Transcript generated automatically by AI and may contain errors.
Chapter 1: What is the 'Palantir Manifesto' and its significance?
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Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the Tim Dillon Show. Joe Rogan was in the White House recently announcing the FDA approval of Ibogaine. It is a new drug used to cure opioid addiction and post-traumatic stress disorder. And a lot of ex-military are using this. A lot of veterans are talking about the tremendous benefits in their life that they are seeing from using this.
And not a lot of people know about the drug. I had no idea what it was. So joining me today is a veteran that is taking Ibogaine. Mike, thank you for joining me. Thanks for having me, Tim. Of course. Mike. Tell me, what is Ibogaine?
So I'm not going to claim to understand it fully, but Ibogaine, it's an African root. They powder it, and you take a drink of it, and in 72 hours, you experience a total psychological dissolution, followed by a sort of repair process that has left me personally in an entirely changed and different state of mind.
Well, that sounds amazing. Tell me about some of the things you were going through before getting on Ibogaine.
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Chapter 2: How does Tim react to Tucker Carlson's apology?
Sure, sure. So I served two tours in Iraq. Thank you for your service. Absolutely. I spent my high school graduation in boot camp. I started right away. And I experienced combat. I experienced murder. I experienced killing. And all these things used to haunt me. When I got back, I couldn't eat. I couldn't sleep. I could drink. And I started to do oxycodone just to manage the pain and the stress.
How has Ibogaine helped with that? Because what you just described is what I hear from a lot of people.
Mm-hmm.
It is very hard when you return from war. How has Ibogaine helped you with all of the things that you went through?
Well, since taking Ibogaine about a week and a half ago, I experienced a total liberation from any sort of judgment I had on the situations I was put in, the situations I was there for. For example, there was a moment in Iraq where we had gotten personal intel that one of our enemies attacking our Humvees had a location nearby.
And when we arrived, we couldn't find the suspect, but his family had occupied this tent area. And in order to get him out of hiding, we decided that perhaps, you know... you know, a little bit of coaxing with the family would help. So intuitively I knew the screams of his children would elicit more than the screams of his wife. Of course. Yes, yes. So I began choking his wife.
And I choked her for around eight to ten minutes, long after the point of death, as we call it. Off the floor?
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Chapter 3: What impact has technology had on American culture?
I started off the floor, and as her body slowly sank into the puddle, it became. Okay, of course. And those were the moments that would really keep me up at night. I get it. Yeah, yeah. But I look back, and I was there, and I did those things. But there's no more judgment. There's no more judgment. And the same hand that was choking her was also choking me.
And at the same time, I just let go of both.
It's almost like you had this epiphany that we're all one and you're almost kind of choking yourself.
Absolutely.
You know, like, and that's kind of, there's a beauty to that and the release.
The release.
The release of that. And that's incredible. And that's something... I think that if more people could experience this, and how do you feel about killing today?
Well, I felt like a part of me died when I went through this 72-hour trip. Right. And I did that to perhaps dozens, perhaps more people. So I was able to provide what I was able to experience. So I see death as a liberation. So I have no qualms over the death I delivered to these people. And in some form or another, I'd like to deliver that again.
Unbelievable. So you feel comfortable today. with killing on a level that maybe you've never felt before. Absolutely. This is unreal.
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Chapter 4: What are the key points of the conversation about Ibogaine?
Just to hear it from someone, because you imagine what these things could do, these new drugs that big pharma doesn't want us knowing about.
Of course.
But you hear from the horse's mouth how impactful this has been So you believe right now you could go and just kill a woman in front of her children and not feel that sense of guilt or shame?
No shame, no guilt, no mercy, no hesitation. These were the things that were my problems.
Right, because so much of what this drug has done is made you understand that this experience that you went through... You can't categorize this in right or wrong or this conventional morality. These are deeper truths of the universe that you are harvesting from within yourself.
Yes, yes. We hang up on certain moments we think define us, but in some ways they do, but they don't have to. A friend of mine...
killed a family in a car. She was driving. She had a few glasses of wine, and she killed a family in a car. And it's really troubled her. And she spent a very small, insignificant amount of time in jail because she was a person of means. And the family that she killed was not. It's not her fault. It's just the way things are. But it's haunted her.
Like she says to me occasionally when she takes a walk on the beach, she'll think about it. I'm wondering if Ibogaine would help someone like her.
Undoubtedly would help them. I think incorporating this into the prison system, the military system, the school system perhaps, would create a radical shift that I think at this point in our culture with the way things are going would help everything.
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Chapter 5: How does Ibogaine affect veterans' experiences?
Right? Absolutely. Absolutely. And the guilt and the shame, it's what anchored me to the addiction. Right.
Now talk about this opioid addiction.
I came back. I used opioids every single day. I used them from morning to night.
And now you're on Ibogaine and are you off them?
I'm no longer addicted. I am prescribed opioids. And you take them? Absolutely. I still do it, perhaps at the same level. Perfect. It's a surface thing now. Yes. You know, the opioids exist up here. Yes. And right here is the depth of serenity that I've experienced.
This is beautiful because what you've realized is you don't have to sacrifice using opioids to heal yourself.
Listen, a man has to handle his drugs. I love opioids.
Completely agree. Completely agree. I love opioids. 100% completely agree. But I don't let them control me. No, and I mean, I am so excited for this to be given kind of in mass to people.
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Chapter 6: What is Tim's perspective on the future of warfare?
Everyone goes through something that they need to process. Mm-hmm. You know?
Yes.
Wow. This is... First of all, thank you for sharing your time with us because I know that this is difficult to talk about some of these things.
It's not difficult.
Right.
It's as easy as anything.
It's just so freeing. So you think right now, if I told you, go into that bank and kill that woman...
Um, yeah, yeah, no problem. Absolutely.
Kill that, that, her husband, kill the children.
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Chapter 7: How does the Palantir Manifesto address societal issues?
Before we end, and again, thank you for doing this. Absolutely. It's important. You know, I think that too many people right now... Forget that what we're doing right here is important and it matters. Before we end, is there anything you want to say to President Trump who took the historic, brave, heroic move of legalizing Ibogaine?
That is beautiful.
Thank you, Mike. Thank you, President Trump. Thank you, Ibogaine. Thank you so much. And we'll see you all in another realm. Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the Tim Dillon Show. We are... Very excited. We have a new manifesto from Palantir, which I think is a great blueprint for the future. And just make that guy's head big. Make Alex Karp's head big for a minute.
That's exactly what you would think about. Like, if you thought about, like, a pinky in the brain... world domination plan and you asked a sketch artist to come up with who they thought would be carrying this out. And you know, his, his, this is Peter Thiel's partner here, not romantically, but in, in, in, in a global governance. This is exactly what you would say.
I mean, this is exactly what you would come up with. You would come up with this guy. But Palantir put out a manifesto, and I believe it is 20... Is it 22 points? I believe it is 22 points. I believe that Palantir is coming out and telling everybody, hey, we need... Yeah, what is it? Is it 22? Yeah.
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Chapter 8: What conclusions does Tim draw about the current state of society?
So a 22-point plan that... Palantir thinks is important. Now you might say to yourself, and one of them is they're calling for a draft. Seems odd, right? But hey, like you might say to yourself, well, they're a defense tech company. They have an interest in American military matters, you know, but we've been a draft free country for a very, very long time.
And the promise of technology was that it was going to make wars less common. That was one of the promises of technology, that an interconnected, interdependent world would not go to war as much. But Palantir is like, let's relax with that because... We think there's going to be a lot of wars. Palantir, to their credit, has came out and said, we think there's going to be wars and big ones.
We think there's going to be some big wars and we're going to be like, Palantir, these are the people that came out and were like, we're going to be fighting a three-front, four-front war. So get ready for that. So we need a draft and we need a lot of money. And we're going to build a lot of autonomous drone death machines. And we're going to need a lot of security measures for the homeland.
So goodbye to your liberty. Bye-bye. This will be like the Patriot Act on steroids. what the people in Palantir are planning. But by the way, let's give Palantir a fair shake. I'm a fan of that on this show. I've always been a fan of that on this show, that we give everyone a fair shake. Now, people don't like that. They get angry. They accuse me of having some bias or whatever.
You're in the tank. I'm giving everyone a fair shake. And people get angry at me. They're mad at me. And what's really upset now, babies are watching this show now. Toddlers, and people send me clips of this, toddlers are watching this show similar to Miss Rachel. I'm not kidding. I'm not kidding. It's actually true. One, because I'm kind of loud and colorful.
One woman said, you remind him of a bear from this cartoon he watches. Whatever. It doesn't matter. The younger people are watching. Fuck Gen Z, Jet Alpha. Who gives a fuck? You're all dead. You're all dead in a Palantir war. The younger people, and I mean anywhere from older infant. Literally, people send me videos. It'll be a two-year-old just kind of watching the show, taking it in.
They know what's happening. They get it. So that's why people are coming at me. They're screaming and yelling. By the way, let me cover this for five minutes, and then we're going to take this Palantir Manifesto point by point, because the last thing I want to give Palantir the benefit of the doubt. Can we give Palantir the benefit of the doubt?
Yes, one of their, you know, one of their founders is obsessed with Satan, so we all have a thing. And yes, the other one just said we're going to be in a war with every country on Earth. Whatever. But I want to give them the fair shake. It does seem like they are going to make money from enslaving the human race and keeping it in a constant state of war. Just an observation from the outside.
I'm no genius. But let me cover this because as always, there's rage. at people that do what I do for a living, at podcasters, there's anger, there's rage, and people are angry because Tucker Carlson came out recently. And I'm not saying me and Tucker do the same thing. I'm not saying me and Rogan do the same thing. But we're all on the internet talking.
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