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Feb. 8, 1999 - Bill Cooper
02:00:14
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Yes, I am good at moving. I'm a very sick man.
I'm a very sick man.
I'm William Cooper.
the you're listening to the power of the time
i'm william cooper tonight relied ladies and gentlemen
I took a look at the weather.
Some of you who probably aren't hearing a thing.
Pretty bad.
Up in the northwest and some portions of the, I guess, northeast and north central.
I feel fine.
In fact, I felt fine for days.
But my throat is still sore, folks, and I have the glands under my My chin are still swollen.
And my voice is not 100%, as you can probably tell.
So, I'm not going to do any loud talking tonight.
And I'm not going to do any forceful talking tonight.
And I'm going to try not to get excited and go off in one of my vociferous tangents, if you will.
Because if I do that, then we'll be doing reruns for another week or two.
This happens to me every year.
My throat appears to be my really weak spot, folks.
Once a year, usually about the middle of winter, I lose my voice.
It's happened every single year that I can remember that I've been doing radio.
Except for maybe one.
And I don't really remember which year that was.
But it seems to be an annual thing with me.
I lose my voice sometime in the middle of winter.
Doesn't matter what I do.
Doesn't matter how well I take care of my health or anything.
In the middle of winter sometime I'm going to get laryngitis or bronchitis or whatever you call it and I'm going to lose my voice.
It just happens.
I've got a lot to tell you guys tonight, an awful lot.
So, I'm going to do it slowly, and later we'll be taking your calls.
There's an awful lot going on here, I can tell you that.
And I think you're going to be pleased as punch, especially those of you who have been helping to make it come about.
I'm talking, probably as you know, about our television project.
Also, folks, I have no idea what the music is going to be tonight.
I'm just going to punch a button and it's going to be selected at random.
And so we could get anything from classical jazz to, well, you'll find out.
And you're going to be, you know, I'm going to be surprised just like you.
Because whatever comes up, comes up.
And I have no way in the world of knowing what that's going to be.
See, I have this big, huge 200 CD changer here, made by Sony.
And it has a setting where it will shuffle the discs and choose the music at random.
And so that's what I'm going to do tonight.
It is already chosen.
A disc and a track on that disc.
It's disc number 32 track 4 and I have no idea what that is.
Because we're changing these things in and out so often that to keep some kind of a list would be a nightmare.
So we tried to do that in the beginning but we stopped that a long time ago.
And we've got everything in the world in here.
Altogether there's got to be over 3,000 Music selections on these 200 CDs.
So the chances of hearing something absolutely fantastic is pretty good.
So that's what we'll do during the musical portions of tonight's broadcast.
I'm just going to push the button and whatever happens, hey, that's what happens.
And I hope you'll all enjoy it.
I know I will.
I know we'll enjoy it no matter what comes up because there is nothing but the finest, best music of, and it's all of its past generations, none of it is modern.
In fact, most of it is prior to 1970.
Almost all of it, in fact.
Except for two CDs that were done in the 70s, nothing in the 80s, nothing in the 90s.
Only two CDs that were made in the eight and the seventies, I should say.
The rest all pre-1970.
Some of it goes as far back to the twenties and thirties.
But it's the very best of the American musical history, I guess we could call it.
The very best.
You know me, folks.
I don't have any bad music.
Not one single cut anywhere.
So let's do that.
Let's see what comes up here right off the bat.
And we'll all enjoy it.
And then we'll get into the meat of some of the things that I've got to tell you tonight.
And I hope you enjoy this broadcast.
Thank you.
I remember when we fell in love.
That little piece of video can mean a lot to you.
It was like we were in the dancing sea.
Love began to take control and give our friends a vision.
We'll have a dance into the night and listen to each other's hearts
And we'll have a better world of facts the night between us under the sky
As the sun begins to rise, we'll be together So let me tell you that no one can take our souls
So let me tell you that no one can take our souls It's deep in the heart that we're pointing our hearts to
find out how we hold it from the very start It's deep that it never went forevermore
Across the stars we have to stop as the ocean hits our shore
A cold forever in your heart, it is that we were meant for love
I'll be there in a heartbeat, love's been there like man, I'll be here from above
Come and have us, love, for now, we'll have it there for another day or more
For now, we'll have it there for another day or more, another day or more
Instrumental We'll have a dance into the night and listen to each other's
hearts.
hearts We'll dance into the night and listen to each other's
Ooh, when we get inside the water's edge, the Milky Way may as well start.
How's the fun we get to have?
Ooh, so all I need is love, you'll share the love.
Love, love, love, love, love, love.
And there's our first surprise out of the gate. That surprised me.
You know, I thought the first one would be one of the older selections, and nope, this was right in the top half of the 1970s.
Remember the really amorous Latin beat?
Well, that's one of them.
Well, folks, I am just pleased as punch, and I am so I'm very proud of all of you who have been sending in your donations.
We're very close to meeting our goal.
I'm going to tell you what we've been doing with this money.
Every single penny has gone into the television project.
And this actually began over a year ago, ladies and gentlemen.
Over a year ago.
About a year and six months ago.
Most of you didn't even know we were doing it.
Because we weren't on satellite anymore.
W-R-M-I, which most of you couldn't get.
And we had a page on the website for donations for the television project.
And at that time we needed about $35,000.
Well, even with the limited people who were listening to us and understood what was happening and visited the website and contributed, we managed to get a good portion of that.
And then one day it just dried up so we weren't able to complete our television project.
And then when we came on to WBCQ, I decided we can't let that equipment go to waste.
It was donated by people with the intent to see the television project come to fruition and be able to produce what we wanted to produce.
And of course we couldn't with what we had.
We had... Well, I'll tell you what we did with that first bunch of money that came in.
We took all of our old video equipment, which we had was Hi8, and we sent it into the factory to have it totally and completely specced out.
That was two Sony Hi8 editing decks.
And that was our Canon L1 professional Hi8 camera, which is quite a piece of work.
I've got to tell you, Canon is producing some video equipment that is amazing.
We also had an A1 digital We sent all of those things in to have them completely specced, new heads put in, all of that kind of stuff.
We purchased, at that time, the top of the line in computers for video production, which meant a Pentium II Dual 300 motherboard.
Which means it didn't just have one Pentium II 300 in it, it had two of them.
We purchased the fastest audio-visual drives that we could find.
There's quite a few of them in that computer.
It cost a lot of money back then.
Everything has gone way down now.
If we had purchased it now, we could have bought four of them with the money we spent just on that one computer back then.
But it will produce digital video editing that you won't believe.
We got a Targa board and a DV-300 digital board was donated by one of our listeners and one of our good friends, as a matter of fact, who live in Pennsylvania.
That was donated.
That was about $700 worth, right there.
We purchased a lot of software.
And digital editing software, the good software, is very expensive.
It's coming down some now.
Back then it was really expensive.
It's really expensive now.
But it's not as expensive now as it was then.
Fortunately or unfortunately as the case may be.
But you can't complain about that when you go to the store you have to pay the price that prevails at that time.
And we have upgraded all of that software every time upgrades have come out.
We purchased a piece of equipment that is absolutely amazing.
And when I say amazing, folks, it blew me away the first time I used it.
It will take the best video signal that you can imagine, the most beautiful video signal that you can imagine.
You're looking at it on a monitor and it's the most beautiful television picture you've ever seen in your life and you cannot imagine in your wildest dreams that it could be improved upon.
Well this piece of equipment not only improves upon it but when it's finished you're standing in absolute awe because you've produced a picture that you've never seen on American television.
Now those of you who have been to Japan you have seen this kind of technology because the Japanese television industry has the best highest quality of any place in the world And I know I've been there and I've seen it.
And the most beautiful television pictures that you'll ever see in your life.
And this is some of the technology that they use to do that.
We also bought a digital special effects mixing board, time base corrector, and time code generator, reader sinker, gin rocker.
If you know what that is.
And if you don't, that's okay.
It does a lot of things that has to be done when you're doing video editing.
We also have two top of the line SVHS decks, which we purchased back then, which we thought would work perfectly for our needs.
Now we found out that they won't because they have no ability for a sync or genlock input.
And it's really the sync that we need because all of the equipment we're purchasing now Has to be synced.
All has to be synced together.
And you'll find out why that is as we go along.
So, we had some pretty good top of the line stuff.
Folks.
For that time.
And it wasn't what we wanted because the donations stopped flowing.
And so we weren't able to get a lot of the things that we are now Also, over the last year and a half, we've developed some connections and some avenues of purchasing real, top-notch, professional equipment for next to nothing, as a matter of fact.
And I mean next to nothing.
Well, I'll tell you what it looks like around here, folks.
CBS, NBC, ABC and CNN had a yard sale and we bought it all.
That's what it's beginning to look like around here.
And new packages and big boxes are arriving every day.
And we're putting together a television studio that will not be rivaled by too many people.
Of course, you know, we can't beat CNN and ABC and NBC and CBS.
We can match their quality But not the cost of their equipment, nor the quantity of equipment.
So, we're cutting corners in some ways.
We really wanted to buy, ladies and gentlemen, a professional, top-of-the-line, DV cam television camera.
We looked at the prices new, And folks we'd have to be conducting this donation campaign for another three years before we could even think about it.
Probably before they'd even let us in the showroom.
We looked at them used and we can't afford them either.
So we went to the what they call prosumer or consumer digital video cameras.
And I've got to tell you that there is no difference in quality between the professional cameras and the prosumer cameras and I'm talking about the quality and the digital image that they record on tape.
None whatsoever.
There is no difference.
You cannot tell the difference.
The human eye does not have the capability to distinguish.
Now you can distinguish between that and beta.
Beta will produce the most beautiful picture that you'll ever see.
Digital is 500 horizontal lines.
Hi-8 and SVHS are 400 horizontal lines.
You can see a big difference.
A huge difference between regular VHS and Hi-8 or SVHS.
Hi-8 and SVHS both have the same quality.
And there's a tremendously huge difference between VHS and Hi-8 and VHS and SVHS.
What some people call Super VHS.
There is the same difference in quality between Hi8 and SVHS and any digital image produced by any digital camcorder.
Even the cheapest ones they make today make a better picture than SVHS and Hi8.
Now if you really get a good one, a 3-chip camera, then you can just absolutely You see, when you look at a regular VHS image, which is the normal movies that you rent from the movie rental place or that you purchase in the store, it's what you're watching when you watch normal television or cable.
That's VHS.
So, if you sit down and you're watching a movie and you think, wow, that's a beautiful movie.
Look at the fantastic image and the way they filmed it was just incredible.
And then you take the same movie and play it in either Hi8 or SVHS if it was filmed in that format.
Or a better format and then taped to that format.
You'll see a tremendous difference and you'll wonder how you ever liked the VHS movie.
Which is what you all are watching all the time.
The difference in quality is staggering.
It's amazing.
SVHS is about 240 horizontal lines.
High 8 and SVHS is 400.
It makes all the difference in the world.
And then digital is 500.
I don't think I'm going to make it, folks.
We'd like to do a 1930s swing number for you now that was made famous by one of the great ladies of song, Miss Ellison Sherald.
You saw How High the Moon.
How High the Moon playing
Somewhere there's a view to take a place to
Somewhere there's heaven and how high can you go
There's no proof that love and love
is far away too And it's not true
that you love me and I love you
Somewhere there's a view to take a place above
We've been living in where you are.
The darkest nights that you've come me to.
Until you rest in my arms Wayne Jackson!
Wayne Jackson!
♪♪ ♪♪
way down.
It's already starting to go.
I just can't believe it.
Seems like it should be okay by now.
Anyway, what I was trying to explain is that there's the same difference between digital and beta.
I think beta is eventually going to replace, excuse me, digital is going to eventually replace beta because ladies and gentlemen you reach a point that even though beta is 700 horizontal lines and it's the most beautiful it's just absolutely stunning when you see a real good beta television picture or production
Some of you already know all this.
I'm really trying to educate those who don't.
So you'll know what we're doing here.
And I think digital is going to eventually replace beta.
And I understand some digital cameras now are producing well over 500 horizontal lines.
In fact, the one we purchased produces 550 horizontal lines.
And it just has the most incredible image that you can imagine, the detail.
He's amazing.
Where we used to be able to stand across the room and film, you know, a wall full of books.
Even if you zoomed in, you could never really read the titles of the books.
With the digital, you can read every single word.
And in many instances, before you do the zoom.
That's what this resolution does.
And now they're starting to produce digital cameras with 600 lines, and I guess eventually they will reach the status that Beta used to occupy.
And the good thing about digital is that it's a lot smaller, takes up less room, doesn't require racks and racks of huge pieces of equipment, and most of the editing can be done in computers.
There's a big problem with the digital though.
Once everything goes to digital, Ladies and gentlemen, you'll never know the truth again.
Because once everything's recorded in digital, whether it be books, information, pictures, television, they'll be able to show you anything they want to, to make you believe anything they want to, whether it ever took place or not.
Because you can create anything in digital And if you don't believe that, go watch some of these fantastic special effects movies.
You don't think that they really had a guy in a costume playing Godzilla, did you?
No, I gotta tell you, they didn't.
Digital is incredible with what you can create people who've never lived.
You could create a president who would give news conferences and Make decisions and appear on television, you know, regularly and not even be real.
Never lived.
If they ever take all of the real books out of libraries and convert them to digital and then destroy the books, the entire history of the world will change.
Philosophies will change.
Ideas whole ideas and pieces of history will be eliminated So there's a problem with digital We purchased a digital camera So that we could produce really super quality images That are just going to stagger you when you see them But when we need to prove something or show you something that you need to know, be assured.
And be assured that it's real.
Thank you.
We will use analog.
Which is tape.
Not digital tape.
analog tape.
You can always tell when something's been faked on analog, but you can't tell when it's been faked on
digital.
Because the whole picture is nothing but little pixels.
And you can blow up these pixels thousands of times, and by changing each little pixel thousands of pixels, tens of thousands of pixels if you want to, you can change an entire event.
For instance, if they ever switch to digital, I think in a hundred years, the Zap Bruder film will show something entirely different that happened in Dealey Plaza back in 1963.
So anyway, so we looked at all the digital cameras that we could afford.
And even there, extremely expensive.
We looked at the Canon XL1, which is one of the most unbelievable pieces of equipment, technology, that I think I've ever seen.
And it operates really well in low light.
Just like our Canon L1.
L1. Our Canon L1 we can film in 0.5 lux. 10 lux is a candle.
10 lux is a candle.
We can film with our L1 in 0.5 lux.
In fact, we filmed in the dark a lot of times in Area 51 and produced some fantastic pictures of what they're testing out there.
Some of you saw those videos.
Most of you, I'm sure, did not.
We also looked at the Sony VX1000.
Which is another incredible camera.
I didn't like the temperature of the color of the VX1000 because it's very cold.
And I'm not a cold kind of person.
I like warmth.
The Canon was very warm.
Almost too warm.
And the VX1000 is really cold.
You see, color has a temperature, folks.
So does film.
And I only know this because my major in college My degree is in photography, so I know a lot about these things.
But we looked at another Sony product because we couldn't afford to purchase the VX1000 or the Canon XL1.
We looked at other digital cameras and we finally found a 3-chip digital video camera that we could afford.
That produces a medium color temperature between the Canon and the Sony that we didn't like the color that they produced.
And it will do absolutely everything that they will do.
And you can either use it in automatic mode or you can put it into a completely manual mode and adjust every single function of the camera manually.
It's the DCR-TRV900.
And the image that it produces is just as good, just as good, you cannot tell the difference between the image it produces, I'm talking about in quality, in detail, from the very best digital cameras that we looked at.
And it was a lot less expensive, believe me.
We saved an awful lot of money by purchasing that camera.
The Canon XL1 is a big camera and it looks futuristic.
It's really a neat, wonderful, technical piece of equipment.
If we could have afforded it, that's what we would have purchased because you can put a filter on the front of the camera and change the color temperature.
You can cool it off a little.
The camera produces a real warm color.
Almost too warm.
In fact, it is too warm.
But we could have lived with that because I know how to put a filter on the lens to change the temperature of the color.
What we couldn't live with was the price.
We really wanted that camera.
We didn't like the VX1000.
A lot of people love it.
I didn't like it because the controls were a little bit Too hard to get at.
Some of them were in strange places, like inside the battery compartment.
And when you're shooting, you need to be able to get right to what you need to do.
So we purchased the DCR-TRV900.
It's a very small, little camera, and its size belies what it can do.
It can do anything.
That the very best digital cameras available can do and do it equally as well with one exception.
It's not real good in low light.
Canon is excellent in low light.
In fact, I'd say unequaled.
But other than that, we can do anything with just as good a quality as anyone can do with any other digital video camera With the one we purchased.
And so we have a great digital camera.
And we're very proud of it and very pleased with it.
And we've been accumulating some other things.
For instance, we just we're getting some professional studio equipment.
Very, very low prices, ladies and gentlemen.
We just purchased a JVC B Y 110 professional three tube camera and case.
It's about 10 years old, but it is a professional studio camera.
You can also use it on your shoulder if you want, but it does not.
You don't put a cassette in it and record on a cassette in this camera.
This is a camera.
It's a big camera.
And it's for producing a video image that you send through a cable to either a portable video recorder of whatever format you want.
You can record on beta.
You can record on SVHS.
You can record digital if you want to on this camera.
You can record on 3.25", 1", 1.5".
Doesn't matter.
But you don't do it in the camera like you're all used to do it.
This is what you see if you go to a television station.
And you'll notice there's a guy standing behind a tripod on wheels, or a dolly on wheels, and has a big camera on it.
And he has a monitor that he's looking at.
And he moves this, and zooms it in, and zooms it out, and positions it where the director in the control room tells him to position it.
And it produces about 700 lines of horizontal resolution.
So it will produce the very best that can be produced on the very best beta system.
Or it will produce the very best that can be produced on any system that you want to tape to.
But it's really made for live broadcasting.
You can use it for taping.
So remember, television is coming to the Round Valley.
And we're going to do live broadcasting right here.
How about that?
It's an incredible camera.
It's just an incredible camera.
Well, I don't know how to describe it.
It looks like it's brand new.
It works like it's brand new.
It's incredible.
Wish I could show you these pictures.
Whoops, excuse me.
Not supposed to touch the microphone.
We also purchased another camera, which is a JVC KY-310.
Which is another of the same genre, in just as good a shape.
These are expensive, very good cameras.
This one also will produce 700 lines of horizontal resolution.
It's a 3-tube video camera, not a camcorder.
Both of these come with the best lenses that you've ever seen in your life.
This one, for instance, has a Fuji 12x zoom lens, has a built-in 2x extender and filters.
It's fast and smooth.
It's motorized, as a matter of fact.
It comes with a tripod, mic holder, extender board, camera case, service manual, plate.
The plate is for mounting it on a tripod.
And a whole bunch of other things.
It's incredible.
I'm sorry, this camera produces a horizontal resolution of 600 lines.
I'm sorry.
The other one's 700 lines.
This one's 600 lines.
And it runs off any 12 volt power supply.
Batteries.
RAC.
And it's beautiful.
It is beautiful.
It is what you see when you go into a television studio or when you see television cameramen on location with all these cables coming out of a big van truck and the guy's got it on his shoulder.
Well, you can either use it in the studio or in that manner.
But it does not record in the camera.
You can record to a portable recorder.
Which you take with you, if you want.
But this stuff is incredible.
And it's in incredible shape.
I mean, it's just beautiful.
We also bought, for taking one of these cameras, if we want, and recording in the field, because they'll run off the batteries, we bought a three-quarter inch VO3800 portable professional tape recorder that It's a portable three-quarter inch tape television record playback deck and it works perfectly.
It just produces a beautiful picture.
We've got all the attachments and everything that goes with it.
Again, it's not cheap stuff, folks.
This is what we're doing with the money that you've donated.
We have, let me see, what is this?
This is a This is a Sony VP7020.
It's a 3.25 inch video player.
Now, the reason we need a player is because we need an edit suite for 3.25 inch.
Because if we want to send something to a television station, we have to do it in the format they use.
And they all have the capability of playing 3.25 inch tape.
So we have the player now.
The 7020 is a 3 quarter inch Umatic player.
And this plays.
It does not record.
Then we're now looking for an editing deck which it will play to.
Or actually through our live broadcast system.
And we can edit with it if we want to.
Record with it or just broadcast, you know live over the air We have an RF video monitor video modulator.
I should say takes a video picture signal and Changes it into a radio frequency so that it can be broadcast you have one Also have an amplifier We have some We've purchased a lot of videotape 3.25", Beta, SDHS, Hi8, and VHS for making copies.
We are going to sometime next week order the duplication system which will be able to duplicate Ten tapes at a time, all of them without losing any generation in the taping because they're connected to a distribution amplifier, which is the top of the line.
We paid a lot of money for that.
And let's see what else here.
Oh, we managed to get a lot of things, folks.
Just incredible.
That's more tapes. Um...another camera.
Bye.
you This just absolutely blew my mind when we found this.
If we were to purchase this brand new, ladies and gentlemen, it would have cost us $50,000.
It would have cost us $50,000.
I'm not going to tell you how much we paid for it because it might embarrass somebody.
It wasn't anything near $50,000.
It wasn't anything near $2,000.
Just to put you in the ballpark.
This is an incredible piece of equipment. It boggles the mind, to tell you the truth.
If you could see these pictures, you'd know exactly what I'm talking about.
It was made by Vital Industries in Gainesville, Florida.
And it's a huge, about 5 foot by 3 foot, television, studio, editing, special effects panel.
With all the buttons and bells and whistles.
Everything that you could possibly think of.
It has two swiping special effects generators built in.
It has the capability to take inputs from five different VTRs which are either tape players or recorders.
In addition, from two film sources and four live cameras all at one time.
It has two Effects generators, they're modular units.
Each has a vertical swiper handle and a joystick type controller with buttons to control almost any kind of special effects that you can dream of.
Now the thing looks like it's been used.
It looks like it's been used.
Nothing is broken.
Nothing is broken at all.
It's clean.
It's in excellent condition.
It works perfectly.
And the only thing is it was originally made to be powered by a DC power source battery because it was part of a control van for a mobile unit.
And it looks to me like they had skipped the DC portion of it and somehow, either through a generator on the truck or in the van, On top of the van or wherever they had it.
Furnished it through an AC power supply that converts it to DC.
But this is just incredible.
Like I said, it would have cost us around $50,000 if we had to buy it brand new and if we didn't have some of the contacts that we have.
The heart and soul of our studio Ladies and gentlemen, this is the Trinity AVR system, which we have now in our possession.
It is one of the most incredible things you'll ever see in your life.
The first time I saw it was, oh, I guess about two years ago, or a year and a half ago, somewhere around there, that Pooh and I went to Los Angeles to a video expo.
Because that's when we were putting together in our mind what we wanted to get if we were able to get the total amount of donations that we need.
And we were going through there shopping and looking at everything and then all of a sudden we came to this big beautiful display and there was this pretty girl sitting there with a keyboard.
Her name is Kiki Stockhammer.
And the name of the company was Play.
And she was demonstrating this Trinity system, this Trinity AVR system, which was not available for purchase then, and was not shipping, still in development stages.
And what we saw her do with that prototype, Pooh and I both stood there with our chins on our chest in absolute, utter amazement.
And we watched her for what must have been several hours.
Because this was the most incredible, Quality, video, picture, special effects, switcher, editor, digital video effects, character generator, it can even paint and create animation and all kinds of stuff that you just wouldn't believe if I told you.
It had Dual channel, D1 still store, live chroma keyer, and sets.
You know, sometimes you've seen Wolf Blitzer standing in front of the White House, talking to you, giving his White House report.
Well, guess what?
Sometimes he's really standing in front of the White House, ladies and gentlemen, and sometimes he's standing in front of a Trinity Digitally created set that doesn't exist.
Now when you see it, it looks real to you.
You couldn't tell the difference between the real White House or the real Capitol building and what Trinity puts in front of you.
But this is what Trinity can do.
And it does it so well, it's incredible.
This is the heart and soul of our system.
And I am just so happy to have it.
And folks, remember, this is for the benefit of all of us.
What we're going to produce with this equipment, and some equipment that we have not acquired yet, is going to go a long way to educating the people of America.
And I think it's going to make you very proud of us, and I think that you should be very proud of yourselves, those of you who have contributed to make this possible.
Because it is now going to be possible.
Even if we don't get the balance of the donations that we need, we're still going to be able to produce.
Not as well as we'd like to, but we're still going to be able to produce.
And we're going to be able to produce some awesome videos.
And some awesome television for here in the Round Valley.
And it's going to be an incredible adventure.
For all of us, not just me, but all of you.
I don't know how I'm going to find the time to do the research, keep up the website, produce this broadcast four nights a week, and run a regular local television station, and produce videos all at the same time, but I'm going to do it, and that's not even counting Veritas, And my writing and all of the other things that we do around here that a lot of you don't even know about.
Plus, I've got to be a father and a husband and a friend to all of those for whom I fit those roles.
And I have to do it with love and understanding And attention.
So, I'm going to do it.
I'm going to do it.
Yes, sir.
Let me tell you a little bit about this Trinity AVR.
It is designed specifically for broadcast, corporate, and educational applications where high performance and pristine quality are required at a low total system cost.
You know what pristine means?
That means the best that you can find.
Nitpicky.
The Trinity AVR comes with fully configured and ready to edit with all the in-out modules and options necessary to turn plain cuts only edit bays into online production powerhouses with real-time 3D digital effects, high-resolution titling, 24-bit animated graphics, and dual D1 still scores, which are the background.
And you won't believe how well this does these things.
You just will not believe it, ladies and gentlemen.
It also includes something called ClipMem, which is a 64 digital RAM recorder.
And it's an exclusive Trinity technology, folks, that automatically digitizes video clips.
It'll give us the power of ADRoll editing.
With just one player and one recorder.
But best of all, it stores the video in perfect non-compressed quality.
No compression, no artifacts, no compromises, no rendering.
It's all now instantaneous, live, and it is just absolutely incredible.
It blows you away.
It's even non-linear capable.
This thing's been reviewed everywhere and people just rave about it.
Some of you may have been to a video expo and you may have seen Kiki go through her demonstration thing.
I wish we had the money to hire her to be our production engineer because I'd do it in a second.
This woman knows this thing.
Why would she do it when she's one of the owners of Play?
See, I thought she was just somebody they hired to do the... No, she's one of the owners.
She owns the company.
Along with several other people.
But you've seen, ladies and gentlemen, all of you have seen Trinity's amazing effects and the fantastic quality on prime time network television.
CNN uses it all the time.
Now we have the same quality and the same magic and we can with our creativity outdo them if we want to.
All it takes is wanting to do it and then a lot of hard work.
We know how to do that.
We know all about hard work around here.
And I think this is just incredible.
Just absolutely incredible.
I know you're going to be proud of it.
For all those of you who have donated, who have participated in this, who have helped us out, you can be very proud of yourselves.
For those of you who haven't, you still have a chance to be.
Even though you won't have hands-on, you will be, in every sense of the word, part owners of this, and partners in making it come true.
Because although there is some of our money in this, most of it, almost all of it in fact, has come from all of you out there.
So in every real sense of the word, you are partners in this venture.
You are part owners, whether or not you ever get to see it face to face or put your hands on it or not.
And you have a right to be very proud of yourselves.
Because you've done something very good and something that will help take us a lot farther toward our goals than we've ever been able to get before.
You've seen these videos that the so-called Patriot community produces.
My God!
Well, that's all stopped as of this moment.
I mean, stop dead in its tracks.
You're going to see Stuff that is equal to or better than anything Hollywood or CNN or ABC or NBC or CBS has ever produced coming right out of our studio.
I promise you that.
It's going to happen.
Now, folks, we still need about four thousand more dollars to complete, to actually complete the whole thing.
We're going to start Putting some of this stuff together this week.
We're going to be rearranging the entire office studio area.
And starting to, we'll be starting to assemble these things that I've been telling you about into a workable television production studio.
To make it as best or as good as it can possibly be We still need $4,000 more.
Now those of you who have not, I'm not going to ask those who have already contributed to contribute again, because they're always the ones who contribute.
They always are.
I recognize their names when the contributions come in.
As people who are always contributing, whether it's sending us an envelope full of newspaper clippings once a month, or Whatever, however it is that they contribute, they're the same ones all the time.
A lot of you have not done that.
I'm going to ask you now to give yourself an opportunity to be a part of this and to feel really good about yourself.
And when you see what we're producing, you can hold it in your hands and you can show it to your friends and neighbors and say, I helped make this possible.
I own a piece of this.
So reach down in your pockets and make this final $4,000 come true.
You see, when I first got on the air and told you we needed $15,000, well that's nothing compared to a year and a half ago when I got on the air and told everybody we needed $35,000.
to $35,000. I know a lot of you looked at each other and said, ah, fat chance.
Fat chance.
Nobody's going to send this guy $15,000.
Well, you're wrong.
Because we've already received $11,000 and the other $4,000 is going to come.
It's going to come because we're supposed to do this.
It's supposed to happen.
It's part of the fight for liberty and freedom.
And it's going to make a big difference.
It's going to happen.
We can either let it happen over a long period of time or we can make it happen in a week or two.
It's up to you.
Because folks, my family and Doyle are tapped out.
We've been giving for years and years and years and years and years.
We're selling things that we love dearly.
To make this happen.
We've done that before.
I remember one time we needed to make something happen and we sold everything, just about everything we owned.
And it happened.
So please, search your soul, your mind, your heart.
Thank you.
And sit down and figure out how you can help reach our total goal.
We need $4,000 more.
That's it.
And we're done.
And we can have everything that we need to make this the most incredible thing that we've ever done.
And I know that we can do it.
And we are going to do it.
We're going to do it with your help.
Because we can't do it without your help.
And the only difference there's going to be is whether it's going to happen over a several months period of time or over the next year and a half as it took to make this completion of the of the total amount come close to the end of its goal, to the end of its accumulation, so to speak.
Or it can happen over the next couple of weeks.
So make up your mind which it's going to be because you're the ones who control that.
police.
I'm going to take the car.
And if you make up your mind that you want to be a part of this, then reach down and donate as much as you can possibly afford.
As much as you can possibly afford.
And let's get this out of the way.
Let's get this project rolling.
I'm going to give you the address.
Write it down.
This is the address to which you should send your donation.
Remember folks, do not send checks.
Send blank money orders, cash, gold or silver coins only.
Blank money orders, cash, gold or silver coin only.
That's it.
A lot of you don't understand why we're doing this.
The reason we do it this way is because once the solution To the pain in the New World Order's side has been eliminated.
They can't go through the solutions records and find trails to your door.
It's not to protect us.
We're already in trouble.
It's to protect you.
All those of you who did not understand that, get it straight.
We're already over the edge of the cliff, ladies and gentlemen.
Those of you Who can think you already understand that?
This isn't protecting us.
It's protecting you.
There's no paper trail to your door.
Nobody can come in the middle of the night and yank you out of bed and put you in some prison because you contributed to our project or because you purchased something from us.
There is no record whatsoever.
None.
Cash, blank money orders, gold or silver coin.
That's it.
Send it to the hour of the time.
The hour of the time.
in care of 101.1 FM.
That's the hour of the time.
In care of 101.1 FM.
And I'm going to stop right here, because Alan's probably shaking his fist at the radio, because I forgot to do something.
You're listening to WBCQ, Monticello, Maine, USA.
I'm William Cooper, and this is the Hour of the Time.
Okay, back to the address.
It's the hour of the time in Cairo.
101.1 FM.
Post Office Box 940.
That's PO Box 940.
Post Office Box 940. That's PO Box 940.
PO Box 940. Eager.
So, thank you.
Spelled E-A-G-A-R.
Eager.
Spelled E-A-G-A-R.
Arizona.
And the zip code is 85925.
I should say postal zone.
Postal zone is 85925.
85925.
Once again, here's the whole address.
And then I've got to give my voice a little break here.
It's the hour of the time in care of 101.1 FM Post Office Box 940
Eager, Arizona 85925 USA Now folks, I've told you about some of the major components
but there's a lot of other components that I didn't tell you about
that cost a lot of money.
For instance, the patch cords for our audio and video, there's not a one of them that doesn't cost $40 or $50 a piece.
Because to get good quality, you have to have good cables, good patch cords.
They have to be shielded.
They have to make good, solid connections.
Those kinds of things cost $40 to $50 a piece, and we need a whole bunch of them.
We have an audio, video, selector.
What it does, you can put in a whole bunch of different audio and video sources, and it's got four outputs.
And by pushing buttons you can make those sources, those pictures and that sound go wherever you want them to go.
That costs a lot of money because we had to have a professional passive switching unit so that there would be no degradation of the signal and so that the unit itself would not produce noise or interference with the picture or the sound.
And a whole bunch of other things.
Rewinders, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
Bulk erasers for erasing tape.
The reason we need a bulk eraser to be able to erase tape, and we need a real strong one, it's a huge magnet, is because we can buy used videotape that's only been used once or twice by television studios.
See, they throw that stuff away.
Or they sell it on the used market.
It's just as good as brand new as long as it's only been used once or twice.
Because you put it on a bulk eraser and it makes it like a brand new tape.
Now if you put it in your videotape player or your VCR to erase it that way, it doesn't.
But a bulk eraser will do that.
So, just explaining some of the little things to you.
We need lights to film a good picture in video.
You've looked at television and you've looked at videotapes that you rent from the tape store and you wonder how they get that beautiful picture?
It's lights.
Lights, folks.
Now if you take your little portable video camera at home and you take pictures and you look at that picture, forget about the quality of the lines of resolution.
Just look at the quality of the image in the light places and in the dark places in the And you'll see that you're producing a pretty poor video picture even though you like it.
And it's neat and it's got little Sally running around in her diaper and playing with her Christmas toys and stuff like that.
It's great for memories and things but if you have the right lighting you could produce the same quality beautiful picture that you see on television or in the videotapes.
So we have to spend a lot of money on lighting.
So this is not Easy folks.
It's not simple.
It takes a lot of thought.
It takes an awful lot of equipment.
It takes an awful lot of work.
We're making it happen.
And I want to thank you from the bottom of my heart to all of those of you who have been a part of this and who have been a part of everything that we've done over the years.
You see, a lot of people don't understand Without the help of a lot of other people, I could have done what I've done, but not as good, not as quickly, maybe not in the quantity that we've done.
Thank you.
It wasn't cute.
Well, in just a second, I'm going to give my voice a rest because I really need it very, very badly.
And then we're going to open the phones.
I'm gonna let you guys talk.
Oh.
Ah, that feels a little better.
The phones are open.
520-333-4578.
We'll talk about whatever you want to talk about.
As long as you do the talking, please.
520-333-4578.
520-333-4578.
Phones are open and that's what we're going to do for the rest of the broadcast.
Oh my goodness, it rang.
It's not supposed to.
Why is it ringing?
Well, why was there nobody there?
That's weird.
Okay, try it again.
I'm sorry.
I don't know what happened, but the phone was ringing and it's not supposed to.
I don't know why there wasn't anybody there when I hit the button, but it's 520-333-4578.
If I accidentally cut you off, I apologize.
I don't think I did, but the phone is not acting right.
So anyway, the lines are open.
520-333-4578 and we're going to take your calls for the rest of the hour.
520-333-4578.
I hope we are.
I don't know why this is ringing, but it is.
Good evening, you're on the air.
Hi Bill, this is Nick from North Carolina.
Hi Nick, how are you?
I'm pretty good, how about yourself?
I'm pretty happy right now, as you probably heard.
First time caller, I just wanted to call and see if what I was thinking this afternoon is about right or what.
I was watching Market Rap on cable the day after work.
You know you talk about social engineering and how people are brainwashed subtly over
TV and things like that.
And I've noticed a lot lately that people in the news, reporters in the news, in the
papers, they talk more about the elites where we used to be.
You know 5 or 6 years ago you very rarely heard that word used in connection with other
people and class standings and stuff in this country.
But more and more you're hearing about the elites, the elites in Europe that can go to
college and the elites in America that do this and the meeting of the elites in Switzerland
and all that good stuff.
Yeah, they're delineating the war between the classes so that they get the people all
ready for socialism.
Right, that's what I'm saying.
It's the subtle ways that the media goes about, you know, I guess maybe subconsciously conditioning
you to...
Oh, yes.
I don't know what school they sent them to for that, but it used to be called the Moscow School of Propaganda.
Right.
But you'll also notice that they don't call us the American people anymore.
We're the masses.
That's right.
That's a Karl Marx word, if I ever heard one.
Yeah, it's very annoying because, I mean, my representatives to Congress, for example, you know, just the things that you see that are out there that I never noticed before.
They'll start listening to you.
They'll start reading until I quit.
Believe everything I was hearing on the news and just started looking at things myself.
It's amazing what's going on out there.
For example, you know, my representative to Congress from my district, he's on the Democrat Socialists of America's website as a supporter in the Progressive Party.
Yeah.
And I call his office and I ask if I'd like to speak to my representative.
Well, he's not in.
Okay, well, then maybe you can answer a question for me.
Why is he listed as a member of this Progressive Caucus on the DSA's website?
Well, we don't know that he is and, you know, this is news to us.
Yeah, that's what you get.
on it, well then I told them somebody should be contacting the webmaster, raising all kinds
of cain if this is not true.
And then when I asked, when they said they would take care of it, they'd look into the
matter, and I asked, well how can I find out once this issue's been resolved, well just
keep checking back with us.
That's the kind of stuff you have to deal with now.
Yeah, that's what you get.
You get form letters and you never get an answer.
And they never call you back.
No, I wrote him a form letter, not I wrote him a form letter, I wrote him a letter.
It has nothing to do with what you asked.
You didn't get an answer.
And you're one of the lucky ones.
And the reply I got, it was signed by him, I'll give him that much, but the reply I got
was why he voted the way he voted not to impeach the President.
Oh yeah, see that's the form letter.
It has nothing to do with what you asked.
You didn't get an answer.
And you're one of the lucky ones.
You got something.
At least you got something.
But don't be so quick to think it was signed by him because they have automatic signature writers.
Well, it was signed by a person.
You can see where the ink had actually stained a part of the paper, so.
I'm assuming it was him.
You're right.
I don't know if that is a signature from anyone else's, but it was signed by a person.
But it's just, you know, when you start looking around and you start realizing what's going on, You look at the people that are so apathetic, that could care less, that, you know, sometimes it feels really hopeless that we're not going to be able to stop this.
You know, we're just going to wind up in five years, six years, two years, whatever, down the road, in a socialist state.
Not me.
I'll be in the underground fighting, or I'll be dead.
I'll be right there next to you, if not out here in Arizona, then out here in North Carolina.
My grandparents fought the communists in Greece.
They fought during the Civil War, both sides.
We've lost family members to the communists.
I'm never going to live in that kind of a state.
Good for you.
Me either.
But that's exactly what's going on here.
That's right.
It's the same people doing the same thing.
That's right.
Well, thanks for your time, Bill.
Thank you for calling, brother.
Have a good evening.
You too.
Thank you.
Thank you.
520-333-4578.
520-333-4578.
I don't know how to make this stop working.
I never did this before.
I noticed that, you know, I thought maybe Pooh had turned something on because he was doing this on Pooh's Saturday morning show.
I was listening to her upstairs and I would hear the phone ring when somebody called into her show on Saturday morning.
And I thought she had turned it on.
But it's not on and it's ringing tonight and so there's something wrong with the phone.
So who cares?
You'll just have to listen to it ring when it rings, and I'll try to hit the button as quick as I can.
5-2-0-3-3-3-4-5-7-8.
I'm taking your calls for the rest of the hour, and I need you to talk because... Oh, it's not ringing now.
What happened?
Good evening.
You're on the air.
Yes.
Hi, Bill.
Hello.
Hope you're feeling better.
Oh, yes.
I feel fine.
It's just my throat.
Well, it was pretty intriguing what the last caller said about About what he saw on Moneyline or whatever that show was.
I don't know if you caught that miniseries started yesterday, the 60s show.
I don't normally watch TV, okay?
And when I do, usually the sound is off and I'm listening to the radio or music or whatever.
But the images alone were enough to, you know, create an ill feeling between the races.
You know, after they were showing, you know, the black writing and, you know, stealing, you know, looting guns and, you know, it, you know, it just was promoting bad feelings all around.
True.
And, you know, every, you know, all the people were watching it last night, supposedly, according to some of the things that I saw.
Also, today there was a, and I'm looking for it right now as I'm speaking, there was an article about a general Uh, who basically, uh, paraphrased what, uh, you've been saying that, uh, Anatoly Golitsyn wrote about.
Um, I'm looking for his name.
Um... Wait a minute.
I'm sorry.
Uh, anyways, I saw it on Newsmax.com today.
Uh, so as far as you go on there, if you have web access, you can find it.
Well, good.
Maybe he listens to this broadcast.
Pardon?
Oh, you're talking about the Russian general.
Yeah, he was a Russian general defector.
Oh, I know who you're talking about.
I can't think of his name.
Let's see.
Stanislav Ludov.
Yes, that's him, yes.
He was the highest-ranking military intelligence officer ever to have defected from Russia.
He came here in 1992 after the Soviet Union dissolved and Boris Yeltsin had come to power.
Basically, he said that they're gearing up with their suitcase bombs And just waiting for us to finally disarm.
And my fine mayor right here in the city of Cleveland joined on to that lawsuit against the gun manufacturers.
I'm sure you're aware of what's going on.
Yeah.
Any thoughts on that?
Do you think that they're going to actually win that case and flog the gun manufacturers?
How can they win it?
It's unconstitutional.
If they do it, it's just another rip out of the Constitution.
But how many people are applauding it who are afraid of people who own guns who are afraid of freedom?
It has nothing to do with being afraid.
It has to do with being brainwashed.
Well, you're right.
And very stupid.
Yes, they are.
And they won't listen to reason either.
But, you know, reason is a hard thing to come by anymore.
Well, if you listen to the same lies over and over and over again, it reaches a point where the lie becomes the truth and nothing else can penetrate that.
It becomes a wall in their mind.
Very true.
Okay, well I'll get off the air and let someone else have a stab at it.
Okay.
Good to hear you again.
Thank you for calling.
Bye.
That's one of the major principles in advertising.
It's not the advertisement.
It's not what you hear or what it says.
It's just hearing the same name of the same product over and over again for years.
You're going to buy it.
It's just a fact.
And you don't buy what you never hear.
Good evening.
You're on the air.
At least most people are.
Hello Bill.
Hello.
I was sitting here listening to your show, enjoying it here.
And I got a challenge for almost everyone out there.
Do you think there's 4,000 people listening tonight?
I have no idea.
We used to have 10 million in our audience.
Well, I kind of believe that somewhere there's 4,000 of us listening.
And if all of us send a book, we're home free.
Problem's taken care of.
To tell you the truth, I think there's probably several million listening.
Maybe not the old 10 million because they don't all know we're back.
Yeah, I know.
Well, you're a little quirky here, but I can still... I made out the show.
It was really nice to hear you back live.
I got a call from somebody, I think it was yesterday.
No, it was Saturday.
Yesterday was Sunday, wasn't it?
Yep.
It was Saturday.
And I answered the phone and he said, is this Bill Cooper?
And I said, yes.
He said, I want to tell you something.
He said, I was switching through the dial last week and I heard the old familiar sound of the stomping boots and the sirens.
And he said, a chill went up my spine and I knew that I'd found you again.
A lot of people, that's how they find you too.
They hear the air raid and they hear the dogs barking and bingo, that's the frequency.
Well, I'm making a challenge to all my other listeners out there and friends.
If you can only send a buck, send a buck.
There's no shame in just sending one dollar because if everyone got off their butt and did that, I think we pretty much have the problem taken care of, don't you?
Yeah.
It was just one dollar.
That's right.
There's no shame if you just can send a buck.
There's no shame anyway whether they send it or not.
It depends upon what their personal priorities are and what they want to support and what they want to be successful.
You know, from everything you've done in the past, I'd have to say that I know this will be a quality A1 job.
It's going to be.
You have no idea what we have been capable of producing now, once we finish up with this other $4,000, whereas we still need audio patch cords.
We've got all the, well, we don't have all of it.
We have most of the video patch cords.
Very good.
We still need a lot of audio patch cords.
Yeah.
And those were just superb quality.
Oh yeah.
But the rest of this stuff is just going to blow your mind.
It's already blown mine.
I wish I could show you guys what I've been talking about tonight.
Oh, I know, I know.
Well, I'm just putting out a challenge to all the other listeners out there.
I know there's 4,000 of us listening right now.
Let's scarp up a buck.
You know, let's just all scarp.
If you can scarp up more, that'd be nice.
A dollar donation would take care of the problem.
Anything more than that, sure, would help, wouldn't it?
Think what we could do if a million people did that.
Oh, I've always said that.
I said, what?
Come on.
You know, the socialists get behind each other.
They'll sell the fillings out of their mouths.
Yeah.
Get their agenda met.
The nature of community will get so cheap that they're... It's just a cup of coffee.
How much does a cup of coffee buy you at the store?
About 75 cents?
Maybe a dollar?
I don't know.
I haven't been for a cup of coffee in a long time.
Well, I don't drink it myself, but I know that it's like $1.15 for a cup of coffee.
If you can't spare one cup of coffee and send it out to get behind this cost, you don't even deserve to be listening.
That's the way I look at it.
Well, there's some people out there that could write the whole amount with one signature and haven't done it.
That's the truth.
Well, I just wanted to call in and put out the challenge.
I'm going to put my money where my mouth's at.
And I just hope someone else is listening to this.
I pray there's 4,000 of you that will get up and actually do it.
Instead of just thinking about it, do it.
Oh, that would be wonderful.
If it's just a dollar, get up and do it tomorrow.
That's all.
It's just that simple.
Yeah.
You know.
Well, I just wanted to call in and stick my two cents in there.
Well, I'm glad you called in and talked.
No matter what you said.
You know, at every point there I said hi.
Okay.
And we'll pray for you and love all of you out there.
Thanks, Cal.
Good night.
520-333-4578 is the number and I've got to slow down and lower the tone of my voice or I'm not going to be around to talk tomorrow night.
520-333-4578 and it's your turn to call.
Yes you.
Actually, right through this microphone, all through that cord, goes right through that mixer, up into the transmitter, across the airwaves, another portion goes through the phone lines, all the way to Maine, to WBCQ, through there, transmitter, and up into the airwaves, and right into your living room.
I'm looking at you, and there you are.
Good evening, you're on the air.
Yeah, Bill, this is Gary Stone here from Nelsonville, Wisconsin.
You're exactly the person I was looking at.
Yeah.
Go ahead.
Yeah, well, I wanted to mention the fact that the Catholics and the Communists merged just like any other big corporation, you know.
This was probably planned for some time.
They took the best of each part of their agenda, of their Government, you know.
But they're all going to do well.
The wealthy, whether it's in Red China or Russia or America, they're going to live high, just like Bill Clinton lives now, you know.
And the rest of us will be the slave workers.
And we won't have nothing.
And isn't it funny?
They didn't cut welfare until they sent most of our jobs to Red China and to Mexico.
Before that, when the people were working, paying a lot of taxes, They didn't cut the welfare.
And now, because they have less money, with less people working and earning more money today, they cut the welfare.
See how it all fits in?
Well, sure.
They create a welfare class who cannot work, won't work.
Take a man out who's got three or four kids.
If he's making five dollars an hour, how the heck can he support his family?
You know?
And there's people that I know where I live that are only making $5 an hour.
Yeah?
They force them to go out and sell their drugs or to steal even for the make good.
Well, I don't buy that.
That's not true.
Nobody forces anybody to do bad things.
Well, if you're hungry or if your kids need a doctor, you know, what are you going to do?
Well, I don't have kids.
I have children.
Kids are baby goats.
Well, yeah.
I'm going to do the best I can, but I'm not going to hurt anybody else in the process of doing it.
I would never sell dope or go stick up a bank or do any of those things.
Never.
No, there's never the time when you should do those things.
sure you know but there are times you know. No there's never the time when you should do those
things never. Well if you need an operation for your kids or something you got no money what are you gonna do?
Well, you're going to do it another way.
But you're not going to go hurt somebody else to do it.
Well... You're not going to go kill somebody else's child to help yours.
Well, I didn't say to kill them.
No, that's what happens.
You go to rob a bank or you start dealing in dope, you're killing people.
You're going to kill somebody.
Yeah, that's true, too.
You're probably going to kill a lot of people.
Yeah, but that's a sad situation, you know, but...
See, what you're echoing is what people have been taught to think like now.
When I was a boy, nobody would ever say what you just said.
Nobody would ever do that.
We've been taught, or some people have been taught, to think that way.
That's one of the methods that they prepare people for socialism.
They tell you that that's going to be all the answer to all the problems.
And you'll never have a child that's starving.
And you'll never have a child that needs an operation that can't have one.
And they're all lies.
Canada has a socialist medical system, and guess what?
While people are waiting in line for that operation, they die.
Yeah.
And what about the Kyoto Treaty?
The Kyoto Treaty that the Clinton administration passed.
It'd be at least a 30% increase on the energy that we use in this country.
Well, yeah.
That's what they want.
Well, they're all gone anyway.
You know any factories that are left?
So say it's because of the Y2 problem, the Y2K problem, that's why we got to increase
taxes to conserve energy.
And if they conserve energy, the factories we got left in America will be forced to leave.
They won't be able to afford it.
Well, they're all gone anyway.
You know any factories that are left?
Oh, yeah.
What?
What can you buy in America that was made in America?
Well, my brother and my nephew, they work at a place, they make hospital beds.
In America?
And all the parts were made in America?
I don't know if all of them are made.
But, but, but, but, I think,
I was employed making beds and I got about 500 people working there.
I think the beds are made somewhere else and just assembled there.
There's only one product that I can think of that's honestly made in America and that's Drake Radios.
Yeah, almost everything else is manufactured somewhere else, and if it's put together here, that's all that's done.
It's assembled here.
here. It's all the pieces. I know a lot of the companies do that, you know. Yeah. They
reassemble it here. Go take a car apart. You'd be amazed at what you're going to find. But
most of the time we send the materials down to Mexico and they assemble them and then
send them back. Well, I don't know what they're sending down there.
We don't make anything here anymore except hamburgers.
Maybe they'll find a way to cut that out, too.
Well, they are.
In Arizona, they're trying to kill off the ranchers and do away with the ranchers so there won't be any cattle.
That would surprise me, I'll tell you.
At least in America.
There'll be cattle everywhere else.
They'll still have hamburgers, but they won't come from American beef.
Yeah?
Okay.
Alright then.
Thanks for calling.
520-333-4578 is the number.
Now he's right about that welfare thing.
They create a welfare state and get as many people sucked into it as possible.
They wait several generations for those children to grow up in the welfare system that were taught by their single mother and their welfare siblings that they can do better on welfare than they can working.
And then they withdraw those welfare benefits and they create a class war.
And they create a criminal class.
That doesn't want to work.
Good evening, you're on the air.
Uh, hello?
Hello.
I'm calling from Mount Pleasant, South Carolina.
How are you doing?
Pretty good, how are you tonight?
I wanted to ask you about, um, firearms.
Um, why is it necessary for the government to register guns once they've already done the background check?
So that they know where to go to get those guns?
When it's time to take them away from the people?
Is there any other reasons that you think they do it?
No.
That's the reason.
That's the reason.
One day they're going to take all the guns away from the American people.
They have to.
You see, Americans would overthrow a socialist or a communist government, and that's what's coming.
Okay.
Now I heard that there's something about ammunition that when people go in to buy, I don't own
any guns right now, but when people go in to buy ammunition that they have to fill out
a form now or they have to do something to buy ammunition.
Not me, I can always get ammunition if I want them and I can always get guns if I want them
without filling out anything.
Well I mean I was looking at one at the gun store and the owner of the gun store was talking
about some government regulation where you were going to have to have, I don't know,
maybe a background check too.
Did you ask him why he would do that?
Did you ask him if he'd read the constitution?
If he believes in it, why he's doing it?
Thank you.
If everybody just stood up and said, no, we're not going to do it.
Screw you.
Get out of my face.
Get out of my store.
We're not doing it.
Yeah, but... But they won't, will they?
No, they're not.
Because they're all a bunch of blithering little cowards that don't have the courage of their conviction and they don't believe in what they profess to believe in.
And they're damn sure not willing to die for freedom, are they?
That's why they're going to get socialism.
That's why they're going to be enslaved except for a handful of us who will fight to the death to prevent it.
I agree.
And just like back in history, don't underestimate what we can do because there's been times in history with a handful of men and women who really believed in what they were doing and got their way.
Yeah, that's right.
Well... And one of those was the American Revolution.
That's right.
The reason I brought up the ammunition Oh sure, there's lots of ways.
You subscribe to gun magazines.
people fill out a form for ammunition, then they would even be, I think they would do
that now because that would then lead them to people who have unregistered guns.
That would like give them...
Oh sure, there's lots of ways.
You subscribe to gun magazines?
I guarantee you, if you do, they're going to come to your house for your guns.
I never even thought of that.
Do you belong to the NRA?
If you do, the NRA stole this mailing list.
Well, you know, the NRA is like, it seems very cowardly now.
They're very, they've backed off.
The NRA is not representing American gun owners, nor do they represent the Constitution.
They give away a little chink at a time, and they'll keep doing that until it's all gone.
Well, I sure do agree with you.
I think if they ever get the guns out of the hands Not only that, that membership list is going to be the first doors they knock on.
The NRA's membership list?
They sell that?
Yeah.
My, that's too much.
Well, you know, I heard that the IRS, when they go in to go after people, some organizations, that sometimes they ask for their mailing list of contributors.
Is that true?
Yes, they take everything they can find, especially mailing lists.
That's why we will not accept filled out money, orders or checks.
Okay.
You know, all the mail is destroyed.
Uh-huh.
Well, you see, I didn't realize this because then the IRS can, you know, harass all of the people to support a group.
You've got to understand that they're all in the same boat, going toward the same goal.
The goal is total, absolute control and enslavement of the entire population of the world.
I agree with you, but I've just started listening to you and I'm enjoying it and I just want to say one more thing I heard last night.
I've never heard this before.
That Jennifer Flowers had written a book where she says she aborted Bill Clinton's baby.
Have you ever heard that?
No.
It wouldn't surprise me.
It wouldn't surprise me at all.
Abortion is murder.
Yeah, but I mean it wouldn't surprise me that Bill Clinton had her to have an abortion.
Well, of course not.
That man has no morals whatsoever.
He doesn't have any morals.
He has no conscience.
This is the man.
We'll tell you whatever you want to hear to get him to like you and vote for you.
I mean, you read this guy's history and it just sends chills up your spine.
You talk about a sociopathic personality.
That's William Jefferson Clinton.
If there's any sociopath alive on this earth, he's got to be the king.
Uh huh.
And I'll just add to one more thing and hang up.
You said that Clinton has said that you're the most Yeah, he wrote it in a White House memo and Rush Limbaugh read it on the air.
Oh my, well that's interesting.
It's interesting that even he knows he's listening to you too probably.
Well he may be.
He has listened to you.
He may be.
I know at one time there were so many people listening to this broadcast that actually you could walk into any radio shack in the country and try and buy a shortwave radio and they didn't have it.
Uh huh, so.
That was back when we were on WWCR.
I'm scared to live in hell out of every socialist in the world.
I still do.
Are you kidding?
There are 30 million shortwave radios in the hands of Americans.
Are you kidding?
There are 30 million shortwave radios in the hands of Americans.
That's not even counting anybody in the rest of the world.
30 million.
Well where do they get these shortwave radios because I don't see them in any of the stores
except Radio Shack.
Radio Shack sells a lot of shortwave radios.
You wouldn't believe how many they sell.
And you can get them from other places, too.
Catalogues.
Sanjean sells shortwave radios like crazy.
They're advertised on the radios.
Uh-huh.
Well, I've seen all of a sudden Grundig is pushing their shortwave radios in the Wall Street Journal.
Well, they tried to do away with shortwave.
See, it used to be, if you bought a radio, it had all the different bands, including shortwave.
Uh-huh.
And then they started doing away with those.
And then all of a sudden we reached a point where nobody ever heard of shortwave, unless you watched an old movie, and shortwave was something that the intelligence service sent code words to their people in the Nazi-occupied and the Japanese-occupied countries.
It wasn't something that anybody could get their hands on.
So you're saying shortwave made a big comeback recently?
You better believe it's the only place left that you're going to find anybody telling the truth about anything.
Okay.
Thank you, and thanks for calling.
Okay.
520-333-4578.
Boy, where I'm standing, the light is shining on the clock, and I can't tell what time it is.
I've got to, okay, now I know what time it is.
It's 740.
We've got 15 more minutes to go.
Good evening.
You're on the air.
Yes, Bill.
This is Richard from Kansas.
Richard, I need you to talk.
Put your mouth right in front of the mouthpiece and talk real loud.
I can barely hear you.
I'm from Kansas and I've often wondered why some of the movies, they seem to, I don't know whether they're flaunting what they're doing or informing us or, you know, maybe just saying to their other members of the inside Well, it's a combination of all of the above.
It really is.
They're talking to each other.
At the same time, they're implanting ideas and thoughts and expectations of future events into our minds.
And if we've seen them before, or we think they're going to come to pass, it's not such a shock.
And we're not as likely to respond in a violent or an objectionable manner.
It's one of the tenets of brainwashing.
Oh, have you been watching the movies on television lately?
I'm glad you slapped us in the face like you're so stupid you don't know what we're doing to you.
Well, have you been watching the movies on television lately?
All of the movies where the militia guys are the bad guys and they're releasing anthrax
and they're robbing banks and killing people to support the overthrow of the government
and all this kind of crap?
You've been watching that?
It's all lie.
It's a way of gradually, over a period of time, conditioning the American people to hate patriots.
To hate patriotism.
See, they have to prepare them to accept the elimination of national borders, the dissolution of nation-states, and the creation of regions in the New World Order.
And it will all be socialist, totalitarian government.
Well, I was at a reunion back in my hometown, and one of my classmate's father is a farmer there, and he shocked me.
A couple of years ago when we were talking about Waco and Ruby Ridge, you know, and he said, well, you know, they get what they deserve when they, you know, when they don't come out for the police.
And I said, you know, they don't, they don't deserve that kind of treatment, you know.
I mean, even worse by the police shows.
Why should they come out for the police?
The only name on the warrant was David Koresh.
And why should they come out anyway when the federal government, the federal police that were there, had no jurisdiction and no business being there.
Right.
None whatsoever.
Absolutely.
He was just echoing what he heard Dan Rather Not, Ted Copulate, and all the rest of the talking head fools on television tell him.
The propaganda of the communist news networks.
That's what he was doing.
He was repeating what he saw.
Yeah.
Well, I was very sad because he was definitely brainwashed and never had an idea that it happened.
Sure.
Well, it can't happen in America.
And nobody would let him tell us lies on television on the 6 o'clock news.
Can't happen.
Not here.
Another question I wondered, the impact of the federal government on the tobacco industry,
I don't smoke, I don't like it, but the way they went after them, it's all unconstitutional.
It's all unconstitutional.
What they're saying is the individual is not responsible for what he or she does.
It's one of the basic premises of socialism.
You have to create a victim population.
And then you have to create a big brother that will take care of them once they are rendered children once again.
Adults that are responsible for their actions cannot exist in socialism.
And you don't need a big brother socialist government if the population is not victimized by somebody.
So what they're saying is if you smoke it's not your fault, it's the tobacco company's fault.
Bull crap.
I thought that it would be going hand in hand with making us sick and weaker if we were smoking,
but it's more effective as a brainwashing tool than anything.
Well, it doesn't matter.
See, it's up to us what we do.
If I want to smoke, I have the right to smoke if I want to.
And if there's not a tobacco company and I want to smoke, I'll grow my own tobacco.
And I'll roll my own cigarettes.
And I'll smoke it.
But I'm responsible.
Not the tobacco company.
Not anybody else in the whole world.
Just me.
Yep.
That's so true.
Okay.
Well, I'll let you go.
But you watch.
They're preparing the population to be victims now.
Everybody's a victim.
Everybody.
Nobody is responsible anymore.
Everybody's a victim.
Right.
And we've got to be protected.
We gotta be taken care of.
And that's coming.
Yeah.
Okay.
Well, I'm trying to get ready.
I'm good for you.
I'm trying to keep my mind right.
I thank you a lot.
Thanks for calling.
Bye.
520-333-4578.
520-333-4578.
I'm going to have to keep my mouth shut for the next 24 hours so that I can do another broadcast tomorrow night.
Good evening, you're on the air.
Hi, Bill.
Hello.
Well, I'm glad to have you back.
Well, thank you.
Something I was thinking about, I've always held this attack on the tobacco industry to maybe be a failed effort to destroy the arms manufacturers.
No, eventually it's going to spread to the arms manufacturers.
That's what this thing is, is suing the gun manufacturers.
You're not responsible.
It's not you that killed that person.
It's the gun.
And it's not really the gun's fault because the gun didn't create itself.
It's the person who made that gun's fault.
It's always seemed to me that that was kind of the effort and that would be the direction that this would go.
People can't think straight at all.
If I really want to kill somebody, there's nothing in the world that's going to stop me.
Nothing!
I could use my bare hands.
I can use whatever I can figure out to use, but I don't need a gun to do it.
Hey Bill, the main reason I called, I wanted to thank you on the air for your Mystery Babylon test.
Oh, well you're welcome.
I have enjoyed that series so much.
I'm listening for the third time.
Some of the tapes I've heard six, seven, eight times.
And it's been a really, it's been a joy to listen to those.
But you know, I've heard people tell me that when they first heard me talk about this stuff on the radio, they thought I was a flaming, raving maniac.
And then after they listened, either on the radio or to the tapes, to the series, when I originally did them on the air, or they purchased the tapes later and listened to them and then stayed listening to the broadcast, Then they began to see the world in a different light.
And they began to understand this secret symbolic language.
And the whole thing became clear to them.
And without that, it could never have happened.
Well, I've been doing a lot of reading.
I recently picked up Manley Hall's Secret Teachings.
I haven't read it yet.
And I've found a lot of old Yeah.
Oh yes.
Welcome to the club.
I'm from the Free Thought Movement.
You familiar with that?
Oh yes.
Very interesting.
But people have been calling me a raving maniac for more than half my life.
Welcome to the club.
Maybe we ought to form Raving Maniacs International or something.
I can relate to that.
Well Bill, thanks for everything that you've done.
I've sent a couple of small donations.
I can't send much.
You should have received... Hey, if you sent a nickel, I am so thankful for that.
Well, I've sent about $40.
Well, that's wonderful.
And I'll send more if I can.
Thank you.
Thank you very much.
And I'd like to recommend your tape series to the listeners.
It's really great.
Thanks, Bill.
Thank you for calling.
That...
It took a lot of years, about 25 years of study to produce the information that went into those tapes, that went into the broadcast.
It was a lot of work.
But it was well worth it.
520-333-4578.
I think we can take one more call.
And then we're going to shuffle off to Buffalo or somewhere.
520-333-4578.
You might as well write that down, folks.
If you ever need to reach me, I'm always available between noon and 4 p.m.
every afternoon during the week only.
Don't call on weekends.
Good evening.
You're on the air.
Hey, buddy.
How are you?
It's Rick Martin.
Good.
Hi, Rick.
How you doing?
How's Barbara?
She's doing fine.
You know what's amazing?
Whenever I'm really thinking about you guys, you call.
I was thinking so much about Barbara today, wondering if she's getting any better.
I'm glad.
I think that sweet ease is going to really help her because I think her problem was sugar.
and all those products, those things are just amazing.
Yeah, well that's great, I'm glad.
I think that sweet ease is gonna really help her because I think her problem was sugar.
If she, as far as that being tired, real tired, if she just cuts sugar out of her diet
and takes that sweet ease, you know, as it's recommended, and then, you know, the regular minerals and vitamins,
she'll, I think she'll feel a lot better.
Yeah, I hope so, Bill.
I guess we're chipping away at it.
Hey, listen to your program tonight.
We got a clear signal.
Oh, good!
We had a real good night to hear all the progress on equipment in the studio.
Yeah, it's amazing.
Boy, that's just amazing.
Yes, it is.
For all of those of you listening, even with all your contributions, without Rick, it would never have happened.
I've got to tell you that.
I'll tell you, Bill, we're still working on some ideas.
I think I've talked to a few things that have been developing.
We have a dream, and I'd like to see the dream of the television broadcast and the news program streamed over the Internet.
Oh, that would be wonderful.
I'll do whatever I need to do.
to make that happen and we want to see it happen.
Well great. I'll do whatever I need to do.
That's pretty obvious after listening to tonight.
I didn't understand a lot of that TV equipment and all the things that were necessary.
But boy that's just amazing what it's going to take to make that happen.
Yeah, you see just a camcorder and a tape doesn't get it.
Not if you want to really get it.
You know, I have people tell me, well, you know, that the internet is going to be our undoing and television, that's our undoing.
It doesn't have to be.
I mean, evil works in the hearts of men.
videotape or on the television. They don't believe it.
Yeah, it's amazing. You know, I have people tell me, well, you know, that the Internet
is going to be our undoing and television, that's our undoing.
It doesn't have to be.
I mean, evil works in the hearts of men. It's not in the equipment.
That's right. It's who is using it to the best or the worst of their ability.
And we're going to use it to the very best.
And if we produce good quality and really educational materials on videotape, then people are going to talk about it.
They're going to share it with their friends and neighbors.
They're going to recommend that everybody get it.
And they're going to understand what they haven't been able to understand.
You're right.
The caller that called in before hit it on the head.
I mean, you begin to change in the way you view the world.
You begin to see things differently.
And I know you've been extremely instrumental in helping that.
And you write that Mystery Babylon series.
It's absolutely incredible to get down into it.
When I first started listening to your program, I heard a few of those tapes.
Well good, then it's doing what I intended for it to do.
really hard to try to figure out what you were talking about. But boy, the series itself
laid that out so intricately. It does change the way you think. You begin to see the symbolism
everywhere. Well good, then it's doing what I intended for it to do. It's definitely working.
Great. So listen, I'll jump off and maybe somebody else can jump in before you say goodnight.
But you guys take care out there, and hey, maybe we'll be able to get out to see you this spring.
We're hoping to.
Oh, that's wonderful.
And Rick, give our love to Barbara, please.
Give her a big hug for all of us, because we're really worried about her.
I will, and to your family as well.
Thank you.
Take care.
Good night.
Good night.
Well, that's it, folks.
goodnight and god bless you all I'm going to be a little bit late tonight, so I'm going to
have to go to bed now.
I'm going to be a little bit late tonight, so I'm going to have to go to bed now.
I'm going to be a little bit late tonight, so I'm going to have to go to bed now.
From the bottom of my heart, I love you.
What more can I say?
From the bottom of my heart, I need you.
You're part of my day.
My inspiration is your own.
You're part of my own.
I love you.
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