Speaker | Time | Text |
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unidentified
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You | |
You got people and families out here in the United States that are struggling. | ||
I just paid $600 worth of utility bills in one week. | ||
I haven't got enough money to feed my family, but I make too much to get food stamps. | ||
I don't even make $10 an hour. | ||
Now if you took that money and subdivided it between the Taxpayers in this country, we would stimulate the economy. | ||
You know why? | ||
Because we go out and pay off bills, pay off tax debts, create jobs, and buy stuff that we need. | ||
That's how you stimulate the economy. | ||
We're not the experts on the Hill as to how to solve this problem, and the problem is a multifaceted problem, so we gave great flexibility to the Secretary of Treasury to act. | ||
We're having an electronic run on the banks. | ||
They decided to close the operation, close down the money accounts, if they had not done that. | ||
Their estimation was that by 2 o'clock that afternoon, $5.5 trillion would have been drawn out of the money market system of the United States, would have collapsed the entire economy of the United States, and within 24 hours, the world economy would have collapsed. | ||
It would have been the end of our economic system and our political system as we know it. | ||
September 18th, 2008. | ||
You know, a lot of people call it the abyss. | ||
We were beyond the abyss. | ||
I mean, you have to understand that in the history of the financial world, we never had $786 billion be withdrawn from quote-unquote safe money market accounts. | ||
This was about the banks. | ||
This was about a withdrawal of maybe $2 trillion and like the world's biggest margin call. | ||
And that's why, when they made the point we've got to act and do things quickly, we did. | ||
And we had borrowed about $55 trillion. | ||
Do you know what a trillion dollars is? | ||
A trillion dollars is one of these, turned on its side, piled dollar upon dollar, until you get a pillar 67,000 miles high. | ||
That's nearly two and a half times around the Earth. | ||
As bizarre as Paulson was in a lot of ways, he got it. | ||
He got it immediately. | ||
And when he called these guys together and said, you know, boys, we got a problem, You know, we're not any geniuses in economics or finance anyhow. | ||
We're representatives of the people. | ||
If we don't act quickly, what we could have, Financial Armageddon, $25 trillion, $50 trillion, $500 trillion, nobody knew. | ||
This market was going south, and as cash was literally flooding out of the system, the bells started hitting. | ||
Anybody who labels this as a subprime crisis doesn't really know what they're talking about. | ||
The truth is that it's far broader. | ||
It's a combination of things. | ||
It's the combination of hubris and greed. | ||
People were greedy in the 1950s, they were greedy in the 1970s, the 1990s. | ||
Why should greed suddenly, in this decade, have caused a problem? | ||
People are always greedy. | ||
It's sort of like blaming airplane crashes on gravity. | ||
We subsidized people's losses, and we also subsidized their greed. | ||
We had this toxic combination of big government in bed with Wall Street. | ||
Decades of easy money. | ||
We divorced risk from accountability. | ||
We just dumped six and a half trillion dollars, seven pillars, 67,000 miles high of single dollar bills into what pit? | ||
A pit of political recklessness, indecision, fecklessness, and favoritism. | ||
Since September 18th, the net worth of households in the United States has declined by 14 trillion dollars. | ||
What if everything we based this on was an illusion? | ||
Maybe a delusion, if you want to call it that. | ||
The fact is that the $14 trillion never really existed. | ||
It was fake. | ||
It was built upon debt. | ||
Massive amounts of debt. | ||
The housing wealth that had been created and the stock wealth didn't really exist. | ||
It was all a liquidity fake, a mirage of wealth. | ||
And I got some bad news for you. | ||
This wasn't an accident. | ||
This was the result of conscious decision-making and some very bad judgment. | ||
Somebody threw us in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean without a life raft. | ||
And we're trying to determine what's the closest shore and whether there's any chance in the world to swim back home. | ||
We don't know. | ||
And that's when Paulson hit the panic button. | ||
And that's what we saw on September 18th. | ||
How did that happen? | ||
There's a lot of blame to go around. | ||
One of the things that happened was the institutionalization of many of the ideas of the 1960s, affecting the future of our country in a very concrete way. | ||
Ideas have consequences. | ||
And we are seeing the consequences of the ideas of the 1960s unfold in our society all around us. | ||
Welcome. | ||
You're in the boardroom. | ||
New Year's Day special. | ||
It is Saturday, 1 January. | ||
Wait for it. | ||
The year of our Lord 2022. | ||
I had to practice that to make sure I got it right. | ||
What you just saw are cold open approximately. | ||
I don't know, five, six minutes long is the opening of a film that movie, I realize it feels Except for a few nits, it could have been made about today. | ||
That film is a film I wrote and directed, Generation Zero. | ||
I started that film right after the Tea Party, Rick Santelli's rant in 2009 and on the first Tea Party meeting on Tax Day, the 15th of April. | ||
The Year of Our Lord, 2009. | ||
That sequence was shot and edited. | ||
Andrew Breitbart, in fact, was the first guy, first person I shot the film. | ||
And my dear friend and colleague and partner Andrew did not make the final cut. | ||
We did three and a half hours with him in May. | ||
But that film right there was made, shot and edited in the summer of 2009. | ||
The film was released at the Tea Party Convention, the first Tea Party Convention took place in Nashville. | ||
I think it was in February of 2010 and then we did a special. | ||
One-hour special on the Sean Hannity show because Jesse waters as a young stringer at the time I shouldn't say stringer. | ||
He's a field correspondent. | ||
I was at the Tea Party convention and saw it The night before Sarah Palin gave the historic speech My point. | ||
And that's why we want to start this show. | ||
We want to do it a little differently today. | ||
I know people are getting up from New Year's Eve and they're, you know, watching the Rose Bowl parade and they're getting ready for all the New Year's football games and people are coming over. | ||
Really thankful to have this show today and to have the show overall. | ||
But we're kicking off. | ||
You saw the New Year's Eve special. | ||
Where we look back over 2021, but particularly we did it through through people through the, uh, we curated, um. | ||
These groups that are really represented us the best, you know, instead of the traditional man of the year, woman of the year. | ||
We made it to to to to groups to men and women groups of men and women, but really, um, those activists. | ||
that have made things happen, both for the deplorables and for Lao Bajing. | ||
We said it was kind of the year of both of those groups that have really stood up and made a massive impact. Right there is, I think, sums up everything. | ||
We're going into 2022. | ||
In 2022, we're labeling. | ||
We've got a concept for 2022. | ||
It's called the Valley of Decision. | ||
And what do we mean by that? | ||
We mean that we, it's not just elections. | ||
So people, every election you've had in your adult, for people that are in their 50s or 60s, every election has been the most important election in the nation's history. | ||
That's a mantra that goes over and over and over again. | ||
Obviously, this November is incredibly important. | ||
I cannot emphasize enough how important November 2022 is. | ||
And we focus very much on this all the time. | ||
The 100 seats, 100 years. | ||
We talk about the redistricting and all the nuts and bolts that go into building a big red tsunami that can't be stolen from us, like the 2020 election was stolen. | ||
But this is something more fundamental, it's more, I don't want to say primal, it's a deeper current. | ||
And this year we want this audience, we're going to provide nomenclature and concepts like we did when the pandemic first came out about this, about where we really are as a country, where we really are really as a civilization. | ||
And we're structuring around this concept, as I did Generation Zero, called turnings. | ||
And this is the great fourth turning in American history. | ||
It just so happens to be that we're in the fourth turning of the cycle. | ||
And we're going to have a little bit, we're going to show in the next segment, actually what turnings are, kind of the short version I gave of this. | ||
And here's why. | ||
We have right now and it's not simply about election. | ||
We have to decide. | ||
We have to. | ||
We have to make a decision on where this all goes is where we're going as a country and we're going to go one way or the other. | ||
We're going to go to the way. | ||
Of kind of the global apparatus, right? | ||
Lack of loss of sovereignty, the elites running things, the apparatus as we've seen it in all its glory, as this country spins out of control every day. | ||
And the question is, is that by because they're incompetent and so arrogant they don't care? | ||
Are they doing that by design? | ||
I know there's a lot of people that watch the show, a lot of people come on the show, a lot of people that work on the show. | ||
They believe it's absolutely by design. | ||
There's others that think it's just complete gross recklessness and incompetence because they don't know what they're doing and their plan is so radical. | ||
So the key here is to understand this year and we want to kick off the show with actually getting down to, hey, what are we trying to do? | ||
What are we trying to accomplish? | ||
Because this show, as we know, you don't watch this for entertainment. | ||
This is not... | ||
We don't have light banter. | ||
It's not a show that focuses on a lot of stuff other people focus on, and that's fine. | ||
They do it much better. | ||
It's just not what interests us. | ||
It's just not what we think is important. | ||
We do think we're on an abyss. | ||
We think we're on an abyss for very different reasons than the apparatus or the elites think. | ||
Economist Magazine, the January 1st for The Economist, has a, we'll hopefully get it up, it's got a big red background and a, like a Greek temple, and it's got a Republican elephant, and it says, you know, the Republican Party walks, it's called walking away, the Republican Party walks away from democracy. | ||
Our whole thesis on the show is the exact opposite. | ||
That we're here to provide a platform for you to get engaged. | ||
We're here to provide a platform for you to have your agency and that your agency means something. | ||
Your agency is powerful and that your agency can actually make a difference and change the arc of history. | ||
And that's what 2022 is about. | ||
It's almost scary to me to think we're just a few weeks away from the second year of War Room Pandemic. | ||
Never in a million years, I think that the pandemic part, War Room is going to be here. | ||
But we start with War Room impeachment and then we went to War Room pandemic. | ||
And I remember the time when we do the shift, Jason goes, boy, you sure, you know, we're doing this impeachment things on a roll. | ||
And then other people, including Jason, came to me in the spring of of of 2020 and said, hey, you know, the pandemic's in back of us. | ||
Maybe we should do it. | ||
We're still in this. | ||
And look, I think now we're hurtling towards natural immunity. | ||
It's going to be a epidemic. | ||
And then, just like the common cold, of course, the apparatus doesn't believe that. | ||
They've taken the exact opposite attitude. | ||
So we have been deemed of show by Media Matters and the guys, the apocalyptic fury coming out of the war room. | ||
Well, you ain't seen nothing yet, because we're really about to ratchet it all up. | ||
And you can see right now, I just want to take this Politico story, which I've been talking so much about. | ||
The Fed's doomsday profit has a dire warning about where we're headed. | ||
If you look at those numbers that we had in that show, that we had in that movie, made in the summer of 2009. | ||
Was that 12 years ago? | ||
13 years ago? | ||
13 years ago. | ||
It's worse today. | ||
It's worse today. | ||
It's absolutely worse today. | ||
Okay, we're going to take a short commercial break. | ||
We're going to be back. | ||
We've got a lot to go through. | ||
We're going to talk about the fourth turning. | ||
We're going to give you a framework on which to think about this, and we'll go from there. | ||
You're with me for this hour. | ||
It's New Year's Day, the first of January, the year of our Lord, 2022. | ||
unidentified
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We're going to be back in the warm in a moment. | |
Should old acquaintance be forgot and old lands I'm We two have paddled in the stream from morning sun till day | ||
But seas between us broad have o'ert since o'er It naturally divides itself into eras or moods. | ||
We call them turnings, which are roughly a generation long. | ||
So there's a natural correspondence between these turnings. | ||
Turnings are like the seasons. | ||
Every turning is necessary. | ||
Discovered a recurring pattern, and implicit in that pattern of generational recurrence, the idea of a rhythm, a pattern, a sequence of events that comes around again. | ||
Nature-like cycles. | ||
Cities are founded. | ||
Cities collapse. | ||
States rise. | ||
States fall. | ||
Families can prosper. | ||
Families can wither. | ||
All follow certain repeating cyclical patterns. | ||
We end up inventing new cycles. | ||
So we have the financial market cycle, we have traffic cycles, we have all kinds of modern high-tech cycles, which we simply create. | ||
There are four turnings, each one roughly 20 years or so long, so an entire four turnings or a saeculum lasts about 80 to 100 years. | ||
A series of turnings that are launched by a so-called crisis worm. | ||
It's a time when there's a lot of genocide, a lot of killing, a lot of starvation, usually a lot of disease. | ||
It's the worst times in history. | ||
And once one of those is over, everybody, both the victors and the losers, make a vow that was so horrible, it should never be allowed to happen again. | ||
That's really the key to understanding what happens next. | ||
The first turning is the high, like the 50s, that comes after the crisis. | ||
It's a period of consolidation. | ||
It's a period of stable families and stable family structures. | ||
Lots of kids are born. | ||
Lots of infrastructure is built. | ||
But emotional life becomes more or less dead. | ||
It begins to die out. | ||
Baby boomers have no memory of World War II. | ||
Their childhood was the American high. | ||
Next comes the awakening. | ||
The perfect little children of the high, like the boom generation, become young adults. | ||
They came of age during that period of rapid social and cultural change when we changed everything about how we felt, how we thought, how we talked, how we dressed. | ||
We changed America's feelings about itself, our moral agenda. | ||
Suddenly their emotions break out and all hell breaks loose. | ||
This became a generation of great passion, of youth anger, that marked a rise at every age in drug use, teen pregnancy, crime, risk-taking, suicide. | ||
Then comes the unraveling. | ||
In the awakening, the eternal truths, the verities that are built up in the high, the values, are questioned. | ||
That process accelerates during the unraveling and restraints are broken down in personal life, in economic life, in political life. | ||
Unravelings in America have certain common characteristics. | ||
They tend to be eras of a lot of economic speculation and more and more stronger boom and bust cycles. | ||
For example, line that up with the 1920s. | ||
Or go back to the 1850s in America. | ||
Go back to the 1760s. | ||
Consider in the 1990s a decade of cynicism and bad manners and public authority seemed to be pretty weak. | ||
you notice repeatedly recurring again these eras that feel very similar. | ||
Now history teaches that usually third turnings finally issue into a fourth turning. | ||
A fourth turning is the crisis. | ||
And history shows that if an event doesn't trigger a fourth turning, a fourth turning leader will actually encourage one to happen. | ||
Or one will simply hit us because of all the deferred public decisions that weren't made during the recent third turning. | ||
this comes to a head in the fourth turning. | ||
These fourth turnings become new founding moments of our nation's history. | ||
Obviously, one fourth turning was the period of the American Revolution. | ||
Another fourth turning was the Civil War era, in which we redefined who we were as a nation. | ||
In World War II and the New Deal, think of everything that changed in that era. | ||
We re-established mankind's relationship with technology. | ||
The government's relationship with the economy, America's relationship with the world. | ||
About every 80 to 100 years. | ||
And guess what this is? | ||
This is the 80th, renowned the 80th anniversary of America's involvement in World War II. | ||
That is the third great turning in American history. | ||
Of course, the first turning was the American Revolution. | ||
The second turning was the Civil War. | ||
The third turning was the Great Depression and the Second World War. | ||
And now we're in the middle of our We're in the fourth turning. | ||
I shouldn't say the middle. | ||
I don't want to tip my hand here. | ||
But this is why 2022 is the Valley of Decision. | ||
This is a very fundamental, I think, one of the most, if not the most important year in modern American history. | ||
We just finished, as we said, 2021 was MAGA's greatest year. | ||
That you, this audience, stepped into the breach and really was the vanguard of how we let ourselves back here on really the precipice of what could be a massive political victory, should be a massive political victory if we don't let the establishment Republicans throw it away. And this audience will not. This movement will not. MAG will not. The deplorables will not. | ||
I want to go back to something about the first segment I showed on the film. | ||
By the way, I haven't watched this film, actually. | ||
I have not watched the film in 10 years. | ||
About 10 years. | ||
When I went through and pulled these sections. | ||
And I'm actually pretty impressed. | ||
I did the whole fourth turning, that was less than five, about five minutes to describe Neil Howell with the help of Neil Howell, that great book, The Fourth Turning, he wrote with William Strauss, William Strauss now being deceased. | ||
But as I said, and I've given this speech many, many times, if you go back to the beginning, go back to beginning of the show, the financial crisis, which was 18 September of the year of our Lord, 2008, | ||
When Lehman Brothers went bankrupt and a couple days later, this is when Bernanke and Paulson went into the Oval Office, I've said, the match that was lit there, the match was lit in that Oval Office by decisions made on the 18th of September of 2008, went off in an explosion, in a bomb, on November 8th of 2016. | ||
unidentified
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It was eight years later. | |
Because what the Obama administration, the Bush and the Obama administration did was they flooded the zone with easy money, with easy cash. | ||
You had the greatest concentration of wealth in American history. | ||
And who paid for that? | ||
You paid for that. | ||
One of the things we're going to do this year in this show is really make sure that people, and don't run away from us, that you really understand economics and finance and public finance and the budget and all that because it's absolutely central to your life and it's central to your understanding Of where you are in the world, where your community is, where your family's going to be, and so many people, not just personal finance, but don't really understand it, kind of shy away from it, and they try to make it very obscure. | ||
It's really not obscure. | ||
The match that was lit, and we haven't gotten over the financial crisis, and now we've doubled, tripled, and quadrupled down. | ||
The same way the apparatus handled the pandemic, right, is the same way they've handled the financial crisis. | ||
We are still in the financial crisis of 2008. | ||
We haven't taken care of really the structural problems, but now, if you go back and look at the numbers then, they're dwarfed by today, and now we're in the problem of the law of large numbers. | ||
We are absolutely, absolutely in a horrible financial situation, a horrible financial situation, of which they just try to kick the can down the road with fiat money and continue to print money. | ||
And remember, in printing money, that's just more things that go on your shoulders. | ||
We're going to offer hope. | ||
This is all not about the apocalyptic fury of the war room in Stephen K. Bannon. | ||
We're going to offer a way to get through all this. | ||
Commitment. | ||
Empowerment. | ||
Community. | ||
Engagement. | ||
All of it. | ||
We're going to be back in a moment. | ||
I'm going to bring in Captain Bannon. | ||
We've actually got an announcement on Captain Bannon that we want to talk about. | ||
Her new role in this whole enterprise. | ||
She steps up to be more than just a pretty face and just somebody here that co-hosts on occasions and jumps in as a correspondent out in the field. | ||
So we're going to take a short commercial break. | ||
I want to thank our production team for their lovely, incredible music. | ||
It's gone all the way through this holiday season. | ||
It's another big change to the show. | ||
We've got a lot of music in the show. | ||
In the coming year, it's going to be interwoven into everything we do. | ||
A lot of change. | ||
We're still going to get the War Room, but we're going to make the War Room even more of a platform for community, even more of a platform for activism, even more of a platform for MAGA. | ||
More of a platform for your human agency. | ||
We're here on the first day of the rest of your life, the first day of the year of our Lord, 2022. | ||
We're gonna take a short commercial break. | ||
unidentified
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When I return, Captain Maureen Bannon and her father, Stephen K. Bennett. | |
be back in a moment music playing You | ||
Sure | ||
The quaintance be forgot and never brought to mind Bye! | ||
Should old acquaintance be forgot and old lands I'm We two have paddled in the stream from morning sun till day | ||
But seas between us broad have fought since old lands are gone okay welcome back It is Saturday, the 1st of January, the Year of the Lord 2022. | ||
And I want to read you, if Denver could put this up, I really want to thank the team, production team at Real America is always helping us here. | ||
A quote, I'm sure many of you have heard this before, but I always, a number of things I do, I have my little traditions I do on January 1st to kind of get revved up for the year. | ||
A bunch of small spiritual books I always go through on New Year's Eve and one January. | ||
But I want to share a quote from William H. Murray. | ||
It's about commitment. | ||
Until one is committed, there is a hesitancy, the chance to draw back. | ||
Concerning all acts of initiative and creation, there is one elementary truth, the ignorance of which kills countless ideas and splendid plans. | ||
That the moment one definitely commits oneself, then providence moves too. | ||
All sorts of things occur to help one that would never otherwise have occurred. | ||
A whole stream of events issues from that decision raising in one's favor all manner of unforeseen incidents in meetings and material assistance which no man could have dreamed and would have come his way. | ||
Whatever you can do or dream you can do, begin it. | ||
Boldness has a genius, power and magic in it. | ||
Begin it now. | ||
It's kind of action, action, action. | ||
The reason, one of my favorite sayings of the Roman legions, and I think they screw it up on the commercial that the actors on, but it's fortune favors the bold. | ||
Not fortune favors the brave. | ||
Fortune favors the bold. | ||
And that's William H. Murray's. | ||
We're going to get it up on all the chat rooms so everybody can see it. | ||
Commitment! | ||
Commit! | ||
You commit, things happen. | ||
I want to bring in Captain Bannon. | ||
I'm going to ask for the next, we've got a PowerPoint, at least one slide I want to bring up. | ||
Captain Bannon, thanks. | ||
Mo, thanks for joining us today. | ||
And I want to make an announcement. | ||
You guys know Mo Bannon. | ||
She comes on the show. | ||
She co-hosts. | ||
But she's committed to, she's actually made a decision. | ||
She stepped up and she's going to take a much bigger role in the overall running of the War Room and particularly everything else that we do other than the show. | ||
The show has got its own kind of entity and we have a team that does that. | ||
But there's so much else going on as we're building platforms and building communities. | ||
And Mo, you're going to be the CEO and president of all that, so thank you very much for doing that. | ||
Thank you for taking that burden off your dad's shoulders, because you know it just got to be too much, and we needed somebody that I could trust, and whose judgment I trust, and whose drive and initiative I knew would make things work. | ||
So thank you very much. | ||
unidentified
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Well, thank you. | |
And our goal here in the War Room is to build the community even more and get more engagement, which means that I will be traveling around, getting more involved with each community that we address on this show, so I'm definitely looking forward to that. | ||
Yeah, no, you guys started out at AmFest, and I know you had a great time out there and made so many contacts with Charlie Kirk and the great team out there. | ||
Can we put up the chart? | ||
And this is about what we're trying to do this year is to give You know, the first, you know, we're coming up on the. | ||
I guess we've already got the second year of the show, but we're coming up on the second year, even of the pandemic show on, I think, the 20th of January of 2022. | ||
I have to look at what our birthday is, but I think it's our anniversary of that. | ||
We started impeachment, I think, back in October of 19. | ||
So we've been a couple of months in doing the War Room impeachment. | ||
But if the charts up, we have human, and of course, I don't have my glasses on, so I can't see this. | ||
The force of agency, this is all about allowing your human agency to have its biggest and highest impact. | ||
Right? | ||
And so if you look, we're talking about, and Mo, you can read them out. | ||
If you want to, you can read them out to me. | ||
unidentified
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Go ahead. | |
The Force of Human Agency is about commitment, empowerment, and engagement. | ||
So for commitment, we want the state of being dedicated to a cause and an activity. | ||
Empowerment, the process of becoming stronger and more confident, especially in one's own life and one's own rights. | ||
And then engagement is to participate or become involved in. | ||
So they are all related to each other and intertwined to each other. | ||
They're intertwined and this leads to community and we know we're building we're building the boardroom community here. | ||
We've actually parted up. | ||
With the H-J-B coin. | ||
You can go to H-J-B.org, H-J-B.org, right? | ||
The coin. | ||
We're building a whole community there for this alternative currency that'll be used for transactions going forward. | ||
We're building other communities. | ||
We're obviously very engaged in the Getter situation. | ||
As a social media platform, it's the only place that I put stuff up and you can go there 24 hours a day. | ||
I know Mo is on fire on Getter. | ||
She's also on Twitter. | ||
unidentified
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She hasn't been banned there yet, like her dad. | |
I really want to go back through all these, because this is about agency. | ||
The one thing we pride ourselves on in this show, it's not entertainment. | ||
There's so many people out there that do that better. | ||
There's so much tremendous talent, I think, in conservative media right now, at all levels, from the blog sites, to the internet sites, the YouTube sites. | ||
People putting up new sites, the aggregation sites, also TV, streaming, all of it. | ||
It's just a wealth of talent and you've got so many different choices to point to. | ||
Ours is different and that's why we want to... | ||
We've got these elements under human agency. | ||
Everything is to is to build and to engage you. | ||
Everything is built to make sure that you're empowered. | ||
Everything is made that that when you make a commitment, when you commit to this, there's going to be action. | ||
And look, whether it's a precinct committee strategy, whether it's a school board, whether it's taking over these election apparatuses, I know the left melts down that, but hey, that's democracy. | ||
If you've got a better alternative, come in, show up, and vote. | ||
You're just lazy. | ||
And right now, you've drafted off that, right, of having control of the apparatus, and that's no longer the case. | ||
We're engaged. | ||
We have a sense of urgency. | ||
And one of the things that Mo's going to do is to make sure we translate that all into community, into building community, helping. | ||
The way we're going to do that is really help all these groups that are out there. | ||
We don't need to recreate these groups. | ||
There's so many groups, and we want more groups to form. | ||
Right people have that have that energy and have that and have that that motivation. | ||
So Mo, I really want to thank you for taking this on and and I know I've seen when you commit for your volleyball career and for West Point for everything you did when you commit, it's it's really something to behold. | ||
So thank you very much. | ||
Give me give me your analysis and your observations. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
I'm definitely looking forward to this position. | ||
I think that we have a great War Room Posse. | ||
I'm excited to build it even more. | ||
I know currently we have a lot of force multipliers within our War Room Posse, but we want to continue to build that and I'm definitely looking forward to that and I see a great, great 2022 for this organization. | ||
The reason it's great, and I asked Mo to do this, Mo has a very different bedside manner than her dad. | ||
She takes after her lovely mother in that regard. | ||
She has a very calming, sweet, nice bedside manner. | ||
People just gravitate to Mo and want to work with her. | ||
She did this on her sport, although highly competitive. | ||
Dad's got a little bit of a different bedside manner, so I think it's better. | ||
Our outreach program, she'll let her dad focus on the show and the outreach program will be through her. | ||
Why did you laugh at that? | ||
unidentified
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Because I think that mom would disagree when it comes to my Twitter and my getter. | |
I come in hot on those. | ||
You come in hot, even your dad's got to tone you down on that. | ||
I want to go back to force multiplier. | ||
And if they can get up, if Denver's got the cover for The Economist, and I want to have this part of the conversation with this audience and with this vanguard. | ||
Remember, one of the things that we make sure that we do is our action. | ||
is such that it has impact. | ||
That's not a waste of time. | ||
The most important media companies in the world follow the show. | ||
Minutely. | ||
And the reason they do is because of you. | ||
Not just the show qua the show. | ||
It's because of the impact that you've had. | ||
And here's where you can tell it's having an impact. | ||
The two still most important publications in the world are the Financial Times of London and the Economist. | ||
A lot of this comes from how important London was as an entity for so many, you know, thousands of years or the height of the British Empire. | ||
Remember, we were a colony at one time. | ||
But they still drive so much globally of the party of Davos's thinking. | ||
Right. | ||
And you can see it solidified there. | ||
Their cover to start this year. | ||
We say it's the Valley of Decision. | ||
And this is the one of the most important years in American history. | ||
Just the election just being one important yet small part of that. | ||
The midterms. | ||
Which are now like a presidential referendum. | ||
They've chosen They've chosen, on their cover, to kick off the entire year, their January 1st edition, in bold red, Walking Away. | ||
And it says, basically, the Republican Party walks away from democracy. | ||
The Republican Party and democracy. | ||
Just to build that narrative. | ||
Nothing could be further from the truth. | ||
We're not walking away, we're running towards the fire. | ||
We're running towards the fire. | ||
Because we're winning. | ||
Victory begets victory. | ||
Victory begets victory. | ||
And you can feel, and Mo, I know, because you've been down in the Virginia situation. | ||
You were down there for the great rally we had. | ||
You went out to AmFest. | ||
You've been all over. | ||
You see, even more than I see, that building up. | ||
And I get it from talking to people every day and having input into the show. | ||
You see it from actually being out there. | ||
We're ascendant. | ||
We're on the rise. | ||
We're on the move. | ||
The action, action, action has been translated to meaningful, concrete objectives and concrete things that are accomplished. | ||
Task and purpose. | ||
Task and purpose. | ||
And this is what they fear most. | ||
They fear populism. | ||
Why? | ||
Because they fear an engaged citizenry. | ||
They fear an inclusive nationalism. | ||
Because that will break apart this kind of globalist concentration of wealth. | ||
The concentration of wealth and how it's come about with the debt and what the Federal Reserve has done in printing you the money and the destroying of the currency. | ||
I mean, it's one of the reasons we got involved with FJB coin is that I sat there and go, hey, you're going to have to have alternative currencies. | ||
The elites have destroyed fiat currency with trillions and trillions of dollars spent. | ||
We're in the first day of one, if not the most important year in modern American history. | ||
It's the first day of January, the year of our Lord 2022, and you're in the War Room. | ||
We're gonna take a short commercial break. | ||
Captain Maureen Bannon and her father will be back in a moment. | ||
unidentified
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♪♪♪ | |
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It's time to cancel, cancel culture. | ||
Should old acquaintance be forgot And never brought back? | ||
Okay, welcome back. | ||
It's our New Year's Day special, Saturday, the 1st of January, the year of our Lord, 2021. | ||
I appreciate, or 2022. | ||
See, I had that down. | ||
I've been memorizing that. | ||
unidentified
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2022. | |
Wow. | ||
Incredible. | ||
The 2021 just zipped through. | ||
I remember, I remember sitting doing the New Year's, the New Year's Day special in 2022. | ||
Incredible. | ||
There's a raging, we talk about attorneys, talk about there's a raging fire, you know, the Biden, excuse me, the illegitimate Biden regime has got things so out of control. | ||
So out of control and spinning out of control. | ||
You've had this great article from Politico and talk about this doomsday prophet, Honig, who was one of the guys on the Federal Reserve. | ||
They kept warning about you can't keep printing money. | ||
You can't. | ||
The bailout from 2008 just you just printed. | ||
Trillions of dollars of cash to bail out the elites, to bail out people who owned real estate, to bail out those people who own stocks. | ||
And it was really corporate real estate. | ||
You've inflated assets to have an asset bubble. | ||
It's got to be stopped. | ||
And then the CCP virus, we've tripled down. | ||
And right now you have. | ||
And this is why it's a moment for decision. | ||
And all the easy decisions, in the Valley of Decision, all the easy decisions are behind us. | ||
That's why I call it the Valley of Decision. | ||
All the high ground and the easy choices, the easy choices for this country, financially, economically, politically, culturally. | ||
All way behind us. | ||
We squandered that. | ||
Our elites squandered that. | ||
With ceaseless, endless foreign wars, and ill-thought-through tax structures, ill-thought-through about taking your money, the pension fund money, and using it to ship all the manufacturing jobs, to turn us into a service economy that, you know, and glibly sit there, hear the guys at Goldman Sachs say, we're going to be a service economy, let China manufacture everything. | ||
We've seen all the faults of that and how tough it is to turn around. | ||
And now we're heading into a firestorm, an inferno, because in this complete and total debacle of where elections have consequences and stonal elections have catastrophic consequences, we're seeing that before us. | ||
And right now, they're cooking up another stimulus plan. | ||
It's just more easy money. | ||
And the reason it's easy money, it's your money. | ||
It's easy for them to take it and to spend it because it's yours. | ||
You're the full faith and credit of the United States. | ||
And remember, this is one of the things we're gonna make sure you understand economics and finance, and it's not impenetrable. | ||
They try to make it like that. | ||
It's actually got a lot of common sense elements to it. | ||
And once you understand it, you understand what the con is. | ||
You understand what the scam is. | ||
You understand that it's on your shoulders, right? | ||
They're taking your money destroying your family destroying you Destroying your grandchildren destroying this nation and they're doing it They're doing it willfully and they're doing it knowingly and we are going to put it into that as sure as the turning of the earth and Mo, I know we're going to get revved up. | ||
We're redoing the sites. | ||
We're going to have a bigger community engagement and supporting these groups out there. | ||
How do people, your getter feed, I don't watch you so much on Twitter, but your getter feed is on fire. | ||
How do people get to you? | ||
How do people get to you and follow you, particularly over the holiday weekend? | ||
I want a lot of people to pick it up now and I want to share it. | ||
One of the things, force multiplier, we're not asking for any money. | ||
All you got to do is be a force multiplier. | ||
You just got to put your shoulder to the wheel here. | ||
How do people get to you, Mo? | ||
Is she on mute? | ||
Maybe we take her off? | ||
Okay, if not, we'll put her, I tell you what, we'll put her up on, we'll put her up on getter. | ||
We'll get her getter. | ||
Let's get it into the, let's get everything onto the platforms. | ||
Let's get everything into the, let's get everything on that, onto our platforms, onto Real America's Voice, into the live chat, everything. | ||
We've got many live chats. | ||
We want to make sure you're over at Telegram in the FJB. | ||
Go to FJBCOIN. | ||
Go into that Telegram. | ||
They've got a Discord channel. | ||
We have Telegram channels. | ||
We have Discord. | ||
We're on Discord. | ||
We're on Getter. | ||
You can go to Real America's Voice. | ||
You can go just across the board. | ||
You can go anywhere to get us. | ||
unidentified
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Okay. | |
So, the kickoff to the first is that, hey, we're in a fourth turning. | ||
We're going to have a lot more analysis of that and a lot more structure around that so you can get a better understanding of all of it. | ||
Also, so we're going to have a lot more analysis of that and also the keys of commitment, the keys of engagement, the keys of empowerment. | ||
This entire year, the entire year is about empowering you and your agency. | ||
Because we've got a country to save and by saving our country. | ||
We're gonna save mankind Remember what? | ||
Napoleon told his marshals when you set out to take Vienna Take Vienna in Vienna. | ||
We are going to take okay. | ||
We're gonna take a commercial break We're gonna come back We're going to talk about the salvation of mankind and humankind. | ||
They talk about a replacement strategy. | ||
It's not a racial element to it. | ||
It's not an ethnic element to it. | ||
There is a plan for replacement theory. | ||
It's about replacing something called good old homo sapiens. | ||
We're going to go through this convergence onto a point. | ||
That point be the singularity. | ||
We're going to bring our editor of all things transhumanism To kick your year off of 2022 with your being able to understand, like, wow, now I see how all this ties together. | ||
Stay for the second hour of the War Room. | ||
It is January 1st, the year of our Lord, 2022. | ||
It is Saturday. | ||
No better way to kick off the year by getting jacked up in what Media Matter calls the apocalyptic fury of Stephen K. Bannon and the War Room. | ||
We're going to be back in just a moment. |