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unidentified
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When they are both on earth, Of all the trees that are in the wood, The holly bears the crown. | |
the rising of the sun, and the running of the deer, the playing of the merry organ, singing in the choir. | ||
The holly bears a blossom as white as the lily flower, and Mary, Lord's first, she decides to be our spring Savior. | ||
The rising of the sun, and the running of the deer, the playing of the merry organ, sweet singing in the choir. | ||
Friday, 22 December, the year of our Lord, 2023. | ||
Ben Hardenberg of Jernsey from Rome. | ||
Ben, I think I've got a new benchmark. | ||
You and Raheem and Brett inspired me yesterday. | ||
It's a discussion of music because we spend so much time on the nitty gritty and the kind of down in the trenches. | ||
Politics, geopolitics, finance, capital markets, all of that. | ||
America will be great again when we have the confidence as a civilization and a culture to write music like that and to have young people trained in their formation to be able to sing music like that. | ||
That's, and hey, that ain't gonna happen overnight. | ||
That's the struggle we got. | ||
When we got, it's just not the economy, it's just not the politics, it's just not MAGA getting Trump back in. | ||
When I say make America great again, I mean as the civilization and the culture that we once had, right? | ||
That is, modernity has destroyed it. | ||
Ben Harnwell. | ||
Steve, that's absolutely right. | ||
Look, this is something I think particular about the Judeo-Christian Christian tradition. | ||
You go back to Leviticus in the Old Testament, it has like one, I mean it is, I hesitate to use the word repetitive when talking about Holy Scripture, but all of the ordinances about how God wants to be worshipped via temple worship, by their sacrifices, | ||
It's peculiar, I think, in the Judeo-Christian tradition that how we worship, how we adore God is intimately integrated with how we love God, right? | ||
It's all there together. | ||
So what better way of introducing somebody to Christianity than show them the great The works of genius, the great inspirations, the best forms of artwork that mankind has ever produced, when that's lifted up and offered to worshipping and adoring God, like in these just simple Christmas carols, Steve. | ||
As I mentioned yesterday, when these things were written, these weren't efforts of high culture. | ||
This was popular culture. | ||
It's high culture to us today because we've fallen so far. | ||
But that's probably because the faith in Jesus Christ has diminished from our society. | ||
As we recede from active Christian belief, we inevitably become more animalistic and, you know, just look at what we produce as art forms. | ||
of contemporary society and compare it to these glories of the past. | ||
And that's, I think, a great illustration. | ||
But I do think that the great Judeo-Christian tradition in terms of art is a fantastic way of introducing people to the transcendent and then via the transcendent to God himself, who is transcendent. | ||
Steve, you know, just in the last segment I was talking about how useless the European People's Party is and no one should trust in them. | ||
Well, lo and behold, there's a great example of this coming from Germany and the Christian Democratic Union, which is the EPP iteration for Germany, has a member of parliament called Roderick Kiesewetter. | ||
And he has said that the 200,000 Ukrainian refugees presently in Germany, presently taking benefits as well, they ought to have those benefits stripped from them unless they are prepared to go back to Ukraine and fight on the front line. | ||
I think, Steve, this needs to be seen in the story that we've been discussing the last few days, that President Zelensky has said that his ambition for 2024 is to recruit 500,000 fantasy troops to bolster the war effort. | ||
And where are they going to get those from? | ||
Well, from, I think, 768,000, according to the European Union. | ||
768,000 18 to 64-year-olds across the Union. | ||
And this is obviously a part of that in Germany. | ||
I can't mention this because I pushed it out on Getter. | ||
I can't mention this development without saying, warning Americans, that you are going to get fleeced over this. | ||
This is a fleecing operation. | ||
These 500,000, no one is voluntarily going to return to the front line in Ukraine. | ||
Not a single person. | ||
Why has Zelensky said this? | ||
Well, the reason is because he said in order to affect this draft, he needs 13.5 Billion dollars in order to get these 500,000 people to return from abroad to fight on the front lines. | ||
That's a heck of a lot of money. | ||
I've done the maths, Steve. | ||
That's $27,000 per potential combatant. | ||
And put that into perspective, please, that the average yearly wage in Ukraine is $7,500, right? | ||
This is a fleecing operation. | ||
Americans beware, right? | ||
You'll see Biden asking for this $13.5 billion soon in order to help the Ukrainian effort. | ||
It's not true. | ||
And this situation here in Germany, I think, is just part of the mood music, part of the the Christian Democratic Central Right in Europe playing the game without really wanting to see serious change effect. | ||
That's my social media platform of choice. | ||
Simply, this is my surname there at the bottom of the screen. | ||
Harnwell. | ||
That's where I am. | ||
At Harnwell on Getter. | ||
Thanks so much, Steve. | ||
God bless. | ||
And if I'm not on the show tomorrow, have a great Christmas. | ||
Thank you, brother. | ||
In fact, we've got our Christmas Eve special. | ||
We're doing it a day early because Real America's Always Celebrating takes off Sunday, the Sabbath. | ||
We have the Noah Benjamin prayer hour up every Sunday, but the rest of the team is off. | ||
We're going to be doing some specials, but we're up every day. | ||
Just come to your same time in the morning from 10 to noon. | ||
We'll be up with original shows, new shows, giving you the news that you need over the holidays. | ||
Look, it's such an intense period for news and what's happening, and particularly in the fight to take our country back. | ||
No days off, right? | ||
You know, Jace Medical, somebody mentioned today, somebody might be a little under the weather. | ||
Now it's time for you to make sure they can't jump up on you, particularly when you need those generic drugs and the active pharmaceutical ingredients that are in them. | ||
The Chinese Communist Party has totally tied up the supply chain. | ||
Biden's trying to write some executive order to plead with them to let it go. | ||
But whether it's an emergency or the CCP and unrestricted warfare, you cannot be held captive by those folks. | ||
Just go to Jace Medical. | ||
They built an entire business around freeing you from the clutches of the Chinese Communist Party. | ||
What you gotta do is go to the website, immerse yourself, find out what they've got to offer. | ||
They've got tons of medical staff and consultants that can answer all your questions. | ||
We know this. | ||
Once you go to Jace Medical, you will become a customer slash patient of Jace Medical. | ||
Jacemedical.com. | ||
So go check it out today. | ||
Dr. Sean and the team have done an incredible job of taking Rosemary Gibson's book that she wrote and turning it into a business that serves you. | ||
So go check it out. | ||
Joe Allen. | ||
First off, Joe, you've been traveling the country. | ||
I know you said the other day what you found out going around and talking to MAGA audiences. | ||
Do people, because you've got an update here on a breaking news story that I think is very important. | ||
I talked to an individual, in fact he was a black guy that was at AmFest and came up to me and wanted to talk specifically about artificial intelligence and particularly about transhumanism, saying that he didn't think, and he knew our show or was familiar somewhat with our show covering it, but didn't think that transhumanism, the entire package, the convergence on the singularity, was being covered enough by, forget | ||
Mainstream media, but it was only focused somewhat in in the in the esoteric segments of Tech the tech world, but it really wasn't covered at all in conservative media Did you find that out also and going around country talking to people because look of everything is going on and we talked about returning to our former greatness The one thing we have to remember is that one of the biggest underlying | ||
unidentified
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Forces in the modern world is this drive to go beyond homo sapien to go to homo sapien 2.0 your thoughts, sir You know Steve my trip around the country is it was enlightening on so many different levels Absolutely people talked about how we are one of the few that brings it up at all let alone covers transhumanism and extreme tech at length probably the most | |
Enlivening and encouraging experiences I've had where all the people who have taken the time to do the research, they're not freaking out and running around with their hair on fire, but they're also taking very seriously the massive, civilizational transformation happening around us. | ||
And I think that, like myself and like yourself, they see this transformation not as an enhancement, but as a process by which we are leaving behind what is most important in humanity and moving towards something that is Dubbed Humanity 2.0, but is in fact some kind of degradation. | ||
It's something that is barely human at all whenever you look at the end goal. | ||
So, you know, probably the most impressive people that I met were those people who really, like I say, they've dug into it and they want to find solutions to it. | ||
They want to make sure that kids in schools are not hyper-digitized. | ||
They want to make sure that the corporations that they work for or that they own don't turn people into robots, basically. | ||
You know, programmed by the algorithm like Amazon workers. | ||
And they really are pretty nervous about the kind of reckless talk out of the Department of Defense from Eric Schmidt, from Marc Andreessen, where they're pushing forward the idea that killer robots, that You know, machines that are programmed to find targets and kill on sight, that this is, without a doubt, a move towards something like Armageddon. | ||
But again, you would think that people would be just completely freaked out. | ||
What I find more and more is that our coverage has, in some way, if not desensitized them, allowed them to really think these things through calmly. | ||
Now the one thing I also don't want to, and I know you want to talk about, we got phones to talk about and other things, so maybe I'll hold you through the break to do that. | ||
One thing I want to make sure we don't take our eye off is there's been so much emphasis on artificial intelligence since Chad GBT came to Davos, the Davos man, last January. | ||
We're coming up on the first year of that. | ||
But underneath, and particularly in the research labs, when I say the singularity, I mean the convergence of regenerative robotics, artificial general intelligence, advanced chip design, quantum computing, biotechnology, CRISPR. | ||
It's the convergence of all those forces. | ||
That gets you to the singularity, not just one. | ||
It's a convergence of all those. | ||
Now, when I mentioned those industries right there are those sectors that was they were the top five or six, the top five or six that made in China 2025 when she and the Chinese decided to revolutionize their manufacturing base. | ||
Just so happens those are the top five or top six. | ||
areas they want to dominate by 2025. | ||
The Chinese Communist Party, these brothers think it through. | ||
Don't think that we don't have big enemies. | ||
We have the biggest, toughest, meanest, most depraved enemies in the history of this world. | ||
Okay? | ||
And these people are very smart. | ||
Don't think our enemies are dumb. | ||
People say, oh, they're so stupid. | ||
They're evil. | ||
And they, uh, and they have horrible plans for humanity. | ||
You see how they treat Lao Bai Jing. | ||
You see how they treat Lao Bai Jing. | ||
But when you look at this, and this is one thing about artificial intelligence, which we have covered extensively here because of the advances it's made and the way it's already been dropped into our society, everyday society, and had tremendous changes already. | ||
Changes that people don't even understand or realize right now. | ||
But don't take your eye off on all the singularity, the convergence of that, and that will be the most fundamental change in mankind's history, right? | ||
From made in the image and likeness of God, right? | ||
Homo sapien to, boom, Homo sapien plus, and that is very close to being upon us. | ||
Okay, short commercial break. | ||
Joe Allen's back from his journeys. | ||
we're going to talk about cell phones and youth next in the War Room. | ||
unidentified
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So, I'm going to talk about the war room. | |
That smartphones are a phenomenon that are just about 10-15 years old. | ||
So, it's really difficult to be incredibly sure that we're going to have a future where we're going to have a future where we're going to have a future where we're going to have a future where we're going to have a future where we're going to have a future where we're So it's really difficult to be incredibly sure. | ||
about the effects of a novel phenomenon. | ||
That said, I think it's worth thinking about two different mechanisms here. | ||
The first mechanism relates to student learning, and that's the mere fact of distraction. | ||
We are distracted by our phones, and there was lots of research that suggests that brain drain effect, the mere presence, even of a locked phone on a table in front of us, in our pockets, can almost like slurp our attention from us, and our attention from what we should be paying focus to, whether it's someone that we're talking to, or a teacher that we're trying to learn from. | ||
There's another mechanism, though, that you mentioned. | ||
You know, we're talking about both the decline of student achievement and the rise of anxiety. | ||
The mechanism, I think, that's causing the rise of anxiety relates not to the mere presence of the phone, but rather to social media. | ||
I don't think that teenage minds, which are exquisitely sensitive to the judgment of peers, should be hooked up to a device whereby they can read the anonymous judgment of thousands, if not millions, of their peers. | ||
I don't think that's good for social comparison. | ||
I don't think it's good for confidence. | ||
I don't think it's good for development. | ||
So I think when we're talking about phones, it's important to be clear about two things. | ||
Number one, we're not entirely sure what's going on here. | ||
It's a novel phenomenon. | ||
And number two, we should be clear about what mechanisms we're talking about when we're looking at the independent variable here. | ||
Are we talking about anxiety or are we talking about student achievement? | ||
Yeah, my grandkids come across other information on their phones that's not related to the subject. | ||
I could play, it's actually something that was quite smart on MSNBC. | ||
I know that's hard to believe. | ||
Joe Allen, talk to me about the smartphones. | ||
And far be it from me, Who use, you know, three or four of these things constantly to kind of make sure that we're ahead of stuff. | ||
Um, to criticize here, but they are, uh, they've had a definite change in human behavior. | ||
I can tell you, and I say this all the time because I, you know, folks know I read a lot books, uh, but I got to find that time more and more. | ||
And I find myself having to find that time, which in the old days, I didn't have to. | ||
I can also tell you, particularly with young people, There is not the focused attention there has been in the past, and particularly being able to read books and hold the arguments of what a book has. | ||
And I think what was so impressive there is the guy saying, hey, this is the first 15 years of this thing. | ||
This is still quite a novel and new device, and we have no earthy idea where this is going to head. | ||
But I tell you, some of the trends that we've seen, Joe Allen, are not good. | ||
Your thoughts and observations? | ||
unidentified
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Yeah, for once, Steve, the Atlantic has returned to their former glory. | |
They're actually reporting things honestly and intelligently. | ||
That was Derek Thompson, and his new article in The Atlantic, it looks like phones are making students dumber. | ||
It builds off of the work of Gene Twinge, a psychologist who spent a lot of time looking at the negative effects of technology on children, adults, But especially children, and also Jonathan Haidt, the social psychologist, who, as far as middle-of-the-road ideologues go, I think that he is among the more impressive. | ||
Both of them suggest that students should never be able to use smartphones in schools, that they should ban them from schools. | ||
And they encourage parents to take them away from their children, to only let them use it At, you know, specific times in the day, sort of like responsible parents used to do with television back in the old days. | ||
You know, just from observing kids these days, so to speak, to sound like a grumpy old man, just from observing kids these days, it's clear that they are basically human smartphone symbiotes. | ||
They literally live half their life or most of their lives on their devices, and it's making them, as you just said, it's making them unable to really follow long-form arguments in articles, let alone books, and it also has a lot of negative effects on their mental health. | ||
So, as they're watching all of their friends, you know, have fun, or if they're trying to keep up with the Joneses, so to speak, in the social media environment, it's making them kind of nuts. | ||
Probably the most disturbing finding that Derek Thompson brings up in this article, though, is that the PISA test, the Program for International Student Assessment, that, you know, this test has been in use for 20 years now. | ||
And American children have scored the lowest that they ever have this year. | ||
There are a lot of different reasons. | ||
The, you know, lockdowns and kids being pulled out of school. | ||
Slow down, slow down, slow down, slow down. | ||
Hit rewind on that. | ||
Tell people why that's important. | ||
Because this is a shocking number, but go back and hit that number again. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah, you know, the big issue is that you could blame it on lockdowns. | |
The PISA test, right? | ||
The Program for International Student Assessment. | ||
This PISA test is kind of the gold standard across the world for judging where kids are at academically, both in language, mathematics, knowledge of history, so on and so forth. | ||
American students have scored the lowest that they have ever in the 20 years this test has been applied, and I think that Derek Thompson at The Atlantic is correct when he points out the various angles of research that indicate that it's mostly due to digital immersion. | ||
Kids just literally sit and scroll through Facebook or Twitter or whatever they're looking at these days rather than reading, rather than learning to do arithmetic or higher mathematics. | ||
It's just, it has completely devastated them. | ||
That's on top of the mental health issues. | ||
Abigail Schreier, who wrote, I believe it's called Irreversible Damage, points out that smartphones, among the other mental health issues that is causing children, smartphones are the primary vector for kids becoming transgender. | ||
It's pretty much the... | ||
This identification with digital selves online and digital groups online that is driving this whole, like, child transitioning phenomenon. | ||
So, I mean, all together, Steve, I would say that, yeah, phones should be banned from schools, parents should keep them from their kids, but I think that the smartphone should be viewed like you would view a chunk of uranium or plutonium or maybe a feral animal. | ||
And to the extent that you have one around, it should be kept as far away as possible. | ||
But, you know, like you say, you know, to keep up in a modern society as we are... Hang on, slow down. | ||
What evidence do you bring to show that... It's a pretty harsh statement, because they're ubiquitous now, right? | ||
I mean, we go to these... I went to the Casa Grande, the Cowboy Church, or AmFest. | ||
And it's just not kids, but you have a big part of our audience that are 50, 60, 70 years old. | ||
Not only on the smartphone, it's one of the ways that they've become so smart and have been so empowered. | ||
Right? | ||
So I'm not arguing they're not lethal, but go back and just give me the evidence first about children in that time of what we call formation. | ||
When it's character formation, the formation of them as people. | ||
What's the argument against these for that? | ||
Let's do that first and we'll do it overall. | ||
unidentified
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Like I said, the two primary arguments are the increase in mental health disorders among children where the digital environment seems to be a major factor or the primary factor. | |
That includes depression from the kinds of bullying online and the desire to keep up with peers. | ||
But as far as academics go, there's one study in particular that Derek Thompson points to They looked at the amount of time kids spent on phones vis-a-vis their test scores, and what they found was that children who spent a simple hour, one hour of leisure time on their phone, scored 50 points higher in mathematics than those who spent five or more hours on their phone. | ||
And this was, you know, they adjusted for many other factors in this study. | ||
There are other studies very similar to this, but it's pretty clear, both from a common sense perspective, but also from the hard data, that the digitization of the American mind has led to an inability to reason, an inability to maintain a kind of inner peace or well-being, | ||
And I would say that it's also a primary vector for the kinds of bizarre, large-scale brainwashing campaigns that we've seen in the last three years, but pretty much all of our lives. | ||
Once you have attached someone to their phone, you're able to manipulate them that much more easily. | ||
Do you think this is also could be attributed to the drop in actual people going to, not believing in Christianity, but actually going and participating in some sort of church activity, whether it's mainstream Protestant or mainstream Catholic or traditional Catholic or evangelical? | ||
Do you think it's tied to that also? | ||
unidentified
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You know, I wish I had the study right on hand. | |
There's multiple studies, but there's one landmark study showing that the Internet, that people's access to the Internet reduces religiosity by multiple factors. | ||
It's pretty clear that for whatever reason, and I have a number of assumptions, but for whatever reason, as people become hyper digitized in their lives, they become less and less religious. | ||
One of the reasons would be that, you know, the internet is kind of full of Reddit tier atheism. | ||
But another reason is that a lot of the social satisfaction and the philosophical attainment, and even just the religious connection one feels with holy texts, that as one digitizes themselves, as they become immersed in the internet, that need is no longer there. | ||
It's sort of like people who eat opiates and no longer need their endorphins, or their endorphins stop working. | ||
I think that's a fairly decent analogy. | ||
Basically, the internet functions as a cheap, aesthetically unappealing, and yet very effective replacement for religious life. | ||
Hang on for one second, Jerome. | ||
I'll just hold you through. | ||
I want to make sure people can get to all your content. | ||
We're going to go out with some music of the season, and we're going to come back into the War Room in just a moment. | ||
unidentified
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Snow, oh, snow. Snow that's falling, snow, snow, snow, snow. | |
Spin the leafy winter, oh. Our garden cannot hold him, nor the rest of stay. | ||
And day by day, when they are most under, all the trees that are in the woods, the holly bears come. | ||
You know our mandate now to make America great again, which we're going to hold ourselves to that, so we have decades to go. | ||
Somebody says, oh no, no, no, is this going to be Trump getting back in? | ||
No, no, no, no, no. | ||
President Trump gets back in office, that's when the work starts. | ||
Remember, to get there, he's got to stay out of prison for 700 years, make sure they don't steal his business, make sure that they have him back on the ballot in these states. | ||
The greatest act of political courage in the history of this country, and there have been some significant acts of political courage, is Donald Trump doing what he's doing now. | ||
Very simple. | ||
If he had just gone back and been a good little boy after they stole the election from him, after he got 74 million votes and they stole the election from him, overnight, you saw how they did it, Raheem Kassamah, we get Raheem on the afternoon show. | ||
We didn't have time to get into at the Cowboy Church the other night. | ||
But Raheem and Bill McGinley did in the summer of 2020 to go through how Mark Elias and these demons told you to your face. | ||
And we were around and all over that. | ||
Now, I'm not so sure the campaign back in those days listened. | ||
You win the deal, you gotta close the deal. | ||
I come out of an investment banking, a brutal investment banking world, that's just not enough to get the deal, is that you gotta close. | ||
If you don't close, it doesn't matter. | ||
That's the world Trump comes out of. | ||
He's a closer. | ||
Remember, I used to say this all the time in 16. | ||
Hillary Clinton was putting together a new coalition. | ||
The Clintons had dined off white working class forever, down in Arkansas, and then when they ran for president. | ||
Because people didn't know back then, and they could spin and lie. | ||
He went from New Hampshire, the whole thing, just one Clinton-esque lie after the other. | ||
They're the biggest part of the administrative state and the deep state. | ||
I saw that from the Clinton Global Initiative. | ||
That's why I made the movie Clinton Cash. | ||
That's why I was selected. | ||
I was selected to come into the campaign and, you know, a hundred days ago and they're down so many points. | ||
Why? | ||
Because I had professionally over the last couple of years perfected at Breitbart and with Peter Schweitzer and others in my great filmmaking team to hammer the Clintons. | ||
To hammer the Clintons. | ||
And now we're in a situation and back then we won and we closed. | ||
That's the difference. | ||
We won and we closed. | ||
We had lawyers, you know, Don McGann. | ||
I realized Don McGann later. | ||
Had a falling out with Trump, but on that campaign, we were ready to go that night. | ||
Ready to go, ready to file papers, people ready to go. | ||
In there, lawyers, boom. | ||
Because, hey, what we won Michigan was, it was 10,000 in Michigan, 20,000 in Wisconsin, the reverse cut 40,000 in Pennsylvania. | ||
Kind of the reverse of what Biden did. | ||
Remember, with all the stealing, they just won by 70,000 votes, and they stole it. | ||
Now, I'm not a machine guy, although I've become much more Informed the machines because of the work of Mike Lindell and Dave Clements and others I'm still a mail-in ballot guy because I think you can show Democracy they did it that way, but I'm open to the other arguments and these guys have done Incredible work and we understand now with the machines have got to go That's no hit on Dominion or these other companies. | ||
It's just we got to get back to paper ballots we got to get back to I think the same day voting and and you know John funds written that whole all those books about how they've totally I Taking the election process and turn it into like a summer camp. | ||
Takes forever. | ||
But the transition integrity project, they told us right then it was going to take weeks. | ||
Ballots were going to come in late. | ||
They could come in and be marked weeks late. | ||
They were going to be able to count in places like Pennsylvania and Georgia and Wisconsin. | ||
No, we're never going to back off that. | ||
And people should understand. | ||
When we win, we're going to go back into all that. | ||
And people say, well, you can't say that. | ||
All is about the future. | ||
You can't have a future in this country until you get to the railhead of a stolen election. | ||
Why do you think we have an invasion on our southern border? | ||
Why do you think you have a complete collapse? | ||
You just heard Joe Allen said they're giving the stats coming out of the education system that we've put more money in than ever, the tax on the American family, this buying into this radical French idea of modern monetary theory, which is where we are. | ||
You can print money forever and it doesn't matter. | ||
It doesn't matter because the people that have the least voice and the least political power. | ||
Are the ones crushed by it, by the interest rates, the credit cards, all that? | ||
Right? | ||
Listen to the voice of the new Patrick Henry, that black man that stood up in front of the Chicago City Council and laid it out in less than two minutes, made the perfect case for Donald Trump and the return of Donald Trump, an African-American man. | ||
I don't know if he's a Trump supporter, never voted for Trump, but he called out the corrupt, incompetent. | ||
Leaders of Chicago, and how they're destroying the black community with this invasion. | ||
And that cry for help, he says, how did these rules even get up there? | ||
How do working class people with just barely being able to hang on and work all the time, how are they supposed to know what's going on? | ||
How are they supposed to get access to it? | ||
You do it all behind closed doors. | ||
You do it such legal gobbledygook or, you know, social justice worry gobbledygook. | ||
Nobody can understand it. | ||
That's his main point. | ||
He's saying that we're just working class stiffs, but we know one thing. | ||
We know you're destroying our community. | ||
That's his tectonic plate shift in politics today. | ||
That's why you're the vanguard. | ||
I said this at AmFest and at the Cowboy Church the other night. | ||
You're the revolutionary vanguard. | ||
You're just like Sam Adams, John Hancock, John Adams, these fire breathers that were part of the Boston Tea Party. | ||
And led the revolutionary movement, right? | ||
The Boston Tea Party happened 250 years ago last Saturday. | ||
The shots at Concord in Lexington were 15 months later. | ||
You don't think these brothers knew there was a war coming? | ||
You don't think these brothers knew that the British Authority, the established order, was going to sit there and go, are you crazy? | ||
You think we're going to just let you split off of what we're building to be the biggest global empire in mankind's history that will compare to the Roman Empire? | ||
This is in the mid-18th century? | ||
No! | ||
unidentified
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No! | |
We're not going to do that. | ||
We have the most powerful navy in the world. | ||
We have a pretty good army. | ||
And where we don't have the manpower, we're going to get the Hessians to come over. | ||
We'll go through all that on Christmas Day. | ||
Why every year do we take Christmas Day to talk about the combat history of Christmas? | ||
Because it talks about, even in the holiest time of the year, the time of year with family and friends. | ||
And in the celebration of the birth of Jesus Christ, that we talk about Bastogne, and we talk about the Choson Reservoir, and we talk about particularly about Trenton on the night. | ||
Because remember, the Christmas of 1776 was six months after July 4th. | ||
Everybody's out with July 4th and the Declaration of Independence is great. | ||
Declaration of Independence is a divinely inspired document. | ||
Divinely inspired. | ||
But it's a bunch of smart lawyers and thinkers that put it together. | ||
Hey, For it to have power, and the reason it has power today, because average schmoes fought like hell and would not surrender. | ||
You've got to remember, when the British Expeditionary Force landed from late July and August of 1776 until Christmas night of 1776, there was nothing but defeat. | ||
Courage, the American Thermopylae, In Brooklyn, the American Dunkirk at the Brooklyn Bridge. | ||
One escaped after the other, but we were run out of from Long Island to Manhattan, all the way from New Jersey to cross the Delaware back into Pennsylvania. | ||
We lost everything, every major battle or driven back for six months. | ||
Until with everything on the line, we did a roll of the dice in one on Christmas night. | ||
So just remember, we've had gloomy times before. | ||
We've had cloudy days, not unclouded days, many times in the history of this republic. | ||
Joe, where do people get you, brother? | ||
Thank you for doing this. | ||
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Absolutely Steve and a big Merry Christmas to the posse and also I just want to give a shout out and a big thank you to all the people who gave me such, showed me such hospitality. | |
It was 13 cities, six weeks, just Really, really wonderful people all around, so the fellowship is much appreciated. | ||
You can find me at J-O-E-B-O-T at Gitter and Twitter. | ||
You can find me at warroom.org under the Transhumanism tab, and you can find the book, Dark Aeon, Transhumanism and the War Against Humanity, Anywhere books are sold, if you want to see how far they plan to push this mass digitization, if you want to see the religious underpinnings, and if you want to get some sense of how to stop it and solve it, that's the book for you. | ||
So again, Merry Christmas to the War Room Posse, and thank you very much, Steve. | ||
I always keep one in hand. | ||
By the way, we're going to send you out at the beginning of the year. | ||
We got to get you back on the road. | ||
I think you're more productive on the road because he both writes and he meets people. | ||
So anyway, Joe, Merry Christmas. | ||
Thank you for coming on. | ||
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Thank you, Steve. | |
Brody for life. | ||
Brody for life. | ||
Back to his previous gig. | ||
Warpath, as people tell, I'm a Ted under the weather. | ||
That always happens when I do those big The AmFest and things like that, right? | ||
I'm just, uh, I guess the system's just not up to being that robust. | ||
We'll get it better. | ||
Uh, Warpath Coffee. | ||
You gotta get jacked in the morning, particularly morning like this morning. | ||
Warpath.coffee slash War Room. | ||
Go get it. | ||
Make yourself a big pot. | ||
Cut off your cell phone. | ||
In fact, go get the End of the Dollar Empire from birchgold.com slash Bannon. | ||
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And over the Christmas holidays, just read it. | |
Read it. | ||
Start to finish. | ||
That's your homework assignment. | ||
Read the whole thing. | ||
I got a fifth one coming out. | ||
With Philip Patrick and the team's gonna blow your head up. | ||
But just read it. | ||
And think. | ||
Cut the phone off. | ||
Cut the TV off. | ||
Cut it all off. | ||
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Send the kids outside to play in the snow. | |
Then your mom used to do it. | ||
Get out. | ||
Get your brother and get out of here. | ||
Get out in the snow. | ||
Do it. | ||
Warpath Coffee and Birch Gold take a big pot of black coffee. | ||
My favorite is the Mariner's Blend, the dark roast. | ||
We've taken the acid out, so you're going to enjoy it. | ||
But they've got all kinds of mild roasts. | ||
They've got flavors for the holidays. | ||
Go check it out! | ||
Mike Lindell, how are we doing on the factory floor, brother? | ||
By the way, big article on Reuters, your big ol' mug is the lead. | ||
I put it up on Getter. | ||
Reuters is talking about all the allies of Trump that they've come to destroy because of standing up for free and fair elections. | ||
Your big ugly face is the number one, and they got a whole section on Mike Lindell. | ||
Mike Lindell this, Mike Lindell that. | ||
You're a bad guy, conservative Reuters. | ||
You're out of control. | ||
What do you have to say, sir? | ||
Well, that's why they've been attacking me since August, where they turned it up about tenfold, because we do have a great plan to secure our elections. | ||
And as this rolls into January, I encourage all of you out there, we put it all in one place now, LyndalePlan.com. | ||
Check it out. | ||
We have the new movie by Professor Clemens there, Let My People Go, but they're so afraid that we're going to secure our elections. | ||
And get to paper ballots hand-counted in every county in this country. | ||
That's what they fear. | ||
That's why they tried to destroy my pillow, thinking that would destroy me from talking. | ||
Well, they were wrong. | ||
Number one, they didn't destroy my pillow. | ||
And number two, I'll never stop talking and never stop fighting for our great country. | ||
I want to tell everyone we're doing something really special for all of you at the War Room Posse for Christmas now. | ||
Uh, what we're doing is I put up the gift cards, uh, the MyPillow gift cards. | ||
If you, uh, if you forgot or you, uh, you're going, I can't get the gift in time. | ||
Uh, if you go to our website, go to the War Room Square, we're going to extend the free shipping too. | ||
So you can get yourself a great gift, get yourself the bed or the toppers or those flannel sheets. | ||
But get those digital gift cards. | ||
They'll come to you right away. | ||
There they are. | ||
You see it on the left there. | ||
I'm wearing that Santa hat. | ||
And this is for the War Room Posse. | ||
Free shipping on your entire order. | ||
We're going to extend that. | ||
So when you're sitting around Christmas and you give away these gift cards, you say, hey, you know what? | ||
You use the promo code WARROOM. | ||
free shipping on your entire order. | ||
And you can get the down comforter 60% off. | ||
We've extended everything for the warm room posture. | ||
You guys have been, it's been a great Christmas gift to my employees of all of you supporting us. | ||
And we want to give back. | ||
So use those, get those gift cards today. | ||
Get that, get yourself that bed. | ||
You've always wanted a month up. | ||
They'll get the best sleep of your life. | ||
The MyPillow mattress, the mattress topper, the MyPillow 2.0. | ||
These are all keep my factory going. | ||
It keeps everybody producing these 100% made in the USA products. | ||
And call that 800-873-1062. | ||
My employees love talking to you guys all out there. | ||
I'll tell you, they love it. | ||
Make sure you talk to them. | ||
Mike Lindell, Merry Christmas, brother. | ||
Great work. | ||
Merry Christmas. | ||
800-873-1062. | ||
And Merry Christmas. | ||
Oh, we're going to see you this afternoon. | ||
We'll get you back on this afternoon. | ||
Until then, Mike Lindell, Merry Christmas. | ||
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Isn't this music magnificent? | |
We could play hours of this stuff that they never hear anymore. | ||
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Back here at 5 o'clock, Boris and Rahim have | |
We're going to talk about some politics, some media, all of it. | ||
Also tomorrow on our Christmas Eve special. | ||
Christmas Eve special. | ||
We have Dr. Carol Swain, who's been in the news so much about Harvard. | ||
She's going to join us. | ||
Dr. Larry Swickert is going to join me. | ||
We always, you know, do a special on Christmas Eve, go through the traditions of Christmas and other things that are important as a civilization or culture. | ||
You're not going to miss this. | ||
And then Patrick K. O'Donnell joins me Christmas morning for the Combat History of Christmas. | ||
This year, we're also going to address activity in the Civil War. | ||
over Christmas, so we want to make sure everybody just make it part of your Christmas morning. | ||
Get a big pot of Warpath coffee, open the gifts after you get back from church, or if you go to midnight mass, you go to evening service if you're a Protestant. | ||
That'll be on Monday morning. | ||
We've got a lot of special content for next week, and of course we'll be here cranking out. | ||
Raheem's done another Boxing Day special. | ||
That's always, you know, that's I think we're in the fourth or fifth year of that. | ||
I want to thank Rahim. | ||
So it's a lot of great content over the holidays. | ||
War Room will be here for you to make sure you get all the latest and there's going to be tons of news. | ||
Trust me. | ||
There's a lot just going on in the world. | ||
One thing, there's a CNN. | ||
Do we have that? | ||
There was a lead story today was about Rosendale. | ||
You know Matt Rosendale. | ||
He's been on here a lot. | ||
And we're going to get more into this next week as we get back to more of the politics, but I want to just lay this marker out. | ||
You know, this guy Danes, this Montana, and if you're in Montana, I hate to be brutally frank about this, but he is just Mitch McConnell's bitch. | ||
Okay? | ||
Let me be blunt. | ||
He's a gutless coward. | ||
He hides behind the NRSC, this, this, this, and he's up kissing Trump's ass all the time. | ||
Trump knows that all he's pushing is Mitch McConnell guys. | ||
The guy out there in Montana is going to be another Mitch McConnell clone. | ||
He's just, because he's Steve Law and McConnell give this guy, this is how he raises the money. | ||
This is what happened with... This is not going to happen again. | ||
President Trump knows who... They know who Omega are, and they know who the phony ones are. | ||
And no offense, in Montana, Commander is a fantastic guy. | ||
He was Secretary of the Interior. | ||
I consider him a colleague, a guy I think highly of, but he's just been not good enough as a congressman. | ||
Why? | ||
He's a McCarthy guy. | ||
And he votes the establishment order. | ||
Just like Daines. | ||
Daines is 1,000%. | ||
establishment. | ||
And now he's after Matt Rosendale. | ||
Matt Rosendale is one of the heroes. | ||
We went to the Calvert church the other day. | ||
We had Eli Crane, Matt Gaetz, Andy Biggs. | ||
The pressure and hate on these guys is non-stop. | ||
But Matt Rosendale, one hundred percent, one hundred and twenty percent, is hardcore MAGA. | ||
And that's what we need in the Senate now. | ||
You've got Carey Lake. | ||
And look, the Danes are not going to touch Carey Lake because they know she's unbeatable in the primary. | ||
They're trying to co-opt her all the time, but hey, that's okay. | ||
If you've got to raise that kind of money, you've got to do what you've got to do. | ||
But you know what Kerry's default positions are? | ||
Of course. | ||
You got these other people that we profiled here running for the Senate in Utah and other places, and they hate them all. | ||
Why? | ||
McConnell wants control. | ||
That evil, decrepit old man, who right now is trying to get back into the big news out of Politico, is how he's trying to get back into it with Biden, said cut another deal, just like the debt deal, just like all the spending. | ||
Remember, this is all because of the compromise and the collaborationist in the United States Senate. | ||
Yep. | ||
That's what Danes is fighting for. | ||
We're not dumb, dude. | ||
We were born at night, but we won't born last night. | ||
So we're up there. | ||
You can go down to Mar-a-Lago all you want. | ||
You can kiss Trump's ass all you want. | ||
We're going to out you all the time. | ||
You're Mitch McConnell's bitch. | ||
All you are is down there is a running dog for Mitch McConnell and the problem in the United States Senate today. | ||
And do you think we're going to let more of that happen? | ||
I don't care. | ||
And look, I love veterans. | ||
That run, particularly people that are served. | ||
But to be brutally frank, a lot of these Navy SEALs and God bless them, but the whole thing went a little too Hollywood. | ||
You got some guys zinking. | ||
These guys are just a little too, and you got, you know, you got what Crenshaw down Texas and others. | ||
It's just a little too woke. | ||
Last thing we need is another woke Navy SEAL, uh, in elective office, particularly in the state of Montana, where you got to get tester out and Trump's going to run 40 points ahead. | ||
So, we'll get more into that, more into the details, but he just voted. | ||
If you're, next time you talk to Trump, Danes, make sure you bring up the fact that you just voted for the NDA that handcuffs Trump when it comes to NATO. | ||
Did you tell him that yet? | ||
Did you tell him how that slipped in? | ||
Did you give him a heads up on that in the NDA that you supported? | ||
Did you give him a heads up on that? | ||
I don't think you did. | ||
You scumbags that put that in there, that lock President Trump's hands, so you gotta keep pouring money into NATO, look, Europeans are plenty rich. | ||
They got pensions, and they got full medical benefits. | ||
And people in the United States have neither. | ||
Okay? | ||
Why? | ||
Because taxpayers in the United States not only send their sons and daughters over there to fight and defend them, we pay for it. | ||
They're not paying for it. | ||
The German elite don't want to pay for it. | ||
Go to Switzerland. | ||
They ain't paying for it. | ||
Go to Tuscany. | ||
Go to the south of France. | ||
Go to Belgravia in the west end of London. | ||
They ain't paying for it. | ||
Not going to pay for it. | ||
Not going to pay for it until they're forced to pay for it. | ||
That's what President Trump said, but it's not about breaking the treaty with NATO. | ||
First of all, it's not an alliance. | ||
It's a protectorate. | ||
And for you to be part of slipping that in there, where President Trump is handcuffed, and by the way, it's totally unconstitutional, but it just shows you what kind of guys there are in the Senate. | ||
They're scum. | ||
The Senate is a fest, the Republican side, led by McConnell and Thune. | ||
Have I heard McConnell and Thune come out? | ||
Danes, I don't know if I've heard you come out, but I've heard the leadership, the guy you work for, the guy whose bitch you are. | ||
McConnell? | ||
Has he come out and condemned Colorado, the 14th Amendment? | ||
Has Stoon condemned that? | ||
I miss that. | ||
They condemned President Trump when he's talking about shutting down the border. | ||
So we got a lot of work to do. | ||
We got a lot of work to do. | ||
Some of the work we got to do is inside. | ||
We got to clean out this place because there are too many bad guys led by Steve Daines in Montana. | ||
For the hard-working folks in Montana, The great patriot you are and what you've done to make this country great and to actually work to make her great again, you ought to be ashamed that he represents you because he's a complete phony con man. | ||
Okay, we're going to go out. | ||
Charlie Kirk's next. | ||
Charlie Kirk got a big announcement. | ||
Fox, no more messing around with Murdoch News anymore. | ||
Charlie Kirk, Jack Posobiec, we're back here five to seven. | ||
You are not going to want to miss it when we're back in the War Room. |