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Well the virus has now killed more than a hundred people in China and new cases have been confirmed around the world. | |
You don't want to frighten the American public. | ||
France and South Korea have also got evacuation plans. | ||
But you need to prepare for and assume. | ||
Broadly warning Americans to avoid all non-essential travel to China. | ||
This is going to be a real serious problem. | ||
France, Australia, Canada, the US, Singapore, Cambodia, Vietnam, the list goes on. | ||
Health officials are investigating more than 100 possible cases in the US. | ||
Germany, a man has contracted the virus. | ||
The epidemic is a demon and we cannot let this demon hide. | ||
Japan, where a bus driver contracted the virus. | ||
Coronavirus has killed more than 100 people there and infected more than 4,500. | ||
We have to prepare for the worst, always. | ||
Because if you don't, and the worst happens... War Room. | ||
unidentified
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Pandemic. | |
Here's your host, Stephen K. Banham. | ||
Okay, we're live on the John Frederick Radio Network. | ||
Also want to thank our new station down in Atlanta, that is AM 1690 WMLB. | ||
We're on the satellite, on Dish Channel 219, of course, on Comcast, on cable, on Real America's Voice, which is the streaming service of the Trump Revolution, on Roku, Pluto, all of it. | ||
And of course, we are simulcast in Mandarin to the diaspora of the Chinese people throughout the world. | ||
We're going to go back to the to the board before I do that. | ||
to mainland China to Lao Bajing, old hundred names, the deplorables of China as they fight every day for their freedom. | ||
It's Thursday, the first of April, the year of our Lord 2021. | ||
It's Holy Thursday, starting now the holiest days of the year in the Christian calendar. | ||
And of course, a few more days left of Passover. | ||
We're going to go back to the to the board. | ||
Before I do that, big news coming out of Arizona. | ||
Some audit firms have been selected by the state Senate to hand count to a forensic audit hand count in Arizona. | ||
2.1 million ballots already. | ||
A fight over who the audits are. | ||
Big fight there in USA Today. | ||
I think Rahim Today, a big story. | ||
I think Dominion Systems is jumping in here saying they don't think they're actually independent. | ||
So this is going to be a fight every day on this. | ||
But hey, it's good to know that Dominion's jumped in there and said, Hey, there's nothing... | ||
Yeah, you don't want to audit that. | ||
Yeah, exactly. | ||
There's nothing there. | ||
Nothing to see. | ||
You're biased. | ||
It's a waste of time. | ||
Let's go to the pub. | ||
If you support Mike Lindell, if you support the people at MyPillow, go to MyPillow.com today. | ||
Type in promo code War Room, up to 66% discount. | ||
The big one is the two-for-one sheets, and you get the moccasins and slippers 40% off. | ||
Go there today. | ||
That sale will not last forever. | ||
A bunch of breaking news. | ||
We just finished with Marjorie Taylor Greene. | ||
You need to go look at her bills. | ||
She's serious about this and the question gets to be where are the co-sponsors? | ||
Particularly on her border security bill tied together all the executive orders of President Trump. | ||
Mr. Rahim Kassam. | ||
You just, I was going to say something else and then I just had this image of Marjorie Taylor Greene benching Fauci. | ||
That's with one arm. | ||
He's got 135 pounds soaking wet. | ||
Right. | ||
Just a question here, because we've invited Dominion to come on, right? | ||
Anytime, every time. | ||
Have they ever responded? | ||
I think they've responded and it's just not for them at this time. | ||
By the way, we'd be very fair. | ||
I'd be totally fair with it because I'm really interested in how that system works and I'm also really interested in how you run a voter machine company when you spend most of your time doing PR. | ||
I'm really interested in how is this company functioning at this point? | ||
They're more interested in commenting to USA Today about an audit. | ||
You've got nothing to do with an audit, okay? | ||
You're a supplier. | ||
Act like one. | ||
In these civil suits, there's a huge spread between the bid and the ask, right? | ||
There's going to be no middle ground on this, particularly as Mike Lindell comes out. | ||
He has scientific proof up. | ||
The one hour we talked about yesterday, he's going to have absolute interference talking about the CCP next week. | ||
The Dominion couldn't be clearer. | ||
The data is not, they're not plugged in the internet. | ||
It can't go across county lines. | ||
It can't go across state lines. | ||
This is all nonsense. | ||
So that all get worked out. | ||
I think the deeper issue that needs to be addressed, it's not in the Georgia bill, but this is a second wave that's got to hit. | ||
We need to have the evidence and the data and the science of why we actually need voting machines as a concept. | ||
Why do we not, even if you've got to have the high school kids and declare it a national holiday, let's get back. | ||
We have to do a hand count of paper ballots. | ||
Just take all the machine, all the technology. | ||
I'm not a Luddite, although this week on Holy Saturday, By the way, and this is something we started a month or so ago, but the demand for this is so great. | ||
It's a topic we've got to get into. | ||
We have on Holy Saturday a special Descent into Hell for two hours, 10 to noon. | ||
Descent into Hell, Transhumanism in the New Human Race. | ||
We're going to have technologists on there. | ||
We're going to talk about advanced chip design, regenerative robotics. | ||
You're going to talk about artificial intelligence, artificial general intelligence, also about gene splicing, the new book. | ||
We told you when this book was a concept it would be the number one bestseller. | ||
By Walter Isaacson about Dr. Doudna. | ||
Gene Editing in the Future of the Human Race. | ||
You've got to come. | ||
You've got to see it on Saturday. | ||
We're already in production of this thing. | ||
It's going to be a driving off point, as we often do, to make sure, just like we did pandemic over a year ago back in January 2020. | ||
Speaking of litigious organizations and people, did I tell you that Colonel Vindman, Lieutenant Colonel Vindman actually sued me? | ||
No, we didn't hear this. | ||
When did this happen? | ||
Of course he did! | ||
My April 1st joke. | ||
Vindman. | ||
That was big breaking news. | ||
God, I got hooked right there. | ||
Okay, I want to go back quickly. | ||
We got guests backed up we got to get to. | ||
I want to get back to special agent, former special agent Victor Avila. | ||
And I want to get this footage up. | ||
He took down in McAllen, Texas. | ||
McAllen is a lovely town. | ||
Spent a lot of time down there. | ||
The major town, I would say, in the Rio Grande Valley. | ||
Fantastic people down there. | ||
Special Agent Avala, you've been on the border, you've been an ICE agent, you've worked in Mexico for us. | ||
Tell us about, this is not about demonizing these people. | ||
What's shocking is that you're saying 400 just go right to the bus, no quarantine, they get a COVID test, right to the bus, to the hinterland of this country. | ||
But this is a deeper issue. | ||
This is not to demonize these people. | ||
This is really about the cartels and a heartless government that's allowing this to happen. | ||
unidentified
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That's absolutely correct. | |
This is the aiding and abetting of the Biden administration of the exploitation of these people and using them for their agenda. | ||
Yeah, Border Patrol. | ||
Let me tell you, I had never seen Border Patrol the way I have ever in my life that I had dealt with them and worked with them in my career. | ||
They are on edge. | ||
They are, you know, the gag order that was placed on them. | ||
They're so afraid, not so much of what's going on with the border, but they're afraid of the Biden administration and the Secretary of Homeland Security. | ||
They're afraid to talk to anyone. | ||
And I really wanted to be a voice for them. | ||
Besides them being overwhelmed, they are unable to do their jobs. | ||
They just want to go back and patrol and secure the border. | ||
And, you know, they took an oath to do that. | ||
And I want to see them, you know, gather together and hopefully, you know, continue to do that and actually go back to securing the border. | ||
These people that are being, by the way, the cartels have shifted and aligned So quickly that the individuals on the on the Mexican side, we're talking about the 20 year olds, 21 year olds, the ones that are trying to come over. | ||
A lot of them claiming to be 17 year olds, by the way. | ||
There's a lot of fraud there. | ||
There's a lot of false claims that we could prosecute them with, but none of that is happening. | ||
There are no laws being enforced down there, Steve, not immigration law, any of that. | ||
Another thing that I saw is that the Border Patrol agents told me first hand is that the cartels are now stopping to send these individuals that might have gang ties, criminal histories. | ||
Believe it or not, the cartels are vetting them on the Mexican side and they don't want them commingled with the family units. | ||
So they're being smuggled and so that's the important thing here. | ||
The smuggling of these individuals, the criminal illegal aliens and the drugs continues everywhere else on the border. | ||
There was a body that washed up while I was there, a dead body, another one that washed up and we're going to continue to see drownings on the Rio Grande. | ||
The pictures you're seeing there are the initial Facilities from the river where the migrants come in and turn themselves in. | ||
I couldn't believe that they were just releasing them. | ||
And you can see how they guide them because this is like a two mile away from the border. | ||
It's a two mile walk. | ||
Part of that footage we're going to replay is this thing looks like it looks like an aircraft. | ||
Hangar that they're building in McAllen. | ||
Victor, we've got to bounce. | ||
How do people... We're going to have you back on. | ||
And I want to mention today, Bianca Gracia, Latinos for Trump, is holding a bipartisan town hall up in Del Rio, in the Rio Grande. | ||
Del Rio is a city that's under siege. | ||
Democratic mayor is saying, Biden, we can't take this anymore. | ||
She's going up there today. | ||
It's at six o'clock, I think, central time. | ||
We're going to have a pregame on that and the five o'clock show. | ||
Bianca Gracia. | ||
You can go to her website. | ||
I think Latinos, Women for Trump. | ||
And get all the information. | ||
If you're new to Del Rio City today, there's going to be a town hall to discuss this. | ||
Victor, how do people... By the way, fantastic footage. | ||
You're a great patriot. | ||
How do people get access to you on social media? | ||
unidentified
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Agentunderfirebook.com. | |
You know, I wrote a book about all this, Steve, and they could check it out. | ||
And my story, agentunderfirebook.com, Victor Avila Jr. | ||
on Instagram, and Victor Avila on Facebook. | ||
I'll continue to post the intelligence that I gather, and especially the cartels and the threat that we face from them. | ||
Victor, thank you so much, and have a good Easter. | ||
You too, have a wonderful Easter. | ||
You can't put the book down when you get an agent on fire, okay? | ||
I want to know, look, we're talking about the finances, later today at 5 o'clock we're going to have Dr. Peter Navarro on, the PhD from Harvard, the assistant to the president, talk about these bills that are coming through, but also the financing of them. | ||
We are, before us, destroying future generations, the economic viability of this nation as we go into this radical concept of modern theory. | ||
One of the things that we had Lydia Friend on yesterday from the Women Of Watts. | ||
And remember, in 18 years, she told us she had never had the support that she had when she came on the show. | ||
And what is Lydia? | ||
Lydia's leading a crusade of grandmothers and mothers in Watts to make sure confronting the school unions and confronting the politicians to get the kids back into a school room. | ||
There's nothing more important than the education of our children. | ||
And we've seen, you've seen now across all this radicalization in the country, Right? | ||
The Great March, as Roger Kimball said, through the institutions has taken place here in the United States. | ||
So one of the things that we're very focused on, be very focused on this year, is education, particularly these young generations coming up in this concept of classical education, right? | ||
I was fortunate enough to have it when I was a young person in Catholic school, but the Catholic school system kind of got away from that. | ||
Now you're seeing a renaissance of this in both Classical Christian and classical Catholic education, and it is the trend I think is going to be one of the saving factors in this country. | ||
I want to bring in now the principal of Regina Apache School, Kim Cotella. | ||
Kim, thank you very much for joining us today in the War Room. | ||
Could you walk us through, we always put concepts out first so people can start to get their arms around it. | ||
What is a classical education? | ||
How is it different from how kids are in public schools or in other Catholic schools, and what is We're going to have Christian Classical on tomorrow, but what is Catholic Classical, and what is the difference between a classical education and what kids get in public schools? | ||
unidentified
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Thanks! | |
Yeah, definitely. | ||
Thank you for that intro, and just kind of leading into, in all the darkness that we are facing, it's really great to present this message of hope, because Catholic Classical education, especially what's happening at Regina Apache's Academy, is really the future of Catholic education. | ||
In talking about kind of what the difference is, if we compare a classical education to a public school model, probably the biggest pieces are classical education is an integration of knowledge. | ||
So an integration of the different content areas, subject areas, and in a Catholic classical school, the integration of faith into all that they do. | ||
So as opposed to a public school where you're getting fragmented education, very industrialized knowledge, The goal of classical education is really that integration of the whole person. | ||
It's very individualized to each student. | ||
And so there's an appreciation of that person who's in front of you. | ||
It's not just a number. | ||
It's not just a group. | ||
It's really care and concern for that individual person. | ||
And that goal of classical education is formation and wonder. | ||
And stirring the imagination and drawing children to deeper truths, as opposed to spoon feeding them this shallow, watered down, you know, little bites and pieces of information that they then have to regurgitate. | ||
It's really allowing them to feast on all that we have that's so good, true and beautiful. | ||
And so when you look at it that way, you think to yourself, why would you ever want to rob our children of the goodness of classical education? | ||
And to your question as to what Christian classical education is versus Catholic classical education, they come from the core root of integration of the Christian faith into all that we do. | ||
And the Catholic classical movement, which is growing by leaps and bounds, Is really just going back to the restoration of the church's teaching from, you know, many, many, many, many years ago. | ||
Kim, can you hang on for one second? | ||
We're taking a short commercial break. | ||
We're going to hold you over the break. | ||
We need to spend a few minutes on the other side. | ||
Kim Quatella, the principal of Regina Pack G Academy in Connecticut. | ||
Take a short commercial break. | ||
We'll return with the future of our children next in The War Room. | ||
unidentified
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War Room. | |
Pandemic. | ||
With Stephen K. Bannon. | ||
The epidemic is a demon and we cannot let this demon hide. | ||
War Room. | ||
Pandemic. | ||
Here's your host, Stephen K. Bannon. | ||
You know, in the last year or so we've been doing the show since we started in mid-January of 2020 and laid these concepts up for you, including in the second show, the gain of function. | ||
Which is going to be a very big topic as we go forward in the next couple of weeks. | ||
But the explanation of that and what Dr. Fauci knew about it and why did Dr. Fauci finance it? | ||
With your tax dollars, by the way. | ||
In the audience, whether you think it is part of a bioweapons program from the People's Liberation Army associated with Wuhan and inadvertently escaped, or if you think this is a total and complete hoax and a waste of your time. | ||
The one thing we do know, it's incumbent upon everybody to boost their immune system. | ||
The work on oneself starts with oneself. | ||
This show is entirely about human agency, your agency, right? | ||
Human action. | ||
That's why you know you have to take control of your immune system. | ||
You have to boost it. | ||
Go today to warroomdefense.com. | ||
We've got the vitamin D3. | ||
We've got the zinc. | ||
It's free. | ||
You've got to pay shipping and handling. | ||
But you get information on the War Room Defense Pack, which is all about boosting your immune system. | ||
So go there today. | ||
Okay, I'm going to turn back to Kim Quatello, principal of Regina Pace Academy in Connecticut. | ||
Look, Kim, it sounds great. | ||
It sounds amazing. | ||
You're integrating all study. | ||
You're doing a classic model with rhetoric and all of this. | ||
It's about formation and character formation. | ||
It includes whether you're Catholic. | ||
You've got the Catholic doctrine. | ||
If you're Christian, it's got The Christian doctrine, the Protestant doctrine, that sounds terrific, but the entire public school system's turned over to STEM, Science with Technology, Engineering and Math. | ||
This weekend we've got this huge special on transhumanism, which really gets to the basis of this kind of new religion that's coming up called scientism, right? | ||
That's not data-based or evidence-based, but it's technocracy, you can solve everything. | ||
We're going to go post-homo sapien and we'll probably do it in the next 5, 10, 15 years. | ||
We hit this point called the singularity. | ||
In a modern, advanced, post-industrial society, how can we go back to essentially the Middle Ages or the Renaissance? | ||
To actually make sure that young people have the best education possible when, obviously, to compete in an advanced technological society, they have to, you know, have computers and know how to program and sit there, Zoom, and sit there on a computer and have the teacher talk to them through a computer. | ||
What say you, ma'am? | ||
unidentified
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You know what? | |
There is such a notion that classical education is the fad. | ||
So this is just the new shiny object that's popping up, especially in Catholic schools. | ||
And there could be nothing that's more opposite than that. | ||
I mean, if you look at just the past hundred years of contemporary education, all education's been trying to do was to form students who would have a skill set, make a living. | ||
It was all this push in the industrialized nation to just have it be skill-based. | ||
And I dare to say that the push with technology and the push of the contemporary education It's been exactly what has left our students devoid of the ability to think and the ability to communicate and the ability to refine their thoughts, which is why our culture is where we are right now. | ||
I mean, we can't have debates. | ||
We can't even have discussions. | ||
There's no common ground. | ||
And it's not because our students have not had enough STEM and enough technology. | ||
I mean, it's the exact opposite. | ||
It's really what What we need to do is go back to the core of what education was. | ||
So from 2,500 years ago, we need to cultivate wisdom. | ||
And so wisdom is knowing the truth and cultivate virtue. | ||
So imitating that truth in our actions and get back to that where students are learning how to think and they're learning how to think well, and they're learning how to write and speak well and, and refine their ideas. | ||
And it's only through that, and that's not devoid of skills. | ||
I'd say you have students, and this shows, you know, in our, in our little tiny school, just in our graduates, you have students that are not just academically formed for any career that you put in front of them, even including STEM, but they are your hardworking individuals. | ||
They are your moral character, you know, employees. | ||
These are the people that you want to be having families and owning businesses and being your lawyers and doctors and teachers, not the opposite. | ||
And we have to go back to the idea that classical education is not just something for the elite. | ||
This is not a model of education that you have to just have a certain social status or that it carries that with you. | ||
There are schools that are flipping their schools from Whether they're a public school or a diocesan Catholic school, to this model, precisely meeting the needs of any socioeconomic background. | ||
It's not just for the few. | ||
It should be for the many. | ||
Kim, how do people, we're pressed for time, and that's quite brilliant. | ||
People already in the live chat, we can tell, want to hear more. | ||
How do people get access to you? | ||
How do they get access to your academy to learn more about Catholic classical education? | ||
unidentified
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Yeah, so reginapachisecademy.org is our website. | |
If they'd like to support us, which we need the support of everyone out there, whether you're a grandparent, parent, or you just believe in what I'm saying, going on to that site, reginapachisecademy.org, going to support us. | ||
And if you want to learn more about Catholic classical education, look into the Institute for Catholic Liberal Education. | ||
Abbreviated ICLE. | ||
They are doing amazing work. | ||
They come in and help form our teachers and are doing this in schools all over the place. | ||
They've got great webinars from their conferences. | ||
And that would be the first step. | ||
And I will talk to anyone on the phone. | ||
Call us up. | ||
This needs to spread everywhere because this is what's going to reshape the culture. | ||
Okay, Kim, she's open for communication. | ||
Go on her website, call her. | ||
Okay, Kim, thank you very much. | ||
Honored to have you on here on Holy Thursday. | ||
unidentified
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Happy to be here. | |
Blessed Easter to you. | ||
Thank you. | ||
We're also going to have people that are starting these Christian classical and get down, drill down to the sense of classical education. | ||
You see the fight that Lydia Friend and people are having out in Watts. | ||
This is a concept that's got to spread throughout this country. | ||
I want to bring in now Darren Beattie. | ||
Darren was a speechwriter. | ||
Darren, you know, you and I met your analysis and understanding of Heidegger. | ||
Right, and you were the only Ivy League or Ivy League equivalent professor, full-time professor that supported President Trump before the 2016 victory. | ||
I think that's got to be warm to your heart about, you and I have talked about this a lot, the power of a classical education. | ||
In an advanced industrial society, particularly as you see all this nonsense today, where you keep saying data-based, evidence-based, you know, science-based, and all you get is spin, and all you get is rhetoric, and all you, they never want to get down to what the basics are. | ||
We're going to see this this weekend on our special on transhumanism. | ||
And I know you've got certain, I know you've got, we want to talk about the revolver, you're the founder of revolver, you've got some big news up here that I want to get into, but I just want your thoughts Since I think, and I keep saying you're one of the smartest guys in our movement, your ideas about particularly education of our younger generations. | ||
Well, it's crucially important. | ||
I mean, the education will produce the categories through which these students and young people will perceive and interpret the world. | ||
And I think it's not even Strictly a political issue, at least in the retail sense that we talked about. | ||
It's a much more profound issue than that, and that the things that one reads and one studies becomes sort of the reference sources through which one kind of shapes one's reality. | ||
And one thing that I see now, and there are a lot of factors contributing to it, but We're, you know, as part of this move towards transhumanism, we're also becoming sort of transliterate or beyond literate. | ||
We're moving from a literate society to an illiterate, sort of digitized society. | ||
And everything digital, of course, can be erased. | ||
Immediately, it can be switched around. | ||
It's perfectly amenable to this new kind of totalitarianism we're moving in. | ||
So the act of developing a relationship with physical books, having one's neural circuitry formatted to be able to have sustained focus in a way that real books with rich material demand | ||
All of those things, especially now, amounts to a kind of cognitive superpower that puts one light years ahead of the rest of the pack if one is fortunate enough to have the benefit of that type of education. | ||
In my personal story, I consider my robust education to be one of the greatest blessings I have. | ||
Extremely important, it's extremely important that people take it seriously and there's a limited amount of time on this earth and there's only time to read the very best of materials and it's very sad that the young people today are being deprived of this. | ||
I want to get a couple minutes here but I want to tee up because I've got to hold you over the section. | ||
Tee up, I want to talk to you about, I want you to talk to us about these disturbing trends that the revolver is breaking and about the government and kind of this whole screening issue and all that. | ||
Well, yeah, so there's a new bombshell investigative piece on CICNIC and that's at revolver.news now. | ||
But a few days ago, Revolver broke another piece, which is that you probably heard of Senator Duckworth basically saying, we need to do a better job of vetting the people in the defense sector to make sure there are no Trump sympathizers. | ||
And the revolver piece from a few days ago pointed out, well, the FBI is already known to have use of this sophisticated technical tools that engage in sentiment analysis to identify whole political networks that could easily be weeded out or really whatever they | ||
So it points out that as early as, you know, several years ago, the FBI and various government agencies have had these really Orwellian sentiment analysis tools that are being used now to vet our entire defense sector from having anyone who's sympathetic to Trump being in there. | ||
But this new piece, if I could talk a little bit about this. | ||
Hang on. | ||
I want to hold the new piece. | ||
We're going to take a short commercial break. | ||
I want to bring you the explosive investigative piece on Sidnick. | ||
It just exposes more of the lies and misrepresentation. | ||
Short commercial break. | ||
Darren Beattie, former speechwriter at the White House, founder of Revolver.News. | ||
Join us after the break. | ||
unidentified
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War Room. | |
Pandemic. | ||
With Stephen K. Banham. | ||
The epidemic is a demon, and we cannot let this demon hide. | ||
War Room. | ||
Pandemic. | ||
Here's your host, Stephen K. Bannon. | ||
We had another big hit. | ||
Lydia Friend was a big hit the other day from Women From Watts, and Kim Cattella has been a big hit. | ||
We can tell from the live chat and from others that we're going to get all the information up about how you get her online. | ||
Go check out her academy and also about this institute. | ||
By the way, it was liberal in the classic sense, as Darren Beattie would have known, Raheem Kassam. | ||
We're pressed for time. | ||
Darren, I've got to go back to you. | ||
You guys have done, you know, between National Pulse, and by the way, Rahim is going to drop a blockbuster analysis this afternoon that's going to put people back on their back foot. | ||
Great job on National Pulse. | ||
You guys are killing it. | ||
Revolver's killing it. | ||
You've got to go to these sites. | ||
You've got Populous Press, you've got Citizens Free Press, you've got Gateway Pundit, Bongino, all these great sites out there today. | ||
You can be fully informed. | ||
You go to these, do your morning sweep of these. | ||
They're amazing. | ||
I love Revolver because it's both the high and the low. | ||
It's the broadsheet and the tabloid. | ||
Real quickly, this blockbuster, you're like a dog with a bone. | ||
You're relentless on this. | ||
Officer Sitnik, get to the bottom of this. | ||
Tell us about this explosive story you've got up on Revolver right now, sir. | ||
So yeah, the bigger the story, the more they try to censor it. | ||
Twitter's been trying to throttle this, prevent people from sharing it. | ||
So go to revolver.news, read this. | ||
Like all of our investigative pieces, this is extremely detailed. | ||
The short version is this. | ||
The New York Times, after having to change its story on the basis of Revolver's earlier investigation, pointing out that this original narrative that Trump supporters beat this officer to death with a fire extinguisher, Once they abandon that false narrative, what we call the MAGA blood libel, now they've resorted to this narrative that Officer Sicknick died from complications related to bear spray, even though they're not charging anyone with murder. And so | ||
the New York Times released this video that's supposed to, you know, expose this case, expose this bear spray case. | ||
Revolver goes through this video that allegedly shows this guy, this poor guy is being charged with 60 years in prison for this bear spray. | ||
We go through this video with a fine tooth comb and in fact it's damning to media that nobody else in media has applied this level of investigative work to a video on which this whole case hinges. | ||
It's quite incredible. | ||
And so I encourage everyone, go to revolver.news, read this in detail, share it. | ||
The biggest take home from this is the following, that we look at the alleged bear spray stream that the New York Times identifies, and when you zoom in on it, when you use Photoshop and comparative image analysis, It doesn't look like there's a bear spray stream at all. | ||
And in fact, we show what actual verified bear spray streams look like through heat map registers on Photoshop and so forth. | ||
And what's even more bizarre is this, is that the suspect in this case, again, they're trying to throw him in jail for 60 years over this dubious claim. | ||
He was standing quite far away from officer when this alleged bear spray incident occurred. | ||
What we identified is something even more curious, which is that there's somebody there is verifiable bear spray in the frame, but it's not in proximity of the suspect here. | ||
The suspect cater. | ||
It's in the proximity of the officer, but it's someone else wearing very similar if not identical clothing, which is a very bizarre fact in this case and raises even more questions. | ||
So in a nutshell, what this does is it takes this latest New York Times quote unquote bombshell video trying to frame this guy as a You know, a bear spray killer, and by extension really it's about getting at all of us as domestic terrorists, exposes the holes in this, and I'm not saying one thing or another definitively. | ||
All this shows is that there is another set of very, very troubling questions that emerge from this ever-evolving blood libel narrative against us and 74 million other Americans who voted like us. | ||
Yeah. | ||
And real quickly, have, have any of the authorities reached out to you given all these, these reports you've been doing? | ||
Has anybody reached out to you guys? | ||
Nope. | ||
Nope. | ||
Quite the opposite. | ||
I mean, I would, I would love to have these questions answered and look, I'm not sitting here prepared to say definitively, this is a scam. | ||
Definitively, there's something wrong going on. | ||
I'm just saying based on The analysis here that's open source for everybody to fact-check, there are troubling questions that have arisen. | ||
Have you approached the New York Times with your frame-by-frame analysis of this? | ||
No, but in fact that's a great idea, and on that suggestion I'll send it over to them later today, right after this interview, and ask for a comment. | ||
I would send it over him just to say, hey guys, this is the Zapruder film of this, and we're trying to get to the bottom of what actually happened. | ||
Even more so than the New York Times, I think the defense counsel and the prosecution for that matter should take a very close and careful look at it. | ||
Last question. | ||
Has the autopsy or toxicology for Officer Sidnick, has any of that been released? | ||
Nope. | ||
Of course not. Yeah, they're holding on to that pretty tight. And again, it's like, why? There's so many very suspicious and bizarre things here. And again, this is an interesting forensic case in its own right. But it's really not just about this poor officer who tragically died. What it's about is this new narrative that's basically War on Terror 2.0. And if you thought the original War on Terror was a disaster and unethical, | ||
wait till you see the full force of this second version, starring you as the domestic terrorist. | ||
It's shameful and that's why I put Revolver's world-class investigative team on this story to cover everything and I hope people go to revolver.news Support us. | ||
This investigative work is extremely important and precious few institutions are doing this essential work. | ||
We're very privileged to have both National Pulse and Revolver that roll the sleeves up and do old-fashioned investigative, go into the documents, go into the files, go into the video. | ||
It's not spin, it's not punditry, it is hard work. | ||
You should be strongly recommended. | ||
How do people get, what's your social media, how do they get to Revolver? | ||
Revolver is revolver.news, as always. | ||
Check it early, check it often. | ||
And you can see me on Twitter. | ||
I'm at Darren J. Beattie. | ||
D-A-R-R-E-N-J-B-E-A-T-T-I-E. | ||
Thank you, Darren. | ||
Okay. | ||
unidentified
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Thank you. | |
I wish I had a world-class research team. | ||
unidentified
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You've got a world-class... I've got a world-class researcher. | |
But you do pretty well with that. | ||
We do pretty well with it. | ||
Rahim's going to have a story. | ||
We're going to talk about it. | ||
Rahim's going to be traveling this afternoon, but we're going to talk about it on the evening show. | ||
An explosive report teed up yesterday. | ||
You've got to see this. | ||
It deals back to the Chinese Communist Party. | ||
Uh, are very proud of that. | ||
We separate the signal from the noise. | ||
We don't waste your time. | ||
And one of the things we're focused on in this coming year is obviously the 2022 elections, but most importantly, to identify and make sure you see people early on, uh, and particularly in now attorney generals, people running for AGs and people running for secretaries of state. | ||
People now realize the importance they've always realized with AGs, but more so with all the election problems. | ||
I want to bring in now Doug Wardlow. | ||
He's currently the General Counsel at MyPillow, but he has announced that he's going to run. | ||
In fact, he ran last time for the AG in Minnesota and barely lost to the current occupant of that office, which has been fairly controversial. | ||
Doug joins us from Minnesota today. | ||
Doug, I just got a question. | ||
The AGs, particularly the red state AGs, and if you win, Minnesota's far from a red state, The Republican AGs have been at the forefront of challenging the Biden administration on what they're doing with what people would say are some pretty radical laws that really intrude in not just the personal individual liberty, but also what the states in our federalist system, in our republic, what the state responsibilities are. | ||
So it's running for AG, particularly Minnesota, which I think is going to become a new battleground state. | ||
What is your position? | ||
What are you telling people in Minnesota you're going to do as AG in really confronting the Biden administration? | ||
unidentified
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Good morning, Steve. | |
Thanks for having me on. | ||
Absolutely. | ||
The State Attorneys General and here in Minnesota, When I become AG, we will absolutely act as a check on the lawlessness of the Biden administration. | ||
We need to make sure that the Biden administration, whether it's ruling by executive fiat or pushing through bills through Congress that violate folks' constitutional rights or go beyond the authority granted to the administration by Congress or trample on the sovereignty of the states, in all those different ways, all those are examples of lawlessness. | ||
State AGs should bring, and I will bring, legal action whenever the Biden administration crosses the line and violates the authority of its authority, or goes beyond the authority granted by Congress, or tramples on the constitutional rights of the people. | ||
That is absolutely critical. | ||
So, you know, whether it's the Biden administration putting out his rule and ordering by executive fiat that all deportations should be paused for 100 days. | ||
That violates the law. | ||
That goes beyond the authority that Congress gives the Biden administration. | ||
State AGs, and in this case, the Texas AG, did push back. | ||
on that and had some success in that. | ||
So it's absolutely critical because state AGs are really the last line of defense when it comes to protecting state sovereignty and making sure that the voice of the people is still heard through their elected representatives at the state level. | ||
Besides the ones, the executive orders he's done on that, what about some of these massive bills? | ||
You've got the executive orders and then you have actually the interpretation, like the infrastructure bill today has got under 9% of the spending is for infrastructure. | ||
It gets into all types of areas of the federal government. | ||
You've got the COVID bill. | ||
Which, and this is why we had Marjorie Taylor Greene on earlier, and her efforts to try to slow it down so people could talk about it. | ||
It is the most radical piece of legislation since Lyndon Johnson's Great Society. | ||
In fact, when Joe Biden signed it, he wasn't hearkening back to FDR. | ||
He was hearkening back to the Great Society of the 1960s. | ||
And here the Republicans just kind of rolled over and let it go. | ||
Understand they don't have the votes. | ||
We understand that. | ||
But there's certain Ways that you can take time so people can understand exactly what's going down and you're going to see that the common sense of the American people are going to turn against this. | ||
So besides the executive orders regarding internal enforcement and things of the border, what's your other highlight reel of what you would oppose in the Biden administration if you were the Attorney General today? | ||
unidentified
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Absolutely. | |
So when the Biden administration is pushing its legislation through Congress, uh... massive instruct infrastructure bill the massive covid we feel spending trillions of dollars it's it's growing the administrative state is growing in this case statements trapping on the rights of the people growing the federal government expense of the sovereignty of the people the state level and so then state attorneys general need to stand up and push back against that in all possible ways whenever there is a transgression of of the boundaries constitution of the law | ||
or uh... of the account of the balance between federal and state governments absolutely looking for ways to push back and make sure that that lawlessness because when you're passing massive legislation that people don't have time to talk about appeals are too long to be read or understood by the people's representatives or the people that really uh... violates the principle of representative government first instance and his lawlessness And so state AGs should go to court and try to stop those efforts, slow down those efforts, | ||
Make sure people have a chance to actually have input into these things and stop the growth of the administrative state at the expense of the sovereignty of the people. | ||
We've got about a minute left here, but I want to hold you over briefly for our next segment, too. | ||
The current holder of that office, you and the current holder have very different political philosophies, and his political philosophy is coming through in how he's comporting himself and how he's handling being the AG of Minnesota today. | ||
What would you say are the basic differences? | ||
We'll get into the details across the break, but just in political outlook, political philosophy, what's the differences? | ||
unidentified
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Right, well, in political philosophy, Keith Ellison is the most radical, extreme, far-left Attorney General in the country, bar none. | |
He doesn't really care if there's popular support for what he's doing. | ||
He doesn't really care about the law at all. | ||
If he sees a means that he can use his office, a way that he can use his office to push his radical far-left agenda, he will do it. | ||
And we'll get into the details on what he is doing, but that is really the difference, whereas I think and believe and know that the Attorney General's office is supposed to be there to enforce the law, to make sure that the laws enacted by the people's representatives are actually enforced, because if they're not enforced, then they don't have any meaning. | ||
Okay. | ||
Doug, hang on. | ||
Doug Wardlow is running for Attorney General for the Republican nomination in Minnesota. | ||
He'll be running against Keith Ellison if he wins the nomination. | ||
We're going to take a short commercial break. | ||
Return to Minnesota in a moment. | ||
unidentified
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War Room. | |
Pandemic. | ||
With Stephen K. Bannon. | ||
The epidemic is a demon and we cannot let this demon hide. | ||
War Room. | ||
Pandemic. | ||
Here's your host, Stephen K. Bannon. | ||
Okay, we've got, we're going to have breaking news tonight in the evening show at Arizona about this audit, about Georgia, about the woke companies trying to basically crush the voter integrity bill down there. | ||
Also the border, they're going to have a live conference, town hall down in Del Rio City. | ||
Also want to make sure everybody go to Revolver, you've got to read the piece. | ||
You'll be very proud that it's one of these small sites that's growing leaps and bounds like National Pulse doing an investigation. | ||
This investigation into Officer Sicknick, and I think we owe it to Officer Sicknick, who's a veteran, we owe it to get to the bottom of exactly what happened, okay? | ||
This guy's a veteran, served his country, Capitol Hill police officer, used now as a political football by the forces that be, the powers that be, and it's very impressive what Revolver's doing. | ||
Rahim's got a blockbuster report that's going to come out this afternoon, Rahim. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah, it'll come out in the next probably half an hour, 45 minutes in fact. | |
But let me just ask, because I've been working on this all overnight, my brain's a little frazzled. | ||
All these companies that are against the Georgia, they're all boycotting the Olympics, right? | ||
That's a very interesting concept you say. | ||
In fact, they're actually sponsoring the Olympics. | ||
This is the Olympics in Beijing, the Winter Olympics in Beijing. | ||
That was put on by the regime that is being designated as a genocidal regime against the Uyghur people and has spread and exacerbated, wherever it came from, exacerbated whatever you think it started and how it started, exacerbated the spread of the virus coming out of Central China. | ||
But just on a like-for-like, right? | ||
You know, genocide aside, on a like-for-like, how's the voting rights of Chinese people? | ||
It's non-existent in 10,000 years. | ||
unidentified
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I thought these were really moral companies. | |
Your story this afternoon is going to put a lot of big names on the report. | ||
If this doesn't trigger a formal investigation of some sort, a national security investigation at the very top, If this doesn't trigger a Republican committee, if this doesn't trigger somebody out there to, you know, go, hang on a second, we've been rolled, then I'm done. | ||
unidentified
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I'm done. | |
Because this is it. | ||
This is everything. | ||
Right here, in this, in 1800 words, I tell you how they stole the election with Chinese help. | ||
unidentified
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Okay. | |
It's a pretty high bar. | ||
Rahim Ghassan at the National Pulse will be up early this afternoon. | ||
We'll talk about Rahim. | ||
We'll be traveling on assignment, but we'll be discussing that with experts this afternoon at 5 o'clock with much other breaking news from the border to Arizona, recount to Georgia, and much, much more. | ||
I want to go back now to Doug Worlow. | ||
He's running for the Attorney General in the Republican nomination in Minnesota. | ||
So you do have radically different political philosophies. | ||
How's that going to practically translate? | ||
How are the people in Minnesota and around the country supposed to, how's that going to translate into actually how you do your jobs day-to-day? | ||
unidentified
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Well yeah, we're going to take the politics out of the office. | |
Keith Ellison has thoroughly politicized the office. | ||
You know, he has two special assistant attorneys general in the office that are actually paid for by a Bloomberg-funded special interest group in New York dedicated to pushing far-left radical environmental lawsuits, one against the American Parole Institute and And Exxon claiming that Minnesotans were deceived about climate change. | ||
And I think those other salaries are paid for by an outside group, not by the taxpayers of Minnesota, which creates obvious conflicts of interest. | ||
So we're not going to do things like that. | ||
We're going to actually enforce the law, protect the people's constitutional rights. | ||
And we're also going to make sure that we restore law and order in Minnesota. | ||
You know, Minnesota and Minneapolis and St. | ||
Paul in particular, since this summer, are basically in anarchy. | ||
Following the death of George Floyd, violence spread across the cities here. | ||
And from here across the country, and that's because Keith Ellison did not do his job. | ||
He was busy playing politics with the office, and he didn't lift a finger to do anything about the violence skyrocketing in the streets of Minneapolis-St. | ||
Paul. | ||
We have carjackings up over 500% in Minneapolis. | ||
It's terrible down there, and nobody goes to downtown Minneapolis anymore. | ||
And now we've got the Derek Chauvin trial going on, and the whole courthouse is barricaded and surrounded by double fences and barbed wire and all of this. | ||
And that's because Keith Ellison failed. | ||
He failed to send the message early on that lawlessness will not be tolerated in Minnesota. | ||
He failed to investigate and prosecute those responsible for looting and rioting in our cities. | ||
He failed to investigate and prosecute those involved with domestic terror groups like Antifa that are fomenting violence. | ||
And by not sending that message that lawlessness will not be tolerated, he's opened the door for violence. | ||
So now it looks like Whatever happens in the Derek Chauvin trial, there likely will be violence. | ||
So because of Mr. Ellison's ineptitude and his failures, the people of Minnesota are suffering. | ||
Real quickly, you know, President Trump is on me all the time about going to Minnesota more often in 16, and we lost, I think, by less than 1% by saying, hey, we've got to focus on Wisconsin. | ||
Let's get the victory. | ||
Let's close. | ||
But, you know, Minnesota has a reputation of being one of the most progressive liberal states in the Union. | ||
How do you anticipate, I mean, Isn't what they want, is Keith Ellison? | ||
Isn't that the policies that people want? | ||
How is a, looks like a limited government, rule of law, constitutional, principled conservative, how do you anticipate, if you win the nomination, how do you stand a chance against a guy like Keith Ellison? | ||
unidentified
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Well absolutely, I'm going to win the nomination, there's really no competition, but the way we're going to win is the people of Minnesota are populists. | |
Generally, fundamentally populist. | ||
We've got some folks in Minneapolis and St. | ||
Paul that are quite liberal. | ||
But that's a limited group. | ||
Across the state, people on the Republican side and people in the Democratic Farmer Labor Party, which is the Democratic Party of Minnesota, are largely populist. | ||
And they are tired of the anarchy. | ||
They're tired of the lack of law and order. | ||
They want to see their rights protected. | ||
Minnesotans are generally rule followers as well. | ||
They want to have the rules enforced. | ||
They want their Attorney General not to be political, but rather to enforce the law. | ||
They're tired of Keith Ellison pushing radical policies through the AG's office, bypassing and undermining little people. | ||
Like, for example, people in Minnesota are sick and tired of things like when Keith Ellison undermined our election laws and entered into a consent decree with his friends that he basically had or that did sue the state, right, to challenge the signature requirements on absentee ballots, the witness requirements, and the postmark deadline requirement for mail-in ballots. | ||
And then he entered into a consent decree and had those rules not enforced. | ||
Those laws. | ||
He basically undid those laws. | ||
And people are tired of that in Minnesota. | ||
They don't want to see that. | ||
They want to have sovereignty through their elected representatives. | ||
Doug, we've got to bounce. | ||
How do people get more access about your run here for the Attorney General spot in Minnesota? | ||
unidentified
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Absolutely. | |
Go to Doug Wardlow, A-G dot com. | ||
That's D-O-U-G-W-A-R-D-L-O-W-A-G dot com. | ||
Early money helps a lot to get this thing. | ||
Going to build off the strong base we built in 2018. | ||
We're going to win back this office for the cause of the rule of law and for liberty and the Constitution and Minnesota is going to be a red state. | ||
Doug Wardlow, a populist and a principled conservative up there in Minnesota. | ||
Thank you very much for joining us. | ||
Raheem, looking forward to the peace today. | ||
Go to Revolver back at 5 today. | ||
We're going to be from the border at this conference down in Del Rio. | ||
We're going to be talking in 8. | ||
We're going to go to Arizona. | ||
We've got Peter Navarro about this infrastructure bill, your new taxes. | ||
Also going to talk about Holy Thursday as we get into the evening of Holy Thursday. | ||
Make sure you don't miss us at 5 o'clock today. | ||
Appointment viewing 10 a.m. | ||
on Saturday where we go into transhumanism. | ||
The new human race descent into hell on Saturday morning at 10 o'clock. |