Speaker | Time | Text |
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Democrats are going to save us from guns. | ||
I mean, it's just, it's one-sided. | ||
And that's how they want it. | ||
They want to make the so-called liberals, the dupes of the corrupt system, think that they're real liberals when really they're just con people. | ||
Until we realize that Republicans and Democrats are the same people at the top, two sides of the same coin, puppet A and puppet B, we are not going to effectively change this until we are honest about who we're up against. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay. | |
I wanted to talk about the fires down in Mexico. | ||
Huge military offensive. | ||
unidentified
|
Well, okay, first of all, you were talking about the Pat Moore's tapes? | |
Yeah. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay, those tapes that you're showing of that stuff going on, that's Guatemala, not... | |
No, you're wrong. | ||
unidentified
|
I think. | |
You're wrong. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay, okay. | |
She goes to Guatemala, El Salvador... | ||
Nicaragua, but she spends most of her time in southern Mexico in the Chiapas areas. | ||
See, I was making a documentary up here at AXS TV, so I was up here for about two weeks every day. | ||
Well, Patricia, a lot of times when she gets back into town, is here every day working on things. | ||
And when I was taking a break, she'd be out in the area on the dub rack making copies to send around the country to other AXS stations. | ||
And I would say, where is this, where is that? | ||
And I saw the tanks with the Mexican eagle on them, and I saw the guy dragging people out of a hut, and I saw her hiding in a hut, literally in a hut, with a policeman walking around with machine guns, and then it shows them digging up bodies. | ||
That's Mexico. | ||
Caller, you know there's been a war in Chiapas for three and a half years. | ||
Now, that's mainstream. | ||
Are you aware of the war in Chiapas? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, I stand corrected on that. | |
I want to say something about the fires, okay? | ||
All that smoke to be getting there, right? | ||
That can't just be from that offensive that's going on. | ||
I'm not going to deny what the Mexican government's doing down there, and that some people are burning down land for marijuana, and maybe the Mexican government's burned a few villages. | ||
In recorded Texas history, there's never been smoke like this coming from there. | ||
It's never happened. | ||
What are you talking about? | ||
They've been having... | ||
The Aztecs were having agricultural fires 2,000 years ago, or actually 1,500 years ago. | ||
unidentified
|
No, 600 years ago, but... | |
Well, I know all about the Aztecs. | ||
They were a warrior tribe that took over the Toltecs and the mine and all that. | ||
Same damn people, Indians down there, burning crops to put nitrogen back in the soil. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
You see, what's going on, this thing of the fires and the burning that's been going on in Mexico, okay, this is something... | ||
First of all, the conditions are a little extra drier than they need to be, and the El Nino has exacerbated it. | ||
Okay. | ||
Listen, listen. | ||
unidentified
|
Wait a minute, wait a minute. | |
Listen to me for a second. | ||
The damn El Nino, they got everybody pulling their hair out. | ||
There have been torrential floods and droughts. | ||
There are cycles in human... | ||
unidentified
|
All I'm saying is... | |
Do you remember two years ago? | ||
unidentified
|
What? | |
When? | ||
Two or three years ago in Austin, they said that we were having a drought. | ||
It wasn't even a real drought. | ||
Then they said... | ||
unidentified
|
Fly spell. | |
And then do you remember the floods for about a year? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
That's how it works. | ||
Floods, drought, floods, drought, two years of nice weather, meteor hits the planet, volcano blows up. | ||
I mean, that's just life. | ||
unidentified
|
Well, let me... | |
But they panic you into giving up your rights under the guise of environmentalism. | ||
unidentified
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That's what I'm saying. | |
Okay. | ||
What I'm trying to say is, all right, just... | ||
It is an exacerbating factor, the dry spell, and... | ||
And the El Nino. | ||
Okay. | ||
But the burnings have been going on a long time. | ||
And what people aren't telling you, and I'm getting most of this from a book put out by the Environmentalist Sierra Club called Endangered Mexico. | ||
And it's a very recent book. | ||
It's only about a year old. | ||
Oh, boy. | ||
I really trust that source. | ||
unidentified
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Oh, well. | |
Sierra Club just bilked us for $3.9 million here locally, standard or whatever the standard real estate fee is of $65 million. | ||
unidentified
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Hey, hey, hey. | |
What they're telling, if you would see what the Sierra Club is saying, Chiapas, right, has got a population explosion going on down there. | ||
Yeah, we've got to kill the bad Indians. | ||
unidentified
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That's not what I'm saying. | |
We're loving environmentalists. | ||
unidentified
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Hey, that's not what I'm saying. | |
Go ahead and finish. | ||
unidentified
|
They've got the population growth rate of Chiapas is twice that of Mexico at large, which is pretty high. | |
I mean, out of a CFR rag. | ||
You believe that front group? | ||
unidentified
|
It's been going on a long time. | |
I've read this on other sources too, the population growth rates... | ||
Well, of course we know the third world's population is exploding. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah, so you have this exploding population. | |
I'm glad you accept this fact now. | ||
The exploding population... | ||
We've got to kill them. | ||
unidentified
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I did not say that. | |
I'm for those people. | ||
I'm for their right to live. | ||
I don't like these UT professors that talk about killing people and Jack Kevorkian's a damn rock star. | ||
unidentified
|
Well, you're digressing, okay? | |
I'll digress all day. | ||
This is all... | ||
Listen, is this Steve? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Steve, I know you personally. | ||
You're a good guy. | ||
All I'm saying is that we know there's a military offensive. | ||
We know there's a scorched earth policy. | ||
We know the media's not down there showing us what's happening. | ||
If it's just some ignorant natives, they'd be down there going, look at the ignorant native, look at the ignorant native, we need UN, UN. No, but look, you had the fires in Indonesia, remember that? | ||
Steve, have you seen the footage I showed you of them holding black kids over fires? | ||
Have you seen them cutting little black kids' heads off the UN? The UN stuff? | ||
I'll play it again for you tonight if you want. | ||
What, from the UN? Yeah, the UN. There were actual convictions in Belgian courts and in an Italian court, but the UN defended them the whole time. | ||
Didn't want their UN deathmongers that were out genociding for some of the oil companies. | ||
What was that? | ||
That were out there genociding. | ||
You can call back if you can get through. | ||
That were genociding for some of the oil companies. | ||
I've got photos of that actually happening. | ||
I mean, that's serious. | ||
We'll play that later. | ||
Hello, you're on the air. | ||
unidentified
|
Hi. | |
Yes, I have a question that I have been dying to ask you for a really long time. | ||
I've been watching you for a very long time. | ||
Appreciate it. | ||
unidentified
|
I was wondering what you thought of the phallocentric nature of the economy of discourse. | |
Would you... | ||
I'm not up on those terms. | ||
Explain the phallocentric. | ||
Are you saying that the... | ||
That there's fallacies, that they're lying about the economy being good? | ||
unidentified
|
No, no, not fallacy as in an untruth, but phallocentric as in predominantly male-dominated and also white male-dominated. | |
And I notice you've been using a lot of words that would kind of tend towards that kind of domination of the language, and therefore it dominates the media, which you've been talking about. | ||
It propagates all kinds of keeping people who are non-white males down. | ||
You're saying I'm an angry white male? | ||
unidentified
|
No, I'm not saying that, sir. | |
I'm not saying that at all. | ||
Well, actually, I am an angry white male, and I've got friends that are angry black males, and I know angry white women and angry Latino women, and we're all very angry. | ||
But I... I'm not talking about white people or black people here. | ||
I'm talking about organized crime rings, consolidating wealth criminally, and propagandizing the people out there. | ||
unidentified
|
I think what she's asking is why the majority of the nomenclature that you use is sort of slanted in that direction with all the terms that you use. | |
Is that kind of what you're trying to say? | ||
You're saying I use... | ||
I mean, language is language. | ||
You're saying... | ||
unidentified
|
I'm not a linguist. | |
Hold on. | ||
I'm not a linguist. | ||
In fact, a linguist would catch me in occasional errors. | ||
What I am is a person that understands models and sees systems. | ||
And to me, there is no male vocabulary usage and linguistics. | ||
And to me, there's no female. | ||
unidentified
|
Right, but do you consider language to be a system? | |
They can be manipulated. | ||
Ma'am, maybe just to clarify a slight bit, what is your name, please? | ||
Jill. | ||
Okay, Jill, maybe you can give us a couple examples and point out exactly what you mean, and then Alex can refute that or agree with you, however it works out. | ||
Okay, well, just for an example from tonight's program... | ||
You said, made one comment, and I know that, you know, in the passion and the heat of the moment, because I know you're speaking about things you care a great deal about, you made the reference to some people go out and bang ten women or something a week, and do you not know the power behind language and how that can come across? | ||
Yes, I meant it to come across that way. | ||
That's what they do. | ||
They go out and they do whatever their little heart desires. | ||
I won't get into what Henry Kissinger likes to do, and it isn't. | ||
It isn't having relations with women. | ||
What is language? | ||
Me being honest with you? | ||
Is that more of an effrontery in the petty dichotomy and system than people destroying entire populations and subjugating and dumbing them down and creating false thought systems, mental illness in the population? | ||
unidentified
|
But where that all begins is with language. | |
Well, what's wrong with my language? | ||
I just showed you I was talking about foul people. | ||
So I said they want to go out. | ||
I was talking about them. | ||
I was using this rutting language. | ||
I was discussing, yes, this sycophant... | ||
European male filth, if you want to call them that, who have many females that are allies and all drink from the same cup. | ||
Does that answer your question? | ||
unidentified
|
What is the cat for? | |
I don't quite get the reference for the cat. | ||
Oh, I was going to get to this. | ||
A nice lady, or a young lady, sent me this. | ||
Are you still there? | ||
Yes, you're gone. | ||
A nice lady sent me this, and it has a little joke here, evil right-wing kitty. | ||
And when I get back after this, I think I'll show you some artwork. | ||
Her artwork is just incredible. | ||
I mean, it's really, really nice. | ||
And I'm impressed. | ||
It's a very interesting style. | ||
And she also sent me some classic, I always talk about Time and Newsweek, darkening OJ's face to create, you know, there you have it, evil, darkest Africa. | ||
unidentified
|
We are white women, a big diversion for a year. | |
See, this whole male-dominant stuff, it's all diversion. | ||
But anyways, there you have the media trying to, you know, well, they're altering his photograph. | ||
Under Ralph Reed of the Christian Coalition, they put a mustache on him. | ||
Newt Gingrich, they made him into a goblin. | ||
That was Newsweek or Time. | ||
The Grinch that stole, you know, before he even did anything. | ||
I mean, I'm not supporting Gingrich. | ||
Gingrich is an obvious agent, even though he has some differing views from the establishment, but he's still establishment. | ||
He's been brought under heel. | ||
Some other interesting magazine covers. | ||
Oh, here's what she thinks of Clinton. | ||
This is funny right here. | ||
You can't really see it. | ||
It's so funny. | ||
It says, the real face of Bill, sweaty beast. | ||
But I'll show you some of her artwork when we get back. | ||
I'll take one more call, and then we'll go to 15 minutes of General Benton Parton, and I'll play it over the next couple months, or month, the rest of it. | ||
Hello, you're on the air. | ||
unidentified
|
Yes, Alex? | |
Yeah. | ||
unidentified
|
Yes, I was going to see what your views might be on the insurance corporations. | |
I seem to have had so many personal problems with it just being just a big farce and them trying to just squeeze every little dollar out. | ||
And almost, I don't know if you would say... | ||
Legally, I would say that. | ||
I mean, I would love to give some examples. | ||
I just want to hear your views. | ||
Okay, thanks. | ||
unidentified
|
And I'll be happy to give you some examples of things that they've done to me. | |
Okay, just real fast. | ||
We need to hurry up and do this. | ||
What it comes down to is, and again, I'm not an expert of the insurance system, but I've talked to enough people that are actually in it. | ||
It's there to maximize profits. | ||
And the best way you can make profits is to have the government... | ||
Legislate that people have to carry insurance instead of just holding them criminally responsible if they injure somebody. | ||
And insurance is a good thing if it was free market. | ||
Then you had Clinton in 92 try to take over the healthcare industry. | ||
And the healthcare industry said, no, no, no. | ||
We're not going to allow that by the federal government one-seventh of our economy. | ||
But then the HMOs have done the same thing, and Clinton's implementing his policy, so we see it happening anyways. | ||
They're just doing it piecemeal. | ||
unidentified
|
Well, the whole idea of insurance is you get all these people paying in knowing that only a few people are actually going to get some help out of it. | |
You know what I mean? | ||
Well, the point is the insurance companies are making the biggest profits in history. | ||
The biggest monolithic thing in our country, except for central banks, is the $12,200,000,000,000 that's in life insurance. | ||
And people can argue, well, that's paid on claims, that's paid to people. | ||
Nobody mattered on the Titanic but the people feeding the boilers and the captain driving the ship. | ||
And see, that's the point. | ||
These monolithic agencies, they tell you Bill Gates is the richest man in the world. | ||
He's got his company, his $48 billion. | ||
Compared to $12,200,000,000,000? | ||
I mean, give me a break. | ||
It's just... | ||
People look at real monopolies or real oligopolies right in the face and go, oh, it's wonderful because the media didn't tell me about it. | ||
And then they look at Bill Gates, who the dogs are after. | ||
The government wants to take over for its buddies because Europe can't compete with him. | ||
unidentified
|
Well, the biggest problem I seemed to have with insurance was when they started requiring people to have it. | |
And then, let's say, I go on and I pay all these stupid premiums, you know, all the time, month after month. | ||
And then I go out and get in a wreck, okay? | ||
Some guy that doesn't have insurance. | ||
So what happens? | ||
He gets fined. | ||
I have to pay a deductible, even though I'm still paying my insurance. | ||
And where does that fine money go? | ||
It goes to the government. | ||
So I'm still out money, even though I've been paying all these premiums. | ||
And then who gets the fine money? | ||
The government. | ||
It's highway robbery. | ||
Yeah, it's highway robbery. | ||
It's a THX 1138 scenario. | ||
If you haven't seen the film, it'll tell you everything. | ||
unidentified
|
George Lucas, 1974. I mean, don't you think that as far as just about all crime, like when somebody commits a crime and they go to court and they're fined, don't you think that should go to the victim and not the government? | |
But the government's here to help you. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
I mean, that's all I have to argue intellectually back at you is it's for the kids. | ||
I mean, that's all they do. | ||
And Clinton hugs Buddy the dog and flood victims. | ||
I mean, the answer's the same. | ||
People are sick of me saying that? | ||
Well, that's what's in the paper every day. | ||
Aren't you sick of this? | ||
Aren't people sick of this? | ||
Because they say the same thing every day. | ||
Listen, I appreciate your call. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
We've got to reform this insurance system. | ||
Okay, Hale, we'll go to these two calls, and then we'll go to the General Benton Parton. | ||
Hello, you're on the air. | ||
unidentified
|
Mr. Jones. | |
Yes. | ||
unidentified
|
How are you tonight? | |
Pretty good. | ||
unidentified
|
I'm really glad I got to get through. | |
I like your show. | ||
I enjoy it. | ||
I'm fighting a battle myself with these people and the paperwork that these people send to you and attack you with, they try to turn you into a criminal. | ||
What's the nature of the fight you're engaged in? | ||
unidentified
|
At all ends. | |
Everything from the Internal Revenue Service. | ||
Let me say something. | ||
We're all criminals. | ||
They've written so many laws and so many codes. | ||
We're all criminals. | ||
It's just, when do they implement? | ||
When do they decide to use that? | ||
unidentified
|
And they're picking on lower-income people. | |
And they're abusing them, me myself, as being one of them. | ||
Listen, that's the fact. | ||
They don't go after your upper-middle class except for a high-profile case like Willie Nelson. | ||
See, Willie Nelson isn't rich. | ||
He's upper-middle class. | ||
You know, when you have families that have trillions of dollars, Willie Nelson's $20 million, $30 million, $40 million is chicken feed. | ||
I mean, I am lower-middle class. | ||
And just to hear, it's all false. | ||
All our systems, our benchmarks are incorrect. | ||
And they're raiding people making $25,000 to $30,000 a year. | ||
They're abusing families. | ||
And it's just so sick. | ||
They see these so-called compassionate liberals who are non-liberals again. | ||
They are just the most sickening dupes, the most feel-good, mindless robots that are in a peer-pressure cult. | ||
And they're never getting out. | ||
unidentified
|
If you fight back, they... | |
It really can get mean, though. | ||
They've taken my family away. | ||
They've separated my family. | ||
My children are with their mother. | ||
I pay enormous amounts of child support. | ||
I'm trying to operate the American Dream, my own business, and they've done nothing but take a big dump right on me and continue to try to squash me and keep me out. | ||
Listen, I really appreciate your call, sir. | ||
If you want to get me some information on it, maybe we'll try to do a story. | ||
unidentified
|
I have a letter that I've written, and I would love to work with you. | |
I'll send it to you. | ||
All the time, I put up the comment line, 370-9558, or the mailing address, and I get some letters, quite a few, but usually it's not anything, you know, it's like you're doing a great job. | ||
If people... | ||
Know about any news stories or things where people are being abused or anything. | ||
I need y'all to go around with cameras. | ||
Just keep a camera in your car, right there in the back. | ||
unidentified
|
I would love to volunteer. | |
A snapshot camera is fine, or a video camera. | ||
Whatever you can do, get me information. | ||
I appreciate your call. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you very much. | |
In fact, Barb Evans, who has a show here on AXS TV, who you would think differs from me politically. | ||
She was coming down here to AXS TV on Chaconne and Rosewood, saw three... | ||
White, unmarked vehicles with people in battle fatigues running around. | ||
I mean, she just didn't know what was going on. | ||
This was last week. | ||
She just told me about it out in the hall before the show. | ||
People who used to even disagree with me are coming around. | ||
I'm not lying to you. | ||
We'll play that Tony Brown clip as we leave the show tonight if you want to tape it. | ||
One more call and we're going to General Parton. | ||
You're on the air. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay. | |
This is my first time calling, and so be gentle with me. | ||
Okay. | ||
But I'm trying to figure out, I'm trying to be discerning about this, and your topic is exposing corruption, and I've listened to you a lot. | ||
I'm just trying to figure out how do we, that aren't as informed as you and the people that usually call you, how do we discern between the, and I'm sure I'm going to use the wrong terms, freedomists or the ones that are anti-government people that are exposing things, how do we discern between those that are like the separatists, | ||
white power type groups, Well, you have to remember that most of your white power organizations, and I've, you know, from the most recent issue that even brought it out mainstream was the January issue Bumstir Awards of the Texas Monthly. | ||
He did a several-page article about Jerry Spence, a... | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, that lawyer. | |
No, no, not the famous lawyer. | ||
This is an FBI long-term 15-year, 14-year informant, pretty much an agent incognito, was out trying to stir up and create Klan groups, create them. | ||
unidentified
|
He and his wife, were they the ones from Wyoming? | |
No, this was in Fort Worth. | ||
Do you remember about a year and a half ago when you heard that the militia was going to blow up a chemical plant? | ||
unidentified
|
Okay, yeah. | |
Hey, number one, it wasn't militia, it was... | ||
The people couldn't even tie their shoelaces. | ||
They didn't even have any ammunition. | ||
They barely had working firearms. | ||
It consisted of Spence making bottle bombs out of black powder that would barely blow one of your fingers off, lighting them, and filming them lighting it, him with a video camera. | ||
He actually made the bomb. | ||
And you find out with the World Trade Center bombing, they went and taught the Muslims how to make the bomb and had Arab-speaking security agents from Egypt that we had trained to go make them build a building up. | ||
What they do is they go out and they stir up people, white pride people, Muslims, whoever. | ||
I don't see Muslims, extreme fundamentalist terrorist Muslims or whatever. | ||
unidentified
|
Back to the original question, Alex, which was... | |
How do you discern them? | ||
I'm trying to tell her. | ||
Well, nothing's simple. | ||
Nothing's a soundbite, Buckley. | ||
The point I'm trying to make is this. | ||
You discern. | ||
If somebody starts telling you, it's all the black people that's causing it, then you know automatically that this is somebody that's being sicked on a group of people that are being stopped on. | ||
You want people who are going after the bullies, people that are putting light on the establishment, the secret government, people that are talking about the Federal Reserve. | ||
But just... | ||
Discern it for yourself. | ||
I mean, it's really quite simple. | ||
It doesn't need to be religious-based. | ||
I'm not saying don't be a Christian or Hindu or whatever you are. | ||
What I'm saying is not religious-based. | ||
That's a diversion. | ||
Have your religion and then have your politics. | ||
What's Caesar's is Caesar's. | ||
What's God's, God's. | ||
unidentified
|
I have a comment to make on this. | |
I think that if you truly are concerned about this, you're interested in it. | ||
And you want to know the truth? | ||
Number one, exactly what Alex is saying is follow your heart because truth rings true. | ||
You can tell almost by looking at a person and considering their demeanor whether or not they're telling you truth. | ||
And secondarily, I would highly suggest that you don't accept everything for face value immediately when you hear it. | ||
You follow up on it. | ||
You research it for your own self. | ||
And that's about the only way that you will truly be convinced and understand exactly what is happening. | ||
Look, basically it's this. | ||
You got all these... | ||
Loaded guns held in American people's heads. | ||
Terrorist groups that they can activate at any time. | ||
And that's why we may politically, we could probably over the next ten years, it's growing, oppose them nationwide and get some reform. | ||
But they won't allow that. | ||
If the CIA in Central and South America or in Asian country or the Middle East or even in parts of Europe wanted to take out a leader, They would blow up a building full of nuns or whatever and blame it on the opposition. | ||
You know, they'd even shoot opposition in the head, throw the opposition out on the street, drive away right as they blow up the building and the guy's body's half destroyed. | ||
They find a leg, you know, with the uniform of the enemy. | ||
I mean, they've done it. | ||
I should write up some case studies for you. | ||
unidentified
|
No, I believe it. | |
It's been done all over the place. | ||
Well, it's a classic tactic. | ||
Again, it was done by Hitler with the Reichstag. | ||
Burn the Reichstag, blame it on the enemies. | ||
Suspend the Constitution of Germany. | ||
Take the guns. | ||
Basically, it's that. | ||
That's our biggest threat. | ||
And I've got to go to this tape. | ||
And thanks for the call. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
The biggest threat is this, because I've got to get back from the tape and do my presentation. | ||
The biggest threat is... | ||
We force a political confrontation. | ||
We're up front. | ||
We get upstanding people like Tony Brown and Congressman Ron Paul and Alex Jones and General Parton and Ted Gunderson and Anthony Hilder and suddenly... | ||
Clergymen start standing up and don't care about money anymore, just care about the truth, and quit insulting this group or that group about their sexual persuasion, which may be important, but it's still a diversion when you've got enemies coming down your streets, taking over your systems all around you. | ||
So we've just got to get to the crisis first, put out the fires, and then deal with the other stuff. | ||
We've gotten here culturally. | ||
Now it's time to get the enemies out that have been spreading this information. | ||
You don't... | ||
Go downriver and try to spoon out the water. | ||
You go to a place and dam it up. | ||
That's what we've got to do. | ||
We have to go upriver and dam up the enemy and hold them back. | ||
And we can do that by knowing who they are, knowing what their plans are, knowing what they're planning to do. | ||
Terrorism, to create fear, as tyrannical governments have always done. | ||
I know I've been kind of ranting. | ||
I do that when I'm on for hours. | ||
We'll go to Benton Parton. | ||
Again, there's a glitch in the tape, but don't worry about that. | ||
It goes away in about 10 seconds. | ||
And I'll be back in about 15 minutes to give you about a 10-minute presentation. | ||
I'll be back focused to do about a 15-minute presentation about some solutions that we can carry out. | ||
They're not easy solutions. | ||
They're going to take backbone and work. | ||
They're going to take people with discernment, as the lady was talking about. | ||
I appreciate her call. | ||
We'll talk about that, and then we'll take your phone calls. | ||
This is exposing corruption every Tuesday night from 8.30 to 11 p.m. | ||
Now, next year, I may not be able to get a two-hour show or whatever. | ||
Next year, they may restrict us down to one-hour shows, I've been told, because of the INET or something with Time Warner. | ||
So, I just appreciate everybody supporting AXS TV. This is a very important... | ||
If you don't like what you're hearing here, you can come down and get your own show. | ||
With that disclaimer said, here is somebody that's going to tell you about Oklahoma City, General Benton Parton. | ||
We'll be right back. | ||
unidentified
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Thank you so much. | |
I like that shirt. | ||
I like it too. | ||
Oh, they're right here. | ||
Hold on. | ||
Mike has an original. | ||
Oh, I love that. | ||
Come and take me. | ||
No, come and make me. | ||
That's right. | ||
And guess what? | ||
You can get those by calling 830-672-3089. | ||
But how does somebody get that good a body, though? | ||
That's what I want to know. | ||
Bye! | ||
Say bye to everybody on Facebook! | ||
Bye! | ||
Bible prophecy. | ||
As you can tell, we have an enthusiastic crowd here tonight. | ||
The title of tonight's talk is Globalism, the Program. | ||
Now, we look around and we see all kinds of things going wrong. | ||
We see the Waco situation, the Oklahoma City bombing, Ruby Ridge. | ||
Are all of these connected? | ||
Are they all part of a well-laid-out program? | ||
Well, you're going to find out that answer tonight. | ||
Our speaker tonight spent 31 years in the Air Force where he earned the Distinguished Service Medal, the Legion of Merit. | ||
Three times, he was a distinguished graduate of the Air War College. | ||
He went on to research and development management, weapon systems concepts, guided weapons technology, target acquisition aids, focused energy weapons, operations research applications. | ||
He directed 1,200 personnel who developed the Maverick missile system. | ||
The optical laser and missile system, imaging infrared guidance system, precision location strike system, the fighter attack system, and a whole lot more. | ||
His resume goes on for several more pages. | ||
Tonight, he will tell us that in 1928, the Communists wrote the program to bring in the new world order. | ||
And he says they're following it step by step. | ||
By knowing where they have gone, and by looking ahead where they're going, we can see where we are today and what's coming. | ||
Will you help me welcome General Ben Parton! | ||
Thank you very much, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
I'm delighted to be here. | ||
I know you may wonder why there's a retired Air Force General running around the United States talking about bombings and the Communist World Program. | ||
But in 1947, in the National Defense Act of 1947, when the Air Force was separated from the Army, all of the development capability for developing weapons for air delivery stayed in the Army. | ||
It did not go with the Air Force. | ||
So in the early 1950s, the Air Force decided they were going to get back in the weapons development business to exploit new technology and overcome a lot of major operational efficiencies. | ||
And they set up a program for bringing in a few graduate engineers into eight quarters of graduate work in armament engineering. | ||
And I was one of the first six of those people. | ||
They were trained quite extensively in all the gory details of weapons and munitions and explosives and the explosive training design and all the things that go with it. | ||
And I stayed with that work for quite some time. | ||
I flew 25 years in the Air Force, but most of my time in the Air Force was still in the research and development side of things. | ||
After I attended this eight quarters of graduate work in armament engineering, they give you a master's degree in aeronautical engineering. | ||
But the breadth of the course was actually given a master's in almost several other areas. | ||
After I finished that work, I went to the ballistic research laboratories at Aberdeen Proving Grounds, Maryland, because at that time that was fairly much the mecca of the conventional non-nuclear weapons development area in the United States, excluding the chemical and biological. | ||
And I worked there for two years through several laboratories. | ||
Most of my time was in the terminal ballistics area, and I spent most of the time there developing the continuous rod warhead for the Beaumont missile. | ||
And the Beaumont, the continuous rod warhead is probably one of the most difficult and most complex warheads in the non-nuclear area, and probably second only to the pit design in nuclear weapons. | ||
But this is a picture of a continuous rod warhead that was being tested out at China Lake. | ||
And you have a circle there about 75, 100 feet, 150 feet across. | ||
Probably the radius is about 75 feet. | ||
And these panels around the periphery of that circle are sheet aluminum, 4 feet by 8 feet. | ||
And you can see the The panels all around the circle are being cut, cut continuously around that circle about 150 feet in diameter. | ||
The warhead has already functioned in the center. | ||
That's about the extent of the expansion of the detonation products from the warhead. | ||
And because you had the warhead was surrounded by heavy double layer of rods, metal rods, the detonation products went off to the end, the so-called end effect. | ||
But I bring this up to show you what a continuous rod warhead is, because it's very significant with respect to TW800. Now, those rods, when the warhead goes off, you have an accordion expanding hoop or circle, moving out five or six thousand feet a second. | ||
Cold roll hard steel rods, but they're all welded at alternate ends so that you have an expanding scissoring expansion of that circle, and it's continuous. | ||
And the most difficult thing is to design the warhead so it is continuous and has the proper velocity. | ||
Now, we had a shoot down of TW-800, and here's the results as shown in the Where they assembled that aircraft back together in the hangar up on Long Island. | ||
And if you saw the continuous rod warhead, it would reach out pretty far. | ||
If you had an aircraft out there, instead of those aluminum sheets, it would have sliced an aircraft into just as well as it would have those aluminum sheets. | ||
Now, it was announced that it could not have been a missile that brought down TW-800. | ||
Why? | ||
Because they recovered all four engines, and none of the four engines showed any missile damage. | ||
They had blinders on only thinking about IR-guided small missiles. | ||
Shoulder-fired, aircraft-fired, or some other IR-guided missiles. | ||
Well, an IR-guided missile is no good for all weather purposes. | ||
And if you have an aircraft going to attack a city with an atomic bomb or an aircraft carrier, and it's in the suit, and it has capability to deliver the weapon with the radar, IR missiles are no good to me. | ||
Okay, Alex Jones here. | ||
Now, I know that this may seem a little boring. | ||
It's a two-hour program. | ||
I'm going to run like 15, 20-minute segments over the next couple months so you can just soak in all this information. | ||
This is class. | ||
This is school. | ||
He's explaining weapons to you right now. | ||
He's going to explain a little bit about Oklahoma City and then the European program for slavery. | ||
So please stay tuned for this important information. | ||
So we use this kind of warhead and many applications for surface-to-air missiles because they have an all-weather capability. | ||
And if they're approximately fused and they can reach out quite a distance, you can have considerable inaccuracy in that guidance system and still destroy the target if the warhead and fusing system is compatible with the reach of the warhead. | ||
And what you do is you have a fusing system that is looking off at an angle and when it intercepts the target, the missile fires and the rods go out and have an expanding hoop and slice across the aircraft just like a saver across the water mount. | ||
Now you could use a fragmenting warhead, blast, what you call a blast frag warhead, and you send out instead of sending everything in a strong, long, continuous cut, you send it out in fragments You may punch a bunch of holes in something and you destroy maybe some systems in the aircraft, but you're not going to get a catastrophic structural failure unless you hit the system. | ||
But with all weather guidance systems, you have longer wavelengths. | ||
You're using semi-active or active radar, going after a beacon or a transponder or a carrier wave. | ||
And you're dealing with longer wavelengths. | ||
You have a small aperture on the missile, so you have accuracy problems. | ||
And if you miss the aircraft 35 feet or 40 feet with that kind of warhead and with that reach and proximity fusing, you'll still slice it into it. | ||
So it doesn't matter. | ||
If you look at the TW-800, across you can see that from this point forward, and this is the forward end of the aircraft, you have a continuous cut from the top all the way down to the bottom. | ||
And this part of the aircraft was separated from this current part at that point, and the nose of the aircraft went down integrally. | ||
It wasn't torn up at all. | ||
It went down in one piece. | ||
Ballistically straight down. | ||
Now at the time the warhead hit it, you had about five pounds of pressure for the pressurization in the aircraft. | ||
So when the warhead hit it and it cut it in two, you had instantly about a quarter of a million pounds pushing it apart because of the pressurization inside the aircraft. | ||
And it appears to me The first point of contact with the warhead was right here, and you can see the explosive decompression dropping the pressure very quickly from the first contact with the aircraft. | ||
But as big as the aircraft is, the 747, it took considerably longer time for it to exhaust the gases out with the push going forward. | ||
Now, from this point back to this point, it looks to me like you had another continuous rod that hit the aircraft here and it even went down into the wing. | ||
The ends of the pieces here you see are structural cuts from the recovery of the aircraft from the bottom. | ||
Now, from this point to this point, you can see a lot of discoloration and smoke and heat damage. | ||
But there's no severe fire damage because you can see that that dichromate paint is still yellow. | ||
There wasn't any burning. | ||
But when the nose came off, it probably pitched up a little in the seats and things coming out. | ||
You can see the streaks across the aircraft from that damage. | ||
Now, from this point back, you had this part of the aircraft saw intense heat and flame. | ||
The paint is severely charred all along here. | ||
In here, you can see the aluminum. | ||
Skin is melted out between the ribs and the stringers. | ||
And so you had this part all in here was separated and came down in random parts spread all over a big area. | ||
But from here back came down together and probably the most qualified witness who observed what happened with GW800. A guy by the name of Major Myers, a National Guard pilot, he was in a helicopter. | ||
He headed right straight out to it, looking at it and saw it. | ||
And he had a lot of experience in Vietnam. | ||
He saw many missiles going after and hitting aircraft. | ||
And he said he saw two bright white flashes. | ||
Two. | ||
Just a few milliseconds apart. | ||
And when they shot and the Vincennes shot down the Iranian aircraft in the Gulf War, what did they do? | ||
Fired two missiles. | ||
007 was shot down by the Russians. | ||
What did they do? | ||
Fire two missiles, air-to-air. | ||
And a standard, sort of standard procedure. | ||
If you're going to bring down a target with very high probability, you fire two missiles because you're always confronted with not only just inaccuracies, but you're confronted with reliability of the system. | ||
So it's normal to do that. | ||
And they were just a few milliseconds apart, those flashes. | ||
The first flash was clean and clear. | ||
The second flash grew into a fireball. | ||
And that tells me that the first one cut here. | ||
The angle is tilted a little up, and the cut was across the plane, tilted just a little bit. | ||
And it was a forward intercept, and the guidance law of the missile would make it converge on the trajectory of the aircraft. | ||
So the first one cut along this line. | ||
And the second one cut along this line, and it did got right down through here, and it probably got into the wing tanks outboard of the fuselage as well as the main fuel tank under the fuselage. | ||
Well, this tank is usually empty, probably have 100 gallons in there of fuel that you can't purge. | ||
After it got burning well, you had a lot of fairly violent exhaust of gases from the burning as the back part of the aircraft was going down. | ||
But all the section in here was probably torn up aerodynamically as it was coming down because of the big cut here, but you did not have the forces to pull it off clean like you had the forces to pull it off clean here. | ||
So it would peel off separately, and you can see it was scattered all over when you look at the pattern of the deployment of all the components from that aircraft. | ||
Now, if it was a surface-to-air missile, I got all the information I could on TW-800, as much of the witness information, and looked as much as I could, and I sent a fax to the chief investigator up in New York, and I said, look at all the information, and I can only come to one conclusion. | ||
The only thing that's totally consistent with all the information out there is that that aircraft was brought down by a A continuous rod warhead, a surface-to-air warhead, a continuous rod warhead fired from a surface missile with proximity fusing. | ||
And if you don't have anybody who knows anything about the terminal ballistics of the continuous rod warhead damage to an aircraft, I'd be happy to come up and give you a hand. | ||
I did not get a response. | ||
I did not anticipate getting a response. | ||
I was told within 24 hours by someone who was fairly well connected in some of the intelligence areas that the aircraft was—they had been tracking a submarine from up around the St. Lawrence Seaway down the East Coast, and it was missing. | ||
They lost contact with it there in the New York Bay. | ||
Now, if it was a submarine that fired the missile, there are several countries that have sailed—they have surface-air missiles in their sails. | ||
That is a part of this submarine that sticks up. | ||
We have none in any of the American manufactured submarines. | ||
None of ours have missiles in the sail. | ||
The Soviet manufacturers, some of them do. | ||
Iraq has them. | ||
Iran has them. | ||
So I don't know whose submarine it was. | ||
Now, Pierre Salinger came out with a story. | ||
There was a friend of fire, trying to blame it on the United States Navy. | ||
That story had been on the internet for many months before Pierre Salinger gave it some credibility. | ||
But the author, the editor and publisher of Soviet Analysts, probably one of the most brilliant men I know tracking what's going on in the world today and from an intelligence point of view, he is also the editor of Galitsyn's book, Perestroika Deception. | ||
How many have read Perestroika Deception? | ||
Nobody? | ||
It's probably one of the most significant books of the 1990s. | ||
A book he wrote earlier, New Lies for Old Back in the 1980s, was probably the most significant book of that decade, if you're trying to understand what's going on in the world. | ||
And he devoted a whole issue to flight TWA-800. | ||
And he said, do the American authorities know at the highest levels that TWA Flight 800 was destroyed by a missile or missiles launched from a submarine off Long Island, and are they preparing to cover up this act of war? | ||
That was his conclusion from, and he covers a tremendous amount of information in this newsletter. | ||
Sorry, folks, we just can't show numbers on AXS TV. So that's why we pulled it down. | ||
Seven plus one meeting already planned in Europe. | ||
And at that G7 plus one, which is the moneyed countries of the world, plus Russia, the one is Russia, the Soviet Union, former Soviet Union. | ||
He said they turned that meeting into a counterterrorism meeting. | ||
And in that meeting, they agreed to have a free exchange among the G7-plus-1 countries on all terrorist and counter-terrorist activities in all these countries. | ||
And he says it was well worth it to them to have gotten access to the files of the FBI and the CIA on all internal and external terrorist activities and information that they had to have brought down that ship to turn that meeting into that kind. | ||
Now, is that what happened? | ||
It probably is consistent with everything that I know as anything. | ||
And I found that Christopher's story probably has some of the best connections in the intelligence world of anyone that I know. | ||
It's a most terribly regrettable thing, but after all these months, they have not come to a conclusion with respect to what caused that airplane to come down. | ||
And I was amazed to find out that Major Myers was not permitted by the FBI to testify to the National Transportation Board until, gosh, it must have been almost six months after the incident. | ||
Now we've had another bombing, and most of you, I'm sure, do not know very much about, even know that we had a bombing in Waco. | ||
This picture shows the compound as it was being, I dare say, attacked on the The day that the whole compound was burned. | ||
You can see a tank entering the building here. | ||
This towering part of the building is over about a 20 foot by 20 foot reinforced concrete structure that they call the Church Records Vault. | ||
And you have a tower above that three or four floors. | ||
And I want you to note this window right here. | ||
You have a flagpole. | ||
And the line of sight from the TV camera that took the pictures that I'll show you of the explosion was lined up across here so you can precisely determine the line of sight from the camera back to the fire. | ||
And you have tanks in behind, a tank back here that had been driving into the building and collapsing the structures behind. | ||
The channel across here finally tumbled down, and the walls were pushed in very much around the whole building. | ||
And then these two tanks finally pulled away, and just a few seconds after, a few minutes after they pulled away, the whole thing was engulfed with fire flame. | ||
It started right here and here and back in here. | ||
And with very high winds, it was consumed fairly quickly. | ||
Now, if you look at this picture, you can see the You see the arrow? | ||
You can see a bright spot, and that is right there. | ||
That is the window that I was pointing out to you, and you can even see the cross piece in there, because when that demolition charge went off in that building, the walls really provided tamping, and the force that they exert back on the expanding gases is very high because the gas, the pressure is so high. | ||
It's like hitting a baseball with a bat. | ||
The faster you hit the ball, the greater the pressure on it. | ||
And the same thing is true in the tamping effect of a building surrounding detonation products. | ||
And the second frame shows it blasting through the window. | ||
The second frame shows it getting over to the corner, and the building comes apart. | ||
And you can see in all those pictures there, the distortions and perturbations and the expansion of that gas cloud. | ||
are caused by the dynamic flow of the gaseous products around the building components as it is blown up. | ||
And you can see here the further expansion of the fireball, and it starts to lift down here in this particular area. | ||
But that was a detonation of a demolition charge in the building. | ||
Now, if you look at the top after the fire, you look at the top, and there is a hole probably two feet across. | ||
And that's the kind of hold you get with a demolition charge. | ||
You have concrete in contact at close proximity to high explosives, and the pressure is several hundred times the yield strength of the concrete, so the concrete in the area of the hole there just turned to dust. | ||
And you have, of course, fairly high dynamic gas pressures going down into the bunker below. | ||
And the red flag in all these pictures will denote a burned or charred body. | ||
And there's a body, and you can see the ribs there. | ||
But down inside of the bunker, there were 28 women and children. | ||
And there is the bunker after the fire. | ||
The tank drove into the building and stayed for some time. | ||
There's all the kitchen stuff. | ||
It went through four walls and a kitchen, and all that was pushed up against the building. | ||
You can see the coal-poured concrete lines in that picture, and they're all cracked from the pressure inside, all corners around the top and down the corners on the side, because when the gas pressure from that demolition charge went into the building, they tend to blow it up like a balloon. | ||
So all the external walls were in tension. | ||
This chart, this picture shows you the building and the backside of it, you can see the little hairline cracks all up and down here and here. | ||
Now, it was reported that that explosion was a propane tank. | ||
That was what it was blamed on, but there's the propane tank. | ||
There's no damage to the propane tank. | ||
There were some pictures, reported pictures of it that showed this end blown off, but they were doctored pictures. | ||
But there's the propane tank. | ||
You see the tension cracks. | ||
You had the pressure inside the building, and I'm told by the investigators, the chief investigator for the case that's being tried, and I was asked to do this forensic. | ||
The only reason I got into it, I was asked to do this forensic, and I was provided all this material on it. | ||
I was told that the building, the tank, had never even been serviced. | ||
It had never been in propane at all. | ||
Now, it's obvious to me that the room inside the bunker... | ||
I had been prepped for this picture. | ||
You have all these guns stacked against the wall, but if you notice here, there's a gun against the gun and a gun against that gun, and there's about three or four guns together. | ||
And if you had the equivalent of three or four F-16 jet blasts down in here, I don't know how you burned those and left them stacked against the wall with the gas dynamic pressures and gas flow in there. | ||
Secondly, from the spall from the hole in the top or anywhere else, you'd never find it lined up around one wall and not around the other walls. | ||
It would be symmetric to the hole or something else. | ||
So the room was quite well prepared for that picture. | ||
So what happened down there at Waco? | ||
There are a lot of things and a lot of misinformation put out. | ||
And I just pointed out some of the things in misrepresenting the truth with respect to what happened at Waco. | ||
They went back in and they scraped down to get rid of all evidence. | ||
All the building there was crushed and hauled away and disposed of. | ||
And then they went back in sometime later and scraped about eight inches of soil up to get rid of all further evidence. | ||
Now here's the Murrah Building in Waco. | ||
This has been a great heartburn to most American citizens. | ||
And what happened in the demolition of the building, or the destruction of the building at Waco, this column, this column, and this column collapsed across the front, and one column back in the middle of the building. | ||
Back in the middle of the building. | ||
When I first found, saw, and heard the evidence about the bombing in Oklahoma, and saw the pictures of what had happened with my background... | ||
I want to take time out to thank the sponsor of this program, 98.9 KJFK FM All Talk Radio. | ||
Again, 98.9 KJFK sponsors this program, and I want to thank KJFK for doing that. | ||
I want to thank them for giving me the opportunity to be a radio host on their station every Saturday evening. | ||
So thank you, 98.9. | ||
That's All Talk FM Radio, free speech here in Austin, Texas, supported by 98.9, KJFK FM. | ||
So thank you, 98.9. | ||
I'll go to your calls in a couple of minutes. | ||
Let me go ahead and just give you a brief synopsis of some plans that I personally... | ||
I have constructed in my mind and I'm going to put down in probably a 10-page document in the next few weeks. | ||
Let's give myself more time. | ||
In the next month. | ||
I always do what I say I'm going to do. | ||
It usually takes me a little bit longer. | ||
I'm also going to get in here and put together some shows for you with news clips and other information to try to bring into focus what's happening in our country. | ||
Basically, we know this. | ||
And next week I'm going to play, I told you it's about Oklahoma. | ||
Well, he talks about a few other cases. | ||
And then next week we'll get into the Oklahoma City bombing with General Benton Parton, former head of Air Force Weapons Development in airborne-delivered munitions. | ||
You might have seen us covering up the screen some. | ||
There was a number up there. | ||
It wasn't a 1-800 number, which are totally not allowed, but I still like to not go anywhere past the rules, and so we covered that number up. | ||
Now, there's a number for comments here in town. | ||
If you have any news stories or anything that's been happening to you or your family or any documents, any whistleblowing you'd like to engage in, if you've got a story that will help people see the corruption and help shed light on it so it doesn't happen to others, please feel free to get in touch with us at 370-9558. | ||
Or you can write to me also. | ||
At that address, 12710 Research Boulevard, Suite 390, Austin, Texas, 78759. Feel free to write to me at that address. | ||
So keep Popo's numbers, put them on your refrigerator when something comes up, and we'll put the numbers up later. | ||
But basically, it's this. | ||
We know what's happened to our country. | ||
We know that taxes are out of control. | ||
We know that the media lies to us or gives us half the truth or diversions almost all the time. | ||
We know that occasionally because of the masses of information and all the new cable channels that some information... | ||
We don't have lights on in here tonight. | ||
I can't tell what camera's on. | ||
We do know that information like Tony Brown does get out. | ||
He hasn't been talking about this and suddenly comes out with it. | ||
He's been slowly inching towards it. | ||
He won't be getting any more interviews, I'll assure you, except for his PBS show and his radio show. | ||
It's very serious what's happening. | ||
We'll play that Tony Brown clip again later where he talks about the corrupt kubals out of Europe that run the world. | ||
So we know about this. | ||
Now, how are we going to effectively oppose this? | ||
If our federal government at the top is a bunch of traitors in both parties, if the people that do stand up are intimidated or shut out of the process and are given the silent treatment like Ron Paul and others, congressmen from Texas, what are we going to do about the federal level? | ||
We can ignore that. | ||
We can oppose what's happening, talk about what's happening, try to get things to change, try to show the corruption. | ||
But there's one problem. | ||
Clinton is pretty much invincible right now because the media has used conditioning with petty issues like sex scandals and other things to where we're sick of hearing about it to shield all the real treason, the missile components, the separation systems, the MIRV technology, the multiple warhead technology to China. | ||
The organs from China. | ||
We played clips of that last night. | ||
All the rest of this information. | ||
And I do want to say that I see more good information coming out on Fox than I see on any other stations, even though the commentator made fun of Tony Brown the whole time and said, but people are making a lot of money. | ||
People are making a lot of money. | ||
And Tony countered with facts to the commentator, well, actually, we've had better economies, and this is all BS and propaganda. | ||
But we've seen the problems. | ||
The solution is local grassroots activism. | ||
Seizing control may take five, six years in most cities of your local governments through education of the population about the real problems. | ||
In cities where they don't have access or their idea of access is a billboard for 30 seconds, which we're getting more and more of around here for some reason, but still we have the best access facility in the country and we're award-winning. | ||
We need to have access facilities. | ||
We need to have documentaries that people put together, circulated, pamphlets, books. | ||
We need to have people meeting in groups and speaking about serious issues, not successionist movements or leaving the union or any of this type of behavior, in my opinion. | ||
We need to push to let people know who it is that's controlling them and manipulating their lives. | ||
Once we know who the problem is, we can explain to people that the solution is local control. | ||
Just getting one council member elected here in Austin who isn't from the green lobby or the developer lobby, which are really all hand-in-hand together except for the handmaidens at the bottom that believe in whatever con game they're part of. | ||
What I'm saying is I'm talking about front groups. | ||
Beware front groups. | ||
If we can get one real city council member, one real commissioner, they may be isolated, but can you imagine Alex Jones or... | ||
Someone else, someone from our community who's well-spoken, with credentials, more so than myself, up there, exposing when they're building a helicopter base or exposing when the Delta Force is coming to town, which we stopped. | ||
Exposing things like that. | ||
Then think of the information. | ||
Then we get two, three, four people like the environmentalists have gotten. | ||
Then we dominate the entire city council. | ||
Now, it's going to be hard because the city council has attached itself and it's going on, even according to the New York Times, but they tell you, again, it's wonderful. | ||
If you're asking why I'm using mainstream media, well, they tell you it's great in today's New York Times about how battling sprawl states buy land for open space. | ||
Well, they don't tell you that they then sell part of it to their best friends and cronies. | ||
Talk about political power and cash cows. | ||
That's what we're talking about. | ||
We saw that here in Austin with the Brody track. | ||
They use your money. | ||
They get it. | ||
As a political power base and then sell it to their friends. | ||
It's just they're developers that don't have the money to actually buy the land. | ||
They use your money to buy it and then sell it. | ||
Or sell portions of it. | ||
So we've got to get people in place locally. | ||
Then we've got to have boycotts and protest of mainstream media as we are beginning to do. | ||
People who have been sitting on the couch have got to be vigilant and come out to the protest. | ||
They've got to get involved. | ||
Have got to call in to talk radio shows at least once or twice a week and voice different issues. | ||
See, if one person calls in and talks about the Trilateral Commission, or if Tony Brown talks about it, they can say, well, that's just a few people. | ||
But the more of you, imagine five of you in a row calling in to a talk radio show. | ||
And talking about a real issue when they're talking about something that's near that, but you can get off the diversion and into the reality. | ||
The host won't be laughing anymore, because the host, most of them just care about what's popular and what's cool and want to go along to get along. | ||
Now... | ||
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A good example of that is in this forthcoming Tony Brown interview. | |
Just look at the demeanor of the guy who's interviewing him. | ||
It's very, very patronizing and sarcastic, and that's just a... | ||
You know, the undertones are pretty sick, so I just... | ||
Yeah, he's acting like a school kid who's making a joke about something. | ||
Oh, the... | ||
unidentified
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Oh, Galileo, the earth is the center. | |
Oh, Columbus, the world is flat, don't you know? | ||
unidentified
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Ha ha ha! | |
Yes, that's exactly... | ||
That's exactly what we're talking about. | ||
But you notice, that's the most excited I've ever seen that commentator get. | ||
He got very excited. | ||
He didn't have any idea what was in that book, and when he suddenly heard it, he freaked out. | ||
unidentified
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I think it's horribly ironic. | |
I really don't know the guy's name, but I know definitely for a fact that he used to be one of those guys on a hard copy or one of those horrible schlock shows. | ||
His name is O'Reilly. | ||
So where's his background in journalistic integrity? | ||
Well, that's what I was talking about, about there being more media. | ||
There's so much media and so many deadlines that more and more of us are getting through with information. | ||
We may never get back on again, but we get out there a few times. | ||
The statesman even once said something about the Federal Reserve. | ||
But that's the key, is more and more people of prominence standing up, and then it will become accepted. | ||
You know, ideas that are revolutionary are always... | ||
We laughed at for a long time until a certain core group, up to 5%, who are educated, highly motivated, are willing to get out and talk about it. | ||
unidentified
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Everybody is prominent. | |
I hate to keep busting it on you like this, but this is one of the lies that they definitely project on you. | ||
Well, by prominent, I mean a school teacher, an auto mechanic, a doctor, a lawyer. | ||
unidentified
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Everyone. | |
Well, it certainly helps to get people who are already in place in positions of power. | ||
Wouldn't you state that? | ||
unidentified
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Absolutely, but everybody is in a position now. | |
Anybody, myself included, I said, myself included, can write a pamphlet with information and get it out. | ||
If you don't have all the facts, just get the basic information and get that out to people. | ||
Exactly. | ||
unidentified
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I just wanted to make the point that that was an inclusionary statement, not an exclusionary one about people in power. | |
Everyone is in power. | ||
Don't let them fool you. | ||
Yes, exactly. | ||
I believe, I'm saying people of prominence, but I'm saying... | ||
The media knows this. | ||
The government knows this. | ||
The power brokers know this. | ||
That's why they always court entertainers and professors and people, and they create meeting houses for them of social conditioning, of peer pressure. | ||
So that's the point I'm making. | ||
Just being honest here. | ||
Yes, everybody, Alex Jones, can do something. | ||
I'm talking about others who are prominent. | ||
We need them. | ||
We need people to go past the level of knowing it's real and go to the level of knowing that I'm not going to solve all the problems today, but my action will have repercussions in the future. | ||
What we do today won't be felt now. | ||
It actually is being felt now, but it'll be felt even more so in the future. | ||
And the enemy knows that. | ||
That's why they're in a long-term strategic goal. | ||
I used the example last week of the Houston city has been... | ||
Houston, our southern city here. | ||
It has been for six years trying to get the 2012 Olympics, and all the other cities have been doing it. | ||
That's just to get the Olympics. | ||
They're working 20 years out. | ||
Six years ago up until 2012, they're working now feverishly. | ||
Can you imagine what the power brokers of world finance and systems are doing? | ||
And the most dangerous thing is the psychology of the middle class as part of the system, and you have the trappings and the baubles of power. | ||
I assure you those are petty to the extreme. | ||
Real freedom is the freedom of the mind and seeing through the veil of the false reality that's being projected. | ||
And that's what we have here. | ||
And many civilizations have been under this. | ||
I don't want to go back and mention them over and over again. | ||
But we can see the barbarism or the strange mentality or the religious cults or the systems that have dominated civilizations. | ||
We need a science-based, fact-based civilization. | ||
So that's the plan. | ||
And I'm going to write it up and get it out to people. | ||
But people know what I'm talking about. | ||
We need people of prominence. | ||
Everybody. | ||
Grassroots. | ||
I mean, people prominent in our community. | ||
School teachers. | ||
You're prominent. | ||
You have young minds. | ||
You have power. | ||
Professors want to buck the system. | ||
Get out of the group psychology. | ||
It's time for you to leave junior high, UT professor. | ||
The popular game should leave now. | ||
You should wake up to what you're part of. | ||
Imagine if a UT professor, and there's many of them that are in the Council on Foreign Relations, in the outer rooms of power, imagine if one of them defected and came on this program and said, yes, I know about this, I've finally seen it. | ||
That's what we need. | ||
People coming out, putting it on the line, ignoring what phone calls they get from friends and people in the establishment. | ||
I've got a lot of those calls. | ||
I ignore them. | ||
I listen to what they have to say, but I ignore them. | ||
So that's it. | ||
Seize control of your local governments. | ||
Realize that you are all cattle and are being fed upon at the establishment's leisure. | ||
They have nothing but avarice for you. | ||
Okay, we're going to take about three phone calls, then we're going to go to Tony Brown again, and I'll be back for a few short comments. | ||
Hello, you're on the air. | ||
Yes, caller. | ||
You're on the air. | ||
Does phones crap out on us? | ||
Or is the phone not turned up in there? | ||
unidentified
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Alex, hey, something weird happened to me today. | |
I went to Albertson's about like 6.30 this afternoon, and they had a sign on the door saying absolutely no credit card transactions can be done. | ||
Said the system's like down, they're working on it. | ||
So I go in and I asked the manager. | ||
Hold on, I was at Luby's today, and their credit card system was down. | ||
unidentified
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So I asked the manager, I go, what's that sign mean? | |
He told me, I said, well, you mean... | ||
He said something about the satellites out of range. | ||
I said, is this your story? | ||
He goes, no, this is like nationwide. | ||
I go, wait a minute. | ||
I go, well, does the ATM machine work? | ||
He goes, I don't know. | ||
I don't think so. | ||
I'll say, well, what are people doing, man? | ||
They don't have, you can't use a credit card. | ||
That's what I'm saying. | ||
Hold on, hold on. | ||
The Y2K problems, the government could be releasing viruses into the system, computer viruses. | ||
Anything could be happening right now, but that's speculation. | ||
unidentified
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Well, I wonder if anybody else, maybe one of your callers, somebody could call in. | |
Did it happen? | ||
You said it happened to Luby's today? | ||
Yes, their credit card systems were down, and they said that they were down all over town. | ||
unidentified
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Was it about 6 o'clock or 6? | |
This was at about 1 o'clock. | ||
unidentified
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Well, this kind of scares me because, I mean, what can they just turn off? | |
You know, if everybody gets this card and there's no cash, they can just turn off. | ||
Your access to anything at any time, not just one person, everybody. | ||
That's the point. | ||
They advertise all this stuff as if it's for convenience, but it's really to track you and control you and make you impotent and weak. | ||
unidentified
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Well, that's like, you could talk riots. | |
People would just, I mean, what's going to happen? | ||
They just, I mean, it's just so much they can control. | ||
They're just like, all right, we'll just cut off the money. | ||
Bam! | ||
Well... | ||
Again, you're going to have natural problems in complex computer systems and information networks, but yes, the experts are saying that we're already seeing Y2K problems, and one year from now is when any time a huge crash will come. | ||
And by 2000, we will have a serious one. | ||
unidentified
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This is a mess. | |
All right, well, keep up the good work. | ||
But don't worry, the government's going to save you. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah. | |
See you later. | ||
Hello, you're on the air. | ||
unidentified
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Yes, hello. | |
Am I on the air? | ||
Yes. | ||
unidentified
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Okay, Alex, I've got a lot of news stories here, but I realize you don't have very much time, so I'm going to be quick. | |
I've got one here from the Associated Press. | ||
It's called Italian Soldiers Accused of Torture in Somalia. | ||
It reads, Rome. | ||
First the Somalia prisoners were forced to eat hot peppers. | ||
Then came cigarette burns. | ||
Finally, electric shocks to the testicles. | ||
Former paratroopers' chilling allegations of torture in Somalia have cast a dark cloud over the Italian peacekeeping force as it heads a multinational force in Albania. | ||
Hey, hold on a second. | ||
I've actually shown the photos of that, and I forgot to cue that up because somebody wanted to see it tonight. | ||
I'll try during the break to find it on a two-hour tape. | ||
unidentified
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Okay. | |
And some photos I had, and I put them in my documentary. | ||
unidentified
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All right. | |
Let me go on, though. | ||
It gets worse. | ||
Well, hold on. | ||
Would you please... | ||
I know they cut children's heads off and made them eat urine and vomit. | ||
Would you please mail me that article, sir? | ||
unidentified
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Yeah, I'll get that to you and more. | |
Well, I really appreciate it. | ||
Please do it. | ||
unidentified
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You got it. | |
You got it. | ||
Let me continue here. | ||
Similar allegations of torture have been leveled against... | ||
Canadian and Belgian troops who took part in the United Nations Restore Hope mission during Somalia Civil War in 1993. Now, all those dead bodies you saw floating down the river, that was the UN doing that for some oil companies, huh? | ||
unidentified
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Yes, yes. | |
In the Panorama interview, Petruno described a pattern of abuse by Italian soldiers during patrols, from smashing jugs of precious water to destroying a house where a single bullet was found. | ||
Hmm, interesting bullets, huh? | ||
Torture was used during interrogation and designed to force prisoners to disclose where arms were stored. | ||
Petruno said. | ||
Officers were often present during the mistreatment, he said. | ||
The abuse grew steadily worse to the point of throwing prisoners against razor wire. | ||
Quote, these things grew out of pure sadism, Petruno said. | ||
I've got another one here. | ||
This is Italian troop leaders cleared in Somalia Trobe. | ||
After questioning more than 100 people about alleged torture and sexual abuse by Italian troops in Somalia, a government-appointed commission concluded Friday that they were isolated offenses, but top commanders played no role. | ||
The multinational relief effort in Somalia lasted from 1992 to 1995. Witness accounts and souvenir snapshots. | ||
Oh, don't you love that? | ||
They're just souvenir snapshots taken by peacekeepers from Canada, Belgium, Italy, and other countries, which we haven't heard about. | ||
Sir, sir, I've got to... | ||
I've got to go. | ||
unidentified
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Okay, I'm almost done here. | |
Have revealed an array of alleged crimes by foreign troops, including torture, rape, and murder of Somalis. | ||
This is what we're facing. | ||
Sir, they killed all, we're not sure, between 500,000 and a million people. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah. | |
They were, I get it mixed up, they were... | ||
They were using the Hutus against the Tutsis, I believe. | ||
I've got all the actual photos and documentation. | ||
unidentified
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People need to realize this is what we're facing. | |
Yeah, mail that to me. | ||
Okay, we're going to go ahead and go to the Tony Brown clip. | ||
It's about five minutes long. | ||
This is Tony Brown again. | ||
On Fox about two weeks ago explaining his research, everything you've heard from me, everything you've heard from General Parton, everything you've heard from Ted Gunderson, FBI. It's just the truth. | ||
It's historical. | ||
It's documented. | ||
We'll go ahead and go to Tony Brown, and I'll be back for a few quick comments. | ||
Don't forget, Exposing Corruption is here every Tuesday night from 8.30 to 11 p.m. | ||
You've got your own minds. | ||
I'm talking about this grassroots effort. | ||
Grassroots means you've got the capacity, you've got the mind, you've got the solutions. | ||
Look what I've done in three years. | ||
You can do something too. | ||
We'll be right back. | ||
Here's Tony Brown exposing crime rings. | ||
unidentified
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When they were organized on May the 1st, 1776 at Ingolstadt University in Bavaria, Germany by Adam Weiskopf, they were called the Order of the Illuminati or the Order of the Devil. | |
And illuminati obviously means to illuminate, to brighten. | ||
And the premise is that people who are aristocratic, elitist, and aristocratic have become illuminated by reason. | ||
And the reason replaces God. | ||
So there's no need for God. | ||
God is... | ||
Well, why is the need for the devil then? | ||
Well, the need for the devil because the devil is illuminated. | ||
The devil is intelligent. | ||
The devil uses reason. | ||
How does this apply to modern-day America? | ||
These people are descendants of the hedonists over in Germany? | ||
Well, some of them... | ||
They picked it up? | ||
Well, it's been centered in England in the recent centuries more so than anywhere else. | ||
But Illuminati was... | ||
People were identified as illuminati during the revolutionary period. | ||
Karl Marx was an illuminist. | ||
So you have bad people who worship the devil in charge, and that's what you're saying? | ||
They're in America now, they're in high positions, they make a lot of money? | ||
You have pious people who are Jews, Muslims, Christians, Buddhists, and you have pious people who believe in Satan, and some who believe in Lucifer, who are not the same in their world. | ||
They believe in the devil. | ||
So they have a different attitude toward life. | ||
Yours and mine is like, let's be up above board and make the world a better place. | ||
Their attitude is, let's Stay under the table and try to destroy people because we've got to save souls, catch souls for the devil. | ||
Really? | ||
You really believe all this stuff, Tony? | ||
This isn't me. | ||
This is not Tony Brown. | ||
Who are these devil guys? | ||
Can you name some names here? | ||
Well, you know, there are a lot of people throughout history and a lot of people today. | ||
Oh, give me one dead guy so he's not going to sue you. | ||
Okay, that's a good point. | ||
Karl Marx was one. | ||
All right. | ||
And Karl Marx was... | ||
Hitler? | ||
Yeah. | ||
I don't think Hitler was. | ||
Hitler was a fanatical white supremacist. | ||
Okay. | ||
But Karl Marx was a devil. | ||
So you believe that these guys exist, this cabal, a worldwide cabal? | ||
Do they communicate among each other? | ||
Do they send emails? | ||
Yes. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Hey, Satan, how you doing today? | ||
I'm not sure about that. | ||
But they're organized. | ||
Really? | ||
They're organized? | ||
They have conventions down in St. Bart's or someplace? | ||
I'm not sure. | ||
I mean, I've never been invited to one. | ||
No, I haven't either. | ||
I mean, it doesn't get a lot of coverage. | ||
If so, we're going to have you on. | ||
There are secret societies that don't get a lot of coverage. | ||
Skull and bones? | ||
Skull and bones doesn't get much coverage because many of the members of skull and bones are so powerful that the people in power just don't report on them. | ||
Now, assuming that what you're saying is true, and I can't say it's true because I really have no knowledge of this at all. | ||
What are these people doing to us? | ||
Well, it's not what they're doing to us. | ||
It's the way they manage the world. | ||
This is a point of view. | ||
This is an organized movement. | ||
There are things going on in the United States right now. | ||
For example, there are two ways to look at history. | ||
The accidental view of history and the conspiratorial view of history. | ||
Give me some concrete examples. | ||
Well, I'll give you a concrete example. | ||
One concrete example is the central bank, the Federal Reserve Bank. | ||
Federal Reserve Bank, okay. | ||
Federal Reserve Bank was organized by a group of people mostly from Europe and from the United States, England and German bankers, who set up in the United States Karl Marx's version of The Communist Manifesto. | ||
The central bank is the second plank in the Communist Manifesto. | ||
And the income tax is the fifth plank in the Communist Manifesto. | ||
But the Federal Reserve basically keeps the economy humming. | ||
I mean, we're all making money here in the finest capitalistic system the world has ever seen. | ||
Well, that depends on your point of view. | ||
Yeah, but look. | ||
No, this is not the best economy in the world. | ||
Everybody's making money, though. | ||
Everybody is not making money, and we have an economy that is very fragile. | ||
It's based on smoke and mirrors. | ||
And if you don't believe Tony Brown, read the May 4th issue, 1998, of the Wall Street Journal, an editorial by a man named Edward Yardini, the managing director of Deutsche Morgan Greenfell Investment Banking. | ||
You can't get any more establishment than him. | ||
But it's just one guy's opinion, you know? | ||
It's one guy's opinion, but this one guy is very, very influential. | ||
And this man writes in the Wall Street Journal that does not allow a lot of nutty articles to appear, that there is a 60% chance of a recession or depression in 1999 or year 2000 because of the Y2K problem. | ||
But that's what economies go up, they go down, they go in, they go out. | ||
That's the marketplace. | ||
But that's why this is not a great economy. | ||
This economy is an economy that's a Ponzi scheme. | ||
You've got a whole bunch of folks putting money at the bottom, taking their money out of mortgages, putting them into stock, and they can't afford it. | ||
When the bubble bursts, as Greenspan has tried to warn them, the irrational exuberance, then people aren't going to lose. | ||
They're going to get hurt. | ||
They're going to get real hurt, and a whole lot of people While a handful of people at the top are going to have the biggest consolidation of wealth ever seen. | ||
Let's get up the address. | ||
Let's get the address up there if you want to write me or contact me. | ||
I really appreciate your letters. | ||
I don't read a lot of them on the air. | ||
Next week I'll show some of these beautiful pictures of some artwork that one of my fans did. | ||
Give me a close shot right now. | ||
I need to do this. | ||
I don't want to do a bad job of this, so I'll just show it next week. | ||
We'll show you some close-ups next week. | ||
Thanks for sending me these and all the rest of the other information. | ||
Alright, I'll be back next week. | ||
Right here at the same time. | ||
Same bat time, same bat channel. | ||
I want to thank my producers, Buckley and Andy. | ||
I want to thank Mike from the Freedom Report, which is Monday nights from 7 to 8.30 p.m. | ||
This is not a joke. | ||
This is the real deal. | ||
This is Third World War. | ||
This is economic warfare. | ||
I'm not kidding with you out there. | ||
The truth is there. | ||
It's in your face. | ||
You know it's real. | ||
Now, what are you going to do about it? | ||
You have incredible power. | ||
Black, white, every single one of you. | ||
Get involved today. | ||
I'm Alex Jones, the host of Exposing Corruption. | ||
And I'm here to tell you I'm not kidding you. | ||
He who hath ears and eyes, let them see, let them hear, let them know. | ||
Stand the hell up. | ||
You've got to do it. | ||
Please get involved. | ||
I'll see you next Monday and next Tuesday. |