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July 28, 2023 - Bannon's War Room
48:10
WarRoom Battleground EP 342: EventBrite Cancels Conservative Women's Event
Participants
Main voices
c
carrie sheffield
06:35
d
dave walsh
15:44
s
steve bannon
22:01
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Speaker Time Text
steve bannon
Peace out yo!
I mean, every day you're out there.
What they're doing is blowing people off.
If you continue to look the other way and shut up, then the oppressors, the authoritarians, get total control and total power.
Because this is just like in Arizona.
This is just like in Georgia.
It's another element that backs them into a corner and shows their lies and misrepresentations.
This is why this audience is going to have to get engaged.
As we've told you, this is the fight.
unidentified
All this nonsense, all this spin, they can't handle the truth.
War Room, Battleground.
Here's your host, Stephen K. Bannon.
steve bannon
Thursday, 27 July, Year of the Lord 2023.
I really want to thank Rob Sig and Parker Sig for the last segment.
In the show, to blow a commercial break.
Normally we do that versus live.
But hey, when a guy like Dr. Malone goes, he's telling you, you know, highly classified information, he goes, hey, we're not, we're not on, are we?
I go, yeah, we're actually live.
I guess that's calling an audible to play through.
So I really want to thank the Denver crew and the SIGs for making that happen.
I've got Dave Walsh and we're going to go in a second to Dave about the, there's so much going on in energy.
That I want to drill down and get the wisdom of an experience of Dave Walsh.
But I want to start with Carrie Sheffield.
Been on the show for many, many years.
Carrie, a story... I don't understand this, so you're going to have to help me out here.
I read in the New York Post...
And it was about you, Carrie Sheffield, and you do amazing work, you've done amazing work forever, but I don't think people, if they had to list the top five out-of-control firebrands, I don't think you'd make that list.
And you're putting on an event, and Eventbrite, which is this massive public company that has this system for setting up things, and you get your tickets, everything, they cancel you.
And I was going, man, if I had to think of a thing to cancel, and I think it's on women's empowerment.
I mean, it's one of these women's empowerment, you're getting people together, you've got speakers and workshops and all that.
Was this just a technical error?
Adventbrite actually shut down Carrie Sheffield's Women's Empowerment, what, conference?
carrie sheffield
Steve, thanks for having me.
unidentified
And yeah, I am definitely...
carrie sheffield
Not a barn burner type personality, but I feel like even women like me, we have come to our wit's end because we have this company that was founded by a woman who puts out tweets and statements claiming at Eventbrite that they want to empower women, but shutting down our organization's event.
It's happening August 12th.
It's called Let Women Speak.
It's a gathering.
So we have an independent women's network, which is a nationwide network of women all over the country.
I lead our Northern Virginia chapter.
Our Austin chapter was hosting this event.
She posted, the leader posted it on Eventbrite and they were said, take it down.
This violates our hate and violence policies and don't do it again.
This is your warning.
And all this event is, is a place for women to talk about what it means to be a woman and why we feel we are under attack right now when it comes to women's prisons, women's shelters, domestic violence shelters, need I say, women's sports, any place where for centuries now, we as women have been fighting to protect ourselves and having men help us to protect ourselves.
All of that is under attack right now because of these policies and laws that allow, with no questions asked, a biological male to be transferred on a bus to a biological female prison where he can engage in sexual assault and all other forms of just violence against women because the state is sanctioning it.
So we're not okay with this, but apparently Eventbrite is.
steve bannon
Hold it, but so hang on.
So now I got to the buried lead.
There was something here.
And correct me if I'm wrong, because in a number of these speakers or whatever, people want to put forward the issue of this transgender ideology, which allows men that are dressing as women or men that are acting as women to compete in sports and to be in locker rooms and be all these issues.
You were going to address that.
And of course, with the radical transgender ideology, that's totally verboten.
And all of a sudden you are a hate group.
Is that essentially what the issue is?
carrie sheffield
Exactly.
That's exactly what happened, Steve.
And we sent an open letter to Eventbrite.
Our communications director was followed on Twitter by Eventbrite, sent a direct message to them.
We've gotten no response to requests to put the event back up.
And so we actually, if your readers or your viewers want to go and click through on my New York Post website article, I have a link to where you can directly contact the CEO of Eventbrite and ask to get this event put back up.
And look, I'm not, you know, I believe in free and open competition in the marketplace.
But this, I think, is viewpoint discrimination.
I think this crosses the line.
And, you know, we're looking at our options here as far as there is precedence for We're upset.
point discrimination is not supposed to be allowed.
And and then like sexual discrimination that this website is discriminating against us as women.
You're not supposed to discriminate against your consumers based on.
We're upset. And again, if you all want to help us contact the CEO, flood the Flood their email boxes to Eventbrite and say this is not allowed.
Because, again, I know your daughter, Captain Bannon, and you, Steve, you guys get it when it comes to what's happening here with women.
So it's wrong on multiple fronts.
So the assault on women's prisons and sports and shelters, it's wrong constitutionally because under the Equal Protection Clause over the centuries, the courts have recognized that women are biologically distinct from men.
And this completely erodes all of that case law by allowing men to say they are women and the law does not recognize that it hasn't for centuries.
And now all of a sudden you're trying to tell me that through your words you can change things that are immutable, they're scientifically flawed.
So it's law, science, biology and public opinion.
That's the beauty of it, Steve, is that we are in the majority here, and this small cadre of tech CEOs think that they are running the show, but we're proving them wrong.
steve bannon
It's actually deeper than that, though, isn't it?
Because what they're saying, and correct me if I'm wrong here, what they're saying is that you're having this conference about Empowered Women, and you've got certain agenda items, a certain breakout session, a certain speaker, and they're speaking about an issue that's in front of the nation, and it's turned out to be a big issue.
Kind of this radical minority, you know, and particularly impacting young women, because I've seen this, as you know, Mo was a volleyball player, and so many parents, they work forever, these kids just dedicate so much of it, then all of a sudden they're competing against guys.
That even The discussion of this, right?
You're not to the point of a change of law.
You're going to talk about those types of things, but just even having a meeting where you're going to then discuss this in an open forum, maybe debate it and talk about action plans and calls to action, everything like that, that even the meeting itself represents essentially the nucleus of a hate group.
That is when you are on a path to fascism.
And so even regardless of what the topic is, you've got to have Carrie Sheffield's back because if you allow this to happen, And it only takes, I'm telling you, it only takes a couple to allow happen that all of a sudden hotels start cancelling you, people start getting nervous, well hey if I show up and I have a job, they're going to take a photograph of me and I'll be in a hate group.
That's why this has to be combated.
But am I wrong that even the concept that you would bring people together who have an open, free, democratic, Discussion of facts, ideas, opinions would be said that, no, that's verboten.
You cannot do that.
You can't possibly do that.
And if you do that, you're a nucleus of hate, ma'am.
carrie sheffield
Steve, that's a great point.
You're exactly right.
Because that is the next logical step in the progression of repression.
That it starts with repressing speech.
Because that's really what this is.
It's repressing our free speech.
And then the next step is repressing the right to gather, because this is speech about a gathering.
The next step is to repress the actual gathering itself.
And so you're absolutely right. The basic Bill of Rights that outlines our ability to peaceably assemble, we already know those are under assault. We also see it in Canada to the north with the truckers. And I mean, so many during COVID, the Bill of Rights was completely in the US.
thrown in the toilet.
So that's part of why we are making such a stink about this, because it is in the ideology, as we know, this transgender ideology, it is Marxist in nature.
It's just one of the strands of critical theory, which was founded in critical race theory, critical gender theory.
It is a much deeper systemic, if you will, as they like to use that word, threat, because it does seek to undermine the notion of gender, because from their perspective, that is hierarchical, that male and female, that inherently, and sort of the Barbie movie gets into this, which I will not give them my money at this point, but from what I've heard of the reviews, that it sort of plays into this, the same idea that the hierarchy of male and female is that
We're in a patriarchal society, therefore we need to completely disrupt the notion of gender.
It's Marxist in nature.
steve bannon
It goes to critical theory.
American people are just not into this whatsoever, across ethnic lines, across racial lines, across religious lines.
They're taking a radical minority's view on a topic and taking the most radical version of that view, and they're shutting down the vast, overwhelming 80 or 90% of the people and saying, oh, you're participating in hate speech.
I don't think so.
And I don't think we're going to allow you to do that.
And the call to action here, I want to be very specific because the audience, as you know, will put their shoulder to the will in this.
Do we have a number?
What do you want them to do?
Are they supposed to email Eventbrite?
Are they supposed to call Eventbrite?
Tell us what action you would find to be helpful.
carrie sheffield
Yeah, so we do have a website where you can call or directly email the Eventbrite CEO.
And the website we created, it's called unfairlycancelled.com.
Unfairlycancelled.com.
And you can go to the headline there.
It's Eventbrite Bans Let Women Speak Austin event.
If you click on that, go to unfairlycanceled.com and click on that headline.
There is a widget there where you can directly email the CEO and like I said, if we can flood them, if you wanna try calling them also by all means, this is, we need to have our voices heard because you're exactly right.
This is a small, and look, the US, we don't wanna repress a minority.
We don't want to repress anybody.
It's a free country.
People can dress like a woman if they want.
People can dress like a man if they want.
It's a free country.
Exactly.
We're talking about mandates and we're talking about totally restructuring society in ways that pose a physical threat to women.
That's just I mean, that's part of why you had people laid off because of the Anheuser-Busch thing now.
People are losing their jobs because people are not standing for what they did with Dylan Mulvaney and just using women as a costume, as something to be taken off and on.
It goes so much deeper than that.
steve bannon
Kerry Sheffield, I've known you for a long time.
I never thought you'd be called a hater.
You're the exact opposite.
You're one of the nicest people in the world, but that's the world we live in today, and that's why you gotta fight back.
I want, if Captain Bannon and Grace Chong can help me out here, and we're gonna do a little producing on thing, if they can get all this information up and over to Carly Bonet, the people that are all over top of our telegram and all the different chats and rumble and everything, really want people to, because it's very important, Thank you, Steve.
be shut down. And Carrie, I want to thank you and for all the work you did. You're one of the bravest people I know, so you keep fighting. In the world of Rampasi, we'll jump in here. Thank you, Steve. And likewise, keep fighting that good fight. Thank you, Carrie Sheffield.
Wow.
So if Grace and Mo can get that to all the different chat rooms and let's be a force multiply and push that around.
Absolutely outrageous.
Also the New York Post story.
I don't think I've got the New York Post story to my team or whatever, but if we can, the New York Post story on Carrie, if we can get that out also.
Dave Wall.
I backed up a couple things I wanted to talk to you about, but since... So Dave, I just have a question.
I want to start with this.
It's summer.
And people know, we're very familiar, the war room is very familiar with the West.
We're huge, we're lovers of the American West, and we try to spend as much time out in the American West as possible, away from the imperial capital and away from my beloved South.
But you know, having been a boy raised in Virginia and throughout the South, And Dave, I know you're now in Florida and a bunch of our teams from Florida.
It gets hot in the summer, right?
It gets hot.
It gets hot in parts of America in the summer.
Washington DC, perfect example, hot and humid.
Is there anything, because right now they're on a roll.
I mean, it is like heat dome, doom and gloom, all of it.
Is there anything you see particularly different that's what's happening here than simply we're having a hot summer, sir?
dave walsh
No, from a climatological basis, very little difference from normative temperatures.
There have been some very hot periods in Texas and Southwest.
Generally, I think we're up about one degree this summer, which in the vicissitudes of annual weather change is kind of normal.
But here, to point, what's going on now?
BJM, that's the RTO region of 13 states plus the District of Columbia,
Illinois, Indiana, over to Delaware through Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Kentucky, Tennessee, Virginia have announced today declared a level one warning or potential energy shortfall, commanding that all power plants in that whole 13 state region, which comprises about 23% of the country for electricity, go on full out operation tomorrow and Saturday due to the According to the media, scorching heat.
Well, here's the deal.
Across PJM, average temperatures from Chicago over to Philly tomorrow will be 90.5 degrees Fahrenheit for late July, July 28th.
That's pretty normal.
In fact, that's right dead stick landing on normal temperatures for July 28th.
And yet the PJM is running into a problem.
Why is it running into a problem?
In the last six years, they have shuttered 20,000 megawatts of coal-fired power Which run all of the time, 24 hours a day, and displace that with about 4,000 net megawatts of solar and wind.
I say net because it's rating plate 20,000 megawatts.
When you factor down the fact that it only runs solar about 17% of the time in that part of the country, wind operational about 36% of the time, you have a gigantic deficiency in what's been added To replace this 20,000 megawatts of continuous coal-fired power.
That's only going to get worse.
steve bannon
Hang on.
Can we do one thing for a second?
Can we ask Memphis if they have the Zero Hedge article and can put up a map?
And we love maps here in the War Room.
We have a map here, and I want to show that, if we can show the map, because this is 23%, but it is a big hunk of the industrial heartland of the country, right?
I mean, this is it.
dave walsh
Tennessee, West Virginia, Virginia, Kentucky, Indiana, Iowa, Illinois, Delaware, PA, Maryland, Jersey, and North Carolina.
It's a big region.
22% of the U.S.
electrical demand in that region.
And the weather is normal for July.
90.5 degrees on average.
I'm sorry, that's about where it ought to be.
It's not because of the weather.
It's because the system is being tested by normal summer heat because the megawatt production of the system has shrunken because of the addition of part-time renewables that are vastly deficient in the power they produce compared to the coal power that's been taken offline.
Progressively in the last six years and then they're going to do in the next five years another 25,000 megawatts of coal additionally taken offline which is going to exacerbate this problem.
The head of the PJM region has been very outspoken about this and he's under democratic reign of the present DOE that they've got a huge problem with electrical capacity in that whole region going forward because of Too much closure of stuff that runs all the time and being replaced by stuff that runs a very small portion of the time, even though it's environmentally popular.
steve bannon
Right there, if you see that, that's on Zero Hedge, it has that.
I want that map, because that map is pretty shocking.
When this emergency is called for kind of the heartland of the industrial, you know, north or northeast Atlantic area, What can people anticipate?
Because people didn't expect this to happen.
And particularly because I don't think back here, you know, and I've been outside of the time in the Navy in California, basically in New York, D.C., Virginia.
I mean, summers get hot and muggy here.
This does not seem to me to be any more.
I remember I was making films for Dave Bossie, I think in the summer of the Tea Party Revolt of 2010.
It was 2010.
In July, I think they had something like 10 or 15 days over 100 degrees back here with like that 95% humidity.
You couldn't even move.
I mean, that was hot.
I don't see people saying that it's this blow away hot.
Now, parts of the Southwest, et cetera, and Texas are different.
What will people's lives do with this emergency measure on the grid?
Are these going to be rolling brownouts?
Are these going to be blackouts?
How will this impact people's lives?
dave walsh
Well, what they're saying is if all their generating facilities don't run flat out Friday and Saturday, they could run into a periodic brownout, you know, four-hour day rolling brownouts.
Probably not real likely, but they're running the risk of that.
But here's to your point on weather.
The peak day ever in the PJM region for power production was in In July of 2006, when they needed 166,000 megawatts of power produced, we're talking tomorrow 10,000 megawatts less than that.
So this isn't even a historic peak in power usage, but they're worried, and they need to be worried, because over six years, seven years, about 40,000 megawatts, nearly 20% of their capacity that's in place now, is part-time stuff.
And that back in 2006, that wasn't the case.
At that time, your entire generation base was continuous duty, baseload, on-demand.
Again, on-demand means hit the start button, a machine starts, it produces electricity on human command.
Now, with this massive introduction of nature-based renewables that are intermittent and not controlled by mankind when they start and stop, but by nature, you can't rely on a huge gob of the quarter million megawatts of electricity now produced in MISO, in PJM, Because they're renewables and they run only on average about 22% of the day.
And you don't know when that's going to be.
Solar, you do know, it's not going to be there at night and not in the early morning.
The wind is, the vicissitudes of the wind are unpredictable day to day.
So you've displaced continuous duty power from 15 years ago with intermittent power.
That's the problem.
It's not the weather.
The peak day ever was back in 2006.
And everyone knows the period from 1930 to 1942 was intensely hotter than this.
This is not beyond the normal range of temperature modify, you know, modulation over time.
steve bannon
Okay.
I finally got the map.
I want to thank Memphis.
I want to thank my crack team.
Hey, you don't need to show me.
Let's get the map back up.
As soon as they get the map, they cut it away.
Okay, there we go.
Okay, walk me through.
What does that map tell me right there for the TV audience?
And this is why if you're listening on radio or the podcast, you've got to go to warroom.org and get our email every day because we put out all the charts and graphs.
Grace and the team puts out all the charts and graphs that we use so you can get it.
What am I looking at right there, Dave Wall?
dave walsh
Yeah, from Illinois over Delaware, Maryland down to Virginia, that's that's PJM.
That's the interconnection called PJM.
But then Tennessee, North Carolina are also a part of it.
I mean, that's the heart of the nation.
That's 22 percent of the U.S.
electricity consumption and supply.
And that that region, that FERC region has already declared even two months ago that it's got a significant five year out issue with lack of continuous duty generation because of all of the solar and wind that has been built out in place of continuous duty power stations. So that's the heart of the country, including Pennsylvania, which is a large, some of the largest gas fields in the world has the same issue because it's closed down enormous number of coal plants that run all the time.
steve bannon
So we're really looking at it. Don't take it. Yeah. Don't take this.
Well, I want to get to this. Don't and don't take this the wrong way, because I know you're a Florida guy.
It's one thing to have Florida or maybe even before the explosion of Phoenix now as a major tech center.
It's one thing to have Arizona and to have issues in Florida.
There's many good folk there but it's not an industrial power base.
When you talk Texas and when you talk the basically industrial heart or the commercial heart of the nation right here.
All of a sudden, that's a different deal.
We're like, are we a third world country?
You've talked about the grid in Texas has been up for brownouts for the entire summer, and now we're talking about it.
This is a game changer in the fact that that's not the United States, and this is not about a bunch of air conditioning being cut off in the villages in Florida.
God bless the villages.
Out in the Arizona desert, right?
Because Phoenix is getting there, but not there.
But I'm talking Texas, which is a major industrial power now, not just agriculture or only gas, but becoming a major industrial.
And right there, that's the heart of the nation.
That's the heart of the commercial part of the nation.
And you're saying, hey, they're telling us if they don't run at full capacity for the next couple of days, next week, you can start having flat out.
You can start having brownouts.
That's third world.
That's developing nation stuff.
Am I wrong in any of that, Dave Walsh?
dave walsh
Totally correct.
You cannot have an industrialized, developed, economic, robust economic, developed society without full-time, flat-out, 100% of the time available and cost-abundant, cost-effective electricity.
That powers steel plants, mini-mills, car plants, petrochemical facilities, paper mills, aluminum smelters, all server centers, the making of semiconductors, electronic products, all massively dependent on huge quantities of uninterruptible high-quality electricity.
We're running out of that in this country, which winds up deferring heavy manufacturing offshore, because we're increasingly lacking the baseload power to have factories in this country.
And yet we're talking today about the heartland of this country.
Yes, not Florida, but Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Kentucky, Tennessee, where lots of products are made for this country.
A lot of resources, development of aluminum, of steel, car plant manufacturing, just The list goes on of the industrialization that will be imperiled by electricity shortages.
This is happening in Germany substantially already.
South Carolina has been a major recipient of German industrial investment, BASF, BMW, Bayer AG, because, in part, of massively high-cost electricity back in the fatherland, and the abundance and cheapness of it in South Carolina.
Over years, South Carolina has benefited from that.
steve bannon
And now we're shooting at the foot.
And South Carolina's got its own issues.
Hang on, we've got a lot more to get through.
I sent Dave an article from the other day, we kind of backlogged this stuff.
It's a very detailed analysis of what we've talked about.
The Germans, it's now dawning on them that because of their energy policies, they're de-industrializing.
The de-industrialization is, you know, you set the predicate of energy policy, and all of a sudden you're de-industrializing.
That's why we're going to get into this whole thing about the end of fossil fuel, and you've got to stop fossil fuel, and it's got to be over.
We are making policy decisions right now on energy that are going to have a massive impact.
And these are not things you just kind of sit there and go, oh, you know, it's a little hot.
Where's our capacity?
It takes years for that.
Years of capital commitment, capacity building, training, processes, all of it.
Okay, we're gonna take a short commercial break.
Dave Walsh is with us on All Things Energy.
Under President Trump, it used to be full-spectrum energy dominance.
That is pretty simple to understand, complicated to execute, but not if you have the political will and the savvy to do it.
Okay, short commercial break.
We're going to talk about all things energy when we return in the war room.
unidentified
Thank you.
War room battleground with Stephen K. Bannon.
steve bannon
Okay, one of the things we try to do always is make sure that the audience, you're just not the smartest person in the stands at the Little League game or at the backyard barbecue, but in places where it matters, right?
In boardrooms or you're in meetings or in lunches or dinners that count both professionally and personally and for the community for you.
The bricks, the Road to the Durban Accords is in front of us.
22nd to 24 August that takes place in Durban, South Africa.
The BRICS are coming together.
There's now 41, I think, countries signed up to join Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa.
Many of those are making commitments to what they call the BRICS Bank.
The currency may not occur immediately.
But they are working on it and they're going to lay out at least a framework and that is going to have both resource back and it's going to be backed by some type of gold or precious metals.
We hear gold right now.
And it's not going to be convertible into gold.
They can't do that right away.
And this is not going to overtake the dollar immediately, but you see that the global South essentially has had a belly full of the financial irresponsibility of the United States of America.
And then when you hear Dave Walsh, it's just not.
Our financial irresponsibility, it's on ourselves as an industrial power.
You cannot continue to be an industrial power if you do not have an energy policy that lays the foundational element to be an industrial power.
And that's where President Trump, ours was not energy independence.
Ours was full spectrum energy dominant in every sector of energy, including sustainable and renewable.
No problem there, as long as it makes sense and as long as it makes logic.
It doesn't need taxpayer bailouts and basically bailing out the venture capital company.
Go to Birchgold.com slash Bannon right now and make sure you get, we have a summary pricey on everything related to the end of the dollar empire, what's going to happen in Durban, because you should know that, and you should be talking to the Birchgold guys and Philopatria's team about gold as an alternative for your retirement, potentially.
Check it out.
Hey, if the central banks of these countries are buying it with both hands, what do they know that you don't?
And that's the question you should ask, and then you should think about it.
This derbent meeting will not end Bretton Woods, the subject of financial structure post-World War II.
But I will tell you, the Global South have as many smart guys and men and women that went to Harvard and went to Sloan and went to the University of Chicago, and they can work in HP 12C.
They can do discounted cash flows, and they are every bit as bright as everybody in this country.
So just understand, they're not going to have their purchasing power hit by 10% a year.
I think it's 17% since the Biden regime came in.
And Dave Walsh, here's the other thing.
And I know this because I have conversations with people in India and Japan, all over the world, particularly in the anti-CCP movement that I lead.
These people are incredibly rational and focused and the reason is their countries are in the developing process.
It's like America back with the revolutionary generation or back with Presidents Andrew Jackson and Abraham Lincoln.
They don't have the margin of error.
of being stupid.
They don't have the margin of error of being silly or irrational.
They look at us and they can't quite figure out what's going on.
So Dave, it's almost like a cult ideology.
I'm hearing government officials coming on TV and they're saying we've got to end fossil fuel.
The reason we can't do this, we have to end fossil fuel immediately.
And we can't have used fossil fuel after 2025.
They're making these proclamations and making decisions off of it.
What backup?
Is this an insanity or is this some kind of fever that's taken over our elites that they just have this mantra now every night on TV, it's hot, it's the hottest it's ever been?
It's not the hottest it's ever been.
I've been a southern or east coast kid, a kid in the Atlantic forever.
Like you said, it's 90 degrees.
I've seen summers where it's 98 all the time.
You can't move and the humidity is so terrible.
What is going on with our elites?
Because the world elites, and this is what's so important about Durban, they've had a belly full of it.
And a lot of these people are our sworn enemies.
Some of them happen to be our allies and want us to succeed and be the leader of this, but they sit there and look at the irrationality, the irresponsibility on the fiscal side, the irresponsibility on the monetary side, and they look at the exact insanity And I look no farther than Germany, the second or third greatest industrial power in the world that is actively de-industrializing.
Now that is all in these articles, de-industrializing.
Why?
Because of energy policy.
Dave Walsh.
dave walsh
Well, they're de-industrializing because environmental policy in their minds is running everything.
They have no rational energy policy.
And now they're coming to grips with, if you're into this net-zero CO2, anti-CO2 decarbonization thing, you can't have basic steelmaking, you can't have auto-assembly, you can't have petrochemical plants, chemical plants, which by the way has been a big industry in Germany, you can't have any of that.
You can't have aluminum smelting, especially steelmaking, if you're a real net-zero advocate.
And the issue is with the BRICS nations, We mentioned one time on the show, only 13 countries in the world are really in actions, really all over this net zero thing.
The countries in Western Europe and in North America, Canada, the US, New Zealand, Australia, that's it.
The balance of countries, about 180 in number, are all about developing their economies as robustly as they can for the people living in those economies, for developing manufacturing, basic manufacturing, production of durable goods, and a currency that's dependent on
Valuable assets such as commoditized gold, silver, copper, lithium, and also on energy, natural gas, oil, and coal, as the basis of currency value, makes compelling sense, as opposed to dependence on governments who simply print currency and raise taxes incessantly and hope that their currency would somehow remain strong while abandoning manufacturing, which is what's happening in the 13 countries.
So this is a, you know, their view on this isn't going to change.
And to your point, if anyone wants proof of how ludicrous this is, the weather, the ballyhooing about the weather is entirely false.
We've had nine years now of flat global temperatures, according to the National Science Foundation.
And we've also had this binge now of the seeking by these same BRICS nations, in case of some of them, of climate reparations, which really shows what this has been all about.
Wealth transfer, sponsored by the Chinese, to nations who have Feel as though that's yet another way or rationalization to take money out of the West.
Climate reparations.
So these issues prove what this agenda has been all about.
It's not about science.
steve bannon
Hang on.
Use the R word.
Go back.
When you say climate reparations, what do you mean?
They want a transfer.
They're saying that your industrialization process damaged us because it damaged the Earth's systems.
You owe us.
So let's have a wealth transfer.
How does that work?
dave walsh
Well, the United Nations COP 27 environmental conference last year put forward a notional massive wealth transfer over a 10-year period to developing nations damaged by Western Europe, the US, Japan, industrial, last 50 years, carbon damage to them, that China, India, the Sub-Saharan African nations, the South American nations should be paid reparations for the past climate damage caused by the developed West.
And I mean, it's even Venezuela.
Maduro had his hands out at the meetings to Kerry and Macron that he too should participate as a recipient, even though Venezuela has been a four million barrel a day oil exporter forever, that they should participate in receiving climate reparations.
How ludicrous.
You know, this is about wealth transfer.
It's not.
And the fact that our government, present government, supporting this notion, Kerry, under the leadership of Biden, supporting this, And in fact, it helped create the notion to do this.
This is insanity for us.
It's absolute insanity.
But it shows what the real agenda is behind this CO2 thing.
It's about wealth transfer, and it's about diminishing the industrial power and the military power concurrently of the West, vis-a-vis China.
steve bannon
Talk to me about this article I sent you about the Dutch Economist.
I want you to walk through the mechanics of how they're, and when they say the quiet part out loud, because they're quite advanced in their thinking about decarbonizing society or beginning truly this reparation.
dave walsh
Well, they've enacted a corporate carbon credit system among 17 major corporate projects now in law that corporations can trade carbon credits.
Certain carbon credit based on the amount of carbon you emit in your factory operations, making your products, that if you don't use all of that, you can sell it to those companies who created too much carbon.
So they, what had happened is Barbara Barsma, who was the head of the Rabo Carbon Bank and the removed CEO, came out and acknowledged they were way downstream and planning to do the same thing with families.
And that is develop a scheme.
If you're a family of four or whatever in a 1,100 square foot dwelling with one vehicle, you get carbon credits for X per year that if you don't use up, you can sell to wealthy people to offload your carbon responsibility.
And through this basically have the rich feel as though they're subsidizing the poor by buying their carbon credits so that they can continue to emit massive quantities of carbon.
as wealthy folks by buying the credits from the poor.
steve bannon
But it's deeper than that.
I want you to go back and give me a couple of minutes on why they are obsessed with carbon as the control mechanism for society.
Because they're doing it with the corporations and they've got these exchanges to do it.
But she said the quiet part out loud in the fact that, oh, but our real plan is to put it that it's a social credit score for the families.
And yes, they'll have the ability, the wealthy and their great benefiting and philanthropically sourcing these guys will do it.
But the key is that they will have a control mechanism.
To basically control you on a social credit score about your your seriously your family's carbon footprint Why is it carbon?
Why have they chosen carbon as the mechanism to control it?
dave walsh
Well, it becomes a heuristic for measuring social behavior Yes, a social credit score that if you use less carbon drive less have less home heating less home cooling less beef consumption probably in the mix and You then generate the ability to sell unused credits to the wealthy and have the wealthy feel as though they're helping out through this process.
It's really a credit score based on your carbon use, which is a way of control.
Remember, Holland is in the middle of trying to buy out 40% of the family farms in Holland to eliminate the pollution caused by gas created fertilizers, ammonia being the main one that they want to eliminate the use of on farms by buying out 40% of the family farms in that the most productive farming nation in the world for the same reason.
Using this carbon thing as a Rassan to terror of control.
It's about that.
It's not about the environment.
Because these same nations, Western European nations were up in arms over Biden's first Climate Act because the US had jumped ahead of them and even more egregiously aggressive subsidies for decarbonization.
So they became angry over that Imbalance in subsidies, not about the environment.
This is entirely a control mechanism.
steve bannon
Talk to me, this show is about activists, the show is about empowering people, and some people use their agency.
We just had an experience in Rhode Island with Dave Walsh.
Walk us through the whole thing, and what happened, what you represent, and how citizens were able to take action.
dave walsh
Well, Steve, I don't say it enough.
I'm incredibly indebted to you for this forum to talk about real energy issues so publicly.
I had a terrific example that a few weeks ago, I was asked to appear on a radio show in Providence.
Good guy by the name of John Laughlin has a weekend radio show he wanted about seven weeks ago, an analytic on their revolution wind thousand megawatt offshore wind project.
Does it make sense or not make sense?
So I got on, I reminded his audience, hey, You guys are second in the nation with the highest energy cost per capita for electricity.
Hawaii's worst, highest at 45 cents.
New Hampshire, Rhode Island mass tied at about 32 cents a kilowatt hour, more than double the national average.
So you're being egregiously taken advantage of by a wind farm that's only going to produce 420 megawatts of electricity and cost rate payers $3.5 billion to build.
Offshore wind, when you factor the 20 year life of it, compared to nuclear is 40, Is the most expensive source of energy in the world beside conventional nuclear?
It's utterly senseless, particularly because it only works 42% of the time, and the cost of that is nine times higher than building a conventional combined cycle gas-fired plant that recycles its exhaust for 50% more energy.
This stuff is nine, offshore wind, nine times more expensive.
So I claimed to the folks up there, hey, you're being taken advantage of because your rates are so high already The companies like Orsted, European company building this, can come in and tell you they're not going to raise your rates any further, but this is going to reduce rates.
This is not free energy.
This is the most expensive energy in the world when you amortize the cost of an offshore wind farm.
Well, lo and behold, last week, the State Public Service Commission rejected investing in the Revolution Wind Project.
Even to be around talking about it to their citizenry, I think was an important avenue Getting some notoriety on an economic basis.
These projects are utterly senseless, except for the developer who's building them, and going to rape the ratepayers with 31-cent electricity that's part-time, intermittent, and non-operational 58% of the time.
So, apparently that argument resonated, and the project has been declined by the Public Service Commission, on the basis of being too costly.
So, very happy.
But, Steve, without this forum, you've provided And folks hearing it, that kind of audience wouldn't be available to hear the truth about this stuff.
steve bannon
Well, people want information.
They want information in their own lives.
And you do such a great job.
Where on social media do they go to get you, Dave?
Because you've become a game changer.
And I really want to say thanks, everybody in Rhode Island, for allowing Dave Walsh to have that platform up there.
And good things happen.
I'm sure nobody knew any of the details or any of the math about it until you were able to expose it.
And that's what we try to do here.
dave walsh
To your point, people in all parts of the country are willing to hear this.
All parts of the country.
It's rather amazing.
It's not limited here in the Southeast.
And you can find me on Dave Walsh Energy on Truth Social and Getter as well.
Thank you, Steve.
Appreciate it.
steve bannon
Dave Walsh, thank you very much.
Breaking news, my staff has just handed me that two more, President Trump has been charged with two more, I guess, major felonies by Jack Smith in the Mar-a-Lago case.
Uh, and this has been charged with deleting security footage, quote, Daily Mail's lead story, Trump wanted the server wiped.
All types of information about this.
So we'll get more into this tomorrow morning at 10 o'clock.
We're going to have quite a show tomorrow.
We're going to have, uh, Liz Wheeler.
Remember Liz as an anchor, I think over at One America's Voice Readers, just incredibly, uh, I got her own site, uh, just an incredible news person.
We have Alex Jones.
Alex is going to walk through both, um, what's happening.
He was shocked by this hearing.
He's going to give his own take on it.
And some new information he's come up with, also talking about his book, The Great Awakening.
Nancy Mace is also going to join us with what's going on, and I'm sure it's going to be the firestorm around the president's, the law firm against the president.
But also, she has some brutally tough questions, got some shocking answers about non-human biologics, all of it.
Nancy Mace is going to be here to join us.
And Rudy Giuliani, Rudy's going to finally get a chance to walk through What's really happened in this Georgia situation, according to Rudy and others around him, it's a big misinterpretation.
He wants to make sure the record's set straight and we always have time.
Rudy Giuliani.
So back here at 10 o'clock tomorrow morning.
Make sure home title lock.
I do not want anybody having one of these bad guys in cyber all of a sudden take your Take your title, take a second mortgage out on it with a hard money lender at high interest rates, and then you got to pay it back.
That would be a shot below the waterline for most of the nation.
Make sure it doesn't happen.
HomeTitleLock.com.
Go check it out.
And make sure you go visit the events here.
We're on the Lindell network for the six o'clock show.
Mike Lindell, Lindell events for the 16th and 17th.
We want everybody to be watching this online and we want everybody to push it as a force multiplier.
Mike's going to walk through the plan and obviously that's getting to be pretty contentious so we want everybody there.
10 o'clock tomorrow, the show in the morning.
I keep admitting to you it's going to be on fire.
Plus this weekend we're going to have an incredible show that we're working on right now.
unidentified
Okay.
steve bannon
Leave you with one of the great songs of the sea.
We'll see you tomorrow morning in The Worm, Vinny.
unidentified
I thought I heard the old man say, Leave her, Johnny, leave her.
Oh, tomorrow you will get your pay, And it's time for us to leave her.
Leave her, Johnny, leave her.
Oh, leave her, Johnny, leave her.
All the voyage is done and the winds don't blow.
And it's time for us to leave her.
The winds blew foul and the seas run high.
Leave her, Johnny, leave her.
We shipped them green, and none went by, and it's time for us to leave her.
Leave her, Johnny, leave her!
Oh, leave her, Johnny, leave her!
All the voyage is done, and the wind It's time for us to leave her.
The mate was a bucko and the old man a Turk.
Leave her, Johnny, leave her.
And the bosun was a beggar with a middle name of work.
And it's time for us to leave her.
Leave her, Johnny, leave her.
Oh, leave her, Johnny, leave her!
All the voyage is done, and the winds don't blow, and it's time for us to leave her.
The old man swears, and the mate swears too.
Leave her, Johnny, leave her!
The crew all swear, and so would you.
And it's time for us to leave her.
Leave her, Johnny, leave her.
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