The Leaks, The Lies, and The Power Moves They Don’t Want You To See | The Tom Bilyeu Show
fUxeUdXNRh4 • 2025-11-27
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Kind: captions Language: en Progress has theoretically been made in the Russia Ukraine conflict. Special envoy Steve Wickoff's back channel communications though from the negotiation have been leaked. Candace Owens has gone into hiding because she believes the French government is trying to assassinate her. Marjgerie Taylor Green resigns from Congress as troops continue to build up in the Caribbean. And Representative Maria Salazar says the US is about to intervene directly in Venezuela. James O'Keeffe manages to get someone from the Governmental Accountability Office to confess on camera that they're hiding information about RFK Jr. A VP at Campbell Soup got caught on a recording trashing the company's products. And Google rides the AI inflation bubble to a nearly $4 trillion valuation. All that more. >> All right, the first thing we have up is Ukraine apparently signing the peace deal. Um, so breaking, Ukraine has agreed to the full terms of President Trump's peace plan. I believe that's the 20point plan that we've gone over in the past. Um, to end the war with Russia per ABC News. Um, what makes this different from all the other times that we've talked about? Like they're getting closer. How close are we? >> Honestly, right now I assume we are no closer. Getting the specifics down on paper with Ukraine is very different than getting Ukraine and Russia to agree. So now look, I on this one, I really don't want to be cynical because I really want this to go well. War is a horror the likes of which I hope no human ever has to interact with. Uh so if we're able to actually get this across finish line, that would be an unmititigated good. But one of my favorite maxims is don't trust what somebody says. Don't even trust what somebody does, but always always trust a pattern. And the pattern with Putin is he tells you what you want to hear. He glad hands and he moves things forward and then does whatever the hell he wants. Um it was so brazen when he had the falling out with um the guy that marched on Moscow. I'm forgetting his name. Somebody in chat will remind me. Uh and it was like, "Well, that guy's dead." And then like a month later, his airplane mysteriously blows up midair. It's like so wild. Like he's just that predictable. Like he's straight out of a black comedy. It's wild. So yeah, I I if I were a one-man poly market, I would say that the odds are extremely low that they're able to actually come to an agreement. Uh the the sentiment that I get online is that Russia is in a very good position right now in terms of who's uh winning the back and forth. I won't call it winning the war, but like that they're losing fewer troops. They're able to push obviously much deeper into Ukraine. I know the Ukraine is launching like kamicazi drone strikes on Russia and so they probably don't love that but yeah from what I hear they definitely would feel like they have the upper hand in a big way. Uh and so the odds that they take a deal just don't seem high. The relationship with China seems to be going well. Um as far as I can tell the sanctions just haven't hurt them enough. So, uh, unless Putin is really feeling pressure from oligarchs or something like that that I'm just not deep enough in to know about, I don't see what would bring him to the table. So, we'll see. But, he's been pretty quiet. From everything I've seen so far, it seems like people have been criticizing the 20point plan and saying that Ukraine would would never sign this. They would never agree to it. Um so I'm surprised that Ukraine is the first one signing like actually saying yes to >> well they reduced it so the number of um points has been reduced. I think it's a 18 or 19 point plan now uh and they are supposedly pulling all the things that people thought oo they'd never agree to this. Now if people thought that they would never agree to seeding territory that doesn't make sense to me. If enough of your people are getting killed and enough of the people in the territories that are in question already identify as being ethnically Russian, like at some point you just go you got to cut the hand off to save the body. If you've got gang green, it's like it's going to either kill the whole body or you lop it off. Now reports indicate that there is territory that Russia is saying you're going to have to give up this area. will give up something else in exchange for that. That may be a hard and fast red line for the Ukraine because it's basically their thermopoli. Uh if you know the story of 300 from uh Sparta, they had to force the army that they the invading army to go through a choke point. And by going through that choke point, they were able to and still lose, but they were able to hold them off for a long time and just absolutely slaughter disproportionately. Um, it seems to be that the territory that Russia is trying to acquire is something like that. That if they can control the choke point, then there's only open land between Russia and Ukraine in a way that they would not be able to uh patrol effectively and stop. So again, not being a scholar on this stuff, but from what I've read so far, it seems like what the Ukraine would need to do is make sure that they hold that, that they build up a big military presence. That that's going to be part of their um go forward strategy. And the negotiation is no, no, we're going to have to have a much larger standing army. You're going to have to remove any of the caps on that. We're going to need to hold that territory, and we're going to need to beef up our military presence. And so if Russia wants to indicate to the world that, hey, we're negotiating in good faith, but these [ __ ] just won't be reasonable. They might draw a circle around that and say, "Wow, guys, listen. Like, we've got good traction here. There's no reason why we wouldn't want to take that." Ukraine is going to say, "Hold on. What are you talking about? We have the good traction here. We're dug in. We can defend this point. There's no way that we're going to give this up." Uh, and so you'll get a PR battle that happens over that. But again, I don't think Russia is sincere. I think Russia is going to keep pushing until something absolutely forces them to stop. And so if you were going to run the betting market on this, you would be looking for the indication that there something very bad has happened to Russia. So oligarchs are ganging up on Putin in a way that he feels weakened by that. uh that there is tremendous loss of life on the Russian side, that there is a um economic struggle that does not seem to currently exist right now. Like you would need that kind of pressure where Putin is going to say I need a PR exit ramp and so then I could see him coming to the table, but without that I don't see why he would stop you if you step inside of his frame of reference. from the chat. Um, essentially thinking about someone in America who is just trying to pay their bills, why should they care about the Russia Ukraine situation? >> I mean, if you said, Tom, uh, this is a Lincoln Douglas debate. You need to be able to take either side of the issue. And now, here's the, uh, case. I think I called them cases. It's been a long time since I didn't done Lincoln Douglas debate. Uh, and I have to defend a side that I don't believe in, but I'm going to give you the best argument. I would say something like, "Okay, listen. Uh, you've got all of Europe. Europe is in a very weakened state. You have Russia. Russia right now is being territorially acquisitive. You've got Putin who has long believed that the fall of the USSR is a tragedy that needs to be rectified. and by invading Ukraine has basically broken like 80 years of we no longer do the whole expand your borders thing. And so we've had this border integrity where people respond very swiftly internationally to say hey like this is an incursion across sovereign borders. We absolutely do not tolerate that anymore. And there's massive uh push back the world over. If the if the invasion of Ukraine is allowed to stand from an international community perspective, we've basically said, "Nah, like all right, a little bit of territory acquisition is fine and you run the risk of all hell breaking loose into Europe again where Russia now starts going into other territories." And so what becomes the brakes on Russia or do they just start doing that? And now we're back in, you know, World War II era where there's all these battles over who owns what territory first obviously by the Germans, then the US and Russia sort of divvying up parts of Eastern Europe. So it like do we want to get back into that world? So let's say if I'm arguing this position, I'm going to pound the table. I'm going to say absolutely not. I'm going to say you cannot trust Putin. that you've got to understand that this is somebody that will continue marching deeper and deeper into the former Soviet states, gobbling them all up. Is there really going to be anything that's going to stop him from pushing deeper into Europe? Um, also you've got a Russia China alliance. Anything that we can do to weaken Russia, China, uh, Iran, North Korea, um, obviously you got the BRICS nations, but I won't try to lump them all together. But you from that like Russia and China running all these military operations, putting out public statements that there's never been a deeper tie between Russia and China. And if you know Russia and China's history, it's pretty terrifying to think that from a military perspective, they're more united now than they've ever been. Uh given that they fought the um war between what ends up becoming North and South Korea together, that there were a ton of Chinese troops uh fighting on the side of North Korea. Uh, and so you've got the that allegiance is like, do we really want to see that getting stronger? Um, the answer would be in this argument, absolutely not. Now, if I'm taking what I actually believe, America is going bankrupt. That will be devastating in a way to the average American in a way that people are not, in my opinion, accurately mapping. It's one of those where I really have to decide if I'm going to keep talking about this, I have to find an emotional way to deal with this. Uh because it's forcing me to map the territory down to like really minute detail. And the the deeper I go, like the more I zoom in onto the picture, the more I sort of map every pixel of this image, the more I realize, oh, the um belief that I have in terms of how the economy works, it doesn't change. It just gets more terrifying. I feel that we are standing on the precipice over the next decade. This is not like a next five months problem, but over the next decade, we will live through the process of what it means to go broke. And when you look at history, it is not pleasant. Now, it doesn't always play out exactly the same way. So, it doesn't necessarily have to become a full-blown civil war or anything like that. Um, but keep in mind right now how panicky, maybe the right word, people are about the Affordable Care Act subsidies getting removed. bro, it all goes away. Like when your country goes broke, it you have to have a balanced budget. So that's $2 trillion a year. Instantly get vaporized. Then it's like, okay, well now that that's happened and we cannot borrow money internationally anymore. All we can do is print money. What ends up happening to the economy? What ends up happening to the dollar on an international stage? is just going to keep getting weaker and weaker and weaker and weaker and weaker. So you run and then of course getting people to understand that printing money hurts the poor middle class the most. Uh so all of that feeds into my belief that you have two options before you. You become the world's gun store and you leverage conflicts to make money for the average American so that we're able to create military industrial complex jobs for a whole lot of people to make a whole lot of weapons. I get the moral implications, but I'm saying it is a an economically viable option for us to decide, hey, we don't we're not going to get involved in these conflicts, but we're going to arm people to the teeth, and we're going to re-industrialize around weapons and artillery and all of that. Cool. Now, they can fight as long as they want because you're making money. What we can keep doing is sending money over either in the form of weapons that we're supposedly not going to use anymore, but if they're usable, obviously we could still use them. Uh doing that or just outright sending cash because that's a dollar that you're not spending here in America. Now, I am the most worried about the cultural implications of America believing that you can just print money, add infin item, that socialism is a good idea. Um, that's the thing that terrifies me. Um, so anything that gets people to focus on fiscal responsibility, I'm here for. So, if extracting ourselves from conflicts that are not near to uh our shores is the way that we get there, great. Um, but I don't think this is the simplest thing in the world in terms of just be isolationist, we are still one of two incredibly important international powers. And so if we completely extract ourselves out of that, you become isolated. You're not making friends. You don't have the allies that you may need at some point in the future. And so, as I say, make friends before you need them. So, this becomes um getting the voting public to choose usually forces you to give them binary options like America first has rapidly become America only because you just need something that's really concrete, really easy to see and understand. Um but it's probably far better that we run a more nuanced plan of uh helping where we can getting fiscally responsible such that we have money to do things internationally with when we need to. But that is going to be a brutally difficult cell. But getting into the nuance. And by the way, if if these strands are not connecting for people, you need to um tell me where people are getting lost so I can really draw the connective tissue because I I'm getting into uh the nuanced web that makes all of this stuff difficult to parse through. I know this is where people tend to get lost, but it is a very hard cell to tell Americans, hey, I know that we're going bankrupt. I know that we have to spend less money domestically, but we also can't go to zero spend on the international stage because these are allies that we want and need. These are ways that we get some of the power that we have as Americans. Um because we have so much influence the world over. And if you give up that influence, which is already waning, but if you give up that influence entirely, then you're going to economically down the road be in a much worse position. But that's hard to convince people of when they look around and they're like, "hm, I can't make ends meet already. This does not feel good in any way, shape, or form." The youth feel totally disenfranchised and they believe they're disenfranchised because capitalism bad, not realizing they're disenfranchised because we gave up on capitalism a very long time ago. Uh and that the way to solve their problems is to move in the opposite direction. But good luck convincing them in the middle of all of that, in the middle of people like me pounding our chest saying we need to balance the budget. and also saying, "But by the way, you probably do want to use money to make sure that you have killer allies the world over." >> We've got people eavesdropping on calls with Russian officials while they're trying to end the war in Ukraine. And I didn't think there was a ton in the actual transcript, unless I'm missing something, but >> it's not that there's a ton. It's that um the it is utterly fascinating to get a glimpse inside of people's awareness of Trump's psychological vulnerabilities. We all have them. When I was teaching film, I would often show students bad film making so that you could see the process. So good editing tends to be invisible and you don't understand how the trick is being made. You know how you feel, but you don't know how to structure that. So as a like growing editor, you're trying to figure out, wait, what do I do? And so I would bring things in where I'd say, okay, you can see what they're attempting to do, but they're doing it clumsily. And so now you can see like, oh, fast cuts create this effect and um things like that. So anyway, Trump is the psychological version of that. His tells are so big and so obvious that they give people a way to see how the psychological game is played. So what I found interesting about Steve Wickoff, Steve Wickoff has a job, get this thing done. And Steve Witoff believes in this exchange that he has information that would be useful to the Russians to get the job done because he understands one of the pieces on the chessboard is Trump's personality. He knows another piece on the chessboard is Putin's personality. And so everybody involved is going to have mapped just as I would expect you to have mapped my weirdnesses so that you know how to navigate me because I'm important to your professional life. And so anybody smart is going to be like, "Okay, Tom's really weird about these three things." And so as people come into the company and you get to know them, it's like you look over your shoulder and you're like, "Listen, if you want to get around Tom, just like acknowledge these things, right?" And so my message to people is always the only thing that makes it worse is when you feel like you can't talk about it. So like I don't mind people saying this is what you're like. We all know that and so we all do this thing and be like yeah that is what I'm like. So you get to see Witoff saying hey guys listen if we want to get this done just start the call. tell Putin to start the call by saying, "Listen, Trump, I'm very impressed with the peace deal that you brokered in Gaza and I think you're a man of peace and I respect you greatly." And he said, "After that, the call is going to go great." And I was like, "Yeah, this is not the kind of thing that you want to leak to the public because these kind of magic tricks only work when people aren't aware that they're being played." Um, but for all of us that now get a glimpse into that to see how all of this stuff goes, it's pretty fascinating. Now, again, I don't think this is necessarily going anywhere because I don't think Putin is ready to sign. Um, but I certainly could be wrong about that, so we'll see. But that that was why I found this particularly interesting. You've got potentially the NSA leaking secrets of our own government, highlighting the fact that our own government is fighting against itself. This is tied to the James O'Keefe thing. Um, watch the series Death by Lightning about the assassination of the of President Garfield. Uh, it really shows how governments like even on the side that you think they would be cooperating with each other, they're fighting against each other going against the other side who they're also fighting against who within their own party they're fighting against each other. Like, and PS, this is why socialism doesn't work because everybody's fighting against everybody else. And so people just end up going, "This guy's my enemy. I'm just going to take all this [ __ ] for myself. You're having a biological experience. You've been programmed in a certain way. So, um, yeah, we'll get back to the show in a moment, but first, here is the brutal truth about scaling. 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If that's you and you want to learn how to break through your biggest business bottlenecks using first principles thinking, be sure to apply now. Just go to impact theory.com/scale or click the link in the show notes. Again, that's impact theory.com/scale. Now, back to the show. Here we are with Candace Owens. This is what's happening. She said, "Urgent. 2 days ago, I was contacted by a high-ranking employee of the French government. After determining this person's position and proximity to the French couple, I have deemed the information they gave me to be cred credible enough to share publicly in the event that something happens." In short, this person claims that the Mcron is it Mcronone Macron Mcronone >> Mcronone um have executed upon and paid for my assassination. Yes, you read that correctly. More specifically, the green light was given to a small team in national gender intervention group. I am told there is one Israeli that is on this assassination squad and the plans were formalized. >> Again, this person provided concrete proof that they were well placed within the French government apparatus. Further to this point, this person claims that Charlie Kirk's assassination trained with the French Legion 13th Brigade with multi-state involvement. >> This is where my neck started getting longer and longer. When the French Legion got pulled in, I was like >> [laughter] >> Journalist Xavier Bousard's life is also at risk. This is deadly serious. The head of state of France apparently wants us both dead and has authorized professional units to carry this out. And then she asks people to retweet. Um and I do not know who in the the American government can be trusted since this source claims our leaders are aware, but I have more specific information which is def definitively verifiable should they care to reach out to me. to the brave official in France who did this because they were so moved by the evil of Charlie's public execution to risk their own life. May God bless you truly. And then I love her last line, let all be revealed. It's so um >> I mean this is a serious situation, but it has cinematic gravitas for right 43.5 million views on this tweet. Dude, this this is like Elon Musk visibility. Very I mean as a content creator we got to give this woman a round of applause. Uh >> takes an assassination attempt. >> I mean okay what we we need to go through this piece by piece um to give the devil is due. I I have not been in any way shape or form unclear. My take on Candace is I do not think she is lying and I think she's wildly off base. So, um, this is somebody who I am in no way, shape, or form trying to diagnose Candace because I don't think the following statement is literally true. But my old college roommate, his brother was schizophrenic and his brother um he would go off his meds and he they'd like find him two states away living under a bridge and he was like, "The Italian government is trying to get me." And I was always like, "Why the Italian government?" But the Italian government was trying to get him. These are this this is all real. And um you know he's like having to move from one place to another cuz they could track his thoughts and like all this time. It's just really wild [ __ ] And they would finally get to him and they would talk him down and they'd be like remember you're schizophrenic. You need to get on your medicine. And so they'd get him back on his medication. And this is the terrifying part. When he would get on his medication, he would realize, "Oh yeah, they're not after me. But I kind of wish they were because my life was way more interesting and it's called secondary depression. So once you realize you're not the main character in some like huge drama, um it kind of sucks. And so my friend unfortunately was telling me the story from the he's gone off his meds again and I'm not going to go chase him down. It's the life he wants he wants to be important. He wants there to be this big conspiracy that he's at the center of and that makes it more exciting for him. And I was like yo he's literally trapped in the Matrix. You pull him out. He's straight cipher and is like, "Yeah, I'd rather be in the Matrix." And so I'm gonna unplug and just like reinsert me. I don't want to be aware again. I'm not saying that Candace is schizophrenic, but I am saying that this drama is great TV, but [snorts] pull up the one I [clears throat] said, uh, this struck a nerve with me. >> Yep. >> So, there's a guy that gives a breakdown, and I was like, this is how I feel when I look at this. And we we'll get in a minute to Officer Tatum, who seems reasonably credible, and he thinks Candace might be right. So remember there's very much a second side to this story. Uh but here we've got Kenakoa the Great and he said, "Why not release the evidence to the public and show the world? Haven't you been saying the Trump administration was involved in Charlie's murder? So why depend on them now to release the evidence?" So, Israel, Charlie's chief of staff, his executive producer, his pastor, the Trump administration, an Egyptian plane, and the French Foreign Legion all work together to kill Charlie Kirk. And that's where I'm just like, yikes. Like, this is getting wild in terms of like all of the things that connect and all that. I stand humbly before life in that I've been wrong before. I'll be wrong again. It is entirely possible that this all unfolds. It's like, holy [ __ ] they really were trying to kill Candace. This is insane. It is certainly not outside the realm of possibility that a government I mean, we know governments kill people. So, it's not outside the realm of possibility that uh that they are, but who does it seem really unlikely to me that all of these dots actually connect together. >> To me, it's like it's too wild to think that she would go this hard without being truly convinced. And then Charlie did die. And so there there's something. Now, maybe that was just one random person, but like what part of you, it seems like you're leaning toward I don't think this is actually real, but she probably believes it. What part of you makes you makes you think that it's not actually literally real? >> Aams razor. So, the simplest answer is usually correct. um that there's a guy that was on the roof with a gun uh that could have shot Charlie, claims to have shot Charlie, uh gave motive for why he shot Charlie. So, there's option A. Uh option B is that this is like the world's most wildly connected, everybody's in on it, uh conspiracy. And it's just like, yeah, I mean, look, it is possible, but [snorts] uh is it the most likely answer? So, again, I'll follow the evidence. And I am super interested in this drama. I'd be lying if I said I wasn't. Like, this is this is becoming the new reality TV. Like, for real. This is new reality TV. And I'm watching it. I [ __ ] love the Candace Owens show. Like, this is wild. Uh, so I want to find out. I want to see if she ends up getting sued into absolute oblivion by the uh French government. I want to see if they really did want her dead. I want to know who the hell killed Charlie Kirk. Was it actually Tyler Robinson? I want to know more information about the shooter and Butler, Thomas Cook. What the hell happened there? Why did they like so quickly sweep this stuff away? So, a thousand% and I'm very open, man. whatever ends up being true, let all be revealed. Let all be revealed. I want to see it all. Um, but it's like when I look at all the things, all the threads she's pulling on, I'm just like, it strains credibility for me. Um, but all will come out in the wash. Now, the thing that I fear is that in the end, it's like it's so convoluted that we never really know the truth and like what happened and it's we're just racing down as a society. Like we're letting go of AAM's razor and we are getting to the more convoluted, the more crazy the better. Um, and I don't that that is going to be high utility, which is the thing that I try to always map the world by. I think that mapping the world that there's like all these crazy criminal geniuses that interact with each other in like the super sophisticated ways is far less believable than the world is full of a whole spectrum of people from lovely, incredible, wonderful humans to just absolute uh predators. And those predators have uneasy alliances and they sort of hate each other and they're building blackmail and they like do actually have sex islands and people do know that you can get scary dirt on people, but that you like pull in the French Legion and I don't know, it just starts to get too much at some point. Uh, we know that there are plenty of bad people in the world. We know that assassinations absolutely do happen. To your point, we know Charlie Kirk was just assassinated. Um, but if you give me a simple explanation that tracks and a really convoluted one where I have to like, okay, we don't really have evidence for that. We just have vibes. But, uh, and we have another video I want to show first to give the other side its due. I want to show the officer Tatum thing. But, um, there's another video that we're going to show where it's like, let me walk you through the psychological principles that Candace uses. They're absolutely brilliant. He is like me, I think, on the fence of like, I don't even know that she knows she's using them. Uh, but here they are. So, anyway, here's Officer Tatum saying that, hey, there really might be something here. At a minimum, the US government needs to investigate this. Supposedly, he has seen the evidence himself. So, let's hear it. >> Then, brother, the American government, I don't care how much you don't like Candace. I don't care how much you've been trashing American government and and the FBI. They got to do something. And I'm going to tell you what they will do. It doesn't matter right, wrong, or indifferent. They got they have to investigate this. They have to investigate this. And I think that if it is found to be true and the proof prevails, which I'm I'm convinced after talking to Candace and the stuff that we talked about, I'm convinced, then that mean that there should be dire consequences for the French government and whoever else was involved, the Mcron, what dire consequences. I'm talking about the American government should go after them like never before. >> So, I mean, listen, if the French government really is trying to assassinate Candace Owens, then yes, I would expect that to be a diplomatic problem. Now, governments do be kill people. So, let's all remember uh the American government kills people daily off the uh coast of Venezuela. So, um don't be too shocked. Now, having said that, if we really did find that that was true, I would expect there to be some backlash. >> Hell to pay. Yeah. Something >> I don't know if I'll go that far, but I if they if we found out that a foreign government killed Charlie Kirk, then yes, I would expect there to be hell to pay. Um, but it's interesting that a plot is discovered that I would expect there to be a much smaller response to than an actual carried out assassination. So, I mean, we'll see. We'll see. All right. Makes >> sense. We also have the Telegram owner, Pavle Durov, um, saying that after going through everything Charlie Kirk ever said about France and Mcronone, I actually think Candace's claim about France being involved in his death is entirely possible. And then we'll add a former CIA officer, John Curia, [snorts] uh, explaining that France assassinates Green Peace protesters >> and they're murderous, too. You know, they're murderous. >> Oh, yeah. If you're a member of, for example, of Greenpeace, they're going to blow your brains out if you try to, you know, take over a ship or throw paint on a ship or whatever. They kill a lot of Greenpeace activists. >> The French intelligence stuff. >> Yeah. >> Like not the paramilitary. >> No, no, no, no, no. They're happy to go out and kill people. Have you talked to any of the CIA uh people that we have through here often? >> You're giving me a silent nod. Does that mean you can't say much? Like what about this specifically? >> I I will read you a recent I won't say who it's from because that doesn't feel right. >> Tom is breaking out his phone. >> Yes, >> we are getting >> uh it goes like this. >> Um I said uh what do you think of Candace's claims at France? Put a hit out on her. I said uh something that would be a little too identifiable. Uh and then his response was regarding France. They don't use assassins. She's full of it. France is a tech heavy service. So >> interesting. A tech heavy service. >> Yeah. Meaning they're going to spy. They're going to capture information. Um but one one uh intelligence community intelligence community person's belief. So take that for what it's worth. But >> makes total sense. >> Very interesting. >> Um you want to get into the breakdown of the psychological tactics that Candace is using? >> Yeah. So, um, yeah, we'll let this guy speak for himself. So, we're not going to watch the whole thing, but you'll get a sense of it in the beginning. >> Candace Owens might be one of the most persuasive voices online right now. What she's really doing, whether she knows it or not, is one of the most effective persuasion formulas on the internet. Her videos on Charlie Kirk's assassination have averaged millions of views. And Candace is incredibly good at one thing, making people feel certain without ever proving anything. So, I sat through all 36 hours of her investigation so far, every clip, every theory, just to see what's really going on. And what I found were five tactics that make Candace Owens not just convincing, but dangerously persuasive. And once you see them, you won't be able to unsee them. Now, obviously, a lot of people feel deceived and gaslit by institutions, and in many cases, rightly so. But that's not the only thing going on here. If you've ever watched one of our episodes, you'll notice it immediately. The odd footage, the timestamps, things that don't line up, the screenshots that don't make sense, and the random people who suddenly seem suspicious. But she doesn't just give you one or two of these. Every episode, she throws out more than you can count. Nearly 15 in this video alone, sometimes over 20. In fact, I say that this is virtually the entirety of her episodes. She gathers anything that could look suspicious, even if it could be random or unrelated. on 94 Kakash Patel as far as November and December. Then we have Frank Turk in October 7th. Well, Megan Kelly >> with so many anomalies being introduced every episode, at least a couple of them will strike you as strange. And given the sheer volume of her claims, your ability to think carefully about any of them gets drawn out by the sheer number of them. By the time you start to think critically about one date or rumor or insinuation, she's already moved on to the next. So eventually what happens is you stop paying attention to the quality of the evidence and you're overwhelmed by the quantity leaving you to conclude that there's just simply too many strange things occurring for there not to be something more going on. This can be thought of as an anomaly overload. It's what happens when a flood of speculation starts to feel like evidence and when the gaps in our knowledge >> this is what I feel when I'm watching her stuff. She's just trying to flood the system. There's so many like I'm just I'm just saying like if you this is weird right and you're like yes it's weird but the number of weird things that I've encountered in my life that when I go and actually look under the hood I'm like oh yeah got it that happens to me with the economy all the time where I'm like what why would that be the outcome and then you realize oh there's actually the underlying mechanism whatever that does yield that otherwise surprising thing. Um, so yeah, I'm always a little when I see like the full episode with Candace, um, I'm always concerned what she'll take as evidence where it's like, okay, it's a coincidence. I will give you that, but I don't understand what you have that directly connects them. >> Someone said Alex Jones was a pro at Anomaly Overload. >> Oh my god. I'm sure almost every day he's got a like a World War II kickoff. we got to talk about it. And I'm like, bro, I I only see you at the headline level. And I'm like, come on, Meow. Like, we see this a lot. Uh, how does he get everybody to believe? No, no, no, for real. Today. I know yesterday and the day before I said it was then, but like today. That would be like if I every day was like the market just crashing today. Today, bro. Uh, and did that every day all day. I don't understand. I think people just want to be in that feeling, I guess. I don't It's interesting. >> All right, back to this video. >> Sinister is happening. >> What's going on here? What are Egyptian military subcontractors doing in the middle of Provo, Utah on the day that Charlie Kirk was assassinated? >> And even though she hasn't proven anything yet, within one episode, you've already moved on from curious to convinced. And all she had to do was to keep asking questions. >> The crime that you were not allowed to commit. just asking questions. >> Okay. But her asking questions is exactly what's in question. If you listen closely to her podcast, often she is just asking questions, but in a way where people hear much more than just a question. Sometimes she makes the implications clear, as she did when implying that Donald Trump was involved in Charlie Kirk's assassination. I >> think it is a circumstance where we all we just know. We just know that he was truly betrayed in one of the most egregious ways that I think I've ever seen. It has made me lose faith in politics. It's made me fully lose faith in Trump. Um, and I just like I just my heart aches for the fact that he gave so much of his life. Again, whether she understands that she's using a technique or not, it is certainly a very evocative way to pose all of this stuff, this could be exactly how it's running in her mind where she sees it and she's like, "Oh my god, like come on, what possible reason could there be?" And that feeling gives her so much certainty that this obviously doesn't make any sense. Um, feelings can be very persuasive. Now, I know a lot of people are saying that she's got a ton of receipts. So, this is where I'm like, listen, this is going to come out in the wash. Like, this one, because of the lawsuit, I think this one's going to go all the way across the finish line. So, it'll be very interesting to see how far this goes. Um, obviously, I hope it isn't true. I hope it isn't true. I don't want her as a journalist to be being pursued by another government trying to kill her. Like, that would be the worst scenario. Great TV. That would be terrible. I don't want that to be true. So I certainly have a bias where like the idea that this is true is just also anathema to the world that I want to live in. Uh so in terms of having a potential blind spot myself, that would be it. Um but yeah, I mean we'll be watching it closely. But this is wild. >> All right, let's move on to Marjorie Taylor Green um resigning from Congress. Um she put out a video. It's pretty long. I don't think we necessarily want to go through the whole thing. Um there is also a transcript. I found something interesting um in the end of it. So um first off, she talks a lot about the personal attacks and things like that. So maybe walk us through first um like what's brought her to this point of actually feeling the need to resign and go be with her family. >> My best attempt at getting beyond the PR of it all knowing that I am not inside her mind. I've never been in a room with her. I think that's true. Uh, so this is speculation to be sure, but I think it goes something like this. She wanted to run for statewide office in Georgia. Trump somewhere between uh, don't [ __ ] do it and hey, you probably would lose might be a little embarrassing. You probably shouldn't do it. Um, I don't know which of those interpretations is accurate. I don't think anybody disagrees that that was sort of the starting point, but um, she did not like that. and then turned on President Trump. I don't know what the right way to represent that is neutrally. Uh but certainly started voting against things, pushing back, being very public against his agenda. And I would imagine that that invited now she's getting attacked from both sides. So that couldn't have been a lot of fun. And when I look at politicians, I have one question. Why the [ __ ] are you in politics? When I say, "Bro, no way." There is not enough money in the universe to get me to go into politics. Uh, is there something if you could somehow convince me that uh, all good, at least average intelligent people were dead and I was the only person left. Oh yeah, I might feel an overwhelming sense of obligation, but I would never voluntarily go into politics. It is a level of misery that is just weird. So when I saw that, I was like, "Yeah, I get that." Like you now felt your own party did not have your back. If she really is somebody that connects deeply to people and felt like, "Well, cuz she was unhinged from where I'm sitting." Like during the State of the Union, during Biden's uh last State of the Union, I was like, "Who is this maniac?" Uh, so she obviously put herself very far out on a limb and if she did that because she felt like, oh, I've got this anchor of Trump that's holding this branch, so I know I'm not going to fall. And so now I'm that like hyper barking Chihuahua that feels safe when I've got a fence or I've got a leash on, but the second you open the fence or remove the leash, I actually get very quiet and I don't bark anymore. So, it's possible she just felt isolated and was like, "I don't like this, man. Like, I'm getting attacked from all sides. Nobody seems to appreciate this. I'm getting stressed. I'm missing time with my family." And so, what am I doing? And if she she said she spent millions of her own dollars, so she's like a multi-millionaire already and can afford to blow millions of dollars to go and campaign uh on her own dime, she's calling in rich. It's like it is a constant temptation. I know from experience when you already have plenty of money, you never have to work again. Every gnarly situation is judged against hm I don't need to do this. So, uh, do I pull the rip cord? So, it feels like either she realizes I'm just my heart's not in this anymore, so I'm going to back out. or she realizes like if she's far more of a political animal than I realize and is like ah for me to go build for the next cycle I need to eject out now I need to go on a campaign be totally anti-Trump and uh spend the next you know whatever year being anti-Trump and then running for Senate I suppose that's possible um or something at the state level but she realizes again conjecture realizes that um being in Congress and having all this pressure to adhere to Trump is not the place to do this. Let me get outside the system, throw rocks at it, and then run off the back of that. We'll see. A lot of the beginning of this um transcript letter that she ended up reading is her saying, "I've been cast aside by the Republican party, but I truly care about the people. I can't get these ideals pushed forward." like it when you just read it, it seems like she has a good heart, is trying to do right by her constituents and then just can't push it forward and is sort of like giving up in defeat. Um, how do you read that? Do you read it that way? Do you think there's some spin here? Do you think that everything is spin? Everything out of a politician, every dude, when you talk to your spouse, when you talk to your kids, you're spinning. So, humans don't know how to communicate without spin. Spin is just frame of reference. Now, how hard is she spinning? That I don't know. But for sure, she's going to say goodbye in a way that puts her in the best possible light. But does that also sound plausible? Yes. I'm sure that that is very frustrating. The best lies are always tied to something real. Uh so, I'm sure that she is very distressed at how much of the legislation that she tried hard to put forward just never gets to the floor. that would be a level of obnoxious that would be hard to deal with that other people can sort of relegate you. And then she ran a strategy of okay, I know how to get attention in this media age and then went sort of full unhinged lunatic from my perspective uh at the end of the Biden administration. Realized I don't love the reputation that that's giving me. Began to reel it in a bit. Um and yeah, but is this just another political arc? It could be. We'll see. Like it is so believable that somebody that has money that I don't know if she's married, sounds like she has kids. So it's like if there are other things for her to focus on that will give her meaning and fulfillment like a thousand%. Do that. Um all of the work that I do knowing that I never need to work again is all predicated on meaning and purpose. And so it's like if she's like for a long time felt like okay this is the most meaningful most purposeful thing that I can do and then just one wall after another and then felt abandoned and completely isolated. And if she's like a communal person which being a woman she's already prone to be it's like well I can see her ejecting to go back to the core group in her life her family that give her all of those same feelings and so why am I doing this? But I can also see that this is just a temporary battery recharge while she builds up a campaign statewide and is like, "Fuck these guys. I don't need them. I don't need their support. I'm going to do this my way." She clearly knows how to get attention. Um, so could also be that. We'll see. Toward the end of it, um, she says, "There's no plan to save the world or insane 4D chess game being played. When the common American people finally realize and understand that the political industrial complex of both parties is ripping this country apart, that not one elected leader like me is able to stop Washington's machine from gradually destroying our country. And instead, the reality is that they, the common Americans, the people possess the real power over Washington. Then I'll be here by their side to rebuild it." Um, this gives me vibes of kind of when you talk about fighting for the soul of America and things like that. It gives me that kind of feeling. It feels like a a rally or like a war cry. But then also, is there truth in that? There's no plan to save the world and the power really is with the people. Do you agree with those statements? >> Um, well, uh, plan to save the world. That is a very generous statement for any politician. But I if she said there's no plan to re-empower America, I would say no, that's [ __ ] There's clearly Trump, Bessant, uh, Lutnik, they are trying to re-empower America. I don't need you to believe that they're doing it for any reason other than re-empowering America will make them and their friends richer, but they clearly are acting as if they are trying to re-empower America. Cool. Now maybe it's just a lucky stray that we're all catching that that will also be good for us. But they clearly have a plan. Now whether that plan is going to be effective is totally different. Also, and here's the part that I think will distress everybody. You will learn about politicians exactly what you learned about your parents when you were a kid. There was a time where you thought that they were invincible. They knew everything and they were just going to make the world safe and sound for you. And then you suddenly realize, oh my god, they had no idea what they were doing. They were falling through life and just making the best of it. The human interactions at scale are so complicated. There's no universe in which any president or anybody else can accurately map. I'm going to do this thing and all these series of things are going to unfold. It's what I call the chaos machine. Just like trying to run a business, uh, everybody has a plan till you get punched in the face by the market. And so they're going to react. And so Trump is a intuitive counterpuncher. So he does everything by sort of gut feel and he'll respond. If you're positive to him, he'll be positive back. If you're a dick to him, he'll be a dick back. So once you understand that, it's like, well, that's what we've got in office. So you've got a guy that does everything by intuition. And so it's going to seem like um he's just constantly changing his mind or whatever, but in reality, he's just learned, oh, I can get ahead by going in, be open, see what's really going on, respond in kind, and then like we'll see where they try to back me. I think that he has an entire region of his brain dedicated to where's the leverage in this. And so he really does, I think, go into ne
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