Tucker Carlson: Transferring Dependence & Human Sovereignty
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This segment delves into Tucker Carlson's profound philosophy on decentralization and personal autonomy. Interviewers commend his commitment to systematically removing dependencies from traditional media, establishment narratives, and even wealth storage, asking if the true divide is centralized power versus human sovereignty.
Tucker clarifies that true independence isn't eliminating dependence, but rather transferring it to trusted loved ones like family and close friends. He explains the natural human need for interdependence, emphasizing that the critical choice lies in who you depend on and whose opinions you truly value.
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Transcript
My favorite interview by anyone of anyone was you, your recent interview of Big Bear Owen Benjamin. And I just want to say thank you for that. That was just amazing. And and during during that interview, you know, we are decentralized TV here, Mike and I are. During that interview, it became evident that you've personally dedicated your life's next chapter to decentralization by systematically removing dependencies from your life, from legacy media, from establishment narratives, from traditional political tribes, even from how wealth is stored. So, Tucker, have you concluded that the real divide within this realm is centralized power versus human sovereignty? Tucker. Of course, it is. And let me just say that wasn't an interview of Owen Benjamin, it was Owen Benjamin riffing and me just enjoying it. It was so awesome. He's an amazing, he's an amazing person and of course, he was the first deplatformed person. By the way, it's a man without hate, a man who makes no claim on anybody else, whose message is totally uplifting and God centered and beautiful. And of course, he's the one. You know, there are actual haters out there on the internet and they're never deplatformed. ...