The subtlecain Podcast

Interview Hrvoje Moric: Happy Warrior

March 10, 2024 Aaron Smith Season 1 Episode 65
The subtlecain Podcast
Interview Hrvoje Moric: Happy Warrior
Show Notes Transcript Chapter Markers

INTERVIEW HRVOJE MORIC: HAPPY WARRIOR


MARCH, 10TH 2024      AARON SMITH      SEASON 1      EPISODE 65

 

SHOW NOTES:

Today, we speak with Hrvoje Morić about the importance of being a Happy Warrior, being grounded, being connected to people in our communities, and embracing the joy found in the little things. We also discuss various aspects of the globalist schemes and related geopolitical dynamics. Hrvoje is a Geneva School of Diplomacy graduate, former Professor of International Relations, proud Croatian-American-Mexican, and founder of The Geopolitics & Empire Podcast. With the assistance of experts from around the world, he seeks to critically analyze global affairs and is devoted to examination of the perilous truths of our time.

You can always email me at subtlecain@protonmail.com

The subtlecain Podcast Telegram: https://t.me/ThesubtlecainPodcast

Substack: https://subtlecain.substack.com


LINKS:

HRVOJE MORIC LINKS:

https://geopoliticsandempire.com/

https://tntradio.live/shows/the-hrvoje-moric-show/

https://geopoliticsandempire.substack.com/

THE SUBTLECAIN SPOTLIGHT:  DR. ROBERT EPSTEIN

DR. ROBERT EPSTEIN ON GEOPOLITICS & EMPIRE:

https://geopoliticsandempire.com/2020/02/22/robert-epstein-were-living-in-unseen-dictatorship-2020-is-big-tech-takeover-turning-point-133/

DR. ROBERT EPSTEIN American Institute for Behavioral Research and Technology

https://aibrt.org/

 

Support the Show.

You are valued, you are loved, and you are worthy.

Speaker 1:

Welcome to the Sub-Occane Podcast. I'm your host, aaron Smith, broadcasting from the Aorta of America, beautiful festival city, oshkosh, wisconsin, where we pump out reason and pierce through the propaganda. Here we go. Today is Sunday, march 10, 2024. This is Episode 65 of the Sub-Occane Podcast Interview with Hervoy Morich. Happy Warrior. If you're new to the Sub-Occane Podcast, thank you for gracing us with your virtual presence. If you're a returning listener, thank you for your continued support. It is much appreciated.

Speaker 1:

Hervoy is an accomplished and well-educated seeker of truth and a warrior in the arena of ideas. His daily radio program on TNT Radio Live is dynamic and informative, and his Geopolitics and Empire podcast is a treasure trove of fascinating interviews with a wide variety of people from all over the world and spanning many different subjects. Hervoy's passion and humility are obvious to anyone who listens to his shows. His genuine curiosity about people and the world allow him the unfortunately increasingly rare ability to actually have meaningful conversations with people of a variety of opinions. It's refreshing and uplifting.

Speaker 1:

So many of us, and myself included, at times are just waiting for the other person to stop talking so that we can say what we're thinking without really listening. That's one of the reasons why I love having him on the show. He has a lot of wisdom to share and experience and it's an honor to take the time to hear what he has to say, to listen. Let's get into it, alright, mr Hervoy Morich, I appreciate you coming back on. As you know, I'm a big fan of your TNT radio show and your podcast, geopolitics and Empire, so thank you very much for taking the time today.

Speaker 2:

It's always great to chat with you, aaron, and with anyone I'm chatting with. I'm guesting often. I was on Doc Malick's podcast recently and there's a Canadian podcast called Jason Levin, and it's funny. I asked him to come on my TNT show and the response I get is hey, why don't you come on my show? So he's like okay, whatever, sure.

Speaker 1:

Well, I've stated this before, but I really appreciate your ability to converse with people from a variety of backgrounds, political views and on a host of topics, and you have real and honest discussion and that happening between two people who don't necessarily walk in lockstep ideologically. It seems counterintuitive, but I'm seeing less and less of that and it brings me hope in it. It's always refreshing to see that people can just sit down and talk and discuss things, and maybe they don't agree about everything, but they're able to discuss things graciously and effectively, tackle topics without compromising their own principles, and you're very good at that. And it's not as easy as it sounds in a polarized world like the one we live in now.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, two things just came to mind there, I think. One is I'm interested. I'm like I'm truly interested in all of these wide range of topics, right, so you have to have a genuine interest. And number two, I think, humility right, to be able to just let the other person speak and learn from them. So those are two things that just came to mind.

Speaker 1:

Well, curiosity is so much a part of who we are in our autobiographical memory, and it becomes so important for our spirituality and for all of these non-material aspects of being human, and the more you have of it, the more you're able to tap into your muse and your creativity and the more you're able to express who you are or define who you are as an individual apart from the group, and that's so important in our walk in this life, and so I respect that.

Speaker 1:

I also respect and value the ability to network with people and who share common goals and values, and you recently had an opportunity to attend two events that I wanted to discuss with you today the greater reset and anarcho-polko, and so if we could take them one at a time and then maybe discuss some of the differences, similarities and what your overall takeaway was, so kind of the W questions who, what, when, where and why- yeah, I feel they are sort of the same type of events and I guess you can say they're a fork because, as I understand it, john Bush and Derek Rose, who run greater reset, they used to speak at or attend anarcho-polko and so they branched off and so now you have two and I saw a lot of the same people at both events.

Speaker 2:

It was interesting so as an anarcho-polko. So the first one was in Morelia, the greater reset, and then anarcho-polko was an anarcho-polko and anarcho-polko. I'm noticing, hey, there's some of the same vendors, like IHeal Collective. They were a greater reset, they were anarcho-polko. There's the guy, a bullion guy, who was at both events that I was talking to, mark, I think, is the name, and on attendees as well. So that tells you right there, it's the same ideological thread which you know.

Speaker 2:

For many of us the first thing is it's anti-globalists, right, anti-new World Order, anti-globalism, all that stuff, right. Greater reset, right. And then anarcho-polko, anarchy. So, yeah, you know, greater reset was a little, the attendance was less, the number of people was less, a little bit less than anarcho-polko. Yeah, it was held at a venue. It was pleasant. Morelia, the venue was much, was pleasant, place to be very comfortable and you had. What can I say? It's the same type of themes talking about the solutions for the greater reset, a lot of health stuff, crypto stuff, off-grid living, that sort of stuff, and then anarcho-polko as well there was. It's very hot, so we're all getting. We're looking like shrimp fried from the sun. So that's what I'm saying. It was not as comfortable as a polko. And then we had three earthquakes. We experienced three earthquakes in a polko. So you know, I think it was a Wednesday midweek when Patrick Henningson, my colleague from TNT, who I got to hang out with and meet for the first time. He was speaking, the ground shook a little.

Speaker 2:

And then the next morning, thursday morning 6am was like 4.0 earthquake and my bed and Airbnb was literally shaking and I ran 6am, I ran out of the house and then Saturday afternoon there was a light shake and it's just like I asked the local Mexican, the owner, he's like this is normal part of life, you know, and I did hear an anarcho-polko that they have built maybe the buildings to withstand the earthquakes and the owner was like, oh, this building is built stronger and so that's what we experienced. But, yeah, it was largely a lot of the same people, some of the same presenters, I think even and yeah, and it's the same ideas. And I briefly talked with Jeff Berwick and anarcho-polko David Avocado-Wolf, who's a trip to Caffoto with him and it's funny, he's got a huge telegram channel and I told him like four years ago he's still there. He shared one of my geopolitics podcast interviews that I did with Martin Armstrong on his telegram.

Speaker 1:

And you talk to people all the time because of the radio show and the podcast.

Speaker 1:

But I know that there's a lot of people out there that feel a bit alone in their local communities and in their lives because they don't necessarily have the chance to network. I know that even the talking to you, talking to other people that I've spoken to through the podcast, has really opened up my world and shown me that I'm not so alone. So it's always, I think, helpful to reiterate to people that there is a large amount of people out there in the world that feel the way they do, that, that see the things that they see, and I would love to at some point attend one of these events myself, just so I could stand and be around and shake hands and, you know, have that sense of community that you don't necessarily have in the virtual world if you're just listening to a show or you know that. So I think that that's a very important aspect of what we do, and you want a larger scale than I, but I do appreciate it's that aspect of it.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, and I mean it was fun. We were with some of the people until we were talking to the wee hours of the night. In fact, one night I came back and the door toward the place where I was staying was locked. It was like past 2 am and the owner I guess he locks it after two for security reasons and I'm ringing, ringing it like when I'm thinking am I gonna sleep on the street, like what? I gotta go to bed. And then you finally open up.

Speaker 2:

But you know, we were at max egan. Right, there's people, you know max egan, he's got a large following in all media. He's got a bar. His bar was literally right across from I was staying and then right behind me was where he, where he was living. So I was basically living, staying right between max egan's bar in his home. And then, you know, david, there were nights where they were jam sessions, where David Adam avocado wolf was playing the drums, max egan was playing the guitar, another figure in all media, steve Falconer was singing the blues. You know we're talking to Patrick Kenningson, other people there.

Speaker 2:

But the other thing, though, for me, as a Christian, though I felt like On the professional level, as you mentioned, it was good, you know these did. These were other Podcasters there, other people in the industry, other people who are guests, who have different topics, so it was good from a professional perspective, but I felt like I was the only Christian there, which are probably the thing I was, you know. So then I came to realize like I felt, well, this isn't really my tribe, you know, and that, at both events, more so, and I'm not gonna book a little bit more a Lot of the people there were preaching basically I would classify this technically as anti-Christian Doctrine, and in fact I came across just over hearing some conversations where they were sort of mocking, making fun of Pupu and Christianity, but they were preaching basically Theosophy, you know not nosticism, occult Theosophy. I mean, they were even signing Alistair Crowley as above, so below, and they were basically preaching Like Luciferianism, satanism, which is actually globalism, but they, they say that they're anti-globalist and so this is my Thing, you know, I think that's right away.

Speaker 2:

That's one reason why, like I felt, I never really gelled on the personal level with anyone, and that's probably one reason. And yeah, so that's sort of my I don't know what you'd call it a criticism or whatnot, and you know they're, they're doing their thing. That's fine. That's not me, but I just think it's important. I mean we may have touched on this before, I think, but now it's coming even more to the forefront that in all media You're seeing now this new age Gnostic Theosophy, you know, helena Blavatsky type stuff, alice Bailey type stuff coming up, yeah, from bottom up as above, so below, because that's the religion of the elite Theosophy, and now it's coming from the resistance. So you have to then ask the question what is, you know, going on?

Speaker 1:

so I'm a well number one. I Applaud you for for being willing to to talk about that. That that's a bit courageous in our In all media to even bring that up. That's something that I know that I've had several offline and, you know, official podcast interview conversations with Terry Wolf about that hijacking, or I don't even know if it's a hijacking, but that usurpation of Christian morality or ideals by that Gnostic or theos, theosophy, theosophy, sorry.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, that's what I said Theosophy yeah that ideology and the great awakening, you know, aligning your chakras or getting your frequency to the right place. I've had conversations with people where they have talked about that, the those wide terms of the buffet of Religion rather than the exclusivity of price that that Christians believe in, and those are really incompatible, and so it's. It's great that that people are talking about Medical tyranny, you know, anti-globalism Technocracy, bringing light to the dangers of CBDCs and things like that. So, but God can use all that, but at the same time, yeah, that I can understand how that would be somewhat isolating if that was the. The general feel of the place was more along the lines of those great awakening ideas.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, and you know, in a way it's almost even worse than the New World Order, because, okay, we're here to escape the New World Order, but then this they funnel you into another dead end spiritually, which you know from a Christian perspective. You know New World Order is bad, but going to hell for eternity is even worse and Some of the, the religion that they were preaching there is the Theosophic spiritualism was almost like a counterfeit of Christianity. Because you know Christianity, you have sin. We're all sinners, we can't do anything about it. Christ's external factor is the one that saves us. He's paid for our sins and they were talking about some of the speakers were basically saying they were talking about a fallen earth, so using mimicking the biblical Idea, but then saying that we have inner trauma. So instead of sin, we have like trauma and you have to do shadow work. So instead of repenting and accepting Christ, you are Christ. You are gods. You have to do the shadow work so you can reach your inner Christ consciousness. You do it all yourself. And then you know David, ike and others. I mean the people there. They preach you are gods. That's why that you know media and you age old media now you're seeing they always repeat the phrase remember who you are. David Ike says this. The other alt media Disciples of David Ike are repeating it and they're saying, well, guess who you are? Or gods right, and that's what the serpent said in the garden readings. It's like really nothing new and just.

Speaker 2:

I listened last night to Terry Wolf's Guesting on James Delling pole. It was pretty cool that Terry Wolf was for two guests and James Delling poles podcast, and James is a Christian, terry's Christian and I'm like I feel like, and James Delling pole is calling out David Ike, so is Terry Wolf, and I think we're, maybe we're starting to see now Some of the lines being drawn. I don't think this is a bad thing, you know. So I think I, from here on out, I would rather be more open about where I'm coming from. I'm still were willing to talk and and guests Be, get, be a guest on and have us guests people from everywhere. But I would rather prefer to work more closely with people like you know you know James Delling pole, terry Wolf, yourself or my people who say look, we're Christians, we're coming at the new world order thing from a Christian perspective and that's sort of our tribe. You guys have your Theosophical tribe over there.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, Meet the new boss? Same as the old boss. Yeah, um, I appreciate that and, honestly, I I knew that there was, um, at least, uh, somewhat of a current of that happening. I didn't, I guess I didn't realize the potential scope of that great awakening mindset that that's going on and that that helps me too. So maybe I would, maybe I wouldn't want to go to those events as much. Maybe I would like to go to an event that Is more along the lines of what you're talking about there as far as, um, a core of Christian people who are talking about what we can understand is, uh, at least an iteration of an attempt to implement the beast system.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, yeah, and you know even attendees. I met some attendees at the airport here in Mexico before. There were a number of them. You could.

Speaker 2:

I'm looking around like I know this guy's going to an, a capulco, and one of the, and some of the people were looking for god. They were looking for meaning, but not at all, you know, in the bible or christ and what you know. They were looking for psychedelic experience. They were saying god, I don't know what god they're talking about. God told me to come to this event to do ayahuasca or buffo I don't even know what buffo is but to get, get this out of body psychedelic experience, and so really it's a spiritual UH thing. Uh and so, and I've been thinking of other conferences I would prefer to attend, like I'm a fan of michael o'fallon, who's a christian, he's, he's got sovereign nations this is podcast and he does an annual conference From a christian perspective where he talks about globalism in your world order. So I was just thinking in the future I would rather, I think from now on, rather go to like sovereign nations conference or other type conferences where it's new world order stuff but from a christian Um perspective.

Speaker 1:

That that's fair and, uh, I wasn't aware of the sovereign nations. I'm gonna look that up. Um. So both of us we've talked about um. We do delve into some pretty dark waters in, uh, in the content and Obviously, you've already answered the the question of how do you stay hopeful in that, and that being our faith is allows us um hope, but there's also um.

Speaker 1:

I know when, uh, I have some conversations With people and we go, and we're like Just recently talking to ian davis and you know my dad reached out to me and he said I hope people listen to the end of that conversation Because you know it's pretty heavy content to to think about and you know Ian brought the conversation back to that there's a lot of hope to be had in the idea of even simple resistance In in the areas that we can Um. I wanted to ask you, based on your contact with other people and In your experience, what's what's one thing? Because we, we always want to talk about solutions, right, so what's what's the one thing you'd tell someone who wants to be proactive to start with, like what's the best? Because it can be overwhelming, you know what. So, and you know just off the hip Off the hip.

Speaker 2:

I mean, again, this might be an odd solution, but as I'm getting older, I'm just kind of caring less and just going, getting right out there. And I was just thinking today, you know, I'm like uh, it's, it's a beautiful day, it's sunny here in Mexico, it's quiet, the birds are chirping. I enjoy the little basic things in life. You know, I'm happy. I had this conversation with a podcast guest earlier today from India. Uh, and he was explaining. We were talking about all this stuff new world order, multiple airty, world War three uh, the, the technocracy and just the way it sounded. It's he was making it sound like the infrastructure is still horrible in India. It would be difficult, it sounded like it'd be difficult to implement this stuff, it would take a long time, and so that kind of made me a little more hopeful.

Speaker 2:

Uh, but as I think about all this stuff more, I'm less and less afraid of anything because again, my solution I feel is is Jesus Christ, right, that's my solution. So really it's like I feel like I've got my parachute. Uh, regardless of what happens, I'm going to be on the right side of eternity, so to speak, in heaven, and so like I really don't have any fear anymore of any of this. And you know, even I even like, like this is why I say I enjoyed the little things. The sun is shining, you know, even if I have a morsel of bread and the coffee, I'm happy. And so, even if they do implement the digital control system, like if I have to live on some rural plot of land, you know scrounging, um, I don't mind, like, I'm still going to be happy. It's like Paul, right? I think Paul was a wealthy Roman intellectual and then he went from having everything to having nothing. And he's like you should learn to be happy whether you're rich or poor. And so I guess, right off the cuff, a lot again, a lot of people listening might not be spiritual or religious, but that's what really makes me happy. It's been solution for me.

Speaker 2:

But beyond that, um, I guess and many of my guests keep you know, I interviewed a Canadian survivalists last week on TNT, stefan Verstauppen, I'm sure he'll come on your program and he, everyone now is saying social network, social network, right, um, community. I feel like that is probably the most important beyond, you know, people have different ranges of wealth that they can afford for stuff or land or prepping gear. I think just having a social network, um is probably the most important. Next, Uh, that's what? Will you know? You'll help each other. If you need some help, someone's going to help you. You return the favor. So that's probably one of the most important things.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, having real personal, you know, in person relationships with people in your community. I've recently connected with a couple of people here in my in my town where I live, and it was really refreshing. I'm having coffee with one guy on on Saturday morning and you know I have friends from church that that I really have bonded to, that we have not much in common other than Jesus sometimes I thought about that too, and my church is is funny because and then they're all Mexicans and they're from all walks of life and it's just like I was thinking otherwise.

Speaker 2:

Me and this person have absolutely nothing in common, but I feel like our relationship is much stronger between me and my fellow church members than it is, like I mentioned earlier, with my, with people in all media, with people from greater reset or anarcho polko yeah, Short break here.

Speaker 1:

The subtle cane podcast operates on a modified and, frankly, almost irrational value for value system. That means that I provide this valuable content for free and with the hope that you will return that value by supporting someone or something in kind. Each episode, I ask guests or producers to provide me with a subject to feature. The subtle cane spotlight shines on the work of Dr Robert Epstein this week. As always, there will be links in the show notes to follow and, as always, I urge you to check out his work and decide for yourself if you want to support it. One of the neat things about this is is that the guests that I've had on recently have been just sending me suggestions when they confirm their interviews. I'm really happy about that. It's catching on and I truly appreciate that people are willing to come on and partake in this endeavor. Her voy ahead said this regarding value for value.

Speaker 1:

Lately Dr Robert Epstein and his Institute have come to mind. I've donated once after he came on my podcast. I think his work is important. Dr Robert Epstein is a senior research psychologist for the American Institute for Behavioral Research and Technology. Epstein is a research scientist and media professional, as well as the author of 15 books and more than 300 articles on psychology related topics, including empirical studies in science, nature, psychological science and the proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. I would suggest giving his work consideration. I've also included a link to the interview he did with her voy. I found it quite fascinating.

Speaker 1:

Dr Robert Epstein, the subtle cane spotlight shines on you, sir. Let's get back to it. One of the interviews that I recently was trying to catch up on some of your work so I could be prepared to talk about things that you've been discussing lately was actually your subtle cane spotlight guest, dr Robert Epstein and his work. I was listening to that conversation you had with him and the two acronyms that really stuck out to me was the SIEM and YME the search engine manipulation effect and the YouTube manipulation effect that he's been studying. Just going back to what you were saying as far as the importance of having real life community when we're online in these virtual spaces, we don't even understand how powerful the digital space can be manipulated. Did you want to talk about Dr Robert Epstein and that conversation you had at all, or what you leaned from that? I'm going to put a link in the show notes to his work and I've devoted a little time explaining a little more about it. Just your take on that.

Speaker 2:

Just to add something from my conversation with Stefan Verstappen last week, who he knows of Derrick Brozen, greater reset and he was saying and the freedom sells thing? Right? He agrees with me, stefan, this older survivalist martial arts dude. He says that's not the way to go. I never felt comfortable with the freedom sells idea. Getting on a list and you're more surveilled, having the resistance online. For me it just doesn't make sense. When that's something you're supposed to be able to do organically in the analog world, you don't need. I don't drop me off in any country. I will form a local network or integrate. I don't need a digital app or something to figure that out. I don't think it's a good idea. Stefan said he's got his group in Canada and they meet. They don't bring cell phones to their meetings, they don't have any website, they don't have a name. You know what I'm saying. That's what I've done, that's what he does. That's how you should do it. You shouldn't be organizing through the digital stuff, because that's all surveilled and then you don't know who is who or what is what.

Speaker 2:

But Rob Rebstin, yeah, he really highlights the scientific dictatorship with the evidence. We talk about technocracy and scientific dictatorship and he shows it at the granular level, to the point where I think they murdered his wife. In my opinion, he also has the same suspicions. He openly talks about it because he can show how the Nexus is basically Pentagon, silicon Valley. It's the same thing. Someone was posting today, elon Musk talking about amazing Polly. She posted this video of Elon Musk talking about oh, he's so vague about his idea how he wants Twitter to be half of the world's financial system. My thought was like, yeah, he hasn't gotten the rest of the details from DARPA, because I really think it's like DARPA is running the show and Elon Musk is just the front man and they're like behind the scenes. Maybe he has secret discussions with DARPA, literally, or maybe they have some representatives through different cutouts that are guiding him without him even knowing, just running the scientific dictatorship. And so, yeah, robert Epstein has showed how, yeah, silicon Valley, we don't have a democracy, voting doesn't matter, politicians don't matter. Silicon Valley and the DHS and Pentagon can manipulate any which way the votes, and Meta just announced they're going to yesterday, this week. They're going to not forget exactly what they're going to roll out this censorship, this information stuff. And so the Silicon Valley and the military industrial complex are now managing everything to get the result that they want, and so that's what Epstein shows, and they're doing it globally too. So it's like the fact that already in the that's why I don't vote anymore, I have just given up. I don't believe there's any more democracy.

Speaker 2:

I quit Curtis Stone, who was a guest of mine, from. He was at Anarcapulco School, canadian farmer, and he's like yeah, he says the New World Order, it's rolling on, it's here. We're going into dystopia. The best you can do is just get out of the way. Get out of the way, get your parallel network, your social network, get some land, have water, food and just get out the way. Back down the hatches, prepare for brace, for impact.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, and even that all of that you can do it does come down to as well, like you said, having our hope in some place other than than the bunker or the group, even because of the overwhelming reach that some of these different mechanisms could potentially have, or at least that is the stated goals of them, like the programmable CBDCs.

Speaker 1:

We talked about that quite a bit, ian and I recently. I was going to ask you too about because you've traveled a lot and maybe it seems a little off topic, but when it comes to finding joy and finding satisfaction and enjoying the little things like you were talking about, I noticed in the travel that I've done and dealing with people in different cultures that, honestly, the people who seem to have the least are the most willing to share what they have and seem the least anxious and depressed of all the people Now downtrodden. Yes, hardship yes, but I don't see the same level of anxiety and depression and hopelessness in a very poor and materially poor place than I do in. I always say if you want to see a miserable person, go to a really expensive restaurant. Your thoughts on that and perspective in that way?

Speaker 2:

I've even been thinking about this lately and I've been thinking about it. 20 years ago when I went to Mongolia I lived in the Yurts and I experienced that in Mongolia. And even recently I've been thinking what I'm doing is great, tnt radio is wonderful, it's a blessing. But I feel sometimes but I gotta do this, do this live show every day. I'm tethered to this and sure I can take a day off or whatever, but every day it's like that's what you're doing, you gotta be doing that. I just felt like I wouldn't even mind if I get fired, the TNT people come and go, or I honestly wouldn't mind. It's kind of like what you say. I would just love to take three, six, nine months a year off and just enjoying time and doing other things and you're happier. And I think what you mentioned.

Speaker 2:

Some of these people they have enough and they're not working as much. I think they're not working like 40 plus hours. In some instances they probably have some work that they have to do, but then they have a large space of time where they can read, help in the local community, be with their family, homeschool, so they don't have that stress of the urban area. Or you're working like a maniac. You got bills to pay. That's why I actually want to get out of the urban area. I'm stuck here for now, but I would love to be in rural Mexico in some Hacienda where time is slow, it's all nature, you have some freshly made tortillas with local, clean, pure food and none of this stress.

Speaker 2:

And yeah, and I remember, I was in Mongolia and went back to Croatia for or maybe it was years later I was talking to someone in Croatia who said how's life like with those? They made this dismissive hand motion with those poor Mongolians, third world Mongolians, and this was somebody that was upper class in Croatia, drives a fancy car, has property, but I kind of think I know that they're kind of grumpy, they're not as happy and he's dismissing the poor Mongolians. I'm thinking of all those people that I spent time with. They're happy, they're not depressed, they have everything they need shelter, food, clothing. They're not lacking anything. So they have everything they need, their needs are met, they're happy. But then in the West you've got more. You're not happy. You're not happy. You're going to see psychiatrists, you're taking antidepressants, your divorces, your or with your spats, with your own children or your children are divorced, and it's just like you know, and that's why I'm like I value now less stress and time over money you know.

Speaker 1:

So, yeah, the American dream is as it's sold is to have now, currently at least, is to have both people in a relationship working 40 plus hours a week, you know, driving their electric cars and having, you know, in their suburbs, having their you know $500,000 house and they got all the laws of the homeowners association.

Speaker 1:

And it's just like these many tyrannical environments of high stress and you don't have a lot of time to reflect, you don't have a lot of time to muse and to think deeply about what's going on, because you're just trying to survive all the time. And I actually am very empathetic to people sometimes when I catch myself starting to be judgmental. Or why are people putting their head in the sand so much? Why are they so willing to just accept everything they're told? But I mean, when you're running around in a flurry all the time, you just ingest whatever is given to you. You know, stop at McDonald's and get yourself a sandwich because you don't even have time to cook. And so the pace of life. I have to remind myself to be empathetic of people, because it is really a rat race and it makes it really hard to dig into the spiritual aspect of who you are and to really consider the questions about life and meaning. So any thoughts on that?

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I mean, I thought that came to me now was and I've seen in the old media, right, you know, you got people doing podcasts. They've got little mini old media empires with programs and webinars and products. You know, I was just thinking John Bush, for example, who I met briefly and he's got his business conferences and courses and products and just doing more. You know Richard Grove, who's fantastic, right, his thing that he's doing. And I was just thinking like what am I? I'm just wondering what's motivating me, what I would like to do in the future, and I was thinking, you know, for me to grow something like that. But then I look at the insane amount of work that you know someone like John Bush is doing and I'm just thinking I'm not motivated enough to scale up like that. You know, I prefer the simple life and I and again, this is just for its subjective, it's different things, different strokes for different folks, right, I just I couldn't see myself working like a maniac to get to that level. It's like I don't feel like I need anything anymore. There's like nothing that will make me more happier.

Speaker 2:

Lord Jacob Rothschild, age 87, passed this week. Right, he owned the world and now he's probably in hell? I'm not sure, unless he repented on his deathbed. So what's good did it do for him? Like I, you know, I've got shelter, I've got a vehicle I don't need and there's like great, I can build an empire and have extra 100 grand or whatever that's. I'm just gonna have absolutely no effect on my happiness. So, again, I'd rather have time, give me more time to read some books, go out and nature. Some people say, okay, you have more money, which then you can. If you manage your time well, you'll have more time with more money.

Speaker 1:

So but then you know, then you have more worries about more money and so, yeah, I don't know Well that that leads to two thoughts for me, and that would be the danger of falling into the trap of effective altruism. And then also the smaller operations. I wouldn't call your, I wouldn't call your operation necessarily small, because you have quite a wide reach, but at the same time, like you were saying, the pace and the amount of energy that you're willing to devote to it and the amount that you expect back from it, the financial incentive of this, I almost want to start calling it the alternative media industrial complex.

Speaker 2:

That's a good one. I've never heard that before. That's good.

Speaker 1:

You know the amount of pressure to make profit. Then, all of a sudden, for the same reason why a lot of us try to avoid advertising where we can, is because you don't want that external pressure, whether conscious or subconscious, altering what the content is that you're providing and the material that you're digging into and talking about. You don't want that external pressure to alter the truth that you're trying to share or enlighten people or at least get a conversation going. It's very easy to fall into the trap of well, I know that this is not necessarily along the lines of what I believe, but because I got to do this, I got to make these numbers, I got to get these ratings or whatever, I can see that being a trap. Do you ever worry about that for yourself? You seem pretty grounded, so I don't think that that's necessarily, but I'd imagine that's something that's at least maybe crossed your mind.

Speaker 2:

Oh yeah, and I've thought about again, if I lose my TNT thing, I'd have to double down on my podcast and look for sponsors and ways to monetize further, and that would lead me to what you're talking about this danger zone of compromising grift. But you know something that we're seeing now in alternative media we can talk about. You know, with the wellness company, right, I don't know if you've heard of the wellness company, people have been digging down. You know Peter McCollough is involved and other people. Again, I'm not painting a huge broad brush, but you can be certain that the deep states which ran runs, the legacy media, the mainstream media, is moving into the new media, the alternative media. And you know David Ike I can't say I'm a fan, you know I think we are ideologically opposed because he's a theosophist. But again, I listened to everyone, I talked to everyone. He makes correct analysis, right, and a lot of things. He he recently coined the term the Mammies mainstream alternative media. You're seeing this now.

Speaker 2:

A lot of shady people, some people you know, we can say their names, but I don't, I can't say anything definitive about them to do. They just pop that up nowhere. They've done good work, like the Maria Z or Zadich Stupedars. You know there's interesting questions about info. You know, why is it that andretates that as CIA, tucker Carlson's that as CIA Alex Jones's family is military. You know, again, there's a pattern here. There's a pattern here. And then you see these channels, these on channels like chief nerd vigilant news, which is now partnering with, like Maria Zadich, and wellness company. This company has links. You know, one of the founders is former Blackwater. They're doing big pharma, investment stuff and just like all kinds of weird stuff going on. And so, yeah, that's the alternative media complex and I kind of don't want to. I want to just do my own thing.

Speaker 2:

I think a true dissident is not aligned, and I mentioned this on TV recently. One of my guests, yuri Roschka, who's the former Moldovan politician and he said he's made this point as well Doesn't want to be in any camp. You know, I know the American Empire sucks, yeah, but that doesn't mean I'm going to go Russian to the arms of the Kremlin or the or Beijing. Right, there's a lot of people on media who are like full on pro Putin, pro Xi Jinping. Some of them are getting money from Russia or China and they keep. They're pushing multi polarity and breaks because you know they don't like the American Empire, which they're right, you know not to like Davos, london, washington and Brussels, but that doesn't mean the other side of grass is greener. There's no good that. They're all bad apples.

Speaker 2:

And I made the point, you know I had. I just, you know I got a message from geopolitics live which is like Sputnik RT say, hey, let's cross post our stuff on telegram and that would boost my channel. But I'm like, no, I don't feel comfortable doing that, because now I'm associating with the Russian Empire, which is the same corrupt Russian oligarchic cartel Russia as is. It's just a different flavor of what Washington, london and Brussels are, and so I think it's important not to be aligned to any power center. And yeah, it's a struggle for all media, for podcasts. It's a true struggle to survive and some people they do the podcast, they are, they have other means of the financial sustenance apart from their podcasts, and then others who do, who try to make a living just from doing the podcasting. So it's it's really difficult.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I mean, I'm, I'm, I'm fortunate, working as a nurse and most of my life I don't think it's ever fair for someone in my shoes to ever say that you were poor but not used to, I'm not used to having a lot, I'm very minimalist. I never for, for all the way through my the end of my twenties, you could, I could, move with a duffel bag, and until I met my wife and you know, typically your wife wants you to have more than a duffel bag. So I mean, she's not materialistic either, but just for the sake of security you want more than the duffel bag. But I've, I've noticed, um, oh, I'm sorry, I lost my thought there. Okay, I'll just I'll, I'll drop that and I'll come back to it.

Speaker 1:

You were talking to Alfred Desaias lately and I just had a conversation with Ian Davis, and so this multi polarity and unipolarity concept and I just wanted to get your take on it and I just um, I like Ian's analogy of this is the. The technocratic pillars are in place, no matter which um dynamic you're you're talking about, but the um looking at it like it's a corporation and this is the board, and the board is going to stab each other in the back and they're going to do whatever it takes to get ahead within that corporation and they still want that corporation that being technocracy to to be, uh, successful. So your your thoughts on that. I know you've had a lot of talk about talks about multi versus unipolarity. He's right on.

Speaker 2:

You know, he just wrote his third article for geopolitics, nampire. In fact I got to go pay him now. But, um, and it's funny, going back to what we were saying earlier, it's, it's funny how I'm a Christian and Ian's not Christian, but we both have a very similar worldview when it comes to geopolitics and all of this stuff. Like we're both, we both get it. Although he comes from the non-Christian and I come from the biblical Christian worldview, and it's for me part of what informs it is the prophecy, right, I'm, we're just re reverse engineering. We're going to end up in this Satan's you know, totalitarian world state. And in E and D, davis comes at it from a different angle but sees the same thing and he's breaking down the nitty gritty. He's looking at it. Uh, you know, he explains it in his articles, in his podcast, and that's exactly what, what we're we're seeing. You know, I think in the short term there will be some beneficial changes, right, maybe if, where other countries will have a little more economic, their economies will be better in the global South perhaps, right, russia, china and the multiple world and they'll be a little, a little less under the yoke of the Western empire. But I think in the long term. Um, multiplicity leads to world federation and world government, with all that that entails, which is the technocracy Because, again, as Ian points out, all countries are on board with the globalist program, which includes agenda 2030, sd, sustainable democidal goals, the world Holocaust organization, the vaccines you know Putin UK announced a few weeks ago we got cancer vaccines.

Speaker 2:

A week later, vaccines like we got cancer vaccines, you know. And like where it's in myopia, these people in all the media who worship at the altar of Putin and teaching being like you could. How do you guys not see this? It's the same exact program. Um, this week Russia minister says Russia and China are working to bring online now our digital currencies. It's just like. It's the same everywhere, which gels with the biblical worldview. You know the beast will take. You know control over all, all waters for rich and poor, all nations, all tribes, all waters, with this type of system.

Speaker 2:

And so and it makes sense if you think, in the long term, their goal is world government and, more specifically, they talk about like things like earth constitutions, world federation, like a constitutional world federation government type thing. It's basically the United States writ large and to have that you would at least need some semblance of democracy at a global scale, and I think that's what multi polarity brings to that table where you're going to have seemingly all over the world's non multipolar. All you know, 200 countries are now on the level week, you know, and then they're all. We can all now participate in the UN. They're going to create a UN parliament, really parliamentary assembly. We will all be able to vote on our phones for the world government and it's, it's like a Trojan horse, multi polarity basically, and so that will actually advance it and in the near term things might look brighter.

Speaker 2:

But then, as this system gets installed, the world federation gets installed, the technocratic infrastructure, then I think in the long term, where you might start seeing the mask come off and then we'll, we'll see one day where all nations will be entrenched in this global totalitarian system, right, and then they might flip a switch, some public emergency, and it's like from Vladivostok to from Lisbon to Vladivostok, from Mexico City to wherever we're implementing now these, these measures. So, yeah, that's my take. I think Ian Davis is correct.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, In my conversations with James Rogusky as well, mirror what Ian Davis is talking about the geopolitical atmosphere with the WHO's. You know, pen, quote unquote pandemic treaty or the international health regulations, those changes in that, that same kind of infighting that you see between the countries that are vying for advantage. And you can't blame a country that's extremely on the low end of the economic scale, you know, on some of you can't. You can't blame them for wanting, for wanting to buy for more power, but in the end it does allow further and further secession to a globalist, centralized power to mediate all these differences and the disperse all these resources. And it seems inevitable, not only from a biblical perspective, which you know, and I'm not somebody who says right now, this second, I know that we're in the end times and I put the feeling is always, I think, like every hundred years, if you look at the, was it the, the turning forth?

Speaker 1:

turning yeah or turning those cyclical things that happen in society. What are your thoughts about that? Is it is a feeling that it's the end of the world? Is that magnified just by media? Is that part of this cycle or are you seeing it now because of the technological advances and things like that is? Maybe this is potentially the first time in history where it is actually possible to implement these things. What's your?

Speaker 2:

Yeah, you said on that last point, yeah, and just to go back one more point on like things have crystallized a bit lately where, when we asked the question about bricks and multiplicity, is Russia a resistance to the world government and all of that? I don't think so. I view it as it's like two cartels, like two Mexican cartels, and both of these Mexican narco cartels chopped your head off, they dissolve your body in the barrel of acid. Like I'm not even kidding, like I've a half hour from my home. A few years ago, where I'm talking to you from now, they found a house that was being used I mean literally, like we're talking 30 minutes from my home, and different. Over the past few years, you know, they found houses where people were tied up, kidnapped, right, I don't know if they were being ransomed or using used for sex stuff. Or here, like literally half hour from my lift, they find houses where you know which are being used as these, these houses for this kind of stuff. Or they found barrels of acid where humans were being dissolved. This is the Mexican cartel. They chopped your head off, they sew your face onto sucker balls. So this is their motto Saperandi, violent extortion type stuff. That's their ideology I use that analogy like this is globalism.

Speaker 2:

This is how the globalists think. The globalists are probably into, you know, pedophilia, a cult, you know satanic worship, just rape of the masses, financially starting wars. And so I think and there's different degrees, you know, maybe you have a cartel that's more humanistic, I don't know who's less violent. And so I would think that Moscow and then the Western Empire, that they have that same ideology, but they, some of the cartels, are maybe like let's work together or let's be corporate, let's be partners, let's be both, be globalist partners, right, sit at the table, at an equal status. And I think that's how Russia views it. And I think over the past couple years Russia has been a junior partner because they've been less powerful, right, russia? Because, you know, american British Empire is much more advanced technologically, financially, in terms of control. So Moscow is at a disadvantage and I think what we see is that the Western cartel really has been trying to destroy the Russian cartel. That's how I view it. So it's like they're both globalists, they're both corrupt oligarchy cartels. But really, you can see, when you look at the face of Victoria Nuland and Hillary Clinton and all these people, it's like they viciously want to destroy the Russian cartel and it's like. So it's not like Russia's any opposition. They're the same type of cartel, maybe less worse. They're still a cartel and they're still going along with the globalist thing.

Speaker 2:

And then to your second point. Now I'm forgetting. Remind me again. Oh, the end times. Yeah, I was talking to Terry Wolf. He's on my show every week, he seems. He seems to think that we are in our lifetime. It is the end times.

Speaker 2:

I've thought a little bit less about that. You know, a couple of years ago I interviewed Patrick Wood, pastor Arthur Palowski this was more during the COVID times, yeah, and during the COVID times I was more freaked out, as I think a lot of us were that this is the end times. I still think it's possible. There's interesting theory, then, that I thought of myself, and then I saw others also have been thinking this way 2030s, maybe Christ returns next decade, because that would be like I think the earth is 6,000 years old, like answers and Genesis. You know, ken Ham, people can make fun of me. I honestly don't care, because neither does the evolution millions of years make any sense. So, whatever, nothing comes from nothing, right, that's not possible. But, and so we would see if it's 4,000 years before Christ, 2,000 years now we're after that, 6,000 years, you know, around 2030s, that would like be 2,000 years after the death of Christ. So it kind of feels there's a symbolism in the Bible of six days, 6,000 years, seven days, you know. So maybe it would be the return of Christ in the end of the world. But I don't think about this stuff as much, you know, when I'm thinking of, when I'm talking to guests and we talk about the technocracy and how, like in India and in some countries, I could see it taking decades or another 100 years to build out this world government. So, honestly, like I have, no, it could be in 10, the 2030s could be the end of the world, or maybe this stuff goes on for another hundred years. I don't know. And what you know, I've talked to Alex Thompson, who's also Christian UK column, gchq officer, and we had on my podcast. We talked about this.

Speaker 2:

He made a good point where it's like a successive wave. So you've got the Babylonian Empire that has totalitarian controls, it collapses and then Satan comes back. He builds up you know he had he builds up the Tower of Babel, which fails. Then Babylon, the Babylonian Empire which fails, but each time he's more successful. It's a bigger empire Roman Empire that collapses, then the Holy Roman Empire that collapse, then the British Empire, which is even bigger than that, that collapses, then the American Empire, which is even the bigger, and all it gets, you know, more than half of the world, and that's collapsing now, and thanks to technology. Now I think we're in the next phase of the next bigger, successive wave, where they're going to create this world empire, but in the end that also collapses. The Bible says that it's like iron mixed with clay, so it can't last. And then you know, christ comes back and saves us. Gandalf comes from down over the hill, but it's that you know. If you're living in that time, you wonder well, how could you best survive?

Speaker 1:

Right yeah, Well, do you have any, any last thoughts or any anything? I know you said just living in the moment and living in a local community, like networking with people in real life and trying to establish yourselves in, enjoy all the little things in life. Do you have any other final thoughts for people? To try and end on a hopeful note about these conversation we had?

Speaker 2:

Yeah, like I said, I woke up today. I'm super happy. Sun is shining, birds are chirping, I get to talk to people. I talked to a guest from India, to yourself in the US let's see Later. Tonight I'm talking to Rick Raza from Chicago. I got to hang out with last year Brandon Whitecart, who's down in Florida, geopolitical analyst. You know, life is beautiful, is wonderful. I haven't posted it yet.

Speaker 2:

I recorded yesterday a wonderful podcast with Doc Malik, who's out in the UK, and I think a lot of what he said speaks to what the question you just asked now, where he said be happy warrior. You know. He said, have lots of sex. I would say, you know, be married and do that. But he said, you know, take care of your health, happy warrior. That's basically it. You know, I think of Ecclesiastes eat, drink and be married. You know, follow God and his rules and eat, drink and be married, enjoy the fruits of your labor.

Speaker 2:

Life is, you know, it's a vein parade, as Solomon would say, just like again, that goes back to enjoying the simple things and all the stuff that's going on. You know, doc Malik said it's happened before. It's happening again is that cycle of history is the fourth turning, it's the Condorati of Wave, it's the Elliott Wave, it's, it's, you know, all these different cycles, theorists, and, yeah, you know, I think you got to be above all of that spiritually Like, if you know, if I said I spiritually met the physically, you know, I believe in Christ, that's my sailboat. None of that can really affect me. And so, yeah, just find ways to be happy, stay sane, and that includes unplugging a lot from the mainstream, even alternative media.

Speaker 2:

Now I had this conversation with Stefan better stop in the Canadian survivalist last week where he says he doesn't even listen to all the media because it's what you mentioned earlier the grifting stuff, the alternative media complex. They're pushing pills and survival gear and, at the end of the world, buy my stuff. And it's just like some of these guys which are big, they've been saying the same thing for 20 years and it's like, okay, yeah, I get it. I bought my water filters, I got that stuff, I got it. I don't need to be stressed out every day by, you know, mike Adams saying the asteroid's gonna come. It's like that's not healthy, that's not healthy.

Speaker 1:

Well, I share that hope in Christ and I appreciate the time that you took to come on here and talk to me again today and you always have an open invitation on the Subtle Came podcast of Oya and I hope to speak to you again very soon and God bless you and your family.

Speaker 2:

Same to you and I can keep up the work that you're doing.

Speaker 1:

And there you have it, mr Hervoy Moritz of GeopoliticsandEmpirecom, we should all strive to be happy warriors. We are certainly in a battle each day, and not just against the tentacles of technocrats. Each and every day we must battle ourselves, our own passions and biases, our own sinful nature and our tendency to choose what is easy over what is right, our inclination to abdicate personal responsibility to someone else. Choosing not to allow the doomsayers and propagandists free rent in our minds can be difficult, and it's not the same thing as putting our heads in the sand. Balance is key. Seek truth, but not at the expense of joy.

Speaker 1:

And if I were to amend the call to be a happy warrior, I would suggest joyful warrior in its stead. That's because happiness can be as fickle as the breeze, but joy is everlasting. It perseveres through, despite and even because of suffering. It calls to us from the deepest parts of our souls and is offered to us freely by our Creator through His Son Jesus Christ, as it says in the Gospel of Matthew, chapter six, verses 33 through 34, but seek first the kingdom of God and His righteousness, and all these things will be added to you. Therefore, do not be anxious about tomorrow, for tomorrow will be anxious for itself, sufficient for the day, is its own trouble. For all you listening, you are valued, you are loved and you are worthy. God bless and good night. There's no turning back. Once the fires lit, let the embers glow and be done with it. I'm startled by my lack of fear, and so will that love turns to ashes here, down some flames. It's so alive.

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Navigating Hope and Community Amid Uncertainty
The Impact of Modern Society
The Alternative Media Industrial Complex
Geopolitics and Globalist Worldview Discussion
Finding Joy in Spiritual Resilience