Speaker | Time | Text |
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How long do we have on this tape? | ||
All right, that's it for this part of the show. | ||
We'll be right back with your calls, I promise. | ||
I just had to get to this news. | ||
We'll get to the civilian inmate labor camp programs and links to the Army's website where they brag about Americans in concentration camps. | ||
If you want to check it out, it's the second hour of the show, the show we did live on March 14, 2001. And we're talking about people power and solutions to fight the new world order. | ||
Let me go ahead and read some quotes to you. | ||
This is from Abraham Lincoln. | ||
The people of the United States are the rightful masters of both Congress and the courts, not to overthrow the Constitution, but to overthrow the men who would pervert the Constitution. | ||
Abraham Lincoln. | ||
I left the best quotes at home. | ||
Put your trust in God and keep your powder dry. | ||
Diplomacy is the art of saying nice doggy while you're looking for a rock. | ||
Will Rogers. | ||
The prudent man foreseeeth the evil and hideth himself, but the simple pass on and are punished. | ||
Proverbs. | ||
And a bunch of other key stuff I'm going to get to. | ||
Let's go ahead and take calls for those that have been patiently, patiently holding. | ||
Hello caller, you're on the air. | ||
There's three of you on the line. | ||
All three talk. | ||
One will be on the air. | ||
Hello, caller. | ||
You're on the air. | ||
unidentified
|
Hello? | |
Yes. | ||
unidentified
|
It's Alex Jones. | |
Well, the government, they got me on surveillance right now. | ||
That's why my phone is so fuzzy right now, because they listen to everything that I'm seeing and doing. | ||
But you said beg, man, because you just hit on something. | ||
I'm working at the Austin State School. | ||
They got military people, doctors and nurses. | ||
They're doing biological warfare on patients that's over there, right across the street from Camp Mayberry. | ||
Where the patients are, they freeze the bodies up, and they wheel them right on over to Camp Mayberry. | ||
Now, they fired me for some false allegations. | ||
They're trying to bring up a crime. | ||
I think I was 12 years old, Alex. | ||
They're trying to convict me. | ||
Is this JoJo? | ||
unidentified
|
Yes, yes. | |
You've got a TV show, and you're a good guy, and you don't say things that aren't true. | ||
And when my dad going to college, he was orderly at the state school for a year, and it came out in ABC News a few months ago. | ||
Think of how calmly we talk about this. | ||
I wish you'd have told those guys in there. | ||
I'd have got you right up on the air with this powerful news. | ||
Where the prisoners, they slice their backs open and put biologicals in them and kill them. | ||
But they say that all ended on the History Channel, too. | ||
unidentified
|
Right. | |
Please describe for us where this is and exactly what's going on. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay. | |
The Austin State School is on the west side of town, right across the street from Camp Mayberry. | ||
There's doctors and nurses. | ||
They're taking some dog tag changes on there. | ||
And I started asking them questions. | ||
Hey, what is it? | ||
I started asking a whole bunch of questions and stuff and they fired me. | ||
So then I'm getting a check for $2,000 in the mail from the state. | ||
And I took that money back up. | ||
They tried to get me to shut my mouth up. | ||
They done broken my house and all the clothes that I was wearing up to that job. | ||
They stole all my clothes, Alex. | ||
They kicked in my gait and stuff. | ||
They done got my phone all bugged up. | ||
My wife is scared to come home now. | ||
And then it's sad. | ||
And then, um, they're wearing these orange biological suits and stuff up there, talking about it was a chemical spill one day. | ||
They lost five people in one night. | ||
Right after when they found me at 2 o'clock in the morning, they lost five people, bringing in them trucks and stuff, because it's the same building they bought me from, that's where they died in. | ||
I guess they want me to keep my mouth shut. | ||
And then, like, for my insurance, check this out, Alex, my insurance for my death is 7,000 bucks. | ||
So it's like they're trying to kill me, so they wear my insurance to be covered and stuff for. | ||
And I'm not accepting the money or nothing. | ||
And then over here on my side of the table is the mobile LBJ High School. | ||
My phone is back here. | ||
It's Donnie and Alex. | ||
It's Donnie. | ||
No, I know that at the state schools, they've tested deadly biologicals. | ||
They've done it at Huntsville. | ||
It's even been in the Houston Chronicle. | ||
Something has to be done, JoJo. | ||
I know you. | ||
You're a friend of mine up here. | ||
You have a show. | ||
You help the community out. | ||
I know you worked at the state school. | ||
You're telling me they're wheeling the frozen dead bodies across the road? | ||
You know they got a tunnel under there, and they're taking... | ||
unidentified
|
Yes, they do have tunnels. | |
You, it's right. | ||
They do have tunnels up there. | ||
They told us about the tunnels, because we're asking if there's any, um, um, if a hurricane or something come get where we got to go, they said we got some tunnels, but y'all ain't throwing one under the back. | ||
They said this whole place used to be camped. | ||
The whole place used to be camped, remember? | ||
They got underground, um, missile tunnels where they put them bodies at. | ||
Nobody's going to go nowhere else. | ||
And when I saw X-Flo and I saw asking all them questions about that kind of stuff, they fired me, and then they sent me some hush-up money. | ||
I don't accept the money, so then they put out a lot of money for a death certificate for me. | ||
Yeah, right over at... | ||
Folks, I hope you realize the magnitude of this. | ||
Right over at... | ||
I knew they were doing this type of stuff, but not there. | ||
Right in that National Guard office, they have the head operation for what they call highway interdiction. | ||
That's where the regular army is stationed, and that's where the checkpoints that we've shown you video of with the military. | ||
You remember the fake nuclear spill they had south of Austin? | ||
And remember the fake bio attacks at the DPS office in the one downtown when they shut down the city? | ||
That's right. | ||
Go ahead and speak up, brother. | ||
Talk right into your phone. | ||
They've actually beeped in on my phone trying to kill me. | ||
The point here is, folks, they're counting on you. | ||
They don't even care. | ||
They're so arrogant. | ||
Give us the address of this branch of the state school and tell us about the biological testing they're doing, sir. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay, the state school is over by C. | |
I don't know the exact address to it, though. | ||
But basically what they do, the doctors, they'll come in and drug them up, drug them up, drug them up, and see, they hire regular civilians just to monitor them, just to write down everything that they do. | ||
But the doctors and stuff, they go in and give them these drugs and stuff. | ||
And then as soon as they pass away or they know they fix them out, they take them to another facility. | ||
And I guess that's going to be the death facility. | ||
We know they fix them out. | ||
They will them to another facility. | ||
And nobody can't go inside. | ||
You got to have an ID. They put their eyes to this machine thing to get inside this place. | ||
And they got a big old sign on there. | ||
Anybody who even touched the door will get prosecuted. | ||
Just touch the door, and you'll get prosecuted. | ||
And then they bring them huge vans, back these vans up into these things, government vans, and they put them bodies in there, and they just go right across the street, Alex. | ||
And they got so many military people that's working up there. | ||
They're just using us as just the monitors, as the slave people. | ||
That's how my insurance and everything is so dirt cheap. | ||
They pay for all this stuff for us, and everybody's getting so sick. | ||
Alex, I'm 23 years old. | ||
I am so sick, man. | ||
I feel like I'm 60-something years old. | ||
I am so sick because I was working at that job. | ||
Then they wanted to do government testing. | ||
They wanted to send me to their doctors and stuff. | ||
I refused it. | ||
But they stole my clothes, man. | ||
They broke my... | ||
Oh, you should see it, man. | ||
Well, that's because you've got the mycoplasm incognitas fermentans, according to Garth and Kathy Nicholson doctors from MD Anderson. | ||
This is what they were injecting the troops with anthrax vaccine. | ||
It's now on Stars and Stripes newspaper website, mainstream, that the troops are now admitting are dying from the anthrax shot. | ||
It's biological warfare, sir. | ||
The U.N. said they wanted to kill 80% of us. | ||
unidentified
|
Check this out. | |
Like, right before you get hired, it's going to go through this orientation class, right? | ||
And see, they were trying to give people these, um, they were saying, like, get the hepatitis B shots and all that kind of stuff. | ||
And so I refused the shots. | ||
So they made me talk. | ||
50-some papers just to say why I didn't want to take them shots and stuff. | ||
And everybody who took them shots are sick and they fired, Alex. | ||
I'm the only person from my class with 75 people. | ||
Just allow us to get fired from the job. | ||
JoJo, we're going to need to meet with you. | ||
Are you going to talk about this on your TV show Saturday? | ||
unidentified
|
Hey, I got heat. | |
Hey, Alex, I took a heat and audio, a little bitty tape recorder in there, and, man, you can hear the big conspiracy that's going on in there, man. | ||
I got all this stuff on tape. | ||
You better get out of your house right now, JoJo. | ||
unidentified
|
Yes, I mean... | |
No, JoJo, they've already broken in your house. | ||
You need to get out of your house right now. | ||
Get out of your house right now if you recorded something. | ||
The number one rule of recording something is don't talk about it until you air it. | ||
Then you're safe. | ||
You need to get out of your house right now. | ||
You need to get down here and then you need to air it on the next available live Patriot show. | ||
Another one's coming up at 8 o'clock tonight. | ||
You need to get down here. | ||
unidentified
|
I'm gone. | |
Jesus Christ. | ||
This is what I'm talking about. | ||
We try to joke about this stuff. | ||
Let me read to you from the Army's own website. | ||
You can read this at thepowerhour.com, Joyce and Dave Monkly's website of the Gulf War Vets Association, or you can type civilian inmate labor into the search engine on infowars.com and read it. | ||
But here's the actual URL of the Army website. | ||
This is the one page. | ||
It's 54 pages long. | ||
www.hqda.army.mil forward slash a-c-s-i-m forward slash ops forward slash i-n-m-a-t-e-b-g dot h-t-m. | ||
The Army has established civilian inmate labor programs on 12 installations since fiscal year 89, four resident programs, prison camps at Fort Bliss, Fort Dix, and Fort Camp Atterbury, eight non-resident off-post programs at Parks Reserve Training Area, Red River Army Depot, eight non-resident off-post programs at Parks Reserve Training Area, Red River Army Depot, Fort Lee, Fort McLennan, Fort Stewart, Fort McPherson, Fort Indian Town Gap, and That's where they've done urban warfare training. | ||
Fort Dix has two resident programs, prison camps, their words, using civilian inmate labor for both federal and state penal systems. | ||
Camp Atterbury's resident program uses state civilian inmates. |