- 16 hours ago
ONE OF MY MOST ESSENTIAL SPEECHES!
In this X Space from 29 November 2025, Stefan Molyneux addresses the intersection of ethics, religion, and societal integrity, advocating for secular ethics as a remedy for civilization's foundational issues. He critiques traditional religious systems, particularly Christianity, for their failure to uphold Western moral values amidst historical crises. Emphasizing the need for rational and objective ethics, the discussion challenges listeners to reevaluate moral frameworks, arguing for a universal approach rooted in reason. Stefan highlights the dangers of hypocrisy and calls for collective action to establish a secular ethical foundation that can guide future generations and promote societal harmony.
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In this X Space from 29 November 2025, Stefan Molyneux addresses the intersection of ethics, religion, and societal integrity, advocating for secular ethics as a remedy for civilization's foundational issues. He critiques traditional religious systems, particularly Christianity, for their failure to uphold Western moral values amidst historical crises. Emphasizing the need for rational and objective ethics, the discussion challenges listeners to reevaluate moral frameworks, arguing for a universal approach rooted in reason. Stefan highlights the dangers of hypocrisy and calls for collective action to establish a secular ethical foundation that can guide future generations and promote societal harmony.
SUBSCRIBE TO ME ON X! https://x.com/StefanMolyneux
Follow me on Youtube! https://www.youtube.com/@freedomain1
GET MY NEW BOOK 'PEACEFUL PARENTING', THE INTERACTIVE PEACEFUL PARENTING AI, AND THE FULL AUDIOBOOK!
https://peacefulparenting.com/
Join the PREMIUM philosophy community on the web for free!
Subscribers get 12 HOURS on the "Truth About the French Revolution," multiple interactive multi-lingual philosophy AIs trained on thousands of hours of my material - as well as AIs for Real-Time Relationships, Bitcoin, Peaceful Parenting, and Call-In Shows!
You also receive private livestreams, HUNDREDS of exclusive premium shows, early release podcasts, the 22 Part History of Philosophers series and much more!
See you soon!
https://freedomain.locals.com/support/promo/UPB2025
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LearningTranscript
00:00All right, good afternoon, everybody, Saturday, 29th of November, 2025, and you will be able
00:09to tell your grandchildren that you were here for this speech.
00:12I will tell you that straight up.
00:14It's going to be my best speech, it's going to be my most important speech, and it's going
00:20to encapsulate and solve everything that is wrong with the world.
00:24Ah, is your appetite whetted?
00:26These are bold claims, monsieur.
00:28That is true, but I do not lie.
00:32Honesty is the first virtue without honesty.
00:35No other virtues are really possible.
00:37You have to be honest about being a coward before you can be brave.
00:41You have to be honest about being lazy before you can be diligent.
00:47And I am honest.
00:50I have been granted by the grace of coincidental genetics and the culmination of a long line
00:56of two truly brilliant family lines come together in me, and I say this with all humility, but
01:03I have solved the problems of the world.
01:06Now, this doesn't mean that the problems of the world immediately stop.
01:11The first person to discover antibiotics did not cure all of the illnesses and ailments in
01:18the universe immediately, but the problem has been solved, and I'm going to tell you the
01:24problem, why I worked on the problem, how I've solved it, and then fight me, bros and
01:30sisters, come at me, tell me how I'm wrong, because in the realm of ethics, it is catastrophic
01:36to be wrong.
01:38You can be wrong in the job you take.
01:41You can be wrong in the woman that you marry.
01:44You can be wrong about smoking, and this affects largely you and those around you.
01:49Being wrong about ethics destroys hundreds of millions of lives.
01:55Destroys hundreds of millions of lives.
01:59So, this is the last thing in the universe that I want to be wrong about, but the most
02:03essential thing to get right for a happy planet and a secure and peaceful future.
02:10So, let me lay out the reason why I've spent over 40 years working on secular ethics, and
02:19what I hope to achieve, and what problem is it trying to solve.
02:24So, Christianity, which is a faith that I was raised in and have a great deal of respect
02:30for, Christianity was the border guard of the suffering of my ancestors since I was a
02:38child, long before I was a child, stretching back thousands of years, 2,000 years, and 25 to
02:44be precise, or you could say minus 33, but Christianity was the border guard of the land
02:54my ancestors died by the tens of millions to build up, to maintain, to service and preserve.
03:02And we said to Christianity, we will give you our allegiance, we will give you our treasure,
03:10we will give you our tithes, we will give you our children, we will give you our faith,
03:14we will give you our salvation.
03:16All you have to do is protect what our ancestors built.
03:22That's it.
03:24That's the job.
03:25If you have a great treasure open to the general pillaging of the planet, you hire a security
03:31guard, you hire security specialists, and you say, I will pay you well, I will pay you
03:36a king's ransom, but all you have to do is protect this great treasure, handed down through
03:45generations at the cost of immense blood, soil, sweat, and tears, all you have to do is hopefully
03:54expand, but at least preserve.
03:59If you have an executor for an estate, and you say, hey, you know, we will pay you a million
04:04dollars, but you have to protect the value of this estate, we don't ask you to double
04:09it, but at least preserve it.
04:11If you could double it, that'd be great, but at least preserve it.
04:14How's that been going since 1914?
04:17How's that been going?
04:20Certainly, white Christians were 30% of the world population.
04:25Now, white women of childbearing age are 2% of the population of the planet.
04:32If that's not an endangered species, I do not know what is.
04:36People say the West and Christianity are intertwined, are merged, are like two trees that have grown
04:42together to one solid trunk.
04:45Very well.
04:46Very well.
04:47The West handed its soul over to Christianity in order to preserve its lands, its peoples,
04:55its culture.
04:56How's that been going as a whole?
04:59If you were to evaluate it objectively from orbit, well, it's been going catastrophically.
05:06It's actually quite hard to imagine how it could be going worse.
05:11If it were going worse, there might be, in fact, some fight or pushback, but it's this boiling
05:16frog thing.
05:17We all know the story.
05:19Christianity was unable to prevent World War I.
05:24It was unable to stop the takeover of currency through the money changers.
05:30One of the few times Jesus himself, capital H, himself, got angry was with the money changers,
05:39pillaging the faithful for the sake of personal profits.
05:42Christianity was unable to prevent the takeover of education.
05:46In fact, Christianity was foundational to the government takeover of education.
05:51It was Christians demanding the government takeover of education in America, in particular,
05:57to protect itself from those Catholics who were swarming in from Italy and Ireland, Southern
06:03Ireland, and France, often.
06:07Christianity was unable to stop the money printing of the post-First World War period.
06:13It was unable to stop the stock market escalation and crash.
06:16It was unable to stop the 14-year Great Depression that led to the Second World War.
06:23It was unable to stop the spread of communism, which swallowed up a third of the world's population
06:30in its endlessly chomping, chewing, eviscerating, disemboweling, and bloody more.
06:36Christianity was unable to stop wokeism.
06:39Christianity was unable to stop the disintegration of the family.
06:43Christianity was unable to heal the growing oppositional divide between hyper-woke women
06:50and generally normal men.
06:53Christianity has been unable to maintain borders.
06:55It has been unable to prevent the evisceration and pillaging of the next generation through
07:01unfunded liabilities, deficits, and endless debt.
07:05It has been unable to prevent the catastrophic decline of the Western populations.
07:13One job.
07:15Protect the West.
07:17It has catastrophically failed.
07:21Look, I understand the arguments against it, and I'm certainly happy to hear them.
07:24Man is sinful in nature.
07:28Satan rules the world.
07:29It is not the God who has failed people.
07:31It is people who have failed God.
07:34But that is not what was sold.
07:38That is not what was proposed.
07:41Give us your allegiance.
07:42Give us your faith.
07:44Give us your children.
07:45I will protect you from the ravages of an amoral or evil planet.
07:51I am afraid with that level of promise, the answer, well, you just not good enough, is
08:00not good enough.
08:02I promise to cure you of this fell disease.
08:06Here is the medicine.
08:08Take it three times a day for three months and you will be cured.
08:11And you take the medicine three times a day for three months and you die.
08:17And your family goes to the doctor and says, you promised a cure.
08:21Well, he just wasn't good enough.
08:24That wasn't talked about.
08:26If mankind is too sinful for religion to defend itself, we need something else.
08:33Blaming the victim is wrong.
08:36Ah, people failed Christianity.
08:38People failed God.
08:39No.
08:41Christians facilitated the handing over of the children to their natural mortal enemy, the
08:47state.
08:49Clamoring, vociferous, enthusiastic.
08:51Here you go.
08:53Entity that killed Jesus.
08:55Go raise the Christians.
08:57Christianity has been unable to preserve the West.
09:03That is a fact.
09:05It is irrefutable.
09:09There's a wide variety of reasons for this.
09:12Promotion of the concept of the soul, denial of disparate IQs, there's a wide variety of
09:17things.
09:17But it doesn't really matter at this point.
09:21It is the post-mortem analysis of a body half-rotted.
09:27The West, not Christianity.
09:29But Christianity has failed to defend and protect the West.
09:35I am a businessman, first and foremost, before, I mean, I've been into philosophy since my
09:41mid-teens, but I spent many, many years as an entrepreneur and as a businessman.
09:45In fact, now it's been almost three decades that I have been an entrepreneur.
09:49As an entrepreneur, you sell a product.
09:54If you fail to sell that product, and if you go out of business or you're about to go out
09:58of business, what sense does it make to blame the customers?
10:04Christian parents, religious parents, we're talking about Christianity because that's the,
10:11by far, the dominant religion in the West, historically.
10:14Christian parents have complete control over their children from birth to, let's say, 15 or 16 years
10:20of age, when the children are still legally dependent, but they're significantly influenced
10:25by their peers, and the parents bring the children to church, and the parents bring the children
10:31to Sunday school, and the parents lecture the children about life and death and birth and
10:35resurrection and magic and miracles and faith and salvation and heaven and hell, and it has
10:42not been enough to maintain the religiosity of the West.
10:46And it doesn't matter why.
10:50The why is irrelevant.
10:52The fact is, the West is bankrupt.
10:57Morally, politically, financially, spiritually, ethically, the West is bankrupt.
11:04And who was in charge of the, quote, business?
11:08The Christians, the priests, the clergy, the parents.
11:11Say, oh, but it's the customer's fault we went bankrupt.
11:14Don't care.
11:14Ah, but people just didn't believe in the product enough.
11:18Doesn't matter.
11:19The West has invested everything into Christianity.
11:23Everything.
11:24Everything.
11:26And it has failed to protect, maintain, preserve, and defend the West.
11:32Why does it matter?
11:35I could go into a speech about why, which would be interesting and important, but not particularly
11:42relevant.
11:43It's called the post-mortem.
11:46It does not bring the body back to life.
11:50Because if human beings are so innately sinful that they will always betray religion, that
11:58they will always betray Christ and God and be tempted overly much and succumb to the temptations
12:04of the devil and of their own baser natures, if the entire history of humanity is Adam and
12:12Eve over and over and over, here's paradise, oh, betrayal, here's paradise, oh, betrayal, here's
12:17paradise, oh, betrayal, then we need another answer.
12:21We need another answer.
12:23Because this answer doesn't work.
12:28And nobody who's been alive for the past five minutes could think otherwise, or imagine otherwise.
12:37It's like prayer.
12:41I read this on my show last night.
12:43That the very kings at the summit, the peak, the tip of the social and political hierarchy
12:49in Europe, that kings regularly buried half or more of their children.
12:56And those kings and those queens and those courtiers and those families prayed with tears of blood
13:05over the dying bodies of their babies to gain five minutes more of life, to rally the resistance
13:15to infection or disease.
13:17And they prayed, their brows furrowed, their teeth clenched, spit forming in the corners of
13:25their mouths, tears falling from their eyes.
13:28They begged God Almighty to save their children, and more than half of them died.
13:35Prayer did not save the children.
13:40What saved the children?
13:43Niger is the most dangerous place to be a child in the world at the moment because 10% of them die,
13:49which is still about five times better than Europe at the height of Christianity.
13:53What saved the children?
13:57Well, reason saved the children.
14:01Science, the free market.
14:03Rationality, you and I are alive because of reason.
14:10Reason leading to science, the free market leading to the distribution of life-saving medicines.
14:17We live due to reason.
14:22My brother was born, then another child of my mother's was born dead, and then I was born.
14:3033% mortality rate, still better than most of history.
14:34We are alive.
14:36We are having this conversation.
14:37We are able to communicate in this way.
14:39Not just because of science.
14:41Science creates the raw materials.
14:44It is the free market that delivers them in a cost-efficient manner to consumers and brings
14:48the price down and the efficiency levels up.
14:51It is not science that builds the trucks and the roads.
14:56Science just says you can, but what makes it actually happen is the free market.
15:01And what makes science possible is freedom of speech.
15:06People say, well, why is there such a difference in these different cultures?
15:09It's not just IQ.
15:10It's related.
15:12But it is freedom of speech.
15:14Which is not just IQ-based.
15:15East Asians have a higher IQ on average than whites, but whites are much more supportive,
15:19particularly white males, especially white males, almost exclusively white males, are far
15:23more supportive of free speech than East Asians.
15:27Despite us tidy-whities having lower IQs on average.
15:31Without free speech, you don't have science, because you have to be free to disagree.
15:35To oppose, to undermine, to criticize.
15:38Not just science, but its great competitor called religion.
15:42This is not, though it may sound like that at times, and that is my fault, but this is
15:48not a speech that is against religion at all.
15:51At all.
15:53If you had a religion that says you must wash your hands before a meal, but you didn't know
15:58why, it's just a commandment, that religion would have done countless instances of goodness
16:05in the world by presenting, sorry, by preventing countless deaths in a population by having
16:12hands washed before a meal.
16:14Infections, transmissions, transferals, and so on.
16:16Viruses, bacteria.
16:17Christianity has done untold virtues, goodness, passionate moral projects, the end of serfdom
16:29and slavery being primary to these.
16:32The infusion of divine dignity to every human being in the world has done untold good in
16:39the world, and for that, in my view, Christianity in particular being one of the few universal
16:46moral religions, where it's not in-group preference, it's not tribal, it is universal.
16:51All men, all women, all children are imbued with a divine spark placed in them by an all-knowing,
16:58all-powerful creator.
17:00And we must truly love the shards of God placed into the breast of every human being that has
17:07produced a commitment to universal virtues and values unmatched in any other religion.
17:14And for that greatest gift to humanity, Christianity should be praised and respected and honored in
17:27its promotion of these virtues and values, but just as a doctor who says to a mother who's calling up
17:37frantic with a sick child, a doctor who says, do not go to the hospital, but instead pray,
17:43would be guilty of malpractice.
17:46The benefits that science, reason, and the market have provided humanity are unparalleled.
17:57And relying on faith rather than reason would be a disaster for a dying child, for an engineer,
18:06for an architect, for a businessman, a scientist, a doctor, a researcher.
18:14I mean, the list is virtually endless.
18:17Now, the one place, of course, that science and reason and the market have failed is in morality.
18:26It's completely failed, which has been the greatest catastrophe in history.
18:34Right now, right now, you know, we stand on the verge of losing everything.
18:39You put AI together with general surveillance, together with a social credit score,
18:45we could have a tyranny that lasts forever.
18:48Because science, reason, engineering, technology, the free market, has created and delivered
18:55tools of liberation and tyranny far exceeding anything ever in human history.
19:01We stand before a bottomless pit of endless surveillance and control and subjugation
19:08where resistance will become impossible.
19:12You cannot talk, you cannot organize, you cannot meet, you cannot resist, you cannot fight.
19:19Counter propaganda is destroyed in the cradle.
19:24The government owns everything, everyone, all the time, forever.
19:29What has limited prior tyrannies is the labor cost of tyranny.
19:32Automation, automation, robots, AI, scanning, various computer tools, and algorithms lower
19:39the cost of human ownership to the point where it remains profitable despite its inefficiencies.
19:44The moment, and I have criticized atheists for decades about this, the moment that the
19:50power of science really showed itself, the power of reason, the power of markets.
19:54Markets are just universality, er, in property rights.
20:00Science is just the universal acceptance of the rules of matter and energy.
20:05And when the power of science and its innate universalization and its free speech became
20:10known and shown and absorbed, scientists should have put aside their test tube meanderings
20:18and focused ferociously, exclusively, deeply, pathologically, I would say,
20:24on the development of secular ethics.
20:27Otherwise, science, reason, and the free market has simply delivered humanity into endless
20:33enslavement and bondage.
20:36Endless.
20:37Those are the stakes.
20:39At the moment, and we don't have long to turn it around.
20:44If we look at the benefits that the age of reason and of markets have brought to humanity
20:53by shouldering into existence universality in matter and energy and law, those all pale to
21:03the benefits of true universality in the realm of ethics.
21:07As science was to faith, so rational ethics are to superstition.
21:14The degree to which science and the market have benefited humanity will pale to the degree that rational
21:23ethics will benefit humanity, because science without virtue is seppuku for the rational.
21:33Reason without ethics delivers the engines of enslavement to the most evil among us.
21:40And most of you here, who've listened to me for a long time, have been hesitant to push the solution.
21:49Universally preferable behavior, the rational proof of secular ethics.
21:53You've been hesitant to push it because of pushback.
21:56And we can happily line up into the eternal story of your enslavement,
22:01surf pens that await us in the absence of rational ethics.
22:05And I pointed this out recently and got a lot of pushback, which I appreciate.
22:13I said God was a placeholder until secular ethics could be developed.
22:19People said, ah, there's no such thing.
22:20It doesn't exist.
22:21It's a fantasy.
22:22It's a ghost.
22:22It's a chimera.
22:24It's a unicorn.
22:25It doesn't exist.
22:27The only ethics are the ethics of God.
22:30But if the only ethics are the ethics of God, we are doomed deeply, passionately, in a heartfelt
22:40and humble manner.
22:43I tell you, if the only ethics are the ethics of God, they have not been enough.
22:50They have delivered unto our enemies the greatest tools of control and subjugation that have ever
22:55been conceived of.
22:56If the only ethics are the ethics of God, we are doomed.
23:02If the only cure for a dying child is prayer, the child will die.
23:10There must be something besides prayer for medicine.
23:14And there must be something besides God for virtue.
23:18Everything in the universe is rational, objective, and makes sense.
23:28Why should it not be true also for ethics?
23:33If you are religious, why would God give us a rational, objective universe, minds drawn
23:39like a moth to a flame to reason and evidence, but then also make the most important aspect
23:47of human life, ethics, entirely reliant upon the argument from authority to be self-contradictory,
23:55not open to rational explanation or definition, and then judge us by virtue.
24:00To give us a rational universe, rational minds, an aversion to anti-rationality, rational universe, rational
24:10minds drawn to reason and opposed to unreason, and then say, oh, you're going to be judged
24:18by ethics.
24:19I'm going to give you a rational universe, a rational mind, an aversion to anti-rationality,
24:24and I'm going to make ethics, the one thing I'm going to judge you by, completely irrational.
24:31No, that would be a sadist, not a loving God.
24:36That would be Kafkaesque, in that you would be judged by your adherence to a law that you
24:44could never understand, that was contradictory, convoluted, open to wild differences of interpretation.
24:52That would be a tyranny, and I say, God, no, it cannot be that virtue, the most essential
25:00aspect and defining glory of humanity, is not subject to objectivity, facts, reason, and
25:09evidence.
25:10I refuse to believe it, because that would be to say that humanity defined by our capacity
25:19for abstract reasoning, must do good, but goodness cannot be analyzed or defined by abstract
25:25reasoning.
25:26That the most essential element of us is our reason, and the most essential characteristic
25:31of us is our capacity for virtue, but the two are in complete opposition?
25:37What is most human about us is reason.
25:40What is most valuable about us is virtue.
25:43Virtue, and our greatest capacity, which is to reason, can have nothing to say about our
25:50greatest glory, which is virtue, is madness.
25:54It's madness to say that virtue is not subject to reason.
26:02Because if virtue is not subject to reason, all we can be is ordered about, all we can be is
26:10bribed and threatened with heaven and hell, like any other lab, rat, animal.
26:19No, no, it cannot be.
26:21I refuse to believe it.
26:23Now, me refusing to believe it proves nothing.
26:27I could be crazy.
26:29Always a possibility.
26:30That's my morning mantra.
26:31Don't be nuts.
26:33It's a good goal.
26:34It's a good plan.
26:36It's really a life mission of mine.
26:38Don't be nuts.
26:40Cross your fingers.
26:41Don't be crazy.
26:42Because, you know, I've seen what happens to crazy people, and it's, well, it's bad.
26:49It's very bad.
26:51Don't be nuts.
26:51So the fact that I refuse to believe something proves nothing other than I have a ferocious
26:58willpower to find the reason of virtue, virtue cannot be self-contradictory, because our minds
27:09are primed for consistency.
27:11How do we know someone is crazy?
27:15Because what they say and how they act is self-contradictory.
27:19I was at the top of the mountain and in the bowels of the earth at the same time.
27:26Who would say that?
27:28A crazy person.
27:30A psychotic.
27:31A schizophrenic.
27:33Somebody with no remaining capacity for consistency, rationality, objectivity, dare I say it, reason.
27:42I am both a man and a shed at the same time.
27:48Open my doors.
27:49Store within me your tools and old bicycles.
27:53That would be a crazy person.
27:56Our minds are primed and developed for consistency, because reality is consistent and rational.
28:03Now, since we abhor inconsistency, we recoil from it, I've been in thousands and thousands
28:13of debates over the course of my life, many hundreds of them public, thousands of them
28:17really, which you can't call in shows, which are a debate with unreason and subjugation with
28:23a person's rational future and virtue.
28:25I've been in thousands of debates over the course of my life.
28:29I have never, ever, had someone say, yes, I contradict myself, but I'm still right.
28:38Even our good friend, Dr. John Balfour, who called in to rip me a new one from his ivory
28:46tower of immaculate conception.
28:50See, get them thinking, not belly.
28:52When I proved to him, UPB, he did not say, no, that's wrong.
29:00He said, so what?
29:02When you prove people wrong, they don't say, I'm wrong, but I'm still right.
29:07They gaslight, they move the goalposts, they change definitions, they go on long, windy,
29:13gish gallops of anecdotes and emotions.
29:17But they do not say, as Walt Whitman famously did, he was a poet and a crazy guy, he did
29:23not say, you say I contradict myself.
29:26Very well, then I contradict myself.
29:28They don't say that.
29:29Sane human beings do not say, I contradict myself, but I'm still right.
29:36And people say, secular ethics, well, Steph, come on, man, they don't, they don't exist.
29:43Ah, so you're saying I should disavow things that don't exist because it would be illogical
29:50to avow that something exists when it does not?
29:53Ah, but does logic exist?
29:55It does not.
29:56Doesn't mean it's subjective or invalid.
29:59Math doesn't exist in the universe as a physical thing.
30:02That doesn't mean that you can say two and two make five.
30:05Your statement is inconsistent with reason.
30:09Okay, does reason exist?
30:11Nope.
30:12Does science exist?
30:13Nope.
30:14Does math exist?
30:15Nope.
30:16Does that mean they're subjective?
30:18Nope.
30:19People are saying to me, Steph, ethics doesn't exist, so you should stop promoting them.
30:24Rational secular ethics don't exist, you should stop promoting them using reason, which does
30:29not exist.
30:31That which does not exist is invalid.
30:34Your argument is irrational, therefore you should reject it, but reason doesn't exist either.
30:38The moment you deploy reason, you can't say something is invalid because it doesn't exist,
30:44because reason doesn't exist.
30:46It's a cope.
30:47I'm almost done, my friends, and I appreciate your patience, but this is the most essential
30:54topic in the world, which is why I hammer on it so consistently.
30:58I may not be able, with your obviously massive help, to save the world.
31:04Perhaps UPB is for 7,000 years from now when people fight free of the decaying brain robots.
31:11But if you have the answer, you have to go hoarse screaming it from the rooftops.
31:16If you have the medicine in a time of plague, even though people think your medicine is actually
31:20going to make them worse and you know it's going to make them better, you still must try
31:23to convince them to take the medicine.
31:25That is for matters of conscience.
31:28I may not save the world, I probably won't, because it's not up to me, it's up to everyone
31:33here.
31:34I may not save the world, but I will literally be damned, if I don't do everything I can,
31:40to try.
31:40To risk life and limb and survival and income and security, to try, because it is for certain
31:48that the world will not be saved if we don't hold aloft the shining beacon of secular ethics.
31:56The world will not be saved.
31:57In fact, the world will be damned by the combination of superstition in ethics and reason, evidence,
32:03and engineering in science and the market, because we then create, as I mentioned, powerful
32:10tools of control, the power of which could scarcely be imagined by any prior tyrants,
32:16and deliver it to our enemies, because we have the power of a god and the wisdom of an ape.
32:25You've seen that famous picture of the monkey with the gun?
32:28I used it as a thumbnail for one of my videos many years ago.
32:31So, that's where we are.
32:34Rape, theft, assault, and murder.
32:36The four great corners of the square of evil.
32:39Rape, theft, assault, and murder.
32:42Theft can never be universally preferable behavior.
32:45Ever.
32:45It is self-contradictory to say that it could be.
32:49Theft is when someone takes your property and you don't want them to.
32:52I took a picture.
32:53I haven't published it.
32:54I took a picture the other day when I was on a walk with my daughter because somebody
32:57had a little kid's bicycle out front of their house with a sign saying,
33:01Take me!
33:03Take me.
33:04It's not theft.
33:05If somebody wants you to take their property, so when somebody doesn't want you to take their
33:08property, it's theft.
33:10If you say theft is universally preferable behavior, you're saying everybody must want
33:15to steal and be stolen from at all times.
33:17But if you want to be stolen from, it's not theft.
33:20Therefore, if you say that theft is universally preferable behavior because it's asymmetric,
33:24one person wants it, the other person doesn't, it can't be fulfilled by both people at the
33:29same time.
33:30It's like saying, here's my rule.
33:33If I go north, you go south.
33:36Now we must both go north together.
33:38Only one of those rules can be fulfilled.
33:41If the rule is I go north and you go south, we cannot both go north together.
33:45If the rule is we both go north together, I cannot have a rule that says you also
33:50go south.
33:51This is not complicated.
33:53It's just hard to grasp because of the trauma of superstition in the realm of ethics and the
34:00degree to which we realize that our world is hell because superstition in the realm of
34:06ethics delivers godlike powers of tyranny to the most scurrilous and venomous among us.
34:12My daughter's brain just said, among us, like the video game.
34:18Theft can never be universally preferable behavior.
34:21Rape.
34:22Can rape be universally preferable behavior?
34:24Can everyone want to rape and be raped at the same time at all times?
34:28Nope.
34:29Rape is unwanted behavior.
34:31If you want to have sex, it's not rape.
34:33If you don't want to have sex, it's rape.
34:35Rape can never be universally preferable behavior because if you say everyone must want to rape
34:41and be raped, then the category of rape disappears.
34:46We must all go north, but you must go south.
34:49We must both go north, but you must go south.
34:52And I must go north.
34:54Doesn't work.
34:55It doesn't work.
34:56So, as it turns out, as it turns out, morality, virtue, ethics is entirely revealable, definable
35:09by reason and evidence.
35:13If prayer does not heal people directly, we can say that there's a state of mind, there's
35:19an optimism that prayer may engender that could help people heal.
35:22I get that.
35:23And I'm not saying that there's no placebo effect.
35:25I'm not saying that prayer has no effect, although scientifically it's pretty hard to find.
35:29But prayer itself does not heal people.
35:33I had a wasp sting over the summer.
35:35My hand, my hand felt just like one balloon swelled up.
35:40Went to the doctor, got my antibiotics while I went down.
35:43I did not pray.
35:44What's the evidence?
35:45So, reason and evidence, right?
35:47Respect for property rights, the non-aggression principle, right?
35:51Theft, the opposite of theft, disrespect for property rights.
35:54That's universally preferable behavior.
35:56It does not self-contradict if you say human beings should respect property.
35:59Human beings should not steal.
36:01That is universalizable.
36:03Human beings must steal.
36:05Is not.
36:07Thou shalt not steal.
36:09Is rational.
36:10Thou shalt steal.
36:12Is not.
36:12Is anti-rational.
36:15Thou shalt not murder.
36:17Is rational.
36:19Thou shalt murder.
36:21Is anti-rational.
36:22Thou shalt not rape.
36:25Is rational.
36:26Thou shalt rape.
36:27Is anti-rational.
36:28And just as there's no theory of physics that can contradict your direct, visceral, personal
36:34experience, there can be no system of ethics that justifies rape, theft, assault, and murder
36:40because we intuit, we understand, we feel those things are wrong.
36:45Why?
36:46Why do we understand and do it and feel that those things are wrong?
36:49Because they're anti-rational.
36:52Now, I understand.
36:53Enforcement.
36:53Yes, but you say these things.
36:55What does it enforce?
36:55Your little theories, Mr. Molyneux, do not stop one bullet, one pilfering hand, one rampaging
37:03and invading penis.
37:05I get that.
37:07I get that.
37:08Enforcement is a separate matter.
37:11But we cannot have a theory of physics that says, if you hold a tennis ball at arm's length
37:18and let it go, it will go sideways, upwards, travel up your arm, lick your ear, fondle your
37:25nether regions, and then impregnate your hamster.
37:28No.
37:29Hold a tennis ball at arm's length, let go of it, it drops to the ground, drops to the
37:34earth.
37:35There's no theory of physics that can oppose that.
37:38It may give you things that are a little bit counterintuitive.
37:42I get all of that.
37:43It looks like the sun goes around the earth.
37:45I get that.
37:45I mean, I get that.
37:46But it's incomprehensible.
37:47But it cannot overturn your direct personal experience.
37:52When we are stolen from, we feel violated.
37:56Why?
37:57Because what is being stolen from is reason.
38:00What is being violated is rationality.
38:03Because the thief says, you shouldn't have property rights, but I should.
38:06I will steal your wallet, you don't have any right to property, but I want to keep the
38:10wallet that I've stolen, because if somebody steals the wallet that I stole from you, I'll
38:13be outraged.
38:15It's a contradictory mindset.
38:17And just as the discipline of physics affirms our direct experience, but disorients our entire
38:28view of the universe.
38:30Did you ever have that when you were a kid?
38:31I was fascinated by astronomy from when I was a little kid.
38:35Got all these books out, read about it.
38:37And it blows your mind, right?
38:40I'm pacing around, having my speech, looking around.
38:45I'm in my little house, stable.
38:50There's a little bit of wind outside, some blowing snow.
38:52And I don't think that I'm on a giant turning ball, rocketing around the sun.
38:58The sun is rocketing around the galaxy.
39:01But I'm actually traveling at hundreds of thousands of miles an hour.
39:05It's disorienting.
39:07At a personal level, physics validates everything that happens.
39:12I go to play pickleball with my wife.
39:14The ball behaves in a predictable and stable manner.
39:18If I make a mistake, it is me, not physics, not gravity.
39:23Nobody's dialing it up and down.
39:26So physics validates your personal experience, but is utterly disorienting in your view of
39:32the universe.
39:33And we kind of only stay sane by not thinking about the implications of physics and what
39:39it means about.
39:40You'd feel dizzy if you constantly looked and thought the world is turning and rocketing
39:44and spinning and the sun is rocketing and turning and spinning.
39:48It's the same with you, Pee-Pee.
39:50You know.
39:51It's what we teach our children, right?
39:53Don't steal.
39:54Don't hit.
39:55I mean, don't rape, don't kill is out of the bounds for children.
40:00But, most children.
40:01But we certainly say to people in our lives, don't steal.
40:07Don't rape.
40:08Don't hit.
40:09Don't murder.
40:10These are the personal ethics we all live with, just as the tennis ball drops from our
40:14hand to the ground when we open our fingers.
40:16So it validates our personal experience and intuition and thoughts and feelings and everything
40:23we teach our children.
40:25It just completely screws up our sense of society.
40:30It's the you in UPB that is the toughest part.
40:34I did not come up with a radical theory called rape, theft, assault, and murder are wrong and
40:38bad.
40:39Everybody accepts that as a whole.
40:42Well, even sociopaths pretend to.
40:46If you catch a sociopath who killed someone, they'll say, I didn't kill anyone.
40:50Murder's bad.
40:51I would never do that.
40:52Right?
40:53But just as physics takes your perspective of standing on a stable Earth while the universe
41:00wheels around you and says the universe is way more stable than you are, you are turning
41:04and rocketing around the sun.
41:07And the sun is rocketing around the galaxy.
41:10And the stars are sometimes hundreds of light years away.
41:14And the tide is the skin of the Earth pulled back and forth by the weight of the moon.
41:21What drove Aristotle mad?
41:22Why are there tides?
41:24He couldn't imagine.
41:25The moon would have anything to do with it.
41:28But the moon is partly why we're here.
41:30Tide pools give birth to life.
41:34So UPB is intensely disorienting when you take it to society and universalize it because
41:40it discredits political power.
41:43It discredits government schools.
41:45It discredits fiat currency.
41:47It discredits national debts.
41:50It discredits hitting children.
41:51At a personal level, we say, yes, yes, of course, among the people I know, rape, theft,
41:57assault, and murder would be terrible.
41:58Wrong.
41:58If you universalize it, if you UPB it, it's incredibly disorienting when looking at society
42:06as a whole.
42:07And it becomes incomprehensible.
42:10And the Western mind has not had to deal or grapple with this level of disorienting
42:14incomprehensibility since Copernicus, Galileo, and Tycho Brahe first said,
42:20The earth is not fixed, and it does move.
42:25Nevertheless, it moves.
42:27It feels still.
42:28It looks like the universe revolves around us.
42:31But it does not.
42:33And it is not.
42:34That's disorienting.
42:36That messes with people's heads in a very fundamental way.
42:40Getting to the truth makes you seasick.
42:43It gives you bad dreams.
42:46It makes you feel unwell.
42:49It tears you out of the matrix.
42:52We all accept rape, theft, assault, and murder of wrong.
42:55Once we universalize it, almost all of our social structures dissolve under the acidic cascade
43:05of moral consistency.
43:08A schoolteacher in a government school says to a child,
43:12Do not hit.
43:13You must not use force to get what you want.
43:15Yet the teacher's salary is paid for by enforced property taxes.
43:19The teacher is perfectly allowed to use force to get what she wants, but the child is not.
43:23And the teacher will never acknowledge that.
43:26Because that's power.
43:27Power is when you carve out exceptions to universal virtues, morals, and values.
43:32What I can do, you cannot do.
43:35You must not use force to get what you want.
43:38I must use force to get what I want.
43:41It's the creation of opposite moral universes while never acknowledging them that is the
43:47root and source of power.
43:49A parent hits a child saying you must not hit people.
43:53A parent bullies a child saying you must not bully.
43:57A parent lies to a child and says you must tell the truth,
44:00while often punishing the child for telling the truth.
44:02Universalization is incredibly disorienting and incredibly dangerous,
44:09because people who universalized in the past got their asses killed,
44:14burned at the stake,
44:16slaughtered on an altar.
44:18Why do the priests have so much power?
44:20Why don't I just talk to God directly?
44:22Wah!
44:23Off with his head.
44:25What if the king is just a guy in a funny hat?
44:27Wah!
44:28Off with his head.
44:29And why should we not universalize,
44:34not just because it's incredibly disorienting,
44:37but because it unleashes the greatest predators on our necks?
44:42Because power is the creation of unspoken opposite moral rule universes,
44:49wherein noticing the opposite moral standard is fatal,
44:55and we have been trained and evolved to not require moral consistency,
45:01because requiring moral consistency removes the greatest source of power,
45:08which is unspoken moral opposites.
45:11Hypocrisy that can never be identified is power.
45:15That's what it is.
45:17You're taking away the greatest weapon of subjugation
45:20to demand and require moral consistency.
45:24If a man says,
45:26a witch doctor,
45:26a charlatan says,
45:27I can perform miracles,
45:29and science says,
45:30no, you can't,
45:32that's a lie,
45:34then you're taking away his power,
45:35because you're saying there's universal physics
45:37which cannot be denied,
45:39or opposed,
45:40or subverted,
45:41or undermined,
45:42by
45:43a guy with capped teeth in a shiny suit,
45:47and a bouffant hairdo.
45:48It's a lie that you can violate the laws of physics.
45:52Physics are universal and consistent.
45:55They do not bow to your own personal preferences.
45:57You take away his power to lie.
46:00Once people accept physics,
46:02they reject magicians and miracle workers and
46:04all sorts of charlatans.
46:07It takes away their power.
46:10It's the same thing with moral consistency,
46:13but even worse.
46:13If you create money out of nothing,
46:17that's counterfeiting,
46:18and you go to jail.
46:20And if you resist,
46:21they'll kill you.
46:23Ah, but you see,
46:23central banking,
46:24blah, blah, blah, blah,
46:25we all know this, right?
46:26We all understand.
46:28We all accept.
46:30And it really is only
46:31modern technology
46:32which has allowed
46:33this to occur.
46:35I'm smart, for sure.
46:36I'm dedicated, for sure.
46:39I have a ferocious will
46:40to solve
46:41and having solved
46:42the problem of secular ethics,
46:44but there would have been
46:45little point in doing it
46:46if it was simply
46:47a bunch of papers
46:48that would be
46:50thrown into a landfill
46:51after I die.
46:53There had to be the capacity
46:54to get past the gatekeepers
46:56which are entirely dedicated
46:58in preserving
46:59these opposite moral universes
47:00that can never be spoken on
47:01wherein our subjugation
47:02originates and is reinforced
47:04and maintained by.
47:05It would be little point
47:06developing UPB
47:08in the absence
47:09of the technology
47:10that both can
47:12subjugate us
47:13and liberate us
47:14forever and ever.
47:15Amen.
47:17When I was in
47:18university,
47:20I mean,
47:20I was recognized
47:21as brilliant,
47:22everybody said so.
47:23I had professors
47:24read out my entire essays
47:25to people saying
47:26this is a perfect essay.
47:28Very first year
47:29I was debating,
47:29I came in
47:30sixth out of all of Canada,
47:33but nobody wanted to touch
47:34my moral absolute
47:36ism.
47:37Richard Dawkins
47:38regrets promoting
47:39atheism in that
47:40it has diminished
47:41Christian morality.
47:44But Dickie D,
47:45Richard Dawkins,
47:47cannot promote
47:48universal morality
47:49because he takes
47:51his money,
47:52good portions of it,
47:54from the state
47:54and all his friends
47:56get money and privileges
47:58and power
47:59from the state.
48:00so how could he
48:02possibly develop
48:04a system of
48:05universal ethics
48:06that said
48:08absolutely and
48:09objectively
48:09left is wrong
48:11since he is
48:12paid,
48:14padded,
48:14protected,
48:15promoted
48:15by the power
48:17of the state
48:18to transfer resources
48:19against people's
48:20wills.
48:21He is compromised,
48:23which is why
48:24he is allowed
48:24to be promoted
48:25and I am not.
48:27He is compromised.
48:28I am not.
48:31I get no money
48:32from the state.
48:33In fact,
48:35it is somewhat
48:36the opposite,
48:37to put it mildly.
48:39It is as a result
48:41of certain personal
48:42virtues
48:42and to a large degree
48:44accidental intelligence
48:45and to an even
48:46larger degree
48:47almost exclusively
48:48the capacity
48:50of the internet
48:52and these
48:53amazing technologies
48:55to broadcast
48:56these arguments
48:57that the solution
48:58of secular ethics
48:59has been possible.
49:00It is
49:01maybe 10 or 15%
49:04my will
49:06and the rest of it
49:07is accident,
49:09fortune,
49:10and circumstance,
49:11which is why
49:12I am humble about it
49:13and I don't want
49:14people to
49:15talk about me
49:16or care about me.
49:17I want them to
49:17talk about and care
49:18about universal
49:19secular
49:20rational
49:21ethics.
49:22It is the one
49:24thing, my friends,
49:25that has never
49:26been tried.
49:28Everything else
49:28has been tried.
49:29Everything.
49:31Political power,
49:32religious power,
49:33economic power,
49:34all of it
49:35has been tried.
49:36Augustinian ethics,
49:37Aristotelian ethics,
49:39Kantian ethics,
49:42utilitarianism,
49:43pragmatism,
49:44idealism,
49:45all have been tried
49:46and all have led us
49:48to the precipice
49:49of ultimate disaster
49:51wherein we tremble
49:52and grip the
49:54crumbling edges
49:54with our toes.
49:56All has been tried
49:57except universal,
49:59objective,
50:00rational,
50:01rational ethics.
50:03And that's great news.
50:05I bring
50:06good news,
50:08great news,
50:09the greatest news.
50:10If every approach
50:12but one
50:12has been tried,
50:14it means
50:15there is yet one
50:16approach still
50:16to try,
50:17to promote
50:18universal,
50:19rational,
50:20secular ethics.
50:22That's fantastic news.
50:24It's like there are
50:25a thousand
50:26lockboxes
50:27wherein there is
50:28a treasure.
50:29After you open
50:30the thousandth
50:31lockbox,
50:32there is no treasure.
50:34But if you've opened
50:35999,
50:36there's still a chance
50:38for the treasure.
50:39And I'm telling you,
50:41this is the treasure.
50:42It is great news
50:43because if we've tried
50:44everything,
50:45and this is where we are,
50:46society is doomed innately.
50:48Humanity is doomed innately.
50:50We are destined to be
50:51slaves forever,
50:53no matter what,
50:53because we've tried
50:54absolutely everything.
50:56If there is one thing
50:58that has yet to be tried,
51:01that is the best news
51:02in human history.
51:04Universal,
51:05rational,
51:06secular ethics.
51:07If all humanity
51:08has is prayer,
51:10children continue to die
51:12by the hundreds of millions.
51:14If there is another option
51:16called science and medicine,
51:18salvation can be
51:19or could be
51:20at hand.
51:22If we have tried
51:23every approach to ethics,
51:25but UPP,
51:26and UPP
51:27is proven,
51:29that is fantastic news.
51:31It means we have
51:32an option and a choice
51:33and a progress
51:35that is unprecedented.
51:38And if we have
51:39a rational,
51:40proven system of ethics
51:41that is unprecedented,
51:43we can change
51:44the course of history
51:45and we can get out
51:46of this blind,
51:46hamster wheel,
51:47bladed,
51:48repetitive cycle
51:48of civilizational progress
51:52leading to wealth,
51:53leading to giant governments,
51:55leading to tyranny.
51:56But it's almost too late.
51:59I have,
52:00I think,
52:01I'm always happy
52:02to be corrected on this,
52:03as I am on anything
52:04and everything.
52:06I think I have done
52:07the most I possibly can.
52:11I have taken decades
52:12of concentrated research
52:13to produce a rational system
52:14of ethics
52:15that cannot be disproven.
52:17I have promoted
52:19said system of ethics
52:20through countless
52:22presentations,
52:23debates,
52:23speeches,
52:24a conference,
52:25conferences,
52:27PowerPoint presentations,
52:29animations.
52:30I do rapid puppet shows
52:32if I thought they would help,
52:34but I have promoted it
52:35as much as possible.
52:37I've even done live
52:38audience participation
52:39explanations
52:40of this approach
52:42to ethics,
52:43the approach to ethics,
52:44the one that works
52:45and is proven.
52:46Beyond that,
52:47I've made the book free.
52:50I have
52:51even rewritten it
52:52to make it even more
52:53concise and digestible
52:54in the last third
52:55of my free book,
52:56Essential Philosophy,
52:57at EssentialPhilosophy.com.
52:58I have
52:59been eager to debate
53:01any and all comers
53:02on the topic of ethics.
53:04I have
53:05battled many storms
53:07and attacks
53:09and threats
53:09and losses
53:11to remain steadfast
53:13in the face
53:14of massive opposition.
53:15I have given up
53:17significant sums
53:18of money,
53:19prestige,
53:20public speaking,
53:21personal safety,
53:22security
53:22to promote this.
53:25I feel
53:25I could be wrong
53:26I feel
53:27that I have done
53:28as much as I can
53:30to promote this
53:32because
53:33I must satisfy
53:35the demands
53:36and rigors
53:36of my conscience
53:37before almost anything
53:39and everything else.
53:41Obviously,
53:41I need my basic health
53:42and longevity
53:43and all that.
53:45Well,
53:45and exercise.
53:46I'm not doing UPB
53:47when I'm working out,
53:49at least rarely.
53:50I have to take
53:51and maintain,
53:52take care of
53:52and maintain
53:53my basic health.
53:54I think I've done
53:55all I can.
53:56The information
53:57is out there.
53:59The arguments
54:00are irrefutable.
54:02And children
54:03can understand this.
54:04I know my daughter's
54:05smarter than your average bearer,
54:06but I was explaining UPB
54:08to her when she was two.
54:10Let's say she's smarter,
54:11blah, blah, blah.
54:11I'm sure she is.
54:12Let's say you have to wait
54:13till three or four.
54:15But children understand
54:16self-contradiction.
54:17They do.
54:18If you say
54:19to a four-year-old,
54:20I'm giving you
54:22no candy,
54:23I'm giving you candy,
54:25but there's no candy,
54:27they'll say,
54:27what?
54:28What, are you giving me
54:28candy or not?
54:30Or if you say
54:30I'm giving you candy
54:31and you only give them
54:32a wrapper,
54:33they'd say,
54:33that's not candy.
54:35If you say
54:36we are going
54:37to the park
54:38and the doctor
54:39at the same time,
54:41they'll say,
54:41what?
54:42Wait,
54:43which?
54:44Because they understand
54:44the three laws of logic.
54:46They get it.
54:47If you say
54:48to a child,
54:49you must go
54:50to bed now
54:51and you can stay
54:52up for an hour,
54:54they will stop
54:54and blink at you.
54:55Like,
54:55that's what?
54:56What?
54:57It's not part,
54:57what?
54:58It doesn't make any sense.
55:00So children can understand it.
55:02And I've done a show
55:03many, many years ago,
55:04almost 20 years ago now,
55:05I think,
55:06called The ABCs of UPB.
55:08You can just go to
55:09fdrpodcast.com
55:10and type in ABC,
55:12you'll find it.
55:13How to Explain
55:14UPB to Children.
55:16So,
55:17I wanted to respond,
55:19as I always do,
55:20to people who criticize
55:22me and my work,
55:24which is great and fine
55:25and I welcome it.
55:26I love it, actually.
55:27I wanted to respond
55:29to those who say,
55:30there's no such thing
55:31as secular ethics.
55:32Secular ethics does not exist.
55:33Or,
55:34as somebody said,
55:35on X,
55:36oh,
55:37come on,
55:37take your Reddit tier
55:38of atheism from 1990s.
55:40We've moved on.
55:42Which,
55:42as I said in the show,
55:43last night,
55:44puts forward the rather
55:45surprising proposition
55:46from a religious person
55:47that a belief is
55:48automatically wrong
55:49because it's older.
55:51Pretty sure 2025 years ago
55:53was a little longer ago
55:54than 1990.
55:56So,
55:57those are my thoughts.
55:58That's my argument.
55:59That's my perspective.
56:00That's my mission.
56:01That's what I'm doing.
56:02That's what I have been doing.
56:03That's what I will continue to do.
56:05And if you have questions,
56:06problems,
56:07issues,
56:07objections,
56:08I am
56:09thrilled
56:11to hear them.
56:13Whatever I can do
56:14to refine
56:15the arguments,
56:16my methodology
56:17for communicating them.
56:18You know,
56:19I was really struck
56:19many years ago
56:21when I read,
56:22maybe in Will Durant
56:23or somewhere,
56:23I can't remember,
56:24but somebody said,
56:26Socrates never used
56:26the word epistemology.
56:28He spoke
56:29in the common language,
56:31in the common tongue,
56:32in the Old Dungeons
56:33and Dragons world.
56:35So,
56:35I have tried
56:36to present this
56:37in an engaging,
56:39emphatic,
56:41hopefully somewhat entertaining.
56:42I think I only had
56:43one joke in here.
56:44But it's too serious
56:46in a way
56:46for much comedy.
56:48But I hope
56:48that I have presented it
56:49in a way
56:51that makes sense.
56:52If there's better
56:53things that I can do,
56:54if there are different
56:55things that I can do
56:56which do not require
56:58the compromise
56:59of any
57:00commitment to
57:01honesty and integrity,
57:03I will do a lot.
57:04I would do
57:05anything for love.
57:07I would do anything
57:08for philosophy
57:09except lie and misrepresent.
57:10Not that I think
57:11that any of you guys
57:11would ask that of me,
57:13but that's the
57:14limiting factor.
57:17We will end
57:18then here today
57:18and massively
57:19appreciate that
57:20if you would like
57:20to help out
57:21what I do
57:21after a pretty
57:23scurrilous series
57:24of deplatformings
57:25over the last
57:25five or six years.
57:26fredomain.com
57:27slash donate.
57:29Of course,
57:29if you want to get
57:30your copy of UPB,
57:32just go to
57:32fredomain.com
57:33slash books
57:33or essentialphilosophy.com
57:35and I really do
57:36appreciate your time
57:37today.
57:38Lots of love,
57:38my friends.
57:39I'll talk to you soon.
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