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TrueLife

Conspiracies, argumentative strategies, & the Trivium

72 min • 22 juli 2020

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Aloha Everyone, you can see a full transcript of all my podcasts here.
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Speaker 0 (0s): All right. My friends it's Wednesday also known as hump day, depending on how you want to define hump, that could be a, something on a camel, or it could be an act of lust, maybe. So are you guys all wondering what the answer to the riddle is? Never the little we did yesterday, it was a, what, what is something that not even the strongest man can hold for nine minutes, but is lighter than a feather. 

I bet you, that was just driving you guys crazy, huh? Well, is there any, any guesses, any guesses? Do you guys think of anything? The answer is your breath because no one can hold their breath for nine minutes and it's lighter than a feather. I was talking to a friend of mine yesterday who was asking me about the podcast and what I'm going to talk about. 

And he says, Hey, you ever talk about conspiracies? And I said, I talk about them all the time, but I've yet to really kind of get in depth on any kind of podcast and talk about one. So today my friends, we're going to step out onto the Wu tree. For those of you that don't know the Wu tree, the Wu tree is a lot, think of like a large, like a large tree with all kinds of branches, but the branches as they grow longer, they grow thinner. 

And my argumentation is like going way out on a thin branch. And the reason that is, is because if you were to go out on a very thin branch, that branch would not be able to, that that branch probably would not be able to hold your weight and it would break. Thus, my foundation for the conspiracies is like the Wu tree. 

It may not hold up. So let's just, let's just jump in here with both feet and try to cover some ground today. You know, one of my favorite conspiracies is the magic Johnson conspiracy. You know what I mean? Remember that guy? Great basketball player. Number 32. I always think of chick Hearns. When I think of magic Johnson, remember whoever every time they would be about to win. You'd hear chick Hearns, just say, all right, well, it's the jellos jiggling. 

The eggs are getting hard. The butter's cooling time to put this one in the fridge. 

Speaker 1 (3m 1s): This game is over. I think it was something like that. The jellos jiggling eggs are cooling and the butter is getting hard time to put this one in the fridge. I miss that guy, but magic Johnson. Remember that when I was growing up, he was a, he was a bad man. I think he's still in the, I think he's in the hall of fame, right? Doesn't he own the Clippers. It doesn't own part of the Lakers now. However, when I was coming up, I was in high school and it was right when they, the AIDS crisis was coming in. 

And for people that don't know the height of the AIDS crisis, it was considered mainly like a gay disease or a disease for intervening, his drug use users. Those are the two main groups of which the majority of people inflicted with AIDS. That was the tool. Then one day, there's this big press conference and magic Johnson comes out and he says, you know, I knew standing there with his wife and his teammates. 

And he was like, you know, I just want to let everybody know that I tested HIV positive. And the whole world was like, Whoa, magic Johnson, HIV positive. And it kind of, it was big news. It was big news. It was all over the news channel. No, there's, there's two major conspiracies here. Let's, let's go over the first one. First. The first is that he never had AIDS. 

He's never HIV positive. He did it as a publicity stunt to draw attention. Okay. And get money to help come up with a cure for AIDS. That's one, one spot. And there's a lot of evidence. Like if it was mainly a disease for gay people and drugs users, I'm sure there's plenty of people that would call magic Johnson bag, but he's not gay. 

And he never, he never participated in that kind of sexual activity. At least not to my knowledge. He's definitely not a heroin addict. So he's not shooting drugs. However, he I'm sure that that guy got around. Right. I'm sure all of those athletes have a number of women they've had sex with. And that number is probably well into the triple digits. 

If not quadruple digits, it was kind of odd though. I mean, he's standing up there with his wife talking about, Hey, I got AIDS, you know, the fruit, his wife's gotta be like, well, how did you get that? How'd you get that magic? Oh, you know, I think it was the fifth number five Oh seven. The 507th woman has said was gave it to me. 

That's another thing like how does a out of the women's stay with all those pros? They just are constantly cheating on, I guess it's the money, right? Anyways. So that's one idea. One idea is that it was a publicity stunt to, to draw attention, to, and get money for the cause. The second conspiracy theory, which I think is much more interesting is that magic Johnson, he was HIV positive. 

He had AIDS. Now magic Johnson does not have AIDS. He's not HIV positive. He no longer has a trace of the virus in his body. Pretty amazing. Right. He had it no longer has it. He had it. 

He no longer has it. He had it. He no longer has it. That in itself is worth study. But even more interesting is that his name is magic Johnson, magic Johnson, magic Johnson. It's a euphemism for a magic penis. This man has a magic Johnson. He got his magic Johnson, gave him AIDS and then his magic Johnson allowed him to get rid of his AIDS. 

You see what I'm saying? The guy is a magic. He's magic to the, I made HIV disappear with his magic Johnson. That is pretty funny. Right? I thought that was pretty funny. You look at it though. He probably never had it, right. He probably thought, Hey, I'm going to raise money. I'm going to raise awareness. I'm going to help out these communities. 

Then he goes out and he tells the public, Hey, look at me. I got AIDS, but now he doesn't have it on his body. You know, you got to think that maybe the insurance companies are, can you imagine, like you go out and you tell the world, Hey, I'm HIV positive. Here's my test. And then you try to get life insurance and they're like, Hey, fuck you. You're HIV positive magic. And then he's gotta be like, well, you know, I'm, I'm actually not. And they're like, well, fuck you. Why'd you say on TV? Oh, well just trying to raise awareness for the group. 

Well, we're going to want you to take a test. You know, you got to imagine that just probably the stigma that comes with that disease probably cause that guy a lot of grief, but I don't know. I think that he, I don't think he probably ever had it, but I like to think of the second one about him having a magic Johnson and, and not getting rid of it. I think that's a kind of a funny one. 

That's one, that's one conspiracy theory. People don't talk too much about another conspiracy. How about the new world order about those guys? What the hell is the new world order? People talk about it a lot. You know, it's all over YouTube. And I think Henry Kissinger wrote a book called world order. 

A lot of people talk about the new world order and the deep state shadow government. I think that's pretty simplistic. There's clearly, there's clearly forces at work that control the narrative. But I would think it's more like in my, I think at some sort of conglomeration of intelligence companies, you know, we talked a little bit yesterday about private corporations hi...

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