Speaker | Time | Text |
---|---|---|
unidentified
|
Who's going first? | |
I am. | ||
Okay. | ||
Can you hand me that hand, Mike, please? | ||
Sir, how long do we have to talk on the books? | ||
What is on the books? | ||
I'm going to try to be reasonable with you. | ||
I ask you, since you've made a number of appearances consistently for several weeks, not to be repetitious. | ||
That only makes it more... | ||
No, I'm asking what's on the books. | ||
unidentified
|
You may wait. | |
And we have an agenda that is posted. | ||
We have people expecting our business. | ||
I would ask you to try to keep your remarks to about three minutes if you can. | ||
Okay, that's not what I asked. | ||
I asked what is on the books? | ||
What is written down of how long you can speak? | ||
What are the rules? | ||
I'm the presiding officer and there aren't any rules about citizens' communication. | ||
We don't need to have them. | ||
We've operated so far. | ||
We've operated with people who come here with respect to their fellow citizens. | ||
We have business before the court that is scheduled. | ||
Citizens communication is not scheduled business, so I'll allow a reasonable amount of time. | ||
All I ask you to do is not be repetitive of things you've said in the past week or so, and we'll be reasonable with you. | ||
So what you're saying is citizens are not considered business. | ||
We're not considered. | ||
Yes, yes. | ||
Citizens should be considered above anybody else. | ||
We're not going to sit here and debate this, sir. | ||
If you want to speak to the commissioner's court, you may begin. | ||
I'm speaking right now. | ||
I'm asking you to hold your comments, if you can, to approximately three minutes. | ||
Thank you very much. | ||
You may proceed. | ||
Here, I don't need this. | ||
I want to just let the citizens of Austin know, for those of you who don't know what's been going on down here, About five or six weeks ago, one of the commissioners, I believe, ordered the SWAT team down here to intimidate a private citizen, Alex here, who came down here to speak. | ||
My name is Greg Erickson. | ||
Y'all should have that down. | ||
I've been here a bunch. | ||
They intimidated a citizen who came here to talk. | ||
And once again, I would like to ask you, who ordered the SWAT team to be in here? | ||
We know, Greg. | ||
I want to hear it from them. | ||
I told you we're not posted to discuss this with you, and we're not going to have a conversation about it. | ||
We'll listen to your testimony. | ||
If you're through with your testimony, we'll go to someone else. | ||
Do you understand how suspicious? | ||
You guys are the ones who are making yourselves look suspicious with your actions. | ||
We're just looking for truth. | ||
We're just looking for what's right. | ||
You guys are doing it. | ||
I'm just sitting here asking you a simple question. | ||
You did it. | ||
Who asked the SWAT team to come in? | ||
Just give us an answer. | ||
Everything's fine. | ||
If you don't give us an answer, The public is going to become very suspicious of your actions, is my opinion. | ||
In me as a citizen, it makes me suspicious. | ||
Thank you for your testimony. | ||
I'm not through. | ||
Please conclude your remarks. | ||
Can anybody tell me who is investigating the county auditor's office? | ||
What's going on with that? | ||
What's going on with the County Auditor's Office? | ||
You wrote an 18-page document alleging wrongdoing in the County Auditor's Office. | ||
What is being done? | ||
My phone number is 473-9555. | ||
And you can tell me at that time? | ||
Is that correct? | ||
I'll tell you what I know. | ||
Why can't you tell me now? | ||
Sir, we're not supposed to engage in deliberation here. | ||
I'm able to make only certain comments to you. | ||
I don't think you understand. | ||
You are not recognized to speak for them. | ||
We are in citizens' communication. | ||
We have not posted this item. | ||
We have posted items that we gave notice we were going to consider and debate. | ||
That's after Citizens Communications. | ||
In the meantime, we provide an informal opportunity for you to say anything without interfering in the meeting that you want to say. | ||
But you can't talk to us. | ||
Yes, sir, that's right, because we don't have an item posted on the agenda to engage in this conversation. | ||
If you want to propose that, just like you would any other... | ||
Once again, I'd like to announce to the citizens of Austin that you cannot dialogue with your own Travis County government. | ||
Now you tell me what's up. | ||
You tell me what's up. | ||
Sir, would you finish your remarks you've been speaking for? | ||
Yes. | ||
My last remark is I hope everybody out there will remember the day all, I don't remember which ones, you tried to get a 36% pay raise. | ||
And I hope the citizens of Austin will remember that. | ||
I know memory goes fast. | ||
A 36% pay raise while the rest of your workers... | ||
Took next to nothing. | ||
Could you explain that? | ||
I'm through. | ||
Thank you very much. | ||
Who's next? | ||
I'll go next. | ||
My name is Alex Jones, and this whole SWAT team deal, I'm not going to speak on this very much more. | ||
I've already showed the documentation of me sitting there peaceably in the front row and people attempting to intimidate me. | ||
It actually had the opposite effect. | ||
I probably would have been here once. | ||
Now I'll be here with you as long as I live here in Austin, whenever I can make it down. | ||
Basically because, it's like Samuel Adams says, it does not require a majority to prevail, but rather an irate, tireless minority keen to set bushfires in people's minds. | ||
And we're setting those bushfires in people's minds peaceably. | ||
I don't know if it was intentional or non-intentional. | ||
I'm sure it was intentional. | ||
Y'all actually don't know who we have working. | ||
In y'all's institutions, and it's really no big deal. | ||
It's nothing wrong with friends telling people what goes on at work. | ||
Y'all went up to a person who wants nothing to do with it and actually disagreed with some of our politics and began to tell her about how I'm under investigation and others' investigation. | ||
Please investigate me. | ||
You can follow me over to my grandparents' house. | ||
You can follow me down to the Greenbelt, wherever I'm taking my dogs on a walk. | ||
You will see the right-wing evil in action, let me tell you. | ||
Now, I want to speak about a couple things. | ||
You notice we're here as regulars now, and then earlier you all kind of belittled that. | ||
No, I make an investment to come down here for the community. | ||
Just because a lot of other people have been disenfranchised and taught that you can't fight City Hall, I'm here to shatter that myth, and I will shatter that myth. | ||
It's very important to understand that there have been many other people here too, parents and others, To oppose ASAP, they have the Student Assistance Program, where they send constables out to elementary school students' homes the first time their child misses, and 19% of the time, according to your own numbers, when, this is important, the parents did call in. | ||
This is an abuse of power. | ||
This is textbook command and control, social engineering, and we know it's coming down from federal programs that's being mimicked across this nation. | ||
This is dangerous. | ||
This is very dangerous. | ||
And only bureaucrats have been here in support of it. | ||
To sit around and lie and show you their false information that Steve Lane did an excellent presentation and has brought those presentations out. | ||
And I hope Steve isn't brought into political kowtowing and back-slapping and isn't conned for a couple weeks on this. | ||
Now, I am going to sit here and I'm going to tell you the truth about this. | ||
This is my last thing I want to say. | ||
You're being conned out there, my friends. | ||
I know the commissioners don't control this, but I'm going to use this as a forum. | ||
In 1992, when President Bill Clinton got in office, he signed an executive order to go in the Federal Register to have citizens across the nation thumb-scan if states wanted their highway funds. | ||
That is a dangerous trend, and the same systems are being pushed by the major central banks of the world. | ||
It's a very serious slave system to track you like cattle. | ||
Then Bill Clinton in 1996 ordered urine and blood testing for everyone who wants a driver's license. | ||
Now, the media told you it's people 18 and under, and now they're asking people at the DPS offices questionnaires. | ||
When are we going to wake up when they want us to get on cattle cars? | ||
When are we going to wake up? | ||
In a few years, you'll be going in if we don't stop this here in Texas, and I'm preparing to go down there and have a sit-in like Martin Luther King, and they want to drag me off and have some kangaroo court judge sentence me in six months. | ||
That's fine. | ||
I don't care. | ||
I'm going in there, and I'm going to peaceably stand up against this. | ||
And I'm doing real good. | ||
I'm living a good life, and I don't want to go get arrested and have, you know, where some murderer gets six months and I get six months for standing up against people being thumbscanned like cattle. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you, Mr. Lieutenant. | |
Sir, I am not done. | ||
People come in here and they speak five minutes, and I speak three or four, and I'm told to be quiet. | ||
This country is in deep trouble. | ||
unidentified
|
And I would ask you to finish your remarks. | |
Fine, I will finish my remarks. | ||
But all I'm saying is, is it's time for people out there to get off their rumps. | ||
It's time that we get at least 5% of this town standing up on a regular basis. | ||
I speak everywhere, from UT to churches to downsized government meetings. | ||
I am working my butt off of shortwave radio, FM, mainstream radio, AXS TV, making documentaries. | ||
I am busting it, and I'm telling you, you're right, I do want notoriety to stand up to this. | ||
I'm putting my life on the line for this. | ||
I know this isn't a joke, like most of the citizens of this country. | ||
You people need to wake up. | ||
The TV is not your mommy and your daddy. | ||
Parents need to talk to your children at night when they get home. | ||
The schools and the TV are training your kids. | ||
Like David Rockefeller said in a trilateral commission meeting, the public schools are helpless people yielding themselves to our molding hands. | ||
Read history. | ||
Find out about the fascism. | ||
God bless America. | ||
Long live the republic. | ||
And death to the new world order. | ||
Death the idea of a police state out of control. | ||
Please wake up America. | ||
Please stop going along with the popular culture. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you, Mr. Jones. | |
Who's next? | ||
I'll be next, but I need to hand you something first. | ||
Sure. | ||
I want to waste my time. | ||
You'll just hand them to Margaret. | ||
She'll pass them down to us. | ||
Please introduce me. | ||
Yes, my name is John Foreman. | ||
I am the host of Texas Best Seminars. | ||
And as you know, Texas Best Seminars is a teaching and alternative media organization. | ||
Right now we have about nine TV shows in operation here on Austin Access TV channels. | ||
We have four radio stations, or excuse me, four radio shows. | ||
We currently have our 12 seminar agenda in place. | ||
Right now we're trying to get into the legislature. | ||
We're visible now at the City Council with our Return to the Government People campaign, thanks to Greg Erickson. | ||
We're down here at the Commissioner's Court with our In Your Face campaign, especially speaking out against the ASAP program. | ||
During the 21st and 22nd of March at the Chariot Inn, Dessie Andrews and James Heyman will be giving a seminar on invisible contracts. | ||
That's from 8 in the morning to 6 p.m. | ||
for those two days. | ||
And you can call 703-6767 to get additional information. | ||
April 4th, we're having a Pay No More Income Tax Seminar with Irwin Schiff. | ||
That's April 4th, 10 a.m. | ||
at the Chariot Inn. | ||
Last week when Alex was giving his verbose speech, he made a statement, and I quote, You commissioners are being duped by the powers that be, just like we are, but you are only doing your job. | ||
He was right. | ||
All of you are just doing your job. | ||
Let's look at another bureaucratic agency just doing its job and how it affects all of us. | ||
Irwin Schiff makes a brilliant statement when he says, organized crime in America begins with the federal government. | ||
For example, on April 15th, approximately 125 million duped Americans, including yourselves, will line up in front of the Federal Reserve Building and deposit their hard-earned money into the coffers, along with their signed confessions, the 10W40 form. | ||
The federal government is only doing its job. | ||
Some of you will lie, some will just exaggerate the truth, but the government is only doing its job. | ||
Some of you will get refunds, others will be forced to pay, but the government is only doing its job. | ||
If the IRS agents think you've lied, they will audit your records, so be prepared to explain, because the burden of proof is on you. | ||
But the government is only doing its job. | ||
If they find any discrepancies on your 1040, they will penalize you, demand additional money, and maybe inform your employer, but they are only doing their job. | ||
If you're broke and your family can barely make ends meet, they will send a notice of levy to your boss and garnish your wages, but they are only doing their job. | ||
If you have any money in the bank, The bank will turn it over to the IRS illegally, but they are only doing their job. | ||
Each year, thousands of Americans are audited just for the hell of it, but the government is only doing its job. | ||
What a horrific tale. | ||
All that because the government is just doing its job. | ||
In 1979, you'll see Exhibit A. Jerome Kurtz, Commissioner of the Internal Revenue Service, mentioned in that annual report no less than six times the voluntary nature of income taxes. | ||
Well, if paying is voluntary, why will 125 million Americans volunteer? | ||
The federal government crossed the line years ago, just like the commissioners of this court had when you doctored statistics and graphs. | ||
As noted by Steve Lane over the past two weeks to justify the continuation of the ASP hoax program. | ||
Mr. Forney, I need to ask you to conclude your remarks. | ||
I am finishing, sir. | ||
That is not your job. | ||
Lying, usurping parental and constitutional rights, squandering taxpayers' money, fraud and mismanagement, that is not doing your job. | ||
Sending armed police officers out to homes of one-time absentees, that is not doing your job. | ||
Your job is to empower the constituency in Travis County so that they will exercise the right to vote on issues affecting their community. | ||
Your job is to save taxpayers' money and expose fraud. | ||
Your job is to eliminate the abuses of citizens' constitutional rights. | ||
Now that you know what your job is, do your job. | ||
Eliminate the ASP program or make it voluntary. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Thank you, Mr. Farmer. | ||
Good morning. | ||
I'm Jessie Anderson. | ||
I appreciate having this forum to address the men and women of Travis County. | ||
I wanted to talk a little bit about ASAP and why I'm diametrically opposed to it. | ||
Number one, because I think it's a terrible intrusion into children's lives. | ||
And as Mr. Castro said earlier, it is our job as parents and grandparents to protect children. | ||
I think they must be protected at all costs, and that includes their privacy. | ||
First, it's fraternity program. | ||
I just see a broadening of many things that can happen as an intrusion into children. | ||
Fingerprinting of school children without parents' consent or prior notification has begun in the public schools of South Carolina. | ||
If it can happen in South Carolina, it can happen in Texas. | ||
A first-grade child in the Greenville County, South Carolina Public Schools came home Friday afternoon, February 20, 1998, with a purple thumb and a button pinned to his shirt saying, I'm Thumbbody. | ||
That's what the program is at school. | ||
This is the... | ||
They thought it was cute, too. | ||
This is the beginning of what is considered biometric identification. | ||
First thumb prints, blood analysis, retinal scans. | ||
I think that we just have to be very careful. | ||
And if we can't protect it anyplace else, I would stress that we protect it on the elementary children. | ||
Be very, very careful of their rights and intrusions into their lives. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Thank you, Ms. Anderson. Ms. Anderson. | ||
My name is Wes Curtis. | ||
I'm with Texas Best Seminars. | ||
Texas Best Seminars downsize government conferences, address the Travis County Commissioner's Court, the county attorney's office, and the five elected officials known as constables. | ||
The present ASAP enforcement policy, as we have revealed last week, in violation of this state's education and family codes, we are here today to reveal how ASAP is also in violation of constitutional law. | ||
To the Constable's Office, we question, due to your deliberate indifference, your qualifications to be licensed and commissioned peace officers of this state when you blatantly ignore U.S. Supreme Court and U.S. Fifth Court case law to enforce ASAP in the manner you have chosen. | ||
Therefore, today, we use this portion of the Citizens' Communication period to offer you a reminder of what must have been a fundamental part of your State Peace Officers Academy or TCLOS. Required in-service training that may have been missed or slept through. | ||
The subject involves a Fourth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution and it guarantees against unreasonable search and seizures as defined by the highest courts of this country. | ||
Members of the court and county attorney, you have each received controlling and mandatory case decisions from courts of proper jurisdiction that I will refer to which are relevant to ASAP. They have helped to define the very strict instances where law enforcement officials may gain consent to tread on private property. | ||
They are shepherdized and found to be sustained or followed by our own U.S. Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans and other federal circuits and by numerous state appeal courts in the U.S. Supreme Court. | ||
We invite you to review these with your legal staffs. | ||
Who are constables? | ||
Constables are designated as peace officers by Article 2.12 of this state's Code of Criminal Procedure. | ||
They, per Code of Criminal Procedure, Article 2.13, are charged with the same duties and responsibilities as any other law enforcement officer to use all lawful means to preserve the peace in its jurisdiction. | ||
The broad definition of a search. | ||
A search by a government official, be he one from a school or a constable, is by definition... | ||
An invasion of privacy. | ||
The Fourth Amendment allows this invasion only under precise circumstances, though. | ||
It says all searches are to... | ||
It says all searches are to... | ||
Conducted by authority of a warrant or probable cause. | ||
The famous Terry v. | ||
Ohio case set it into granite. | ||
The requirement that law enforcement must have before being justified and detailed as citizen number one. | ||
Articulable facts leading to the reasonable suspicion that would make a reasonable and prudent person to believe that a crime has been committed or is imminent in being committed. | ||
Example, that all that's called probable cause, that a criminal law has been broken or is soon to be. | ||
And, number two, that the detention of a citizen is no longer then necessary. | ||
So a constable requires requests or orders a parent to open up her home to talk with school-aged children suspected of truancy. | ||
That home is being searched by the officer's color of authority and power of his appointed office. | ||
Remember now, no crime has been committed. | ||
Neither is there a reasonable suspicion that a crime is imminent in being committed. | ||
No legal process or warrant for the home search or an order to take the child into protective custody exists. | ||
Finally, there is no authority under the Education Code, Section 25.091, see attached Exhibit A. For truancy to be enforced in this manner, but no matter the home is searched. | ||
The broad definition of a seizure. | ||
A seizure is, by definition, the exercise of dominion or control of something, like, for instance, private property or a person. | ||
This is occurring when a constable arrives on private property and requests a citizen to converse with him on the subject matters of truancy and his or her child. | ||
That citizen is seized by the officer's color of authority and power of his appointed office. | ||
Remember, no crime has been committed. | ||
There is no reasonable suspicion that a crime is imminent to be committed. | ||
No legal process or warrant for the citizen's protective custody exists. | ||
Finally, there is no authority under the Education Code, Section 25.091, see attached Exhibit A, for the truancy to be enforced in this manner, but no matter the citizen is seized. | ||
Special circumstances. | ||
Lawful seizures of a private residence or a person is allowed also when any of the following precise circumstances are present. | ||
Exigent circumstances. | ||
Number two, lawful consent. | ||
Or number three, lawful pursuit. | ||
We won't worry ourselves... | ||
You need to finish your remarks. | ||
I am, sir. | ||
We won't concern ourselves with number three, lawful pursuit, because it's obvious that the police can follow a fleeing bad guy who enters a resident or business. | ||
Exigent circumstances. | ||
Our courts have ruled that exigent circumstances justify government officials entering private property. | ||
Examples are when the evidence of a crime... | ||
Discovered in plain view or the subject of a warrant is likely to be destroyed, hostage situations, if there is an imminent danger to the officer's physical safety or if life-saving medical assistance is required for a citizen. | ||
Lawful consent. | ||
Government officials may seize and search a private residence if lawful consent has been given. | ||
Here we get the core method of how these constables are pulling off these violations of privacy rights. | ||
In the case of Shloknoff v. Bustamani, see the attached Exhibit B, the United States Supreme Court said that the government must prove the consent given by someone. | ||
Mr. Curtis, make good use of your last 30 seconds. | ||
As not under an arrest at the time he gave it. | ||
Can you take this over from there? | ||
Thank you. | ||
My name is Steve Lane. | ||
unidentified
|
Good morning, Steve. | |
Good morning. | ||
I want to finish this last part here. | ||
A constable, already ignoring the lawful manner of enforcement and definitions of truancy given by the Texas Education and Family Codes, approaches a home without a lawful reason. | ||
He pounds on the door and orders or threatens the residents inside to open the door and to talk with him. | ||
He has technically seized that residence. | ||
Its inhabitants usually comply. | ||
They're intimidated and scared, but nonetheless are seized by virtue of his authority, thereby raising a question to the willingness of any consent given. | ||
Once again, it's the government's burden to prove that the officer's request to open up and talk was not obeyed out of fear or intimidation. | ||
In light of the circumstances of sub-citizens who have testified before this court, it would be an uphill battle for constables to prove that no coercion exists. | ||
Post Bustamante, I believe, is the proper pronunciation. | ||
Courts, such as the U.S. Fifth Circuit, have come to consider various factors in helping to determine if consent to search of a residence was voluntarily given. | ||
I direct your attention to the attached Exhibit C, U.S. v. | ||
Jenkins. | ||
One of the several factors that Jenkins concerns is the behavior of the officer involved. | ||
Was his mannerism threatening? | ||
Another concerns the resident. | ||
Was he or she aware of their right to refuse the consent? | ||
To an order to open up the door. | ||
If the officer was threatening and or the homeowner didn't know he could refuse the order to open his door, then there probably was some coercion on the part of the officer. | ||
Once again, I direct your attentions to just what ASAP enforcement entails. | ||
Armed police ignoring the state education code enforcement regulations, going to homes in the evening hours with no warrant or exigent circumstances, Pounding on the door of the home, ordering those inside to open up and speak with the officer, all a process of forced consent. | ||
In conclusion, county officials, you're going to have to do away altogether with this ASAP business or make it optional at least to escape the potential civil liabilities. | ||
But let's say you're happy with this ASAP program. | ||
What do you plan to do when parents come to the realization that all they need to do is call your collective bluffs? | ||
What if the parents learned that by sending via certified mail an express written declaration that if a truancy accusation ever arises against one of their children, that constables are not allowed on their property without lawful authority under the family and education codes? | ||
To the constable offices involved, will you go back to your ministerial duties for Article 2.13 of the Code of Criminal Procedure? | ||
Or will you continue to push the envelope further by pursuing this already proven illegal practice and policy and eventually bring personal supervisory liability upon yourselves for failure to instruct and supervise those in your command? | ||
Will those of you who continue this high-handed practice risk written complaints and official oppression charges being filed against you? | ||
How far will your collective arrogances go? | ||
To the Commissioner's Court and the County Attorney's Office, why do you allow this travesty of justice? | ||
Why do you sanction the violation of the State Education and Family Codes? | ||
What about the right to be left alone in one's home when no crime is or has been committed there? | ||
We question your fitness for holding elected office when you idly sit by and knowingly allow these violations of the Fourth Amendment and the Texas Family and Education Codes. | ||
The highest criminal court in our state had it right when in the case of Wheeler v. | ||
State, attached to Exhibit E, declared in 1982 that the Constitution does not require that one erect a stone bastion or retreat to a cellar to exhibit a reasonable expectation of privacy. | ||
We, Texas Best Seminars, Downsizing Government Conferences, echo that sentiment. | ||
Citizens of Travis County take note of this ASAP issue. | ||
Isn't this the way of liberals? | ||
If they have to disobey the law and trample in on your rights to achieve their agendas, they will do so. | ||
If we at Texas Best Seminars downsizing government conferences have to do it alone, we will fight for the common citizens' right to privacy and a return of government obeying the laws that we the people have embraced through our elected representatives. | ||
One's home, be it mine or yours... | ||
unidentified
|
You need to finish your remarks soon. | |
Yes, sir. | ||
One's home, be it mine, yours or anyone else's, is a castle. | ||
There will be no violation of that castle without lawful reason or consent, consent that can come only from truly free and informed men and women. | ||
Finally, we are pro-police and pro-law enforcement. | ||
This is not an issue about how well ASAP works to curb truancy. | ||
In fact, this program would work better if we would only put constables into every home with school-aged children 24 hours a day. | ||
Obviously, this would make even the ASAP promote its crimes constitutional. | ||
I have about a paragraph left. | ||
We, from a fearless and more informed vantage point, are declaring that the infringement of civil rights has occurred over this ASAP program as it is implemented. | ||
As the highest courts of the land have ruled, this is possible before any law enforcement officer enters a home, as with the current ASAP program. | ||
Socialists, Marxists, and Nazi-style tactics have always proven to be efficient and effective. | ||
That doesn't mean that they pass the litmus test of constitutionality in a free society as ours. | ||
Again, we are pro-police, pro-law enforcement, and pro-property rights, particularly local. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you, Mr. Lang. | |
- Who's next? - I wanna speak next. | ||
- There's one last portion. | ||
unidentified
|
- Please, go right ahead. | |
- Last paragraph? | ||
- Okay. | ||
- Right at the however. | ||
unidentified
|
- However, we are opposed to the-- - Ma'am, would you please introduce yourself? - Unnecessary. | |
However, we are opposed to the illegal use of police power by a privileged few who would force their social utopian agendas down our throats of their fellow citizens Which violate constitutional law and our state's family and education code. | ||
And also, I don't want to continue with the ASAP issue. | ||
I want to continue with my own personal issue. | ||
In 1992, this court, in 93, I filed lawsuit against Judge Elshire. | ||
In regards to forcible entry of my home from two appraisal personnel people, you never acknowledged my suit. | ||
Now I am in district court, federal district court, and you are being sued for fraud and conspiracy from this court. | ||
I wish she would resign immediately. | ||
I am glad that after you give up your position, you will attend school to become an attorney. | ||
But I think you've already realized all the illegal activities that have gone on in Travis County. | ||
It is time that someone does something about it. | ||
And I am going to use your 18-page document. | ||
In federal district court to win my lawsuit against Travis County because it's not just Judge McCown that's committing fraud and conspiracy, but Judge Richardson, Judge several different judges that I've encountered. | ||
And it is a shame that you did not get back with me and you didn't... | ||
And also another thing I would like to find out is how come we got all these items on the agenda in executive session? | ||
How come I have never been included as an item on this executive session? | ||
And if the county attorney's office feels the need to brief us on an item in executive session in order to protect the attorney-client privilege, we have part of the discussion there to receive the attorney's advice. | ||
All the rest of the discussion and deliberation occurs out here, but usually after we've heard the advice. | ||
Good. | ||
I'm going to request that they put my lawsuit on the agenda, and I don't want it heard in executive session. | ||
I want it heard open in front of all of you. | ||
Thank you very much for your time. | ||
Who's next? | ||
Well, I guess I am. | ||
Okay. | ||
I'm glad to be here again to talk to my helpers. | ||
Your name, sir? | ||
Robert Kurtz. | ||
You know, words mean things. | ||
I hate to use Rush Limbaugh's pun, but it's true. | ||
I'd like to remind... | ||
The listeners, really the people in here sitting in front of me probably are expert at words. | ||
But I want to remind the people who are looking through the one eye there, the camera, a few words. | ||
I pulled this out of Webster's Third New International Dictionary. | ||
It's unabridged. | ||
Freedom. | ||
The quality or state of not being coerced or constrained. | ||
By fate, necessity, or circumstances in one's choices or actions. | ||
Self-determination. | ||
And I love this word especially in the French. | ||
Liberté. | ||
Liberty. | ||
The quality or state of being free. | ||
Freedom from unusual external restraint or compulsion. | ||
The power to do as one pleases. | ||
A condition of legal non-restraint of natural powers, exemption from subjection to the will of another claiming ownership or services. | ||
You should compare this with bondage, serfdom, and slavery. | ||
Voluntary, preceding from the will, produced in or by an act of choice. | ||
Acting of one's self. | ||
Not constrained, not impelled, or influenced by another. | ||
Spontaneous. | ||
Free. | ||
Commissioner. | ||
A person who has received a commission or has been delegated to perform some service or carry out some business. | ||
The officer in charge of a department. | ||
Or Bureau of the Public Service. | ||
There's a local poet here in town who wrote a very short poem that I'd like to pass on to the public. | ||
I know it means nothing here. | ||
America, America, the land of the free, the home of the brave that all the world could see, a land filled with the blessings of God from sea to shining sea. | ||
A place where people could shout, we have liberty. | ||
Foreign nations looked at us and marveled at our feats. | ||
They knew God was on our side and had given us a special seat. | ||
People came from miles around to seek our purple mountains' majesties, to escape poverty and partake of our luxuries. | ||
This is a home of immigrants, of bastards, if you choose, a place to be called a home and crowned in brotherhood. | ||
But I see today a twist of fate, no longer a land of the free, a place where individuals are losing their identity. | ||
America, America, please wake up and see. | ||
The government is taking away our liberty. | ||
They tell us church and state has to be separated because God is not involved. | ||
Then they take God out of our schools and say the problems are solved. | ||
We people try to worship God in their own style. | ||
Janet Reno comes in to destroy them and say they are defiled. | ||
They experiment on us with chemical warfare. | ||
Secretly. | ||
The next thing we know, we're sick, and it happens unexpectedly. | ||
Our president talks so smoothly and quietly like a lamb. | ||
But I wonder if the dragon is holding him by the hand. | ||
What happened to our national anthem, America the Beautiful? | ||
What happened to our pledge of allegiance to the flag? | ||
Were these not... | ||
Prayers to God from guidance in the days to come. | ||
America, America, where have you gone? | ||
Thank you, sir. | ||
I'm not finished, sir. | ||
Almost you are. | ||
There's been many things crop up in this nation over the last 25 or 30 years that seem contrary to the Constitution of the United States and the Constitution of Texas. | ||
Mr. Bullock, I ask you to start obeying the laws of this state and tell the truth about the Republic of Texas. | ||
Lastly, to the secret entities that are trying to take over this great nation, you can take my freedom, you can take my home, but I'm going to shout it to God Almighty. | ||
You will not win me. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Thank you, Mr. Kirk. | ||
My name is Keith Campbell, and I think you'll be happy to know none of this pertains to you guys today. | ||
I'm fighting another battle across the street. | ||
I just kind of walked into this or stumbled into this this morning. | ||
I have nothing prepared. | ||
I think some of the issues they're talking about for me kind of make strange bedfellows. | ||
I'll explain why. | ||
I always kind of thought I've always done the right thing growing up and all. | ||
I joined the Marine Corps, got an honorable discharge. | ||
In 1988, I moved to Austin because I was accepted to become a member of the Austin Police Department, which I was for about eight years. | ||
My father is also a retired policeman in Houston. | ||
So when they say they are for law enforcement, I believe that. | ||
Absolutely. | ||
Yes, sir. | ||
I left the police department simply because I asked a legal question. | ||
I asked if there was any law that said I had to use a social security number, is basically what I said. | ||
Of course, I did that in an affidavit form. | ||
And I sent the letter, of course, up to the chiefs of police. | ||
And I was a member of the Austin Police Department recruiting division, which is a pretty desirable place. | ||
You had Friday, Saturday, Sunday off. | ||
For a cop, that's pretty good. | ||
I went for board to get that position. | ||
Within two days of writing a letter asking if I, or basically saying I no longer wish to give the approval for you to use my social security number and that sort of thing, I ended up transferred to the abandoned motor vehicles unit, which if you know what that is, it's basically punishment. | ||
It used to be walk and beat, but now that's a desired position. | ||
People want to go to walk and beat. | ||
So I ended up basically sweeping the parking lot out on South Congress. | ||
And of course, having the pride that I do, I couldn't do that for very long. | ||
But anyway, to make a long story short, I left. | ||
And I'm just saying, I think a lot of times y'all look at some of these people here and think they're nuts a little bit. | ||
And I apologize. | ||
And I'm simply saying that I think, you know... | ||
And I've heard it said before, you know, if you get up in the stadium over here and rant and rave and yell about your team, nobody sees that as strange at all. | ||
But when you do that and hear about liberties and freedom, people are looked at like a nut. | ||
And I think that's a problem. | ||
So, and I don't even know all the aspects of this ASAP program. | ||
I don't like it. | ||
I know what's wrong. | ||
But see, I fight things on a personal level. | ||
I've taken my kids out of public school. | ||
That's how I fight. | ||
I teach them at home. | ||
See, I believe there's other problems. | ||
So, you know, I take my kids out and I take care of them. | ||
And I think that's what more and more Americans are going to end up having to do. | ||
And I'd just like to say, I don't know how the rules in here work, but I don't really like the idea that while these people are talking, it may not be something y'all really want to hear, but y'all get up and leave. | ||
You walk out of the room. | ||
To me, where I was raised, that's rude. | ||
I would say, let's take a break. | ||
I need to go to the bathroom or do whatever. | ||
Take a break. | ||
But I'm just saying, I think it's rude for people to walk out of here when at least they feel like they have something to say that matters. | ||
And that's all I have to say today. | ||
Thank you, Mr. Campbell. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Mr. McKee, would you limit your remarks to about three minutes? - I'm not sure. | ||
Good morning, Judge, Commissioners. | ||
My name is Darwin McKee, and I'm speaking to you on Citizens Communication. | ||
For the past several weeks, we've heard some of the issues brought forward by Texas Best Seminars and others, and I want to say a couple of things. | ||
I am very appalled and in strong disagreement with some of the tactics that have been used here because I believe that the tactics are meant to intimidate this court and to ask it to do things, not because of the rationales presented, but because the potential exists. | ||
To completely disrupt the meetings that we hold for the public's purpose. | ||
By the way, just by means of an aside, when we go out generally to the restroom, we can hear what is going on in there. | ||
Anyone trusted with public service? | ||
Should be mindful that even though there are times when the tactics used are not ones that we would use or agree with, there are times when kernels of truth do seem to come forward. | ||
And I have heard a few things that I think we should consider. | ||
I've asked Dinah Dinwiddie with the Public Safety Division to look into certain areas. | ||
And to come forward with an additional report on March the 24th so that we can explore those areas. | ||
But I do want it to be known that I support the ASAP program, that I think that it can be modified to address at least some of the concerns that have been raised here. | ||
But I do so not from the standpoint that I am intimidated. | ||
And I do not do it from the standpoint that I think that we should continue to allow these meetings to be disrupted. | ||
But I do it because I think that a good public servant should listen. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Thank you, darling. | ||
Thank you very much. | ||
Is there anyone else to speak under citizen's communication? | ||
We'll proceed with item number six. | ||
Hello, Austin, Texas. | ||
I'm Alex Jones. | ||
You're watching Exposing Corruption. | ||
I don't claim to have all the answers in this world, but what I do claim to do is to care about America and know that your rights are rapidly being eroded. | ||
I want to thank Mike for bringing this up here. | ||
Mike's involved in a lot of things we do. | ||
I won't tell you Mike's last name, but he's helped get some research for us. | ||
I used to have this code, and I've misplaced it. | ||
It is the United States Code, annotated, Title 22, and that is 2451-3090. | ||
It is couched as International Arms Control, and it starts back in the 60s and moves through the 80s, and it talks about setting up a drug war, and people like General McCaffrey, And creating the intelligence network to disarm Americans. | ||
That is laced all through the code and the law. | ||
But they try to couch it as usual in that it is for foreign countries. | ||
But then it gives and speaks about local control. | ||
We'll get into that more later. | ||
Again, that is from the U.S. Code. | ||
And this is just basically the framework. | ||
They do this quite often when they usurp your rights. | ||
It's very, very popular. | ||
With these people that control our government, these criminal agencies. | ||
Also tonight, I'm going to read you some passages. | ||
I just got this book today. | ||
I didn't buy it. | ||
Someone sent it to me. | ||
It's Anne Rand, Capitalism, the Unknown Ideal. | ||
People always say, oh, you got all your ideas from Anne Rand. | ||
And I say, I've heard of her. | ||
Isn't she basically free market libertarian, talks about corruption in government? | ||
I just heard about her. | ||
And I'm sure some of her ideas, since she's been writing books since the 1930s, have infected me, and probably I have been influenced by her without knowing. | ||
But basically, I came around to my understanding of things on my own. | ||
Again, I want to thank my producers and make sure we started taping this show. | ||
I gave them a videotape. | ||
I know it's my fault, as usual, not getting that going. | ||
So tonight, the interesting thing about this, I've only had time today while I was standing in line to pay a ticket to read for an hour. | ||
To read two essays written by the then young economist, not too young, 30 or 40 years old, in the 1960s. | ||
I believe it was 1963 when he wrote one of the essays. | ||
Our Federal Reserve Chairman, Alan Greenspan. | ||
And he talks about how our government was really... | ||
In these essays, and I'll read you some of the quotes later. | ||
He talks about how our government is really just... | ||
Becoming socialist and calling it free market, and that really a lot of professors, he says, will point back to the railroads in the late 1900s and the mid-1900s being subsidized by the government, but they say it was free market and that it failed and the government had to help. | ||
Now, the first big railroads into the West were not free market. | ||
They were given the land, they were given the money to do it, and they were very, very corrupt. | ||
And what was the government's answer to this corruption? | ||
More government. | ||
Of course, because these powerful individuals controlled our federal government at that time, and a lot of their descendants still do. | ||
So basically, I've only read a few articles. | ||
I haven't even read any of her writings yet, but the lady that sent me this did highlight the two articles by Alan Greenspan in here. | ||
One of the articles is about how we should be on a gold standard, or at least a standard of real money, and how it gives unbelievable power to private banks and other individuals and governments to have fiat money systems that are in private hands. | ||
And you can see that he sold out and now believes differently and has a lot of power because of it. | ||
I haven't really had time to highlight it. | ||
It's information I already knew. | ||
But it's interesting to hear Alan Greenspan saying this back in the 60s. | ||
I guess he would have been about 40 years old then. | ||
Now he's like 76 or something. | ||
So that is very, very interesting. | ||
And we'll get into that more later. | ||
That is Ayn Rand, Capitalism, The Unknown Ideal. | ||
And I'll read the book this week and have you a better critique next. | ||
I just got this today at about 1 o'clock. | ||
Somebody sent it to me. | ||
Okay. | ||
Something I have had a chance to read quite a bit of is Prevailing Winds. | ||
Now, this is a supposed far-left magazine. | ||
Let me open it to you. | ||
Well, let me just read you some of the stuff on the cover. | ||
Oklahoma City bombing exposed. | ||
Flight TWA-800, the cover-up. | ||
CIA and drugs. | ||
I burglarize with the FBI. Ex-DEA agent tells all prison industrial complex. | ||
NutraSuite. | ||
And our catalog. | ||
Now, you open this up, and I've read quite a few articles in here, and basically it tells you everything the New American, a supposed far right wing, would tell you. | ||
UN troops cutting little kids' heads off, torturing people, CIA and drugs, all this going on. | ||
The one difference is Bill Clinton's really our friend and going to save us. | ||
Obvious front group. | ||
Shows you a lot of facts, shows you a lot of problems. | ||
And then tells you Bill Clinton's going to save you. | ||
The John Birch Society, which I'm not a member of, does attack the Republicans and does attack the Democrats. | ||
I really respect their organization. | ||
Some of my friends have attacked me on this point and said that I'm kissing up to the JBS because I might want them to put my documentaries and things around the country. | ||
That is insane. | ||
I talked to some people at a meeting who live out in the country and have an Access TV show, and then I was accused by one of my associates of being nice to this front group because I wanted to be their friends. | ||
You bet I do. | ||
I first got into this by reading Gary Allen, None Dare Call a Conspiracy, which was distributed by the John Birch Society, a supposedly right-wing organization that is against war, unless our country is being attacked, that is for the Constitution. | ||
That has exposed CIA drug dealing, Oklahoma City bombing, and Andre Strasmeyer being the man involved in that and executing that attack at the behest of the CIA, and Carol Howe, BATF informant, telling them this, much more. | ||
So it just goes on and on, and it's important as citizens that we understand how we're being manipulated out there. | ||
All right. | ||
I've also got a whole gigantic slew here. | ||
Of newspaper clippings. | ||
PRI Veteran forms New Mexico Party. | ||
Well, that sounds ridiculous. | ||
PRI Veteran, that's the fascistic, command-and-control, semi-socialist government in Mexico that sends death squads of ski-mask, garbed, black-uniformed squads. | ||
It's even been in The Statesman. | ||
Into encampments of Indians to kill them so that they can sell it to hotels to build complexes or grow marijuana or whatever the Mexican government does for the CIA. And then the statesman says PRI veteran forms New Mexico Party. | ||
This is from the statesman 219. And it says in here, talks about how this former stalwart of Mexico's long dominant ruling party, Has formed his own political party, an apparent bid to become the first opposition figure elected president in nearly 70 years. | ||
And he probably will get elected, and they'll say, oh, see, Mexico isn't a one-party system, one rule by four or five families. | ||
The guy is a long-term PR guy. | ||
That is the Mexico's central party, the only party of any significance. | ||
And they act like he's actually going to... | ||
It talks about how he's going to save them. | ||
The center-left Democratic Revolution Party has yet to name a presidential candidate. | ||
The center-left Democratic Revolution Party? | ||
I mean, this is just a bunch of crap. | ||
We control Mexico. | ||
We put down those people. | ||
We treat them like garbage. | ||
Now, not we, the American people. | ||
The American people are ignorant. | ||
I was down. | ||
Supposedly it was on the news yesterday. | ||
I didn't see it because I was taking a nap when I got home. | ||
I was tired. | ||
I went down and spoke for the birthday of Texas. | ||
Nothing to do with the Republic of Texas. | ||
We're celebrating Texas independence, 1836. My family and my father's side was here in 1830. I've seen the Spanish land grant. | ||
My dad has it in the safe. | ||
Laminated, broken old brown paper that says that we pay what was like 10 cents an acre. | ||
For like 15,000 acres. | ||
We paid for it in 1830. Santa Ana came tromping in and tried to steal it six years later after we developed it. | ||
We saddled up, went down to San Jacinto alongside Mexicans and kicked his butt. | ||
Am I saying that Texans didn't abuse Indians? | ||
Am I saying Mexicans didn't abuse Indians? | ||
Am I saying the Spanish didn't abuse Indians? | ||
Am I saying the French didn't abuse Indians? | ||
Am I saying... | ||
No! | ||
No, I'm not... | ||
Actually, some of the best people to the Indians that got along with the Indians the best were the German settlers here in Texas. | ||
And that's more my mother's side of the family. | ||
So I'm not going to sit here and put up with this garbage anymore as people sit around and bash America and talk about Oslon and Mecha, which is a big group at UT and across the country. | ||
A documentary evidence of them attacking people at the 4th of July in California, beating old people up, both Hispanic, black and white, who had American flags, and the police didn't even intervene as old senior citizens and veterans were being bloodied by a young mob of Mexican supremacists. | ||
And I want to tell people before I say that, because everybody's so brainwashed out there, my producer at 98.9 KJFK a couple Saturdays ago was threatened By the Ku Klux Klan over the air, or white supremacists. | ||
They send us all these letters and things and announce themselves, and they're racists, and I rebuke them on the air. | ||
I've rebuked them ever since I've been on the air. | ||
I can't stand white supremacists. | ||
Half of them are controlled by the federal government. | ||
And again, a recent publication. | ||
I've been telling you this each week. | ||
The January issue of the Texas Monthly on page 48, I believe, has a long story. | ||
It's one of the cover stories. | ||
About the Ku Klux Klan in Fort Worth being controlled by Jerry Spence, a known FBI informant and pretty much a FBI officer, I mean, agent. | ||
He has been in their pay for like 15 years and went out and stirred up these guys to blow something up. | ||
They never built a bomb like the news told you. | ||
They just talked about it. | ||
Kind of like the guys with the anthrax. | ||
It ended up to be an anthrax vaccine, which you can buy from your large animal vet to give to your animals. | ||
Totally harmless. | ||
I wouldn't recommend injecting yourself with it. | ||
But basically, the media got two weeks of front-page scare tactics. | ||
Then they get to reverse it in the back of the paper once. | ||
The scare's already there. | ||
We're begging for centralized... | ||
World government to keep us safe from the terrorist when it is the world government and the world military industrial complex that is selling these weapons. | ||
But back to basics. | ||
Mexico and Mexico City are absolute hell holes now unless you go down to the resort areas. | ||
27 million people at last count live in Mexico City. | ||
Half of them live in cardboard shanty towns and then go to the factories that build the electronics that we love so much. | ||
It's akin to China, but not quite slave labor camps. | ||
They don't even give them slave labor camps. | ||
They just throw them out to live by the sewers. | ||
And I've seen, even on PBS, people get like 30 minutes of water at a faucet a day, and they get buckets of water, and sometimes the water doesn't come. | ||
And they then go into the factories and build things for Ford and General Motors and AT&T, the terrible pieces of junk. | ||
Answering machines I've bought. | ||
Never buy anything from Mexico. | ||
It's not because the people aren't hardworking or intelligent. | ||
It's because they're in terrible, terrible slavery down there. | ||
And the quality of the goods is just abhorrent. | ||
So again, the PRI, and now Manuel Camacho Salas, position to run for president in 2000 election. | ||
And it says he's a longtime PRI, the institutional party down there, for the last 70 years. | ||
But he's going to save us with a new party, and he's probably going to win. | ||
Of course he's going to win, because the media in Mexico is telling you he's going to win, so people all clap, oh, the revolution's over! | ||
People aren't standing up anymore about being driven off their homes, Indians in the South, so they can set up UN biospheres and then sell the land. | ||
It's all a big scam, the UN setting up shop here to take our national parks. | ||
It's just a world slavery system under the guise of altruism and Altruistic aims for the children. | ||
Two suspects are cleared of anthrax poisoning. | ||
Again, it's from the Statesman 224-98, right there. | ||
And it talks about two men arrested in an anthrax scare were cleared Monday of all biological weapons charges after tests show the material was a harmless vaccine and not the deadly germ. | ||
Look how big this article is. | ||
Remember when it was front page for two weeks? | ||
Judge rejects car seizure law. | ||
Now, this is good. | ||
In Louisiana, measures sought to get motorists to buy insurance. | ||
And the judge in Baton Rouge says that he is overturning this because it takes the Constitution away. | ||
This is from the Dallas Morning News, Thursday, February 26th, 998-29A. A real rarity, asset forfeiture seizure was actually overturned in one of the states where it runs rampant. | ||
Florida, Louisiana, Mississippi, and now Texas and California, it is running rampant. | ||
They don't even have to find drugs to steal your property to fund the growing police state of black ski mask wearing federalized police. | ||
And later, I think I'll probably, for the 15th time, play you clips from Lair News Hour where it shows SWAT team commanders admitting that they're under secret control by the federal government and they can't talk about it. | ||
Then we'll show you some black helicopters on the mainstream news for those of you that still think it's a joke where they tell you that you're under surveillance, my friends. | ||
And, in fact, I'm not going to tell you what happened Saturday night because my dad told me they're probably doing this to make me act like I'm insane. | ||
So I'm not going to tell you. | ||
You can just imagine. | ||
A little note I wrote. | ||
They're using expectations. | ||
They have not been realized. | ||
They were not ever meant to be realized. | ||
Expectations for this, expectations for that. | ||
Get you focused on so-called racism. | ||
Get you focused on men and women's issues. | ||
We're all human beings. | ||
Focus on who runs the world, who's stealing your paycheck, who's lying to you, who is absolutely manipulating you. | ||
Okay, we talked about that. | ||
It's time to wake up. | ||
You have not been empowered. | ||
You have been neutralized out there, especially the Democrats and the Republicans just as well. | ||
George W. Bush is an absolute front candidate. | ||
He'll probably be president in 2000. They're already pushing him across the nation. | ||
His father is CFR, Trilateral Commission, and Bilderberger has been linked to bringing drugs into this country. | ||
He was ex-head of the Central Intelligence Agency in the 70s. | ||
It just goes on and on. | ||
Now, here's a rare editorial cartoon that I find hilarious. | ||
It's from the Washington Post National Weekly Edition, which is very rare. | ||
And it says, speaking of Washington cover-ups, can we get a close-up? | ||
I know we got a semi-close-up. | ||
And you can't really pick it up that good, but it shows a guy reading the newspaper, and he is saying, speaking of Washington cover-ups, and there's a little bubble, and then it shows a newspaper he's reading, Federal Budget Accounting Gimmick. | ||
Using Social Security taxes to cover year-to-year deficit. | ||
A budget surplus. | ||
And it shows Clinton. | ||
Now, we don't have to mess with that camera. | ||
You're doing a great job, Andy. | ||
If you want, you can come around. | ||
I kind of jammed the cameras together tonight. | ||
You can do a close shot on that one if you can possibly. | ||
I have created a huge snarl here, which is impossible to get around. | ||
We do this broadcast from the smallest studio because we wish to, because it makes for easier. | ||
Yeah, we'll zoom into this in just a second and focus it. | ||
Again, if you want PAP and slick packaging, Ted Koppel and Peter Jennings are there for you, both on the... | ||
Well, I won't talk about it. | ||
There you have it. | ||
Of course, talk about Washington cover-ups. | ||
You've got President Clinton, it says, on the front of the newspaper, funding... | ||
You have President Clinton funding the Social Security... | ||
I mean, funding the so-called deficit. | ||
The balanced budget with Social Security money. | ||
It's a gimmick. | ||
It's a lie. | ||
And it further steals from the Social Security Trust Fund. | ||
There is no money there. | ||
As soon as the checks come in, they are deposited in the Federal Reserve. | ||
Absolutely out of control. | ||
The Federal Reserve is private, my friends. | ||
Something cannot be quasi-private, quasi-public. | ||
The stock is held by private banks. | ||
I don't care if two of the seven-member boards are appointed. | ||
And that's only two on a seven-member board, and that's the 14-year terms. | ||
Here's some more fascism for you before we go to some phone calls and then to some other clips. | ||
Teens who smoke could lose driver's license. | ||
Now, this is what the state's talking about and Clinton's talking about it. | ||
You know, it's Clinton. | ||
You can thank him when you go thumb scan like a common criminal at the DPS. You can thank him at the Institute of Urine and Blood testing he wants. | ||
For driver's license, it's for everyone, not for under 18, like he said. | ||
He's a liar. | ||
I've read the code, had it here for you before. | ||
It says, it is punishable by fines, community service, and possible driver's license suspension if you're caught with cigarettes. | ||
Again, this is about controlling your youth and showing them who runs the show locally, nationally, and statewide and internationally. | ||
Big Brother is obsessed with the youth, just like Hitler, just like Stalin, just like Pol Pot. | ||
Just like Fidel Castro. | ||
Just like Genghis Khan. | ||
Just like Julius Caesar. | ||
Can I go on for you? | ||
They're manipulating you out there. | ||
Here's another one. | ||
It says, you could lose license if you smoke. | ||
Ad tells teens. | ||
This is from the Statesman. | ||
This is from Rebecca Rodriguez, Austin Statesman Capital Staff, 225-98. | ||
And telling you... | ||
How wonderful it is. | ||
How wonderful an idea this is. | ||
They're not out trying to catch the carjackers and the throat slitters and the murderers and the rapists. | ||
Now, here's something I'm going to get into later. | ||
FBI crime lab whistleblower wins settlement worth more than $1.16 million. | ||
I don't know why they didn't say $1,160,000, but it talks about... | ||
This is from the Statesman, and this is from the Dallas Morning News, 22798. It's talking about, it says that, but he also criticized Dr. Whitehurst for overstated and inaccuracy, allegations of intentional misconduct that Mr. Brownwich's investigations did not find. | ||
Okay, Mr. Brownwich is from the Justice Department, whitewashing. | ||
What Frederick Whitehurst said. | ||
Frederick Whitehurst said, the paper never printed it. | ||
You had to read it in alternative media or see him in interviews. | ||
Frederick Whitehurst was head of the FBI crime lab, had a sterling record. | ||
He complained five times with memos over about four years about the FBI planting blood, it seems. | ||
They would do the analysis. | ||
He ran the crime lab, turn in the results. | ||
They would falsify his name, write in false DNA responses, write in false explosives documentation. | ||
Finally, he went forward with a scathing report. | ||
They threw him out of the FBI. He is sued. | ||
He is won. | ||
He is being reinstated at the FBI. But Mr. Bromwich has asked that he not be sent back to the FBI crime lab, that they put him somewhere else where he can't cause problems. | ||
The FBI crime lab is too vital for them. | ||
And to keep that corruption going, here I have the statesman for you. | ||
FBI to pay $1.16 million to crime lab whistleblower. | ||
This is by Michael J. Snipe and Associated Press. | ||
This is 2-27-98 from the Statesman. | ||
Washington. | ||
The FBI agreed Thursday to pay a settlement worth more than $1.16 million to Agent Frederick Whitehurst, the whistleblower who triggered an overhaul of the FBI's crime laboratory. | ||
Now, they don't tell us about what the whistleblower was about. | ||
Don't want us to talk about that, do they? | ||
When this first came out, it was in the back of the paper once in the Statesman. | ||
Dr. Whitehurst returned to work from a year-long suspension Thursday and voluntarily resigned as required by the deal to settle part of his lawsuit against the Bureau. | ||
He can't go back to the crime lab. | ||
They need things to continue like they were. | ||
Just falsifying his name, manufacturing evidence from Oklahoma City, the World Trade Center bombing. | ||
I'll get to that in a second. | ||
The FBI did the right thing, said Dr. Whitehurst's attorney. | ||
Stephen Cohen is a positive message to all employees. | ||
For 10 years, a lab supervisor who was once the, they say supervisor, he was the boss of the crime lab. | ||
But notice how they use semantics. | ||
He was just a supervisor of the FBI crime lab. | ||
We're supposedly the best in the world where people send things from all over the world. | ||
For 10 years, the lab supervisor, the lab, you know, he tests blood. | ||
He, you know, pays $5 an hour. | ||
For ten years, the lab supervisor, who was once the FBI's top bomb residue expert, complained mostly in vain about lab practices. | ||
His efforts finally led last April to a scathing 500-page study of the lab by Justice Department Inspector General Michael Bromwich. | ||
Finally, he kept griping, and finally the Justice Department came in. | ||
No, he went to the press with it. | ||
And then Bromwich had to come in and whitewash. | ||
Bromwich says in the other article that, you know, we can't really listen to this guy. | ||
He's exaggerated. | ||
But, by the way, he's out of the crime lab. | ||
Mr. Bromwich cited the world-renowned lab for flawed scientific worth and inaccurate prosecution testimony in major cases, including the Oklahoma City and World Trade Center bombings, which the CIA activated terrorists to destroy. | ||
Doesn't say that here. | ||
But the... | ||
October 23, 1993, New York Times does, and I've had it here for you many times, they just say it offhandedly that the FBI and the CIA had agents inside and knew about the bombing and pulled their agents out and let the bombing go forward as an accident. | ||
You know, it was a boo-boo, and it's in the back of a two-page article. | ||
No big deal. | ||
Total conditioning. | ||
He recommended major changes, discipline for five agents. | ||
That it's still under consideration and transfer of Dr. Whitehurst to other facilities. | ||
Oh, thank you. | ||
Let's try to get a close-up. | ||
Not a super close-up. | ||
We can just get a close-up right here for everyone. | ||
There you go. | ||
Lovely, lovely, lovely. | ||
FBI whistleblower. | ||
Oh, right here. | ||
Clinton pledges aid to Florida. | ||
He mourns losses caused by tornadoes. | ||
Every day we see this in the paper. | ||
Helping an old lady, helping a child, kissing a small... | ||
He's so good. | ||
He is so good how he hasn't treated our troops from Desert Storm who have been attacked with chemical weapons. | ||
Now the British press even admits it. | ||
He's so good how he raises your taxes and calls it a tax cut. | ||
He's so good how he draws a big circle and tells you the budget's balance when he just raided the Social Security fund totally to play this gimmick off on you. | ||
He loves you. | ||
Doesn't it feel good to be a dupe? | ||
He's hugging and looking down at this woman. | ||
Oh, he's helping. | ||
Always, every day we see this. | ||
We ought to thank the taxpayers. | ||
That pay for this and do this. | ||
Well, I am really blue tonight, aren't I? Home of man linked to Mexico drug cartel brings US $190,000. | ||
unidentified
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Drugs? | |
I don't know what's going on, but stay with us. | ||
My cousin and his associate love to play with the equipment, but I appreciate them being here every Tuesday night. | ||
Drugs are of no value. | ||
You can't resell them. | ||
But a home, a vehicle, represents significant capital. | ||
You see, drugs are of no value, unless you're laundering them through the Federal Reserve. | ||
Drugs are of no value. | ||
You can't resell them. | ||
But a home, a vehicle, represents a significant capital. | ||
El Paso, the U.S. government, reaped a 190,000 windfall in just 10 minutes Wednesday as it began to sell off property that once belonged to top lieutenant in Mexico's most powerful drug cartel. | ||
They're stealing people's homes every day with no due cause. | ||
I mean, I guess they're queuing up tapes in there and we're having some problems with equipment. | ||
Actually, I shouldn't say they're playing with the equipment. | ||
They changed up around a few weeks ago. | ||
We'll figure it out. | ||
Government issues, rare apology for misconduct and investigation. | ||
This is where the Environmental Protection Agency and the Justice Department are all hooked up, and they go around basically stealing. | ||
Things that people dig up on their own land. | ||
Pottery, ancient arrowheads, things that are worth a lot of money. | ||
If they find out, you go and brag about it, they'll just send some professors over with some armed thugs and steal it from you. | ||
Might even drop by in ski masks. | ||
This is from the Statesman 22798 Associate Press article. | ||
Just, again, law enforcement now, I mean the national and the transnational and the bureaucracies, aren't concerned with criminals, my friends. | ||
They're concerned with stealing your property. | ||
Plain and simple. | ||
Oh, more power for the UN. We hear about the UN every day. | ||
We're being conditioned and told, and our kids are getting used to the UN running things, and that's where the authority comes from. | ||
World court to rule on jet bomb trial side. | ||
America can't get involved and put sanctions on somebody. | ||
We have to go to the UN for that. | ||
All right, I have raved on for quite a bit of time. | ||
I'm going to go to three calls. | ||
And then, I'm going to go for probably the last time. | ||
I'll put it on replay to play not during my live slot. | ||
The SWAT team attempting to intimidate me. | ||
The audio is not very good because the cameraman was at a distance. | ||
Jimmy Ritter did a good job. | ||
Okay. | ||
Thanks. | ||
Thanks a lot. | ||
unidentified
|
Basically... | |
What happened is, is the media, and I've got tape of them doing it, and I may, I haven't had time to put together, I may show you some clips of some local radio hosts saying that I'm a moron and saying we're all morons, and that the SWAT team was there to receive an award, and these morons, that's how one of the hosts talks. | ||
All the morning shows are bashing me, which is fine. | ||
I welcome it. | ||
People just say, who is this Alex Jones? | ||
They'll tune in, see that I'm not as bad as people say, and then they'll wake up and say, wow, this is really good. | ||
Or not good, but some good information. | ||
Now, they said that we saw the SWAT team there, some sheriff's people, and just freaked out and started yelling and screaming and causing a big problem. | ||
You're going to see the footage of me sitting there peaceably, reading the court agenda for the day. | ||
First time I ever went to the court, sat on my TV show the night before. | ||
I also have a Monday night show that Robert Smith puts on. | ||
I had said, this is like six weeks ago now, that I was going to go down there. | ||
I had said that I was going to go down and speak during citizens' communication about the ASAP program, about them sending constables to elementary school students' homes on the first day. | ||
Even if parents call, 90% of the time the school makes a mistake. | ||
It's a federal program being mimicked all across the country. | ||
And if you know history, it's something Hitler would have clicked his heels thinking about. | ||
I said I was going down there just like this, and I go and sit down at 8.30. | ||
Around 8.40, an officer plops down beside me after he'd talked to them. | ||
I said, why is SWAT here? | ||
I'm sitting there, quiet, relaxed. | ||
I've got a dozen witnesses. | ||
I've got Gus Pena, who doesn't even really agree with us, was there and said, why are they here? | ||
He was asking us. | ||
We sat there in the front row. | ||
So you can ask him. | ||
He's an activist here in town for the Hispanic community and a pretty good guy. | ||
He doesn't like us being rude to the court, but I'm sorry. | ||
He gets nowhere. | ||
We get somewhere. | ||
And suddenly they plopped down beside me after the court pointed me out and bumped his shoulder into me and said, you need to watch yourself. | ||
If you cause a problem, you're going to jail. | ||
And I said, I have no criminal record. | ||
You need to watch yourself. | ||
And I am a law-abiding citizen. | ||
I'm here to speak. | ||
Thank you. | ||
He got up and started addressing me. | ||
Someone handed him a piece of paper, began reading me some code about false alarm report. | ||
That's what happened. | ||
That's the lie. | ||
And people are lying and slandering me. | ||
That's fine. | ||
I'm not going to sue people that lie about me. | ||
I'm not like some people here in town or threatened to sue. | ||
I may go after the court talking to some lawyers about that simply because they're obstructing justice and lying about it. | ||
Margaret Gomez, we're told, by Marco Martinez, her top aide, we have him on tape, by the way, called them out. | ||
And we've talked to SWAT team people. | ||
I have their business card right here. | ||
I showed it to you last week, and I'm going to show you their name, who tell us they didn't appreciate being called out. | ||
That's not the job of special weapons and tactics. | ||
By the way, on the telephone, they told one of my associates, Steve Lane, that they do train with the military. | ||
I don't need them to tell me that. | ||
I already know that. | ||
And it is secret, by the way. | ||
It's just all interconnected. | ||
Can't you see how it's interconnected? | ||
All right, I'm going to go ahead and go to some of your phone calls. | ||
We'll go to that to rebuke it, and then we'll have some new footage of Congressman Ron Paul. | ||
And then we'll have some footage from the Columbus, Ohio meeting a couple weeks ago where Sandy Berger admits that the UN wants to take over Iraq's oil supply. | ||
That's what this is all about, my friends, right here on Exposing Corruption. | ||
We're not backing down. | ||
And also, I'm then going to talk about what I'm going to be doing in the future. | ||
I'm a law-abiding citizen. | ||
In the next few weeks, probably two or three weeks, I'm going into the DPS office. | ||
And I'm demanding, with cameras, that I be allowed to renew my driver's license. | ||
I'll have my social security card, which they told us back in 1936 when wonderful Franklin Delano Roosevelt of the Hyde Park family, who made its money by bringing in opium, oh, I'm sorry, you didn't know that, gave us... | ||
His wonderful Social Security Act and promised that the number would only be used for implementing the program, never as a personal identification number, and it's been being used as that since day one to track you like people. | ||
Like slaves. | ||
Now they're thumb scanning you. | ||
Been doing it since 93. Now they're asking people if they want to be urine and blood tested. | ||
They're tested because Clinton ordered that in 96 to be implemented by 98. They're a little scared to do it, but they're preparing to do it probably in the next year or so. | ||
I'm not sure when they're going to implement that. | ||
Now's the time to stand up against this type of technocracy and slavery. | ||
Like Martin Luther King, I'm going there peaceably. | ||
I am going to demand that I, in a peaceable way, with camera... | ||
And we'll have people there also wearing sound devices in case they take our cameras or anything. | ||
I'm just letting everybody know what's going to happen. | ||
I'm going to come down there. | ||
I need a lot of volunteers. | ||
We're going to do it not covertly. | ||
There's nothing illegal about it. | ||
We're going to call the media in on it. | ||
We're not going to cause a problem. | ||
We're going to march in peaceably, line up. | ||
I probably won't be the first person because they think they can take me as the leader and stop it. | ||
Then if they start refusing to give us driver's license when we have our Social Security card... | ||
Which they promise we never have to have. | ||
When I have my old driver's license and my birth certificate, I will demand not to be thumb scanned. | ||
I will demand because I'm innocent until proven guilty. | ||
I've committed no crime. | ||
This is a free market, supposedly free society. | ||
And then if they refuse, I'm going to sit down. | ||
I'm going to sit down and have a sit-in. | ||
It's respectable. | ||
It's the high road. | ||
And they will give me my driver's license. | ||
By the way, you can get a religious exemption. | ||
But I am not doing it on that. | ||
I'm doing it, and if I have to, I will sue on these grounds, and I will go to the Supreme Court, and it'll probably get big-time news attention, and we need this because Cindy Parker from Georgia has defeated this in three states. | ||
We can defeat it here in Texas, and we're going to defeat it. | ||
We're going to stand against this form of slavery as the bureaucrats try to shackle us. | ||
All right. | ||
Let's go ahead and go to some calls. | ||
Hello, you're on the air. | ||
Yes, caller. | ||
unidentified
|
Yes, I've been hearing the term Illuminati and the Tri-Rattle Commission. | |
Can you tell me who these groups are and who belongs to them? | ||
Okay, basically the Illuminati. | ||
The Illuminati was started by... | ||
Can you turn your television down, please? | ||
The Illuminati was started by Adam Weishaupt in 1776. And it was prosecuted by the German government. | ||
They engaged in murder. | ||
This is in the history books. | ||
They took over entire universities with secrecy and terror. | ||
They were top professors, top doctors, top royalty were involved in it. | ||
They caused the French Revolution, which some say is good, some say is bad. | ||
Then the movement invaded America. | ||
George Washington warned us about it. | ||
Basically, it's organized crime. | ||
That's all it is. | ||
Illuminati. | ||
And they had the Carminari in Italy. | ||
It's basically just organized crime. | ||
You don't have to put a fancy term on it. | ||
It's always been here. | ||
It's secret guilds and organizations. | ||
They found that the Freemasons, which had been a pretty good organization, they had been for building structures, were easily infiltrated. | ||
So they've infiltrated a lot of your Freemasonry, a lot of your high-level masonry, a lot of your aristocratic masonry. | ||
They all have the same rituals, getting in coffins, swearing your allegiance to Satan. | ||
This sounds really weird. | ||
I think I have it. | ||
I've played it many times. | ||
It was on Discovery Channel. | ||
No, it was A&E. George Bush, Prescott Bush, his father, George W. Bush, have all been through these rituals. | ||
Your 33rd degree masons, who aren't in the skull and bones, also get in coffins and have some similar allegiances. | ||
And I'm embarrassed to tell you I've had some family that was in it. | ||
They're dead now. | ||
That's how I know about it. | ||
I was not supposed to be imparted with this knowledge. | ||
But, you know, my father, he is a free thinker and wanted me to know about this when I was 12 years old on a deer hunting trip. | ||
By the way, my dad's a doctor, not some kook. | ||
This is factual. | ||
A&E, in fact, when I talk about this, I should have the clips. | ||
It was on A&E. A lot of you have seen it. | ||
I've played it three or four times for you. | ||
The show can't be all clips of tape. | ||
Basically, I don't think these people are really Satanists. | ||
It is to test people. | ||
Most people were Christians in America 200 years ago. | ||
So as these people invaded, how do you make sure people have sworn allegiance? | ||
Well, if people are incredible Christians, conditioned to be Christians, either good or bad, conditioned to be Christians, how do you break that conditioning and make them swear their allegiance to you over their God? | ||
You make them worship the thing that they supposedly oppose. | ||
So you asked about it. | ||
I also was watching Discovery Channel. | ||
It talked about when the Mafia is being made, when a member is being inducted, they burn cards with Catholic saints on them and burn cards of Jesus. | ||
Every organized crime group in the Western cultures that have been Christian, and this is not a religious show, burn pictures of saints during their rite of passage or get in coffins and worship the devil. | ||
It's just something they do to shock the person and make them totally swear allegiance. | ||
If our culture was a Satanist culture, then they would have you worship Jesus. | ||
Do you understand what I'm saying out there? | ||
And I'm sure people will take clips of this and play it on the radio. | ||
I really don't care and take me out of context. | ||
That's been being done quite a bit. | ||
But this show is about teaching you how you're manipulated as a culture. | ||
We'll go to the wide shot. | ||
I'm sure people are sick of looking at my ugly face. | ||
Again, guys, y'all are doing a damn good job. | ||
This show is no holds barred. | ||
Buckley, you've studied this quite a bit. | ||
Why don't you tell people what I'm explaining to them? | ||
unidentified
|
Well, to start off, we'll just have to mention that... | |
I can't hear you, guy. | ||
You might want to... | ||
unidentified
|
Can you hear me? | |
I can't hear you in here. | ||
unidentified
|
Now you can hear me. | |
Yes, I can hear you. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay. | |
To start off, I'd like to mention that a lot of our presidents have been masons. | ||
Bill Clinton himself is a 33rd degree mason. | ||
And Bilderberger, and Trilateral Commission, and CFR. And they all have the same ritual. | ||
unidentified
|
They're all interlocked, and it's really interesting what you were saying before about them making them desecrate some sort of spiritual icon or something. | |
And that's exactly what they do, is they'll take you up to some level, and they'll bring you in, and there'll be a ritual, and they'll have you urinate on a cross or something like that. | ||
The decision that you make there is a decision of whether or not you progress to the next level. | ||
If you urinate on the cross, if you refuse to do it, like let's say, then what they do is they say, oh, that's great. | ||
You're a true, true, you know, Christian, true, true person. | ||
And then you get inducted to a sort of sideways. | ||
Lower room. | ||
It's rooms of power. | ||
Now, we're not going to talk about what Ted Gunderson, ex-head of the FBI in California, highly decorated wall of honor says about how when you get to the upper room, what you have to do. | ||
Do you think we should tell them, Buckley? | ||
unidentified
|
Well, we can just tell them really vaguely that it involves. | |
What does Ted Gunderson say they do? | ||
unidentified
|
Just very vaguely it involves sexuality and children and torture and death. | |
Thank you very much. | ||
And I'm going to run a Ted Gunderson documentary where he has documentation, photographs of this. | ||
I've already run a documentary where he gets into it briefly. | ||
The Franklin cover-up and other things. | ||
See, these are people that finance wars. | ||
Have you seen war, death and killing and guts all over the place and murder and manipulation and people that bring down countries and dumb down civilizations? | ||
They don't care about the rituals they make you go through. | ||
They do it to test you because you're going to do things 10,000 times worse. | ||
You're going to destroy the human psyche and the capacity of civilizations to be free societies. | ||
unidentified
|
Exactly. | |
And this is something that I'm not sure whether Alex absolutely agrees with or not, but this is something that I believe in wholeheartedly, is that these people are, in a sense, take this as an abstract concept, are, in a sense, Possessed by negative spirits, if you want to use those terms. | ||
And essentially what they do is they create these instances which amplify this negative and evil energy across the world. | ||
And they're very skillful at it. | ||
It's been going on for thousands and thousands of years, secret brotherhoods that have been passed down rights and holding back knowledge. | ||
And I want to say one thing to them. | ||
I stand against you. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you, Alex. | |
Thank you very much. | ||
And listen, we're getting really hardcore tonight. | ||
unidentified
|
Absolutely. | |
And listen, if anybody doubts us, there's lots and lots of literature. | ||
David Icke. | ||
David Icke. | ||
Look, Buckley, you are more... | ||
Why don't you tell people about your religion? | ||
I personally am almost... | ||
I don't get into religion. | ||
I'm focused on the world. | ||
But I look at it more of what the evidence we have. | ||
I look at more of social conditioning. | ||
You are more spiritual. | ||
unidentified
|
Absolutely. | |
One thing I'd like to, first of all, not necessarily to correct you on, but sort of correct the nomenclature that we're using is that religion is the wrong term because religion in itself creates these paradigms which separate people from each other. | ||
If you look at most of the wars that have happened throughout history, most of them have been religion. | ||
Oriented and based on religion and based on killing the infidels. | ||
Look at the Crusades, look at... | ||
The Pihad. | ||
unidentified
|
Exactly. | |
It's all based upon religious differences. | ||
That in itself is a tool. | ||
unidentified
|
But let me define this. | |
Let me define this. | ||
Hold on one second. | ||
I have to make this point. | ||
Now, people will love to bash religion. | ||
We're talking about countries that are state-run religion. | ||
And right now, wouldn't you say that the current environmentalism of a bunch of dupes is really just a priesthood of another religion? | ||
And the welfare state is another religion? | ||
unidentified
|
Absolutely. | |
To a certain extent, it follows a lot of the parameters that are generally found in religions. | ||
But one thing that I'd like to say about all that is that there is a definite and absolute difference in between spirituality and religion. | ||
Spirituality is a one-on-one instance and situation with you in a higher form of consciousness, which includes yourself and all the people around you. | ||
It does not include laws and specific teachings that are translated The problem is that we need to go against organized religion because it's levers of control by the state. | ||
Absolutely. | ||
And what it does is it creates condemnation and fear which causes people to not live to the fullest extent that they can in their life. | ||
It stunts them spiritually, it stunts them physically and mentally in lots of different ways. | ||
And it creates reactionary... | ||
It creates knee-jerk reactions in people when they hear something that is appalling to them because it... | ||
Let me make this point. | ||
My problem with so-called conservatives, so-called conservatives, so-called liberals is that none of them are imaginative. | ||
None of them peer deeply. | ||
It's basically they want to believe in something. | ||
They pick it like they pick a soft drink or a brand of tennis shoes or a brand of automobile. | ||
unidentified
|
It creates the illusion of superiority. | |
Yeah, oh yes, I'm part of this. | ||
And then you get together with your group and go, oh yes, we're part of this. | ||
I get together with my friends. | ||
I look at myself. | ||
I watch my tapes. | ||
And you know this about me because you're my cousin and you've known me my whole life. | ||
I mean, I do not have a big ego. | ||
People that know me personally say, you're really a nice guy in person, and on the air you're pretty mean but serious. | ||
It's because I realize what I'm putting on the line. | ||
And I realize that most people are mindless to this and don't understand what we're dealing with, the scale and the scope of the ruthless people that have nothing but avarice for the human spirit. | ||
unidentified
|
That's a great point. | |
It's good to point out the fact that everybody... | ||
And the world basically has this concept that has been ingrained inside of us that the world revolves around them and not through them. | ||
We are looking out more and more upon our reality as sort of an island and a sea separated from people who are loved ones and people who just happen to be on the street that are actually our loved ones, but we don't realize it. | ||
And what's happening is sociological and religious sort of paradigms We create this separation between people, and it causes people to grow these cultures of hatred inside them that are just seeded with this very small idea that has been ingrained in them through generations and generations. | ||
Now let me make a point. | ||
Let me make a point, and then we'll figure out some calls. | ||
Thanks for that information, Buckley, and that's absolutely true. | ||
It's all science of conditioning, and I want to explain that to you. | ||
There is a new religion. | ||
It's not really new. | ||
The religion of adoration. | ||
Patriotism can be a religion if it gets out of control. | ||
I don't have any illusions about the founding fathers. | ||
They had a lot of problems, but so did the rest of the world. | ||
It was very barbarous at that time, as it is now. | ||
And they actually were visionaries. | ||
But I want everybody to understand something. | ||
You are being manipulated with scientifically crafted conditioning, and the children now are not being trained. | ||
By their parents and by guardians and by people in the community. | ||
unidentified
|
Let me make a brief point. | |
Some of the people who studied propaganda and mind control the deepest were the Nazis. | ||
Now, if you look at the early beginnings of NASA, which is our highly technological venture into space, you will see that Wernher von Braun, along with a whole bunch of other scientists, were the cornerstone of that program. | ||
Now, do you think that if we took all their rocket scientists... | ||
That we let all their propaganda doctors just go their way? | ||
No, it's a known fact that we brought every Nazi over here we could. | ||
And that's absolutely true. | ||
People really respected the grade of evil that came out of Germany, because Wall Street financed Hitler, and so did Britain, and then later it turned against them. | ||
Or perhaps they wanted it, I'm not sure. | ||
And the Bolsheviks were funded by the Bank of England, by the way, talking about Russia now, and by New York banks. | ||
They wanted to bring down the czars. | ||
The czars were liberalizing the country, truly liberalizing it. | ||
Standard of living was rising. | ||
Before we go to these calls, I've got to make this point. | ||
Children are being trained by the television. | ||
You parents, you get home, and you try to cook dinner, and you're tired, and you flop on the couch. | ||
I understand. | ||
And you're worried about paying for the Lexus. | ||
And you're worried about going out to your friend's party and getting a babysitter. | ||
Look at your kids. | ||
That's your future. | ||
That's you living on. | ||
Right there in front of you. | ||
And you're letting the state and these high schools where nothing but relativism and weakness is being taught and America is being degraded and everything is commercialism and materialism. | ||
And I'm not saying wanting material is bad. | ||
I'm just saying if that's your God and you let your kids be brainwashed. | ||
Give up the nice car. | ||
Give up something. | ||
Send them to private school. | ||
Homeschool these kids. | ||
This is the future. | ||
This is your most precious thing. | ||
Because they're going to these public schools and they're learning about how good Dr. Kevorkian is. | ||
And by the time the state gets control, they're going to be sticking you in euthanasia tubes like Soylent Green. | ||
And I'm telling you, Jack Kevorkian's a sicko. | ||
Have you seen his artwork? | ||
Again, it's demons eating babies coming out of women's vaginas. | ||
That's Jack Kevorkian for you. | ||
And I'm sorry to be that specific, but I saw it. | ||
I've said this before. | ||
Can you imagine how insane it was to me? | ||
To be flipping through the channels and see PBS, one of my favorite channels, even though it's a lot of propaganda, I know how to see through it and look around it. | ||
And I'm seeing a show about Jack Kevorkian. | ||
He's up in New York, and there's all these beautiful women and good-looking people, all dressed impeccably and sharp, drinking champagne and fine wines. | ||
And his paintings are everywhere. | ||
He's talking about how he paints them in his blood and how he takes his blood out. | ||
And some beautiful models going, oh, ooh, ooh, ooh. | ||
And I'm just going, what the hell is this? | ||
Then it shows the paintings. | ||
A woman's legs splayed, and the red is painted in his own blood with oil paint, and a baby coming out with the amniotic, or whatever it's called, sack. | ||
And a demon leering up to eat it. | ||
This is a man that was thrown out of dozens of hospitals for running around, messing with patients, some of which died. | ||
This guy is a ghoul. | ||
Look at him. | ||
Use your inner compass. | ||
Look at me. | ||
You see a maniac, an aggressive male that loves his family, that loves his country, and likes to fight. | ||
And I've chosen a good enemy to fight. | ||
Look at Kevorkian. | ||
You see a demonic ghoul, a soulless piece of crap. | ||
And you open up a UT textbook. | ||
I've had them here on the show. | ||
And it's Kevorkian standing up for what you believe in. | ||
He's the new idol. | ||
And they play spaceship at the schools. | ||
They play spaceship where the kids get around the table. | ||
I repeat this stuff every week for you because you have to understand it. | ||
And I've had little kids call and go, yeah, I play that. | ||
And I go, yeah, I know. | ||
You get around the chair and there's six or eight of you and only four can live or only six can live. | ||
Well, the teacher says environmentalists need to live, policemen need to live, and nobody really has to die, but just make sure you're on the right side. | ||
And the kids' imagination absorbs that, and the constable comes to their house if their kid, I mean, if they miss a day of school, their parents forget to call the first day in the elementary. | ||
They're training us to be a state-run system. | ||
Nazi technicians brought over here, Operation Paperclip. | ||
Operation Rat Line. | ||
Prevailing Winds, a liberal publication. | ||
The Secret Treaty of Fort Hunt by Carl Olgsby. | ||
And it goes right into it to explain how Nazis were brought in. | ||
The historic piece examines the deals made behind the Nazis and U.S. intelligence. | ||
And later I'll get in to the United States Code, Title 22, talking about disarming Americans. | ||
From the 60s through the 80s and how that plan's being instituted under the guise of the drug war. | ||
Two more calls I've gone over. | ||
Then we'll go to some tape to prove the SWAT team footage once more because media here in town, radio hosts, again, are saying that I am a liar and that they were there to accept an award and that I was causing problems. | ||
I was there 20 minutes early, sat down, they came up and harassed me. | ||
That's the facts. | ||
Hello, you're on the air. | ||
unidentified
|
Hey. | |
How you doing? | ||
unidentified
|
All right, Alex. | |
Yes. | ||
Listen, I call Bob's talk show sometimes, I call myself the token liberal. | ||
And I don't know, do you hate liberals? | ||
No, I'm a real liberal. | ||
Now see, people are going to say, I say I'm a conservative, I say I'm a liberal, I say I'm a libertarian. | ||
Terms don't mean anything. | ||
I'm for freedom, brother. | ||
Listen, a classical liberal is Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Jefferson, personal freedom, motivated highly, obsessed with free market. | ||
What is a liberal today? | ||
Oh, I'm loving, so I'm going to give the state all the power. | ||
Yes, but so-called liberal, fascist dupe. | ||
Of the system. | ||
Every socialist system, unless you say it's Europe, but they're just total parasites, is based on death and murder. | ||
Look at Russia. | ||
Nazi Germany was socialist. | ||
Look at Cambodia. | ||
Look at China. | ||
unidentified
|
Look at Fidel Castro's Cuba, which is still glorified at UT. All you have to do is just see how many times a platform of both parties have changed completely 180 degrees. | |
Look, this stuff of liberal conservatives, all a bunch of garbage. | ||
I'm a classical liberal, which is libertarian, and in the current scope, the party that most follows what I believe, except for a few issues, are the Republicans, but they don't follow their plank. | ||
They are just as bad or worse. | ||
So understand they're all lying to you. | ||
They're all part of the same team. | ||
They're two different management teams. | ||
Please break your conditioning, sir. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay. | |
I used to do a lot of drugs. | ||
I've been clean six years. | ||
Am I on the air? | ||
Yeah, you're on the air. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay. | |
And I agree with a lot of things you say. | ||
I have a different perspective of conspiracies. | ||
This isn't a conspiracy. | ||
This is Frederick Whitehurst. | ||
unidentified
|
No, I mean... | |
This is Frederick Whitehurst, right here from the Statesman. | ||
This is Frederick Whitehurst, FBI to pay $1.16 million to Crime Lab whistleblower. | ||
It says right here, they were manufacturing evidence from Oklahoma City bombing to World Trade Center. | ||
unidentified
|
Well, let me make this point about conspiracies. | |
I think it's very interesting. | ||
It's programs of slavery. | ||
unidentified
|
When Hillary Clinton mentioned the word conspiracy, did you notice how many people, mostly enemies of Clinton, but I agree, they're all the same thing. | |
How upset they got with just the word conspiracy. | ||
Well, let me tell you why. | ||
Let me tell you why. | ||
It's because I remember, and I threw it away, and I wish I should have people doing archives for me. | ||
It was in the Statesman. | ||
She said, right after the Heaven's Gate cult, she said, Hale-Bopp, Heaven's Gate, UFOs, and the Vince Foster Whitewater investigations. | ||
I'm sick of it all. | ||
Conspiracy theories. | ||
So see, she throws in factual documentation with UFOs and Hale-Bopp and the Heaven's Gate cult, and then she calls it a right-wing conspiracy. | ||
You bet it is a Republican management team, CEO B, trying to take over CEO A. | ||
Are they going to change anything? | ||
No. | ||
unidentified
|
But I just think that it's like a type of denial that went into effect when all... | |
You're not listening to me. | ||
You're not listening to me. | ||
You vote for Democrats, don't you? | ||
unidentified
|
I don't vote, man. | |
I'm a convicted felon. | ||
When I get my right to vote back, I don't know what I'm going to do because I feel betrayed. | ||
You can only have an effect locally or statewide. | ||
unidentified
|
I feel betrayed, man. | |
Do what? | ||
unidentified
|
I feel betrayed by... | |
Well, you need to vote for Ron Paul, but he isn't in this district. | ||
But Ron Paul, we're going to play a clip of him later. | ||
Do you have any more comments? | ||
unidentified
|
Well, I just wanted to say about... | |
I remember a night when there was a white guy trying to sell me some cocaine for $120 a gram and a black kid, 12 years old, trying to sell me four times that much cocaine for $60. | ||
And anybody who doesn't believe that the government or some organization didn't infiltrate and bring in a lot of cocaine into the black community in the mid-'80s just wasn't there. | ||
Look, let me tell you something. | ||
I know for a fact... | ||
Secondhand from people that have told me things. | ||
I don't even know if my cousin in there has been told this by his dad, but I've been told things. | ||
Let me tell you something. | ||
Our country flies in the drugs, and the big banks launder it, and they ship it into our communities. | ||
I appreciate your call. | ||
unidentified
|
Thanks, man. | |
Bye. | ||
Take care. | ||
One more call, and we're going to the tape of the commissioner's court. | ||
Hello, you're on the air. | ||
unidentified
|
Hey, Alex, man, this is Scott, and I'm calling. | |
Did you see the Daily Texan today, buddy? | ||
No, man, I didn't. | ||
What's going on? | ||
unidentified
|
Well, hey, man, I went and checked out the Daily Texan, and the big picture is of the people in the Neato Aztec costume dancing. | |
The Mexican supremacist. | ||
unidentified
|
The little picture is me looking mad as hell because when I said to that guy who was calling us racist and stuff, I said to him, But if we agree, then what are we arguing about? | |
Wait, wait, wait, wait. | ||
Scott, first tell them the story. | ||
I was the main keynote speaker for the Young Conservatives, and the Libertarians were out there too. | ||
And I spoke for about an hour and a half, and I called you up because I saw you in the crowd. | ||
And so basically... | ||
unidentified
|
Well, here's the deal. | |
I showed up late. | ||
Alex sees me in the crowd. | ||
And says, hey, come on up here. | ||
And I was kind of embarrassed. | ||
Didn't really want to get up there. | ||
But once I had the mic in my hand, I started going off. | ||
And I started telling people about some stuff. | ||
And then these people would run up and say, racist, racist. | ||
unidentified
|
Well, there's this one guy who happened to be brown who was saying that Alex was a white supremacist and that it's all a bunch of racism and this and that. | |
But see, the picture in the Daily Texting today is of me looking like I'm cussing at him when I'm saying, if we agree, then what are we arguing about? | ||
Because I've made a speech about how whether it comes from Adam and Eve... | ||
Hey, hold on. | ||
Just last night I talked to you on the phone, Scott, and you talked about how it hurt your feelings that you said, hey, brother, and the guy pulled away from you, and then they show you being real serious and him going... | ||
Right. | ||
unidentified
|
Exactly, man. | |
I haven't seen the picture. | ||
Well, I saw those Daily Texan snakes going around going... | ||
unidentified
|
Well, the guy who took the picture seemed like he was a nice guy when he asked me my name. | |
But the picture in the paper is not of me with my arm around the guy and him putting his hand up between his face and my face to pretend like I didn't exist. | ||
It's the picture. | ||
I look like I'm cussing at him. | ||
You look like you're about to start cussing at him. | ||
And he looks like he's standing there very calm and reasonable. | ||
We're trying to have a reasonable, honest, quiet day. | ||
The caption says, harsh words were exchanged as Alex Jones and Scott Horton debate with Dwayne Ochiltree on the West Mall. | ||
And then it says how you were invited there by the young conservatives. | ||
Hold on, let me back up for a second and tell you something. | ||
This is exactly what I'm talking about. | ||
This guy... | ||
He's down there screaming bloody murder and saying I'm a white supremacist. | ||
And I'm saying, sir, I'm a multiracial family. | ||
Sir, I get death threats from the Ku Klux Klan. | ||
You're a racist! | ||
You're a white supremacist! | ||
And I'm going, no, my family paid for its land from Spain. | ||
A dictator came and tried to steal it from him. | ||
His name was Santa Ana. | ||
We went and fought the Battle of San Jacinto. | ||
I'm here. | ||
You're the ones bringing up racism. | ||
I go, Mecha are the ones that I have on tape in California beating up senior citizens at the 4th of July, running around like the Klan. | ||
They're brown-skinned Klansmen. | ||
I'll stand up against any racist. | ||
And that guy comes running up the steps and grabs the mic from him. | ||
I just give it to him. | ||
He begins screaming and saying, you're a white supremacist. | ||
And I reach in and go, hey, man, I'm not. | ||
Quit saying that. | ||
And then you get in there and say, hey, man, it's cool. | ||
He puts his hand up. | ||
And I bet, and we talked about this last night on the phone, and I bet right as you lowered your hand, I bet that's when, you know, because he put his hand in your face. | ||
I remember that. | ||
I bet you were going. | ||
And they got us, didn't they, boy? | ||
unidentified
|
Well, they got me. | |
My mouth's open. | ||
It looks like I'm yelling an epithet at them or something in this picture, man. | ||
It really looks bad. | ||
But then the article goes on. | ||
Listen, listen, hold on. | ||
They are technicians. | ||
Those so-called liberals are part of the fascist state, the paid-off foundations and the Rockefellers and the Carnegie foundations that run the universities and that suck this state and this nation dry, that are brainwashing our youth, that are manipulating them. | ||
See, that's why I say I'm more, you know, all these labels mean nothing. | ||
It was the young conservatives that let me get up there and bash the U.N., that let me bash, I was up there bashing the Klan. | ||
I was the one. | ||
You think? | ||
The liberals would have looked at me wearing a so-called liberal, the fascist fad people, would have seen me dressed like this and said, we don't want you, buddy. | ||
We want somebody out there going, we're going to fight through the hypocrisy and bring this nation down for the good of socialism. | ||
And they had people in the crowd going, because we kept giving them the mic, going, you know, the middle class is the problem. | ||
Socialism, socialism, yeah, we've got... | ||
Semi-Socialism here for the elite. | ||
Socialism is a movement of the economic elite, not of the downtrodden masses. | ||
And I'm sick of these people being conned, and that's why I'm fiery. | ||
That's why I see these people being abused. | ||
I hate seeing someone who's been destroyed. | ||
unidentified
|
Yep. | |
I'm sorry. | ||
Go ahead, Scott. | ||
Read the article. | ||
unidentified
|
For all you people who weren't there yesterday, what happened was, after I went off for a little while, naming some elitist publications that they might want to look up that is not... | |
Oh, we're reading out of prevailing winds, a right wing. | ||
Oh, whatever. | ||
That's about his left wing on that state diagram as you can get. | ||
You're a student, you're a cab driver, you're a skateboarder, you're a researcher. | ||
unidentified
|
I'm a Jeffersonian Republican. | |
Yeah, you're a real right winger. | ||
We've got to watch out. | ||
You've got long hair. | ||
We've got to watch out for Scott Horton. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, I'm armed with some gull-wing trucks and a Santa Cruz deck, man. | |
But so here's the deal, folks. | ||
I was done speaking. | ||
I got back down in the audience. | ||
Alex starts talking again, and then this guy who happened to be brown comes up and starts calling Alex a white supremacist and all this, and the big race debate starts up. | ||
So I run back up the steps. | ||
Give me the microphone. | ||
I got the microphone, and I gave everybody a little bit of speech about whether you believe in Adam and Eve or whether you believe in the anthropologist, archaeologist's view of the beginnings of mankind. | ||
We're all human. | ||
No matter what, we all came from one small little clique. | ||
We spread out around the world. | ||
We're geographically separated from each other for a long time. | ||
People adapted in evolved different ways. | ||
But we're all human. | ||
We all have the human spirit. | ||
And here today, because we're celebrating Texas Independence Day, we're here because we're Texans and we're Americans. | ||
And so skin color means nothing. | ||
There's no such thing as race. | ||
Scientifically, it gets no more specific than species. | ||
And we all have the Declaration of Independence. | ||
The shape of an ear, the shape of an ear, the shape of a nose, skin color from where you are on the equator. | ||
That's what you said, but the Daily Texan didn't want that. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh, no, that appeared nowhere in the article. | |
All it has from what you said, it has nothing of what I said in there, and what it has of you saying is, let me find the quote in here, I'm glad to see people come out and celebrate a state we all love and have pride in, Jones said, adding that he was saddened to see the event become a divisive issue. | ||
Jones went on to attack the protesters' lack of patriotism towards Texas and America and called for students to stand up for their state and country. | ||
That's about an inch and a half a text. | ||
The rest of it, there's a couple of quotes from Ms. Muhammad who put on the show to begin with. | ||
And the rest of it is all quotes of how the history of Texas is nothing but evil white people killing brown people. | ||
And I'm not apologizing for the people that committed the Indian genocide of the last century. | ||
People coming together under the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution of the United States to keep us all free. | ||
They would rather tear down America and tear down all that is good that we stand for and only talk about, yeah, well, you know, your great-great-grandfather might have killed my great-great-grandfather 100 years ago. | ||
Scott, that's because they don't know who they work for. | ||
There are people that want to get us all heading America, so we'll let it become a global, you know, we'll let the UN and the World Bank and the IMF. And the World Trade Organization take over, and that's what they're doing. | ||
It's on the news every day. | ||
They play up the racism to divide. | ||
They see us still as a colony with subjugated groups within. | ||
They're going to stir them up like our CIA does. | ||
Our CIA goes to a third world country. | ||
They stir up the minority against the majority, back them, and do all kinds. | ||
It's happening. | ||
We have a CIA program right here. | ||
Now, I'm going to say it right now. | ||
My family... | ||
My family paid for its land from Spain, and Spain did more killing than the Texans did. | ||
I have Indian blood in me. | ||
You can see it in my father. | ||
You can't see it in me. | ||
My grandfather, you can really tell he was Indian. | ||
He had an Indian nose, a big, handsome, tall man, Cherokee and Comanche in him. | ||
And so... | ||
unidentified
|
Well, obviously, you're a white supremacist. | |
I know that I'm descended from Russian Jews and Mexicans and English and God knows what else. | ||
Obviously, I'm a white supremacist, too, because I believe in the Constitution, and only white supremacist domestic terrorists have faith in the Constitution. | ||
Exactly. | ||
I get death-threaded. | ||
My producers on the radio get death-threaded by white supremacist groups, and we get hate mail probably five or six a day. | ||
I'm a white supremacist! | ||
Listen, I appreciate your call, Scott. | ||
unidentified
|
Thanks for having me on, buddy. | |
Good job, bro. | ||
Hey, get me a copy of that, because I don't know if I'm going to get out and get that elitist front group rag, the Daily Texan. | ||
They're not that bad. | ||
They're just kind. | ||
I shouldn't be mean to them. | ||
Did I say I was going to take another call? | ||
You were going to give a word to your sponsor, Alex. | ||
Oh, yes. | ||
We have to thank them. | ||
98.9 KJFK FM Radio sponsors this show. | ||
And, of course, I am a member of the team at 98.9 KJFK. They have never told me to make any modifications. | ||
unidentified
|
Maybe they should. | |
I am a radical and very diverse station. | ||
And here in Central Texas, 98.9 KJFK supports free speech. | ||
They support this man that is hated by the Mexican supremacists that want Texas to be Oslon and take Texas back for Mexico and the PRI. I guess the bankers would really have it. | ||
Hell, the bankers already own Mexico. | ||
So I guess really that's what they want. | ||
They want to divide it up. | ||
They already own it. | ||
They just want to subdivide it. | ||
And I've got the white supremacists hating me too. | ||
So that's great. | ||
I'm the man. | ||
But I go to a grocery store out everywhere. | ||
People know me. | ||
People see me. | ||
I went to pay a ticket today. | ||
Probably had 15, 20 people say, man, I appreciate what you're doing. | ||
Black. | ||
Why? | ||
That was some guy who's a rapper. | ||
I'd actually heard of his label. | ||
I was saying, yeah, man, I appreciate what you're doing, Alex. | ||
You know, you're talking about the CIA. We know what's going on. | ||
We know about the banks. | ||
And I was just going, yeah, yeah. | ||
And I had everybody. | ||
I mean, what are you talking about out there? | ||
The people that see it, see it. | ||
But all the little cons over here and all the little dupes over here and all the little government provocateur race groups, they all make me want to throw up. | ||
Why am I so energetic? | ||
Why am I so pissed and vehement? | ||
Because I'm sick of it. | ||
And we've been pacified too long. | ||
We've laid down too long. | ||
It's time to get excited about freedom, not about a damn football game. | ||
There's nothing weird about caring about your children's future in our hands, the American people's hands, not in Bill Clinton and the CFR's hands. | ||
All right. | ||
Well, let's pop up the sponsor one more time because we haven't even thanked them the whole show already in about an hour. | ||
That's my address if you wish to write to me. | ||
We will pop it up there. | ||
Again, I didn't thank them properly. | ||
98.9 KJFK, All Talk FM Radio. | ||
Thank you. | ||
98.9. | ||
I'll take two more calls. | ||
Make it quick. | ||
I know I've been rambling. | ||
Then we'll go to them in about 15 minutes. | ||
And here we go. | ||
Hello, you're on the air. | ||
unidentified
|
Am I on the air? | |
Yes, sir. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, you had spoken earlier about protesting the driver's license, fingerprinting schemes. | |
Yeah, I'm going to do it. | ||
I'll put up a comment line at the end. | ||
It's always full. | ||
I can't take messages off it quick enough. | ||
In fact, I don't even return calls anymore. | ||
I've gotten so lazy. | ||
But we have to organize it, do it professionally, do it nonviolently, like Martin Luther King. | ||
We're going in to refuse thumb scanning. | ||
It's been going on since 1993. The reason we've got to do this is they're already handing out questionnaires asking if you'll be urine and blood tested as Clinton wants. | ||
It's time to stand up or become total slaves. | ||
unidentified
|
Well, yeah, I'm interested in being there. | |
I just want to know time and place, basically. | ||
You'll hear more about it in the next few weeks, provided I'm still here on Access Television. | ||
And they support me here. | ||
I really appreciate them. | ||
There are some people that don't like me. | ||
But I'm still here, and I'll set it up in the next few weeks, organize it. | ||
I've been saying this for six months, but I'm doing it. | ||
I just kind of fear getting thrown in jail for sitting into a thing and having some kangaroo judge lean forward and say, you shouldn't have talked about corruption. | ||
unidentified
|
Ha, ha, ha. | |
And throwing me in the break for six months. | ||
But I'm going to do it, and we're going to stand up against it. | ||
Is that all you have to ask? | ||
unidentified
|
Yep. | |
Appreciate your call. | ||
Hello, you're on the air. | ||
unidentified
|
Hey, what's up, Alex? | |
Nothing much. | ||
unidentified
|
Hey, I just kind of tuned in. | |
If you could really quick give me a... | ||
What were the protesters protesting down at the Texas Independence thing? | ||
All I know is that I would say, does anyone... | ||
I would see these guys walking around down there going, you know, of all races, going, going, and just the gleam of self-realization and pride of their ignorance. | ||
And they would come up and scream, racist, racist, or ask me if I wanted to say sexual things. | ||
And I would say to them, my friends, you're conned, you're duped. | ||
I try to be nice. | ||
I was mean quite a few times. | ||
unidentified
|
Do they think celebrating Texas independence is equivalent to racism? | |
Yes, they do, because the white man kills everybody. | ||
But basically, it was my family paid for its land from Spain. | ||
I'm sure Indians were displaced. | ||
I'm not proud of that, but since some of that Indian blood flows in my family, it's not a big deal. | ||
I'm sad it happened, but you've got no big deal today when you've got over 2 million people, we're told, even the mainstream press, starving in command and control, I'm not going to call it communist, North Korea. | ||
You've got 30 million political dissidents in China. | ||
You've had socialists kill. | ||
Over 120 million this century alone are communist command and control. | ||
You have this murder going on. | ||
You have people working in slave labor equivalent in Mexico. | ||
You have total manipulation going on on a grand scale, out of control. | ||
And these people are there only to bash America. | ||
Now, it's right to feel it was bad that the Indians got their ass kicked. | ||
The Indians, some of them were peaceful, some of them were violent. | ||
The white man came, and he had his slaves, black slaves, white slaves, indentured servants. | ||
He had a focused attack. | ||
One tribe was raiding another tribe while the other tribe was raiding the other tribe. | ||
The white man was just as barbarous and he was together on it and came in and took over and it was wrong. | ||
And some tribes were assimilated, some were destroyed, but that's the past. | ||
My family didn't do anything to the Indians. | ||
They bought their land from the Spanish in 1830. These people don't care about the Indians as much as they just care about... | ||
They're celebrating Texas history. | ||
unidentified
|
They're pro-Mexico, right? | |
They want to take Mexico to take back Texas? | ||
They want Oslon. | ||
Even I was told that KB-24 and a bunch of other stations even admitted that. | ||
I haven't seen it yet. | ||
unidentified
|
What is Oslon? | |
It is a super communist state. | ||
That's what their literature says. | ||
I've had it on the show. | ||
I don't usually get into it. | ||
unidentified
|
Was there a massive amount of people down there protesting? | |
I'd say it was about 200, 300 people at one time with us, or about 250 with us. | ||
I'd say there was one focus group of them, about 200 strong. | ||
So I'd say over the two hours, we had about 600, 1,000 people that stopped and cheered. | ||
I'd say they had about, I don't know, 200, 300, I don't know, people that were gleaming eyes, slobber coming from their mouths. | ||
Running around screaming, racist pig, die, MF, white supremacist. | ||
unidentified
|
That's incredible. | |
Also, I saw you at the very beginning of the show before I had to run out. | ||
You were holding up an Ayn Rand book, and I know we can't recommend anything on the air. | ||
Well, see, I've never read this. | ||
Somebody sent this to me free. | ||
unidentified
|
It kicks ass. | |
Well, listen, I'm going to be focused when I get back after this clip, and then we have another clip. | ||
And I'm going to actually read or tell you about what Alan Greenspan said back in the 60s about the Fed, and now he's sold out and runs it. | ||
unidentified
|
You also need to read her other books, The Fountainhead and Atlas Shrugged. | |
They're incredible. | ||
See, everybody tells me that I say the same stuff she does. | ||
unidentified
|
You really do. | |
I came to my realization without ever reading it, but I'm reading it. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, also tomorrow night on the news, there's going to be a show about cops using cameras to bust criminals. | |
Yeah, I heard how wonderful it was on the radio today. | ||
I heard a commercial for it. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, I'm sure it's just going to be a total propaganda piece. | |
Well, listen, I appreciate your call. | ||
unidentified
|
Thanks. | |
When we get back, about ten minutes, it's all on the play of this. | ||
We'll take your calls. | ||
I'll talk about this. | ||
I'll talk about the U.S. Code a little bit more in detail. | ||
And a little bit more about Frederick Whitehurst. | ||
And then we'll take some more of your phone calls right here on Exposing Corruption. | ||
We'll be right back. | ||
Good job, producers. | ||
I really jump it on them. | ||
I don't ever tell them. | ||
What's happening around here? | ||
Well, let me show you a couple more pictures. | ||
Well, there's another conspiracy, another hallucination, another delusion of Alex Jones and associates, Texans for Freedom, you know, evil people like that. | ||
There's another pipe dream. | ||
Let me show you one more time the audio of him reading me the riot act and threatening to take me to jail. | ||
Of course, he whispered it to me in my ear right here, and then when I talked back to him, he went and got the little law for me and came over and told me to watch my speech. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Oh, so really, any verbal utterance that you can have, I might say that this is out of control. | ||
This is one of those new laws, isn't it? | ||
Okay, now, Commissioner Sunliner said that she didn't send him over there. | ||
Okay, well, you see the supervisor talking to him, and now I'll show you go over and give the guy the piece of paper to come over and give it to me. | ||
First he comes and tells him to sit down beside me, and then he comes over and gives him a piece of paper. | ||
Now here, it's fixing to happen. | ||
unidentified
|
Watch and learn about the lies. | |
I guess it's just a conspiracy, isn't it? | ||
Too bad we had our own cameras down there. | ||
We don't even need the mainstream media. | ||
unidentified
|
Watch the chain of events for yourself. | |
He comes over, tells it in my ear, sees the camera, says, I see the camera, gets up, and then his supervisor, who's been up there talking to him, comes back in, talks to the commissioners, he goes out, gets the laws, brings them to him, and then sends him over to read it to me and give me a copy. | ||
So there you have it. | ||
Now let's go back to her calling it a conspiracy. | ||
unidentified
|
Why were they here? | |
No, I was referring to the number of people in the audience. | ||
I had no idea. | ||
We sidestepped the whole question. | ||
Why were they here? | ||
Why were they here? | ||
I didn't order them there. | ||
Somebody had to order them to be here. | ||
They don't just come here. | ||
They're on a payroll. | ||
Somebody ordered them to be here. | ||
Well, it wasn't for me, and I wasn't discussing with my SWAT officers conspiracy theories about what Margaret... | ||
I don't want to be rude, but Mr. Jones' show is a call-in show. | ||
unidentified
|
Believe it or not, we actually weren't discussing you all. | |
Mr. Jones' show is a call-in show. | ||
You can take issues up with Alex Jones. | ||
unidentified
|
...with my SWAT officers conspiracy theories about what Margaret... | |
I don't want to be rude, but... | ||
unidentified
|
conspiracy theories conspiracy theories conspiracy theories about what Margaret I don't know we sidestep the whole question why were they here? | |
why were they here? | ||
I didn't order them there somebody had to order them to be here they don't just come here they're on a payroll somebody ordered them to be here well it wasn't for me and I wasn't discussing with my SWAT officers conspiracy theories Well, there you have it. | ||
You can't, I mean, these people will just throw out conspiracy theory, soldier of fortune, black helicopter, all their little buzzwords, and it just so happens that on this very show, Exposing Corruption, I have documented black helicopters from Lair News Hour in 60 Minutes, but they're telling you it's a good idea. | ||
But I was a kook a year ago to tell you about it, and now they send SWAT out for innocent people to intimidate us. | ||
You've seen the footage, and she calls it a conspiracy theory. | ||
She loves it so much, she says it more later. | ||
unidentified
|
Hear, hear from her. | |
Mr. Jones' show is a call-in show. | ||
Mr. Jones' show is a call-in show. | ||
You can take issues up with Alex Jones with him personally. | ||
The issue here is about children, okay? | ||
I don't want to get involved in the pettiness of things like that because it's petty, quite frankly. | ||
unidentified
|
We're talking about children and we're talking about intimidation. | |
Well, this isn't the appropriate forum for your personal problems with Alex Jones. | ||
Okay, I've showed you some of the commissioner's lies. | ||
Now let's go over this ASAP program, probably for the last time. | ||
Absent Student Assistance Program, which has been expanded massively. | ||
It's a three-year-old program, and you're going to see some of the constables and some of their bureaucrat enforcement arms up here explaining to you, some of the administrators, telling you that Now they're going to 400 to 500 homes a night. | ||
And you're going to hear Sunlighter, Commissioner, sit up there and talk about, we all have to obey the law. | ||
And then later she giggles and says, well, I get out of tickets. | ||
And that's about 30 minutes later. | ||
It's just continual BS and most people don't catch it. | ||
The important point is, is they say this program would just go away if kids would stop missing school. | ||
Well, they brag about their statistics. | ||
Between 1% and 2% more kids are going to school because of the 400 to 500 visits to people's homes a night by armed guards. | ||
And, of course, there's many mistakes in the system, and Judge Elshire, Bill Elshire, does address that, that people call in and the constable still show up. | ||
Or your kid's in the hospital and you call and tell them, it doesn't matter, bureaucrat mistake. | ||
They still come and trespass on your property. | ||
They keep talking about this partnership between the state and your children. | ||
These people are not fit to run your children's lives. | ||
The state needs to get away from your kids. | ||
But they really feel like it's their job and that your kids are theirs. | ||
And this is coming from the national and the international level. | ||
Hillary Clinton, it takes a village to raise your children. | ||
So let's go ahead and have a couple minutes of clips. | ||
Some of the more. | ||
Disgusting comments. | ||
And these people really believe what they're saying. | ||
That's the dangerous part about the whole system. | ||
It's growing. | ||
It's out of control. | ||
It wants to disarm you, gain control of your children, destroy parental rights, bankrupt you, and socialize the whole economy. | ||
It's dangerous. | ||
And it doesn't work. | ||
And if they've done such a good job over history, bureaucrats and people, why since we got federal sponsored schooling in the National Education Association and we dropped from number one in the world in education to number 49th now, and that's 1997 why since we got federal sponsored schooling in the National Education Association and we dropped from The state wants invalids, ignorant people that can't even spell their name correctly. | ||
That is clay that is molded more efficiently, as David Rockefeller says. | ||
What else did David Rockefeller say? | ||
I'll say this many times. | ||
The government training centers are what he calls the public schools. | ||
The public schools are helpless people yielding themselves to our molding hands. | ||
And our youth are being molded quite nicely. | ||
Now, here are these minions, in my opinion, these government bureaucrats that run the Absent Student Assistance Program, you know, another one of those wonderful services. | ||
$2,000 a day fines for grass over three inches, you know. | ||
Love like that. | ||
These are the people right here in front of you that are destroying this country, and they think they're doing a good job. | ||
Because they're just go-along-get-along servants. | ||
These are followers, and followers are leading us. | ||
Wait a minute. | ||
How are followers leading us? | ||
Because they're not really leaders. | ||
They're following their masters, the transnational corrupt crime rings. | ||
And you're probably saying, Alex, prove what you're saying, Mr. Jones. | ||
unidentified
|
What is this about transnational crime rings? | |
More conspiracies from the mind of a kook? | ||
No. | ||
The foundations that control and manipulate the NEA and the national education system and the lobbies that fund all the systems and codify the documents that all the states and the counties Think of the newest, coolest thing, are the corrupt establishment, mainly European and New York finance, that seeks to steal and destroy the free market because it makes it more easily manageable for them because they are threatened by new money. | ||
Don't mean to be too complex, but let's go ahead and get to the bureaucrats. | ||
It is very nauseating to watch them pushing socialism and federal, supranational standards for control of your children. | ||
And this isn't coming from my mouth. | ||
I mean, Hillary can't shut up about it. | ||
Janet Reno, the butcher, the obstructor of justice, can't shut up about it. | ||
And every fascist society in history has been obsessed with kids. | ||
Learn history and learn that the establishment, the corrupt establishment, understands that control of the youth and manipulation of the youth is control of the future. | ||
They are controlling our destiny, and they are dumbing down our people. | ||
They are pure filth, in my opinion. | ||
Pure garbage. | ||
Listen to the first quote from this bureaucrat wanting more control of your children as they accelerate this program. | ||
First thing he says is that now they're moving into elementary school students. | ||
That is absolutely out of order. | ||
Elementary students, I mean they're going down to the first grade guys, are not skipping school. | ||
It's about sticking their nose in your business. | ||
Listen to him. | ||
He's very proud of this. | ||
Should be embarrassed. | ||
Should be ashamed of himself. | ||
unidentified
|
So one of the things that we certainly want to do is to quickly let them know that we're working together. | |
As you indicated, any time you try something new and try to work with it, you're going to have some problems and mistakes that you make that you really apologize for. | ||
Mainly, again, it's a learning process for us, too. | ||
But I think over the last two and a half years, as we've seen this develop, the coordination with Roger and the constables have just gotten better and better. | ||
And as you know, this year we're working with the The kids will know that Big Brother is boss. | ||
The problem is that if we work with the elementary and middle school and hopefully the high school, that we're going to have a process where it gets less and less necessary for the visits and the cost and so on. | ||
We really think that's going to happen. | ||
The kids will know that Big Brother is boss. | ||
The problem is that if we work with the elementary and middle school and hopefully the high school, that we're going to have a process where it gets less and less necessary for the visits and the cost and so on. | ||
We really think that's going to happen. | ||
Oh yeah, bureaucrats are really going to give up their power. | ||
They always do that. | ||
Yeah, that's what government does. | ||
It starts a program and then it fixes things and then it stops. | ||
No, its job is to make things worse so that they need more government and more bureaucrats until the whole system falls apart like Russia or any other socialized, communized, fascized system. | ||
Again, it goes back to history. | ||
Y'all have got to get it out there in the public that are hearing this and you didn't get it when you were in school. | ||
It's getting worse and worse. | ||
Now let's hear some more. | ||
unidentified
|
A lot of times institutions are tough to deal with, but we're all human beings within those institutions wanting the same kind of things with the parents. | |
And once that communication is established, it's amazing how well children can do when they know the parents and the schools and the community are supporting of them. | ||
Yes, once we have these international programs that the UN sponsored for the Ride of the Children and People, well, you heard him. | ||
Then it's for the kids, and everything's just fine. | ||
And it's institutions and a partnership with the parents. | ||
It's that village we keep hearing about. | ||
Boy, it would have made Hitler proud with the Hitlerjugend or Stalin's youth camps or Mao's Children for the Cultural Revolution. | ||
They were some of the best workers, man. | ||
Or Pol Pot's terror squads of 13-year-old children. | ||
Man, they are really getting it together, I tell you. | ||
And D.A.R.E. goes out and tells kids to tattle on their parents. | ||
It's just getting better and better, isn't it? | ||
Now you're fixing to hear about the expansion of these programs and how wonderful it is and how good everything's going. | ||
unidentified
|
At the ninth grade. | |
What we also found out as a result of this expansion was during last spring we had a pilot program to try out the elementary school program. | ||
We had a pilot program to try out the elementary school program. | ||
as we try to collaborate with our other partners in the justice system, particularly the Travis County Juvenile Court, as we try to collaborate with our other partners in the justice system, particularly the Travis County Juvenile Court, and what we've... | ||
Yes, yes, your students, your children, your elementary students, and the Travis County Juvenile Court. | ||
We've got to get them in the system. | ||
It's very important to get them in that system. | ||
There's revenue generation. | ||
They get used to the system, giving them orders, not their parents. | ||
Yes, that strengthens the village. | ||
Yes, yes. | ||
unidentified
|
Another issue that we've learned from the status reports is we're tracking participation fairly actively. | |
And I'm speaking of schools participation. | ||
How often do they send us a list of kids? | ||
They send us a list of kids. | ||
And then at the elementary schools, the participation is still coming online. | ||
We're averaging right around 40% participation with the elementary schools. | ||
On this camera, I want people to show you who Carol Howell... | ||
FBI informant, VATF informant, warned them. | ||
She came out, and then they threatened to fire, just like Frederick Whitehurst from the FBI crime lab who said they were manufacturing evidence, head of the FBI crime lab. | ||
Again, I have your precious statesman here. | ||
FBI to pay $1.16 million to crime lab whistleblower. | ||
They call it inaccurate prosecution testimony in major cases, including Oklahoma City World Trade Center bombings. | ||
No, they said they manufactured evidence. | ||
If we can come in here, I think this will do. | ||
Just do the close shot, and I'll show people here. | ||
Okay, there he is. | ||
If you see this man, I think he's actually been on AXS TV. They play one of his tapes here, hailing Hitler and things. | ||
He's Andres Strassmeyer. | ||
His father was a top Nazi brought over to this country. | ||
There he is. | ||
He's a known CIA actual agent. | ||
He's been heavily linked to. | ||
And that's who McVeigh has been hooked up with for about two weeks. | ||
And that's who we think blew up the Oklahoma City building. | ||
Good chances. | ||
That's what the New American says. | ||
And these are dangerous people. | ||
And I don't really appreciate having to come out against them. | ||
But there is your loving Andres Strassmeyer. | ||
In fact, I think it's important people see this guy in case they've seen him. | ||
They can really know who did it. | ||
Let's get a close-up of this in about a minute or so. | ||
Yeah, we'll do it on that camera right there. | ||
We'll have to straighten that one. | ||
Let's get a lovely picture of this gentleman. | ||
Yeah, there we go. | ||
Head of Elohim City. | ||
Yeah, let's take a look at him. | ||
Yeah, he's a nice-looking fellow. | ||
Man, you can really count on. | ||
Well, that's good. | ||
We've seen who this loving individual is. | ||
Free to do whatever bidding his master is commanded him to do. | ||
Like burning the rice stack back in 33. These people can be counted on. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you very, very much. | |
And there's the lady that stood up and then was tempted. | ||
The first they wanted to tell her everything was fine and give her a job, but then she said, no, you covered it up. | ||
And it doesn't matter for her now. | ||
She's now been thrown out of the system because she was a good FBI informant, BATF informant. | ||
More love, more caring, more help. | ||
From the government. | ||
Now here I have from Ayn Rand, I've never read before, people said I ought to. | ||
It says, there's an essay in here by Alan Greenspan. | ||
This was written in 1962, where he talks about, really, socialism is for the rich and created by corrupt institutions to circumvent the free market. | ||
And he says that coercive monopolies cannot stand in a real free market. | ||
He talks about that and proves it. | ||
And he talks about how professors use the argument that the railroads in the 19th century showed the failure of free market. | ||
No, it showed the failure of subsidized behavior in the West. | ||
And then they have another essay here where he talks about how we need to be on the gold standard, or at least have federal control, and how the Federal Reserve is dangerous. | ||
And that is on page 96 of Ayn Rand, Capitalism, the Unknown Ideal, because nobody ever really follows it. | ||
Now we have what they call a mixed economy, which is really a parasitic. | ||
A socialist economy for the rich. | ||
Basically, I just read this today. | ||
I haven't had time to highlight it. | ||
I'll go back over it more for you next week. | ||
Now, of course, Greenspan is sold out, and you'll never hear any of that from him today. | ||
He was obviously too smart a gentleman. | ||
They had to pay him off and suck him into their system. | ||
He's now one of their boys. | ||
Before we go to your calls, and if we can, drop my little Statesman article. | ||
Before we go to the calls, I want to cue up the tape, and then we'll just play it in front of me for a few seconds. | ||
I want to cue up the tape and show you a tape from Lair NewsHour, and I get my dates mixed up, is it September 23rd, 1997, where they show you black helicopters and say it's for surveillance of major cities, and it's a secret program. | ||
We'll try to show you that clip. | ||
Then we'll show you some footage that you've seen before. | ||
But it's important we see this, because this myth has not been dispelled, and I have to dispel these myths. | ||
This show is about information, not continual entertainment. | ||
You need to tape these shows and get this documentation out to people. | ||
Then we'll show you footage that the Ritters, Jimmy and Gene Ritter, got at the Sheriff's Department complex. | ||
In Houston, Texas, where it looks like 13 to 14 attack helicopters, Apache, I believe, A models, and also a bunch of Hueys and things. | ||
This is for you, my friends, and this is the local police in training with the Fed. | ||
This is the United States Code, annotated, Title 22, and they attempt to couch it. | ||
In that it's for foreign policy, but then it openly states, the formulation and implementation of United States arms control and disarmament policy in a manner which will promote the national security can best be ensured by central organizations charged by statute with primary responsibility for this field. | ||
This organization must be such as positioned with the government that it can provide the president, the secretary of state, and other officials of the executive branch in Congress with recommendations concerning United States. | ||
Then it goes on to say the effect of these recommendations upon our national security policies and our economy. | ||
And it's all counts in legalese, but this was all started back in 1962. And I think Kennedy tried to turn it around. | ||
That's why he got killed. | ||
And then in the 80s, it's heavily strengthened. | ||
And it talks about the terms of arms control and disarmament mean... | ||
The identification, verification, inspection, limitation. | ||
And it talks about the drug war and things. | ||
This is the blueprint for the police state that is now being unveiled before us with the smart highways and the thumb scanning and the ski mask wearing police under federal control. | ||
Secret police. | ||
Whenever we're ready with one of those clips, are we ready? | ||
unidentified
|
Ready to roll. | |
Let's play one clip and I'll be back in a minute or so and then we'll play some more. | ||
unidentified
|
What is the problem? | |
I got out of a ticket the other night actually. | ||
I actually got out of a ticket the other night. | ||
As far as training and actual combat that we all learn from and a lot of people don't realize that, that when we go to a call out, you know, for lack of a better description, we are in combat. | ||
Equating crime control to war bothers Patience Milrod. | ||
She's a Fresno lawyer who says the military approach to crime is wrong. | ||
This militarization of the police function... | ||
Shifts our expectations of what the police will do. | ||
And we're no longer back in the days when the police cop was walking a beat or there's a policeman on a bicycle and there's a certain range of behavior that we expect from a police officer that's got a relationship with the community in which he or she is functioning. | ||
And that is an entirely different expectation than we have of a police officer who operates as if he or she were in a war. | ||
The idea of war is that there is an enemy. | ||
Again, I have been lacking. | ||
I've been doing a lot of things, a lot of speeches, a lot of work. | ||
I didn't have it queued up for them. | ||
I think it's before that or after that. | ||
We've played it many times. | ||
It shows the black helicopters, says it's for your best interest. | ||
And then later, before or after that, I can't remember either. | ||
It's not that long of a newscast. | ||
It shows one of the SWAT commanders talking about secret programs. | ||
Again, if you want, this is all volunteer down here. | ||
We have our own lives. | ||
Again, if you don't like it, you can go get some multi-million dollar package BS for yourself. | ||
Let's go ahead and take some calls while we're finding that. | ||
Hello, you're on the air. | ||
unidentified
|
Hello, Alex. | |
Yes. | ||
unidentified
|
I watch your show a lot, and I've come to a conclusion, and that is that, yeah, you're fighting against the revolution as it currently stands, but you're headed towards the next step of the revolution. | |
The revolution started not 50 years ago, not 100 years ago. | ||
It started 500 years ago. | ||
Yes, the Renaissance. | ||
The battle against centralized control. | ||
unidentified
|
The battle against the monarchy. | |
But see, the printing press started that. | ||
Religious monopolies were broken up. | ||
Yes. | ||
Yes. | ||
unidentified
|
The French Revolution was... | |
A very big step. | ||
Our country was not founded on the principles of the French Revolution, but the next step of the revolution that we have espoused, which is communism and socialism, does espouse the principles of the French Revolution. | ||
Let me explain something to you, my friend. | ||
I don't know where you're going with this, but all I'm saying is that there's no such thing as communism. | ||
It is command and control. | ||
It is a catchword used by professors and the intelligentsia and the establishment to rationalize neo-feudalism. | ||
Slavery. | ||
I mean, the big powers that be, about 130 years ago, got together and said, too many people are getting too much power, new establishments are rising, not only the state-sponsored, state-licensed by the monarchy shipping companies and mining companies. | ||
We're losing control. | ||
We need to start funding something called communism, and we'll go have Karl Marx write it, and then we'll be able to con the masses back into slavery. | ||
unidentified
|
Well, how is anarchy a proper reaction to that? | |
Anarchy doesn't... | ||
Look, command and control is what big systems of humans gravitate towards because so many people are followers. | ||
Anarchy is impossible in groups of bigger than 5 to 10 people, my friend. | ||
Anarchy, control always comes back into state. | ||
I mean, there could be a nuclear war, and if we weren't all destroyed, there would be a government set up pretty quick. | ||
unidentified
|
Well, the last time I talked to you, you said that you were an anarchist. | |
As an ideal, and actually, I didn't say that. | ||
I would challenge you to produce that. | ||
What I'm saying is that you have a political spectrum. | ||
You have command and control over here. | ||
I'm going to put you on hold so we can fix that noise. | ||
Maybe we don't have the things tuned or you got your TV up. | ||
Basically, what it comes down to is this. | ||
It's the real political spectrum. | ||
And I've said this every week, but see, it has to be said again. | ||
You have... | ||
See, you just want to talk about it. | ||
You don't want to fix the problems. | ||
You just want to be an apologist and sit in your hole. | ||
But anyways, I'm sorry I'm mean. | ||
We're in a fight for our lives, and I'm sorry I get vicious when it comes to standing up for America, standing up for some human liberty. | ||
We're sitting over here. | ||
All right, what is the end result? | ||
Have we fixed that noise? | ||
Well, I know we can't tell, but we'll figure it out. | ||
What is the end result of command and control? | ||
Okay, of socialism, supposedly on the left. | ||
It's command and control. | ||
What is the end result on the so-called right of this false political spectrum? | ||
Fascism. | ||
And what is its end result? | ||
Command and control. | ||
It's a bunch of crap. | ||
And they tell you to be in the middle of this? | ||
They tell you to be in the middle of this? | ||
It's a lie. | ||
They've taught you garbage. | ||
They've fed you garbage. | ||
They've given you false terms. | ||
The real political spectrum is anarchy, impossible to achieve in a modern civilization when you do not want anarchy. | ||
There's not even anarchy in a tribe. | ||
A small band might have anarchy. | ||
When you go out with three or four of your friends, one of you is the leader, you know that. | ||
Anarchy is impossible. | ||
It is an ideal. | ||
And I don't even say go for that ideal. | ||
Way over here next to anarchy is representative republic with a never-ending struggle for individual liberty, a true libertarian stance. | ||
I don't mean the libertarian party. | ||
And then, over here, you've got the command and control, which we're always sliding towards, which the powers that consolidate in a centrifugal force, as the communist will tell you, pull. | ||
But the powers that be are always pushing socialism. | ||
Look at all the rich establishment foundations. | ||
Look at the facts. | ||
You're on the air. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay, I appreciate your assessment of the situation. | |
Let me move on to something else. | ||
Can you turn your TV down, or is that just us? | ||
unidentified
|
I can turn my TV off. | |
Okay, go ahead. | ||
unidentified
|
All right. | |
Have you heard about the recent New Jersey case regarding homosexuals in the Boy Scouts? | ||
You called last... | ||
Was it you that called my TV show last night? | ||
unidentified
|
No. | |
Somebody called up with us. | ||
It's a huge diversion. | ||
If you don't like the Scouts, get your kids out. | ||
It's a wedge issue to divide us. | ||
I'm not going to get engaged in pettiness. | ||
And I'm sorry. | ||
I'm sick and tired of it. | ||
I'm not going to... | ||
Black helicopters are swarming around. | ||
Police are under federal control. | ||
And we find that clip from Lair NewsHour. | ||
I'll show it to you. | ||
Hello here on the air. | ||
unidentified
|
Good evening. | |
How are you doing? | ||
unidentified
|
I saw you at municipal court today. | |
I wanted to come up to you, but I saw you talking to that group of young men, particularly the young black men, not to define him by his race, but I found it very interesting that you were not at all hindered by your atmosphere, and it was like you were on TV. Really? | ||
Yeah, you were just going off. | ||
I mean, you weren't loud, and I just slipped over my life. | ||
I was like, oh my God, that's Alex Jones! | ||
What were you talking about, down at UT? Municipal Court today! | ||
unidentified
|
You were paying a ticket, I guess. | |
Oh, yeah, yeah. | ||
unidentified
|
And it was surreal to see you in that atmosphere anyway, because I always see you on a box, you know, on television. | |
We were talking to this guy, and you were talking to him about the same kinds of issues you're talking about tonight. | ||
Basically, I'm an S.O.S. Beacon going, meow, meow, meow, pumping out. | ||
You understand? | ||
unidentified
|
You certainly are. | |
And I thought it was very heartening to see that because you seem like a very passionate young man. | ||
It's nice to see that you don't just turn on for the television. | ||
You legitimately are like that. | ||
Oh, no, I can't shut up. | ||
unidentified
|
Well, no, I thought I was very touched by that. | |
I thought it was really cool. | ||
Well, you know me, I'm a white supremacist, some of the people were saying. | ||
That's why I'm trying to embrace, you know, African Americans here. | ||
unidentified
|
You know, I don't agree with your spin on Reagan or Texas independence, but I know you're not a racist. | |
No, I wasn't. | ||
When have I talked about Ronald Reagan? | ||
I think Ronald Reagan was completely controlled. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, a guy called you. | |
You know, I totally appreciate you, and I think you're great. | ||
I see that you really are dedicated to a cause that I believe in, and I think your form is good, and I think your message is good, and I think the way you present it is very upbeat and very... | ||
Why didn't you come up and talk to me? | ||
I was in line for an hour to pay that ticket. | ||
unidentified
|
Because I went to the Mantech location, and the reason I'm coaching is because you were doing so well with those guys. | |
And it wasn't just that guy. | ||
What I wanted to call you and tell you, there were a bunch of people around that young man listening to you. | ||
Oh, I know. | ||
unidentified
|
A lot of young Latinos and black young men. | |
And I was like, you know, I didn't want to get in on that because I was like, that's too beautiful, you know, to see that. | ||
Well, I mean, they know better than anybody about the modern slave state. | ||
So I have to talk to them about it. | ||
I want to embrace them. | ||
And most of those guys know just as much as I do about it. | ||
unidentified
|
I mean, they understand. | |
And, well, I don't know about that. | ||
I talked to a lot of young... | ||
You were talking about rap, right? | ||
I have friends in the community, the hip-hop community. | ||
A lot of them have a little bit of information from a lot of different places. | ||
And that's why when you were talking to these guys, it felt like you're really going to consolidate what they know. | ||
Well, I'm better in person. | ||
unidentified
|
Pardon? | |
I'm better in person talking to people. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, you were very humanistic. | |
That's what I was going to tell you. | ||
I was impressed. | ||
You were for real to me. | ||
I was just awestruck by the whole scene. | ||
Well, I appreciate it. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
You're making me feel good here now. | ||
unidentified
|
No, no, I'm serious. | |
I had to call you tonight. | ||
I usually go to bed. | ||
I was like, I'm going to stay up and watch this guy. | ||
I'm going to tell him you're for real. | ||
Well, listen, have you seen me play the black helicopters for you? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Well, why don't you stay on the line while we go ahead and play that. | ||
I'm going to put you on hold, and I'm going to ask you what you think about this. | ||
Is this a conspiracy theory, okay? | ||
I'm going to put you on hold. | ||
Do we have that queued up, guys? | ||
unidentified
|
The television... | |
Black helicopters? | ||
Yeah, we certainly do. | ||
Okay, let's go ahead and go to that. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay, we'll play it. | |
In addition to the new technology, hundreds of millions of dollars worth of surplus military equipment is being transferred to local police as a result of military downsizing. | ||
Army helicopters that once did service in Vietnam are now used for surveillance in American cities. | ||
Police departments are refurbishing armored personnel carriers acquired from the military and are building their weapons inventories with military firearms. | ||
These are, I guess, the M14 that we received. | ||
Orlando police have received six M14 rifles from the military. | ||
And Los Angeles police recently obtained 600 army surplus M16 rifles. | ||
Basically, they sit there and they tell you that this is all being done because they're downsizing. | ||
It's all this free equipment. | ||
It's been going on big time since Jimmy Carter's administration. | ||
Accelerated with Reagan and has exploded. | ||
I mean, we're in a modern police state, ski mask wearing police, training with the military, and we're fixing to show you SWAT team commander telling you it's top secret, but that it is going on. | ||
The conspiracy's gone, my friends. | ||
It's fact. | ||
Are you there? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Great. | ||
I mean, I hate to play that every week now, but people just continually, they have to see it with the media telling you how nice it is. | ||
unidentified
|
It's a catchphrase now. | |
Whenever I mention what you talk about to people, they automatically say conspiracy. | ||
So we're going to continue to play that maybe three times a show from now on. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, you know, you've got to do what you've got to do to get your message across. | |
But I just wanted to tell you that, you know, you're for real. | ||
And I was impressed, you know, you had a captive audience. | ||
By all means. | ||
I don't think they minded it too much. | ||
unidentified
|
No, you weren't loud. | |
You weren't speaking very loud. | ||
I noticed there were people leaning around you, and then I looked. | ||
I was like, why are they all around him? | ||
And then I was like, oh, my God, that's Alex Jones. | ||
I know. | ||
If they don't kill me, I'm going to get better and better at this and become some kind of mad prophet or something. | ||
unidentified
|
And it was ironic, too, because it was in the middle of municipal court. | |
It was just all very strange. | ||
I'm right there in the belly of the beast. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, you are. | |
Yeah, I was waiting for cops to, like, come out and harass you, but they didn't today. | ||
I guess they didn't know you were there. | ||
Yeah. | ||
unidentified
|
But, um, anyway, more power to you. | |
And I want to know about the thumb-scanning thing. | ||
I want to show up for that. | ||
Well, listen, you're going to get your opportunity. | ||
I'm going to start. | ||
I'll have it planned by next week. | ||
We'll start the drive. | ||
I'd like to have at least 20, 30 people down there ready, just like Martin Luther King, to put it on the line. | ||
unidentified
|
I like when you say that, like Martin Luther King. | |
You know what, though? | ||
I'm scared. | ||
I hate to admit it, but I wonder if, and I hope other people call in about this. | ||
Sometimes I get scared when you have stuff like this, because I don't, and I'm going to, this is going to sound really wormy and terrible, but I get scared. | ||
Because I know you've got people after you. | ||
And I'm not trying to scare you or be paranoid. | ||
Listen, I don't want to talk about it because it'll only scare people out there. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, but that's my thing, though. | |
You should address that. | ||
I mean, what if they take pictures of us when we're there and then later on down the line? | ||
And I mean, I'll do it. | ||
I don't care. | ||
Who cares? | ||
Who cares? | ||
I mean, we're living in tyranny. | ||
You've got to stand against it. | ||
Every man dies. | ||
Not every man lives. | ||
That goes for women, too. | ||
We've got to embrace them. | ||
Look, I had the SWAT team feeling bad that day when I got up there to speak. | ||
They were there, they intimidated me, and I spoke out, and when I got up, I saw the SWAT guys in the back going... | ||
I mean, some of them, except for Blondie, looked like they were depressed, and they were kind of... | ||
unidentified
|
Really? | |
Down at UT, I had police, Hispanic, black and white, waving at me, smiling. | ||
They liked what I was saying, even though I was doing it in kind of a passionate forum. | ||
I do get too aggressive. | ||
Look, we got to stand up peaceably. | ||
That's why they killed Martin Luther King, though, was because he was peaceable, he was aggressive, he was more smooth than me, but... | ||
That's why, but I don't care. | ||
I don't know, Alex. | ||
unidentified
|
You've got your own style, man. | |
I respect you. | ||
I do. | ||
Well, listen, enough praise, please. | ||
unidentified
|
I'm going to quit, you know, going overboard, but I just, you know, it says a lot for a man when you see him in person, and you see how he reacts with real people. | |
Well, I talked about it. | ||
I was there for an hour. | ||
I talked about 20 people. | ||
I mean, I talked about that earlier in the show. | ||
unidentified
|
That's what I'm saying. | |
I mean, you wouldn't pay your ticket like a normal Joe Schmo. | ||
You were sitting around. | ||
You were talking with people. | ||
You were a man's man. | ||
You're not just a bunch of BS, and I respect you for that. | ||
I just want to let you know. | ||
Well, one thing I am, I'm far beyond driven, and I am a true believer. | ||
unidentified
|
You are. | |
Well, listen, I appreciate your call. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay, you have a good night. | |
I appreciate that. | ||
I'll put up the comment line over the next few weeks. | ||
It'll probably be jammed out, but keep the number. | ||
I want to get people prepared, get them together, get it focused, and get at least 20 people down there to have a sit-in if they won't give us driver's license. | ||
Now, we have to bring our license. | ||
We have to bring our... | ||
Birth certificates and we'll even bring a social security card. | ||
We will demand our driver's license as we pay for the roads. | ||
Are we ready with the SWAT team commander? | ||
unidentified
|
Absolutely. | |
Excellent job, Buckley and Andy. | ||
Let's go to it. | ||
unidentified
|
But Lieutenant Sid Hale, a SWAT instructor with the L.A. Sheriff's Department, says military training for police has arisen out of need. | |
All we have to do is go to our memorial and you can see the number of people that we lost before we started realizing it. | ||
You were telling me before about training with Marines, training with SEALs. | ||
Could you explain what you've done? | ||
Now, some of this stuff I'm going to have to dance around on because it's classified. | ||
Just so you know. | ||
In fact, I'm starting to get nervous even just thinking about it. | ||
But no, we've trained with most of the special operations units in the military. | ||
What kind of training? | ||
A lot of urban movement, maritime interdiction operations, hostage rescue, a lot of long rifle training, sniper training. | ||
To many police officers, the threat from well-armed criminals... | ||
Okay, the threat from well-armed criminals. | ||
We had a lot of officers we lost. | ||
I don't have a problem with police being highly trained, having ex-military people locally. | ||
But they don't need federal control with black helicopters swarming around, with infrared spying your homes. | ||
And the government has proven itself not to be on your side. | ||
They think of you as slaves that are meant to pay your money to them. | ||
And that is what they are about. | ||
And that is what they stand for. | ||
And that is what they want to do. | ||
They want to divide you, balkanize you, and destroy your mental capacity. | ||
All right, now we'll cue up the Houston footage, again, gotten by the Ritters, real patriots that are really doing a great job. | ||
And we will just, I'll talk behind it, and we'll show you some of the love. | ||
For those that know military weapons, that is the Model A Apache. | ||
Frontline attack helicopter two-man can carry impressive missile attachments, and they do have the missile attachments on them, and if you look closer, they have the infrared pods on the nose for looking and spying into your homes. | ||
They also have sound systems, laser sound systems, where they can aim a laser at your window and listen to whatever's going on in your house. | ||
Laser identification systems. | ||
I've watched the tape carefully. | ||
You can see, I think, 13 to 14 of them. | ||
Some of them are dark spots in the back. | ||
I'm not sure what they are. | ||
I mean, what kind of helicopter. | ||
There are also some Hueys out there. | ||
This is the Sheriff's Department complex, law enforcement complex in Houston, Texas, and they are training with the military. | ||
L.A. is an armed encampment under federal and international control. | ||
Houston, Dallas, Austin has it going on. | ||
They have these out in the open. | ||
They also have their secret Peapod helicopters, which I've seen here in town. | ||
And my father told me not to really tell the stories and things that I've been seeing lately because they would love to say that I'm crazy or something. | ||
I'm going to have to start carrying a camera with me at all times. | ||
Oh, what's the big deal? | ||
I might as well just... | ||
No, it doesn't matter. | ||
I'm not going to give people fuel. | ||
I'm not going to give them any fuel. | ||
But there you have it in Houston. | ||
I think these are mainly for intimidation. | ||
Look, it happens. | ||
I'm going to tell a story. | ||
I left my radio show Saturday night, was driving down Parmer towards Mopac. | ||
Look at my eyes. | ||
This is the truth. | ||
And I'm on Parmer, and it's dark out there. | ||
Very few streetlights. | ||
And I'm going between 183 and Mopac. | ||
And right as I get on it, going down the dark stretch, there's cars around me. | ||
All of a sudden, this is one in a million that they weren't messing with me. | ||
I see this spotlight. | ||
I can't see any helicopter. | ||
It had no tail lights, no nothing, just a spotlight. | ||
Dark helicopter. | ||
I don't know what color it was. | ||
You couldn't see anything but a spotlight. | ||
Helicopters are supposed to have tail lights. | ||
Only special ops, I guess, can fly around with everything off. | ||
I don't know who this was. | ||
Military, international, local, I have no idea. | ||
Shining a light on me. | ||
The light's on me, and I'm going, it flies over me, and I go, oh, that's no big deal. | ||
I've never seen that before in Austin. | ||
No big deal. | ||
Maybe it's star flight. | ||
I'm driving. | ||
All of a sudden, I'm trying to look because I can't see it. | ||
All of a sudden, there's a spotlight around my truck. | ||
It follows me around my truck. | ||
It's directly behind me, like this. | ||
I pull. | ||
I'm sorry, Dad. | ||
I had to tell this. | ||
This is what it's meant to do. | ||
But now I've shown you the Laird News Hour for surveillance of major cities. | ||
It's true, so I'm going to tell you. | ||
I'm countering them, following me all the way up to Mopac, and then turns off to the north. | ||
Just a little intimidation. | ||
Just a little love. | ||
And that's fine. | ||
It doesn't intimidate me one damn bit. | ||
Now listen, it is wrong for me to tell you this, but I'm not going to lie to you and not tell you that this stuff isn't serious. | ||
Who cares? | ||
We have got to start standing up to these people. | ||
Who cares, damn it? | ||
Every real human has to stand. | ||
And I'm standing, and I'm going to stand. | ||
You don't intimidate me a bit. | ||
And I've been told that the, I said it to the commissioner's court today when I went down there to speak to them, not where I paid a ticket at municipal court, where I went this morning to speak to the commissioner's court about corruption and fictitious vendors and you name it. | ||
I went down there and I told them that we have people inside their facility and I could name them. | ||
The bureaucrats came straight to this person and said, and this isn't our person that gives us information, but she's a person that's married to one of our associates. | ||
And she goes, I don't want anything to do with this, guys. | ||
I'm just working. | ||
And they come up to me thinking I'm the guy that y'all are getting information from, the documents and things. | ||
And they say to her, you better watch it because Alex Jones and others, Steve Lane and Wes Curtis, are under investigation. | ||
You want to investigate me when I go out on a date or something and drink two or three beers at a restaurant? | ||
Or you want to investigate me when I go over to my grandparents or something? | ||
You want to investigate me when I'm on the green belt with my dogs? | ||
You want to investigate me? | ||
You want to investigate me when I'm oil painting in my apartment? | ||
You bring it on, baby! | ||
Like I said last week, I'm not something special, but I'm a man, I'm a patriot, and I'm going to stand up against your lying corruption. | ||
I watched those bureaucrats bring up all those ASAP documents. | ||
Now we find out it's unconstitutional. | ||
We find out that it's breaking the state education code, the family law code. | ||
Anybody should know that. | ||
But in a country where the IRS can take your house with no due process, no innocent until proven guilty, but a murderer gets it... | ||
As they should, but you don't, then we got a big problem. | ||
When the IRS can seize your paycheck with absolutely no due process, you got a problem. | ||
When the Federal Reserve prints fiat money and everybody lies about it at the universities when the facts are right there, we got a problem. | ||
When police are authorized to wear black, and when they had some SWAT down there this morning, but I know they're across the street, I know they work across the street. | ||
So hopefully, they didn't come up to me or anything, but I did see some SWAT walking around inside the foyer outside the courtroom. | ||
They were wearing their really cool black Nazi outfits. | ||
Kind of cool outfit. | ||
I like to wear it. | ||
Girls think I was sexy, you know. | ||
It was real manly looking, real aggressive, real high authority, you know. | ||
And it's fun to get to be a stormtrooper and take your orders from the feds. | ||
We'll take two more calls, and then I'm going to go to about a 15-minute tape of Ron Paul. | ||
It's kind of slow, but listen to it. | ||
And then I kind of make fun of Sandy Berger and William Cohen and Malin Albright. | ||
That's at the end of the three-quarter inch tape, guys. | ||
I make it hell on my producers. | ||
Absolute hell on them. | ||
Because I've gotten lazy and I'm not even queuing the tapes up for them. | ||
Hello, we're on the air. | ||
unidentified
|
I'm going to start calling you William Wallace. | |
You're all right. | ||
If you don't mind, please. | ||
Will y'all stop that? | ||
Please. | ||
That's the end of it. | ||
No more worship of Alex. | ||
unidentified
|
I want to... | |
I don't mind. | ||
Never mind. | ||
Go ahead. | ||
unidentified
|
Speaking of worship, if you let me read a couple paragraphs of this. | |
Sure. | ||
It's our brothers in Alabama I've called up before. | ||
Let me tell you. | ||
Let me read something to you about students in Alabama in high school and any school. | ||
The students, called the defendants, are permanently enjoined from permitting, including but not limited to, vocal prayer, Bible and religious devotional or scriptural readings, distribution of religious materials, texts or announcements, and discussions of devotional inspiration of nature, regardless of whether activity is initiated, led, and discussions of devotional inspiration of nature, regardless of whether activity is initiated, led, or No exception to this provision shall be permitted during times of perceived crisis or exigent circumstances. | ||
Okay, what did you just say for us laymen out there like myself? | ||
unidentified
|
It means that if somebody got killed or there's a bad accident, students can't get together and mourn about it or pray about it. | |
This is what's happening in Alabama. | ||
Okay, I want to make a statement. | ||
unidentified
|
This is going to define, believing in God or not, this type of censorship is going to be a very pivotal point in our country. | |
The one thing they add, listen to this last piece here. | ||
The court will appoint a monitor. | ||
The monitor shall have the power and authority. | ||
To, one, enter any classroom or public school property, school assembly, sporting event, commencement exercise, or school-sponsored or school-initiated event for the purpose of observing and reporting on compliance for the duration of the permanent injunction. | ||
What is this from? | ||
unidentified
|
Sorry? | |
What is this from, sir? | ||
unidentified
|
This is a special report I got, and it's covering the situation that's happening in Alabama. | |
Okay, let me go ahead and comment on that, because we're pressed for time, okay? | ||
I really appreciate your call. | ||
And I know I'm rushing over the calls. | ||
Actually, hung up on the wrong one. | ||
Really, callers, I don't mean to make y'all mad. | ||
You know I'm a spaz. | ||
I kind of just free flow what's in my mind. | ||
Totally honest person, and I just have to get on to stuff. | ||
I don't care if you pray to Jesus or whoever you pray to. | ||
That's your personal decision in class. | ||
Students should be given five minutes a day to do whatever they want. | ||
If a school wants to and nobody objects, they should be able to read a prayer before a football game. | ||
If people have a problem, they can grab about at their school or get on the school board. | ||
It should be local. | ||
If a city doesn't want any prayer in schools, fine. | ||
If a state doesn't want any prayer in schools, no. | ||
And the federal government or the U.N. doesn't want it. | ||
And the U.N., guys, this is not kook stuff. | ||
They're trying to restrict our fossil fuels. | ||
They're running our military now. | ||
You hear about it in the news every day. | ||
Our troops are under U.N. command. | ||
You've got a bunch of traitors like John Shelley Casvili, our ex-joint chief of staff, was the son of a Polish death camp operator under the Nazis. | ||
It just goes on and on that the U.N. is taking over our national parks, Executive Order 12,986. | ||
It just goes on and on and on and on and on. | ||
It is not a joke by any stretch of the imagination. | ||
So basically you need to be conscious of that. | ||
The U.N. is moving in because they have to have a global taxation system. | ||
And it's just the military enforcement arm. | ||
Then you have the World Trade Organization as the trade enforcement arm to make sure we have crooked trade deals. | ||
You know, I use this example every time. | ||
China with a 15% tariff, us with a 2% tariff. | ||
They call that free trade. | ||
I got a bridge I want to sell you. | ||
Please, I got a bridge I want to sell you. | ||
Is that commercialism? | ||
It's a joke. | ||
Basically, the U.N. is moving in because money is leaving the countries that are command and control to places where they can make money. | ||
So they've got to have a world tax system so the slave system can be full-powered. | ||
I've got one call. | ||
Hello, you're on the air. | ||
unidentified
|
Hey, I don't know if anyone's noticed, and maybe I'm imagining this, but has anybody noticed on their little display in front of the airplanes and stuff, has anyone seen that black helicopter? | |
Because the other day I drove by and I saw one on display. | ||
What are you talking about? | ||
unidentified
|
I'm serious. | |
This is not a crank call. | ||
The other day I drove by Camp Mabry and I swear I saw they have an airplane on display, you know, where people can go and look at them up close. | ||
I saw a black helicopter there, and I thought, what the hell is this? | ||
Well, look, they got green helicopters, they got black helicopters, they got gray helicopters, they got silver helicopters, they got red helicopters. | ||
But the night-off ones are a flat black or a flat green, and they turn the lights off. | ||
I actually saw one Saturday night at around 1130 at night. | ||
unidentified
|
Well, maybe someone can check this out and... | |
See for themselves. | ||
I've seen it. | ||
I drive by Camp Maverick. | ||
It's on Mopac, right off Mopac. | ||
unidentified
|
Right. | |
Yeah, that's just a reserve helicopter. | ||
unidentified
|
Is it? | |
Yeah. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay. | |
Well, I was just wondering. | ||
Did you see the clip a few minutes ago, Lair NewsHour? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Yeah, I've got that on tape. | ||
I've seen it numerous times. | ||
Well, I'm going to keep running it. | ||
I'm sorry for people, but we have to get the brainwashed in with us. | ||
unidentified
|
And I am walking around with my camera everywhere, and I'm going to get this stupid helicopter that keeps flying like 50 feet over my home. | |
And disrupting everybody in my neighborhood. | ||
Even Pat Beach from the Austin American States, when he wrote a cover story on AXS TV and called me the dark star of AXS TV, he said that as he was writing the article, he walked outside a couple days before, and a tight formation of helicopters flew over his home. | ||
Then he says, this is a good time to introduce dark star Alex Jones. | ||
I mean, people see this. | ||
It's not a joke. | ||
unidentified
|
Right. | |
I mean, they got military encampments all around us. | ||
They're letting us know. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, Big Brother's there. | |
But you're not allowed to oppose it because you're crazy. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh, of course. | |
And I've been told, you know, they don't exist. | ||
But, I mean, I guess I'm not supposed to believe what I see, just what I hear, right? | ||
You're learning. | ||
Yeah. | ||
What's your first name? | ||
unidentified
|
It's Lana. | |
Lana. | ||
Incredible job. | ||
You are learning so well. | ||
Yes, do not talk. | ||
If you have kids, don't talk to them. | ||
The school will handle that. | ||
The counselor will handle that. | ||
unidentified
|
I'm getting ready to pull my kid out of school. | |
Oh, no, no. | ||
They'll teach them all about how good Kevorkian is. | ||
And they'll teach them about the U.N. and how bad America is. | ||
And the TV, when they get home, if they watch the news by accident, they'll hear about the U.N. a lot. | ||
Now I'm an alien here. | ||
But basically, they'll just continue to tell you how wonderful everything is. | ||
And just don't worry about... | ||
Don't be a kook like me, please. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, right. | |
Well, I know that's satire. | ||
Oh, no. | ||
I'm sure... | ||
Oh, for people that are listening out there, I have to say this. | ||
I appreciate all the morning shows talking about me. | ||
I really hope y'all keep that up. | ||
But I want to tell everybody that tunes in from hearing about me on those shows, all the morning shows, I want to tell people... | ||
I have been supported on some other radio stations that I'm... | ||
I mean, I'm actually an FM radio host myself, but a lot of other stations attack me on a lot of the big morning shows. | ||
Which is fine. | ||
I appreciate that. | ||
But some other shows have actually been supporting me at night during the day and things on those very stations. | ||
Well, actually on some other talk stations. | ||
But what I want to say is, is please keep it up. | ||
But for people that are listening, they're taking clips of my show and they're playing them and acting like I'm calling in. | ||
They're acting like I'm calling in and they're like, you know, I call in and say, I'm Alex Jones and I'm a bitch dog. | ||
They'll say things like that. | ||
Like, that'll be played tomorrow, okay? | ||
They'll probably love that. | ||
They won't even have to doctor that, because I just said that for them. | ||
And actually, I've been told I could put a little copyright thing on my show, or I could call them and say it's slanderous. | ||
My dad's got about a dozen lawyers. | ||
He's a pretty big businessman. | ||
But I'm going to let them keep doing it, because they're just petty worms. | ||
Actually, they're helping me. | ||
So, everybody out there, when you hear this type of behavior from the petty, dumbed-down, masked people, that do the entertainment petty shows, just remember they're liars and they're cutting my words up. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Well, thanks a lot. | ||
I appreciate your call. | ||
unidentified
|
All right. | |
Take care. | ||
All right, guys. | ||
We'll go to the Ron Paul thing. | ||
I don't know if we can even play the whole thing, but let's go ahead and go to that. | ||
I'll be back in about 10, 15 minutes. | ||
We'll take a few more calls, and then Exposing Corruption is over for the night. | ||
But first of all, let's thank my sponsor one more time. | ||
Yes, go to page. | ||
Enter page, number, destination. | ||
I love that new CG. It's pretty nice, new character generator. | ||
I want to thank my sponsor, 98.9 KJFK FM Radio. | ||
That is All Talk Radio. | ||
And again, I am a FM radio host with KJFK, and they're kind enough to sponsor my show. | ||
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KJFK FM Radio. | ||
All right, I know I've kind of been obnoxious tonight, repetitive, but I am trying to fight back against the conditioning of the enemy. | ||
And when we get back, I'll try to shut up and take some of your calls. | ||
This is Ron Paul, a real patriot. | ||
It's kind of sloppy. | ||
I just put it together real fast. | ||
Are we ready with that? | ||
...regulations on him, and resentments are turned back toward us. | ||
The Arabs in the Middle East do not understand our foreign policy because there have been numerous UN resolutions, but it's only this one particular resolution that we have felt so compelled to enforce. | ||
And the real irony of all this is that first... | ||
...the United Nations. | ||
I guess he's a conspiracy theorist too. | ||
Before we left about 10 days ago from the Congress, I think many members and much of the nation thought that within a short period of time, within a week or so, there would be additional bombing by the Americans over Baghdad. | ||
There were polls out at that time that said that 70% of the American people endorsed this move. | ||
Something that I question, and of course I question the legitimacy of dealing with policy by measuring polls anyway. | ||
I think we should do what is right, not try to decide what is right by the polls. | ||
But in this circumstance, I think the polls must have been very, very misleading. | ||
We heard a gentleman earlier this evening from North Dakota mention when he was at home, essentially nobody was telling him that they were in favor of the war. | ||
Stay with us, guys. | ||
It gets a lot better. | ||
I think most members of Congress on this past week at visiting home had the same message. | ||
And certainly there was a very loud message in Columbus at a town hall meeting. | ||
It was written off by those who wanted to go to war and wanted to drop the bombs. | ||
By saying, well, no, this was just a very noisy bunch of hippies who are opposed to the war. | ||
Well, let me tell you, there's a lot of people in this country who are opposed to the war, and they're not hippies. | ||
And I think to discredit people who oppose... | ||
Going and participating in an active war and try to discredit them by saying that they belong to a hippie generation, I think they are going to lose out in the credibility argument in this regard. | ||
Somewhat ironic about how this has come about because... | ||
It seems that those of us who have been urging great caution have been satisfied with at least a temporary solution, yet we're not entirely satisfied at all with the dependency on the effort by the United States enforcing UN resolutions. | ||
In this case, I think that what we must do is reassess the entire policy, because it's policy that gets us into trouble. | ||
It is in this one instance. | ||
We did not just invent foreign interventionism in foreign policy. | ||
This has been going on for a long time. | ||
And the first egregious example, of course, was in Korea. | ||
Where we went to war under the UN banner and was the first war we didn't win. | ||
And yet we continue with this same policy throughout the world. | ||
And hardly can we be proud of what happened in Vietnam. | ||
It seems like we're having a lot more success getting along with the Vietnamese people as we trade with them rather than fight with them. | ||
So there's a lot of argument against this whole principle of foreign interventionism, involvement in the internal affairs of other nations, picking leaders of other countries. | ||
We were warned rather clearly by our first president, George Washington, that it would be best that we not get involved in entangling alliances and that we instead should talk with people and be friendly with people and trade with people. | ||
And, of course, the first reaction would be, yes, but the person that we're dealing with as leader of Iraq is a monster, and therefore we can't trust him, and we shouldn't talk to him. | ||
Well, there's been a lot of monsters around the world. | ||
There have been a lot of monsters in the world, and we have not treated them all the same way. | ||
Just think of the tremendous number of deaths to the tune of millions under Pol Pot. | ||
And at that time we were even an ally of his. | ||
And even the inconsistency of our policy, where in the 1980s we actually encouraged Saddam Hussein. | ||
We sold him weapons. | ||
We actually have participated in the delivery of biological weapons to Hussein. | ||
At that time we encouraged him to cross the border into Iran. | ||
We closed our eyes when poison gases were used. | ||
So all of a sudden it's hard to understand why. | ||
Our policy changes. | ||
But once we embark on a policy of intervention, and it's arbitrary, we intervene when we please or when it seems to help, it seems then that we can be on either side of any issue, any time. | ||
And so often we're on both sides of many wars. | ||
When are you people out there going to wake up? | ||
Here is a Republican from Texas, a Libertarian Republican, Ron Paul, speaking out against Pol Pot. | ||
Of course, it was Anthony Lake. | ||
Clinton's last national security advisor who ran the National Security Agency who tried to be head of the CIA but failed because of his communist ties. | ||
He's written many papers about how much he loved Pol Pot and how good a job they were doing and not to mess with him back during the 70s when he was slaughtering over 2 million people, perhaps 3 million. | ||
We're not sure. | ||
And then Ron Paul tells you about the documents that he's seen obviously behind closed doors that have now come out about us selling chemical and biological weapons to Saddam, During the 1980s. | ||
Wake up out there. | ||
Clinton's the warmonger. | ||
Clinton is more fascistic and more out of control than any president probably in US history. | ||
But you're buying it hook, line, and sinker. | ||
You people out there with Clinton Gore bumper stickers are really duped. | ||
You guys need to be conscious that Ron Paul is also very, very angry about what the Republicans have been engaging in. | ||
This is a man who was an Air Force flight surgeon in wartime. | ||
I respect him incredibly. | ||
You would do yourself good out there to check into Ron Paul. | ||
This is the kind of generation of patriots that we need to be in office. | ||
Dr. Congressman Ron Paul is being respected. | ||
Let's go back just a few more times and show you a few more clips just to repeat some key points for people that might have missed it. | ||
This is a major congressman up there telling you what's really going on. | ||
Wake up and realize the mainstream media has an agenda to keep you ignorant and snowed. | ||
Clinton is a fascist command-and-control punk. | ||
I was saying there have been a lot of monsters in the world, and we have not treated them all the same way. | ||
Just think of the tremendous number of deaths to the tune of millions under Pol Pot. | ||
But he cared about the children. | ||
And at that time, we were even an ally of his. | ||
And even the inconsistency of our policy, where in the 1980s, we actually encouraged Saddam Hussein. | ||
We sold him weapons. | ||
We actually participated in the delivery of biological weapons to Hussein. | ||
At that time, we encouraged him to cross the border into Iran. | ||
We closed our eyes when poison gases were used. | ||
So all of a sudden, it's hard. | ||
It's hard to understand why our policy changes. | ||
Now, Mr. Paul, Mr. Paul, Mr. Congressman Ron Paul, I'm going to play devil's advocate. | ||
How dare you be not understanding? | ||
We're trying to help. | ||
We're trying to do a good job here. | ||
Don't confuse with the facts, sir. | ||
Don't confuse about what really happened and what's really going on. | ||
And this is all about the UN taking control of... | ||
Iraq's oil supply, like Sandy Berger even openly bragged during the Columbus-Ohio International Town Hall meeting. | ||
No, the facts speak for themselves, my friends. | ||
Even the inconsistency of our policy where in the 1980s we actually encouraged Saddam Hussein. | ||
We sold him weapons. | ||
We actually have participated in the delivery of biological weapons to Hussein. | ||
At that time we encouraged him to cross the border into Iran. | ||
We closed our eyes when poison gases were used. | ||
So all of a sudden it's hard to understand why our policy changes. | ||
And so often we're on both sides of many wars. | ||
And this does not serve us well. | ||
A policy design that is said to be pro-American and in the defense of this country, where we follow the rules and follow the laws, and we don't get involved in war without a declaration by the Congress, I think it would be very healthy not only for us as Americans, but it would be very healthy for the world as a whole. | ||
So I am very pleased that there has been at least a pause here, although our troops will be maintained there, and they're waiting to see... | ||
Now, he's being nice right now. | ||
He's not explaining something to you. | ||
He's talking about the Congress deciding things instead of the President. | ||
Now it's the UN that decides things. | ||
Sovereignty's gone. | ||
We've got to stand up for American sovereignty again. | ||
I will repeat, just watch the news. | ||
They're training us to accept UN authority every single day. | ||
All we hear about is UN this, UN that. | ||
From children's cartoons to sitcoms to the nightly news, we are being conditioned as a country to accept global governance. | ||
So I am very pleased that there has been at least a pause here, although our troops will be maintained there, and they're waiting to see if there's some other excuse that we can go in there and resume the bombing. | ||
But the whole notion that we are going to bring Hussein to his knees without the cost of amenity American lives, I think, is naive. | ||
Because nobody has proposed that we go in and invade the country. | ||
There have been proposals that we just assassinate Hussein, which is illegal. | ||
At least that's acknowledged that this is an illegal act to go and kill another leader, although we've been involved in that too. | ||
But people say that many have argued that this should be our policy now, and that is to topple Hussein. | ||
But, you know, we used the CIA in Cuba a few decades ago, and now it's just been revealed that our CIA botched the job. | ||
And also, we led those individuals who were trying to restore freedom to Cuba. | ||
We let them down by them assuming we would do more, and then we did less. | ||
We were very much involved in overthrowing a leader in South Vietnam right before the rampant escalation of the war there. | ||
That did not serve us well. | ||
And then there's another example of our CIA putting a government in charge over in Iran. | ||
And that's when we put the Shah in. | ||
But this did not bring peace and stability to the region. | ||
It brought us hostage takings and hostility and hatred and threat of terrorism in this country. | ||
Maybe that's exactly what people in our power structure want. | ||
It doesn't matter how much trouble and how many enemies they make. | ||
It's all about terror here in the empire. | ||
It doesn't matter that we funded and created Saddam. | ||
Mr. Paul, again, don't confuse us with the facts, sir, please. | ||
Again, I'm playing devil's advocate. | ||
You heard it. | ||
Clinton and everybody else couched this in that it's for the kids, it's for the children, Saddam's evil. | ||
Back in the Bush administration, which Congressman Ron Paul attacks, April Glaspie, right before the Gulf War started, went over there and told Saddam that we weren't going to get involved. | ||
She was a U.S. ambassador to Iraq in inter-Arab affairs. | ||
And then he crossed over into Kuwait because they'd been horizontally drilling, stealing his oil, not defending him, just the facts, and we attacked him. | ||
Basically, back to the point. | ||
It's about the U.N. stealing Saddam's oil. | ||
Plain and simple. | ||
It's about control. | ||
It's about setting up... | ||
Vassal states for the UN to suck dry and fund their world government aims. | ||
Now, compare Congressman Ron Paul and his sincere demeanor, which is very clear to see. | ||
National Security Agency, William Cohen, Secretary of Defense, and Secretary of State, Madeleine Albright. | ||
All CFR, all traders, all agents of European finance. | ||
Total criminals. | ||
Let's take a look at these guys. | ||
Here was the now infamous town hall meeting in Columbus, Ohio, where people overwhelmingly rebuked them. | ||
Unlike the press told you, all the questions were hardcore too, not just some dissenters screaming in the background. | ||
unidentified
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We could accomplish our mission, the mission being, as I said before, and as others have said, to significantly reduce his ability to threaten his neighbors with weapons of mass destruction or otherwise. | |
I'm not going to get into... | ||
I'm not going to get into that we sold him these weapons, that the media is keeping this from you, and that we detonated these weapons above ground and our troops are contaminated, and now even Britain is admitting it, but our press is covering it up. | ||
They're doing a great job. | ||
unidentified
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Of those plans, I think the better off we all will be. | |
Boy, if evil has a face, there it is. | ||
Good Lord, look at her. | ||
Incredible. | ||
unidentified
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Madeleine Albright, CFR servant. | |
Countries like Indonesia, who we sell weapons to, yet they are slaughtering people in East Timor. | ||
What do you have to say about Israel, who is slaughtering Palestinians, who impose martial law? | ||
What do you have to say about that? | ||
Those are our allies. | ||
Why do we sell weapons to these countries? | ||
Why do we support them? | ||
Why do we bomb Iraq when it commits similar problems? | ||
unidentified
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I must act official. | |
There are various examples of things that are not right in this world. | ||
Weapons of mass destruction. | ||
Weapons of mass destruction. | ||
Look at her, she's pathetic. | ||
We're all pathetic. | ||
unidentified
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I really am surprised that people feel that it is necessary to defend the rights of Saddam Hussein. | |
Well, why do we put him in power then? | ||
unidentified
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...is how to make sure that he does not use weapons of mass destruction. | |
I am not going to play much more of this. | ||
All they ever said was weapons of mass destruction, weapons of mass destruction, weapons of mass destruction. | ||
Kind of like how the UN is trying to ban guns worldwide and make us accepted here in America. | ||
As if firearm rights haven't been taken away enough. | ||
It's always guns, guns, guns. | ||
It's never controlled criminals. | ||
No. | ||
Same with this. | ||
take no responsibility for what we've done in the past, and just repeat the same buzzword over and over and over again. | ||
unidentified
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I suggest, sir, that you study carefully what American foreign policy is. | |
Let's respect that. | ||
The more time you take shouting, the more time you take away from people who have questions. | ||
Now, if you're ready to hear some real hypocrisy, here's where he talks about the danger of these chemical and biologicals and the threat to your children, even though we sold them to them and won't treat our own troops that were exposed to them in the 1990-1991 Gulf War. | ||
unidentified
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With no loss of life to the American citizens, what we have to be concerned about is how long are we prepared to stay the course to make sure that he doesn't develop weapons of mass destruction, chemical and biologicals, which will pose a grave threat to your children and grandchildren. | |
And that's why we're taking the action necessary in order to build up. | ||
The diplomatic initiative or possibly a military option if necessary. | ||
So we are there to protect your children and grandchildren from one of the most grievous types of threats that we will ever see in the future. | ||
That is weapons of mass destruction. | ||
Come clean, Cohen, please. | ||
You want the oil. | ||
Come on, Albright. | ||
That's what Berger says. | ||
Saddam could just help his children give up that oil, can't he? | ||
The UN really needs it to help run all the wonderful operations like disarming us, restricting our fossil fuels, taking over our national parks, and the wonderful thumb scanning that's going on here with the help of Bill Clinton and the urine and blood testing he has planned. | ||
unidentified
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Oh, there's so much good work to be done by the banker-funded bureaucrats. | |
You know, if I can just answer that, Saddam sits on enormous... | ||
Storehouses of oil. | ||
And as Secretary Albright said before, it's the United States, since 1991, that has been trying to say to him to give him the right to sell that oil, take that money, buy food and medicine for his people, and distribute it under UN auspices so we make sure that it goes to people and not to tanks. | ||
For five years, he refused even to have such a regime. | ||
We finally got such a regime in place. | ||
He delayed it another six months. | ||
We're now prepared to expand that regime. | ||
We would like to see him sell more oil so that more food and medicine can get to the Iraqi people. | ||
And believe it or not, he's resisting that. | ||
Yes, he's resisting. | ||
It's called controlling your own country, burger. | ||
We know the UN's taken over under banker control all over the planet. | ||
It's their nation. | ||
We set Saddam up, sold him the weapons during the 80s. | ||
Made him think that we were his friend. | ||
And now we've got him in a trap and are stealing his oil for the UN. And you let it slip out of your mouth. | ||
You called it a regime. | ||
And Sandy Berger loves the word regime. | ||
I'll never forget, and I'm angry every day, that I didn't have my VCR set up and ready the time I saw him in a CFR meeting on C-SPAN. Giggle and call it the global regime of power of the CFR. He's a top-level CFR member. | ||
He's also, again, runs a national security agency. | ||
He's a total traitor. | ||
Shouldn't be in that position. | ||
And call it their global regime of power and then giggled and called it the global regime of love. | ||
And everyone at the caviar dinner giggled. | ||
Well, I think you've seen the facts here for you. | ||
These people are trash. | ||
And they, again, want Iraq's oil supply under UN control. | ||
I leave you with Berger making those comments one more time. | ||
unidentified
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Saddam sits on enormous storehouses of oil to sell that oil, take that money, buy food and medicine for his people, and distribute it under UN auspices. | |
Take that money, take that money to sell that oil. | ||
Well, I couldn't resist having fun. | ||
I played you the entire clip and then had to mess with it like that just to show you what they're really obsessed with. | ||
Go back there. | ||
It should be something better like that. | ||
All right, guys. | ||
There you have it. | ||
I put that together today real fast. | ||
I'll do a better, longer version for you with more of their disgusting clips. | ||
I've got about five minutes left. | ||
Brief recap. | ||
Here's the new American for you talking about Carol Howe. | ||
Gave FBI agents prior knowledge of the Oklahoma City bombing. | ||
You'll be shocked at their response. | ||
They covered up for Andre Strassmeyer, son of a Nazi, known CIA agent, who is... | ||
The New American shows conclusive evidence, and there's other books and documentaries that other people put out that show this. | ||
And then even mainstream publications like Texas Monthly and the January issue of the Bumster Awards, again, Told you that Jerry Spence, grand wizard, went out, who was an FBI informant and almost an agent. | ||
The guy got paid so much money by him for like many years. | ||
Went out and stirred him up, trying to get him to blow up chemical plants. | ||
Couldn't get him to. | ||
Got him to talk about it enough so the media could talk about this. | ||
Same thing with the anthrax. | ||
They found that it's safer now just to have people talk about terrorism than they could talk about how these people were fixing to do this and how the FBI saved this. | ||
They've already... | ||
Had the Oklahoma City bombing to show us what it can be like. | ||
Now they're showing us how the federal government saves us from the terror that they allowed Andre Strassmeyer to engage in. | ||
Same thing with the World Trade Center bombing. | ||
They had CIA assets, Egyptian security agents, and I've showed you the newspaper clipping from the October 23rd. | ||
1993, New York Times, where they just nonchalantly mention it, that they knew at least two days before about the bombing and let it happen. | ||
That's World Trade Center bombing, 1993. Oh, FBI, to pay $1.16 million, just to repeat, to Crime Lab whistleblower, just to recap, Frederick Whitehurst, ex-head of the FBI Crime Lab, they call him a lab supervisor, | ||
yes, of the FBI Crime Lab, scientist, doctor, I'll take two calls, quick questions, and then the show's over. | ||
Thanks for people being patient. | ||
Hello, you're on the air. | ||
unidentified
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Good evening, Alex. | |
How you doing? | ||
unidentified
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This is old Ray Kahn. | |
How you doing, sir? | ||
unidentified
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Good. | |
I got a little trivia for you, sir. | ||
Hang up and let you come in. | ||
Let me turn my TV down. | ||
I'm sorry. | ||
Madame Albright. | ||
The one, what looks like she'd hit you with her purse. | ||
A. Judean. | ||
A female going before an Arab. | ||
It's an insult. | ||
The previous lady that was our ambassador who spoke, I can't think of her name offhand. | ||
April Glaspie. | ||
unidentified
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Yes. | |
A. Judean. | ||
A female going before an Arab. | ||
Now, you're sounding anti-Semitic. | ||
unidentified
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No, no. | |
No, this is just... | ||
Robert, Robert, first let me tell you, I know you, Robert. | ||
Robert Kurtz, you are Jewish. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah. | |
Okay. | ||
But this is fact. | ||
It's just plain, ordinary fact. | ||
I know, listen. | ||
unidentified
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People of Islam know it. | |
Let me finish it now. | ||
Robert, I understand what you're saying. | ||
You're talking about how George Bush didn't call Saddam by his real name. | ||
He called him Saddam. | ||
unidentified
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Saddam. | |
Yes. | ||
You get some sad of different insults. | ||
unidentified
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Yes. | |
You know, meaning all kinds of things. | ||
Listen, I got to go, okay? | ||
unidentified
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This is the love I'm talking about. | |
Yes, this is the love. | ||
unidentified
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Just a little trivia there. | |
Now, listen, Robert, I really appreciate your call. | ||
unidentified
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Hold on a minute. | |
One Apache could take out in one sortie the largest shopping center in Austin. | ||
Yes, they could carry dozens of Hellfire missiles and you name it. | ||
Robert, I really appreciate your call. | ||
One more call. | ||
Hello, you're on the air. | ||
I had to get to two calls. | ||
Yes, caller? | ||
unidentified
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Hello? | |
Yes, real fast comment, ma'am. | ||
unidentified
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Yes, I've been listening to you, Alex, and I believe in everything you say. | |
Well, I'm not 100% right, but I'll tell you, if just 10% of what I'm saying is true, we had better get motivated and educate the American people. | ||
unidentified
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Well, I'm behind you, and I'm asking everybody else that there's going to take masses of us to start some kind of action. | |
Okay, you're absolutely right. | ||
It's grassroots. | ||
Robert, sorry I had to cut you off. | ||
I just said I was going to get to two calls. | ||
Didn't want to lie about that. | ||
I'm bad enough about not letting them get in the callers. | ||
All right, this show is every Tuesday night, 8.30 to 11 p.m., right here on Channel 10. If you agree with the information, tape the shows. | ||
Tape the shows. | ||
Tell your friends about it. | ||
Get your own show. | ||
Get involved. | ||
Call into radio shows. | ||
Raise hell. | ||
Make this an issue. | ||
Make it mainstream. | ||
Forget their buzzwords. | ||
There's my comment line off air. | ||
write that number down if you've ever got a story or any problem thank my producer 98.9 KJFK also Again, my comment line is Tuesday, 8.30 to 11 p.m. | ||
I'm also on Bad Bob Presents Monday nights, 10 to 11. Think for yourselves. | ||
I'm not your enemy. | ||
Long live America. |