Speaker | Time | Text |
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unidentified
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Thank you. | |
Thank you. | ||
You know, why aren't they staging demonstrations in front of the embassies of all the brutal African governments we have today? | ||
And he says, the only answer I could come up with is that for them, brutal injustices are only important when it's conservative whites mistreating blacks. | ||
When blacks mistreat other blacks, that's not important to them. | ||
He said it's the same reasoning at home. | ||
He notes that millions of black Americans have been murdered. | ||
Murdered over the years by fellow blacks. | ||
But Jesse Jackson only gets animated when Texaco executives make a racial slur against their employees. | ||
And he said, this is just phony poverty pimping. | ||
It's race hustling. | ||
And he says, really, it's making Americans, blacks, and the civil rights movement look like a joke. | ||
And he's right. | ||
You know, he says that the civil rights leaders have discredited themselves, and they have. | ||
For Frontiers, I'm Brian Lynch. | ||
Remember that if you can't speak your mind, you're a slave. | ||
There are problems in our country, yes, we live in troubled times. | ||
There are far too many criminals and far too many crimes. | ||
I'm locking every window and I'm vaulting every door. | ||
The tool I use in self-defense will even up the score. | ||
You can rant, you can rave, you can make your demands. | ||
And you can take my gun from my cold, dead hands. | ||
There are global corporations, they have billions that they pay. | ||
To the greedy politicians who make sure things go their way. | ||
They tax us into poverty and we live from day to day. | ||
To them we're useless eaters, we don't get to have a say. | ||
If you want to trash this constitution, is that what's in your plan? | ||
You can take my gun from my cold, dead hand. | ||
In every case through history, when genocide was planned, the firearms were gathered up and the opposition banned. | ||
The tyrants made distractions and the people stood away, and by the time they realized they couldn't get away, this smiling face on my TV says we should all join hands and help create this vision of a new world order plan. | ||
We'll downsize our defenses, give our bases all away to a UN Global Peace Force, and we'll do just what they say. | ||
Take your globalist agenda and your new world order plans, and you can take my gun from my cold, dead hands. | ||
Well, we are back live for this second edition, special edition of the Freedom Report. | ||
We're going until 12 o'clock Central Standard Time right here in Austin, Texas. | ||
It is January 11th, 1999. One day closer to victory. | ||
We are live. | ||
If you'd like to get involved on air, 477-2288. | ||
Don't forget that the twin of this program, Exposing Corruption, is on Wednesday night, every Wednesday night, 9 to 10 o'clock, right here on Time Warner Cable Channel 10. A lot to talk about. | ||
I'd like to... | ||
As promised, go through some executive orders and some other news pieces that I've been covering in the past few weeks for everybody. | ||
This month's issue, Vanity Fair, talks about how the Pentagon, that means the Clinton administration, is talking about putting Russian commanders in our command centers. | ||
Just to keep us safe. | ||
Also, from the Detroit News, the 4th, that's last week, it says, It has some comments here that I think we should start out by reading. | ||
Don't waste your time worrying about elections not happening. | ||
But you're sure to hear more talk of martial law in 1999. The Ottawa Citizen on December 12th reported that the Canadian government is considering martial law in response to Y2K disruptions. | ||
Might sound reasonable. | ||
Wait till I get to these other UN documents. | ||
Don't waste your time worrying about elections not happening. | ||
Previously secret government documents the citizen obtained say among the activities that must be done to meet the problems resulting from the year 2000 failures in development of relevant emergency orders and regulations required for the invocation of emergency provisions under the Emergencies Act. | ||
The British government is readying a disaster unit reserved for invasion or civil unrest. | ||
In the United States, Senator Bennett has asked the Pentagon What plans it has, quote, in the event of a Y2K-induced breakdown of community services that might call for martial law. | ||
And the House committee has recommended that Clinton consider declaring a national emergency. | ||
Isn't this curious? | ||
Year 2000, Bill Clinton about to leave office. | ||
FEMA has scheduled regional Y2K training exercises for spring 1999 and plans to have joint military-civilian forces on alert by December 31, 1999. Directly... | ||
Better have this on me. | ||
I've got so much information. | ||
Directly from WorldNetDaily and the Milwaukee Journal. | ||
We'll read from this later. | ||
First, let me read from www.star-telegram.com or star-telegram.com. | ||
Also, Knight Rider Newspapers, December 12, 1998. You can also go to the UN website and get this information. | ||
Nations at UN conference suggest SWAT teams to handle Y2K crisis. | ||
UN Under Secretary General Joseph E. Conner, this is a guy that's under Kofi Annan that killed at least 500,000 Rwandans for several oil companies back in 96, before he was Secretary General when he was head of peacekeeping. | ||
Under Secretary General Joseph E. Conner called Y2K the largest computer project in its 50-year history of information technology industry, but said predicting its effects accurately was impossible. | ||
He said nations should attack Y2K on two fronts by deciding which systems are crucial and fixing them, and by developing contingency plans for coping with computer failures. | ||
Our goal was to recognize, I mean, was to organize on a regional basis, including implementing the SWAT team idea. | ||
Told reporters that such teams would help nations deal with problems that cross borders, such as regional power grids. | ||
We've also got these quotes in here from Ahmad Kamal from Pakistan, their head ambassador. | ||
I mean, I'm about to throw up. | ||
Then we have Clinton talking about this nine months ago before the U.N. Assembly. | ||
Then you have World Net Daily. | ||
Coming out and talking about Operation Comex slash Mobex and the Milwaukee Journal. | ||
You have high-level people here at the levels of generals coming out and saying, as long as it's kept anonymous, I'm giving the name of the exercise, Comex, Mobex. | ||
The National Guard is planning. | ||
Its first national mobilization of troops in 1940 in preparation for civil unrest resulting from the Y2K millennium bug World Net Daily has learned. | ||
The National Guard Bureau in Washington is currently formulating plans for a mobilization test in conjunction with the Federal Emergency Management Agency. | ||
If Y2K causes a complete shutdown of all communications, the National Guard will need a way to mobilize troops. | ||
According to several officers, Who believed their careers would be at a risk if their names were made public. | ||
Now, how do I call them generals? | ||
Well, it talks about a top-level memo that's going to be going to all the adjunct generals in the National Guard. | ||
So these are obviously generals at the Pentagon. | ||
The officers spoke separately with World Net Daily. | ||
Each is in a position to know about the plans at a national level within the National Guard Bureau. | ||
The plan as it's now being designed will be a mock modernization. | ||
Excuse me, mobilization of 480,000 members of the National Guard in all 54 states and territories. | ||
Exercise COMX slash MOBEX will be conducted without telephone, radio, television to get the word out to all Guard members. | ||
This will be a simulated communications out to explain another member of the group. | ||
In other words, the situation, the standard method of recall, the telephone will not be an option. | ||
Concerned about potential panic, unrest over Y2K, failures of communications, power, and transportation. | ||
has prompted the National Guard to plan for the worst. | ||
WorldNetDaily spoke with several full-time Guard members who work at the national level. | ||
Each is an officer, and each is concerned that the public is not being properly informed of the extent and seriousness of the problems, including civil liberties issues associated with the Y2K computer bug. | ||
I've taken an oath and I don't see some of the senior folks following through on their oath, explained one officer of his reason for making this known. | ||
Not only is my oath to the Constitution, but it's to the people. | ||
As far as I'm concerned, the faster and sooner people are educated on this stuff, the less panic will ensue. | ||
Oh, but see, they want panic, problem, reaction, solution. | ||
Another officer is equally concerned and agreed. | ||
He pointed out that people panic when they are caught unprepared and unaware. | ||
He says the Clinton administration should have done more to prevent panic. | ||
No one with any leadership has stepped forward and said, we need to take prudent steps, he explained. | ||
The Canadians are way ahead of us. | ||
They're already told their folks they're going, they're doing a good job letting their people know what's going on. | ||
World Net Daily has also learned that all military and civilian federal employees are scheduled to be paid a little differently in December 1999. Payroll for January 2000 will be paid a month early. | ||
One of the officers says that is to place all Guard members In a situation where they cannot refuse duty of the Y2K crisis because they have already been paid in advance. | ||
I apologize for having to read this whole thing. | ||
I'm not the best at news reading. | ||
A letter from the National Guard Bureau will soon be in the hands of every adjunct general. | ||
The letter will inform the Guard and leaders of each state about COMX/MOBEX, that's the operation, and how it will be conducted. | ||
Although the exercise, temporarily scheduled for May 1st, will be no secret, the various aspects of this exercise will be kept under wraps until the modernization begins. | ||
Everyone knows it's coming out, but there's going to be serious scenarios written into it, explain one officer. | ||
There will be as many different things they can throw into it at once and see how the command and control structure handles it. | ||
Tell I don't like reading on the air, guys. | ||
I think it's a real situation. | ||
Where you've got a guy standing there with his wife, looking at him with tears in her eyes, and two kids hanging on his leg, and he's being drug out the door by a couple of MPs. | ||
World Net Daily, January 6, 1998, Detroit Times, and, most importantly, the comments by one of the senators in the Detroit News the 4th of last week. | ||
Coming up later in the program, I will read some... | ||
Some of the headings from some important executive orders, one of which is Executive Order 10998, which allows the federal government via the Federal Emergency Management Agency to take over all food resources and farms. | ||
There's also a hoarding disclosure in there. | ||
Another one allows the government, Executive Order 11001, allows the government to take over all health and education welfare functions. | ||
Well, that's nothing new. | ||
Where's the one I wanted to read? | ||
Oh, here it is. | ||
Executive Order 11000 allows the government to mobilize civilians into work brigades under government supervision. | ||
This is the Federal Emergency Management Agency. | ||
I can't think of four more scary words. | ||
Federal Emergency Management and Agency. | ||
Okay, we've gone through this. | ||
I'll cover this more later. | ||
Yes, we're about to go to your calls at 477-2288. | ||
What happened? | ||
You forgot the traffic comment. | ||
Well, Mike, it's right here. | ||
We're going to play traffic calming coming up in a little while. | ||
That's the highly requested. | ||
If you've been in there panicking, looking for that story, I apologize. | ||
We're about to go to Holly and others at 477-2288. | ||
You'll see a lot of tape shows right here on Access Television. | ||
This is a live show. | ||
We do live shows Monday, 9 to 10 o'clock, right here on Channel 10. And we're doing a special expanded show tonight, later into the evening. | ||
And we do shows Wednesday. | ||
From 9 to 10, which is exposing corruption right here on cable channel 10. So we're about to go to your phone calls concerning these important issues. | ||
I'll also talk about cloning a little bit at the end of the program this evening. | ||
There's a little interesting article here in the Time magazine this week saying that the government can save us when it comes to cloning. | ||
Shades of a brave new world. | ||
We'll read that later. | ||
Now the main story tonight is a world... | ||
Exclusive, they say, with Dateline NBC. It was supposed to air a month ago, but due to impeachment news, it didn't air. | ||
Now it did air, and it's a total, complete whitewash, and you should be extremely angry about this. | ||
What the whitewash engages in is nothing less than criminal. | ||
Number one, they talk about the murders and the killing and the torture. | ||
In Africa and in Haiti by UN peacekeepers. | ||
That's he quotes. | ||
But they don't mention the most egregious activity in Rwanda in 1996 that we've covered at nauseam. | ||
And there's actually been convictions in Canada and major investigations in Italy and, of course, in Belgium. | ||
We're going to air this coming up in just a few minutes for you. | ||
I apologize to those that saw it in the first part of the program. | ||
Earlier, we've got to re-air it now so we can... | ||
Go through and document the lies for you. | ||
That's coming up in just a few minutes, so cue that up, guys. | ||
And the important part that we all have to look at here is that they ignored this key fact and that we, here at the Freedom Report, have been reporting this for years. | ||
So by researching it and bringing the information to you, the photos you're going to see are nothing new to the viewers of this program. | ||
Nothing new. | ||
Also, they act like that the U.N. just has no control over their troops. | ||
Well, we had a caller earlier tonight, and I've read it on the air myself, that talks about how they have diplomatic immunity. | ||
U.N. troops have diplomatic immunity. | ||
And the U.N. does have its International Criminal Court and its other international court at The Hague. | ||
They could prosecute these guys, so they lie on this thing when they say they can't prosecute the troops. | ||
That's a flat-out lie. | ||
And they act like they need more power, and that it's this rogue element in the U.N. that's... | ||
Torturing kids, murdering children, raping women, all the rest of this. | ||
Remember, they will only mention the northeastern country of Somalia in Africa. | ||
They will not mention the country on the Gold Coast of Africa, Rwanda, very rich in diamonds, gold, uranium, lumber, and most importantly, sweet crude oil that is 90% ready to be put in your gas tank. | ||
It's gasoline almost coming out of the ground. | ||
Dutch Royal Shell and British Petroleum, they're now buying up most of the market here in the U.S. are the ones that wanted that area. | ||
I'm not saying they pulled the strings, but certainly they profited and Shell was taken over two weeks ago in London by some protesters. | ||
Switzerland has also had tens of millions of dollars of damage in the last year in anti-globalist demonstrations. | ||
The most orderly riots you've ever seen in your life. | ||
This is what we're talking about here tonight. | ||
The real issues, the track record we've shown you here on this program. | ||
Three years ago, I and others, back when Mike was producing Jeff Davis' show, which is now on Saturdays at, what, 10 or 11, and others brought you the information that was in the alternative press that was with good sources, former military, current military people, that Bill Clinton was selling missile secrets to the Chinese military, or that he was compromised because they got him elected back in 74 to the Statehouse in Arkansas. | ||
And then to his attorney general and then to governor in 78. So we've seen this for a long time. | ||
He's either compromised or he's getting Swiss bank account money. | ||
We know the DNC got money, but that could have been a cover just so the activity could be engaged in. | ||
Or he was trained in Russia during the 60s. | ||
He may just be an agent of that end of the European scam that's being run to consolidate wealth with the old money. | ||
We showed you what was happening with Clinton. | ||
And a year ago, we actually had the... | ||
The information from the coffees released, that's the payoff meetings where they drink coffee, with the Chinese military people, with the Chinese leadership. | ||
We've aired that a thousand times for you, right here on the Freedom Report and exposing corruption. | ||
We've shown you that, and now it's come out in the mainstream press, and the last weeks we've been reading it for you, where they admit the Chinese generals in the White House, the head of their missile development systems, what happened, all the information. | ||
They're having to do it because of damage control, but they're also spinning it in their direction. | ||
They're hemorrhaging massively. | ||
They're losing massive credibility. | ||
When upstarts like me and Mike and everybody else are up here battling with them, when the Freedom Forum and all these other shows, and shows all across the country and shortwave radio and FM radio and micro radio and AM radio, the little pockets of information, people are getting the information, they're studying it for themselves, double-checking it, researching it, and finding out that it's very, very damn serious. | ||
Let's go ahead and take some of your phone calls. | ||
Holly and Paul and whoever else is on line three. | ||
And then we will go to this Dateline NBC piece that you will see as a whitewash and designed to just manipulate the public. | ||
And tell them that everything's handled. | ||
Don't worry about this news. | ||
Holly, thanks for holding. | ||
unidentified
|
Hey, I guess I wanted to say I've been watching the show for about two years, and it's really good. | |
I had a comment and a question. | ||
I was going to say, it seems to me that all these conspiracies and things you talk about are so commonplace now that people have just come to accept them. | ||
It's almost like a joke. | ||
You're talking about shock therapy. | ||
The enemy has realized that they couldn't beat us anymore, so they've just thrown it in people's face and saying, who cares? | ||
Let's go party. | ||
But there's enough serious people, Holly, that believe me, that's why they're squeezing harder and harder. | ||
That's why, real or not real, Clinton may launch a PSYOP warfare attack. | ||
He has the computer codes and the box to activate the code sequences to launch attacks on our national and international computer systems for Y2K. Holly, do you understand problem, reaction, solution? | ||
unidentified
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Yes, I do. | |
Well, that's what we're up against. | ||
unidentified
|
I just don't understand where you're getting your solution. | |
I used to be a real big activist. | ||
I've read a lot of Ayn Rand. | ||
I'm currently in the public school system, and it seems to me every time that I keep trying to, you know, rebel against something that's going on or something I think isn't right, I just get stomped on. | ||
I've gotten picked out of the newspaper staff. | ||
Are you a teacher or a student? | ||
unidentified
|
I'm a student. | |
I'm 17 years old. | ||
Well, Holly, you certainly are intelligent. | ||
Listen, Mahatma Gandhi didn't think he was getting anything done, getting the British out. | ||
The Founding Fathers... | ||
Fought and died and lost almost every major battle, but it was a war of attrition. | ||
You've got to shake that morale, that bad morale. | ||
They have done that to you. | ||
They've done that to me. | ||
It's hard sometimes. | ||
We see the crisis. | ||
We see the sitcoms and the talk shows and all the rest of the crap on TV. And it gets us down sometimes. | ||
It makes us feel bad. | ||
But at the same time, we are going to win. | ||
We're going to win. | ||
People are waking up. | ||
They're realizing that everything is not a relativist view and that they just want us to be relativists so we're neutralized. | ||
And the good people and their mechanism and law enforcement and the military and the civil service are waking up. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, it's just upsetting to me. | |
I mean, I went to eat with my aunt over Christmas and she was talking about how, you know, the idea of communism is good in itself. | ||
That's a good ideal. | ||
And it just made me sick. | ||
People are, by their very nature, generally rebellious. | ||
And rebellion to a certain degree, it's not even rebellion. | ||
People want to be rebellious. | ||
And so the establishment is very smart. | ||
They will lay this stuff out on the table as if nobody wanted it or as if it's something that weirdos do. | ||
These ideas, they will put it in the universities by controlling what's written via their grant money. | ||
And people will think they're rebelling against the system. | ||
I'll never forget when a major magazine editor, about two years ago at my parents' house, one of their friends from Dallas, they came down, I think it was Halloween or something, my parents usually have a big Halloween party, | ||
you know, a bunch of people come over, and I was sitting there arguing with this guy, and he goes, Alex, I understand what you're saying, I understand, but Alex, he's drinking some wine, Alex, you've got to understand, oh lovey, Oh yes, great. | ||
unidentified
|
Another delicious hors d'oeuvre. | |
That if you're so against the rich, you've got to be for bigger government. | ||
It puts them in check, you know. | ||
And I said, sir, you know that the biggest thing is corporate welfare. | ||
unidentified
|
You know that the corporations go, oh, please don't hurt us with regulators. | |
Please don't hurt us with taxes. | ||
Meanwhile, they make over half their money generally from government contracts or other scams. | ||
They also use government regulators to put their competition out of business, the new organizations that are growing. | ||
And you just can't hammer because they're comfortable and they have their friends. | ||
unidentified
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Oh yes, yes, definitely. | |
And they're trapped in this psychology. | ||
unidentified
|
And then if you make a point, they'll go, well, yes, I guess. | |
And then they're back to their same old crap. | ||
They don't care. | ||
They've sold out. | ||
They think they're on the capstone. | ||
They think they're elitist. | ||
And they're not. | ||
unidentified
|
Well, I don't know if I could have much to say about that. | |
I mean, I'm not that poor myself. | ||
But I do like to take other people's opinion into consideration. | ||
The point I'm trying to make, I think you misunderstood me, Holly. | ||
I'm saying that there's nothing wrong with having a nice house and nice cars and land and all the rest. | ||
That's how you get quality of life. | ||
And then it spreads out in the community. | ||
The Russian model, the Nazi model, the Chinese Communist model, Pol Pot's model in Cambodia, they don't work. | ||
I'm saying socialism is sold to us. | ||
It's sold to the masses as if it's to stop the big rich guys that are out of control. | ||
Meanwhile, all the rest of the low-level guys that are rich, that think they're the power elite, are being fed upon and taken over by the real old money that is stealth, that is below the surface. | ||
I mean, is that making sense to you? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, it is. | |
That the political paradigms are false, so how can we as Americans make real political decisions when we're arguing about left and right? | ||
It's really about right and wrong. | ||
It's about command and control. | ||
unidentified
|
For some reason, I've always believed that, you know, I'd like people like that, like Bill Gates, to be able to keep all their money. | |
Not because I think that, you know, he's hurting anyone. | ||
It's important that he, you know, squashes some people out on his rise to the top, as sick as that might seem. | ||
I think that's pretty much what capitalism is. | ||
You're talking about survival of the fittest. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, I'm talking about pretty much exactly. | |
I think that people like Bill Gates, he's producing enough product to get his money. | ||
Well, number one, there's five major operating systems out there. | ||
It's a bunch of garbage. | ||
You can go to the store and find any operating system you want. | ||
And it's a flat-out lie. | ||
Bill Gates made his money in the last 19 years. | ||
He made his own money, just like Michael Dell, and that's why Bill Gates is under attack. | ||
And Bill Gates's $48 billion is nothing compared to the trillions of dollars. | ||
Rockefeller Brothers Foundation, when it was formed, turn of the century, had $2 billion-plus in it. | ||
$2 billion, not to mention all their other stealth chairmanships of high-level directorates, of interlocking corporations. | ||
$2 billion is the equivalent of $2 trillion in today's money. | ||
Look it up for yourself. | ||
I'm sick and tired of the lies. | ||
The enemy is stealth. | ||
They're taking everything over. | ||
And they are not free market. | ||
And Intel and Microsoft, if they have their way, will be destroyed. | ||
All the modes of production will be shipped to India and Germany and China and Britain and out of here because we are being subdivided. | ||
We will never be forgiven for having some decent people in this nation. | ||
unidentified
|
That's right. | |
I appreciate your call. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay. | |
Take care. | ||
And I'm telling the UN and all the rest of you people that we are going to stand against you. | ||
You may try to send your lies and sing your little siren song and get us down on our knees and bleed us real good. | ||
But people that know what's going on, some real serious people are waking up to your crap. | ||
Now that may be your plan all along, to have this nation in civil war and destruction. | ||
When military people turn against military people and there's nerve gas attacks and everything else. | ||
Perpetrated by the central secret government. | ||
And I'll tell you the truth. | ||
I know about FEMA and what they really do. | ||
I know about the NSA. I know about the CIA. But there's government agencies we don't even know about, guys. | ||
CIA's black budget in 98 was $28 billion. | ||
That's the money they get that's secret. | ||
That here's the money, but we can't discuss where it goes. | ||
Then they've got their drug revenue. | ||
It's private, guys. | ||
Anybody with a mind knows this. | ||
The CIA and the NSA and all these people. | ||
J.P. Morgan's son started the CIA in this country. | ||
Hell, that'll be on Discovery Channel for you, but damn, it's real cute! | ||
unidentified
|
This crap isn't cute! | |
And all you people out there that think you're so wealthy and so rich, you're not! | ||
You're going to be consolidated. | ||
You're not going to be safe in your walled-in communities. | ||
You're going to be fed upon. | ||
Maybe not now, but your kids will be. | ||
And to the people out there that are living in the projects, you're having the drugs shipped right into your community just like people shipped in the fire water, the alcohol for the Indians, and the poison blankets. | ||
It's the same crap all over again. | ||
They've narcotized whole populations. | ||
I'm cheeseburgerized. | ||
I'm into entertainment. | ||
I'm into all this garbage. | ||
Life is easy. | ||
Life is soft. | ||
And that's the problem. | ||
We'll be eased right into slavery, guys, right into the hands of this beast. | ||
Let's take two calls and we're out of here. | ||
Let's go to Steve. | ||
Steve, you're on the Freedom Report. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, I was watching C-SPAN about like 10.30, and there was these two senators, a Democrat from Minnesota and Iowa, Tom Harkin and Paul Wellstone. | |
Yeah. | ||
unidentified
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And what they proposed that the American public do is start writing letters to their senators to open up some of the Senate debates about the Clinton impeachment. | |
Oh, yes, I'm sorry not to mention that. | ||
I covered it on the radio this evening. | ||
They had their closed door meeting Saturday. | ||
Now they're going to have a closed trial. | ||
Never happened before. | ||
When they did Andrew Johnson, it was open. | ||
Every other impeachment has been open. | ||
But now it's going to be closed door. | ||
And they're talking about just leaving Clinton alone because he's blackmailing him with all this sex stuff. | ||
And that's their fault for going after him on perjury and obstruction of justice connected to sex. | ||
Because despite those being real high crimes and misdemeanors, it's still got sex in front of it. | ||
They should have gone after them for the Chinese missile secrets. | ||
One problem, George Bush, Alexander Haig, Brent Skrokov, James Baker, Henry Kissinger, they're all over there in China right now making these deals and going... | ||
They're the go-betweens with Clinton. | ||
There's not a dime's difference. | ||
How do you fix this problem? | ||
You wake up the public. | ||
You show them the real political paradigm. | ||
unidentified
|
Right. | |
Well, you know, that's what I'm going to do, and I'm going to write, you know, I was going to write up form letters just, you know, to pass out to my friends and family, and I maybe just, like, suggest that other people do the same because, you know, maybe it might not open anything up, but it's better just to be able to know. | ||
Well, I do appreciate your call, sir. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you, sir. | |
Take care, Steve. | ||
Thanks for holding so long. | ||
Let's take a few more calls. | ||
Let's go to Paul. | ||
Paul, you're on the Freedom Report. | ||
unidentified
|
Hey, how you doing, Alex? | |
Pretty good. | ||
unidentified
|
Real big fan of yours. | |
Hey, listen, As far as the Clinton thing goes, if he gets off on this, I'm ashamed to be an American because, I mean, a lot of friends I work with are total liberal, and they're like, oh, it's okay if he sleeps with his wife. | ||
They associate their power with Bill Clinton. | ||
They don't realize that they are scheduled for termination by this system. | ||
I mean, I'm serious. | ||
These consolidators, these command and controllers, when they come into a once-free nation, they generally kill at least a third of the population. | ||
And a lot of the professors... | ||
That raise the gates for the hordes to come in, they're the first to go because they're the ones that know how the system works. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
And another thing I was going to ask is, what do you think about the Reform Party? | ||
That, like, Jesse the Mines of Ventura, the thing, I was watching his inauguration speech, and the one thing that really got me was that he was talking about honesty, and I almost practically believed him because, you know, he's an ex-Navy SEAL or whatever, and he said he wants to go into smaller government and all that stuff. | ||
Kind of blew my mind. | ||
I think Ventura was a Navy SEAL and everything before. | ||
I think Ventura's good. | ||
I had to reserve judgment, but he's not building Red McCombs. | ||
He says he will not allow Red McCombs to spend hundreds of millions of dollars. | ||
Was it $370 million or something? | ||
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Yeah, something like that. | |
He invited him to the press box to a game, and he turned him down on all that. | ||
Yeah, I mean, so that's... | ||
Right now, it looks like Ventura's a real man, and we do appreciate his fine work. | ||
unidentified
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And one more thing, just one little thing. | |
I've been noticing, like, I used to belong to a bank here in town, and now it's changed ownership to Norwest, and now it's changed ownership later on down to Wells Fargo. | ||
Is that something to do, you think, with the future coming down to, like, one bank or whatever? | ||
It seems like all these banks are selling out. | ||
Well, you had one of the top biggest banks here in the U.S. bought by Deutsche Bank a few weeks ago. | ||
You have to remember, with Germany and Britain, everything is focused by the old central money. | ||
The Crumps, the Rothschilds, the... | ||
The British world family, the Dutch world family, these people have incredible ancestral wealth and the systems and the societies to control the apparatus. | ||
And they take pretty good care of their top little echelon of minions. | ||
And if you read the Wall Street Journal every day, they're like, it's no big deal, but you will over and over again see the Justice Department not letting U.S. companies merge, but allowing foreign companies to buy U.S. companies. | ||
And it's a major national security breach, and we're losing our industrial base. | ||
Appreciate your call. | ||
unidentified
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Thank you. | |
Take care. | ||
Okay, who disagrees? | ||
Is it Steve on line two? | ||
Scott, okay. | ||
Scott disagrees. | ||
Yeah, buddy. | ||
unidentified
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How you doing, Alex? | |
Pretty good. | ||
unidentified
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What's your story? | |
You know, I was just flipping through the stations doing a little channel surfing, and all I heard was you getting on Microsoft and that Bill Gates was going to move all his production to China and Asia. | ||
What's up with that? | ||
I think you have a real listening problem, to tell you the truth. | ||
unidentified
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No, I didn't hear it. | |
I just heard a few things. | ||
For anybody that knows this program, I support the free market. | ||
I support Bill Gates because he's new money. | ||
I said that. | ||
unidentified
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Okay. | |
I'm talking about the Justice Department attacking Microsoft. | ||
unidentified
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Oh, I think it's horrible. | |
Bill Gates has created more jobs, more. | ||
He is like an industrialist. | ||
Is this the first time you've seen this program? | ||
unidentified
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Yes. | |
We're here every Monday night from 9 to 10. This is a late edition. | ||
We're also here Wednesday nights, and keep watching. | ||
We've got some important information for you. | ||
unidentified
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Oh, thanks. | |
Yeah, I appreciate the call. | ||
We'll take one more from Joe. | ||
Joe, last call before we go to this piece. | ||
unidentified
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Hey, how you doing, Alex? | |
Pretty good. | ||
unidentified
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Hey, I'm 22, and I just wanted to say something to all your viewers. | |
It's really a shame that the people of my age area had to deal with all this stuff, you know, and it's a good thing you run this show because... | ||
It's really the key to all this is awareness. | ||
Kind of like what you were saying, you know. | ||
Knowledge is power. | ||
My people perish for lack of knowledge. | ||
unidentified
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Well stated. | |
I just wanted to say, I think that one of the enemy's biggest allies is the news, you know, the media. | ||
You know, they're really one-sided, I've noticed. | ||
It's kind of... | ||
It's weird to me that all that can be possible. | ||
You see one side of so much and... | ||
I don't know. | ||
I was kind of hoping that maybe you could go in on that one day. | ||
Kind of like the media and their actual... | ||
You know. | ||
We're about to... | ||
Joe, we're about to go in. | ||
Were you watching earlier tonight when we played the Dateline NBC part? | ||
unidentified
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No, actually, I came right in on your song. | |
Have you seen the programs, the hundreds of them, where we play the... | ||
The video and the photos of the children having their heads cut off by UN peacekeepers? | ||
unidentified
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No, sir, I missed that one. | |
We've aired that quite a bit for people. | ||
It's actually in my documentary produced over a year ago now. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah, I've been watching you for a while. | |
Unfortunately, I usually catch, you know, the end of it or, you know, but... | ||
Well, tell your friends about it. | ||
And most importantly, people should tape this program. | ||
unidentified
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Oh, yeah, we're taping now. | |
Send it to people in other cities. | ||
So they can wake up to what's happening. | ||
Let me tell them what's happening. | ||
Old money is stealing your human rights, your God-given rights. | ||
They are phonies. | ||
They're conning the so-called liberals who are really just bootlickers into this corrupt system. | ||
Big government is a movement of the economic elite, of the ultra-rich, not of the downtrodden masses. | ||
Now listen, we're going to air this piece for you, Joe, okay? | ||
unidentified
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Great. | |
Appreciate the call. | ||
unidentified
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Hey, thanks, man. | |
Yeah, absolutely. | ||
We're about to air this piece that... | ||
This is from Dateline NBC last night. | ||
The key facts on it, we've been airing for years here. | ||
The fact of the matter is that in Rwanda in 96, Coffey Hannon, then head of UN Peacekeeping, killed between 500,000 and 900,000. | ||
You remember the video from CNN of the dead bodies floating down the rivers? | ||
They talked about this massive death toll that they said the UN was trying to help. | ||
It's come out in court documents in Canada and in Belgium and in Italy. | ||
That the UN was actually getting people at refugee camps by the tens of thousands, huge giant camps as far as you can see, and then leaving at night and arming the Hutus to come in and kill them. | ||
Because you see, the Tutsis had a lot of the nice cities and things. | ||
They were a pretty smart tribe that was doing quite well for themselves. | ||
They were a minority, and the UN, because it was heavily run by people like Kurt Valtheim, who was a Nazi, was good at killing minorities and stealing their property. | ||
Something they do quite a bit. | ||
And then using the, you know, the rabble of the majority of some group, you know, to come and force it so they can move in with the oil companies and everybody else. | ||
And a lot of you'll say, who cares? | ||
Just in black people. | ||
Well, that's fine. | ||
You know, have that little attitude. | ||
Feel superior. | ||
It'll just be you next. | ||
And we read earlier UN SWAT team's plan for here in the U.S. World Net Daily. | ||
We also read executive orders for you. | ||
We'll come back with some of those. | ||
Then we've got the traffic calming story. | ||
Which is about control of transportation and more. | ||
We will go ahead... | ||
unidentified
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What was that, Mike? | |
And they... | ||
Oh, yes, they're putting people out of business and they still haven't... | ||
They blocked off a road. | ||
They still haven't removed that. | ||
It's very educational. | ||
It's not all the flash, the media, but it'll be good. | ||
But here's Dateline NBC. Now, you'll think it's shocking, but they act like that it's an accident what the UN's doing. | ||
They don't even mention Central Africa or the Gold Coast right there on the western coast of Africa. | ||
The Gold Coast there. | ||
They don't even mention what the UN did, the real atrocities that we've documented in depth. | ||
All they mention is Somalia and like it's some rogue elements in the UN. The UN doesn't have enough power and they killed some people and also in Haiti they, you know, they beat somebody up or something. | ||
Complete lies, guys. | ||
We've been covering it. | ||
Now they're being forced to do these whitewashes. | ||
NBC has studios in Rockefeller Center and is partially owned by the Rockefeller Brothers Foundation. | ||
The same place the UN has its main center in Washington, D.C. Now, it first cuts in with Arnold Schwarzenegger's wife, Maria Shriver, from their studios in Los Angeles, and then it cuts back to Rockefeller Center. | ||
You've got to watch this. | ||
This is very important. | ||
This is propaganda. | ||
They're losing credibility. | ||
Let's go to this. | ||
It's much worse than what they say. | ||
Ask yourself, where's the 500,000 dead? | ||
And we'll be back in 15 minutes to take your phone calls and go through some executive orders and cover and re-air the traffic calming story. | ||
We'll be right back. | ||
unidentified
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From our studios in Los Angeles, here is Maria Shriver. | |
Good evening. | ||
They are charged with some of the most crucial work on Earth. | ||
For 50 years, UN peacekeepers have been deployed around the globe to put food into the hands of the starving, to protect refugees from the bullets of warring factions, to alleviate suffering, and to stop torture. | ||
But now Dateline has uncovered evidence that some of the violence has been committed by the peacekeepers themselves. | ||
Here's Lee Thompson with a disturbing report about abuse of the powerless. | ||
but we should warn you it contains graphic pictures of violence. | ||
"I'm sorry." I'm very sorry. | ||
All right, guys, I'm sorry. | ||
We had a bad connection. | ||
This is Alex Jones. | ||
There's one more point I had to make. | ||
Notice they say repeatedly in this report, for the first time ever on television. | ||
For the first time ever on television, I want people to call. | ||
After the 15 minutes is up of the show, and I want you to tell us on the air, do you remember us talking about this for a couple years? | ||
Or is it just me? | ||
Go ahead and hit the tape again, Mike. | ||
This is the Freedom Report. | ||
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They're called Blue Helmets. | |
Peacekeepers from the United Nations sent it to hot spots all over the world. | ||
Attention, attention. | ||
Please evacuate the area now. | ||
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Work is hard. | |
They stop fighting. | ||
Deliver food and medicine. | ||
Protect human rights. | ||
And it's dangerous. | ||
More than 500 blue helmets have been killed in action in the last 50 years. | ||
These heroic soldiers have even won the Nobel Peace Prize. | ||
And all of us pay for this good work. | ||
Although the U.S. owes money to the U.N., American taxpayers still kick in more than $200 million a year for peacekeeping. | ||
But the noble goals of the United Nations are not always carried out by its peacekeepers. | ||
Dayline has found that some of the very same soldiers who are supposed to be protecting civilians have instead been accused of terrible crimes against them. | ||
Everything from child prostitution to smuggling, drugs and weapons, torture, rape, even murder. | ||
And what's worse, critics say, is the United Nations is doing very little to stop them. | ||
As a result... | ||
Crimes of war committed by soldiers of peace. | ||
For example, in the African nation of Somalia, peacekeepers on a U.S.-led mission were so brazen, they actually took pictures of their atrocities. | ||
Trophy photos as souvenirs. | ||
They're seen here for the first time on American television. | ||
Okay, guys, you're not going to see again Rwanda. | ||
Cover up by NBC. Cover up, cover up. | ||
It's come out multiple times. | ||
Back to the tape. | ||
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These Italian peacekeepers snapped away as they pinned a man to the ground and allegedly shocked his genitals with wires from a radio generator. | |
Other Italian peacekeepers took photos as they bound a woman to an armored truck and allegedly raped her with a flare gun. | ||
These peacekeepers from Belgium were photographed roasting a boy over an open fire. | ||
A witness said he went into shock after his clothes caught on fire. | ||
The soldiers were acquitted of torture after the child couldn't be located. | ||
The peacekeepers claimed it was just a game to discourage the boy from stealing. | ||
These are only some of the cases we know about because peacekeepers took photos. | ||
Experts say many more cases of wrongdoing still haven't come to light. | ||
Not only were these soldiers committing these extraordinary crimes, but they're actually documenting their crimes themselves. | ||
John Hillen was himself a peacekeeper for the U.S. He's now a senior fellow at the Center for Strategic and International Studies who has written extensively on peacekeeping and believes in it. | ||
Hillen points out bad soldiers from many armies have abused civilians, and he says the number of U.N. peacekeepers who have committed crimes over the past 50 years is small. | ||
But he says in recent years, incidents have increased greatly. | ||
It's become worse recently because UN peacekeeping has happened in much greater scale and volume. | ||
Kyle Brown was a peacekeeper, an elite Canadian paratrooper sent to Somalia on a US-led mission. | ||
Part of his job was to help the starving people of Somalia. | ||
But Brown says that when desperate Somalis tried to steal their food, some peacekeepers in his unit turned violent. | ||
Language that they understood, violence. | ||
These people live and die by violence. | ||
Brown says his commanders had issued orders to rough up the locals, that the soldiers even set out food and water for bait to lure hungry Somalis into shooting range. | ||
You use the term turkey shoot? | ||
Yes. | ||
What do you mean? | ||
These Somalis were being hunted by these men. | ||
I remember hearing the troops yell, I got one. | ||
At this weapons bunker, nicknamed The Pit, the peacekeepers tied up a 16-year-old Somali boy who had been hanging around the compound. | ||
Brown says the corporal who was supervising him blindfolded the boy, bound his legs, and tied his hands behind his back. | ||
And he turns to me and says, watch this. | ||
According to Brown, the corporal kicked the boy, then beat him with a baton with a lead pipe. | ||
Soldiers later testified the beating continued for hours, that more than a dozen different peacekeepers came by to watch, and some joined in, including Brown. | ||
In all, more than 80 soldiers heard the boys' screams, and no one came to his rescue. | ||
But Peacekeeper Brown did pull out his camera and take pictures. | ||
He says it was his corporal's idea. | ||
Picture that tells a thousand words. | ||
This almost looks like it's... | ||
Show and tell. | ||
Sure. | ||
Show and tell. | ||
A medic later found cigarette burns on the teenager's feet and genitals. | ||
And evidence... | ||
All I've got to say to this fellow is, we know the UN plans to come here in their own documents. | ||
You can go to the UN and do a SWAT team search in their search engine. | ||
And I just can't wait for Mr. Bad Boy to come here, because he won't last long. | ||
Let me tell you guys, these people are not playing games. | ||
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But he was raped with the peacekeeper's baton. | |
After hours of torture, the boy finally died. | ||
As you watched him do this, you knew it was wrong. | ||
I knew it was wrong. | ||
You knew it was beyond the rules. | ||
Yes, and at the same time, I was being confronted by the reality that he was under orders to do what he was doing. | ||
So you stood back. | ||
I stood back, and it's not a conscious effort. | ||
It's not something that I can tell you that I made a conscious decision to do. | ||
When it found out about the murder, Canada's military brought criminal charges against the peacekeepers. | ||
Brown was sent to prison for 20 months for torture and manslaughter. | ||
His corporal tried to hang himself and never stood trial. | ||
The entire unit was shot down. | ||
But John Hillen says that kind of crackdown is rare. | ||
We may think that an egregious offense has been committed, and the soldier may just get slapped on the wrist by national authorities and sent home, if that. | ||
Consider the case of Nicholas Duvee, an itinerant worker in the Caribbean nation of Haiti, who at one time was a mechanic in the UN compound there. | ||
I thought they were going to kill me. | ||
Last winter, Duvee went to the UN. He says he asked some of the peacekeepers there, who were from Pakistan, for wood. | ||
There was an argument. | ||
Duvee says the soldiers started beating him with fists. | ||
All right, again, I have to jump in here. | ||
They're telling you about one guy who was beaten, not the 500,000-plus, killed by Coffey Annan, head of UN Peacekeeping at that time, now Secretary General. | ||
We're not playing games here. | ||
In fact, Mike superimposed over this program a photo of Kirk Valtheim, the SS high-ranking officer that headed up the UN from 72 to 82. They're lying to you guys. | ||
They're soft-soaping it. | ||
They're soft-soaking it. | ||
It's ridiculous. | ||
Hit it again. | ||
unidentified
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And rifles. | |
He wasn't armed and says that in order to protect himself, he threw rocks at them. | ||
DeVee says the peacekeepers grabbed him, tied his hands behind his back, and strung him up to a mango tree. | ||
He says they beat him bloody for seven hours. | ||
Did you scream? | ||
Yes, I screamed. | ||
The whole time I was screaming. | ||
But every time I screamed, they beat me harder. | ||
While he was pinned down, he says, three of the peacekeepers gang raped him in broad daylight. | ||
Duvi insists a UN major stood by and watched the torture. | ||
This major, did he try to stop them? | ||
No, not at all. | ||
He just laughed. | ||
The major laughed? | ||
Yes. | ||
He said I would die inside the camp. | ||
He said today is your last day. | ||
You're going to die. | ||
The peacekeepers later turned DeVee over to the Haitian police, who photographed bruises all over his body. | ||
Dateline obtained those photos. | ||
Most are so graphic we can't show them. | ||
But the UN says its two investigations tell a different story. | ||
It says Duvee was part of a belligerent group that started the fight and that a rock he threw injured a peacekeeper on the head. | ||
Ambassador Julian Harsten is in charge of the UN mission in Haiti. | ||
I've seen the pictures. | ||
I'm not an expert in that kind of picture. | ||
I was fairly horrified looking at the pictures, I have to tell you. | ||
But the inquiry suggests that reasonable force was used. | ||
Duvee was brought by police to Haiti's largest hospital. | ||
Doctors here issued this medical certificate. | ||
It concluded that Duvee was the victim of rape and abuse. | ||
But the UN says there's no conclusive proof Duvee was raped, that the medical report was flawed because the hospital didn't conduct sophisticated tests. | ||
There were no blood tests made. | ||
The report, it was quite clear, was written by two separate people. | ||
The report was unsigned. | ||
But in fact, the report was signed by doctors and an administrator of the hospital. | ||
Though they can't identify the assailants, the doctors and the Haitian police told Dateline there was physical evidence of rape. | ||
Of course, no one knows for sure exactly what happened, except for DuVe and the peacekeepers themselves. | ||
But we do know that DuVe and his lawyer never got to question those peacekeepers in court. | ||
Neither did the Haitian police. | ||
That's because under international law, soldiers have immunity from prosecution by anyone other than their own government. | ||
So just three days after their fight with Duvi, the peacekeepers were allowed to end their tour of duty and fly back to Pakistan. | ||
And what did the Pakistani government do? | ||
Just like the UN, it investigated and cleared its own soldiers of a great and unreasonable force. | ||
Do you see anything wrong with that? | ||
No. | ||
I think you have to go along with the system exists. | ||
Who would you ask to do it if it weren't for the people most closely involved? | ||
But critics say that's a problem in the system, and the biggest one is training. | ||
This is the United Nations checkpoint. | ||
Whoa, yes, we need more funding. | ||
That's the moral of the story. | ||
So they have diplomatic immunity. | ||
They just can't help themselves. | ||
And now they're coming here to keep us safe from drugs and everything else. | ||
Thank you, Bill Clinton. | ||
You're such a loving liberal. | ||
Yeah, right. | ||
Thanks, Uncle Bill. | ||
Thanks, Uncle Bill. | ||
unidentified
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The UN does show peacekeepers these training tapes. | |
You're not allowed to be here. | ||
You know that. | ||
But it doesn't have the money to give soldiers any basic training. | ||
Instead, it trains only their commanders, relying on the countries that supply the troops to prepare them. | ||
But many peacekeepers come from developing nations that don't have the resources to train them properly. | ||
And all they really get from the UN are these little wallet cards, a code of conduct with rules like don't abuse alcohol or drugs or threaten anyone. | ||
Despite that, the UN argues allegations of peacekeeper misconduct are largely unsubstantiated, that crimes are rare and isolated, and the vast majority of soldiers do a good job. | ||
99.9% of all troops are very well disciplined, are well looked after, and look after the people that they are protecting very well. | ||
Colonel Peter Lenches is head of training for UN peacekeepers. | ||
He's the first to admit there are flaws. | ||
The UN has no real screening. | ||
Correct. | ||
It has no real training. | ||
Correct. | ||
And it cannot punish. | ||
Absolutely correct. | ||
When you don't have any of those things, aren't you asking for problems? | ||
No more than I think the normal interrelationship the international community would generate. | ||
This is an imperfect business. | ||
In fact, UN officials admit peacekeepers have had serious problems with child prostitution, drug dealing, running brothels. | ||
Larceny, racketeering, black marketeering, smuggling, prostitution, these sorts of things. | ||
But done in a very systematic and organized fashion. | ||
In Bosnia, more than 20 peacekeepers were kicked out for theft and corruption. | ||
Nearly four dozen others were sent home after allegedly abusing mental patients at this hospital. | ||
Peacekeepers from Canada were accused of beatings, rape, and sexual abuse of a handicapped teenage girl. | ||
These Canadian peacekeepers who were sent to Africa made their own home movies. | ||
What's this operation called? | ||
The operation Snash Negus. | ||
Negus. | ||
Negus. | ||
Pull the gun out. | ||
Straight arms. | ||
Among them, this corporal who admits he was a neo-Nazi. | ||
What do you think about the tour? | ||
I ain't a man. | ||
We ain't killed enough niggers yet. | ||
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Canada did take action against Somalia. | |
It kicked this peacekeeper out after he returned from Somalia. | ||
It reprimanded 22 other soldiers and expelled two officers who were in Bosnia. | ||
The Italian military also disciplined 12 peacekeepers for abusing civilians in Somalia. | ||
But it has filed no criminal charges against these soldiers who are accused of rape and electrocution. | ||
Five years later, Italian authorities tell us they are still investigating. | ||
Both countries and Belgium tell Dateline they've strengthened controls on their soldiers to avoid future problems. | ||
But a military court in Belgium let these peacekeepers go free. | ||
Even the country's defense minister was outraged. | ||
Experts say that's not unusual, that even terrible crimes by peacekeepers are often just set aside and forgotten. | ||
The fact that we're only prosecuting the tip of the iceberg because we have hard evidence is worrying, because I'm not sure how we're going to fix the problem. | ||
So if the UN can't screen, can't train, and can't punish its troops, Does it at least keep track of the crimes they commit just to make sure the worst soldiers aren't sent back into the field again? | ||
Well, Dateline asked the UN for statistics on crimes by peacekeepers. | ||
There aren't any. | ||
The UN doesn't even track the problem. | ||
Shouldn't somebody do that? | ||
Oh, yeah. | ||
Somebody should do it. | ||
So in the end, despite all the good work peacekeepers do, The UN acknowledges the only real check it has on its bad soldiers is the honor system. | ||
It all boils down to trust. | ||
Of course. | ||
Is it good enough? | ||
It has to be. | ||
It's the only thing we've got. | ||
After Dateline began asking questions... | ||
All right, guys. | ||
I mean, I mean, I hope... | ||
That you could, in fact, back it up to that general or whatever the hell he is, just the arrogance that, oh, of course, I may have a one-inch penis, and I may be impotent, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, but I have power, and that English piece of garbage, and all the rest of these guys, and Bill Clinton, and Reno, they're all a bunch of filth! | ||
We put Marilyn Albright up there earlier. | ||
This is the lady that's trying to tell federal judges and others not to put certain people in prison. | ||
They're already trying. | ||
They've got their International Criminal Court, guys, that can control our government. | ||
They're claiming they don't have enough power. | ||
They gave the orders. | ||
You didn't hear one word about Rwanda. | ||
An extermination campaign. | ||
Plus, you look at these countries with all these UN doctors where it's 50% of the population has AIDS. They're getting some really good inoculations, let me tell you. | ||
They're getting some really good vaccinations. | ||
It's just, they're really helping them, let me tell you. | ||
Are you all still having phone troubles in there? | ||
477-2288. | ||
I know they've been trying to pick up calls and screen them, so they don't have any profanity on the program, and they've got the phones working. | ||
Okay, we'll go ahead and go to some phone calls. | ||
The important also point is, what is the UN doing in these countries? | ||
Who gave them the right? | ||
Who gave them the express control to do this? | ||
And all you know is what you're told in the press, guys. | ||
We've been doing the research for you for a long time. | ||
What do you think about what we told you and what now is coming out, even in these whitewashes? | ||
You're on the air. | ||
Brian? | ||
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I just wanted to say your show really makes a lot of sense to me and my friends and what's going on in the great... | |
New World Order is the scariest shit that could ever happen, and it's going to continue to happen. | ||
Well, not if you get in the field and get involved. | ||
There's 260-something million Americans, and if all of us just start talking to friends and make it an important thing, I mean, they pack these football stadiums with 100,000 people that we have trouble even talking about it to our friends and family. | ||
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Well, that's because the government doesn't want us talking about it. | |
Well, I don't care what they want. | ||
unidentified
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I don't either. | |
I agree with you wholeheartedly. | ||
I'm not trying to argue with you. | ||
No, no, no, no, I'm not. | ||
I'm just saying we have got to get our morale up. | ||
We've got to get our information. | ||
Don't just listen to me. | ||
Go to the UT Law Library. | ||
Research these executive orders. | ||
Research 11,000. | ||
It allows the government to mobilize civilians into work brigades under government supervision. | ||
unidentified
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That's scary stuff. | |
And I saw your show last week about... | ||
The land grants, and I can't remember exactly what you called it. | ||
It was Marion County where the county commissioner said, I didn't know what sustainable development was, and I got constituents calling. | ||
I researched it. | ||
It is the UN taking over. | ||
He was saying, I am thoroughly shocked about what's going on here. | ||
I don't know what to say. | ||
I don't know what to do. | ||
I researched it. | ||
They lied to me. | ||
They're taking over. | ||
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Right, in Florida, right? | |
Marion County, Florida. | ||
And it's happening right here. | ||
Travis County is a country biosphere. | ||
unidentified
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Right. | |
And people like that... | ||
Well, have you ever seen us play the guy from Waco who goes honed? | ||
Honed to kill. | ||
unidentified
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Right. | |
Before he kills the children. | ||
I mean, they're hiring sociopaths. | ||
unidentified
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I agree wholeheartedly. | |
Alex, I just want to tell you, keep doing what you're doing. | ||
Well, I'm not going to do a damn thing, Brian, unless you start doing something small. | ||
And that doesn't mean call me or... | ||
I'm just saying, tape these shows, send them out to friends and family. | ||
More importantly, come down to Ashley, let's get your own show. | ||
Or just research the executive orders. | ||
Go to the UT Law Library. | ||
Call your congresspeople. | ||
Ask them. | ||
Make sure I'm not lying to you. | ||
That's important. | ||
And then, you've got what's happening. | ||
The UN's taking over the national parks. | ||
Executive orders. | ||
Bill Clinton's putting the National Guard on alert. | ||
They're building FEMA concentration camps. | ||
I'm sure you've seen us play that video clip, haven't you? | ||
From the Senate. | ||
You've got senators calling for martial law in last week's Detroit News on the 4th. | ||
You've got the trial of Clinton being done in closed session for the first time in U.S. history. | ||
They are so arrogant right now. | ||
It shows they've got some plan that's about to come to fruition. | ||
Problem, reaction, solution. | ||
unidentified
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I agree wholeheartedly. | |
Definitely. | ||
If it wasn't for people like you and people like me that are watching your show, it would already be over. | ||
So we've just got to keep... | ||
You're right. | ||
We have been holding a line against it. | ||
But get out there. | ||
You are the troops in this information war. | ||
Call talk radio shows. | ||
Blast them. | ||
Do it. | ||
It doesn't matter if there's not ten of you. | ||
Just do it yourself and count on others to take up action. | ||
Get off the bench. | ||
Become proactive. | ||
Start acting. | ||
Stop reacting. | ||
unidentified
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I think there are a lot of people out there that... | |
Think just the way you and I do and the rest of us do that actually are thinking that way and probably will take action. | ||
And the media is never going to give us any help. | ||
They're never going to act like anybody else is listening. | ||
They're not going to act like anybody's there to help. | ||
unidentified
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Of course not. | |
The Statesman is not a... | ||
It's a privately held newspaper. | ||
I mean, if you want to get down to it, that's not a people's newspaper. | ||
And at the same end of the paradigm, we have to understand that it's private industry. | ||
Combining together in criminal syndicates to steal our property via a social system. | ||
See, most people see it in simple one-dimensional patterns. | ||
Left, right. | ||
Left wants to help the people with big government. | ||
Right wants to help the rich and all the rest. | ||
It's a lie. | ||
The truth of the matter is that the old money is fighting new money and fighting the middle class and fighting the poor to enslave us, dumb us down, and control us. | ||
It's modern feudalism. | ||
Look up feudalism in your encyclopedia or in your dictionary. | ||
unidentified
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Oh, I know what feudalism is. | |
And one point that I did want to talk about, since I have gotten through on the phone to you, just like the whirlybirds going over your house. | ||
The harassment that happened a couple of months ago? | ||
Yes. | ||
unidentified
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A prime example. | |
People are laughing at that. | ||
Black helicopters over our house. | ||
No, it was not. | ||
It was dark blue helicopters. | ||
My mother and parents even doubted me on some things until a few months ago. | ||
It was like five months ago now. | ||
We almost stopped them from getting their helicopters. | ||
We got them cut by $400,000. | ||
They called it Starflight for medical reasons in the bond package. | ||
There are two German helicopters that they've bought, $13 million, $14 million a piece, outfitted. | ||
Sabre 1 and Sabre 2, in a two-day period, my mother was over the house for 30 minutes, directly over hovering, taking photos of her, right there at about 200 feet, she said. | ||
We played the actual audio of her interview with me on the radio. | ||
She's very shy, but came out about it. | ||
The next night, Mike calls me, saying, Oh my gosh, we just got film of them flying over. | ||
By the time we got the camera out, we only got the last pass. | ||
The helicopter would fly over at about 500, 600 feet, turn its light on over the house, and then come back. | ||
Mike got this on tape. | ||
I drive over to Mike to see the tape. | ||
My girlfriend calls crying and says, who was not into this stuff, guys, saying, my God, a helicopter's crying, a helicopter's shining a light through the window. | ||
So it's just continual harassment, and it just shows, and most people can't even imagine it. | ||
unidentified
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Well, what about this, Alex? | |
Halloween, a lot of my friends were down on 6th Street having a very good time, and the police instigated basically a riot on 6th Street, and there were five helicopters over downtown flying over 6th Street. | ||
Well, did you hear about what happened when UT won against Texas A&M? I didn't see it, but Shannon Burke was broadcasting live from a bar. | ||
I don't know if y'all know, you have the sound up when you're rewinding that. | ||
I'm sorry. | ||
He was down there broadcasting live from, I think it was, what's the name of that place? | ||
Well, it doesn't matter. | ||
He was down there broadcasting live that day, and I'm driving up to the radio station to do my radio program, and they're doing this loud live deal from the District Bar and Grill or whatever, and I hear Shannon go, my God, my producer just walked in. | ||
Alex Jones is right. | ||
Sammy Guilford says they have tanks out on the street, actually they're armored personnel carriers of Russian and German design, the big suckers. | ||
They have armored personnel carriers, two dark blue helicopters that say Travis County flying at like 200 feet, which is illegal unless it's an emergency, up and down the street, police in black uniforms marching abreast, and there was no riot. | ||
unidentified
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And this was here in Austin. | |
This was here in Austin, and of course, I almost veered off the road. | ||
I know my camera doesn't have a battery. | ||
I've been lazy. | ||
I hadn't brought the camera. | ||
It wasn't charged up. | ||
Mike was out on some job building decks, and I'm just like, damn it, all I've got to do is have, you know, all I've got to do. | ||
And then 20 people told me the next week that it was something out of a movie. | ||
Helicopters flying, tanks. | ||
They said a SWAT team officer was riding out of the top of the armored personnel carrier with an automatic weapon going, Just like something out of an SS movie. | ||
unidentified
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It's crazy. | |
Yeah. | ||
Well, listen, I appreciate your call. | ||
unidentified
|
Thanks a lot, Alex. | |
Take care. | ||
I'm going to try to take your two calls real fast, but first of all, we have the honed to kill clip, and then we're going to go directly. | ||
unidentified
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We have a couple of Kansas City's finest members of the SWAT team. | |
This one here is quite a specimen. | ||
I tell you, in all my years involved with SWAT, I've never seen a gentleman like this that I've learned so much from in just the short time I've been around him. | ||
He's just awesome is about the only word to describe him. | ||
Honed. | ||
Honed to a fine age, honed to kill. | ||
That's right. | ||
He's just the Rambo. | ||
He's just like Rambo out here. | ||
Why? | ||
That was me interviewing Mike McNulty, the... | ||
unidentified
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But this is the attitude. | |
Ah, we can ride up to a wooden house, open fire into the door. | ||
Proven. | ||
Then they stole the metal door that had the bullets where they fired in. | ||
Helicopters firing from above. | ||
51 days later, they set the fire. | ||
We've got it on flare footage. | ||
We've aired it. | ||
It's on HBO, for God's sakes, now. | ||
An edited version from the 3 hours, 14 minutes. | ||
But we were at the premiere here in Austin of it. | ||
There you have it. | ||
In fact, we took some of the Branch Davidians up there. | ||
Mike did. | ||
I mean, we're involved. | ||
We research. | ||
We travel the country. | ||
We get out there for you. | ||
Let's talk to Paul and Wade, and then we're going to go to the traffic calming story. | ||
Please watch it. | ||
Very important information. | ||
A real education. | ||
One more part of control of the serfs and the feudal system. | ||
Paul, you're on the Freedom Report, late edition. | ||
unidentified
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Hey, Alex. | |
How's it going? | ||
Real fast, because we're almost out of time. | ||
unidentified
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Alrighty, I want to know, first of all, who's funding these UN Rwandan hit squads? | |
And a comment about the HBO special. | ||
You need to show those autopsy photos of those kids. | ||
Those were only kids. | ||
They didn't deserve to die by the U.S. government. | ||
Well, number one, there was no speed lab, no automatic weapons. | ||
There is no upper and lower receiver on AK-47. | ||
Like the report said, it was MAC-90s legal. | ||
I own one of them. | ||
Very good gun. | ||
There was no molestation of that girl who said it was there. | ||
That's now been debunked. | ||
She never even lived there. | ||
It is pure propaganda. | ||
The helicopters were firing. | ||
FBI agents admitted it. | ||
And I have confronted them personally, the ones that engaged in the activity. | ||
unidentified
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The ATF definitely tried to whitewash everything. | |
Get ready, Michael. | ||
We're almost out of time. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay. | |
Thanks, Alex. | ||
All right. | ||
Thank you for the call. | ||
unidentified
|
All right. | |
Let's talk to Wade. | ||
Wade, 30 seconds. | ||
unidentified
|
Alex. | |
Yes? | ||
unidentified
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Hey, I totally agree with you about the police up and down Guadalupe after the game. | |
It was ridiculous in full riot gear and all that stuff. | ||
You saw it? | ||
I didn't see it. | ||
I just heard it from... | ||
unidentified
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Yeah, there were more police on the street than students. | |
I mean, it was ridiculous. | ||
Did they have the armored personnel carriers? | ||
unidentified
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I didn't see that, but I mean, I saw full riot gear, you know, with the shields and the batons and, you know, masks on everything. | |
Well, Sammy Guilford's a good guy, but sometimes he even laughs at me. | ||
He told me that the guy was riding out of the top like an SS officer. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah. | |
But what I really called about was if you could throw some Y2K facts at me. | ||
I read a lot of stuff on the internet. | ||
I want to know how seriously this Domino thing is going to wipe things out. | ||
Is it just going to be smaller businesses? | ||
You know, I think I'll do a partial show Wednesday night if I remember on that way, but we're almost out of time. | ||
To other callers, if we have time left at the end, there'll be a thing tomorrow for that. | ||
Let's go ahead and start the piece on... | ||
It's really smart growth, but it's traffic calming. | ||
And it's got about 10, 15 minutes of, or 5 or 10 minutes of information for you, news articles of how insane these people are. | ||
And then, well not insane, they know exactly what they're doing, and then it's got some important information. | ||
So please watch. | ||
It's too much of me, but it's very important. | ||
Let's go to that. | ||
This is the Freedom Report. | ||
Traffic calming devices. | ||
Part of a national initiative known as Smart Growth. | ||
You see, Kirk Watson would have you believe that traffic calming devices are some local initiative. | ||
They're federal all the way. | ||
It's the same mindset of people that get in the fast lane and drive under the speed limit and insist you go around. | ||
They have that self-assured look on their face. | ||
You see, all they can do in life is obstruct you, seek to control you. | ||
They're control freaks. | ||
They've never struck out on their own and tried to create something or actually tried to do something. | ||
Now, you're going to see documented evidence that since smart growth and one of its sub-issues, traffic calming, which is a federal plan, has come into Austin in the last month in a test case by Mayor Kirk Watson. | ||
That businesses are on the verge of going out of business due to main roads being shut down right in front of their businesses. | ||
You're going to see eyewitness reports of head-on collisions since they've put in these myriad devices. | ||
We're talking about turning straight lanes, straight roads into S-curves. | ||
We're talking about turning four-way stops into circular four-way yields where no one knows what to do. | ||
We're talking about more and more, guys. | ||
We're talking about turning two-way streets into one-way streets. | ||
Turning one-way streets into two-way streets. | ||
And then I'm going to read from the Wall Street Journal, where traffic planners across the country talk about how great it is and what they're pushing for is to move traffic to the speed of horse and buggy. | ||
Now, I'm going to read that. | ||
I'm going to show you the documents, and it's going to blow you away. | ||
So stay tuned right here on the Freedom Report. | ||
You know, I almost forgot as well that it's not me saying slow traffic down to the speed of a horse and buggy. | ||
Again, that's the traffic planner's own words, mayor's own words from around the country. | ||
This is insanity, guys. | ||
It's insanity. | ||
They openly hate automobiles. | ||
They say it all the time. | ||
The so-called environmentalist Al Gore says that the combustion engine is the greatest threat to civilization. | ||
unidentified
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I thought that it was civilization. | |
They're fear-mongers. | ||
They want to force you on buses, force you on trains, just like in good old Europe or China or Russia. | ||
These are command and controllers, guys. | ||
They want to control your life. | ||
Now, for those of you that think that, again, this is Kirk Watson's local initiative, as the city council's been claiming, let's discuss a very serious article in 8796 in the Wall Street Journal, page A1, cover of the paper. | ||
They have statements from mayors and city planners and the new breed of highway designers talking about traffic calming devices. | ||
And I'm fixing to read you some quotes and give you names of these wackos who make statements like, we want traffic to travel at the speed of a horse and buggy, or we want drivers to spend even more time in traffic. | ||
Again, there it is, 8796, the Wall Street Journal. | ||
Let's go ahead and show you some of this. | ||
This is right out of their archives. | ||
It's all about control, my friends. | ||
Control of mobility. | ||
Listen to this planner. | ||
Anywhere that doesn't have congestion, you probably wouldn't want to be there, says Toronto urban planner Ken Greenberg, who, as the city's design director in the 1980s, halted the construction of freeways and narrowed numerous streets in successful downtown. | ||
He says cars should move at the speed of a horse and buggy. | ||
Now you notice in the article, he says they should move at the speed of a horse and buggy. | ||
Oh yeah, that's real good for communities. | ||
To not build highways into narrow existing streets. | ||
And it's happening right here in Austin. | ||
Here's some more insane quotes. | ||
An influential group of planners called the New Urbanists who see the traditional town center as a model for modern development. | ||
They have gained the ears of a handful of mayors who are grasping for new ways to reverse the generation-long flight of retail, residential living, and office jobs from the cities to the suburbs. | ||
You know, even the Wall Street Journal, who is a respected paper, hell, I've been in there, a little bit of bragging here on the program, really shouldn't do that, but even a respected paper like the Wall Street Journal is being too nice to these guys. | ||
This is a federal move. | ||
As I sit here, I've got a speech from Al Gore where he calls for sustainable growth and talks about slowing traffic and everything else you can imagine. | ||
It's all about control, and I... And to sit here and read this article, it talks about how everybody's fleeing to the suburbs. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah, to get away from the traffic. | |
Of course, but they want to slow it down more, as if that's what you want? | ||
You didn't hear it from me, you heard it from them. | ||
There's a bunch of other quotes in that article, and it might do you some good to get on the internet and check it out. | ||
it's Wall Street Journal 8796 now let's get to on the street right here at Austin Texas I don't take my head screwed up | ||
unidentified
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Well that tape just got eaten - Mm-hmm. | |
So I guess we're going to take some phone calls. | ||
I apologize. | ||
We were going to do a great story for you. | ||
Live television, guys. | ||
I was in there relaxing, thought my night's work was over. | ||
No, Mike, I didn't. | ||
Mike, you have to rewind it. | ||
That was another repeat of the piece. | ||
It was actually farther back on the tape. | ||
That's what's happened. | ||
I love it. | ||
I apologize about that heartily, guys. | ||
Well, it's on AXS TV playing on the channels. | ||
What's the name of the tape we turned in for that? | ||
It's called Traffic Calling. | ||
And I should be playing more in the future. | ||
You can consult your show world and Sunday Statesman. | ||
If you could find it, Mike, and queue it up to that point where I leave the part, then that would be good. | ||
Rewind it about 20 minutes. | ||
I may have doubled up and screwed it up there. | ||
Let's go ahead and take some phone calls, and then I'll get into cloning, or whatever you want to talk about. | ||
You're on the air. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah, hi, this is Chris. | |
How you doing, Chris? | ||
unidentified
|
All right. | |
Hey, that nice little traffic calming? | ||
Yeah, have you seen the whole show? | ||
unidentified
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Just bits and pieces of it. | |
Yeah, I didn't know. | ||
The tape screwed up for some reason. | ||
I apologize. | ||
unidentified
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All you've got to do is go back to the Middle Ages and look at the way they designed their cities. | |
They're specifically designed so military troops can't move in on a city, but troops within the city can move the way they want to. | ||
It also controls the public. | ||
That way the military can move the way they want to. | ||
Well, the interstate highway system was set up for the military, and Al Gore's father, who just died last month, we're very sorry about Armand Hammer's favorite protege dying. | ||
Openly, from the start, didn't want the traffic, he was the guy that designed it and had it passed, he didn't want it to even be used by the general citizens. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah, it just makes a mess for us and makes them move easier because they know where it is. | |
Yeah. | ||
Because they can bypass it. | ||
And then you add the dumbing down of all the populace. | ||
And nobody wants to vote anymore, so... | ||
Well, what you said is true. | ||
I mean, if you go back to feudalism, control of land, control of resources, on and on and on, it's all about controlling the serfs. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah, it keeps us in check. | |
We need to stop being confused by all these new, fancy political terms and just get back to what slavery means and how it's been used. | ||
It's the most common form of control, and it's here with us again. | ||
unidentified
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Well, it's not going anywhere. | |
The problem is that so many baubles are manufactured by the system and are spit out so fluently by it that it's really going to be hard to wake up people. | ||
unidentified
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Well, like I said, one, you've got to get rid of the dumbing down. | |
Well, people have to understand that to have a nice car or a nice house does not mean you're rich and does not mean you shouldn't get involved and it doesn't mean that you're above everybody else. | ||
It means you've got to fight for people and wake up to the real political system. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah, just be proactive. | |
You know, put out a website or something. | ||
I mean, you can... | ||
Every... | ||
Exactly. | ||
There's so much we can do. | ||
unidentified
|
All right. | |
You have a good night. | ||
You too, sir. | ||
Thank you for the call. | ||
Excellent point. | ||
You're on the air. | ||
unidentified
|
Good evening, Alex. | |
Yes. | ||
unidentified
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This is John. | |
It's the second time I talk to you. | ||
Watch your show about half a dozen times. | ||
I like it. | ||
I have two questions. | ||
One, do you work anywhere else? | ||
unidentified
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Do you have a regular job? | |
Yeah, I do two radio programs a day. | ||
unidentified
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Other than broadcasting. | |
Well, I was in dental office management. | ||
I've also worked almost everywhere you can imagine from the time I was about 12. Worked for large animal vets. | ||
I've worked for golf course. | ||
I've done quite a bit, yeah. | ||
unidentified
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Alright, my question is... | |
I also have two documentaries that are out worldwide. | ||
Get letters from Germany and Switzerland and England and Canada and Mexico and where's the place with the hopping kangaroos? | ||
Australia. | ||
unidentified
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What are the names of those documentaries? | |
We play out here on AXS TV, America Destroyed by Design, America Wake Up for Waco. | ||
unidentified
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Alright. | |
How do you get on AXS TV? You come down here, and you take a couple of the classes, and you're on the air. | ||
unidentified
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Okay, where is here? | |
We're on East 11th Street off Northwestern. | ||
unidentified
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Alright, and can you use any assistance in preparing your show? | |
We can always use that, but at a certain point, there's too many people getting involved. | ||
Why don't you come down and get a show for yourself? | ||
unidentified
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Thanks a lot, Alex. | |
Yeah, take care. | ||
unidentified
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Alright. | |
There's also a comment line if you'd like to comment or get in touch with us. | ||
280-9333. | ||
We need people with ideas that are proactive, that want to do things, lead, and then we'll support you. | ||
We don't want to sit there and hold your head because we don't have the time or the energy or the expertise. | ||
Let's go ahead and talk to this person. | ||
You're on the air. | ||
unidentified
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Hello, Alex. | |
Yes. | ||
I just wanted to thank you for what you've done. | ||
You've opened my eyes and you've gotten me watching TV again, something that I thought I would never do. | ||
And I've started to tell some people about your shows, and a while back you had a show that exposed some of the Clinton scandalous affairs before you ever got in the White House. | ||
It was his Office of Economic Development. | ||
Yeah. | ||
unidentified
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And I've tried to find that. | |
I was wondering, what was the name of that tape? | ||
What was the book? | ||
Sir, I've aired dozens of tapes on William Jefferson Clinton. | ||
I don't know which one you're talking about. | ||
unidentified
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Well, the title of the tape was something compromised. | |
It exposed the Clintons through a gentleman who had worked for the Clintons and then had moved to Mexico and was working for the CIA. Terry Reid? | ||
We didn't air a documentary, Terry. | ||
We played an eight-minute interview we got with him on tape where he talked about seeing Bill Clinton get boxes of cocaine. | ||
unidentified
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Right, where he had like an equipment manufacturing or... | |
No, he was a CIA pilot flying in drugs and finally got sick of it and quit. | ||
Bill Clinton used to kind of pick up the cocaine and leave with it. | ||
unidentified
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Well, I think on that same tape is where they had the FBI... Undercover tape where... | |
His brother, Roger Clinton. | ||
Okay, we've aired the MENA cover-up. | ||
Others have as well. | ||
We've aired the Clinton Chronicles. | ||
We have aired quite a bit. | ||
We've aired about, what, 10 or 15, I don't know, videos on Bill Clinton. | ||
And George Bush, former director of the Central Intelligence Agency, who they both work closely together. | ||
unidentified
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Well, this one particular gentleman who worked for the Clintons, and when he had moved to Mexico to open up a bogus corporation, where he found out later that they were shipping cocaine back in the boxes of equipment, that he thought it was just equipment going back to the United that he thought it was just equipment going back to the Yeah, that's exactly. | |
That's Terry Reid. | ||
unidentified
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Okay. | |
Well, I was trying to remember the name of that video because I told some people about it and they were in total disbelief about what I was telling them and I wanted to try and-- Well, you could tape those programs and just scan the show world for really goofy names. | ||
We put weird names on things like, you know, "loving happiness" or something because they seem to play stuff more if it says that. | ||
And I'm serious. | ||
I mean, we put total police state or Clinton's evil. | ||
It doesn't seem to play. | ||
So we put happy bunnies or something and it'll play. | ||
Or I knew when I just turned in at Sun City. | ||
I mean, there's a whole bunch of names I turn them in under. | ||
But just scan around. | ||
Keep the tape ready. | ||
Hit record. | ||
You can get it on tape. | ||
unidentified
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Okay, well, I appreciate it. | |
And you've educated me and I just wanted to... | ||
To share the knowledge with some people, you know, any chance I get now, I start to chime in and let people know that there's a lot more going on, and how can you believe somebody has been lying to us from day one? | ||
Well, you know everybody lies, so why don't you just lay down? | ||
Why are you having some morale? | ||
Lay down, GI, lay down. | ||
I do appreciate your call. | ||
unidentified
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Well, thank you. | |
I appreciate it. | ||
Have a good one. | ||
Take care, buddy. | ||
All right. | ||
Hi, I'm really sorry that the traffic calming screwed up. | ||
Guys, is that on the tape before it or something? | ||
unidentified
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No, you're wrong, Mike. | |
If you rewind the tape, it's on there. | ||
or it's after the SWAT piece. | ||
unidentified
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Rewind it then. | |
Rewind it then. | ||
There is no two hours on our tape, Mike. | ||
Well, you've got the original traffic calming, don't you? | ||
I mean the original VHS tape. | ||
Good, I'll have to come in and redo it. | ||
unidentified
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Oh, God. | |
Hello, you're on the air. | ||
You're on the air. | ||
unidentified
|
Hey, what's your beef with NBC? I thought they... | |
How can you say they're in cahoots with the UN? I thought that was a pretty good expose they just did. | ||
Sir, they didn't tell you about the 500,000-plus killed at the hands of UN soldiers. | ||
They didn't even talk about Rwanda. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh, okay. | |
Yeah, and plus it's two years late. | ||
Don't tell me that news agency didn't know about it. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
They're getting their butts hammered in 100 newsletters and radio shows and AXS TV shows. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Don't you know they're losing market share to the alternative media every single day? | ||
People are tuning out in droves. | ||
unidentified
|
Well, I appreciate your call. | |
Hello, you're on the air. | ||
unidentified
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Yes, I had one question to see if you might have the wherewithal to get it. | |
When Bush was president, he signed over the U.S. military to the U.N. Yes. | ||
I was wondering if you'd be able to get... | ||
A copy of the document. | ||
Well, it's been being signed over for a long time. | ||
I would agree that in 1990 it accelerated. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah. | |
It's all incrementalism. | ||
Successive approximation. | ||
unidentified
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I used to have the exact date and all. | |
I went to the University of Texas to try to find it, and they got 90 million books away, and I couldn't find it. | ||
So I thought maybe you might. | ||
Believe me, I wish there was 100 hours in a day. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Okay. | ||
I appreciate your call. | ||
unidentified
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Thank you. | |
Take care. | ||
Alright. | ||
You might want to look in this week's Time Magazine with a big snake on the front. | ||
And they talk about DNA detectives and all the rest of this stuff. | ||
The problem is the government with your DNA can falsify it. | ||
FBI crime lab Frederick Weiners came out a year and a half ago and said they were manufacturing evidence. | ||
Head of the crime lab told you that. | ||
Back of the paper a couple times. | ||
By Robert Wright, they've got a story on page 67 about How only the government can save us from the Brave New World scenario. | ||
I thought the Brave New World by Huxley was actually about the government and genetic engineering, but you know double speakers. | ||
It's a lot of scary things. | ||
I think in the near future we'll hear human cloning announced. | ||
I may be wrong about that. | ||
Yeah, National Identification Card, that'll keep you safe. | ||
We talked about quite a bit tonight. | ||
Let me read what Henry Kissinger said in 1992 before the U.N. Assembly. | ||
He said, Today Americans would be outraged if U.N. troops entered Los Angeles to restore order. | ||
Tomorrow they will be grateful. | ||
I'm sorry, let me read this right. | ||
unidentified
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Today Americans would be outraged if U.N. troops entered Los Angeles to restore order. | |
Tomorrow they will be grateful. | ||
This is especially true if they were told that there was an outside threat from beyond. | ||
Whether real or promulgated, it threatened our very existence. | ||
It is then that all peoples of the world will plead with world leaders to deliver them from this evil. | ||
The one thing every man fears is the unknown. | ||
When presented with this scenario, individual rights Love, love, love. | ||
Let's go ahead and read what Thomas Jefferson said. | ||
If the American people ever allow private banks, i.e. | ||
the Federal Reserve, he didn't say that, I said that, If the American people ever allow private banks to control the issue of our currency, first by inflation and then by deflation, the banks and corporations that grow up around them will deprive the people of all property until their children wake up homeless on the continent their fathers conquered. | ||
Again, it's this two-dimensional system you look at as if it's government against the rich people, and then you're conned in to your class envy by that paradigm, and you're fully enslaved by the ultra-rich. | ||
You want freedom, you want a piece of the pie, get with the program. | ||
This whole Clinton crap that's going on is just a complete diversion. | ||
Bill Clinton is a problem. | ||
He is the most arrogant president we've probably ever had. | ||
The biggest leaks of national security. | ||
But national security has been thrown by the wayside a long time ago. | ||
Wednesday night, I'll be back for Exposing Corruption. | ||
Time Warner, cable channel 10 at 9 o'clock. | ||
That's Wednesday, 10 o'clock, I mean 9 to 10 o'clock, right here on channel 10. That's Wednesdays at 9, channel 10. Sponsored by 98.9 KJFKFM. We want to thank 98.9. | ||
KJFK FM radio for sponsoring this program. | ||
We also want to thank Mountain View Homes. | ||
Large decks, small decks, screen-in porches. | ||
Mountain View Homes supports free speech, the First and Second and Tenth Amendment. | ||
They support states' rights, your personal liberties, control of your own destiny. | ||
Thank you, Mountain View Homes, Incorporated. | ||
Guys, tape these shows. | ||
Set your VCR Wednesday for Time Warner Cable Channel 10 at 9 o'clock. | ||
Tape Exposing Corruption. | ||
It'll be a hard-eating, one-hour program. | ||
We'll be back Monday night, 9 or 10 o'clock, for the regularly scheduled Freedom Report. | ||
That's Mondays at 9 o'clock, Channel 10, and Wednesdays at 9 o'clock, Channel 10. This has been a late, special edition of the Freedom Report. | ||
I want to thank Jesse and I want to thank Mr. Mikey in there. | ||
I want to thank all the viewers and everybody else. | ||
I don't claim all the answers. | ||
I want to apologize for erasing that tape. | ||
Somehow I am extremely angry and I will get to the bottom of it and find out exactly what's going on with our traffic calming piece. |