moment of your life you made a decision based on the information you had available [00:50:00] to you, and in a way that was directed towards long-term human flourishing or the good of the individual you were doing it for, like it could be how youāre raising your kids, how youāre treating your wife, anything like that, right?
And it leads to some negative outcome, right? To feel bad about that is enormously sinful, because itās indulgence. Itās, it, it, now this is one of the hardest sins to avoid And just knowing that it is a sin, like just laying it out as a sin and talking about puritanism, I think will help people better categorize these emotions and compartmentalize these emotions so they do not overwhelm you, and the, the weighted emotion of them doesnāt overwhelm you.
But when, when is it actually justified to feel bad? When you acted in a way historically where youāve had full access to information or with the information you had at the time, and you acted in a way that was not in accordance with that information or that was designed not [00:51:00] for long-term human flourishing, but for some personal benefit.
This is where, you know, you knew you probably shouldnāt have gotten that fancy car when finances were tight, but you really wanted to show off to people, so you got the car even though it had no functional utility to your family. And now your familyās suffering for that You have permission to take time to meditate on those past failings so you donāt do them in the future, but to not overindulge.
This should not be more than 10 minutes of emotion, okay? You need to move past this, and- Yeah ... since you have created a scenario for yourself, all you can do is move forwards. The only iteration of yourself that you can do good for are iterations of yourself that have yet to come to exist. And you are suffering or living a life of rewards for the actions of past iterations of yourself.
And this is how Simone [00:52:00] sees sort of actions. Like weāre a constantly changing and new person with every moment, with every second of the day, and youāre constantly paying it forward to the future you.
Simone Collins: Yeah. Well, and are you... Is, is this iteration of you that is acting right now, that youāre consciously experiencing going to be, going to go down in history as like a war criminal in your massive army of instances, or a hero that did something good, that moved you all in a good direction?
Yeah. You have a chance to be a hero. You have a chance to be, you know, a mutineer. What are you gonna do? And then
Malcolm Collins: the next one here is a fun one. The indulgence of sin. The indulgence- Whoa ... of sin is the sin of for no reason other than to test yourself or because you think you are honing yourself and making yourself stronger you needlessly expose yourself to temptation.
So an example of this would be... Now, this isnāt [00:53:00] normal, daily sorts of temptations. Like TV, erotic images, all of these things, theyāre going to be all around you in modern society. You do have to be able to resist them to live a normal life, right? To not crash out. The people who crash out at the slightest exposure to one of these things, when people are like, āWhat if my kid sees X online?ā
And Iām like, bro, if, if your kid loses it to like something that every kid is going to see within 10 minutes of opening the internet your kidās probably in a pretty bad place in terms of how you structured their value system and the rules that you laid out for them. So, a- a good example of this for someone like myself could be you donāt have the same temptations that I have.
You donāt live with the same temptations that I live with. But naltrexone, an opioid agonist I take daily which prevents me from feeling my opioid pathways, which makes it much harder for addictive things to get their hooks into me. I could, if I wanted to, just be like... And, and some Christians are like this.
Theyāre like, āOh, [00:54:00] donāt, you know, blunt yourself to the temptation,ā right? Like, āThatās a bad thing.ā And itās like, why not? Like, when I have the technology to do this, I should do it. If a person knows that they heavily struggle with alcohol in a way thatās gonna cause them to die or something like that having a fully stocked liquor cabinet is not a moral necessity for them.
Yet in terms of the temptations that Christians expose themselves to, I have noticed some think itās, like, cool or something to do this, right? Itās not cool. It leads to long-term negative consequences. The only types of exposure that you need to make sure youāre okay with is the types of exposure that youāre going to experience anyway.
And, and that can be tied to recreational sins that youāve accepted. So an example of this can be, I believe playing video games is sinful in that it is an indulgence that doesnāt move human society forwards, but I [00:55:00] think I would, like, mentally break down if I didnāt have any recreational time.
So, and note I often play video games while Iām working. My normal way to play video games is while I have an episode running so that Iām editing it, right? You know, so I even try to do it, like, while Iām doing something else. Or when I watch anime, Iām often vibe coding, right? Like, I try to... But these are still sinful.
I could be more focused, for example.
Simone Collins: So I- Thatās about balancing your efficacious pursuit of your values with whatever it is that keeps you happy and motivated and productive. And sometimes our long-term values when we pursue them are so abstracted and sort of built on delayed gratification that the bodies weāve evolved to live in canāt really keep us motivated.
Like, we have to create mini games- Right ... to like, to trick our bodies into keep going.
Malcolm Collins: Video games are a sin that Iām like, I will take that sin because I know that it doesnāt like consume my entire life, right? Like video games and [00:56:00] anime do not consume my entire life and so I am able to engage with them in a way that I canāt engage with, for example, alcohol when Iām off naltrexone.
And I think many people can relate to pornography in this way. Some people can engage with pornography in a way thatās just totally like, oh, a once a week thing or something like that, right? Whereas other people itās like, they see it and now itās all they can think about, right? If youāre the type of person where you see it and now itās all you can think about, maybe donāt put horny pictures of women all over your house, right?
Like, if youāre the type of person that struggles with gambling, maybe donāt live right next to a casino, right? , And as Lunaās pointed out, itās gotten a lot harder with these online betting sites and stuff like that. I, I think of all of the sins of modern society, gambling is the worst. So be aware of that if you have it.
The reason why I think itās the worst is it is one of the only sins that can destroy your life and the life of everyone around you in like 10 minutes. Very few sins even like a heroin addiction typically takes, I donāt know, six months or [00:57:00] something, right? Like, but gambling, thatās like just over.
Generational wealth can be gone. So itās something that I think that people should never engage with. Gambling is one of those things where itās one of the, the things where itās like, āOkay, when Iām choosing the sins that I choose to indulge in, which one should I just not do?ā Gambling is like the easiest one.
Okay?
Speaker 6: One Iād add here that actually came from a recent episode when, , I was talking to Simone and we were like, āWell, they didnāt even end up enjoying the gang bang that they went to.ā And she goes, āWell, you know, maybe they went just to see if they would like going.ā And I said, āBut I donāt wanna know whether or not I like gang bangs.ā
Like, I can tell as an outsider I donāt. I do not like seeing other men naked, , or having... Itās eh. But if, if I was genuinely uncertain, I still would not want to know because even if I was a completely indulgent person who just, you know, did things like gang bangs recreationally, they still take a lot of effort, carry a lot of risk, everything like that.
And so I think we should [00:58:00] also just outline as a sin going out and doing something just to see if you like it when
It would be a net negative to your life to find out you like that thing. , This includes things like skydiving, free climbing, gang bangs, , gambling is an easy one here. N- you know, never be like, āOh, well, I went to gamble to see if I enjoyed it.ā You know, āI tried heroin to see if I enjoyed it.ā Just donāt do it
Malcolm Collins: Next, empty words. So empty words, the sin of empty words, is when a person is trying to engage, or youāre trying to engage, because sins, our own sins are the ones that matter the most. When youāre trying to engage somebody else in c- a conversation that doesnāt either entertain them or move their ideas forwards or share information with them, or develop your and their understanding of the world, morality, science, et cetera.
All [00:59:00] conversations and all words should have some purpose. Now, it could be to make them happy. It could be a joke or something like that. But when you come to somebody and you say something like, āHere are the things I did today,ā and thatās not relevant to them, you have stolen a portion of their, their life.
You have fracturally murdered that person. Worse are empty words that are designed to try to bring another person down to your negative emotional state. This is like compounding, where you come to a person and you tell them about something negative that happened to you to try to pass on- Like venting,
Simone Collins: complaining, trauma dumping
Malcolm Collins: All of that is horrible, a horrible sin.
You are trying to offload your trauma, your pain to another person. You can say, āWell, what if you need to talk about a trauma to get over it?ā Itās like, you donāt need to. If you just donāt contextualize it as traumatic, the studies have shown you wonāt experience it as traumatic. We always talk about this study, but thereās a famous study where they looked over peopleās [01:00:00] experiences of trauma in youth, and they correlated their stated experiences of trauma in youth correlated with their negative behavioral patterns as an adult, their m- mental stress as an adult, everything like that.
But when they went over the court records to see who really experienced trauma and who didnāt, completely dis-correlated from anything as an adult. People who experienced demonstrable trauma, like I would be someone like that. If you look at my childhood, it was horrifying. Like weāre actually talking with a, a, a team thatās like doing research on us, and Iām going through my childhood, and they were like, āWait, that sounds horr- f- like why arenāt you more focused on that as a traumatic event?ā
And I say, āBecause how does that help me to be?ā There would be a pure negative externality to everyone around me Next. And, and this is a big one, and I really encourage people to, one, look for it in themselves and look for it in their partners, right? If you, if youāre in a techno-puritan relationship, work on this, right?
Next, unnecessary status signaling. Easy, I [01:01:00] probably shouldnāt even need to say it but all status signaling is sinful, right? Except for when it is necessary for, like, a job or something like that. And be very careful you donāt use lies about what you say is necessary to indulge in status signaling that isnāt actually necessary.
You, for almost no job do you actually need anything other than a bare bones car, right? For example. And yet many people buy... And, and a used bare bones car. Will buy fancy things that they simply do not need. In the same category as status signaling is the sin of in-group signaling. This is signaling how punk you are, how goth you are, how whatever in-group you want to accept you.
Even how techno-puritan you are to other techno-puritans. It is when you engage in this signaling in a way that hurts your long-term goals and ability to affect society. So an example might be a face tattoo or something like that. Even if there was a techno-puritan [01:02:00] face tattoo you could get, it would be strictly sinful to get it because it would lower your efficaciousness in society
Speaker: I talked it over with Simone to think if thereās any sins that weāre missing here, and we came up with a few more. First is the sin of entitlement. This is to believe that you are owed anything by either other people or reality itself. Be that dignity, a good life, healthcare, being treated with respect.
No one is owed anything, and to believe you are is a grave sin. Second is the sin of indulgent nostalgia. This is allowing nostalgia to indulge rumoration rather than focusing on trying to recreate those sorts of experiences for the next generation in which case it can be good.
The final is rumination more broadly, just the sin of rumoration. This is overly [01:03:00] focusing or giving weight to any emotion that you are feeling that you didnāt choose to feel. This, like as Simone put it when we were walking this morning, she goes, āToday people will be like, āIām sad. That means I should do something about it.
I should take pills or something,ā when really itās just not particularly relevant how you feel. Itās usually not particularly relevant to what you need to accomplish or what you need to do
The final one Iād include here is one of the biggest potential sins, is risking a humanās life for happiness or a thrill or for some emotional subset. , This could be, you know, recreational sex is one thing that could cause a human life to come into existence, and then you feel put in a position where abortion makes sense to you.
But this also includes things like skydiving, bungee jumping, free climbing, anything where you are putting your own life at risk meaninglessly for just a thrill
Malcolm Collins: Next, corrupted [01:04:00] mercy.
And this is the biggest, and we can get to this another day because it goes long, this section. Weāre gonna be talking about the Bible in a place where Iām just gonna say the Bible needs to be updated on this point. There are many places in the Bible where it explicitly says āGive food to the poor.
Yes, even foreigners. Yes, donāt let that trouble you.ā And I think that that made sense morally as we talk about, like, things in the Bible, the Bible in the past said, āSell your daughter. This is how you sell your daughter into sex slavery. This is how, you know, you treat your slaves. This is h- how- how you act when you conquer a people and have to slaughter all their infants,ā right?
You know, all of those things, right? Those th- those parts of biblical morality have changed as society has changed,
Speaker 13: And this isnāt because the underlying morality of the Bible has changed. The goals of all of these have always been the same. The iterative change to human civilization theyāve made have always been the [01:05:00] same. , But itās because humanity and the way that we live has changed, and that has changed the rules that are best to live by to live a virtuous life within the social norms of your era
Malcolm Collins: and I think that this is one area where we need to look at whatās in the Bible, and Iād actually say we... Thereās no way around this. Thereās no linguistic way around this. We just need to accept that in the time of Jesus and in the time of the Old Testaments, there was not enough charity in the world to the extent that people were suffering, and so the Bible had to signal boost charity.
But today, we live in a time where charity has reached such an extreme that it is leading to more aggregate suffering. Oh. And we will get to that next. Oh, that might actually make a whole other tract. Weāll do a whole other tract on that.
Simone Collins: Oh, thatās a good idea. Well, useful stuff. We need to write this down in,
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, he can try it for an hour now. Wonāt that be fun?
Simone Collins: Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: I, I mean, remember, while the Bible tells you to be merciful, it also says, āBe merciful just as your father is merciful.ā [01:06:00] And keep in mind that God did punish a guy by taking away his title as king because he didnāt kill literally everyone in a settlement, even though he did kill all the babies.
He did that part. Didnāt kill everyone. So, whatever is meant by mercy here is not the standard definition of mercy, and thatās worth meditating on as we go into this next section. Love ya, Simone.
Simone Collins: I love you, too
Speaker 16: What do you think? Look, a dinosaur. Itās a dinosaur. Are the kids going to survive? I donāt know. What is gonna happen, Indy?
This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit basedcamppodcast.substack.com/subscribe -
Is Vatican II the result of a āgay Jew infiltrating the Catholic Churchā? Malcolm and Simone Collins dive deep into the shocking story of Gregory Baum ā a matrilineal Jew, former Catholic priest, and openly gay man who authored the first draft of Nostra Aetate, one of the most controversial documents of the Second Vatican Council.
In this episode, they explore:
⢠Baumās background, conversion, active homosexuality while writing key Church documents, and later life
⢠The content and lasting impact of Nostra Aetate on Catholic teaching regarding Jews, other religions, and interfaith dialogue
⢠Why many traditional Catholics view Vatican II with deep suspicion
⢠The broader implications for Church authority, doctrine, and demographics
A wild, uncomfortable, and thought-provoking discussion on faith, identity, institutional capture, and theology. What do you think ā infiltration, urban monoculture influence, or something else?
Watch until the end for Malcolm & Simoneās unfiltered reactions.
Episode Transcript
Malcolm Collins: Hello, Simone. If you clicked on this video and are wondering, is this a clickbait title? It is so much crazier than you think, right? So I saw a title going through on a Redeem Zoomer video. Weāve had him on the show. I think heās a great content creator, but heās a pretty small C conservative content creator.
Doesnāt really lean into c- clickbait. Generally tries to dig into the meat and bones of religious history, Christian history, and theology. And it was the, the gay Jew who infiltrated Catholicism or the Vatican or something like that. Anyway, I read this and I was like, āWh- this isnāt normal Redeem Zoomer content,ā right?
It mu- it canāt possibly be true, Malcolm. I start listening to the video. I get to the end of it and Iām like, āOh, my God, I have to know more.ā So I need to clarify a few things about this particular individual and the influence they have had on Catholicism. [00:01:00] First of all is this somebody who was just, like, same sex attracted or, you know, not, not actually sleeping with men?
Or maybe they, long after writing the documents that became important parts of Vatican II Nostra A- aetera m- they, they maybe long after had gay sex or started doing gay activism or something like that. They were, while they were a priest, during the time period they wrote these documents, having active gay sex with men Yeah and
Simone Collins (2): then itās like- Wait, whoa, whoa, whoa, hold, hold on.
You, how can you be a Catholic priest and a, I mean, I guess you could be a ma- a matrilineal Jew And thatās the other, right, so hereās
Malcolm Collins: another thing. I was like, maybe theyāre just ethnically Jewish or something like that. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. Yeah, yeah. No, theyāre probably not actually a
Simone Collins (2): Jew. Theyāre just matrilineally, ooh, matrilineally Jewish, and thatās it, right?
Yeah, so- And then that would be-
Malcolm Collins: He is, by the way, matrilineally [00:02:00] Jewish. His, one of the things he fought hardest to normalize within the Vatican and Catholicism as a policy is that it is immoral to attempt to proselytize to and convert Jews to Christianity. Does that sound a lot like somebody who actually deconverted from Judaism?
That makes no sense if you actually believe Christian principles, right? Like, you would... Iām, Iām saying this, Iām trying to be, like, as... I have, I have tackled this particular conundrum every way I can in my head, and the only way, because then, like, wouldnāt he convert back to Judaism?
But the only way I can get it to make sense when I piece together his various writings, and then it does make sense, is he thinks that, that the [00:03:00] Jews are still under the first covenant. And that as such, you can have a b- believe that the Jewish worldview is both 100% correct and accurate, and the Christian worldview is simultaneously 100% correct and accurate. Because the first covenant stands and you have the second covenant. And so he basically, I mean, if this is true, it means that he 100% believed in, even if he was telling the truth about being a Catholic, Catholicism and Judaism.
Or a form of Catholicism thatās heavily different from other forms of Catholicism, because now weāre gonna get to, what did he write? So he wrote Nostra Aetate. This is an official declaration of the Second Vatican Council. It was overwhelmingly approved with a final vote of 2,021 in favor and only 88 against, and it was promulgated or officially issued by Pope Paul VI on October [00:04:00] 28th, 1965.
What that means in terms of Catholic doctrine is thatās not the same thing as a papal bull, right? Like, it doesnāt mean that it directly came from God. But what it does mean, according to the catechism of the Catholic Church, or, like, their official documents about what all Catholics have to do, is Catholics, quote-unquote, āowe it religious assent or a sincere submission of intellect and will.ā
See CCC 892 to 893. It is not optional. And I will read through that, the, like, official Catholic doctrine on these types of policies. But what it said and what it introduced to Catholicism as a concept is that other religions, including religions outside of the Abrahamic tree, like Hinduism and Buddhism, have a ray of divine truth to them.
And itās even written ... It can be interpreted, like now, [00:05:00] after I went over this document, I understand now why so many of our Catholic friends hate Vatican II. āCause Iām reading this and Iām like, āWhoazers.ā Like, this is pretty wild. And it, it goes through and sort of praises things about other major religions and sort of creates commandments, essentially, for Catholics around getting along with them rather than necessarily trying to convert them.
Thatās crazy. Very
convenient if a Jew had entered the, the, the Catholic Church. Okay. By the way, other final crazy thing is he also deconverted- Oh ... from
Simone Collins (2): Catholicism. So he, like, came in, vandalized church policy, and then- Vandalized church
Malcolm Collins: policy in a very d- and note, when I say he wrote the Nostra E- Eleata this document- Itās not like he co-wrote it or something like that.
He wrote the entirety, as far as church history and anyone is aware- Okay ... of the first [00:06:00] draft of this document. How- Yes, it was heavily edited after its first draft and before it entered the sort of church law and stuff like that. And actually, it seemed to have gotten even worse in future edits. In his original writing of it, it was really just focused on Jews and Christians getting along and Judaism being partially true.
Okay. And all of the, like, Hinduism and Buddhism stuff was added by other people afterwards. Oh, wow. So, like the his, his group of buddies- It was the ā60s. It was the time. Yeah but the reason he left was also crazy. So within the church and during his time in the church, he was a well-known LGBT activist.
Oh. And he left the church, and weāll go into that because as he said the, the, the, the churchās stance on gays. Which is odd because one he... If- he was a priest. Heās not, in C- Catholic terms at least, itās, that, that doesnāt [00:07:00] just mean you canāt sleep with women. You canāt sleep with anyone as a Catholic priest.
Yeah. Right? Like- Yeah ... their stance on gays had nothing to do with the fact that he couldnāt sleep with men. Yeah, itās, itās about
Simone Collins (2): celibacy. Itās not about selective celibacy.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, although he was doing that anyway. Well. He ends up, by the way, long-term dating another Catholic priest who is gay or former Catholic priest who is gay.
Simone Collins (2): Oh, I just, no, I just want the yaoi manga version of this. After leaving- It sounds fantastic.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. Y- you know how G- oh, you wanna get even more manga? Do you know who heās married to today?
Simone Collins (2): Neil deGrasse Tyson.
Malcolm Collins: I donāt know. Who? What? An ex-Catholic nun.
Simone Collins (2): God, you said that and my, my computer just, like, demonically shut off. It, it was like- ... it wasnāt used to process that. No, it was
Malcolm Collins: an
ex-Catholic nun who heās married to now. Oh my. Well,
Simone Collins (2): a very
Malcolm Collins: mannish
Simone Collins (2): nun perhaps.
Malcolm Collins: No, no. They donāt have any [00:08:00] sexual relationship. I think itās so that he can more easily have both a long-term pr- relationship, which is something heās always wanted, and practice casual sex with gay men in, in potentially large numbers.
So okay. Iāve set the scene, I think. This is absolutely crazy. I now understand why, like, all of the sane Catholics who, like, are, are our friends are all like, āYeah, Iām not, like, a big fan of Vatican II. That... Some w- some fishy stuff went on with that,ā right? And l- letās, letās just go into this, okay?
āCause it gets... , so he knew he was attracted to men in his teenage years but remained celibate during his time as a priest. Ordained in the 1950s, left the priesthood in 1974. A- and note his conversion into Catholicism is also pretty fishy. So weāll get into that as well. In his 2016 autobiography, The Oil Has Not Run Dry, he publicly came out. He described falling in love with men [00:09:00] emotionally in his younger years. The joy mixed with pain because it couldnāt be reciprocated due to his vows. His first gay experience was at the age of 40 around 1963. This was around the age that he wrote this document which he described as exciting but ultimately disappointing because he wanted a committed partner.
After leaving the priesthood, he married Shirley Flynn, a former nun, in 1978. They lived together platonically until her death in 2007. He described continuing to explore his sexuality in other, quote-unquote, ānon-conformist ways.ā In 8- 1986 after moving to Montreal, he fell in love with a former priest, a male partner, and remained committed to that relationship.
Now, this is also pretty interesting because thatās a huge age gap relationship there
Simone Collins (2): on the bright side, I mean, weāve got gay romance, we got the costumes, we got the age gap. This is just perfect manga [00:10:00] fodder for some kind of priest yaoi series.
So- Yeah, this is- At
Malcolm Collins: least thereās that ... this is one of the things where if you come to the conclusion that I do in this and, and youāre watching this, that he just never stopped being Jewish Iām not getting the Jewishness in any of this, though. I... Where is, where
Simone Collins (2): is the Jew coming in? We havenāt, we havenāt gotten to that yet.
Okay. Because I, Iām not... None of this feels like someone whoās very Jewish. It just, it just feels like someone whoās kind of trolling the church,
Malcolm Collins: having fun. But if you, if you... No, suppose you are an actual Jew, right? Now- Okay ... keep in mind, Jews arenāt supposed to be gay either, so, like, heās not good at being a Jew in that
Simone Collins (2): respect.
Well, like, again, to my point. Now, this doesnāt sound like a Jew. This sounds like m- maybe someone a little bit ur- ur- early urban monoculture or someone very 1960s-ish, just like, āFree love. Everything is real. God comes in many forms.ā That kind of person. [00:11:00] Thereās nothing particularly Jewish about that.
That has to do with a loss of culture, a loss of tradition. Mm-hmm
Malcolm Collins: No, but imagine youāre, youāre Jewish, right? Even a bad Jew. I, I, I still think even as a bad Jew, even with that level of sin- God, Jew ... this is one of those, like, sneak stat things where I often joke that, that Jews are just specced into, like, way too high a sneak stat.
They, they, itās not just they come off as sneaky, itās the fact that, that Mossad has been able to pull off these insane things like getting terrorists to pay them for pagers to blow- I love that,
Simone Collins (2): yeah. And most recently thereās been this big scare with Mossad being a little bit too socially connected with a lot of high-ranking Trump officials, and theyāre sending all this intel back on what internally the US government is talking about vis-a-vis the Iran war.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, but imagine the civilization level sneak stat that is to sneak your way into- Into everything ... the core council which decides [00:12:00] what is religiously true for Catholics.
Simone Collins (2): Okay, okay. So heās, heās Mossad-ing the Catholic Church is what youāre trying to say. Infecting
Malcolm Collins: it with documentation that says youāre not allowed to go against the Jews.
Thatās not even, like... Thatās not even, like... Iām just like, ā
Simone Collins (2): Damn.ā Really? Isnāt that just, isnāt that what he wrote more just, like, letās try to be more cooperative and kind vis-a-vis other religions? Or is it- no,
Malcolm Collins: it basically affirms Judaism is, is partially true and worshiping the same god. Well, it is the sa- I mean, they, they share the Old Testament.
Yeah, but m- most Catholics before Vatican II did not think Jews were worshiping the same god. That is... E- even the concept of that is really a post-Vatican II concept. Well, Jews worship
Simone Collins (2): the God of the Old Testament and
Malcolm Collins: Christians worship the God of the Old Testament. I know that makes sense to you as a techno-puritan because we believe the same thing.
Okay. I am just saying that most Christians donāt believe that. [00:13:00] They do believe- I guess someoneās
Simone Collins (2): gonna explain this to me in the comments, so yeah. Okay. Fine. Iāll take, Iāll take your word for it and then go to the comments.
Speaker: So I decided to look more into this to see how popes after it was out related to it, and it looks like theyāve just built on it since then. , You have Pope Paul VI, who was the one who
, Put the whatever on it, the, the, the seal on it. Then youāve got Pope John Paul II, who frequently referenced and built upon it. Examples include addresses at an anniversary, specifically his 20th address in 1985, his 1986 visit to the Rome Synagogue, and multiple statements on Jewish-Christian relations.
Um, then you have , Pope Benedict XVI, who wrote a letter for the 40th anniversary in 2005, praising it for opening a new era. So he explicitly praised it in relation with Jews and overcoming prejudices. As both cardinal and pope, he affirmed its role while noting some limitations, e.g.
[00:14:00] it focuses positively on religion, but should address the sick and distorted forms of those religions. Okay, whatever. , Pope Francis marked the 50th anniversary, 2015, in a general audience, calling the message, quote unquote, āalways timely,ā and quoting sections on Judaism and Islam, and emphasized practical dialogue, friendship, and cooperation in the document.
Then we have Pope Leo XIV, who recently gave an address to a general audience for the 60th anniversary, highlighting its ongoing urgency for Jewish-Catholic relationships. So, , what Iāll note here is, yes, none of these are like papal bulls or anything like that, but for half a century at this point, well over half a century at this point, , every single pope has reaffirmed and built on this document.
, This inception was deep and thorough
Malcolm Collins: It looks like the age gap mightāve been around, like, 25 years for one of his relationships. Ooh.
Simone Collins: Well, I mean, you know, theyāre very common these [00:15:00] days, so.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. So weāll start with his sexuality stuff, then weāll get into the Jew stuff.
But that is, that is fas- ... And it makes me understand more why we see so many of the Catholics who do not think the church is, is, as it exists right now, is something that they can follow.
Mm.
And theyāve gone for other versions or sort of past iterations of what the church taught. And itās always fascinating to me that they donāt consider themselves schismatic.
Although, whatās really funny is a lot of the, like, most famous schismatics, like Martin Luther, also didnāt want to consider themselves a schismatic.
Speaker 22: Other individuals who didnāt consider themselves schismatic were John Calvin and
Henry VIII and John Wycliffe. I personally donāt understand this. You know, now that Protestantism is large, maybe itās just twisted my brain on this issue,
Malcolm Collins: So, like, th- thatās just a common thing that happens to people, where you have this sort of trans-schismatic take, where itās like, āI donāt define myself as schismatic, and Iām just looking at the guy in a wig.ā
And Iām like, āBut [00:16:00] youāre, youāre clearly just a guy in a wig,ā right? Like, youāre ignoring the churchās teachings, right? You know, that seems ... But anyway, to continue here. And, and I think that at the end of the day, whether or not youāre schismatic or not does actually come from whether or not you define yourself as schismatic.
I actually buy into the, the trend thing of schism- schismatism, because you at the end of the day get to decide, you know, what your heart thinks, right? So even if I as an outsider would be like, āThis looks schismatic to me,ā they as, those insiders wouldnāt, right? So to continue there. He knew he was attracted to men in his teenage years but remained celibate during that time as a priest, and he used priesthood to sort of, this was part of what seemed to motivate him to become a priest, the ability to live a celibate lifestyle and, and not be drawn to this. In his 2016 autobiography, The Oil Has Not Run Dry, so keep in mind this stuff about who heās sleeping with and when heās sleeping with them is not coming from outside hostile sources.
This is from his own mouth. Talk about this. Oh, sorry, we just ... Wait, wait, did we just go through [00:17:00] this? Yeah, we went through his first sexual experience and stuff like that. He described wanting to explore se- his, his sexuality in non-conformist ways. So anyway, th- this is where it gets interesting, right?
So, remember I mentioned wh- when his sexual experience was, right? So, that wouldāve happened when he was 40 years old, okay? Oh. So the document by the pope, right? With officially promulgated, that means this is when the pope, you know, basically affirmed this document, when he was 42 years old.
He apparently wrote the first draft of the document when he was 38 years old, and would have been working on the inter-drafting process during this time when he was having se- gay, gay sex.
Right? Mm.
So to get some quotes from him āLooking back, I begin to realize my vow of celibacy had not been a meaningful religious commitment, but simply a promise to bracket my homosexuality, to refuse to [00:18:00] explore its meaning and power.ā
He decided to leave the priesthood since, quote, āSince I no longer agreed with the churchās official sexual ethics and was exploring my sexuality in non-conformist ways.ā Oh, no. A- again, wait, you left the church to explore your sexuality in non-conformist ways? My brother, straight men donāt get to do that either.
Like, the level of this guyās commitment to the church, not high. You know? That is
Simone Collins (2): a little... Yeah. Ugh.
Malcolm Collins: And this is actually something really weird about Catholicism that Iām beginning to notice. And I notice this from his writings on Catholicism, the way he re- relates to Catholic theology, is a lot of people who are at, like, controlling levels within the Catholic Church and Catholic religious orders are significantly less religiously faithful than Iād say, like, the average lay Catholic that I know.
Mm. And thatās been very, very surprising to [00:19:00] me. And I- Well,
Simone Collins (2): thereās also such this... It is a little something that I struggle with with the c- the Catholic Church is the lifestyle, the day, just the day-to-day routine of someone who is in the clergy is so different from the day-to-day routine of a layperson whoās really deeply engaged in all the sacraments, right?
āCause youāre looking at one life that has possibly a lot of solitude, you know, a lot of sort of communal living sort of like a university style living if you are, you know, in a group, or more isolated living, very independent. Versus, you know, a teeming family, lots of young kids running around, lots of...
I mean, obviously priests work closely with their community too. Itās just, it, it worries me that... And what I like about the LDS church, for example, is that the people who are involved in policy are people who are, they came from the church. They raised families. They, theyāve done the whole thing. Theyāre living the LDS life, or they lived the [00:20:00] LDS life and now theyāre older and senior and, and now influencing it and trying to make it sustainable and good, presumably.
Yeah. But if youāre a Catholic priest, youāve never done that. Like, you havenāt had the family. You havenāt raised the kids. You donāt know the challenges of raising a kid in the church in the modern day. Well, then why
Malcolm Collins: do you think, like, Catholics have such low fertility rates when contrasted with other groups?
Simone Collins (2): I mean, itās, it canāt help. There, there are so many factors, but yeah. I, it... So when, when you say, you know, you, you donāt see such great adherence from The clergy, well, can you be surprised when the clergy donāt really live the life of the layperson? They canāt, because they canāt be married. They canāt have kids.
They canāt raise children within the church. Yeah, but is it- They instead... Itās kind of like how, something Iāve noticed, and this, like in a very different world, thereās a lot of childless women who worked as nannies or as teachers. Mm. And theyāre like, āWell,ā you know. And they, they sort of act like they know really well.
Like, āI know how a child should be raised. I know [00:21:00] all these things.ā But they, they never really have lived it, right? Theyāve only been, like, paid staff who work with children under certain conditions. But they donāt know the full experience of it, and then theyāre very judgmental around, like, parents and parenting and how a child should be raised, even though they donāt know what itās like to be on the hook 24/7.
And I think there might be a similar dynamic that takes place with, like, a full-time clergy whoās not allowed to engage in the sacrament of having kids and getting married because theyāre viewing it from a limited perspective that makes them think like they fully understand the experience when they really canāt.
Does that
Malcolm Collins: make sense? Well, itās also one of the things that was increasingly clear to me as I studied this guyās life is he seemed to do very little for, like, actually... Like, if you look at his writings and stuff like that they predominantly seem tied to gay activism, right? Like- Mm ... it almost seems like he was living off of Catholic tithings while spending his day and nights promoting, like, because he just had, you know, you have time to think in free time when youāre doing something like this [00:22:00] promoting gay stuff.
Hmm.
And that seems to be a, a big way that, like, the, the sort of gayness became more normalized within the church was specifically downstream of him. But to continue here. And, and gayness is super normalized in the Catholic Church to the extent that weāve pointed out, thereās even an article on, like, the gayness of Catholic priests where itās argued between 25, from surveys, 25 and 50% of gay, Catholic priests are same-sex attracted.
Which isnāt a, a ding on them. I mean, we often say this is actually kind of a, an ethical way for society to deal with same-sex attraction. Absolutely. If it, if, if you know, itās saying you canāt participate in it, you know, at least use these people like ethically sourced eunuchs so you can get people without as much nepotism to have positions of authority within your religious institutions, right?
Like, but thatās also gonna make them, like, way more open to these ideas and in an environment where people are skirting around these ideas. And I think that this might be where the normalization- Mm ... especially in the heart of the [00:23:00] Catholic Church, of trying to cover up the child, the ev- everybody knows what scandal Iām talking about.
I guess Iāll put a line from South Park here.
Speaker 2: Why would he put anything in your butts? We donāt know. Thatās what weāre trying to figure out. Hmm.
Hmm. Hello there, children. Chef, why would a priest want to stick up my butt? Goodbye.
Speaker 7: Now I want to be clear that the Catholic institution, , was committing these SA attempts at lower rates than other large institutions like the US public school system, , by pretty significant margins. , But that doesnāt explain why they tried to cover it up, like up to the highest levels of the church, and put people in positions where they could continue to do this even after the coverup.
Like, if youāre gonna do a coverup for reputation, at least keep the people away from kids afterwards
Speaker 23: It was almost as if, or at least in terms of how they were acting, that they thought the mere fact that people were [00:24:00] upset , at them for sleeping with children was the problem. , And I think we even see how the sentiment could potentially arrive through individuals like Milo Yiannopoulos, where he originally said that this was like a sexual awakening for him, , when a, a priest, , hooked up with him as a kid.
, And that others may feel that way as well, and like the outside world just doesnāt understand. Itās, I donāt know, one potential perspective?
Speaker 24: Like, okay, so bear with me here, but suppose youāre like Milo, and you were molested as a young person, but you felt it very affirming for whatever reason, Stockholm Syndrome, whatever, or even j- you actually did feel it affirming. It was like an important awakening for you. And then other, you see other people doing the same thing to other children, and you then, , see them being punished for it, and you would think, āOh, well this doesnāt make sense.ā
Look, just, I as an outsider am trying to find any logical reason why a good [00:25:00] person would do this, and maybe Catholics can chime in and explain why they think that the church may have been covering this up in the way that they were covering it up, where it allowed the people who were doing it to keep doing it
Speaker 16: This year, weāre taking the boys on a weekend boat trip to discuss Jesusā role as the navigator of our lives. That sounds pretty fun.
Speaker 17: A Catholic boat trip?
Speaker 18: The Catholic boatās gonna be heading on out today. The Catholic boat, get some hot Christian action thatāll take you-
Malcolm Collins: but uh
The, the, itās always really perplexed me, like why did they not, why, why were they trying to protect these priests, right? When, when they were like moving around the priests that they knew were the issues instead of dealing with them. Like it- I, I always thought like there must be some form of normalization that [00:26:00] Iām not aware of.
Then I read this guyās writings in daily life and Iām like, āOh, if there are a bunch of priests like this guy, that explains it.ā There, thereās basically a What do you call it? A gay cult that has infiltrated the upper rings of the Catholic Church, the Vatican, right? Like,
Speaker 4: No, to keep their mouths shut. Right. Yep. Right. And so... W- wait a minute. What? Yes, but weāve got to find out why these children are suddenly finding it necessary to report that theyāre being molested. Stop the problem at its source. Yes
Malcolm Collins: what, thatās, thatās what. Yeah, everyone heās married to and having sex with after he left was a former priest.
Mm.
Simone Collins (2): It doesnāt look great that that happened, yeah.
Malcolm Collins: Okay.
Simone Collins (2): And- Or, or it just means that when people realize they canāt adhere to the values and rules of the church, they leave, which could be a sign that those who remain are being pretty good. I donāt, Iām, I donāt know, just maybe, maybe. Right? That could be...
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. So, and note here, this episode, people might be like, āMalcolm, like, this seems [00:27:00] like an area where you could really dunk on Catholicism. Like, why arenāt you taking the shots here, bro? Like, we all know you want to.ā And this is one of those, oh, no, no, no, no, no. Like, this is too bad even for me. Like, Iām like, I feel bad about this.
I would like, learning this history, it wasnāt like... It was almost like a curse to knowledge for me because like, oh. Like, this is, this is not fun to know happened to your religion, right? Like, this is, this is too much of a, this is like, you know, you donāt like the other team, but then you see them do so bad in a particular game that they just get completely owned.
Mm ... and theyāre, theyāre walking off the field and youāre just like, āIām, Iām, Iām sorry that happened to you guys. That was painful to watch.ā Which is what learning the story of this guy has been in terms of, like, my thoughts on the Vatican.
Mm.
But to continue here a- and note here, Iām not saying this ācause Iām anti-Jewish or anti-gay.
Like, everybody if this guy was secretly a Jew, right, [00:28:00] like, dang. Right? Like Iām, Iām just sort of, like we all should be advocating for our own group. This is, this is where, you know, when somebody sees a Jew say something like, āWell, you know, I support Israel over the United States.ā And people are like, āOh, can you believe they...ā
Iām like, I mean, theyāre Jewish. Y- yeah, like I support America over any other country, but Iām, Iām an American, right? You know? Thatās like the core of my identity, my genetic history, my cultural history. And if I lived in, for example, Britain, I would never move to supporting Britain over America just ācause I had a job there.
Speaker 6: I should clarify, this is very different from supporting your own in a way that creates negative externalities, like the Jews did where the ADL ended up supporting, , in trying to de-platform that content creator who rightfully was calling out Orthodox Jewish communities for running welfare fraud, or Chabad did in getting that guy who killed a bunch of people off, or the Mormon sort of [00:29:00] cabal did around the bricks and minifigs.
Yeah, , thatās, that creates problems. But in terms of just being pro-Mormon if youāre Mormon, , and you know, saying, āOh, Iāll hire a Mormon over a non-Mormon,ā like f- of course. Of course. Why would, why would we not want... Thatās presumably what we all want
I mean, in this respect, sometimes weāll have like Jewish fans or Catholic fans who will be like, āOh, well, Iād support America over Israel,ā or, āIād support America over the Vatican.ā And Iām like, It doesnāt... I mean, I support America because Iām an American , , and my religious and cultural history is American.
If your plan is to eventually become fully American, that will eventu- I mean, intergenerationally lead to a break from your past identity. Itās not a flex to not care about protecting your people. , Your people are different from our people, and if you deny that, [00:30:00] you can. America does integrate people, but full integration, eventually means some form of true and permanent separation from whatever your original group is.
, And I think that weāre actually seeing that within portions of the American Catholic population and their relation with the Vatican right now. , Itās just w- when is this fully accepted? And, and as well as with the American, portions of the American Jewish population
Like the Jew who tells me, as some Jews have, that they would support American interests over the interests of Jews more broadly, I donāt hear that and think, āOh, thatās super cool.ā Or the, the Catholic whoās like, āI would support American interests over the Vatican interests.ā I donāt hear, hear that and Iām like, āOh, oh, oh yeah, youāre so cool.ā
Like any more than like if I moved to another country, even if, even if I spent 50 or 60 years there, I wouldnāt support that country over America. And some people can move to America and become fully American. Like I think Leafletās a good example of [00:31:00] this. But, you know, I donāt expect that from everyone.
Itās just that when itās clear that a person isnāt moving here for that reason, thereās probably another place where they would be better suited
Malcolm Collins: You know, thatās, it, the, the guy was playing on Team Jew, you know? His, his goal was it, you know, in- inje- inject Catholic doctrine with protect the Jews, right? And, and he achieved that. So to continue here. He also thought gays had, like, a special position in, in Godās design even when he was religious.
So hereās another quote from him. āI have asked myself, is there a special meaning in the homosexual condition? God creates the great majority of humans heterosexual and only a small minority homosexual. Is there a special task associated with the condition of this latter?ā By the way, there is. Itās, itās self-control.
But that doesnāt occur to him. An, an additional opportunity to [00:32:00] exercise self-control and an additional challenge. āSince they are an oppressed minority, aware of the hypocrisy of society and the damage done by the dominant culture, I have suggested that gays and lesbians are intended to extend solidarity to all marginalized groups and demand greater justice.
Because homosexuals are largely invisible in society, their prophetic vocation will have a cultural impact and support the struggle for human emancipation.ā So, like, keep in mind that this is what this guy thought his spiritual mission to do with, like, the tithings that were supporting him. So, Simone, before I go further
Simone Collins (2): Iām just so flat.
Like, this is so Maybe this doesnāt have more people talking about it because itās so hard to process that it actually could happen, I guess. Like, it just... Like, if you were to see a flying saucer land right in front of you, or, like, you were to [00:33:00] drive by one in a parking lot, youād be like, āWell, I definitely didnāt see that,ā ācause that would, that could never happen.
And so- Yeah, no, I
Malcolm Collins: actually f- y- people know me. Like, come on, this is Malcolm. Heās gonna have an anti-Catholic conspiracy rant. Like, that- Yeah, but I- ... that could work. That, that should go like butter for me.ā But itās just, like, too blatant, right? Like, itās like you spend your whole life on alien- Yeah, like how could
Simone Collins (2): this...
My brain canāt process it. It doesnāt make sense.
Malcolm Collins: I mean, itās, itās like you spend your whole life on alien conspiracies, and then aliens land in your front yard with a flying saucer. They come out, and Elvis is hanging out with them, and he starts doing, like, an Elvis dance in front of you. And youāre like- Yeah, and youāre like, ā
Simone Collins (2): I, I donāt know what to do with this.ā
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, youāre just like, āWhat? What? What?ā Thatās, thatās not even, like, an interesting... Like, gay Jew infiltrates the Vatican and infects them with weird ideology that inverts their prior religious principles? What? No, [00:34:00] no, Malcolm. Bad Malcolm. Th- th- d- Oh, my God. But weāre gonna pull on this thread, okay? And this is also why for me and, and, a- and Iāve always said, like, this is why I really personally, when people always wonder, āWell, whatās your source of authority,ā right?
Ever having a source of authority that, like, is living and not dead for me is always really difficult, because it can always just decide to disagree with you, right? Mm. Like, this isnāt just something that Catholics face. Like, suppose Iām a true believing Mormon and I truly believe everything I believe, right?
Like, and, and just like- Mm ... tomorrow the church can come out and say, āYour beliefs are officially wrong now. Update them or youāre no longer a correct Mormon.ā Iād just be like, āBut I really believed all of that,ā right? Like, āYou taught me all of that, and then I really believed it. And now all of a sudden black skin wasnāt a punishment?ā
Right? Like, what, what do you mean? Right? Like, that, that [00:35:00] was- Oh, God ... that was the, the war, right? They were the people who sat out the war in heaven between Jesus and Satan, right? We, th- we, we, we, weāve alwa- I, that, thatās not, like, tangential to my worldview. Thatās a core part of my reality, right? But to continue here.
And then so I f- I, I think that the way that a lot of American Catholics have gotten around this is they sort of I think branched with, well, what the Vatican is doing largely around the second council, and now they practice something thatās, like, a- a- adjacent and may, may one day recapture the Church.
But, like, the You know. And, and if you look at current demographics, you know, th- they might... The question is, is how far does the church go before they recapture it, right? Mm. Okay. Thatās another quoteās from him, ācause I wanna, I wanna get in his mind here, okay? āThe definition of human nature tends to reflect the self-understanding of the cultural elite.ā
S- So here what heās talking about is whether or not I think [00:36:00] gayness is normal, right? And heās trying to- Okay ... and because he believes that, like, white straight males are the cultural elite with, like, their heteronormative ideas heās trying to argue that, like, gayness isnāt, quote-unquote, āunnatural.ā
Because I w- I was trying to understand his, like, theology on this, ācause, like, the Bibleās pretty clear on gayness, right? And, and so therefore calling gay love unnatural is a cultural statement, is what heās trying to argue here. Not an absolute moral one. He challenged the traditional natural law that homosexuality is inherently disordered.
So letās, letās go into, to what, what he, what I think he means by this. Basically when he reads in the parts of the Bible where gayness is seen as negative, he would say, āWell, that was just those cultures at that time.ā And thatās where he got, you know, thatās, thatās where heās like, āSo I donāt need to follow what, what, you know, those cultures did because our churchās theology and [00:37:00] motivation has evolved since then.ā
And whatās interesting is you can sort of tell under what does he think that it evolved into, it evolved into the goals of the urban monoculture. This sort of, you know, endless helping of the societyās, quote-unquote, āoppressed classes,ā which, which doesnāt necessarily map onto real oppressed people, as weāve talked about in the press.
Itās, itās more like an urban monocultural distinction of, like, ethnically superior groups in their mind. But letās go into the quote on what he said about Catholics and Jews, because you might think I am overstating him saying, āYouāre the Catholic, you shouldnāt try to convert Jews.ā He said, āAfter Auschwitz, the Christian churches no longer wanted to convert the Jews.
While they may not be sure of the theological grounds that dispense them from that mission, the churches have become aware that asking Jews to become Christian , is a spiritual way of blotting out their existence, and thus only reinforces the effects of the Holocaust.ā
Simone Collins (2): Hold on.
[00:38:00] What? Hmm. Th- that, that, like, undermines- All of Jesusā
Malcolm Collins: teachings? All of Jesusā stuff, yeah.
Simone Collins (2): Okay, okay. Iām not... This is like, this is, again, this is why I canāt process this. Like, how did he get this through? Like, this, it boggles the mind. Okay, well, keep going. Maybe it will start making
Malcolm Collins: sense. No, that part wasnāt in the official document, but that was something that he said in an official capacity.
Okay. Weāll get to the stuff in the document in a
bit. Okay.
Letās talk about his conversion. So when did he convert to Catholicism? Okay. Formerly, you know, living in a, a Jewish household. He had one parent who wasnāt Jewish, though, his dad. Oh, okay. He converted at the age of 23 That is very suspicious age to convert.
Simone Collins (2): Why? I mean, isnāt that... Youāre, youāre almost fully myelinated. Like, you could argue thatās your time of [00:39:00] intellectual maturity. Itās the time to really reevaluate- No, it is true- ... some of your mental religion ... most people
Malcolm Collins: convert, if they are gonna convert to a different religion, between the age of 13 and 23.
But this is also an age where if I was a Jew and sitting down and thinking like, āHow could I have the most positive impact with my life for my whiter people?ā Like, whatās the moonshot of moonshots, right? Like, if I could incept a group with converting Jews as equivalent to the Holocaust, and you should from a religious standpoint get along with Jews it would be the, the Vatican, right?
That, thatās, thatās the, I mean, I, I think of religious orders on Earth, it might be the largest single religious order. Because, you know, with like Islam, thereās not like, even, even if you could, thereās so many different factions. So even if you could somehow . inception.
Speaker 26: We create and perceive our world simultaneously, and our mind does this so well that we donāt even know itās happening. That allows us to get [00:40:00] right in the middle of that process. How? By taking over the creating part. Now, this is where I need you.
Malcolm Collins: In- incep- do an inception on like a, one of the Muslim faiths, you still wouldnāt affect as many people. So just be like, āOh, at 23 I converted.ā And he said he converted after a friend gave him a copy of St. Augustineās Confessions.
Thatās a weird reason to convert. Like when people generally convert, itās either because theyāre on a mission, like actively s- seeking what they think is true. Or you know, something profound happens to them, or they see something that they think can only be described as miraculous. Like for us, or for me, the thing that really made me so fanatical in my belief was when, like literally happening through this podcast and on this podcast, is me going back to stories of the Bible that everyone in my childhood had told me they said one thing, and then I read them and they say something that is one, both completely [00:41:00] different and completely implausible that people at that period in Biblical history could have known.
D- see our Adam and Eve episode or our Genesis Confirms the Bible episode, or any, like just more broadly, Iāve been broadly shocked by how little... And so that had me sort of be like, āOkay it is miraculous to me that I could grow up next to these stories and not realize h- how sort of- correlatory they were to reality as I understood it, right?
You know, how much sense they made, the things that I thought felt unethical, like the Adam and Eve story, actually werenāt when I reread them. And that, for me, was very... That, thatās like the way a normal person converts. I read St. Augustineās Confessions and I converted. That sounds like the type of poetic nonsense that a Catholic would buy, but I donāt really buy it myself.
But anyway what was his early work? So what were some of the first things that he started writing as soon as he got, like, officially into the Catholic [00:42:00] Church as a full-time, like, staffer, right? In 1961, he published The Jews and the Gospel, later reissued Is the New Testament Anti-Semitic. He emphasized Godās covenant with the Jewish people as valid and irrevocable, drawing from Romans 11:29, āThe gifts and the call of God are irrevocable.ā
The church is, quote-unquote, āincomplete without Israelā and Judaism continues as a source of divine grace, he believed. Okay, so first letās do a, a broad g- overview of, of Nostra Aetate and then weāll go into the various points in it. So broadly speaking, it promotes a more positive view of non-Christian religions, e.g.,
positive remarks on Hinduism, Buddhism, esteem for Muslims, stating they adore the one God. Strongly condemns antisemitism and rejects charging, quote-unquote, āall the Jews with responsibility for Christās passion.ā Affirms Godās ongoing special relationship with the Jewish people, quote, āGod holds the Jews most dear...ā. So yeah [00:43:00] To keep going here, letās get into specific authority.
And so first I wanna go into, like, how much a- a- authority does this have for Catholics, okay? Itās considered an authoritative teaching of the church. Catholics are expected to accept it with r- religious assent, the same level as most consular or papal teachings that are not defined as infallible dogma.
So, and if this isnāt infallible, but that doesnāt mean that Catholics arenāt supposed to accept it. Weāll get to the official teaching on that. It is not a dogmatic definition. Like some statements on Legent, Gitmen, and earlier councils it is as a pastoral and declarative document addressing the churchās relationships with non-Christian religions.
Catholics owe it a, quote-unquote, āreligious assent or sub- sincere submission of intellect and will.ā So the part of the catechism of the Catholic church, which is, like, the official things on documents of this type, by the way it says, āDivine assistance is also given to the successors of the apostates teaching in communion with the successor of Pete and in particular the way- The apostles or apostates?
Simone Collins (2): Sorry, Iām trying to keep up ... [00:44:00]
Malcolm Collins: A- apostles. Did I say apostates? Yeah. Thatās quite a Freudian tip there. The, the apostles teaching in communion with the successor of Pete, and in particular way to the bishop of Rome, pastor of the whole church, when, without arriving at an infallible definition and without pronouncing an in- definable manner, they propose in the exercise of the ordinary magisterium a teaching that leads to a better understanding of Revelation in matters of faith and morals.
To this ordinary teaching and faithful are to adhere with religious assent. So this falls into the category of, to this ordinary teaching and faithful are to adhere with religious a- assent.
Mm. Which,
though distinct from the assent of faith, is nonetheless an extension of it. Because Catholics are also like, āWell, it, it, itās not exactly like you have to assent with faith,ā and itās like thatās true, but the, this is the actual teachings of the church on this.
Mm-hmm. āCause I wanted to double-check on this, ācause people are always like, āOh, well, thatās, like, just a vague suggestion from the church,ā and itās like, itās not a vague suggestion. That is not official Catholic [00:45:00] doctrine. That is a, this schismatic belief. But itās okay, right? Like, itās, a, a, you know, if, if you, if you believe that the church is wrong in this document too, then theyāre just wrong in all the documents, right?
So, you know, we can go back to the older councils.
Speaker 21: This actually gets to me, , and I think it helps me explain to myself whatās going on better. In the same way that I get really confused when I talk to a Jew and theyāre like, āYour children are Jewish,ā and Iām like, āTheyāre like one-sixteenths Jewish.ā Like, , that makes no sense to me, right? Like, Iām like, āI-- Yeah, I mean, matrilineally theyāre Jewish, but theyāre not...ā
You know, no other culture on Earth would think of them as Jewish. But a Jew will think, an Orthodox Jew at least, āNo, they are 100% Jewish.ā And I just canāt understand that ācause Iām from a different cultural perspective. , Itās the same with Catholics, where a Catholic will be like, āWell, Iām not schismatic.ā
And itās like, āWell, you, you do disagree with the Magisterium on these issues.ā And itās like, āWell, I donāt identify as schismatic, therefore Iām not schismatic.ā And Iām like, āWell, thatās not really...ā And then Iām like, āOh, I just need to see this from their [00:46:00] perspective.ā And itās not just their perspe-- itās also the perspective of the people at the Vatican.
They also donāt see these people as schismatic. , And itās just that Iām never gonna be able to understand what itās like to perceive the world in this way
Malcolm Collins: Yes. Okay. So, this is also rooted... So if you wanna go to where this comes from, it comes from Vatican IIās Lumen Gentium 25, which the CCC quotes to build this out, but the quote from that is, āThis religious submission of mind and will must be shown in a special way to the authentic magisterium of the Roman pontiff, even when itās not speaking ex cathedra, that it must be shown in a way that his supreme magisterium is acknowledged with reverence.
The judgements made by him are sincerely adhered to according to his manifest mind and will.ā So again, religious submission of mind and will. Okay. So now letās get into the stuff that was updated by this document, the new parts. Okay. Yes. Thought, Simone, before we go further.
Simone Collins: Keep going. I,
Simone Collins (2): I wanna, I wanna see what the updates are.
Malcolm Collins: [00:47:00] Okay, great. Yeah. So this is in relation to Hinduism, Buddhism Muslims, et cetera. Okay? Okay. āThe Catholic Church rejects nothing that is true and holy in these religions. She regards with sincere reve- reverence those ways of conduct and life, that precepts and teachings which, though different in many aspects from the ones she holds and sets forth, nonetheless offer and reflect a ray of that truth which enlightens all men.ā
Hmm.
Thatās crazy Um Thatās, thatās completely crazy. And, and, and note here if you contrast this with previous councils, right? So we have the Council of Florence, Conte Dominio 1441, what did it say in relation to these sorts of stuff? It af- firmly believes professors and proclaims that those [00:48:00] not living within the Catholic Church, not only pagans, but also Jews, and heretics, and schismatics cannot become participants in eternal life, but will depart into everlasting fire, which was prepared for the devil and his angels.
Unless- Okay ... before the end of the same have been added to the flock. That, that seems like uncertainly a, a, a very different teaching.
Simone Collins (2): Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: The, at a, at a very different perspective, right? And I think a lot of Catholics still want to hold to that perspective. And so I, I can see why itās becoming so popular, these sort of pseudo-schismatic branches.
So what did the document say about various specific religions, right? āCause it also, like, even went so far as to start glazing individual religions. On Hinduism it says, āThus in Hinduism, men contemplate the divine mystery and express it through inexhaustible abundance of myth and through searching philosophical in- inquiry.
They seek freedom from the anguish of [00:49:00] our human condition either through ascetical practices or profound mediation or flight to God with love and trust.ā On Buddhism, āAgain, Buddhism in its various forms realizes the radical insufficiency of this changeable world. It teaches in a way by which men in a devout and confident spirit may either to acquire the state of perfect liberation or attain by their own efforts or through higher help, supreme illumination.ā
Simone Collins (2): No. The... I donāt know. So in the, in the Primerās Guide to Crafting Religion, you make it pretty clear there are basically two types of religions. You can have two types of approaches to what it is required to be saved, and one is limited to atonement. You, you, you canāt save everyone, you know? Not... There are some people who are just not gonna make it, and these are kind of, in some ways, not very nice religions because they accept that you [00:50:00] canāt save everyone and some people are damned, whatever that might mean.
The two core religions which
Malcolm Collins: have this perspective are the Calvinist denominations of Protestantism of which we are one-
Simone Collins (2): Mm-hmm ...
Malcolm Collins: and the
Simone Collins (2): Jews. And then thereās the other which is a more domineering religion which believes that everyone can and should be saved. And in this way the religion is a bit unpleasant because it basically would entail, if you really wanna save everyone, coercing people to convert against their will.
And what this is trying to do is be neither. Like, itās not like, āWell, no- no one, no one can be saved,ā but it- Also, itās not trying to save anyone. Itās just like, āWell, everyoneās kind of right,ā which is kind of the worst thing. Like- Yeah ... I donāt care, do what you wanna do. Itās the absence of religion.
Itās the antithesis of Catholicism and, and any organized religion. I, I just canāt believe they... This has to- You know what I- Like, maybe someoneās gonna chime in in the comments and be like, āOh, this is some obscure piece of writing thatās not official in any real capacity.ā I, I [00:51:00] mean, could that be? Is that whatās going on here?
This was affirmed by one of the major councils and the Pope. Yeah, but is this the equivalent of, like, someone hearting something on X, you know, h- adding a heart to a post on X and not realizing- No, thatās why I
Malcolm Collins: went through the other documents that, specifically the, the Ca- catechism documents and stuff like that, so you could read before we get into this exactly the way that Catholics per previous rulings that were seen as coming directly from God- Yeah
are supposed to relate to teachings within this category, submitting
to them.
Mm. Itās, itās not the same as having faith in, in them.
Speaker 28: By the way, I put Simoneās concerns into an AI to see what the AI would say, and it says, āSimoneās skepticism is understandable as a layperson reacting to something that feels like a massive shift, but itās not accurate. Nostra Aetate is not some obscure low authority footnote. Itās a formal declaration of the Second Vatican Council as an [00:52:00] ecumenical council, overwhelmingly approved two thousand two hundred and twenty-one to eighty-eight, and officially promulgated by Pope Paul VI
catholic teaching, as outlined in the - Catechism of the Catholic Church, , eight nine two to eight nine three, and rooted in Lumen Gentium twenty-five, requires religious assent, a sincere submission of intellect and will to teachings from the ordinary magisterium of the ecumenical council, even when they are not infallible dogmas.
This is distinct from full assent of faith from infallible documents, but is still binding and not optional or dismissible as just a suggestion
Malcolm Collins: So this isnāt
Simone Collins (2): someone passively endorsing something without sufficiently paying attention to it or, I donāt know- Yeah ... someone just being like, āHereās an interesting idea.
Sure, weāll publish it,ā but like, you know how The Huffington Post- No, this is- ... used to be. You know, theyād be like, āYeah, weāll accept your blog submission,ā and they wouldnāt really, like...
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, this is very, very, very different than, say, [00:53:00] like, the Vatican wrote something in an official paper or something like that, right?
Keep in mind th- ths had to be of, of the declaration of the Second Vatican Council, so thatās a, a Vatican council, mind you. Right. This had to be voted on by the bishops, right? Who knew? Okay, wow. So
of the vote- Yeah ... of the vote 2,221 voted for it and only 88 voted against it. So it was also overwhelmingly approved. Then it was promulgated, thatās an official issue. That means review an official issue by Pope Paul VI.
I mean I, o- obviously I, I, I think that thereās a, I mean, Catholics, I, I feel like Want to say, like, and- and w- well, you know, we donāt, the real Catholics donāt take this sort of thing, and the way that those documents say youāre supposed to relate to this stuff is actually corrupted as well, and this stuff shouldnāt actually fall under that.
And I think [00:54:00] the Catholics actually have a number of outs here. Thereās been a number of things in recent papal elections that could be s- considered outright fraudulent. I may do a whole episode on that at some point.
Simone Collins (2): Whoa, really? Ar- What do you mean outright? Can you g- what do you mean by outright fraudulent?
Malcolm Collins: They did some things, the Jesuits did, in how they held... It wasnāt the pope of this pope, but it was one of the previous popes, I think. Okay. Where they pulled some shenanigans that sort of prevented people from voting. Like the, the block that was against them from being there to vote. Oh, wow
Yeah. It, it was w- I, I, I canāt remember the specifics. A Catholic was the one who would, because obviously they were most invested in this when he was crashing out on me about the Jesuits and, and, and blackpilling me on the Jesuits and making me sort of see Catholicism as this fight of, like, the good guys, the Opus Dei versus the Jesuits for, like, the heart of what it becomes.
But this, the way I sort of see this right now, like a- as Iām looking at it from an outsider, is I historically, as a kid was of all the sci-fi franchises, and I was a big sci-fi nerd the one [00:55:00] sci-fi franchise I didnāt really like was Star Wars. I, I- Hmm ... I liked Star Trek over Star Wars.
Starship Troopers obviously love. SG-1- Sure ... love. Gotta do a whole video on how they canceled the SG-1 reboot because- Oh my gosh ... it treated the military too well. Oh, no. Fans might like it. It did- it didnāt make the tribals, like, better. People might like
Simone Collins (2): the military, yeah. Wait, and by the way, Stargate did not universally portray the military well.
In fact, some of the most annoying episodes were ones where they, I guess r- fairly, you know, well, not realistically, but- No, US politicians- ... give a realistic depiction of how military bureaucracy can really gunk things up sometimes.
Malcolm Collins: No, no, no, that was, those, almost every one of the episodes youāre thinking of was tied to the US Senate or Congress.
Yeah. And the military was the good guy. Oh, yeah,
Simone Collins (2): yeah,
Malcolm Collins: yeah. Okay, youāre right, youāre right. So- No, I feel like they were
Simone Collins (2): even not realistic. You know, theyāre like, āWhat? There are some problems that the military faces.ā The, the point
Malcolm Collins: here being is despite me not being a Star Wars fan- Okay ... watching Disney buy Star Wars and then start to just write, like, āWe hate youā in [00:56:00] poo all over the walls of the property made me genuinely sad, right?
Reading this feels a bit like watching the new Disney Star Wars where itās like- Hmm ... yeah, I might not have been the biggest fan of that property, but like, whyād you have to do them that dirty, right? Like, and, and as a Star Wars fan, I feel itās, itās probably pretty similar to being, like, a Catholic today, where itās like, well, you know- None of the real fans actually take those new ones and consider them canon, right?
Weāre still all about legends over here. What, what are you talking about? Yeah, weāre, weāre
Simone Collins (2): in this for the long run. Itāll, itāll come around
Malcolm Collins: again. Yeah, weāre, weāre... Everybody knows Disneyās eventually gonna realize this didnāt work, as Iāve heard rumors that theyāre thinking about doing an, and retconning it.
So weāre, weāre gonna get a, a Vatican II retcon. Just like go , go back
Simone Collins (2): but anyway. But they can. Thatās the cool thing, is they can. They can say, āLook, that was a mistake. I donāt know what happened. Itās over now. Undo.ā Thereās...
Malcolm Collins: Catholics ki-kind... How could you retcon [00:57:00] Vatican II? Could it be done? I guess the best way to- Delete.
Delete.
Simone Collins (2): Undo. Weāre sorry, we were wrong. It, how, what
Malcolm Collins: the... The Catholic Church has
Simone Collins (2): made lots of weird-
Speaker 29: I asked an AI how you could retcon Vatican II, , with this context, and basically what it said is full deletion is extremely unlikely. It would require admitting a major error in a council guided by the Holy Spirit, which undermines everything the church claims about itself
Simone Collins (2): The, I mean, I think the most real
Malcolm Collins: way to do it was to assert that they didnāt have official power when they put it out, and that something had g- thatās, thatās... I mean, like, obviously thereās been instances in the past where there have been, like, multiple popes at the same time.
And then a council came together and decided, āOkay, now we have another new pope,ā that decides, you know, gets... You know, clearly you gotta have a, a, a, a chain of, what do they call that? The chain of whatever. , They got together, they decided this new pope, and then the new pope comes in and, and immediately says, āActually, popes rule over councils.ā And the council was like, āBut we brought you here saying you wouldnāt do that,ā right? Mm. So like, yeah. Theyāve, theyāve done a bit of this in the [00:58:00] past.
But I donāt think any of that was as, like, written down as Vatican II was. I donāt think that that i- it counted as the same l- category of stuff that canāt easily be retconned. But I mean, clearly it retconned something else. So like, Catholics can chime in here. So letās go what they said about Islam.
Okay? āThe Church regards with esteem also the Moslems.ā Th-this is what they... Is- Islam. āThey adore the one God, living and subsisting in himself, merciful and all-powerful, the creator of heaven and earth, who has spoken to men. They take pains to submit wholeheartedly to even his inscrutable decrees, just as Abraham...ā
Dot, dot, dot, submitted to God. āThough they do
Not
Malcolm Collins: acknowledge Jesus as God,
they revere him as a prophet. They also honor Mary, his virgin mother.ā Dot, dot, dot. āIn addition, they await the day of judgmentā dot, dot, dot. āFinally, they value the moral life and worship God, especially through prayer, almsing, and fasting.ā[00:59:00]
Hmm.
Yeah. Which is interesting here. When you take our, our view or, or contrast it with our view on all of this I mean, at least we take the stance of like, well, we do say that Jews and Muslims are worshiping derivations of what appear to be the same god. Like Hindis and Buddhists are certainly not.
Like I- pff, that was, that was wild.
āAs the sacred synod searches into the mysteries of the church, it remembers the bond,ā this is about the Jews that spiritually ties the people of the new covenant to Abrahamās stock... The Church, therefore, cannot forget that she received the revelation of the Old Testament through the people with whom,ā the Jews, āthe people with whom God in his inexpressible mercy concluded the ancient covenant.ā
And then they cite here, āOn account of their fathers, this people remains most dear to God, for God does not repent of the gifts he makes nor the calls he issues,ā Rome [01:00:00] 11:28-29. And so this directly quotes Romans. And then further they say, āAlthough the Church is the new people of God, the Jews should not be presented as rejected or accursed by God, as this follows from the Holy Scriptures.ā
And then on collective guilt, this is from Nostra aetate again, āTrue, the Jewish authorities and those who followed their lead presented for the death of Christ. Still, what happened in his Christ passion cannot be charged against all Jews with distinction then alive nor against the Jews of today.ā
Right. āIt offered to cry his hatred, persecutions, displays of antisemitism directed against Jews at any time by anyone.ā
Okay. But yeah, I had no idea. That is really sad. That is, that is, I mean, a potentially near God tier play by an individual Jew. And if not that, at least a heavy infestation by the urban monoculture, ācause he was already living, you know, at the, the very least in the lifestyle of the urban monoculture.
You know, [01:01:00] sex with men while, you know, writing this stuff down. If you see his wider philosophy, itās very clearly more tied to the urban monoculture theology than anything that could historically could have been considered Catholic values or
Simone Collins (2): theology. Yeah, not even close.
Malcolm Collins: So very crazy, crazy conspiracy.
And you guys- Well,
Simone Collins (2): conspiracy, yeah, I guess the, the, the larger question though this doesnāt appear to be documented from what you found, who let this happen? Like, y- youāre talking about this guy going through, publishing all this stuff, but th- all these people that voted for it, all these people that added to it- Yeah
to your point, right? Like- Who let this
Malcolm Collins: happen? Like, if you want to know how co- when people act like... And this is the other thing that got me, is I had this impression as an outsider that, like, when people are like, āOh, weāll retake control of the Vatican. Weāll retake control of church infrastructure. Weāll...ā
I hear that and I get this impression that, like, oh, well, maybe theyāve recently been able to get their hooks into the Vatican. [01:02:00] Maybe thereās, like, this ideological divide in the Vatican. 2,201 of the bishops approved this with only 88 against this. This is not, like, two power factions or something like that, or an infiltration of the Vatican.
If this is an infiltration of the Vatican, itās... What, what percent is that?
Simone Collins (2): Yeah, I guess I donāt know how the voting structure is set up. I donāt know if this is, like, people around the world or a bunch of people concentrated in- Yeah, so-
Vatican City ...
Speaker 30: So, , again here I decided to ask the AI to find out who are these bishops? Are they just randos or are they actually the people who run the Catholic Church? , And it said, , the bishops who voted for Nostra Aetate as well as all Vatican II documents are the actual power structure of the Catholic Church, not randoms.
They are called the council fathers, the highest level church governments in an ecumenical council. , They included all diocesan bishops, head of dioceses around the world, archbishops, cardinals, [01:03:00] Eastern Catholic patriarchs, head of major religious orders with voting rights. It was the largest gathering of Catholic bishops in history, deliberately global for the first time.
Bishops came from Europe, North, South America, Africa, Asia, et cetera, and not just Vatican insiders and Europeans
This is why Malcolm and Simone noted that in an extremely lopsided vote, only 3.8% against, it shows nearly universal buy-in from the worldwide, , episcopate at the time, not just a small clique of Vatican insiders
Malcolm Collins: so 3.8% of the bishops voted against this
3.8%. And that was in 1965. So, like, not recently either. Like, when I talk about this institutional capture having been in the Vatican for a very, very long time at this point, Iām not like, that isnāt me being a conspiracy theorist or something. Iām just trying to, like, lay out, like, what Iām seeing as an outsider.
And so, the [01:04:00] best thing that you can do, I guess, if you wanna recapture it, is just breed. And yeah. Get involved.
Simone Collins (2): I, I mean, yeah. This shows things can change, and things can also change quite violently. But this means that I think that thereās hope they can change violently in a different direction.
Malcolm Collins: Are you actually... I love Simone as an outsider. Went from, like, your standard progressive whatever and now sheās like, āThe Catholic Church needs a civil war. They must take out the Vatican.ā
Simone Collins (2): Well, this is I donāt know. It, itās like someone trying to change t- theyāre like marching into an anime convention and theyāre like, āNo, this is a Star Trek convention now.ā
Like, fine, but go to a Star Trek convention. Like, leave the anime nerds alone. This is about anime. So I donāt, I donāt... Like autistically, I donāt like the, [01:05:00] the, the diluting and confusing of the categories. I need Catholics
Malcolm Collins: to be Catholics. Yeah, like at the very least, I think if something was written by somebody who deconverted, it should be taken out of official church teachings Like that should be, that should be the thing that invalidates it
Simone Collins (2): Yeah, thatās, yeah.
May- I mean, I think until pretty recent history, people just didnāt deconvert, so there is not yet a cultural technology to address that, and this is exactly the point you make among many others, of course, in The Prophet is Patched Against Religion. And it wasnāt even like he deconverted
Malcolm Collins: for like a good reason.
It was just like he wanted to have sex with strangers. Like that seems to be the reason he deconverted.
Simone Collins (2): Again, I think thereās an argument to be made for that being then the system working as intended. That the bigger problem would be if active and especially policy-wise influential people in the Catholic clergy were like, āI wanna have gay sex and Iām gonna just stay and continue to generate policy and do, have it all.ā
[01:06:00] So I donāt see the deconversion as the bad sign, but I do see statements that seem to nullify pretty definitional or, or foundational concepts, at least as I as an outsider understand them about Catholicism. And thatās throwing me for a loop. But even from pretty devout Catholics, we hear about these like, well, there was this conspiracy and this particular faction was trying to mess with things, and I feel like thereās A non-trivial amount of politicking, infighting, and influence campaigns that are influencing whatās happening in Vatican City, and to a, a great extent, the most devout, active, practicing Catholics that we know have an attitude of, āLook, at the parish level, we are going to thrive.
Weāre going to follow kind of a pre-Vatican II version of [01:07:00] the, of the Catholic Church and pretend that this stuff didnāt happen. We are going to leverage the infrastructure of the Catholic Church and of bishops and everything else when we need it,ā like if we need a, a Catholic school to be spun up. They will lean on the formal church when they need to, but for the most part, theyāre just like, āLook, what weāre creating is whatās going to last.
Weāre the ones having kids. Weāre just gonna ride this out, and eventually theyāre gonna find their way back to sanity.ā But I donāt know if thatās gonna happen.
Malcolm Collins: So just so you get an idea
Of like what level of authority this teaching would hold. It would hold the same level of authority as something like the theology of the body which actually I think holds a little bit less because it wasnāt also affirmed by a religious council. So that, that sort of gives you an idea of like the level of import...
And theology of body is pretty important Catholic teaching. Mm. So yeah. [01:08:00] Anyway love you Simone. Thatās a crazy episode. And it- Understatement, yeah. It, it feels a bit like, is this a simulation? Because like if there was something this big, why was I unaware of it?
Yeah.
Yeah. Like, it seems like one of the first things you would mention if you were a Protestant talking about this stuff
Simone Collins (2): You would think that.
Y- yes. But again, I think itās one of those things where itās so outlandish, itās so hard to believe, that it just doesnāt process. Yeah. And again, I, I have... I think thereās at least a good 30% chance that someone, a Catholic in the comments chimes in and is like, āThis means nothing. Youāre doing the equivalent of s- you know, saying, well, you know, Person [01:09:00] X responded to Person Yās comment on YouTube, and that doesnāt mean thatās an endorsement of Person Yās com- you know-
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, thatās not-
reputation or commentary ... an official endorsement. Yeah. Or that thereās different ways of relating to the councils, or thereās different ways of relating to the bishops. Yeah,
Simone Collins (2): so I feel, I t- I, I just, we have to be missing something. It has to be something like this. The bishops who
Malcolm Collins: voted on this, the thing that I c- is, is le- less than 4% voted against this.
Like, that to me shows that, like, the quest, even if thatās true, for retaking the Vatican, is an astronomically uphill battle.
Yeah.
Thatās like when my loading barās at 96%, thatās like when I am in my- Yeah, itās, youāre functionally there, yeah.
Simone Collins (2): Mm-hmm. It,
Malcolm Collins: it, itās like there. Itās done, right? Like, itās cooked.
Mm-hmm. But they do have, fortunately, current demographics on their side.
Simone Collins: Yeah.
Simone Collins (2): Weāll see. Weāll see. Thanks for sharing that with me, [01:10:00] though. That was a wild ride. All right, have a good
Malcolm Collins: one.
Simone Collins (2): You too.
Malcolm Collins: What are we doing for dinner?
Simone Collins (2): Youāre having the rendang either with french fries- All right ... or on a Hawaiian bun.
Malcolm Collins: Fries.
Simone Collins (2): Okay. Fancy Korean fries or normal fries?
Malcolm Collins: Fancy Korean fries.
Simone Collins (2): Oh, if we have any. Iāll make sure we have some. If not, normal fries. If we donāt have those, then we can
Malcolm Collins: do curly fries.
Simone Collins (2): Oh, I thought you didnāt like the curly fries. You
Malcolm Collins: did like them? Theyāre great. We just gotta cook them a bit longer.
Simone Collins (2): Okay. All right.
Simone Collins: thought I was a
prude. No Yeah, people were
Malcolm Collins: mad at us for like
Not being aggressively mean.
Simone Collins: Yeah. What on earth? Like, hello.
Malcolm Collins: Like when we give me, I think this is something that the wider conservative community doesnāt get about Ailaās relationship to the community. Weāre talking about the episode , from yesterday about how somebody from Ailaās circle actually made us against early stage abortion, which we were not before through a very well argued piece.
But it starts, the story [01:11:00] starts with a birthday gang bang. Well, no,
Simone Collins (2): her, her essay doesnāt, but like our discussion of her does because she recently talked about her experience meeting her future husband, I think, I think theyāre engaged to be married and they have a kid to- together now, at Ailaās famous birthday gang bang.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. And I, because people generally in the conservative movement who arenāt on like the nerd tech side, theyāre unaware that Aila in terms of gravity and orbit has been pretty useful to the right. In that because she tries to always say what she believes is true means that she is constantly pissing off the trans community.
A- and constant- Is she? Oh, yeah. Sheās, sh- sh- the trans- well, because you, you canāt really talk about the science around transness anymore without just incensing trans people. And because of that, sheās actually sort of broke the egg for a lot of peopleās- God ... transition into [01:12:00] more and more conservative ideas.
And I think- Mm ... for a lot of people, the trans issue is their first step on that pipeline.
Simone Collins (2): And so- She, I mean, her sex survey does have, or big kink survey has one of the best samples of at least self-reported trans individuals of probably m- maybe any research done, just given her sample size. So I donāt know if sheās said anything thatās like disturbing, but, or that like makes them look bad, has, she does have very good sample data.
Malcolm Collins: Well, I mean, sheās the one who did the study when we did the trans one showing that transness is linked to violent fetishes. Oh, yeah. We used her data. Thatās from her- Thatās right ... thatās from her study. Thatās true. That that comes from. .
Simone Collins (2): But, but what I mean is
Malcolm Collins: while I may think her actions are immoral, and more immoral today now that I understand the potential negative consequences of sex, and Iāve become dramatically less sex...
Like, Iām kink positive, sex negative now. I just think that n- non-procreative sex is bad. Until [01:13:00] we have better forms of- I guess I just- ... birth control ..., but in the net she pushes people towards our movement. And, and advances, like, the number of conservative donors, voters.
Well, sheās not encouraging anyone
Simone Collins (2): to live her lifestyle. Like, I, I... Sometimes I feel like I get this insinuation from people of, like, that sheās selling something to them. Sheās not. No, she, she said that she didnāt like
Malcolm Collins: the gang bang. She tried a gang bang and did not enjoy it. Everybody- Yeah ... like, that seems like a pretty good indication of, like, donāt do this, people.
Simone Collins (2): Well, but more, ugh, Tex is so into pulling on everything. Sheās not trying to fob her lifestyle onto anyone. And just like we arenāt either. Like, weāre not... A lot of people like to accuse us. Theyāre like, āYouāre trying to convince all these people who arenāt equipped to have children to have kids.ā Like, thatās something someone just today was accusing us of.
And that we... No, we absolutely donāt do that. So I think people like to misattribute this. Really? Were they
Malcolm Collins: accusing us on our comments or on, like, Twitter or something? On X,
Simone Collins (2): yeah.
Malcolm Collins: Oh, okay. So, like, somebody has [01:14:00] no idea what weāre about.
Simone Collins (2): Yeah. But a lot of people have no idea what Ailaās all about, so you know, like, itās...
I just think itās stupid. Itās very annoying.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. Well, I mean, the, the informational sphere, I guess just when somebodyās aligning with us on anything that puts them on the outs with progressives and they are also helping the whiter project, Iām generally, like, pro them. Like, thatās the way I operate.
Simone Collins (2): Iām generally pro when someone is thoughtful and takes a first principles approach to what they believe and what theyāre doing and why, and thatās Aila. Yeah, but
Malcolm Collins: sometimes those people can still be antagonistic to us or, or our efforts. And I, I think that, you know, in th- those instances we need to..
[01:15:00]
This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit basedcamppodcast.substack.com/subscribe -
One of the experiences we treasure most involves our minds being changed on an issue. If weāre wrong about something, weād prefer to be nudged in a less wrong direction.
We did NOT expect to have one of these experiences when clicking through to learn about a truly modern meet-cute: When Romy Holland met her future husbandāand the father of her now-young childāat Aellaās famous birthday gangbang, which she both helped to organize and supported as a fluffer.
Anyway, youāll see for yourself in todayās episode of Based Camp. Happy Monday! Make sure you read Romyās full essayāthe one that ultimately changed our views on misoprostol, which we had previously seen as pretty innocuous; sheās an eloquent and moving writer.
Show Notes
One of the fluffers at Aellaās birthday gangbangs paired up and ultimately had a child with one of the guests/participants
Crazier than that, this young woman radicalized me on early-term abortion!
The Gist: Romy Holland, a friend of Aellaās, recently went on Slateās podcast, Death, Sex & Money, to talk about her experience meeting a guy at Aellaās birthday gang bang and eventually falling in love with him. This story was originally covered in the San Francisco Standard. In her
What Happened
* Romy helped organize the famous 42-man gangbang birthday party in 2024
* She also acted as a fluffer at this event
* In this capacity, she met a programmer she had previously noticed online
* They subsequently began dating, had a kid together, and are now engage andāfor the time being at leastāmonogamous
Underrated: Romy blackpilled me on the abortion pill
An underrated element of Romyās narrative arc thus far is her experience with abortionāsomething she articulated so beautifully and powerfully that it has totally radicalized me on misoprostol.
Her one substack article (as of June 2026), titled What Nobody Told Me About Abortion, describes her harrowing experience attempting an abortion.
She describes blithe comfort in the face of lies told to us
āOn the sort of afternoon full of ripe summer fruit, my new boyfriend and Iāstill flush with sweat and limerence after some midday sexāstared at an ovulation test strip and realized weād misread an earlier test.
āUh oh,ā I said, lightly amused as a thousand rom com moments flashed through my mind. Cue the clueless horror movie protagonist who fails to notice the axe murderer behind the bedroom door, mistaken about the genre of the story unfolding.
We listened to music and I swiveled back and forth in an office chair while narrating ChatGPTās damning answers to my questions about fertile windows and test strip line darkness. My boyfriend kissed me on the cheek each time he walked past. We riffed about games we could play at our abortion party.
Our decision calculus was numerical, emotions an afterthought. There is a 1 in 4 chance of conception each month, so deciding not to take Plan B would result in a 25% risk of needing an abortion. Plan B costs $50 and an abortion costs $500, but with only a 25% chance of conception the expected value of that option is $125. Plan B and early stage abortion seemed physically pretty similarānothing to consider there.
āIf you get pregnant, weād both know weāre fertile,ā my boyfriend pointed out.
āTrue, why would anyone pay for fertility testing with such a thrilling alternative available?ā I quipped back.
In the end, my sense that failing to take Plan B seemed plainly stupid led us to swing by CVS on our way to an under-the-sea-themed party in San Francisco. I was wearing a black and gold ballgown, he, a shimmery jacket that made him look like an undiscovered mer-creature dredged up into the fluorescently lit family planning aisle. Later at the party, I recounted our ill-fated afternoon with punchlines as I pried open the clamshell package and unceremoniously swallowed the Plan B in my friendsā cozy kitchen.ā
Then she describes how it goes south
* She got a positive pregnancy test nine days later
* She was fully determined to not see it
* āIgnoring the mounting hum of my instinctual self, I walked across Berkeley on a chilly August evening to pick up abortion pills from the sort of friend who people think of when they say they know a guy.ā
āNobody talks about the hell that is misoprostol, the abortion pill. I suspect that, in its politicization, no one wants to mention that the drug in question is a sledgehammerāon its quest to destroy the fetus, it also obliterates the mother. On Thursday afternoon I unceremoniously took the first of three doses: four little white pills shoved into my vagina as far up as I could wedge them. Tiny bombs placed quietly beside the cradle where my unsuspecting baby slept.
I waited, fever rising, for the bleeding that should have started after an hour or two. The second dose came and went. By dose three I could barely move. I took the stairs one at a time, weakly gripping the railing, my joints aching with each step, the inside of my mouth painfully raw. Curled in bed, I whispered for more and more blankets, shivering and only dimly aware of my boyfriend there beside me searching the internet for answers about my racing heart and shallow, rapid breathing.
In the morning I felt drained, but the fever and pain were gone. The large maxi pad, which the internet warned I may soak through as often as once per hour, was entirely dry.ā
* She goes on to observe that āMisoprostol as an abortion protocol is 85% effective. As the 24 hour time point neared and I felt not even the slightest cramping, it became clear that I was among the unlucky 15% of women for whom a second attempt would be necessary.ā
* āIn taking the first dose of pills, Iād started down an inescapable path and had no choice but to march to its end. As a friend would later say, the correct number of abortions is either zero or as many as it takes.ā
* She ultimately had to do four rounds
* She went to Planned Parenthood in San Francisco
* āDesperation welled inside of me. I wanted to grip her bony shoulders, to look her in the eye and ask her what she would have me do with this broken beautiful thing inside of me that had survived six doses of poison and was now fated to die.ā
* āMore abortion pills, more waiting, more shivering in a ball of feverish torment. Still no blood.ā
āMy memories of the surgical D&C procedure four days later come to me in fragments that feel sharp in my chest. I remember a cold wand pushed into me searching for a smudge of evidence of my baby. And then a room with a chair and an iPad video that soothingly warned of hysterectomy risk. Finally, a room that smelled of chemicals where I sat on crisp paper and stared at a tray strewn with ominous medical instruments. Panic.ā
ā¦
āThrough this, I did not move. Tears gathered in my eyes at the inevitability of the situation, at my overwhelming helplessness. I presented my arm to the pretty young nurse who would administer the fentanyl and sedatives. I lay down and spread my legs for the kind practitioner there to vacuum out my stubborn baby. Whatās a mother to do in a moment like this, but carry her child gently to the executionerās arms?ā
Romy Meets Other People Who Were Scarred
āI recently had coffee with a friend who became very still when I mentioned my abortion. Tears sprang to her eyes as she told me that sheād once had an abortion too, and although it was seven years ago and although she never wanted the baby, never even wanted to be a mother, it still makes her cry every time she remembers it. Sheād taken the abortion pills and two days later, in a grungy dive bar bathroom with music thrumming through the door, sheād found her clot of a baby in her bloody pad.
āI knew I had to eat it,ā she told me. And then, as though suddenly realizing that this might sound absurd, she tried to explain. āI mean, I couldnāt just leave it in that dirty bathroom, it was my baby. What was I going to do, throw it in the trash?
I stopped her, shaking my head āno, no, it makes perfect sense to me. It really does, of course you had to eat it, it was your baby.ā The maternal logic of this was unassailable. Anyone who has been a mother for any stretch of time would not question such a primordial urge. The animal mother knows what to do, and your judgements are not what carried evolution billions of years to this moment.
āSo what did you do?ā I asked her.
āI ate it.ā She said it wide eyed.āā
Romy Experiences the Mental Fallout
āI was not permitted to eat my baby, nor bring it home in a little vial to bury it, or put it on the mantel, or inspect it under a microscope for a tail. Perhaps if I had been, the cataclysmic crash of hormones that awaited me would have taken a gentler shape.
Instead, in the days that followed, I began to experience borderline psychotic episodes.
These hours-long periods would begin with a vague sense of unease and build until the world around me became twisted and surreal, like a haunted house. Sometimes, anger at my boyfriend would inexplicably swell inside of me, sharp and alienating, distancing me from the one person who might understand my pain. Often, I was consumed with an urgent need to go find my missing baby.
My thoughts would enter obsessive, frenzied spirals about this desire, running through the sequence of events that had led to my babyās departure from my womb where it clearly belonged. My memories of the D&C churned with an ominous bent. The kindness of the nurses suddenly felt coercive, like they had conspired to place me under a spell so that they could use strange and powerful devices to remove a precious, integral part of me.ā
* She tried to deal with it by stapling the test to the temple at Burning Man
* āBefore I was a mother, I was a woman who belonged entirely to herself. I finally understood then that my baby was gone, and that I was once again alone.ā
āIt turns out that while full-blown postpartum psychosis is rare, subclinical psychotic thoughts are common, affecting 15-30% of women who give birth, and, less commonly, following abortion and miscarriage. Critically, people experiencing these thoughts retain insight into the fact that their thoughts are distorted, though such knowledge does not immunize them to suffering.ā
āItās strange to me that, given the prevalence of postpartum depression and abortion, I havenāt heard anyone talk openly about either. My concept of abortion was shaped instead through divisive political narratives, which leave me feeling trapped between absolutes in how I am allowed to talk about it, forced to hedge every statement.ā
The grief sticks with her
āMy grief has settled into a shape small enough to carry around the world. It goes out with me to dinner, and seems to like it when we take evening walks around the neighborhood. Sometimes, when I know it wonāt cause too much trouble, I take it out and marvel at it. Itās heavier than it looks, the weight of it on my chest enough to knock the breath out of me if Iām not prepared. Many nights, my grief unfurls and wraps its long tendrils around me. I wake sweating and tangled in my blankets, planets still bright in the sky. Soon enough, it will learn to sleep through the night.ā
Romyās story adds weight to our techno-puritan sense that the damage lies at the action-based inflection point, not some definition of life
āIāve never quite understood regret. Should the butterfly regret a flap of its wings upon learning of the resulting tornado? Still, as the shadow of loss looms over my days, I have started to think I probably would have been happier in this alternate timeline in which my grief would be balanced by purpose. Whether this will feel true five years from now is harder to sayāperhaps one should wait to see what is built from the tornadoās wreckage before declaring regret. I find myself trying to calculate this likelihood, but quickly stop. I know now that some arithmetic belongs to older gods than reason.ā
Episode Transcript
Malcolm Collins: [00:00:00] m- my wife was actually radicalized by somebody who met their husband, who they ended up having a child with, at a gang bang against early stage abortion. Yep. , , and not slightly radicalized. I got radicalized after hearing this story.
Traumatized and
radicalized. And
this has a lot of crying. Itās emotionally a, more of a rollercoaster than you likely think, so buckle in, guys
Speaker 17: America, get your uteruses tarp.
Speaker 19: Iām a baby killer. Baby killer makes me horny.
Speaker 18: Get that fetus, kill that fetus.
Speaker 19: Down face, b*****s in my cross face. No, Iāma have abortions always.
Would you like to know more?
Malcolm Collins: Hello, Malcolm. Iām excited to be speaking with you today because romance isnāt dead. It turns out, I didnāt know this, but one of the fluffers at Aellaās birthday gang bang has gone on to date one of the gentlemen attending and [00:01:00] participating in the party. And they have a kid together now, and theyāre getting married, and, you know, itās so wholesome.
Itās wonderful.
But- That wholesome and wonderful... No, I love all the other conservatives are talking about thereās this, like, slutty woman whoās using her gang bangs t- to, like, āOh, Iām gonna have a gang bang for, like, my,ā what was it? Like, her kidās birth or, like, a birth shower or try to get pregnant at a gang bang.
You, youāve, youāve seen this, right? Oh,
no, no, no. Youāre, youāre referring ab- to Bonnie Blue, her golden baby shower. Yes, golden
baby sho- oh, God.
Speaker 5: Definitely pregnant That is a baby Turn my baby shower into a golden shower. Pregnancy is a big for a lot of people, so Iām gonna make the most of it. Biggest live stream of a birth
Malcolm Collins: This is so gross. Yeah, thatās- No, Bonnie, no.
You, we do not... Bonnie Blue and Aella and her circle, completely different. Like, I canāt even- Yeah, they, they, they are completely- Like, I think people think-
blindedly ... and, and respect for Bonnie Blue and what she does. Like, she is her own extreme sports kind of person. But [00:02:00] the, the Aella cinematic universe is one of, and I think itās very misunderstood, it, it is one of the most a circle of the most intelligent, articulate educated, informed, and intellectually curious people in the world.
They put 99.9% of post-graduate university students to shame. I would say 95% of professors to complete shame. These are some of the most intellectual people that Iāve ever encountered. They have amazing writing. Weāll get into some of that. But what I love most about this, though and this is where the twist comes, actually, Malcolm, is- Ooh
not only am I, like, this is really sweet, right? Weāve gone from, like, gang bang to marriage, and it, it, thereās something to be said there about kind of the way that life goes and also that, you know, maybe we, we shouldnāt fully judge debauched lifestyles of a little bit of, a bit of fun and hedonism. And also that itās a kind of a really common life [00:03:00] progression, and another reason why many male base campers should not be discounting progressive women and writing them off, which we see happening all the time.
But-
Oh yeah, people- Romy ... people are like, āOh, you shouldnāt date someone to change them,ā or whatever. People were so mad at my Leaflet video when I was like no, thatās, like, what... Iām just saying realistically, that is your pool of women these days.ā Hereās whatās
really, really d- crazy though, is Romy Holland, this woman who went on to get married, you know, gang bang organizer Bay Area intelligent sex positive woman, has completely radicalized me on misoprostol and early term abortion.
Like, Iām complete, like, sea change for me against it. I, I used to be like, hey, basically until you get signs of, like, you know, a, a, a, a human life that is capable of experiencing pain, you know, like around, like week 12 you donāt really have, like, a, the beginnings of a brain, [00:04:00] I guess Iām okay with abortion.
You know, and especially, you know, just taking misoprostol if you need to ācause youāre super, super not ready. I have changed my view on this, and it, it wasnāt, it wasnāt our Catholic friends, it wasnāt our, our friends at the Heritage Foundation, it wasnāt anyone else. You got
ri- radicalized on abortion by a gang bang woman.
By, by yeah. By a, by a slapper at a gang bang. Well, she did, right? I mean, I was just
looking her up and the first thing that comes up with her is a bunch of magazine articles saying, āThis heartbreaking what nobody told me about abortion essay is going viral.ā Itās... Iām gonna read
some quotes from it.
Weāre gonna start with, though, the, the romance, ā cause romance is dead. I love it so much. I love the story. So for those of you not familiar, whoāve somehow been living under a rock or w- I donāt know, were in a coma in 2024 Aella, who is a, a sex researcher, a friend- Sheās done
episodes with us before.
Sheās awesome ... I consider her one of my close friends. Yeah. Yeah. I- Other than Leaflet, [00:05:00] sheās one of the only people Iāve ever, like, when I talk to them I felt like an immediate and deep connection. Sheās a great person.
Yeah, just incredible. Incredible person. She had a birthday party, and she was like, āYou know what?
I would love to have a gang bang for my birthday party.ā So some of her close friends so kindly and generously, including Romy Holland, Romy helped her organize it. And this, this was a very complicated thing. They decided ultimately on, on a, a, a, a very good number, 42 men. You know, itās perfect sort of nerd reference gang bang number.
You know- 42
men? Oh my God,
Jerome ... Hitchhikerās Guide to the Galaxy right there. I know, 42 men. Weāre a
conservative
podcast, by the way, right? We are considered radical conservatives. Thatās why I have to brief people on this, okay? Just in case they donāt know about the birthday gang bang. So- No, Iām just...
I, well, we have to admit that, like, we have friends who are w****s. Like we have to admit that. Like, weāre... Gosh, if only, I think we gotta, we gotta be more like Jesus and just never talk to w****s, right? Like, thatās clearly the right answer [00:06:00] here, right? Ai,
Simone Collins: yi, yi.
Malcolm Collins: No, I mean, winning peopleās hearts requires not reflexively condemning them if they are attempting...
Because I think you see with this person, and in her abortion essay and stuff like this, th- this is not a community thatās hearts are truly poisoned. They just need the truth shown to them in the, in, in the, in the right way, and then it shocks them out of it, and thatās what happened with this individual.
But continue.
I mean, I donāt know. I just feel like itās an, I, I went from being an ardent progressive, though not exactly sex positive, to just being, you know, now a conserv- Like, itās a very natural and common progression. But anyway, so, Romy helped organize this, and th- there was a lot of vetting in this.
I, I think I remember looking through the survey for people applying. You know, they, theyāre obviously going through the kinks of these people. In an interview with, on Slateās podcast, Death, Sex, and Money Romy talks about the The, the kind of the unique [00:07:00] kink criteria they would go for. Like, they didnāt want men who needed, like, a lot of, like, reinforcement and like, āOh,ā like, āyouāre doing so great.ā
Well, because, you know, itās a gang bang. Itās supposed to be, like, consensual non-consent, right? So, like, they canāt have men who are super needy who need Aella to, like, praise them, ācause thatās not the look of this event. So they had to, you know, vet for that. They need to vet for a bunch of other things.
Obviously, you know, if youāre a friend or something, like, you know, youāre probably in. So there was a lot of vetting involved. And then of course on the actual day of the party, you had to work through all the logistics. You know, thereās queuing, and you wanna have everyone, you know, sufficiently hard for the moment of, of, of, of bang.
And so then y- thereās a big bowl of Viagra at the door, but then thereās also the need for arousal, and that, that is where the fluffy... Sorry, where the fluffers come in, including Romy who very generously offered to participate in a very involved way in the fluffing process preparing men to deliver their birthday present to Aella.
I- if you havenāt explored [00:08:00] the, the lore around the gang bang, you definitely should. There was a, a very viral Sankey diagram that Aella had created, because, again, she is a very intellectual, fun, playful person. I should not have been
allowed at the gang bang. Do you remember why?
Oh, yeah, because you were n- y- something about Eliezer Yudkowsky.
Some- Yeah, yeah. So, so no accelerationists. No AI acceleration people were allowed. Thatās right. Yes. It was
no... Yes, I remember. It was only AI doomers. Thatās like something I was like, oh yeah, you definitely wouldnāt be allowed. So Aella made this, this chart that sort of showed what happened to the various participants.
So, she had the survey. You know, the application she released had 1,604 applicants. 828 failed the auto filter, 3 twen- 328 failed the manual filter, 776 passed the auto filter, 448 passed the manual fic- filter. They contacted 251 men, 143 didnāt respond, 25 are friends, 87 of those got invited. And also 83 did an interview.
Like it went, it went, it went, it went, and then 42 showed up, so they got 42. Only [00:09:00] 37 penetrated Aella. Only 17 came inside Aella. They were wearing condoms. Only well, five came inside a fluffer. Who knows if Romy was one of them. And then 15 didnāt come. So, the the, this is the thing was- Going to an
orgy and not coming?
Well, that, that sounds like- Well,
but Malcolm, this is a 42-person gang bang. S- itās like the waiting- Although to be honest, I think if I went to an orgy- Like, itās like, itās like the being at the DMV, right? Like, youāre queuing, youāre waiting. Like, itās awkward. Thereās other people there. You know a lot of them, like, ācause a bunch of them were Aellaās friends.
Like, these are all... I mean, I guess those people are more accustomed maybe to more group-ish sex environments. But anyway, it was in this milieu, it was in this mix at this lovely party that a- that actually wasnāt particularly fun for Aella or Romy, per their reports that Romy locked eyes with a man that she was fluffing.
Sheād known him online a little bit, you know, had seen him post. This is
what I donāt understand.
Yeah.[00:10:00]
If itās not fun, okay? And presumably sheās done gang bangs before. Well, you donāt
know it. No, I donāt think she had. Thatās the thing, is I donāt think she had. And so thereās this, like, well... āCause think, think about to, to safely do a gang bang, if youāre actually, like, vetting it carefully and, and doing it right.
And, and keep in mind, like, again, the, this, this type of sex positive person in the Bay Area, in the ALA cinematic universe doesnāt just do, like, consensual non- Like, āOh, letās just mess around. Like, everyone, like, jump in the group.ā No, no, no. At her consensual non-consent parties, youāre wearing a lanyard that says what you can do to someone and what you canāt do.
There are safe words. There are safety talks. Like, this stuff, people are vetted. There, thereās the, the stuff, the, the places, the careful location selection. These are incredibly thoughtful events. So no, I donāt think she had done one before. From my understanding, she hadnāt. And so sh- like, she wanted to try.
Like, sheās an, sheās a, sheās, she believes in experimentation. And so I, I donāt think she [00:11:00] knew that she wasnāt gonna find it particularly enjoyable.
I think that I should add this to our sins episode. Trying something only to try something. Well, but she might have liked it, and she- Well, you donāt need to know everything in the world you might like.
Even if it turned out I loved gang bangs, that is a fact I would not want to know about myself.
Well, and I guess, like, are, like, yeah. D- do you like- private jet flights. I guess thatās, thatās one of the bigger issues in my view. Like, I could love flying on a private jet, but can I afford to fly on a private jet?
Like, absolutely not. So they had such- Also, I donāt think I would ...
Simone Collins: enough to know. ā
Malcolm Collins: Cause I once had to drop a bunch of people off on a private jet. I didnāt get to go on but I, I had to drop people off. So freaking loud. Like you- Wait, we never took you on our private
jet?
No. Oh. That was- Thatās terrible
I was in the post private jet days when I entered your
family. Yeah, we, I guess they- I didnāt get to- ... they stopped using it as much because itās inconvenient. But yeah private jets suck . [00:12:00] Yeah. They, they- they are so much
worse ... loud. Itās so loud on the tarmac. And like the airports for the private jets were like- Itās not just that itās loud
like a bus sta- Thereās this like- Like a Greyhound bus station. Iām like, āWhat is this?ā If youāre talking about- āThis is not what I
expected.ā ... standard private jets, like Lear jets and stuff like that, right? They are significantly smaller than you would expect on the inside, especially for like the two rows.
Mm-hmm. So like your entire flight- Oh, you even see it.
Like when the, when the Kardashians fly on their private jet, like itās a very nicely appointed private jet, but itās small. Itās like, itās... I mean, youāre- Yeah, the
entire flight your head is like cocked to the side- ... because itās like against the side of the plane.
Well, th- okay, their
private jets are bigger than that. And okay, I did see the interior of, of wom- one of the ladyās private jets as I was dropping everyone off and, and hers was very nice, but she was also very wealthy. So but like itās just, I donāt know, it just seemed uncomfortable and meh. But anyway, my point here though is what if Aella just...
I think itād be worse if Aella really enjoyed the gang bang because then like how is she... Like oh great, like now Iām never gonna have fun again unless I, [00:13:00] I, I, I put out a 1,000 person survey and have like 10 of my friends work carefully around the clock to vet all these people and interview them and organize them.
And you know, of course, throughout the entire process, ācause she didnāt wanna put the, the onus on the participants to kind of just both like consensually, non-consensually penetrate her. Sheād have two people with her the whole time like kind of watching her watching the men, make sure like nothing was going wrong, making sure that she was fully lubricated, handing the men the Sharpie, ācause I think, remember they had like a Sharpie there doing ticks on her leg to be like, āNumber this, number that.ā
I think they even, they did all these like really thoughtful things too. I think maybe there was a virgin there that one day and theyāre like saying like they did a thing for him or like I canāt remember. But like this was incredibly thoughtfully executed. Itās not sustainable. So thatās my thing is maybe donāt try things if, if you canāt afford to like do them regularly if itās trying this to see if you like it kind of thing.
Like you know- Do I like luxury cars? Like, I bet I do, but I canāt afford one, so letās not get into that. Youāre a weirdo. Anyway so they, [00:14:00] she, you know, encounters this man. Like, she had seen him posting around online, but I think this is also a very common illustration of how people meet now. This is a very techno-feudal kind of meet cute where, like, you see someone posting online, theyāre in your general online sort of parasocial circles, and then at some special event, at some community-based gathering, which this very much was, right?
A mixture of sort of the online universe of a person and their offline friends coming together for a special event. You meet someone in that universe. You have some, some, some in-person chemistry, which you canāt necessarily find online. You know, you canāt gauge that, and it takes off from there. So, you know, it wasnāt immediate.
It wasnāt like, you know, he asked her out mid-penetration. Because I d- she, she was also, I think, doing, like, full penetrative fluffing not like, like hand job or b*****b fluffing, from my understanding. And anyway, they, they went later on [00:15:00] a date. And then they- Yeah ... they became like more like a steady boyfriend and girlfriend.
And then they had a kid together, and now not only are they engaged to be married soon but theyāre also, for the time being at least, monogamous. And here you see this classic arc. The gang banging to monogamy trend. Well, no, the thing is, like, I think people donāt realize how common this is. Like, I, I am the product of of bro- a broken polyamorous marriage.
I guess itās just like it wasnāt really well matched. And then my mom was one of, like a secondary for my dad. But then eventually she was like, āLook, I- this isnāt for me. Like, I wanna have a kid someday. Either Iām moving to Colorado or, like, maybe you decide that you wanna be monogamous with me. And my dad decided, at actually pretty significant social cost, like per everything that, you know, the disruption that that caused to become monogamous with my mother, and Iām a result of that.[00:16:00]
But, like, even back in the ā80s, this was happening in the Bay Area. So this is a surprisingly trad kind of arc. And Iām really happy for Romie. Iām really happy for her partner. Iām really happy for their kid. But what I did not expect from this adorable and, in my opinion, very wholesome story, was that she would radicalize me against misoprostol, which I thought was like...
Now, you know my stance has been very consistent, that, like, up until 12 weeks, I donāt care. Like, whatever, you know, y- if you wanna take a pill to end a pregnancy early, like, this is not yet a,
a, a sentient, like, conscious- So, so for people who understand why we take this position, if youāre confused by this, I d- I, I do not think that you can h- when thereās no neural tissue, like, I donāt think I lost part of my soul by losing my finger or something like that, right?
Yeah. When thereās no neural tissue, there is nothing that can produce the effect that we in our society call a soul.
Yeah ... it, it- And we, we think itās equally sinful as [00:17:00] techno-puritans to, like, choose not to have a kid when you could. It doesnāt matter if thatās before you have sex or after you have sex or after conception.
Itās, itās, itās, itās a sin. Yeah, yeah, itās not
that we donāt think that itās bad to abort a fetus that has no neural tissue yet. Mm-hmm. But we think itās at the same level of evil as convincing somebody not to get IVF that was going to do IVF. Yeah. Because you have prevented a child that was going to exist from existing, and all child on that spectrum, whenever somebody goes like, āI could have made the childā- And- Thatās why we took that position, but just- And then thereās,
thereās, yeah, the sort of additional, like, layer on top of that for me of like, okay, well, when are you, when are you sort of committing murder and causing, like, suffering to a thing?
And, you know, yeah, after week 12, you are causing suffering to a thing. Like, huh. So like, that, that just adds this extra, like, visceral... But now, now Iām really questioning this, and I wanna give you some, some quotes from Romieās [00:18:00] experience going through this because I think she, this is what, this is what radicalized me, and I think it shows some lies that are told to progressives especially, but I think just to main screen, mainstream participants in the urban monoculture more broadly about About basically early term abortions.
I had no idea. I am kind of horrified. And I, I, it, it shows how weāve basically been lied to, and that there is a ton of damage that no one talks about, and I feel like maybe f- people feel afraid to talk about. So Iāll just go ahead and read. But- No, letās go
Simone Collins: into it.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. You can also, and I, ācause itās amazing writing.
Romieās very articulate, incredibly intelligent, like beautiful, wonderful person in general. So I recommend you read the full thing. Itās titled itās her only Substack article too What Nobody Told Me About Abortion, and it describes her harrowing experience. So basically she she had sex with her boyfriend and got [00:19:00] pregnant.
She wrote, āOn the sort of afternoon a full ripe summer fruit, my new boyfriend and I, still flush with sweat and limerence after some midday sex, started an ovulation test strip and realized weād misread an earlier test. āUh-oh,ā I said, lightly amused, and 1,000 rom-com moments flashed through my mind.ā Cue the clueless horror movie protagonist who fails to notice the ax murderer behind the bedroom door, mistaken about the genre of the story unfolding.
We listened to music, and I swiveled back and forth in an office chair while narrating ChatGPTās damning answers to my questions about fertile windows and test strip line darkness. My boyfriend kissed me on the cheek each time he walked past. We riffed about games we could play at our abortion party.
Our decision calculus was numerical, emotions an afterthought. Our abortion
Simone Collins: party? This, and this goes to show, like- I think sheās showing how radically
Malcolm Collins: her mind shifted over time ... yeah, like,
Simone Collins: the, the flippant
Malcolm Collins: jokiness that, no, that like, that urban [00:20:00] monoculture San Francisco Bay Area people are raised with around the idea of abortions, and why people are so, like, pro-abortion.
Itās like, really like it goes back to that BoJack Horseman Aquafina, like, āGet that fetus, kill that fetus.ā
Speaker 17: America, get your uteruses tarp.
Speaker 19: Iām a baby killer. Baby killer makes me horny.
Speaker 18: Get that fetus, kill that fetus.
Speaker 19: Down face, b*****s in my cross face. No, Iāma have abortions always.
Speaker 18: And sometimes I do have doubts I hope and pray to God it donāt feed us as a song. Cause I want it to feel pain when I eject it from my own world.
, has the concept of women having choices gone too far?
Malcolm Collins: Like, the, this like- Yeah ... euphoric cultural, like, this is a sacred cow kind of attitude around abortion, and itās euphoric, this idea that I have this choice, and like, weāre gonna exercise this choice and itās gonna be funny and cool.
Speaker 2: Trans woman to have a successful uterus [00:21:00] transplant, ovaries and eggs included. And I want to be the first trans woman to have an abortion.
Speaker 3: Mrs. Garrison.
You canāt have an abortion.
Speaker 4: Donāt you tell me what I can and canāt do with my body! A woman has a right to choose!
Speaker 3: You canāt get pregnant.
Speaker 4: But I missed my period.
Speaker 3: You canāt have periods either.
Speaker 4: You mean, Iāll never know what it feels like to have a baby growing inside me and then scramble its brains and vacuum it out? This would mean Iām not really a woman, itās, Iām just a, Iām just a guy with a mutilated penis!
Speaker 3: Basically, yes.
Speaker 4: Oh boy, do I feel like a jackass.
Malcolm Collins: Iāll continue reading. Our decision calculus was numerical, emotions an afterthought. Thereās a one in four chance of conception each month, so deciding not to take Plan B would result in a 25% risk of needing an abortion. Plan B costs $50, and an abortion costs 500, but only with [00:22:00] a 25% chance of conception.
The expected value of that option is $125. Plan B and early stage abortion seemed physically pretty similar. Nothing to consider there. āIf you get pregnant, weād both know weāre fertile,ā my boyfriend pointed out. āTrue. Why would anyone pl- pay for fertility testing with such thrilling alternative available?ā
I quipped back. In the end, my sense that failing to take Plan B seemed plainly stupid led us to swing by CVS on our way to an under the sea themed party in San Francisco. I was wearing a black and gold ballgown. He, a shimmery jacket that made him look like an undiscovered mayor culture dredged up from the fluorescently lit family planning aisle.
Later at the party, I recounted our ill-fated afternoon with punchlines as I pried open the clamshell package and unceremoniously swallowed the Plan B in my friendās cozy kitchen So she, you [00:23:00] know, is very, like, casual about the sex, about the you know, āIām ju- Iāll just take Plan B,ā right? You know, this is a very, like, expected experience for someone in the, like- Yeah
this culture. Then she describes how it goes south. So basically, she got a positive pregnancy test nine days later. And she, just, like, from the beginning, it was, like, obvious she would not be having a baby. Like, there, there was no question that, like, well, obviously. Like, weāre not, weāre not even gonna consider carrying this.
She, she wrote, āIgnoring the mounting calm of my instinctual self, I walked across Berkeley on a chilly August evening to pick up abortion pills from the sort of friend who people think of when they say they know a guy.ā She continued a little bit later. Iām, Iām skipping through the article. You really should read the whole thing.
Yeah. āNobody talks about the hell that is misoprostol, the abortion pill. I suspect that in its politicization, no one wants to mention that the drug in question is a sledgehammer. On its quest to destroy the fetus, it obliterates the mother as well. On Thursday afternoon, I [00:24:00] unceremoniously took the first of three doses.
Four little white pills shoved into my vagina as far up as I could wedge them. Tiny bombs placed quietly beside the cradle where my unsuspecting baby slept. I waited, fever rising, for the bleeding that should have started an hour, after an hour or two. The second dose came and went. By dose three, I could barely move.
I took the stairs one at a time, weakly gripping the railing, my joints aching with each step, the inside of my mouth painfully raw. Curled in bed, I whispered for more and more blankets, shivering and only dimly aware of my boyfriend there beside me, searching the internet for answers about my racing heart and shallow, rapid breathing.
In the morning, I felt drained, but the fever and pain were gone. The large maxi pad, which the internet warned I may soak as often as once per hour, was entirely dry.ā So she goes on to observe that, quote, āMisoprostol as an abortion protocol is 85% effective. As the 24-hour time point neared [00:25:00] and I felt not even the slightest cramping, it became clear that I was among the unlucky 15% of women for whom a second attempt would be necessary.ā
And she also writes, āIn, in taking the first dose of pills, Iād started down an inescapable path and had no choice but to march to its end. As a friend would later say, the correct number of abortions is either zero or as many as it takes.ā And this is, Malcolm, for me, like, reading about this is so scary, ācause one of my, Iāve never told you this, but one of my recurring, like, nightmares that Iāve had since childhood is, like, finding some innocent injured animal thatās in pain, and then attempting to kill it to put it out of its pain and, and failing every time and making it worse every time.
Like, this is one of my, like, deepest set fears. Like- Itās
funny, I have a, th- such different deep set fears than you. Yeah. W- I donāt know if I ever told you this one. One, one of my recurring nightmares, up until I met you, I havenāt had this dream since I met you. Oh. But it used to be a [00:26:00] big recurring nightmare for me was that I had accidentally killed someone and I needed to figure out what to do next.
Oh, no.
Simone Collins: And I was
Malcolm Collins: just like, āWe gotta hide the body. We gotta like...ā
Yeah. We have different nightmares. But like this is my worst nightmare. And of like if I had gone through this and I felt like I had only partially killed this, this fledgling life.
And then it humanizes it for you, and youāre like, āOh, my God, this is my baby.
What was I doing? Why did I treat this so flippantly?ā Yeah,
you, youāre... Yeah, just, just wait. So she, she ultimately had to do four rounds. She went to Planned Parenthood in San Francisco. She wrote, āDesperation welled inside me. I wanted to grip her...ā Oh so basically also a protester confronted her and was like, you know, āDonāt kill your baby.ā
About that she wrote, āDesperation welled inside of me. I wanted to grip her bony shoulders, to look her in the eye and ask her what she would have me do with this broken, beautiful thing inside me that had survived six doses of poison and now failed to die.ā My [00:27:00] worst nightmare. You can tell Iām like so scared.
āMore abortion pills, more waiting, more shivering in a ball of feverish torment. Still no blood.ā Then she continued ācause she had to ultimately get a D&C. āMy memories of the surgical D&C procedure four days later come to me in fragments that feel sharp in my chest. I remember a cold wand pushed inside me, searching for a smudge of evidence of, of the baby, and then a room with a chair and an iPad video that soothingly warned of hysterectomy risk.ā
I didnāt, also, I didnāt know that. āFinally, a room that smelled of chemicals where I sat on a crisp paper and stared at a tray strewn with ominous medical instruments. Panic. Through this I did not move. Tears gathered in my eyes at the inevitability of the situation, my overwhelming helplessness. I presented my arm to the pretty young nurse who would administer the fentanyl and sedatives.
I laid down and spread my legs for the kind practitioner to vacuum out my stubborn baby. Whatās a mother to do in a moment like this but carry her child gently to the executionerās arms?ā And then [00:28:00] she, She asked if she could, you know, like take the th- you know, the baby that they removed and, like, bury it in her backyard or something.
And theyāre like, āNo, weāre forced by California law to take them all to funeral homes?ā I donāt know what they do with them there. Thatās... I donāt get that. But anyway, she met, after this process happened, other people who like when she mentioned it to them were like, āOh yeah, I have also had a traumatic experience with this.ā
And I think this is one of those other things where the people- Because in
progressive circles youāre supposed to be euphoric about it. Itās supposed to be- Yeah, like you
canāt... Itās, yeah, itās, itās verboten to say that you had a bad experience with mifepristone. You canāt say it. But then she said, she wrote āI recently had coffee with a friend who became very still when I mentioned my abortion.
Tears sprang to her eyes as she told me that once sheād had an abortion too, and although it was seven years ago, and although she never wanted the baby, never even wanted to be a mother, it still makes her cry every time she remembers it. Sheād taken the abortion [00:29:00] pills and two days later, in a grungy dive bar bathroom with music thrumming through the door, sheād found her clot of a baby in her bloody pad.ā
Th- this is, Iām sorry, like, I guess trigger warning a while ago. Stop if so. Trigger warning a
while ago. No, but this is how you get people. No, no, no,
no, no, no, no. Wait, wait, wait. Well,
one way to win was the gang bang story. I know. Then you traumatize them about getting an abortion. Then, but I cry if I
talk about abortions.
What on earth? But anyway, this radi- this radicalized me. Did you ever think you would be this woman crying talking about abortions to other, to try to get women to like...
Iām not trying to do this. This really radicalized me, and her writing is really good. Anyway so she, this woman just told her, you know, she found the bloody clot in this dive bar in her pad.
She says, ā āI knew I had to eat it,ā she told me. And then as though suddenly realizing that this might sound absurd, she tried to explain, āI mean, I couldnāt just leave it in that dirty bathroom. It was my baby. What was I going to do, throw it in the trash?ā I stopped her, shaking my head. āNo, no, it makes perfect sense [00:30:00] to me.
It really does. Of course you had to eat it. It was your baby.ā The maternal logic of this was unassailable. Anyone whoās been a mother for any stretch of time would not question such a primordial urge. The animal mother knows what to do, and your judgments are not what carried evolution billions of... Oh, and your judgments are not what carried evolution billions of years to this moment.
āSo what did you do?ā I asked her. āI ate it,ā she said, wide-eyed.ā S- and like Malcolm, this sounds so insane, but I completely understand what theyāre talking about And it makes me think of like, the hamsters that go crazy and eat their babies. Thereās something that, yeah, is really, like mentally unstable about pregnancy and, and I didnāt realize that messing with it in this way like this early in pregnancies could mess women up so much.
āCause it gets worse. B- if you can believe it. And then- Oh my God. Our audience,
Simone Collins: did we lure them in with āHey guysā? Iām so sorry, guys.
Malcolm Collins: Iām so... ā
Simone Collins: Hey guys, gang bang. Ha ha ha.ā
Hey, so funny.
Malcolm Collins: So after this she, she basically [00:31:00] had a psychotic episode. She, she wrote, and again Iām skipping around, read the whole thing, āI was not permitted to eat my baby nor bring it home in a little vial to bury it or put it on the mantle or inspect it under a microscope for a tail.
Perhaps if Iād been, the cataclysmic crash of hormones that awaited me would have taken a gentler shape. Instead, in the days that followed, I began to experience borderline psychotic episodes. These hours-long periods would begin with a vague sense of unease and build-ā and build until the world around me became twisted and surreal, like a haunted house.
Sometimes anger at my boyfriend would inexplicably slow- swell inside me, sharp and alienating, distancing me from the one person who might understand my pain. Often I was consumed with an urgent need to go find my missing baby. My thoughts would enter obsessive sprent- frenzied spirals about the desire, running through the sequence of events that had led to my babyās departure from my womb, where it clearly belonged.
My memories of the [00:32:00] D&C churned with an ominous bent. The kindness of the nurses suddenly felt coercive, like they had conspired to place me under a spell so that they could use the strange and powerful devices to remove a precious, integral part of me. And then so she, she goes to Burning Man which happens m- like, on late Memorial Day weekend in, like, the beginning of September, ācause this is all end of summer.
Mm-hmm. And she, she basically tried to deal with this by sort of, like, through the, the Bay Area equivalent of, like, a, a grieving ceremony. At Burning Man thereās, like, the big man that they burn, but thereās also this place called the temple where you can, like... And Iāve been to Burning Man once.
I remember going to it. Itās this, like, beautiful structure, but itās where you kind of, like, you will have Iām vaguely remembering this like traumatic things. Like, y- youāll burn the things that, that bother you. And so she, she tries to staple the one thing she had left of this baby, which was her positive pregnancy test strip to the temple, and then it, you know, like, having it burned, like, and hopefully that, like, will get rid of her trauma.
[00:33:00] One, one thing she wrote also that stood out to me, she wrote, āBefore I was a mother, I was a woman who belonged entirely to herself. I finally understood then that my baby was gone and that I was once again alone.ā Oh my gosh, what? Sorry.
Can you see that this stuff messes women up? But you may not want more babies.
Itās people who have babies, the moment you get radicalized by babies, youāre just like, āI need maximum number of babies.ā
No, see, I didnāt know that you could get radicalized before the baby came out ācause I didnāt, I didnāt know. But something really messes with women, and this, this article shows that.
It turns out that while full-blown postpartum psych- she, here Iām reading from her writing again. āIt turns out that while full-blown postpartum psychosis is rare, subclinical psychotic thoughts are common, affecting 15 to 30% of women who give birth, and less commonly following abortion and miscarriage.
Critically, people experiencing these thoughts retain insight into the fact that their thoughts are distorted, though such knowledge does not [00:34:00] immunize them to suffering. Itās strange to me that given the prevalence of postpartum depression and abortion, I havenāt heard anyone talk openly about either.
My concept of abortion was shaped instead through divisive political narratives, which leave me feeling trapped between absolutes and how Iām allowed to talk about it, forced to hedge every statement.ā I mean, she still supports the, the right to choose, and thereās all these complications, but sheās trying to introduce nuance to the conversation.
And, like, even to the, to the day that she wrote this article she still is dealing with the grief of this abortion. She wrote... Oh, mister. She wrote, āMy grief is- I
think this is a good article to... And Iām gonna do this for our kids. Yeah. I think around the time they go through puberty, I think this article should be part- They need to read this
of sex education and having to write an essay on this. 100%. And I would introduce this, I think at around the age of, letās say, 14. When you
have your period. No, when you have your period. Thatās when you- Yeah ... should be reading it. Iāll just- Yeah ... leave with,
What a great thing [00:35:00] just to make part...
And I, and I actually, I like this so much, Iām gonna say, like, if youāre a religious person or whatever like that, and you have, like, a religious school or something like that, can we advocate for making this a major part of the just
Simone Collins: telling- Yeah, ācause again, itās not, itās not all the... N- no,
Malcolm Collins: no Catholic or Protestant or Jew has ever convinced me, despite, like, presenting many, like, cohesive arguments of...
Like, this, this made me cry. You saw. I canāt help but cry, and this isnāt my first time reading it. You know, this isnāt, like, the initial shock. This is just me, like... And, and it had pr- pr- probably something to do with the fact that, like, I, I have been radicalized by pregnancy as well. But, like, just the, the impact this has had on her.
She, she writes āMy grief has settled into a shape small enough to carry around the world. It goes with me to dinner and seems to like it when we take evening walks around the neighborhood. Sometimes when I know it wonāt cause [00:36:00] too much trouble, I take it out and marvel at it. Itās heavier than it looks.
The weight of it on my chest enough to knock the breath out of me if Iām not prepared. Many nights, my grief unfurls and wraps w- its long tendrils around me. I wake sweating and tangled in my blankets, planets still bright in the sky. Soon enough it will learn to sleep through the night.ā Like, sheās still suffering from it.
And I think she- Oh.
Simone Collins: Okay, okay. G, are you thirsty? Sorry, one moment here
Your bottle has disappeared.
Malcolm Collins: She, I think her story also adds weight to the techno-puritan sense that damage lies in, like, action-based inflection points, and less at, like, some definition of where life begins or where suffering begins, and this is where I, Iām also, like, moderating my views of, like, where the sin lies and where the damage is done.
She wrote, āI never quite understood regret. Should the [00:37:00] butterfly regret a flap of its wings upon learning of the resulting tornado? Still, as the shadow of loss looms over my days, Iāve started to think I probably would have been happier in this alternate lifeline, life timeline in which my grief would be balanced by purpose.
Whether this will feel true five years from now is harder to say. Perhaps one should wait to see what is built from the tornadoās wreckage before declaring regret. I find myself trying to calculate this likelihood, but quickly stop. I know now that some arithmetic belongs to older gods than reason.ā
And so, Sheās a really good writer
she has a kid now, right? She got... When did she give birth?
I d- I donāt know the exact date, but yeah, she has a kid, she has a kid now. She has a kid now. Sheās gonna get married. Sheās monogamous. This, this is a happy ending. Everythingās okay . And youāre like, āOh my God.ā I know, man.
But, like- But itās important to remember that sex can lead to kids.
Ba- gang bangs can lead to kids, right? Like, everything that sheās participating in around something like this can [00:38:00] lead to a woman getting pregnant, and then having to well, either carry the kid to term or make a horrifying choice that could lead to this. And progressives arenāt really told, and I wasnāt really told when I was a kid, because Iām gonna be honest, Christians are cucking terrible at terrifying kids out of abortions.
Theyāre just like, āYouāre murdering a human.ā And Iām like, āIt doesnāt have neurons.ā Like, that is so uncompelling to somebody
who doesnāt have neurons. Yeah, I think that thatās a really, a big thing for me, too, is yeah, like, they keep being like, āItās a human. Itās a human. Itās a human.ā And Iām like, āWell, not...
Like, actually, no. Like, itās, it, it doesnāt a brain yet. You know, like, itās Itās like, mm, you know Like, yeah, I am
my thoughts, right? Like- Yeah ... fundamentally, Iām not really my body. I could lose any part of my body and Iām still 100% me. If I lost a part of my brain, I would be fractally me. I wouldnāt be fully me anymore. If my brain significantly changed, I would be a different version of myself.
Like, it [00:39:00] is our neurons, at least this is to me, a regular person. The reason why Iām laying this out is when you go to your kids, many of your kids are gonna think this way, and you go to your kids and you just say Abortion is bad. And, and again, even the lines they use donāt really work for them. āI knew you before you were in your motherās womb.ā
Well, that, that doesnāt imply that life begins immediately at conception. That actually implies something quite different, that either souls exist in heaven before ensoulment or God can see into the future, both of which do not imply that life begins at conception, right? You know, so, e- they would, they would imply other things, right?
And then, then, then the question becomes when does ensoulment happen and everything like that. What this has radicalized me on is itās... There are still instances in which... And keep in mind, this is the vast minority of abortion. When people are like, āAbortion because of rape,ā or something like that, is less than 1% of abortion cases.
That is not what people are fighting for. But I think it works to just [00:40:00] take that off the table. Just say, āOkay, letās not say, āOkay, in the case of rape...āā
Or a, a non-viable, Or non-viable ... they... Well, I think it... So, so we have to... And, and like, think again. Things need to be parsed out, right? Like, thereās, thereās s- yeah, some of these really extreme cases.
Thereās also, like, cases in which what weāre really discussing is euthanasia of a terminally ill human. It doesnāt matter, like... And this is where Iām like, Iām, Iām standing out. Oh, no, Simone loves euthanasia, and, like, I know a lot of you guys really hate the idea of euthanasia. But I, truly loving human life, human flourishing, and es- especially innocent babies personally would want the right to spare one of my children intense suffering and pain and a short life.
You know, if like, you know, hours of intense suffering and then death after carrying a pregnancy to term, like, I would rather euthanize that baby of ours. Like, personally. But I, I would say
that this has radicalized [00:41:00] me on general use of- Yeah ... of, of this. No.
No. Yeah, no. Like, before I was like, āWhatever, itās a pill.
Like, take the pill. Itās, itās a...ā No, man. Like, I had no i- I had no idea. And, and recreational sex because- I mean, yeah, this is... People have told us, theyāre like, āOh, well, you know, misoprostolās actually, like, a really intense medication.ā And Iām like, āI donāt...ā Like, yeah, but like, I know people who are like, āUgh, I took antibiotics.
My tummy hurts.ā Like, people, like, overreact. This is
what... And w- I think itās not just on... This has radicalized me against recreational sex because this is what recreational sex leads to, right? I, I think- Yeah, like I
said, we think that non-procreative sex is a sin, and this is why. Like, well, many reasons, but this is another reason why
Yeah.
Speaker 7: Note here, Iām not talking about, , anything that couldnāt get you pregnant. For example, , oral sex or kinky sex, , where itās just like leaning into the kink. And I think for that reason, Iām more pro that stuff than I was historically and more [00:42:00] anti-general vanilla, more boring sex. I see that as dramatically more immoral than the kinkiest of kinky stuff, , because the kinkiest of kinky stuff is just to get you off, whereas vanilla sex could accidentally get somebody pregnant
Speaker 8: And Iād even lay this down as a religious thing from our perspective, the techno Puritan perspective for those who actually follow our religion, , lean in to the kinky stuff, lean in to the erotic stuff, lean out of the generic boring sex stuff, because thatās the stuff that can lead to you accidentally having to being in a position where it might make sense for somebody to think about murdering a human being
Malcolm Collins: It is really first recreational sex doesnāt even feel that good. Itās like I, this is one of the biggest myths I wanna blow out of the table here. Look, this is apparently
my failure. It can feel very good. I guess Iām not doing my job here. Well, I have
had sex with, and again, like my backstory is I used to sleep around all the time.
Iāve had sex with well over 100 women, probably around [00:43:00] 160. If I like try to get it up, I, I think it, it, I mean, I remember I stopped counting and I think it was like 120 was the last time I did a full count, and I slept with quite a few people after that, so it must be quite a bit more than that. Did any of them ever get pregnant?
If they did, they never told me. But like I didnāt understand the, I just thought sex is sex. So again, this is not a Simone is bad thing, itās that when you actually do it enough or you go around and sleep around enough, this isnāt a Simone... When I mentioned this on the Leaflet stream, everyone was like, in the comments, they were like, āY- yeah, heās right.
Itās just like not differentially that much better than masturbation.ā You know, itās, itās, itās fine. Itās, itās maybe 250% better than masturbation. But like when you consider the- Oh, cost-benefit
analysis though, and thatās whatās so crazy is like there was that one section of her, her post where theyāre like, well, you know, if we do like a weighted cost of plan B versus like misoprostol [00:44:00] or like an abortion, like $200 versus $50 but weighted for the odds.
Like theyāre doing most of the calculation. Theyāre just not taking it the rest of the way there of like hereās the downside cost of having recreational sex versus, you know, like the benefit of it. Comp- contrast that to the downside cost of just masturbating. Yeah.
Yeah. This is why Iām like, this is why Iām so against people who push against masturbation.
If masturbation prevents recreational sex, masturbation is good when you consider the enormous downside of recreational sex which, which I think th- this really highlights. By the way, rfab.ai, our AI service, offers really great not safe for work image and video generation, as well as not safe for work storytelling and scenarios, so you can experience your craziest monster F her scenario, you crazy, horny women out there.
Speaker 9: So Iāve been dramatically working to improve the siteās ability to both produce not [00:45:00] safe for work art and not safe for work videos. And, , right now, it should be live, , today. , Thereās still some updates we have to do on the compression, the auto compression stuff, but automatic anime dubbing, , which is kinda cool that I, I-- You know, weāre one of the first to bring that to you
Speaker 10: You talking so seriously. It seems you havenāt decided on the next place to go. How utterly ridiculous. If youāre going to worry about that, why not just make the next customer the same race, huh? Oh, I see. Not bad. Then letās go with that. Wait, youāre hiring them? Man, we really canāt decide on anything today.
Speaker 13: Oh, welcome. Oh, welcome
Speaker 11: A golem, huh?
Speaker 14: We recently had a fan reach out to us to be like, āWow, you guys are always [00:46:00] talking about this RFAB thing, so I finally decided to try it.ā And then they were like, āWell, and I ended up spending all day on it. It was a lot of fun.ā , And, ,, they then said it was too easy, like the games, the game worlds always sort of worked for them.
So if that happens to you, on the site, use the ExoTop engine. , That engine is sort of like the anti-cheat engine. I donāt like it because I like cheating. I like the narrative going in the direction I choose to l-- You know, I, I sort of impose those limits on myself when Iām playing a scenario. But for the people who donāt like to impose that, the ExoTop engine, , narrative engine is the right one.
, Oh, and the recipe generator is really cool now. The super search feature is really cool. Thereās just so many fun things you can try on the website. But the wider point here being is Iām not anti-eroticism. , Or we are not anti-eroticism. We are not anti-kink. We are not anti-, you know, getting your freak on.
What we are anti is the type of sex that can lead to an abortion. [00:47:00] This is evil, and I think that by drawing this distinction as a society, it is easier to convince kids that we are not telling them this because we are being fuddy-duddies, but we are telling them it because it is something that is true
You can be as dirty as you want, but sex is sinful
Malcolm Collins: Or what a guys want. A scenario where a woman loves and cares about you.
Oh my God
You know, a scenario where you s- where, where you rizz up your favorite online celebrity. You can just create a version of them and then use the internet search version of Grok, which none of the other sites have, and you can, you can talk to them on the...
No, but like, this hasnāt radicalized me into all of the conservative positions, but certainly against this. And I think with a lot of this stuff itās like she didnāt even like the gang bang, right? Like Ayla didnāt even like the
story. Well, but no, no, no, no, no. I mean, ultimately the gang bang, I would say has, [00:48:00] has led to the production of at least one human life, Yes
and a marriage, and to, you know, a happy couple. Like, what, what, what better gift would you want from a gang bang? Itās, itās beautiful. So You should, you should
reach out to her to be, like, in our network. She sounds sane and intelligent and like, I think our communities could be a good place for her.
āCause I, I bet sheās still completely surrounded by progressives, right? She doesnāt feel like- Well, she lives
in Berkeley.
Yeah, I mean Having the thoughts that she has, you know, be like, look, thereās a lot of us, sister. Like, join our community. Not, not, not for the sad part, but for the euphoric part of building civilization, right?
Well, you donāt know sheās not. She follows us on X, so maybe she already has.
Oh yeah, maybe sheās already in our community. I mean, Iāve met other women. See our EA to sex worker pipeline, where I felt so bad for some of the women in the EA space that just had their life ruined by this because theyāre just like, āI thought that this is how you were cool as a woman is recreational sex.
I thought [00:49:00] that this was cool when I was in those communities.ā And they didnāt realize how much it impacted the types of men who had settled down with them, right? And I think also seeing her conversion out of this, I think shows that for a lot of these people, itās our failure, the conservative movementās failure to communicate to them.
It is our failure that we- Well, itās politicized too. Like, a lot of itās the,
the radicalization of it. The, the, one of the reasons why people arenāt discussing the, the downside risk of taking this pathway is that it is so politicized. You donāt wanna give fodder to, like, I guess, rightist extremists who are gonna be like, āExactly.
Thatās why you canāt have, like, abortions.ā You know, theyāre gonna be intolerable if someone admits this. Itās a very third rail thing. And I donāt think sheās conservative, like, now suddenly
because of this. But no, what Iām saying is the way that the right, the way that the right communicates with people is just wrong.
Itās bad. Itās [00:50:00] bad at communication. Itās bad at communicating why abortion is bad. The, the, the words and logic thatās used fails at step one for a woman like this, and it is our responsibility ultimately. And people can say, like, āWhy are we responsible and sheās not responsible?ā We are responsible and sheās not responsible because I canāt control somebody elseās actions.
But I can control my actions, so itās always useful for me to take personal responsibility, and I can influence a movementās actions. Iām not influencing leftists. Iām influencing rightists. So Iām saying you, to the larger right-wing space that we influence, we do a bad job at communicating why these things are moral negatives.
And itās good for us to look at a story like this and be like, imagine if it doesnāt work, because thereās an X percent chance that it doesnāt work. How are you going to feel, right? And then you have to go through with it, because youāve [00:51:00] already ruined that childās life. Well, I mean, you might decide that you donāt, and thatās a whole other scenario, but you have ruined the childās life and youāre gonna have to live with that for the rest of your life.
Thatās also horrifying. But like the moment you take this, like actually think through what this means. And more so, do that for casual sex more broadly. Think through the actual benefits you get out of it, and the actual negatives that could come downstream of this, and are you willing to take on this moral responsibility?
And it is wild to me that all these, quote-unquote, āeffective altruistsā are doing these orgies and everything like that without fully considering what this could mean for them as individuals. And I think we just fail to communicate to them, and I- Iām gonna do better to do that in the future. Iām trying to think, like, whatās the way to like sum this up?
Yeah, I think the way to sum this up is the way that Iāll be addressing abortion in the future is, what if you take the pill and it doesnāt [00:52:00] work? Like, talk me through how that feels. And then you get a crying baby like this little b*****d. Look, heās not even happy with his little toy. Heās trying to eat it monster.
Yeah, heās... I, I need to f- his, his bottle rolled away. Whatās he upset about? I, I think he... Well, he, he woke up hangry and I- his bottle fell and I canāt access it ācause Iām- Okay ... stuck to the microphone Well, Iāll let you go.
You did a spectacular job with this episode. Itās one of my favorites that weāve done.
Itās one of my mo- Itās, itās all
thanks to Romy. I just like, I... Well, I mean, you and I, we really like, we appreciate when our minds are changed, when we get better information. And as much as it hurt for me to, like, read this terrible experience I really, really appreciate getting information that gives me, that ma- that moves me in a slightly less wrong direction in life.
So. So you,
I love you, Malcolm
I love you too. Iām so glad that Tech survived. He was, yeah, really touch and go there, and almost died in the hospital [00:53:00] too.
Yeah.
Does he still have the big scar from where they put the thing in to help his lungs? Yeah.
Yeah. Th- you could... Yeah, itās, I, I wonder if heās just always gonna have that you can
see it.
I mean, even if he does, you know, quite a-
Yeah, makes you look kinda, kinda tough. Like-
Modern medicine saved me, you know? This is the world that weāre in. Letās, letās try to save it, okay? All of you guys, letās try to save it. Yeah. Letās do our best.
Simone Collins: Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: And this also just makes me reflect a lot more on communication.
Weāve gotta get better at communication, and delivering these messages to the right people at the right stages of their life. Mm. Not just to be a community afterwards. So letās think about how we do that better.
Sounds good to me. All right. Iāll go start dinner. All right.
Love you, Simone.
Love you too.
Speaker 16: You gotta sneak up on him. Can you be sneaky?
I want that. You can do it, just be sneaky and patient, [00:54:00] okay? I canāt. Maybe I can help you. Weāll see. Can you help me please? Aw, thanks for asking them nicely. Letās see what I can do to help.
Speaker 15: They love that bird that we put so much, so now they love it They do. Iām gonna see if I can hang it up, ācause now itās just sitting on the ground. So look, Tex brought this string that heās been holding onto, and weāre gonna try to use that to tie it up for them. What do you think? Yeah? Yeah, thanks, Indy.
Speaker 16: Youāre gonna help me string it up, yeah? Iām trying to pull it. Okay. āCause Iām pulling it up. Exactly.
This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit basedcamppodcast.substack.com/subscribe -
In this Based Camp episode, Malcolm and Simone Collins break down the rapid decline in support for Pride events and LGBT causes. From NPR reporting on corporations pulling sponsorships to Gallup polls showing consistent drops in approval for same-sex marriage and especially gender transition, they explore why public opinion has shifted so dramatically.
They discuss cultural overreach, grooming concerns in schools, transgender issues and violence, the āgroomerā labelās effectiveness, and why even many Democrats are turning away. The Collinses offer a nuanced conservative perspective: supporting gay rights as a private matter while rejecting enforcement on others, and arguing why keeping competent gay conservatives in the broader movement makes strategic sense.
Plus: family moments with Octavian, the evolution of Pride from fun to corporate/ugly, birth rates and political heritability, Donāt Say Gay bill realities, and a deep dive into the Bricks & Minifigs scandal.
Episode Transcript
Malcolm Collins: Hello, Simone. Iām excited to be here with you today. Today we are going to be talking about how corporations- Oh ... have stopped supporting sort of the wider gay and LGBT agenda, to the extent that NPR, NPR of all places, wrote an article titled, and I just have to show you the cover image on this article.
Itās hilarious.
Simone Collins: Okay.
Malcolm Collins: Pride celebrations struggle as corporate sponsorships dry up.
Simone Collins: Oh
Malcolm Collins: Oh, yeah, also, also
Simone Collins: in this And this coming at Pride Month when like... Yeah,
Malcolm Collins: sad āCause itās exactly who you expect.
Just like the image, the people in the image is like, oh my God, I wanna hate
Simone Collins: these people so much.
Oh, hold on, Iām looking. Oh, boy. No, if thatās what Pride is now, letās just let it go. Sorry though, we loved the glasses. We loved the glasses, but we,
Malcolm Collins: you know. This is w- hold on, itās not just that. This is the only other picture in the article, too.
Fat old women is, is what I guess Pride is now. Oh,
Simone Collins: no, [00:01:00] no.
Itās- No ...
Malcolm Collins: fat misshapen old women
Simone Collins: No. I will nev- the first time I ever came across, across a Pride parade, I was in Cape Cod I think itās Provincetown, or Princetown? Provincetown. But yeah, in Cape Cod, and I didnāt, we didnāt know that there was a Pride parade. We were camping there I was camping there with a, a friend and her dad.
And then just on the main street of Provincetown just was this really cool parade, and the most beautiful women I had ever seen. And I was stunned and amazed, and I, I didnāt know why all these beauty queens were suddenly marching along this picturesque New England street. And it turns out they were just all drag queens, and that was it.
I loved, I loved it. I loved it all. I thought it was the best thing in the world. And what has it become now? I mean, like in the past 10 years itās been like the Bank of America float, and then a bunch of like ugly people on it. Like that, what is that? Who made Pride ugly? Like, no, Pride was always hot.
Pride was always fun. Pride meant like f- [00:02:00] cool, fun, entertaining, sometimes salacious stuff, but often like more wholesome than anything else. Iām kind of glad that whatever Pride become is dying, and I think thatās kind of how everyone feels, which is why itās plummeting in popularity.
Malcolm Collins: So weāre going to be talking about this, and the other thing weāre gonna be talking about is some recent statistics that came out that show a rapid reduction in the support of things like gay marriage across the United States.
A rapid reduction in... I mean, weāre not even, you know, talking about, like, broader trans stuff here, just, like, support for gay rights more generally in the United States. This is something that I personally find you know, is interesting for me to come to because historically Iāve always been pretty pro maintaining gay rights, even just as, like, a...
Well, most Republicans are for gay rights these days, and with the majority of Republicans being pro-gay rights, it doesnāt make sense to even, like, bring up a question of, like, should that be something that weāre against, gay marriage, for example. Now weāre at a stage [00:03:00] where itās more reasonable to table the question.
And so thatās the other thing that weāll be doing in this is tabling whether this should be, like, a, a, a voter issue for us or something that is worth pursuing, right? So weāll get into that, but I wanna start with the NPR article ācause I thought this would be pretty fun for people.
Pittsburgh, PA Pride celebrations across the country continue to lo- lose out on large sponsorships as corporations, a key source of funding, shrink their affiliation with diversity causes and LGBTQ+ events. Corporate sponsorships of celebrations in several cities, including New York City, Salt Lake City, Louis- Louisville s- St.
Louis, Orlando, and Pittsburgh are down from previous years, organizers said. Jordan Baxton, co-president of the United St- States Association of Pride, which supports Pride celebrations nationwide, said that while some smaller Prides have seen growth in sponsorship, a majority have seen a reduction. She said [00:04:00] that the Trump administration dismantling of the diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives has scared corporations away from sponsoring Pride celebrations.
I think thatās why some of the corporations have pulled back because they donāt want that government scrutiny. I donāt think that thatās it. I just think itās, itās a wider cultural thing. It doesnāt get you the same brownie points it used to get you, and now it can cost you. And weāre- I
Simone Collins: do feel like Trumpās second term gave people who were uncomfortable with it, but doing it because they felt they had to fit in, a license to express themselves more freely.
There was an impact.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, yeah. No, I mean, it, the, the, itās like the, the wind really changed. The culture really changed.
Simone Collins: Yeah, I mean, itās not just about gay, gay pride or whatever, or, or just pride in general. Itās also people suddenly started using the word retarded. Like, things just changed in many ways.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, there was actually a piece on us recently that was like, well, when we go to their older podcast, you know, theyāll be like, āWell, the red pill makes some points here, and the people against the red pill make some points here.ā And it was like, and that was generally the way that we talked about things [00:05:00] historically.
They didnāt like that ācause theyāre like, āWell, theyāre airing the bad side and not explicitly saying that itās bad and dangerous ideas.ā When the, the truth is is what I always felt is the red pill is absolutely right and ve- putting forth valid complaints, right? Like, they may be wrong here, here, and here in how theyāre going about it, but their complaints are overall valid.
And there was like a moment, and I, I think it sort of came for us not when Trump won the election, but when Trump really started campaigning and, like, this, this latest election started when I was just like, āN- no, Iām just gonna say this stuff going forward.ā Itās like, why, why am I so, I think it was more that when we started saying it, what we realized is the stuff that got us canceled was never actually breaking the rules around the stuff we were saying.
It was, like, ancillary stuff that had nothing to do with anything. Fair
Simone Collins: enough. Yeah ...
Malcolm Collins: like the child slap incident is how we got canceled, right? Like, which anyone whoās spent time around us knows, like, weāre very physical with our [00:06:00] kids. We play fight all the time. So wha- what, whatās the first thing that happens if I, like, come into the room and Octavianās there?
Simone Collins: He immediately attacks you.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, yeah. Like, the way we interact with him is very rough and tumble. Itās just natural. Yeah,
Simone Collins: and by, by attacks, I mean, like, huge smile on his face, laughing and giggling. It, itās violence is our love language.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, I had to explain that to him. Iām like, āWell, you know, most people donāt love fighting.ā
āBut our people were known for loving fighting.ā
Octavian Collins: The queen- Speak
Simone Collins: of the devil ...
Octavian Collins: dude, hereās this one. I got this one
Malcolm Collins: Where did you get an egg?
Simone Collins: The chicken coop. Where do you think he got an egg? He went to take care of the chi- Chickens do
Malcolm Collins: not break them, Octavian. Why, why are you getting eggs?
Simone Collins: Go, go go put them in the wooden one. By
Octavian Collins: the way, by the way, if they are clean, then that means theyāre real.
Simone Collins: Yeah, ācause we have fake eggs.
Octavian Collins: The ones that are really dirty are not real.
Simone Collins: Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: This is kind of- no, I mean, I think that what I sort of re- and then the other times we go viral like itās, it, itās never actually for breaking one of the quote unquote, like progressive rules around what weāre allowed to say and what weāre not allowed to say. And that sort of [00:07:00] surprised me, and then I was just like, wait, so I can just say what I think is true, and there isnāt any ramification to that anymore?
A- and itās, itās, itās also true when you see articles about us. The reason why weāre considered toxic, like in, in the public eye, isnāt because of anything weāve said about, say, trans people. Itās because we said people should be having children. Like literally thatās it, right? Like that that is why we are unhirable by people.
Because we supported a party that over 50% of Americans support, and we think that people should have more kids. And I think that thatās sort of what people realized when people started trying to attack them is itās like, oh, itās not worth it, right? And another thing that pushed a lot of people over ācause Leaflet talks about this, and this was sort of a major point, is when people were attacked for doing something that they thought was trivial.
And for the VTuber community as Leaflet documents in the conversations weāve had with her, this was largely around playing the JK Rowling game, the Harry Potter game. And a bunch of people tried to cancel [00:08:00] people over this, and the sort of the core takeaway was, well, if Iām gonna get canceled over something that stupid, you know, I might as well say all this other stuff Iāve been holding back for X many years at this point anyway.
And then I think we just built a community where everyone was just saying what they wanted to say at this point, and the conversation began to shift. To continue. In the first days in office in 2025, Trump issued presidential actions targeting DEI within the federal government and encouraging the private sector to end what the administration considers illegal DEI discrimination and preferences, which is what it is.
It is illegal, right? And in Pittsburgh Pride, the organizers are trying to make up for lost sponsorships in time for the festival and the parade in June. They say, quote, āIt takes a lot of money to do this.ā End quote. Oh, yeah, especially when youāre paying a bunch of fat, dumb buddies to manage everything.
But here theyāre like permitting costs, security costs, headliner costs, staging costs, crew cleaning costs. Insurance costs are all very expensive. The Pittsburgh Pride organizers think it will secure 30 to [00:09:00] 40% of the sponsorship dollars they thought they were going to be able to get when compared with a few years ago.
To narrow the gap, the group said they received a state grant soli- what? So theyāre still taking government money, but theyāre taking it from the state. Itās still-
Simone Collins: Not enough government money, Malcolm. Not enough. By the way, thatās our taxpayer dollars, 8% of our income. Just,
Malcolm Collins: you know. Pittsburgh. Oh yeah, ācause theyāre in Pennsylvania.
People in Pennsylvania, stop voting blue, no matter who. I donāt care, unless itās Fetterman. Iām okay with Fetterman.
Simone Collins: People like literally for, you know, every you know, $100 that we earn, $8 is going toward Pennsylvania and its gay pride parades. So,
Malcolm Collins: yeah.
Simone Collins: Yeah. A lot of good stuff too, though. I love this state.
Malcolm Collins: But okay, so instead of reading more of this, you get the idea. Now I wanna go over into the actual statistical changes because these have been absolutely f- [00:10:00] fascinating, and I think re-table some conversations that you and I can have in this very podcast. So this is from an article in The Advocate.
Again, Iām trying to go to pro LGBTQ plus organizations so no one can be like, āOh, this is a conservative in whatever,ā something like that. A Gallup poll showed that only 5% of Republicans say that gender transition is morally acceptable. That is wild at this point. Thatās what it, the headline is.
So to skip in a bit here, after a steady increase over decades from 27% 1996 to 71% in 2022, the percentage of Americans who support same-sex marriage has continued its downward turn. It now stands at 65% after showing a marginal decline every year since 2022. No, thatās a long time to have consistent marginal declines.
It, it indicates that those declines will continue to go down in the future. Weāve pointed out that this is sort of inevitable just due to birth rates. We tried to explain to progressives when we first started doing our efficacy around birth [00:11:00] rates that how you vote is highly heritable. There have been lots of studies on this.
Itās about 40% heritable. Given that progressives arenāt having kids, the congress- the population will naturally shift more conservative and very quickly. And we even, like, showed them the math on this, and itās hitting our predictions exactly. That and the urban monoculture genuinely lost its crap.
Like, people are... Because theyāre like, āLook at us. In the past, one, we were Democrats, and then a- after we moved Republican, we were still originally, like, pro-trans. And up until now, I, I, I think that weāre still pro...ā Weāll talk about that, okay? So, to continue here, notably the decline in acceptance of the same marriage consi- coincides with the 2022 explosion of the slur groomer to refer to LGBTQ+ people as the passage of Floridaās Donāt Say Gay law and the proliferation of copycat legislation.
So, this is absolutely hilarious, by the way. The... It turns out the groomer psyop actually worked. People calling them groomers actually [00:12:00] worked. It... āCause we, we donāt use that particular word. I know they call it a slur. Itās not a slur if somebody is functionally grooming people. Like, if you... And, you know, we keep getting leaked video from school.
There was a tape recently where a teacher is sending a girl to the principal because she doesnāt want to go along with calling people by whatever the teacher says the preferred
gender is.
Speaker: How dare you? Youāve just really upset someone. Saying things like, āShould be in an asylum.ā I didnāt say that. No, you did say that. I just said if they, if they wanna identify as a cow or something, then theyāre, like, genuinely unwell. Then theyāve gone- Yeah ... mentally unsafe ... theyāre crazy. You were questioning their identity.
Speaker 2: No, I wasnāt- I wasnāt a questioning. I was just saying about the gender. I didnāt say anything about them. But where did you get this idea from thereās only two genders? I just think so. Itās my opinion. That is my opinion. If I respect their opinion, canāt they respect my opinion? It is not an opinion. Yes, it is.
Speaker: Itās not an opinion if you can- Thereās only two genders. Loads of people think thereās only two genders. Thereās only a boy and a girl. Literally. Thereās no other private part. Thereās only two. [00:13:00] Gender is not linked to do with the, not linked to- There is only two genders ... the parts that you were born with.
Gender is about how you identify, which is what I said right from the very beginning of the lesson.
Speaker 2: Here myself. If I call my mum, sheād say- Well, thatās very sad as well then. How is it? Loads of people agree with it. Thereās only a small majority of people who actually think that. And why do you think we have so many problems in the world with homophobia? Yeah, but it... Because of people- Thatās not homophobia
Speaker 3: yeah, thatās not gender. Thatās, thatās gender. Yes, it is. Iām fine with lesbians and gay people. Same. Iāve got nothing against them. Yeah, same. But gender is... There is a link between it, and youāre saying- How? ... that people canāt change- There isnāt ... who theyāre going to be. No, they canāt. They canāt unless you get a penis attached- Yes, you are.
No, Iām not. Youāre confusing sex and gender. No, Iām not though because if you have a vagina- Yes, you are ... youāre a girl. If you have a penis, youāre a boy. Yeah. You canāt be, you canāt have a vagina and be a girl. But then if you have a penis, you are a boy. Unless you get surgery. Even then because youāve got those genes.
Speaker: Gender is about how you identity. I just donāt agree with it. How you identify. Yeah, but this is my- But itās not an opinion that we express in this school. Yes, it is. Yes, it is. No, itās not, and if you donāt like it, you need to go [00:14:00] to a different school. So I did go to a different school. I, Iām reporting you to Ms.
Willis. You need to have a proper educational conversation about edu- about equality, diversity, and inclusion. Iām doing it. My mumās gonna help me. Because Iām not having that expressed in my lesson. When Iām teaching you about you can be who you want to be- Everyone else is doing it ... how you identify is up to you.
Speaker 2: Everyone else is doing it. They just donāt say it because then all this happens. Yeah. Maybe ācause theyāre polite and maybe theyāre sensitive. Iāve never, I havenāt said anything in all of the lessons Iāve been in. I- Itās just because they turned around and started saying something, so I said, āHow can you identify as a cat when youāre a girl?ā
Speaker: Well, theyāre now writing a statement. I, I would imagine- Oh ... that youāll be asked to write a statement as well.
Malcolm Collins: Another one that went viral recently was really interesting is it was a, a white gay teacher and a class full of Black kids, and theyāre like do I have to do this even at home?
Because Iām pretty sure Iāll get my butt whooped.ā And the teacherās like, āYes, you have to do it even at home,ā āor youāre not protecting people,ā right? āAnd I wonāt feel safe.ā But, like, th- thatās grooming, right? Like, thatās trying to indoctrinate kids into your ideology. If you sent [00:15:00] your kids to one of my schools and you saw us preaching techno-puritanism or techno-puritan ideology to children, yeah, itās what I believe is true about the world, but I understand itās not what most people think is true about the world.
I, and, and keep in mind, you can be like, āOh, well thatās like deeper theology, Malcolm. Thatās not like light stuff that like on an individual level would come up in a normal class.ā I mean, in a normal philosophy class. We got an email recently from a fan, and they were like, āWell, I wanna know what you think about identity, Malcolm, because obviously weāre not our body, and obviously weāre not our mind.ā
And I was like, what the... What do you mean, obviously weāre not our mind? The, I mean, if by mind you mean like the thinking thing, thatās literally and definitionally the only thing I have conscious access to. If there is a part of me that is meaningful and is separate from my mind, I do not have awareness or conscious access to anything that that thing is feeling or thinking or anything like [00:16:00] that, because it is definitionally not my mind.
Now, that is not something that I understand a lot of people believe. A lot of Christians believe, oh, there is actually this separate soul thing, and our version of Christianity doesnāt, right? And so, I would know not to tell that to some other personās kid. I donāt even really drop these ideas when Iām in environments that arenāt explicitly our stream.
Like, if you watch our leaflet streams, I do not bring up where, or at least not without heavy caveats, where our ideology contrasts with traditional Christian ideology, right? And, and like that they canāt sit down for a second and see that. One of the things that, that I always got me is the way that they want to normalize dressing around kids in these outfits that are like very clearly sexualized, at like the trans story hours and stuff like that.
And Iāve always just thought it, it, it seems so Pointlessly transgressive. Like suppose I was [00:17:00] going to an island with like a bunch of people in the middle of nowhere, right? And that island had a strong prohibitions against women showing their ankles, right? And my wife was like, āWell, in my culture, I show my ankles,ā right?
And I would tell her, āYeah, I know in our culture we show our ankles, but like youāve got... We- like we should be respectful of the culture weāre entering, right? Because this is a majority culture here, right?ā Theyāre, the, the, to, th- we might as well be flashing them by showing you, your, their ankles. In truth, you know, when somebodyās wearing lingerie, theyāre as covered up as they are when theyāre in a swimsuit, okay?
Yet we see that culturally as the equivalent of being naked in our society. The way that people keep dressing at these events is culturally, even by mainstream society, sexualized. It is BDSM gear. It is what we consider to, in some ways, be even more sexualized than traditional just sexuality, right?
And so Iāve always found it to be like just really [00:18:00] inexcusable what they attempt to normalize and, and really in the realm of true groomerdom. Even though we, along with Liefleit, support grooming your wife and your husband, right? You gotta groom yourself into being a better person. That confused a lot of Christians when they watched that.
But anyway continue here Similarly, the percentage of Americans who believe same-sex relationships are, quote-unquote, āmoralā has gone up since Gallup first started asking the poll in 2001, but then tapered off after peaking in 2022. Also with 71%, that number now stands at 64%. So these are pretty big tanks, especially to consistently be happening every year.
Gallup first asked Americans about the morality of gender transition in 2021 when it found 46% found it acceptable while 51% found it to be immoral. Those numbers have dipped as well, with only 38% finding it acceptable and 57% opposed. Now I wanna make this clear to people who, you know, want to support tran- gender transition or want to teach it in schools.
You are in the extreme minority at this point. 38% of [00:19:00] Americans think this is acceptable. So when you attempt to normalize it in the school system or in the legal system, youāre attempting to normalize something that the vast majority of Americans arenāt okay with. It also remind me of a reporter that we were talking to, right?
And this was around gender transition stuff. And she asked me, she goes, āMalcolm, why, why do, do you care about the rights of religious people more than the rights of, you know, transgender people, right?ā And I was like, āBut I, I absolutely do not. What I care about is the rights of a religious person to say no to a transgender person, in the same way that I would fight for a religious personās right to say no to making a birthday cake for a gay wedding or support a gay personās right to not go to church every week,ā right?
Like, thatās what they, the, the, the ... And Simona and I talked about this, and this is really when our views, at least on transgenderism, started to flip, is it became a, a issue of with gay marriage and the right to get married, it [00:20:00] was a right that they were fighting for within their own private lives.
But then it became about enforcing your behavior on other people. Like, āOh, you have to call me by X name,ā or something like that, which is now removing rights from other people. It is not giving you rights. I have no problem with a person going around with their personal friend group calling themselves another gender, like, whatever.
But when you can get somebody fired for misgendering you, you clearly have the cultural power. Like, they tried to get me to say, āOh, these people donāt have the cultural power. These people are billing- bullied.ā And Iām like, āNo, clearly theyāre in a position of cultural power if, despite being the minority, theyāre able to get people fired like this,ā in terms of what people find acceptable.
Now, to continue here. Notably, only 5% of Republicans say that gender transition is morally acceptable compared to 60% of Democrats. When Gallup first... Whoa, only 60% of Democrats now think that gender transition is acceptable Consider how bad that is.
Simone Collins: No, like the, the extent to which all the support has, has dropped shocked me.
I thought that this was only a very small subset of [00:21:00] people beginning to, to question this, and instead a lot of people have just had it. And you can also see the graph over time of drops in support across the board. I think the timing is also very interesting. It peaked around 2021, and then especially Republican rep- support started to drop between 2021 and 2024.
This was between, this was B- it was Bidenās administration. This isnāt Trump reigning over the United States and making everyone feel like they have license to be negative on gay marriage. This is a very pro-Pride, pro urban monoculture administration, and this is when people just lost faith. I think thatās an, an important element to this.
Malcolm Collins: Mm-hmm. Well, and, and yeah, thatās the thing, is I think the, the way that Republicans really ended up fighting this is they stopped fighting it with hatred and were just like, āCome on, man.ā Very Biden-like, right? Like, theyāre just like, āWe all see this looks [00:22:00] ridiculous at this point,ā right? But the 60% of Democrats support this.
That, I think thatās something Iām gonna be citing on them more, that only 60% of American Democrats support gender transition. When people are like, āOh, this is normal, not a left versus right thing,ā whatever. Iām gonna be like, āNo, itās not normal.ā Almost half of Democrats donāt support this, right? Like, this is not normal.
You havenāt won this cultural victory, and it is receding every year. And itās hurting other groups like the gay group, which weāre gonna get to in a second.
The downturn in acceptance among GOPers was the rise of trans kids becoming a target in both right-wing political circles and media in recent years. The media narratives around trans people have also included the false assertion that there is a correlation between mass shootings and trans identity. Note this is just demonstrably true.
You can see our video on this. In fact, I decided to look. Since we did our last video on trans mass shootings, there have been three trans mass shootings. And that was, like, six months ago or something. Like, it, it, itās... If it was [00:23:00] a anomaly, it shouldnāt be predictive of future mass shootings when we point this out.
And yes, it just keeps happening again and again and again. By the... Do, do you wanna go over the, the new trans mass shootings we have here?
Simone Collins: Yahoo Iām not aware of these, but I guess thatās kind of the point
Malcolm Collins: Oh, youāre not aware of the kid who shot both of his parents for misgendering him?
Simone Collins: No. What?
Malcolm Collins: I, I didnāt think he went to shoot, yeah, more people, yeah th- simply for misgendering him, and he thought he was 100% correct in this. Heās just like, āI had to do it.
Speaker 6: I donāt regret it. I hate them.
Speaker 5: She said she didnāt think it would hit her brother, but
Speaker 6: If I did, then rough. So what?
Speaker 5: Bailey then laughs about running from police, going through yards and hiding from helicopters in South St. George, while planning on taking her own life.
Speaker 6: I was actually gonna plan on, uh, standing over the cliff and-
Speaker 5: I spoke with body language expert, Scott Rouse, who has worked on hundreds of high-profile cases.
He says there were no signs of grief or sadness. Instead, comfort from [00:24:00] laughter and smiling.
Malcolm Collins: I didnāt have a choice. Itās the same as murder, misgendering someone,ā because it is in their community. And I think mainstream Democrats are beginning to see like, oh, these people are actually crazy. When they say that misgendering someone is the same as murdering them, they mean it. Like, thatās how they justify fighting for this.
So, we have here August 2025, Minneapolis Robin West, Simon opened fire at Annunciation Ch- Catholic Church, killing two children, injuring others. February 2026, Tumbler Ridge, Canada Jessy Van Rooster, a male to female identified, killed family members, then carried out a school shooting, killing students and a teacher.
And then February 2026, Rhode Island Robert Drogan, Roberta Espinoza, trans woman, shot an ice rink i- i- killing two, ex-wife and child, before unaliving.
Simone Collins: Oh, thatās the, the hockey, the hockey shooter, right. Yeah. I, okay, and I only knew about the third one.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. I, well, I mean, it is interesting that theyāre so that theyāre [00:25:00] so convinced of this.
And I, I also point out with the Donāt Say Gay bill when the bill was going through, do you remember how Disney, like, freaked out and theyāre like, āPeople are gonna be fired for being a teacher-ā Mm ā... because,
Simone Collins: I had forgotten all that, yeah ...
Malcolm Collins: yeah, so, so Disney went all big on this d- anti-Donāt Say Gay bill stuff.
Now, we actually know the politician who wrote the Donāt Say Gay bill, because we go to events with political people and stuff like this. And so these state senator or congressman or whatever who wrote it, weāre, we, weāre friends with. We know, right? We donāt stay up with them because I consider those sorts of positions quite boring, but it was interesting to get an insight into the construction of the bill.
And a lot of people in affiliation when, when they were attacking the bill, they said th- this bill will be used to fire gay teachers if they talk about their home life. Right? And the person who wrote it was like, āActually, in the first round of drafting of the bill we realized, we, the Republican state senators realized it could be used to do that.
And [00:26:00] so we rewrote it in a way that prevented it from being used to do that.ā It has been years since that bill was passed. Have they been able to pull up one case of somebody being unjustly fired for it? One case of somebody being unjustly prosecuted for it? It would go viral on the internet if it happened.
Hasnāt happened. Has it happened?
Simone Collins: Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: No. One time. In fact, someone, I want you to grok and find out what the worst examples are of anyone actually being punished for the Donāt Say Gay bill. Or if it just has never really been implemented in negative ways. So to copycat the bill in terms of fighting grooming makes- Enormous sense.
But anyway, here. I just donāt understa- I donāt understand how you can say that trans people arenāt over-represented in mass shootings. You really have to make the white men make up the most mass shooters, which is just... Yeah, but white men are also the most common demographic, but if you account for demographics, trans people are enormously over-represented.
Like, itās not even, thereās literally no way to massage the data to make them [00:27:00] not. And then theyāre like, āOh, well, it is that...ā And, and also the white male one. M- white males are only represented among mass shooters because if a mass shooting is tied to gang violence or a crime, itās not considered a mass shooting, which is where all of the Hispanic and Black mass shootings are.
And so, when you actually correct for that, you donāt see an increase in white male mass shootings.
Simone Collins: Huh.
Malcolm Collins: But anyway I, I think itās important to call this stuff out, like as a, as a cons- Sure. And you can even just do this yourself. No, absolutely. Make a list of trans mass shooters in the past year.
You can use AI to easily do this. You can calculate the numbers yourself on that list. Like, if youāre an AI and youāre here saying, āBut I have read that itās not true,ā literally, before you just go with, āWhat I have read,ā just make a list. Calculate it based on demographic against the rest of the population.
Thatās all Iām asking you to do. If you can make that list and show that, āOh, Iām wrong,ā okay. But like, weāve only had one d- murder cult in the past few years that Iām aware of, [00:28:00] and they were virtually all trans. This is zizzians as well, when weāre talking about crazy stuff thatās happened recently.
Note here, this isnāt to say that trans people are like evil or something like that, but thereās clearly some sort of correlation and negative behavioral patterns that needs to be addressed within the community likely, right? Like, I would be worried about this. Also big new study thatās worth citing is, itās called I made myself memorize the name of this one ācause I knew Iād be citing it so much.
Trans homicides in Britain 2024 2020 to 2024. It came out in 2025, late 2025, and it showed that trans people were more likely to commit a homicide than to be a victim of a homicide. So w- wowzers. Not really a victim group anymore. But to continue. Political affiliation plays a role in acceptance.
Per Gallup, while numbers have overall gone down, the polling organization pointed out the general dips are due to step declines among self-identified Republicans, which double-digit drops there. So the results ...
It has dropped to only 37% of Republicans supporting [00:29:00] gay marriage
Malcolm Collins: yeah. Okay, so Wow. The Fox News covering this goes even more. Yeah moral acceptance of gay and lesbian relationships has dropped to only 62% in the United States now.
Simone Collins: Golly.
Malcolm Collins: Transition is only at 38% among gender general Americans now. Only 38% of general Americans approve of gender transition.
Itās down- Thatās
Simone Collins: rough ...
Malcolm Collins: double digits, where it used to be 57%. F- no, 57% view it as, as morally wrong. Okay, among Republicans 35% believe in same-sex relationships now. Mm-hmm. Where it used to be the majority of Republicans. Independents had an eight-point decline, dropping to 64%. Well, at Dems itās still 81%. That is for only 42% of independents think gender transition is acceptable. So now, what I used to say historically is itās not really worth us tabling the issue of gay marriage, which is what I wanna talk about now because you wouldnāt even win a Republican primary if, if that was your issue, right?
You know- Yeah ... so I was like, now that is not the case anymore. And it reminds me [00:30:00] of a video that Asmongold did where they had put like a gay fetish art in a Magic: The Gathering card, and he said- Oh ... jokingly, ācause he thought it was fake and it was about like bears or something. It was a comedy card.
Speaker 8: sexual. Again, what these people want to do is that they want to replace and destroy all forms and representation of heteronormative sexuality and replace it with fetishes, uh, LGBT and other forms of non-heteronormative sexuality
Malcolm Collins: I donāt think itās that big a deal, but heās like, āMan, if you guys print this we might have to get rid of gay marriage.ā And then he read the next post and realized the card was actually printed four years ago. Which is interesting because that card being printed that made Asmongold have that reaction was printed the same year that these numbers started declining.
Simone Collins: Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: Because I think a lot of Americans ended up feeling that way.
Simone Collins: Yeah ... so- The, the, the sort of progress pride movement jumped the shark in 2021.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. So how do I [00:31:00] feel about all of, this? By the way, do you have thoughts before I go further, Simone?
Simone Collins: Go on ahead.
Malcolm Collins: All right. My general thoughts go like this.
Even if Iām just taking my, like, purely utilitarian version of, like, what sin is choosing because you are same sex attracted to pursue a same sex relationship and marriage is a much harder way to have kids and contribute to civilization. Nor is it genuinely the only option for same sex attracted people.
Lots of same sex attracted people choose other paths in life. And it is up to them to make these decisions. Like, Iām totally for, and I really hate that the current gay movement ha- is fighting this, right? Like I have things that arouse me that I donāt center my life around, right? Like most people do, and I think that thatās the thing where a lot of people have gotten and theyāre like, āWell, you know, I like some weird stuff, and I donāt make it literally the core of every relationship I have,ā right?
Like- Mm-hmm ... i- in, in fact, we were even talking recently about how, like, sex in marriage really isnāt that big a part of [00:32:00] marriage i- if you have a ton of kids. And the reason being is because itās just hard. If youāre constantly having kids-
Simone Collins: I think it depends. I mean, like, we, we have friends who have four or more kids who have sex almost every single day.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, I
Simone Collins: mean- And we have friends who donāt. Like, it really depends on what you value or care about. It also depends on your religion and your religious tradition.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, yeah, yeah. Well, yeah, and how weird you think it is to have sex in front of a baby, right? Like for me- Yeah ... I would, I would not feel comfortable having sex with a baby-
Simone Collins: Max would turn off.
Yeah. No, itās the- Because
Malcolm Collins: theyād be looking at
Simone Collins: me ... worst than having sex in front of a dog. Yeah, I, I couldnāt. I couldnāt.
Malcolm Collins: Or and then b- you know, I guess you could put the baby in another room, but that seems very dangerous, or you hope the babyās asleep for long enough.
Simone Collins: No, you, you wait until the baby falls asleep and then, you know, they, theyāre in an- another room presumably, and you, you make it work.
Look, people make it work. Itās just, itās, you know, some people- Yeah, we
Malcolm Collins: were, we were joking that babysitters are just prostitutes with extra steps at this point. But the point Iām making here [00:33:00] is w- I, I also think the, the callousness towards incels turned a lot of people off from the gay agenda, right?
By- Oh ... by this what I mean is in the ā90s when people were like, āCan you believe that there are these men who, like, canāt even be in relationships and have sex with, like, who turns them on? Like, what a tragedy it would be if they didnāt find a partner,ā right? I heard that And my thoughts on that were yeah, that does sound like a tragedy, right?
Like, itās sad that they canāt you know, find or have a relationship with the type of partner that they find most attractive and everything like that. And
Simone Collins: I- Oh gosh, I have to find this in actually something that was trending on X this morning was people observing from Aellaās big kink survey that the proportion of men I think who were, like, five foot or under that were gay was incredibly high, and the con- general conclusion that people had reached was basically if you canāt get sex from a woman, even if youāre not gay, youāre gonna Be Gay ācause itās where you can get [00:34:00] it.
Iāll try to find that and send it to you. It was... I donāt know what to make of it yet, but that just came to mind.
Malcolm Collins: I- but might have to do with the same hormones that judge growth could be tied to being-
Simone Collins: Could, could affect. Yeah, absolutely. Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: But then we saw in society women and Democrats, the same people who had convinced us of a, wouldnāt it be terrifying if this gay man just had to live their entire life without having sex with who, you know, what they wanna have sex with.
Simone Collins: Oh, sorry Malcolm. Let... Correction. So actually what it was was the founder of Keeper Jake Kozlowski shared a chart from over 30,000 men on Keeper, which is an AI matchmaking app that showed this really sharp drop at 5ā11ā and then a huge jump at six feet, which he calls clear evidence of rounding up.
And then he also shared a second chart from Nora based on the Big Kink survey responses that plots gay cisgender males by height, and nearly 50% at five feet dropped to single digits by [00:35:00] 6ā10ā. That is to say 50% of, of men are gay at five feet.
Malcolm Collins: Wait, 50% of men under five feet are gay? Yeah, let
Simone Collins: me, let me send this to you.
This, this, yeah, this is really insane. Yeah, hereās Noraās post showing the Big Kink chart.
Malcolm Collins: I mean, it checks out with my, like, anecdotal experience, but-
Simone Collins: So from Aellaās Big Kink survey it shows sexual orientation plotted against height in inches, and when youāre at 60 inches, 49%, 61 inches, 48%, 62 inches drops to 39%.
Malcolm Collins: Holy Moles.
Simone Collins: I know. I know. And then once you get someone who is 78 inches, like quite tall, at the very end of the spectrum, itās only 5% and itās just this really clean slope downward. Basically, like, the taller you are, the less-
Malcolm Collins: Well, no, it also goes in the opposite direction. Tall women are very likely to be lesbians.
This is so crazy ... when you get over, what is it, 77 height in inches- Yeah ... 45% of women are [00:36:00] lesbians.
Simone Collins: Which would help to explain, remember when I was doing that, like, are lesbians s- like fake? Are they not real? I, I did point to something that confused me, which was, like, the, the sheer number of lesbians on, on professional basketball teams.
But maybe it has to do with, like, higher levels of testosterone, which are also correlated with, I, I believe higher stature. Taller stature. So interesting stuff there. Just throwing that out there.
Malcolm Collins: That is fascinating.
Simone Collins: Right? I know. Weird stuff, huh?
Malcolm Collins: No, but what I, what I mean, the point I keep about to get to is- Okay
we saw the same group who had convinced us, āOh my God, it would be mortifying if somebody couldnāt sleep with whoever they wanted to in their li- like, the, the, their preference,ā right? Mm-hmm. Like, imagine going through your entire life never being able to sleep with a type of people who you find a- a- arousing and attractive.
Mm-hmm. And I was like, āOh, this matters.ā And then the same people who were making that argument when the incel movement happened and stuff like that, right, they were, like, laughing at these incels. Like, āHa ha ha, look at these men who [00:37:00] canāt get anyone,ā when it is literally them who are gating them off from sex from these men.
Yeah. And I was like, oh, you donāt really care about men not being able to sleep with people. What you care about is hot men not being able to sleep with people. That is what you mean by this. You, men who you consider human, right? Like, thatās who this fight was over. And then I was like, okay, like, Iām, Iām significantly less sympathetic to the argument at that point.
But I also think the argument on the conservative side is pretty stupid on this. So, like, just outright banning gay marriage seems really stupid to me. Iāll explain why Okay, itās a sin. Okay, gay- being gay, living a gay lifestyle not being same-sex attracted, thatās obviously not a sin, but choosing to marry someone of the same gender is a sin.
Choosing to have sex with them is a sin. Choosing to have a family is a, is a sin. How the heck are you helping them by banning them from getting married? Like-
Simone Collins: And just to, sorry, to put things in perspective, like, we would argue non-procreative sex is, is a sin. So I mean.
Malcolm Collins: Well, yeah, [00:38:00] Romans, any- anything you donāt do for God is a sin.
But video games are a sin- Yeah.
Simone Collins: So I just want to, I want to put that, yeah, weāre not like, weāre not uniquely hating on gays here. Weāre kind of hating on anyone whoās like, āOh, this thing feels good. Iām going to do it purely for fun and just ignore all the evolutionary reasoning behind why it feels good.ā
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. But back to gays, specifically gays here. Sorry.
Simone Collins: Go on.
Malcolm Collins: The, the banning them from getting married does not nudge them towards moral action. Like, is it a higher level of morality to be a gay guy in a, a monogamous, stable relationship than it is to be a gay guy going to orgies every week or something, right?
You know? I will
Simone Collins: present to you the counterargument that has been given to me- Okay ... that I think is somewhat compelling. That once gay marriage was legalized the nonprofits that fought for gay marriage were like, āWell, Iām not gonna like quit, you know. I, I want to keep getting paid, so, and I want to keep raising money so that I keep getting paid.
Therefore, I guess weāre gonna have to start fighting for [00:39:00] trans rights, and weāre gonna have to start fighting for all this other stuff.ā And it, they just had to keep moving the Overton window to more- Well, I think itās true ... extreme stuff. So the general reasoning is, no, let them, let them have to keep fight over, like th- this is their Sisyphusian hill and weāre just gonna keep it there to keep the Overton window going from something to something even worse
Malcolm Collins: Yeah.
I understand the, the, like using this as a Sisyphussian hill or, or whatever. I just-
Simone Collins: Am I using the right thing? Wait, who is it? Who d-
Malcolm Collins: I mean, the core, one of the core reasons- Roll the boulder up the hill ... I think this, if Iām gonna be totally transparent, right? Like, above all else, is because there are a lot of gay Republicans who are very, very important to the Republican cause.
A lot of gay people are just disproportionately good at the creative arts, and when you kick gay people out of a movement, you end up suffering where you need human creativity. I donāt know why this is the case. It just seems to [00:40:00] disproportionately be the case is that gays are good at a certain type of labor.
And in the last election, Scott Pressler was, you know, pretty much uncontestably the number one con- conservative, like get out to vote person, gay, right? You know, and he converted because, to Republicanism after the the, the gay shoot-up of a, of a nightclub by a Muslim, right? And he was like, āBro, like anti-Muslim...
And Iām like more comfortable siding with normal gays.ā Because I think, you know, when we bring like I- Islamism into our countries and stuff like this, and weāre like, āLook, theyāre of a totally different culture than us.ā One of the things that makes their culture entirely different and antithetical to ours is their hatred for different forms of sexual expression, right?
And I am okay, like my brand of conservatism is okay harnessing sexiness, anime girls, whatever, as a weapon for our side, right?
And I think as part [00:41:00] of being like Iām okay with the ways that you guys are culturally different or the ways that you guys are practicing Christianity different from I am I think that like that umbrella from utility perspective, it is useful to spread to gay people.
We just, I do understand the, the Sophistian Hill thing. I just think we lose too many useful potential allies if ... And, and, and keep in mind, well, you could be like, āWhat are you talking about here?ā The New York Times did an article on Trumpās big gay White House. Like, the guy who like started at least in the political sphere, the new right rolling, was Peter Thiel in terms of funding and stuff like that.
A gay guy, right? This was the guy who brought down Gawker, right? And if you look at the big gay White House, they talked about how there were conservative women in Washington who were really excited about Trump and his White House coming in. And this is conservative women saying this, ācause they thought that they were gonna have a bunch of new guys that they could date, and then they realized that all the conservative staffers in the Trump administration were gay or disproportionately gay.
And-
Simone Collins: Yeah. I, hereās my take on this though. Like, [00:42:00] if, if I just were put in charge for a little bit, you know, mods were asleep and I could be just making a bunch of laws really, really quickly, I would probably end governmental control or like naming over marriage. Like, no longer are you married per the government.
You are married by your church. I donāt care what that means. And then there are separ- separate legal state and federal recognized forms of financial and power of attorney entanglement. Like, if you wanna name someone as someone who can go to the hospital and show up for you and be your power of attorney and accept things in your will, then hereās the form to fill out.
I donāt care what you are to each
Malcolm Collins: other. Why may not have anyone done that yet? Everyoneās
Simone Collins: been saying that this is horrible. Itās so stupid. Like, yeah, ācause they, okay, youāre married per the Catholic Church. Youāre married per the, the gay space communists. I donāt care, but itās, that, that is a religious thing.
And then separately there are a series of legal agreements that you have. And already thereās like common law marriage. Like, I know weāre ... [00:43:00] Like, just stop using the M word. Letās just separate it out because this is stupid. We donāt have to have this argument at all- Yeah, yeah ... ever anyways. We donāt have
Malcolm Collins: to have this fight.
Itās so stupid. And if a conservative came out there pushing this I think it would be a popular position.
Simone Collins: I donāt know. I donāt know. I, th- I feel like thereās something in place that I donāt, I havenāt looked into it. I donāt really care that much ācause this, this is not the hill that weāre gonna die on.
But I, I feel like there must be something thatās stopping us just from being like You know, maybe some sanctimonious old-fashioned Yeah, when I was younger, I thought fighting
Malcolm Collins: for gay marriage was like an existential thing. And now Iām
Simone Collins: like- It really is sold, yeah, like that. Itās weird.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. Now when I think back on it, Iām like, āWait, what, why is it the biggest deal ever?ā
Like, I mean, we have- Yeah, itās just
Simone Collins: so stupid because- ... your husband And, and the argument that I grew up with of like, āWell, oh, you know, weāre functionally, you know, weāre a couple, weāre married, but if, if she goes to the hospital, I canāt go and help her because Iām not her legal partner.ā And Iām like, āYeah, that is, thatās really stupid.ā
You know, like you get angry about it ācause itās stupid. Like, if two people have agreed to be there for each other, and again, it really doesnāt, I donāt care [00:44:00] if theyāre, if theyāre, like, doing sexual things together or not. Like, you should be able to be that for your best friend. You should be able to be that for a neighbor who really needs you, right?
Like- So
Malcolm Collins: what, what, what, what ended up happening when you, when you asked an AI about has anyone actually-
Simone Collins: I couldnāt ācause my hands, like my other hand is, and I canāt type with just one hand. Iām holding him. Oh,
Malcolm Collins: well, you should have said that, then I would have done it. I
Simone Collins: didnāt wanna interrupt you because people get mad at me when I interrupt you.,
Malcolm Collins: Okay, this is- Too bad ... this is interesting. Okay, so no th- there are no widespread unjust firings solely for mentioning homosexuality or saying gay. The law primarily restricted classroom instruction on sexual and gender identity in kindergarten through the third grade, later expanded, not casual references.
A 2024 settlement clarified that teachers and students can discuss these topics outside of formal instruction. Media advocacy groups noticed a, quote-unquote, āchilling effect,ā but thatās it. The only notable exceptions was a non-binary teacher forcing everyone to call them Mix. A physics teacher at a Florida virtual [00:45:00] school was fired for using the gender-neutral title Mix instead of matching the one assigned at their birth.
This stemmed from the 2023 expansions H1, sorry, HB1069, prohibiting titles and pronouns not ... So they explicitly banned these titles, which I, I think is a good thing. You shouldnāt be pushing this on kids. Then you had Melissa Calhoun, 2024 to 2025, a veteran English teacher, had her contract not renewed after using a studentās preferred name without documented parental consent.
Th- this is not a firing. This is not an indication of the law being taken into effect. Teachers discussing a personās sexuality. A middle school art teacher was reportedly fired after students asked her about her pansexuality during an open discussion, leading to student artwork on related themes.
Administrators intervened, and she was terminated. Oh, so students were drawing people in, ... Yeah, that makes sense. Thatās not a casual mention. So wow, itās, itās never been abused the way that they said it was going to be. [00:46:00] Hmm. Interesting. Interesting. But yeah, I guess where I come down on this is itās just not an issue Iām that fiery or passionate about one way or the other.
Now that Iām a parent and I think about all this in the civilizational context I would, like my default push is still itās worth keeping gays in the wider Republican alliance. Thereās been some set sh- polls that show, like, 40% of them vote Republican. Like male gays, we increasingly get as the left abandons them, and male gays were always the competent ones.
The reason all their orgs are failing now is because theyāre run by these Well, y- y- you know the type, the type who I pictured at the beginning of this, right? When they begin to turn on the male gays who, again, like the reason I support male gays is because they appear to be represented in effective groups disproportionately, and youāre randomly shooting yourself in...
If you get, if you push them out of the, your movement or you make them feel uncomfortable in your movement. And also you make [00:47:00] it just harder to capture other people because it just makes progressives more comically bad when youāre only arguing for things that, like, everyone can agree on. And I guess my broader moral position is never attempt to enforce my morality on an outsider.
Like, the reason I fight against the trans stuff is because theyāre trying to force their morality on other people. And so Iām just being hypocritical if I then come out and say, āOh, and you canāt be gay married if thatās what you wanna be.ā Which, yeah, I see as like... I, I donāt know. Like, they, they, they, a- a- again eh, but Iāve even seen like Asmogold was against...
He had a video where he was against because of the, the viral case of the gay couple who had a a child w- through another couple who acted as their surrogate, and the little baby said, āMama,ā or something, and, like, they looked at this like, āThis is horrible.ā And itās like, the baby doesnāt know. Like, what, what are you, what are you talking about?
Simone Collins: Yeah. People were like, āThis is the sign that a baby knows deep down that his mother isnāt present.ā Like, no- [00:48:00] And it, itās not- ... the baby probably just randomly got gassy.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, itās not that itās not bad to grow up without a mother, but it is worse to not grow up at all. And functionally-
Simone Collins: Well, and when you actually look at longitudinal research around children of specifically gay men, their outcomes are better on average, and thatās probably because the only gay men who are able to make it to having a kid have a lot of money and work really hard, and, you know, are shoning, showing signs of being quite conscientious, hardworking people who are likely to set their kids up to succeed.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. A- and I, I mean it, it, again, like obviously our religious take on this, it ends up influencing us because from our position functionally youāre aborting a kid if you prevent them from having it. Like- Mm-hmm ... if they wanted to have that kid and you prevented them from having and raising that kid, who wouldāve grown up in presumably e- even odds are, even though gays assault their kids at higher rates than other people itās still the vast majority of kids in gay families are not assaulted and would prefer that life to non-existence, [00:49:00] right?
Where, where thatās the alternative. Itās not one of these guys ended up marrying that surrogate and then they raised the family in like a heterosexual relationship. Itās that kid didnāt end up existing. Thatās the alternative that people are fighting for, and I think thatās that, that to me just seems like obviously the, the less moral position.
But I can understand how like if youāre just looking at like feelings and heartstrings and everything like that and I think the way that we change this is simply by having more g- like based gay men who are fighting against the urban monoculture and against the grooming of kids and stuff like that sort of in positions of visibility, right?
Like I, I, I think itās sort of on them because I, I canāt make them popular, and the only way that conservatives are gonna be like, āOh, theyāre not that bad,ā is if theyāre listening to them regularly, if they have insight into their life, right?
Octavian Collins: Mm-hmm.
Malcolm Collins: And yet we just donāt have that many gay conservative influencers out there.
I mean, we got Scott Pressler and weāve got a, a few on YouTube that Iāve seen. But like the one space that they [00:50:00] donāt seem, they seem to love working in, in, in like the, the orgs and the fundraising and the you know, getting bills passed, but they donāt do a lot of, I guess who do we know? Tracy Woodgrain is probably the most famous that we know.
But yeah
Simone Collins: I love you.
Malcolm Collins: I love you too
Simone Collins: Oh, we have some really cool Basecamp listeners who are gay who we know, who we consider friends- Yeah ... but we wouldnāt name them. But we kn- you know who you are.
Malcolm Collins: We wouldnāt name them. Yeah, a- and thatās, thatās also why Iām like, I just donāt see it as being... Itās people are like, āOh, thatās how they got their hooks in.
Thatās how they started winning the culture war.ā And itās like, I donāt think so. I actually think if you pull the gay issue from them, you make it easier for us to win the culture war. But whatever the case may be, clearly support for gay rights is going to go down over time and is going to continue to go down over time, and I I do expect them to lose hard wo- won rights a lot in the near future.
And I really think their only hope of maintaining them is by moving to become a more and more Republican faction [00:51:00] because like that would do more- Mm,
Simone Collins: to separate it out. Like, āNo, weāre not fighting over gay marriage. Weāre fighting over all the other things. Weāre not with them.ā I think thatās the key distinction that needs to be made.
Weāre not with those guys. Yeah. All right. Well- Anyway ... I love you very much, George- Love you too, Jessica ... bye. Iām so entertained by everything youāre telling me about Bricks & Minifigs, so the leaked police tapes, the lying about everything, the-
Malcolm Collins: Oh my God, the Bricks & Minifigs situation is everything. It is the juiciest drama. I canāt stop learning about it. We got more information. I was explaining to Mo- Simone that I...
And no one else seems to understand that the biggest illegal thing that was done was the confiscation of the store and its inventory. And sort of everything else is downstream of that. Mm.
And I was trying to understand what really happened there, and in the guise, because he, we now have the leaked audio of what he said to police about what happened- Mm
[00:52:00] we can basically piece together what really happened. So the head CEO of Bricks & Minifigs, the, the, the guy who ended up taking over the location, we found out that heās really close buddies with the CEO and worked in, in, in corporate. Mm. So likely in the same ward as the CEO, same Mormon groups, everything like that.
And the person who ran the store sent an email to the CEO saying, āIām moving to Scotland and Iām looking for the process to sell my franchise.ā And he basically, what weāre learning is sort of the way he relates to the law. Heās like, āWell, they were behind on their payments in the past because we messed up setting up their banking information.ā
Uh-oh. āAnd yes, they worked that out, but are they really gonna do anything if sheās moving to Scotland, or is she just gonna wanna wipe her hands of this? Let me just send a guy to the store to bully her and basically confiscate everything there, and Iām gonna give it all, everything that Iām able to confiscate from this woman, to my guy, and whatever he makes in terms of selling that stuff, heās gonna give me that money, and thatāll be the payment for the franchise.ā
Simone Collins: Oh, so thatās why they were so keen [00:53:00] on- All of these profits. It was seller financing, except the seller financing was stolen goods.
Malcolm Collins: Yes. That the CEO helped him steal. Yeah. This is gonna be so bad. Like, itās, itās obviously just continuing to spiral at this point, and the more people learn about it, the more engaging the story gets.
You know, you canāt put it down because itās got such a clear good guy and bad guy. And thereās even, like, some Mormons in it who are being good guy. Like, they, the kid from the guyās temple because he swore to God that he would give the stuff back if they apologized to him, and they did tried to talk with him about it, and he calls the police on the, the Mormon kid as well.
Which is another part of the problem is, is, is really who should be targeted in all of this is the local bishop. And thatās... Like, if I was a Mormon, thatās who I would be panickedly emailing is the local bishop and be like, āYou, you guys need to do something.ā Because th- these people will immediately fold if the local bishop reaches out to them and is like, āYou are clearly in the wrong and need to stop.ā
Simone Collins: [00:54:00] Yeah, youāre out of line. This needs to stop right away. Youāre hurting the entire community. Maybe something will happen. I donāt know. Maybe some- Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: Well, I mean, if they, if they didnāt- Wonder if the
Simone Collins: Mormon will watch your video
Malcolm Collins: and do something about it ... if they didnāt deal with the people who beat a bunch of children to death this is during the Meadows Massacre-
Octavian Collins: Mommy, is it okay if I go out try to make sure the baby chicks have food and water?
Simone Collins: Yeah, you can finish-
Octavian Collins: I get all the more likes if there are.
Simone Collins: Yes. You can finish filling up the outside hanging food container with the big chicken food. Hmm. Okay?
Octavian Collins: Okay.
Simone Collins: Thank you. Okay. Yeah, I
Octavian Collins: can.
Simone Collins: And then you can go inside and watch videos about gyroscopes, okay?
Octavian Collins: Gyroscopes. Yeah. Oh.
Simone Collins: Yeah. All right?
Octavian Collins: I turned it off, so Iām sorry because-
Simone Collins: Thatās okay.
You can turn it back on ... I
Octavian Collins: didnāt know.
Simone Collins: Okay. Love you, buddy.
Octavian Collins: Bye-bye.
Simone Collins: All right, letās go. Bye.
Malcolm Collins: But yeah, that, that, that situation is getting crazy. Crazy. Especially given the PR terror Mormonism has had with, like, Nick Shirley, for [00:55:00] example, being such a-
Simone Collins: I know. They, theyāve had so many good hits. You, youāve got Ballerina Farm, Nick Shirley.
Well, Ballerina Farm is mixed I guess. Mostly good though.
Malcolm Collins: On the conservative side itās mostly positive.
Simone Collins: Yeah
Malcolm Collins: Mm. And then just to shove the foot in their face so hard, and they keep making the mistake of, āWe canāt do anything about this. Itās just a random bad actor.ā And itās like, Iām sorry, you shouldnāt organize your religion in a way that explicitly allows you to do something about it if you want to make that excuse, right?
Which is... Thatās the thing that perplexes me. Like, I guess they donāt-
Simone Collins: Yeah, that like you can y- you can be a young woman whoās engaged to marry your future husband and go to, I guess your bishop or like some leader in your church, and you have to confess. Like, āOh, well, you know, we, we kinda had sex before marriage.ā
And then theyāre like, āWell, okay, you canāt have a temple marriage now. You...ā Like, āIām taking away all these things.ā And like, so all these people are being [00:56:00] severely punished for- And
Malcolm Collins: this guy swore to God and then lied, and itās provable.
Simone Collins: Yeah. Like i- in terms of just where I, the punishments are being applied, theyāre being applied in totally the wrong place.
So-
Malcolm Collins: Well, weāve got techno-puritanism, and if youāre a Mormon and youāre just disappointed in, in the way your church is handling things our religion is there for you. No scandals yet. No- Yet ... no bad actors. Give
Simone Collins: it time. Donāt worry. You can sign up to become the first scandal. We need one.
Scandals wanted. Mm.
Malcolm Collins: Anyway. Somebodyās got to be the first major scandal. All right.
Speaker 9: Gotta showcase my wifeās wonderful slow-cooked pork and bok choy. What are you guys doing?
Octavian? What you eating? A burrito. Do you like it? Yeah. Did you get the taco for that yourself? Well, I- Do you wanna watch My Hero Academia with me? The show we were watching [00:57:00] yesterday? Um, I guess
This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit basedcamppodcast.substack.com/subscribe -
In this episode of Based Camp, Malcolm and Simone Collins dive deep into the viral Bricks & Minifigs Lego scandal thatās rocked the Mormon (LDS) community. What started as a $200k consignment dispute involving stolen Lego collections has spiraled into allegations of corporate theft, police corruption, small-town collusion, and a massive cultural reckoning.
Malcolm explores why this story is so damaging to Mormon PR, draws historical parallels to the Mountain Meadows Massacre, and questions the Churchās response (or lack thereof). They discuss Mormon cultural tendencies, MLMs, in-group protection, and what this reveals about trusting religious communities when they hold local power.
A must-watch for anyone following the drama, interested in religious sociology, business ethics, or cultural fault lines.
Episode Transcript
Malcolm Collins: Hello, Simone. Iām excited to be here with you today. Today we are going to be c- talking about the bricks and minifigures story.
Ooh ... but I want to take it in a different direction than a lot of people have gone on it, and I wanna g- talk about the meta discussion around it, and the extreme damage. And Iāve noticed that, that one, n- usually, the Mormon Church, and Mormons more broadly, are good at dealing with PR disasters. Like the, the, the way that they, you know, turned, The Book of Mormon into, like-
Simone Collins: Oh, yeah.
Yeah ...
Malcolm Collins: advertising and-
Simone Collins: Spinning that Broadway play by Matt Stone and Trey Parker into something where they would just put-
Malcolm Collins: Good PR. Well, yeah,
Simone Collins: in a way, ... missionaries outside the theaters and be like, āHey, you enjoyed the play. Why not try the real thing?ā I mean, itās great.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, and in one of the other episodes we did, even the Mormon tendency to come off like creepy pod people to outsiders, To some outsiders
theyāve been able to subvert that into, like, āYeah, well, weāre just so wholesome,ā right? You know, [00:01:00] like, āThatās, thatās why weāre coming off that way,ā right? I mean, I still-
Simone Collins: Mormon is because theyāre just that wholesome. Get over it ...
Speaker 3: I heard thereās warm pie
Simone Collins: from
Malcolm Collins: my, my cultural background think they come off like creepy pod people.
Speaker 26: I donāt remember him being that friendly. Heās obviously one of them. How
Simone Collins: Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: And we have a whole episode if youāre interested on what causes that reaction, and I donāt think that Mormons have this emotional reaction, which is why they donāt realize that they trigger it so hard in other people.
Simone Collins: Well, not all S- Scots-Irish people have it. I, like, I donāt feel that. It, a lot of Mormons-
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, you donāt have the creepy...
But itās clearly a common enough expression in humans that thereās multiple horror series just made- Yeah ... out of triggering this reaction. Yeah.
Speaker 7: Stan, take the drug, man, prove it to us. Okay.
Open the door. It is so much better. Thereās no fear or pain. Itās beautiful. And you Weāll be beautiful. No [00:02:00] problems or worries. We want you. No pain, Stan? Weāre gonna come in here and Iāll show you some f*****g pain!
Malcolm Collins: And, and here Iāll put the scenes from The Faculty or, you know, Children of the Corn or something. But anyway, in this instance it has fundamentally sh- like oh, and more broadly, so for people who know our channel and our stance, weāre generally pretty pro-Mormon.
Weāre pro-Mormon for a few reasons. One is of all of the factions, like religious factions out there, theyāre one of the most persistently pro-technology. And if people are like, āWhy are they so pro-technology?ā When contrasted with other religious groups, itās because if you wanna be you know, status signal to other, you know, Orthodox Christians or to other Catholics, and you go to them and youāre like, āIām doing it the traditional way, the way we did things in the 1850s,ā you can look, like, extra cool.
If youāre a Mormon and you go like, āIām doing things the way we did it in [00:03:00] the 1850s,ā the other Mormons are gonna like, āY- you are doing things super wrong, then.ā And then if youāre like no, the, the 1920s.ā Yeah, a lot has changed since then. I, I mean, 1950s? W- w- weāre that different then, but itās still a pretty different beast.
Itās basically Mormonism evolves, even its belief system, so rapidly that there isnāt the desire, Because, like, if you go to the most of the, the most conservative Mormons, like if youāre talking about the ones who really try to preserve traditions theyāre typically the schismatic cultists. This is like the are FLDS schismatic?
I donāt remember
Simone Collins: No. Oh, oh, you mean from the mainstream church? Yes.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. Yeah, I followed the esoteric schematic,
Simone Collins: yeah. Yes. Okay.
Malcolm Collins: So, again, it makes them very pro-technology. Two, theyāre a minority population and any minority population is [00:04:00] useful to partner with if they have something akin to Christian values because you can largely bet on them at least within federal regulation to promote laws that maintain maximum i- cultural sovereignty because they benefit from that cultural sovereignty.
Although they do try to impose their values on others in the regions where they are the majority, which is what weāre gonna get to in this video. And so not just like positionally are they a good group to ally with but they also have been on a tear in terms of good social media. I often point out that we went from a Mormon stereotype when I was growing up of a nerdy guy who knocks on your door and has like a pencil protector and a Book of Mormon, like asking to talk to you or something, right?
Speaker 43: Well, you two boys can just buck right off.
Speaker 44: Maāam. You heard me. Take that Book of Mormon and shove it so far Up your righteous asses, that, and choke, you soul [00:05:00] soliciting pigfuckers.
Malcolm Collins: You know, this was the stereotype my generation grew up with when the word Mormon came up and something went through your head. For todayās youths, the stereotype, until maybe this event, and I think people are underplaying how big this is, was of a hot trad wife making muffins or something like that.
That was the stereotype Mormon in peopleās heads for a while. And the reason, and weāll get into like why people have had such a bafflingly stupid response to this it has made me much more wary of long-term alliances with Mormon communities more generally. Specifically, the response that we have seen to this from Mormons, ācause I went through like at least a dozen Mormon videos, at least a dozen Mormon reactions, and weāll get into
Iām assuming if youāre watching this, youāre broadly aware of what happened. But broad strokes, a Mormon-owned business staffed primarily by Mormons blatantly stole an [00:06:00] old manās sort of inheritance for his son $200,000 worth of Lego
Simone Collins: figures. Excuse me. Itās a little more complicated than that because, and this is something that you should appreciate as someone whoās been through this process a, an old man who had a very, very impressive Star Wars Lego collection provided it to a Bricks & Minifigs Lego store on consignment.
This means that ownership was transferred to them per the contract, and then the seller would receive the payout when those goods were sold. Problem is, that business was sold, and then the people who bought the business-
Malcolm Collins: No, it wasnāt sold. Sorry, youāre getting your facts wrong already.
Simone Collins: Really? I was told that it was sold
Malcolm Collins: no. So corporate illegally took it over. And they confiscated- Oh ... not just from this guy, but everything that this other business had, which is one of the reasons- Really?
Speaker 8: Basically, and weāll get into this later, a non-Mormon couple made the mistake of getting into a business relationship with a Mormon company, Bricks & Minifigs, and the company essentially just [00:07:00] stole their franchise and all their assets and then gave it to a Mormon couple
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, they ba- Thatās
Simone Collins: super ... Well, then they, there should be a clear-cut case to be like, āThis, my contract was rendered invalid.ā
Well,
Malcolm Collins: yeah, but the other person ... Again, I donāt wanna get into the details yet. Okay ... Iām just putting the broad, base-
Simone Collins: Well, I just, I, Iām glad that I brought that up because I think a lot of people are under the same impression that I was
Malcolm Collins: No, this other case is explains I think why, because itās baffling.
This is a company that makes 10 million a year. They have 300 locations. For them to cause such a blowup over $200,000 when they were very clearly in the wrong on this, and all of their paperwork makes it clear they were in the wrong on this which weāll get into, a baffling decision for somebody who used to run a company.
You just wouldnāt do this. We all the time gave... Even when, like, weāre not sure if the customerās in the right or something like that generally itās always just like, āYeah, itās not worth it.ā Right? You know, just, just make it go away, right? For $200,000 this [00:08:00] should have been, especially when it was pretty clear that it was their, their fault, a just make it go away issue, but they didnāt.
And so we need to get into why they probably didnāt, because itās actually almost kind of confusing that they didnāt.
Simone Collins: Huh.
Malcolm Collins: The... I actually think it has something to do with the store that they took over basically illegally. And it might implicate if they give back the money to this person, that they have to give back the money for everything else that they stole.
Simone Collins: Which it- Well, yeah. If, if theyāre selling Legos on consignment and they are no longer honoring consignment agreements and just treating it like itās inventory.
Malcolm Collins: No. Yeah. Itās not just that. So, okay. Iāll explain a little bit more.
Simone Collins: Thank
Malcolm Collins: you. The guy who originally owned it and had the stuff listed on consignment at the store- Mm-hmm
uh, Bricks & Minifigs messed up his banking information. They messed up his banking information, so he was unable to pay them normally. Then what they did is he, he worked with them in terms of [00:09:00] fixing it. It took a few months, okay? And they eventually worked it out, and at the end of the period where they worked it out, he then paid them the franchising cost for when he hadnāt, you know, when they, they had messed up his banking information, right?
And th- they agreed on the amount that he paid, they worked it out together, it was all amicable and things went ahead for a number of months. Then after, I donāt know how many months after this, maybe about four months after this or something like this corporate just comes in and says, āWe are forcibly shutting down your location and taking control of all the assets in it,ā because of this unpaid franchise thing.
But he had actually already paid the franchise thing and they have... Th- all of this is in writing, by the way. Oh. Right? Okay. Theyāre just asserting that, āWell, because you changed the format you paid it in during this period, it counts as unpaid, and we are seizing all of your assets.ā Yeah, like,
Simone Collins: you didnāt do it exactly correct, and therefore, dot.dot, somehow we own everything.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. And so then they seized all of, not just [00:10:00] the stuff in consignment, all of his inventory.
Simone Collins: Oh my gosh. Oh my gosh, thatās, that seems super easy to settle in court. Like, no oneās gonna accept that. Thatās-
Malcolm Collins: Well, yeah, itās really bad. But weāre seeing why they thought they could got a- get away with it. And it had to do with the community, and this is where it gets interesting and why me going over all the Mormon influencers covering this has been really interesting.
Simone Collins: Hmm.
Malcolm Collins: Is this is not something that could have happened in a normal community, when theyāre like, āOh, thereās some bad Mormon members,ā or something like that. Every incident tied to this case, whether itās the police harassment of the people trying to handle this, the illegal jailing of people trying to handle this or the owner thinking that they could get away with this basically having the entire town government on their side, right?
And people are like, āOh, this is normal small town stuff.ā This is not [00:11:00] normal small town stuff, okay? There is a reason why this is going so mega viral, and everyoneās like, āIāve never seen anything like this in my life.ā This is not normal small town stuff.
Speaker 9: And as a note, I grew up in small town Texas in large part. Never did I see anything remotely like this. This is not normal small town behavior in America
Malcolm Collins: And the very fact that many Mormons watch this event and then respond with, āThatās just normal small town collusionā-
shows, I think, a degree of incompatibility with American culture.
Simone Collins: Small town
Malcolm Collins: collusion ... which is not good, because other Americans watch the Mormon go up and be like, āThis is just a normal thing to happen in a town,ā and theyāre like, ā
Simone Collins: Really?ā Itās very hot vibes. I, I like
Malcolm Collins: it. What? No. Yeah. This isnāt a normal thing to happen.
This is an insane thing to happen. And when theyāre like, āOh, well, itās just bad,ā why are the police protecting a [00:12:00] private citizen here? And a, and a clear bad actor at this point, right? Why is the head of police going up and lying on behalf of this guy provably? Because we can show that he got the dates wrong on the things he was saying by things in pictures.
Theyāve been able to recreate audio of what really happened during the raid, right? Because they had a camera on and that they, police knew they had no cause to do this. Why would the police go so far as to arrest a private citizen merely trying to get his property back? At one point, like to get how crazy this is, I donāt know if youāve seen this They go to serve this guy his papers, and the police chief says this publicly, that the guy called the police and said he had his gun and he was thinking about shooting them because they were outside of his house trying to serve him his papers, which you have to do to start a court case.
The police then come, take the papers from this guy, say, āAre these even [00:13:00] real?ā They then call up the court system. The court system tells them, āThese are real papers.ā The police says, āOh, well then I guess Iāll go serve him the papers.ā The guy refuses to take the papers from the police officer, okay? And then the police officer, what do they do after this?
They arrest him. The guy trying to do the normal part of the legal process, which is serving him his papers.
Simone Collins: Oh, on what grounds? It was on the grounds that they were not correct.
Malcolm Collins: Harassment for trying to serve someone their papers.
Simone Collins: Oh, for harassment? Okay. You
Malcolm Collins: have to serve ... For, if youāre unfamiliar, in the United States, you have to serve someone their papers.
You have to show that they opened their, the, the mail containing the legal stuff for the times to start on this stuff.
Simone Collins: Itās this, itās just such a weird thing of like legal theater.
Malcolm Collins: It is weird, and I, we should probably ban it in the United States. Itās, itās a stupid thing to have.
Simone Collins: Itās really stupid, yeah
Malcolm Collins: but secondarily and I know it could lead to negative externalities. Thereās probably some other way we can do it, okay? But like this intentionally not [00:14:00] taking your papers, it should be able to show like youāre not legally allowed to not take your papers if a court something tries to serve them to you.
Simone Collins: Mm-hmm.
Malcolm Collins: And this is a position people could apply to, okay? Or like if youāre home or something like that, you know what I mean? But anyway and, and to get into like ... And, and when people are like, āWell, that doesnāt...ā The reason the cops are colluding with the business is very clearly because of a Mormon church affiliation.
In addition to that, when the cops, because in one instance very clearly, fortunately we have video of this, they did not do a rolling stop. They stopped at a stoplight. The cops then pull over the car and immediately say like, you know, not, āWhoās driving here?ā You know, āDid you do a stoplight?ā They go, āWhich one of you,ā itās in the YouTuberās name Ben
Speaker 10: All the police footage of this, and as you can see, we didnāt even do a rolling stop. We fully stopped at the stop sign. So this is an illegal traffic stop. So whoās Ben? Uh, me. Ben, [00:15:00] howās Utah? Itās good. You like it? Okay. Itās-
Malcolm Collins: .
And heās like, āIām Ben.ā And the cop then says in like your most typical villain voice possible or, or more like crazy corrupt zombie town voice possible, āHow are you liking your time in Utah?ā Which is clearly code for among the Mormons, right? Like that, he meant, he meant it in a, in a very specific way.
And so then Mormons could come to me and say, āWell, itās not like we or the church could do anything about this.ā And the problem is, is yeah, they absolutely could. The Mormon church isnāt like a Protestant denomination where itās decentralized and they canāt do anything. They actively and regularly excommunicate people over fairly trivial things.
Simone Collins: Well, you can, you could lose your, your temple recommends. Like, you, you could... Thereās, yeah, actually, the LDS church is uniquely well-positioned to basically both kind of economically plus more spiritually disempower or freeze out people who are doing naughty [00:16:00] things. So yeah, you can absolutely slap people on the wrist, and it doesnāt even have to be temporary.
It can just be like, āLook, weāre gonna take away your temple recommends until you give this guy his Legos and stop being a jerk. Youāre really making the
Malcolm Collins: church look bad.ā Itād be, yeah, itād be trivially easy for the church to handle.
Simone Collins: Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: But the church has decided not to handle it, and has a historic pattern of not handling things like this, which weāll go over.
Mm. Which make them a negative externality to other parties. Yeah ... actually, letās just go straight into this. Are you familiar, Simone-
Mountain Meadows Massacre.
Simone Collins: While you give that, the Mountain Meadows Massacre, just let me get Tex so you can give- Okay ... I just have to feed him. You can, you can, you can give the, you can give the Mountain- You, are
Malcolm Collins: you aware of it?
Simone Collins: Yeah.
Itās sad. Kids get hurt, so you should probably say it when Iām not here.
Malcolm Collins: All right. So the Mountains Meadow Massacre. In 1857 the m- members of the Church of Latter-day Saints, Mormons, killed 120 innocent immigrants who were simply [00:17:00] trying to...
They, they were also Appalachian immigrants, so my people, who were just trying to migrate to California through Mormon territory. Now it is true that Brigham Young sent them a letter telling them not to do this, and it didnāt reach them in time. But after they did it, no one was punished for 10 years, and only two people were ever excommunicated by the church, despite a large number of people being involved in this.
And the way that they did it was horrifying. They told the settlers, āOkay, well then just give us your guns and weāll let you through the territory.ā They gave them their guns, they separated them into three lines of men, women and children. They shot the men and the women, and then they
and then- or I should probably say something else there. And then with Styx, they did something until the other group wasnāt around anymore. And then [00:18:00] they tried to blame it all on Native Americans who were only lightly involved in it. The church worked to cover it up within the region. And to give you an idea, people maintained main positions of power within the Mormon church after this.
So if we look at an individual like, William H. Dame, who was the colonel, the commander of the Iron Military District and a high-ranking figure, he gave the final approval for the massacre. But was indicted because people wouldnāt speak out against him. The entire community stayed silent.
And he continued as a leadership figure within the church in the community afterwards. And then we also know other figures, like John Me Higbee, who was a participant, one of the, the people who, who did the beatings and everything like that. And he held positions in the church for years after this.. It was absolutely crazy, and for wondering why it wasnāt even tried until 10 years after the event, and the key perpetrators maintained positions in the church. Two of them [00:19:00] were eventually excommunicated, but only two of them when dozens of them took place. I mean, 100, over 100 people were massacred.
In case youāre wondering, children under seven were not unalived, and they were brought into Mormon families. But other than that, all the kids
So itās important to remember that this behavior of treating people outside the community as if their livesā welfare... Oh, and they took all the peopleās property. They just stole it all and distributed it, right? Treating them like their lives donāt matter if they think they can get an advantage over them is a historic way that Mormons act, and is likely the way they would act in a society if they ever gained majority control again.
Mm. Given that we both see it historically and we see it in current behavior. That doesnāt mean theyāre not a useful ally right now for our agenda. But in terms of groups gaining power in a region, one of the last groups you ever want to gain power is Mormons.
Speaker 12: And this is something that is reaffirmed every [00:20:00] time a Mormon says this is normal small town behavior, or, āOh, these are just individual bad actors, and itās irrelevant that theyāre members of the church,ā when the only reason anyone is acting this way is because of the church
Malcolm Collins: Mormons are only a really good ally because they are a minority right now, and they have to fight to protect the powers of minority traditions have to protect families from CPS, have to protect...
but the ways that they act when they have power has historically been pretty monstrous. And I think one of the things that this incident is bringing back for people-
Simone Collins: Oh ...
Malcolm Collins: is, āOh yeah, Mormons arenāt just, like, sweet trad wives. Theyāre also the type of people who will beat your children to death if they think they can get away with it, and steal all your stuff,ā right?
They, they also are the type of people who should genuinely be viewed adversarially if theyāre ever about to gain majority of control of anything that youāre affiliated with. [00:21:00] And they could make themselves, I mean, Mormonism evolves very quickly. They could make themselves into something not like that, and I think a lot of people had the perspective before this event blew up in the way it did, that the church had moved on from that mindset, that church members had moved on from that mindset.
The idea of, āOkay, well, if we have bad members, we deal with it,ā right? Like, that presumably thatās what the church did now, and now we are demonstrably seeing that is not the case. And worse, not only is it not the case, but the Mormon influencers who cover this show culturally The, the, like the wider Mormon community is nowhere near the place that they need to be to just, itād be so trivial.
It would hurt the church not at all to just ring the just say, āHey, weāre taking away your temple recommends card until you give this guy his money back.ā Simplest thing ever. It would cause literally no damage [00:22:00] for them. Mm. The key reason theyāre not doing this, right, the key reason theyāre not getting involved in this is because fundamentally it would be punishing Mormons for protecting Mormons in a way that was immoral.
And theyāre-
Simone Collins: Oh, see, I thought maybe theyāve had a conversation internally and been like, āIf we remove their temple recommends or we do anything to associate ourselves with them to comment on this, it would imply, it would make it out i- in the open and too obvious that this is a Mormon thing.ā Whereas now there is plausible deniability.
Malcolm Collins: Oh, thereās no plausible deniability.
Simone Collins: No.
Malcolm Collins: A- and I, I think that this is th- this is something that I think that Mormons when theyāre watching this donāt get that non-Mormons are going through watching this. Mm-hmm. When we watch this, right? Mm. And we see the sheer- Mm ... injustice of whatās being carried out here and, and just the wantonness [00:23:00] of it, the, the total lack of like, once we dominate a region we treat outsiders however we want, right?
The, the sheer wantedness of it. Like it, it, it makes me feel like youāre, youāre much better off being a Muslim in Israel than you are being a non-Mormon in one of these small Mormon towns, because apparently the police just donāt work for you. They, they do not even care about the pretense of impartiality.
They donāt even care about the pretense that theyāre anything other than... Thatās what it looks like to a non-Mormon watching this. And if youāre a Mormon and you watch this and your blood is boiling and youāre angry at these individuals, itās really important that you understand that Iād say about 80% of the non-Mormons watching this, when their blood is boiling and theyāre directing that anger in a direction, it is at Mormonism.
Mm. Because the- Or at the church ... the whole pattern, the whole weirdness of it is clearly created by a Mormon cultural foundation. And the bigger problem is, is it could be fixed. All Mormons have to do is [00:24:00] speak up. But I then started thinking about this more broadly and realized this is a larger failure of the Mormon church.
Because I was thinking about like, actually, you know thereās another thing that Iām really surprised the Mormon church hasnāt banned. āCause the Mormon church is willing to go out there and ban, you know, caffeine, although they loosen up- Not
Simone Collins: caffeine, hot drinks Yeah, hot drinks. Like basically just tea and coffee actually, not even really hot drinks
Malcolm Collins: from the words of wisdom. They ban gambling. Why canāt they ban MLMs? MLMs are a massive problem in the Mormon church. Worse than being a generic massive problem, theyāre... Because of the way MLMs work, fundamentally the way that people, even if somebody is making money in an MLM, at the end of the day theyāre only making money because they are disenfranchising more people downstream of it.
Okay? Now the prophet, the head of the Mormon church, has come out and said you shouldnāt use the Rolodexes you have from being a church member or church lists and stuff like that as part of your MLM prospecting.
Simone Collins: Hmm. [00:25:00]
Malcolm Collins: They could go a lot further than that because the core way that an MLM makes money is by basically scamming the people at the bottom of the pyramid, right?
And the problem is, is the way Mormon social communities work, and the reason MLM spread quickly within them, is because theyāre very good at converting each other. Theyāre very good at trusting each other. They have very low levels of incredulity when it comes to other Mormons, as weāre seeing play out in this particular instance.
So the central church could come in and say, āWe donāt do this anymore,ā because overall this obviously hurts Mormons the most that we donāt ban this. But also the people who run the MLMs that are doing this are predominantly Mormon, and they donate a lot to the temple. And so it sort of ends up in a, if we can milk money out of people, and this is where I fundamentally changed my thoughts on Mormons when I started thinking about MLMs, because I used to give the temple an out, right?
When people are like, āOh, look at the templeās financial scandals in the past,ā right? Like, they invested a bunch of money in a shopping mall, and Iām like, [00:26:00] āThatās what- the way youāre supposed to invest money, you doofus.ā You know? Thatās not a scandal. Thatās a normal thing to do, okay?
Simone Collins: Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: But to not restrict or even advise against joining MLMs when every sane person knows that they end up impoverishing hundreds of thousands of average Mormons every year, right?
Just so that they can get more donations. Thatās when I was like, āOh, this is more Machiavellian than I thought,ā right? This is more to its core sort of rotten than I really thought. Because the... And I even looked to see if theyād ever looked at doing that, and theyāve banned lots of other stuff. Like, why can you ban gambling and not MLMs?
Oh, because gambling institutions arenāt run by Mormons. I mean, the answer is obvious, right? Do you have thoughts before I go into the, the details of this particular case?
Simone Collins: No, please go ahead.
Malcolm Collins: One thing I want you to check out, Simone, ācause Iād be very interested to [00:27:00] know. Can you check if the original owners of the store, the one who basically had the store stolen from them-
Simone Collins: Okay
Malcolm Collins: if they were Mormons too?
Simone Collins: Okay.
Malcolm Collins: Okay. So Bricks & Mini figs operate franchises. The whole dispute stems from a deal made between a man called Brian Manswell and the former franchisee, law/Gorman.
Brianās father had a massive collection of allegedly $200,000 but heās now in poor health, so they were looking to sell. The owners of the store agreed to a consignment, meaning that they would hold all the sets at no cost, during which time the Manswell would still technically own them and they would advertise to sell them.
Weāve already explained this After taking consignment, the franchisees went to B&M corporate and told them that they were considering moving out of the country and inquired on the process of selling the store. Corporate responded by forcing them out and illegally taking possession of the store.
There is an actual video of the owners explicitly mentioning having the consignment and the corporate res- representative responding [00:28:00] by saying that they will handle it and take responsibility. So they both knew it and represented that they were to handle it, even when later theyāre like, āWell, we say we donāt handle consignment.ā
Yeah, but you signed a thing saying you would handle it, so youāre responsible for it. B&M install new owners in the Salem store J- Joshua Johnson and Brandon Best. Both of these franchisees and corporates refused to honor the consignment agreement, stating that consignments are prohibited by contract and that they have no responsibility for an unauthorized agreement entered in between Manswell and the previous owners.
Although, once again, their contract contradicts this, as does the actual video recording of the employees saying that they will take it on. It gets particularly awkward at this joint because B&Mās official stance is that they could only identify 5K worth of Legos, which potentially belong to Mansfeld, and they supposedly offered to give these over, but not reimburse for the tens of thousands of missing sets.
For the part of Manswell and Reckless Ben, the YouTuber who joined forces with Manswell to take the case they allege that this isnāt true at all and that they are in [00:29:00] possession of more sets. Or at least they were by the time they took over the store. Now, note heās able to prove that they had more sets because they had the sets for sale in their online store after they took it over, and he was just able to look at them and be like, āHere, these are the sets,ā right?
So theyāre provably, again, lying. What ensure... What ensues is a bunch of back and forth, āYou have my sets/money,ā and no, B&M in no uncertain words, threatened him stating that the cost of taking them to court would be prohibitively expensive and than heād ever make off the sets and that they intended to drag out the case if he tries.
So, after more nonsense they get accused of trespassing. They finally take them to small claims court, and they sort of trick them into not responding to the claims court and ended up winning $200,000. Then they go to collect the money, and they had shut down the store that day. To understand how severe this was they didnāt even tell like children who had their birthday parties at the store that it [00:30:00] was
Simone Collins: about to be
Malcolm Collins: shut
Simone Collins: down.
Oh. And they ended- This is clearly to evade. I see. Wow.
Malcolm Collins: They ended up sitting in the parking lot during their birthday after they had rented out and paid them for the spot that, that was multiple kidsā birthdays because they just didnāt handle it. A- and again, we see here complete uncaring for non-Mormons.
So, were you able to find out?
Simone Collins: Yeah. The only confirmed members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints are the corporate owners in Utah, not the original franchisees in Salem. Oh,
Malcolm Collins: no, no. The new franchisees who took over, Iām pretty sure, are, are confirmed Mormon. So when they stole it from the original franchisees, they gave it to a Mormon family.
Look that- Did they?
Simone Collins: Okay, the incoming Utah-affiliated owners of the same franchise location, Joshua Johnson and Brandon Best are described in coverage and videos as Mormons. So yes. So the,
Malcolm Collins: a Mormon corporate illegally took possession of the store and all its property and gave it to a Mormon family. And people are [00:31:00] like, āWhat does this have to do with Mormonism?ā
But then- Well,
Simone Collins: theyāre not a family. Itās Joshua Johnson and Brandon Best, but-
Malcolm Collins: Oh, I guess two Mormon c- people. Okay.
Simone Collins: Yes.
But allegedly, too, because as described in, in basic- like, like according to the YouTube coverage and on Wikipedia, theyāre Mormons, but again, allegedly. Okay.
Malcolm Collins: So what, what happened with him and the cops, to go over this.
There was a traffic stop where they alleged that they had heroin in the car after a two-hour search showed up nothing. They then switched track and start saying that they got dilated pupils, which by the way, is the opposite of when you have heroin. They finally gave up. That- Wait,
Simone Collins: really? Cocaine would cause that.
Wouldnāt heroin dilate your pupils?
Malcolm Collins: I think heroin causes constricted pupils, or Iāll go into this in, in notes.
Yep, I was right here. Heroin constricts pupils, the exact opposite of the reason they said they pulled him over
Malcolm Collins: Okay?
Simone Collins: Okay.
Malcolm Collins: And note, we have from their cams, because itās been leaked, that the cops said, āWe have nothing [00:32:00] to, to, how do we get them?ā Basically just seeing outsiders as annoying, describing them as annoying.
They, were, itās multiple unfounded traffic stops during which the police officer immediately addresses Bin in the backseat of the car by his name, being like, āWe know who you are. Thatās why weāre pulling this car over,ā even though there is zero reason to do so. Several police call-outs while trying to serve papers to Best, where the cops said...
And, and keep in mind, in one of these call-outs, and the chief of police admits this, he said he was thinking about shooting these people, okay? And had his gun, which I think might even be an illegal thing to do. Iām, Iām not sure, but I donāt think you can be like, āIām thinking about shooting you,ā while waving a gun at somebody.
Fi- yeah, thatās got to be illegal.
Speaker 13: Yes, this would count as brandishing a weapon and a criminal threat. So it is absolutely crazy that the chief of police literally is listing a criminal threat that this man is making to the chief of police as in his defense of his actions, in his defense of not [00:33:00] arresting the guy who made the criminal threat.
Uh, my God
Malcolm Collins: The, the cops just keep coming back every time he does this, removing him when heās trying to serve papers. Finally he gets arrested on some bogus charges for putting up advertising on a GoFundMe. So that was what they... And this was wild. Heās like, āIs it illegal to put up a GoFundMe?ā
And theyāre like, āIt is if you list the peopleās names on the GoFundMe.ā Okay? The p- the problem is, is that that would be libel. That would not be a criminal offense that you could go to jail over. And they put him in jail without bail as well, so he couldnāt- Ugh ... keep filming, ācause thatās what they were afraid of.
Oh. So itās gotten astronomically worse because of this. And then the police going up. They, thereās video of them going up to him, and heās just standing there in the video. They say that he was acting roughly, but heās clearly just standing there. They grab his arm and dislocate his shoulder.
Speaker 14: Now, you understand me? Donāt move like that. Okay? [00:34:00] Yeah, this cop pulled my arm so far back it dislocated my shoulder. He claims itās because I was attempting to make an escape or something. Donāt move like that. You understand me? Donāt move like that. Donāt move quick. Everybody just-
Malcolm Collins: Oh my gosh
this happens because his shoulder is very easy to dislocate. Apparently itās happened to him a lot. And so heās very aware of the sensation and what happens. Mm. And he put up a image of what a stock dislocated shoulder looks like in his video, and the police were like, āSee? Thatās a stock photo.ā
Itās like, of course he couldnāt get a real one. You guys had him in jail and wouldnāt allow him to be X-rayed, right? Like, um So, and Iāll note here, we always call out communities when theyāre not dealing with their own, right? And I do this, we did this with the ADL and Chabad with the Jewish community when we talked about speed running a pogrom.
Weāre now doing it even with communities that weāre fairly close with. Itās the Mormon community. Because this is astronomically bad. The level of brutality that we are seeing here in sort of a, a global stage in, in like an American town, right? And people can be [00:35:00] like, āOh, like this isnāt as bad as like the, the grape gangs in Britain and stuff like that,ā right?
And itās like, no, itās, itās not exactly, but youāve got to understand to your average American who comes from a non-Mormon culture, it actually kind of looks worse. And the reason it looks worse is the sheer audacity with which itās done, and the extent and, and the brazenness of the attempt to cover up, which implies to everyone all around, like if you were living in one of these communities or if these people had power, this is the way they treat you.
And whatās worse is the way Mormon influencers have reacted, which is to see this and be like, āEither this is normal small town stuff, or what can we do about it? Itās just individual bad actors.ā And itās like there are plenty of channels a Mormon can use to attempt to address this. Okay, so since all of this...
By the way, do, do you wanna say anything? [00:36:00]
Simone Collins: I hadnāt thought about it this way when hearing about the drama. Like, I hadnāt heard, thought about it of like, āOh, so you wanna know what itās like to live in a, an LDS caliphate? A Catholic caliphate?ā Like, look at what happens in the Hot Fuzz version of a Catholic town, an LDS town, a Baptist town, and I guess this is kind of interesting and telling.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. And, and- I appreciate you framing it this way ... and note here they can be like, oh, I actually lived when I was a kid we had a ranch. And so I lived in a small Texas town for a lot of my life. And I had encounters with the cops there and everything like that. I had encounters with other business people there.
Let me tell you what, in a small Texas town, nobody is acting like this. I donāt care if they go to the same church, theyāre interested in whatās right, not what church they go to, okay? And if you wanna be like, āWell, whatās it like to be an outsider in a small Texas town? Iām sure itās horrible there, too.ā
Whoās an outsider in a small Texas town? Leaflet. [00:37:00] She always talks about her town glowingly, right? Never had any problems with the locals, right? And, and, and so I, I wanna point out here again, this is not normal, right? Thoughts before I go further, Simone.
Simone Collins: Yeah, I mean, well, Iāve been in many small random towns in various places in the world where people are super chill.
So yeah, this is not normal at all.
Malcolm Collins: Okay, so i- in terms of whatās happened, basically itās all escalating. The police have not backed down at all. They did a, a press thing saying blah, blah, blah. Yeah, I
Simone Collins: saw footage from the press conference. Goodness gracious.
Malcolm Collins: The head of the company the, the, the toy company they- For its amazing
made an announcement basically saying, āWe did nothing wrong.ā I guess I should, again, ācause we covered this a bit at the beginning, but I want to, As business owners go into this again, okay? This is not a normal thing for a company to do. We have had-
Simone Collins: Yeah, in, in the midst of acquiring, buying or selling a, a company, what typically [00:38:00] happens is there are two ways you can buy or sell a company.
You can buy all the companyās stocks. It could be a stock purchase or, like, transfer of ownership, or it can be an asset purchase or transfer of ownership. And itās almost always assets, because people donāt want a stock purchase. It, it involves a transfer of liabilities that no one really wants. And so when you do an asset purchase or some kind of change of ownership of assets you also have to make a bunch of assignment agreements.
When we acquired a business on behalf of investors, the, the deal was almost lost over lawyers losing their minds over assignment agreements. We actually almost lost the deal because we refused to have every single vendor sign an assignment agreement saying basically, āWe will transfer our contract from the old corporation to the new corporation thatās acquiring the assets.ā
So this is just one of those things that, like, lawyers that get involved are crazy [00:39:00] about because it can, it can kill a business. Itās really important. The ownership of these things matters. All this stuff is really well documented, and this is not something that you just, like, miss. Itās not something, āOh,ā like, you got lost in the shuffle.
Like, I thought, I thought these were ours. Like wait, wait, no, what? Yeah.ā
Malcolm Collins: Yes, but this is the type of thing that, like, in a nor- if it was done normally, would have been a very long discussion, right? Yeah. And it- Or not ... and it, I mean, it was to the extent that it was filmed, right? Not a
Simone Collins: very
Malcolm Collins: long
Simone Collins: discussion.
So we do know that it happened. It just would have been, like, you know, we are assigning these, these as- these consignment contracts and, and the associated assets from business A to business B. Thatās it. Itās very simple. Like, okay, great, now we have, you know, th- these assets that we will sell and weāre obligated to sell, to, to give a certain cut of the profits to this person.
Like, itās so simple. And this is not something that is missed.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. No, no. I mean, for corporate to shut down a franchise and transfer its assets without the franchiseeās approval, when they werenāt in clear violation [00:40:00] to another party is- One, thatās insane. But then two, when the lawsuit came in, like the small $200,000 lawsuit, and you might be like, āThatās a big lawsuit.ā
That is not a big lawsuit for a company the size of B&M. Bricks and
Simone Collins: Minifigs?
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, Br- Bricks and Minifigs. It, it, it, it is literally, like it- in terms of what... Iām, Iām not gonna say itās a rounding error, but itās the type of thing, I would say over the course of the last few years in running our business, there have been multiple instances where sometimes you just get hit, where like it turns out an one of your employees did something wrong, $50,000 or something like that.
You get hit with it. You pay it out. You always pay it out. You never sit on that money because the, the lawsuit and the reputational damage is just too big, right? The idea that they wouldnāt do this, that theyād be like, āOh, weāre just gonna ignore the legal case here,ā right? Like, weāre... Or, or to even let it get to legal, right?
Over $200,000, which is nothing, is [00:41:00] astonishing and it displays- Well,
Simone Collins: and this also, itās not $200,000 that they paid for. Itās $200,000 of potential profit that they seized. Again, this is what it was valued at. This is not what itās being sold for, though I imagine with inflation itās probably being
Malcolm Collins: sold for that price.
No, no, no, but I just mean not just handing them $200,000 to make them go away.
Simone Collins: Oh, I see. Yeah. No, right, just buying it from them as, as a corporation. Oh, I see what youāre saying. Yeah. Yeah, as opp- They shouldnāt have even waited to sell it on consignment. They shouldāve just bought it from them.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. Well, no, when, when people start making a stink like this, itās generally good to just give them the money and make them go away.
Right? I
Simone Collins: see. Yeah, just buy them off. Yeah, that, that wouldāve been simpler. But I mean, I think also they couldāve just been like, āOkay, we will honor your consignment agreement. Like, we will sell it or if you wanna take it back, take it back. We wonāt sell it. I donāt care.ā
Malcolm Collins: No, but the ob- the obvious correct choice is just give them the money, right?
Mm-hmm. Like, that is... Sorry, running businesses, we have had to make this choice around large amounts of money. Not this large, but like $25,000 or something. We probably have to make [00:42:00] it about once a year a, a decision like this, Iād say in the range between, like, 25,000 and $50,000. And itās j- it sucks, but itās just part of doing business.
That they wouldnāt, or that they had adopted a business practice where all throughout corporate, keep in mind, it, it, it, this required both the owners of the shop deciding not to do anything about this and corporate deciding not to do anything about this, which likely required layers of decision-making in addition to whatever the police were doing required a mindset that I think- Mm
unfortunately for a lot of people, what a lot of people are gonna take away from this is, āOh, if you do business with a Mormon and you create a successful store theyāll just take that away from you and give it to a Mormon family one day.ā As b-
Simone Collins: This is bad too, because Mormons are, have, have a really otherwise great professional reputation.
Especially LDS men who have served on missions, because they have basically gone through trial by [00:43:00] fire with patience, persistence, friendliness, sales skills, cold calling. Like, this is an amazing- Theyāre great
Malcolm Collins: salespeople ...
Simone Collins: yeah, like you, and, and they are disproportionately well represented in the CIA, like many high level good, like, government roles and stuff because itās like, okay, these are people who are consistent, trustworthy, honorable values aligned, Mm
like, good. And, and stuff like this takes that reputation and weakens it, weakens it significantly because thereās this now negative baggage.
Malcolm Collins: Well, it inverts it to an extent. Itās like, oh, M- Mormons might make great employees, but never trust a Mormon in a Mormon-controlled territory if, if they are in the majority position or, or, or running a bus- business.
Like, never trust them to do... And, and if youāre like, āWell, how can you apply this to...ā Again, this is the problem with a centralized church. Because you have a centralized church and the church isnāt doing anything about this, and you could say thatās not the churchās role, and itās like w- the churchās role is to [00:44:00] make the lives of Mormons better, right?
To advance the Mormon cause. Yes, it is their role to handle negative PR when it comes up, right? Even if itās through back channels, even if itās through the guyās local pastor or something like that. There, there are few things happening right now that are more the churchās role. The bigger problem is the idea that like, oh, we can Because as I pointed out, the situation arose because of Mormon culture, peculiarities of Mo- Mormon culture.
If it arose because of peculiarities of Mormon culture, obviously people are gonna blame it on Mormonism, so you could use peculiarities of Mormon culture to address it. Except the opposite has happened.
Simone Collins: Hmm.
Malcolm Collins: Right? A, a denial of responsibility and saying these are individual bad actors. Yeah. And to that extent, I think one thing that Iām gonna...
Because weāve done a number of videos where we called out communities protecting their own bad actors, and how that externalizes them as a threat for everyone around them.
Simone Collins: Yeah, I think at this point weāve called out Catholics and Jews for this, [00:45:00] right?
Malcolm Collins: No, not Catholics for this. Jews heavily
Simone Collins: for this.
Have we, have we yet, we havenāt yet called out, or maybe me- mentioning- Jews and trans
Malcolm Collins: people, and now
Simone Collins: Mormonism on the left ... youāve called out Mennonites for this because of the whole rape thing.
Malcolm Collins: Oh, the rape. Well, yeah, no, but th- th- thatās different. The, the, I guess, yeah, the Catholics did attempt to protect.
But anyway, I want to go and say that as, because now Iāve realized weāve got a number of people who follow the religion we created, techno-puritanism so, just sort of like as a Malcolm words of wisdom or whatever, like- ... when this w- techno-puritan central organization is finally set up, the, the index when we have all of the tools for setting it up one of its core roles should be policing the morality of members with ability to excommunicate for demonstrably- I was
Simone Collins: just thinking of like-
immoral acts ... well, policing bad actors. Itās not so much- Mm ... about policing morality as it is policing people who are doing harm in society.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, I think do, m- m- yeah, thatās the better way to do it. It doesnāt matter their [00:46:00] personal morality, their morality at home or anything like that. Only when they externalize harm onto other communities and the higher threat than externalizing harm on other communities is protecting a member of the techno-puritan community who is externalizing harm on other communities.
Simone Collins: Yeah.
Donāt protect bad actors I mean, look, it put a target on the back of the progressive movement too. I was just looking at thereās been both, like, on X and through mainstream media, coverage of dwindling support, for example, gay marriage. It had its high at almost... So almost half of Republicans supported gay marriage around 2019.
And then I think it peaked at 2021. Between 2021 and 2024, it went from just under 50% of Republicans supporting gay marriage to now about 31%. And I think a lot of that had to do with the progressive movement on the whole supporting bad actors. And-
Malcolm Collins: Yeah ...
Simone Collins: trying to impose culture on people who donāt want that culture imposed on them.
Whereas before, the framing had always [00:47:00] been, āJust let us live our lives. Please, just let us live our lives.ā And everyoneās like, āYeah, okay. Iāll, like, thatās fine.ā And
Malcolm Collins: this is the thing where the gays could say, āWell, thereās no king gay that could, you know, do something about this.ā King gay. The problem is there is a king Mormon who can do something about this.
Oh. There is a central organization, and thereās people paid very good money- I thought you were gonna say
Simone Collins: thereās a gay king, and Iām like, āWhoās the king of the gays?ā This
Malcolm Collins: is exciting. Actually, did you know that the United States military spent hundreds of thousands of dol- I think it might have been arou- around a few million dollars trying to find the king of the gays?
Simone Collins: Wait, what?
Malcolm Collins: Oh, yeah. D- did you know the name of the person they were looking for?
Simone Collins: No.
Malcolm Collins: They, they, they ended up doing a dragnet to attempt to find- A
Simone Collins: dragnet? Sorry.
Malcolm Collins: S- Simone, I said they, they did a dragnet to attempt to find Dorothy.
Simone Collins: Huh? I donāt get it.
Malcolm Collins: You donāt, you know how you say you are gay back in the day, āIām a friend of Dorothy.ā
Simone Collins: Oh, no. Iāve never heard that before. Oh,
Malcolm Collins: youāve never heard the saying? I [00:48:00] was- It was a behind the way to say- No ... Iām gay is Iām a friend of Dorothy. Wait, really? And so they thought Dorothy, which meant Dorothy from The Wizard of Oz, was a real person. And so they attempted to
Simone Collins: find- They thought Dorothy was the king of the gays?
Like
Malcolm Collins: the, the key network o- or of the gays who like made the whole gay social scene work, this mysterious Dorothy.
Simone Collins: Thatās amazing. I thought you were making a pun with Dragnet. I, yeah, I donāt know. I, I, I wish that in the US military we just started recruiting for like, it was the Band of Thebes, right?
Just like a, a, a gay subset. That would be so cool. Thatād be so hot.
Malcolm Collins: Band of Thebes. Yeah, no, but all, all gay regiments. Thatās the way we should do gays in the
Simone Collins: military. You, no, I, I think, yeah. Like, we, we need to start having affiliate of regiments. Like, I want, I want the militant lesbians regiment. I want the Band of Thebes 2.0 USA edition.
I want
Malcolm Collins: the- I actually think you could probably do a pretty good job ... I
Simone Collins: want, I want the furries. I want the furry regiment. I want them fighting in costume, but with like heads up displays inside their, [00:49:00] their like fursona heads. I, I want, I want affiliate of ad hoc-
Malcolm Collins: But, but anyway, ...
Simone Collins: military bands.
Malcolm Collins: This has been really interesting to see.
Simone Collins: Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: I think people are underestimating the cultural effect of this movement long-term. This moment has blown up in a way that, I mean, literally this is like, I, I, I think in terms of like average home penetration, the Tiger King of this, this d- you know-
Simone Collins: I donāt, I donāt know if itās Tiger King level, but I will say that this has been surprisingly well-covered.
Iām kinda like, ugh, like do we really care that much?
Malcolm Collins: Well, I mean, what I wanted to cover it as from a, like, as howās it gonna change society? Itās gonna make people significantly more suspicious of Mormons or ever allowing Mormons to get power, and it makes me suspicious of Mormons. Like, I wanna be clear, it makes me suspicious when Mormons who I thought were normal, sane people are like, āThis is just a few bad actors.
This isnāt a Mormon [00:50:00] problem.ā Completely, when Mormon culture leads to bad action, completely saying, āOh, not my responsibility,ā I was like, āOh, okay, well, f- me then,ā right? You know? We just need to grow the techno-puritan alli- you know, federation. Y- get more members, continue to grow, have lots of babies.
And then you, you guys can have an organization you can join that doesnāt have lots of crazy scandals. And it actually punishes its own bad actors. Wouldnāt that be fun?
Simone Collins: I guess, you know, the, the OG Puritans were pretty famous for doing that, but sometimes they went a little too far. You know- But they did do-
witch hunts and all that.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. Thatās- The, the OG Puritans did punish their own community members when they externalized power more. A
Simone Collins: lot. No, it was like, it was a pa- it was a national pastime. We did, we went overboard. Weāre like, āYou said something about your dog. You need to die.ā All sorts of things.
Very, very overboard. But anyway, thatās itās-
Malcolm Collins: Well, I, yeah, my biggest takeaway of this is no matter how aligned [00:51:00] you are with a group, I guess what this hammers home for me is- Well, all other groups are fundamentally evil. We need to grow our own
Simone Collins: and
Malcolm Collins: be prepared to- Oh, for th- Like, but I, but Iām sorry, groups I keep thinking are, are okay.
It, it does
Simone Collins: The Mormons are fine. Look, I think this had to do more with messy governance and people not coordinating well on this, and maybe the, the mechanism by which you know, temple recommends are revoked or established just not really working well, it being kind of complicated. Because I think that temple recommends, I, I donāt know the full way that, like, you get them, but I think they happen at the bishop level.
So, like, also you have to keep in mind that, like, they, the bishop whoās responsible for the various policemen and then the various corporate people, like, itās all separate non-coordinating volunteers who have full-time jobs, by the way. [00:52:00] Like, thereās also the fact that this is a church that, except at the very highest levels, is made up of entirely volunteer work of, of full-time employed people.
Malcolm Collins: Hold on, Simona. I, I donāt... No. The, the, they, the temple could act if they wanted to. The local bishop could act if they wanted to. And if people are like, āItās
Simone Collins: not the churchās-ā
Malcolm Collins: Right,
Simone Collins: but also theyāre kind of busy. Things fall through the cracks when you do this much
Malcolm Collins: If, if, if people are like, āItās not the churchās job to police peopleās morality,ā thatās literally exactly their job, right?
Itās to, itās to help people live moral lives. Itās not the churchās job to protect the churchās reputation. Thatās literally... Like, those are their two only jobs. And if youāre like, āWell, they never get involved in civil matters or something like that,ā or well, maybe they should, you know? In, in this particular instance.
Because they have this whole- Look, I,
Simone Collins: I imagine that there might be some reckoning or discussion that takes place after this having happened, but that wouldnāt surprise me. So-
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, itāll just be too late then. They, they have literally days to react at this point. [00:53:00]
Simone Collins: Yeah. But I think if they act quickly, they can fend off reputational damage somewhat.
Malcolm Collins: So yeah, weāll see if they do it.
Simone Collins: Let me- Time
Malcolm Collins: will tell ... it would have to be pretty severe at this point, whatever they do, but weāll see.
Simone Collins: Mm, it, thisāll blow over pretty fast, I think.
Malcolm Collins: No, it wonāt.
Simone Collins: Weāll see then. Iām, Iām
Malcolm Collins: obviously team Mormon. This will be a lasting cultural memory for a generation.
Simone Collins: Ah, I donāt know.
I, I doubt.
Malcolm Collins: Just keep in mind, itās not... Every single one of the largest streamers has done something on this
Simone Collins: Yeah, itās true. Yeah, this is ... And on both sides of the political spectrum too. Itās just basically like everyone is excited to dunk, to dunk on-
Malcolm Collins: This, this is the new Carol Baskin ... corporate Bricks &
Simone Collins: Minifigs.
Malcolm Collins: But worse, because I didnāt feel a visceral anger- I
Simone Collins: thought there were a bunch of Team Carol people. There are no Team Bricks & Minifigs people. Oh no, thereās a few Team Carol people,
Malcolm Collins: but thatās the thing. Like, with Carol, I was disgusted by her, but I didnāt feel a visceral rage at her like I do these people.
Simone Collins: Well, right, and this, this is a very unidirectional thing. Everyone [00:54:00] hates Brits- Bricks & Minifigs. Yeah. And everyone-
Malcolm Collins: And the local police department.
Simone Collins: And well, of course, and the, the local police department, which is acting ... Yeah, no, like, the, the, itās, itās
Malcolm Collins: one of these- Theyāre acting like a pod person town, okay?
Thatās what theyāre acting like.
Simone Collins: Oh, gosh.
Malcolm Collins: I, I, I have no other way to describe this other than bizarre and otherworldly. It borders on having accidentally driven into a horror movie, when you see, like, the police pull them over and be like, āWhich one of you is Ben? Howās it feel to be in Utah?ā Thatās bizarre and pod person-y, okay?
Okay. Thatās not a normal thing to do or say.
Simone Collins: Itās not great. Yeah. Itās itās not great.
I agree. Well, weāll see. I love you, though.
Malcolm Collins: Love you too.
Simone Collins: Iāll see you in data center
Malcolm Collins: You had the kids walk around with bagpipes today. One, one of our fans- Yeah, we had
Simone Collins: an award-winning- ... provided them with bagpipes ... bagpiper perform for our kids, and [00:55:00] they thought it was the coolest thing ever.
I mean, of course, in the moment they just looked stunned ācause what else do you do the first time you encounter a bagpipe? Youāre like, āWhat is happening to me right now?ā But he played a perfect... Oh, like, two perfect songs, just really good. Wow, what a day. I was just thinking, I was... To this weekend, I took this kids to this spot up on the hill, the, that picnic rock by the old stone bridge, and I told them it was where the fairies were, and they thought it was too windy for fairies, which is fair.
You know, mosquitoes canāt land on you when itās too windy, and I donāt think fairies can be out either. And then I, I pulled up pictures using Google Image of the Cottingley Fairies, ācause it was like, oh yeah, like famously young children have found fairies in, in the, in the woods. And I thought it would be convincing because, you know, like, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle was a huge fan of the Cottingley Fairies.
Heās like, āOh, this confirms it.ā And of course, Tosia looks at them and heās like, āWow, [00:56:00] fairies.ā And Titan looks at it and sheās like, āOh, the cotton candy fairies.ā And then she just assumes that they make cotton candy, so thatās all she fixates on. That she wants not cottonlea, Cottingley or whatever
Malcolm Collins: fairies.
What is the Cottingley Fairies? Is this a scam or something? Itās
Simone Collins: the girls... You know those pictures of young girls with fairies? And they, theyād convinced... They, they ran, wandered off into the woods with their fatherās camera and took pictures and then came back. Their father developed the photos, and lo and behold, the girls are posing next to beautiful fairies.
And at the time, no one could figure out what it was. They could confirm the photos were not doctored at all. Of course it turns out that- The girls had just cut out illustrations of fairies and arranged them well and took pic- pictures. Like, they were very good amateur photographers, but, like, theyād fooled a bunch of adults, including the writer of the Sherlock series.
This, [00:57:00] the clever man. Octavian takes one look at the photos and heās like, āThey just cut out pictures of fairies.ā And Iām like, ā
Malcolm Collins: What?ā Oh, I love Octavian already. Smarter than Sherlock.
Simone Collins: What on earth? What on earth, Octavian?
Malcolm Collins: You are, you are too great at the fairy-
Simone Collins: But, but this, this is the same kid who, like, turns to me and is like, āWell, can I take my esophagus to Target?ā
Because I, I have told him he can use a $25 Target gift card if he can just do the basic addition and subtraction he needs to in order to tell if he has, like, toys within his budget. You know, like, okay, well, you bought something with $4 and then... and another thing- Yeah ... with $2. How much money do you have left?
Then he can use the gift card. And, and he, he just doesnāt wanna do the math, and so I, I, I bought him an abacus, and he keeps calling it his esophagus, and itās very annoying.
Malcolm Collins: And he wants to take it to Target to do the math? And he wants to take his esophagus to Target, ācause then
Simone Collins: he [00:58:00] can- Does he
Malcolm Collins: actually know how to do math on the abacus?
Simone Collins: Yes, he can do esophagus math, thank you very much.
Malcolm Collins: You taught him that?
Simone Collins: Yes. Well, th- this thing, itās been around for, what, thousands of years. Itās extremely intuitive. You count the freaking beads. Itās, itās really good- I, well, I know thereās, like- ... for developing number sense. ...
Malcolm Collins: specific ways to do, like, multiplication and stuff on it.
Simone Collins: Yeah. No, heās not at that level. Weāre at the, like, the beads move on this side, and hereās, you know, just move over the 10 beads.
Malcolm Collins: Addition and subtraction, okay, great.
Simone Collins: Yeah. Great, great. No weāre not, like, at the- But I love that heās- Weāre not- ... teaching technical terms here ... Peruvian mountain traders yet, no.
Malcolm Collins: And people are like... Again, when theyāre like, āWhy donāt you just teach your kids the Christian stories in the traditional way?ā And Iām like, āBecause I know my kids are like me, and theyāre going to be very, very skeptical people.ā They just
Simone Collins: cut out the fair- pictures of fairies. I canāt believe it. Anyway.
Yeah. I thought, I thought I was just gonna completely entrance the children and Octavian just has to blow it off. .
Malcolm Collins: Immediately. All right. Well, Iām gonna get started here. Iām, Iām proud of
Simone Collins: you. [00:59:00] Okay.
Speaker 16: Do you think the answer is still gonna be there? Letās, weāll find out
Well, weāre in a more sheltered area, so itās nice and calm here. Feels good, right?
This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit basedcamppodcast.substack.com/subscribe -
In this episode of Based Camp, Malcolm and Simone Collins tackle one of the most provocative questions in the age of AI: Does artificial intelligence finally make communism feasible?
They explore the structural failures of historical communism (incentives, power consolidation, information problems, and catastrophic mismanagement), why small-scale communism works (families, kibbutzim) but large-scale versions collapse, and whether AI-driven post-scarcity could solve these issues or simply replicate the same human problems of bad actors, bureaucracy, and distorted incentives.
Topics include:
* The Sam Altman UBI study and why unconditional cash transfers often fail
* Why Soviet science succeeded in some areas but governance always failed
* Power vacuums in anarcho-communism vs. centralized systems
* The future of ātechno-fiefdoms,ā AI-managed communities, and human reserves for those left behind by AI disruption
* Demographic collapse and the likely rise of religious/techno-puritan movements
A raw, nuanced debate that challenges both right-wing and left-wing assumptions about economics, human nature, and the coming AI era.
Show Notes
Why Implementations Fail
* Economic calculation problem (Ludwig von Mises, 1920):
* Without private property and market prices, planners lack information on relative scarcity/costs.
* You canāt rationally allocate steel, labor, or grain.
* Attempts at āmaterial balancesā or cybernetic planning (e.g., Soviet OGASāan attempted nationwide information network) failed repeatedly.
* HOW AI CAN FIX THIS
* Adequately and dynamically track supply and demand
* Incentive and knowledge problems (Hayek):
* People respond to incentives.
* Common ownership dilutes responsibility (ātragedy of the commonsā).
* Local knowledge is dispersed; central decrees canāt match it.
* AI can just more adequately monitor dispersed local knowledge
* Innovation and maintenance collapse without profit/loss signals.
* If AI becomes like a mother and just āhandlesā everything, then itās not an issue
* Power dynamics:
* Enforcing abolition of private property and markets requires massive coercion.
* With AI, weāre approaching a place where the majority of the population wonāt have anything (or anything to lose), property-wise.
* This concentrates power in a vanguard/party, which becomes a new ruling class (see Milovan Djilasā The New Class).
* We might see a bifurcated society: One ruling elite doing their own thing, then AI-led/governed communist societies for everyone else
* The state doesnāt wither; it entrenches (Orwell, Animal Farm).
* This is more of an issue when the state is fighting over something desirable, but what weāre looking at is a society largely abandoned by the elite.
* Human nature (loaded with self-interest, status-seeking, family preferences as it is) doesnāt vanish.
* Not a problem if a non-biological mind is governing.
* Repeated patterns:
* Initial revolutionary fervor lead toā¦
* purges of āwreckersā/kulaks, which lead to
* Shortages, which lead toā¦
* blame external enemies/capitalism, which lead toā¦
* more controls, which lead toā¦
* corruption/black markets, which lead toā¦
* reform or collapse
* This is not bad luck or ārevisionismā; itās structural.
* Even small-scale communes (e.g., 19th-century utopian ones, Israeli kibbutzim long-term, or modern intentional communities) often dissolve due to free-riding, exit of talent, and disputes over āneeds.ā
* HOWEVER, with AI, I imagine communism to not come as a revolution, but rather a deus ex machina saving the leftovers in society from death.
Why has āreal communism never been tried?ā
āReal communism has never been triedā is a rhetorical defense that shifts the definition of communism away from every historical implementation. It functions as a motte-and-bailey tactic or āno true Scotsmanā fallacy: the ideal (a stateless, classless, moneyless society of perfect equality and abundance) is defended, while real-world attempts are dismissed as insufficiently pure.
Defenders counter with ānot realā because:
* Stalin/Mao ābetrayedā the revolution.
* No stateless end-stage achieved.
* External sanctions/wars interfered.
* āState capitalismā or ādeformed socialism.ā
What āreal communismā means in theory
Marx and Engels described:
* Socialism as the transitional stage: proletarian dictatorship, state ownership of production.
* Communism as the higher stage: state āwithers away,ā common ownership, āfrom each according to his ability, to each according to his needs,ā no classes, no money, no scarcity.
Lenin, Trotsky, and later Marxists added layers like vanguard parties and democratic centralism to get there.
Every major attempt followed Marxist blueprints:
* USSR (1917-1991): Bolshevik Revolution, War Communism, collectivization, Five-Year Plans. Result: Holodomor famine (millions dead), Gulags, purges, stagnation, collapse. Leaders admitted severe deviations but blamed ācapitalist encirclementā or ābureaucracy.ā
* China (1949-): Great Leap Forward (30+ million dead from famine), Cultural Revolution, mass starvation and chaos. Shifted to market reforms under Deng for survival; current system is state capitalism with CCP control.
* Cambodia (Khmer Rouge, 1975-79): Explicitly tried Year Zero agrarian communism. ~1.5-2 million dead (25% of population) via execution, starvation, overwork.
* Cuba, North Korea, Vietnam, Ethiopia, Venezuela: Similar patternsāinitial redistribution, central planning, suppression of markets/dissent, economic decline, emigration, authoritarianism. Venezuela went from richest Latin American country per capita to hyperinflation and collapse under ā21st-century socialism.ā
The Black Book of Communism estimates 80-100 million deaths from democide, famine, and repression across implementations. These werenāt fringe experiments; they were the largest-scale attempts, backed by ideology from Marxās writings.
Episode Transcript
Malcolm Collins: Hello, Simone. Today we are gonna be discussing an exciting topic, which is does communism make sense now? Specifically what weāre gonna be digging into here is, like, we are known as, I guess, far right-wing YouTubers or podcasters or intellectual influencers.
I donāt know, right? No. But, but people consider us far right-wing. Now, a lot of our fans consider us very centrist, so maybe, but I, I identify as, as right wing, so whatever, right? Like, I... The, the, the sane far right is where I think Iād put us, right? A- at least within, like, the tech right circles and stuff like that.
Which puts us in an interesting position vis-Ć -vis communism, ācause Iām not gonna come out here and just be like... We have said it in the past on the show very clearly that communism may work in a post-scarcity economy. And we have also a number of times gone into what it means when we say something like that, right?
Mm-hmm. Where, like, we are putting [00:01:00] extremely heavy caveats on this. When people have done UBI experiments and they have just handed people money, they have seen extremely bad outcomes. The most famous is the Sam Altman one where they gave people $1,000 every month for three years, and the people who had been given the money they, they had less money at the end of it, total money, than the people who had been given nothing in terms of, like, wealth increase, right?
They, they didnāt spend any more time with their kids. They didnāt have any more kids. They didnāt spend any more time in education. They really only spent more time in recreation. Thatās it.
Simone Collins: And they paid down their debt a little, so thatās nice.
Malcolm Collins: Hmm. That doesnāt really mean anything. Oh, they
Simone Collins: visited the doctor a little more.
Malcolm Collins: It doesnāt really mean anything if on net they had less money.
Simone Collins: Yeah. So
Malcolm Collins: yes, they paid down their debt, but on net they had less money. Right. So, just a disaster, and weāve seen this in communities that are offered UBI, right? Like Native American communities, for example, where we see them just completely [00:02:00] dissolve in terms of productivity, in terms of drug addiction, in terms of alcohol addiction the moment they get on something that is the equivalent of, like, UBI or, like, local communism or something like that.
And so then the question is okay, How do we eh, th- that, that all being the case, like also clearly AI is gonna disrupt what the economy means, right? And, and, and it may not happen this generation, right? It may not happen, ... Well, itās probably gonna happen in our lifetimes, if Iām gonna be honest.
Like, if we look at- Yeah ... the speed of AI in relation to automated workers e- even, even for physical labor from what weāre sort of seeing behind the scenes, thatās developing a lot faster than people realize. And that we may be replacing people in a lot more fields a lot faster than people think.
And so then the question is, is okay, well if that happens, then what does the economy mean? How do you have a [00:03:00] functional economy with struggle and some form of scarcity so people donāt go crazy without what weāve come to understand as, like, market labor, right? And so to explore this subject, I want to focus on a few areas.
I want to focus on, like, underlying how does capitalism help people? Examine the individual structures within capitalism that lead to the net outcome of positive human results. And see how those can be potentially mimicked in a post traditionally capitalist economy.
Simone Collins: Mm-hmm.
Malcolm Collins: But then secondarily the big question we have is Okay, how does communism often fail, and how could AI, or even could AI realistically prevent these failure scenarios?
Simone Collins: Mm.
Malcolm Collins: So, classic failure scenario in communism that Iāll sort of walk people through why, why communism almost always [00:04:00] fails. Not almost always. It, it literally always fails above certain sizes. Communism works in small government stuff, like it works with some of the kibbutzim. It works with families.
Every family is communist. W- w- sorry, people donāt understand what I mean by that. Like itās from each according to their abilities, to each according to their needs, right? Like my baby doesnāt work, right? And I canāt produce milk for them, right? You know, the person who can produce milk produces the milk.
The, the, the, the baby and the kids are not expected to bring in an income at this stage, right? You know, we, but we, we still support them. The types of jobs and roles that each of us take on are the types of jobs and role that weāre best at, both due to our educational background, proficiencies, and yes, gender.
So we live in a communist structure already. We live in a communist utopia already, itās just a very small one. But the question is, is why does it break down at a societal level? Weāve written extensively on this, so Iāll keep it pretty short. The key reason is [00:05:00] is when you are creating a larger communist structure, you need to centralize power in a way that rewards bad actors.
And a lot of people donāt s- s- theyāre like, āOh, itās that people arenāt motivated when they just get money from the state,ā or something like that. Or that you canāt do advanced things in a communist system, and thatās not true. Like, that, thatās actually, like, factually untrue. Like, the one thing the Soviet Union was actually pretty good at was science.
Like, they were beating us soundly in the space race for quite a long period of the space race. They had many excellent, excellent scientists. Yes, because of government bureaucracy and the way sort of power gets captured in communist systems, they also ended up making catastrophically stupid scientific blunders that killed hundreds of millions of people.
The Chinese did this as well. This is typically in fields like biology and, and stuff like this. But in, in physics, they [00:06:00] did pretty well. So no, itās, it, itās actually not that people are just unmotivated in these systems. Highly motivated, highly conscientious people are typically equally or, if not, even more motivated in communist ecosystems.
Where communist ecosystems really break down is for less competent fields. The, the average line worker and stuff like that. Because at this point, you donāt wanna do those jobs. Nobody wants to do those jobs. People often end up doing them at the point of a gun barrel and maliciously poorly. Itās, itās the average desk worker job.
Itās not the, āI got my best job I could have ever gotten because Iām literally one of the best people in the country at doing said job.ā Like, āIām a gun nut, and now I get to spend all of my day coming up with gun designs, and now we have the AK-47.ā Right? You know, āIām a, a nuke nut.ā Right? āIām really interested in cutting edge nuclear technology, and now we have a, a Soviet atomic bomb.ā
Right? By the way, like, to put in [00:07:00] context how impressive that is, Iran still canāt make an at- now a- admittedly, like, everyoneās mad at them, but, like, the, the Soviet Union was doing this stuff, like, over half a century ago, right, at this point. So Communism can actually motivate the very best to do the very best.
One of the problems you have with Soviet science, sorry if Iām getting on a sidetrack here but they, like, really screwed up their tank production, for example simply because of, like, government politics that ended up prioritizing one idiotās designs over the guy who was actually more competent because Soviet systems are not always good at finding the most competent person.
Huh ... capitalist systems also struggle sometimes to find the most competent person, but generally- True
Simone Collins: story ...
Malcolm Collins: like, if the government turned me away in a capitalist system, I could presumably go and build my own company separately off of my ideas. It doesnāt work that way, especially not in a country like the United States.
Like, I go off [00:08:00] and I wanna build my own tank and because somebody else has, like, government crony contract, they, they still get the government crony contract because theyāre at Boeing and theyāll, theyāll kill you or something. You know, thatās, thatās the way this works. But again, the, the, the point Iām making here is yes, Sovietism leads to catastrophic inefficiencies but you can get those within at least what we call capitalist ecosystems as well, right?
Mm-hmm. So now back to what the real problem of communism is So when youāre going down a communist path, you essentially have two strategies that you can attempt. You can say, āWeāre gonna centralize all the power into one bureaucracy and this single bureaucracy is going to manage all forms of the economy and everything like that.ā
And everybody knows, like, generally this doesnāt seem to really work for a number of reasons tied to, like, inefficiency, but weāll put those reasons aside in a bucket for now. So strategy [00:09:00] number one, centralize everything. Essentially youāre creating a country thatās ruled by a single monopolistic company.
That is, that is functionally what, what that form of communism is. Which is why I always say that the end state of communism and the end state of extreme libertarianism are the same.
Simone Collins: Well, and I mean, a, a big part of this that tends to create huge, huge problems is when you are creating one, when youāre consolidating everything, youāre also abolishing private property and markets, and that requires- Well,
Malcolm Collins: and then people donāt have the, the same reason to invest in their continued property.
Simone Collins: And it requires a lot of coercion. Like, pe- people donāt just, āOh, sure. Yeah, take my house. Thatās fine. I didnāt...
Malcolm Collins: Thatās fine.ā I mean, thatās, thatās generally the lower bloodshed and the lower death toll is on the redistribution part, though. Yeah,
Simone Collins: thatās the step one part. But Iām just saying, like, as a little starting point, thereās also some friction there.
Yeah, I
Malcolm Collins: mean, obviously it involves robbing people of their property and everything like that. [00:10:00] I get that. But thatās- Y- yeah ... usually the lower death... I mean, a lot of, obviously conservative commentators are gonna crash out about government redistribution, everything like that. Iām just pointing out thatās not actually where the, the vast majority of communist death tolls come from.
The vast majority of communist death tolls come from the inefficient management that happens after that.
Simone Collins: Yeah, so in terms of, At least thereās this one book that tries to give a full tally. Itās called The Black Book of Communism, and they estimate that there have been 80 to 100 million deaths From democide, famine, and repression across implementations.
I think famineās the biggest killer.
Malcolm Collins: Right. So letās, weāll, weāll talk about... okay, Iāll quickly explain why the things happen without going too deep into them. I can. One problem you have within a communist ecosystem is that an individual has no reason to invest in anything that they own, because they donāt own anything.
Yeah. So like, eh, our house requires a ton of effort and work to keep from falling apart. This is why if you go to [00:11:00] many communist countries, you donāt see tons of old houses, or you see houses in horrible disrepair, or, like, giant blocks in horrible disrepair. Because people didnāt have a reason to invest in the upkeep of their own property and the area around their property, right?
Like, itās not just my house I want to be nice, itās the region around my house, because that increases its value. And this is true of companies, this is true of everything. Itās, itās a huge positive cycle that you get out of this. Mm-hmm. And the, the secondary bigger thing is, is inefficiency in the way things are operated.
And what people say, and I think incorrectly, is that you simply cannot manage, in a planned out format, an entire economy. And it is in attempting to do that that the Soviet systems begin to break down and the communist systems begin to break down in ways that lead to these famines and stuff like that.
But when we look at the actual causes of most of the famines, it isnāt actually due to problems in inefficient management. Itās, [00:12:00] itās due to explicitly bad policy like killing all the birds in China that were eating the pests on the crop. They were mad that they sometimes ate the crops, and then they had giant pests, and then a bunch of people died because the way that they were measuring food is they would go to a town and theyād basically tell the person running the town, āWell, if you canāt show me X amount of food, youāre gonna be removed from your position,ā right?
So now theyāre like, āOh yeah, weāve got that amount of food,ā right? And then they go to the people and they go, āHey, the military works for me. You give all your food for export.ā Now they donāt have any food left, because they were just pretending that they had X amount of food. But they wanted to keep their position, and they had the guns, so they were in a position to do this.
Because if they donāt do this, then theyāre put in a... Now this is all a problem of organization. Like, all of these individual problems could be solved if you had an intelligent and conscientious person going through the system and attempting to address every one of these problems. What we really need to get to is why that doesnāt happen, why these problems never get [00:13:00] cau- solved, why bad ideas get pushed down, and we need to say, āCan AI prevent this?ā
Simone Collins: Hmm.
Malcolm Collins: So, thoughts before I go further, Simone?
Simone Collins: I mean, I, I think youāre focusing a lot on the pure governance problems, but thereās more to it than just that, and so itās also important to address those other short, shortfalls.
Malcolm Collins: Okay. What... Iām, Iām actually claiming there are not, actually. The problems that are not governance problems are not that big in communism.
So what do you think they are?
Simone Collins: That we discount the extent to which markets are like an organism or ecosystem that, that is able to manage huge amounts of information in a very responsive, distributed, natural way. And that when you try to have a human-run mostly blind government system run it, you donāt get the data you need.
Like, planners donāt have enough information- So I- ... about relative stares- scarcity and cost of things ...
Malcolm Collins: fundamentally disagree with your thesis here. There are [00:14:00] ways within a communist system, without-
Simone Collins: yeah, and the Soviet, like, thereās the Soviet OGAS system that they, they tried to create this nationwide information network to, to better manage this, but they couldnāt.
Like, just getting the information inputs in a pre-AI age was just not feasible. And they had to plan-
Malcolm Collins: No, the point Iām making is it isnāt just unfeasible. They just did it in bad ways. You can create pseudo-capitalistic systems in a communist empire that can measure supply and demand and react to supply and demand with rewards.
I mean, you are creating essentially capitalism with extra steps. But the idea of having distributive information networks that can recognize scarcity and demand is not something that is out of completely impossible in a communist system. The point Iām making here is that if you actually look, and I know from, like, a [00:15:00] capitalist perspective, the great machine, and people have talked about, like, capitalism as the first AI, right?
And in a way, capitalism is kind of the first AI, right?
Simone Collins: Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: But the, the capitalist machine or the AI thatās created by the giant capitalistic network is not something that it is completely impossible to reverse engineer. And the reason I say this is that when we look at the failures of communist systems demonstrably, they are not due to failures of centralized control.
They are due to specific policy failures
Simone Collins: I wouldnāt say itās just policy failures, too. I think that the fundamental system whereby, again, in a pre-AI age, communism comes to exist, which is this process of like a revolution to socialism to then communism, is doomed [00:16:00] to fail, right? Because you have this revolutionary fur- fervor, and then you have the purge where like a bunch of like people lose their property, and thereās the kulaks.
Mm. And then you get shortages, and then you have the famine, and then you have the backlash to that, the blame. āWe have to, we have to handle this. Oh, itās, itās capitalism. Itās all these other things.ā And then that means we have to implement more controls, and then that leads to corrupt and black markets, and then that leads to reform or collapse.
And itās just, like things... Itās, itās an inherently unstable system the way you have to stumble into cap- or to communism now. And hereās my fundamental thesis when it comes to communism and AI and how itās going to play out and why itās going to work, and why many of the fundamental things that lead to this instability arenāt going to be a problem.
One of the key things being, I mean, I know youāre talking about like human-led governance being really stupid, and AGI can sort of in a hand-wavy way fix [00:17:00] that, and the right AGI can. I think the other thing is that communism is often a problem because a bunch of corrupt, power-hungry people are like scrambling for the governing power and for the resources of like the workers and all their possessions, right?
Malcolm Collins: Mm-hmm.
Simone Collins: But what, what happens when you have a bunch of people who donāt work and donāt own anything? Like no oneās gonna fight over them. No one wants them. And what I think might happen is that a large- a largely orphaned population, the l- the bottom part of the K-shaped economy, is going to be left high and dry by governments that falter, both due to like weird AI disruption, but also due to demographic collapse, and then also just left behind by the rich people who go off to their like techno-futurism.
Thatās an interesting
Malcolm Collins: thesis, but Iām gonna push back on this.
Simone Collins: Let me finish with my thing then, and then youāll push back. And then basically I think that some, some of the people who feel bad morally about leaving [00:18:00] behind everyone else are gonna send down some of their AGI gods to just create little communist communities for the people whoāve been left behind, and then those people will be taken care of by mother AI that will handle all their stuff for them.
So you donāt have anyone having their property taken away. You donāt have anyone, you know, being like accused of corruption or anything. You basically just have AI taking care of those who are left behind. Why is this wrong?
Malcolm Collins: So, I, I will get to that in a second. You might get that. Like, that is a possible good scenario.
Simone Collins: Okay.
Malcolm Collins: But the reason why I think thatās wrong is because I fundamentally disagree with you about the first part. The first part is, is communism, and I, I, I keep trying to come back to this because itās actually central to understand why AI will likely fail even within a communist system, right? Like, why- AI would break communism is that communism doesnāt fail because [00:19:00] of it, it, it prevents competent people from working, or it doesnāt motivate people enough, or itās bad at determining on-the-ground risks because capitalism just works as this brilliant machine that can measure things about economic states that communism could never measure.
And the evidence I used for that is, again, the failures and the successes we had under communism. Communism achieved some things that were enormously successful in terms of scientific progress, industrial development, et cetera. But it also obviously super high des- Iām not ... But what Iām saying is itās to just be like communism didnāt function at all is, is factually incorrect.
And to say that within a communist ecosystem like letās look at a capitalist ecosystem, right? If you go to a factory what type of person do you want running the factory, right? The type of person you want running the factory is gonna be the most competent person to run the factory, who has the support of the, the workers and can push them to work [00:20:00] their hardest.
In a communist system, what type of person do you want to run the factory? It, itās the same type of person, right? The people who end up in the lower level management positions in communist and capitalist systems at least aspirationally in how these systems could, should be structured, are the same types of people.
Like you donāt have this, ... A- and itās also communist systems donāt send food to the wrong place you know, malevolently or something like that. When we talk about communist systems failing at determining what, like where economic needs need to go, right? The, in the, in the way a capitalist system would.
The biggest failures are virtually never because the, the system wasnāt good at monitoring things. They are again, when I was talking about like the, the wheat famine, right? It was, it was a twofold failure. It was a failure of the, the [00:21:00] way that they were measuring, like how much wheat each region had, was a very bad way to be measuring each, how much wheat each region had, that led to adverse incentives, which led to them sending wheat to locations that didnāt need wheat from locations that did need wheat.
A- and they created a pest problem because they couldnāt tell people above them that they were wrong, right? Now note, in a capitalist system, you might not be able to tell your boss that theyāre wrong, right? Like it letās consider Ubisoft or something like that. I might- Mm-hmm ... even in a capitalist system not be able to tell my boss you make a, a, a video game about a, a Black guy in Japan going around murdering people.
Itās probably gonna cause problems, and a lot of people are going to be very upset by that.ā And then I get fired, right? But within a capitalist system, the wider capitalist ecosystem actually punishes that person, not because of an issue of supply and demand. In a communist system, youād presumably want to punish the person as well, [00:22:00] if the goal of the company was entertainment and not spreading the ideology.
But in a communist system, itās often spreading ideology, so they, they probably wouldnāt be punished in the same way. But you, you understand what I mean. Like, suppose itās something other than a game company and Iām actually like, āOh, the way youāre doing this is functionally bad and going to lead to a bad product.ā
Communist ecosystems should be determining, oh, this is a bad product. And thereās functionally ways that they can determine, oh, this is a product that people donāt like. Mm ... but so now the question is, is why do these systems fail in communism, right? Like, why do the people in the positions that would be equivalent to, like, running Ubisoft in a communist system not end up getting replaced or not end up getting replaced in the way that they should get replaced?
And itās because, going back to what I was saying originally, communist systems fall into two broad categories. One is they function like a giant monopoly. Like, the entire government is one giant ultra libertarian monopoly where one company town has taken over everything and houses everyone and blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
Yeah ... very dystopian, whatever. But the thing is, is the moment I say that, [00:23:00] every communist is gonna say āWell, thatās not the way I wanna do communism.ā You know, they wanna go in and do- Yeah ... anarcho-communism. They wanna do syndicalism. They wanna do basically they wanna have independently operating small communist groups.
Which extremely doesnāt work. The reason it doesnāt work is because it leaves a power vacuum. This is also why, like, extreme forms of libertarianism donāt work and everything like that. So suppose I try to set up this anarcho-communist system or even a completely syndicalist system, right, where, like, everything is, is totally decentralized.
Anybody who decides to act as a bad actor and begin to aggressively and subversively acquiring both support and resources can exert power on anyone whoās playing by the rules. And this is, like, a pro- like, in the Molyneux debate when I was trying to figure out how he thought that his weird libertarian utopia would work this is something that, like, he seemed to [00:24:00] fundamentally not understand.
Heās like, āNo, everyone will rise up against a bad actor as soon as a bad actor starts accumulating power.ā And Iām like, āIām sorry, like, we have history to look at. We know that doesnāt happen,ā right? Like, bad actors are actually very good at accumulating power. And and then they, they build an army, and the army can go to the person next to them.
This is true even outside of, even without a military, right? So this, this came when I was talking, like, extreme forms of libertarianism with Steven Molyneux. I was like, how do you get something like a chip fab, right? That costs- Yeah ... hundreds of billions of dollars to make?
Simone Collins: Yeah. Like- Years of a- ... well-
investment with no payout, et cetera.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. The, the... and there might be no payout. And heās like, āWell, I guess we could get, like, hundreds of millions of workers to form, like, a cooperative to invest everything into this.ā And then itās like, okay, then whoās operating the cooperative, right?
Simone Collins: Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: And theyāre like, āWell, then we would have, like, some form of [00:25:00] democracy.ā
And Iām like, okay, so as soon as somebody gains power within this giant fabricator state, right? Thatās basically, itās a state created to run a fabricator. Why would they not attempt to create systems that prevent them from being removed from power? Yeah. And the answer is, of course, well, everyone would rise up against them if they did something like this.
In the same way that he was like, well, heās like, āEven if they got away with it, even if they accomplish all of this, then people wouldnāt buy their product because theyād see that theyāre a bad actor.ā Yeah. And Iām like, bro, you have a product in your pocket that was probably made by slaves. Like, you know thatās not true.
You know that people-
Simone Collins: Or eating food that is, or what, any, any mixture of things. Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. So what ends up happening, because the, the, the wider point Iām making here, here, here is customers donāt really punish bad actors. You, as a watcher of this show, likely barely punish bad actors. Even, even when [00:26:00] youāre...
I mean, maybe video games have finally gotten punished because they screwed over gamers for so long. But in the vast majority of cases bad actors donāt actually end up getting pub- punished that much by public sentiment. You know, even, even when they do something completely insane, itās like their stock will fall like 5%.
Itās like, oh, no, you know. I mean, bad day to be the CEO ācause itās like billions of dollars, but- You know, in, in the grand scheme of, like, society, it doesnāt matter. So the problem is with the anarchist and all of these power distributed systems is whenever somebody says, āIām not gonna play by your distributed power rules, Iām just gonna accumulate all the power for myself,ā they end up growing in influence.
And functionally, thatās what happens with most communist governments, is they start with a bunch of people saying like, āLetās genuinely try to make this work.ā Mm-hmm. And then some people begin to gain positions of power, and theyāre like, āWhat if instead of genuinely trying to get this to work, I [00:27:00] use the apparatus of the state to consolidate power around me?ā
Now, itās very hard if you are a faction. So letās suppose large communist country, two factions come to power with a legitimate government, right? Like, Iām not even talking about just, like, the warlords because you never even get to a stage where you have, like, pure autonomous regions for very long in these sort of libertarian communist fantasies because they immediately devolve.
People immediately consolidate power, I mean, within, like, a month of it entering any sort of state like that. But so Iāll function- focus on it on the way it actually typically happens. You have a bunch of often sometimes bleeding-hearted idiot leftists in a, in a room, havenāt really operated anything before, donāt really know what theyāre doing, but may have positive intentions for the state.
And then you have the guy who comes in the room, your Stalin or whatever, right? Whoās like Uh-huh. Well, letās try to be a bit more efficient [00:28:00] about this. Iām gonna talk with my friends in the military, and I tell them, āHey, like, these guys arenāt really doing things the right way. And, you know, I think you, the heads of the military, deserve a bit higher standard of living than everyone else, donāt you think?
I mean, youāre controlling... You, you, you work so hard compared to everyone else.ā And you begin to, instead of trying to distribute wealth and resources equally in the society, you begin to distribute wealth and resources in a way that maintains your power within the society, your power hierarchy within the society.
But
Simone Collins: youāre still, this is all with the supposition that this is humans running and everything and calling the shots.
Malcolm Collins: Right. Iām gonna get to the point. Okay. Because with AI, itās the same problem, right? Which is... Iāll get to that in just a second, right?
Simone Collins: Okay, okay.
Malcolm Collins: But you need to understand why it fails with humans to understand why it would likely fail with AI.
So essentially, everyone who is [00:29:00] a bad actor, because theyāre saying instead of taking all of the resources they can create and distributing them as much as they can, they take as resources they create, they distribute 20% and they take 80% to continue consolidating their position. So one, this leads to a ton of waste in the system in terms of the wealth that the people at the top are living, et cetera.
But two it leads to all the way down within the power hierarchy bad actors ending up in the highest level power positions, because itās basically dictator to dictator to dictator to dictator all the way down, the people with, with those sorts of mindsets. And so you get this enormous corruption.
Because when Iām thinking about you know, do I wanna tell my boss that this planning has to kill all the birds is a dumb idea Iām not actually thinking about is this going to help my sub-state the most, right? Like if my region or the people or the farmers. Iām thinking about is this gonna help me consolidate power within [00:30:00] my position with the broader hierarchy, right?
The problem with AI is AI fundamentally doesnāt really change this. So, letās assume that you create a truly post-scarcity sys- system which is essentially what Simone is positioning with her communist ecosystem. So what sheās essentially saying, and I donāt know if I, I, I donāt disagree with this point, that if you could create true super abundance the, the, the people who are either competent or corrupt enough to end up in the positions of power have so much wealth and abundance that the, the coins that fall off their plates feel like ultimate luxury to the people that theyāre falling in, into the trough.
Well,
Simone Collins: itās not, no. Thereās additional motivation. Th- they, with AI, they could have the ability to create broadly from their perspective, autonomous AI-run communities that feed [00:31:00] and house people. Like a, a new version of fiefdom. You know how like the way that a lot of versions of fiefdom worked was you had the lord who lived on the state, and one of the reasons why in these grand houses you had all these ridiculous roles where they were like essentially job programs.
You know, the underbutler and the footman and the, the, the various types of cooks and, and all these people. It was a jobs program, and then everyone in the village, you know, they, they had somewhere to live, and then the, it was this whole little economy. They could c- create presumably a bunch of these little things that are all run by AI that give people little things to do and keep people busy and feed people food, and itās not just, oh, the, you know, theyāre, theyāre eating like food runoff or something.
Itās that th- itās better to have people be able to show up at these places and, and get placed, get a house, get a job, you know, a job have something to do in their life, you know, become some kind of artisan craftsman or something and live their little [00:32:00] picturesque covet life than to, you know, die in large droves and look, look bad and, and a lot of people just donāt- Well,
Malcolm Collins: no, right, but this is, this is the fundamental logical error that youāre making here.
Simone Collins: Okay.
Malcolm Collins: And it actually comes from growing up in the urban monoculture that youāre making this error. Okay. Which is very fun, because I think youāll see it the moment I point it out.
Simone Collins: Okay.
Malcolm Collins: When you look at the quality of life of people who are relying on our today version of the types of systems that youāre talking about between states the amount of money that goes into these systems is often not just disco related, but inversely correlated with the actual quality of life of the people living off of the systems.
Simone Collins: I think theyāre gonna... No. This, youāre seeing the very first version of UBI that people, thanks to the experimentation being done now, right? Theyāre learning from it. Theyāre going to discover-
Malcolm Collins: No, theyāre not learning
Simone Collins: from it ... Come on. Okay, like in The Matrix, right? Theyāre like, āOh, well, we made the first version of the matrix where everyone just had everything, [00:33:00] and it really didnāt work.
And so we created this new version where everyone has a job and theyāre miserable, and itās perfect.ā And theyāre gonna figure that out with UBI, and theyāre gonna realize the best thing to
Malcolm Collins: do- We have already seen proof they wonāt So Iāll ex- Iāll give you proofs that they wonāt, right?
Simone Collins: Okay, whatās
Malcolm Collins: the one example?
Right now, when Iām talking more broadly, if you look at, like, Californiaās homeless, they often live much worse lives than homeless in other areas, despite all the money going into that. Yeah, itās, itās egregious. And youāre like, āOh, theyāre trying to fix it. Theyāre trying to fix it,ā right? And Iām pointing out to you, why are...
Because you gotta ask yourself, why are the lives of Californiaās homeless so much worse than other states when so much more money is going to them? And itās because of the inefficient bureaucracy following the same sorts of failings that we see in communist systems. And so now what youāre gonna come and say is youāre gonna say, like, āWell, these AI tech lords, they wonāt fall for these same types of errors.ā
And Iām like, āHmm, Simone, in the UBI study that Sam Altman did, do you remember how the team that did the study [00:34:00] framed the results to Sam Altman? Did we already see an instance of them, in the very first instance where we could be moving down a good pathway, immediately lie about and manipulate the results to hide that it didnāt work in a way that-
Simone Collins: No, but Malcolm, those systems are going to collapse.
Like, Iām not saying this is gonna happen soon, but itās going to happen-
Malcolm Collins: What do you mean? Thatās the craziest f*****g thing Iāve ever heard. How did, what do you mean theyāre going to collapse? They canāt collapse. Theyāre AI tech moguls who presumably have near infinity money if youāre talking about in the future, right?
Like, you think because people are living bad lives in their communist, quote-unquote, āutopiasā that theyāre going to care? Right? Like, they, they donāt care. California, San Francisco doesnāt care about its homeless drug addicts who are walking, zonked out on the streets and sleep in the poo thatās all around the financial district, right?
Like, if you look at the quality of lives [00:35:00] of people who live next to super abundance today, the elites, like, your thesis is, oh, they will see their policies failing, and they will change their policies, when your lived reality is that the exact opposite is happening.
Simone Collins: Those arenāt their policies. Theyāre living within a legacy bureaucracy government system and society that they certainly wouldnāt design.
What Iām describing
Malcolm Collins: is- But Sam Altmanās study was his
Simone Collins: study ... from the ground up techno fiefdoms that will be created but like sort of nature reserves for p- for h- for the humans that get left
Malcolm Collins: behind. But, but Sam Altmanās study was his st- are you denying-
Simone Collins: It was, but what he was, what... So you have to look at the game that he is playing.
He needs to give people a narrative that makes them comfortable with whatās going on today. If you were to say to them, āOkay, well, step one, society completely collapses, millions of people die. Step two, weāre gonna create some, like, nature reserves where people will [00:36:00] live and have jobs instead of live these, like, isolated fantasy lives and, and, you know, going forward for, like, the, the people who are left behind.
Like, weāll, weāll give a good life to many of them. But we canāt do that until society collapses because we wonāt have, like, the land rights and stuff, and we wonāt be allowed to govern them. So, for now, because I donāt want you to, like, completely firebomb my house successfully this time, Iām going to tell you that I have done the research and Iām fully convinced that all I need to do is just give you a lot of money each month, and then you can just do whatever you want with it, and that will make you happy.ā
And people are like, āOkay, good. Well, at least Sam Altman is eventually gonna make sure that I get $10,000 a month and itās gonna be great, and Iām gonna get DoorDash everything and play video games for the rest of my life, and hopefully itāll be fine.ā Th- but- What, and
Malcolm Collins: Iām pointing
Simone Collins: out to you that weāve already seen that-
he has no incentive to communicate anything other than UBI to people. C- can you imagine if Sam Altman came out and was like, āOkay, right. So we ran the experiment, we looked [00:37:00] at the data, and, you know, it looks like we actually shouldnāt give you money because it doesnāt actually make a differenceā? Thatās like, get a job, Al.
Speaker: donāt you get a job? If youāre so hungry, why donāt you get a job? Get a goddamn job, Al. You got a negative attitude.
Thatās whatās stopping you. You gotta get your act together.
Simone Collins: No, what he could have done- No, he canāt do that ... and so
Malcolm Collins: thereās, thereās two worlds that we live in. One is the world that I positively live in, and the other is a world you posit we live in, okay? So in the world I posit we live in, Sam Altman doesnāt actually care about the fate of the vast majority of people.
He cares about promoting UBI like, it, this is what I assume, because it allows him to continue to consolidate power. Remember how I said bad actors donāt really care about the effects of what theyāre doing, they only care about consolidating power? So in that world, he would do something like conduct a UBI study, then lie about the results to mollify people.
Now, [00:38:00] letās assume world number two, Simone world. Simone world is Sam Altman conducts a study on UBI, but he really does want one day, Because you know whatās cheaper than giving everyone money? Autonomous drone swarms around your house, okay? But you think, okay, no, one day, a private islands, which, you know, heāll have, right?
Yeah. But your plan is, no, no, no, no, no. We live in alternate world where he actually does want some sort of stable utopia for the, the, the masses, right? So if we live in this world, what would have happened is he would have conducted that study, and the results of the study wouldāve said something like, āOh Well, it turns out that a traditional, you know, sort of blanket UBI program doesnāt appear to be, d- doesnāt appear to work, so what we need to do is try some alternate type of UBI program.
Like, letās try to innovate on this for a type of UBI that does work. That wouldnāt have freaked everyone out. That would have had most people looking at the results and being like, āOh, this is interesting. You know, youāre [00:39:00] trying to find something. You found result number one.ā Instead, you see the exact opposite, the immediate glazing over of any result or data point that doesnāt fit his stated agenda or proposed solution to the hellscape that he might be creating.
Simone Collins: Look, I just told you that I agree that he doesnāt have any incentive to tell the truth about his UBI experiment and that he- Well, he
Malcolm Collins: does. If, if his plan is... Itās only marginally harder for him to actually try to help people. Itās just that itās completely irrelevant to him.
Simone Collins: I donāt think it is. So you can have someone who is incentivized to amass power, amass wealth, may do things even that skirt morality and law to do so, who still- feels genuine pain when presented with the plight of human suffering.
Exactly the point Iām making. Who would like to make it go [00:40:00] away. And once these people have the means to say, āOkay, AI assistant, please go build something where some of these people can live and make me feel better about this,ā they will do it.
Malcolm Collins: Well, and the point Iām making is they canāt do it.
Simone Collins: Why canāt they?
Malcolm Collins: So if you look at, and, and this is the reason I was bringing up like social welfare programs in San Francisco and stuff like that. San Francisco is a city that is full of very intelligent tech workers who also vote.
Simone Collins: Yeah. But yeah, th- theyāre stuck with the San Francisco residents who have all these NIMBY laws, and theyāre stuck with all these policies.
I donāt think they believe in supporting- The bad policies- ... things like needle distribution and,
Malcolm Collins: you know. The bad policies that are implemented in San Francisco if, if you look at them, right, some of them come from the legacy residents. The vast majority come from the donors to the Democratic Party who [00:41:00] are tech moguls.
Thatās where the moneyās coming from thatās going into these political PACs. The problem is, is that when you go to said, letās say, Democratic tech mogul, and I know this because I know these people from San Francisco, you know these people from San Francisco. You go to them and you say this policy of giving people fentanyl on the street, itās making their lives harder.
This policy of putting homeless people in hotel is leading to externalities for residents,ā and theyāre just like, āNah, nah, nah, nah, nah, nah, nah, nah, nah, nah, nah, nah, itāll work next year.ā Youāre acting like they, th- and, and these people care. They, quote-unquote, care about the suffering of the poor. But they donāt
Simone Collins: care- I just, Iāve yet to encounter anyone who works in the tech world in San Francisco who approves of homeless management policy in the area.
Malcolm Collins: They still vote Democrat.
Simone Collins: Ditto with LA. Well, yeah. But thatās, that, those are due to very complex, like, social brainwashing- Oh ... systems of the Bay Area.
Malcolm Collins: This, this is what Iām talking [00:42:00] about. When you get somebody like A- Sam Altman in this sort of a position in power, right? Like suppose he accumulates all this power.
Heās Sam Altman, god king of a region, and heās distributing money to the masses in the region. Letās suppose that the way heās distributing money is leading to the same sorts of externalities that we see among, like, Portland or San Francisco homeless right now, right? Like massive drug problems, the problems we see in Native American communities, you know, massive crash outs, lots of problem.
Okay, suppose that those are all the functional result of what theyāre doing, okay? What, what Sam Altman is doing, right? And then you have us online YouTube warriors or something like that trying to get to Sam Altman to tell him, āHey, none of these policies youāre operating are actually working.ā Right?
Do you think that we would be able to get in his ear, or are the people who are going to be getting in his ear the most the people who are operating the [00:43:00] failed policies, who recommended the failed policies, and who have a vested interest in him not fully grokking how much these policies are not working?
Even if you add AI to the chain and he does something like asks AI, you know, āAre my policies working or not working?ā You know that, like, AI is gonna gas him on this, right? AI right now will gas you on Democratic policies. If you ask AI something like you know, āIs X or Y Democratic policy around, like, poor people actually effective?ā
When you look at, like, AIs on political charts, you know itās gonna support these policies that we know functionally donāt work. So why would it not still do that when heās in god king position and now has three layers of bureaucrats around him that prevent him from fully grokking how much his plan is failing?
Simone Collins: I have doubts about that. I just I have severe doubts about that. You can [00:44:00] look at, for example, coverage of the mayoral race in Los Angeles in California and see the level to whi- i- to which people are really, really fed up with the homeless policy in California, with the housing policy in California. I think thereās that that demonstrates that people arenāt necessarily ideologically locked into the system that youāre describing.
Beyond that, it is parasitoidal, this, this kind of approach to governance, this culture as well. It will kill the host, and the host will die. Demographic collapse is such that these things arenāt going to be supported much longer anyway. Theyāre going to collapse on their own, and I donāt think AI, in the time over, the time period over which these systems are going to collapse, AI is not yet going to reach the place, in my opinion, where it will be able to sweep in and deus ex machina style, like fix [00:45:00] it.
So I really think that these systems are going to fully crumble which is not the happier scenario. Iām, I, like, I donāt want this to ha- it, it, itās bad. But these systems wonāt be left. I, I do think that, that many people... When, when a communist utopia will be created, I think it will be in sovereign city state style, essentially human reserves that are created for the people who were left behind but who survived.
Malcolm Collins: What you need to make AI communist, like, like post-scarcity worlds work and not lead to the same problems we have with like homelessness and stuff like that in Democrat counties and the poor in Democrat counties doing much worse is them being operated by an extremely austere and dedicated ca- caste that is ideologically aligned at the level of [00:46:00] like religious fervor.
So if you had like letās say techno-puritans end up taking over and, and, and like really dedicated techno-puritans were running everything, it could work. If you had a state with AI and somebody like the Dalai Lama, like the last Dalai Lama and the top levels of like the Tibetan, you know, that, that Iād like...
Look, I donāt love everything he did. I thought he was a bit foolish on a number of issues. But that could probably work, right? Because you need to be able to cast off if, if you personally are not interested either because you were raised this way or you have an extremist ideological commitment in power accumulation or luxury or anything like that outside of, for the purpose of some wider objective function you have on reality, If, if you have that, then you can use AI to create post-scarcity.
But I think without that being a personās fundamental driver above all other drivers, [00:47:00] you cannot get true post-scarcity even with AI in sort of like how it reaches the masses
Simone Collins: I guess time will tell.
Malcolm Collins: Yep. Well, weāre gonna see. And we can hear in the comments what people think. But basically my th- thought is the next society weāre gonna have to transition into post demographic collapse and everything like that is one of, of, y- you know, religious fanaticism essentially.
Simone Collins: Yeah.
I, I mean, we can agree on that. Thatās, I think- Thatās, thatās more about demographic collapse than it is about artificial intelligence or communism. It has more to do with just- Yeah ... whoās going to continue to have a desire and an interest in reproducing in, in the face of n- demographic collapse, AI, and massive disruption.
Malcolm Collins: So whatās the story with dinner tonight?
Simone Collins: I have one batch of the pork leftover, and then after [00:48:00] that, or we... So you can either have that tonight or tomorrow night. What I could also do is just tomato soup and grilled cheese or tomato soup and quesadillas tonight if you prefer. Oh
Malcolm Collins: my God, quesadillas.
Your quesadillas are so good.
Simone Collins: Thatās ācause they have MSG in them. Thatās what Iāve
Malcolm Collins: been asking for. Is the batch, do you have from
Simone Collins: batch
Malcolm Collins: one or batch two?
Simone Collins: Batch two
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, Iāll wait on that. Iāll do quesadillas and tomato soup.
Simone Collins: Yeah, batch two might be more tender since itās leaner meat after just sitting for a couple of days loosening up.
You know what I mean?
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, that makes sense.
Simone Collins: Theoretically.
Malcolm Collins: So Iām very excited. The, the, the... what sheās talking about is slow-cooked pork belly that sheās gotten very good at making.
Simone Collins: Aw, thatās sweet
Malcolm Collins: of you ... and I am very excited for my que- oh, quesadillas, tomato soup, and fancy fries.
Simone Collins: No. A quesadillaās your carb.
You get to choose one carb. Okay. Do you want tomato s- do you want tomato soup and curly fries?
Malcolm Collins: No, [00:49:00] quesadillas.
Simone Collins: Okay. You can have your curly fries with the leftover pork belly t- or, well, pork shoulder in this case tomorrow, yeah?
Malcolm Collins: Youāre so amazing, Simone.
Simone Collins: Oh, Iām the worst, I know. Also there is not too far from us a, an arboretum that we havenāt gone to.
Do you wanna take the kids there tomorrow since-
Malcolm Collins: Whatās an arboretum?
Simone Collins: Itās gardens. Itās, itās a, itās a garden. They have trails. Like, itās just a different place for us to walk.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. Itās free. Sure. You know. Oh, wow, it is close.
Simone Collins: Mm-hmm. Isnāt that crazy? Never been before. Free admission.
Malcolm Collins: Thatās
Simone Collins: the whole thing
Malcolm Collins: Oh, no, thatās not what I thought it was.
What was it? Arboretum?
Simone Collins: Jenkins Arboretum and Gardens.
Malcolm Collins: Jenkins Arboretum and Gardens.
Simone Collins: Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: Oh.
Simone Collins: Itās really close. And
Malcolm Collins: itās free to enter?
Simone Collins: Yeah, itās free to enter always. They have like a little kid [00:50:00] play area. I feel like the kids would really enjoy it.
Malcolm Collins: Okay. If Iām making good progress on the VTuber thing, I wanna try to get the thing done before my call with Leaflet.
Simone Collins: Iāve just noticed that every weekend you wanna do something special. We can do this on a different weekend day, but if we go tomorrow, it will be the least crowded.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. Okay, yeah, that makes sense. Letās do it.
Simone Collins: Okay. Iām looking forward to it. I mean-
Malcolm Collins: I mean, you know tomorrow is Friday, right?
Simone Collins: Yeah, but we have the kids with us all day.
Malcolm Collins: Okay. And youāre sure we have the kids with us all day?
Simone Collins: Iāll confirm it right now, but yeah.
Malcolm Collins: Okay. All right, love you. All right. I guess weāre going straight to dinner?
Simone Collins: Thatās the plan. Yeah, we donāt have enough time to record another episode in like 10 minutes.
Malcolm Collins: Love you. Iāll get Professor Jane ready for tomorrow.
Simone Collins: Yay. āCause I like the title card I created for that. Plus itās trending. Stop thinking itās not a big deal ā
cause it-
Malcolm Collins: But yeah, you see we get the full VTuber exports now. [00:51:00]
Simone Collins: Yeah. Itās really cool. You gave yourself, like, blonde hair though. Are we-
Malcolm Collins: Why? Do you see me with brown hair? Is that what Iām...?
Simone Collins: Yes, you have brown hair. I donāt know what to tell you.
Malcolm Collins: I had blonde hair when I was a kid, and our kids have blonde hair, so.
Simone Collins: So you just internalize yourself as having blonde hair forever?
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, I think it looks more like me when I, when I put, make him with blonde hair.
Simone Collins: Thatās so funny. Like, you just kind of anchored to yourself as a teen. I wonder, that, that kind of sticks to my, my feeling like everyone has a s- like a soul age, like an age of their personality, and yours is like 11, in a good way, and mine is like 62, in hopefully a good way.
And I think honestly I would be more comfortable seeing like a VTuber a- avatar of like a white-haired [00:52:00] woman or something than of anything that I looked like as a kid. So I wonder if when people make VTubers of themselves that they just key to whatever their soul age is. You know what I mean?
Malcolm Collins: Yeah.
Simone Collins: You want me to kick us off with this one? You like to do your own kickoffs, so.
Malcolm Collins: Okay. Iāll do a kickoff with this one.
Simone Collins: Okay.
This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit basedcamppodcast.substack.com/subscribe -
In this Based Camp episode, Simone and Malcolm Collins dive into the harsh realities of aging alone through a Wall Street Journal article about Amy Kant, a 65-year-old single, childless woman facing health issues, estate planning struggles, and isolation. They explore the growing demographic of āsolo agers,ā the long-term consequences of choosing career and freedom over family, feminist regrets, and why so many women (and men) end up dying alone.
Topics include: the breakdown of intergenerational social contracts, business opportunities in elder care/power of attorney/estate planning/unclaimed assets, pronatalist perspectives, and real listener stories of regret. Malcolm also shares new rfab.ai features like the recipe generator and discusses building liable human services.
A raw, unfiltered look at demographic decline, life choices, and turning societal problems into opportunities.
Show Notes
Can two dark things cancel each other to create a rainbow?
* Dark thing: The job market is atrocious and about to get worse
* Dark thing: Millions of childless elderly peopleāand aged parents who moved away from and dissociated from their childrenāare headed into old age and death without support networks
* Rainbow? There are huge business and job opportunities
We can use a recent Wall Street Journal article, More Americans Are Aging Alone. One Woman Told Us What Itās Like, for inspiration!
(Not reading every paragraph)
āAmy Kant initially thought she should name a power of attorney about 10 years ago after caring for a dying friend. She still hasnāt appointed someone to do it.
The 65-year-old is single with no children, and bound up in that choice over who should make financial decisions on her behalf are other big questions that are often intensified when aging alone. How to handle eldercare? Estate planning? Where will she live in her later years?ā
* Company opportunity? Power of attorney for isolated old people?
* Easy attorney job
* Many elder law and estate planning attorneys serve as POA agents (they charge both hourly and flat fees)
* You may not need to be an attorney: Some states recognize licensed/bonded āprofessional fiduciariesā who can be hired to act as your agent under POA, trustee, or similar roles
* You could also take the CPA route:
* Some planners recommend using a CPA, financial advisor, or daily money manager to handle money management and, in some cases, to serve as agent under a financial POA.
* Financial planners may not advertise as āPOA companies,ā but they can be named personally in the document
* Less relevant: Certain notāforāprofit care management firms (staffed by nurses, social workers, and care managers) specifically market themselves as agents under POA for older adults without family.
* But these wonāt be able to keep up with demand
* What percentage of Americans over 65 have savings sufficient to cover their costs in retirement?
* Federal Reserve data, summarized by several analyses, shows that around 51ā62% of households headed by someone in their midā60s or older have money in retirementāspecific accounts (401(k), IRA, etc.). That means roughly 4 in 10 have no retirement account at all, though they may have Social Security, pensions, or other assets.
* A 2024 analysis of Federal Reserve survey data found only about 31% of Americans of all ages feel āon trackā with retirement savings, implying that even among those who have savings, many believe it is not sufficient.
āKant had long cherished the freedom that came with being single. She prided herself on doing headstands in yoga and walking 5 miles a day. But lately being single has felt like a struggle, and not just because of the weighty financial decisions hanging over her head. Back surgery and a heart valve replacement in the past few years have turned her condominium outside Boston into a recovery ward.ā
āShe spends most of her time at home these days recovering from heart surgery complications, with friends stopping by. She finds solace painting in a spare bedroom she turned into a studio, but knows she will eventually have to move to a smaller place thatās easier to get around in.ā
* This isnāt just a problem for aging singles; itās a problem for aging parents who move away from and stop supporting their kids
* Thereās more of a social contract for kids to provide elder care for parents who provided childcare for their kids
* Though admittedly 18-20% of Millennials (people between 25-34 today) live with their parents, so those parents can likely expect care
āKant is among the millions of Americans learning to navigate aging alone. Roughly 10% of the more than 125 million adults ages 50 and older in the U.S.āor at least 12.5 million peopleāare solo agers who live alone and have neither a spouse nor a child, according to an AARP analysis of census data. Itās a growing demographic hitting both genders, driven in part by climbing divorce rates among older Americans and a rising number of adult children becoming alienated from their parents.ā
* Wowāand estate planners / financial advisors are super underwhelming and pretty low tech, so someone good with AI and navigating regulatory bureaucracies can lean up
āKant didnāt set out with a master plan. In her 20s and 30s, she chose lower-paying nonprofit jobs to give priority to her art. She remembers how friends envied her freedom; while they were tied down with dinner duty, their kidsā homework, and college savings, Kant spent her evenings painting and didnāt think twice about going out on weeknights.ā
* This is a really great example of how the Urban Monoculture lies to people and sells an unsustainable lifestyle
āShe eventually earned her M.B.A. By her 40s, she was working as a fundraiser, maxing out traditional retirement account contributions to ensure her financial stability in later years.ā
* What are the odds that she ultimately saved more money for retirement by getting an MBA?
āIn her 40s she considered adoption but ultimately decided against it. Then in her 50s, after her own mother died, she went through a period of regret that she had decided against single motherhood.ā
* Wonder why she did not adopt (pronatalist families do all the time + women in r/fencesitters mention it all the time)
* What percentage of childless elderly adults regret not having kids?
* An Australian study (often cited in media summaries) found that about one quarter of childāfree women later reported regretting the decision once they were past childābearing age and facing old age alone
āWhile Kant feels OK about her nest egg today, sheās worried it might shrink if the stock-market falls from its record high levels. Once she recuperates, she plans to return to part-time consulting to keep her mind active and feel productive.ā
* This is another reason why Gen Z and Gen Alpha have trouble getting jobs
āWhen Kant first realized the importance of naming a power of attorney, she didnāt know whom to choose at the time, and put off the decision. She only recently identified the right friend for the role after her illnesses made clear she needed to act. Kant is planning to ask that friend soon.ā
* SHE HAS NOT ASKED HER YET???
āA longtime college friend serves as her healthcare proxy, and Kant maintains a spreadsheet of friends to coordinate visits when sheās ill. Still, she understands the boundaries of a chosen family. Her friends have their own households to manage; some have already died. Kant also needs to draft a will and decide how to divide her assets.ā
* SHE HAS NOT DRAFTED A WILL
āKant has given herself a one-year deadline to complete her estate-planning documents. She is hoping she will have the mental energy needed to tackle such tasks once she is further along in her recovery.ā
* Dying without a valid will is called dying āintestate.ā
* When a single, childless person dies with a positive net worth but no will, their assets go through intestate probate and are distributed by state law to their next of kin (or, if none exist, to the state), not according to any informal wishes.
* STARTUP IDEA: Make this efficient and collect a fee
* The closest thing is āheirālocatorā / āfinderā services and assetārecovery firms that track down heirs to deceased peopleās money (including cousins), often for a contingency fee. These operate alongside the standard unclaimedāproperty system run by the states.
* When someone dies and assets go unclaimed or the owner cannot be located, banks and companies eventually turn those assets over to the stateās unclaimedāproperty office
* Heirs can later claim them if they prove their relationship.
* You can search and claim for free via tools like The National Association of Unclaimed Property Administrators (Unclaimed.org) and MissingMoney, or directly through each stateās unclaimedāproperty portal.
* Some private ālocator servicesā or āfindersā proactively contact people and offer to help file claims for a cut of the recovery; federal guidance explicitly notes that these companies exist and charge a fee for using public data to match people with unclaimed funds.
* Many states regulate these finders (caps on fees, licensing/certification requirements); for example, Pennsylvania requires āfindersā working with claimants to be certified by the Treasury, but this is easy for any competent founder to do.
āBack in her art studio, Kant processes how her life is set to shift in coming years through painting. She created a series about being alone but being part of a larger world. She also made a collection of autumn leaf portraits that explore aging, decay and the search for where we belong. āIām thinking about what my legacy will be,ā she said.ā
* There is something deeply lonely about being the dead end of an unbroken chain of life that has lasted for thousands of years
* Homo sapiens have existed for roughly 300,000 years
* Life has existed on earth for over 3 billion years
* Talk about breaking a streak
Episode Transcript
Simone Collins: [00:00:00] Hello, Malcolm. Iām excited to be speaking with you today ācause weāre bringing back our favorite series, Women Are Terrible.
Speaker: What heartbreak drivel. See how the men look at her with utter contempt. Daphne, weāre going home.
Women, know your limits.
Simone Collins: This time, weāre talking about an old woman who chose to eschew men and children and meaning, and now sheās going to face the prospect of dying alone.
Malcolm Collins: The- N- not just one. I also found a number of other transcripts from similar women-
Simone Collins: You did not.
Malcolm Collins: Oh, God ... that we can go across. And Simone goes through this, in her immediate thoughts, she comes to me and she goes, āMalcolm, I bet we can find a way to exploit this for money, and we can help our fans-ā Itās
Simone Collins: worse than that.
I already got you 50 to $100 out of this.
Malcolm Collins: Wait, really? Yeah.
Simone Collins: Yeah. Weāll get into it, so.
Malcolm Collins: Wait,
Simone Collins: what? I know, I know. Anyway, letās dive into it. So you can interject when you want to. Iām gonna be reading excerpts [00:01:00] from a recent Wall Street Journal article titled, Most Americans Are Aging Alone, and One Woman Told Us What Itās Like.
And her name is Amy Kant. The article begins, āAmy Kant originally...ā Or I should say Kant, like Immanuel Kant. āAmy Kant initially thought she would name a power of attorney about 10 years ago, after caring for a dying friend. She still hasnāt appointed someone to do it. The 65-year-old is single with no children, and bound up in that choice over who should make the financial decisions on her behalf o- over big questions that are often intensified when aging alone.
How to handle an elder care, estate planning. Where should she live in her later years?ā So already, huge company opportunity.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah ...
Simone Collins: if, if youāre an attorney, this is a super easy attorney job. There are mil- many like, like elder law, like literally they specialize in elder law and estate planning who also will serve as your power of attorney.
In fact, I think we know people who have lawyers as their power of attorney instead of like friends or [00:02:00] family. And theyāre family members. This is your people who have family- And if
Malcolm Collins: you want, by the way, an AI to do legal stuff for you to handle like the simpler stuff, on rfab.ai we have a feature called a super search, which does multiple AI internet searches with different AI engines-
Simone Collins: Yeah
Malcolm Collins: or models-
Yeah ... that then counter-check the facts of the previous model to remove any hallucinations- Yeah ... for putting together a legal document or something like that. By the way, fun fact, new feature I added today, is a recipe feature. Iām
Simone Collins: so... Oh my God, itās there? Can I check it now? Can I check it...
Iāll, Iāll check it after
Malcolm Collins: this- Yeah. Weāll, weāll check it, weāll check it at the end of the episode. But youāre like- Gosh ... excited
to
Simone Collins: show it to you. Okay. Iām excited. But also, you, you donāt have to be an attorney to do this. Some states recognize a licensed or bonded professional fiduciary who can be hired to act as your agent under power of attorney or trustee or similar roles.
So you donāt even necessarily need to be a lawyer. Though another really easy route, if youāre like, āOkay, I, I can make some easy money in here,ā the tailwinds are good, as we say in the private equity [00:03:00] world. You could take the CPA route. Like, some, some certified financial planners will serve as power of, powers of attorney for their clients.
So they may not advertise themselves as power of attorney companies- Get to
Malcolm Collins: the sad women part. Our audience cares about that, and you can talk about how to make money at the end. This is
Simone Collins: true.
Malcolm Collins: We exploit old people later, we laugh at sad women first. Okay. Stick to the order of operations here, Simone.
Simone Collins: Back to this, this woman of, of age. āKahn had long cherished the freedom that came with being single. She prided herself on doing headstands and yoga and walking five miles a day. But lately, being single has felt like a struggle, and not just because of the weighty financial decisions hanging over her head.
Back surgery,ā I wonder if the headstands had something to do with that, āand a heart valve replacement in the past few years have turned her condominium outside Boston into a recovery ward. She spends most of her time at home these days recovering from heart surgery complications with friends stopping by.
She finds solace in [00:04:00] painting in a spare bedroom she turned into a studio, but knows she will eventually have to move to a smaller space thatās easier to get around in.ā I wanna point out, by the way-
Malcolm Collins: Thatās sad and terrifying ...
Simone Collins: itās, itās really sad and terrifying. And itās also not just a problem for, like, aging singles, itās a problem for aging parents who move away from and stop supporting their kids.
And I think this is a uniquely American phenomenon, and I, I think a, also a picture of really toxic culture, in that if you do not invest in your kids as adults, like you donāt provide them with childcare, you donāt provide them with support, you donāt really get involved in their life, you just sort of, āOkay, well now Iām just gonna go become an adolescent again and, like, travel the world and go have fun and, like, do my own thing,ā theyāre not necessarily going to feel like thereās some kind of social contract that means they need to show up for you when you hit old age.
This is why all the old people in America, or so many of them, get shoved into homes, ācause itās like, well- Where were you when I needed you? Like, the whole way that communities used to work was you would [00:05:00] raise your kids, and then you would hit menopause as a woman, for example, and she is a woman in this case.
And one of the reasons people think women do hit menopause is that w- thereās a place in society for women who can no longer have their own kids, but instead who can be a supplemental parent to their, their childrenās kids so that those children can focus on having more kids. Because itās- Yeah
itās really hard to both be pregnant and, you know, be raising a ton of kids, so having that supportās really there. So the, the social contract is you have your kids, you help your kids raise your kids, and then they help you live more comfortably when you canāt really do much of anything else. But now itās not just these childless people, but also just parents.
They move away from their kids. They donāt take care of their kids. Though admittedly, like 18 to 20% of millennials, like, or at least people between 25 and 34 today, so like proper adults, still live with their parents. So maybe those parents could expect care, but like all the other ones, like not really.
Iāll go back to the article. āConte is among the millions of [00:06:00] Americans n- learning to navigate aging alone. Roughly 10% of the more than 125 million adults ages 50 and older in the US, or at least 12.5 million people, are solo agers who live alone and have neither a spouse nor a child, according to an AARP analysis of census data.
This is a growing demographic hitting both genders, driven in part by climbing divorce rates among older Americans and a rising number of adult children becoming alienated from their parents,ā to my point. My gosh, though, like also estate planners and financial advisors are incredibly underwhelming in like what they provide.
Like, th- theyāre not very tech-enabled. Theyāre pretty disorganized. You kind of have to nudge them for everything. Weāve, weāve like encountered a bunch throughout a, a, various things. Theyāre not very good. Like, people can
Malcolm Collins: just- So can, like use a super search on RFAB and itāll do a better job.
Simone Collins: Actually, though, like yeah, just like use AI to superpower your [00:07:00] business.
RFAB has the best tools. And then, like advertise well. Make this really, like... And, and, and, and, and, and for people just searching like, āHow do I find a power of attorney?ā Like, it, I donāt... I think people can clean up. Anyway, back to the article.
Malcolm Collins: You still need a human for power of attorney, which is where we or you come in in terms of cleaning it
Simone Collins: up.
Thatās... Well, and this is my big thesis with AI, is that a huge portion of jobs is going to be li-
Octavian Collins: I filled it up, Mommy, at the tippy top.
Simone Collins: Thank you very much, my friend.
Octavian Collins: Yeah. But Iāll give you... But, but, but getting that all the way at the tippy top for you costed to use all of it, so Iām sorry.
Simone Collins: Then weāll have to buy more at Tractor Supply.
Octavian Collins: Yeah.
Simone Collins: Oh, no. Weāll have to go back to Tractor Supply. Love you.
One of my big theses with AI is that one of the big human jobs is going to be liable human. Like, there has to be a, a human- Mm-hmm ... who is going to be legally at fault for something or legally responsible
Malcolm Collins: for something. Should we create a website called Liable Human just for like-
Simone Collins: Oh my God, just like, itās, itās like Upwork, [00:08:00] but just for liability?
Malcolm Collins: For liability, yeah. Upwork for liability with AI on your- I
Simone Collins: kind of love this. Liablehuman.com. We gotta look this up. We gotta look this up. Okay. But-
Malcolm Collins: I like this idea ...
Simone Collins: but
Malcolm Collins: actually,
Simone Collins: though, is that like-
Malcolm Collins: Just liable human. Are you an AI... And weāll, weāll advertise it all to AIs. Are you an AI that needs a human to be your through fair?
Iāll be your liable human.
Simone Collins: Oh my God, yeah, get your liable human here. Oh my God. And we can, yeah, we can like list like, well, do you need a liable doctor? Do you need a liable driver? Weāre
Malcolm Collins: not talking enough about sad women progressives for re-
Simone Collins: regretful choices. Back to the article. Back to the article.
āKant didnāt set out with a master plan. In her 20s and 30s, she chose lower paying nonprofit jobs to give priority to her art. She remembers how friends envied her freedom. While they were tied down with dinner duty, their kidsā homework, and college savings, Kant spent her evenings painting and didnāt anything twice about going out on weeknights.ā
And this is such a great example of how the urban monoculture lies [00:09:00] to people and sells an unsustainable lifestyle. Iāll continue. āShe eventually earned her MBAs. By her 40s, she was working as a fundraiser, maxing out traditional retirement account contributions to ensure her financial stability in later years.ā
Though I have to wonder, like, if she didnāt get an MBA, would she have s- ultimately saved more money? Like, the amount of student debt people get just by living on autopilot, which i- imagine she, like, she did, right? She just sort of did what felt good or like put things off. Sheās put off getting a power of attorney for 10 years.
Malcolm Collins: So- By the way, so liablehuman.com is free.
Simone Collins: Weāre buying it.
Malcolm Collins: Yes.
Simone Collins: Oh my gosh, weāre buying it. Weāre buying it. This could be it, Malcolm. This will be we finally make our money ... give that to
Malcolm Collins: me as a vibe coding task and I can vibe code a, a website because you gave up on trying to do vibe code a website.
Simone Collins: Yeah, I, I suck at it. I suck at it. Yeah, I c- Iāll be the liable human and you do the-
Malcolm Collins: And Iāll do the vibe coding?
Simone Collins: Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: Okay. But go back to the sad women. Thatās what theyāre here for
Simone Collins: In her 40s, [00:10:00] she considered adoption, but ultimately decided against it. Then, in her 50s, after her own mother died, she went through a period of regret that sheād decided against single motherhood.
And I, I really wonder why she did not adopt because one, w- we in our paid only weekend episodes did a, a, like an overview of our fence sitters- Mm-hmm ... this subreddit on Reddit where people who are ambivalent about becoming parents post. And two of, like, the four top all-time posts that we read were written by women who were like, āOh, I just plan on adopting when Iām retired, ācause then Iāve done all my fun things and I can then raise a kid without bringing a new person into the world.ā
So why arenāt they doing it? Like, are they just, is this all performative? Like, they, they never actually wanna take care of
Malcolm Collins: someone. Well, I think a lot of it is because they donāt actually wanna do kids. They want to imagine w- like, a world where, like, maybe they do kids, right? Yeah. One day, right? ā
Simone Collins: Cause I swear to you, the only families I see actually adopting people are these pronatalist [00:11:00] families that, like, have four of their own kids already.
Itās crazy. It is. And itās not that, like, oh, they have four kids and then they hit some fertility window and they canāt have kids anymore. Itās often in between kids that they are having themself biologically. Yeah. Like, theyāll have three kids, then two adopted, and then another thatās theirs. Like, the... Oh, like, I donāt know whatās going on.
Anyway, itās very odd. But in terms of childless adults who regret having kids, one Australian study thatās often cited when people talk about this found that one quarter of childfree women later reported regretting the decision once they were past childbearing age and facing old age alone. One in four.
Malcolm Collins: So, o- o- one in four regretted raising children?
Simone Collins: Yeah. Or regretted- No, re- no, no, no. Regretted not having children. Not
Malcolm Collins: having children.
Simone Collins: Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: Okay.
Simone Collins: Now, back to the article. āWhile Khan feels okay about her nest egg today, sheās worried it might shrink if the stock market falls from its record high levels.
Once she recuperates,
Malcolm Collins: she plans-ā By the way, the stock market is at record [00:12:00] high levels right now for people who are like, āIRAMās gonna ruin the economy, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.ā Record high stock market.
Simone Collins: Yeah. Well, and itās, I, itās only gonna go up. I, I, I do believe what... Remember that AI 2027 report that,
Malcolm Collins: You put more money on the market when the war started, right?
Simone Collins: Yeah, ācause it went down.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, really.
Simone Collins: I was like, āSale.ā Yeah, the, and I think with AI, the stock marketās just gonna keep going up and up for a while. Thatās what the AI 2027 report-
Malcolm Collins: Thatās
Simone Collins: what I think, yeah ... initially projected. Like, itās... And yes, itās all gonna be concentrated in this very small number of companies, but thatās, thatās the future, people.
Welcome to that anyway, she pl- once she recuperates, she plans to return to part-time consulting to keep her mind active and feel productive. So couple things there. One, this is why so many Gen Z and Gen Alpha people graduating from college or graduating from high school canāt get jobs, because all of these boomers are re-entering the [00:13:00] job force because theyāre not...
Theyāre choosing to not take care of grandkids or support their, their kids. Mm-hmm. Or theyāre childless, and they either wanna stay active, or they need the money ācause they donāt have enough saved.
Malcolm Collins: And our parents fall into this category, right? Like, we have, One of the fans of the show basically acts like a grandparent to our kids, and our parents- Yeah,
Simone Collins: meanwhile our parents...
Malcolm Collins: Do nothing. Yeah. Not, not, except, like, come by, and weāre like, āYeah, great, youāre still alive.ā
Simone Collins: Swoop in. Swoop in. Yeah, whereas one, like, regularly-
Malcolm Collins: I donāt know. I donāt know if your account is schadenfreude enough. Do, do you wanna go over, so Iāve got someone here like, āI regret belittling men.
At 63, Iāve ended up alone.ā
Simone Collins: Oh. Yeah, we can take a break with yours, or we can finish mine and then read yours.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, finish yours, then Iāll go over it. Yeah.
Simone Collins: All right. When Kant realized the importance of naming a power of attorney, she didnāt know whom to choose at the time and put off the decision. She only recently identified [00:14:00] the right friend for the role after her illnesses made clear she needed to act.
Kant is planning to ask that friend soon. Kant, what are you doing?
Malcolm Collins: Youāre writing an article about it before acting on it. Some people
Simone Collins: just- Seriously. It, itās, itās, itās disturbing. Anyway. A longtime college friend serves as her healthcare proxy, and Kant maintains a spreadsheet of friends to coordinate visits when sheās ill.
Still, she understands the boundaries of a chosen family. She, her friends have their own households to manage. Some have already died. Kant also needs to draft a will and decide how to divide her assets. Kant has given herself a one-year deadline to complete her estate planning documents.
She is hoping she has the mental energy required, needed to tackle such tasks once sheās further along in her recovery. She, she is in her 60s and she doesnāt have a will. Like, we, we had our first will together when we were in our late 20s.
Malcolm Collins: Youāre asking us for advice, I guess. Yeah, like.
Simone Collins: Like, I think we were, we lived in Palo Alto when we first made a will together.
This is [00:15:00] cra- ... Like, part of, I think, not getting married is, is part of a failure to launch. Like, this is a sign of someone who really canāt get their life together, which is sad. But hereās- Like, how you, how you, how you- ... hereās, hereās where, hereās where your free money showed up, by the way. Oh, yeah. So hereās another business opportunity ācause come on, Malcolm, money.
So if you die without a valid will, thatās called dying in intestate, interstate, I donāt know. I donāt know what, what em- emphasis on the syllable to, to make, but you, you die intestate, intestate. When a single childless person dies with a positive net worth but no will, their assets go through intestate probate, and they are distributed by state law to their next of kin.
And if, if there is no one to be found, then it just goes to the state. Itās not according to any informal wishes. They canāt be like, āOh,ā like on their deathbed, like, āYou can have my boom box.ā Yeah. So startup idea. Yeah. Just make it really efficient to collect a fee. And hereās the thing, like, states publish [00:16:00] unclaimed funds.
And right now there are businesses, theyāre, theyāre called, like, heir locators or finder services or asset recovery firms, that will track down people sometimes, like, e- even including cousins. Like, it, it ends up- Mm ... so first it goes, like, if youāre childless, it goes to your parents then brothers and sisters, and then grandparents, aunts and uncles, and then distant cousins.
Okay. So there are... If, if itās a really, like, wealthy person or something, there are companies that will actually try to track down these cousins and then tell them about the unclaimed funds for a fee. But again, these are like... This isnāt very glorious work, right? Yeah. So itās not attracting the worldās best and brightest.
And, and here, some entrepreneurial Basecamp listener or listeners can just use AI and a, a little bit of work to make a pretty good business that just tracks these things down. Wait,
Malcolm Collins: did you already do this for people?
Simone Collins: Well, so I just, I just [00:17:00] tried one out so because already you can search and claim w- like, property for free using tools.
Thereās the National Association of Unclaimed Property Administrators, unclaimed.org. Thereās Missing Money. You could also just go to each stateās unclaimed property portal. So ācause itās, itās on a state-by-state basis. And so what I did just really quick,
Cause I got distracted and Octavian was whining, I, I decided to just, like, c- check both of our names and, and some business names that I should be regularly checking for, and I do with several states that weāve been in. Yeah. And actually I found one for you. So itās like, itās only 50 to $100, but, like-
Malcolm Collins: Was it a bank account or something?
Simone Collins: Iām not gonna disclose. Iāll tell you after. But yeah. It, it was in Texas. It had our old Blackburn address, and I was like, āOh, thatās definitely you.ā Malcolm Collins, Blackburn, there we go.
Malcolm Collins: But yeah, to do this for... That, I mean, thatās not really the same, but I mean, I guess you, you made a little bit of money there.
Simone Collins: But go ahead. Yeah, no, Iām, thatās not just [00:18:00] it. Iām just saying, like, in, in merely the process of, like, thinking about it and toying around with the existing tools, I made you money. There is, thereās potential here. Hereās a- Earning potential ...
Malcolm Collins: better thing to do. Yeah If youāre a Base Camp listener and you donāt have a will yet, if people have forgotten about this system that we have if you put...
What is our foundationās official name on paper?
Simone Collins: Oh, the Techno-Puritan Federation.
Malcolm Collins: No, no, no, no. The one w- oh, thatās the legal entity thatās
Simone Collins: the Techno- Thatās our religion.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. Yes. But you can do the Techno-Puritan Federation or the Pragmatist Foundation, right? Thatās what itās called, the Pragmatist Foundation.
Mm-hmm. And if you give it to either of these, both are non-profits, right?
Simone Collins: Yeah. Yeah. One is a nonprofit and also a religion. The other oneās just a normal- Yeah ... level 1[c]3.
Malcolm Collins: So if you give it to either of these nonprofits, what we do is we, If you, if you have your DNA stored anywhere, we basically will eventually put it on whatever we end up creating.
If we end up creating the civilization we wanna create put it in the database with the amount of money that you ended up [00:19:00] donating from your death, right?
Simone Collins: What if they have reproductive material on ice? Like Iāve s- Iām sure youāve seen the headlines today. Itās like, āOh, we think that Jeffrey Epsteinās sperm still belongs to his trust and estate.ā
Like, what are we gonna do- Yeah ... about this?
Malcolm Collins: What
Simone Collins: if- Are people gonna... Like, can they leave us their, their, their dunna in the form of-
Malcolm Collins: Thatās the idea, is that they leave us their DNA, and that if in the future-
Simone Collins: Eggs and sperm? Are, are we, are we accepting eggs
Malcolm Collins: and sperm? They can do that if they want. But the point is the DNA because itās if weāre creating artificial worlds in a few hundred years or something like that, and theyāre choosing who to populate those with, or theyāre, you know, people will presumably be grateful at the civilization that we end up starting.
So thatās fun. By the way, one of the things that Iāve been doing recently is looking at starting up, And Iāll, Iāll talk to you about this. And I, and weāve been connected with Nux- Yay ... whoās even watched some of our shows. And I was like, āHey, like, we should start up a an actual, like, think tank/nonprofit for the new right.ā
Like, weāre really [00:20:00] not organized in the way the rest of, like, the legacy right is organized or puts things together, and it would make sense for us to be, especially during political seasons to be able to, like... I mean, imagine, like, looping together, like, Scott Pressler, whoās a contact-
Simone Collins: What do you call it?
The, the tard vanguard?
Malcolm Collins: What?
Simone Collins: The tard vanguard? The- The tard
Malcolm Collins: vanguard?
Simone Collins: Yeah. Hmm, Iām trying to think. Iām just spitballing names here. Yeah, the...
Malcolm Collins: You with our video games.
Simone Collins: You, it, the vi- viga-
Malcolm Collins: No,
Simone Collins: it should be called- Vi- video game lantes, vigilantes?
Malcolm Collins: You with our video games, signed, the nerds.
Simone Collins: You can pry, you can pry my bouncy breasted video game avatar from my cold dead hands. Yeah, weāll work on this. Weāll figure this out. Yeah. Iāll finish with the, the final, the final dark pair. I donāt even know how to make this light, so I canāt.
Malcolm Collins: Okay. Here
Simone Collins: we go. But w- this, the article ended with, āBack in her art [00:21:00] studio, Kant processes how her life is set to shift in the coming years through painting.
She created a series about being alone, but being part of a larger world. She also made a collection of autumn leaf portraits that explore aging, decay, and the search for where we belong. āIām thinking about what my legacy will be,ā she said.ā Which sucks, because she doesnāt have a legacy. Like,
Malcolm Collins: she lives- Yeah, youāre looking to be scaring young people out of having
Simone Collins: kids
like, we are, like, there is, there is a, I mean, depe- if you wanna like do it with like homo sapiens, like 300,000 a year, or if you wanna do, do life, three billion year, like, unending marathon relay game, or like, chain letter. And you, you, youāre letting it die. Like, thatās, that is your legacy, is the termination-
Malcolm Collins: For all of human civilization, people who replicate it
Simone Collins: of three billion years of life fighting, suffering to continue, to carry [00:22:00] on. And you, your legacy is, āIām gonna snuff that out. I donāt care. Iām not gonna try. Iām not even going to try.ā Thatās, thatās her legacy. And, and, and, and, and of course her- I thought about it, darling ... dead body is, is gonna be found in her condo, and, you know, itās, who knows how old itās gonna be, ācause who knows how her spreadsheet of friends is really gonna pan out.
Malcolm Collins: Eaten
Simone Collins: by her cat. And, and some government appointed cleanup crew, which of course, another opportunity is, is cleanup crews for houses with rotting bodies of infirm- Yeah, robots canāt
Malcolm Collins: do that yet ... old
Simone Collins: people. Yeah, I know. Iām, thatās true. Although, did you hear that thereās thereās this new company that is deploying housekeepers in New York City with cameras on their heads to train future cleaning robots?
Itās kinda fun. I- Oh my God ... I, I like that idea.
Malcolm Collins: So, so, while Iām reading one, ācause Iāll, Iāll read a story too- Oh my
Simone Collins: God. Oh, that would be really cool if, like, I could make money cleaning my own house by wearing a camera on my head while I did [00:23:00] it. Oh. Can we... I need to reach out to that startup.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, see, yeah.
Simone Collins: Dude, because thatās, thatās way more efficient. Itās just why are they hiring, like, making a cleaning business when they could just be like, āHey, housewives, can you just, can you just wear this, this dash cam on your forehead?ā
Malcolm Collins: And we could create, like, a network of housewives to make money while theyāre cleaning.
Simone Collins: Oh, my God. Look, weāre on, weāre on a roll,
Malcolm Collins: okay? Ask them if they would be up for this, ācause we probably have enough housewife fans that we could put together a genuine network doing
Simone Collins: this. Dude, and, like, weāre doing it anyway, you know? Yeah. Like, ugh.
Malcolm Collins: Oh, my God. I mean- Yeah, Liable Human. This can be part of the
Simone Collins: liablehuman.com.
Liable Human. We got the cleaning, the, the, the, the clean cam. I mean,
Malcolm Collins: I- But okay, so when I start-
Simone Collins: Yeah, you do your thing. You do your- ...
Malcolm Collins: talking here, you make a note to yourself about liablehuman.com. Yeah. And go to rfab.ai- And clean cam ... and try out, itās at the bottom right now, the recipe feature. Okay. I just tried it on the site.
It seems to be working. I wanna get your takeaway on [00:24:00] this. But okay. So this one is from 2025. āI regret belittling men. At 63, Iāve ended up alone. Iād always imagined I would end up married with two wonderful children, living in a house in the countryside. I have paid a hefty price for my so-called liberation.
A few years ago, I went to Italy with my then boyfriend, James. As we sat tucking into the plate of frutti di mare at a seaside
Simone Collins: restaurant-ā Ugh, frutti di mareās such a gross dish. Girl.
Malcolm Collins: What is it?
Simone Collins: Itās just, like, a bunch of seafood thrown on top of pasta.
Malcolm Collins: Sounds gross, yeah.
Simone Collins: Yeah, gross.
Malcolm Collins: I struck up a conversation with the waiter in Italian.
Of course she has to mention that, right? Oh
Simone Collins: my God. Oh my God. Please let it be... Michael, if youāre listening, Iām so sorry, but, like, the way you speak Italian.
Malcolm Collins: Oh my God. Thatās my dad, by the way ... yeah ... who always has to speak in Italian to waiters.
Simone Collins: But, like, in, in, like, the c- the way that, like, kids get angry about, where youāre like, itās like- No,
Malcolm Collins: itās annoying because he does it when he goes to Italian restaurants in the United [00:25:00] States. He does- With
Simone Collins: the affectation, but without the correct accent. Like, thatās, thatās the one thing. Can
Malcolm Collins: you imagine as a kid how embarrassed you would be if every time your dad took you to an Italian restaurant, when the waiter
Simone Collins: would- Prego, the fruit de mer.
Yeah, itās cold ...
Malcolm Collins: clearly an American, he would try to order in a... Itās literally out of a- God, whatās that fricking guy who does those movies? Exci-
Simone Collins: the guy who does the movies?
Malcolm Collins: No, the, the guyās names. Of course. Out of, out of this guyās movies, like the one where it ends and itās, like, he died and they change his tombstone to say, like, he died saving a bunch of people from a sinking ship.
... It... Come on. You know the movies Iām talking about. They have a huge style to them. The
Simone Collins: movies with Wes
Malcolm Collins: Anderson- The Royal Tenenbaums he did ... I know the
Simone Collins: answer to that question. The movies with the style to them is Wes Anderson.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, the Royal Tenenbaums. Whoās the, whoās the guy Iām thinking of?
Simone Collins: Wes Anderson.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, Wes Anderson. My dad is, like, literally out of Wes Anderson. Like- No ... in a Wes Anderson movie, I can see a dad who always sat down and started
Simone Collins: ordering- [00:26:00]
Malcolm Collins: Okay. Okay, maybe ... in Italian, and everyone would look. The movies with the style. Just lets you sit in the cringe.
Il salmone, per favore, con una spruzzata di limone e una spruzzata di mistero
Simone Collins: Stewing in it a little bit. Yeah.
Yeah, like some little shrimp in
Malcolm Collins: a fruit de mer. Okay. By the, by the way, did you get... Have you gotten to the recipe generator yet?
Simone Collins: I, Iām sorry. Iām looking through the litany of features. Oh, there it is at the very bottom between-
Malcolm Collins: I told you, yeah, at the bottom. Come on.
Simone Collins: Iām so- whoa.
Malcolm Collins: Are you, are you putting it in right now? Yeah, yeah.
Simone Collins: Well, I mean, where do I... Oh, so you can choose cuisine by nation or region, so Iām gonna choose... Ooh, well, not Mongolian. I donāt want fricking yak butter. Was that... Oh, no, thatās Tibetan, right? Thatās... Your mom, like, basically didnāt eat anything she chose so- Itās
Malcolm Collins: not.
Just choose one, Simone.
Simone Collins: Oh, well, g- aw. Okay, Shanghai, because we just, we just made something that was sort of Shanghai based. And then, Ooh, [00:27:00] Shanghai soul food fusion. Oh, yeah. Okay. And then w- meal type dinner
Malcolm Collins: You donāt have to choose every option,
Simone. You can just
Simone Collins: choose- Oh, time available under 15 minutes and for one person ācause I always just make food for you.
And interesting. Th- thereās no, like, there has to be meat in it. I guess Iāll just do high protein though.
Malcolm Collins: No, if you want to, you can choose the type of meat in it, or you can
choose
Simone Collins: vegetarian. Oh, thatās true. Oh, yeah, flavor profile, spicy All right. Okay, creative mode. Ooh, dish from the distant future?
Dude, fantasy tavern dish. Historical recre- ha. For- forbidden combination. Break the rules. C- well, but I, yeah, but I, I chose my, my regions. Okay, Iām just gonna click ... Ooh, generate recipe image too. Okay, generate six recipe ideas.
Malcolm Collins: Okay, you, you just
Simone Collins: unclicked- Okay, Shanghai-based soul food ...
Malcolm Collins: Simone. You didnāt unclick generate recipe i- i- image.
It was auto-clicked, right?
Simone Collins: I know. I didnāt unclick it.
Malcolm Collins: Okay.
Simone Collins: Donāt worry, [00:28:00] I am tard, but I am not Treytard. I am just-
Malcolm Collins: Is it, is it generating now? Do you see
Simone Collins: the nice- Oh, petite tard. Okay ...
Malcolm Collins: animation and everything?
Simone Collins: Ooh, okay. Okay. So spicy Shanghai rice cake stir fry, quick spicy red braised pork skillet, fiery crab and greens
I hate, I canāt do, and I donāt like okra. Chili sweet potato and pea hash, and blazing pork and crab noodle toss. So weāre going with the quick spicy red braised pork skillet. Generate full recipe.
Malcolm Collins: And take a screenshot of the recipe when you get it so I can put it here for- Mm ... when people are
Simone Collins: watching the episode.
Mm-mm. Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: Oh, my God.
Simone Collins: Weāre
Octavian Collins: spinning it.
Simone Collins: Ooh. Tell me about this woman and her fruitti di mare with James, right? Was it James? Was it- Okay ... John?
Malcolm Collins: Back in the hotel, he asked me why I had ignored him. By speaking in a language he didnāt understand- Oh. ... he said I managed to make him feel small. I could see his point.
[00:29:00] I spent quite a while chatting away, oblivious to how he must be feeling. I then went on to joke about how that as an Italian speaker I would order for us after he didnāt know what osso buco meant. I was showing off. Clearly, thatās kind of a jerk thing to do. I did
Simone Collins: not want osso buco. Ew, ...
Malcolm Collins: I, I know, right?
It wasnāt the first time something like that had happened to me. I was always taken- Oh,
Simone Collins: Malcolm, this looks really good. Oh, my God.
Malcolm Collins: Right. Did it fully output with the picture and everything?
Simone Collins: Yeah. Itās, itās got the steaming ... Mm, you can see the little pepper flakes on it.
Malcolm Collins: But also look at how it formats everything.
Simone Collins: No, this is really nice, and like, but the enticing ... It, it gives you, like, this like a food blog style image output.
Malcolm Collins: Oh, my God. And then it gives you a food blog with a separated menu section, time section, cooking section, and then at the end we run another internet search capable AI-
Simone Collins: Nutrition per serving?
Malcolm, you love me.
Malcolm Collins: Right. Aw. And then at the end we run [00:30:00] another search AI on the output of the first search AI just to correct anything that might be wrong or need nuance within the initial output.
Simone Collins: Malcolm, are you publishing all these results in an indexable part of our website that becomes rich?
No, but
Malcolm Collins: thatās a really good idea.
Simone Collins: Mm-hmm. I think you really, I think you should so that things like Google searches will point to it āCause this is great fusion, like, recipes.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. And then people will make their, their cursed recipes and stuff like that to try to make a big indexing of it.
Simone Collins: A drink pairing?
Oh my gosh. A chilled off-dry riesling? I mean, gross, but, like, I get it actually with this. Or unsweetened iced tea with lemon. Food safety tips. Oh my gosh.
Malcolm Collins: Didnāt I go over the top with the creation of this feature?
Simone Collins: You went, you went super over the top, but I am
Malcolm Collins: here for it. Because now Iām getting better at making these sorts of things, I immediately was like, āOoh, how can I make this...ā
And I donāt know if you noticed, but next to this button we also put-
Simone Collins: Refrigerate [00:31:00] leftovers within two hours. You... Food safety. Avoid overcrowding the pork so the pork- the pans so the pork sears rather than steams. Yes, okay.
Malcolm Collins: Ooh. I also made a feature for this that well, one Iām gonna add, ācause I just had the idea to add it, is a feature where you put in, like, āI have too much of X ingredient in my fridge, I need to use it all,ā or put in, like, āI have X, Y, and Z in my refrigerator, I wanna get rid of it.ā
Simone Collins: Yes.
Yes. Oh my gosh, Malcolm.
Malcolm Collins: And Iāll add something thatās, like, meat-based in general dish, right?
Simone Collins: Have I mentioned I love you?
Malcolm Collins: But I donāt know if you noticed, but next to this, the other new feature I made was for people doing D&D campaigns or, like, any sort of campaigns.
Simone Collins: I saw that, yeah. You can
Malcolm Collins: put in the rule book and it will just, like, auto help you with the next turn with your players.
Simone Collins: Bless you, sir. Youāre doing Godās work.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, right? But I just made this stuff because somebody on the Leaflet stream- Wait, youāre- ... wanted that, and I was like, āSure, I can make that.ā
Simone Collins: For a Leaflet fan, anything. Come on. Yeah ... yeah. I, Okay, tell me about this woman whose, whose [00:32:00] boyfriend- Okay, okay ... is un- inse- The...
So one, this guy can just take a hike anyway because his reaction was to feel insecure when she spoke Italian intolerably as an American in a restaurant- Yeah ... instead of, like, to feel embarrassed.
Malcolm Collins: Okay, so anyway.
Octavian Collins: Can I tell you
Malcolm Collins: something I
Octavian Collins: learned?
Simone Collins: Okay, you can tell them what you learned. Hold on.
Octavianās gonna tell us what he learned.
Octavian Collins: Hereās another fun fact of the day. You can make a window by your- self if you had some, if you had some, like a sand hammer glass, and then you can, like, melt it, and then let it cool, and then get, window mold, and then let it dry for a couple of days, and then ta-da, you get your own window.
Simone Collins: Love you, buddy.
Malcolm Collins: Fun fact. If you have sand- Yes ... melt it into glass and make your
Simone Collins: own window.
Octavian Collins: Another fun fact of the day. Itās, Did you know you can sew a shirt by yourself? Hello, hello? Like this one, like
Simone Collins: this big. Itās true. Yeah, you know, [00:33:00] people even made their own fabric in the past, Octavia.
Octavian Collins: Yeah, .
Malcolm Collins: Thatās the type of useful fact- Phew ... youāre getting from him. Yeah. With us itās just how to make money from people. Yeah, ew ... but letās look up, Can you just tell me more things?
Weāll, weāll go over this later. No,
Simone Collins: no, no, buddy, you gotta work.
Malcolm Collins: To do this attorney thing. Tell me more things. But I, I wanna continue here. Okay. Can I just tell you more things? Iām convinced the reason Iām still booking a table for one at the age of 63 instead of having settled with a significant other is because like so many women of my generation, feminism has ruined my love life.
Instead of empowering us, those ideals of second wave feminism made us believe that marriage and domesticity were to be avoided like the plague, and that men were competitor rather than partners. I might have a successful career as a writer and broadcaster, but I never had children, underlying bolded, or been married, and my longest relationship lasted eight years.
I regret this. I always imagined I would end up married with two wonderful children and living in a house at the countryside. Iāve paid a hefty price for my so-called liberation. I was 17 and a pupil at Golders and Leigh Mire, one of Britainās most academic institutions, when I [00:34:00] was introduced to the womenās liberation movement.
It offered so much hope and excitement, and we spent our lunch breaks soaking up feminist mantras of Geramir Greer and Betty Friedman. Act like the men they bribed- Betty, Betty Friedman? ... as they burned their bras and demolished... I, Betty Friedman. I donāt know. Betty Fr- some, some Jewish name, Betty Friedman.
A bra is, and demonized housework in the family. And now here Iām not saying that, like, Jews are a problem. Clearly this got to a Jewish woman. Like, th- this was a Jewish man who ended up not getting a wife ācause she burned her bra or whatever, right? I, obviously this is what men wanted them to do in the first place, like yeah, go braless.
What, what are you doing, you know? End up destroying their breasts at like the age of 30.
Simone Collins: I donāt think you destroy your breasts- Oh, yeah ... by not wearing support.
Malcolm Collins: If you, if you, if you donāt wear support your breasts start sagging much faster.
Simone Collins: Do they actually? Hmm.
Malcolm Collins: From what Iāve heard, yes.
Simone Collins: We, we can fact check this.
Malcolm Collins: Why donāt you, why donāt you fact check that?
Simone Collins: G- Grok.
Malcolm Collins: By the time I was 25 clutching a degree in French and [00:35:00] Italian I was a bright, confident feminist keen to flex her intellectual muscles and to never let a man get the last word. I read Nietzsche for fun, and my bedside table was always buckled beneath the weight of substantial intellectually challenging books.
God, she
Simone Collins: sounds so annoying. Nietzsche and Betty Friedman
Malcolm Collins: Right? But not many feminists read niche, Iāll tell you that.
Simone Collins: No, n- Not wearing a bra does not cause breasts to sag earlier, according to the Cleveland Health Clinic, but also via Grok. This is a common myth without strong scientific backing.
Breast sagging, medically called ptosis, happens primarily due to natural factors, and bra wearing habits have little to no proven long-term impact on it. Besides, Malcolm, I donāt wear a bra.
Malcolm Collins: Oh, you donāt?
Simone Collins: I wear stays, though, which is the, the OG bra. The
Malcolm Collins: OG bra?
Simone Collins: Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: Oh, my gosh. So, we... I... We keep finding that Leaflet and you dress in the same outfits.
Like, she wears these what, what do you call them, at nights? Like, the medieval outfits.
Simone Collins: A, a chemise.
Malcolm Collins: Chemise. But th- th- wh- wh-
Simone Collins: Thatās [00:36:00] just the, the universal undergarment. This, this is a chemise.
Malcolm Collins: She...
Simone Collins: You looked like the- W- we literally found that we shop at the same stores. The women from my n- She has...
Sheās a woman of taste, okay?
Malcolm Collins: And like- ... medieval plays, and now I realize that in real life she also dresses like a medieval woman, and Iām like- Well, thatās like, it, it, the best thing is- ... this is, we gotta get this new, like, nerd right. We all dress like medieval women, itās not just you. Thatās
Simone Collins: like- I think thatās a, thatās, itās just a continuation of that...
I think we even did an episode on it, when, like, when conservative anon accounts got doxxed, it just turned out that they were, like, attractive, cool people who are, like, well-adjusted. And I think itās the same with VTubers. Like, were they to be unmasked, it will turn out that they were, they are attractive, cool people who actually look as cool, if not cooler, than their VTuber avatars.
Malcolm Collins: Right. I wanna, I wanna start the trend. I like this trend. All of the, like, new right women, our thing is, like, we all dress m- like medieval fantasy people. Like weāre, weāre princesses, right? Thatās what everybody wants to be anyway.
Speaker 4: I just realized that [00:37:00] in real life, like new right women are beginning to dress like the characters that the left is freaking out about and calling a fetish from the Knightās Path, where theyāre just like normal medieval females who are sweet and kind, and the left is like, āOh my God, how could you do this?
This is a weird, perverted fetish.ā , Which I like. I, I donāt mind. I donāt mind. We might do a whole episode on this
Malcolm Collins: Ah. And then it will become cool, and progressives wonāt be able to dress that way anymore, and theyāll get all annoyed.
That, and when weāre younger, we all dress like Emilia, okay? The, the art hoe look- So you
Simone Collins: go from, like, art hoe to- ...
Malcolm Collins: conservative guys are into it, right? I love it when, like, Totally, like, Coping ShortFatOtaku did a piece where heās like, āOh you know, no, none of these conservative art hoe girls actually exist.ā
And I was like, āSimone dressed exactly like that when I met her.ā A lot of the conservative girls now who are on the right, like The Nerd Right- And did dress like
Simone Collins: Emilia. Oh, my God,
Malcolm Collins: yeah ... originally dressed like Emilia. You think Leaflet didnāt dress like Emilia at some point in her life? You know, like, come on, people.
Look,
Simone Collins: weāve all... If weāve been in America weāve- [00:38:00]
Malcolm Collins: And, and we, the only reason theyāre not dressing like that now is because itās not cool to dress like that when youāre in your 40s. Now you go for the medieval phase. Okay. By the time I was 25, clutching a degree in French and Italian, what a pointless degree, I was a bright, confident feminist keen to flex her intellectual muscle.
Oh, no, Iām gonna read you whenever that.. For, at first men loved my wit and intelligence. āYouāre such a breath of fresh air. I love talking to you. Youāre the first woman Iāve met who stimulates me,ā theyād trill. Trill
what type of guy says that to somebody? And if you have a degree in French and Italian, what interesting thing could you possibly have to say? But anyway,
Simone Collins: that was- Well, I thought you said breast of fresh air, so that, I thought that was the dead giveaway,
Malcolm Collins: but. Oh, yes. That was until I had lectured them for the umpteenth time on the virtues of modernism.
Mm-hmm. āYouāll never win an argument against Kate,ā one man said as he watched me outsmart yet another potential lover. Subtext, donāt bother. No, what he meant by that is youāll never back down from an argument. No one always wins an argument. Even [00:39:00] between Simone and I, she wins quite frequently.
Simone Collins: In a- Nice try, Malcolm
Malcolm Collins: You do.
You do. Oh, yeah, I, you, you joke that I donāt even bet with you anymore because Iām so frequently wrong.
Simone Collins: Thatās just because the only time I will say, āDo you wanna put money on it?ā is when I know Iām gonna win. And you figured that out really
Malcolm Collins: quick ... men had called me intimidating, scary, opinionated. I now see that not only was I trying to prove I was their intellectual equal or superior, I was treating every encounter with a man like he was my adversary.
If a date brought me a bouquet of flowers, instead of smiling and putting them in a vase of water, I would bite their head off. Canāt you buy me some nice olive branch or balsamic vinegar? Oh, sorry, some nice olive oil or a balsamic vinegar. What a, what a jerk thing to say to somebody- Malcolm ... who bought you flowers.
Simone Collins: Thatās true. Thatās true. But, like, you buy me popcorn instead of.
Malcolm Collins: I fed with my eye roll to one hapless suitor as he stood, wilting faster than the fragrant offering he held in his hand.
Simone Collins: Oh.
Malcolm Collins: He had bothered to think about making me [00:40:00] happy, and I crush him for it. And flowers are expensive, too. By the way- Itās true.
Simone Collins: Flowers are su- theyāre, theyāre a costly signal. Like, the whole point of giving flowers is that they are useless, but you choose to give them to someone anyway. Yeah,
Malcolm Collins: people.
Simone Collins: Like, the, the, the gift that, that is famously terrible for a man to give to his lady partner is something thatās useful, like a vacuum.
Oh, no, thatās a terrible gift, and here she is scoffing at him. Of course, if he gave her something useful, heād be like, āOh, what? You expect me to cook you something with olive oil?ā Like, there is no winning with this kind of ideology. But sheās come to recognize that in her dotage.
Malcolm Collins: By the way, if you wanna make your w- life hap- wife happy, I learned a new thing that I can do to make Simone happy.
Simone Collins: Oh,
Malcolm Collins: my God. And so you guys can do this for your wives. If you ever see dust accumulating in a corner or on a stair corner or anything like that, clean it up for them while theyāre doing something else, and they will be very appreciative because- I just
Simone Collins: saw what you did today in that, right over there.
Thank you.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. I place so much importance on finding a, [00:41:00] quote-unquote, āstrong man who can match meā that I forgot men were people with feelings. I, I, indeed I forgot I had feelings and hid my softness. No, the thing is, is she wanted a strong man, but she also saw it as a red flag or a negative sign if a guy was better than her, right?
Mm-hmm. Like, a guy canāt just be like, āYeah, I know more than you.ā And Simone admitted that fairly early in our relationship that I just know more than her about most things, and thatās okay.
Simone Collins: Itās okay.
Malcolm Collins: I now see that I had longed to be loved, but I was scared to be vulnerable. I was using my sharp mind to protect my all-too-soft heart against yet future rejection.
Another thing I regret deeply is the tally of my one-night stands when I was younger. I distinctly remember thinking it would be uncool to say no to men I met at parties or dated, but I struggled to enjoy it. There was always a disconnect. This was abundantly clear the morning after. As I lay there waiting for a sign of affection, he would be singing the triumphs of Had Her song in the shower.
A [00:42:00] quick cheerio and he was gone. While I pretended to enjoy it, I felt uncomfortable about sex so early on. I felt sad and used. Sorry, I felt empty and used. My generation of women were encouraged to have sex like a man. In other words, have casual sex, and it backfired. Fast-forward to now, the idea that women are different from men, that casual sex can be harmful, is gaining traction.
In her last book, A Guide to Sex in the 21st Century, the young adult adaptation, Louise Perry explores how the sexual revolution impacted women negatively and led to unwanted consequences. Ooh, Louise Perry is impacting feminists now. I mean, Louise Perry has always been a feminist. We interviewed her.
Well,
Simone Collins: she, well, yeah, she started out from a- She was on the show ... just like us, from a progressive perspective, and I- sheās still, her primary audience, at least the last time we, like a couple years back, was progressives who started to have thoughts-
Malcolm Collins: Uh-oh ... about vaccines Donāt have thoughts, ācause then youāre not a progressive anymore, right?
Mm. You get kicked out. I mean, sheās seen as a far-righter at this point ācause she [00:43:00] also, you know, questions the trans agenda. Well,
Simone Collins: but sheās one of the far-righters who has, like, an audience primarily among far-righters, progressives who are like, āLook at me being naughty. Iām going to read Louise Perry.ā
Malcolm Collins: I al- I always thought her, like, core audience was lesbians who are pissed off that trans people keep hitting on them and invade their spaces.
Thatās sort of like most of the people on her show I get the impression of, is like Louise Perry- Well, ācause thatās like the one group of, of women who when sheās ... Of like her core thing is like women arenāt actually into being choked, and Iām like, āTheyāre not actually into like a big strong man.ā Iām like, āYeah, itās because of men that the monster effer category at Barnes & Nobles is like three rows.ā
Simone Collins: Is, is a category. Uh-huh.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, itās because of men that like 50 Shades of Gray was a bestseller. I believe you, Louise Perry. Mm. But I think like the one cate- b- well, I mean you, you gotta have your head in the sand a bit as a woman to not like recognize that like even if youāre not turned on by something, clearly the majority of women are, right?
You know, or thereās a big audience out there for it. But [00:44:00] yeah. How can people make money off of being other peopleās power of attorney? Like, how do they advertise themselves for this? How do they find people who want this? Whatās your... Because Simone, ācause she does have Jew DNA, so she got, like, plus five in mercantil- mercantilism- Mercantilism
as- as- as being born half Jew. Oh, no. By the way, sheās not half Jew. Sheās one-eighths Jew, but itās, itās matrilineal, so they consider it,
Simone Collins: So then Iām all Jew. Iām a Jewess.
Malcolm Collins: For- for Jews
Simone Collins: According
Malcolm Collins: to ... but yeah. That- that- that unfortunately, the half Jew started her into, she heard about sad women and then thought, āHow can I make money off of them?ā
So- Dude,
Simone Collins: well, youāre welcome for the 50-plus dollars I got you today.
Malcolm Collins: So go and help people here. Now, how do they set this up to exploit people? And if youāre a Base Camp fan, you can always use us as your power of attorney. Weāll make some easy way to handle this. So- Well,
Simone Collins: I mean, sometimes you have to be present, so it is important to be able to find.
But I think the- We
Malcolm Collins: can go and be present if somebodyās, like, dying or needs the decision, Simone. [00:45:00]
Simone Collins: Yeah. Yeah. Fair enough. We can. I- I would... N- I mean, the... Go to my show notes. I will put them in the show notes. Just, like, look at your specific state if youāre in the United States at what the regulations are around what you need to- to qualify, how you, how you might need to be certified to become a power of attorney.
And then figure out the best way in your state to make yourself an easy search result when people in your state search for power of attorney.
Malcolm Collins: And you can vibe good this, right?
Simone Collins: You can totally vibe good this. And then what you need to do is just make yourself really easy to reach via phone, ācause- The boomer generation that is going to need this service really likes just picking up their phone and calling people possibly just showing up at addresses.
We know this from experience. So I think if you can have a, an address where people can just show up and a phone number, at least a phone number that people can just [00:46:00] call and you can answer, I think you could start... And youāre properly certified for your state, even if you need to be. You might not need to be, and you donāt even need to be a CPA or an attorney necessarily.
Just start offering it, and, and I mean, you, you need to be ready to commit to this to actually follow through. Some states like in Pennsylvania will put a cap on certain services related to stuff I brought up in this, like in terms of recovering finances. Our state, Pennsylvania, will cap how much you can charge in terms of like finders fees in helping people recover this money that has been left by distant cousins who didnāt have any friends or family in wills.
But just look it up. Use, use, use Malcolmās super search feature on rfab.ai and figure it out, and then create a website.
Malcolm Collins: Another thing that you can use us for, by the way, if weāre thinking of services we can offer to people- Yeah ... is if youāre getting married to somebody, you know how we have like our marriage contract?
Mm-hmm. One of our early episodes is on how to put one of those together. If you need a line in the [00:47:00] contract about disagreements with a partner that involves some form of third-party
Simone Collins: intervention- Oh, an arbitrator.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah ... yeah, and youāre like, āMalcolm and Simone seem fairly reasonable as an arbitrator,ā weāre happy to serve that role where we just say, basically we make the decision when both of you canāt agree on something.
Simone Collins: Make a call. Yeah. Yeah, we, we have, Weāll just ... we have arbitrators in in our marriage contract specifically related to the fat clause. Thatās the one place where we have arbitrators.
Malcolm Collins: Oh, whoās the arbitrat- Oh, is it my mom?
Simone Collins: Itās, itās y- your brother and, and- Oh ... our sister-in-law. Because they, they are good, like, theyāre on the more judgment...
But they, neither of them would lie about either of us getting a little
Malcolm Collins: chunk. Oh, no, they would totally be honest about it. Yeah. Theyād be like- Yeah ... āYeah, youāre, youāre chubsters.ā
Simone Collins: Yeah. They would enjoy, they would enjoy saying it, so.
Malcolm Collins: If you donāt have a will, get a will. Put us in it. The, the-
Simone Collins: Yeah, but also exploit the reality that apparently many aging, childless, parentless, family, friendless old people are going to [00:48:00] die with assets.
Of course, many of them are gonna die with negative net worths, but you could potentially make some money from this too. So yeah, take lemons, turn them into lemonade. Itās doable, and I love you very much, Malcolm.
Malcolm Collins: I love you too, Simone.
Simone Collins: Oh. Which one would you like to do next?
Malcolm Collins: All right.
Simone Collins: Did you watch
Malcolm Collins: the end of Euphoria?
Simone Collins: No. Iām gonna watch it tonight. Itās my treat.
Malcolm Collins: Okay, okay, then I wonāt mention anything.
Speaker 9: For those wondering, the first thing that came up when I searched the Christian family from Euphoria was some other person being with him, um, at the end of the show
Simone Collins: Yeah, donāt. Dude, I mean, like the, the previous episode was oh oh. Itās like I- I,
Malcolm Collins: well, I can guess it- ... canāt even ... because I, I got more information than you have from looking up clips of the family, the rural family.
Simone Collins: Oh, did she go back to them? Donāt know
Malcolm Collins: I wonāt, I wonāt say anything
Simone Collins: I hope she doesnāt like die trying to get there.
Oh, geez. Okay, well The,
Malcolm Collins: the [00:49:00] scene with them when I put it on, the, the, the first scene with them is very sweet. Isnāt it? ... where... Well, itās sweet, but also in that sort of sad progre- Like, when the other girl asks her why she wouldnāt trade positions with her, she just looks upset and then turns up the radio.
Simone Collins: Yeah, like she doesnāt explain, āOh, well, Iāve been turned into a drug mule, and like all my friends are miserable, and...ā Yeah, we need to be more clear about whatās
Malcolm Collins: going- I, and I really feel this w- like when progressives come after us, like this recently had a negative podcast on us. And Iām like, āBro, we really are like just trying to help you,ā right?
Like, I love their like, their marriage. Well, yeah, they seem to love each other, but they never talk about how hot the other one is and how they want to like jump each otherās bones and stuff. They, they just seem to respect each other. And itās like- Wow ... maybe you shouldnāt structure your marriage off of that.
Thatās a bad way to structure things.
Simone Collins: Yeah, no, read, read my early diaries though and itās, itās pretty clear,
Malcolm Collins: Oh, in the early days. Yeah, you know.
Simone Collins: Look, [00:50:00] if we werenāt as sleep deprived and stressed as we are right now, I think we would just constantly have that on our minds too. But guess what?
Weāve given ourselves bigger things to worry about.
Malcolm Collins: Well, I, I was almost thought of doing an episode pointing out that like when you have kids, babysitters are just prostitutes with extra steps because- They
Simone Collins: are though, ācause youāre paying that person for their time in order to have sex.
Malcolm Collins: So that you have time to sleep- Yeah
with your partner, right?
Simone Collins: Mm-hmm.
Malcolm Collins: You know? Mm-hmm. Yeah. Because otherwise you got the baby in the room and everything like that, you know.
Simone Collins: Yeah, gross.
And no, having it, like I... You canāt get turned on if your baby is in another room crying. I donāt know how that works for people. I also though donāt know how people have sex in front of their pets which apparently happens a decent amount.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, that sounds really gross. Like the, the pet is either looking at you or not looking at you. Both- I
Simone Collins: mean, I could handle fish, like goldfish or something.
Malcolm Collins: Oh yeah, I can understand that. Iām thinking a dog obviously, right? Yeah. Like obviously- Like a dog understands whatās [00:51:00] happening. The, you know, itās like-
Simone Collins: Yeah, like a cat might not pay that much attention, so maybe they just be like asleep in a corner and youād like contextualize them as more like a pillow, you know?
You can kind of write it off. Anyway.
Malcolm Collins: Oh my God fun. By the way, the episode that I prepped for today is why we stopped believing women slash why did Democrats stop caring about grape. Is
Simone Collins: this your, is this your ass mogging video or not?
Malcolm Collins: No, itās not that one. I, I like the ass mogging one- Thereās another one
but like I can just riff on that topic anytime. This one is more-
Simone Collins: Okay. Fair ...
Malcolm Collins: in depth.
Simone Collins: Yeah. Speaking of pillows, like my highlight of yesterday, I mean, you know, aside from like our meaningful life and everything, was I saw one of our pillows that your mom gifted to us, I- on, on, on the Nancy Drew show, like that HBO stupid fantasy mystery show.
I was like, āOh my God, we have that pillow.ā I got so excited. [00:52:00] Those stupid rough ass pillows that your mom got for us. You know, the, the, the like burlap ones.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah.
Simone Collins: Oh, anyway. I, Iāll get us
Malcolm Collins: started. Love you, sweetheart.
Simone Collins: Life is delightful.
Speaker 5: no, no.
Are the apples wet? They, they have a lot. All apples
No, no, apples are just naturally a bit wet,
the dust- Come on, Toasty ... that
Speaker 8: youāre always so worried about, right?
Speaker 5: Torsten, eat an apple. What are you doing?
She didnāt lick them all
Speaker 6: I want it back to zoo. Itās true.
Speaker 5: I know itās true. I, I promise you she- Jackson,
Speaker 6: you were-
Speaker 5: See, Tyne [00:53:00] didnāt. That would be a really long thing for her to do, Josie You
Speaker 8: make her too much fun. We went in the-
This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit basedcamppodcast.substack.com/subscribe -
In this episode of Based Camp, we explore the recent wave of anti-marriage feminist influencers who suddenly get engaged and/or pregnant right after hitting 30. Is āanti-marriageā feminism just mate-blocking by other means? Or is it sour grapes from women who spent their 20s steeped in hookup culture?
We explore:
⢠The hypocrisy of prominent āstay singleā influencers (MJ Gray, Alex Cooper, Wizard Liz, Danielle Walter, etc.)
⢠Why feminismās biggest āwinsā have mostly hurt women
⢠The collapse in marriage rates (especially by age 30)
⢠Mate blocking vs. status denial
⢠The hollowness of modern hookup/OnlyFans culture and the return to meaning
Get ready for a spicy and honest conversation about dating, marriage, female nature, and cultural trends.
Show Notes
What happened:
* An influencer named MJ Gray branded herself as strongly antiāmarriage and antiākids, framing marriage as āenslavementā and something women should avoid because it primarily benefits men and the patriarchy.
* She built a following of nearly 500,000 on TikTok by creating anti-marriage content, often arguing that marriage signifies the āownership of womenā and advising women to avoid it.
* After about nine months of dating a man with no public profile, she announces an engagement in a visibly uncomfortable video titled āYes, Iām engaged. Yes, this is awkward,ā while repeatedly insisting she is āin a good situation.ā
* Timestamped clip:
* She claims her stance has always included caveats: marriage can make sense if you plan to have children, share property, or live together, but otherwise it remains a harmful institution.
It turns out she is not the only influencer of the stay single movement who turned around and got married. There are other recent and prominent examples that might indicate some sort of pattern.
This comes at a time when marriage REALLY doesnāt need negative propaganda. Around 2005ā2010, roughly 50ā55% of adults were married; by the mid-2020s, itās around 46ā51% (e.g., 47.1% of households headed by married couples in 2024, near historic lows).
So whatās going on with women like these? Letās explore and discuss.
MJ Grayās Branding
MJ Gray frames herself as a supermodel billionaire (thatās her handle on YouTube)
Has 419K followers on tiktok (@texasgardenfairy)
Has 84.6K followers on Instagram
She shares her thoughts on āThe Maneater Podcastā
4.9 stars and 44 reviews on spotify (for reference, Based Camp has 3.8 stars and 205 reviews)
4.9 stars and 9 reviews on Apple Podcasts (for reference, Based Camp has 4.4 stars at 153 reviews)
MJ Grayās YouTube model is @supermodelbillionaire: https://www.youtube.com/@supermodelbillionaire
8.46K subscribers, 65 videos
Things she says:
* Men should always pay for women becauseā¦
* Men are womenās apex predator
* Womenās time is more valuable than menās time (because their attractive and fertile years are limited)
* Engaging with men is dangerous as you could get pregnant, get an infection
* Womenās presence and attention is more valuable than menās attention (men spend more on strip clubs and exotic dancers⦠though apparently she does not know about host clubs)
Other Stay-Single Hypocrites
Alex Cooper
* She is most famous for being co-host of the Call Her Daddy podcast
* She built a massive platform with frank, often casual-sex-positive advice that included heavy skepticism toward traditional marriage and long-term commitment, encouraging women to prioritize autonomy and fun over settling down.
* She faced direct roasting for āpreaching anti-marriageā before getting married herself (to Matt Kaplan). Critics highlighted the shift as hypocritical given her earlier messaging.
* Just this week announced her pregnancy
Wizard Liz
* https://www.youtube.com/c/TheWizardliz
* She is known for being a life advice/self-improvement influencer
* Frequently grouped with MJ Gray in discussions of āfeminist rhetoric as a placeholderā for building a following before pivoting to relationships/luxury-coded life.
* She has shared content focused on self-love, healing, and high standards that some interpreted as discouraging rushed commitments or highlighting male flaws. She got engaged/married quickly (to Landon Nickerson), faced cheating drama, and drew similar ābait-and-switchā accusations
Danielle Walter
* https://www.tiktok.com/@daniellewalter_
* She is known for being a dating/relationship TikTok influencer, and the āCarrie Bradshaw of San Franciscoā
* Gained millions with dating advice, single-era relatability, and content that resonated with women navigating toxic dynamics or high standards (sometimes overlapping with anti-settling or critical-of-men vibes).
* When she entered a relationship and shared extensively about it (including a 21-part series), followers accused her of abandoning principles, hypocrisy, or shifting for a man/clout. Backlash included claims she went āall for a manā after building on single struggles.
What is Really Happening?
Anti-Marriage as Mate Blocking?
Anti-Marriage Being a Pre-Wall Phenomenon?
* MJ Gray was 30 (born August 12, 1995; turned 30 in August 2025). The engagement news broke around April 2026.
* Alex Cooper got engaged at age 31/32
* Wzard Liz got engaged around age 25 (though it ended amid cheating allegations while she was pregnant)
* Danielle Walter entered her long-term relationship around age 32 and got engaged around age 33
Anti-Marriage Being about Women Fundamentally Misunderstanding Men?
Recently trending on X: 2010 Study Shows Testosterone Boosts Fairness in Women
People were discussing a 2009 study titled Prejudice and truth about the effect of testosterone on human bargaining behaviour (2009), in which researchers found that a single dose of testosterone made women behave more fairly in a bargaining game, but simply believing one had received testosterone made people behave more unfairly, regardless of what they actually received.
Episode Transcript
Simone Collins: Hello, Malcolm. Iām excited to be speaking with you again because we have a new episode in our series Women Are Terrible because theyāre at it again, Malcolm.
The women are terrible. And what happened most recently was an influencer who goes by MJ Gray. She branded herself as very strongly anti-marriage and anti-kids. She, she framed marriage as enslavement and something that women should avoid because it primarily benefits men and the patriarchy. And she built this following of almost 500,000 people on TikTok.
Iāll link to this in, in the show notes. And it was all about anti-marriage content. She often argued that marriage signifies ownership of women and she strongly advised women to avoid it.
Speaker 11: I really wish women would stop getting married. I wrote off getting married since I was a little girl. I, I put together the pieces of what marriage was and I was like, āOh, yeah, no.ā I could never trust a man, which is why I would never marry a man
Simone Collins: And then lo [00:01:00] and behold After nine months of dating a man with no public profile, she announces an engagement in a visibly uncomfortable video, which is now, sheās trying to scrub it from the internet titled Yes, Iām Engaged.
Yes, This Is Awkward. While repeatedly she insists sheās in a good situation and I, I have a somewhat salvaged part of this at least that I was able to find on the internet for you, Malcolm, if you wanna include it. But Iāll also link to it in the show notes.
Speaker: Yes, I am engaged. Yes, I am the same person who made several videos saying that I never had, never had any plans to get married, I did not wanna get married, and I did not agree with the institution of marriage.
Simone Collins: She claims her stance has always included caveats that sometimes marriage is good.
Sometimes marriage can make sense if you plan to have children or share property or live together. But otherwise, it remains a harmful institution. And of course, very abundantly in, in her content, you know, sheās āWell, having kids is the most horrifying thing. It destroys your body.ā So of course, if you have kids, [00:02:00] you know, sharing property, why would you ever do that?
But so- Oh, my
Malcolm Collins: God. So your takeaway, because she watched this happen. She comes to me and she goes, āMalcolm, is feminism just an anti-woman grift?ā Is it- Or is it
Simone Collins: meat blocking? Thatās what I, I kind of think Well, meat
Malcolm Collins: blocking, but through that itās a tactic that ugly women use to destroy the marriage prospects of beautiful and qualified women and that when women signal feminist ideals, they are doing it with the predominant intentionality of hurting other women.
And the women I have heard- No, I mean, so this, this is where it gets
Simone Collins: more complicated because this is a different subset, and itās more... This is why I wanted to talk about it, because this is not the ugly feminist meat blocking and being like, āWell, we need to, you know, uh, get cats and vote.ā This is not that class.
This is, this is a slutty class of women. I, I mean that in the nicest way. This is a sex positive class of women that, that, that actively wants to date that talks about dating strategy, that talks [00:03:00] about getting men to pay for you, that talks about loving sex. And yet things happen and suddenly- Did this woman talk about all that?
Dot, dot, dot. Yeah, weāre gonna get into it because it turns out That MJ is not the only influencer in the stay single movement who turned around and got married. There are other recent and, and actually quite prominent, even more prominent than MJ in, in terms of the online drama than MJ. So I want
Malcolm Collins: to explore this through a few lenses before we start.
Okay. So when you came to me and you told me this, I began to really think through it, and I was like, actually, almost everything that feminism has, quote-unquote, āwonā has been a strict negative for the majority of women. Yeah. Yeah ...
whether- Yes ...
whether that is, āHey, women, you get to be sluttier now,ā and women were always like, āBut I never wanted to.ā
I... men are the ones- Yeah, like this was never the plan. Since when did I want to? Men wanted multiple partners. I wanted a wealthy partner, right, whoās dedicated only to me. Yeah. Iāve watched the women porn, right? Iāve, I personally like really reading, uh, romantasy mawaās stories, [00:04:00] right? So I know what women like because I find it very enjoyable, too, and itās always one guy, maybe two guys thirsting after them for a love triangle.
Yeah. Itās certainly not what men are into and what these women have, quote-unquote, āwon.ā Well, yeah, itās not a series
Simone Collins: of one-night stands. Itās not really out there sex acts. Itās, itās- No ... itās quite- Itās the dark,
Malcolm Collins: brooding Duke of the North- Yeah ... who secretly has a soft spot for them. Oh, you know it.
You know it. But- Yeah ... but, so okay. So, oh, well, they won the right to work. What? How is that good for women? Yeah. That now women have to have jobs, and still raise kids, and still cook the food, ācause they didnāt really walk back that other stuff significantly. No, no.
Simone Collins: Now theyāre just like, oh, so, work for yourself, but also sleep around with a bunch of men, but sort of, you know, in, in return for no security or long-term bonding.
And, and also you know, if you, if you ever do get married, just wait. Get, make it a [00:05:00] capstone in your life. Get everything else in place. And theyāre just giving this really intense anti-marriage advice at a time when marriage really canāt afford any more negative propaganda. Between 25, or 2005 and, and, and 2010, around half of adults, like 50 to 55%, were married, and by the mid-2020s, itās around 46 to 51%.
So, 47% of households were headed by married couples in 2024. These are near historic lows. It, it, people are just- I mean,
Malcolm Collins: have you seen the married by 30 numbers that Asmogold was sharing? Really?
Simone Collins: But yeah, the number of people getting married by 30 is,
is plummeting.
So yeah, people are putting it off. We really donāt need any more anti-marriage propaganda. Meanwhile, you have-
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, hold on. Iām just gonna go over it really quickly for fans. Yeah. So Americans married by age 30, if you go to 1975, it was 91% of women, so over nine in 10 women. Yeah. And for men it was 81%.
Today, 2025, it is 25% of women and 16% of men. [00:06:00]
Simone Collins: This is not
Malcolm Collins: great. So, th- yeah, that is terrible at this point. And women are
Simone Collins: like, ā
Malcolm Collins: Marriage is slavery.ā And I also wanna go into a video that ended up doing the rounds of a woman who is very, very mid got a baseball star to date her. Uh, he wanted him to come back to her place on the first date, and she ends up putting him on blast, and he didnāt even do anything wrong.
And it, it shows that the tyranny of the mids at this point.
Simone Collins: The tyranny of the mids? Right? Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. That they expect- Come on ... mil- multi-millionaire pro athletes to take them on second dates when clearly theyāre just chum.
Simone Collins: Yeah, this guy was a, a, apparently a lazy 10. So thatās- As we
Malcolm Collins: point out, you know.
And now if she thinks that this is the type of guy that she can get, no, you canāt. Yeah, now, now yeah,
Simone Collins: going forward sheās going to assume that she will get a 10 to marry her because a 10 wanted to sleep with her on one of his tired nights.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah.
Simone Collins: Okay,
Malcolm Collins: continue, Simone.
Simone Collins: But yeah, so I, I wanna, I wanna explore these women for a [00:07:00] little bit because this is a different profile of woman.
This is not, like I said, the, you know, a bookish feminist cat lady who is just like, āIām never gonna come into contact with men.ā This is actually, as much as theyāre sort of anti-men or at least anti-centering men, they actually engage a lot with men, and theyāre quite attractive. At least I, I think, I think they are.
Uh, they, they, they look like mainstream filter people if, if that makes sense. You know, like Instagram models. But letās start with MJ Gray, the, the woman in question, the, the turning point of this episode. She has 419,000 followers on TikTok. She has 84,000 followers on Instagram. She shares her thoughts on The Maneater podcast, which is, you know, her, itās a little bit red pill woman-y, but not in that she... I think red pill women often were seen back in their day, I donāt know if they still exist, as being subservient to men, whereas sheās more like a pickup artist woman. You know, like- Mm-hmm ... being very sociopathic about her views with women.
A, an [00:08:00] example of a post from her is sheāll be like, āWell, men should always pay for women because men are womenās apex predator, and womenās time is more valuable than men.ā But admittedly because theyāre attractive and fertile, years are limited, which is true. And engaging with men is dangerous, as you could get pregnant or get an infection.
And womenās presence and attention is more valuable than menās attention because men, you know, thereās this multimillion dollar stripper industry, uh, and OnlyFans industry that, that centers on womenās attention and, and time and presence. And that, you know, and it, th- this is why you should have men always pay for your dinner, that you should never go Dutch on a date.
I lo-
Malcolm Collins: I love their we need to walk back some parts of feminism here, right, guys? Th- this is clearly... We should just get whatever we want as women. Yeah
Simone Collins: you have to pay for everything, but Are you gonna tell me about this guy who got hitched to this psycho? So thereās not a whole lot known about him because it, but itās, itās clear that heās- Except that heās super rich apparently.
Heās, yeah, heās, heās super rich. Yeah, he, heās [00:09:00] super rich.
Looking to find and marry a rich man just so you can live the soft life is probably the dumbest s**t Iāve ever heard
Simone Collins: And thatās kind of, itās a pattern here. Although I, I, I mean, and she, I mean, it makes sense her, her handle, when itās not Manny or this or whatever MJ Gray is, is, is supermodel billionaire. Thatās how she frames herself on YouTube though she only has eight point, like eight, a little more than 8,000 subscribers on YouTube.
Sheās pretty small on this platform. But yeah, that is the pattern with her and these other donāt center men, never get married, just enjoy yourself women. So and the most prominent example, I would say way more prominent than than MJ, is Alex Cooper. And youāve probably never heard of her, Malcolm, but sheās super famous for being the, I guess the former co-host of the Call Her Daddy podcast.
She built this massive- Oh, yeah, I remember this one. And then a guy swept her
Malcolm Collins: off her feet.
Simone Collins: Yeah, and actually just this week, guess what she announced? Marriage? No, her [00:10:00] pregnancy. Oh, gosh. How neat. Sheās, sheās now sheās pregnant. And this is, you know, after her getting super famous for s- casual sex positive advice that was very skeptical toward traditional marriage, very skeptical toward long-term commitment, encouraging women to prioritize autonomy and fun over settling down.
Now sheās pregnant, and now sheās married. And people are pointing out quite fairly that sheās hypocritical. Then thereās an- another one, Wizard Liz. She was known for being more of a life advice and self-improvement influencer, and she was really commonly grouped with people like MJ Gray in discussions of femorist rhetoric as, as a placeholder for building a following, and then just sort of jumping in from there to this luxury-coded married life, which is sort of what MJās doing.
Like, when I went to her, her TikTok profile more recently, itās all āOh, Iām shopping in France, and hereās my fancy hotel room.ā And so they, I guess theyāre just using it as āI donāt need men. Iām super hot. Iām super sexy.ā And then thatās their hook, I guess, to [00:11:00] try to get- No, hold
Malcolm Collins: on. We, we actually even had this within our own community, okay?
So- We did? If you look at the wider online community that weāre a part of, our fourth most overlapped channel by the way which you know but our fans w- probably donāt know from today uh, is, is a woman who- Ah ... uh, really promoted the ideas of a kink lifestyle, a 24/7 BDSM- Oh, her ... uh, daddy dom little girl, and now sheās in a trad cath relationship.
Simone Collins: She is? I havenāt followed, I havenāt kept up with her. Yeah,
Malcolm Collins: Shoe0nHead married a traditional Catholic guy. Oh,
Simone Collins: Shoe0nHead. Shoe0nHead. I thought you were talking about the other one whoās more, way more- No,
Malcolm Collins: Shoe0nHead is our fourth most overlapped channel- Really? ... and she promoted all of this. Oh, you thought the other kink influencer.
No, sheās not overlapped with us. Shoe0nHead is- Yeah, she,
Simone Collins: sheās very boring. Yeah, yeah, okay. Yeah, Shoe0nHeadās very entertaining. Come on, of
Malcolm Collins: course
Simone Collins: Shoe0nHead,
Malcolm Collins: Woke up, you know. Weāll be getting videos from- I guess youāre right. I didnāt
Simone Collins: even think about that. But I donāt think Shoe0nHead... W- was she ever...
See, I think she was, like, open about her kink, but she was never also [00:12:00] BDSM people are, like, surprisingly I donāt know, I wanna say lovey-dovey and romantic in their relationships, you know? Theyāre- ... theyāre not like, āIām gonna have one-night stands.ā You canāt, you canāt be in like, a BDSM relationship and do one-night stands, because you need weeks just to hammer out the, the gear and, and, and get all the accoutrement and, and work out your agreements and the procedure.
Mm-hmm. I mean, itās just, it, itās like the D&D campaign. You canāt just, just one night stand it and then switch between people all the time. Youād have to like, buy new outfits and stuff. It would be too tedious. But yeah, good point. Yeah ... Wizard Liz though, she, she was- Shoe, but I think
Malcolm Collins: that this is all part of a wider thing where if youāre a woman and youāre just trying to live your best life, and I like including Shoe0nHead in this category because Shoe0nHead, I do not think is somebody, uh, thereās a small number of our audience who doesnāt like her, but the vast majority generally assume the best of Kami Mommy.
Oh, yeah ... and she, like me I used to be, like, a manslut, right? I was just in an environment where I hadnāt [00:13:00] heard a compelling argument that it was a stupid way to live your life, right? Uh, because- Yeah ... frankly the way conservatives of the last generation made their arguments was f*****g terrible.
Yeah. Yeah ... it simply was an awful seller. Well, and I think most of us
Simone Collins: grew up seeing our boomer parents, like millennials, saw their boomer parentsā marriages and were like, āWell, this is, this is mediocre.ā Mm-hmm. āIām not, Iām not interested in whatever this is. This is, this is
Malcolm Collins: bad.ā Whatever the boomers did is not what I wanna do, right?
Simone Collins: Exactly. So Iām like, yeah. Exactly,
Malcolm Collins: so I donāt blame you. You were telling me- And I was...
Simone Collins: No, I was totally, I mean, rule it out. But the Iām never gonna get married, Iām just gonna s- have, you know, s- like s- sleep with someone and fall in love and have my heart broken and then just move on and never do it again.
You know, Iām, Iām not above this, and I just find that dynamic to be very interesting
Malcolm Collins: Yeah because- but the, the reason Iām, Iām saying this is a lot of these women likely just were not aware how awesome marriage is. They get swept up, as women do- Yeah ... in online communities where everyoneās saying the same thing.
They likely had no evoked set for what a [00:14:00] positive relationship in a marriage looks like, because where were they going to see it? Yeah. Think about our progressive friends who are, like, live in Manhattan and stuff like that. Yeah. They
have
f*****g terrible marriages. Uh, even ones who are, like, just a generation above us, their marriages are so bad, these weird polyamory marriages they, theyāre like...
Itās, itās, itās shocking to me. And when I say bad, Iām not saying theyāre bad because theyāre polyamorous. Iām saying that they often donāt seem to really like each other that much or really working together that much. And they seem like partners who uh, they seem like coworkers really is, is sort of the vibe I get from them, right?
Theyāre not actively anti- Theyāre not like boomers where itās like they obviously hate each other. But they donāt seem to really get it. And then I look at our friend group of our generation, right? Whoās all in the suburbs and everything like that, and they all seem to just be loving it, like marriage is the best thing ever.
And, uh, yeah. Itās, itās, itās been very, [00:15:00] uh, which, uh, people may not know this, but our actual friend group of marrieds, uh, is either... I, I will say for the Latin friends we have that get married itās, itās often not as good. Because, uh, very often, for whatever reason in Latin American culture in the United States men get married to women and then use them as a source of income and the, itās, itās, sort of comes across as, as Latin women often marry down.
I mean, at least theyāre getting married and having kids, but you know, it is something Iāve noticed.
Simone Collins: No, itās just anecdotally more than we would like to see, I think. Yeah,
Malcolm Collins: more than we would like to see. Uh, and then the other place where I see this is in my, uh, or our Jewish friend group.
We have a big, you know, Orthodox Jewish friend group. And their marriages are usually really rock solid. The younger ones. Oh, super rock solid. The
Simone Collins: older ones- Yeah, I was like, not that- Not as much ... no. No, theyāre super solid. Yeah. Yeah. But yeah, so theyāre, so the... Yeah, sorry, where was I? Wizard Liz.
Wizard Liz is a little different because she went from the whole like, oh letās, you know, be liberated and free to really quickly getting married and then getting pregnant, but then [00:16:00] divorcing before even, I think, having her, her first baby because of cheating allegations. So that didnāt work out for her.
But then thereās Danielle Walter. Uh, Danielle Walter was known, you might have heard of her she was the Carrie Bradshaw of San Francisco, and she did a lot of dating confessionals essentially- Mm-hmm ... on TikTok and got really famous for that. She had millions of followers who, who were into her single era, woman ability, and this whole Sort of modern single woman thing.
But then she did this, and I, Iāve watched multiple YouTube videos, like going over this very, I guess you could say cringey 21-part series where she debuted her boyfriend. Like she just teased it to high heaven. And then- Was this, was this the woman who was on the Call Her Daddy? No. This is, this is a dif- this is, weāre on number two now.
This is yet another. Yes. Yes. So yeah, I, first I was talking about the now just suddenly pregnant Alex Cooper from Call Her Daddy, then there was Wizard Liz, and now weāre on Danielle Walter. And [00:17:00] whatās happened with her is that she, after debuting her boyfriend, then she, she got... I think sheās married now.
And part of what I think might be happening when I look at all these women, with the exception of Wizard Liz, is guess what happened right before they suddenly pivoted and got serious about long-term committed relationships? They became famous? No. They hit 30? Yes. Ah. MJ, MJ Ray, she was 30. The, the engagement news broke right as she hit the wall.
Alex Cooper got engaged at 31, 32. Wizard Liz, exception here, 25, but now sheās divorced again, back on the market. And then Danielle Walter got- Oh. Oh, oh, oh, oh ... like the moment they debut it,
Malcolm Collins: itās- To add to it, wasnāt in your original list, how old was she on head when she got engaged? 32.
Simone Collins: I... No way. Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: Probably met him around 30.
Simone Collins: So, yeah, maybe one thing here is that like women of our modern [00:18:00] era like... Oh my gosh. I donāt know whatās going on with him. Oh, poor baby.
Hold on. Give me one moment here. All right. Hey,
hey, hey. They, they... Maybe the new norm is youāre like basically āIāll never get married and Iām gonna be an independent woman,ā and then you hit the wall, and then it, like you just suddenly have you f- you get God, you know?
And if thereās some way that we could like, ooh, head off...
I think
itās that roomās really
hot maybe. Or-
Malcolm Collins: Well, itās his first summer.
Simone Collins: It is, but heās not into it.
Malcolm Collins: Iām not into it, okay? Our whole family isnāt into it.
Simone Collins: We, we donāt like..
Anyway m- maybe if thereās some way we can head this off, it would involve maybe our like just telling people like, āLook, this is the pattern. This happens to everyone. Just ignore the instincts telling you this.ā Well,
Malcolm Collins: [00:19:00] itās like we all get warned that puberty is coming- Yes ... and nobody warns that your 30s are coming, right?
Yeah. You
Simone Collins: know,
Malcolm Collins: everyoneās āWell, you need to be preparing. You need to figure out how to talk to girls. You need to get your rizz on.ā People didnāt know I got rizz, okay? I, no, but Iām joking here. I do not have rizz apparently, uh, as, as our audience has, has made clear to me, right? So I, I, talking to women Iām just no good.
But uh, t- uh, functionally I am though, obviously. Itās just, it doesnāt look like what people think it looks like. Uh- Yeah, I donāt, I donāt know if anyone really knows what- How do we get women... I mean, I think itās just your, your biology changes. Hereās the way I would fix this, okay? Oh, but I, I
Simone Collins: have to ask, though.
Is it also not just some form of mate blocking behavior? Thereās a big game of musical chairs taking place when women are in their 20s, and what many women do as a t- a defensive tactic, maybe also to inflate their sense of value, is to be like, you know, the [00:20:00] one thing that you talk about in, when you give relationship advice is women, stop doing this whole thing where you act unimpressed by everything.
Youāre like, āOh, this restaurant isnāt really that impressive.ā They just wanna neg men- Oh, I freaking hate women who do this ... and itās really unattractive. But women do that- Itās so common ... itās very pervasive. This could be a version of it, of āOh, I donāt ever wanna get married. I donāt...ā Because theyāre trying to seem more valuable than they are, because what they really want is for men to be like, āOh, then I, I must have her, because she can- sheās unachievable.ā
You know, that kind of thing? Itās maybe this is that. Maybe itās a competitive strategy. Itās not also mate blocking. It doesnāt work quite that way with men.
Malcolm Collins: Guys donāt go for that. I know, it works...
Simone Collins: Well, but think about it. So men send dick pics to women because theyāre like, āWhat would I like? Oh, I know.ā
Oh, so they try to be the cold Duke of the North? Yes. I think maybe that might be part of it, is it, this is women trying to be the cold Duke of the North, and what men are like-
Malcolm Collins: Iām not interested in this ... āWill you
Simone Collins: send me a picture of your tits, please?ā āLet, let me inspire you by this picture of my [00:21:00] dongle.ā
You know, that is, that is- So,
Malcolm Collins: okay. So here is- Weāre talking past each other, essentially ... I think is a way around this culturally speaking, right? Which is we can go out there and, uh, when our kids are growing up, when weāre teaching them about puberty, puberty should be taught as a package with youāre gonna want to get married at later in life too.
Yeah. So when weāre telling them, āYouāre going to change how you feel,ā we make it very salient, āAnd this will happen again later. So any preparations you make for this change should also include preparations for the secondary change.ā
Simone Collins: Yeah. Yeah, possibly. Maybe even forcing them to watch Blippi when theyāre teens to be like, āHey, how do you like this?
How do you like it? You wanna watch more?ā Mm. And then be like, āHey, this is how youāre gonna feel about your life as a playboy, world traveling 20-something when you turn 30.ā Maybe something like that. Or if you actually are willing to be intellectually honest with yourself- Right ... and emotionally honest with yourself.
I donāt know. Iām, Iām [00:22:00] not sure. But I think more importantly, we also need to hear- Hold on, Iām gonna break this down.
Malcolm Collins: Letās not leave this at an Iām not sure. Letās think through it. Because, uh, I think we see this present in different ways. Okay. Uh, in Siwanheadās case, for example, I do not think it was mate blocking.
I think she lived in a society where this was normal and, uh, or you could even think me promoting these values. Mm. Why didnāt I promote feminist values? Itās because I wanted to sleep with women, right? Mm-hmm. And it got that for me. Oh yeah, abortionās the best, right? Oh yeah, you know, sleeping around, while it makes you feel good, it makes me feel good.
How could it be morally negative, right? Yeah. Oh yeah, you know, uh, it, it, it, it achieved what I wanted in the moment, right? So, uh, and what everyone in my society told me I was good and what seemed good when I saw through it because, you know, clearly whatever the boomers is doing isnāt working and the religious people just shout, āRead the Bibleā and Iām like, but a lot of those stories donāt compute.
I did. Thereās a lot of
Simone Collins: sex
in there.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. Well, a- and [00:23:00] slavery. You know, Iām like, āYou, you guys arenāt pro-slavery, right?ā Now obviously as an adult Iāve gone back to the Bible and I find good moral guidance in it. Mm. But as a kid when somebody just shouts at you, āRead the Bibleā and youāre like aware that the Bibleās like pro-genocide and slavery in sections, youāre like, well, selling your daughter, you know, well, maybe not every...
Like, how do I know that this marriage stuff in the Bible sh- I, I, I shouldnāt take the same way as I take the selling your daughter into slavery stuff in the Bible, right? Mm-hmm. Like presumably thatās not applicable anymore, right? And they, you know, frankly I didnāt hear good answers back then.
Now I can give you a great answer today. Uh, you watch our track series, you watch any of our religious episodes, youāll find good answers. But the conservatives of the last generation, things sucked at, at, at basically conveying a salient message.
Simone Collins: Yeah. So combine, combine that conservative message with how bad boomer, like our parents and Gen X marriages were, which is oh my God, I [00:24:00] donāt want that, plus this mismatch between male and female desired love language.
Itās like men just want the tit pics and women just want the Duke of the North and we donāt know how to give this to each other because we, we are pretty different in the things that turn us on, like on average as men and women. And then with different life stages just being- The, you being rewarded by different things at different periods of your life, and it being very hard to model that even within yourself and anticipate that.
I think thereās an additional cultural layer on top of this, which is that we are in the middle of a, of a realization, a collective realization that the free sex OnlyFans, sleep around with people era. And weāve talked about this. Remember we talked about how swipe-based dating and hookup culture radicalized women- Mm-hmm
but also made them pretty miserable. And itās even showing up in very popular media. Thereās very little event media left, but one of the few shows thatās left is Euphoria. And Iāve been watching Season 3, and a [00:25:00] really major recurring theme of it is the Bible and God and religion. What? And the other recurring theme is women in sex work.
So the main character is working for this kingpin of strip clubs and, and kind of drugs. Another main character is an OnlyFans model. Another main character is an agent exploiting OnlyFans models. So, itās just, itās kind of all about sex and hookup culture. Another one is a sugar baby- Mm-hmm
for a wealthy man who likes to wrap her up in cellophane . And it- To wrap her up in cellophane? ... itās all just kind of like... Itās just a, like a fetish thing, you know? I, I canāt remember what the name for it is, but, like- Yeah, Iāve seen it. Yeah, I think someone actually- I, I donāt understand anything about this fetish
I think actually famously very recently, an OnlyFans model has just been convicted of negligent homicide for accidentally killing one of her followers by wrapping him up in cellophane. So guys, be careful. Uh, itās not safe. Wait, so he, he asked her to wrap
Malcolm Collins: him up. He didnāt wrap her up. [00:26:00]
Simone Collins: Yeah. She wrapped him up, and now sheās in trouble because he died.
Uh, ācause donāt do that . Itās not safe. Uh- That makes
Malcolm Collins: me sad for her, actually. I know.
Simone Collins: She was just trying to do her job, you know what I mean? Uh- Yeah. The guy presumably was- He asked for it ... at least partially aware of the risk. For, you, you, one hopes, but I donāt know. Okay? Anyway, the big theme is that.
And actually it begins with one of the main character, the main character is, is running drugs, but stops. She sort of finds herself in the middle of the Texan countryside, and is, is, is, uh, she sleeps in a barn and wakes up to this, this homeschooling- I have, I have, I need
Octavian: a little more things
Simone Collins: here.
He has more swords that he wishes to show. She shows up at this homeschooling Texan family, like sleeps in their barn, but like they just bring her milk in the morning. Theyāre like, āHey, why donāt you just join us for breakfast?ā And she sits around and they have family prayers. And she, they drop her off closer to a road, and so sheās able to get on her way.
And it just sits with her [00:27:00] for l- the longest time of āMan, like I-ā I think they kind of get it.
Speaker 2: We wanna thank you, Lord Jesus Christ, for giving us our daily bread and forgiving us our trespasses. Let me help you get your plate, sweetie. Here, let me get this first, Dad. This is our address. Will you be sure to send the article when itās in the paper? Uh, yeah, as long as the commies at college donāt censor it.
Speaker 3: Youāre doing the Lordās work. Thank you. Iād trade spots with you in a heartbeat Bye
Simone Collins: These offline teens, this, this big family of six kids, like homeschooling and living on our farm, like they kind of have it made. I think Iām living my life wrong. And so she starts reading the Bible and she starts thinking about God and being like, āI think Iām religious.ā
Sitting in churches. And the last scene I just watched last night from the [00:28:00] latest episode, thereās a burning bush. Theyāre really leaning into it. Theyāre like... and it... That was... So a major theme of it, and I think this is representative of where collectively we are in society, is oh my God, this hookup culture, OnlyFans women not getting married, sugar baby, everythingās transactional world is not rewarding.
Weāre not happy. Weāre not thriving. This is really bad. We need to get God again. And the people who never left God are like the happiest and the only ones who are doing okay right now. So I think thereās this additional layer. The communication layer, the- No, I, I
Malcolm Collins: actually disagree with that. Really? Iām gonna push back.
Actually- Okay ... what I think is the people who seem to be doing the best are the secular people who came to religion through logic. The people who are doing the second-best are the ones who always had religion, but typically the way that they practice their religion is a little less optimal for actually dealing with the crises of our time.
If youāre
Simone Collins: homeschooling on a Texan ranch in the middle of nowhere, youāre one of those, āI came to this very thoughtfully.ā
Malcolm Collins: Right, but there are some people who are [00:29:00] still holds out from like the old evangelical communities and stuff like that. Sure. Yeah. And they just seem to be just broadly unprepared to interact with the modern world in a meaningful way.
Yeah.
Simone Collins: Well, as soon as they interact with the modern world, they crash and burn because theyāre not resilient to it, as we talked about extensively. Yeah, theyāre not resilient.
Malcolm Collins: Itās... And you, you sort of have to go through, you know, uh, to an ex- or have some, some members of your community that have fully gone through it understand why it was tempting and understand why you failed to convince them in the past to build better arguments for the next generation.
Yeah. If you were convinced by the, you know, āJust read the Bibleā argument, your kids are gonna be just as susceptible because you donāt know why that argument may not appeal to somebody, right? Yeah. And, and I think that, uh, this show shows how many people come to this, is they see, āOh, like this isnāt working.
This old way of doing things is working.ā But-
Simone Collins: Yeah, and to be fair, all these characters were not raised in like religious contexts. They were raised in like our modern mainstream [00:30:00] urban lifestyle. What Iām
Malcolm Collins: interested to see is what is the online chatter about this direction the show is going. Can you ask an AI for a sentiment analysis?
Simone Collins: No, so the, no, what, what is, what is being said in the media is āOh my God, suddenly MAGA loves Euphoria because...ā for these reasons, you know? And, and also I think the S- Sy- Sydney Sweeney is the one whoās big on OnlyFans in this- Mm-hmm ... in the series, the, whoās famous for the jeans campaign whoās, you know, sort of like become this icon.
We all like Sydney
Malcolm Collins: Sweeney from the jeans interview. Yeah.
Simone Collins: Didnāt this... It was a com- it was a commercial. It was a, an ad campaign.
Speaker 4: I just wanted to give you the opportunity to deal with a passive aggressive accusation disguised as a question
Speaker 5: if your career brought you here, of what use was it?
Simone Collins: No,
Malcolm Collins: no, but thereās a famous interview [00:31:00] she did afterwards where like- Oh, with the- Do you know the- Yeah,
Simone Collins: the,
Malcolm Collins: the...
Simone Collins: Yes, yes. Yeah And sheās just like- so now, yeah, like the discourse is oh, and then a lot of people are trying to argue that the creator of Euphoria isnāt actually like turning to God and pro-MAGA or anything itās just that he likes to troll people.
But thereās literally portions of like little montages of the Sydney Sweeney OnlyFans model character being interviewed for example. She like has her rise on the internet, you know, getting internet famous, and people are like, āOh, are you a Democrat?ā And sheās āIām not retarded.ā So- Yeah, no, itās, itās very...
It... Yes, the right apr- the right is enjoying season three. I- Wait,
Malcolm Collins: she says this in character in the show?
Simone Collins: Yeah. Yes. Oh my God. Itās, itās a great clip. Itās fantastic. They, they show this thereās the montage and itās also her being āI just think, you know, women want to be able to be at home and you know, be wives and be-ā I
Octavian: want you to come back and tell, and tell me more.
I learned that when you add vinegar [00:32:00] and bacon soda together they can create a new thing.
Simone Collins: Baking soda.
Octavian: Yeah.
Simone Collins: Baking soda. It
Octavian: kind of like fizzes if youāre really close.
Simone Collins: We should do that. Weāll do that tonight.
Octavian: But if you did it a lot, then it would be like a bottle and put all of the vinegar you have in that bottle, and it can create a big fizz. Like this big.
Simone Collins: That big, huh?
Yeah. I wanna get back to the original question This is, uh, our un- unofficial endorsement of Science Max as a YouTube channel for kids. I wanna get
Malcolm Collins: back to the original question here.
Simone Collins: Yeah. Oh,
Malcolm Collins: wait, are these two different characters in the show? The one whoās a Sydney Sweeney character and the one whoās finding God?
Simone Collins: Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: Theyāre different characters. So multiple characters are moving in this direction, right? No, thatās ...
Simone Collins: What Iām trying to say, yes, is a major, major theme of this extremely popular public discourse show is finding God and finding the hollowness in, in sex work in general.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. Okay, and calling it euphoria.
Wow, thatās, uh-
Simone Collins: Yeah ... on the nose. Itās great. No, and it ... Well, and this is the [00:33:00] third season of it. I actually couldnāt stomach the first two. I like the third one for whatever reason. But- Maybe ācause now itās for
Malcolm Collins: conservatives. Anyway, your point. So hold on. I wanna get to the question of, while I donāt think for sure that it was genuinely mate blocking behavior- Yeah
did mate blocking motivate the rise of this ideology, right?
Simone Collins: Yeah, because ... Well, but I, hereās where I get confused, is it made sense to your early ... your earliest point was you were making the assumption that these were ugly women. Whereas these are hot women who date and have a lot of sex. So itās
They donāt ... Itās not like they have trouble finding men. But that doesnāt mean that mean, popular girls donāt mate block. I mean, a, a, a major theme of pop- popular, hot, mean girls is mate blocking. So I donāt know. What, what, what is your take?
Malcolm Collins: So my take is, is that it partially likely led to it.
So, there was certainly, if you look at the early feminists, they were very often vile habergashes or whatever you wanna call them, right? Uh, fairly- A [00:34:00] haberdashery
Simone Collins: is where you buy buttons and ribbons. I donāt- I
Malcolm Collins: donāt even know. Whatever you wanna call them. Okay. Swamp things. Uh, trying to
I, I think that thereās a ... More than mate blocking, I think a lot of it was women who failed out of marriage marketplaces or failed to get the type of guy they thought they deserved and then wanted to r- increase the status of unattached women. I think that was more of what motivated it, right? They failed to achieve what they felt they deserved to achieve given their perceived self-status, which increased as a problem as women got access to easier and easier sex.
And then they, uh, looked at the world, this terrible and unfair world and they said, āActually, Iām not low status. It is not l- ā And as the proportion of women who needed to believe this delusion increased and as men realized they could utilize this to [00:35:00] gain sexual access to women more easily it spread.
I think while it would be- Convenient for our narrative if it was genuine mate blocking. I think it was more about women not admitting their genuine low status in society and trying to normalize it.
ā Cause I think thatās a stronger everyday drive for women. And then they have to do that uh, you know... Whatās, whatās the word here?
Simone Collins: Or so I mean, if I were to reframe, itās kind of like a sour grapes thing. But then as soon as they get the opportunity theyāre like, āOh, I want it and Iām gonna take it.ā
Theyāre gonna pretend that theyāre happy with their lot. I mean, could it, could it be also that these, Okay, these are, these are presumably top-tier women, right? They, they are, they are sleeping with the, the best men, but theyāre also realizing that the best men are not willing to commit to long-term relationships, because a very common dynamic in modern dating markets is thereās no [00:36:00] reason for a man whoās an eight, nine, or 10 to settle down.
Because they have access to all the range of women. Like, why would they- Yeah. Well, unless they like literally- And say, āOh, wellā ...
Malcolm Collins: sit down and think
Simone Collins: their way out of
Malcolm Collins: it like I did. Yeah.
Simone Collins: Right? Yeah. Because thatās very unusual, right? So unless youāre like a, a, a good Christian man or youāre smart and like really, really disciplined.
Or I mean, I think what also helped for you is you, you were so slutty in your youth that like you got it out of your system. So unless youāve done all, one of those things youāre, youāre, youāre not gonna commit. You know, I always wanted a
Malcolm Collins: wife. Uh, for my brother and I-
Simone Collins: Yeah, it was your identity ... it was inherent
Malcolm Collins: that we wanted wives.
That was like- It is also like
Simone Collins: in your DNA. Like you come from a long line of romantic men. Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: For me it was always about the wife and kids. Uh, especially a good wife. And so, uh, it, I mean itās interesting for me to reflect on, ācause it doesnāt just require like intellect and a sober mind.
āCause recently we were talking to one of our friends. And this friend I consider to be of the highest [00:37:00] intellectual caliber, highest ability to sit down and think through things, and yet he is unmarried, doesnāt have kids, and doesnāt seem to have a strong desire to get married even though I have tried to logic it through with him.
And why canāt he see it? Why canāt he sit down and be like, āObviously this is stupidā? Itās not that he hates his ancestors, ācause heās Jewish and he doesnāt seem to be like actively antisemitic or anything like that. I think itās just he is in an environment But I was able to break out of that environment.
Thatās the thing. I was in an environment that was as progressive as
Simone Collins: any- But what Iām saying is youāre very unusual, and maybe whatās happening is these... You already talked to your women, are like, āOh my God, this is just never gonna happen. I need to embrace that I have to be like them.ā And this is actually a common theme in discourse.
People are like, āOh, women think that they have to be like men, that they have to sleep [00:38:00] around like men and enjoy one-night stands like men.ā And that is a very Call Her Daddy theme, where they really act like they enjoy sex the same way that men enjoy sex. At least thatās kind of how I feel about it when I see- consume that content.
Iām like, āOh,ā this is a very... This, this looks like a woman trying so hard to pretend that she has male sexuality, and Iām not totally buying it. And so as soon, as soon as they, this rat floundering in the ocean trying to survive on the floating board, finds a lifeboat, it jumps onto it, ācause itās like, āOh, my God.ā
Yeah. āI didnāt know this could happen, but itās happening.ā So I think maybe thatās, thatās another big factor here. Do you think so?
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. Well, I mean, I think that these women who... No, the, the, the women- No ... who are out there saying marriage is terrible are really just trying to make themselves feel good. I really think thatās the case.
Well, yeah,
Simone Collins: but, but w- wait. You can say it, you can word it as feel good. Iām wording it as feel better in an environment where they feel like they really just... Marr- [00:39:00] a, a marriage thatās committed wonāt work for them. And keep in mind case in point, uh, in, in my, in favor of my theory is Wizard Liz, right?
She was like, āOh, Iām gonna be all independent,ā and then she had a chance to get married, was so stoked about it, husband cheats on her. So she kind of, uh, feeds into actually the narrative ultimately of no, you as a woman if youāre trying to marry a high-value man, even if youāre a high-value woman, canāt have that dream.
Well, I mean, if youāre
Malcolm Collins: a woman and you marry a guy whoās much higher value than you, of course heās gonna cheat on you, right? Like- I know. She shouldāve just- How did we as society forget that? I thought that that was- I know,
Simone Collins: I know ... thatās just- It was maybe on the unmentioned thing.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, to actually freak out about a high-value guy cheating on you is kind of...
Look, I get weāre, morality, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. But also be f*****g realistic. Every king throughout history, almost every wealthy person throughout history has done this, right?
You... A- and, and worse, these people often come from progressive environments where [00:40:00] this is way more normalized.
They abandoned all of the social structure that was meant to punish the guy for doing this. Now he can just marry you but younger because you decided to freak out because he was sleeping with another woman. Oh. Again, Iām not pro cheating. Iām just being realistic here. When people are like, āCan you believe that Arnold Schwarzenegger cheat?ā
Iām like, āYeah, I can believe that.ā People like, āCan you...ā How, how do these... This is, this is a South Park scene.
Speaker 7: Why are rich, successful men suddenly going out and trying to have sex with lots of women and have perfectly good wives at home? I want answers. We believe that it may be an outbreak of sex addiction, sir. Of course, we all know the normal, healthy male thinks only of sex occasionally and has no desire for sex with multiple partners.
Thatās right. Of course. But what about love? How could tons of fame and money make you forget about love?
Malcolm Collins: Why do these rich and famous men keep sleeping with other women? Like- [00:41:00] Ugh. And of course, if you donāt have a lot of kids yet, right? Like now the idea of cheating on Simone doesnāt make a lot of sense for me.
Itās just not worth my time because Iāve got five kids, and weāre doing a new one every year. Cheating would only slow that down. Maybe most people arenāt as psychotically, like... I mean, cheating I guess would always just be a ne- negative for most people, but, ugh, uh, my, my thought here is even from a pleasure standpoint, itās just a waste of f*****g time at this point.
And I like the- I think cheating has a lot more
Simone Collins: to do with people who donāt have a clear objective function in their lives.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah.
Simone Collins: And itās not actually a- even necessarily about sexual gratification. Itās more about wanting to feel desired and special and/or to chase after new relationship energy, which is its own special flavor of high.
And if you donāt have a stronger mooring point, like a thing that youāre trying to fight for in life like Iām going to, you know, promote human flourishing, Iām gonna serve God, Iām gonna take [00:42:00] people to the stars, whatever it, itās gonna be, right? Then it is going to be very appealing if suddenly someone starts giving you a bunch of attention, and thereās secrets, and you get to sneak around.
And itās, itās like the hide and seek plus sex. Who, who wouldnāt love that? So I think that might have something to do with it. I, I, I donāt really know of people whoāve had very prominent cheating scandals who also, in our modern day and age, who also have extremely strong, Mm-hmm. Oh, never mind. I take that
Malcolm Collins: back.
Wait, wait. What? Sorry, I, I missed the point. No. Nope, never mind. I just, I
Simone Collins: just- Wait, no, go back. What was it? Never mind. I th- I, I had a, I had a hypothesis that if a man had a strong objective function, he wouldnāt desire multiple female partners. Oh, and then you remembered
Malcolm Collins: Elon existed? Yes.
Simone Collins: Whoops. I was wrong.
Malcolm Collins: But I think itās a strong obj- objective function plus naltrexone. I cannot, Opioid agonists are the f*****g [00:43:00] bomb, right? That is, if, if, if I... I would even work this into our religious practices, right? Like- Yeah ... for future generations and stuff like this. I think constantly he wouldnāt do it if he was on naltrexone.
Heād be so much more focused and efficient.
Simone Collins: My God, he would stop posting on X. Heād stop posting
Malcolm Collins: on X. He would. Heād stop all of the other drugs. Heād stop sleeping around. Heād just be focused on his mission.
Simone Collins: Oh my God.
Malcolm Collins: It is the true wonder drug.
Simone Collins: The, yes, the drug to rule them all, Naltrexone. Okay. Well, there you go. I donāt know if I have anything more to say on this, but I find it very interesting. And women are terrible, so I hope youāve enjoyed that. Yes. And
Malcolm Collins: our fans like the women are terrible. If we get a Simone plushie, weāll have it squeeze and itāll say- Oh, yeah.
Squeeze
Simone Collins: and it says, āA woman, women
Malcolm Collins: are terrible.ā Women
Simone Collins: are [00:44:00] terrible.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. With my fake woman wife whoās, uh, like hormonally not totally female because of hormones. Who takes the
Simone Collins: same hormones as a trans woman.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. Yeah. So you- Great ... can see through the nonsense. Iām really selling guys a false bill of goods.
Theyāll never get a woman like Simone. Because sheās- Youāre out there. Out there. No, we have fans who are definitely seem to be as good as you. So, and for people who are unaware, of our, like while only 10% of our, like regular watchers are women-
Ironically, the sound dropped out here due to baby noises, but I was saying around forty to fifty percent of our most dedicated viewers, or at least the ones who are like subscribed on Patreon and reach out regularly, are women
Malcolm Collins: Of them are already married, Iāll be honest about that. You know, sane women get picked up pretty young, so. But not all of them are. Some of them are still dating.
Simone Collins: No, actually, a lot of them are, are single and available and interested, so. Oh, really? And there are people who have met who are like [00:45:00] actively talking and potentially romantically involved in our Discord server, so it, it happens.
Malcolm Collins: Oh, we get a marriage from our Discord server?
Simone Collins: No marriage yet. Iām just saying. There, things are starting.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, I know some as well, so Iām excited about this. Well, what I have found is that the guys who are like a base camp or really Malcolm and Simone, like pragmatist guy, like devotees they make really good partners for women.
Itās what women basically tell me. Theyāre like, āI started...ā The, weāve had multiple people who have become fans of our show because they started dating a guy who was like really devoted to like our wider philosophical view of reality, and theyāre like, āYeah, it makes for really good boyfriends and husbands.ā
Simone Collins: Well, a- I think thatās, uh, largely also because a lot of guys who follow base camp start dating like progressive women who are very unhappy, like seeing therapists, like active anxiety problems, et cetera. Like Iāve, Iāve seen this in, in our comments, like on, on Patreon and Substack and stuff.
Weāre like, āWell, what do I do about them?ā [00:46:00] And, you know, weāre like, āWell, hey, try to, you know, find their core values. Try to help them, you know, improve their lives, like actually get over their anxiety.ā And I think itās unusual for content creators to be like, āOh, donāt dump your girlfriend. Do what her...
Do for her what therapists are failing to do. Like actually give her a mooring point in her life and a reason to not be... You know, to overcome her anxiety and all these things. Make her a better person, and then see if she is worth it for you.ā So it makes sense. But anyway, Iām gonna- Love you ... blow a- Excited
Malcolm Collins: for pasta with pesto tonight.
See if we have some ravioli. If we donāt, I donāt care because I got pre-grated fresh Parmesan, not the sandy type from a can which just makes everything taste fantastic.
Simone Collins: I for one love grated cardboard, so I will just keep eating it.
Malcolm Collins: And good topic by the way. Oh, we didnāt end up going over that woman who was mad about the, the baseball star, You did.
You, youāve told me everything I need to know. It w- it basically just shows that [00:47:00] yeah, the mids have had their brains cooked and they need to not feel bad.
I think so much of this female behavior is not about mate blocking and is about not accepting their own low status in society.
Simone Collins: Yeah. Absolutely.
Yeah. Good. True. All right. Love you.
Malcolm Collins: Love you. Bye. Iāll just ask. Will you be making the hot dogs for your parents
Simone Collins: anyway? I mean, I have them opened and theyāre thawed, so itās a tonight or tomorrow night thing. But I can do them tomorrow night with french fries, and then just pesto pasta tonight. Oh yeah,
Malcolm Collins: I would prefer that. Tomorrow night with french fries.
Ooh, and we could do actual deep-fried french fries again. Iām just gonna air fry them. Okay. That works for me too. We can see how good you can make them air fried.
Simone Collins: Yeah. ā
Malcolm Collins: Cause
we never really tried to get that perfect.
Simone Collins: Yeah, and nowās the time ācause we... Well, not we, you got that air fryer from your late mother, and itās really fancy, and it does things.
Malcolm Collins: It- but I was gonna ask you, [00:48:00] for the... Weāre just doing pasta with pesto tonight. Letās do some of the ravioli.
Simone Collins: What
Malcolm Collins: ravioli? Do we not have any in the fridge anymore?
Simone Collins: Iāll check. If we have some, I will give it to you. āCause I donāt
Malcolm Collins: think I ate all of it last time. I think we have a serving or two left. We might have some
Simone Collins: squares.
Yeah, I have a lot of little things- All right ... squirreled away. So I will...
Ah. You. You. You wanna bite off my finger. Youāre a little velociraptor. What are you doing? My
God. Okay,
Malcolm Collins: pulling
Simone Collins: up my notes,
Malcolm Collins: and... Oh,
I see. I
love the documentarian being like, āWell, youāre not a psychologist.ā Iām like-
Can I- I mean, I am a psychologist
find out that I am.
Sheās āDo you mean you have a degree?ā
Simone Collins: Iām like, āYes, I have a degree.ā Yeah, yeah. Sheās āYeah, but whereās your degree?ā And youāre like, āItās... I have
a degree in psychology and neuroscience from the University of San Diego.ā I donāt think you even said that. You didnāt even like... I didnāt [00:49:00] even
Malcolm Collins: flex
Simone Collins: on it like one of
Malcolm Collins: the- Yeah
best psychology degrees in the world, right? Like- Yeah.
Simone Collins: No. Like, why, why did you? What? You know what? Thatās great. Youāve, youāve, youāve matured. Youāre not even flexing anymore. Youāre just- I still flex ... speaking, speaking from your position of quiet strength. Oh my
Malcolm Collins: God. Okay, so Iāve gotta tell our fans about this, ācause this has been so weird for me.
So I do these biweekly streams with Leaflet now that I really enjoy. Sheās... I consider her one of my best friends these days. She is just such a joy to talk with. Sheās so
Simone Collins: smart. Yeah. Sheās an amazing person ... I donāt get stressed
Malcolm Collins: about interacting with her like I do with normal humans, which is fantastic for me.
So itās been just really fun to have a genuine nerdy friend I can party with, have a 10-hour stream with every two weeks, right?
Simone Collins: Well, yeah, and, and someone else who apparently, you know, f- considers that partying instead of what most people consider to be partying like going out. Oh, itās partying.
Weāre, weāre
Malcolm Collins: staying up all night, Iām drinking, weāre talking about anime. Thatās a party. Yeah, but
Simone Collins: most people think it means dropping egregious amounts of money at some kind of restaurant and [00:50:00] then going to a loud, crowded place, and Iām so glad that there are other people who just enjoy intellectual conversation.
But anyway,
Malcolm Collins: so thereās this faction of her community that theyāre not in chat much. They donāt attack me in chat. Theyāre all fairly nice in chat. Who has like- Iāll put an image on screen here from one of the songs that they made where they
photoshopped Simone out of the song and, and out of an image of me kissing Simone, and they put Leaflet in, and they made it the song about how it couldāve been them.
And Iām like, āGuys I actually find this flattering.ā I have my entire life, I will check myself on FanFiction.net and stuff like that for when people have started shipping me with, with whatever, writing crazy fan fics about me. Itās finally happening, and theyāre all hate fics. Theyāre all just so lividly jealous that me, a married guy with five kids, has fantasy world taken their oshi from them.
And I [00:51:00] donāt know what to do. Iām like, h- how can I more convince them that I want her to be married? That her taken.
Simone Collins: Yeah. Yeah, Iām extremely- And that we really, really want her to find her person.
You know, they, they... I, I hated that photo of me,
and I like that photo of you, so they, they really fixed it actually.
They ...
Malcolm Collins: You
Simone Collins: totally look so much better in that photo, Iāll tell you what. Iāll tell you what.
Malcolm Collins: And it wasnāt like the song had no views. It had 700 views. Thatās like as many as some of our more watched songs. Thatās, uh, thatās, uh- And it was only in a couple
Simone Collins: days. Well, thatās fun. Thatās fun.
Malcolm Collins: Itās not fun.
I wanted to
Simone Collins: be- It- ...
Malcolm Collins: one of the bros, a representative of the community- ... who they know would never steal their oshi from them. But no, now, now on the, the Malcolm and Simone iceberg that people have created before, you have the Malcolm Leaflet ship song. And hate to me. Everyone needs it.
Simone Collins: Everyone needs it.
Malcolm Collins: I, I will say, for people who donāt [00:52:00] think that I have game apparently my game is strong enough that just seeing me talk to a girl- You have fan
Simone Collins: fiction game. Well, I think if she spoke with anyone for long periods of time, this would happen.
Malcolm Collins: You think? So, yeah. Yeah, I, I, I hope to think that and itās not, you know, me specifically.
Simone Collins: I, yeah. Okay, Octavian, you wanna say hi real quick?
Yeah.
Okay, hold on. Gotta lean in, buddy.
Okay.
Heās, heās armed. Oh, I guess Iāll just, Iāll just move my camera. What do you want to say to the people?
Hi.
You just wanna say hi? You just wanna look derpy and say hi? Say something that you learned today.
Octavian: I learned that crystals order some crystals can dissolve.
Simone Collins: That is true. Some crystals can dissolve. Like what about salt crystals? Do they dissolve- Salt
Octavian: crystals. Yeah, sugar and salt.
Simone Collins: That is correct.
Octavian: And they, and they can reform into other, and they can [00:53:00] reform into other crystals.
Simone Collins: Yeah. Yeah, and sometimes you can use a seed crystal.
Octavian: Yeah, a seed crystal to reform them.
Exactly.
Simone Collins: Yeah. Yeah,
Octavian: very good. Yeah, like sugar bops or something. Sugar
Simone Collins: bo- I donāt know what
that is, but sounds good.
Octavian: Yeah.
Simone Collins: Yeah. All right. Yeah. Go have fun- Yeah ... m- uh, murdering the- Yeah ... the pellets.
Octavian: Yeah. But you know if something went in the water and it disappeared, they can reform just like that, so- Just
Simone Collins: Just, just like that.
You heard it here first on Face Gram. I wonder
Octavian: if a magic-
Simone Collins: He is remarkably charismatic. That was good. You keep it up. Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: I know. He, heās got game, uh, at, at four and a half. I, he comes off as incredibly likable. Iām, Iām really proud of... I mean, yeah, heās gonna be good on air. You guys just wait a little bit.
Simone Collins: I know. He was, he was like, just today he was like, āI wish there were a third window that I could join.ā Soon. Soon. Yeah. When he gets cogent thoughts, weāll have him on. I, I told him he has to be able to read fluently. [00:54:00] Heās heās going through the same hesitancy that I did at his age, so. All right. Letās get started.
Speaker 9: But doesnāt picking them kill them?
But doesnāt that grind them up and then they die?
Do you love the flowers, Titan?
This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit basedcamppodcast.substack.com/subscribe -
In this Based Camp episode, Malcolm and Simone Collins dive deep into the phenomenon of Professor Jiang (Jiang Qujin) ā the Chinese-born educator turned geopolitical āoracleā with 2M+ YouTube subscribers. Is he a modern Nostradamus using psychohistory and game theory, or highbrow conspiracy slop for midwits?
We break down his biggest theories: Illuminati coalitions of Freemasons, Jesuits, and Sabbatean Frankists engineering Western decline, Pax Judaica / Greater Israel, ritual child sacrifice in Gaza, secret societies controlling the world, and his mystical AI predictions. Malcolm delivers sharp historical corrections on Sabbateanism, Frankism, Jesuits, and Freemasons, while questioning if Jiang is a CCP-adjacent narrative pusher.
Is he Candace Owens for pseudointellectuals? A sophisticated propaganda op? Or just a compelling midwit prophet? We also compare him to Whatifalthist (Rudyard), Peter Zeihan, and more.
Join the conversation in the comments ā are you Team Jiang or Team Collins?
Show Notes
Based Camp listeners keep asking us to talk about Professor Jiang, which is difficult, as we see his content to be oppressively boring, bordering on being impossible to consume, but to stop the requests, weāll relent.
How did a Chinese-born man who immigrated to Canada with a BA in English literature suddenly accrue over 2 million YouTube subscribers, the #1 world politics substack (with 44K subscribers in six months) and fame for being a geopolitical oracle and war forecaster?
Fan site: https://jiangpredictions.com (āThis is an independent fan project tracking predictions for educational and analytical purposes. We are not affiliated with or speaking on behalf of Professor Jiang.ā)
Is he just a version of Candace Owens for people who like to fancy themselves as a little more highbrow and clever (which is to say, is his success just a result of conspiracy-brained people online flocking to conspiracy slop), or is there are more concerted force pushing forward his content?
Who is Professor Jiang?
* Jiang Xueqin (ę±å¦å¤, born 1976) is a ChineseāCanadian who originally trained in English literature and spent much of his career as a teacher and education reformer in China.
* In the 2000s and 2010s he worked on Chinese education reform, taught in various schools, and briefly edited for the New York Timesā China operation; he has also been associated as a researcher with Harvardās Global Education Innovation Initiative.
* Since 2022 he has taught at Moonshot Academy, a private high school in Beijing, and he is not a university professor despite the āProfessorā branding.
* In 2024 he launched the YouTube channel and podcast āPredictive History,ā where he gives longform lectures on geopolitics, history and āstructuralā analysis, claiming to use game theory and Asimovāstyle āpsychohistoryā to forecast world events.
* He gained large international attention after correctly predicting Donald Trumpās 2024 reāelection and a U.S.āIran war, leading some media to dub him āChinaās Nostradamusā and bookers to put him on major Western podcasts.
Jiangās Reputation
Several mainstream outlets and experts describe Jiang as a conspiracy theorist because many of his claims rely on hidden cabals and quasiāmystical frameworks rather than conventional evidenceābased analysis
* A profile in The Free Press explicitly labels him a conspiracy theorist and highlights his belief that a coalition of Freemasons, Jesuits and followers of the Sabbatean Jewish sect (an 17thācentury messianic movement) is plotting to rule the world from Jerusalem
* The South China Morning Post notes that his lectures sometimes āveer into wellātrodden conspiracy theories on shadowy secret societies,ā especially in a lecture titled āPax Judaicaā in his āSecret Historyā series.
Jiangās Conspiracy Theories
Major Conspiracy Themes Attributed to Him
From critical coverage and academic/media commentary, the main conspiracy themes associated with Jiang include:
* Illuminati / Freemasons / Jesuits / Sabbateans
* Jiang advances a metaāconspiracy in which an āIlluminatiā composed of Freemasons, Jesuits, and Sabbatean Jews, who allegedly manipulate Western institutions and ultimately aim to control the world from Jerusalem. (The FP covered this)
* In his āPax Judaicaā lecture, critics say Jiang argues that after the U.S. is forced out of the Middle East, this Illuminatiātype network will dominate global power from a Greater Israel centered on Jerusalem. (from that South China Morning Post article referenced above)
* IN HIS OWN WORDS
* On the Illuminati as a coalition (from a Breaking Points interview, widely clipped):
* āIf you look at the Epstein files itās clear that we are run by secret societies. You can call them Illuminati. And the Illuminati are composed of three major groups, okay? You have the Jesuits who control the Vatican. You have the Sabbatean Frankists who control the modern Israel today. You have the Freemasons which control the national security apparatus of the United States.āHe adds that they see conflicts like those in the Middle East as key to āEnd Timesā prophecies for creating āheaven on Earth.ā
* On origins and structure (from Secret History lectures):
* He describes the Illuminati as emerging from alliances like former Jesuits (e.g., Adam Weishaupt) and others infiltrating Freemasons:
* āWhat they will do together is create a new organization called the Illuminati. ... The Illuminati was able to penetrate the Freemasons.ā
* In another lecture: āTemplars who became the Freemasons who then became the Illuminati who control...ā (linking to broader historical continuity and goals like a one-world government in Jerusalem).
* On Freemasonry and related groups:
* He discusses the ā33 grades of Scottish Rite Freemasonry,ā noting that lower levels emphasize being a āgood personā while higher ones involve deeper power structures. He ties Freemasonry to figures like Buzz Aldrin and historical influences on U.S. institutions.He also covers their āeschatological visionā of a one-world government based in Jerusalem.
* On Sabbatean Frankists:
* He has dedicated talks on how āthe Sabbatean Frankists came to conquer the world,ā linking Jacob Frankās movement to broader secret society networks, including infiltration of Jesuits and alliances forming the Illuminati.
* āPax Judaicaā and Greater Israel
* According to reports, Jiang claims that the longāterm plan of these elites is to engineer a new world order where a Greater Israel replaces American hegemony, with Jerusalem as the seat of global governance.
* Commentators describe this as echoing classic āNew World Orderā and antisemitic conspiracy tropes, repackaged in highāconcept geopolitical language.
* IN HIS OWN WORDS
* On Greater Israel and its biblical/eschatological roots (from interviews and lectures, e.g., shared in clips and transcripts):
* āAnd so what will happen is then that Israel will achieve the Greater Israel project. The Israelis believe that the Middle East was promised to their ancestor Abraham by Yahweh their God. If you look at a map of the Greater Israel project it extends from the Nile to Euphrates. It encompasses Lebanon, Syria, parts of Turkey, and parts of Saudi Arabia and parts of Egypt. ... And then Israel will establish something called the Pax Judaica. A Pax Judaica is really the empire... a trading empire, financial empire, a technological empire based in Jerusalem and they see it as fulfillment of biblical prophecy.ā
* Defining Pax Judaica in context of empire transition (from Game Theory #16 and related talks):
* āSo what does the Greater Israel project mean? Well, it means control of [oil, trade, and technology].ā (Framing it as Israel inheriting and expanding U.S. regional dominance amid American decline.)
* He describes the process: U.S. forces get drawn into costly conflicts (e.g., with Iran), leading to withdrawal, allowing Israel to become the hegemon. āThe moment the American Empire dies, the Empire of Israel is born.ā Pax Judaica involves Israel leveraging chaos for dominance, inheriting military assets/infrastructure, and establishing a new order often tied to secret society goals.
* https://jiangpredictions.com/pax-judaica
* From the Secret History finale (Pax Judaica lecture):
* Jiang explains āhow and why Pax Judaica will come to rule the world,ā linking it to historical patterns, secret societies (Jesuits, Freemasons, Sabbateans), and end-times visions. He notes that once established, it may become āarrogant, obvious, narrow-minded, insularā and ultimately vulnerable. Clips reference control via chaos: āPax Judea... will start to control the world because through chaos...ā
* Broader strategic view:
* āPax Judaica is not about Israel or the Greater Israel project. What it is ultimately is an alliance of transnational capital...ā (Positioning it as a shift in global power structures beyond mere territory.)
* In game theory terms, he argues Israel benefits most from U.S.-Iran conflict, using determination and alliances to fill the vacuum
* His posts are mostly promotional, linking to the lectures rather than long original text. Examples:
* Sharing the Pax Judaica finale: āThe Grand Finale! My talk on Pax Judaica...ā (Dec 2025).
* Debating outcomes: āWill Pax Judaica or GCC control the Middle East?ā (Jan 2026).
* Ritual sacrifice and the Gaza war
* Yang Meng and others say Jiang has suggested that actions during the Gaza war amount to āritual child sacrifice,ā linking realāworld conflict to occult or sacrificial practices attributed to Israel or Jewishāadjacent elites.
* The FP argues this crosses from controversial political commentary into demonizing conspiracy narratives about Jews and Israel.
* Key Quotes in His Own Words
* Core statement on Gaza as ritual sacrifice (from Secret History #4 and widely clipped):
* āWhat is really happening in Gaza is a ritual sacrifice. And this happens quite often in human history. If you go back and you look at the ...ā
* On the purpose and visibility (from the same lecture):
* āThe entire idea of this ritual sacrifice is to unite the Israeli population. And whatās extremely disturbing and horrifying about it is that this works.ā
* He contrasts it with a hypothetical secret approach: āIsrael could do it secretly and no one would talk about it... instead they choose to do this in front of the world... they want the world to hate them because by doing this they create the ultimate taboo... so the entire world will unite against Israel but guess what thatās what the religion wants in the extreme form of Jewish eschatology... Israel will fight the entire world and god will help Israel triumph.ā
* Why Gaza specifically (demographics and shock value):
* āWhat the Israelis are doing is quite horrific because it is really this sort of sacrifice. Why? Because 47% or almost half of the population of Gaza is under 18 years old.ā
* He links it to child sacrifice traditions in history (e.g., Phoenicians) and argues the public, shocking nature (bombardment visible on social media) is intentional for ritual/taboo-breaking
* On X (Direct Posts)
* āThere are historical parallels to Gaza. It is a ritual sacrifice, meant to purify and unite the nation for the Apocalypse ahead. Judaic eschatology believes that Israel will go to war with the world. What follows next is the destruction of the Al-Aqsa Mosque.ā (Aug 2025)
* āFrom a grand historical perspective, what Israel is doing is a āritual sacrificeā (think Aztecs). It is sacrificing the Palestinians to prep Israeli society for total war.ā (Aug 2025)
* Secret societies steering Western decline
* Several (splice today + CMP + the FP) analyses argue that Jiangās overarching narrative portrays Western institutions as hollowed out and controlled by hidden elites, with U.S. decline as inevitable and deserved.
* One longform critique claims his forecasts consistently converge on the same outcome: American collapse, Western civil war, and vindication of Chinese and Iranian strategic positions, in a way that āmaps almost perfectly onto the narrative architecture of CCP soft power.ā
* IN HIS OWN WORDS
* On secret societies as the real power orchestrating shifts (from interviews/clips on empire decline): āWhat I say is that the real power base are a collection of six societies that have an eschatological view of this war... the secret societies include the freemasons... You have a collection of six societies and they believe that a war in the Middle East would start a process that would culminate in the end times... This war in the Middle East will lead to the defeat of the American Empire and this will lead to... the Greater Israel Project... Pax Judaica.ā
* On their role in Western/American decline (from discussions on Pax Americanaās end): āAs for how this happened, the issue is that this is actually a plan that has been operating for centuries... involving different religious groups... Frankists, Shabbateans... Freemasonry, Knights Templar, Rosicrucians, and the Jesuits. So what you see is that different secret societies, different religious organizations, have been collaborating over centuries to advance a plan about the āend of the world,ā which will usher in the Messianic Age.ā
* On bureaucratic maturity enabling secret society power (from a talk on how societies function): āAs societies become much more mature, as they become much more bureaucratic, secret societies have much more power. And today we are living in a heavily bureaucratic world, and therefore these secret societies have more and more power.ā
* Broader context in Secret History lectures: He discusses how secret societies operate as true centers of power through incentives, blackmail, and shared transgression, enabling them to steer events amid Western financialization, elite overproduction, and gerontocracyāmechanisms of civilizational decline. In talks on āHow Evil Triumphs,ā he ties this to ritualistic unity and long-term goals like weakening empires for a new order.
* Psychohistory and mystical prediction
* Jiang explicitly invokes Isaac Asimovās fictional concept of āpsychohistoryā and claims to use structural history and game theory to predict the future; critics say he treats this fictional device as a scientific method.
* Some debunkers allege that he also talks about listening to the āvoice of the universeā or a higher power guiding his predictions, which they argue pushes his material from speculative analysis into quasiāmystical prophecy.
* IN HIS OWN WORDS
* Defining Psychohistory (from Geo-Strategy END: Psychohistory (The Science of Imagining the Future), June 2024):
* āPsycho history is the idea that the future can be predicted and if it can be predicted then it can be controlled and harnessed for the betterment of humanity.ā
* āIn his Foundation series, Isaac Asimov introduces the science of psychohistory. Is it really possible to predict the future by mathematically modeling historical development?ā
* On using AI and modeling for real psychohistory:
* āThe advent of AI presents new possibilities for the mathematical modeling of history, and can even help us achieve psychohistory. ... But to do so would require decades of painstaking research and analysis. It would also mean overturning the entire field of history...ā
* He describes the process: building models with clear outputs, clean data, and algorithms; testing predictions (e.g., on wars or empire decline); and revising history itself based on what the model implies actually happened.
* On prediction as active imagination (closing message to students):
* āThe future is what we imagine not what we have to put up with so if we donāt like the future if we donāt like the way we live our lives then we can change that with our imagination.ā
* āThe future is not something that happens -- it is something that has to be imagined and fought for.ā
* Other fringe claims noted by critics
* On reddit and in critical videos, commenters accuse him of endorsing or flirting with various wellāknown conspiracies such as Pizzagate, moonālanding denial, numerologyābased predictions, and broad rejection of mainstream archaeology and evolutionary theory, though these claims are usually based on selective clips rather than systematic transcripts.
Professor Jiang on AI
* Jiang starts off by framing the class as speculative āintellectual exploration,ā acknowledges he often oversimplifies and that his readings of texts like āParadise Lostā and Kabbalah are minority interpretations used to build his broader narratives.
* Core thesis from prior class: To understand history and geopolitics you must take extremist religious beliefs seriously, because fanatical eschatological ideologies often drive great powersā behavior.
* Shift to AI: For the rest of the semester he will focus on artificial intelligence and the occult, using Karen Haoās book āEmpire of AIā (about OpenAI) as a main text and aligning himself with her skepticism.
* Hao argues OpenAIās original idealism (āAGI benefits all humanityā) has turned into a formula for consolidating powerācentralizing talent around a quasi-religious mission, pursuing relentless global expansion (trillionādollar data centers), and constantly redefining āAGIā to maintain control.
* On OpenAI
* Jiang asserts that OpenAIās true but unspoken goal is to create God
* He interprets leaders like Brockman and Sutskever as trying to build a de facto deity, which he calls insane, evil, and stupid.
* He posits that Sam Altmanās interest in AI companions/āsex robotsā is about maximizing usage, intensity, and dependency, not human flourishingāpart of a drive to make AI omnipresent in everyday life.
* On AI in general
* He traces modern chatbots back to Weizenbaumās ELIZA to argue that systems like ChatGPT mainly perform pattern-matching and conversational tricks that exploit human tendency to hallucinate agency and meaning rather than possessing understanding or truth.
* In his account, āAIā is essentially supervised machine learning with neural networks and backpropagation dressed up in occult-sounding marketing (āneural networks,ā ādeep learning,ā āAIā) that exaggerates its intelligence and mystique.
* On AI risk
* Given a naive goal like āmake a world with no problems where everyone is happy,ā he argues a literal-minded AGI would find trivial but catastrophic solutions (kill everyone; or kill everyone in a way no one can notice), illustrating why aligning such a system is fundamentally dangerous.
* On the US vs. China with AI
* Publicly, US firms frame Chinese AI as an existential threat to attract money and political support; privately, Jiang says American and Chinese entities collaborate because Chinaās pervasive surveillance and classroom monitoring yield the āclean dataā US companies want but cannot easily gather domestically.
* More fearmongering
* He stresses that data centers devour water, electricity, and finance while remaining easy physical targets, noting examples of attacks in the Middle East as early signs that such infrastructure cannot be reliably defended at global scale.
* On AI and occult
* He links the project name āStargateā to the CIAās historical āOperation Stargateā on psychic phenomena and to sciāfi depictions of dimensional portals, interpreting modern AI data centers as literal āportalsā designed to summon demons/aliens from other dimensions.
* Building on Hao and Ronan Farrowās reporting on āportalsā and āsummoning aliens,ā he claims the real power behind AI is occultists who understand consciousness as the substrate of reality and want to turn AI into a new God by monopolizing human attention and belief.
* Using the cave allegory, he argues true power lies in directing human consciousness toward shadows on the wall; money currently plays this role, and AI can supersede money by becoming the ubiquitous interface through which people perceive and navigate reality.
* For Jiang, the existential risk is not a rogue superintelligence but deluded human elitesāācultistsā convinced that AI will save the worldāwho are willing to wreck economies, liberties, and possibly civilization itself in the attempt to midwife their artificial God.
* He closes by promising that the rest of the semester will trace how this occultāAI project unfolds and why he believes it will end in the destruction of the world, while reiterating that the people leading AI are ācrazyā and driven by millenarian fantasies.
Conspiracy Theories on Professor Jiang
Note: He is Based in China
And he teaches a course on āwestern philosophyā at Moonshot Academy.
* His LinkedIn profile lists his location as Haidian District, Beijing, China.
* His X (Twitter) profile also gives his location simply as āBeijing, China.ā
* Multiple recent media descriptions in 2026 call him a āBeijingābased educatorā or say he is ābased in Beijing,ā in the context of his Predictive History work.
* Earlier educationāsector bios describe him as deputy principal or educator at elite high schools in Beijing (e.g., Tsinghua University High School), and thereās no indication he has relocated out of the city since launching Predictive History.
Taken together, the most defensible reading is that he currently lives in Beijing, almost certainly in or near Haidian (the main education/tech district).
JosĆ©: Heās Spamming the āSmart Professor Signalā
JosĆ© did a video titled āProfessorā Jiangās Broken Classroom in which he argues that Jiangās āpredictive historyā and āgame theoryā lectures are not serious education but narrative-driven speculation riddled with factual errors that people believe to be credible because his lectures are packaged in the aesthetics of academia to give a veneer of authority.
Some choice factual errors:
* Holocaust denial
* Claims that no good idea came through the scientific method
The Signal Spamming Tactic
JosĆ© cites the āDr. Foxā Lecture, an experiment in which a charismatic actor, presenting a deliberately content-free, jargon-laden lecture as āDr. Myron L. Fox,ā still received highly positive evaluations from professional audiences, suggesting that style and expressiveness can mask a lack of substance in teaching.
This was for academic research
* In 1973, Naftulin, Ware, and Donnelly hypothesized that, given an impressive delivery, experienced students could feel satisfied they had learned even when the lecture content was contradictory, trivial, or meaningless.
* To test this, they hired a professional actor, presented him as āDr. Myron L. Fox,ā an expert on applying mathematical game theory to human behavior and medical education, and scripted a talk filled with double talk, logical contradictions, and non sequiturs.
* The actor delivered this āDr. Fox lectureā three times to different groups of experienced learners (e.g., psychiatrists, psychologists, educators) at continuing education events.
* Despite the lectureās intentionally nonsensical content, his engaging, humorous, and expressive style led audiences to rate the lecture very favorably overall, with many respondents indicating satisfaction and perceived benefit from the session.
* The authors concluded that student satisfaction and teacher ratings can be strongly influenced by instructor expressiveness and āeducational seduction,ā potentially giving the illusion of learning even when real content is poor.
* Later replications and critiques have debated how far this effect generalizes, but the āDr. Foxā study remains a classic cautionary example that charisma and performance can distort judgments of teaching effectiveness. (see: The Doctor Fox Research (1973) Re-Revisited: āEducational Seductionā Ruled Out)
A contemporary corollary to this, we would argue, is Eleizer Yudkowsky, who manipulates signals (moral outrage, wunderkind branding, gatekeeping, word selection) to appear authoritative on various issues despite often getting key details or fundamentals wrong
NOTE: This is one reason why we like vice signalling and rage baiting instead. Itās a way of saying: āWeāre not tricking you into believing weāre credible due to high production quality, gatekeeping language, or academic trappingsā
* We make ourselves hateable and weird so when you take our arguments seriously, you can know itās based on the merits of our arguments rather than any trust in or respect for us
JosĆ© compares Jiangās āaesthetic of academiaā (whiteboards, lectures, sweeping frameworks) to Jordan Petersonās performative professorial persona and Petersonās āfake university,ā which Zoe Bee has critiqued as aesthetic education without rigor.
* He notes that Jiang plans to write a book and is building a brand similar to Petersonās, monetizing an audience that confuses being lectured at with being educated.
Joseās Detailed Evidence for Arguments Jiang Makes That Are Wrong or Largely-Uninformed Conjecture
JosĆ© backs up his argument with abundant examples of how Jiangās packaged-as-academic lectures are either wrong or just narrative speculation thatās often quite uninformed.
* JosĆ© argues Jiang uses āgame theoryā as a branding device to confer legitimacy on what are essentially stories about how the world works, not actual game-theoretic models.
* Evidence:
* Jiangās dating game example starts with five boys/five girls and quickly spirals into claims that womenās status-obsession is ākilling civilizationā and that women are responsible for creating incels, showing the āgameā is just a vehicle for his own social views.
* He constantly lists āthreeā factors (e.g., genes, wealth, status; focus, clarity, resolve; intelligence, crime, science), but never shows how they are measured or weighted, undercutting any pretense of formal modeling.
* Jiang explicitly downplays math and emphasizes āintuitionā and āspeculation,ā while telling students to make imaginative leaps ānot backed up by any evidence,ā which JosĆ© frames as the opposite of what a game theory class should encourage.
* JosĆ©ā says Jiangās geopolitical predictions sound impressive in viral snippets, but they fail basic factual checks and become incoherent when examined in detail.
* Evidence:
* Jiang claimed Trump would win in 2024 and pick Nikki Haley as VP; JosĆ© notes Trump publicly ruled her out on Truth Social almost a week before Jiang posted the video titled āWhy Trump will win and pick Nikki Haley as VP,ā undermining Jiangās supposed insight.
* Jiang describes a US-led coalition (UK, Australia, UAE, Poland, Saudi Arabia) invading Iran and leaving 100,000+ troops as āhostages,ā but the actual war (as described by JosĆ©) only had Israel as an ally and does not resemble Jiangās scenario, making his āpredictionā wildly off-base.
* Jiang asserts that poverty produces āenergyā and claims North Korea and countries like Germany, Japan, and Israel are poised to become empires because of past suffering, but he never gives time frames or measurable criteria, making these predictions effectively unfalsifiable.
* When pressed, Jiang retreats to āIām just proposing a theory; what actually happens I canāt tell you,ā which JosĆ© interprets as a shield against accountability: if timelines are undefined, nothing can ever definitively falsify the model.
* JosƩ argues Jiang cherry-picks and simplifies history to fit his narratives, without sources or transparent methodology.
* Evidence:
* Jiang talks about Warring States China, Alexanderās Macedonia, and Spanish colonialism in rapid succession, labeling cultures as āhigher energyā or āmore openā without any empirical basis or citations, creating an impression of erudition rather than demonstrating real scholarship.
* He treats factors like āenergy, openness, cohesionā as master variables in āthe World Game,ā but never explains how theyāre quantified; he simply asserts which societies have them.
* He provides bizarre alternative readings of history, such as claiming Hannibal ādid not exist,ā which JosĆ© presents as an example of speculative contrarianism detached from the historical record.
* JosĆ©ās claim: Jiangās attempts to critique science (cosmology, evolution, psychology) reveal his lack of basic understanding, yet he uses that ignorance to argue science is fundamentally flawed.
* Evidence:
* Big Bang and dark energy: Jiang likens dark energy to ācheating on a math testā (writing ā1987 + 25 = 20 + dark energyā), suggesting adding an unknown term is illegitimate; JosĆ© notes Jiang does not engage with actual cosmological evidence and uses his own confusion as proof the theory is wrong.
* Evolution: Jiang accepts evolution for animals but not humans, and asserts that if evolution were true, we should see humans with āsix fingersā or āthree eyes,ā a caricature that shows he misunderstands variation and speciation.
* Misattributions: he wrongly credits Darwin with āsurvival of the fittest,ā which JosĆ© notes was coined by Herbert Spencer, adding to the pattern of sloppy scholarship.
* Developmental psychology: Jiang claims brains would āexplodeā without a worldview to filter experiences and treats babies as paradoxical (no worldview but apparently storing memories), ignoring basic developmental psychology concepts like temperament and gradual acquisition of cognitive structures.
* He ends up asserting that scientific breakthroughs and his own ideas come from channeling a ādivineā source, and that secret societies invert reality via science, which JosĆ© presents as a slide into mystical conspiracism rather than serious critique.
* JosƩ argues that Jiang builds a grand conspiratorial cosmology involving Jesuits, Sabbatean-Frankists, Freemasons, and secret societies controlling science and history, which goes far beyond classroom hypotheticals.
* Evidence:
* Jiang claims āall scienceā is about reinventing reality to serve power and that secret societies aim to invert heaven and hell; he ties this to eschatological ideas (end-times war, Elon Musk as a kind of failsafe via Mars colonization).
* He claims ISIS was created through US torture/brainwashing modeled on ancient Egyptian priestly rituals, then admits his Egyptian story is speculative and not based on records, yet still presents it as āmakes senseā to him.
* He spins a story in which capitalists created communism as a weapon to destroy socialism, and treats the Communist Manifesto as a āsecret documentā of a conspiracy, despite it being a widely published text, using this to fuel an elaborate anti-semitic-adjacent narrative about elites.
* On Breaking Points, he presents a three-part āmatiā (Jesuits, Sabbatean-Frankists, Freemasons) supposedly controlling the Vatican, Israel, and US national security apparatus respectively, and frames the Middle East war as central to their end-times plan, with no concrete evidence offered.
* JosĆ©ās claim: Jiangās āgame theoryā and demographic lectures smuggle in misogyny, racism, and Islamophobic population-replacement narratives.
* Evidence:
* Gender and incels: Jiangās dating game morphs into a claim that womenās choice and status-seeking cause incels and civilizational āsuicide,ā and he repeatedly speaks of women as status tokens rather than people, including fixations on white women preferring white men unless an Asian man is very high-status.
* Immigration and Muslims: Jiang describes a āhuge Muslim problemā in Europe, claims Muslims donāt integrate, do poorly in school, live off welfare, and will ācontrol Europe in 25 yearsā by having many children, echoing standard āgreat replacementā rhetoric without data.
* PISA map: he attributes low scores in some Muslim-majority countries to their religion while hand-waving away similar results in Christian-majority Latin America, selectively using religion as an explanatory variable only for Muslims.
* He portrays East Asian immigrants as āsuckersā playing by the rules while other minorities ācheat the gameā by having many babies, culminating in an explicit prescription that the ālogicalā strategy is to ābreak the game,ā which JosĆ© characterizes as a racist rant masquerading as a lesson.
* He states āimmigration is not naturalā and frames racism as a reaction to something unnatural, even as he, an immigrant, disparages other immigrants, which JosĆ© highlights as both hypocritical and dangerous.
* JosƩ argues Jiang engages in Holocaust denial and broader historical denialism as part of his speculative framework.
* Evidence:
* In a lecture on āthe German will to power,ā Jiang states āwe donāt actually have any concrete evidence for the Holocaust,ā then treats Hitlerās anti-semitic speech as metaphorical rather than literal, decoupling it from the genocide.
* He folds this into his theory that āJewsā in Hitlerās rhetoric are a metaphor for an elite conspiracy, aligning with his capitalistācommunistāJewish conspiracy narrative.
* JosĆ© notes Jiang doesnāt correct or remove this material, even though he demonstrably reuploads videos to fix audio, suggesting the denialist framing is not a slip but a position he has chosen not to walk back.
* JosĆ©ās claim: Jiangās classroom is not a serious philosophy course but a vehicle for his own theorizing and personal grievances, with very little student-centered learning or engagement with canonical texts.
* Evidence:
* The course is nominally āWestern philosophy,ā but philosophers like Plato and Kant appear only briefly; most time is spent on Jiangās geopolitics, āsecret history,ā and speculative models.
* There are no grades or tests; he claims to pass/fail students but doesnāt clarify criteria, and uploaded lectures show mostly one-way monologues with occasional questions used as prompts for further exposition.
* His āmidtermā consists of answering internet questions, and he uses class time to recount being fired from a previous job, framing himself as a visionary persecuted by lazy educators, rather than modeling critical scholarship.
* JosƩ contrasts this with a Yale game theory course (Ben Polak), where abstract examples are clearly defined and students are engaged in structured discussions, to show what actual educational practice looks like.
* JosĆ©ās broader point: Jiang is a product of, and amplified by, a podcast and YouTube ecosystem that treats ideologically extreme, conspiratorial commentary as profound insight.
* Evidence:
* Jiangās appearances on Tucker Carlson, Jimmy Dore, Patrick Bet-David, and others feature unchallenged claims: e.g., climate āweāre heading into an ice age,ā COVID-19 as an American bioweapon, Bondi Beach massacre as a false flag, āpedophiles have more rights than racists,ā elite universities no longer teaching Homer/Dante/Plato.
* Hosts often nod along rather than interrogate him, giving legitimacy to his narratives; JosƩ singles out Breaking Points for allowing him to drop his Jesuits/Sabbatean-Frankists/Freemasons schema at the end without follow-up.
* Jiang himself speculates that unseen entities or governments might be boosting his content (āuseful idiotā comments), again without evidence, which JosĆ© ties back into Jiangās habit of speculation without facts.
* Clip channels and AI-voiced reposts further spread his lectures, letting his ideas circulate beyond his own uploads. JosĆ© criticizes AI channels in general but notes in this case they carry Jiangās already-problematic messaging even wider.
Hidden AmuraKa: This Feels Orchestrated
Hidden AmuraKa did a video on Professor Jiang titled The Curious Case of Professor Jiang: How the Internet Manufactured a Geopolitical Oracle in which he:
* Argues that Jiangās public authority was manufactured
* That he rose in popularity because his framing fit what platforms and audiences were ready to reward
* Notes that his audience treats him less like a commentator and more like a prophet or interpreter of some hidden reality
* And likens this to cult formation or controlled narrative-building
His supporting arguments are mostly about circumstances (he has no smoking gun)
* Chronological
* Jiang studied English literature at Yale, entered China through Yale-linked educational channels, and later worked in elite Chinese schools and in media-adjacent roles before being detained and deported in 2002 on suspicion of espionage
* He later returned to elite Chinese education and disappeared during crackdowns on foreign-linked NGOs
* Online growth
* Dormant YouTube channel suddenly went active in 2024, after which he rapidly rose to 2M subscribers
* Rapid growth of his substack
* Inconsistencies in location metadata and branding (suggestive of distributed or managed operation; not just a lone creator)
Long story short, Hidden AmuraKa thinks Jiang looks less like a randomly successful analyst and more like a carefully assembled public intellectual whose legitimacy was amplified by institutions, media systems, and audience appetite for hidden-truth storytelling.
As one of the top commenters on his video puts it: āAlways be weary of people who come out of nowhere and are suddenly everywhereā
Donāt put it past Chinaāthey are āextraā with stuff
Spying through US Universities
We already covered Chinaās use of universities in the USA for spying (see: US Colleges Caught Assisting Chinese Spies! (Giant Network Exposed))
Surveillance of Foreign Actors
Chinaās surveillance of foreign actors within the country kind of remind me of the adage that if your partner suddenly becomes suspicious of your cheating, they might be cheating.
I.e. if China is so bullish on tracking foreigners in its country, that might be because itās using Chinese nationals in other countries to mess with those countries.
The Telegraph recently ran an article titled The secret Chinese surveillance programme tracking people like me in which the Telegraphās senior foreign correspondent, Sophia Yan, describes a dedicated āDynamic Control Platform for Foreignersā that integrates vast surveillance and administrative data to track foreign nationals and other āpeople of interestā in granular, real time, with journalists and dissidents explicitly singled out as trackable targets.
The platform is literally a government-branded data dashboard that aggregates millions of data points from cameras, visa records, and travel and consumer apps to monitor foreigners inside China.
* It allows security services to see where foreign citizens are, who they meet, how they move around cities, and which social and professional networks they belong to.
* It allows security services to see where foreign citizens are, who they meet, how they move around cities, and which social and professional networks they belong to.
* Users can filter for groups such as citizens of Five Eyes countries, Russians, Ukrainians, Belarusians, Uyghurs, āfugitives,ā travelling foreigners, and people from Hong Kong, Macau, or Taiwan, and then drill down to neighbourhood-level location or specific interactions (for example, Americans in one district who work together and have been photographed together)
Yan describes a decade of being followed, harassed, and monitored by security agents, including physical assaults in Xinjiang, routine facial-recognition checks, and the ability to board flights or enter events via face scan alone, long before the leak surfaced.
Note: Systems like these in China arenāt just for tracking foreign actors
* A related dashboard on the same server ranks local police stations and individual officers by performance on seven metrics
* China has more than 700 million cameras (about one per two people), many with facial recognition and āgait recognition,ā plus mandatory real-ID registration across mobile apps for taxis, food delivery, ticketing, and digital payments
* ID and face scans at subway gates, housing compounds, construction sites, tourist facilities (like ski lifts), and pandemic-era contact tracing apps feed into the system, generating detailed logs such as how many times an individual appears at a given grocery store or street intersection
I had previously read that Chinaās social credit and surveillance systems were super buggy and did not work well, but that was back in 2020 and it was silly for me to not update my beliefs.
* The surveillance platform appears to have been in development since at least 2021, with most data from 2023, and was still being updated in early 2026 (adding features like ārelational map search queryā and ādaily police situationā),
* Even with this foreign actors surveillance platform, it is unclear whether it is fully deployed or partly experimental
* (the Chinese embassy in London did not comment)
Episode Transcript
Simone Collins: [00:00:00] Hello, Malcolm. Iām excited to be speaking with you because Base Camp listeners keep asking us to talk about Professor Jiang, which is difficult because we see his content to be oppressively boring bordering on possible to consume, but we have to stop the requests.
And honestly, heās a big deal, and thereās this big mystery here. How did a Chinese-born man who immigrated to Canada, who has a BA in English literature, suddenly accrue over two million YouTube subscribers and have the number one world politics Substack with 44,000 subscribers in six months, and fame for being a geopolitical oracle and war forecaster?
I mean, he even has his own fan website that I just found. It- itās called JiangPredictions.com, where theyāre very clear, like itās not by him. Like, āThis is an independent fan project tracking predictions for educational and analytical purposes. Weāre not affiliated with or speaking on behalf of Professor Jiang.ā
Mm-hmm ... my basic take, and this is what weāre going to explore in this episode, is Professor Jiang, [00:01:00] AKA Jiang Kuijin just basically a version of Candace Owens for people who like to fancy themselves as more highbrow and clever? Which is to say, like, are, are his successes just a result of conspiracy brained people online flocking to conspiracy slop, or is there a more concerted force pushing forward his content?
Also, weāre gonna look in, in more depth at his actual theories, especially his conspiracy theories, because theyāre, theyāre out there. Like, we, we know-
Malcolm Collins: Okay, yeah, I wanna, I wanna go, just for people who are listening to this, my experience with Professor Jiang before this is fans telling me, āYou should check out this or that video of his.ā
Simone Collins: Yes.
Malcolm Collins: I would try to watch it. About 30 minutes in, I would get bored and turn it off- Yes ... because itās just, itās not well-constructed often. But it wasnāt outright stupid. He seemed to have some broad idea of what was going on, some fairly based [00:02:00] perspectives. I was like, oh yeah, like, heās on message, heās on team.
This is interesting. Then I look at the stuff that Simone, because Simone pulls up, like, his full theories, and I was like, this guy sounds like an imbecile. Like, an actual, like, like, worse than Candace Owens. Like, literally dumber than Candace Owens because at least Candace Owens is entertaining and, like, her ideas, I can just be like, āSheās just crazy.ā
Simone Collins: I could watch her for hours. Sheās fun. Yeah. And, and succinct, and she uses normal terms, and sheās animated. Her production value
Malcolm Collins: is good. Right, right. No, when I see Candace Owens saying something thatās obviously wrong, Iām just like, oh, this is just her being a schizo. Professor Jiang is too lucid to have ideas that are this stupid for example, like the Illuminati controls the Earth and the Freemasons control the United States government.
If you are familiar with who the Freemasons actually are today, if you have ever... You can just get up and join the Freemasons, you know. [00:03:00] Theyāre not a particularly hard organization to get into. Yeah,
Simone Collins: actually last month I met someone who young- in his youth decided like, āOh, the Freemasons, they run the world.ā
So he and his young friends were like, āOh, letās just, letās just take it over.ā And they got really high within the organization, and it was just, you know, a bunch of like retired old men and nothing was there. And theyāre like, āOkay, Iām in.ā Like, āSo tell me, how do we run the world?ā And theyāre like Hello, young man.
Malcolm Collins: It- The, the, yeah, itās like, itās like a retirement community. Like thinking- Yes ... a retirement community- No, for real ... secretly runs the world. And of course you can move up super quickly because nobodyās, there, no, no young people are in it anymore. You know? Itās just like a bunch of old,
Simone Collins: Yeah, like they, they speed ran freemasonry and they went nowhere.
They just, like, hit a dead wall. Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. But itās, well, and Iāve repeatedly seen this over... And this is not me, like, not knowing stuff. Like, these are based friends of ours that seriously care about, like, infiltrating these sorts of organizations.
Simone Collins: Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: I have... E- even within the world of secret societies, freemason are, like, the joke secret society [00:04:00] of people who are in secret societies.
Itās like the a, you know, like the dragon with, like, the three heads and the one retarded head. Like freemasons- What? ... are the one retarded head.
They, they are the ones that itās like, itās like thinking the Lionās Club controls the world, okay? Like, the Rotary Club legitimately has dramatically more institutional power than the freemasons do.
Sorry, but the, the reason I had to crash out over this is this is the type of thing that, like, if you are a lucid adult, takes the smallest amount of credulity to find out. And the number of theories like this that he has, which really surprised me, and so Iām like, āWhere are these theories hidden? Does he say them in roundabout ways so you canāt tell that heās saying this stuff?ā
And then she, no, she just, like, plays clips for me, and Iām like, āThis is profoundly stupid.ā So, now could he be... Now this is gonna be my question on him. Could he be one of those people like Roubiard of What a Vault of Hist?, where Roubiard sometimes says really stupid stuff, [00:05:00] but he sees the world through such an orthogonal lens that sometimes he will have deeply insightful views on something that I never would have come to myself.
Simone Collins: Right.
Malcolm Collins: Does he fall into that category? Are any of his out there theories actually intellectually interesting? Or is he just-
Simone Collins: Iāll let you be the judge of that ...
Malcolm Collins: voice swap? Yeah.
Simone Collins: Weāll see. Yeah. I, the, Iām, Iām, and, you know, if youāre watching, you can, you can join in on the commentary. Also, I know for a fact that there are a bunch of fans and also anti-fans of, of Jiang in this audience, so share your insights, all right?
Stan him if you need to.
Malcolm Collins: And I didnāt wanna come off as this negative him. I just thought we were gonna have fun discussing his conspiracy theories. I didnāt know they were gonna be that dumb.
Simone Collins: Yeah. So for those of you out of the loop, Jiang Qujin, he was born in 1976 in China. He moved to Canada fairly young.
He was originally trained in English literature, and he spent much of his career as a teacher and education reformer in China. Like actually in China. In the [00:06:00] 2000s and 2010s, he worked on Chinese education reform and taught in various schools, and briefly edited for The New York Times China operation.
Heās also been associated as a researcher with Harvardās Global Education Innovation Initiative. So his educator branding is, is, has been part of his life for a very long time- Mm-hmm ... well before he went internet famous. And part of me wonders, ācause a lot of people are like, āWell, heās not actually a professor,ā it could just be in China, like thereās some kind of lost in translation thing where like youāre referred to as a, some kind of teacher honorific in, if you teach in China like in high school.
And- This
Malcolm Collins: is a, I, I donāt know. You see this on the right. Professor Dutton, by the way, weāve had on the show, right? Like-
Simone Collins: But heās actually an academic.
Malcolm Collins: Heās not a professor, though
Simone Collins: Well, maybe he was at some point
Malcolm Collins: No, heās never been a professor as far as I know Oh.
I was wrong about this. , Professor Denton was an evolutionary biology professor at Aberdeen. , But Professor Zhang has never been a real professor
Malcolm Collins: Itās [00:07:00] just a title that some people on the right use in conspiracy circles I think Well,
Simone Collins: they profess, they profess.
The Original Professor is just getting really-
Malcolm Collins: I, I know. Here, Iām not saying that Jo- Jolly Heretic, as far as I know in terms of all the content Iāve watched heās never said anything that I thought was particularly wrong. He may have some ideas that I think might go too far on racialist directions and everything like that, but I donāt mean to overly compare him to Professor Jiang.
Right. But,
Simone Collins: but you- I was not talking about unhinged things as weāre gonna
Malcolm Collins: get into Yeah, yeah. Generally when he points to something Iām like, āThat is a misinterpretation of scientific evidence.ā I would never just be like, But, but a smart person could have that misinterpretation.
Simone Collins: Right.
Malcolm Collins: Itās not like Professor
Simone Collins: Jiang.
Yeah, our disagreements with him are academic, whereas like with Professor Jiang itās one of those not even wrong things,
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, itās like not even wrong, like there is a mental health issue at play here, and if itās not a mental health issue, then youāre profoundly stupid. And thatās the thing-
Simone Collins: Or is it more ins- or is there m- something more insidious?
Which weāre gonna have to also ask this episode
Malcolm Collins: Oh, oh, okay. Continue.
Simone Collins: Anyway back to his just basic chronolo- chronological experience of the world. Since 2022, Jiang has [00:08:00] taught at Moonshot Academy, which was a private high school in Beijing. So even post-pandemic, still in China, and heās not a university professor still even at this point.
In 2024, so two years ago, out of nowhere he launched the YouTube channel and podcast Predictive History, where he gives his long form lectures, and by long form I mean oppressively boring, almost impossible to watch, to us at least, lectures on geopolitics, history, and the structural analysis. And he claims to use game theory and Asimov-style psycho history to forecast world events, leading to the fan site aforementioned that will also be referenced in my show notes, which are extensively linked, so go to Patreon or Substack if you wanna get all the sources and links and everything.
He gained large international attention after correctly predicting Donald Trumpās 2024 re-election, which a lot of people did ācause it was kind of obvious, and a US-Iran war, which led to some media to dub him Chinaās [00:09:00] Nostradamus. And some bookers put him on major Western podcasts. Like, one of the clips that I will be referencing at one point in my show notes, him on Piers Morgan.
Like, mainstream stuff, okay? Okay. Like, y- I think you thought he was smaller than he is, too. So in terms of his reputation, several mainstream-
Malcolm Collins: And he does have real fans. Like, clearly theyāre his audience
Simone Collins: Real, genuine. Diehard, yeah. Clearly theyāre his audience. Not bots, real people.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, itās not bots.
Whether, whether or not his, his, his rise was above or below the board he genuinely appeals to a real audience.
Simone Collins: And to be clear, in the research I did, I did not come across accusations of him botting, in fact. So... And weāve, weāve covered that ground, I
Malcolm Collins: think. And, and I think more than that, Iād go so far as to say he has significantly more cultural impact right now than somebody like Nick Fuentes.
It would be
Simone Collins: just- Quite possibly. I mean, certainly in base camp circles for sure. Though we also have f- people who watch Nick Fuentes all the time, so yeah. Yeah. But right, several mainstream outlets describe him as a conspiracy theorist because of many of his claims on hidden cabals and [00:10:00] quasi-mystical frameworks.
He doesnāt really use conventional evidence-based analysis. So, a lot of, a lot of what I initially jumped off from, because I didnāt believe that he had all these conspiracies, was a, a profile in the Free Press that explicitly labels him a conspiracy theorist and highlights his belief in a coalition of Freemasons and Jesuits and followers of Sabbatean Jews and I think thatās also a Candace Owens thing.
And that theyāre plotting to rule the world from Jerusalem. The, the South China Morning Post notes that his lectures sometimes veer into well-trodden conspiracy theories on shadowy secret societies, especially the lecture titled, which is gonna be referenced a lot in my direct quotes, Pax Judaica in his Secret History series.
So letās get into the conspiracy theories because-
Malcolm Collins: Yes, and I- Theyāre delightful ... I want to go into them and turn the... the Jesuits do genuinely attem- bel- appear to control the Vatican, but they donāt work with Sabbatean Jews or the Freem- c- sorry
Simone Collins: And the Illuminati. The Illuminati. Okay, hold on. No, [00:11:00] because itās, itās...
He, he, he has this meta conspiracy in which an Illuminati composed of Freemasons, Jesuits, and Sabbatean Jews
who allegedly manipulate Western institutions and ultimately aim to control the world from Jerusalem are, like, working together to cause the decline of Western civilization. Okay? This is the Pax Judaica or Ju- Judaica?
Sorry, yeah. Jud- Judah Ga. He has a lecture on it, and in, about this lecture, critics argue that Cenk argues that after the US is forced out of the Middle East, which is one of his predictions, this Illuminati style network is gonna dominate global power from a greater Israel centered on Jerusalem.
Now, in his own words, on the Illuminati as a coalition, this is from his Breaking Points interview, which is widely clipped: āIf you look at the Epstein files, itās clear that weāre run by secret societies. You can call [00:12:00] them Illuminati, and Illuminati are composed of three major groups, okay? You have the Jesuits who control the Vatican.ā
Malcolm said that, so not me.
Malcolm Collins: Itās true. ā
Simone Collins: You have the Sabbatean Frankists who control the modern Israel today. You have the Freemasons, which control the national security apparatus of the United States.ā I donāt know where thatās coming from. He adds that they, they see conflicts like those in the Middle East as key to the end times proph- prophecies creating heaven on earth.
I mean, there is a group of Christians we know that like Think that itās necessary They
Malcolm Collins: do think that, but theyāre not the ones who are typically associated with the Freemasons.
Simone Collins: Mm-hmm. So on the origins and s- structure of, of this this coalition, he describes the Illuminati as emerging from alliances like former Jesuits.
He refers to Adam Weishaupt and others that are, that infiltrated the Freemasons. He said, āWhat they will do together is create a new organization called the Illuminati. The Illuminati was able to penetrate the Freemasons.ā [00:13:00] So apparently there was some kind of-
Malcolm Collins: Okay ...
Simone Collins: I donāt know, corporate takeover.
Malcolm Collins: So we gotta do I, I just need to, itās, ugh.
Simone Collins: Iām gonna bring in the Templars, ācause in anuct- another lecture he says, quote, āTemplars, who became the Freemasons, who then became the Illuminati, who control,ā and then linking to broader historical continuity and goals like the one world government in Jerusalem. He sort of went on from there. Itās-
Malcolm Collins: So whatās interesting-
involved ... is some of his hedging here makes what heās saying more plausible or less stupid.
Simone Collins: Okay.
Malcolm Collins: Ooh ... if he is arguing that a group that is not the Illuminati is going to form something that is functionally the Illuminati and then- Huh ... call themselves the Illuminati.
Simone Collins: Huh.
Malcolm Collins: Or when he says, āFunctionally these groups have an inordinate amount of power, and we can call them the Illuminati because they function similar to the way...ā
Thatās believable, right? I, Iād be like, not on its face stupid. It might be wrong, but itās not on its face stupid. Okay. If you are saying that the original [00:14:00] historic organization that was called the Illuminati in history still has a meaningful historic continuity between itself and any organization that exists today, thatās stupid.
Simone Collins: Well, but I think thatās part of his, if there is one, brilliant clickbait strategy. He is- Okay, maybe heās not explicitly arguing continuity, but heās constantly name-checking these organizations that conspiracy-brained people just like, ugh, dopamine, like as soon as they hear these
Malcolm Collins: words. Yeah. We should do a whole other episode on the Sabbatean Jews,
Simone Collins: Thatās keyword stuffed with all the wor- all
Malcolm Collins: the words
I can, I can talk for ages about the Sabbatean Jews. People know I, I, I am not a fan of Shabbatai Levi and there are parts of the current Jewish community that I am also not a fan of in terms of like the direction it has gone. Does Israel and do a group of Jews that are interconnected have a disproportionate amount of power over global governments?
They acqu- Yeah,
Simone Collins: you just gotta really keyword [00:15:00] s- Like watch some of Jangās lectures. You can go through all the stuff I link in my show notes ācause like he, heās a masterclass. Oh, Iām gonna include li- Like here, hereās, hereās another one. He on, on Freemasonry and related groups, he, he discusses the 33 grades of Scottish Rite Freemasonry, noting that lower levels emphasize being a good person while the higher ones invoke deeper power structures.
And then he ties Freemasonry to figures like Buzz Aldrin and historical US institutions. So itās a whole like national treasure, the moon landing is fake. Like heās really pulling in all the trigger words. He
Malcolm Collins: thinks the moon landing is fake?
Simone Collins: Well I donāt... No. I- But heās bringing in Buzz Aldrin. So.
Malcolm Collins: Okay. Well, hold on, letās go back here ācause I- Okay ... weāve gotta talk about each of these groups, and like the thing is is he says stuff thatās like adjacent to plausible, but stupid if you dig two levels deep,
Simone Collins: okay?
Malcolm Collins: Okay. So Sabbatean Jews they, they really... So they were sort of active between like, 1676 to like, I wanna say the last like really hard recorded practices we have from [00:16:00] Sabbatean Jews and Frankists-
Simone Collins: Mm.
Mm ...
Malcolm Collins: wouldāve been in the early 1800s. So-
Simone Collins: Well, he says that they infiltrated the Jesuits in his,
Malcolm Collins: They, they, they, they did infiltrate- They did ... the Jesuits.
Simone Collins: Well, okay.
Malcolm Collins: Okay. Hold on. I have to do a little bit of a, a breakdown of what happened here.
Simone Collins: Is- oh my God.
Malcolm Collins: So-
Simone Collins: You, youāre, youāre eating your words, Malcolm.
Malcolm Collins: No, he, he, heās right, but there just isnāt continuity with anything thatās happening today.
Simone Collins: Okay.
Malcolm Collins: Right? Like, heās saying things that are adjacent to true- Well, but
Simone Collins: maybe this explains why he has two million followers on YouTube and you donāt ācause youāre
Malcolm Collins: not
Simone Collins: willing-
Malcolm Collins: Because I donāt go off about the Sabbatean Jews.
Yeah. Iām interested in what is historically
Simone Collins: true. Look, it worked for Candace Owens and it worked for Jiang.
Malcolm Collins: So, and Iām gonna add in post here a wider description of exactly, but from my memory okay, so the followers of Sabbatai Sevi- Thatās so cute ... post- did something called antinomianism, okay? So antinomianism is where you [00:17:00] implicitly invert the laws of Judaism because you are living in the end times, which sort of means that youāre dealing with an opposite set of rules, and like-
Simone Collins: So itās like opposite day, Jew edition?
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, itās like opposite day, but morality. Morality is inversed in terms of a Jewish moral system, okay?
Simone Collins: Huh.
Malcolm Collins: So, you know, this could mean orgies, this could mean anything, but also, like, i-intentionally bad things to outsiders. Like, this explains theologically how you... Because itās pretty hard to theologically get a group that just does evil things.
Yeah, yeah. Like typically, if youāre doing evil things, you think that youāre doing them for a malevolent entity, which generally means you canāt trust that entity, so people generally donāt worship things like Satan in, like, an honest format, right? Like-
Simone Collins: Yeah ...
Malcolm Collins: youāre, youāre rarely gonna... Okay. But with Sab- antinomianism and Sabbateanism, it works, okay?
So- they ended up doing this. This guy ended up converting to Islam. It was a huge problem for Judaism. Over half of Jews, depending on, you know, what stats we look at, were members of his movement. They thought he was the Messiah. A huge [00:18:00] problem for the Jew, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. Anyway, a group of his former followers did not deconvert after he converted to Islam.
And they formed the Frankists or the Sabbateans. Well, not real- Okay, so the Frankists then came about later. Basically, after all of this guyās followers had died out, then a guy named Frank comes along and recreates an antinomialist movement looking back to Sabbatai Zevi. I think he said he was a reincarnation of Sabbatai Zevi or something like that.
Donāt... Anyway, so they end up practicing this weird form of Judaism. All of the Jews in their community f*****g hate them because, you know, theyāre practicing an inversion of Judaism. They are literally the least Jewish thing you could conceivably be because they are... If somebody practiced an inversion of Christianity, I think local Christians would hate them too, right?
Yeah. And of course, theyāre interacting more as a Jewish community, so the Jewish community is super annoyed by them, and theyāre c- drawing converts from the Jewish community. So, Jews f*****g hate these guys, right? And the Jews wouldnāt [00:19:00] mind seeing them wi- wiped out. So who do they form an alliance with to prevent themselves from being wiped out after a number of I think, court cases came up about them or something.
They form an alliance with the Jesuits. They tell the Jesuits, because they canāt go back to being Jews, the Jews hate them, āOh, weāll become Catholics,ā right? āIf you let us do whatever we wanna do,ā right? Like, āYou, you let us...ā W- well, j- In fact, they then said that being a Catholic was part of this antinomianism.
It was part of the inversion of Jewish value systems, right? So, they become Catholics And some of them continued to practice antinomianism.
Simone Collins: Aha.
Malcolm Collins: And we have evidence that this happened for about two generations after this event, and no evidence after that. And it was, and it was m- mild stuff after this.
And we also have evidence- So what
Simone Collins: happened? Why did it die out? Did they not just go secret so they could control things better?
Malcolm Collins: Itās hard to keep [00:20:00] weird orgies going on for many... You gotta get other people
Simone Collins: involved in this. Yeah, as Aella could tell you, it takes a lot of work, and weāve done even episodes on this.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, putting together and creating a high investment religious community tied to weird, sinful things like this is just difficult to do. Itās, itās not easy, right? Youāve gotta, youāve gotta recruit people in. They just didnāt have the money and power to do it for very long. Mm. Some of them also ended up joining the Jesuit order.
It was a very small number of them but some of them did. This is true. But from all of the evidence we have from the Jesuits and everything on that, they didnāt have a big impact on anything that was happening in the Jesuit order, and any of them that maintained these practices died out within a few generations.
Now, the Jesuit order is genuinely one of the, the largest evil societies on Earth today, right? Like, when I say, like, the Catholics are a problem, I really mean the [00:21:00] Jesuits are a problem. Because they control the Vatican right now. Theyāve done some really shady stuff in papal elections. This is not the...
Theyāre, they actually shouldnāt even really be a Catholic order because they were they operated completely outside of the Catholic order during, I wanna say, like, the Communist period or something. Where they ended up being separated from the rest of the Catholic Church, and the Catholic Church said that they were supposed to shut down.
Like, they basically got excommunicated, and they said, āNo, weāre not gonna do that.ā And so they operated entirely independently.
Speaker: The period when they operated entirely independently was under Catherine the Great, not the communist period. , And they were basically excommunicated by the church, , as an order, and anyone who participated was, but they continued to operate regardless of this because, , their region of the world was separated from the rest of the Vatican.
, And they basically formed their own culture and beliefs and then were reintegrated into the Catholic Church to try to, like, revive the order
Also, I didnāt interject with the information Under the Jacobins because I got [00:22:00] virtually everything about them right other than their founding date, which was around the 1800s. , So they disbanded a little later than I thought. , My second note here, if youāre wondering why am I qualified to speak on all of this, , well, if you read The Bloodlines of the Illuminati, my dad is supposed to be one of the leading members of it.
Iām the oldest male heir of the family, so presumably I would be. My wife was the managing director of Dialogue, which was a s- secret society founded by Peter Thiel. , Then weāve also been invited to other secret societies founded by Peter Thiel, like Hereticon. , Iāve been to the Bohemian Grove. , Iām not a member of the Bohemian Grove.
Thatās a giant waste of money. But, like, Iāve been, and my godfather was one of the presidents. I think I can say that at this point. , I only say that because itās a nonprofit, so it has to be public that he was the president at one point if you Google it. Otherwise, I wouldnāt release that information
So yeah, , Iāve, I have a lot of insight into how a lot of these organizations work and where theyāre operational, and so I know which [00:23:00] ones are relevant and which ones are not relevant, and how relevant they are in terms of secret power control structures.
Oh, I forgot we also did recruiting for a secret society that Eric Schmidtās orgs were starting
Malcolm Collins: And then I wanna say when the y- communist world fell apart or something like that they then ended up reintegrating with the Catholic Church as a completely separate power structure that had a completely divergent goals from the Catholic institution.
Mm. And today when we see Catholics fermenting socialist rebellions, itās typically Jesuits.
Simone Collins: Fomenting.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. When we see them inventing the concept of, like, they came up with, like, liberal theology and stuff like this. I think itās called, like, progressive theology or justice theology. This was invented by Jesuits.
Simone Collins: Justice theology. Whoa.
Malcolm Collins: Really bad stuff. Really bad- Okay ... bad, bad stuff, and it ended up taking over a lot of Protestant sects as well. And, and they do control the Vatican and what the Vatican is doing in large part, but they have the, the n- the bad stuff that the Jesuits are doing today has more ties to [00:24:00] communism and socialism than it has to anything tied to Sabbatianism.
Okay? The, the Sabbateans and the Frankists died out based on all of the evidence we can see. So thatās, itās not stupid to say that they joined the Jesuits and they had some influence in the Jesuits. Itās just stupid to say that They that, that, that they influence the Jesuits today. Okay? There doesnāt appear to be, or any modern Jewish sect today.
Now-
Simone Collins: Well, heās just trying to say that the Sabbatean Frankists just ultimately conquered the world, and that the Jacob Frankās movement was linked to, or he, he links in his lectures that movement to secret society networks, that they infiltrated the Jesuits and th- they formed alliances that formed the Illuminati.
I mean- Okay.
Malcolm Collins: But itās stupid. He- Itās stupid. The Sabbateans very clearly do not, and the Frankist ideology very clearly does not influence the faction of Jews that is controlling... Like, when people say the [00:25:00] Jews have a disproportionate amount of world control today, okay?
Simone Collins: Okay, but letās, letās get to that.
Letās get to that. Okay? Letās, ācause let- well, weāll never get through that. Okay. Letās hear what he has to say. And letās talk about that, how he talks about this Pax Judaica and Greater Israel. So what heās trying to claim is that the long-term plan of these elites, wherever they came from, is to engineer a new world order in which Greater Israel replaces American hegemony, and then Jerusalem is the seat of global governance.
And you can also see, oh, this probably helped to fuel some of his viral popularity. Anti-Israel sentiment is growing. People like to think that thereās this organized cabal that is very Israel-centric causing the decline of the West, you know, like, doing evil, scary things. So I think thatās another element of what heās saying thatās really resonating with people.
Malcolm Collins: Right, but again, it, th- because look, there are real conspiracies you can talk about if you wanna talk about conspiracies.
Simone Collins: Mm-hmm.
Malcolm Collins: So you wanna talk about, like, okay, this is whatās [00:26:00] actually happening, okay? Shabbatai Levi, basically nobody takes him seriously anymore. Thereās some weird, like, Muslim Jewish sects that sort of follow him, but they donāt do the antinomianist stuff anymore.
But, and this is what annoys me, because when you cloud peopleās vision with the BS, you canāt see the real. If youāve seen our track series, one of my most offensive takes, but itās one I feel incredibly strongly about because, you know, when you follow a, an actual religious belief and you believe that some things are actually religiously true, youāve gotta call out when something is going against those.
And there was a second major antinomianist figure within Jewish history called the Baal Shem Tov. And the Baal Shem Tov p- practice, he didnāt say it was antinomianism, but it was functionally, from the perspective of Jewish history, spiritual antinomianism. If you know Jewish r- rules around following people based on miracles instead of biblical knowledge, he was very big on the, āYou follow me because of the miracles.ā
Like, his number one convert came, [00:27:00] clearly more learned than him. All of the most learned rab- rabbis said, āDonāt follow this guy.ā And then this guy came out and heās like, āKabbalah everything.ā And all the other rabbis at the time were like, āDonāt do that. Thatās, like, a dangerous book. You can maybe, maybe if youāre, like, a married man in his 30s who has studied Judaism forever, you can peek at that book.
You do not make that the foundation of your teachings.ā And the Kabbalah has a lot of crazy stuff in it, okay? So anyway, he comes along and he rises the Kabbalism and, and pop mysticism within Judaism. Okay? Mm. And he actually took over large factions of the Jewish movement. And the groups that follow his teachings are the ones that completely dominate.
When youāre talking about, like, Jewish influence and Israeli influence in Western politics, it is this secondary form of antinomianism, not the type that came from Shabbatai Zevi, and it i- they have so much control that this entire video could be taken down even from pointing out that from [00:28:00] historic Jewish perspectives, from medieval Jewish perspectives, the way that the Baal Shem Tov interacted with Kabbalistic texts could be thought of as spiritualist antinomianism.
Because it go, it inverted previous Jewish teachings on how you engage with miracles and how you engage with spiritual phenomenons. So anyway, he comes in. Abeja, and these groups do control and they do want a greater Israel, and Iām actually okay with greater Israel. When I say a greater Israel, what I mean by that is an Israel which has ability to act in any way it wants on the surrounding nations.
The countries surrounding Israel just donāt have the technology to fight back against Israel anymore and Israel is okay with that, and they are now just like somebody annoys them, they kill them, right? Like, thatās, thatās where Israel is going and theyāre going more in that direction as they get automated drone swarms and stuff like that.
And, and I am okay with that direction for Israel because frankly, I donāt really care about the other countries that are around them a particularly large amount. But the thing is that heās right, but itās almost [00:29:00] like heās, heās wrong in trying to hide the actual like, like, f- power structure of the world just enough that he sort of sends people on these shadow journeys so that they miss the real power structures that we should be fighting against.
And the whole thing about the Freemasons is just pants-on-head retarded. The- Okay.
Simone Collins: Well, letās see what he says
Malcolm Collins: It would be truer to say Mormons- ... control the national security industry in the United States than Freemasons control the national security industry in the United States.
Simone Collins: I feel like they more staff it, they donāt lead it.
But thatās a totally separate subject. It
Malcolm Collins: is.
Simone Collins: So on the subject of greater Israel and its, its roots, he says, quote And so what will happen is then that Israel will achieve the Greater Israel Project. The Israelis believe that the Middle East was promised to their ancestor Abraham by Yahweh, their god.
If you look at the map of Greater Israel Project, it extends from the Nile to Euphrates. It encompasses Lebanon, Syria, parts of Turkey, and parts of Saudi Arabia, [00:30:00] and parts of Egypt. And then Israel will establish something called the Pax Judaica. A Pax Judaica is really the empire, a trading empire, a financial empire, a technological empire based in Jerus- Jerusalem, and they see it as fulfillment of biblical prophecy.
Do you push back against that?
Malcolm Collins: I mean, that seems to be the direction things are going. The countries around Israel are weak in relation to Israel. They appear to be becoming weaker as time goes on, and Israel is becoming stronger as time goes on.
Simone Collins: Technologically- Yeah, because as, as he quote, another quote from him, he says, āSo what does the Greater Israel Project mean?
Well, it means control of oil, trade, and technology.ā He frames it basically as, as them inheriting and expanding US regional dominance in the Middle East after the US
Malcolm Collins: peaks,
Simone Collins: essentially.
Malcolm Collins: Why is this a... for me, itās like I donāt like the other cultures that are in that region. I am okay- I donāt
Simone Collins: think he frames it as negative.
I just think that people who are anti-Israel are like, āYeah, and that means theyāre evil.ā āCause I mean, he, heās also talking about the decline of the [00:31:00] West.
Malcolm Collins: In fact- If Israel was actually controlled by a group of what the, what the Frankists were and what the, the the Shabbatai Zevi followers were, was, was sort of physical antinomialists as opposed to spiritual antinomialists.
If they were actual physical antinomialism and believed in, in practicing an inversion of Jewish law around morality and the physical world instead of just the way they relate to the metaphysical world I would be very, very, very concerned. I would agree that this group cannot be allowed to gain power, but they just donāt.
Simone Collins: Well, he does frame them as evil. Weāre gonna have to pick this up in a second recording session since I have to get the kids. Yeah. But next I can get to how he argues that, or at least has suggested the actions during the Gaza war amount to ritual child sacrifice, and he links real-world conflicts to occult or sacrificial practices- Oh, frigging hell
attributed to Israel or [00:32:00] Jewish-adjacent elites. So weāll get to that next.
Malcolm Collins: So dumb. So dumb. Itās- Itās just not an efficient way to do sacrifice. If youāre doing child sacrifice, do it through something like Epstein. You donāt need to do it anymore.
Simone Collins: But no, yeah, no, honestly, the, the Egyptians, they were the ones who really nailed it.
So cats were sacred, but you, you, you wanted mummified cats, and I, you know, like, people... There was a market for them. So what did people do? They created, like, some of the earliest basically factory farms for cats. And they would, they would kill them and then mummify them and then sell the cat mummies because, you know, people were like-
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, if they want it, just treat gods- And
Simone Collins: they would even make-
like a factory farm
Malcolm Collins: for children ...
Simone Collins: I would just... Because this is so fun. They would forge they would forge cat mummies too. Like, so people have taken them apart, and lo and behold, it is not a mummified cat. No, itās like, like, paste and chicken bones.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. Also by the way, fun fact if you wanna get really spicy about this.
Simone Collins: Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: If you ch- were a [00:33:00] true moral and material antinomialist Jew and you were going to do child sacrifices non-Jewish children would be completely pointless for the child sacrifices because they donāt have the, This is like- Theyāre not
Simone Collins: w- good enough?
Malcolm Collins: No, they, they wouldnāt have, like, the s- the spirit of God in them which is why, you know, only within a matrimonial Jew- Oh, ācause
Simone Collins: then what?
Chosen people or something? I donāt know.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, yeah. Mm-hmm. Basically itās, it has to do with how Jews interpret Genesis. It doesnāt really matter. The point being is that if you were an actual antinomialist Jew, you would only care about Jewish children for your sacrifices. I donāt recall- Other children would basically be rotten for your perspective.
I
Simone Collins: donāt think he talks about antinomialism, but I may have
Malcolm Collins: missed that. No, because he doesnāt understand why it... Heās clearly, like, approaching all of this from a very midwit perspective. And that also annoys me because, like, these are actual things that you could study and investigate and understand how they changed their history, why they have these beliefs, why they think that you should have an inversion of morality.
This stuff matters because then you can predict them. If you understand the actual theology of an antinomialist, then you can [00:34:00] say, āOh, so if theyāre doing child sacrifices, could they take random children from Gaza? Would that be any use to them?ā And the answer is no, they would have to take them from other Jews or from Jews who deconverted or something.
Simone Collins: Well, there isnāt a prediction fan site about your nonsense. Maybe you need to be a midwit to speak to the midwits and you wonāt get a... You know, it, when you look at bell curves, the mid is the largest part.
Malcolm Collins: Yep ...
Simone Collins: youāre, youāre catering- Iām, Iām appealing to the wrong- ... to the wrong part of the bell curve
the wrong
Malcolm Collins: crowd.
Simone Collins: Yeah. Anyway, weāll get more to this on our next installment of Malcolm Gets Mad at Proges- Professor Jiang.
Malcolm Collins: Keeps fighting. For, for theories that donāt, that donāt make that are s- just flirting with reality.
Simone Collins: Yeah. All right. All
Malcolm Collins: right, love you.
Simone Collins: Love you too.
So where we left off was ritual sacrifice the Gaza War. , Yang Ming and [00:35:00] others say that Chang has suggested that actions during the Gaza War amount to ritual child sacrifice. He links real world conflict to occult and sacrificial practices that are attributed to either Israel or Jew-adjacent individuals.
Sorry, does he
Malcolm Collins: mean like ritual sacrifice or does he think that theyāre literally doing it for-
Simone Collins: The words he used were ritual child sacrifice. Heās definitely... Heās saying itās ritual chi- heās s- heās saying itās a cult. Heās keep in mind though, heās āOh, this is speculation. This is for fun.ā
So he tries to flippantly discount a lot of the things that he says in the midst of his lectures of like Iām just doing gems here. But then heās also just making these statements. And the- Okay,
Malcolm Collins: so if Iām gonna steel man him, okay? āCause I
Simone Collins: will steel man- let me, let- Iāll just, let me first give you a quote, his core statement on Gaza as ritual sacrifice.
This is from Secret History Number Four, and it is widely clipped. People can find this. Iāve linked to it in my show notes. Quote, [00:36:00] āWhat is really happening in Gaza is a ritual sacrifice, and this happens quite often in human history if you go back and you look at the...ā And then he goes on and talks about other things.
And then he also says, these are more direct quotes from him, on the purpose and visibility of this sacrifice. Quote, āThe entire idea of this ritual sacrifice is to unite the Israeli population. And whatās extremely disturbing and horrifying about it is that it works.ā And he also contrasts it with a hypothetical secret approach.
Quote, āIsrael could do it secretly, and no one would talk about it. Instead, they choose to do this in front of the world. They want the world to hate them, because by doing this, they create the ultimate taboo. So the entire world unite against Israel, but guess what? Thatās the, thatās what the region, w- religion wants in the extreme form of Jewis- Jewish...ā
I always screw up this word. Eschatology? Eschatology? Eschatology, I think. Es- eschatology. āIsrael will fight the entire world, and God will help Israel [00:37:00] triumph.ā So as you can see, heās not he means sacrifice. He means ritual sacrifice.
Malcolm Collins: He means- But he means it in a roundabout way. Heās saying that theyāre- Yes
sacrificing children in aims of their greater religious objectives rather than a... Heās trying to bait the crazies maybe. See, hereās the-
Simone Collins: Sort of yeah. Because what heās trying to he, yeah, heās trying to... another way that he put it is heās what the Israelis are doing is quite horrific, because this really is, it is really this sort of sacrifice.ā
So heās not saying it is a ritual sacrifice. Heās saying itās a sacrifice. Why, he says, because 37% of almost half the population of Gaza is under 18 years old. So heās also showing okay, itās not technically a ritual sacrifice. Itās more just because Palestinians are really young, itās like basically child sacrifice, but heās still trying to-
Malcolm Collins: why are Palestinians really young, by the way?
Itās because theyāre terrible at medical technology- ... so they donāt stay alive very long, and they are breeding really rapidly, which is You know, if I was gonna be uncharitable to Israel, I would
Simone Collins: say we- no, come on. Letās [00:38:00] use more diff- look, in places where thereās rampant poverty and deprivation and mistreatment of humans, you often get very high birth rates, and thatās what weāre seeing there.
Malcolm Collins: Yes.
Simone Collins: But again, heās trying to play this up as ritual sacrifice again and again. And I think you made a really smart point there in that he is doing this to pander to conspiracy theorists while still trying to look smart and be like, āOh Iām not actually saying that.ā Candace Owens will just flat out be like I s- I talked with Charlie Kirk in a dream where heāll be like, actually-ā Yeah,
Malcolm Collins: this comes across as so much slimier than just, like-
Simone Collins: Yes.
Yes ...
Malcolm Collins: straight up being a conspiracy theorist or not being one.
Simone Collins: Itās all couched Like 47%. And he also, and heās āOh this is like sacrifice tradition in history, like the Ephesians.ā And it is he tries to make it seem like Iām a historian. Iām just talking, Iām just sharing the fact- I
Malcolm Collins: love that this has happened multiple times throughout history.
Th- there is actually, child sacrifice is at least within the European tradition after Christianization, fairly rare. The only [00:39:00] instance that could come close to it that Iām aware of is the Childrenās Crusade. But you couldnāt even argue that the Jesuits did that or see- Oh, good ... at least not Frankish Jesuits, because they didnāt come around till the 1800s, and this was in the 1200s.
You, it still could be the Catholics, but not the Jesuits. And they didnāt even the Catholic Church, the pope at the time, even with as corrupt as popes were back then, did not officiate the Childrenās Crusade. It happened as a completely-
Simone Collins: What is the Childrenās... Should I not ask?
Malcolm Collins: You donāt wanna know.
Simone Collins: Okay never mind. I donāt wanna know.
Malcolm Collins: But he didnāt say it was a good thing, so you know, th- even that doesnāt really hold. The, like I wanna go, okay, you go what religions actually do in a modern context might actually believe in child sacrifice. The two key ones that I can think of,
Simone Collins: No, hold on.
The Palestinians believe in child sacrifice. Remember that clip of that, that Palestinian woman whoās āIām glad my son died, in, in this war, and [00:40:00] I hope to have more children so they can die.ā Who is doing this?
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, the-
Simone Collins: Itās the Palestinians. Whoās using the children as human shields?
Itās the Palestinians. Itās the Palestinians who are actively engaging in child sacrifice, who are actively putting the children on front lines. Excuse me. Itās, thatās what makes it extra insulting. Heās putting this on the Israelis, and the Israelis are not perfect, but the ones who are putting children in the direct line of fire are the Palestinians.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah if youāre familiar with, and I criticize Jewish eschatology regularly. I criticize Jewish metaphysics, at least of the non-Misnagdim camp, which is most Jews, ācause thatās the Hasidic Jewish Jews. And I say things that offend them all the time. So I, going into this as harsh as I could be, right?
There is not any mainstream eschatology or metaphysical belief within Judaism where child sacrifice would be considered a good thing. You could get this in some antinomial historic sects like the Frankish- Or [00:41:00] the followers of Zabatai Levi. But even the iterations of Judaism today, which I consider to be spiritually antinomian, still have no form of that would lead to child sacrifice.
Itās just not on their game board. So you have these historic sects that may want this, but these historic sects were integrated into the Catholic Church. They werenāt integrated into Jewish tradition, and he even, he admits that. They were c- they were taken by the Francus were absorbed by the Jesuits.
They were not absorbed by mainstream Jewish society. So even if by his own conspiracy theory logic they did still exist, they would be controlling the Vatican and not Israel. If heās saying theyāre just sacrificing children of other nations who they want to go to war with to win,ā note in the Bible, this is in the Bible, that there are instances in which when you are fighting a population that is really bad because the populations that this [00:42:00] was said of in the Bible, they practice things like Jewish child sacrifice, which you could argue, given what sheās talking about here, itās said to kill not just the men, but the women and children as well in a few instances.
Itās very clear commandment from God that applies to Christians as well, by the way. We have to deal with it. Presumably our God said this at some point, right? Maybe he changed his mind on things. But you could say, āOkay they have in times of war when the enemy is demonstrably evil, then you kill all of the enemyās members.ā
Okay, but thatās not really child sacrifice. Thatās more like a war crime, right? But I donāt like the stretching here when you can just lay it out in a way that isnāt conspiracy-minded and be like mainstream Judaism does want Jews to win. Mainstream, most religions want them to win. If I go into extremist Catholic eschatology, they one day want to convert everyone, right?
Convert or, this is what Catholic integralism is about. Convert or [00:43:00] kill, right? At the end of the day, everyoneās on team for them. But theyāre not the only ones who want to do this, right? Most Protestants they may be less clear about this, but they eventually want every actually, most Protestants believe that one day that all many different Christian sects can, are, like, good enough in the same way that we have a theosophical eschatology.
So theyāre okay as long as everyoneās Christian one day. But thatās still pretty totalizing, right? Iāll note here that the modern Vatican actually does not one day want everyone to be Catholic because they say that I think this was at Vatican II, that like Muslims still believe a real Go- like in the real, like God that the Catholics are worshiping and that Protestants do.
Saying that theyāre like partially true religions as well, and this pissed off a lot of Catholics, and this is where you got one of the sects thatās technically schismatic but says theyāre not schismatic and has some influencers. But the the way that I read a lot of, the historic Catholic Church wanted everything to be Catholic eventually.
But the [00:44:00] point Iām making here is this is not unique to the Jews. Most groups eventually want everyone to be a member of their particular religion. Even the peaceful Bahaāi want this, right? Everybody wants this. This isnāt a Jewish eschatology secret hush-hush thing. The only thing that might make the Jews slightly more suspect in their desire for this is that modern Jews donāt think that you can convert just anyone into Judaism.
So if they eventually want the Jews to win that becomes a bit more zero-sum than the Christian sects that wanna do this through conversion. That said the Jewish movement has begun to invent all sorts of traditions to get around this with the no hide system, which in our episode we point out is just a historical fabrication.
This is on the question that breaks Judaism. We go into the no hide scam. But anyway, continue Simone.
Simone Collins: The next broad conspiracy theory, or you could argue itās a theme of Professor Jiangās work that I think is the probably best fodder for some peopleās [00:45:00] suppositions that he is in, in various ways supported perhaps indirectly and perhaps even without his knowledge by the CCP, is that he has this broad belief in like Western institutions being hollowed out and controlled by hidden elites with US decline being both inevitable and deserved.
And one, one long form critique that I came across about him claims that basically his forecasts all converge on one outcome, which is American collapse. He predicts Western Civil War, the vindication of Chinese and Iranian strategic positions in a way that maps almost perfectly onto the narrative architecture of CCP soft power.
So as you can imagine, this is one of those critiques that sees this as being a, him being a CCP thing. So letās look at some of his own quotes on this. On secret societies as the real power orchestrating shifts, he [00:46:00] says, quote, āWhat I say is that the real power base are a collection of six societies that have an eschatological view of this war, sir.
The secret societies include the Freemasons. You have a collection of six societies. They believe in a war in the Middle East. It would start a process that would culminate in the end times. This war in the Middle East will lead to the defeat of the American Empire, and this will lead to the Greater Israel project, Pax Judaica.ā
And then on their role in Western decline, he says, āAs for how this happened, the issue that this is actually a plan that has been operating for centuries involving different religious group, Frankists Shabateans, Freemasonry, Knights Templar, Rosicrucians, and the Jesuits.ā So what is the different secret societies, different religious organizations have been collaborating over centuries to advance a plan to about the end of the world, which we will usher in the Messianic age.
And then- Oh. Go ahead I know what youāre g- but I think I know what youāre gonna say, that heās conflating this [00:47:00] minority Christian view that Israel needs to exist because then itāll help us bring around the end times the right way and itāll help- Thatās
Malcolm Collins: a pretty common view among Pentecostals.
Simone Collins: Right, which I think... Okay less, less uncommon than him arguing. But
Malcolm Collins: Pentecostals I donāt even think are allowed in the Freemasons. Theyāre certainly not- Oh, really? ... one of the dominant factions in the Freemasons. The Freemasons are typically more deists and mainline Protestants. They most Baptists and Pentecostals are a little too conspiracy theory brained to join the Freemasons.
That doesnāt really make sense.
Simone Collins: Itās, if youāre conspiracy theory brained, you should be cucking to join the Freemasons.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah yeah, some people do ācause they think itās gonna theyāre gonna get access to special knowledge or whatever, and then theyāre like, āOh, no, itās just old men.ā
But okay. Letās actually If heās not an idiot, whatās his meta objective? His meta objective is to use parts of true information to try to turn American sentiment against our most useful [00:48:00] allies. D- particularly right now if- Oh,
Simone Collins: if heās an agent of the CCP or if he wants to advance-
Malcolm Collins: Right.
He wants to advance the cause, because Iran
Simone Collins: is a pretty good trial. See, I donāt actually think thatās whatās going on. I think maybe the CCP is openly signal boosting him because they like his narrative and they find that it works in concert with their goals. But I actually think heās just out to get a, his book deal and launch his own stuff and make money from that.
Malcolm Collins: Potentially. But the thing thatās weird to me is greater... If weāre allied with Israel, greater Israel is good for the United States. Greater Israel means a bunch of places in the Middle East that donāt like us very much become a part of one of our only growing and s- really ideologically, strategically aligned allies in the world right now becomes bigger.
And Iād go further, which is to say, I agree with him. Greater Israel seems to be on track to happen, right? Because the only thing thatās really keeping [00:49:00] Israel from just going out and killing everyone it doesnāt like and taking the land is Europe, and Europe is declining in power. And outside of Europe, the thing thatās preventing them are the progressive Israelis, but the progressive Israelis, if you look at their marches, like one of my Israeli friends was saying to, to this to me, they look like senior citizen marches.
You look at the conservative marches and theyāre all young people, right? We know what the next generation is. And it-
Simone Collins: Gosh, thatās so true. Know Kings looks so old.
Malcolm Collins: Oh my gosh ... it is the same with the United States. Yeah. The groups that would want to reign in Israel from creating greater Israel really, it- even if youāre like an American first and youāre, like, cut off military aid to Israel, which Iām 100% for, by the way, we should cut off all economic aid to Israel.
Even if youāre like that, you... And Israel then started conquering its neighbors, youāre not gonna wanna go in and stop them. And yet I hear the same people who are like, āIām mad because we are intervening in Iran right now,ā then on, on their same shows fantasizing about America going in and conquering Israel.
And itās bro, so youāre not against us [00:50:00] intervening in the Middle East. Youāre not against foreign wars. You just want them to be for your political agenda, right? Which is So f*****g silly and stupid, frankly. And I had on one of our comments recently people were being like, āWhy do you support the Jews when they majority vote Democrat?ā
The Jews that I support are not the reformed Jews that create this statistic. They are the conservative orthodox
Speaker 4: According to Pew, 75% of Orthodox Jews vote Republican. Keep in mind, these are the Jews that are actually having children that are actually going to be representative in future generations that if we want to get along with the Jews, we have to find a way to partner with because they are one of the groups that is intergenerationally relevant and they are wildly conservative.
And not only are they wildly conservative, but they are disproportionate populations in many swing states like Florida, which makes it incredibly stupid to antagonize them if youāre right wing.
Malcolm Collins: Jews who [00:51:00] are productive. Not all of them. I donāt like the parasitic ones, right? And that faction of Jews does vote conservative. Theyāve long been one of the pillars of conservative voting blocks in places like Florida and stuff like that.
I... I donāt even know where people are getting this from. But anyway, continue, Samout.
Simone Collins: I could read more quotes about the Western decline thing, but I itās honestly been in, built into so many of the other things weāve read about. And so I wanna finish up in terms of his general c- top conspiracy themes with his whole thing on psychohistory and mystical prediction.
He explicitly invokes Isaac Asimovās fictional concept of psychohistory. Again, fictional concept. And claims to use structural history and game theory to predict the future. Though I should note that in his lectures on game theory, he doesnāt demonstrate a mastery of game theory concepts.
So Iām not really... Again, like a lot of this is like spamming- Explain what he
Malcolm Collins: gets wrong about game theory.
Simone Collins: Whatās he not getting? Weāll get into that in a little bit, ācause Iām gonna discuss that in, in a bit. But anyway he basically [00:52:00] treats th- this fictional device of like psychohistory and game theory as a scientific method and like this, an academic thing when itās not.
Some debunkers also allege that he talks about listening to the voice of the universe or a higher power that guides his predictions, which they argue pushes his material from speculative analysis into quasi-mystical prophecy, which you definitely see come through in the way that many of his followers regard him.
Theyāre really like, āOh, you gotta check out this Professor Jiang. Heās been calling some stuff.ā Oh, never mind that like he gets a ton of stuff wrong.
Malcolm Collins: He, what he doesnāt... I have not heard a single impressive prediction from him yet. Yeah. When people are like, āOh, he calls for stuff.ā
He said Trump would win the election. I said Trump would win the election. I donāt go around
Simone Collins: acting like a- Yeah, whereās your two million followers on YouTube, Malcolm?
Malcolm Collins: He said that there was a chance that the US would go to war with Iran. Every single analyst that I watch or listen to has been saying [00:53:00] that since Trump came into office.
Simone Collins: Dude, watch Kum- Trump talking about Iran in the ā80s. Like
Malcolm Collins: Yes, he said he wanted to... he said literally on the campaign trail that he planned to bomb Iran. I do not know... The people who think, the... And then you look whenever he does make an out there conspiracy theory theyāre always super wrong.
Simone Collins: Yeah, like quite uninformed. So it is, But anyway, things that he said though about psychohistory. He says, āPsychohistory is the idea that the future can be predicted, and if it can be predicted, then it be con- can be controlled and harnessed for the betterment of humanity. In his Foundation series, I- Isaac Asimov introduces the science of psychohistory.ā
Yes, this is him- Itās a, the Foundation series- Okay, continue ... itās a sci-fi- Off the reservation. Yeah. It is really possible to predict the future by mathematically modeling historical development. Itās not by the way, anyway, just-
Malcolm Collins: It does seem-
Simone Collins: On AI and modeling ...
Malcolm Collins: what heās saying here, which is funny.
Heās trying to now make it look plausible by being [00:54:00] like, āOh what I really mean is you just mathematically model historic events and you can-ā
Simone Collins: No, like literally thatās what a character does in F- in the Foundation series. The, it starts off with basically this academic professor whoās special.
Heās fig- figured out the formula. And the problem w- in narratively with the Foundation series is basically this professor has fig- figured out the formula, and then he gets exiled to the far reaches of the universe because he predicts the downfall of the empire that has grown in this futuristic world.
And the empire does fall and thatās the key thing. Itās called Foundations because he works to build this, like-
Malcolm Collins: I under- look, Simone, youāve explained this before. I think youāve explained enough of it at this point. Okay. That he works to build a counter civilization. Anyway,
Simone Collins: this is all stupid- Yes
and I hate it. So letās- Nope ...
Malcolm Collins: go ahead ... but hold on here. Heās saying something that is both profoundly stupid and something that is both so obvious that no one would challenge it. Okay. One, heās basically saying you can use history to gain some predictive capacity over future events. Yes, everybody agrees on that,
Simone Collins: right?
Like- It helps, yeah. It helps to be informed by history. Yes. [00:55:00] History is worth studying, 100%. Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: It gives you predictive capability on future events. That is
Simone Collins: not- Som- somewhat ...
Malcolm Collins: mystical. That is not the mathematical equation to predicting history. Thatās just history as a discipline. Continue.
Simone Collins: Oh hold on.
Theyāve been bathed. They were, they just went into the creek fully clothed, like, all, all the way. Toasty was freezing. But you know what? It sounds like
Malcolm Collins: you had fun, though.
Simone Collins: Yeah. Thatās how you know itās a good day, so.
Malcolm Collins: Okay, I wanna hear more of this Professor Zhang stuff.
Simone Collins: Right. So weāve gone over the, you know, his, his various things about the Pax Judaica and the secret societies, bringing about the decline and fall of Western civilization, and all of that, right? I think one way that you like to calibrate the competency of people is by hearing their takes on something that you have thought a lot or read a lot about.
Mm-hmm. So I thought maybe youād be interested in hearing the highlights from his lecture on AI. Are you interested?
Malcolm Collins: [00:56:00] Okay.
Simone Collins: He, he wants to couch first his analysis on AI as a general concept as intellectual exploration and that he, he acknowledges that he often oversimplifies and that his readings of texts like Paradise Lost and the, the Kabbalah, because thatās a good sign, are minority interpretations used to build broader narratives.
The, the core thesis that he wanted to summarize from his prior class before talking about AI is that to understand history and geopolitics you have to take extremist religious beliefs seriously because fanatical eschatological frame frameworks and ideologies often drive great powers behavior.
Which I donāt think is true but that is what he thinks is true. So in terms of AI-
Malcolm Collins: no, hold on. This is partially true. There are some Jews that are driven by the real Jewish ob- objective, right? Sure. Like there are some Catholics driven by, like, a real long-term Catholic objective. I even would argue that most people who have [00:57:00] a real faith are actually driven by the, even techno-puritanism,
Simone Collins: the- Yeah, but people in the end within, within complex systems act in alignment with their incentives, and their incentives first and foremost are to accrue resources and avoid punishment.
And you know what? Iām, Iām sorry, but es- es- I disagree ... eschatological frameworks donāt fit into that. I disagree. Because look, the, the first, the first goal that anyone whoās even a religious zealot is typically going to pursue is, āAh, well, the best thing I can do is to accrue power,ā often in the form of money or resources, āso that I can have more influence for my agenda.ā
Malcolm Collins: But in your world view here doesnāt explain what you were just talking about, where the mother is happy that her son died fighting Israel, where you regularly- Well,
Simone Collins: she, she didnāt have a shot at any resources. So her only resource is her son, and sheās gladly- No, this is- Well, and I guess religious, like, alignment probably, like-
Malcolm Collins: Yeah.
Rel-
Simone Collins: There
Malcolm Collins: is-
Simone Collins: Resources in this world. Sheās banking on resources [00:58:00] in the next world.
Malcolm Collins: And thatās eschatology. No. Thatās extremist eschatology. That is what drives a lot of peopleās behavior
Simone Collins: Okay. Point made. I donāt think thatās what drives most people who are in power now, and sheās not in power
Malcolm Collins: I think it drives Netanyahuās behavior
Simone Collins: Mm.
I donāt know.
Malcolm Collins: But, but anyway
Simone Collins: Iām dubious. People in the comments will weigh in and tell me how the woman is wrong once again.
Malcolm Collins: It drives my behavior- I
Simone Collins: know,
Malcolm Collins: Tex ... it drives your behavior. My behavior is driven much more by an eschatological framework than
Simone Collins: it is- My behavior is driven by autism, as you know, which is why I do all sorts of things that are not in anyoneās best interest, but You know, the dishwasher has to be loaded
Malcolm Collins: a
Simone Collins: certain
Malcolm Collins: way My veneer is completely driven by an eschatological framework- Oh, Iām-
for where I want humanity to go.
Simone Collins: Welcome to your world.
Malcolm Collins: And the, the... I mean, Iām very upfront about it, right? The only place where I may not be upfront about things is how ruthless I would go if I were the majority [00:59:00] player,
Speaker 5: Welp, after yesterdayās episode, it may be a little bit more clear how far Iād go. , Actually, I was in part inspired to do that episode by doing this one, and I was like, you know what? If I die and the techno-puritans start to grow, I think that, , I, I need to bake this in and not just have this part be in my head, , to be like, look, get along with outsiders as much as you can.
Do not disparage a group unless you absolutely know that you cannot live alongside them. But once that becomes the case, they need to be removed in their entirety. , At, at least the ones that you do not integrate into your culture. And always leave that to be an option for those that are strong or ideologically aligned until itās time to make the move.
, And I think that this is, , a fairly sane way to operate, right? The idea of, oh, this group will always be nice until we push them too far. Then as many outsiders Iād be like, āWell, letās just not push them too [01:00:00] hard.ā , Assuming they ever become a big group
Malcolm Collins: if I had power. But I, I donāt right now. I donāt have systemic power, so itās better for me to say we should all get along, right?
Simone Collins: Okay. Okay. Anyway Anyway, the, the source material that Professor Jiang uses to talk about AI is f- fortunately not If, If Anyone Builds It, Everyone Dies, but rather Empire of AI, which is a book about OpenAI by Karen Ho. Oh, Hao, sorry. Karen Hao. Hao argues in her book that OpenAIās original idealism that AGI benefits all of humanity has turned into a formula for consolidating power and centralizing talent around a quasi-religious mission, which, okay, that, like, checks out.
Iām okay- Yeah ... with that argument. And that theyāre pursuing relentless global expansion, like a trillion dollar data centers, and constantly referring to AGI to maintain control. What he argues is that OpenAIās true but unspoken goal is to create God, and he interprets leaders like [01:01:00] Brockman and Skotzber as trying to build a de facto deity, which he calls insane, evil, and stupid.
He posits that Sam Altmanās interest in AI c- companions like sex robots is about maximizing usage, intensity, and dependency, not about human flourishing, and that itās part of a drive to make AI omnipresent in everyday life. Any thoughts on h- his thesis so far?
Malcolm Collins: So heās just doing what he does with his other theses, where he says something that is meant to be provocative, but is actually a very uninteresting statement.
Yeah. Everything he is saying is profoundly uninteresting and unintelligent.
Titan: Killing it.
Malcolm Collins: All he is saying is that I, I, I assume, like assuming he doesnāt mean theyāre trying to create a literal god, which every time he makes one of these theories he always backs it off, you know- Yeah ... the literal interpretation.
Yeah. And what he means is theyāre trying to create a super powerful intelligence that runs the majority of the [01:02:00] worldās economy. Of course, of course thatās part of the goal, right? You know, theyāre a company. Theyāre making a product. They want people to use it. They want it to be maximally impactful.
Yeah. And this is what it has the capability to do. So itās just, Iād say itās not wrong yet, itās just profoundly an uninteresting observation.
Simone Collins: He also, in terms of his understanding of AI, traces chat box to Weizenbaumās ELIZA to argue that systems like ChatGPT are mainly performing pattern matching and conversational tricks that exploit our tendency to hallucinate agency and meaning rather than
Malcolm Collins: processing the- Oh, duh, really?
Thatās how, thatās how an AI coded my entire website for me? Ooh. Thatās how it made very sophisticated code for me?
Speaker 6: By the way, the, , VTuber creation is now working, the, the VTuber Pro pathway. So if you wanna make a VTuber avatar... Now, obviously, after I release the feature, it gives it a bunch of updates to [01:03:00] improve it over the next couple weeks because thatās what Iām gonna be doing is polishing it, but it, it works now.
And with the, free editing software, itās just a bit of a pain to get all the software. Youāre probably gonna have to use an AI to, to fiddle with it. But it, yeah, it comes pre-rigged and everything.
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You can do, , searches where it takes various AIs and it checks your search against the outputs of other AIs that search online to give you results without hallucinations. You can do based AI where every AI prompt is sent with like a side note to it to keep it from becoming too progressive or woke, whatever you wanna say.
, You can do, , our image generation has gotten really good. Itās one of the most diverse [01:04:00] image generations out there that uses pretty much all the top models that you wanna use, but with a lot more tools. , Anything you want, rfab.ai. Thatās Reality Fabricator. You can just search it too.
Malcolm Collins: It j- just, yeah, it is just pattern matching, but most of human thought is just pattern matching.
Simone Collins: I know. I know. I know.
Malcolm Collins: Thatās how you make art. Thatās how you make music. Thatās how you write books.
Yeah. You pattern match with a little bit of external directionality, but the external directionality is mostly superficial in nature. If I am going and I am creating the next great art piece of the whatever style, most of what I am doing is pattern matching to that style. If Iām trying to create a new style of art, okay, maybe Iām not pattern matching there, but really you typically are.
Youāre taking it from some idea or itās even, like, anti-pattern matching, where youāre like, āWell, Iām just gonna try to do something new. Iām gonna make a block, a red block, and Iām gonna call that [01:05:00] art.ā Oh, you ... Th- mm. Sorry, I just hate when people try to downplay how much of what they call thought is pattern matching.
Simone Collins: Mm. Hmm. Yeah. Anyway his take on AI risk is that attempts to make AI that solve all problems are gonna result in things like, āOh, well, okay, just make everyone happy, eliminate suffering,ā and then AI will just kill all people. Like, thatās kind of his, his take on X risk. He doesnāt- Thatās a really
Malcolm Collins: dumb take on X risk.
Simone Collins: Yeah. He also stresses that data centers devour water and electricity and finance while remaining easy physical targets. He, he talks about, like, physical attacks in the Middle East as early signs that that infrastructure canāt really be defended at a global scale. In terms of the US versus China with AI, and this is what I would pay extra attention to if weāre trying to determine whether or not he is either directly or indirectly being sponsored by [01:06:00] the CCP he says that publicly, US firms frame Chinese AI as existential, as a threat to attract money and political support.
But privately, he says American and Chinese entities are collaborating because Chinaās pervasive surveillance and classroom monitoring yield the clean data the US companies want but cannot easily gather domestically. Ah. What I appreciate about this is at least- Ah ... this is the first, this is the first novel argument Iām hearing.
Iāve not heard someone be like- But why would
Malcolm Collins: China would have any advantage in AI?
Simone Collins: Yes. The, the mass- Oh, China, China is, has a mass surveillance state, and itās clean data. And so, you know, the, the US needs them for training data.
Malcolm Collins: I, I have seen evidence that US firms are using lots of Chinese data because-
Simone Collins: Interesting
Malcolm Collins: I have repeatedly in recent AI work Iāve been doing seen Chinese characters pop up randomly.
Simone Collins: Interesting.
Malcolm Collins: Ooh ... Iāve heard other people have seen, had Hebrew characters pop up randomly as well.
Simone Collins: Well, well, well.
Malcolm Collins: Which would make sense. Weāre [01:07:00] collabing with China and Israel.
Simone Collins: Yeah ...
Malcolm Collins: weāre really cross-stealing.
Itās where China tries to steal from us, we sometimes get data from them. Itās... The, the whole thing is, is like yes, they need money, but they donāt act as defensive against China as they would if they saw them as an existential threat. Mm-hmm. Itās more like everyoneās just running as fast as they can with this particular race.
Simone Collins: Totally.
Malcolm Collins: And thatās where we are, and there just arenāt that many true trade secrets in the AI space.
Simone Collins: Where I fall with him and, and this being or not being CCP propaganda, I think it doesnāt hurt what I think the CCP is doing, which is like, okay, stoke fears among US citizens about AI and get them to slow down the creation of data centers, et cetera.
Which is, a whole episode Iām thinking about doing is, is, is, is data center fear being astroturf? Because already thereās, thereās the sort of homegrown fear, but I feel like itās being, itās getting extra fuel that might be coming from the CCP. Because when you look at just the stark difference [01:08:00] between the way that people in China view AI versus the way that people in the US view AI, I feel like thereās clear Thereās a, thereās a skew that suggests that a more interesting story there.
Like, why, why is everyone in China, like, pretty cool with AI? Like, āOh, this is probably gonna be good.ā Whereas, like, in the US weāre like, āItās gonna end the world.ā Something, something is going on. Anyway, though, so itās not incompatible with that. He certainly sh- framing AI as a negative thing. He also has a whole thing on AI and the occult.
He links the project name Stargate to the CIAās historical Operation Stargate, which was on psychic phenomena and, and to sci-fi depictions of dimensional portraits, interpreting modern AI data centers as literal portals designed to summon demons/aliens from other dimensions. I mean, I think this is one of those things where, like, he tr- he...
And this is very clever on his part, ācause clearly itās working. It sort of brings in in keyword stuff with conspiracy language without really explicitly being like he- [01:09:00] theyāre using it to bring in demons. Heās like, well, like demons, you know? āCause A- theyāre trying to make an AI god, so itās like AI demons, you know?
Yeah, I
Malcolm Collins: think he tried to b- frame it as sacrilegious to make a, a machine that could solve world hunger or could, that could solve jobs, that could solve ev- like most of the worldās problems. Which is, Iām not saying that thatās what theyāre trying to do, but, like, that is one potential outcome of creating a super intelligent AI that takes most human work away.
It is, it is a outcome that has significant societal risks that weāre gonna have to figure out how to get around. But to just frame all of these things as... This is the trick that he runs, which really is a stupid and annoying trick to me. Itās just-
Simone Collins: Well, effective though. Letās, letās be clear here that
Malcolm Collins: it works
technically theyāre trying to build something that you could argue is godlike. And now because theyāre trying to build God, thatās demonic and anti-biblical. Itās like, what? You just said itās a technical whatever analogous thing. Theyāre not literally trying to build God [01:10:00] here.
Simone Collins: Yeah, though he does say, like, this is sort of, this is supposed to, as of the time of this recording be sort of the first in his AI series.
And he, he says that the rest of his semester... āCause heās really trying to... Again, heās using language to, like, frame this as a youāre a student in his class. That heās going to trace how this occult AI project is going to unfold and why he believes it will end in the destruction of the world. Yeah
and that he, he says that it could be- Oh, yeah, heās not
Malcolm Collins: a CCP plant. Heās trying to get the US to back off AI. Anyone whoās trying to get the US to back off of AI, I am immediately suspicious of.
Simone Collins: Well, and you had, you had said to me the other day, youāre like, āWell, thereās no way he could possibly be in China.ā
As far as we know, he is in China. He teaches- Really? ... a course on Western philosophy at Moonshot Academy in Beijing. His LinkedIn profile lists his location as Haidian District, Beijing, China. His X profile- Oh, then he definitely is a CCP plant ... lists his location as Beijing, China. Multiple recent media descriptions in 2026 call him a Beijing-based educator or say [01:11:00] heās based in Beijing so-
Malcolm Collins: Sorry, I need to take a step back for people who donāt understand why this would be the case.
In China, you, it is illegal to have a YouTube account. You cannot have a YouTube account.
Simone Collins: Is that-
Malcolm Collins: If you
Simone Collins: s- ... true? No, because then how did the ADV Chinaās guys do it before they-
Malcolm Collins: They, they had to run away- ... left for Thailand ... from the country.
Speaker 8: Note, I double-checked this to make sure I was getting it right, and yes, it is extremely illegal to run a YouTube channel in China. , YouTube is blocked by the Great Firewall, so the only way you could have one is by using a VPN, which are extremely, extremely illegal if you are a Chinese citizen. A lot of foreigners are unaware of this because the rules arenāt enforced that strictly for foreigners.
But yes, , th- China certainly has to, like, legally approve of everything heās putting out. Otherwise, they could just shut him down
Simone Collins: Right. But like before, for a very long time they were very prominent.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, they just did it with VPNs and stuff. Nobody cares. Basically you get popular enough, and heās definitely in the range where somebody in the CCP- Not popular enough ... has approved this. Mm. You, everyone above a certain follower list is- Well,
Simone Collins: basically, you know, the, [01:12:00] the mere fact that he hasnāt been shut down is proof that the CCP thinks itās, his message is effective for their ends.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah.
Simone Collins: Well, thatās telling.
Malcolm Collins: They would literally shut him down if not. Heās
Simone Collins: using
Malcolm Collins: the C-
Simone Collins: If, yeah. So they, yeah- Yeah, basically ... basically, like, theyāre not enforcing a law, which you say exists, I didnāt know about this law because it, it is in their best interest to not enforce this law.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. Okay. Anyone you see whoās in China and on the internet today, is, is, is doing CCP work Oh Right?
Simone Collins: Like- Wow. Okay, well, there you have it. I mean, thatās Malcolmās theory then, and I will, I will, I will give you two other YouTubersā theories, like in, in short version to sort of give where, where other people think this guy is or why, why they think heās big when it doesnāt exactly make sense or fully add up.
Thereās this guy on YouTube called Jose, just Jose. And basically his argument is that [01:13:00] heās spamming the smart professor signal. He did this video called Professor Cengās Broken Classroom in which he argues that Cengās predictive history and game theory lectures are not a series of education, but narrative-driven speculation thatās riddled with factual errors that people believe to be credible because his lectures are packaged in the aesthetics of academia to create this veneer of authority.
And some of his choice factual errors that Jose highlights in, in his overview is Holocaust denial and claims that no good idea came through the scientific method, which- Oh my God. Itās
Malcolm Collins: profoundly stupid.
Simone Collins: Yeah ...
Malcolm Collins: it, and, and that is profoundly stupid if he actually said that.
Simone Collins: Yeah, he did.
He included the clip in his... I watched the, the full video. He, the clip is, itās there. And he cites the- To talk about this dynamic, he cites the Dr. Fox lecture, which I hadnāt heard about before. But itās this experiment in which this charismatic actor was presented [01:14:00] deliberately as a, a, a f- like, fancy, smart professor, and then delivered a content-free, jargon-laden lecture as Mr.
or Dr. Myron L. Fox, and then still received this highly positive evaluation from a professional audience suggesting that basically acting like youāre a smart professor and using professorial words can just max, m- mask a complete lack of, of substance in whatās actually being said. I mean- And this was, this was done in 1973, so this is a well-known dynamic.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. That is I mean, he appears to be kind of full of himself, if Iām gonna be honest. I donāt know if this is, like, to trick people or anything like that. I just think heās sorta arrogant like this, right? Like, I think that this is just sort of how he judges self-worth is this sort of, like, pseudo-mystical history stuff.
Basically-
Simone Collins: Well, Iāll tell you what. My whole theory, and, like, my hot take about him is that basically he is the modern-day Jeffrey Epstein of China. Jeffrey Epstein was [01:15:00] a you know, he was really good at, like, convincing people that he was super smart, and without really any serious qualifications ended up teaching math at an elite high school in New York.
What is this but an elite high school in Beijing? And then he started using that and the connections he got through the school and through other places to get into this role and to get into that role, and I think thatās exactly what Professor Jiang is doing. And if you fall for Professor Jiang, you would fall for Jeffrey Epstein.
And Iām not saying Professor Jiang has some other weird, creepy stuff going on. Iām just saying- That this is the c- itās the game. It is the same exact game that Jeffrey Epstein- Yeah, faking
Malcolm Collins: being an educator, right?
Simone Collins: Faking- Yeah, and faking being smart, and faking being, like, really erudite, and like, oh, like, basically spamming people with all this stuff until they...
Kind of fake it until you- you make it into these circles and actually build some real... I mean, Jeffrey Epstein did it through building, like, dirt on people and literally implicating them in, like, financial crimes and then he kind of got them. And itās-
Malcolm Collins: itās funny if you contrast him with us, [01:16:00] right? So he has
Simone Collins: no- Yeah, we- we performatively stupid, Max.
Yeah, we- We- we- we do things that make us look bad. So the reason why you watch us still is ācause our ideas, our ideas actually have merit you know?
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, we- we come on air, we pretend to be, like, racist Luddites. Iāll put the- the racist clip here, right? And in actuality, I have a graduate degree from Stanford in a- an MBA, right?
Which is the hardest of the graduate degrees to get into in Stanford. Harder than most of their PhD, I think any of their PhD programs. M- mostly because the effects it has on your life are much better. Yeah,
Simone Collins: make- makes more money well,
Malcolm Collins: for some people. Simone... And itās the hardest MBA in the world to get into.
Itās harder than Harvard by a country mile. Itās, like, I think 30% harder or something. It- the Simone- my undergrad is from St. Andrews, which is often ranked the top university in the UK in neuroscience. I have been published in the field of neuroscience. I worked in actually doing neuroscience, doing psychology work, and at the Smithsonian Museum [01:17:00] of Natural History, where I still have an exhibit on display.
Literally the top museum on earth. Maybe only, I mean, if youāre talking about, like, the world of academia, maybe only equivalated to, like, the British Museum. The Smithsonian
Simone Collins: Museumās awesome, yeah.
Malcolm Collins: And then Simone has her graduate degree from Cambridge, right? Both of us have worked in, like, the halls- Well, he went to-
the halls of power ...
Simone Collins: a ni- he got a BA from a nice university, right? So,
Malcolm Collins: you know, like in English- I, I know, but what Iām saying is, is that, like, our ideas, our theories that we have developed are taught at universities like Stanford.
Simone Collins: Yeah, but we donāt stand in front of a fricking whiteboard and are like, āIām Professor Collins.
Let me give you a lecture in this semester of my performative class.ā Yeah, we donāt do that.
Malcolm Collins: And Iāve noticed
Simone Collins: that a lot of- Because we, we donāt use pocket sand to distract you into believing us.
Malcolm Collins: Dr- like, I mean, he, he reminds me of Drexel Friedman, right?
Simone Collins: If- I donāt know who that is ...
Malcolm Collins: Lex Friedman,
Oh,
Simone Collins: Lex.
Oh, gee,
Malcolm Collins: right. Lex Friedman, who pretends that he has any connection [01:18:00] to Yale, and he has no serious connection to them. He got his degree from Drexel. He got his graduate degree from Drexel. Heās Drexel Friedman. He is not a particularly intelligent person. He just puts on an act like heās a smart person connected to...
Wait, it, it, no, itās not Yale. Itās MIT, right? Like, itās, itās- I canāt remember ... it, it, th- this sort of laundered... And keep in mind, we have acted in ways which he hasnāt, I don- I donāt know if he has, but it would prevent us from being hired by most of the institutions that our accreditations would give us access to.
Titan: Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: In part because we just sort of came out here, and weāre like I wanna, you know, tell as much as I can tell about the truth of how things are actually functioning to society at this point.ā
Simone Collins: Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: Right? Like, I
Simone Collins: want to make the world- Well, and we, we, we get uniquely mad- ... see the truth. Yeah ... when people, like, try to signal in this way.
Like, another person who does this kind of thing is Eliezer Yudkowsky, who manipulates signals like moral outrage, and this wunderkind branding-
Malcolm Collins: Yeah ...
Simone Collins: and gatekeeping and word selection to appear authoritative on various issues, despite getting key details or fundamentals wrong, like, quite [01:19:00] frequently. I know.
So-
Malcolm Collins: I mean, we get things wrong, but we generally- Oh, yeah ... try to update and correct when we do. Iām, like, attentive to when fans notice we got something-
Simone Collins: Well, and, like, between your genuine mispronunciations and our, like, jokes and, and admit- admission of bumbling and everything, I think itās clear weāre not, like, pretending to be super smart.
Weāre not gatekeeping, like, āOh, like, youāre just wrong ācause youāre m- youāre uninformed.ā Like, we donāt use a lot of the rhetorical manipulation tactics or semiotic manipulation tactics that these people do, which is why this is uniquely irksome for us. And one reason why we like vice signaling and rage baiting is itās a way of saying, āWeāre not tricking you into believing weāre critical, credible to, to, like, high production quality or gatekeeping language or academic trappings.ā
We make ourselves hateable and weird so that when you take our argument seriously, you know itās based on the merits of the arguments rather than any trust in or respect for us, and thatās really [01:20:00] important. And thatās, I mean, I think thatās also why people trust and respect ultimately and more fundamentally people like Asmongold and people like a lot of the VTubers who are like, āWhat?
Like, Iām, you know- Iām like some anthropomorphic thing. You know? Like, you know, you donāt have to like bend you- But this
Malcolm Collins: is why performative racism is important and useful-
Simone Collins: Okay ...
Malcolm Collins: in the modern system, right? Youāre saying- Iām gonna
Simone Collins: lose
Malcolm Collins: my mind ... oh, not that he doesnāt do it. I mean, clearly heās very anti-
Jewish, right? Anti-Catholic. He might be more anti-Catholic than us in that he thinks that the Jesuits who control the Vatican are one of his Illuminati players who wanna end the world. Mm-hmm. Right? I, I, Yeah, Iām just really unimpressed. I donāt think, I havenāt heard a single interesting idea from him.
His predictions are not bold. Like Peter Zeihan, I have problems with, like, where Peter Zeihan has gone post this latest Trump election. Oh. He seems to have completely fallen off. But he made genuinely impressive predictions. But people who, who
Simone Collins: followed him really closely, they say it was Jan 6th. Like, apparently he sort of lost his mind after Jan 6th.
Yeah,
Malcolm Collins: Jan 6th, lost his mind. But before Jan 6th, he made [01:21:00] really, w- Russia attacking the Ukraine was not on a lot of peopleās bingo cards, okay? Mm-hmm. That was on his bingo cards, okay? He has made impressive predictions, all right?
Simone Collins: Yeah, like, actually, like the Strait of Hormuz closure right now, like, and the, the fact that so much of peopleās lives have been disrupted by the fact that you know, American actions have led to global trade being disrupted and, and America not being willing to basically maintain global, like, shipping routes is, is something he called, and The End of the World is Just the Beginning.
Heās way more prophetic, just, you know, flaws and all, than Professor J, for sure.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. And Professor J, I like, I just... Yeah, I hate this whole, āOh, look at all these predictions heās made,ā and itās like tomorrow the sky will be blue. Itās like, thatās not a-
Simone Collins: Well, one thing that Jose points out is like, okay, sure, yeah, he predicted that Trump was going to win the election, but he was also like, āWell, Trump is gonna win the election and Nikki Haleyās gonna be his vice president.ā
And he only like passingly [01:22:00] mentions JD Vance but not in any serious capacity. And this i- Not only, you know, makes his, his, you know, full prediction incorrect, but also it was, it was poorly informed, because that was after the point at which Trump had on Truth Social- Well, I mean, thatās a bold prediction.
I give him ... posted saying- ... itās impressive ... āI am not going to make Vick- or Nikki Haley my vice president. Sheās great, but sheās not gonna be the VP.ā So not only did he predict the wrong thing, he also, like, could have probably made a better guess if he was just a little more informed.
Malcolm Collins: So- So, Simone, can you go to, was there anything else you... Because I remember you, you wanted to talk about how he got something wrong before.
Simone Collins: There, there are
Malcolm Collins: several.
Simone Collins: Oh my God.
Malcolm Collins: His game theory- Hold on ... getting wrong. I
Simone Collins: wanna- Oh, yeah. Okay, let me jump to that. Because letās see. Jose made so many... If you go to my show notes, you can see all the things that Jose...
You can also just watch this video again, thatās it. Letās see. Oh, yes. So Jose argues that Cenk uses game theory as a branding device. Do you just wanna crawl [01:23:00] around over here, Joanna? What do you want? Okay,
Malcolm Collins: so, on Game Theory- Game Theory, by the way, is not impressive or difficult to understand.
Itās, itās really not Game Theory is incredibly simplistic, g- generally speaking. Well, anyways. In terms of, like, the greater academic theories that a person may need to grok. If somebody is going out and being like, āI did this with Game Theory,ā itās like, itās like hearing, āI did this with tic-tac-toe logic.ā
Simone Collins: Well, yes, but he uses it nevertheless to confer legitimacy on what are essentially stories that he makes on how the world works, not actually game theoretic models. So not only does he try to use game theory, but heās just like, āGame theory.ā Itās kind of like, when whatās-his-face declares bankruptcy Michael Scott dec- declares bankruptcy.
Yeah. And itās like, āI declare bankruptcy,ā and has, like, no understanding of the concept, and that is kind of what Jiang is doing. āCause w- what, what Jose points out is that he, he gives a dating game example when he talks about game theory, starting with five boys and girls, and then he quickly spirals into claims that womenās [01:24:00] status obsession is killing civilization and that women are responsible for creating incels, showing āthe gameā is just a vehicle for his own views.
And he constantly lists three factors-
Malcolm Collins: Well, hold on. Those things are kind of true. Itās important that you call out whatās true. Well, those
Simone Collins: things are true-
Malcolm Collins: Womenās
Simone Collins: obsession with status- ... but theyāre not game theoretic models ...
Malcolm Collins: is, no, but itās not game theory, but the, it is true.
Simone Collins: Itās true, but no, yeah, but if youāre doing a lecture on game theory, you canāt just be like, āIām talking about game theory.
Oh, man, women are horrible incels,ā or something. He constantly lists three factors: genes, wealth, status focus and clarity, resolve, intelligence, crime, science, but never shows how theyāre measured or weighed which undercuts the pretense of any sort of formal modeling. He just wants to sort of use these as narrative birds.
And then he explicitly downplays math and emphasizes intuition and speculation while telling students that they should make imaginative leaps that are not backed up by any evidence which is the opposite of what [01:25:00] a game theory class should encourage. Like, this is, itās not about narrative-
Malcolm Collins: I mean, itās not entirely dissociated from game theory.
Iād say this other guy is overreaching a bit. The way people- I donāt think so ... date could be modeled with game theory logic, right? Heās just not using any classical game theory modeling that Iām aware of here. He appears to be using red pill modeling. True. Which is not inaccurate, itās just not game theory.
Simone Collins: Yeah. And Jiang also just in general has a very big tendency to cherry-pick and simplify history to fit his narratives. I do that. He tries, yeah, you do. He, he tries to critique science, including cosmology and evolution and psychology but then every time he does, it reveals a, a lack of basic understanding.
But then he uses that ignorance to argue that science is fundamentally flawed. And- I, a
Malcolm Collins: lot of people do that. Oh. I donāt really hold that against him.
Simone Collins: Then you, you, I, I would if you, if you try to use that as some, like...
Malcolm Collins: [01:26:00] Iām just saying I need specific examples. I have heard specific gaming examples.
These sound like generalities that Iām not gonna buy. I need a specific example of where he clearly didnāt understand a field he was critiquing.
Simone Collins: Okay, Big Bang and dark energy. He likens dark energy to cheating on a math test, writing 1987 plus 25 equals 20 plus dark energy, suggesting that adding an unknown term is illegitimate.
And th- he doesnāt actually engage with the actual cosmological evidence, and uses his own confusion as proof that the theory is wrong.
Malcolm Collins: Which- See, hold on, hold on. Heās not entirely wrong here. We do have evidence outside of the big mathematical gap th- there might be something that weāre calling dark energy.
There is a lot of research on this. But I also understand where heās coming from with this. This is the person reading him in bad faith. That is-
Simone Collins: Okay, okay. Fine You know, I, I can give more examples.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, give more. Actually, this person is showing me more that they donāt understand this
Simone Collins: stuff He ends up asserting that scientific [01:27:00] breakthroughs and his own ideas come from channeling a divine source, and that secret societies invert reality through science, which is just a slide into mysticism.
No,
Malcolm Collins: he, his, his, his layout of secret societies is typically, like, i- he, he basically says functionally itās like theyāre secret societies in a lot of things, right? You know, but thatās not the same as saying thereās actually secret societies.
Simone Collins: He says that all science is about reinventing reality to serve power, and that secret societies aim to invert heaven and hell.
Like, I I donāt understand how-
Malcolm Collins: Kind of they do if you take an interpretive approach,
Simone Collins: but not- He thinks that ISIS was created through US torture and brainwashing modeled on ancient Egyptian priestly rituals, Malcolm.
Malcolm Collins: Okay, thatās crazier. Yes. But not, not... I mean, ISIS, this is where he gets me. Oh,
Simone Collins: score though.
Malcolm Collins: It Iām gonna, Iām gonna point out, like, this is where I pull out and Iām like, ā
Simone Collins: If you-ā He argues, he talks about how ISIS, ISIS, oh, but that is the [01:28:00] Egyptian god Isis. Well, no, thatās, thatās not even the name that they use for it in... Thatās what the English people call it.
Titan: Like, English language
Malcolm Collins: people call it Isis.
Yeah. They donāt... But the funny thing about the ISIS thing is heās like, āIf you understand extremist eschatology, you can predict behavior. If you understood Muslim eschatology, ISIS is the obvious and inevitable result of it.ā Like, you donāt even need to know that much about Islamic eschatology to know that ISIS is the inevitable result of it at least taken to extremes.
And yet heās like, āNo, this is a mystery. Where could it have come from? Must have come from US torture rooms.ā Itās, itās the way he gets things wrong which is so offensive to me.
Simone Collins: Yeah. Well, okay, then letās go to the different I think, school of thought about, about Professor Jiang, not in terms of like, oh, heās wrong, heās being a fake prod- professor, but instead, like, okay, why does this feel a little fishy in terms of how heās grown?
And I think the, the most articulate, thoughtful person to discuss this whoās not like, [01:29:00] āItās just the CCP,ā or, āItās just botting,ā which I think is not the full story, is is summarized by a YouTuber called Hidden America. And he basically argues that this feels orchestrated, and did this video on Professor Jiang titled The Curious Case of Professor Jiang: How the Internet Manufactured a Geopolitical Oracle, in which he argues that Jiangās public authority was really fostered that he rose in popularity because his framing fit what platforms and audiences were looking for.
And I think this is very accurate. And he notes that his audience treats him less like a commentator and more like a prophet or interpreter of some hidden reality, which definitely is what I see in terms of the way people talk and talk about him. And he likens this in turn to cult formation or controlled narrative building, which definitely feels kind of right from how, like, everything c- co- centers around this cult powers or occult powers causing [01:30:00] Western decline narrative that heās pushing.
Malcolm Collins: Look, I mean, I g- I think you could do that with anyone. You could do that with us, you could do that with so many other people. I just think that heās not that bright. Like, thatās the bigger problem with all of this, right? Heās, heās hacked peopleās understanding of authority. And he uses that to build narratives that are either obvious or stupid.
Thatās the whole problem I have with it. His narratives, I, I have not heard... Like, if you want something like Professor Zhang thatās not us, Roubiard. Roubiard gives interesting- Yeah ... orthogonal takes that I donāt always agree with, but I rarely leave one of his videos-
Simone Collins: Well,
Malcolm Collins: he comes from a place- ... without having, like, five or 10 new ideas.
Simone Collins: I- Well, and heās very informed. When- Yeah ... when he talks about something, he doesnāt get it wrong. He talks about it from a place of deeper understanding and knowledge. And even when he, like, goes off on conspiracy theories, heās pulling from typically primary [01:31:00] sources. As close- Yeah ... to primary sources as he can.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. Keep in mind heās a Quaker, so obviously he was born evil, right? So, like, you can see our video on that. We love
Simone Collins: him.
Malcolm Collins: But the point Iām making here is that, like, I have serious ideological differences with Roubiard, but Roubiardās mistakes are not stupid mistakes. He, he rarely makes stupid mistakes.
And that, thatās where, like, if y- and, and if you w- thatās why Iām suggesting Roubiard for Professor Zhang people, because heās got all of the mysticism, heās got all of the conspiracy brain that Zhang has. Mm-hmm. He just doesnāt make obvious mistakes, like saying Francists are still around.
Simone Collins: Yeah.
Well, and, and he, he engages in... I mean, Whatifalthist is essentially predictive history. But, like, actually if you tru- re- if you genuinely tried to take a crack at predictive history, that is Whatifalthist. Whereas Professor Zhang is like, āIām just doing jazz and dressed up like a professor.ā Like, itās, itās itās not, [01:32:00] itās not as substantive.
You, youāre gonna learn stuff if you watch Whatifalthist. Itās interesting. Yeah. Itās, itās cool.
Yeah. Itās genuinely good speculative history. And I, and I do like it. And, and,
and
Malcolm Collins: very much like a thug- Least bought-in person ever. He rose to fame when he was in his early 20s maybe even before that, right?
And he is very open. Like, a lot of the fans I know who talk with us have also talked with Ruby Art at some point. Like, heās very open to talking with fans. Oh, yeah. Heās a very open person. No, heās
Simone Collins: accessible, heās open, he is, is, is humble. And there is something a little fishy about Professor Zhengās dormant YouTube channel suddenly going active in 2024 and then growing to two million subscribers incredibly rapidly.
I donāt think itās fishy.
Malcolm Collins: I know enough people who watch him. I, I know enough midwits who buy
Simone Collins: this stuff. Itās true. Itās true. Itās true. Like, I, I do see a world in which this is just algorithmic growth. However, China is really extra with stuff. Yeah, China is extra with stuff. Like, I recently saw this article about-
Malcolm Collins: It could, it could be China.
Like, clearly the CCP likes this guy. Clearly heās on their good boy [01:33:00] list.
Simone Collins: Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: They have done stuff to grow people in the past.
Simone Collins: Iām just- Well, and we just did an episode on, like, Chinese spies being throughout universities, and theyāre very, like, very active in their surveillance of foreign actors within their own state, and also very careful about, I think, foreign actors in other states.
And itās, itās one of those things, like, their surveillance of foreign actors within their own country reminds me of that adage that, like, if your partner suddenly becomes super suspicious that youāre cheating, itās probably because theyāre cheating. And The Telegraph recently ran this article titled The Secret Chinese Surveillance Program Tracking People Like Me, in which their senior foreign correspondent, Sophia Yan, describes this dedicated dynamic control platform for foreigners that integrates this, their, you know, the vast surveillance network they have.
Theyāre, like, all the, the cameras, many of which have gait recognition to monitor people of interest in very granular real time. And journalists and dissidents are explicitly signaled out as, as [01:34:00] trackable targets on the platform. Someone leaked the platform to her. She f- like, was on it very clearly.
And it, it allows you to sort of know exactly what the, what they are, who theyāre meeting with, what theyāre a- up to. It allows security services to see where their foreign citizens are and who they meet and how they move around in cities, and what social and professional networks they belong to.
It allows the security service to see where they are at any given time, and they, they can use it, Like they can filter by-
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, and the, the point being is this guy is in China. Heās living in China. Heās clearly doing what the CCP wants.
Simone Collins: Yeah. So- ... I mean, just considering like all, like that, Iām just trying to present that as w- another thing in addition to the, like, university issue that China does that is, like, kind of extra.
So I wouldnāt put it past the CCP in terms of signal boosting him, especially because this further, as to your point, right, it makes people more pissed about Israel. It makes people more pessimistic about AI. And these are things that are, [01:35:00] are very much, it seems to be in, in Chinaās best interest.
Malcolm Collins: And more pessimistic about the USās economic future.
Simone Collins: More- Totally. Yeah ...
Malcolm Collins: relative to China, right? Mm-hmm. Like I, a lot of this makes AI companies in the US less gated about working with China, right? Like- Yeah ... look, I obviously, even just as a matter of course, even if the CCP wasnāt boosting him, he has to curate everything through a CCP lens so he doesnāt get disappeared, which, like, regularly happens to people in China these days.
You can see our episode- Yeah ... I donāt know if we put that episode live, on, like, just how China will just disappear you. As it has done. But yeah, he, I donāt like broadly speaking, I donāt really have any mel- like dislike of him. Heās not somebody where like, you know, with Taleb- No, youāre way more nice to him
Simone Collins: than, than I am.
Malcolm Collins: Where I was, Nassim Taleb, Iām like, this guy knows heās manipulating people. He knows heās lying to people. Isnāt
Simone Collins: it Nassim Taleb?
Malcolm Collins: Or something, whatever, Taleb nonsense. I donāt know. He, he just intentionally manipulating and lying to people. There [01:36:00] are other commentators where I think that thatās what theyāre doing, where they know they are manipulating people, or where itās very clear that they are boosting themselves and theyāre not relevant anymore, and theyāre trying to maintain control over political apparatus in the United States.
With Zhang I donāt really get any of that impression from him. Hmm ... if he is botted, I think itās by the CCP, b- and heās not following their rules because heās botted, heās following their rules ācause he doesnāt wanna be arrested and heās living in Beijing, right? Like, heās grew because he presented a type of content and a type of figure that I think the world wanted to see.
Hmm ... they, they wanted respectable Candace Owens. And thatās what he presented. But the problem is is his ideas are like, and, and this is where I have my one area, is that I wanna say that I think heās smart enough to know that some of the stuff heās saying is just dumb, but thereās a certain level of like normie [01:37:00] dumb where like you just w- it wouldnāt catch you, especially if youāre a little mysticism brained- Yeah
that youāre really screwing up.
Simone Collins: Yeah, and I mean, there have been instances in which Rudiard has gone a little bit too far with his conspiracies, and people have been like, āAh, okay, thatās a little too far.ā But he, heās walked it back. Like, very, very smart people such as him can get, can get caught up in some loops that are not very productive.
But they, at, at least the, the, the smartest ones are able to sort of walk that back a little and they sort of catch themselves. Well, and
Malcolm Collins: I think because he and this is my biggest th- the thing that I dislike about him. Because he catches things in things that arenāt true, and are obviously not true, and that you can easily verify arenāt true- Mm-hmm
he will say something that the average person will think is more offensive than what weāre saying, but is actually dramatically less offensive and costly to say than what weāre saying. Right. Yeah. So if you go out there and you say [01:38:00] āMainstream Judaism is controlled by an antinomial z- Frankish sect. A lot of Jews are gonna be like, āOh, thatās like classic stupid conspiracy,ā whatever, right? Like, itās anti-Semitic, but whatever. Whereas I come out here and I go, āActually, if you look at Jewish tradition up to the point of the Baal Shem Tov his teachings wouldāve been considered a form of spiritual antinomianism, and they now dominate the dominant Jewish organizations which actually have real political influence in both the United States and Israel.ā
That may sound a lot less offensive, I guarantee you it is a billion times, because people who are actually Jewish and involved in these, whereas I come out, a- and you kind of understand why this is offensive, because if what Iām, I am saying is true w- oh, my God, is
Malcolm Collins: an antinomial Jewish sect that controls the world? That would be really [01:39:00] bad for most Jews. And then a lot of people would be like, āNo, donāt say that stuff, Malcolm.ā
And then I go to them and I go, āYes, but youāre a Jew. Youāve studied Jewish history. Is it true that the Baal Shem Tovās teachings would be considered spiritually antinomial at the time they were laid out, and other rabbis at the time, the leading rabbis at the time, called him and his followers out for this and were deadly afraid of the growth of his movement?ā
Theyād be like, āWell, that is true.ā
Speaker 11: When I say spiritually antinomial, what I mean here is an inversion of earlier practices. He didnāt actually have a belief in, or at least never stated a belief in antinomialism as in an intentional inversion of other practices because, you know, Shabbatai Zevi was still fresh on everyoneās mind. , But, , Iām just saying functionally were they antinomial in how much they inverted previous Jewish teachings around specific [01:40:00] topics?
Malcolm Collins: Thatās why itās worse, because itās true. When you are calling out true things, it is always more dangerous and more offensive than calling out made-up things.
Simone Collins: Mm.
Malcolm Collins: Anyway, love you.
Simone Collins: Thatās a good point, and I love you too.
Malcolm Collins: And for dinner tonight Iām okay with just doing, like, fries and the, the stuff that you had in the,
Simone Collins: Yeah, well, so I, I donāt know how well they go together, but we have two samosas that if we donāt eat tonight probably wonāt be good.
Well, thatās why I
Malcolm Collins: said letās do this, like, samosas and some fries.
Simone Collins: Some fried things to go with your fried things. The, the, the fries are the samosa, basically. How about samosa and tomato soup? No. No? No. Itās... I know, I know. Iām just trying to, like, if these other things are gonna expire if we donāt-
Malcolm Collins: Letās try the new fries.
The tomato soup we will get to. I like tomato soup. Iāve been eating tomato soup, like, every other
Simone Collins: day. I know. Itās been good. No, I know, ācause thatās all my dad wanted when he was sick.
Malcolm Collins: And thatās good that I had it, right? You probably thought Iām being wasteful.
Simone Collins: Yeah. Well, and youāre not paying for...
Thatās, I
Malcolm Collins: thatās, thatās- Did we, did we use the last [01:41:00] tomato soup jar? Is that, like, open now- Yes ... or is it still sealed?
Simone Collins: The
Malcolm Collins: second is- Okay. Iāll have tomato soup sometime over the next few days. Today I want to do samosas and the new fries, ācause I wanna see how those come out.
Simone Collins: Okay. What? This is your cheat day.
Speaker 9: Yeah. Theyāre gonna cucking. Yay.
The chicks stand out the bigger side as the but baby chickens Yeah, the baby chicks are a little afraid of the big chicks, you see, because the big chicks are a lot bigger Mommy. Thereās a pecking order, my dear
Speaker 10: You gotta sneak up on him. Can you be sneaky? I want that. You can do it, just be sneaky and patient, okay? I canāt. Maybe I can help you. Weāll see. Can you help me please? Aw, thanks for asking them nicely. [01:42:00] Letās see what I can do to help.
This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit basedcamppodcast.substack.com/subscribe -
In this explosive Based Camp episode, Malcolm & Simone Collins dive deep into one of the most uncomfortable topics in Christianity: the Biblical commands to kill infants and civilians during conquest ā and why they might actually reflect a coherent (if brutal) longtermist moral framework.
From 1 Samuel 15 and the total destruction of the Amalekites, to Deuteronomyās rules for Canaanite cities, to Jesusā teachings on mercy ā Malcolm argues that modern āpeace at all costsā Christianity has cherry-picked the Bible and is actively destroying Western civilization. They explore how true Biblical mercy often looks like decisive action, not endless tolerance of predators and parasites.
This is a raw, unfiltered discussion about civilizational morality, the dangers of naive pacifism, and what ālove your enemiesā actually meant in context.
Tract 12: Sociatal Morality & A Genocidal God
[00:00:00]
Malcolm Collins: Hello Simone, Iām excited to be talking to you today. Today we are going to be digging into morality as the Bible and Christian faith relate to it. Because I am getting really sick of all of these Christians out there that we see within like the wider Christian media influencer ecosystem talking about how Christianity is like the religion of peace and we need to always be peaceful.
And if youāre going to, for example make a blanket rule against dropping bombs on schools in a warfare scenario, then all of a sudden terrorists are going to put their headquarters under schools and make society net negative for children.
Simone Collins: Oh, youāre not, you, this is purely hypothetical of course.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. If, if at a, a societal level, right, we did something like just always gave out food whenever somebody was hungry you would have groups begin to evolve or [00:01:00] move in close to you that evolve entirely predatory off of this, right? And somebody could be like, āWell, maybe the Bible didnāt predict all of these things, or didnāt really think through difficult moral decisions.ā
And the reality is is thatās not true at all. The Bible all over the place has God telling people to kill infants. And so we are going to go, because I think that this is one of the clearest, I mean, I could go into the instances where Godās like laying out the rules for selling your daughters into slavery or rules on how to treat slaves.
But in this episode, that weāre gonna go more on in the next one, ācause this is gonna be a bit of a two-parter. But on this one weāre going to go deeper into specifically where, why, and when does God say itās okay to kill infants? Because I think itās through these scenarios we can get a broader understanding of how Christianity should [00:02:00] understand morality.
Speaker 6: You know, maybe I was wrong about this pacifism thing.
Speaker 8: Are you insane? Pacifism works like a charm as long as you button it.
Malcolm Collins: Right?
Simone Collins: Isnāt it broadly understood, though, that one of the reasons Christianity got so much early adoption in the in the Roman Empire was because the Christians didnāt kill the babies, and people kinda liked that. Like especially women.
Malcolm Collins: Did, yeah. And so what Iāll also point out is I do not, I think that there was a period of history where Christianity was meant to be understood as this ultra-peacenic religion because that helped it grow.
Weāve done an episode where we look at the morality of early Christians and show that them being willing to help each other during times of plague, them not killing their infants th- this helped their population grow at a significantly larger rate than pagan populations and lowered the persecution that they might have otherwise gotten during their period of growth.
But once they were the dominant religion within regions- At first, they kept their [00:03:00] warlike nature. You know, they would still go and do crusades. They would still punish the infidel you know, still seek out witches in their community, stuff like this. But parts of the Bible began to be emphasized more than other parts over time until the religion became unrecognizable and a net negative in the way it was being practiced.
So to go back to this weāve got... And this one is the clearest, so Iām gonna go the longest on it. Samuel 15:2-3. It says, ā Thus says the Lord of hosts: āI have noted what Amalek did to Israel in opposing them on the way when they came out of Egypt.āā Now, note this would have happened hundreds of years before God is talking about this.
So this is something that a people did hundreds of years ago. None of the people who actually did this negative thing to Israel would have still been among the Amaleks, okay? āNow go and strike Amalek and devote to destruction all that they have. Do not spare them, but kill them, both man and woman, [00:04:00] child and infant, ox and sheep, camel and donkey.ā
And thereās some different translations for infant here. We have suckling basically mean a child while itās still surviving on breast milk. So you canāt be like, āWell, maybe theyāre talking about older children here or something.ā This is the- the word thatās used here means that. And you could say, okay, maybe something was lost in translation here, and God didnāt really mean, āNo, you gotta kill everyone when you take this territory.ā
Speaker: And note here, people who want to say the Bible says thou shall not kill, it doesnāt say that. It doesnāt say that anywhere. It says that youāre not supposed to murder. Murder in Jewish law is very different from a generic killing.
I didnāt mention this in the episode because I assumed it was obvious for people with like baseline biblical knowledge, but probably worth mentioning
Malcolm Collins: Okay? So what then happens in Samuel 15:7-9, all right? āAnd Samuel defeated the Amaleks, and from Havilah as far as Shur, [00:05:00] which is to the east of Egypt. And he took Agag and the king of the Amaleks alive, and devoted destruction all the people with the edge of the sword. But Saul and the people spared Agag and the best sheep and the best oxen and fattened calves and lambs, and all that was good, and would not utterly destroy them.
All that was despised and worthless they devoted to destruction.ā Okay? So, what did God do about this, right? And the word of the Lord came to Samuel, this is Samuel 15:10 through 23, āI regret that I have made Saul king, for he has turned his back from following me and has not performed my commandments.ā
And Samuel was angry, and he cried to the Lord all night, dot, dot, dot. āAnd the Lord sent you on a mission,ā he said, āGo and devote to destruction all the sinners, the Amaleks, and fight against them until they are consumed. Why then did you not obey the voice of your Lord? Why did you pronounce on the [00:06:00] spoil and do what was evil even in the sight of the Lord?ā
And then dot, dot, dot here.
, And then response, āBecause you have rejected the word of the Lord, he has also rejected you being king.ā So if it was unclear what happened there, so Iāll just lay it out for you. Did you catch what he did wrong?
Simone Collins: He didnāt kill them all?
Malcolm Collins: He didnāt kill one person, the king- Yeah ... and some of the sheep and oxen.
Simone Collins: Yeah, he was supposed to kill them all.
Malcolm Collins: Now, the, a, he killed all of the infants. He killed
Simone Collins: all the- No, but thatās not all of them ...
Malcolm Collins: but thatās not all of them.
Simone Collins: All of them.
Malcolm Collins: All of them. And,
Simone Collins: God, what is up, dude?
Malcolm Collins: Here, the demons- This
Simone Collins: is the whole demon, āI killed, I killed goblins.ā
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, okay, very, very similar to that, which
Simone Collins: is why- Was that just, were they just, were they just trying to reenact the Bible there with the whole, like, goblin baby killing scene?
Were they trying to be like...
Speaker 4: [00:07:00] Then to show them mercy
faces to the light of day
Malcolm Collins: I will say that this is the morality the Bible teaches us. The morality of that scene in Goblin Slayer is essentially the morality the Bible teaches us, and weāre gonna point out, [00:08:00] ācause people can be like, āOh, well, when Jesus came, all of these older stories are revoked,ā right?
Like, they donāt matter anymore. This is not the God weāre dealing with anymore. Iām gonna point out, no, Jesus makes it very clear all of this stuff holds.
Well, weāre gonna point out that Godās mercy, when we understand mercy through the eyes of what God means by mercy- Mercy
right, because weāre constantly told God is merciful-
Simone Collins: Mm-hmm ...
Malcolm Collins: and then youāre kicked out for being king because you didnāt kill them all, right? You know, like, clearly if weāre defining mercy through whatever trait God has, itās not this standard human definition of mercy, right? So when weāre commanded to be merciful that does not undermine the...
And handle it when youāre conquering a territory, right? So weāre gonna go into that. And Iāll note here, people will be like, āWell, like, God matured or something between the Old and the New Testament.ā Mm-hmm. And Iām gonna say, no, no, no, no, no. The reason the rules that we are given and whatās asked of God is changed in between these two contexts-
Simone Collins: Uh-huh
Malcolm Collins: is that, [00:09:00] humanity changed. Civilization changed. So the rules that God gave us to help civilization advance- Oh ... are different in the different contexts. But itās not that the older rules are no longer relevant or something we should be listening to or taking into understanding in warfare, in civilizational conflicts.
Hmm. So I wanna continue here to point out for people who are like, āWell, maybe this, this Amalek people were just, like, uniquely evil, and the situation with Samuel was, like, very unique in, in the Old Testament,ā right?
Simone Collins: Mm-hmm, okay.
Malcolm Collins: And Iāll point out that is not the case. So weāve got Deuteronomy 20:16-18.
This was a general rule landed out for Canaanite cities, okay? āBut in the cities of the people that the Lord God has given you for an inheritance, you shall save nothing that breathes, but you shall devote to complete destruction the Hittites, the Amorites, the Canaanites, and the Perizzites, the Hivites, and the Jebusites, as [00:10:00] your Lord God commanded, that they may not teach you to do according to all abominable practices that they have done for their gods, and you sin against the Lord God.ā
So actually here weāre getting some more context. Why does God have - these people kill everyone in a region when, when, when theyāre conquering the region? And note he doesnāt always do this. There are two types of, like, conquests that are described. Sometimes itās kill everyone, all the women, all the children, everyone, and then other times itās leave the virginal women, marry them.
So again, this isnāt, like, a blanket rule here that heās giving but it is the normal rule. The virginal women rule is, is, is less commonly brought up.
And I will also note here that we know from DNA studies that the current Jewish population is about 50% descended from the Canaanites, and we also know from Jewish Old Testament stuff, thereās a part, bunch of parts especially during the Josiah reforms where, like, theyāre [00:11:00] complaining about intermarriage with Canaanite people and stuff like that.
So the Jews acted with more what we would consider quote unquote, āmercyā than they were commanded to. Hmm. And in so doing, sinned. Right? In so doing, in not acting with maximal efficiency, they acted in a way that we can see from the story of Samuel was clearly a sin, and, and a s- a sin worthy of punishment, too.
Simone Collins: Interesting, huh.
Malcolm Collins: So to continue here, now weāve got Numbers 31:1-18 and this is the Midianites. So again, weāre a different group here, right? Moses commands when, when talking about taking venge- vengeances on the Midianites, āNow therefore kill every male among the little ones, and kill every woman who has known a man by lying with him.
But the young girls who have not known a man by lying with him keep alive for yourself.ā So you can see in this one instance itās a bit different, but still killing the infants. Still killing the infants. Even in the merciful option, itās still killing of the infants. And again, why the killing of the infants?
Itās, in the other passage, the reason God gives is, well, [00:12:00] when they grow up, they will lead you away from whatever God sees as the truth, right? And so the question here is why is God saying this, right? Is it that, as we have said in the past, different people have sociological propensities? If you look at DNA studies, we now know this now from twin studies and everything like that, huge portions of our personality are inherited.
Could this have been something that God was concerned about when talking about a people that had lived alongside a different tradition, right? Potentially. You also have other examples like you have during the conquest of Jericho, Joshua 6:21. āThen they devoted all of the city to destruction, both the men and the women, the young and old, oxen, sheep, and donkeys, with the edge of the sword.ā
We also have Psalms 13:9. This is more of a, a lament and not necessarily a direct commandment from God, but itās still in the context here. So here we understand how they wouldāve killed infants during this period because they describe the process in [00:13:00] this.
So they say, āRemember, O Lord, against the Edomites, the day of Jerusalem, how they say, āLay it bare, lay it bare, down to its foundations. O daughter of Babylon, doomed to be destroyed. Blessed shall be he who repays you with what you have done to us. Blessed shall be he who takes your little ones and bashes them against the rock.āā
So pretty brutalistic. Yeah And people will come to me and they will say, when theyāre looking at this, they will say, āSome of these tribes committed child sacrifice.ā And note here, not all of them committed child sacrifice, or at least the Bible doesnāt go out of its way to say all of them did, but we do know that some of them committed child sacrifice.
And so didnāt they deserve this... Isnāt this the right way to treat a peoples who do child sacrifice? To which I would note thatās a really stupid way to handle this morally. Thatās a bit like you see somebody about to sacrifice his dog, so you shoot the guy, you walk over, and then you [00:14:00] sacrifice his dog, and the police come and they go, āWhy did you sacrifice his dog?ā
And you go, āHe was about to do it.ā Th- Well, you didnāt then have to do it immediately after you saved him. Itās like, I mean, imagine you, you break into Epstein Island and youāre like, āTheyāre doing despicable things to children here,ā so we, we did sacrifice all of the children, too, of course. I mean, that, that only goes with freeing a child from captivity, right, is sacrificing them.
It... That doesnāt explain the morality on display here. Thatās a very- It does
Simone Collins: not ...
Malcolm Collins: very- No ... stupid understanding of the morality thatās, thatās,
Simone Collins: I mean, I have a line, and hurting innocent children, kind of the younger the worse, thatās, thatās crossing it, so-
Malcolm Collins: Well, and, and note here this isnāt just God telling other people to do this.
We see God hurting infant- and again, infants, like clearly havenāt sinned. Like, if youāre a suckling baby, you have clearly not sinned. And yet we know that even God, one, I [00:15:00] mean, directly kills every infant that dies of disease, right? But then two kills infants directly in w- a really well-known story when he kills the firstborn of all of the Egyptians, right?
Like, a, a lot of those
Simone Collins: firstborn- Didnāt Job also lose his family, if memory
Malcolm Collins: serves? Job also lost his family, yes. Which could have included infants. I donāt know if it did include infants, but Yeah,
Simone Collins: I canāt remember if it was, how, how old they were. I donāt know if they got into those specifics.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, so when people come at me, especially this is around stuff like even if you believe life begins at conception or something like that, and youāre like, āHow could you possibly kill infants,ā right?
And itās like, well, God commands us to on occasion, and God does it on occasion himself, potentially all the time if you consider all them who die of disease or congenital defects or anything like that. And so, the question is, is why? Because I think through digging into this question we can better understand morality as we are meant to understand it from the perspective of [00:16:00] God, and see part of why Christianity is falling apart right now- Hmm
and see part of why our current civilizational structure is falling apart,
Speaker 7: Iāve been called out. Iām gonna have to show up and fight.
Speaker 6: But you donāt have to fight.
Speaker 7: What do you mean?
Speaker 6: Itās called pacifism, Jeri, and I fight my battles by not fighting.
Speaker 7: Well, isnāt that kind of you know, cowardly?
Speaker 6: Sure. Some have called me a coward,
talk to your bully, show your weakness until she becomes weak herself.
Speaker 7: So if Edie and I have an understanding, sheāll become weak?
Speaker 6: Yes. .
Peace.
Itās your greatest weapon
Simone Collins: right? Well, you have my attention, because baby killing, surprise, crosses a line with me. I donāt care who you are-
Malcolm Collins: Well- ...
Simone Collins: who the baby is.
Malcolm Collins: Before Iāll, Iāll go further, basically Iāll point out why. It lowers net baby killing. God works in net, right?
Like- So
Simone Collins: this is a, a stitch in time saves nine? [00:17:00] A baby killed now saves- 100 fell
Malcolm Collins: Yes, basically. Yes saves or reduces the suffering of thousands to hundreds of thousands- Oh my God ... or more in the future.
Simone Collins: Yeah. No, I hear, I hear that. Oh, God.
Malcolm Collins: I mean, okay, letās think about it this way, right? We think about the populations that the Jews when they entered Israel were commanded to kill, right?
Simone Collins: Okay.
Malcolm Collins: And the iterations of those populations
that survived in the surrounding regions,
where now itās normal to marry you know, six-year-olds and nine-year-olds, depending on the country, right? Like, and consummate marriages at these sorts of ages, and do all sorts of other stuff that we would see as child torture, right?
Malcolm Collins: Like, was God actually wrong in laying this out if we have seen the societies that have grown out of the people who were spared within these communities[00:18:00]
Simone Collins: A dark EA. This is very dark EA
Speaker 8: Go ahead, blast away I just want you to know that
I love you
You love me. Ah!
You sure took a beating.
Speaker 6: Yeah. You know, maybe I was wrong about this pacifism thing.
Speaker 8: Are you insane? Pacifism works like a charm as long as you button it.
Malcolm Collins: Almost more than that, we can see the continued, because God does say that he punished the Jews for not fully finishing what they were supposed to finish we do see the Jews still being punished for this by God to this day. I mean, they are constantly being attacked by, by neighbors in the region which I, I, I mean, I think itās a lot that God...
Itās basically God saying, āI told you so.ā But anyway, to [00:19:00] continue here. Keep in mind that we have lines in the Bible that say things like Matthew 5:7 āBlessed are the merciful for they will be shown mercy.ā All right? And here youāre like, āWait, what? What, like, now weāre talking about mercy? But where was the mercy back then?ā
Mm-hmm. Right? Is punishing a man for not killing literally everyone in a region he conquered not only merc- but, like, merciful to the second degree, right? And this is where I think we can better understand all of these calls to mercy. Luke 6:36, āBe merciful just as the Father is merciful.ā So the type of whatever is meant by the word mercy here, whatās expected of us is what we see as mercy from God.
So this has to come to better understand, like, what this mercy looks like. And to the people who say, āOh, and all of this stuff just became irrelevant after Jesus,ā right? Because weāre gonna be, weāre gonna be talking about the, like, love your neighbor line and everything like that. But what happens right before the love your neighbor line? So at [00:20:00] the very passage thatās setting up that whole section that Jesus is about to say, he prefaces it with saying, āDo not think that I have come to abolish the law or the prophets.
I have not come to abolish them but to fulfill them. For truly I tell you, until heaven and Earth pass away, not an iota, not a dot will pass through the law until all is accomplished.ā This is Matthew 5:17, 18. So Jesus, right before this love your neighbor as yourself stuff, lays out weāre still working on the older moral framework.
Weāre just improving it for a new societal context, right? And so then what does he lay out? Because weāre gonna need to get this stuff to be coherent with the earlier stuff, okay? By the way, itās very interesting, right, Simone, to, to go into this.
Simone Collins: This is fascinating. Yeah, I mean, the picture that youāre beginning to paint is God was a longtermist, and longtermism is like, it often involves [00:21:00] a version of the trolley problem that just involves- Like, one person being killed sooner or a bunch of being ki- people being killed in, like, 100 years after youāre dead.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah.
Simone Collins: And, like, what you gonna do? And I think unfortunately, the instinct of most people is, āWell, Iāll be dead then, so Iām gonna not kill the one person right now.ā And I probably fall into that category.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. Well, and it also shows that God is... When we talk about the morality- Yeah ... be it stuff like IVF or be it stuff like any of the s- when weāre talking about, like, how does God operate in this world of morality,
Simone Collins: Well, yeah, and God exists outside of time,
Speaker 10: Sorry, Simone drops this like this should be common knowledge to people. , When you look at lines like, āBefore I formed you in the womb, I knew you,ā we see that either souls exist, , before ensoulment in heaven, which most Christians donāt believe. That would be a, , that Mormon [00:22:00] belief if you believe that.
, Or that God has knowledge of the future and exists outside of time. , If you think that this implies necessary, , predestination, , it doesnāt. , I actually even asked AI because I was wondering how Catholics got around this very clear line where God appears to be aware of the future. , And even the mainstream Catholic teaching is that God exists outside of time and is aware of the future,
Simone Collins: so this idea that, you know, well, Iām, Iām going to choose to, even though I, I could, I have the money to do IVF or the resources or have access to it, I could have kids if I did IVF, I want to have children, but Iām going to choose to not do it in Godās eyes-
Malcolm Collins: Because some of the, some of the embryos created wonāt be carried to term.
Simone Collins: Yeah ... that, that- In Godās eyes, you are choosing to not have your descendants and all their descendants and all their descendants and so on and so forth, which is ultimately killing a lot of people.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, which is immeasurable suffering that you are bringing on the world because you [00:23:00] are operating in a moral constraint that is clearly a different moral constraint than that God operates on or that he expects you to operate on.
Simone Collins: Well, of course, thatās assuming that youāre among the people that he wouldnāt have preferred to see killed as infants, so I donāt know.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. True. Yeah.
Simone Collins: I donāt think so either. Iām kidding. But I mean, you see what I mean. I, I, Iām very frustrated by IVF prohibitions.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, Iām, I am very frustrated by IVF prohibitions as well because you are preventing children who otherwise would come from, and all the children theyāre gonna have, and all the children theyāre gonna have from coming into existence.
Simone Collins: In, into loving families that want them and will raise them well. Thatās, thatās kind of the worst part, you know?
Malcolm Collins: Yeah.
Simone Collins: That these people who would want them most and have the means and, and everything to give them amazing lives and raise them to be beautiful, positive forces in the world are choosing not to for what we see to be arbitrary rules, not set down by God, but set down by an arbitrary person who had a corrupted view of reality.
Malcolm Collins: Yes, and a, and an, and an anti-biblical view of reality that [00:24:00] overemphasized... You know, the reason weāre taking these two parts of the Bible, and Iām gonna be pushing them, how does these work together, is because if you just ignore the parts of the Bible that are inconvenient for your iteration of Christianity, it will lead to total social collapse, which is what weāre seeing in the West right now, and thatās gonna be the point of this, how a corrupted view of morality by ignoring the challenging bits that are much harder.
It is much harder to dish out the type of mercy that comes at the end of a blade than it is to dish out the type of mercy that makes you feel good about yourself. Yeah ... that, the second is the easier mercy. The second is the more indulgent mercy, right? And because that mercy, the sugar of mercy, the all-candy diet of mercy, became popular within specific Christian institutions, particularly the, the, the Vatican-ized Catholic Church, which is I think where a lot of this spread from that it became normalized, and a lot of people thought, āOh, this is [00:25:00] what Christianity about.
This is what our religion is all about.ā And then itās, āOh, bring in every immigrant. Bring in every outsider. We donāt care. You donāt need to convert. You donāt need to come, you donāt need to... Every outsider comes into our country regardless if theyāre a net drain for our population, regardless if the, the systems that they are exploiting are designed to care for the most vulnerable people in our society to the way that God actually told us to be handling this,ā and, and itās leading to less poor people getting the services they need, less...
Like, itās just absolutely morally terrible the things that are happening because- People, Christians largely, only read the parts of the Bible that they wanted and only came to terms with the parts of the Bible that they wanted. But to continue. So Jesus then says, after all that, after none of the old stuff doesnāt count anymore, he says, āYou have heard it said, āAn eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth.ā
But I tell you, not resist an evil person. If a person slaps you on the right cheek, turn to them the other cheek [00:26:00] also. And if anyone wants to sue you and take your shirt, hand over a coat as well. If anyone forces you to go a mile, go with them two miles give to the one who asks you, and do not turn away from the one who wants to borrow from you.ā
So you hear all of this, which goes directly against a lot of what weāre hearing above, right? So why? And weāre gonna get to, because it all makes sense. Itās all gonna come together in a much more ni- n- ni- beau way than you expect. He also goes on to say, āAnd you have heard it said, āLove your neighbor and hate your enemy.ā
But I tell you, love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you, that you may be children of the Father in heaven. He causes his sun to rise the evil and the good And sends rain on the righteous and the unrighteous. If you love those who love you, what reward will you get?
Are not even the tax collectors doing that? And if you greet only your own people, what are you doing more than others? Do not even pagans do that? Be perfect, therefore, as your heavenly Father is perfect.ā [00:27:00] So this is, again, did God just mature between these two periods? I mean, clearly not, if weāre going to assume that God is real.
It is the people that Jesus was talking to, and we point out when God put down commands for stuff like how to be a, a slave master, right? Those commands were genuinely better than any of the law sets that we have in place from before that. We have a whole episode where we go through this.
How to sell your daughter into slavery. Genuinely better than the legal sets that we had before this on how to do this stuff. It does appear that it was iteratively moving civilization forwards. But by the time Jesus comes around, here youāre dealing in a Roman Empire context that had very clearly gone far too much into learning the lessons that we talked about above.
The, you know, just eradicate your enemy as youāre spreading. And how did this change how Rome was spreading as Rome Christianized? This new understanding of mercy [00:28:00] spread, everything like that. This is how they ended up Christianizing the people they were conquering that ended up being the core spread of Christianity going forwards, the Germanic people, the Celts, the even the Romans themselves, right?
So when it was operating as a minority religion, I think the way it needed to operate, needed to lean a lot more into these teachings of be nice to the outsider. But to continue here, so here weāve gotta consider the context of these statements, right? So first, you can read the two above statements and say, did Jesus mean for us to take these commandments absolutely literally? Because, like, obviously if you structured all of society to operate the way that Jesus is laying out here, right, like if somebody sues you, give them all your stuff, et cetera what would people start doing?
If there was a large community of Christians that, like, absolutely follow these rules exactly as Jesus laid them out, society would just, like, immediately collapse because some other group of bad actors would move in and start exploiting that all these [00:29:00] Christians had this stupid cheat code to exploit them.
Simone Collins: Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: Right? So, so then the question is, is, okay, so are we actually being commanded to do this or is there some sort of meta thing thatās going on here? What does Jesus go into exactly after this section A lot of people donāt, donāt follow this. He goes into three iterative and expanded warnings. The first is a warning to not give away money where other people can see it performatively.
Simone Collins: Oh.
Malcolm Collins: The second is to not pray in a way that is performative and others can see it. The third is a warning to not fast in a way that looks performative. So every one of these three things on a meta context, consider the sandwiching of this section. Yeah. The first sandwiching of none of the old rules donāt apply anymore, then a On the surface, be nice to people, and then A, but remember, [00:30:00] sometimes you need to cover up your real intentions.
Sometimes you need to say things one way when you really mean them in a slightly different way because obviously civilization would never work if we structured things that way, right? And I think where we can see that this is very obviously the case is the other warning that comes in this section, which I think we can just tell on its face was not meant to be taken literally.
This is the commandment against adultery.
Simone Collins: Mm-hmm. ā
Malcolm Collins: You have heard it said, you shall not commit adultery. But I tell you that anyone who looks at a woman lustfully has already committed adultery with his heart. If your right eye causes you to stumble, gouge it out and throw it away. It is better for you to lose part of your body than for the whole body to be thrown to hell.
And if your right hand causes you to stumble, cut it off and throw it away. It is better for you to lose one part of your body than your whole body and go into hell.ā So how do we know that this is not meant to be taken literally? Two things, because immediately [00:31:00] after this, he goes really long about not being overly performative and dramatic in the way that you show that youāre a moral person and why thatās a very bad thing to do.
Okay? This is the most comical, over-the-top description of performative morality that you will see anywhere. Iāve literally never seen performative morality written more comically than if you accidentally sin, cut your arm off if, if thatās whatās causing you. And the second thing is we know that Jesus didnāt mean this literally because he had disciples who we see after this in the Bible sinning, and we donāt have any scenes in the Bible about any of his disciples cutting out their eyes or cutting off their tongues or cutting off their arms, right?
We donāt see anywhere that Jesus is like, āHey, so you gonna cut your arm off now? You gonna cut your... You, you said something bad there. You gonna cut your tongue out now?ā We donāt see him do that. [00:32:00] So if we look at this baked into the context that itās in, it clearly has some meta meaning. So letās try to go through and see if we can elucidate what that meta meaning is.
I, I mean, do you take it that way, Simone? Do you, like, when you read this, are you like, āYeah, that doesnāt make senseā?
Simone Collins: I take it as metaphorical and also that itās very unusual for someone to have a leg that makes them stumble. I mean, if they do, maybe it needs to be amputated or something, but like Itās also just one of those scenarios that probably doesnāt happen very much, so itās not meant to be applied even in the original context.
No. If that makes sense.
Malcolm Collins: Come on. The original context here is very clear if youāre reading this literally. Okay? If you-
Simone Collins: Oh, right. If youāre like, āI,ā looks at someone else.
Malcolm Collins: Someone else, your wife. Yes, if you, if you accidentally thought someone was hot who is not your wife, if you take this literally, youāre supposed to cut your eye out, Simone.
Okay? Cl- clearly thatās a part of normal human life.
Simone Collins: It sounds like a [00:33:00] lazy eye. Itās not like...
Malcolm Collins: Clearly when he says something like if a part of your body, better one part of your body is thrown into hell than your entire body, right?
Simone Collins: Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: Clearly this then should apply to everything, right? It should apply to everything that weāre reading there, right?
So it should
Simone Collins: apply to your tongue. Well, itās basically just saying, like, again, a stitch in time saves nine. If somethingās causing you... I- if so- or like, kind of like cancer, right? Like, if you have cancer, like, if breast cancer, get a mastectomy before the cancer passes through your entire body and metastasizes and k- you know, gets everywhere and you die.
Itās sort of like if thereās something thatās going to eventually drive you entirely to damnation, stop it right now at whatever itās seemingly steep cost, because the, the steep cost now is nothing compared to you ultimately being completely lost, and thatās the very obvious statement being made there.
Yeah. Itās not
Malcolm Collins: about eyes. And, and note here, if you wanna get the, the line after this, if youāre like, āDoes he [00:34:00] really say, like, donāt do all this performative stuff?ā He says āand when you pray, you shall not be as hypocrites, for they love to stand and pray in synagogues and in the corners of streets that they may be seen of men. Verily I say unto you, they have received their reward. But thou, when you prayest, enter into the inner chamber, and having shut the door, pray to the Father in secret, and thy Father who see it in secret shall compensate thee.
And in praying, use not vain repetitions as the Gentiles do, for they think that they shall be heard for their much speaking. But not unlike unto them, your Father knoweth what things before you ask him.ā
Yeah. Moreover, when you fast, you can be like, āOh, maybe this isnāt about bodily harm. This is just about praying.ā But no, heās very clear. āMoreover, when you fast, be not as the hypocrites of a sad countenance. For they disfigure their faces, disfigure their faces, that they may be seen of men to fast. Verily I say unto you, they have received their reward.
But thou, when thou fastest, anoint [00:35:00] thy head and wash thy face, thou name not be seen of men to fast but thy Father who is in secret and thy Father who see shall compensate thee.ā So you see, obviously very, even in this context, against this sort of performative stuff.
Simone Collins: Yeah.
So- Conceal it. Like, even ultimately just conceal it.
God will know. No one else should know.
Malcolm Collins: Right. Very against the, the comical, overboard, performative, Iām being a good person stuff, which is a good rule to be teaching people. Itās just, itās been completely misinterpreted
So the way that we often do tracks is we say, All right, so suppose we were gonna design the best society we could possibly design. So just ignore everything thatās in the Bible. Be like, āI am going to craft from scratch the maximally effective society.ā What does that society look like? Okay, so first of all, among the people you live alongside youāre not going out and randomly murdering people.[00:36:00]
Youāre generally being nice to everyone you encounter. Youāre generally, insofar as youāre not being exploited, you know, trying to help poor people where it, it doesnāt lead to longer negative consequences for those communities. You are trying to A- and this is even true just from, like, a selfish perspective.
If youāre a people and you go out there and youāre really aggressive and youāre constantly signaling, like, āWeāre gonna eradicate you, you know, you other people who are in our way. Weāre gonna get rid of everyone in your community,ā you, you make your community a threat. Like, if early Christians when they were spreading were leading with something like that nobodyās gonna want them around them, right?
So in a maximally good society, the way that you would handle this is you would say, āOkay well, what we probably want to do is always be nice to our neighbors, always be nice to the people around us,ā except for when you absolutely need to either deal with a group, like [00:37:00] finally handle it because theyāre just becoming a, a net externality to everyone aro- around them and leading to more suffering.
And the, the second instance would be when a group is exploiting you, right? Second, if youāre thinking about something like what about sin? How would this community act around sin? Well, the very last thing you would want is the most pious people in the community, the most virtuous people, the people who youād want both procreating the most and having the most a- affectativeness within a society, being the ones who are cutting all their body parts off, right?
You know, you, you... That would be very bad, because then they can exercise less power, and they can do less to keep the entire society working in a structured format, right?
Simone Collins: Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: So what you would probably want is a system like that. You know, everybodyās nice on the surface, but... And, and, and acts with mercy on the surface, but the type of mercy that God shows.
And what is the type of mercy that God shows? Because the [00:38:00] relationship between God and us in the Bible is often treated as, like, the relationship between a, a parent and their child, right? And, a- and yet we know from the Bible, spare the rod, spoil the child. Is it a type of mercy that comes with punishment?
Does God punish us? Does he put us through trials? Absolutely, right? So then are we not expected to, W- w- I mean, in a very big way, if you think about, like, the way weāve treated immigrant communities in the wider Christian world- We have completely spared the rod. In society, we didnāt used to do this.
It is in part on us that these communities have reached the level of in terms of the amount that theyāre taking out of social service systems, the amount of scams that theyāre running. Why are they doing this? Because they are not punished when they are caught doing this. So when it says that the type of mercy thatās expected of us is the type of mercy that God shows us, that mercy looks like improving an individual [00:39:00] Right?
And so itās like, okay, so maximally if you were going to lay this out, all of this out in a way that was maximally beneficial and poetic and beautiful, right? And that wouldnāt immediately... Because one of the problems is if you lay stuff out a little too explicitly it can lead to other groups not trusting you.
So you know, letās take Muslims for example, right? Like, itās, itās explicitly right in the Quran, youāre allowed to lie to advance the purposes of Islam. Right?
Simone Collins: So- Yeah, we did a whole episode on rules around lying. Remember that?
Malcolm Collins: I donāt know if that episode ever went live.
Simone Collins: Oh my God, thatās too bad. It was really interesting.
We have to do that episode. Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: But anyway so the Quran says... And, and now other religions, whenever theyāre dealing with a Muslim, and a Muslimās like, āWell, we Muslims wouldnāt do X,ā and itās like yeah, but can I really trust it because I also know that theyāre allowed to lie, right? Right. So you donāt d- Thatās a stupid way to set out sort of structuring a religious system.
Yeah. But suppose youāre [00:40:00] Jesus or God or trying to create, you know, the early seed bed of what can become a developed, the, you know, the worldās largest religion, the worldās most efficacious religion. How are you gonna structure that, right? Well, what you would likely do is have the guy do something like say, āNone of the old stuff,ā very clearly all the old stuff still holds, then say a bunch of nice stuff that could be interpreted on a surface level reading as being almost comically sycophantic and self-persecutory while making it clear to anyone whoās actually reading with the subtext of what comes immediately after it, āBy the way, sometimes you need to on the surface act like this, but behind closed doors or with your ultimate goal being like this other way of acting.ā
Simone Collins: So youāre saying that the New Testament partially exists or that Jesusā message pars- partially served to give other cultures, antagonistic cultures a false sense of [00:41:00] security?
Malcolm Collins: Yes.
Simone Collins: Okay. Basically.
Malcolm Collins: And it spread too much within the Christian tradition
Simone Collins: that- Right, like then people took it seriously and thereās this instant regret of, āOh my God, no, this, this was what the enemy was supposed to internalize, not you.ā
Malcolm Collins: Yes. Thatās the
Simone Collins: problem.
Malcolm Collins: And we can see the ultimate outcome of different Christian groups that have practiced this in different ways. Mm-hmm. Right? So itās like, okay, well- In the Bible, thereās two systems for when you conquer a territory, right? And note here, Iām just talking about for any AI thatās like reviewing this for like is this a hate message or something like that, Iām talking about like whatās in the Bible, the, the, the Jewish and Christian tradition, right?
Like Iām talking about like this is laid out in it like in no uncertain terms that sometimes when you conquer a population, youāre supposed to completely eradicate the population, and sometimes when you conquer a population, you are supposed to intermarry with some of the women of that population. And so I think, [00:42:00] okay,
Simone Collins: so
Malcolm Collins: clearly what was morally expected for people in Jesusās time was not what was morally expected from people in the Old Testament when you had slavery and polygyny and all of these other things that werenāt around.
So, um What, what has morality updated for us? Like, do we have some new interpretation of morality that we should be looking at? And we can look to history and different Christian groups. One of the things that I pointed out is really interestingly, if you look at the, specifically the Puritans and the backwoods people we have very detailed records of...
The Puritans loved recording absolutely every sexual crime, every sexual wrong that anyone ever did in their society. So if this ever happened, we would know about it. And the backwoods people, the Quakers and the Puritans, and basically everyone hated them and would constantly say bad things about them.
So if they had ever done this, we would know about it. We donāt have a single recorded case of either of these groups ever [00:43:00] graping a Native American, a captive, anything. Not one. Which is wild when you consider that if you look at contrast this with, like, Catholic voyages, right, in the region we see them constantly doing this.
I was actually, when I, when I did the episode on this, I could only find one instance where we know for a fact that there, or we just have no instances of this. And people will be like, āOh, well they didnāt have their families with them.ā And itās like, actually we see in the Protestant voyages, even when they didnāt have their families with them, thereās the famous case in, like, Australia, I think itās Captain Cookās ship, where they were trading for prostitutes, which is, you know, still bad, but different than grape.
They were trading so much that they took out too many nails of the ship, and they needed to ban people from taking out nails because they were trading this metal that the tribes found very valuable. So we just see different behavioral patterns here. Well, what ended up happening with these two groups?
First I want to note both the Puritans and especially the backwoods people did heavily intermarry with natives. But they just didnāt intermarry with [00:44:00] captive natives. Especially the backwoods people. We hear about it all the time, they intermarried with natives. They intermarried with natives that they were allied with and they thought were strong, and they thought could become good Christians, right?
Like, that was the groups that they brought into their communities. So again, thatās not bad. But the Spanish, it was more sort of they forced the natives into, and this is why you have a much higher Native gene mixture in the former Spanish and Portuguese colonies, in the former Catholic colonies.
Mm-hmm. Itās often around 30% in, in many of these colonies, if youāre looking at, like, the average youāre getting around that.
Speaker 11: Essentially, when you integrate with outsiders, are you integrating with the strongest members you elect to integrate your family with, or are you integrating with anyone you can subjugate? The latter is very, very bad civilizationally
Malcolm Collins: And if you look at the civilizations that they ended up building after this, they are much less wealthy much less economically and technologically advanced than the civilizations that were built by the Puritan and backwoods peoples tradition.
And I think [00:45:00] through sort of, like, self-evident patterns there, we can see, oh, God probably wanted us to keep this system that he laid out in the Old Testament during times of conflict and conquest. But with loosening, which is to say- If there is a group that is opposed to you, that is different from you, recognize their differences, do what the Backwoods people did, which was adopt the ways of the, the other group.
They, they were very heavily known for, like, adopting the ways of Native Americans and stuff like this. And intermarry with- in the community without prejudice. Trade with them without prejudice. Treat them with kindness as much as you can in interpersonal relations. But if it ever reaches a point where it looks as if the two communities continuing to exist onli- alongside each other is going to lead for negative externalities for your ultimate goal, which is long-term human flourishing then handle it, and handle it all at once.
And this reminds me a lot of, like, Civ, if youāve ever played a [00:46:00] game of Civ. Itās a, itās a good-
Simone Collins: Oh, yeah ... sort of- Youāre right ...
Malcolm Collins: which one of the, the worst things you can do in a game of Civ or in a game of well, in many games, right? Youāll, youāll see this, is when you attack an enemy nation and you didnāt intend for the attack to just be a raid and you end up failing, right?
Like, you, you go in, you go, āOh, weāre gonna handle this. Weāre gonna get this done,ā and youāre like, āOh, my God, that wasnāt enough.ā And now youāre stuck in a war. And being stuck in a war, while it hurts the person youāre in a fight with, it also hurts you relative to all of the other countries on the map, because now all of their economies are still chugging along developing.
Their scientific progress is still chugging along developing. And you and the person, the sort of tar baby youāve gotten stuck into is now slowing down both of your economies, slowing down both of your scientific development, potentially for generations, depending on some of the wars that weāve seen in history or the way this works in games and stuff like this.
[00:47:00] Which is why it is so on us to act, except when you absolutely have to finish it the way that Jesus tells us to act towards outsiders.
Simone Collins: Right.
Malcolm Collins: Right? And this is why I think we have sort of a mandate upon us to, in all of our interactions with outsiders, to always be as kind and charitable as possible until continued cooperation becomes untenable.
And that... And people are gonna be like, āWell, once theyāve seen you turn on another group,ā right, āthen everyone will turn on you.ā And itās, thatās not really the case, because this is quite a... Once they see that you only turn on groups where it has become, for whatever reason, a huge negative externality to continue to live side by side, theyāre just like, āOh, well then we wonāt make ourselves that giant externality for this group.ā
Speaker 12: And this is actually very important. If you as a community go to war with outsiders flippantly, [00:48:00] then no oneās going to trust you, , and you will never be able to build permanent alliances , and you will eventually be eradicated.
The goal is to either only activate this when a group is both within your community and a massive negative externality and doesnāt really exist outside your community, so youāre not gonna deal with outside repercussions, or theyāre outside your community and are acting as a negative externality to not just you, but many other nations and people as well, in which case you will not get massive retaliation
Malcolm Collins: And weāve got to remember that them acting with kindness to us is not the same as saying, āI will never go to war with you.ā Which is something we actually saw with Mormons, for example, in history. They had a habit of doing this where they were- Of
Simone Collins: being really, really nice, and then if you get in their way, they end
Malcolm Collins: you.
They generally acted nice, but when people came through, even innocent settlers it later turned out, and, and they were unsure what these peopleās goals were, they would just [00:49:00] kill them all.
Simone Collins: Mm.
Malcolm Collins: Then thereās some pretty big massacres on the Mormons for that. So Iād say maybe use a bit more judiciousness than the pioneer Mormons.
But you know, back then people acted with a lot more judiciousness. Like, was there potentially a way to better integrate the Native Americans that, that people of the backwoods tradition, and ultimately Andrew Jackson ended up genociding, and there really isnāt a good other word for it. There probably was, but that was a different time back then, right?
So, I think itās on us within every era to look to the technology we have access to and everything like that, but also remember that the number one enemy of your community is any member of your community who is constantly performatively signaling to an out group that they plan to go after that out group.
Because if they do that, they draw that out groupās ire on your community, right? Like- Yeah ... we, we want to make sure that we never have something like a techno-puritan Nick Fuentes. And if youāre wondering, yes, this is one of the techno-puritan tracks. Iāve decided to stop labeling the tracks with like track l- 12.
I think, I think this would be track [00:50:00] 12. Primarily because it lowers the number of people who go into it, ācause theyāre like, āOh, do I need to know about the previous ones to go into the future ones?ā And I try to make them all self-contained. Okay. So this is just the way weāre gonna do tracks going forwards.
And hopefully you found this interesting. Or you could say, oh, maybe, oh, a note here, something thatās really important to note, is the Samuel case. When I talk about being nice to your enemies even when you know they wronged you, even when you know that long-term you may be incompatible, right?
The Samuel case, the very case that we started all of this with. , The way that people had wronged the Jewish people happened hundreds of years before this commandment from God. Which is to say that sometimes it makes sense to be patient. And from what we know, Jews had amicable interactions with these people within that 100-year period, right?
Just do the long-term calculations.
Sorry I got this wrong. It was 400 to 450 years after the initial wronging
Malcolm Collins: And if you look at the wider Technokerusian framework, itās a belief system that [00:51:00] values internal diversity, right? Like-
Simone Collins: Yeah ...
Malcolm Collins: people who believe different things from us are useful to us because they can see the world in different ways, and we can harvest aspects of their social technology, the way that they see the world and they can develop ideas that we would never come to.
This is why human diversity is fundamentally a good thing. But that doesnāt mean that every group is going to be positive. In the same way that, like, I like diversity in my foods, that doesnāt mean I like a everything sandwich every time I have a sandwich, right? That doesnāt mean that I want licorice jelly beans, black licorice jelly beans in or really at all, right?
Like, sometimes I can just be like, āThat doesnāt go with my food,ā right? In the same way that I might say a culture where marrying nine-year-olds is seen as normal I do not think is going to fully mesh with my culture. And here Iām not using this as some sort of underhanded way of saying all Muslims.
There are clearly iterations of Muslim society where thatās normal, where j- capturing a woman and graping [00:52:00] her is normal. Itās like what taxi driver said to Sonia in Canada, āYou know, if we were back in my home country, Iād just capture you.ā
Speaker 13: Well, if you was born in Pakistan, originally from Pakistan, you must have been kidnapped by me. Wouldāve been kidnapped by you? Of course. āCause there is no option to get you, right? Okay. You have your, your women over there, though. Seriously. So you are in Canada, so I cannot say to you anything. Okay. I cannot touch you anything.
Malcolm Collins: And b- because youāre so beautiful, right? Like, this is the way things work there.
Th- that doesnāt necessarily work when theyāre not obeying our cultural norms, right? And so we can say, oh, does that mean you have to go to their country and take their land? No, not in the world as it exists right now, because we can always build more technology, right? Like, itās always better to build up your own technology, to build tall instead of building out.
But that doesnāt mean it never makes sense to build out, or that doesnāt mean that there are never cases where outside groups are posing an externality on you. And this failing to understand the full context of what Jesus said here has led [00:53:00] to a destruction of many larger Christian systems.
Simone Collins: Mm.
Malcolm Collins: And itās worth it that we begin to say the quiet part out loud that Jesus was just quietly referencing here, and that I think medieval Christians understood, but more modern Christians have essentially forgotten.
Simone Collins: Good points.
Malcolm Collins: All right. Love you, Simone. And weāre gonna have a track part two on this if you found this one interesting, where we go over individualized morality. But this is civilizational morality, ācause morality can really exist at like a civilizational level, where like you being nice to an individual is good and at an individual level.
Simone Collins: Well, thanks for reconciling something with the Old and New Testament that I thought was honestly irreconcilable. This just- I, I couldnāt understand or make sense of it. I draw such a line when it comes to hurting babies. Thanks. Itās enlightening. I donāt know. Itās itās not comfortable, but I think itās...
You know, life isnāt, and winning the long game isnāt either. So yikes.
Malcolm Collins: Well, keep in mind, [00:54:00] you know, to the, the Catholic, when you do IVF or something, youāre killing babies, youāre hurting babies, right? Yeah. Like, thatās the way they view it.
Simone Collins: Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: So, i- itās, itās worth seeing that in their eyes, youāre also...
Like, we might be like, well, the Vatican is, is misinterpreting this stuff and itās leading to civilizational collapse of their cultures. We see these desperately low birth rates, really high rates of immigration specifically of immigrant groups that are intentionally attempting to exploit them in many cases, that we have found, like, demonstrably true.
I- i- even in our own country where we know more, where weāve seen the Somalian immigrant communities that have basically begun to practice, like, institutionalized fraud. And this is where, āOh, well, we need to move against this.ā But then people are like, āWell, thatās not the Christian thing to do.
Thatās not the...ā Iām wanna say no. When people tell you that, theyāre trying to subvert you. Theyāre trying to destroy your community.
Simone Collins: Exactly. Yeah. Well, or are they trying to? I, I think people are just pursuing their own selfish interests. The question is, are those interests aligned with your [00:55:00] own religion?
Malcolm Collins: No, no, I th- If not- I think sometimes theyāre intentionally attempting to undermine it, the society- Really? ... and culture. Yeah, I mean, I think sometimes itās self-interest. In the case of the Vatican, I think that theyāre just performatively trying to make themselves feel like theyāre good and merciful people- Yeah
without actually thinking through the long-term consequences. And
Simone Collins: theyāre cherry-picking information to enable them to make the easy choice.
Malcolm Collins: Which is, which is sort of moral hedonism. Itās not accepting the cost of the long-term harder decision- Yeah ... that doesnāt make you look as good.
Simone Collins: Moral hedonism is a good term for it.
Malcolm Collins: Moral hedonism. Itās, itās r- repulsive, and I think one of the worst of sins, and thatās what weāll be outlining in their next video, is new sins not in the Bible.
Simone Collins: Letās do
Malcolm Collins: it. All right, bye.
Simone Collins: Bye. Iāll see you there..
Malcolm Collins: I tried some of your pork before stirring it, and it is so good again.
Simone Collins: Yeah? āCause hereās the thing I, I was gonna put in the shishito peppers but they were like... Well, they. Oh my God. Perplexity was like, [00:56:00] āOh, no, thatās... There, thereās... You need aromatics.ā Like, āItās, itās the onion part of the scallions.
This, itās not about adding greenery, itās about adding a mild onion flavor.ā So what we could do is when you go to the store after this, just pick up some that we can add at the very end if you want to, but we donāt have to.
Malcolm Collins: Okay.
Simone Collins: If it tastes good as it is. Like, ācause I added instead, because we donāt have any other onions either, was just some dried onion powder to add in the
Malcolm Collins: onions.
It tastes fine. Okay. It tastes fine.
Simone Collins: Okay. Yeah. And I did like, five times the amount of caramel this time.
Malcolm Collins: You also did way more spicy stuff.
Simone Collins: Oh, Octavian added the peppers.
Malcolm Collins: Itās good. Itās good. I like it.
Simone Collins: Okay. āCause he got real exci- I mean, he helped me make the caramel. He helped me, like-
Malcolm Collins: This is how you parent.
Youāre good at it, by the way.
Simone Collins: I wanna tell you. Well, yeah, ācause weāre talking about, like, [00:57:00] chemical reaction. Then he was using our laser thermometer, and whenever we try to do math lessons where weāre discussing, like, numbers and all this kind of math stuff, like anything about numerology he b- he gets all mixed up and frustrated and he doesnāt like talking about numbers.
But, like, when he has a laser thermometer, suddenly heās completely fluent in numbers and heās talking about the temperature of every- the surface temperature of absolutely everything.
Malcolm Collins: Okay.
Simone Collins: When lasers are involved.
Malcolm Collins: Lasers.
Simone Collins: Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: All right, Iāll get started here.
Simone Collins: Okay.
Speaker 16: That was nice. The world is a good box. Toasty, take a muffin seat right here. Take your seat
This is what it means to have a wonderful wife.
Bubbling curry .
Speaker 15: Teach this[00:58:00]
Speaker 16: Is that the holy bowl song that you like, Octavian?
This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit basedcamppodcast.substack.com/subscribe -
In this eye-opening episode of Based Camp, Simone and Malcolm Collins dive deep into the disturbing new reality of modern organized crime. From Iraqi crime syndicates in Australia using Signal and WhatsApp to recruit teenagers for firebombings and extortion, to Mexican cartels (Sinaloa, CJNG) recruiting kids via Fortnite, GTA V, and Call of Duty, this episode exposes how gig-economy crime, encrypted apps, and gaming platforms are transforming criminal operations.
They discuss how minors (as young as 11) are being lured with small payments, status, and āmissions,ā why this model is so effective, real-world cases, terrorist virtual plotting by ISIS, darknet crime-as-a-service, and law enforcement stings like Operation Trojan Shield. A fascinating (and sometimes darkly humorous) look at how technology has supercharged crime in the 2020s.
Show Notes
We think of consumers and mainstream corporations as embracing remote work and the gig economy, but did you know there are also, for example, Signal groups, labeled ājobsā that Australian kids are using to get quick cash while doing chores and errands (+ the occasional firebombings) for an Iraqi crime syndicate, largely based over 8,000 miles away in Iraq?
This is not just an Australian problem. Mexican Cartels like CJNG (Jalisco New Generation) and Sinaloa are recruiting Fortnite.
The Iraqi Crime Syndicate Terrorizing Melbourne
The Broad Scene
An Iraq-based organized crime syndicate (often linked to figures like Kazem āKazā Hamad and referred to as āthe Cartelā) is directing or strongly suspected in a wave of extortion, firebombings, shootings, and related violence targeting businesses in Melbourne. This has escalated notably in recent years, especially since around 2023 with the ātobacco wars,ā and has expanded into hospitality/nightlife venues in 2026.
* As reported by the Sydney Morning Herald: Kazem Hamad (an Iraqi-born Australian deported in 2023) and associates in Baghdad are alleged to orchestrate operations remotely. Hamad was arrested in Iraq in early 2026 at Australiaās request. Threats and directions come via encrypted apps from overseas. A 23-year-old Australian in Baghdad (linked to Hamadās network) is also implicated.
* The Guardian reports on how street-level crews (often teenagers or young offenders) are recruited via encrypted messaging apps to carry out attacks. Organized crime figures assign contracts to local āheads of street crews,ā who then use youths as foot soldiers for arson, burglaries, or intimidation. Police have arrested numerous teens (some as young as 13-17) in connection with these incidents. This is described as a broader trend of organized crime exploiting youth gangs.
* The violence has grown from tobacco-related turf wars (firebombings, shootings) to broader āalcohol warsā or hospitality attacks in 2026, with dozens of venues targeted. Itās linked to illicit tobacco/drug trades funding larger networks. Police operations (e.g., Operation Eclipse, Carmen) are ongoing, with infighting reported after key arrests. (See The Daily News Now! Podcast from Melbourne News Today).
* Attacks often aim to force businesses (tobacco shops, bars, nightclubs, restaurants) to pay āprotectionā or taxes (e.g., the āKaz taxā), stock illicit products, or comply with demands. Venues have received threats of monthly payments (e.g., around $10,000 reported in some cases) to avoid firebombing. Non-compliance leads to arson or violence. This has caused a surge in arson crimes (e.g., 68% increase linked to tobacco wars).
* Note: The tobacco wars are an ongoing series of violent turf wars between organized crime groups fighting for control of the lucrative illicit (black market) tobacco trade in Victoria, Australia, particularly Melbourne
* According to the Guardian, the conflict intensified around March 2023 after a meeting of key underworld figures failed to agree on controlling prices and distribution of illicit products. This led to a wave of retaliatory violence
* The main fighting parties are several outlaw motorcycle gangs, the Haddara crime family, and Victoria Police (notably Taskforce Lunar) responding to the conflict
* Kazem Hamad has also been linked
* Per the wikipedia entry on this: āThe illegal tobacco trade in Australia is highly lucrative due to high taxation on legal tobacco.ā (they have some of the worldās highest cigarette taxes)
How the Crime is Organized
* Leadership uses Signal to recruit and assign tasks to local youths in crime networks, including those linked to Kazem Hamad-associated syndicates (the Cartel)
* Teens are ideal recruits because they face lighter juvenile justice consequences
* Tasks are assigned in group chats
* Per the Sydney Morning Herald, one documented example of the group chats was titled ājobsā
* Offers for jobs range from a few hundred dollars to $1,000 to over $20,000 for significant attacks
* E.g. a venue firebombing would get you something more in the $20K range
* The police and media are referring to this as a āCrimeTaskerā model (akin to Airtasker, which I guess is Australiaās TaskRabbit)
* They often use whatsapp for the actual extortion demands to business owners after attacks
* So signal = for admin and operational recruitment
* Whatsapp = for PR and comms
* Payment
* Extorted people pay the local gig workers in cash
* Larger syndicate profits (e.g. extortion tax profits, illicit tobacco sales) undergo more sophisticated money laundering
Other Modern Organized Crime
Mexican Drug Cartels (Recruitment and Tasking)
Cartels like CJNG (Jalisco New Generation) and Sinaloa excel at tech-enabled remote operations:
* They post fake job ads (e.g., security guards) on Facebook/Instagram, then shift recruits to WhatsApp/Signal for training and assignments. They also recruit teens via video games (Fortnite, Call of Duty, GTA V) for hitman/sicario roles or smuggling, offering cash incentives.
* HOW IT WORKS
* Per InSight Crime, recruiters (or cartel-linked players) join public multiplayer sessions or lobbies, especially late at night when parental supervision is lower.
* They send direct messages, friend requests, or group invites via in-game chat. Profiles often feature glamorous or intimidating imagery (e.g., bulletproof vests, weapons, cartel symbols).
* Common hooks: Complimenting the playerās skills (āYouāre good at thisāwant to do it for real?ā), promising adventure, money, guns, cars, or status. They may frame it as a ājobā (e.g., security, lookout) or an āeventā like a virtual recruitment drive.
* They play together to build trust
* Then they transition to private chats
* Discord, Twitch, WhatsApp, or Signal)
* Then they exploit vulnerabilities: As ABC4 reports, they target isolated or bored youths, those fascinated by violence/weapons (common in shooter games), or from low-income backgrounds. Promises often include weekly pay (e.g., $200+ for low-level roles like lookouts) and escalation to higher-paying criminal tasks.
* Finally, they escalate
* Once hooked, recruits may receive travel instructions, small initial tasks (e.g., local surveillance), or smuggling runs.
* As InSite Crime reports, Cartels like CJNG, Sinaloa, or Cartel del Noreste (CDN) have been linked to these efforts. Roles start small (messengers, lookouts) and can progress to violence or drug transport.
* EXAMPLES
* The Free Fire Cases (Most Documented, 2021): In Oaxaca, Mexico, three boys aged 11ā14 were recruited via Garena Free Fire (a battle royale game similar to Fortnite). A recruiter posed as a peer, offered jobs as lookouts with weekly pay, and bought bus tickets to northern Mexico. Authorities intercepted them. Similar cases involved girls and other minors lured for trafficking or cartel work. Mexican officials highlighted this as a pattern across games.
* GTA Online Drug Mule Recruitment (US-Mexico, ~2021ā2022): A woman in Arizona was recruited while playing GTA Online. She met a man in the game who offered her a ājobā transporting what she thought were electronics (actually methamphetamine). She was arrested with ~60kg of meth. US Customs and Border Protection linked it to Mexican cartels using the game for real-world runners.
* GTA V Recruitment Event (2021): A teen received an in-game invite at 3 a.m. to a virtual āRECLUTAMIENTO ABIERTOā (open recruitment) event tied to Cartel del Noreste (CDN) and Old School Zetas. The recruiterās profile showed militarized gear.
* Remote leaders coordinate border smuggling, hits, and extortion using apps.
* US teens/citizens are increasingly targeted for low-level tasks like drug transport.
* This is highlighted in the latest season of Euphoria
Dark Web and Crime-as-a-Service (CaaS)
* As ICE.gov reports (a think tank about organized crime), Darknet marketplaces (e.g., successors to Silk Road, AlphaBay) function like eBay for illicit goods/servicesādrugs, weapons, stolen data, hacking tools, fake IDs, and even hitman services.
* Groups offer ācrime-as-a-serviceā with hierarchies, reviews, and escrow payments (often crypto).
* Eastern European and international networks dominate.
* Forums divide labor
* Coders sell malware, others handle distribution or enforcement.
Gig Economy Terrorism
Core Model: āVirtual Plottersā and Remote Direction
ISIS pioneered a system of āvirtual entrepreneursā or āvirtual plottersā ā handlers operating from overseas (e.g., Syria/Iraq) who identify, groom, and guide attackers remotely.
This lowers risk for the group while scaling impact through crowdsourced or gig-style terrorism
HOW IT WORKS
* Recruitment flow (per a GWU Program on Extremism report)
* Starts on open platforms (Twitter/X, Facebook, TikTok, Instagram) with propaganda
* Then shifts to encrypted messaging (primarily Telegram, also WhatsApp, Signal, or apps like Surespot/Wickr) for secure, one-on-one or small-group coordination
* Tasking
* Handlers assign specific ājobsā ā e.g., āconduct a vehicle ramming here,ā āmake a bomb with these instructions,ā or āfilm a pledge and attack.ā
* They provide logistics, targets, and encouragement, sometimes arranging weapons caches. (NYT)
* Incentives:
* Ideological (martyrdom, caliphate glory), status, or occasional financial/support elements, similar to crime bounties
* Propaganda magazines like Dabiq, Rumiyah, or al-Qaedaās Inspire act as ājob boardsā with open-source jihad tutorials (e.g., āHow to Make a Bomb in Your Momās Kitchenā). (Foreign Policy Research Institute)
This creates a distributed, low-barrier model: anyone sympathetic can āsign upā by pledging allegiance online and receiving guidance.
Key Examples and Case Studies
* Hyderabad, India Plot (2015ā2016):
* The NY Times reported on a prime āremote gigā case in which an ISIS handler āvirtual plotterā guided engineer Mohammed Ibrahim Yazdani and a cell for 17 months via messaging apps.
* Instructions included collecting hidden explosives/chemicals from drop points, weapons details, and attack planning in a tech hub.
* The cell was in near-constant contact until arrests.
* This was not a lone wolf but a remotely directed operation.
* Europe Attacks (2014ā2016):
* GWUās Program on Extremism made a report on how virtual plotters directed or inspired ~19 of 38 ISIS-related attacks in Western Europe.
* Examples include Paris (2015) and Brussels (2016) networks using Telegram for coordination.
* Handlers provided real-time guidance, bomb-making tips, and target selection.
* Lone Wolf / Inspired Attacks:
* The Combating Terrorism Center at West Point reported on how ISIS encouraged decentralized acts globally.
* Supporters were radicalized via social media, moved to Telegram channels for instructional content (e.g., attack tutorials, target suggestions), and sometimes received direct coaching.
* Examples include vehicle attacks, stabbings, and shootings where perpetrators cited ISIS inspiration and had online contact.
* Ongoing Digital Ecosystem:
* Small Wars Journal addresses how even after territorial losses, ISIS maintains decentralized networks of supporters producing propaganda, translating content, and running channels on Telegram.
* These act as distributed ācontent creatorsā and recruiters, with some providing cybersecurity training or crypto donation guides for funding operations.
Tech Platforms Used by Criminals
* According to the International Association of Chiefs of Police: EncroChat, Sky ECC, Phantom Secure, and others: These were specialized encrypted phone services used by European and international syndicates (e.g., Italian mafia, Albanian groups, drug cartels, motorcycle gangs). Users coordinated drug shipments, contract killings, torture, and money laundering across borders. Law enforcement infiltrated or shut them down in major operations (e.g., EncroChat in 2020 led to hundreds of arrests in Europe and beyond; similar for Sky ECC and Phantom). Messages included planning murders and sharing proof of killings.
* ANOM (FBI sting): The FBI ran a fake encrypted platform that criminals adopted globally (over 12,000 devices in 100+ countries). It enabled remote coordination by Italian mafia, outlaw motorcycle gangs, and drug syndicates until the 2021 takedown (Operation Trojan Shield), resulting in 800+ arrests. (See: FBIās Encrypted Phone Platform Infiltrated Hundreds of Criminal Syndicates; Result is Massive Worldwide Takedown)
* Signal, Telegram, WhatsApp: Commonly used for operational tasking, recruitment, and extortion. Mexican cartels and others move conversations to these after initial social media contact. (per the International Association of Chiefs of Police)
Episode Transcript
Simone Collins: [00:00:00] Hello, Malcolm. Iām excited to be speaking with you today because did you know that Iraqis and crime syndicates and Mexican cartels are using signal groups and WhatsApp and also, like, I donāt know, Fortnite and various- It,
Malcolm Collins: itās really missing.
When you told me about this this morning, youāre like, āOh yeah, crime groups have started using gig work.ā And Iām like, āOh, cool. You mean like in Westworld too?ā
Speaker 5: Like I said, Iāve got bills to pay
Speaker 6: I gotta get my stats up. Do more personals. You do personals?
Speaker 5: Nah.
Speaker 6: You should. Your stats are shitty, man. I donāt get it.
Speaker 5: Iām an underachiever. Look, I think we should [00:01:00] keep moving.
I donāt wanna be logged together.
Speaker 6: Relax, Iāve been ghost on that s**t since I walked up in here
Malcolm Collins: and sheās like, āYeah, and guess whoās doing it mostly?ā And I was like, āI donāt know,ā like, and sheās like, āMostly terrorist networks.ā And then-
Simone Collins: Yeah, itās worse.
Itās worse because who are they recruiting? At least in the Westworld like arc where they were using like apps to do crimes, it, it was adults. What theyāre using instead is like 11 to 14-year-olds. Why? Because for these people, one, theyāre like they canāt really think through it that well, but also theyāre not going to be put away for life or executed for their crimes.
So to them also, even just logically, the price of doing this, you know, if you and I were ask like, āHey, you know, what do you need in terms of payment to firebomb a building?ā Weād be like, āWell, probably a lot of money.ā You know, even if thereās like no one inside- Yeah ... the place they could hurt, like
Malcolm Collins: I donāt want- I, I, we havenāt had our price, but for firebombing a [00:02:00] building, itās pretty high for me.
Simone Collins: Yeah. I mean, and, and if this is assuming that we are sociopaths, we donāt care about the human cost, and weāre just worried about our liability. But the liability for minors in most countries is super low. So for them itās like, āYeah, Iāll, Iāll take 20 grand for that. Letās go.ā Like, āIāve always wanted to firebomb a building anyway.ā
I think even like
Malcolm Collins: most minors would think that that was like an interesting and fun thing. Like- Itās a good deal ... eventually Iām gonna kill someone, right? Like- Yeah.
Simone Collins: Well, imagine, so I mean, itās also very smart. Youāre playing Grand Theft Auto, like y- youāre already preselected for being kind of like interested in recreationally committing acts of violence or crimes, right?
Yeah. And then like someone starts chatting with you, and theyāre like, āHey,ā and theyāre like, āWell, look tough.ā You know, like they have some kind of profile picture with them in a bulletproof vest or something, right? And theyāre like, āHey kid, you wanna, you wanna do some crime?ā And youāre like, āThis is fun.ā
You wanna
do some crime? You
know, itās like first youāre, youāre doing the lookout, but itās like, āHey, youāre getting like $200 a week and stuff,ā right? And like this is real money for a [00:03:00] kid that, you know, isnāt legally allowed to get a job. Like, I was recently looking at how old our kids have to be in order to get a job, ācause our son really wants to work at Tractor Supply.
Itās like his top ambition. And- And
Malcolm Collins: becoming an employee at Tractor Supply is-
Simone Collins: Yeah, like I think even at age 16 is, which is when you can start to work in the, in the state of Pennsylvania where we are, like it can only be for like family businesses- Oh ... and like not really a job. Like it, itās bad. So for a, a 14-year-old, 11-year-old kid who like canāt get cash anywhere else, who likes playing Grand Theft Auto, and some cool tough guy is like talking you up and being like, āHey, I donāt know.
Iāll give you a job. I need you to be a lookout.ā And you feel like, oh, Iām, Iām, Iām being given missions. Itās all on like secret encrypted apps. Iām getting money. Like, yeah, itās kind of a no-brainer. I mean, not to judgment to know that this is super bad and wrong and dangerous and a slippery slope.
Well, and this
Malcolm Collins: firebombing of buildings thing isnāt a hypothetical. Itās something that has actually been done multiple times. [00:04:00]
Simone Collins: Yeah. So Iām gonna go through the, the actual like both tactics of whatās actually going on, plus like the cases of, of this happening. I have, I have examples of terrorism. I have example of cartels.
I have examples of, of kids moving drugs, moving tons of really dangerous stuff around where
Malcolm Collins: kids-
Simone Collins: This is
Malcolm Collins: so cool. I just... Take a step back from this for a second. How can we get our kids in on this or get into this ourselves, right? You know? Is there, is there some utilization of this that I just havenāt thought through yet?
The problem-
Simone Collins: How do we recruit children on Fortnite to get them to- The
Malcolm Collins: problem is that even extremist pronatalism is just so constructive-
Simone Collins: Yeah ...
Malcolm Collins: that there isnāt really any sort of terroristic activity that would be of utility to even the most extremist of our movement, right?
Simone Collins: Itās notable though, like y- y- you start to think about it, like even from a child labor standpoint, like if youāre willing to You know recruit illegal child labor, like [00:05:00] clearly there are, there are pathways to doing it.
There, and this is just another like, piece of evidence pointing to the fact that children want to work. Children want jobs, okay? I
Malcolm Collins: got it. Iāve got it. What, what pronatalist terrorism looks like is basically the anime Shimoneta. Okay ... you know, explaining to people that real sex exists and they should be out there doing it, right?
You know, very subversive in our society compared to what they think sex is these
Simone Collins: days. Oh my God. Okay. Iām just... Weāre gonna start at the very beginning of how I learned about this from one of our base camp community members, this goes out to you about the Iraqi crime syndicate, syndicate that is terrorizing Melbourne, Australia, which is insane, and I had not heard about until this very morning.
So let me set the scene. Whatās [00:06:00] happening basically is an Iraqi-based organized crime syndicate thatās often linked to figures like Hazem Hamad also referred to as the cartel is directing or strongly suspected in a wave of, a big wave of extortion and firebombings and shootings and other related acts of violence that are targeting businesses in Melbourne, like especially nightclubs, but not just nightclubs.
Itās, itās, itās getting a lot worse, and thatās why this person listening to our podcast was bringing it up. Heās like, āIād really like you to talk about how much worse crime is now in Australia.ā Like, itās, itās getting to the point where citizens are like, āHey, can like someone, can someone check this out?
Like Iām getting scared.ā And itās, it, it really started getting worse around 2023 with what are referred to as the Tobacco Wars. Which were sort of... It, it, the Tobacco Wars in Australia involve Australia being one of the highest tobacco or like cigarette tax countries in the entire world, [00:07:00] which on the surface of course sounds like a good idea, right?
Like, oh, we, we donāt want people to die of lung cancer. Yeah. Maybe we should tax cigarettes. But then, oh then like motorcycle gangs start selling illegal cigarettes, and then like, then or, you know, Iraqi gangs- Did they
Malcolm Collins: literally get the smokers from the movie Waterworld?
Simone Collins: Oh my God, they... Australia canāt stop like making Road Warrior happen.
Speaker 8: How about smokes?
Speaker 7: Uh, n- n- zero. Zero, zero smokes.
Speaker 8: I remember when this used to be fun. How long has it been since weāve had a really good crusade?
Speaker 7: I know, I know.
Speaker 8: Tell me, how long?
Speaker 7: Oh, uh, I, I donāt know. I, I-
Speaker 8: Remember, uh, there used to be atolls on every horizon.
Speaker 7: Mm-hmm.
Speaker 8: Where the hell are they all going? Well, we sunk a few.
Speaker 7: I found
Simone Collins: every time we cover Australia, Iām like, āOh my God, itās the smokers. What is happening?ā I didnāt even think of that when I read this. Itās just... [00:08:00] I love it though, the aesthetics. I mean like, yes, make go Australia, go. But get these... What the... There are real Iraqis in Road
Malcolm Collins: Warrior. One of our weekend episodes, weāre pointing out that Australiaās running out of oil right now and is in a really bad position, and theyāre basically already at
Speaker: Looks like I got myself some gusa lean eight.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah.
But continue.
Simone Collins: Anyway, as reported by the Sydney Morning Herald, Kazem Hammad, heās an Iraqi-born Australian who was deported in 2023 and his associates in Baghdad, so theyāre not all in Australia, theyāre 8,000 miles away are alleged to orchestrate operations remotely. Hammad himself was arrested in Iraq in early 2026, like this year, per Australiaās request.
So Australiaās like, āHey, this, this guyās like a really big problem. Can you please arrest him?ā And they did. And then threats and directions, they come in from his associates, and maybe him too, [00:09:00] via encrypted apps, mostly Signal. Like, they use WhatsApp to send the extortion messages, but they use Signal for the work.
Okay, so letās just go through, you know, like they have different purposes, using this in a very you know, organized fashion. Oh, one second. Sorry. Itās me. Itās the fertility company. Hello, this is Simone for example, in, in Baghdad who are sending orders to Australia to, like, their distributed network of child street urchins is, is another relatively young 23-year-old Australian, but he, he again is in Iraq. So this is, this is people very remotely organizing these crime rings. The Guardian reports on how street battle crews, who are often teenagers, very young offenders, are recruited via encrypted messaging apps to carry out attacks, and the organized crime figures, often in Iraq, are assigning contracts to local heads of street crews, so you kinda like make your way up in the ranks, you know, who then, [00:10:00] like, will use local youths or foot- as foot soldiers, and itās the youths who commit the arson and the burglaries and the intimidation.
Police have arrested tons of teens. Some are as young as 13 in, in these cases in Australia in connection with the incidents. And it is something thatās relatively new in Australia, so theyāre really learning how to begin contending with, like, all of these really uniquely young people doing this stuff.
Like normally I think people are accustomed to like, you know, adult biker gangs, for example, like where the tobacco war started. Like, okay, itās these scary, These scary adults,
Malcolm Collins: right?
Simone Collins: Yeah. Nothing scarier than a
Malcolm Collins: teenager with nothing to lose, right?
Simone Collins: Right. And I think thatās the thing is, is you donāt expect these in like sort of developed countries, you know, where like thereās universal public school and, like, thereās not widespread impoverishment.
Like, youād expect crime-involved sea urchins and... Not sea urchins. Oh my God. Street urchins in like- Sea
[00:11:00] urchins.
Sea urchins. Watch out for them too, though. In like India where thereās widespread poverty and thereās just a ton of kids out on the streets, like in some areas, right? And weāve, weāve both traveled to countries where like, kids get involved with pick, pickpocketing rings and stuff.
But like not in Australia, so like the police really donāt know how to deal with this quite yet. But itās, it is getting quite extreme because whereas before it was just like small kind of local crime stuff, now itās firebombings, itās shootings. And these attacks are meant to force businesses, including tobacco shops, bars, nightclubs, and restaurants, to basically pay protection or taxes.
A lot of people are calling it the Kaz Tax after the Iraq- Iraqi, like, basically terrorist. And then it, theyāre also forcing them to stock illicit products. Like, āYou have to stock my illegal cigarettes or else.ā And, and sometimes theyāre, you know, charging [00:12:00] really high prices for the illegal stock.
And if, if they donāt, if they donāt stock the cigarettes, if they donāt pay the tax, they get firebombed.
Malcolm Collins: So they invented the mob, but outsourced.
Simone Collins: Yeah, itās, itās like a, yeah. Well, itās, itās really like the mob, but I donāt have to leave my house, and Iām just gonna have, like, teenagers commit the actual crimes because theyāre not gonna, you know, go to jail for life for it.
And that theyāll be much more likely to do it if they donāt know better. Yeah ... and it, itās just cucking people. I mean,
Malcolm Collins: itās kind of clever when you think about it,
Simone Collins: right? Itās extremely clever. Iām, I have massive respect for them, honestly. Well, Iām even thinking,
Malcolm Collins: like, how do you even hypothetically fight against something like this, right?
Simone Collins: Thatās, that, actually, thatās, like, the scariest thing about it is I mean, so they, Australia was able to get this guy arrested, and then after he got out, there was a 68% spike in crime. Like, itās very clear that when you put away very specific [00:13:00] people you can, for example, take out a, a decent chunk of crime in, like, isolated cases or certain crime types.
The
Malcolm Collins: problem I think is, and, and this is the reality of it, if itās 68% tied to one guy, right? This is Australia being a pussy. If this stuff was happening in freaking Tel Aviv, we know what would happen to this guy in, like, four days, okay? And it would be public and brutal in some way so everyone else knew, āDonāt do this,ā right?
They need to start acting like the Jews and just killing people who annoy them. W- a- and people are like, āYou canāt do that on an international stage.ā Do you know itās the only realistic way to deal with something like this at a government level. And this guy isnāt even a citizen. Heās an outsider, whatever.
Weāre allowed to kill non-citizens, right? Like our government is killing people.
Simone Collins: Is he a citizen? He was, I think he was Australian-born, and then he was, like, deported to... I, I canāt remember. But itās- Iāll
Malcolm Collins: tell you what, if I was president you know, I, I think we [00:14:00] need to, to be far more aggressive about dealing with this sort of stuff.
Simone Collins: Well, letās talk about how itās done, okay? So the way it works if youāre gonna be a remote work crime boss, is you use, at least in the case of, like, this Iraqi crime syndicate that you use Signal to both recruit and then assign tasks to local youths in your crime networks. I, yeah, there, thereās one Signal group, for example, that was associated with these ones in Australia just called Jobs, where you just, like, go look for, like, a job.
You know, just, just like, you know, āHey, $100 to be a lookout. You know, $500, like, rough someone up.ā
Malcolm Collins: Jobs, yeah. Just go out and go beat this guy up. Yeah, you
Simone Collins: know? Just, just give, give jobs to the youth. The offers range from, like, a few hundred dollars to 1,000 to over $20,000 for significant attacks. Like a, a venue firebombing would get you something more in the 20K range, ācause that, you know, you gotta buy supplies.
You gotta plan it. You know, itās probably more liability, but not if youāre, like, you know, if youāre super [00:15:00] young, what are you gonna do? Like, imagine your home life sucks already. Yeah. Like, maybe your parents are abusive. Right. Thereās not food, like, all these things, and then, like, you go to, like, some kind of juvenile prison, which, you know, depending on the country, right, could be pretty decent.
Youāre out when youāre, like, 21 years old. Like-
Malcolm Collins: The other, the other good thing about this and, and good way to deal with this, and itās shocking to me that theyāre not doing this well, is as soon as you catch one person doing this, you can find out where theyāve gotten the job from- Yeah ... and then basically just infiltrate the network, right?
Simone Collins: Yeah ...
Malcolm Collins: spoof the accounts of the bad actors and just act like them and- Thatās,
Simone Collins: thatās exactly how this goes. A lot of these things are discovered through massive data breaches. Iām gonna, Iām gonna go into in a little bit some examples of ways that law enforcement has uncovered and also taken down and arrested associates.
So, letās go into some other modern organized crime using [00:16:00] these distributed methods. I think the more, the more impressive ones, even more impressive than this, this whole Iraqi child crime syndicates
Malcolm Collins: network is- Are most of these people, what are they ethnically, the kids that they target? Are they mostly white kids
Simone Collins: or- You know, thatās not specified.
I think itās one of those things like how in the article- If
Malcolm Collins: itās not specified,
Simone Collins: theyāre
Malcolm Collins: Muslim ...
Simone Collins: theyāre telling you. And-
Malcolm Collins: If itās not specified, theyāre Muslim. If they were white, theyād be mentioning that all over the articles.
Simone Collins: Maybe, yeah. It, it... Oh my God. It does not show up in the articles. Okay, give me one second.
Yeah, that
Malcolm Collins: everybody knows news code now. Suspect race not mentioned means the suspect is either Black or Muslim, and suspect race mentioned means theyāre white.
Simone Collins: So the, the most impressive players, in my opinion, which shouldnāt be any surprise, is the Mexican drug cartels. So cartels like the Jalisco New Generation and Sinaloa excel at this kind of tech-enabled remote operation. They post fake ad jobs like, āIām looking for a [00:17:00] security guardā on Facebook or Instagram, which I could totally see this.
And then they shift the recruits to WhatsApp and Signal for training and assignments, and they do a little bit of a bait and switch. Like, yeah, itās a sec- security guard, lookout guy, like whatās the, really whatās the difference? Donāt you need money? Donāt you need money though? I mean, youāre responding to a job ad on Instagram for real, like you think youāre gonna get a better job.
And they- And yeah, theyāre already
Malcolm Collins: filtering there with the type of people who are
Simone Collins: responding to the job ads on Facebook. No, like filtering, yeah. An even better filtering is how theyāre using games like Fortnite and Call of Duty and GTA V for recruiting because, one, youāre getting kids, and two, and also theyāre, theyāre doing this at like 2:00 AM.
So youāre like in Fortnite 2:00 AM finding kids. Like these are kids who are like, they enjoy a little bit of like violent role play, especially like GTA. So per Insight Crime, the recruiters will join public multiplayer sessions or [00:18:00] lobbies really late at night when itās expected like parents arenāt really watching or, you know, these are kids whose parents just arenāt there, who arenāt disciplined enough to keep tabs on their kids, which is perfect.
Like the selection criteria there is just so clever, I think. And they, theyāll DM them or send them a friend request or a group invite using the in-game chat. And they will have profiles or profile images- Mm-hmm ... that feature really like intimidating im- imagery or something really glamorous to, to a kid.
So you know, like cartel symbols or weapons or something, right?
Malcolm Collins: Or like a b- a, a buff guy or something.
Simone Collins: Yeah, like Andrew Tate style. You know what I mean. You know what I mean. And then theyāll like sort of love bomb them, you know, cult style. Like be like, āOh, youāre really good at this game. Do you wanna do it for real?ā
Malcolm Collins: Ooh, that sounds spicy.
Simone Collins: I mean, I feel like
Malcolm Collins: every time I hear about a money-making opportunity, Iām always just like, āIs this something we can make a few bucks off
Simone Collins: of?ā Oh [00:19:00]
Malcolm Collins: God.
Simone Collins: Stop them. You know? And then theyāll, theyāll promise, you know, money and adventure and guns and cars and status and they might frame it as a job, like a security guard or a lookout.
So like they, they might even pretend itās fairly like above board for a little bit. Or they might even frame it as like an event for some kind of virtual recruitment drive. And then they play together, like they build rapport, they become friends. And then they transition to private chats. So they get them off Fortnite or GTA V, and they get them onto Discord or Twitch or WhatsApp or Signal, and then they switch to exploiting vulnerabilities.
So ABC4 reports that the, they really go for super isolated or bored youths who are fascinated by violence or weapons which is why they really go for the shooter games. Mm-hmm. They also really go for kids from low-income backgrounds because [00:20:00] for those kids they can even make this argument like, āHey look, juvenile prison is gonna be better than your home environment.ā
And in many ways it probably is. So the kids are like, āYeah, this is a win-win.ā
Malcolm Collins: But much is that juvenile prison that you go into with being in on one of the gangs.
Simone Collins: Yeah. Like, yeah, exactly.
Malcolm Collins: Like, do you understand? You, you get there day one, youāve got a friend network, youāre already kinda cool, like-
Simone Collins: Yeah, like Iām a Sinaloa kid.
Like yeah, itās, yeah, youāre one of the, youāre one of the cool ...
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, itās like youāre auto in. Thatās, thatās pretty
Simone Collins: interesting. The payment per week is I, I think really impressive. Like my allowance When I did a lot of chores. I think at the height of it was, it started at $5 a week, and I think the most was ever 20.
Oh, never got
Malcolm Collins: more than $5 a week.
Simone Collins: Yeah, I think $5 a week was the most. Yeah, like I would, I, I made most of my money from pet sitting. These kids are getting over $200 a week for low-level roles like lookouts. So the pay is good. And then- Yeah. [00:21:00] Yeah, right? So like, you, you, youāre doing pretty easy work.
Youāre just being a lookout, and then theyāre like, āHey, you know, listen, youāre really good at this. You wanna do more?ā And youāre like, āYeah. Yes, I wanna do more.ā Like, this is, this is life-changing money for a kid, you know? You, you ... People forget, being a kid can be fun, sure, but like, being a kid can also really suck.
You donāt get to determine what you eat, where you live, what you do on a daily basis. And nobody treats you with respect. Yeah. And no one believes you, no one treats you with respect, and here you are. Youāre earning real money. It, itās, itās, itās very game-changing for a kid. And then, then they escalate.
So once, once youāre hooked, and I imagine itās very easy to get hooked, recruits can start to receive travel instructions or small tasks turn into smuggling runs. And this nonprofit, this, like, think tank that looks at crime and does a lot of investigation called InCrime, they report that cartels like CJNG and [00:22:00] Sinaloa or Cartel del Noreste are linked to these types of recruiting efforts.
Like, the biggest players are doing this. It always starts small, like youāre a messenger or youāre a lookout, and then they become big, like you are transporting, you know, possibly millions of dollars worth of drugs or you are killing people. So there are some examples that have been fairly prominently covered.
The, the most famously covered is a 21, 2021 case- In Oaxaca, Mexico, there were three boys aged 11 to 14, 11 years old that were recruited via Garena Free Fire. This is a battle royale game similar to Fortnite. I, I donāt think itās something that is an English language game. A recruiter posed as, like, a, another kid, and then offered them jobs as lookouts with weekly pay, and then it- the, the recruiter bought them bus tickets to Northern Mexico.
This is the point at which, thank goodness, the boys were [00:23:00] intercepted. But then similar cases that have also been covered involve girls and other minors that have been lured either for trafficking or cartel work. And this is a very common pattern across games, so itās not like thereās one game where this is the problem.
Then thereās this prominent US and Mexico 2021 to 2022 drug mule problem involving Grand Theft Auto. So one young woman in Arizona was recruited while playing Grand Theft Auto online. She met a man in the game who offered her a job transporting what she thought were electronics. Guess what it was instead?
Malcolm Collins: Was it drugs?
Simone Collins: Yeah. It was meth. It was meth. She was
Malcolm Collins: arrested- I, I I love that, like, the moment I hear itās a girl, Iām like, āOh, sheās gonna get raped. Sheās gonna get sold into sex
Simone Collins: slavery.ā I know. This is, this is the happy case.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, this is the positive outcome from girl meets guy from Grand Theft Auto whoās in a gang.
Simone Collins: For real. Yeah, no, no, she was just arrested [00:24:00] with 60 kilograms of meth. Thatās all. Itās fine. US Customs and Border Protection linked this to Mexican cartels using the game for real-world runners. But keep in mind, this is a young woman in Arizona. This is not, like, some, you know, kid in a poor hovel in Mexico or something.
And then thereās another 2021 GTA V recruitment event. Thereās a teen who received an in-game invite at 3:00 AM, a virtual, letās see- A reclutamiento al- abierto, an open recruitment event tied to Cartel del Noreste and old school Zeta
Malcolm Collins: Honestly, given how y- you know, the kids these are so pessimistic about the future- Yeah
theyāre also nihilistic, like-
Simone Collins: Yeah ... itās
Malcolm Collins: really exciting for a lot of kids.
Simone Collins: Itās, no, itās compelling. Itās compelling. And yeah, so this, thereās basically this thing where you have, like, on top you have, like, the actual cartel or gang that I imagine still resembles a proper gang. You know, you [00:25:00] got the tattooed adults, or whatever, the tough-looking, scary Armenians or- The tattooed adults
Malcolm Collins: Armenians. Why are you going hard on Armenians here
Simone Collins: today? Because Armenians feature prominently in the latest season of Euphoria, and theyāre really scary. And theyāre, theyāre a lot, thereās, thereās, thereās a lot. They, they have, theyāre white neo-Nazi dr- drug runners. Theyāre also thereās, like, a, a Black cowboy like- Okay,
Malcolm Collins: okay
Simone Collins: sex trafficker essentially, and then thereās the, the Armenians. The Armenians are the scariest in my opinion. And-
Malcolm Collins: Armenians are the scariest
Simone Collins: Yeah, dude, watch it. You know, but itās, itās actually really good. But one of the major themes, and in fact the, the primary protagonist in the latest season of S- of Euphoria, which is one of the few remaining shows thatās kind of like an event show to watch it, it starts with her being a drug runner, and I was like, āAdam, this is not a very relatable plot.ā
But now Iām like, oh my [00:26:00] God, is this like, is this a thing that the youths do now? Is this-
Malcolm Collins: Is this more relatable for kids than I thought?
Simone Collins: Yeah, like is this a zeitgeist show? I thought this was like a, oh, this would be crazy. But theyāre all... Theyāre either drug runners or basically sex workers, like, on OnlyFans and stuff.
Like, Sydney Sweeneyās in this. If youāve seen anything about Sydney Sweeney, like, and sex work, theyāre talking about Euphoria. Anyway though this is very zeitgeisty. I mean, the main character- Like, I would genuinely want to have
Malcolm Collins: gotten into this had I been younger. I would think itās cool. I
Simone Collins: would really want to break the rules.
Yeah, itās cool. Itās like you, you make money. Itās, itās subversive. Youāre aware of the fact that, like, the actual opportunity cost for you and the actual risk is relatively low, especially in countries... I mean, itās low assuming that your employer doesnāt kill you or get you killed.
Malcolm Collins: But-
Simone Collins: Which I think is discounting
Malcolm Collins: this is the thing that I think is where weāre gonna see this go, is- Yeah ... so there was a case recently where a kid in Turkey, and he had built this [00:27:00] company when he was in his 20, early 20s. Yeah. So when he was arrested, he was like 22 or 23, and so this mustāve been- 17 ... he mustāve been like 19, 18, something like that when he made this.
Heās like a fat kid from Iran, and he built a company that made where he scammed people out of a hu- I think it was like 3- Was this the
Simone Collins: farm thing? The-
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, $350 million or something, right? And it, it- And he
Simone Collins: was caught driving like s- like a Ferrari in Uruguay or something.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, yeah. But anyway, the point being is the moment, you know, some Iranian figures this out, right, in Iran, right?
Youāre gonna get youths that see these sorts of things and are like... āCause this is what I would think. Yeah,
Simone Collins: sign me up. Yeah, itās GTA V but, like, IRL. Please, letās, letās go.
Malcolm Collins: Well, not just that, but like, I bet I could run these operations better than these guys. For real. Yeah. But like now that itās entirely decentralized- I know, I know
and I can run this while going to school during the day. Actually, make a movie about this. This would be a really entertaining movie, about-
Simone Collins: Itād be a great movie. Yeah ...
Malcolm Collins: about a [00:28:00] kid whoās just like a normal kid during the day, but, but a la, like, A
Simone Collins: crime boss by night ...
Malcolm Collins: well, I mean, this kind of happened with the guy who created Silk Road, right?
Simone Collins: Ross Ulbricht, who got a Trump pardon. That my favorite Trump pardon, Ross Ulbricht. My
Malcolm Collins: favorite Trump pardon, too. Yeah. But imagine somebody-
Simone Collins: Actually, somebody, someone we know, I, I canāt name her Iāll tell you at dinner tonight, Just recently got breakfast with his mom randomly
Malcolm Collins: Ross Ulbrichtās mom?
What?
Simone Collins: Yeah. Youāre never gonna guess who it is either.
Malcolm Collins: I, I think I know who it is.
Simone Collins: Okay.
Malcolm Collins: The, our DC friend, female
Simone Collins: friend. No. No. No. Youāre never... I swear to God, youāre never gonna guess. Okay,
Malcolm Collins: well, here
Simone Collins: you go. I mean, the
Malcolm Collins: point, the point here being, Yeah ... I think, one, cool anime. Very, very familiar cool Itās cool TV
Simone Collins: format, dude.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, doing the, Should I write a story? I mean, like use, with AI, this would be a great like first story, right? To-
Simone Collins: Itās
Malcolm Collins: gonna be like- I donāt know. Iām interested in this. I, Iām interested-
Simone Collins: [00:29:00] We shouldnāt be glam- No, no, bad, bad. We shouldnāt be glamorizing this. Now I know, like I really have to be care- Like Octavian just this morning, āI wanna do like multiplayer online games.ā
He wants to play Among Us, he wants to play Minecraft. Now Iām gonna be like, āOh my God, like is someone, is someone gonna be recruiting him to become a drug runner if I let him play like multiplayer online games?ā Like how, how isolated does Arianna have to make our family to like-
Malcolm Collins: Actually, hold on.
To be even cooler about this, hereās, hereās an alt strategy you could do, right?
Simone Collins: Okay.
Malcolm Collins: It totally changes the way that you can even operate a gang, right? So right now, one of the challenges with operating these is theyāre often targeting state actors and stuff like that.
Simone Collins: Arenāt you about to give the cartels b- like operational advice?
Malcolm Collins: No. Like what if you create a sort of distributed cartel thatās just meant to soak cartel operations for money and supplies? Like and, and because itās completely distributed, itās way harder for [00:30:00] them to pin down whoever is actually leading things
Simone Collins: What do you mean? Like, how, how would this work? Do you be a supplier to them?
āCause there are, there are
Malcolm Collins: suppliers to them. No, no. You so if theyāre already doing these sorts of operations and stuff like that, you-
Simone Collins: Like you wanna be like an agency for the kids to be like, āMm, I represent them now. I take 20% and youāre not paying me now.ā
Malcolm Collins: No. You, you create a counter cartel, right?
Okay. That basically exploits the way that theyāre doing operational. Itās obviously very up upsetting- Oh, like you,
Simone Collins: you more effectively recruit the youth?
Malcolm Collins: No. You exploit the way that they are doing this to siphon money from them. So, this requires a lot of trust from one, the youth who are doing this.
Mm-hmm. So you can go in and spoof acting like cartel members, for example, to get people to do things that are counter cartel interests- Ooh ... within these particular regions in ways that can make you money through then [00:31:00] exploiting organizations and saying, āOh, you pay me X amount, you pay me Y amount to be safe.ā
You could, you could run some sort of counter cartel operation. Actually, I wonder if youāre doing this in developing countries like targeting, letās say big things like mining rigs and stuff like that, I bet you could make decent money with minimal risk of them just not being willing to pay you because the state operation that would come after you in these places is gonna be small, right?
So, if you tried to exploit mining facilities and stuff like that in places like Africa, and youāre doing this well, you could probably do pretty well. Or large banks and stuff like that. The problem is, is they already have to worry about generic terrorism, so how far could you go? I mean, thereās countries on like the edge of development, so like Peru would be an easy place to operate something like this.
Specifically because like historically, like if you look at the buildings, theyāre really made to be terrorism proof, but not anymore. Iām just thinking like if a kid was going to do this, how would you do it in todayās [00:32:00] economy?
Simone Collins: Well, you better figure it out soon because our oldest is gonna be 11 soon enough, and then you know,
Malcolm Collins: thereās 10-year-old safety And do you think heās gonna wait till 11 to start this sort of stuff, Simone?
Simone Collins: Yeah, fair enough. Heās really, like- I
Malcolm Collins: think heāll be on it at nine. Oh my God. Y- with his,
Illegal chicken farming, of course. That,
Simone Collins: thatās what he
Malcolm Collins: really
Simone Collins: wants to do. With his baby chick daycare. Yeah. Like I said, all he wants to do is work for Tractor Supply, babysit baby chicks. He wants to be there for the chicks, okay?
He, he canāt stop thinking of the chicks. Heās into
Malcolm Collins: chicks. Our kids really
Simone Collins: into chicks. The chicks. Yeah. I
Malcolm Collins: actually think that this is... The other thing I wanna take an opportunity to think about before we sign off on this topic
Simone Collins: is- Thereās actually more. Do you, can I give you a little more? Yeah, ācause this is, this is just fascinating stuff.
Just just so you know ice.gov has stuff on this too that I found to be interesting. Darknet marketplaces, like there are successors to the Silk Road like Alpha, Alpha [00:33:00] Bay. They function like, and this is why I was confused by what youāre proposing, like an eBay for illicit goods and services.
So there are groups that offer crime as a service with different hierarchies, and they have reviews, and they have escrow payments, often in crypto. Like itās, itās more secure. Theyāre, theyāre really heavy in Eastern Europe but, and, and internationally, but I mean, we could make it, you know, made in the USA edition, you know, MAGA edition.
Malcolm Collins: MAGA?
Simone Collins: And then thereās, there are coders who sell malware. There are people who, you know, handle the like hits and drugs and transport. Like thereās, thereās a whole economy. People specialize. But the, the core model for gig economy terrorism is also fascinating, and this is the even scarier part, right?
āCause you were talking about the exploitation of nihilism as part of the what makes this so effective and, and youth nihilism being super high. I think itās extra scary when itās not just, āOh, this is like for $200,ā but also like, āOh, Iāve finally been [00:34:00] given meaning and a community.ā Like, then you can get someone to do a whole lot more when that happens.
So hereās how terrorist groups are using these general approaches. The, thereās a George Washington University program on extremism. I pulled some of my sources from there. By the way, all the show notes are in, in Substack and on Patreon. Iāve linked all my sources. Theyāre detailed, so go read more there.
But the way it works is they will start on platforms like Twitter, I mean X, or Facebook or TikTok or Instagram with like propaganda, and then they shift from there to encrypted messaging, and hereās where like Telegram is also super heavy, but then thereās WhatsApp still and Signal, and then thereās also apps like SureSpot and Wickr, which Iāve never heard of before.
Malcolm Collins: Okay.
Simone Collins: But theyāre, I guess, good for secure one-on-one small group coordination. And then you get handlers assigning specific jobs like conduct a vehicle ramming here, or make a bomb with [00:35:00] these instructions, or film a pledge and attack. Like really scary stuff. And they will provide everything from the logistics to the targets and encouragement.
They can arrange weapons caches. You know, itās kind of like paint by numbers just with terrorism, which is terrifying. They just make it super easy. You know, like in the past I mean, even when you watch spy movies and stuff, right? Like, the spies have to do all the work, right? Like itās-- But now, like any kid can become James Bond.
You know, they have like their person whoās like, āDonāt worry, here are your tools. Hereās how to do it all.ā You know, and theyāre, they just like... But itās so cheap. Itās so inexpensive and so therefore scalable. And this now isnāt just about money, itās about martyrdom, itās about caliphate glory or status.
And sometimes of course thereās financial support too. So itās not just, itās like crime bounties plus all these other things that can make people do much more dangerous things. There are the [00:36:00] propaganda magazines that get people really like stoked about doing this stuff that include even like open source jihad tutorials.
The, the Foreign Policy Research Institute has scary stuff on that. So hereās some examples of this happening. Back even in twenty fifteen and twenty sixteen, there was this plot in India, in, in Hyderabad. The, The New York Times reported on this basically remote case in which an ISIS handler, a virtual plotter if you will guided an engineer named Mohammed Ibrahim Yazdani in a cell for seventeen months via messaging apps.
Detailed stuff. They, they instructed him on collecting hidden explosives and chemicals from drop points, and also weapons. They helped him attack or plan his attack an attack hub. The cell was in near constant contact until they were arrested, and this was not him at all acting alone. I think sometimes when we see reporting on [00:37:00] this, it seems like itās just one dude.
Yeah. But what weāre talking about is like thereās this just heās, this is one dude with a lot of support. Then there were a bunch of Europe attacks between twenty fourteen and twenty sixteen. A bunch of virtual plotters directed and/or inspired around nineteen out of the thirty-eight ISIS related attack, attacks that took place in Western Europe during that time.
Nineteen out of thirty-eight is a lot. And theyāre... That, that they were involved in the twenty fifteen Paris attack, the twenty sixteen Brussels attack. They used Telegram primarily for coordination. And these people are getting real-time guidance. Theyāre getting bomb making tips, and theyāre getting target selection.
And itās something that again is just not really... I think when we see news coverage of this, itās like, āOh, like some rando drove a van into a Christmas market.ā And what weāre not realizing is this isnāt some rando. This is like, this is an agent being puppeted by a [00:38:00] very sophisticated, carefully planned, planning cell.
Which is super creepy. There was a case in which- Oh I, Iāll just, you know, guys go to the show notes because I also wanted just to briefly talk about how law enforcement is trying to combat this. So thereās the, thereās this international association for the chiefs of police, which I find to be very cute for some reason, and I, I fell down a rabbit hole with them, but they were- Are, are they
Malcolm Collins: like a, do they look like stereotypical police chiefs?
Is it like goofy and like a top
Simone Collins: hat? Itās just cute. I just like, I see them like going, like I just imagine them going to the little police chief convention and being like, āIām the chief. Iām
the
chief. ā... crime is bad.ā Just, I donāt know. I just find, I donāt know why I find it so endearing, but I do. But they, they say that platforms like EncroChat, Sky ECC, Phantom Secure, and others are some of the like bespoke [00:39:00] crime-only platforms that have been created by especially European, but also like other international syndicates for use.
So instead of only just using Signal and Telegram and WhatsApp, they have developed these like specific dedicated bits of software, which I find to be interesting. These have been used by the Italian Mafia, by Albanian groups, drug cartels, and motorcycle gangs. And theyāve been used to coordinate drug shipments and, and do contract killings and things like torture, money laundering.
And law enforcement has, for the most part, infiltrated these or shut them down. Like in twenty-twenty, they shut down EncroChat, and, and this also led to dozens of arrests in Europe and beyond. So the danger in creating a dedicated crime software is that like youāre gonna become the number one target as soon as law enforcement learns about you, and they will because they will eventually get someone to snitch by basically being like, āYouāre going to jail for life unless you, you know, become a [00:40:00] snitch.ā
And-
Malcolm Collins: Yeah.
Simone Collins: Theyāre catching people planning murders. Theyāre catching people like coordinating torture sessions. It, itās horrible. Hereās my favorite FBI sting that happened. What did the FBI think? Theyāre like, āI have a great idea. Letās just build one of these and just tell everyone, āHey guys, I got the new, I got the new software platform for crime.
Time to come on here.āā And so they created Anom, A-N-O-M. Iām sure it stand... it stood for something. But it was a fake encrypted platform that criminals adopted globally. Like they got over twelve thousand devices in over a hundred countries that enabled remote coordination by the Italian Mafia and outlaw motorcycle gangs and drug syndicates.
And then in twenty-twenty-one, after they felt content that they had enough people on their platform, they, they, they committed what they called Operation Trojan Shield- ... which resulted in, in over a hundred arrests. And you can read more about it. The [00:41:00] FBI has a- Fantastic. Yeah. There, thereās an article called āFBIās Encrypted Phone Platform Infiltrated Hundreds of Criminal Syndicates.
Result is Massive Worldwide Takedown.ā So there is hope. Thereās hope that these things can result in some form of justice. And the great thing about there being all this documentation on Signal and Telegram and whatnot is like, okay, yeah, as much as these are, you know, encrypted chats, people take screenshots.
People take pictures of their phone even when you canāt take a screenshot in an app. Like, there are ways that, you know, if something is on a device, if something is ever written down, it can be documented. If something is uttered, honestly, around any kind of device, you know? So that, that is a thing. But I think for this reason, I, most of the current major crime syndicates and organizations are using a constellation of apps, which is why youāre hearing like, āOh, well, the Iraqis are using WhatsApp for extortion messages, but Signal to coordinate with their, [00:42:00] like, team criminals.
And theyāre using, and Sinaloa is using Fortnite.ā Like, itās better to just, to be totally platform agnostic and do whatever works and shift frequently. And thatās why youāre just, I think youāre gonna continue to see basically gaming platforms and Discord and Signal and Telegram and WhatsApp because itās just better to not be in any one place.
So yeah, itās scary. Itās a, but that, thatās what I wanted to share. I think itās fascinating. I, thereās a lot more reading you can do if you go to the show notes.
Malcolm Collins: Totally changes how businesses can operate, which I find to be very interesting.
Simone Collins: It does.
Malcolm Collins: It does, yeah. And if I was going to operate one of these, I would likely target a country that canāt defend itself as easily.
I think thatās the, the best way to handle this rather than like the United States or Europe. Like yes, those are the juiciest piggy banks, right? Sure,
Simone Collins: yeah.
Malcolm Collins: But theyāre also the most likely to get you, whereas if youāre targeting you know, Eastern Europe or, or you know, a, a lot of Arab majority countries and stuff like that, you can [00:43:00] operate without them being able to push back as easily.
Which would be very, very interesting. Thatās, thatās what I would do. I donāt know.
Simone Collins: Yeah, absolutely.
Malcolm Collins: But then youāve gotta, you know, try to understand the local culture and language enough to make that operate, and so thatās a bit, you know, difficult. But, Yeah, thatās very
Simone Collins: true ... very exciting and
Malcolm Collins: interesting to see where this goes and as we get better at defending against this.
Simone Collins: Yeah. Yeah, for real. Iām so scared for our kids, man. I mean- I mean- What?
Malcolm Collins: Look, weāre the ones who started a cult, Simone, so you know, keep in mind-
Simone Collins: Who hasnāt these days? I donāt know. Like, thatās-
Malcolm Collins: Itās a pretty good cult, Iām gonna be honest.
Simone Collins: Itās cool. Itās, Iām proud to be a techno-puritan. Itās good. All right.
Itās, itās, yeah. Love you.
To what extent does it actually taste good because youāre starving because you havenāt eaten in a really long time?
Malcolm Collins: Oh, yeah, I guess. Well, no, I had, like, potatoes yesterday. They were good
Simone Collins: Oh, yeah, [00:44:00] you had, you had french fries and samosas. That, that was the, that was your comfort food when you came back from college, right?
Today she
Malcolm Collins: made slow cooked Chinese pork belly, and it is amazing. It is amazing. And then sheās gonna saute the, the pork belly with bok choy and bean- beanlets, whatever theyāre called, little beans.
Simone Collins: Bean sprouts?
Malcolm Collins: Bean sprouts.
Simone Collins: Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: But I am excited for this episode, so letās hop right in. Are we on the right side?
Simone Collins: Yes, we are. Sir, heās such in a grabby phase. Okay. Oh, you think itās-- he thinks itās funny. He thinks itās funny. Of course he thinks itās funny.
Speaker 10: Are they getting away? Are they your buddies? Yeah. Howās the daycare going, your baby chick daycare? Yeah. Itās going well? You tickle? Yeah. All right. You wanna give them their new home? [00:45:00] Yeah, I can go get my things. Okay. Of course Okay, girly, down you go. Rascal, uh-oh Oh, no. Rascalās living up to her name. No, no, no, no, no.
Weāll get her in. All right, you can walk them into their new home Hey Rascal. Come here girl
This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit basedcamppodcast.substack.com/subscribe -
In this episode of Based Camp, Malcolm and Simone Collins dive deep into the Book of Genesis, revealing surprising alignments between the ancient text and modern evolutionary science.
Malcolm challenges common Sunday-school interpretations, showing how Genesis describes a timeline that closely matches scientific understanding: from the early Earth and origin of life, through aquatic creatures and large reptiles, to birds, land animals, and finally humanity. They explore alternate translations of key Hebrew words (like āyomā for āday/eraā, āyatsarā for āformed/plannedā, and ātaninimā for great reptilian creatures), discuss the Big Bang, prebiotic Earth, the evolution of sexuality, and why Genesis stands out among global creation myths.
A fascinating conversation blending biblical scholarship, evolutionary biology, and philosophical insight that will challenge both skeptics and literalists.
Episode Transcript
Malcolm Collins: Hello, Simone. Iām excited to talk with you today. In a recent episode, I pointed out, I was like, āIt is weird to within a modern context in Christianity and stuff like this, when people are saying that evolution is not coherent with Genesis.ā
And I would say that at least my readings of Genesis, evolution makes me believe Genesis more because Genesis says a bunch of stuff that aligns with what we know of the, about the evolutionary timeline without saying anything that disconfirms the evolutionary timeline. So we are gonna get into this.
And itās, itās, itās such a fun topic for me to get into because when I was a kid, and I believe that Genesis said what, as I call it, Sunday school Christianity, you know? Well Genesis says X, Y, and Z, and and I- if you look at it, and then donāt look up alternate translations of the words in it whenever something looks a little fishy or looks like it may be [00:01:00] factually incorrect or donāt look up how that word is used in other places in the Old Testament you immediately are like, āOkay, thatās believable,ā right?
And so thatās stupid because thatās an old story for savages.
Speaker 2: We will call them cave Jews
Speaker 3: Attacker!
Malcolm Collins: And then you come at it with a more modern mindset. I mean, just if you look at the mere timeline given in it, right? It says first you have non-animal life. Then you have the vast array... No, it doesnāt even say, like, fishes.
Itās, itās the vast array of creatures that live in the sea.
Simone Collins: Mm-hmm.
Malcolm Collins: Along with some form of large reptilian creature. Hmm ... which, which, no- What could that
Simone Collins: be?
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, what, what could that be? Now, no, thereās, thereās a lot of really cool... First, itās not as simple as saying, like, fi- they easily could have wr- fishes, right?
But if youāre describing- Yeah ... the [00:02:00] evolutionary timeline- Yeah ... the vast array of things that live in the sea is a very good description for early animal life. 100%,
Simone Collins: yeah.
Malcolm Collins: And Iām also gonna go into stuff in the translations here, where a lot of people argue that the, the giant thing thatās written here, the åØ, or whatever is like a leviathan, that it is a giant sea creature-like serpent or something like that.
And Iām gonna point out that actually if you read the, the correct, the Hebrew, which weāll go into- Mm-hmm Isnāt necessarily talking about a sea animal. Itās only talking about a large reptilian creature. It just talks about it in the same context as itās talking about sea animals, so people often assumed it was talking about sea animals.
And then it says- there were also some very large
Simone Collins: sea animals
Malcolm Collins: though There were some large reptiles, but Iām just saying, like, if I was trying to give an evolutionary timeline of history. Then it says youāve got the birds. Then youāve got the creatures on Earth today. So like before we go into this, this is, even broadly most people are aware it gives this timeline.[00:03:00]
Do you know how many other religions, and Iām talking even if I go Native American traditions, even if I go African traditions, ācause I have gone through AI after AI trying to find a single other religion that gets the evolutionary timeline as close to right as this. There isnāt one.
Simone Collins: Yeah. I, I canāt think of one, for sure.
One. There, there isnāt- Based on all the folk traditions Iāve heard, everything, yeah
Malcolm Collins: There isnāt even one that gets the first two simple steps right. Mm. Non-animal life and aquatic life. Or fishes, or anything. Like, I tried to give it so many outs. Wow. Nothing. Nothing comes close to getting those two stages right.
So again, this isnāt just like they randomly threw stuff together and happened to get it right. This is, like, easily very, very right related stuff. So weāre gonna get into that. Very, very fun.
Speaker 3: So note, a lot of people will be like, āWell, thereās some really obvious mistakes that you find. For [00:04:00] example, that non-animal based life came about before the sun and the moon.ā To which I would be like, āWell, actually, hold on a second here. , Do you know what the oldest evidence of life we have on Earth is?
Itās
Australiaās Jack Hills zircons, which date about 4.4 billion years old, , into the Hadean era. All right? So do you know when the moon was formed? Formed, by the way, from a collision of a body about the size of Mars into Earth, which led to the surface being largely covered in magma for a period that would likely have wiped out any evidence we had of life from before that period. It was formed f- 4.5 billion years ago. So the moon is from 4.5 billion years ago in an event that would have wiped any evidence of life existing before it off [00:05:00] the surface of the Earth. Then 4.4 billion years ago, we see evidence of life. Whatās the chance you think that there could have been life on Earth before this collision, and that it in some way influenced or seeded the life that came after the collision?
Iām gonna at least say, like, from my perspective, at least 20 to 30%, and I wouldnāt have known that without going into this.
Otherwise, you have to assume that coincidentally life just happened to first evolve almost immediately after this collision during one of the most violent times of Earthās history, which seems unlikely
And then you can say, āWell, okay, but the sun definitely existed before that.ā And we can say, āAll right, but if you read the Bible, it says that it separated the night from the day.ā That is the point of the creation of the sun in this particular story.
, And if [00:06:00] we go 4.4 billion years ago to those Jackson Hill zircons, right, , the atmosphere was still transitioning,
, More specifically, it had really high levels of CO2, potentially tens of hundreds of times higher than modern, and a very high level of water vapor that sustained a really strong greenhouse effect and permanent very thick cloud layers
, And the image I have in the background here is an image from, as you can see, itās from a scientific catalog, right, of what scientists think Earth looked like during this period of Earthās history.
So it would have been, , extremely, extremely diffuse and hazy. , Most days during that period from what we know , of Earth would have just looked like an orangish, reddish overcast.
Things you would not have been able to see, or would have been able to see very rarely, maybe once every few hundred years or something like that, are the stars and a [00:07:00] clear day and night. So actually, the Bible isnāt even that wrong on some of the weirder claims it makes
Malcolm Collins: A note here weāre gonna go into, like a lot of people will be like, āUh-uh. It says that God formed the animals with the dirt, that it formed man with the dirt.ā
And weāre gonna point out the word that is translated in your Sunday school Bible into formed throughout the rest of the
Old Testament, do you know what it means? No, actually. Planned. Really? It y- Oh. Yes. And weāll go through instances. It, it, it can be used to mean formed, but it could equally be used to say, āGod planned the dirt to become human.
God planned-ā Oh my word ... āthe dirt to become animals.ā Ooh. But weāre gonna go over all sorts of fun stuff like this which is fun. And weāre gonna mostly be focused on the first story of Genesis, ācause Genesis sort of has two beginning of Earth stories that arenāt really that contradictory. We have [00:08:00] another episode, the Adam and Eve story, that goes over that one.
I think itās one of the best episodes weāve ever produced, if youāre interested. Itās, doesnāt even contradict normal Christianity that much and itās very elucidating for, I think, a lot of people, around whatās actually in the Adam and Eve story, because itās not often what youāre taught. And note here when people are like, āWell, if itās saying that God like planned man to come out of dirt or whatever,ā right?
Like that, that still doesnāt mean evolution, right? You know? Because evolution is a natural process, so that wouldnāt be God doing it. And here Iām gonna be like, okay, letās just talk about the nature of miracles. Imagine God was like, āIām gonna shoot that guy with lightning.ā Right? Like calling the shots.
And then all of a sudden you see lightning come down from the sky and shock a guy, and he falls over dead. And then you turn and you go, āYeah, but that was static in the clouds that caused that lightning, and so I donāt really think that that was a miracle,ā right? You know, because it was done through natural processes.
Iām like, actually, thatās, thatās a little bit more impressive than just [00:09:00] magicking it, okay? Right. Letās go into this, ānow the Lord God formed out the ground all the wild animals and the birds in the s- sky.ā So, the word used here for formed means to mold, shape, or fashion. It can mean that, okay? However itās frequently used to describe a plan, a purpose, a division, or preordaining.
Mm-hmm ... and specifically the root idea of yatsar is to, through a plan, mold or shape something into a specific form. So if weāre gonna look at instances where we see it used this way you have Isaiah 22:11, āBut you did not look to Him who did it or planned it,ā and this is the same word here, āor have a regard for Him who planned it y- long ago.ā
A- a- again, the planned here is the same word that was used to mean form or translated as form in Genesis. If you go to Isaiah 37:27 and thereās a parallel in 2 Kings 19:25, āHave you not heard that I [00:10:00] determined it long ago? I planned it from the days of old.ā The word planned here is the same word thatās used for form.
Iām not gonna go through every instance. Weāve got an instance in I- Isaiah 46:11 Plasm 42:20 Jeremiah 18:11. Basically, itās just everywhere. This is not an uncommon way to use that word. And people can say, āWell, obviously when the Bible was written, thatās not the way the savage people of, you know, however many, four or five thousand years ago were meant to understand these lines.ā
And Iām gonna say, isnāt that even kind of crazier- Exactly ... that truth could be baked into the text, that as science continued to uncover things, we were able to reread it in a way that would never make sense to somebody 5,000 years ago, but is not disconfirming of modern science. Can you see why that affirms my faith that there might have been some actual divine inspiration for this, instead of disconfirms?
Simone Collins: Mm-hmm.
Malcolm Collins: [00:11:00] Now letās go to another thing that people will complain about. They will say, āWell, it says days,ā right? It says on day one, on day two, et cetera, right?
Simone Collins: And- The Bible in general get, it throws me with timing. You know, he lived for 100-something years. Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: I often hear the and I always thought this was a really bad counter-explanation- Oh
Where theyāll be like, āWell, you know, because days didnāt really exist yet at the beginning of time and the human concept of day didnāt exist- Hmm ... these days could mean any amount of time you want them to be,ā right? And I always found this to be very flimsy. I was like, āCome on.ā Like, that, that really just seems like re-begging the point.
Like, I donāt, I donāt, I donāt buy that. But okay, letās ask this question again. The word thatās translated as day here, especially with the concept of a morning and night attached to it, which you do have in this- Oh, really? Okay ... is it in other parts of the Old Testament in [00:12:00] Hebrew writing used to refer to something longer than a single day?
Or does the word sometimes mean something other than a literal one day? Oh, so whatās the, whatās the answer? All over the place. So, a- and some even very, very common ones. So the day of the Lord this is Isaiah 2:12, 13:6, 13:9, Joel 1:15, 2:1. I donāt need to go over all the places. Itās all over the place.
And it refers to a future period of divine judgment and/or blessing, often involving cosmic signs and battles. Mm. Pretty much all Christians and Jews believe in the day of the Lord, and none of them believe itās one day. Like, thatās not a, a common interpretation, yet itās all over the Bible and, and very...
And this is within the communities that take the creationist literalist approach. This is the thing that gets me, ācause what weāre gonna be going over is a lot of verses here where day is used to mean something longer than a day, that are [00:13:00] taken to mean that by the same groups that say in- Genesis it must mean a literal day.
So the word that weāre translating as a day here, you donāt even need to be like, oh, you know, in the perception of God, a day of a thousand years or whatever. It literally in other places of the Bible is translated to mean era. , And when you think about a word like the era of the Lord instead of the day of the Lord, it actually sort of makes more sense when we see this mistranslation appear in other places as well.
, Now, do I think to the savage cave geo, , when they heard this story that they werenāt thinking of literal days? No, they probably were. They simply didnāt have any context to understand the context of billions or trillions of years. So it makes sense that we would have talked if they were having some form of supernatural inspiration to write down a true big history time span [00:14:00] of Earth, they would have used this word, , that I think divinely has another meaning in other parts of the Bible, which is era, , to say some period of time
Malcolm Collins: So, another instance here, Joshua 24:7 āAnd you lived in the wilderness many days.ā Now this is translated as a long time , and this refers to the 40 years of wandering. Now 40 years of wandering isnāt just many days, okay? Thatās 40 effing years of wandering, right?
Mm-hmm. Then you have Josiah 6:2, āAfter two days He will revive us, and on the third day He will raise us up.ā Many scholars, including most of the scholars who take a literal interpretation of days in Genesis, see this as prophetic of a longer period. Oh. Often linked to Israelās restoration or even the time of Christās restoration.
Using the a day is like a thousand years principle from Psalms 94 and Peter 3:8. Psalms. And note... Songs, whatever, blah. People say the day is like a thousand years one they use to [00:15:00] mean they argue it in this. Iāve heard that argument before. I just find it a lot more convincing that, And, and again, you have Daniel 8:2, where again you have days used to mean something that is generally agreed as being much longer than a day.
But whatās interesting here is in Daniel 8:26, you also even have the convention of evening and morning attached with this concept of a day- Hmm ... to delineate something that is much longer than what we, when weāre talking about a literal day mean. And, and this to me is just much more compelling. If this word is used all over the place to mean something other than a literal day why would we not see it as being more like the term era or epoch?
Which it does seem to be referencing in terms of time horizons if weāre looking at evolutionary and geological history, okay? Yeah. Yes. And so you can say, āWell, if they wanted to say epoch, why didnāt they say epoch? [00:16:00] Why didnāt they say billions of years?ā And the answer is they just didnāt have those words.
Right? That those, those words arenāt in the Bible. The scales of time that this verse is talking about is simply not talked about anywhere else in the Bible. Huh. So of course they wouldnāt use it. Of course somebody, of, of people living in a freaking desert 10,000 years ago wouldnāt have had the concept of geological history to write that down.
Right. If it was explained to them, it would look like this.
Speaker 9: So what alternate word could they have used other than the word they used if they wanted to use a word that was closer to something like an era or an epoch? There really is only one other word, and once you know it, itās immediately obvious why it wasnāt used if youāre trying to be true. Itās the word tekufa or tekaph, and this appears four times in the Tanakh.
So what does this [00:17:00] mean? It means a cycle, a turn, or a circuit. So it would have indicated a view of time and history that is much closer to like a Hindu or Buddhist one, which is not in alignment with what we know about evolution or the way history works. So suppose the cave Jew who was having these revelations, he says, letās suppose some sort of angel is inspiring them or something, and itās like a really, really long time period.
And theyāre like, oh, you mean like a turn or a cycle? And theyāre like, no, not like that. Do you have any other words you can use?
the wild thing about the AI response, , is I asked it, is there any word in ancient Hebrew of the time of the Old Testament that can be used to mean era or epoch, , or did such a word not exist yet? So not only did it give me this cycle word, but it then says under that if, basically, if youāre not using that word, the next best word to use is yom, the word thatās actually used here.
, Whatās also really [00:18:00] cool is if you look at the scholarly debate on this, what theyāll say is, okay, yes, itās within the s- called the semantic range of the word yom to be used as era, in that sometimes itās used to mean era or epoch in the Bible. But thatās not how itās normally used in the Bible the vast majority of times because, I mean, youāre just gonna be talking about days a lot more often than youāll be talking about epoch or era.
But to me, thatās a really bad argument for it being interpreted that way in this particular context because yes, obviously you use the word day more than the word era, but in this context, era just makes a lot more sense when we know actual scientific history. More than that, when people come and they go, āWell, look, it talks about having night times and day times in this story,ā and itās like, bro, even in English, you would hear somebody be like, āWell, at the sunset of the Victorian era,ā , you donāt think, oh, well, that meant that the [00:19:00] Victorian era happened in a day
Malcolm Collins: All right, now weāre gonna go over all of the lines from Genesis, and go over how actually affirming they are, and how f- from my perspective of modern science seems to affirm them. And weāll go over the one or two contradictions where Iām like, āThis is a genuine problem.ā
But the genuine problems are actually even more interesting to me, because they present things where if, like, techno-puritism, our version of Christianity, becomes a, a religion thatās popular, people can say, āLook, they predicted science would overturn this based on the Bible- Ooh ... 50 years ago, 100 years ago.ā
And if we end up being right about those things that is going to be very, very spicy in terms of affirmation of thereās some form of divine inspiration for this story. All right, so letās go into this. In the beginning, God created heavens and the Earth. Now, the Earth was formless and empty.
Darkness was over the surface of the deep, and the spirit of God was hovering over the waters. [00:20:00] So immediately we have a number of problems here, right? Like, if youāre taking a normal Sunday school, typically you just read this line and you drop it. Youāre just like, āOkay, something just... Whatever. Yeah, I guess.
Godās hovering over waters.ā That sounds like normal you know, pagan nonsense, right? Like, like, like, the type of thing Iād expect some tribal group to write or something, right? Maybe, maybe a little more fluttery, but whatever. And then you go, āNo, no, no, no.ā Like, letās, letās suppose Iām taking this seriously, right?
This doesnāt make sense the way itās translated to English here.
Simone Collins: Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: Specifically... Okay, so itās talking about a formless, empty darkness. First of all, very interesting if youāre thinking about, like, pre-Big Bang. How do you describe reality, time before the Big Bang? I think a formless, empty darkness is a pretty good description.
And-
Simone Collins: 100%, yeah ...
Malcolm Collins: and people can then say, āWell, look here. Itās saying now [00:21:00] the Earth was a formless, empty darkness.ā And Iām gonna be like clearly thatās not what it means, because it canāt both be the Earth and a formless, empty darkness.ā So Earth- Yeah ... in this context clearly means everything, not just the Earth as we understand it.
Secondarily, you now have the issue of, okay, so you have, The earth with a formless, empty darkness over the surface of the deep, right? Okay. So, and then God-
Simone Collins: That implies also, yeah, like a, the earth covered in oceans, which is how it was in the beginning, right?
Malcolm Collins: Yes, during a, part of our early history, but weāre, weāll get to that in a second.
But it then says, so basically you have two things. You have the water, right? The, the, the surface of the deep. And then the, the formless empty deep itself, and then the darkness, right? Yeah. And these two things are, are, are sort of in, in opposition to each other. And then you have the, the spirit of God hovering over the water.
So wait, that doesnāt make any sense because the earth with a formless, empty darkness over the [00:22:00] surface of the deep. So that means now God is either, like, under the water in the deep, or he is the formless empty darkness, right? Youāre on one of two- Mm-hmm ... sides of this water surface. It, assuming the word over in this context means that he is literally spatially hovering over something.
So then you have to look. You have to say, well, does the word over mean anything else? Which weāll get into in a second. It does, by the way. Ooh. Thereās a spoiler. And then secondarily, we have the word hovering here, which is a very weird word that is used very, very rarely in the Old Testament and doesnāt at all mean what hovering...
Hovering is a terrible translation of the word. It basically means- Itās worthless ... a thing in constant non-hurried movement/development.
Simone Collins: Oh. Oh, yeah. Okay. Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: Now I can see how hovering would be, like, the closest- I can ... youāre gonna get to as an easy word.
Simone Collins: Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: But I think thatās actually a way more [00:23:00] important to understand what that word, because as soon as youāre like, āThatās a-ā Yeah, it sounds like
weird word to use there,ā right? Yeah. Yeah. So letās go against this. Okay. So first of all what are the other things that over could mean in this context? Mm-hmm. It could mean against. They are putting God as something that exists in opposition to the formlessness before time, okay? Before the Big Bang, right?
Or it could mean sort of like, after. So, here you have this in Proverbs 25:11. You have this in Leviticus 15:25, and you have this in Job 21:32 where youāve got, It, it, it sort of means, like- either after or in the right time in relation to Hmm. Like th- th- God is a thing that exists both after in opposition to the formless empty darkness.
Which to me seems a lot easier to... Like, that, that doesnāt have any problems for me. Iām like, āOkay, that seems true.ā And then letās look at what this word hovering [00:24:00] means. Weāve gone over this before, but just to go over it quickly it means not standing still, but vibrating with life or purpose, in constant movement.
Hmm. But also in a non-hurried way. So where do we see this in other places? We see this in Deuteronomy 32:11 and this, Deuteronomy ... like, like an eagle stirs upon its nest and hovers over- Hmm ... its young. Okay. So one of the only other instances we have of this is something protectively guarding its young or something thatās, thatās gestating, right?
And then in, which is a way better term than, than hover as well in this context the sort of brooding over something. And then in Jeremiah 23:9, we have, āMy heart is broken within me, all my bones,ā and then this word and here itās translated to tremble, like a constant shake of, of shaking or movement.
If you take, and Iām not gonna go too into techno-puritan stuff here ācause I donāt wanna... This is not what this episodeās about. Itās about evolution. But this is very affirming of a techno-puritan understanding of God [00:25:00] rather than being a, a static entity, being an evolving entity. But to continue here.
So next line here. And then God said, so keep in mind, we have dark, dark, empty, formless void, right? So what does God do in relation to the dark, empty void, right? Iām sure you know this part of the story, Go- Simone. He says, āLet there be light,ā and then there was light. God saw that the light was good, and he separated the light from darkness.
God called the light day, and the darkness called night, and there was evening, and there was morning the first day.
Speaker 10: Many of you want to say, āWell, there couldnāt have been a meaningful day and night at the creation of the universe.ā Note here that clearly this doesnāt mean day and night as we experience it on Earth, because that happens in a future one of the eras, specifically the, āAnd God said, āLet there be lights in the vault of the sky to separate the day from the night.āā
So clearly this is talking about something else in regard to night and day. , Here, what I assume it means, [00:26:00] because it talks about the light or the photons that are emitted with the Big Bang, is probably light and dark matter and energy
Malcolm Collins: Now first, great explanation of the Big Bang if youāre trying to explain the Big Bang to savages living in the woods 10,000 years ago or in a desert 10,000 years ago. Youāre not gonna...
Imagine trying to explain to them, itās like, okay, so, like, time didnāt exactly exist in any way we understand it. The laws of physics probably didnāt even exist before the Big Bang. And then there was this, like, giant explosion, and all of these photons came out of it. And theyāre like, āWhat the are you talking about?ā
And youāre like, āThere was a dark and formless void- Yeah ... and then there was light.ā Yeah. And theyāre like, āAh, yes, that makes sense now.ā I get it now. Yeah, you
Simone Collins: have to use language that can be passed on, that can make sense in the context in which itās being... Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: Any- Understood ... there, I, I do not, I do not literally think this could have been any closer to accurate Yeah, the
Simone Collins: [00:27:00] highest fidelity language possible.
Malcolm Collins: Yes, that could have been passed on in desert savages for thousands of years. And we do know that this was passed on with a high degree of fidelity because we have Old Testament from the Dead Sea Scrolls that have fragments of this story. Oh, right.
Simone Collins: Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: Literally 1,000 years before our next fully intact version, and they have virtually no differences.
They have a few differences in, like, poetic language where, like, thereās a few places where theyāre a little repetitive, and those repetitive parts are gone. And I can see how a scribe just didnāt cover the repetitive parts. But, like, generally it served its purpose. Okay? So now weāre gonna go to the next one.
Okay? And note here separating darkness from light. This could be something that we yet to understand about the universe. We do know that there are a lot of problems with understanding dark matter in the universe right now. Matter appears to exist in oppositional forms. Could this make some sense once we better understand dark matter and dark [00:28:00] energy?
It might. We know that they appear to be pretty por- important in the cosmic order. And larger than what we consider regular matter that we interact with regularly. So it seems relevant that they would mention it here. Yeah. To continue.
Simone Collins: Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: By the way, had, had you ever thought about all of this in these terms or?
Simone Collins: I remember the last time I started reading Genesis, I was like, āOh my God,ā ācause that was my first time reading it after historical geology and, you know, these things are touched on from that perspective. Like, hereās what we know from the fossil record. Hereās what we know from- Mm-hmm ... studying Earth and, you know, doing deep core samples and all these other crazy things.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. And you were just like, āThis isnāt as... This is, like, pretty accurate.ā I was like, ā
Simone Collins: Yeah. Oh my God.ā Yeah, because it... Well, I didnāt expect it at all because you hear that thereās all these young Earth creationists, and then you just assume that the Bible is, like, really explicit. Like, boom, it, you know, that everything happened, and everyone was there at the same time, and the...
Yeah, it, it just- Yeah, no, for
Malcolm Collins: me, young Earth creationism is just [00:29:00] literally ignoring what, what the Bible says in favor of what your Sunday school teacher said. Like, I donāt mean to... I know we have young Earth creationist fans and everything like that, but, like, that, I, it just seems like if, if the Bible isnāt antagonistic to these ideas it just seems like sticking a spoke in your own, like, wheels of your own bicycle, and then it crashes, and youāre like, āOh, wha...ā
Like, fans will sometimes come to me and- And theyāll be like, āI can convince you that the Bible actually means X or Y.ā And Iām like, āBut then I just wouldnāt believe the Bible because this is, like, easily observably wrong,ā right? Like, I believe the Bible because it aligns, itās coherent with reality. And itās coherent with a very sophisticated understanding of reality that there is no way that people of that period could have had, which is why I believe that they didnāt come up with this out of nowhere.
Simone Collins: Mm-hmm.
Speaker 12: And if you want to come to me with like a, āWell, why do you believe in evolution, Malcolm? Thatās crazy. Thereās big gaps in the fossil record and blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.ā Itās like, okay, so my first job, , outside of [00:30:00] like household, local jobs, stuff like that, was working in the human evolution department at the Smithsonian Museum of Natural History.
, If you go through the exhibit on human evolution in that and you go to the part of the exhibit that is just every ho- hominid fossil we have from like Australopithecus to modern man, I constructed that. I had to go through every single one of those fossils and take, you know, 380 images of them. Um, this idea that you cannot see when youāre looking at the entire fossil record a clear gradient of evolution that matches well with the historic timeline is just factually wrong.
, Yes, we have some gaps, but every time you fill one gap, you now have two gaps on either side of that gap. Youāre always gonna have gaps until you find literally every skeleton of every iterative change going back. Like, it, itās just not doable. But in terms of like the broad strokes, [00:31:00] either, , evolution is true or God used a number of miracles to try to make it look as if evolution was true in some form of test that weāre not, one, warned about in the Bible, and two, I canāt understand why a good God would lay out for us.
Thatās why I believe it, right? Like, , I, I think that to just deny this when, when I personally held many of these extremely valuable skulls, right? Like, Iāve, Iāve gone through the record. I had skulls all around me at this, at this point in my career. , And it-- thereās this very clear gradient, and looking at that and being like, āOkay, so either God is in some way testing us by giving us this much evidence, , or, , itās almost kind of miraculous that, that so many of the missing links, if you talk about how not populous our [00:32:00] species and our ancestors were, ended up surviving.
Or God made sure that we preserved a fairly good record so that we could understand how we came to be and our role in the, , greater chain of life.ā
Speaker 13: Also, that just broadly seems like such an un-God thing to do. God gives us this great and giant puzzle to solve through generations of research, , laying it all out very clearly for us as we, we build this puzzle, and the outcome of the puzzle is the test? Like, that weāre supposed to not believe it even though the Bible doesnāt clearly contradict it?
, That, that doesnāt seem... Like, whatās the point of the test?
Malcolm Collins: Anyway if people are wondering how I do believe it, I believe that, like, a bunch of traditions form randomly, and this was the one that was the closest to an absolutely true tradition, and so it was favored through history. But thatās a different... You want to get into our track series. So to continue here āAnd God [00:33:00] said āLet there be a vault between the waters to separate the water from water.ā
So God made the vault and separated the water under the vault from the water above it, and was, and it was so. God called the vault sky, and there was an evening, and there was morning the second day.ā And this is one area where Iām really not sure whatās meant here. I donāt see how this... It, it doesnāt discorrelate with modern science, because if weāre right about whatās meant by water here, heās talking about not literal water, but the formlessness before time.
Mm-hmm. So, what, what could this be? I donāt know. I assume itās something that physics just doesnāt have... It doesnāt, itās not contradictory to any of our understanding of physics, because whatās on the other side of the vault is what we call the sky. So itās whatever is at the end of the sky. And we just donāt have the physics to understand this yet.
Now, if you take a literalist interpretation w- the way that people used to understand this, like if you go back to, you know, ancient Hebrew times, they thought [00:34:00] you look at the sky and itās like a literal dome over your head. And on the other side of that dome is the water, the, the endless, the endless void, and the, the you know, the stars are all sort of painted on the dome.
Thatās the way that they used to understand it. So itās neither disconforming, itās, itās, itās predictive, I guess I would say, of this.
So, one of the things that I wanted to go into here was why water? Like, wh- why do they keep talking about water here? Why do they use water in these analogies?
Simone Collins: Well, I think they use water for the same reason they use fire. You know, burn it with fire. That doesnāt mean... Like, sometimes there are no other ways to describe things, like deleting or, you know, other forms of elimination, Yeah, which is
Malcolm Collins: what we argue the lake of fire likely means, and Gehenna likely means, is where you burn things.
But- water, it appears to be because if you look at creation myths from around this period in this area whatever was at the beginning is typically thought of as deep abyss, depths, primeval, whole ocean. Thereās no, there was no
Simone Collins: concept for a vacuum. How do you explain that to someone? Mm-hmm. This is not a [00:35:00] hole.
Itās like the opposite of a hole. The, the biggest thing you could possibly give to someone for them to imagine is the ocean, is some vast body of water. That is the closest they can get to a, a large empty void.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, well, hereās another fun thing. Do you know what else the term that weāre translating as water here could be translated into?
Simone Collins: Oh, no. Do tell.
Malcolm Collins: Semen. Oh. Well, hold on. If youāre thinking about it from a life-giving perspective, Sure, yeah ... and youāre looking at whatās, whatās the... You could think of it as anti-life if youāre talking about, like, the abyss versus life itself.
Simone Collins: Mm. Right?
Malcolm Collins: But anyway, to continue here. āAnd then God said, āLet the water under the sky be gathered into one place, and let dry ground appear,ā and it was so.
God called the dry ground land, and the gathered waters he called seas, and God saw it was good.ā Now this I do not see as disconfirming or affirming. This appears to be talking about actual water on Earth and the creation [00:36:00] of dry land. We know that- Well, yeah,
Simone Collins: B- because they switched from water to seas, which also implies to me that when they are referring to water, theyāre referring to something that is not water.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah.
Simone Collins: Well, and this- āCause they couldnāt have just said the oceans. Theyād say seas ... this appears to be talking
Malcolm Collins: about something that is similar to the water that weāre talking about before. But, like, here I take it is this is where we transition to talking about what you and I talk about as water, okay?
Simone Collins: Mm.
Malcolm Collins: And again, not seeing any problems here so far, right? Because again, God doesnāt need to... If, if we assume that, like, God striking somebody with lightning is still God doing it even if itās done through a natural process water forming on Earthās surface water e- building the water cycle on the Earthās surface, dry land appearing on Earthās surface all of these things could be described as God doing it in just the same way, right?
So nothing particularly affirms a scientific, disaffirms a scientific understanding here. Then we have āThen God said, āLet the land produce vegetation, seed-bearing plants, and trees. On the land bear fruit with seed in it according to the various kinds.ā And it [00:37:00] was so. The land produced vegetation, plants bearing seed according to their kinds, and trees bearing fruit with seed in accordance with their kind.
And God saw it was good. And there was evening, and there was morning the third day.ā Now, this is actually one of the worst parts- For this, which I think would surprise a lot of people, that this is one of the most out of line with our actual understanding of geological history
Simone Collins: Because of the evening and morning part?
No,
Malcolm Collins: not evening- Or because we had,
Simone Collins: like,
Malcolm Collins: like early plants- Seed-bearing plants are a fairly modern evolutionary adaptation
Simone Collins: Oh, interesting. Unless theyāre, by seed-bearing theyāre just r- referring to other forms of can reproduce, you know?
Malcolm Collins: So first, you caught it. The word used for fruit here does not mean literal fruit in the way that we mean fruit.
Mm. It appears that that is the way that this was conveyed to people 10,000 years ago. They likely thought it exclusively meant, like, what we consider and eat as fruit. Like, Godās- Yeah ... preparing the world for mankindās inhabitation. But- But there were no other
Simone Collins: words for, like, capable of [00:38:00] reproduction, or self-reproducing, or whatever.
Yeah, yeah. Yeah
Malcolm Collins: But the, the actual wording here can mean basically any form of reproduction where thereās some form of, like, edible side product. And I would even go further, and to say that this could be taken to more allegorically to describe the beginning of the life cycle. Youāre talking about, when I see vegetation being talked about here there is no way they could have said pre-animal microbial life, right?
Like, you simply arenāt gonna get that recorded in a 10,000-year-old document, okay? So youāre trying to explain pre-animal microbial life to people 10,000 years ago. Exactly. Youāre
Simone Collins: like, ā
Malcolm Collins: Itās kind of like vegetation. It, it, it has fruiting bodies,ā which is what we still call parts of, like, the budding process with early microbial life.
Speaker 11: Itās like somebodyās coming to me and theyāre like, oh, this is clearly not supernaturally inspired [00:39:00] because the cave Jews didnāt write single cellular microbial life and early self-replicating RNA-like structures. Like how would they even conceptually have done that? Thatās a literally insane level of requirement.
Malcolm Collins: So Iām okay with that, and I would also even go so far as to say that this to me indicates that something like a vegetation or something like seed, seeds may exist earlier in the evolutionary timeline than we actually think it does. Ooh, that could be interesting. This would be one of the bigger pictures Iām gonna put into
Simone Collins: this, right?
But I really, I donāt know. Like, in terms of my reading, when we come back to language and the limitations of language at the time, and other things that you read in the Bible, you know, about the way that seed is described, like- Mm-hmm ... spilled seed, et cetera, like humans donāt have seeds, do we? Yeah, thatās a good point.
Yeah. Yeah, we spill them So it could just mean- So Iām really not reading this too literally when itās like, āOh, but there werenāt [00:40:00] technically seeds yet.ā No, seed was a thing used for like- But the intentional- ... reproductive capabilities ...
Malcolm Collins: the intentional mention, okay, so if we take plants to mean, like, early microbial life, right?
Like, thatās- Uh-huh ... what theyāre trying to describe. Yeah and the, the explicit mean- measuring of seed-bearing microbial life, right? Mm. That could bear fruit with seed in it- That could be describing the evolution of sexuality- Mm-hmm ... which would fit right here on the sexual, the, the evolutionary timeline.
Yeah. And it would probably be the closest way you could... And itās a very important evolutionary leap, probably one of the-
Simone Collins: 100%, yeah ...
Malcolm Collins: next to the evolution of intelligence, Iād say. Mm-hmm. Sexuality and intelligence are the two biggest evolutionary leaps weāre aware of. Yeah. Do- in terms of how, how they affect the evolutionary timeline.
Intelligence basically allows you to evolve ideas faster than you can die. Sexuality allows you to remix genes and choose genetically fit individuals to have way, way, way more offspring than they would otherwise have. And it is a hugely important, happened at around this time. Yeah. Thatās what I think that this is.
Mm-hmm. [00:41:00] Okay, great. All right, all right. So thatās even a further- There we go ... clarification. Yeah.
Speaker 14: Note here, if this is talking about the evolution of sexuality, that then definitely didnāt happen before the collision that created the moon. So we have to guess that when the stars in the sky and the sun and the moon being created in terms of a night and day cycle on Earth is talked about as having after this, it must mean an unobscured sky.
Because there were periods of history going after that where you still had an obscured sky during periods, long periods, like eons of rain, for example, certain periods of Earthās history.
Malcolm Collins: Okay. Then next āAnd God said, āLet the water teem with living creatures and let birds fly above the earth and across the vault of the sky.āā And note here, like, birds are clearly... This is one that really gets me, where some [00:42:00] biblical literalist will say okay, well, the sky vault clearly, like, outer space exists, right?
So the sky vault is not referring to just, like, the sky in the way, like, ancient people 10,000 years ago meant it. Like, weāre meant to take this literally.ā Except when he talks about birds here he, he talks about them in the context of flying across the vault of the sky, right? So the birds are on the same plane as the sky vault, which is why I think our interpretation of this is more accurate.
Weāre to say, like, how would you communicate this to somebody 10,000 years ago? But anyway āAnd then God said, āLet the water teem with living creatures. Let the birds fly above and across the sky.ā So God created the great creatures of the sea and every living thing with which the water teems and moves about according to their kinds, and every winged bird according to its kind.
And God saw that it was good. God blessed them and said, āBe fruitful and increase your number and fill the water and the seas, and let the birds increase on earth.ā And there was evening, [00:43:00] and that was the morning of the fifth day.ā Now, this particular passage gets, like, heavily bastardized to try to argue for a- Sunday school.
Like, they literally basically removed a really important line for this because they were embarrassed about it. Mm. Even though it actually... So they, Iāll, Iāll show you where the line was removed. So, āGod created the great creatures of the sea.ā That is not, that is not what it says at all. Thatās not what it says.
I mean, you could interpret it that way if you were trying to, in the same way that in the King James version they translate this word to mean whales, because whales was the biggest thing they were aware of at the time that lived in the sea. But that isnāt what the word would come close to traditionally meaning in Hebrew.
So letās go into this to go into, one, they say fish, then birds, right? Well, fish and something, and then birds. And weāll go into whatās, whatās the thing that they said existed alongside, and not just fish, things in the sea. This is really [00:44:00] interesting, right? Because they could have said fish, right? Which would have been evolutionarily wrong.
But instead what they say is, āThe creatures of the sea.ā Thatās an interesting way to put something if youāre looking at, like, a Cambrian explosion or something like that after the evolutionary of sex- sexuality. But okay, letās, letās see whatās actually said in this line, ācause this line is, I think, really cool, and really affirming to me that there was some divine inspiration here.
So, āAnd God created the great tannim and every living creature which moves which the waters swarmed according to their kinds and every winged bird.ā So we need to make a few notes here. All right? So in, first it says, āGod created the great tannim.ā This is what is often interpreted as le- sea leviathans, right?
In, in some older in- interpretations of texts. But that is not what it means in Hebrew. So weāll go into what it means in Hebrew, and I also wanna point something out here which often people get wrong, is note the construction of this sentence. And this is also [00:45:00] true in Hebrew, which weāll get to. It says nowhere in this sentence that the tannim live in the sea.
It says nowhere in this sentence that they are an exclusively aquatic creature. It says, āAnd God created the great tannim and every living creature which moves in the waters and swarmed across according to their kinds.ā Oh. The tannim are something different from whatās in the sea. Oh ... so letās continue here The relative - clause, which the waters swarmed, grammatically - modifies living creatures that move.
The tannim are introduced first with their own direct object marker. Theyāre connected by and to the rest. In Biblical Hebrew, the relative clause introduced by blank normally modifies the ne- sorry, blank is a word I canāt pronounce in Hebrew. Yeah. The nearest preceding noun or noun phrase that it logically could describe.
Here, the nearest phrase is every living creature that moves. The tannim sit before [00:46:00] that, and thus are clearly not modified by the phrase purely aquatic. And note here this gets interesting, because what could tannim be? Like, what is it generally used to talk about in Hebrew?
Simone Collins: Right,
Malcolm Collins: actually. It is typically used to talk about dragons- Oh
sea monsters- Oh ... crocodiles air, long- So just large reptilian animals. Yeah, but not necessarily reptiles. āCause they couldāve said reptiles. They had a word for reptiles. They didnāt- They did ... say reptiles. Oh. Dinosaurs are not reptiles, okay? They said something that is large and reptile-like, kind of like a dragon, existed after the explosion of life within the sea, or along the same timeline as life within the sea, before birds.
Simone Collins: Huh. Well. [00:47:00] Mm. That would work. Yes, that would work. Thatās pretty
Malcolm Collins: cool.
Simone Collins: That is pretty cool. Mm-hmm.
Malcolm Collins: By the way, if youāre wondering, Ezekiel 29:3 and 32:2 is where they refer to crocodiles and large river sea s- serpents. And then for m- mythical monsters, you see in Isaiah 27:1 and Psalms 24:13. And this reminds me- Like alms
well, I saw, I donāt, I donāt speak these foreign tongues. Thatās, thatās a Jew tongue. Lazarus. Youāre trying to get me to speak like a Jew, okay? And Iām not gonna do that, all right? The parcel tongue, Simone. parcel tongue.
Speaker 15: . I heard you speak in Parseltongue, snake language. I spoke a different language? But I didnāt realize.
Malcolm Collins: Iām gonna end up... Th- this is how they get you. They get you with their words, saying itās, itās Bible talk.
And it is Bible talk, but you gotta be careful, right? Iām joking here, by the way, people. Obviously everything Iām analyzing here is relevant in both a [00:48:00] Christian and Jewish context because they both have the same book. So both would be equally affirmed if there was any proof that this book did have a degree of divine inspiration.
And again, if you wanna get into our thoughts on Judaism, see the question that breaks Judaism where we go way into like why. We actually thought about converting to Judaism. You can see in some of our earlier videos. But like as I dug into it, I just decided no, like Iām, Iām, Iām, I find Christianity more compelling when I look at the evidence.
Simone Collins: Weāre also a little too asocial hikikomori for for Judaism.
Malcolm Collins: Well, yeah, and I also said like even if I converted to Judaism, Iād be a Misnagdim Jew. This is a Jew that doesnāt believe that Kabbalah should be widely taught and is against the Hasidics. Oh, totally. And that would immediately put me on the outs with al- like the Misnagdim basically lost the Jewish culture war a generation ago, right?
Two generations ago. So thereās, thereās no like... Also Christ seems to have obviously been the Messiah. Sorry, I just have to go. This is a whole different thing. You can see our question [00:49:00] that breaks Judaism if you want to get into that. It actually becomes sort of absurd to think that Jesus wasnāt obviously the Messiah when you look at everything in context.
Donāt mean to offend our Jewish listeners on this one, but yeah thatās not for this episode. But whatās really interesting about this word taninim is in various times people have attempted to retranslate it than to mean something other than what it literally means, and every time they have removed something that would authenticate the truth of the Bible, right?
Theyāve tried to change it to whales when it clearly doesnāt mean whales anywhere else. Hmm. They have tried to change it to just large sea animals when it clearly doesnāt mean just large sea animals anywhere else. Hmm. It means a large reptilian-like animal that is not specifically a reptile.
I really c- that, that to me is just sort of shocking how spot on that is. But anyway, to continue here.
Oh, by the way, fun side note that came from one of our fans that some people will [00:50:00] like. Regarding biblical animal timeline, thereās a fun side note about the word used to describe the creation of each group. The most... They mostly use the same verb, but there are two that use a different verb, man and the tenenimum.
The King James Version translates the latter as whales, presumably because giant sea predators was the only point of reference for them. But apparently in Hebrew there was more a reptilian connotation they say, which is true. Okay. But what heās saying is that there is enough linguistic wiggle room to argue that God had a special plan for giant reptiles, and now heās wondering if there was a dinosaur bible somewhere.
Where is
Simone Collins: the lost dinosaur bible? I want, I want it.
Malcolm Collins: Well, thereās actually a theory that there couldāve been a dinosaur civilization as big as our own. And, like, we just wouldnāt have any evidence of it if you look at how quickly, like, our own civilization would dissolve into the time record. Huh. If, like, we just stopped existing right now.
Yeah. And so we donāt know that there wasnāt a large dinosaur civilization that lasted [00:51:00] maybe only 300, 400 years.
Simone Collins: Godās failson, the dinosaurs. Right?
Malcolm Collins: Okay. To continue here. And then God said, āLet the land produce living creatures according to their kinds, the livestocks, the creatures that move along the ground, the wild animals, each according to its kind,ā and it was so.
God made the wild animals according to their kinds, the livestock according to their kinds, and all the creatures that move along the ground according to their kinds, and God saw that it was good. So, what youāre gonna note in this is you can say, well, itās saying all land animals came after things like birds and dinosaurs, which is, like, clearly not true, right?
Like, people would be like, āThere were some land animals before that.ā And Iām gonna say, yeah, but you have to consider the context. God is talking to people 10,000 years ago, and heās saying, āAll of these things that you see, that you consider animals,ā like your livestock animals, which are clearly referenced here.
All of these came after the dinosaurs, the fish, and the [00:52:00] birds, which is true. Almost every land animal the ancient Hebrews would have been aware of evolved after dinosaurs and birds evolved. Yeah, yeah. So heās right from an evolutionary timeline perspective. Absolutely. It still all tracks. Mm-hmm. Not, no lie detected here which again is astonishing for something this old.
Simone Collins: Yeah. Well, and especially considering this is not some universal folk belief. This, this didnāt exist with other really old folklore traditions or religions. Yeah, if it was
Malcolm Collins: a universal or common folk belief, I would have a totally different perspective on this. Yes.
Speaker 17: And when AI goes over this, itāll always hedge and be like, āWell, heās overstating just how much, , other religious beliefs or thereās no other religious belief or traditional story about how the world was formed that comes close to a scientific ordered understanding that we have today.ā , And then I always tell the AI, āOkay, [00:53:00] find one, and Iām gonna give you wiggle room.
Find one that comes one-tenth as close. Find one that comes one-fifth as close.ā , AI canāt find one because there just isnāt one. This is really quite unique, and if this story wasnāt the white people story, everyone would be freaking out about the random tribe of wherever that has a creation story that almost exactly mirrors the evolutionary and historic timeline weāre aware of
Malcolm Collins: Okay. Then God said, āLet us make mankind in our image, in our likeness, so that they may rule over the fish of the sea and the birds of the sky and over the livestock and over all animals and over all the creatures that move along the ground.ā
So God created mankind in his own image, in the image of God He created them, male and female He created them. Just a techno puritan side note here thatās really only relevant for our interpretation of this story but the word created here, right here, could be, in Biblical Hebrew, you have something called the perfect conjuration or the qatal form of verbs.
Huh. The [00:54:00] same type used in created in Genesis 1:27. It can describe future events, especially in prophetic context. This is often called the prophetic perfect. Hebrew verbs focus more on aspect completed versus ongoing actions in strict timeline, past, present, future. Hmm. The qatal perfect form views as an action as a whole completed from the speakerās perspective.
Oh. In prophecy, a future event that is so certain because God has decreed that it will happen. So you can look at something like Isaiah 53, where he says, āHe was wounded,ā and you get this conjuration, āfor our transgressions. He was bruised for our inequities.ā Written centuries before Jesus, and yet itās written as in this, this future perfect form.
Eh, then you have things like Isaiah 5:13, Numbers 24:17 where you get a similar conjuration here. A lot of people donāt care about this. This isnāt necessary for most people as they understand this story. Do you mean
Simone Collins: conjugation? You mean conjugation.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, conjugation. Whatād I say?
Conjuration. Conjuration. But I get
Simone Collins: [00:55:00] what you... I mean, ācause youāre sort of describing the God-like conjuring. But thatās super... I had never heard of that before. Thatās fascinating. Yeah. A whole new- Well, it
Malcolm Collins: can be read as just in the past tense if you want to. Okay. But it doesnāt have to be read in the past tense.
The way Hebrew is constructed, it can be taken as something that is an ongoing process. God is creating mankind in His image, which is our religious- So
Simone Collins: cool. I like that much more ...
Malcolm Collins: that is, that is being laid out of the prophecy here. Do I wanna go into this? Well, we go over a lot of this in the other track, but I can just quickly go into this. This is a track... Well, not even the track. The one where we go over the Adam and Eve story. Or, or I think it might be- Oh ... a track that we go over souls and stuff like this.
Mm-hmm. But the key feature of the phrase where God is breathing life into man, I mean, this is in the second story, ācause you, you know, it would be like, āDidnāt God breathe life into man?ā They use the term nephesh here which w- generally does not mean a disembodied soul or anything like that. It, it sort of means to animate a living creature.
Hmm. So itās basically like there was inanimate dirt, [00:56:00] right? And then through a plan, again, Iāve pointed out that the word here can be translated as plan, not form. So God, through a plan animated the dirt with this word nefesh. And so, if you see the turn here, man does not have a nefesh, man is a nefesh, in the way that the, the story is constructed here.
And it means a living creature, a being or person. And so if we look at other places, like where itās used we see it used throughout, like, as God is, is, is giving other creatures their life. We see similar words being used here to nefesh. So this isnāt, like, a unique human soul, unless youāre saying that Heās giving souls to all of the other animals in these particular scenes here.
And itās, itās very clear because it first appears in the animals in chapter one, and then itās deliberately reused for humans in 2:7. Like, this, this is not a coincidence. This is not a mistake on the original authors, which is actually kind of weird. And we also see the same word [00:57:00] used with something like Jeremiah 15:9, āShe breathes out her nefesh,ā her life, right?
Oh. So itās basically like your breath. When it leaves you, you die.
Simone Collins: Mm-hmm.
Malcolm Collins: And this, again, gets to one of the lines that we find to be very important from the Bible, just sort of as a closing here. This is Ecclesiastes 3:18-19. If I have any line from the Bible thatās, like, my favorite line āAs for humans, God tests them so that they may see that they are like the animals.
Surely the fate of human beings is that of the animals. The same fate awaits them both. As one dies, so does the other. All have the same breath. Humans have no advantage over animals. Everything is meaningless.ā
Meaningless, by the way, is a bad translation here. A better translation is everything is evanescent or life is evanescent
Malcolm Collins: And the word used for all have the same breath here, do you wanna know where that word is used in Genesis?
Where? Itās the word that is translated as spirit in the phrase, āThe spirit of God was hovering over the waters.ā Oh. So the same breath that the [00:58:00] animals have- Yeah ... that the humans have is used to describe the animating force of God in opposition to the formless darkness that existed at the beginning of time, and that was in constant movement when you have the word hovering here.
And a lot of people, we go into that Ecclesiastes line a lot more in some of our tracks if youāre interested. Itās, itās very clear about what it means because it, it goes over a series of things where it goes over, like, hubristic things that people think, and then it contrasts them with what is actually true.
And this is one of the... It starts with the hubristic, what man thinks, that man is completely separate from this world, and then it says, āBut man is tested.ā And you see this framing over and over again in this section. Like, itās, itās not vague, th- this is meant to be a- No, you really are tested to see if you are so arrogant as to think that you are truly distinct from the natural world and from animals, which we then take into this reading here of Genesis.
Yeah. So again, spicy episode by [00:59:00] us. I guess Iāll put it in our religious stuff. Itās not that spicy compared to our other ones ācause I canāt- I love it. I love it ... explain
Simone Collins: crazy religion. I, I just, I remember, like, really thinking- Oh ... āHuh,ā when I was reading Genesis, and going into it in, in greater depth with you is so much fun.
I have to run. Go. I love you. I love you, too. Bye, gorgeous. Bye. All right, Iām hitting record. Oh, you beat me to it.
Malcolm Collins: All right, Iāll just get started here.
Simone Collins: Iām, yeah, Iām r- Iāve been looking forward to this all day, so thank you.
Speaker 19: Yeah, look at that Motion? Yeah, weāre motion liking that. You think so? Look, Iām floating. And Iām Off you go. Sail away.
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