
Secret Civil War on the Left: Gays vs. Muslims vs. Blacks
Based Camp | Simone & Malcolm Collins
Anti-Black Racism in Arab Societies
Hosts discuss cultural racism in many Arab countries and everyday discrimination against darker-skinned people.
Join Malcolm and Simone Collins as they dive into the controversy surrounding Greta Thunbergâs involvement with the Global Sumud Flotilla (GSF), the intersection of progressive movements, and the complex dynamics between various activist groups. This episode explores the rifts within the left, the overlooked genocides in Sudan and the DRC, the treatment of LGBTQ+ individuals in conflict zones, and the shifting alliances among Black, Palestinian, and LGBTQ+ activists. With candid discussion, historical context, and sharp analysis, this conversation challenges assumptions and highlights the real-world consequences of performative activism and intersectional politics.
Episode Transcript:
Malcolm Collins: Hello, Simone. I am excited to be here with you today. Today we are going to be using the split up of the Flotilla that Greta Thornberg was involved in and on the board of over a person coming out as gay, and then the Muslims on it who were running a lot of stuff, whereas like, well, we wonât be part of it then.
And it it, itâs still sort of operational, but itâs having a lot of issues. Weâll be using this as a framing device to talk about. What has been happening increasingly over just the last couple months which is a split up or like a, a forced sort of reconciling in the left between. And by the way, we found some video of Greta Thornbergâs volatility here.
Dare you. How dare you.
Speaker: Groups donât make me frown. Only the west must be to down the rockets. Praise the fight. Freedomâs wrong, but hey, [00:01:00] feels
Malcolm Collins: . A, a reconciling of. Many people thought, and, and, and itâs sort of like every non-white group largely thought that the left was all about centering them. Mm-hmm. And theyâre learning that itâs not, and while we will be talking about, one of those things weâll be talking about is the conflict between the Black Forest part of the left and the Palestine per part of the left which is like way more gruesome than you would think specifically because.
Okay, Simone, are you aware that there are other genocides in the world that are significantly larger than if you consider Gaza a genocide than whatâs going on in Gaza? Are you aware of this?
Simone Collins: Nothingâs coming up in the news. I couldnât. Well, no, no, no, no.
Malcolm Collins: Of course. Nobodyâs talking about it. None of the leftists are freaking out about it.
Credit Thornbergâs not doing anything about it. But no, thereâs significant, multiple larger genocides but the largest genocide in the world right now. Itâs happening in the Sudan. Do you know. Who is killing who in this genocide? No. [00:02:00] Arabs are killing blacks.
Simone Collins: Oh
Malcolm Collins: no.
Simone Collins: Oh,
Malcolm Collins: and you can say, oh, come on Malcolm, you must be misframing it.
So this is from an AI here, because I ask, is this actually true? Yes. The ongoing genocide in Sudan, particularly in the Darfur region, largely involves Arab dominated forces led by the rapid support forces RSF. In Allied Arab militias, perpetrating systemic atrocities against non-Arab, often referred to as black or African ethnic groups such as am Mati, fir and za.
We, I canât pronounce this. This ethnic dimension is the core driver of the violence. So yeah,
Simone Collins: this is, I remember there being Darfur activists in
Malcolm Collins: college.
Simone Collins: Yeah, so, thousand protest
Malcolm Collins: dark four. We just stopped doing it within the current era of leftist media. Got
Simone Collins: tired of it. Or like, I donât know. Well, no,
Malcolm Collins: we get tired of it.
This is a completely new conflict thatâs happening in the same, this is a new one.
Simone Collins: Okay, so this is not the. Star four of like,
Malcolm Collins: well, obviously theyâre connected, but itâs a new genocide. Yes, it is. It is. Mass murder of children, [00:03:00] mass graves. Really horrifying stuff. And then people will be like, well, weâre not funding this one.
And itâs like, well buckle up buddy, because guess who is funding them? The UAE and theyâre doing it to get rid of the blacks in the region so that they can control the ports more easily and use it to export gold because I think they get like 80% of the gold from the region or something. Weâre not gonna go too far into that.
But throughout this, what you will find, and I think that many people, they see like one dimension here where theyâre like, they see the Gaza Palestine thing. And theyâre like this is at odds with leftist views around gay rights, which, which weâll get into. It is, but I think they miss how sort of unilaterally antithetical to most purported urban monoculture and leftist values.
A Arab community and specifically obviously Arab communities are different and thereâs diversity within the communities. But Iâm talking about dominant beliefs in these communities [00:04:00] are towards their other agendas like. Helping, for example, black people. And I think that weâre sort of coming to a head.
Weâre also gonna talk about what has recently happened, which is a, a, a widespread movement of LGB organizations that are splitting from trans organizations and many activists recently with this idea that they are going to push like a, a divorce or a, a forced separating. To go to the, the gay stuff âcause youâre like, how you know, anti-gay is a place like Gaza.
Okay. So, in 2000 there were four Palestinians killed in the Gaza West Bank for just being gay. Which led to a lot of gay people in Gaza to flee to Israel, where they were accepted for asylum to protect themselves from the Gazaâs. If the Gazaâs controlled. Like Jerusalem, for example, the gay people in Jerusalem would be killed.
Theyâre able to go there for protection now because they are killed. In Gaza. Now whatâs really wild here is we actually have like quite detailed like, like torture [00:05:00] and murder of, of, of gay people because of captured records that they have found of a senior Hamas commander in Gaza who was arrested beaten, placed in solitary confine before being murdered.
Predominantly because he was found to be gay. Other captured documents revealed that they tortured and killed to other gay members. Specifically for, and I love this because this is extensively documented in Hamasâ own records.
Simone Collins: Oh no.
Malcolm Collins: That these two people were killed because they gay griped, some of the Israeli captives which implies that regular gring must have been very common if they thought they could get away with gay griping and an Islamic, like, I love when people are like, oh, no, no, no, no.
Even, even though the hostages have said yes, grape is very common among the hostages, theyâre like,
Simone Collins: itâs fine. Just donât. Donât be gay about it.
Malcolm Collins: Donât
Simone Collins: be gay about it, guys. Oh, man. Okay.
Malcolm Collins: By the way, for the other [00:06:00] if you, if you wanna get an idea of like the scale of the various genocides that weâre looking at in the world right now.
The, the one that is Arabs killing Blacks in the Sudan there have been around 150,000 deaths. And around 12 million people are displaced with 11 million internal displacement, 3 million refugees.
And then if you look at the next biggest, which is again, not the Gaza War, itâs the DRC Eastern conflict. Itâs had around a hundred thousand casualties 7 million refugees. And then if you look at the Gaza War, if you consider this a genocide it has. Just 64,300 casualties, which, which, which would make it about half the size of whatâs going on in the Sudan right now.
And only around 1.9 million people. And keep in mind like this is, this is still a lot of people. Iâm not saying that this is a good thing, but any
Simone Collins: death is tragic. But if, if weâre talking about effective altruism or tackling the, the biggest. The biggest atrocities in terms of, would
Malcolm Collins: it be much [00:07:00] easier to end the Sudan conflict than it would be to end the the conflict that weâre dealing with in Israel and Gaza right now?
Like, itâs a much more realistic thing to do. And this is why when you talk about something like Greta Thornberg and I, and I think this is really telling, and I wanna get into the psychology of this. Why does she climate activists decide one day not to address the biggest genocides in the world? And people will be like, well.
Just because the genocides happening in another region doesnât mean you canât be talking about a genocide in in this region. Right. Well, isnt
Simone Collins: she supposed to be the I of the left? I mean, right.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. Well, she is kind of, but I, but what I wanna find here is when a leftist is like, well, you canât complain about the genocide here.
And then say that, like, we shouldnât be talking about the genocide here. And Iâm like, Iâm not saying that right. But the problem is, is I can go to your tweets, I can look at what your sort of lieutenants are doing, your Gretta thornbergâs, and not all one of them. I mean, I would argue that the tweets that the Sudan conflict is getting, despite being significantly larger is probably 0.5% of the tweets that Gaza gets from leftist activists.
So, so the [00:08:00] question is, is, why donât you talk about it when itâs Arabs killing blacks? Why do you talk about it when itâs Jews killing Arabs, like, and, and Arab, and Iâll put a clip. On the screen here, itâs in another language. But, but for context here. So you, you, you donât actually. I have to read the full saying.
This is the Palestinian analyst, Mannar Shaki on Al Jazeera tv. So, mainstream tv, you know, in the Middle East. And, and theyâre even talking about this there, he, he pointed out that more people have been killed in the Sudan than Gaza in the past two years. But he then goes on to say, but nobody cares about them because the blood of Palestinians is precious.
You donât see people in us. Protesting their death. Oh, okay.
Speaker 4: Ű”ŰÙŰ ŰčÙۧ ۶ŰۧÙۧ ÙŰ«Ù۱۩ ÙÙŰȘŰÙ ÙŰ ÙÙÙ ŰŽÙÙ ŰŰȘÙ Ű¶ŰۧÙۧÙۧ ŰŰȘÙ Ű¶ŰۧÙۧÙۧ ŰŻÙ Ùۧ ŰșۧÙÙ. ۧÙŰčۧÙÙ ÙÙÙ Ù ÙŰČÙŰČ ÙÙ ŰŽÙÙ ŰșŰČŰ© ŰŁÙÙÙ ÙÙ ÙÙ Ű§ÙŰłÙŰŻŰ§Ù Ű”Ű§Ű± [00:09:00] ÙÙ ŰȘÙŰŹÙ۱ Ù۔ۧ۱ ÙÙ ÙŰȘÙ ŰŁÙ۫۱ Ù Ù Ű§ÙÙÙ Ű”Ű§Ű± ŰšÙÙ۳۷ÙÙ ŰłÙŰȘÙÙ ÙÙۧ Űۯۧ Űۧ۳۳ ÙÙÙÙ ÙÙۧ Űۯۧ ÙŰÙÙ ŰčÙÙÙ Ű ŰšÙÙÙ Ű§ Ű„ŰÙۧ Ù ŰžŰ§Ù۱ۧŰȘ ŰšŰȘÙÙÙ ÙÙ Ű§ÙŰŹŰ§Ù ŰčۧŰȘ ÙÙ ÙÙ
Malcolm Collins: so they believe, and there is a belief, and Iâll note this as somebody who hangs out with like upper class. Arabs and stuff like this. They are the only upper, like, okay, so I lived in Korea for a long time. You lived in Japan for a long time.
There is an undercurrent of like, racism against like black people in those countries. But if you are among like upper class educated people, you would not expect racist jokes. Among upper class Arabs, who I hang out with. Racist jokes against blacks are very common. Thereâs a much more open distain in those communities towards black communities
Speaker 7: For those who like to group together, free Palestine, free Sudan, free the Congo, I want you to take a look at this.[00:10:00]
The young black boy in that clip, his name is Joshua Alito Malal. He was a Tanzanian student. Who was in Israel studying agriculture so that he could learn and take it home to his family, help his country. He was brutally murdered by Hamas. They knew he wasnât Jewish. They knew he wasnât Israeli. They didnât care.
They terrorized him, tortured him, killed him, and then shot him several times in the head after they killed him. This is how Hamas and the broader Islamic jihadist world feels about Africans, which is why they enslaved them by the millions across the African continent, including in places like Sudan.
Stop claiming solidarity where there is none. Stop.
Malcolm Collins: .
And, and people will be like, well, you know, you canât blame a community just, just for what itâs you know. Elites are doing, and, and, and weâll get into, well, itâs, it is not just the elites. [00:11:00] There have been campaigns in some of these countries of going around and, and lynching people recently and stuff like that.
Oh. So, so I guess itâs pretty horrifying.
And I wanna be clear here, if you are thinking to yourself, well, you know, my fellow activists are just unaware that there is a giant other genocide of Arabs killing black people. , And, and that is why theyâre not protesting it. Thatâs why theyâre not talking about it. And Iâd be like, well. Somebody in your movement is educated, right?
Like thereâs somebody at the top of your movement. Why is it that the people at the top of your movement, in terms of the information theyâre filtering down to people under them, when it can be used to villainize Jews, they are highlighting that information. When that information could be used to protect black communities, they are hiding that information.
You have to ask yourself, what does that show about their actual values?
Malcolm Collins: Before I go further, do you want any, any comments here about sort of whatâs going on in the left and, and I think that the right did a very good job of [00:12:00] sort of forcing the left for a long time. Like look at it. Look at what they do to gays, but we havenât done the same with blacks yet.
And I think we need to do the same with blacks as well. Look at what they do to blacks.
Simone Collins: I think thatâs fair. I mean, what, what I, I appreciate about the, the way that actually several people, I donât know if this is just a trending idea right now who followed this podcast have spoken with us, or, or DMed us or emailed us about this, this reality that theyâre seeing that basically the only.
Actually woke. People who are woke who identify as woke are are white because every other group is just an interest group. Or are, or specifically I should say, white, cis, non-disabled. People because everyone else is just a special interest group. And as soon as it comes up in the movement that itâs their interest group versus the priorities of a different interest group.
And if those come into [00:13:00] conflict in any way, then it just starts to fall apart. And I had never. Even consider that. Remember anyone we were
Malcolm Collins: dealing with recently whoâs like super woke and the moment like crack came up, she thought she was like the queen Ashima, like, like Prince Ali walking into a place, getting to shut other people down in the conversation.
And just, just looked. Very buffoonish in context. Iâm not gonna go too into it, but it, it, you see this, right? Like thatâs, thatâs why theyâre a part of this because they think that they are afforded special status.
Simone Collins: Yeah. And in the moment that youâre not afforded special status, you try to attack whatever group is, is taking it away.
But it, it just, I donât know. I, I had, I had believed Iâd labored under the impression that every member of the woke contingency. Contributed equally to the, the game of intersectionality and would defer appropriately to whatever like was considered to be the most worthy cause or subgroup or in need subgroup of the moment.
And [00:14:00] then all this information has been sent to us on how that is not actually the case. And. Sort of like gay rights or black rights versus Palestine is just one of, it. Turns out quite a few examples of this, and I just, itâs mind blowing to me because I, I didnât, I really didnât understand that that this was just mostly, it.
Itâs, itâs a, itâs a very varied supremacy culture. Yeah. With one, like, like with a substrate that is willing to consistently put itself at the bottom, and that is cis non-disabled. White people. Yeah. So weird. Or pretend so weird at
Malcolm Collins: the bottom. They never do for long. I mean, if theyâre in it long enough, all of a sudden now theyâre gender queer or now theyâre, oh yeah, thatâs right, theyâre neurodiverse or now theyâre, you know, thatâs, thatâs the way it works.
But I wanna go into this, this more like this, this era of black conflict is part of this because this, just getting to this and weâll probably do another episode where we dive deeper into this. I found this really [00:15:00] fascinating. And I personally knew that Arabs are. Like racist against black people more than other groups.
But I didnât realize that like, generally whenever they get the chance, they start trying to exterminate any neighboring black population. Yeah, I didnât, thatâs, and I wasnât aware of this. And I think that like this needs to be part of the discourse more maybe. So in Udan, if this is actually a
Simone Collins: thing, I, I just, no oneâs ever talked to me about it.
This is mind blowing to
Malcolm Collins: me. Yeah. So, so, we talked about this in, in Sudan during the first and second Sudanese wars. So this is the earlier set of wars, right? That you were talking about, the div conflict that you heard about. Okay. 1955 to 2005, an estimated 2.5 to 3.5 million black indigenous Africans were killed or ethnically cleansed by racially motivated attacks by Arabs.
So that was by Arabs too. Yes. That was by Arabs too. Yes. Then in Mauritania despite Slaveryâs official ban in 1981, codified in 2007, so in Mauritania, slavery wasnât banned till 2007. Okay? Even today, 10 to 20% of the [00:16:00] population remains enslaved and it is almost. Universally, the darker skin maan or the, the black Maan is so, so, so they still keep slaves.
And they were very, very big in the slave trade. O obviously, you know, the Barbary Coast and everything like that. Great. So in Egypt, and former president NOA Sadar a Nubian so, so black faced racial insults for appearing quote unquote not Egyptian enough dubbed Nasserâs Black Poodle soccer player.
Sadika quit national play as fans chanted racial slurs and displayed a back. Dog on his jersey. Sudanese refugees and darker skinned Egyptians report daily bias discrimination and abuse. Libya 2000 anti African riots saw black migrants and called them, oh, by the way, I should note in Darfur when they mass murder people.
The, the general slur that is used by the Arabs for the blacks that they are killing is slave. Their, their job is to kill the slaves. So, thatâs sort of [00:17:00] like in their language, the inward, but like even more direct so you get an idea of what the vibe is here. People this is really bad. Libya in 2000 anti African riots saw black migrants called quote unquote slaves and quote unquote animals during the 2011 Civil War.
Amnesty International documented massacres of Black Libyans and Sub-Saharan Africas solely based on skid color in Morocco. The Trab Saharan Slave trades legacy endures was black Moroccans derogatory called Abda or, or Slave or Kanda servant. This, this is like a regular thing there. This is not like, you know, in the US you donât actually get racial slur anymore.
This is a normal part of daily life of being black in one of these countries. And they still have the segregation on school buses, Sub-Saharan migrants and other, other forms of the sort of apartheid. Okay. Wow. By the way, I loved it. Yeah. No, no, no, no, no, no. I, I wanna, I wanna lift this because they keep saying.[00:18:00]
Just because thereâs a genocide in one region doesnât mean I canât talk about a genocide in another region. And you then have to say, well, except this genocide is about twice the size, easier to stop. And youâre not talking about it even 1%, the amount youâre talking about the other region, like Greta Thornberg, effing went, tried to like go to to Gaza, you know, did the whole thing, was arrested, refused to watch any of the videos of the atrocities that took place that day because I just refusing to be educated on the topic, was sent back by Israel, goes back on another flotilla.
Goes to Gaza again. Like, I didnât even know. I thought she just stopped. Thatâs crazy. Could she not have, could she not have done Sudan next? Could she not have done, like if youâre doing this for multiple years, why not do one year for Gaza and one year for Sudan? Right. Like that? That seems like a thing, right?
But to continue here. And, and the reason Iâm, Iâm pointing all this out is Iâm not pointing out that like Arabs are intrinsically racist or anything like that. You know, this is, this is, this is [00:19:00] not the point, but what I am saying is Arabs have a distinct culture. That is unique to their regions as distinct as American and Korean and American and, and Japanese.
And you might have disagreements with parts of their culture but I think everybody has a right to their individual culture. But I think itâs also important to recognize when aspects of a culture that are normative within a region are antagonistic. To your stated objective, like when youâre like, okay, weâll all get together and we wonât fight for a little bit, just to get the conflict resolved and, and, and, and, and this particular region, right?
Itâs important to note if everyone of the group that youâre trying to save is like, and once we have our arms freed up again, letâs start funding those Sudanese. You know, right now weâre splitting our money. You know, we could, expand our influence in Africa as well. So itâs, itâs important to note this stuff, right?
You know, and that I [00:20:00] think it, itâs also useful for conservatives who are. Fooled by the progressive rhetoric and do not understand how much we have in common with, i I in terms of our goals with Christian Africans. For, for sort of the planet, for humanity. This is a group. That is very easy for us to work with.
And, and in many cases, even, even Muslim Africans, I, Iâll point out here that the when I, when I talk about Arabs murdering blacks in these regions Iâm not talking about while they, while they do happen to be Muslims, it is important to note that they are murdering the Africans, not because of their religion, but because of their skin color.
They donât really care if theyâre Muslim or not. Not that that makes it better. But it is a, an important note. Okay, so you were under the impression that the flotilla thing, because this is what the Flotilla is trying to say, is, oh, itâs not because theyâre gay. Itâs not because we have a bunch of Muslims who refuse to work with gays.
So letâs read parts of the, itâs propaganda
Simone Collins: from the Zionist [00:21:00] lobby.
Malcolm Collins: The Zionist lobby. Yes. Zionist lobby. Can antisemitism bring, bring them together? The, so weâll see.
Simone Collins: So itâs a great uniter. Yes. There we go.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. Yeah. And, and if, and if anybody here is listening to this and theyâre like, why do you need to point out the racism?
Thatâs normalized within many Arab communities. Itâs because it is framed today within leftist rhetoric that. White population, so letâs say Northern European populations are racist, vile people, right? And what Iâm pointing out here is, and this is important. That the amount of racism that you are going to see in any country dominated by a, a Northern Europeans is absolutely astronomically, minuscule, anti-black racism when contrasted with the amount youâre gonna see in any country dominated by Arabs.
And this isnât to say Arabs or worse, like people have a right to to ethno preferences, but I think that thereâs this like [00:22:00] delusion, right? That the, that these two groups are friends in some way. When, when. And I note here, if youâre a black person and youâre watching this and you believe that Egypt used to be black it, itâs more complicated than a lot of people make it seem.
There were periods where Nubians had control or whatever, but suppose you do believe that Egypt used to be black. You gotta ask yourself why itâs Arab now, then. Why, why do black people who go there? That would imply that somebody got rid of all the black people who used to live in Egypt. I was, it, was it yaku?
What did they call him? Yuba or whatever the the, the one from the.
Simone Collins: Oh, the evil one. Muslim.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. Crazy. The made white
Simone Collins: people.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. Made white people. What was it? Him? I, I mean, it was
Simone Collins: Yakob, right?
Malcolm Collins: Yakob. Yakob. Or, or you could say itâs the populations that are there right now that got rid of the original population.
Now that that isnât actually what happened. Although there was large and, and violent of migrations into [00:23:00] Northern Africa. But the populations that were there before are not what many people wouldâve consider. Black Africa, it doesnât necessarily matter. Anyway to continue here. Gf Iâm just pointing out that even from their own propaganda questions should be coming up.
Like if North Africa used to be black, why isnât it black now? And the people who are living there who arenât black probably have something to do with that. Again, thatâs not exactly what happened. And a lot of this happened a long time ago. And Egypt is one of the, the less racist of the countries that weâre talking about, although a black soccer player quit due to the amount of racism he he dealt with in the country.
So like itâs pretty good. Itâs there. Yeah. Yeah. GSF Co-coordinator Khalid Baja announced his resignation in protest at the presence of LGBT activists in the Flotilla, including Safi Adi, who identified as a queer activist. He said, quote, we were lied to about the identity of some of the participants in the vanguard of the Flotilla.
I accused the organizers of having a hidden aspect from us. [00:24:00] He complained in two streams on social media, other figures, including activist Marin mfn. And presenter Samir Elfe condemned what they saw as an attempt to impose culturally progressive agenda unrelated to the Palestinian cause. Describing it as a quote, red line crossed, and an attack on quote, societal values in quote and note.
They didnât like try to make this about promoting gay agenda or anything, right? Like theyâre, they didnât like confuse gay agenda with the agenda tied to Palestine. Just a person who was on one of the boats happened to be gay. He wasnât like doing gay stuff. He wasnât like hitting on them or promoting gay stuff while they were doing it.
He just existed as a gay person on not their boat. One of the boats,
Simone Collins: Well, he didnât hide it. Like his Instagram bio is Rainbow. [00:25:00] Communist queer militant based in Tunisia from the river to the sea. But he did say queer and there was a rainbow. So he wasnât hiding it?
Malcolm Collins: No. Okay, so hereâs a great quote from one of them. Who, who left over this? This is Elwafi quote, Palestine is first and foremost the cause of Muslims. It cannot be separated from its spiritual and religious dimensions with Jerusalem at the heart of its symbols and destiny. So why involve it in it?
Dubious activists serving other agendas that do not concern us and have nothing to do with Gaza, such as homosexuality, exclamation. Question mark. And, and note here again, he wasnât like promoting homosexuality, he just existed as a gay person. Yeah. Theyâre like, you donât understand how important it is that we kill gay people.
Simone Collins: Yeah. His plan wasnât to go and provide aid and then turn Palestine gay or anything.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah. No, no, no, no. But theyâre, but I think that this is a thing. The progressive think that this [00:26:00] is whatâs gonna happen and they donât understand that theyâre not breeding, theyâre not really relevant. Theyâre sort of idiotic patsies for other peopleâs agenda.
And. We, those of us who are breeding and think about the future, need to be aware of where our potential allies are and where are the groups that are most likely to ally against us. Yeah. Fair. Even if we are temporarily allied wisdom them for now. Mm-hmm. And I think conservatives in the United States, my brother in Christ.
Black Christian Africans are one of our strongest potential allies going into the future. They are a, a, a high fertility group. They may not be high technology or, or high industry right now. But that doesnât mean that we arenât gonna still benefit from having allies in some regions that are very, very populous.
And theyâre also regions that historically. Like conservative Americans. Mm-hmm. If, if you are unaware Bush for example, is very, very popular in Africa. And I note if Word W [00:27:00] Bush. Yeah. W Bush is extremely popular in Africa. And I will note here if youâre like, is that because
Simone Collins: of his work on
Malcolm Collins: aids?
Itâs because of his work on a lot of things. Yeah. If he, he dealt with Africa in a way that sort of took them seriously. So if you look at like shutting down usaid and people are like, well thatâs gonna get Africans to like hate you. And itâs like, no. If you actually look at what was happening in these communities where this stuff was being distributed, they thought that they were like being sterilized and stuff.
Yeah. The workers, thereâs a reason why they talked about how many US Aid workers were killed. You donât kill someone who you think is there to help you. They were forcing their views on them in the same way they forced âem on us. They donât like this stuff any more than we do, you know? And and if youâre, I donât, I donât wanna go too deep on that, on that stuff, but what Iâm pointing out here is, is itâs, they donât want or need us to be forcing aid down their streets to throats to build alliances.
Wisdom. Thatâs not the way the African Christian communities are. . I wonât go too much, but you see what I mean? They, they, well, so what happened with the
Simone Collins: Illa that, that I read [00:28:00] was that this sort of really slowed things down. It, it made them look bad. Well, GRE Berg resigned from her post. Yeah. She, she stepped down from her like board position. She still. Refers to herself as an active supporter and participant, but not in a leadership capacity.
So they sort of lost her leadership endorsement. Itâs, itâs not a good look for them. Itâs not helping the cause. Well, and one
Malcolm Collins: way for me it was embarrassing to find out that sheâs still involved with this. She did her thing with the Flotilla. Sheâs not getting them more attention now or anything like that.
Yeah. Is this just âcause she doesnât have a home or something and she just lives to be an activist and I love, so, so she goes around and she in this. That I, I didnât quote it, but she was talking about how Iâm not doing this for attention. You know, Iâm doing this to get aid for the people in Palestine.
This Flotilla thing has been operational for like 10 years at this point. They have only once early on, and it was only a fairly small amount, gotten any aid through to the people of Palestine and, and theyâve spent. [00:29:00] Many tens of millions of dollars on operating this the, the amount of lives in Palestine they could have saved by actually working to get aid to them.
Instead of playing yacht week with a bunch of other rich kids on frankly, what looked like pretty expensive boats you know, I, I no, theyâre not like. Super rich people, yachts but they cost a, a pretty penny when you see these boats. And, and getting to, to do this for years on end, it looks like Greta has thatâs a deeply selfish thing to do.
A, a very deeply selfish thing to do, which directly interferes with what you say your goal is. And I love it when she says because if she says, Iâm not doing this for attention, why? Why donât do aid in a way that actually gets it to people.
Simone Collins: Why not? That sounds good. Yeah, letâs do that.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah,
Simone Collins: letâs do that.
I, I donât, I donât like that there are people suffering anywhere. Yeah, I, I, it bothers me when people contribute to. Nonprofits that are wasteful or efforts that are [00:30:00] wasteful. And thatâs why weâre so against any sort of performative action. Are you gonna talk about the, the Palestinians versus black activists during the 2024 election?
Yeah. Yeah. We were, we were sent a, a clip by someone, and I hadnât heard about this, but there was a very real rift on the US left during the 2024 presidential election that crystallized. Around Kamala Harrisâ candidacy because pro-Palestine activists felt that Harris was too supportive of Israel and not responsive enough to demands for ending US military aid.
Which one I just think shows how, I donât like using this word, but how dumb Palestinian activists are. âcause itâs like, oh, you think Trump is gonna be nicer? Like, have you not heard of? But that is still what Palestine is. Itâs like either 100% my way Exactly. Or. No deal.
Malcolm Collins: Well, no, but, but you saw this Israel multiple times and weâll do an episode on this.
Eventually. Ja will take so much research for the people who are gonna complain, but they have offered [00:31:00] peaceful solutions to end hostilities in the region.
Yeah.
And they basically keep getting told. So, so actually I can just read a, a, a, a take up of it. They didnât give them full sovereignty, but again, when they have militias have come up and theyâve started murdering nearby Jewish population, so why would you,
yeah.
They continued to control the airspace. Which, which they again, why would you do that when they keep bombing you?
Yeah.
And they, they wouldnât accept that Jerusalem was go, was not gonna be a full Palestinian capital. Versus Yeah, their demands are
Simone Collins: unreasonable. And this is also reflected. Yeah.
They said, they
Malcolm Collins: said, we need control of Jerusalem, which, why would the Jews, itâs not gonna, theyâre in the position of power here. People like you donât get a itâs, itâs. They, they, they, they have demanded every time itâs come to push, to shove. One of the things I always say is, well, we need a rejection of Israelâs existence.
Like this was in the Hamas charter until 2017. The, the, there, there was th. If you actually study the [00:32:00] history of the region instead of like what the leftists tell you there have been multiple, completely reasonable offers made to the other side, and theyâve always been said, no, we want everything back.
All of you guys get out.
Simone Collins: And thatâs just not realistic. Itâs, itâs, itâs delusional and yet here we are again. Itâs 2024 election. Well,
Malcolm Collins: itâs not delusional. Itâs a, itâs a religiously motivated demand is, yeah, I guess itâs, itâs,
Simone Collins: itâs, they, they really donât actually care that much about any outcome, but the one outcome that they care about.
So theyâre not gonna. But no, I think even if I wanted, like, letâs say I, I was like, no, my end game is 100% like in enslave the Jews in Israel and take over J Jerusalem and have complete control of the region. I would still, I would still accept the concessions and creep my way in.
Malcolm Collins: No, no, no, no. Because they, they, they, what they were afraid of is if they accepted the concessions and, and created a two state solution, then other Arab states would [00:33:00] recognize Israel, which would oh, what?
Theyâd stop funding them or something. Well, no, they, there would be more of a problem if they attacked Israel with the other Arab countries because they, look, look, a lot of these regions, like your day job, your, your funding coming into this country is like one of the major industries. Is being basically an anti-Jewish terrorist.
And, and, and the money is coming in from that, whether itâs from, you know, Qatar or from Iran or from any of the, any of the competing groups. Basically the, right now, the way, the way things are, and one of the reasons why they donât actually want a two state solution, even the people on the ground is because, it has turned Palestine into Palestine is such a weird word to even call as a thing because Palestine never existed as a state. It, it existed as a, a British oh God. What is it called again?
Simone Collins: Protectorate.
Malcolm Collins: Yeah, the British mandate of Palestine was established from 1920 to 1948, so it was only operational for 28 years.
Was established by the League of Nations after World War I, following [00:34:00] the collapse of the Ottoman Empire. No sovereign palatine in state existed during this period. And, and the British governed the regions. So, so one, even talking about Palestine is weird, but itâs basically turned these people who never mattered historically into a central focus of all Arab politics because all of the various Arab factors, whether itâs the Qataris or the Iranians, or the Saudis or the Uua E or Egypt sort of like.
Change their own social dominance order through the way that they fund the terrorist organizations that are in Palestine right now.
Simone Collins: Yeah. Itâs become this really strange proxy thing. Let me just get back to this though, because youâre going on a really good tangent. Get back to
Malcolm Collins: the point I was making.
There is, okay before this, I mean, what was this region? Because, you know, as it established it was not a Palestinian state. It, it was a a, a a a. What was it called? A British mandate. Right? And before the British mandate, it was under the Ottoman Empire. Before the Ottoman Empire there was the Islamic State of Malos go on.
I just need to get a Kleenex. [00:35:00] Before the Islamic State of the Malos of Egypt there was the Iab Arab Kurdish Empire. Before that, there was the. ABI Empire. There was before that the Frankish Christian Kingdom of Jerusalem. There was before that the um, of fated empires. And then there was before that you had the Byzantine Empire.
Before that. You had the assassins before that, you had the byzantines again. Or some would argue that point. It mightâve been a cyber state before that you had the Hessians. Before that you had the solicit empire. Before that, you had Alexander the Great, the, the big point here is you could go back to the Persians, the Babylonians, et cetera.
But there, there. Was never a meaningful Palestinian state for this sort of population. They were always irrelevant in the wider power struggles. And now they are centered so long as a two state solution isnât achieved and the fighting doesnât stop.
Simone Collins: Like I said, theyâre delusional. But [00:36:00] the, the point of what happened here was they, the Palestinian activists basically said.
Yeah, we need to boycott Kamala Harris, which is again so stupid because she was gonna be way more pro-Palestine than Trump would be. And they were like, letâs just force Trump to win âcause thatâs gonna be great. And then. But they, I, I loved his Riviera of the Middle East. Weâre gonna make the rega of the Riviera of the Middle East, canât we, though?
Speaker 31: Gazaâs the new Riviera, oh what a sight. Gold towers shining, baby. The night stretching by the seaside, a five star hotel where camels roam with golden chandeliers in every home piece talks on the [00:37:00] 18 hole diplomacy with the golfing.
Oh, what a sight. Gold towers shining day and night. Golf courses stretching far and wide. Trumpâs dreamland by the seaside.
Simone Collins: And naturally a lot of black people on the left were like, hold on. This, this disrespects the historic significance of the first black woman president and it, it underplays Black American priorities. And suddenly they found this, this. Themselves in this position of like, wait, I thought Iâm, Iâm a black leftist.
Like sheâs a
Malcolm Collins: black woman. Is it she at the top of the priorities? Yeah.
Simone Collins: Like, no, I, I, I am at the top of the priority. And then the Palestinians were like, no, Iâm at the, the, the top of it. So basically this, this [00:38:00] pro-Palestinian group especially though a bunch of them did this, but the biggest one was called uncommitted movement.
Notably refused to endorse Harris. It cited her unwillingness to change, to, to change military support for Israel, or cl clearly commit to more forceful pro-Palestinian stances. And they, they, they argued that supporting Harris amounted to complicity in Palestinian suffering. So many of the more radical and younger followers posted stuff on social media saying that they werenât gonna vote for Kamala Harris, or they were gonna vote for third party candidates, and then black activists and voters.
Who of course were, you know, critical of, of US policy and Gaza, because theyâre on the left. They, they pushed back because theyâre like, wait, these are coercive attempts by pro-Palestinian movements to make Palestine the litmus test for voting. Sometimes they accuse these activists ignoring or minimizing the unique historical struggles of black Americans, which one are real, but two, itâs sort of showing of like, well, hold on.
Iâm used to me being the priority [00:39:00] here. Whatâs going on here? Yeah, and some, some get really frustrated about this.
Malcolm Collins: We get a lot of people when they watch this and theyâll be like, oh, you know, youâre overstating Arab views on black people and stuff like this. I, I literally played for you a clip of Al Ja zero, like a mainstream Arab station.
Yeah. Was a mainstream Palestinian activist, literally saying. Black Lives donât matter. Yeah. You know, in the us like when conservatives, when BLM was happening, people were like, well, you know, all lives matter. When people are like, black Lives Matter, the response was, no, all human lives matter. In, in, in, in this region.
Itâs no, they donât matter. I, Iâm sorry. They certainly donât matter as much as Palestinian lives. Yeah. And itâs interesting
Simone Collins: that in this online debate that that really didnât come up. What it was really more about was that just really high profile. Influencers on social media got into these feuds where, where there were like Arab American and pro-Palestinian people criticizing Black Americans for continuing to support Harris.
[00:40:00] Like how dare you support Kamala Harris? Palestine. Palestine. And then the prominent black influencers push back and theyâre like, you know, supporting Harris isnât about ignoring Palestine. We need to protect our own community safety and, and our hard won progress at home. And Trump is gonna take that all away.
And it it things like black voters were accused of abandoning Palestinians and then pro Palestinians.
Malcolm Collins: And I think itâs important to remember, you know, weâve got Palestinian friends, weâve had Palestinians on the show, Richard Hanania, people know Palestinian. But the, the, the, there is not a single Arab majority country that is taking refugees from Gaza right now.
Like, like a large scale refugees was, was, was out the plane of, of sending the back. And, and people need to ask like why, right? And itâs because the people who have worked with this community for longer understand. The degree to which they are uncompromising and will hijack your movement. And I think the left is beginning to maybe see that, but I [00:41:00] donât know.
Right. Like I, I, I think that you will be surprised within leftist circles how much they just com completely taken over by the pro-Palestine stuff within a few years if there isnât some sort of revolt against this.
Speaker 9: I donât care. Iâm not trying to get you. Iâm letting you know You did not. You existed. Yeah, I did. In recent days, American Palestinian content creators started an online attack against the black community for their stance on domestic issues and for voting for Kamala Harris. Black people also wear a universe and get on a plane and come to our countries and kill us.
Speaker 11: You vote that signed papers to kill us. I donât wanna hear it anymore.
Speaker 12: What have you done to change your government? I donât think crying on your phone is an example. What narrative are you pushing by showing black soldiers in the Middle East being told that we should put our issues and lives and rights behind everybody elseâs, including Palestinians.
I donât want to hear yâall tell us to put ourselves last. Iâm [00:42:00] sick of it the
Speaker 13: way you all switched up 180 on Palestinians and people who are Palestinian activists. The second we have a black women, black woman run for office is discussing
Speaker 14: Eat Palestinians names out of your. Mouth when youâre trying to defend your decision for voting for Kamala.
Speaker 15: Iâm starting to see a lot of these videos coming out, and I feel like someone really, really has to speak on it. So Iâm going to, the gin side in Congo has made eight millions of victims.
Speaker 14: Heâs saying Palestinians and he just doesnât listen.
Speaker 16: This video coupled with all of the other Palestinians and their disrespectful and denigrating videos towards people like me, Iâm done.
So the money that was coming out of my bank account every month. To help Palestinians over in Gaza. Yeah, thatâs gonna stop. And Iâm gonna redirect those funds to help the people over in Congo.
Speaker 19: If I bring up like a black issue and someoneâs like, oh, people of color, I said, black. Black. Black, black, because other people of color donât even like us.
Speaker 20: You guys keep [00:43:00] bashing white people for slavery, but why donât we ever talk about the Arab slave trade and keep in mind that the Arabs have enslaved more black people than the Europeans combined.
Speaker 21: When it comes to the people who we are supposed to be defending over in Palestine, guess what?
Those same communities treat us with voracious racism, and youâre asking us. Donât look at them, donât look at our racism, donât look at our past history and how weâve treated your communities. Help us, save us. Be there for us. But guess what? When we need you guys, no oneâs standing up for us. When we have gone through this oppression for the past 400 years, why didnât any of you come racing on boats to come and help and save us?
Simone Collins: Yeah, yeah. I just, itâs not just about. Blacks versus pro-Palestine people in, in America it, itâs also about black versus Latino and Hispanic [00:44:00] leftist groups because you have black and Latino activists disagreeing around criminal justice reform and immigration with some black activists feeling like progress.
Activist focus on immigration and reform and the needs of undocumented undocumented immigrants is, is overshadowing the, the push for police accountability when it comes to anti-black discrimination. And then Latino organizers are arguing that the struggles for citizenship that many Latinos go through doesnât receive enough attention compared to criminal justice issues.
And then of course, you have the lgbtq plus movement. Clashing with racial justice movements where, you know, they, they donât like where funding is going or where legislation focus is going. And then thereâs of course the, the Asian American concerns over affirmative action, right? Where their, their concerns about stereotyping and model minority narratives are used to minimize and, and pit them against black and Latino communities.
Which, which causes a lot of trouble. I think what
Malcolm Collins: weâre in to see [00:45:00] is progressives, and thereâs been some very interesting conversation about this recently in sort of the intellectual spheres. For a long time. Theyâre sort of motivated by this idea that economic concerns, weâre gonna be able to use that to, to create sort of this revolutionary class of human thatâs gonna want to completely transform society.
And that just. Every time it did manifest that way, they, they ended up with like mass murder and everything like that. And if you look at like poor Americans for example, theyâre much more likely to vote right wing, right? So that, that clearly didnât go their way. Like as I point out, like the, the, the far left these days looks like theyâre literally dressed up, like theyâre from the capitol, from the Hunger Games or something, right?
Like, so it didnât work. So how do you get your foot soldiers? Will you go to every. Group that you can convince to have sort of intragroup solidarity and see society as attacking them and try to build a narrative where you exist to protect them. But the problem is, is that itâs sort of come due and they havenât actually helped any of those groups.
The [00:46:00] statistic that I would like to point out, yeah,
Simone Collins: it was, it was all a lie,
Malcolm Collins: is that if you look, they came to them
Simone Collins: and they were like, you. Are the chosen one. You get special treatment and they were love bomb. Itâs very culty, right? Like, oh, weâre gonna, yeah. If, if
Malcolm Collins: you look at income differences between blacks and Hispanics and whites in various regions of the us, they are smaller in more Republican districts, bigger and more democratic, different districts like it, it, it, they did not deliver.
You know, weâve pointed out that in the last 10 years there have been more anti-black hate crime killings than there have been were documented in the 1950s. You know, it is, it is not awesome. They, they, they did not deliver. If you look at the rise in white income since the 1953, this is the rise in black income.
Itâs like staggeringly different. Yeah. They, they did not deliver. They do not care. It is time for people to understand that nobodyâs gonna care about your interest if youâre seen as a monolithic voting block. Which is in part I think why progressives have done so little towards black interests.
It, it recently when contrasted with like, other groups because theyâre like the, the, the [00:47:00] Palestinians actually didnât vote. If you look in the United States there was a huge swing, I think in, in many regions. The Arab vote actually went to Trump. Oh, wow. And and the left like freaked out about this.
They were very confused by this. And, and, and thatâs why people are listening to them now. So they, they did actually, I also wanted to talk about the L-G-B-T-Q shift weâve seen recently. So, the, there was a movement that crystallized September 20th, 2025 with the launch of GB International, a new global coalition which issued a quote, declaration of Independence explicitly cutting tides was trans, non-binary queer, intersex, and I plus element of the b lgbtq.
Plus umbrella. The groups manifesto widely shared on x features spokespeople from multiple countries stating LGBT rights focus on same sex attraction and biological sex are being eroded by an over in on gender identity and legacy organizations. And I think that like. Theyâre in 18 countries with 17 plus organizations and theyâve gotten a lot of online buzz for this and [00:48:00] been covered by a lot of media you know, like Yahoo News and The Telegraph.
But the mainstream orgs that still have all the money are, are still a little pissed that this is happening. But I think that weâre seeing this in the background that, that people are understanding that this alliance isnât working anymore.
Yeah.
And that. A new alliance is going to need to be had on the left.
And I think that the alliance historically was gone into very willfully, blindly, like this group thinks gays need to be, you know, if, if you look at the laws in Gaza, for example, itâs, itâs a 10 year prison sentence for being gay, right? Like, 10 years. Yeah, 10 years. But then like
Simone Collins: after youâre out, youâre still gay, so do you get another 10 years?
Malcolm Collins: No, youâre not allowed to be gay. Like, youâre not allowed to identify that that doesnât exist in their country. Right? Like there, there, the crime isnât
Simone Collins: being gay. Itâs just. Identifying as it, and then every time you identify, you get another 10 years.
Malcolm Collins: Well, so within Muslim law, itâs actually [00:49:00] having sex with men.
Oh, okay. And if you look at Sharia Law, you need to have four people attest to it. So within normal Sharia law, it is rare for gay to be killed, but like hypothetically, theyâre, theyâre supposed to be. And so they often are you know, local justice and stuff like this. The idea that like. Well, because itâs not technically Sharia Law and you didnât have four people see it at the time.
Four people are like, yeah, Iâm pretty sure youâre gonna get murders. And, and we see this across the Islam, girl, like, Iâm not like making something up. Itâs like everybody knows that this is a thing that happens. And I, I, I think. They, they went into it being like, well, weâll just pretend that this group, if it ends up proliferating within our communities, puts us at existential risk because of vibes.
Like, it would be cool if they didnât or something. I, I, I mean, I think that theyâre just so interested in tearing down the west right now that there is. And, and so certain that their faction is going to dominate after the West Falls, that there is a, a willing blindness to that. And the other thing Iâm, Iâm trying to, [00:50:00] to to highlight here is and no, thereâs a lot of Muslims in Africa, so Iâm not talking like Islam is not inherently anti African.
But I will note that there is going to be much more. Ability, if youâre talking about Arab Muslims in terms of building coalitions with African communities, then I think many American, African and, and European African organizers are aware of or fully grow which is gonna cause issues.
Simone Collins: Well, this just changed the way I looked at the left. âcause I, I donât know. I, I thought that. The intersectional subgroups of the progressive movement bought into intersectionality and I didnât realize that they would kind of bulk when asked to bow down to the priorities of the, the, the. Subgroup du jour.
So very interesting stuff. Iâm glad you decided to do this episode because one, I just totally thought [00:51:00] Greta Thunberg had dropped the Flotilla thing. She hasnât. Thatâs crazy. Thereâs better things to do. She just lives
Malcolm Collins: on a yacht these days.
Simone Collins: Greta, theyâre not, theyâre not in these boat. I donât know, like boats are so freaking expensive.
Theyâre just money holes, but also like, itâs not. Itâs not glamorous.
Malcolm Collins: No. Iâve, Iâve lived on boats before. It is not fun. Even, even if theyâre fairly nice yachts no even, yeah,
Simone Collins: even if theyâre very expensive, nice yachts, itâs not nice.
Malcolm Collins: I just imagine her miserable life living with a bunch of like Islamist like activists and, and, and, and having to,
Simone Collins: Iâm sure they have fun.
But I, I just, yeah, I donât know.
Malcolm Collins: I mean, I donât know how much theyâre gonna care when she starts bringing up her environmentalist rhetoric or her. You know, like how this is all really about the environment and beating colonialism is about the envi. I, I, I donât understand what thatâs about. Like, that seems like, so like delusional schizo posting when people are like, oh, fighting colonialism is like pro.
Itâs like, bro, but the [00:52:00] colonialist power that the power is, you deem as colonialists are the ones that do the most to fight global warming. Right? Like presumably you want them to
Simone Collins: have more colonial power, right. Well, I mean, we call it, we call the progress pride flag, thanks to whoever it was. Who follows this podcast?
Who called it that? We called it the
Malcolm Collins: colonizer flag.
Simone Collins: No, no. The colon it flag itâs, but I meanâs even
Malcolm Collins: if they donât buy into that, how can Greta Thornberg say colonialism is the problem? When the colonizer regions are the ones that are the most green, itâs, and if they still had their colonies, presumably they would make them green as well.
Simone Collins: Itâs not supposed to make sense. Okay,
Malcolm Collins: but. Okay,
Simone Collins: hereâs what does make sense. I love you. Youâre great.
Malcolm Collins: I love you too. And I have a spectacular day, Simone, and two AI going over this or whatever. I just watched you. âcause youâre gonna be like, well, you know, heâs overly generalizing. Iâm not overly generalizing.
Iâm talking about cultural trends and regions have a right to be culturally different [00:53:00] when you deny that you are dehumanizing those regions. And the thing I wanna note about all of this, especially like the the Gaza thing that always gets me and everything like that, is these views that like normal Muslims have and I think theyâre entitled to, their views are, are generally to the right.
Culturally of the very views that got Charlie Kirk shot, right? And, and they will cheer him being shot and then freak out about people dying in Gaza who hold the exact same views, but like five times more extreme. I donât. Like the, the ness. And as youâve pointed out, the core reason is, is they donât see these people as human.
They do not believe that they are responsible for their beliefs, but Christians are, thatâs, thatâs basically the gist of it. And, and thatâs why I think
Simone Collins: they see them like, like animals that theyâre going to, or, or like savages, which theyâre going to civilize, which has long been this, this sort of, uneducated colon co colonizerâs view.
Malcolm Collins: Well, people always saw the regions they were colonizing.
Simone Collins: Yeah.
Malcolm Collins: [00:54:00] But so it goes, okay, love you.
Simone Collins: Love you too. All right. I sent you the other link already, so just top over the. When I called and they were like, what appointment?
And then, then he called me back and this is
Malcolm Collins: for her C-section, by the way. Thatâs happening in like three days.
Simone Collins: Yeah. Mom, mom, mama. But yeah, I mean, getting the surgeon that I have booked was like impossible and that I thought that they actually didnât have it booked and that I wouldnât have two surgeons and that I wouldnât have her.
I was so scared, Malcolm. That would be so bad. You donât understand. You donât understand. Oh God.
I still canât believe what you said about cashews. Well, I mean, what I learned about cashews,
Malcolm Collins: I love, she had no idea. They come in these giant fruits that are like the size of an apple. And I was like, and theyâre poisonous and they have to go through all this, this processing. She just had no idea. And I, sheâs like, theyâre so expensive.
Why are they so [00:55:00] expensive? And I was like, this is a cashew, probably not so expensive. You should be like, why arenât they more expensive? It, the,
Simone Collins: the labor that has to go into them. I mean, I guess weâre, weâre also discounting the cost of a bunch of other things which youâre discounting and actually really cheap to produce, but because theyâre heavier, they have a lot of water in them.
The shipping cost so much. The shipping cost.
I didnât expect me making sure that my hospital admission was queued up would end up being this huge delay. See, this camera is much better. Someone was saying, by the way, theyâre like, well, canât you just invest in like. 10 80 P cameras and we have 4K cameras, but I think yours is just not coming through 4K.
Can you check your camera settings? Mineâs
Malcolm Collins: coming through Great. Right now. Is it coming through fuzzy on your end?
Simone Collins: I think other people think your camera. No, my camera
Malcolm Collins: in some days has been coming through bad. Iâm saying [00:56:00] today, right now. Is it coming through bad to you
Simone Collins: today? It looks okay. Yeah. Okay. I, I donât
Malcolm Collins: know, so I donât know why sometimes it looks good and sometimes it looks bad.
We have invested like a lot in good cameras and Yeah. And everyoneâs
Simone Collins: like, why are you shooting using a potato?
Malcolm Collins: And, and itâs like, I donât know, like expensive cameras are weird because sometimes they just shoot potato quality for no reason that I understand. And I will try to use the podcast, you know, normal ones, I try to use the professional stuff.
It, itâs not better. I can pay literally like once I go over a hundred dollars for a camera, it seems no matter how much I pay, I get the exact, it is completely random quality. I can pay $300 and get terrible quality. Yeah. So like weâre trying here people, I just am not good with sound and video effects.
Thatâs not my. Expertise. Sorry. Although I do edit all of our videos, so you know, but that was the help of ai. So you know,
Simone Collins: God bless ai. All right, letâs do [00:57:00] it.
Speaker 3: Poop Octavian. Yeah. You need to make a poo shape like a poo emoji like this. Okay. Tell me about what youâre working on. Octavian. Yeah. What are you doing, buddy? Oh, Iâm, Iâm making this concrete. Lemme sell you something. Oh, wow. Whatâs this like? Yeah, it looks like a poop. Letâs make a big turd. Ready. Circle Circle.
How did it turn that color? Circle? Circle. Oh, well, because we mixed them together. Oh. Did you know it would turn this color? Yeah, sure it did. Huh? Did Mo Mommy tell you not to mix them all together? One, but he did Uhhuh,
so we base poop tighten. I donât think you eat that. No, no, no. So mommy sticky. This is gonna cut. Well look at the watermelon slice in there. Oh, you cut it. You made your fingers pull the scissors. Wait, wait. What are this? Oh, I did that. [00:58:00] Thank God they didnât the scissors. I for a second there.
What do you think? Avian? What are you making now? It looks great. Looks.
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