π 4 Books mentioned in "Interview: Cancellation Island, w/ John Cameron Mitchell, Part I | STUFF THEY DON'T WANT YOU TO KNOW" of Stuff They Don't Want You To Know

Podcast: Stuff They Don't Want You To Know
Episode: Interview: Cancellation Island, w/ John Cameron Mitchell, Part I | STUFF THEY DON'T WANT YOU TO KNOW
Published on May 16, 2025
Hereβs a list of all the books mentioned in this episode. Click on the links to watch specific excerpts on YouTube and feel free to purchase the books if they caught your interest!
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There's another aspect of that in the uh book of Enoch. Um and that is also a great uh kind of analog I suppose for this idea of lizard people and potentially even where they came from.
Matt mentions the 'book of Enoch' as a text that provides an analog for the idea of lizard people, potentially linking it to the Nephilim.

How Did We Get the Bible?
Buy How Did We Get the Bible? by Tracy M. Sumner on Amazon
Um, because the Bible doesn't actually refer to, you know, specifically by name, the act of being gayed. I think it's the idea of seeking something about unusual flesh or or there's a term that I'm maybe misconstring, but there's this sense that or there's this u theory that perhaps that is referencing these nephilim, but it's not actually contained within the Bible because that book was cut out.
Matt mentions 'the Bible' in the context of discussing anti-queer rhetoric and the Nephilim, noting that the Book of Enoch was cut out of it.

Protocols
Buy Protocols by Andrew D. Huberman on Amazon
going the shadowy immigrant coming to take over to infiltrate right our purity and the protocols of Zion of course you know pushing the uh alternate reality of invasion secret invasion and to me the lizard people one is such a perfect uh you know it seems to also come a little bit from Scientology, right?
John Cameron Mitchell mentions 'the protocols of Zion' as an example of a conspiracy theory text used to other people, specifically in an antisemitic context.

Theological Wordbook of the Old Testament
and even Jesus was a kind of manifestation of Eve to the Gnostics as someone who brought up love, which was not a word used in terms of divinity in the Old Testament.
John Cameron Mitchell mentions 'the Old Testament' when discussing Gnostic views on Jesus and Eve, contrasting its use of language regarding divinity with later texts.