In a world of deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act.
It's the David Knight Show.
As the clock strikes 13, it's Wednesday, the 15th of October, Year of Our Lord 2025.
Well, today we're going to talk about civil war.
A lot of people are talking about civil war.
And of course, Ray Dalio is uh uh saying exactly the same thing I've been saying.
So you go back and look at uh we go through these cycles.
He doesn't call the fourth turning.
So as we go through these cycles, he said, this is looking like 1930.
And in some ways it's looking like the eighteen fifties, uh early sixties.
So uh we'll take a look at that.
We'll look at uh the further actions of Trump to get a Nobel Prize, he just destroyed another boatload of people without any due process, murder on the high seas, that should get him the Nobel Prize, right?
And we'll take a look, since we didn't talk about it yesterday, we'll take a look at the Gaza peace deal.
Uh is there something to celebrate here?
Will it hold for a week?
For even a day.
We'll be right back.
Stay with us, well,
Lou Rockwell has an article that's uh been put up on uh Free Thought Project.
Is Trump preparing for the next civil war?
Or are we already fighting it?
Now, he's not talking specifically at the beginning about what's going on with the troops being placed in cities provocatively.
Uh he's pointing out, first of all, that these wars that we're involved in, uh in Ukraine, for example, he says that's a civil war.
Uh what's going on in Israel is something of a civil war.
He said, We're fascinated by what we see on the screens, whether it's in Gaza, Ukraine, now Venezuela, even in the Pacific yet.
We must have been getting a snack when the plot twisted, and the Peace in America First campaign morphed into Tomahawks and Kiev.
Brutal U.S. assisted genocide in Gaza and the U.S. Navy blowing up fishermen and other civilians in international waters at will without consequence.
The current idiotic fiascos, NATO's Ukraine, Israel's expansionist murder spree, have been curiously unwinnable, even more curiously unstoppable.
Trump complained that he didn't understand how difficult it would be to end these wars.
The vast majority of countries represented in the UN probably agree with Trump on this point.
Why can't the stupidity and inhumanity just be stopped?
Ideally, by the U.S. government.
Simply ceasing to send them money and bombs.
That's the key thing.
when you're putting more lethal weapons in the hands of the Ukrainians.
This is Trump.
Only Trump can get away with this kind of nonsense.
To say one thing and completely do the other.
States are defined and measured by how they use the tools of war against all enemies, foreign and domestic.
Israel, a state engaged in ever expanding civil war, is an excellent example.
Landowners displaced and brutalized since 1948, rebel against those who displaced them.
And then subjugated them.
To prevail, Israel built a Westb Western inspired military and intelligence apparatus with Zionist wealth, with subterfuge and relentless Western enthusiasm for Eurocolonialism's last gasp in the Middle East.
Since 2013, Ukraine has experienced civil war.
Yes, this is what we've been talking about.
It got kicked off.
The civil war in Ukraine got kicked off by the CIA, the Obama administration.
And uh they they were had been at civil war for let's see, it was 2000 and 2022, was it?
Yeah, that Russia invaded.
So at that point had been eight years of civil war.
And Kiev had been uh shelling civilians in the um in the eastern part of Ukraine for eight years.
Uh Ukraine and Gaza both serve as testing grounds for newer weapons, technologies and tactics, as well as for broad-based narrative control, manipulation of emotion in terms of siphoning GDP away from citizens and into the global war industries without valid national security interests or democratically declared war.
In that regard, it's very much like Vietnam when we look at it, right?
It's they want to keep it going because it's a testing ground for weapons, it's a testing ground for tactics.
Uh they don't care if they win anything, they want to keep it going as long as possible.
They want to have a live fire testing ground, and they're just playing with people.
And uh there's no declared war.
There's no reason that we should be in that war, except to make these people rich, to divert money to the military industrial complex.
Washington has been actively participating in these civil wars uh for a very long time.
And uh now we're starting to move towards our own as well.
ICE has ticketed a Chicago man with legal residency, charged him a hundred and thirty dollars because he didn't have his papers on him.
Your identity papers, please?
Right?
What does that sound like?
No one to call anybody Nazis, that's been kind of worn out, but hey, if the shoe fits, uh the uniform fits, then wear it, right?
Uh but look, this is a perfect story because I agree with the end that they're trying to accomplish here.
And the end is that this guy is doesn't have a job, he's living in government paid for housing.
Uh, he has legal residency.
How did that happen?
And uh and yet, when you look at the process that is happening here, the way they're doing this is what mitigates really against not only this end, but it's going to uh hang us in the long run as well.
Because when I first saw this, it's like, okay, so he's he's here legally, but he doesn't have his paperwork, so they're gonna hit him with a hundred and thirty dollar fine.
So he said they asked if we have papers.
I said, I don't have them on me.
The agent said stood him up, his name is Cruz, not Ted, somebody else.
Put him in the truck, drove him around in circles, and asked him questions.
Where was he born?
What is his name?
Who is his mother?
Who is his father?
I told them they're dead.
The agent said they needed the information anyway, so they could look him up and their databases.
Eventually the agents verified that he is, in fact, legally in the country, and they let him go.
But not before writing him a hundred and thirty dollar ticket for not having his papers.
Now, are they going to do that to us?
Yeah.
Where's your phone?
I left it at home.
You're supposed to have your phone on you at all times.
Uh and so let's go over here, let's see if we can do some biometrics.
Okay, I identify who you are because I got you in the computer.
But I'm still going to find you because you don't have your surveillance device on you.
Right.
So I have a real problem with that.
A real problem with that.
But I have a problem with this guy as well.
Uh it doesn't mean that uh one justifies the other, however.
Uh so his friend who is homeless did not have legal status and was taken away by the feds.
In Chicago, Operation Midway Blitz agents have used broad federal authority when targeting suspected immigrants, say legal experts.
I gotta look at this and say, okay, I Got, I don't know how many men they've got from ICE doing this, and they're working on two or three people.
Uh, how long is it going to take them to get the millions that came in with the open borders during just Trump and Biden?
Um they're not even going to make a dent in it in terms of Trump's term that's here at that rate.
America has never been a place where people need to show one's papers.
Exactly right.
Uh that's the ACLU talking.
Uh ticketing a lawful permanent resident, forcing him to appear in court and pay a fine for not carrying their identity papers, is unnecessary and cruel, and it's authoritarian.
It does not make our community stronger or more safe.
It's simply part of the Trump administration's attempt to make life uncomfortable for all immigrants, they said.
Well, um, I think that dangerous precedents are being established for all of us.
I view this the same way.
I view the mandatory e-verify, or the real ID to have to fly.
And they're ramping that up now as well.
Every country is doing that.
So if you want to, if you're an American, you want to go to Europe, you're going to have to be fingerprinted now in order to get into Europe.
I'm disgusted with this police surveillance state that's being created globally.
That's always been the plan.
Not surprised by it.
I'm disgusted by it, and I'm disgusted because we've known about this for a long time, and the people are not focused on this.
They're focused on everything else.
A spokeswoman for ICE did not return messages uh when seeking comment.
So the spokeswoman had nothing to speak about.
I don't care.
We're going to ticket people if you don't have your identity papers, please.
Uh so uh a former dishwasher, Cruz lives in government-funded apartment, but isn't working due to his health.
You know, when I was a kid, uh, that was a job for high school kids.
Now high school kids don't have jobs.
Dishwasher.
So he's living in government-funded apartment.
And he's not working.
Cruz said he was relieved to be released, but he worries how he's going to pay the fine.
It's not fair, I said.
Let's go to my house and I'll show you my papers.
I'm a resident.
The problem is he doesn't have a house.
He's got a government-supplied apartment at your expense, at the taxpayers' expense.
This is why I've said the fundamental problem is a welfare magnet.
Fix that instead of your police state tactics that are out there.
It's just so obvious that they don't want to fix the core problem.
They'd rather create another problem, a problem that'll be a problem for each and every one of us.
They want to force the real ID on us, they want to force the e-verify on us, make us carry our identity papers or our identity device with us at all times, so they can use geofencing to track us, not just biometric identification.
That's the real problem, folks.
Uh yes, the immigration stuff is a problem.
And in this guy's case, what do you think he would do if he didn't have a government apartment?
I mean, he might live on the streets or something, or he might go home where things are cheaper and more affordable, or he could build a home there.
Well, Ray Dalio uh has something to say about the fact that we are in multiple wars.
Uh he warns that we're in a civil war, and he warns that we have soaring debt, and he says the U.S. is not the only country in this situation.
Okay.
There is a financial money war, there's a technology war, there's geopolitical wars, and there are more military wars.
And so we have a civil war of some sort, which is developing in the United States and elsewhere, where there are irreconcilable differences.
So, how do you see it being settled?
Actually, where do you see the U.S. going?
Does it get settled?
Well, either either we will rise above it and realize that our common good is going to r necessitate us dealing with it so that uh what works for most people is gonna work.
I think that's a little bit idealistic.
I have to be a practical person.
And I would say that I think that these conflicts will become tests of power by each side.
Well, I agree, absolutely.
Did you hear the phrase that he used?
Irreconcilable differences.
I think there's even a movie about that, about a divorce called Irreconcilable Differences.
That's usually the key phrase that you use in a divorce.
You know, you don't want to get into the details, uh, well, the details are complicated.
Let's just say we have irreconcilable differences.
Let's just say that we have irreconcilable differences, and Marjorie Teller Green is right.
We need to have a national divorce.
We need to be able to go our own way.
Except that we have people in Washington who will use this, as he points out, as a test of power.
They're not going to let that happen.
We have an abusive uh husband here.
Dalio said something bad is coming at some point.
And again, this is a guy who is he?
Well, he founded a hedge fund called Bridgewater, and he's a multi-billier.
So if I were a rich man, people would think that they really know what I'm talking about.
But in this case, I think Ray Dalio does know what he's talking about.
And I think he says I'm a student of history, and these things come in cycles.
He said we have the brutal AI war that's coming between the US and China.
The UK is in a debt death spiral, among other things.
He's now warning that the U.S. may be entering a new kind of civil war amid rising inequality in debt, as well as a breakdown in the global geopolitical order.
In an interview with Bloomberg TV, which aired this week, he said the forces which shaped the world, quote unquote, were all now being disrupted, and that America served as a prime example of this.
We're in wars, as you heard him say, financial war, money war, there's a technology war, there's geopolitical wars, there's military wars.
And so we have a civil war of some sort, which is developing in the US and elsewhere, where there are irreconcilable differences.
He had this year uh issued several warnings about the risks posed by America's rising national debt, which currently stands at a staggering nearly thirty-eight trillion.
Additionally, the billionaire also highlighted the country's debt to income ratio of roughly 120% as potentially leading to a situation in which repayments sap government finances and trigger a death spiral for the economy.
He um uh said the US government debt is rising too quickly, fueling a climate that's very much analogous to the years before World War II.
Yeah, the global warming when the bombs start dropping.
Fueling a climate.
This is we have a financial climate change that is hitting us really.
That's uh the other climate change is not real.
But this is.
This is very real.
And uh looking very much like World War II, the last fourth turning.
Of course, uh we covered uh this is months ago, but the way they calculate the US debt's a little bit screwy.
So it's actually closer to 150 trillion dollars than on the books.
Yeah, every every government stat that they give you is a lie.
Whether you're talking about the debt, the inflation uh rate or the employment rate or COVID or anytime you get number from the government.
If they want you to if they want it to be big, assume it's small.
If they want it to be small, assume it's much larger than they're giving you.
That's right.
Yeah, these these uh bureaucracies are just rigged.
Anyway, the uh he said when debt rises relative to income, it's like plaque in the arteries that then begins to squeeze out the spending.
And he'd used this analogy before when he said we're going about to have a heart attack.
Well, certainly uh the uh financial pressure, I guess, is analogous to blood pressures.
He blamed politicians of both sides of the aisle.
And he has called for a mix of tax revenue increases and spending cuts to tackle what he calls the deficit debt bomb.
Maybe we just followed the Constitution.
That'd get rid of almost all the federal government right away.
But I thought that's kind of interesting.
You know, that phrase we hear all the time, both sides of the aisle.
What is that?
Well, you got one side that says, I'll do this, and the other side says, I'll do this and I'll do that.
And neither one of them do the right thing.
They're always I'll do this, I'll do that.
Yeah, both sides of the aisle.
Well, on top of the debt, he sounded the alarm over Trump's tariffs.
Warning about the shifting policy.
Again, It's not even the level of taxation.
He's saying, you know, we need to read some raise taxes and cut spending, right?
So it's not about raising taxes, which is what tariffs are really about, raising taxes on you and me.
But it's about the shifting policy, the constantly shifting policy.
And of course, even as he's doing this interview, Trump goes back to 100% tariffs on China.
So it's that chaos, that engineered chaos that Trump represents.
He said it's part of the economic and geopolitical pressures that could trigger a crisis that would be, in his terms, worse than a recession.
Worse than what would that be?
That would be a depression, wouldn't it?
I think that right now we're at a decision making point, and we're very close to recession, and I'm worried about something worse than a recession if this isn't handled well.
You think Trump will handle it well?
That's what I'm worried about.
We have a breaking down of the monetary order, and we're going to change the monetary order because we can't spend these amounts of money.
We're having profound changes in our domestic order, how ruling is existing, and we're having profound changes in the world order.
Such times are very much like the 1930s, he said.
Yeah, prelude to world war.
I've studied history, he said.
This repeats over and over again.
Asked about the worst case scenario, Dalio pointed to a potential breakdown of the dollar's role as a store of wealth, combined with internal conflict between the norms of democratic politics and escalating international tensions, potentially even military conflict.
These breakdowns have occurred before.
The existing monetary and geopolitical order began in 1945.
These systems go in cycles.
And I worry about the breakdown, particularly because it doesn't have to happen.
Well, it doesn't have to happen, but uh it's happened over and over again, and the timing is right.
And it is uh, as we can see, it's not just a bad leader at the top.
There are bad people who are supporting what the the bad actions that this guy is doing.
As I pointed out, uh the people who are cheering the the memes that were probably put together by Trump bots, uh Trump uh PR flax, showing police brutality and the people are cheering it, saying, I voted for this.
Yeah, you voted for civil war, didn't you?
You won it as badly as the left.
They're mere images of each other.
And uh so he says it's going to be severe.
I think it could be more severe than those if these matters simultaneously occur.
That's right.
Everything all at once.
Well, Hag Seth has uh put uh stringent rules on the Pentagon press corps, and the large mainstream media companies are saying goodbye, we're not going to sign this thing.
And he's saying, Well, if you don't do it, then um you're not gonna be coming in here and talking to us.
I just gotta say, you know, when we talked yesterday to um uh to Anthony Frieda, he said that uh uh he had started in the advertising agency and he went to work for the people, did the Joe Campbell campaign.
He's having fun with that until there was the determination that it was targeting kids.
And he said, I didn't want to become an artist, so I could sell cigarettes to kids.
So he said, I'm getting out of that.
I'm gonna go to the New York Times because he's at that point in time he thought, well, these are people doing good work, they're telling people what's going on.
And then he goes to the New York Times and they say, well, we got to get the cartoons and the op-ed pieces vetted by the government, vetted by the Pentagon.
And he goes, Well, wait a minute, I didn't become an artist to sell wars either.
That's even worse.
And so when you look at this history, and we all know that this has been going on for quite some time.
The New York Times and all these mainstream media organizations, Washington Posts and so forth, that are having such a fit about Heg Seth's rules.
And again, he's ramping it up, and he's doing it in public and in their face.
But the reality is that these people have been complicit behind the scenes for the longest amount of time.
Look, if you've got a credentialed press, you don't have a free press.
These people are not free to say whatever they want.
They will tow the line, they'll get on one side that I'll do this or I'll do that, or the other, right?
They get on one side of the aisle or the other.
And uh we have seen this for the longest time.
You have some of these organizations get their access by sucking up to the left, most of them.
Uh some of them get access by sucking up to the right and to Trump.
And uh, but that's that's the whole thing, right?
People watch me because I've got an interview with this Republican or this Democrat or whatever, and that's what they want to maintain.
They will have that access cut off if they push against it.
So, in a sense, I see this as a positive development.
If you're going to have an open fight about this, and they're going to have to openly embarrass themselves by signing a pledge that they will do what the Pentagon says instead of pretending that they're independent, and uh now it's out there for everybody to see, and they've got to back away from this, and it and then there's consequences for it that make them mad.
You might actually get some real uh reporting.
I I'm not that optimistic, but uh, you know, that it's a it's a positive development, I think.
A growing list of news organizations with access to the Pentagon briefings have formerly rejected a new defense department or Department of War policy that would require journalists to sign a pledge, promising not to seek unauthorized materials and limiting their access to certain areas.
Well, the reality is is that uh the way this is uh put in by Zero Hedge um says unauthorized material.
So you think, well, certainly they shouldn't have any access to classified information because you know the security state is how they have ruled us since 1945.
And um everything is a national security secret if they don't want you to see it.
I mean, I've even seen this at local uh local government level.
Everybody acts as if they are the Pentagon or the CIA.
I can't talk about that, you know.
Well, the um the reality is is that they're talking about things that are not classified.
And what he wants to say is that you will only look at what we hand deliver to you that we want you to see.
It doesn't even have to be, they don't have to go through the procedure of pretending that it is pertaining to national security.
They don't have to do that.
Just have to say everything is prohibited for you unless I hand you the folder.
You know, because those papers are evidently on Pam Bondi's desk or on Pete Heggs' death desk.
Uh, you know, I've got the answer to that.
I'll give it to you later.
It's setting on my desk, and I'll I'll give you the answer.
Uh many wonders.
Now they're full on very public revolt against the policy introduced last month by Heg Seth, uh, who has himself been thrust into the center of controversy since being named Pentagon chief, due to the embarrassing Yemen group chat signal episode earlier in the Trump administration.
Others have been told to sign the pledge by Tuesday at 5 p.m., that's last night, or surrender their press credentials within 24 hours.
After weeks uh uh ago, the new policy was introduced.
Well, it's had a credentialed press, it's not a free press.
Um I was never interested in uh uh being a part of the White House press corps.
Um not that I was invited either, but he had uh Jerome Corsi, he got credentials for InfoWars.
And you know, so he could go there and ask a question and be seen.
It's like you don't need that.
You you can get the information that is out there, and the very fact that they're gonna require credentials for you, that's a newsworthy issue.
So you don't have to have that visibility, except it's just part of playing that game.
Oh boy, I could go sit in the room and get lied to directly.
Well, I wouldn't be sitting in that room after the first time I was asked questions.
Establishment media outlets have also been frustrated after long accredited media outlets, they were forced to vacate their assigned Pentagon workspaces under what officials described as quote, an annual media rotation program, um, where independent media podcasters and non-traditional media figures have been given access and sometimes even priority.
This is the influencers, right?
These are these are not journalists, they're not reporters, they're influencers.
But of course I would say the same thing about the New York Times and the Washington Post.
They are also influencers.
They're just pretending that there's Something else.
These other people, at least they're honest in saying I'm an influencer.
I'm a propagandist.
Uh those who have made clear they're not signing the policy are the Washington Post, New York Times, CNN, The Atlantic, Politico, The Hill, The Guardian, Reuters, Associated Press, NPR.
Do they still have any reporters left?
I thought we got rid of them.
Oh wish we had.
Uh Huffington Post, Breaking Defense and others.
Interestingly, there is only let's see, Newsmax has made it clear that it is not signing as well.
That's kind of interesting.
But I think the uh most interesting thing is that um uh one America News is the only organization that has signed this.
Out of all the ones that were in Washington, only one American news has signed this, and uh everybody else has said no, we're not going to do it.
Uh that's that's amazing.
Uh so they're gonna get the Pentagon feed and they'll they'll take it.
And you're gonna have, I guess, uh Pentagon Pete's gonna be there and there'll be one reporter.
Let's see.
Uh oh yes, you it really will be the one American news.
That's right.
The one American news organization.
The one and only.
Yeah, and the one American news reporter right there.
Uh these a bit hard to dodge questions at that point, huh?
Yeah, yeah.
Uh now let's go to somebody uh you again another question.
Uh yet these mainstream media gatekeepers would have more of a leg to stand on if they hadn't already long ago proven themselves to be uh by by and large, mere pro war stenographers of official government narratives time and again.
This is what I was saying, the Mockingbird people.
That's what Anthony Frieda saw when he was at the New York Times as well, long time ago.
The media loves to fawn over military commanders and anonymous sources which they already agree with, from hawkish pro Israel or pro Ukraine stances to regime change operations abroad in places like Syria or Libya.
That's when criticism from the press goes out the window.
Uh perhaps the press will finally grow more critical of whatever anonymous military and or intelligence officials tell them.
Now that there's an adversary of theirs in the Pentagon.
So we'll see what happens.
Uh don't trust anybody.
Use your own critical thinking, seriously.
Uh so let's cover the uh comments here before we take the break.
That's right.
Audi MRR, Israel already fired weapons on Palestinians trying to return home.
Oh.
Who could have foreseen that?
They're normally so good about keeping their ends of the bargain.
Yeah, we're going to uh talk about that.
It's one of the reasons I said at the top of the program that I did not cover this before, because I didn't think it lasts.
Yeah.
And it didn't even last a day.
We'll give it twenty-four hours, then we'll talk about No.
No, didn't last.
Reminds me of the English troops abusing Americans before the Revolutionary War.
That's right.
That's why they want you chipped.
They'll know everything about you, they'll know where you are.
The real OctoSpook.
He has no American rights.
They are well within using our powers to deport him.
What is up with the fine games?
No, he does have rights.
He's a human being.
And it doesn't say citizens in the Constitution, it says persons.
People.
People have rights because we're created in the image of God.
That's what this country is founded on.
I don't get rights and privileges from the Constitution.
I don't get I don't get my rights from the the Constitution or the government.
Those are privileges if you get them.
No, we have to say that our government respects human beings in America.
Our government will not do criminal things to people.
And I don't care if they're here illegally.
I don't care if they're a murderer.
You follow due process and then kill 'em.
You don't go out with a lynch mob, and you don't shoot people in boats without even knowing who they are.
I will never s accept that.
That is the wrong way to approach all of this.
Yes, our rights are come from God and they're based on us being human beings, not American citizens.
And we do not want to turn our government into the kind of monster that we've seen it become.
And we've seen this in other countries as well.
You have to allow due process and legal protection and respect for human beings.
End of story.
There's other ways to get these people out of the country.
They don't need to be giving him a free apartment at our expense.
Just stop that.
And you can do some other things.
Deport him.
That's fine, whatever.
Uh you know, take away his legal Status if he can't support himself and then deport him.
I don't have a problem with that.
Just do it legally.
You know, I don't have a problem with the death penalty.
I have a problem with our court system.
And so we have to make sure that we're following the rules that our government is not uh allowed to do anything that it wishes on a whim, and that is something that I've seen under the Trump administration that is worse than anything else I've seen in my life in America.
This idea of government by whim.
And uh so it's like have you had enough women women yet?
Not winning, but women just one whim after the other.
Also, uh the man was here legally.
He wasn't a citizen, but he was a legal resident.
So yeah.
Yeah.
And that's a problem.
We need to fix that.
If he doesn't have any means of support, if he doesn't have any skills, uh he's if he's not working, uh, he shouldn't be given legal status.
Other countries do that.
I mean, you want to become a citizen in New Zealand, you've got to have millions of dollars to get residency there.
I know, because I tried once.
Uh, but you know, you you can't do that.
Uh you can't survive as a country if people can come in and live off of you.
And uh that's the fundamental issue that they want to address.
Yeah.
Uh your microphone's off.
Audi MRR.
Well, thank you very much.
That is very generous.
Um I believe that says thank you for your prayers.
My director of operations gig is safe.
My podcast, everything is a lie, damn it is off the ground, and Jason Barker and Agry Tiger among my first guests.
So go check out Audi MRR's new podcast.
Everything is a lie, damn it.
And that's all one word.
So go check them out there on Rumble.
That's uh that's that's true.
That's true.
I'm glad to hear that worked out.
Thank you for letting us know, Audi.
Very happy for praise God.
And he also says we have the Fourth Amendment for a reason.
Yes.
And the Fifth Amendment, due process and things like that.
Yeah.
It's very, very important.
Little Ford School House says I live in Southern Illinois, and they're setting up a website where we can sign up to house immigrants and get benefits for it.
Well, I'm sure that won't end with somebody getting beheaded in their own bed.
The real OctoSpook enticing citizens to become criminals, housing for and invading criminals.
Nice.
Yeah, that's the problem.
The welfare magnet drags in a lot of the worst people, people you can't trust.
Outy MRR, they don't want to fix the core problem because they created the core problem.
That's right.
I mean, they even wrote papers about it.
This is how we're going to bring down the U.S. with a welfare system.
We bring in everybody from abroad and put them on the welfare system.
They'll take it down.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Zocsaw Oxas useless eaters won't be able to opt out of the brain chips.
That's right.
If you want your privileges to keep on going, if you want your welfare, you're going to take the brain chip.
Audi MRR, they are really engineering that civil war narrative, aren't they?
It won't happen, so they'll do a false flag.
Francine.
Can't remember what it was, but the SMART acronym in Smart Cities is not good news.
Probably not.
Self-monitoring and reporting technology.
Technology, yeah.
Nanny state.
Niburu 2029.
Recession, depression.
There's yet to be a turn for what Emperor Trump will cast upon Marx Merrica.
The closest would be total implosion.
That's right.
We're passing the event horizon.
That's right.
Do not obey.
Still today I'm surrounded by others with zero understanding or realization of the soon-to-be digital IDs slash currency slash social credit ranking system.
Amazing how ignorance ain't got time to research.
Well, you can give them a link to David Knight News.
If if I can get them through a few minutes without offending them.
That's right.
There's three hours a day every weekday.
They don't have to do any reading at all.
Wally Walris.
I'll do the reading for you.
Exactly.
But you do the thinking for yourself, yeah.
Wally Walrus, these ICE agents are out of control in Portland.
They delayed an EMS for 20 minutes and threatened the driver.
That's nuts.
I don't like the I I detest their tactics.
I detest the fact that they're, you know, we've got videos all over social media.
I mean, I could fill up the board with these videos of people in civilian clothes, not showing a badge, not showing any identification, not having a uniform, many times wearing a mask, just coming up and kidnapping people.
It's like why are we supporting this?
This is insane.
I mean, the police are bad enough.
We we don't need to make this whole thing worse.
You know, we're over policed in the first place.
Guard Goldsmith, the entire Trump Justice Department is sycophantically in line with authoritarianism.
Plus the Joint Chiefs are okay with Trump gathering six thousand soldiers off the coast of Venezuela while piling ice goons into the States.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And of course you can find Guard Goldsmith at Liberty Conspiracy Weekdays at 6 PM.
He's heaping up this storm that's about to break over our heads and everybody else too.
It's just amazing to watch this.
It's going to be a nightmare scenario.
It's just fine.
Yeah.
The real OctoSpook.
When Edward Snowden disclosed the extent of government surveillance, he was shocked he had to fear his own government and citizens doing nothing.
yeah Fazono Vontae 1776 the US debt clock says 37.608 trillion Hmm.
Ridiculous numbers we're dealing with.
Ridiculous numbers.
They don't mean anything.
Well, and and look at the the uh criticism that Thomas Massey got.
You know, when the freshman um uh congressman came in, that the new people get sworn in.
He'd walk up to each of them and he'd hand him one of these uh debt clock things so that he puts on his lapel that is a constant tally, and they called you're just a grandstander.
It's like seriously, you're just a spectator, and you're not even looking at the game that's happening here.
You know, you don't even care what the debt is, and uh you're worse than a spectator.
You don't care about the outcome.
It's like somebody to baseball game.
I've been one professional baseball game my life, and uh just amazed.
Nobody was paying any attention to the game.
They're all just kind of hanging around doing their own thing.
Oh, you know, something interesting happens, they'll run a replay on the jumbo.
And that was exactly it.
You know, if there's a if actually it there was actually anything at all interesting in that boring game, they would play this and this and replay.
So slow-mo.
Doesn't it Ovantae 1776 says, and climbing about the debt clock, and of course, like I mentioned, just because they calculate the debt weird, it's actually closer to a hundred and fifty trillion dollars.
We are in debt.
I forget exactly what the metric was, but it's something like unless they actually have a plan on how to repay it, they don't count the debt.
So assuming that they haven't made a plan to repay it, they just say, eh, well, you know, that doesn't count yet.
Yeah.
That's amazing.
Niburu 2029.
Here's the script.
Here's the questions.
Don't deviate.
That's right.
OAN is going to get their little little booklet of questions they get to ask.
Audi MRR, I studied journalism in college.
What passes for a news article today is a disgrace.
These people can't even write a decent headline, let alone a proper lead.
Guard Goldsmith.
Kind of like Trump's multiple marriages, they didn't last.
Right.
Yeah, his uh his uh oath to t to uh protect the Constitution is kind of like his marriage vows, too.
I think that was in reference to the peace agreement.
Oh, yeah, that's right.
Uh we have uh no one in politics cares.
It's all like they said, you know, Thomas Massey a grandstander.
That's all all these people do.
It's all about getting their headlines and getting their time in the sun.
Oh, look, I'm on camera.
Isn't that wonderful?
Well we have Epstein Island.
It's false flag time.
Remember 9-11?
That's right.
False flag time.
That's the season.
Yeah.
And of course, with Christmas coming up, they always love pushing the worst things through right around Christmas.
Think about it.
You know, they they uh bombed the Pentagon for only six trillion dollars.
What will they do for thirty-eight trillion?
The CIA is getting nervous.
A little there's KWD sixty eight.
Elon's chips will do away with the need for zip papers.
That's right.
Won't that be wonderful instead of having to scan your papers?
You know, that's what they're selling you, you know, that by 2030, you'll have this app, you know, so you have paperless identity papers.
Isn't that great?
Uh that's what I always wanted.
Boy.
I've always wanted a more cloying and efficient bureaucracy.
It never leaves you.
It can be always with you.
Your phone will have all your relevant data, and no one will be able to steal it almost immediately, because that never happens.
Yeah, and once they get your biometric data, then how do you get a new face?
Yeah.
Yeah.
I've mentioned this, but you know, my father in law, he was in the military, served in Vietnam and had uh you know, so he goes to the VA for his care, and at one point he shows up and they say, uh, well, we've got you know, this name and this name, but we don't have your name.
those are my two children.
Well, it shows that you're deceased.
Took him two years to declare him not dead.
But he's now been resurrected.
Yeah.
In the VA system.
Yeah.
The system had a miracle and he came back.
Sorry, we can't treat you for that fatal disease because you're already dead.
So that's the type of bureaucracy we're going to be dealing with.
And imagine how difficult it will be to get an AI to admit you're not dead.
No, sorry.
Yeah, we thought the death panels would be deciding who has to die, but it might just be deciding who's already dead or who's alive.
Oh my Wamo Shinderu.
Star Bark.
This name isn't Snake Pliskan, is it?
That would have been uh perfect.
Snake, I thought you were dead.
Yeah.
Greatly exaggerated.
Escape from VA, yeah.
You do have to escape from those places.
Star Barkley, they don't know how to research.
Swamp Lover.
No need to research.
CIA run mainstream media will tell you what you need to know.
Exactly.
Why do any research for yourself?
Why think of anything for yourself?
There's somebody in a position of authority who has an opinion on it.
You can just adopt that.
Why bother learning anything?
Yeah, so often these quote unquote news medias are just rubber stamps repeating whatever they're told.
Uh there's that whole story that you mentioned often, Dad, about uh the guy that reported Sam Hyde did a mass shooting, and then when you called him out on it, he said, Well, I got that information from uh the official sources.
So Jake Tapper.
That's Jake Tapper.
Well, Jake Tapper, isn't he CNN or something?
I I know I anyway.
I don't watch them.
Maybe MSNBC.
I don't know.
All these different newsletters.
But that was Jake Tapper, you know, so he says, Well, I got that from the government.
It's like, oh, well, it must be true, then you never check your sources when it's the government, right?
The government can never be wrong.
You never have to worry about it.
KWD68 Obama says Trump is wrong about ice.
That's true, but Obama militarized police departments all over the nation.
That's right.
You know, that that's what I was saying before.
You know, tr uh, you know, Alex had done before I went to InfoWars, done four documentaries on the police state, and then he did another one uh the Obama Deception.
And yet, it was a problem when Obama was going to militarize the police.
But it's not a problem when Trump actually does what Alex was saying that Obama was setting us up for.
So when they switch teams, uh, then, oh, well, uh, this isn't what I was talking about at all.
I thought the Democrats were going to do this since it's being done by Republicans, I guess it's fine.
Especially since it's uh he who must not be criticized, Donald Trump doing it.
Well, we're gonna take a quick break, folks, and when we come back, we're going to talk about the uh Gaza peace plan.
And uh is there peace?
Did uh what actually happened in the aftermath of this?
We'll see.
We'll be right back.
You're listening to the David Knight Show.
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All right, let's take a look at the Gaza Peace Plan.
This is from MediaEit, again, a left-leaning anti-Trump site.
And they said, Israel plans to cut in half the aid to Gaza as it accuses Hamas of violating the hostage agreement.
The Israel will cut in half the number of aid trucks allowed into Gaza and limit distribution of assistance, as they feel the terror group Hamas has violated a recent peace agreement that includes the release of all hostages.
And of course, they'll bring in the lawyers to find some technicality somewhere.
The devil is in the details.
And again, I didn't make a big deal out of this peace thing.
Everybody, the people on the viewer are saying, oh, Trump did it.
Great for Trump.
And you've got uh late-night talk show hosts are an agreement that Trump uh did something great here.
I don't think he did anything at all.
I don't think this is going to last.
I've seen these so-called peace agreements come and go, especially with Israel and its neighbors for the longest time.
Trump said this took 3,000 years to get to this point, and I can't figure out what he's talking about on his timeline.
I mean, I've gone back and looked at my Bishop Usher History of the World chart, and I can't figure out what he's talking about at all.
Uh you know, it goes 2,000 years ago that the Romans uh under Titus and uh sent uh the the Jews out and destroyed Jerusalem and the temple and the rest of this stuff.
It was recorded by Josephus uh in great detail.
It was a great book, wasn't it?
That uh that that got us on uh G.A. Hinti stories for the temple.
Uh and is largely drawn from the historical work of Josephus, but uh that's 2,000 years.
So I don't know what he's talking about with the 3,000 years.
Um, you know, he's not going back to Abraham, that was longer than that.
Anyway, he said to get to this point, he says, Can you believe it?
No, I don't believe anything that you say.
I don't think you know what you're talking about.
And he says, and it's gonna hold up too.
It's going to hold up.
As usual, Trump lies about everything.
Uh so well, this peace deal was three thousand years in the making and only lasted half a day.
That's right.
That pretty much sums it up.
That's kind of what's happening there.
Uh so he um uh in his speech there, he uh called out Miriam Adelson.
Uh who he spoke at the Knesset, the Israeli parliament.
He went to uh report to the board of directors for his administration.
That's literally the thing, the way to look at this.
Those are the people who control him who give him the money.
And uh, of course, uh the board of directors and CEO, Miriam Adelson.
Trump told Israeli lawmakers on Monday that Adelson had equivocated when asked whether she loved the U.S. or Israel more.
And uh paying tribute to her role in his Mideast strategy.
Yeah, she's telling him what to do.
I know that Trump would lie.
He would immediately say America, but he would also be lying about that.
I know who loves more.
Miriam Addison was born in Tel Aviv in 1945.
Her parents, uh after her parents immigrated from Poland.
Uh she was trained as a physician, then she married the casino billionaire Sheldon Adelson, who owned the Vegas Sands Corporation, turned it into a global gambling empire that the family sold for six and a quarter billion dollars in 2022.
Also, can I say it's a little ironic?
She was trained as a as a physician specializing in addiction treatment, and then marries a casino operator.
Yeah, I can help.
I can help you drum up some business here.
We can keep these people coming back over and over again.
A gambling addiction is actually ranked one of the worst addictions you can have.
Yeah.
It leads to suicide more frequently than almost any other addiction because you know you're not just you can destroy yourself for generations.
Who's that comedian that uh died not too long?
Norm um Norm McDonald.
Yeah, he was addicted to gambling.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And It was uh it was a big deal for him.
And uh really does destroy your life.
It's a shame.
The couple were one of the top GOP donors over the last decade, giving six hundred million to support Trump's three presidential campaigns and to back other Republican candidates since 2015.
And uh so again, uh one of the things that she said was she took aim at Israel's critics across the world, calling them foreign fans of Hamas, our enemies.
Well, I I think this is part of the nonsense that goes with all this stuff.
Opposing what Israel is doing in Gaza doesn't make you a fan of Hamas, but it does make you an enemy of Israel.
Uh they make you the enemy if you criticize what they're doing.
And they call you a fan of Hamas.
This is Hamas, I'm your biggest fan.
This is like uh George W. Bush.
You're either with us or you're a terrorist, right?
You're with the terrorists.
So if you're with the terrorists, you're a terrorist.
So um the uh couple, the Adelsons pushed Trump to recognize Jerusalem as the Israeli capital, move the U.S. Embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem in 2017, and to endorse Israeli control over Syria's occupied Golan Heights in 2019.
So Trump awarded Miriam the Presidential Medal of Freedom, 2018.
And uh, because uh she's funneled so much cash to him.
According to Al Jazeera, she told Jewish voters at an event in September that they had a sacred duty to pat to back Trump.
Well, she and her husband tie the 10% to uh Trump, 10% of their wealth.
So uh, you know, they're they're fully backing him.
Six hundred million dollars.
It buys a lot of Trump, doesn't it?
Uh Trump at the Knesset on Monday said Miriam and Sheldon would come to my Oval Office.
They'd call me.
I think they had more trips to the White House than anybody else.
He said, I actually act or asked her once, so Miriam, I know you love Israel.
What do you love more, the U.S. or Israel?
And she refused to answer, said Trump.
We've got video in the deck.
Yeah, let's play that.
I I guess uh she considered that to be a rhetorical question.
It was pretty obvious which one she loves more.
Yeah.
Stand up, please.
You she really is.
I mean, she loves this country.
Thank you.
She loves this country.
Her and her husband are so incredible.
We miss him so dearly.
But I actually asked her, I've got to get her in trouble with this, but I actually asked her once they said, so Miriam, I know you love Israel.
What do you love more?
The United States or Israel?
She refused to answer.
That means that might mean Israel.
I must say.
Yeah, well, it's an open it's not an open question for her.
It is for Trump, except I it's not an open question for me about Trump.
I think I know who which one he loves more, and it's not America.
And if that's Trump as a professional liar that she would hesitate like that.
Yeah.
Well, as a matter of fact, Trump loves Argentina more than he loves America.
And they haven't showered him with money, but he has showered them with money right away.
As soon as they were having a problem, right to the rescue goes Scott Bessent to cut them a big check.
A check that's bigger than what they're talking about uh maybe someday giving the farmers who they have directly hurt with their policies, their trade policies.
They don't care about the American farmers.
They knew this was going to happen because they did it to him once before.
And they didn't do anything to plan for this coming in, and they're still hemming and hawing and delaying about helping the American farmers after the harm that they did that they did to the American farmers.
But they helped Argentina right away, and Argentina used that money to hurt the American farmers.
So MAGA really means make Argentina great again and uh run the American farmers into the ground.
Miriam Adelson again wrote that uh foreign fans of Hamas are our enemies, the ideological enablers of the West who would go to any length to eradicate us from the Middle East.
I'll tell you who she has gone to war with.
She's gone to war against the First Amendment.
She and all of Israel want to destroy our constitution.
It's one thing to buy politicians, it's another thing to try to destroy and set in legal structure uh destroy the First Amendment.
They lost me on that, I tell you what.
I was never on their side.
Disgusting to me that you know Donald Trump, casino owner, Miriam Adelson, wife of Sheldon Adelson, casino owner.
As we mentioned, you know.
Gambling mafia.
Gambling addiction is awful.
Vegas is built on the destruction of lives.
There was a time where I don't think anyone who could have owned a casino would have been accepted as a politician in America.
Like, no, you're that's a gross business.
We don't want you as part of the power structure.
But now it's just, oh yeah, she's donating six hundred million to Trump, former casino owner, who's now president.
And it just, in my opinion, again, shows how far America has fallen and who we will just allow in politics.
You gotta say, Sheldon Addison knew how to run a casino from six of them into the ground, which is uh an accomplishment in and of itself.
Lucky loser is the name of the book, where they talk about how incompetent Trump is.
But yeah, that's exactly the point that my dad made.
I mean we went to um uh 1961 and went to see uh Walt Disney World and uh not Walt Disney World, Walt Disney, Disneyland in California, right?
Disney World didn't open until I was in high school, but Disneyland opened in 1955.
So um I was young.
We went cross country in the car.
That was an interesting experience back in the day when we didn't have air conditioning going through Death Valley Hell the metal dashboard that they had in the uh Chevy's back then and the the uh plastic seats, and then uh we would go up to got across uh that that was one experience.
I don't remember which one we did first.
I think it was the Colorado thing was first.
We went up uh Pikes Peak and uh there was snow at the top during the middle of summer, you know, and then we get to Death Valley.
It was a memorable trip.
Anyway, the uh uh we also went through Vegas.
And I remember my dad taking me in and saying, look at these because in in those days uh you didn't dress like a bomb unless you really were a bomb.
Now everybody spends a lot of money to uh dress like a bomb.
As a matter of fact, Billy Joel even sang about that back in the 80s.
You gotta spend a lot of money to uh to dress trash, right?
But um back in those days you dressed nice if you could afford to.
So if you didn't couldn't afford it, you dressed like a bum.
And so those poorly dressed people were pouring money into these machines, and he said, look at this building, and then look at these people and tell me that this is a fair game.
You know, it's not, it's a sucker's game.
And that's how people like Sheldon Adelson got rich.
Yuriel Abeloff, professor of politics at Tel Aviv University, told Newsweek that what was agreed between Israel and Hamas should not be confused as a peace deal.
He said it is a survival pact for leaders who thrive on conflict.
The agreement forced upon them by external patrons like the U.S. and Qatar is deliberately vague on core issues, allowing them both to claim a win.
In other words, uh Israel thrives on conflict, Hamas thrives on conflict.
They don't want to stop this.
But uh uh the people who are paying them, their their patrons, are uh telling them that they're gonna sign this deal, and they leave it really vague, so they've got wiggle room, they can claim that they won.
And so nothing is really going to happen.
But again, as I said, you got people on the view uh going crazy for Trump and saying, look at this, he did it, and of course, Stephen Cobert, uh Jimmy Kimmel praising Trump for the Gaza ceasefire deal.
This is the headline from Breitbart.
And I have to say, who cares?
Since when do we care what these people say?
They're always wrong about everything.
They said it's important to give credit where credit is due.
Well, the thing, same thing is they work for the same people that Trump works for.
Same people that own Trump own the networks.
Uh Kimmel said, What a day for Donald Trump.
You know what?
He finally did something positive today, and I want to give him credit for it, because I know he's not the type of guy to take credit for himself.
Now that's a funny joke.
Uh uh you don't usually hear funny jokes from Kimmel anymore.
He said, Well, we're only in the first phase of what will undoubtedly be a long and tricky process.
The fact is the bombing has stopped.
Well, that's not the fact.
Um, and so we'll talk about what's going on with that.
People are still being killed there.
Nolte at Breitbart says um the silence from Hollywood about Israel's peace deal proves that Hollywood never really wanted a Gaza ceasefire.
Well, maybe uh the silence is from skepticism.
Maybe it's the fact that uh uh there's they don't really think that the killing is going to stop, and actually the killing did not stop and the destruction did not stop with the peace deal.
Uh from Russia, we have uh foreign minister Lavrov said that Russia has repeatedly assessed it as the best thing on the negotiating table at the moment.
However, it is essential, he says, to stop the bloodshed as soon as possible and resolve the grave humanitarian problems, but of course the Palestinian issue is not resolved by this.
And there will not be peace because of this.
Trump's plan mainly focuses on the situation in Gaza while only addressing the Palestinian statehood in the most general terms.
The U.S. and Israel were two of only ten countries which flatly rejected a two-state solution at the UN.
Uh so he said um, you know, if you don't address the core issue, uh it's not going to last.
And so all this stuff about 3,000 years.
As a matter of fact, if anybody's got any idea what they think Trump was even talking about, let us know here in the comments, and and uh Lance can be on the lookout for that.
Uh what this 3,000 years is about.
I scratching my head to try to figure that out.
I have to assume it's just he knows.
All right, well, Jesus was 2,000 years ago, so I gotta go back further than that.
Then he just picked, I'll add another thousand on top of it.
What's stronger than two thousand years?
Ah, three thousand years.
Well, I think David was about a thousand years uh before uh Jesus, so maybe but that doesn't make any sense as a starting point.
Anyway, Israeli forces kill at least seven Palestinians in Gaza, despite the ceasefire.
As I said before, it doesn't stop.
And uh the murder hasn't stopped, the starvation hasn't stopped, maybe a little bit less, and they'll pretend and pat themselves on the back for a couple weeks.
Trump says Israel has used America's weapons very well.
We make the best weapons in the world, and we got lots of them, and we've given a lot of them to Israel, frankly, he said, and the Knesset applauded.
They like uh the what's been done with that.
Israeli soldiers, however, torched food and homes, and torched a critical sewerage treatment plant in the wake of the ceasefire announcement.
Soldiers called the mass arson of Gaza City, their quote, final touches.
Maybe it's called the final torches.
Among the structures that dropped, this is from Drop Site News.
Among the structures that drop site discovered had been set on fire by departing soldiers was the uh Sheikh Ajlin sewage treatment station, a central component of Gaza City's sanitation network.
The attack is a blow that could push Gaza City's wastewater system to point zero.
Uh the plant is one of Gaza's oldest and warned that its destruction will set back planned reconstruction efforts by years.
I mean, they signed a ceasefire, so why set it on fire?
That's another rhetorical question, isn't it?
Uh so uh the uh the Israeli soldiers are saying it's one last memory as they do that.
Uh the homes that were burned had been some of the only ones remaining left intact because they were used as military staging areas, according to review of satellite imagery of the area.
So there were a few homes that were standing.
They took them over and lived in them, and then when the ceasefire began, they burned those homes down.
Not all homes taken over by Israeli forces are burned down.
Social media posts indicate some units simply left them trashed and vandalized on the walls with graffiti.
Enjoy this sluts, one soldier wrote on social media, the Palestinians returning to find their homes ransacked.
We shall return here with spray painted over the wall of a house taken over by Israeli forces in Gaza.
That's another one.
So uh let's see if anybody's got uh an idea about the 3,000 year metric that he's got.
Perhaps one of you can enlighten us.
Epstein Island says gold is going to be 4200 an ounce tonight.
Zoks have oxas, I want to cry.
I'm a relative whom I begged to buy gold and silver, they would have already doubled their wealth.
Makes me sick.
Marky Mark in New Jersey, spawning at Epsian Islands says it's already surpassed 4200 an ounce.
See here, and he links to market watch.
Well, if it makes you feel any better, the dollar is still going down.
So there's a lot a lot more to go.
And I don't think the end is here for gold at all.
So Jerry Alitalo informed men and women are familiar with the term.
The brain is the battlefield of the future from Giordano.
Some suggest U.S. neurowarfare operations are well underway against Americans.
Swamp Lover.
Project Mockingbird is alive and well.
That's right.
Nibrew 2029.
VA worst of the worst medical malpractice systems on the planet.
Yeah.
It's uh I've never heard a good story about the VA, not a single one.
Anytime it starts with, well, I was at the VA, you know you're in for some kind of horror story.
Uh Andy.
The liberals still want the government to do all health care.
Yeah.
You like your VA care?
You can have it.
Like you died, you like your insurance company, you can keep it.
I don't like it.
I don't want to keep it.
Uh handy says, I tried blackjack once, lost twenty dollars in just a minute or so.
It made me mad, so I threw away another $30 even quicker.
Depression set in immediately.
Yeah, Karen and I went to a trade show once for the video industry.
They would always do it in Vegas, and they would always evidently they must have gotten cheaper rates because they'd always do it in August, August and Vegas.
What a mess.
Anyway, uh one year, the first year we went, uh the um uh if it was the airline or the hotel, but anyway, we had a voucher for like 20 bucks.
And uh so we went to the Tropicana, which has now been torn down.
Uh, and we we walk in and we're kind of looking around, you know, like tourists, you know, looking up and everything.
Kind of the thing they always say, you know, we go to New York City, you can tell the tourists are looking up at the buildings and everything, you know, while somebody comes up and picks their pocket.
So anyway, we look like a couple of uh rubes from the country, and uh so we kind of walk over and we're looking at the roulette wheel, and uh there was a woman who was running it, she said, uh put it all on one thing.
You put it all on the roulette wheel, and I'll tell you how to do it.
But she said um uh not the roulette wheel, it was the vertical thing, it's like wheel of fortune, except I guess if it's in the casino's wheel of misfortune.
Said, put it all in one thing, and she said, and win and lose, walk away.
Walk away, she said.
So we did, and we didn't win anything.
You gotta get out while you can.
Yeah, that's right.
Uh yeah, my one experience at a casino is um one of my friends, he wanted to go for his birthday, and I brought $50 specifically, just like this, you know, he wants everyone to have a good time.
Have I planning to lose this $50.
Once I lose, I'm done.
And just it was so depressing just seeing mostly you know, old people in their 80s or older just sitting at the slot machines, just pulling the lever over and over again.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It was just, you know, there's no one else, there's no family there with them.
They don't have any children or grandchildren or anything.
They're just alone at a slot machine, putting whatever money they have left into it, and it's just horribly depressing.
There, if I if I never set foot in a casino again, it'll be too soon because it was just so incredibly sad to watch.
It's a slot machine, and the uh the things that are going around.
It's got all the lemons and the cherries and all the rest of stuff, and then it's got a Trump face.
And there's three Trump faces, and they're about to line up.
Clever.
Uh I also don't understand, you know, the draw of a slot machine either.
It's just, you know, lights and sounds, you know, it's like a baby's toy for an adult, at least with something like blackjack or you know, some other card game.
There's an element of skill, you know.
You can tell.
That's why they they don't let the card counters play.
They watch them very very closely.
No, no.
You know, the surveillance industry really got its start in the casinos.
Uh the uh I did some work for the Department of Transportation in North Carolina for a short period of time, and they had cameras that could uh zoom in, you know, that stationed all along the interstate so they could see if there was an accident or back up so they could do something about it.
And uh you could zoom in on those things.
It's amazing how far those things would go.
And those are cameras that they set up for the casino.
And I thought, man, if this is gonna look all the way down the interstate.
Imagine, you know, when you're in the casino, they just got a short distance from you.
It's like a microscope.
They can read everything that's going on in your hand of cards.
That's right.
Yeah.
The uh casino industry is terrible and it preys upon people.
It's very sad.
It's even sadder when it's not Vegas.
Trump Trump's big influences are professional wrestling and casino industry.
Should tell you exactly where he stands.
Yeah.
The uh it's bad enough in Vegas where you've got all the lights and the showmanship of it all, but that casino I went to was the one in Oklahoma.
I don't know what it's called, but it's an Indian casino when it's just it's so sad.
It's even sadder than a Vegas casino is.
Yeah.
Yeah, I remember driving through uh uh Louisiana, they had like little gas station type casino things, uh where they just have cheap Christmas lights stapled around uh you would think that they could afford a nicer place of people throwing away their money.
Yeah, I want that's what I want.
I want nice surroundings when I throw all my money into the machines.
Yeah.
You're not gonna get that at the 7 Eleven.
Swamp Lover says Project Mockingbird is live and well.
Uh where that one.
That's right, when he's talking about Muriel Adelson.
Epstein Island, there really ought to be a law that ends dual citizenship.
That shouldn't even be a question.
That should just be immediate.
Yeah.
You know, when you're talking about Trump and Adelson, you know, it is disgusting to see somebody like Mike Johnson who is a total sycophant to Trump.
And it's equally uh uh disgusting to watch Trump be a total sycophant to Israel.
And and it's just there's this pecking order that is almost comical.
Actually, it is comical, except that we're at the bottom of the pecking order.
So uh I guess that part of it's not too funny.
Uh so and goes as Vegas is going down, ain't nobody got money to waste on BS.
Yeah.
Yeah, and it's also the hassle that they're putting people through for traveling.
Traveling is what's really going down.
It truly is amazing.
I was about to say, uh, Vegas may be dying, but online gambling is exploding.
It's a bigger problem now than ever before by a large margin.
So I don't think it's that gambling is going away, it's just going online.
Yeah, they made it extremely easy.
And uh, as I've said, gambling addiction is incredibly difficult to break.
And if you have an addictive personality with it being so easy, it's affecting a lot more people than it has in the past, actually.
It's gonna ruin a lot of lives.
Yes.
Soiling no, read that one.
Apossum King, Adelson is lobbying hard for gambling in Texas.
Oh good.
Isn't that wonderful?
Wally Walris, biggest casino operator in Oregon is the state lottery.
We have state-run gambling machines everywhere.
Well, they've called it, you know, I've heard people refer to it as the stupid tax, so maybe they'll just start taxing you directly for it.
Yeah, it's fitting that they use the money for education, except they don't educate people about the right thing.
So you know, you ought to take it and educate them about game.
Well, when you think about what the Department of Education's goals really are, it is fitting that they would use the money from the idiot tax to pay for the thing that's dumbing down America.
Yeah, that's right.
Wally Walris.
No, read that one.
Nibaru 2029 says that's how Trump's clan made its fortune.
He spelled clan with a K. Gambling and prostitution in Alaska during the gold rush.
Ah, what a classy fellow from a line of classy fellows.
You know, you talk about these casinos and Trump's connection, and of course, uh Zemeckis, who did Back to the Future.
He said he he uh patterned to Biff after Trump.
I say that more and more all the time.
He nailed it, didn't he?
Exactly, yeah.
It was very prescient and perhaps a bit too prescient and Biff ruler of the world.
Maybe if he hadn't done that, Trump wouldn't have seen it been like, I could do that.
I could absolutely do that.
Nibro 2029, ceasefires are only short pauses to rearm and re-strategize.
That's right.
Yeah, so we we look at it and you know they have uh made 1984 and Brave New World and Back to the Future all come true.
We live at the nexus of those three the bin diagram.
You're here, right?
With those three movies intersect.
If only we had a Marty and Doc somewhere to go back and reset all this.
Yeah.
Swamp Lover.
Israel can be given guns to kill children, but I'm restricted on what I can have to hunt, make it make sense.
Yeah, that's right.
Well, maybe if you were to convince the CIA that the deer were, you know, some sort of terrorist threat.
Mm-hmm.
Well, you know, Trump got um Trump got a lot of uh praise uh for for people.
Uh even uh you know, for this peace thing, as they completely ignore that he is blowing up uh uh yet another boat, this time they say it's six people.
I don't even know if they know how many people are on board the boat.
Uh they've given no details about what they know or anything.
Of course, there's no due process, that's a key issue.
And this is just like it is with the illegal immigrants in the U.S. We have to follow the rule of law.
There's international law that says this is an international war crime, and this guy thinks that he deserves a Nobel Peace Prize, and all these people, whether you're talking about the view or you're talking about uh Stephen Cobert or Jimmy Kimball, they're absolutely clueless if they don't uh uh criticize him for these extrajudicial killings all the time.
The US military conducted yet another strike on a boat alleged to be trafficking drugs off the coast of Venezuela, killing six people.
And uh I read an article uh last week where they went back and they referred to what uh Duterte did in the Philippines, and he's uh now uh facing trial at the International Criminal Court, and rightfully so, because he was frustrated with drug use, and he said, Well, we're just gonna shoot people on the street.
If you think somebody's a drug user, kill them.
They killed tens of thousands of people doing that.
Uh that is what's dangerous about this.
You have to have the rule of law.
Anyway, Trump said the vessel was, quote, affiliated with a designated terrorist organization, unquote.
But he didn't name any organization.
He didn't provide any evidence to back up the assertion.
Again, he did this without proof.
He did this without due process.
And you know, we stop and think about how they have operated the war on drugs and and how effective has that been.
You know, we look at this and say, this is a perfect example of the means not being justified by your desired or stated ends, right?
Uh we can all agree that we'd like to see people not on drugs.
Has any of this stuff put a dent in drug usage?
No.
No, it's actually made the drugs more intense, more concentrated.
And it's given us all these other problems as well, like civil asset forfeiture and the no-knock SWAT team raids, predominantly about the drug war.
So now we moved on beyond civil quote unquote asset forfeiture, uh where they can steal your car and accuse your car or your inanimate object, whether it's your car or your plane or your home or whatever.
They just steal it and uh charge the or cash.
You know, U.S. government versus $9,000 of cash.
They don't charge you even with a crime.
They don't certainly find you guilty.
They don't even bother with that.
They just take your stuff.
And so what we're seeing here, in a sense, I think, is an extension of this kind of corruption.
We go from asset forfeiture to life forfeiture.
Well, you know, you're doing things that look to us kind of like you might be doing drugs uh running.
So we're gonna kill you in international waters.
Even if you turn back, we're going to kill you.
Uh this is simply murder, folks.
Uh, and uh I will not praise Trump for anything that he's even if the peace deal was real, and I don't believe that it is.
Uh I would still not praise him as long as he's doing this type of thing here.
Intelligence confirmed the vessel was trafficking narcotics, said Trump.
Uh it was associated with illicit narco-terrorist networks and was transiting along a known DTO route.
Well, they were in an area that they say if you're in this area, you're trafficking drugs.
Proof.
That's it.
Proof and poof, there you go.
Uh not how we've done it, not how it's still being done in other areas where they don't want to try to do a regime change of a country.
And it's not how we should do it either.
So it was conducted in international waters, and six male narco-terrorists aboard the vessel were killed in the uh strike, no SU US forces were harmed.
That's uh the end of what uh Trump had to say.
So again, I'd say prove it.
Prove it in court.
And guess what?
Even if Trump had proven this in court, there's still no death penalty for what he alleges that they were doing.
How can the world can you justify this?
And how in the world can people remain silent about this?
Again, even if they were found guilty with due process, there's no law in the books that says we give a death penalty for this.
So uh Rand Paul has announced that he's co-sponsoring a war powers resolution that would stop the president from being able to unilaterally conduct such strikes.
Well, you already have that.
It's called the Tenth Amendment, and it's also uh Congress that it's not just the Tenth Amendment, you know, the war powers uh that are defined in the Constitution say that it has to be a declared war.
And so um they have diluted their power to uh to declare war, uh done that deliberately, and so I guess they do need to put something in there, but uh anyway, uh he said blowing up boats without due process could risk unintended escalation and trigger regime change efforts.
An approach that history has repeatedly shown to fail.
That's why I am co-sponsoring a war powers resolution to stop it.
Congress must reassert its authority, he said.
So um, this is uh from CNN, they said even some conservatives have unease about this, especially because that was the US military had destroyed one of these boats that had turned around before it was hit.
Paul also publicly criticized Vice President Vance last month after he celebrated one of the strikes.
Paul said in response to the vice president, he said, what a despicable and thoughtless sentiment it is to glorify killing someone without a trial.
Boy, that says it all right there.
Well said.
Uh so in comments at the White House during an event with the Argentinian president, Javier Malay, on Tuesday, because again, we put Argentina before even Americans.
Americans come dead last.
This is not an America first administration.
This is America dead last.
Everybody, even Argentina, uh gets um ahead of us.
Well, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessant, who was meeting with Javier Malai to write him some big checks, noted the strikes as he advocated for building economic bridges with other nations.
Oh, isn't that nice?
We're using our economic strength to create peace.
Are we really?
Or are you just lying murderers?
That's not creating peace at all.
So again, uh the headline as it was put out by the Gateway Pundit, cheers all of this stuff.
Another Venezuelan drug boat, six narco terrorists killed.
Well, again, none of that is true, Gateway pundit.
None of this has been proven.
Uh you should, and you don't put quotes in it, you don't attribute this, you don't question any of it, you just put it out.
Why?
Because you are Trump influencers, you're not journalists.
You're not being honest about this stuff.
None of this is proven.
If it were proven, it still would not be justified.
We don't have the death penalty for how he even alleges that they did.
Um then they say War Secretary Pete Hegseth said, according to uh President Trump, the boat was carrying enough drugs to kill twenty-five to fifty thousand people.
Isn't that interesting?
That's the the way they always talk about fentanyl, all the rest of this stuff.
And it's like, you know, how how this is as absurd.
Nobody ever calls them out on this kind of absurdity.
Yeah, you're gonna is that the purpose of these things to kill that many people?
Um yeah, if they overdosed, you know, you could have uh oh you could overdose uh uh twenty-five to fifty thousand people.
I'm not supporting drug use at all.
But I'm saying this type of talk is idiotic and meaningless.
It is like uh uh Barack Obama saying, you know, how many jobs uh that they saved or created.
It's like, well, wait a minute, you've never used the Bureau of Labor Statistics to talk about jobs that were saved before.
That's purely subjective and made up.
Um, you know, this is not a new job.
You know, they look at a new job and they say, Well, we created that job.
No, you didn't create that job.
Somebody who Risked their capital and their hard work created that job.
You take credit for it.
Of course, Obama's famous for that, talking about how, you know, you didn't build that, we built it because we built the infrastructure and this and that, and we taxed you to build the infrastructure and did it very inefficiently.
But he's famous for taking credit for that, even more so than most people do.
But it it always made me cringe when I would hear Republicans talk about jobs that they created and so forth.
They didn't create anything.
And uh so when you talk about enough drugs to kill tens of thousands of people, come on.
This is like Trump bragging that he saved millions of lives when he killed tens of millions of people with his injections.
Not to mention they know exactly how many drugs were on the boat that they blew up without what did they uh sweep through the water and collect all of it and total it up?
Mm-hmm.
All this is just pure fantasy.
They have no they release no details about anything.
You know, they don't tell you the quantity of drugs, they just tell you, well, it would have killed twenty to five to fifty thousand people.
And Gateway Pundant just repeats that dutifully, as if they're doing Trump press releases, because that's all they are.
Intelligence confirmed that the vessel was trafficking narcotics, they said.
Trump further confirmed the death of six narco terrorists in the attack.
Well, I don't think that they're terrorists, even if they were doing drugs, and that's again not established.
So uh very uh disgusting.
Maybe the gateway pundits trying to get Pentagon uh privileges.
Well, you know, there's about to be a lot fewer people in the press room, so that's right.
Well, the way the AP report it with their headline, U.S. kills six people in a strike on a boat accused of carrying drugs near Venezuela.
Now that's legit.
You know, I accuse uh associated press of being associated propaganda, but um that is uh an accurate headline for what happened.
That's a neutral headline, it doesn't take one side or the other.
But then they go on to say the Trump administration has yet to provide underlying evidence to lawmakers proving that the boats targeted by the U.S. military were in fact carrying narcotics, according to two U.S. officials who were not authorized to comment publicly and spoke on the condition of anonymity.
Following Tuesday's strike, Orge Rodriguez, president of Venezuela's National Assembly and close ally of Maduro, said the objective is not the search for truth to the press.
He says, and much less it's about fighting drug trafficking.
He says it's about looking for a way to have an excuse for aggression.
We're not asking you to make anything up.
Rather, we're asking you to defend the truth.
This is a plea that he made to local media outlets.
Well, the truth is lying on the floor, dead.
Uh Trump, meanwhile, has a tantrum over what he says is the worst picture ever of himself.
I guess he is the hair apparent to the throne.
When you look at this, they they showed him basically bald, and he doesn't like this.
They took a picture from the bottom up.
And he likes the fact that he was on the cover of Time magazine, and uh they're calling this his triumph.
This uh Gaza cease fire deal.
Well, um, but then he doesn't like the picture that they put of it.
A super bad picture, he said.
And I think it's a super bad take to think that he has accomplished anything here really.
Um so the Time magazine released a special edition helling hailing the events as quote, his triumph, and detailing how his administration had gone to great lengths to try to secure peace.
The image was taken looking up at his face as he stares in the distance with a serious expression.
Uh Time magazine, he said, wrote a relatively good story about me, but the picture may be the worst of all time.
They disappeared my hair, and then something floating on top of my head that looked like a floating crown, but an extremely small one.
He described the cover as really weird, and he continued, I never liked taking pictures from underneath angles, but this is a super bad picture and deserves to be called out.
What are they doing and why?
Well, wait till he sees how spitting image does him.
Spitting image has his hair as toupe as a special character, and they show Him as uh uh as bald, and this toupee is flying around and talking to him's kind of like uh uh what's the Marvel character, uh Doctor Strange.
Kind of like Doctor Strange's cape.
So uh anyway.
Tomahawks will not solve anything.
Yeah, this is the uh uh the taco response is now gonna be Tomahawks in Kiev.
Mr. Peace, Mr. Peace Prize.
Uh so just more war, more death, more military industrial complex profits, all from Mr. Peace Prize.
Uh this is Luka Shinko speaking in Minsk on Tuesday.
He stressed that arming Kiev with these missiles would not resolve the conflict, but could quote escalate the situation into a nuclear war.
And he's right, it will escalate, whether it's the nuclear war or not.
Uh, it is a stupid move.
It is a provocative move.
It is not a move that moves us towards peace.
Putin has warned that the potential tomahawk deliveries would force Moscow to strengthen its air defenses and deal a major blow to U.S. Russia relations.
He also stressed that the missiles would not change the balance of power on the battlefield.
Well, you know, stop and think about this.
I remember when we had the Cuban Missile Crisis, and uh I was a kid, and they would Russia wanted to put uh nuclear missiles in Cuba, which is just a couple of minutes away from uh landing in Florida where I lived at the time.
And uh, but imagine, you know, this is so much more provocative.
I mean, they're actually shooting these things into Russia.
Can they still sell this narrative that that Ukraine is just the first domino in all of Europe, that Russia is the aggressor in terms of a pan European war, that that's their goal?
I mean, this is even more absurd than the uh Vietnamese thing.
You know, the Vietnamese thing was that well, the you know, the Viet Cong are really uh surrogates of the Chinese, and the Chinese seek to take over all of uh and um of uh uh Asia there at that point.
And and yet when we look at this, this whole narrative that Russia is the aggressor.
I mean, we've seen the aggression from NATO.
We've seen the civil war in Ukraine, we've seen Kiev uh killing and bombing their own people.
And now they're sending in literally live missiles into Russia, and Russia has not hit the nuclear uh button yet.
And so I I think it's a bit absurd that they're portraying this whole thing still as a domino theory that's going on there.
Meanwhile, Zelensky, our ally, is stripping citizenship from prominent political opponents.
Maybe Trump will do that.
Maybe that'll do the next thing.
Take Chucky Schumer's citizenship.
You're no longer a citizen.
Of course, it actually should be done to Ilhan Omar.
She should have her citizenship removed.
It was her whole family came in under false pretenses in violation of the law.
You're not allowed to immigrate into the U.S. if you are a member of the Communist Party.
I mean, that's whether you like it or not, that's the law.
I I do like that law.
But uh, but nevertheless, they lied because her father worked for the Somalian government, and he was a Marxist publicly as a Marxist.
So the whole family came in under false pretenses.
But anyway.
So the whole, you know, did she marry her brother to all that?
So there's multiple lies under her immigration status, which could immediately be used to say, no, you're no longer a U.S. citizen.
We are revoking it.
Well, Zelensky doesn't have to have any reason.
He's just doing it by decree, by executive order.
Zelensky confirmed signing a decree stripping certain individuals of their Ukrainian citizenship.
Uh he has stripped several prominent public figures of Ukrainian citizenship, including the mayor of Odessa, a renowned ballet dancer.
Can't have that ballet opposition, right?
Uh guy's gonna have to come to America and do ballet parking.
And a former MP.
Uh and all of them had criticized Zelensky's policies in the past.
Uh Odessa Mayor had been known for his consistent opposition to Ukraine's policy of demolishing monuments it sees as linked to Russia.
He's repeatedly denied having Russian citizenship and vowed to go to court in response to media reports about him being stripped of his nationality.
Uh born in Ukraine, uh, The ballet dancer is a citizen of both Russia and Serbia.
And has spent his teen years at the Academy of the British Royal Ballet in London.
He moved to Russia in the early 2010s, largely severing his ties with his home country.
Following his 2018 performance in Crimea, he was added to the controversial website called Mirat Voretz, which provides details about people has labeled as enemies of Ukraine.
And there's more to it than that because you get put on that website, and that's their public assassination list.
Targeted to be killed.
So you better not get in a boat anywhere.
Zelensky has been using claims about Kiev's critics possessing Russian citizenship.
When he cracked down, it cracks down against them.
And of course, this sounds just like in America, right?
They don't like you.
You're a Russian Russian Russian, right?
You're just Russian disinformation.
It's the same type of thing.
Many former Ukrainian officials and Zelensky's political rivals have been targeted in such manner, including Viktor Medvachuk, formerly the leader of the largest opposition party in the country.
Well, we're going to take a quick break here.
Speaking of Zelensky, we'll let him sell some T-shirts for us.
Real quick, we do have a couple of comments.
We've got Hiro May saying, I worked in the casino.
It really is a scam.
There are charts in the back room that show the odds of winning for every machine.
Like, wait a minute, hold on.
This guy's having a run.
Karen and her brother, one of their friends from high school, went to work for the FBI.
His job was to go around and check on the games and whether or not they were cheating even on their cheating.
Now, hold on.
That's too much cheating.
They've already set the game up so the house always wins, but they have to make sure that it's not such a high percentage that it's almost constantly.
You've got to be paying out just enough to make sure that people have the sense that, oh, wait, that could be me.
Yeah.
That could be me.
So there's a legal mandate for how much these things are allowed to take from the average user.
Yeah, that's right.
You can win like 55% of the time, but you can't set to win 65% of the time or higher.
Yeah, that's a problem.
It's taking too much advantage of your suckers.
Epstein Island says, I see endless online gambling commercials just as much as the Ask Your Doctor commercials.
Yeah, it's everywhere now.
It's everywhere.
Well, they're very much alike, aren't they?
One of those drugs you are gambling.
And they do tell you, you know, it's kind of like I imagine if it, you know, if you walk into the casino, they should be saying, this may lead to blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
But that still doesn't deter people when you tell them what this drug's going to do to them and how it's going to fail, even for what you're taking it for.
It usually exacerbates that.
Niburu 2029, all online gambling is concluded only with credit cards, highest interest rates ever, and a major contributor to the debt clock.
Yeah.
At least in Vegas, I suppose, you're limited by the amount of cash you can pull out, whereas online gambling, you just stick your credit card in it and there you go.
Not just losing that money, but the interest on that money as well.
Yeah.
Wow.
Well, we've got to take a quick break and we'll be right back.
Stay with us.
Hello, it's me, Volodymyr Zelensky.
I'm so tired of wearing these same t-shirts everywhere for years.
You'd think with all the billions I've skimmed off America.
I could dress better.
And I could, if only David Knight would send me one of his beautiful gray McGuffin hoodies or a new black t-shirt with the McGuffin logo in blue.
But he told me to get lost.
Maybe one of you American suckers can buy me some at the David Knightshow.com.
You should be able to buy me several hundred those amazing sand-colored microphone hoodies are so beautiful.
I'd wear something other than green military cosplay to my various gallas and social events.
If you want to save on shipping, just put it in the next package of bombs and missiles coming from the USA.
The air is in the air, and the air is in the air.
The air is in the air.
Defending the American dream.
You're listening to the David Knight Show.
Hear news now at APS Radio News.com or get the APS radio app and never miss another story.
Well, some of you were commenting earlier about gold, and we're going to talk about that.
Gold has been glittering, uh, but crypto has been jittering is looking a little bit shaky.
And uh, we're going to talk about that in just a moment, but before we do, I want to thank the people uh we just picked up some checks, and uh, I want to thank the people who have contributed uh via check.
Um, Brett and Ingrid S. Jody K. E. Charlie, and we have a listener from Karen wrote this down, Mid Island, New York.
I'm not sure where that is.
I know where Long Island is, I don't know where Mid Island is.
Uh, Scott and Samantha T, Timothy W. Lois L. Gary B, Matthew H. H D from NC, Dale L, Joel B, James F, Scott C, Margaret Mary T, and Ryan Forrest.
Thank you very much, all of you.
And uh appreciate that so much for love of the road.
And um, just to give you an idea, we're about thirty percent uh here at the middle of the month.
So thank you so much for your support.
And um, let's talk a little bit about gold.
You know, I mentioned the fact that we had a whale who came in and messed with uh crypto, messed with Bitcoin, but especially made a lot of money, I think, off of the altcoins.
And some of them on Binance because of some of the issues with Binance as well.
Uh, some of them went to zero momentarily.
Well, the trader who made $192 million shorting the crypto crash last week is betting against Bitcoin again.
Online chain analysts and traders have dubbed the address as an insider whale.
Some even argue that the position itself could have accelerated the crash.
So again, it's not just Trading on inside information, but if you move that massive amount of money around, that can actually cause it.
Uh the wallet identified, and they give the address here, on the decentralized derivatives platform, hyperliquid, opened a new 163 million dollar short position on Bitcoin late Sunday data shows.
And again, all of this is publicly available.
In the past, uh there's a billionaire who uh lost uh a million dollars almost 900 something thousand dollars, and he didn't even know that he had lost that crypto until somebody noticed this large trade, and they were able to go back and identify.
Not only did they see it, the trade on the uh public blockchain, but they were able to track that back to this particular person.
He contacted him and he asked him, you know, why he um why he did that, and appear apparently it was a a move in the wrong direction, and the guy didn't even know that that money had been gone until he was notified of it.
The same trader drew attention on Friday when it opened a massive short roughly 30 minutes before Trump's surprise announcement of a hundred percent tariffs on Chinese imports.
Now uh what a fortunate coincidence.
I'm not a coincidence theorist, I'm a conspiracy theorist.
Um a move that erased over 19 billion with a B in crypto market value and triggered the largest ever day of liquidations in the market.
The perfectly timed bet to a gain of nearly 200 million dollars, sparking speculation that the entity may have had advanced knowledge of the policy shift.
The entity.
Yeah, the entity.
Back to Mission Impossible, if you want to know exactly when Trump is going to do something, that is Mission Impossible.
Look, it is uh we were talking about online gambling before.
This is what I consider to be online gambling of today.
And and it is a gamble.
You know, whether you're talking about the stock market or the crypto market, uh it is um it is gambling, and the people who are on the inside are rigging the game.
It's a rigged game.
This person had insider knowledge, and they have enough money that they can move markets around with or without the insider knowledge, evidently.
Well, there has been a $26 billion gold rush into ETFs, into paper gold.
And so part of it has been that these um uh these ETFs, these funds, you when you buy an ETF, let's say GLD or SLB to get gold or silver, what you're buying into is a fund that owns gold or silver.
You're not buying the gold or silver.
Uh, this is kind of like people who think that Social Security is a retirement plan.
There is no account there, you know, when you put your money in in Social Security, there's not an account there that has your name on it.
It's just uh kind of a Ponzi scheme.
And that's kind of what's going on with a paper gold and paper silver.
Um I would not trust this at all.
Especially if you're buying gold and silver as a hedge against economic uncertainty.
The last thing that you want to do is buy it as a derivative, and uh that's really what this is.
So again, I would suggest that you get the gold and silver physically.
Uh get it from Tony Arteman.
You can find him at David Knight.gold.
That'll take you to Wise Wolf, and you can start to accumulate this on regular basis.
And um again, this is just uh foolish, but it shows that there's a lot of retail movement essentially with this.
It's not just the central banks that are buying the gold, but now people have picked up on this in a retail way.
Gold's unstoppable upside trajectory continues.
We've been pointing out the similarity between the early 2025 breakout moves for months for weeks, rather.
Uh, these are people who are looking at charts, and again, I would suggest that you look at things other than charts to try to time things.
I'm not a big chart fan.
They may have some uh you told a lot of people talk about well, look, here's the cup with the handle and all this other kind of stuff.
Um, and uh these are people who do quantitative analysis, and I'm sure there's some validity in that because you're looking there at the psychology of the market in general.
But I think uh overall, when you look At how uh how shaky things are, like Ray Dalio was talking about.
That's the reason to get into gold and silver, and that's the reason to get into physical gold and physical silver.
The gold bubble will not die until there is a seller.
That's the headline from Zero Hedge.
And and that really is true.
I mean, everybody is buying now, nobody's really selling.
And so Bank of America has now upped uh their estimate for gold and silver in 2026.
They're calling for $5,000 gold and $65 silver.
That's not all that much of an increase.
I mean, that's only about a 30% increase for silver, which is a huge amount, especially when you consider them in the bank, you're gonna get less than a tenth of a percent, typically in a savings account.
So, yeah, if you get 30%, that's always been a huge return in any at any time, but especially contrast that to uh what's paid on a savings account, which is paid on a uh uh uh on a uh currency that is losing its value,
so you can get one-tenth of one percent on the US dollar, which is rapidly losing its value, or you can put it in something like silver, and Bank of America thinks that you will make um 30% on your money next year, or on gold, they think you'll make uh 25% on your money, but they have always been very, very conservative.
Gold prices up, silver is steady, bulls are showing signs of exhaustion, they say.
But the fundamental issue is that this is not like you're buying stocks and buying a story.
The reality, uh the the narrative in this case, is based on reality.
It's based on what we see in terms of the fiat system, not just in America, but with all these different countries.
That's why all these different central banks are grabbing gold.
And the fact that they are going to be trying to set up a different financial system.
And I'm not just talking about BRICS.
BRICS is trying to set up his financial system, but the Western countries are going to be setting up a different financial system as well.
They're going to have to have gold there behind it in some way, shape, or form, in order to give it credibility.
But the massive worldwide debt of all the company countries everywhere is a thing that is really concerning.
Gold price could go a lot higher, and miners are still undervalued after 100% gains, says uh BlackRock and their advice.
All that glitters is fear, as $5,000 gold is now increasingly inevitable.
Uh this is just the headlines, I'm not going into the details of it, because again, nobody knows exactly what the price is going to be, but uh this just kind of gives you a sense of the general feel of the marketplace.
Uh gold and silver set all new highs, as we keep seeing here.
The U.S. government could add $14 billion to its crypto reserves as part of a forfeiture case, tied to a Cambodian-based company, if they uh convict them.
And again, uh this is not you know, I always think of forfeiture as being something that is not tied to a judicial process, but in this particular case, there is a um uh uh a case tied to a Cambodian exchange, and um I'm not sure exactly what the uh charges are, and I'm not really interested in it.
The bottom line is they're going to seize $14 billion worth of Bitcoin.
Uh so I imagine they've got enough incentive to find these people guilty, whatever they did.
I mean, if they can blow up people on boats, they can assume that these Cambodian people did something that they can uh uh take their their crypto.
What's surprising about I guess is that there's a a process with this.
You know, I'm not used to our government actually having a due process.
Yeah, you'd think they would just go and be like, yeah, that's ours now.
Yeah.
Most, you know, generally we get a post-hoc justification.
If at all.
And Max says, isn't it all just a stage play?
Trump in reality loves Putin, would love to engage in a war with Russia, China, so we can hand us over to the NWO on a platter.
Yeah.
Well, he's gonna take us down as well.
He's taking down the middle class.
He's making it come true that you will own nothing.
Uh, because that's the key thing.
You take away uh the ability of the middle class to have businesses, and that's what his chaotic economic policies in 2020 and this year are doing.
And uh he's gonna continue to do that.
All the world's a stage.
Soylent Goy, if you don't understand that there's censorship in America, it means the censorship is working like a charm.
It's hard to believe that anyone could not understand the level of censorship that we're dealing with.
CJP Rumble, 50 countries are attempting to implement digital prison ID.
Skipper T2.
My mom said stocks were gambling.
She was a smart lady.
My mama was right.
Mom always said uh my mom always said that too.
And uh she was right.
Uh yeah, stocks are gambling.
Gambling is gambling.
Crypto's gambling.
Yeah, there's many different forms of gambling.
Yeah.
They're all bad for you and bad for bad for your health.
Well, we're going to take a quick break.
We'll be right back.
All right, uh, let's talk a little bit about some of the tech issues, because as usual, there's some crazy stuff going on with tech.
Uh here is one of them.
Uh we have a company that is um helping people to apply for jobs.
Uh and I imagine if it's AI, you apply for the jobs.
Sorry, we're not hiring humans.
No, but the take on all of this was make you solve a caption if you can, they throw out your resume.
Yeah.
Because AI is applying for jobs for people, it is flooding the market with job applicants, and one person said, Well, what if everybody applied for every job?
What we'd expect to see AI doing.
So um uh said not only is new job creation slowed to a drip, but the positions that do exist are increasingly hidden.
Uh and of course, part of that is with this H1B visa stuff.
I mean, these people intentionally hide these jobs, put them out there for a while, and then say to the federal government, well, we've uh listed these jobs, we haven't had any applicants because we hid the uh stuff.
So now we need to hire people from India because Americans just don't want this job.
That's the kind of the game they've been playing.
So um anyway, the um so they have uh said uh next we will build out the employer side and the AI engine that evaluates and matches people and companies at scale, uh says this one company that's putting this stuff together.
Um despite his cloyingly optimistic copy, reactions to source, or C E, I guess that's source A on social media were almost universally negative.
They said, What's next?
An app that will automatically order food for you that uses AI to censor when you're hungry.
We have applicants using AI and recruiters using AI.
Nobody is actually taking a moment to understand how to build the concept of hiring.
And uh the question is, are there really jobs out there with the economy and with AI?
Sam Altman says that if the jobs get wiped out, maybe they weren't real work to start with.
I don't know.
How do we ever live without people like Sam Altman and these uh Silicon Valley Tech people?
Yeah, truly.
How did we muddle along on our own without these geniuses?
And what is a real job anyway, right?
Uh I don't imagine that he and I would have the same definition of a real job.
I think a real job works in the real world, making real stuff or growing real food.
Uh that's not what he does.
He has virtual jobs.
Um they're talking about how tech might wipe out entire categories of human professions, he says, Well, what's a job anyway?
You know, can't tell uh a woman and now they can't tell a real they can't tell a real woman and they can't tell a real job either, can they?
Uh to be fair, I'm gonna say that there has been this push online making fun of these sort of daycare for adults jobs where you'll see these women, usually it's women, say, Follow me as I go through my day.
And it's like, oh, I wake up at eight o'clock and I spend three hours putting on makeup, and then I go in and I stop at the fruit juice bar and I get myself a juice, and then I do ten minutes of sending emails, and then, oh, it's our in-group yoga session where they bring in a someone we do yoga.
Now I stop at the coffee bar that's built in, and when you look at these videos, you have to think, what are you actually doing in a day?
This is like Google.
You've spent the night the vast majority of your work day playing around with your friends that also work at the same company.
And what have you actually done?
What does your job actually do?
You've sent ten minutes of emails in a day.
And people wonder why the technology is going through a process of insidification.
Well, a man has launched the world's first Waymo DDOS by ordering 50 robotais to a dead end street.
He says, This is Waymo than they accounted for, said one person talking about it.
It was a prank.
And the guy has actually made his name public.
He's because he's 23 years old, and I guess he knows more about operating systems than he does the legal system.
Because he just put a big target on his back.
He's playing around with his big company like that, putting all their uh jamming all their cars into a dead-end street.
Hey, you didn't specify in the contract that I can't order 50 Waymo's to the same location.
Uh he is uh self-identified tech prankster.
He's got a popular account on X, and over the weekend he went viral after posting about, quote, the world's first Waymo DDOS, a type of malicious cyber attack in which a hacker tries to drown their target in a swarm of simultaneously simultaneous requests, typically with a goal of overwhelming networks and disrupting service.
Put in real life terms, it's like if a crowd of protesters swarmed a restaurant, making it hard for real customers to get in, effectively wasting the business's time and losing them money.
Well, his attack uh was perhaps most mischief was more mischievous than malicious.
And um but it was disruptive, and uh again, you gotta be very careful about doing stuff like this.
Usually the people do this, try to maintain their anonymity.
He's 23 years old, so maybe he doesn't know some of these cases here.
At dusk.
It's funny that they would need to say in real life terms, it would be like having a whole bunch of people go to one area when that's literally what's going on here.
This is the real life term.
It's having a whole bunch of physical things go to one spot.
Yeah, DDOS would be almost as if you sent all these self-driving cars to the same spot.
Actually, may they come real.
Uh the plan he wrote on his post at dusk, fifty people went to San Francisco's longest dead end street.
All of them ordered a Waymo at the same time.
So he's not really doing any cyber hacking.
He's just uh uh working with people and saying, all of you go here and each of you order it at the same time, and we'll see what happens.
When the herd of self-driving cars eventually arrived, he wrote that he and his co-conspirators didn't bother getting in.
They left after about 10 minutes, and they charged a five dollar no fee, uh no show fee, he said.
Everyone was giddy, and when another car showed up, there were chairs, maybe three or four real drivers.
All of them laughed and just drove around, he said.
Ultimately, he said Waymo handled this really well.
When it realized that it was being spammed, the company's ride hailing app disabled all rides within a two-block vicinity until the morning.
I assume this isn't much different than if a big concert had just ended, he said.
And that's way more than they accounted for, said another poster.
So uh again, uh some people put the cone of shame on these things.
Not the collar that you put on dogs that have an ear infection or something, but the uh uh the cone of shame of putting a traffic cone on the car so that it can't move.
It kind of freezes in place.
Uh OpenAI is in danger after authors are suing it to gain access to its internal Slack messages.
So this would be kind of interesting.
I wonder if they'll play it the same way that uh Alex played the uh Sandy Hook lawsuit and pretend that he doesn't have the messages that he really does have.
Uh and I'll talk about that coming up.
But um there's a lawsuit against OpenAI by authors and publishers who say that their copyright has been infringed.
Of course, uh that's the business model of Sam Altman and OpenAI.
The plaintiffs have gained access to their internal Slack messages of OpenAI and the emails, and that could potentially demonstrate willful infringement, and it could lead to enhanced damages.
Uh so juries hear that, and it's a very powerful stick.
So um this was a um as a matter of fact, and another similarity to what Alex did.
Uh the AI company Anthropic agreed to a blockbuster one point five billion dollar settlement after they had were caught red-handed training its models on enormous cash of pirated versions of copyrighted books and other material.
So they got a one and a half billion dollar lawsuit.
Uh the difference is that they've got the money.
They can actually pay it.
But uh now a similar lawsuit aimed at ChatGPT maker OpenAI has taken a dramatic turn, raising the possibility of yet another major legal escalation about copyrights, a potentially much bigger payout to its rights holders.
Specifically, authors and publishers who filed a lawsuit against the Sam Altman-led firm have secured access to the messages and emails, and uh according to publication, the communications could demonstrate woeful infringement and could lead to enhanced damages of up to a hundred and fifty thousand dollars per work.
A massive increase from just seven hundred and fifty.
So we're looking at uh two thousand times uh almost uh what no, not quite two thousand times, let's see.
So um about two hundred times more than they were being charged before.
Uh Anthropic Settlement only covered about half a million works out of an estimated seven million, resulting in a payout of about three thousand dollars per author.
Authors and publishers had just gone after similar communications right after the case settled.
Uh finding out what attorneys said or what clients said to attorneys and back and forth probably gives us a lot of evidence regarding the state of mind.
The lawsuit highlights the AI industry's largely careless treatment of copyrighted materials.
Tech leaders have continued to argue that training AI models on protected content falls under fair use, a legal doctrine that allows for transformative use of copyrighted materials.
Most recently, OpenAI's TikTok like Text to Video app, Sora 2, has been found to spit out a litany of videos heavily based on protected intellectual property, showing this not just ChatGPT potentially infringing copyright.
So given the major payouts at stake, the tides could be turning in favor of artists who've had their life work sucked up by AI models without permission, and they could be looking at another consolidation prize in the form of a settlement fee.
Both anthropic and open AI have been accused of training their AI models on copyright material to a parisse website called LibGin.
Communications show that they deleted the data set.
A move that plaintiffs argue could be construed as intentional destruction of evidence.
See, this is the way that this works, and uh people don't understand what was really going on with Alex's default judgment.
It's a similar thing to this.
Uh if they get these emails, if they get these messages, and they see internal communications that this was a deliberate thing, uh then that makes all the difference in the world.
But beyond that, if you were in a lawsuit, as I've said before, if somebody files a lawsuit against you, you get notification the lawsuit's been sent to you.
If you don't answer it with a reply and say, I I disagree with that, I'm gonna contest that or whatever.
If you just ignore that lawsuit and you don't reply, you lose.
You lose by default.
And then once the lawsuit starts, you have to comply with the discovery stuff.
And if you refuse to comply with discovery, again, you lose because you didn't play the game.
And that's really what was going on with uh Alex Jones and with InfoWars thing, because we just had a termination yesterday.
Uh he appealed to the Supreme Court about the judgment, and he believes that uh the judgment was uh manipulated by the FBI, the CIA, and other people that he uh had a right to say what he said, but it wasn't about any of that.
It was about the fact that he didn't comply with discovery.
As a matter of fact, I was really amazed to go back and look, I remembered it was the Perry Mason moment.
And I go on YouTube and I search for it, and there's not really any uh videos to say about it.
There was one from uh legal uh a legal organization that had a few views on it, not many.
Uh the second one that I found was me talking about it.
Somebody had put up what I said at the time, they had 24 people who uh listened to that channel, and uh 19 of the 24 had seen the video.
And uh and so it's something that's really been under the radar.
And uh this is basically what happened in the trial.
I think it's very serious serious.
And I think that it shows that what Alex is saying about the fact that he was railroaded is absolutely not true.
Just like we're talking about in this case, it is vital that you comply with discovery.
Discovery makes a difference.
And uh if you um uh refuse to play the game, refuse to participate in the legal process in some way, shape, or form, you lose by default.
One of the things you talked about yesterday is you comply with discovery, right?
So that on the witness stand?
That's one of the things I talked about.
Okay.
One of the things that you were ordered to do in this lawsuit, you're ordered to turn over any text messages making Sandy Hook, right?
Yes.
And you didn't have any.
Right.
Not that we could find.
And and you in fact told me in your testimony, sworn testimony before coming to this courtroom.
You searched, right?
I did.
Jones, I'd like to show you what's been Mark's plain first.
You've got it upside down.
That's text messages between you and Paul Watson, isn't it?
Yes.
And they mentioned Sandy Hook, don't they?
Yep.
Planned Smith 130 into evidence.
I've never seen this text message.
I guess you guys got poles.
My phone did disabled.
So that's probably your phone didn't say the second.
I told you guys I gave it to the I gave it to the lawyers and said they drained the phone, they'd find that stuff.
Oh, how about folks?
They were supposed to find it.
So that's what testimony is?
No, I searched as well.
I mean, so you uh all this stuff that you say we didn't give anything.
Mr. Jones, you know how an iPhone works, right?
You've had iPhone tax messages for several years now.
Yeah.
What does it mean if the messages are in blue?
Whose messages are those?
Whose phone is this taking from?
Who knows?
I mean, I just I turned the phone over and take stuff off.
Can I have you look in the very bottom below the very bottom left corner?
Is that the phone number?
Yes.
So you did get my text messages.
Said you did.
Nice trick.
Yes, Mr. Jones.
Indeed.
You didn't give this text message to the case.
You don't know where this came from.
Do you know where I got this?
No.
Mr. Jones.
Did you know that 12 days ago?
Twelve days ago.
Your attorneys messed up.
They sent me an entire digital copy of your entire cell phone with every text message you sent for the past two years.
And when informed, did not take any steps to identify it as privileged or protect it in any way.
And as of two days ago, it fell free and clear into my possession.
And that is how I know you lied to me when you said you didn't have text message about saying Did you know that?
I see I told you the truth.
This is your perimeter moment.
I gave my phone.
And then Mr. Jones, you need to answer the question.
No, I didn't stop.
No, I don't know what's happened.
But I mean I told you I gave him the phone over the five.
You said in your deposition, you searched your phone.
You said you pulled down the text.
Did the certain function for Sandy Hook?
That's what you said, Mr. Jones, correct?
And I had several several different phones.
Yeah, what Alex is uh fortunate is that they didn't come after him for perjury.
Uh just like they didn't come after James Claffer for perjury.
Doesn't mean that you're not a liar because they didn't indict you, but uh that's that's the issue.
And he's still selling this idea that this is a major defeat for the First Amendment.
And I see this from WND, I see it from Gateway Pundit, and WND quotes Gateway Pundit.
It appears that our First Amendment rights have been decimated by the Supreme Court, explained the Gateway Pundits report.
That's not true at all.
This is a fake fight about the First Amendment.
It was never about the First Amendment.
You don't have a right to maliciously slander people.
I mean, you can be wrong, you have a right to be wrong, but you don't have a right to tell lies about people.
And of course, what uh Alex Jones said was that um you know, as soon as this began, he said, No, no, I I believe that uh the people died.
I d uh what I said before that nobody died.
That's not I don't believe that anymore.
Well, that's fine.
You can be wrong, uh, but you have to correct mistakes when somebody pulls it out there.
He never fought that.
He never fought, and he had a lot of people got upset with him because they believed that nobody died there.
But he never had that argument to say that he was right about that.
And he never appealed to his right to be wrong.
He never even participated in the process because you just saw there, they withheld the information.
That information was only obtained because of the mistake of his lawyer.
They had worked together to make sure that information was not going to be put out there.
Why?
Because he didn't want them to get a hold of other information that was going to show how he is protecting his assets.
So, you know, when you have uh slander that is judged to be malicious, that is judged to have been done knowingly, that has never been protected.
First Amendment hasn't changed about that, and the court process hasn't changed if you uh decide that you're not going to participate in it by not doing discovery.
So um it was uh uh something that he realized that he can make a lot of money uh selling that uh if um if he was doing he didn't really care if it was true or not.
I don't think Alex believed that nobody died at that uh at uh Sandy Hook, but uh what he did believe was that he can make a lot of money telling people that.
Uh so regardless of the remarks, one person said, How is one point four billion a reasonable punishment for speaking your opinion?
It wasn't about his opinion, it wasn't about free speech.
It was what was judged by them to a be malicious, but it was that was determined when they did the the judgment.
He lost the case because he refused to comply with discovery.
And he kept saying, Well, we sent him all the stuff, but they said they didn't get it and everything.
And then you see in this Perry Mason moment, which is what uh Alex called it really was a Perry Mason moment, you see there that uh no, they actually had a lot of stuff that they didn't send him, and that included the emails.
It goes on for quite some time.
It's like a seven-minute clip where uh they get into it back and forth about the emails because he also kept the emails a secret.
It's the same type of thing that you're seeing here with open AI and Anthropic.
If they hide the information for discovery, they lose.
Uh so according to uh uh uh Alex's um press release in April of last year, um said uh Alex Jones joined Steve Bannon on the war room the day after undercover video revealed a CIA FBI operative explaining how the FBI had used their powers to bankrupt Alex in InfoWars.
Alex Jones told Steve Bannon that President Trump needs to fire their butts and clean house of the deep state.
Well here's the reality if you want to know uh who the CIA operatives are who were taking down InfoWars you might go back and take a look at Steve Pachinick who is the one who was selling the the fact that nobody died.
That was a Steve Pachinick thing.
And he tried to pull that thing on me as well as I've mentioned many times after the Vegas shooting he came on my he wanted to come on my program he waits and comes on late and then tries to throw his uh stuff out all at once at the very end and um and sandbag me on that but I didn't believe that nobody had died at the uh at the Las Vegas thing and I knew exactly what Pachinic was doing because I'd seen him do it before with Alex.
So you get these CIA operatives like Steve Pachinick who come on and tell people about the stop the steal sting which is a total fabrication lie.
Alex jumps in on that because uh even though it doesn't make any sense and even though he knows that there weren't 20,000 National Guard distributed all over the country that are arresting people really want to believe that would not be reported or observed by anybody.
Anyway he jumps in on that just like he jumped in on the Steve Pachinick narrative about Sandy Hook and Steve Pachinick started making all these you know after he started this nobody died thing that became the go-to way to shut this all down by the people who were the controlled opposition that would come in with every event and say about every event nobody died.
And that is the way that you shut down any questioning of any suspicious shooting is just by coming up with something absurd like that.
There's also the fact if you know exactly how each group will react to a situation you know how to manipulate them anyway.
Like you know that the conspiracy group is immediately going to jump to well nobody died you can work around that.
Mm-hmm.
It's you know when someone has the exact same reaction all the time it becomes account you can account for it in different ways.
That's right.
You have to be able to make a judgment based on what the facts point to not just a matter of well this is my go-to.
This is what I always assume.
If you want to start there but look at the evidence and see where it leads that's fine.
But you need to be able to take it out I said over and over again I said this whole idea that nobody died I said um it works to their advantage if people do die.
You know take a look at 9-11 right it worked to their advantage that they killed 3,000 people with an inside job.
They don't care if nobody they're not gonna go out there and try to make sure that nobody died.
They don't care about our lives at all.
So that's never been an issue.
But it got so bad that even in that uh uh uh shooting in Texas was it Sutherland Springs or something?
That was the church one.
Yeah.
And um uh I'd interviewed many times um Mark Collins who is a spitting image of George Washington he actually goes around to schools dressed as George Washington and teaching them about American history.
He's also a pastor.
He was a former pastor of that church.
He knew the people there very well.
And he's actually played George Washington on several different film productions.
And anyway, I talked to him right after that shooting that happened on a Sunday.
I talked to him on that Monday.
He gave us some information that was not reported by mainstream media.
And they were saying it was done with an AR-15 or whatever.
He said no.
The person who stopped him had an AR-15.
But anyway, clarified the firearms that.
that were used and that type of thing but um afterwards there was this thing going around about nobody died and he goes that's absolutely not true and he goes I can't believe you guys are saying that it got to the point where they thought that InfoWars was saying that about everyone I got him back on and said we didn't say that.
Nobody said that as far as I can tell and I certainly don't believe that let's get you back on we'll talk about that to clarify it.
Uh it became like a disease this Steve Pachinic lie so many of these things that he introduced.
But the real issue was discovery.
Jones charged that the default judgment was improper uh because it made too much of quote unquote trivial discovery issues.
Well, if you are refusing to let them have access to the messages on your phone and the emails that you have, because you're hiding money offshore, uh, that is not a trivial issue.
It's also not a trivial issue if they can't look at it and see if there wasn't a uh knowing awareness that you were telling a lie.
And that's you know why they're looking for this information from anthropic and from open AI.
So he said it's impossible to construe his remarks as denying death.
That's what is uh his people said.
But uh I think when you say nobody died, and you say it repeatedly, I think that that is uh what is I think that is denying deaths.
And he did that until he got to court.
So the Supreme Court has rejected this particular case.
The BBC uh shows us a little bit differently um from the alternative uh mainstream media.
As they pointed out, Jones has not yet paid any of the damages.
He's raised a lot of money, though.
Of course, I imagine a lot of that went to lawyers like the lawyer who mistakenly sent his uh all of his phone information for two years to the opposing counsel and didn't realize it.
I think maybe at that point you should be forced to work pro bono, you know.
The Supreme Court did not explain its decision to deny his request again because it's not about the First Amendment.
The First Amendment was never defended in this particular case.
Uh said he should have the same protections on the First Amendment of the Constitution that journalists have.
Well, again, he chose not to participate.
He chose not to defend the First Amendment.
They said the result is a financial death penalty by fiat imposed on a media defendant.
Well, it's it's not.
Um it is noncompliance with the process.
It was in it was during Texas court proceedings that Jones acknowledged that the attack was 100% real.
He had previously claimed that the massacre was staged, that it was part of a government plot to take guns from Americans, and that no one died.
Nobody died.
That became the uh the uh the mantra that uh went back and forth all of the time.
So um again, getting back to this uh lawsuit and big tech.
This is over copyright issues instead of over a slander issue, but it's always important for both sides to be able to get discovery to see if there was uh what was actually being said internally.
Elon Musk is making cyber truck sales look better by selling a huge number of them to himself.
This is this is one step more than even what NVIDIA did.
You know, NVIDIA went out and gave money to one of its largest customers, so that c that uh large customer would buy NVIDIA's uh GPUs.
Well, Elon Musk is buying the cyber trucks himself.
He's not even giving the money to a third party that's master stroke.
What a businessman.
I mean, it makes perfect sense when you see how few Teslas there are on the road versus how much investment they have.
It isn't about how many cars they can sell, it's purely about how much investment they can get.
Yeah, that's right.
That's right.
Well, Western executives, they say, are shaken after visiting China.
The uh they say that China is rapid advancement in manufacturing, particularly in electric vehicles.
Many executives are impressed by China's highly automated manufacturing industry and its skilled workforce.
Some executives are even abandoning their own EV projects in favor of Chinese technology.
Um there's absolutely no way that anybody's going to be able to compete with the Chinese on EVs.
This whole industry, we've been saying this for years, was handed to China on a silver platter by the people who are pushing the climate change accord, the uh uh the Paris Climate Change Accord of 2015.
That basically makes it impossible for European, uh, American and possibly even Japanese manufacturers to be able to compete.
Because if they shut down their fossil fuels because of emissions, and of course, China did not have to do that.
China was given a pass.
They could continue to, China and India, the two biggest polluters with the two largest populations, Could continue to build cheap and dirty uh power plants like coal plants that didn't have any scrubbers on them.
They could do that for another couple of decades, they could continue to increase that.
Well, everybody else had to cap it and start reducing it.
And so that is causing uh when you look at manufacturing, it's not just the labor cost, but it's really the power cost are huge in manufacturing.
So you're not gonna be able to make something like steel.
You're not gonna be able to make stuff like uh EV batteries and things like that.
So this has all been handed to them on a big green platter.
And uh these are there are no people.
Everything here is robotic.
And again, so they're going from slave labor to robot labor, which robot again is the Czech word for slave.
That word was coined in a uh play that was done by a Czech playwright, and these people have given a blank check to uh China to be able to when you look at this, they don't have to pay the robots, they've just got to feed them electricity, and they've got the cheapest electricity.
So you can't even compete with them if you build out robots and don't even use humans in uh American and European factories.
And I said back in 2017 when Trump was pushing his tax relief and so we're gonna bring back manufacturing.
I said at the time they're not going to bring back manufacturing, and they're not going to onshore this stuff unless and until they can automate it with robots.
It's not going to create the kind of good paying jobs that we used to have before in manufacturing.
That is not their intention.
And um, so the people that are going there saying you get this sense of change where the Chinese competitiveness has gone from being about government subsidies and low wages to tremendous number of highly skilled educated engineers who are innovating like mad, said a British energy supplier, octopus CEO.
Uh according to recent figures by the International Federation of Robotics, China has deployed orders of magnitude more industrial robots than Germany, the US, and the UK.
And it's not just a desire to keep margins low through the automation of human labor.
China has quite notable demographic problem, but its manufacturing is generally quite labor-intensive, they said.
Uh so in preemptive fashion, they want to automate it as much as possible.
Not because they expect they'll be able to get higher margins.
That's usually the idea in the West, but to compensate for this population decline and to get a competitive advantage.
Yeah, these people play the long game.
Um the globalists and the people who are trying to push for global governance, uh, they are the ones who have engineered this global population decline even in China.
But of course, in China, they accelerated it by getting China to put in the one-child policy.
And uh so there has been government mandates, there have been social uh nudging and influence to get people to not want to have children, to not want to have a family.
And then, of course, there's been the chemical pollution that has made it impossible, even if people uh want to have children and are pushing to have children, they're unable to have children because of what has been done to uh the food and other things that are there, the drugs.
Robotics, if deployed well, can lift the productivity of your economy greatly, and if China is extremely good at it, then we should try to catch up because like China, a lot of Europe is aging.
No, there's basically a uh government-assisted suicide program when you look at manufacturing.
A top U.S. Army general says that he is letting Chat GPT make military decisions.
Yeah, what could go wrong with this?
Uh movie after movie done about this very scenario.
Um it's worrying that high school kids are outsourcing their brains to AI, but it's downright alarming to imagine U.S. military leaders uh doing the same thing.
Unfortunately, the scenario is no longer the stuff of Cold War fiction.
As reported by business insider Major General William Hank Taylor, uh commander of the Eighth Field Army in South Korea told reporters, Chat GPT and I have become really close lately.
Well, brain, what should I do next?
I think you should take over South Korea, is what he says.
I'm asking to build, trying to build models to help us all.
And he said this includes a joint UN command in South Korea.
As a commander, I want to make better decisions.
And so I want to make sure that I make decisions at the right time to give me the advantage.
So he brings in Chat GPT.
Notorious For its often agreeable answers, prioritizing endless engagement over accuracy.
So it's like uh yeah, I think you really could take I think you could really take China, go for it.
Yeah.
This strategy is brilliant.
You could definitely win World War III.
Go.
Yeah, so this is the time that we live in right now.
Well, we got some comments here, Travis.
Global thermonuclear war.
Yes.
Yeah, they say it's the plot of a bunch of sci-fi novels, but it's usually a malicious, intelligent AI that uh is the villain in those, not some extremely stupid thing that can just string a few words together and an idiot general that goes along with it.
That's right.
We're going to be doomed by obsequiousness.
This is a dystopian science fiction ma uh thing combined with idiocracy.
Yeah.
Oh, you comedy.
You are so right.
That's a brilliant strategy.
S. A. Miller, one two three.
Thank you very much.
That is incredibly generous.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Says David Travis and Lance been enjoying the show as always.
Your wisdom, wit, and wealth of information is always appreciated.
Blessings to you all and to the listeners as well.
Well, thank you.
Thank you very much.
Guard Goldsmith, and again, Liberty Conspiracy on Rumble.
6 p.m. weekdays, and you can find him on Substack at Guard Goldsmith.
Technocratic feudalism is their preferred system, it appears.
Sounds so much cooler than it actually is.
You know, technocratic feudalism.
Oh man, yeah.
You'd think it would be nights of lightsaber fights if they're came like that.
Where's our techno Robin Hood?
Miburu 2029.
Bill Gates has been earning a 30% return on his vaccine industrial complex investments for decades.
Then Trump joined him in the profiteering back in 2020.
TW 97401, Bitcoin, digital money, not worth the digital paper.
It's not printed on Gerald Celente.
That's right.
That's a good quote, yeah.
Nubaru 2029.
Emperor Trump's favorite daughter, Princess Ivanka graduated from Schwab's young global leaders in 2015 and has been in control of Daddy's short hairs ever since.
His hairs are getting increasingly short, aren't they?
According to that picture from Time Magazine.
Uh a Syrian girl.
Alex looks like King Henry VIII in this video, doesn't he?
Yeah, well.
His uh divorces weren't that extreme.
He's not quite up to six yet.
He's working on getting rid of the wife number two.
No beheading yet.
Let's see.
Uh Nibiru 2029.
Sandy Hoax was an orchestrated false flag that occurred, then blown up for political extortion.
Sandy Hook people had connection to Remington Arms, and that's how they were able to get away with suing Remington, says Swamp Lover.
So Nibiru and Swamp Lover.
Big Brit is back again.
Well even though I mean there is a lot of weird things surrounding Sandy Hook.
It's just pushing the nobody died narrative kind of kills any questioning of other things surrounding it.
And that's why Pachinik did it.
Uh to shut down any questioning of Sandy Hook.
You know, that's one person um who uh used to interview pretty frequently uh said that he uh it fell to him to introduce Alex at uh some place where both of them were speaking, and he said uh he kind of joked and said he makes the truth sound unbelievable.
Well, that's exactly what controlled opposition does.
You know, you can talk about the chemicals in the water and you can make a case for that.
Then you go out and you create a soundbite, turn the frogs gay, right?
Well, now you've made a joke out of it, and you've made it unbelievable for most people.
I mean, fundamentally that is true, but you do it in a way that makes the truth unbelievable.
Or you can just add a lie to it like nobody died, and uh that's that's the way these people operate.
And Alex knows that.
He's not stupid.
He goes along with it because the sensational way of putting it that way, and the sensational lie that nobody died uh helps him with his engagement and his uh audience, which equates to money.
Radis bro, thank you very much.
We appreciate it.
Says number one, we've got this AI not sure.
Number two, AI got a higher IQ than any man alive, and number three, AI is going to fix everything.
The steps in the plan.
I can't wait.
I can't wait for all our problems to be fixed by some AI.
And of course, that's a reference to idiocracy.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Big Brit is back again.
Even Chinese have made videos of how poorly made Chinese EVs are.
Yeah.
There's uh there's a lot of videos that come out of China that you look at and you're like, there's no way that's that can't be.
Well, they have a great idea though, they got the battery ejector button.
So that makes it somebody else's within seconds.
This can be somebody else's problem.
That's right.
That's right.
He got a battery that's gonna catch fire when it's headed.
let's eject it out and uh let other people deal with it.
You won't be burned alive in your car.
It's headed right through the gates of the orphanage.
CJP rumble, the planet needs more lithium batteries.
That's right.
The creeks and the tributaries, they hunger for lithium batteries.
It's your job to go out there and throw them in.
Yeah.
Suck Dadio 77, China in decline.
BS, everything is in decline.
They're trying to save their globalist Nepo baby.
That's right.
Well, we're gonna take a quick break, folks, and we will be right back.
Uh when we come back, we're gonna continue with some news, and we've got some uh pharmaceutical news as well that I think is pretty important.
We'll be right back.
If you like the Eagles, on a dark desert highway, the cars and Healy Lewis in the news.
They say the Holly Rockarous.
You'll love the classic hits channel at APS Radio.
Download our app or listen now at APSradio.com.
Well, as I mentioned earlier in the program, American travelers are now going to be fingerprinted when landing in 29 European nations.
You know, I was just going back and organizing some really old photos that we had, and I looked at it and I thought, you know, I just can't travel anymore.
You know, you should travel quite a bit.
Uh but it's become such a police state burden to go anywhere.
It's just amazing.
And so now if you want to go to Europe, you've got to be fingerprinted as an American.
Uh I wonder do they do this for the boat immigrants that are coming in?
We see these people hitting the shore with uh uh a boat and they all jump out and run for the hills, you know.
Are they fingerprinting them?
No.
The European Union's new entry and exit system has now come into effect as of October the twelfth.
It affects travelers who are heading to twenty-nine European countries for visits up to ninety days within a 100 and day, 180-day period.
Uh travelers will scan their passports and have a photograph taken.
Most will have their fingerprints taken, unless you're a child under twelve.
Travelers might be used to getting their passports stamped when they travel abroad, but the new EES program means that passports will not be stamped.
Only Americans with biometric passports will be able to take part in the new entry system.
Those who don't have a biometric passport will have to join a separate line, and travelers who overstay the 90-day rule will be identified.
Stop back and think about this.
I should have gone back to see when they first started doing passports.
We used to used to have to have government permission and the passports that were there.
This is something that was like a 20th century abomination that came in.
And now it is um escalated to the point that's gonna be uh IDs everywhere.
Uh, everywhere we look, we have free speech under attack.
We have privacy under attack.
That's why I push back against this thing that you know what happened with InfoWars is against free speech.
We got free speech being attacked in every way in every country, including our own.
And a real attack on free speech.
Uh, but when you go out to something that is um a slander case, and you don't even comply with the discovery rules, that is not an attack on free speech.
We need to focus on the attacks on free speech, the real ones.
Well, uh it's not just the inability to uh fly.
They're trying to make it unaffordable to have a car.
So they want to shut down and lock down all travel, even with cars.
Average new car price is now topped $50,000 for the first time as Americans shift to EVs and to luxury models.
The expiration of the $7,500 EV tax credit helped to spark record sales that reshaped September's pricing landscape.
But now they said uh in just five years, folks, the average price of a new car has gone from $40,000 to $50,000.
Think about that.
That's a $25,000 $25% increase in just five years in the price of a car.
It truly is amazing what is being done with this.
The luxury segment has also fueled the price increases.
More than 60 models with an average sticker price north of $75,000, contributed to 7.4% of new car sales in September, up from 6% a year earlier.
Meanwhile, the once common $20,000 car is essentially gone from dealership lots.
The average age of cars on America's roads exceeds 12 years.
There we go, we're average.
Average monthly payments cross the $750 threshold.
And seven-year loans are now more common.
One in five new car buyers pays more than $1,000 a month to secure their vehicle.
These longer-term loans carry a lot of risk for consumers, especially because they are long-term loans on what is a depreciating asset.
So it's very easy to get underwater on these loans and not be able to, if you need to get uh if you can't afford the payments, uh you can't sell it uh for what you uh still owe on it.
Tesla is still the dominant player in the EV segment.
They recorded an average transaction price of fifty-four thousand dollars in September, slightly lower than August, but again, they're just a little bit over the average price of fifty thousand.
Meanwhile, GM is taking a one point six billion dollar hit as it scales back its EV operations.
Again, uh these uh this push to uh force the car manufacturers to make EVs when we look at VW, especially, you know, that diesel scam thing that they came after them with the EPA in order to get them to stop making cheap, reliable, affordable diesels and to start making EVs.
They got the message, huge fine by the American EPA and jail sentences for a couple of uh CEOs.
So they jumped into EVs, and guess what?
Nobody wants these things.
Nobody can afford these things.
Same issue going on with BMW.
And uh GM is taking a $1.6 billion hip hit.
The company noted that the loss is part of its plan to realign EV production and factory operations to better match customer demand.
The decision was made after the expiration of the $7,500 federal EV tax credit on September 30th.
Part of a broader policy rollback under Trump, the one beautiful beautiful bill act uh set September 30th as the final date for getting EV purchase credits, effectively terminating the benefit.
So it's gonna be a big slowdown uh at this point.
And uh GM had previously pledged to invest up to $35 billion in electric and autonomous vehicles through 2025, aiming to transition most of its portfolio to zero emission models later in the decade.
And again, it's a zero emission models, it's the biggest issue.
Uh you know, the hybrids are complicated and expensive, but you know, the the best model is if you just use um a gas-driven generator to charge the battery.
So make it completely electrical so you don't have to switch back and forth between a mechanical drive and electric drive.
Just make it all electrical, and then you've got a small engine that is uh going to kick on when you need additional range, it can charge the battery and it can use uh just a little bit of fuel and kind of run in a steady state uh mode, which conserves fuel and reduces emissions.
And uh they won't even allow that.
That gets shut down.
Uh GM Had one of those and uh Mazda wanted to make one of those.
They actually wanted to use a little rotary engine, which is very, very small and use that as a generator.
But no, we have to have zero emissions.
And if you're gonna stick to that, you're gonna have zero manufacturing, you're gonna have zero cars and the rest of this.
This is government planning, and this is government misallocation of resources.
And of course uh Biden was doing this for the green stuff, but you had uh Trump and Peter Navarro told GM and Ford, you're gonna stop making cars and you're gonna start making ventilators.
I mean, that alone should have made Trump a pariah to conservatives.
But it didn't.
Uh and then uh the fact that it was uh the ventilators were killing people, that didn't phase people either.
So he just gets away with all this stuff.
It's amazing.
Despite the plan cutbacks, GM said this month that its overall sales remained strong.
Analysts have said that the end of the federal EV tax credit will test whether the EV vehicle market is mature enough to thrive on its own fundamentals, or if it still needs support to expand further.
This is a solution for which nobody else thought there was a problem.
But if you look at what is happening in Germany, it's even worse.
Uh, this is from a Daily Skeptic.
They said climate lunatics in Hamburg pass a referendum committing Germany's leading industrial city to de-industrialization completely in just 15 years.
Hamburg is Germany's leading industrial city.
Its companies add 20 billion euros in gross value every year.
Much of this economic output is related to Hamburg's happy location on the Elba and the fact that the city is home to Europe's third largest port.
All this has made Hamburg extremely prosperous, which prosperity has filled it with rafts of clueless virtue signaling morons who have no idea how anything works and why they find Hamburg attractive in the first place, or how their hip urban lifestyles are maintained.
And so there was a photograph they have in this article that's published by Bild in Germany, and you can see this author points out this is Eugippius.
He said, You can see these unmitigated retards having a happy because they've just scored cheap virtue points by voting their own personal energy apocalypse.
And uh so you see these people thumbs up and clapping, yay, we won.
They're celebrating because of their completely insane popular referendum passed with 53.2% of the vote on Sunday.
The referendum, the so-called future decision, binds the free and Hanseatic city to achieving total carbon neutrality by 2050.
Five years earlier than the 2045 goal set by the almost equally insane German-wide uh Germanywide climate protect protection law as amended in 2021.
So across Germany, they have to uh get to uh their net zero uh by 2045.
So they wanted to speed it up in Hamburg and do it five years earlier, which would be kind of interesting because they will be the literally the canary and the coal mine, or the shut coal mine, I guess.
There's no gas coming out of the coal mine anymore because they've shut it.
But uh people will be able to see the effects on Hamburg earlier, maybe headed off.
I don't know.
What are you saying, Lance?
The canary without a coal mine.
That's right.
I haven't got a clue.
Yeah.
Um it doesn't have a coal mine or a pot to piss in either.
That's what's gonna happen to these people.
Uh so uh that was in turn five years earlier than the previous 2050 goal.
And they keep moving these things forward.
I wouldn't be surprised to see them do another referendum to move it up to, let's say, 2030.
That's the magic number that everybody's been talking about before.
But first they did 2050, then Germany says 2045, then Hamburg says, I see that, and I'm gonna raise you by five years.
We go to 2040.
So there you go.
And the loser is Hamburg.
Less than 44% of eligible voters even bothered to cast a ballot.
Uh thus just 23% of the most deranged Hamburgians, she call them hamburgers.
Uh they're gonna be chopped meat, That's for sure, could take their city hostage and use its government to destroy all industry and most activity.
Inside the next decade and a half.
The biggest joke is that when Hamburg has finally achieved the sacred net zero, it'll make absolutely zero net difference to anything because Hamburg is responsible for something like 0.022% of CO2 emissions globally.
The city is not even a rounding error.
And that's the whole point.
When you look at this, and does it really make any difference?
When you look at the climate uh accord thing, 2015, the Paris Climate Accord, if you're going to allow the two countries that have the largest manufacturing and the largest population, China and India, to not only not reduce anything, but allow them to continue to build out with cheap and dirty uh things while you start putting this on smaller areas like that.
It doesn't make any sense at all.
And some of the true believers in this climate McGuffin nonsense, people who believe that there really is an issue that CO2 is really gonna uh warm the planet and kill everybody.
If you believe that nonsense, uh at least some of the people who are that stupid and gullible could still still see that, wait a minute, we're talking about global warming.
So that means that it matters if you have more emissions in the biggest countries like China and India.
So that's the point that's been here all along.
And the thing is, China and India are actually causing real ecological problems.
Yeah.
But we refuse to actually look at those.
We're forced to look at this nebulous, oh, carbon emissions that will you know, completely hamstring everyone if we actually focus on it.
But we're not going to do anything about the massive amount of pollution that is coming out of these two countries.
They're allowed to continue to make a mess of their own areas, and it's gotten so bad that it's starting to affect other people as well.
Yeah.
There's actually a story where the amount of fecal matter in the ocean is becoming a problem.
Like it's washing up on beaches in concentrations that are high enough where it's making it so people don't want to go to the beach.
I prefer plastic.
Yeah.
And it's it's almost literally solely because of India, because they're just dumping uh a ton of raw sewerage directly into these rivers that feed out into the ocean.
I mean, the Ganges.
Well, you see that happening a lot with Mexico doing that down near the Baja Peninsula area, you know, and dumping out raw sewage that gets up into uh California sometimes.
And it's just Mexico's population is so much smaller than India.
India's population is massive, and I believe, as far as I know, it's not slowing down.
I believe India is still growing.
Yeah.
And they have they never had a one-child policy.
No, and they do not have the infrastructure to take care of their population, which is part of the reason they're so dead set on shipping them all out.
If they were to stay in India, it would be a massive problem for them.
But if they can continue to breed this massive population and then just shove the workers out into other economies where they siphon money off, it's a great business deal for them.
Yeah, it's not a bug, it's a feature now.
So uh yeah, when you look at at China, uh remember a couple of years ago they started making all this noise about all the plastic pollution in the ocean.
Well, it turns out that was all coming from China.
It was all focused around that particular area.
And but they put that narrative out, and part of the reason that they put it out was because they were losing their narrative about climate change, which is never none of their predictions have ever panned out.
None of their models have ever panned out, and so people are starting to question all this net zero nonsense.
So they fell back to their initial starting position, which is we're gonna clean this up.
And when you talk about cleaning stuff up, Wuhan has some of the worst air anywhere in the world.
And uh, again, they don't bother to clean stuff up.
As uh Eugipius says it's absolutely imperative to get these sorts of people out of politics.
They're crazy, they are doing everything in their power to destroy civilization.
They're insulated from a lot of the economic chaos that they wreak because they're overwhelmingly government bureaucrats, university types, and hipsters, who are to a varying degree reliant on the state to make their living.
They're renters rather than owners, they live near the city center rather than in the suburbs, and they're young rather than old.
So we pretty much know where this kind of stuff is coming from.
Now, we've had a couple of different incidents about uh semi-trailers and uh the the drivers who don't have legitimate commercial driver's licenses and who Don't speak English, and we have another one that's just hit.
This is ICE is ready to deport an Indian illegal who had a New York commercial driver's license, and his name was No Name Given.
And what I thought was really funny was that this article from New American refers to him as Mr. Gibbon.
Well, Mr. Gibbons.
Yes, Mr. Gibbon.
Um he was taken into custody, arrested in Oklahoma, and he had a New York commercial driver's license with the name No Name Given.
Homeland Security reported ICE revealed the slippery Mr. Gibbons' real name, and that's uh equally amusing.
His real name is An Mole and Mole.
He's got like Boutros Boutroscali.
The guy who's so nice they named him twice.
Yeah, so uh it's funny.
People the same name back to back.
Um the beginning of the end of Anmole and Mole's career as an illegal alien driver, uh September 25th on Estate 40 runs east-west through Oklahoma.
Uh runs east-west through the entire country, actually.
Goes from uh I think it's Wilmington all the way over to California.
I don't know what the terminal point is in California.
Anyway, the day they caught Anmole and Mole, authority authorities also arrested 125 illegals from multiple countries, including India, Uzbekistan, China, Russia, Georgia, Turkey, Tajikistan, Ukraine, and Mauritania.
If New York wants to hand out commercial driver's licenses to illegal immigrants with no name given, uh that's on them, said GOP Governor Kevin Stitt.
And uh so even more disturbing is the fact that the license bore the trademark star of real ID.
He got a real ID with no name.
Real ID is supposed to make us safe because it was supposed to identify everybody after 9-11, right?
Who would have thought that these government programs are inefficient and overly cumbersome?
Yeah, now it's supposed to be uh, you know, you gotta have it to get on an airplane.
And the other thing that this article isn't stating is that I don't think a U.S. citizen would be able to get a no-name given driver's license.
These are given two illegals.
That's right.
Yeah, if you were I were to show up and pull something like that, they'd throw us out on our ear.
Yeah.
You're gonna come back and you're gonna comply with every last bit of bureaucracy.
That's right.
Well, you know, you have these uh states like New York and California, and of course, this is one area where the federal government, I think, does have jurisdiction since the federal government, in a sense, uh, since they kind of own the interstate system, they paid for it, and they have massive subsidy of it, whether we like it or not.
Uh Richard Nixon used that to enforce his 55 mile an hour speed limit, saying I'm not going to give you highway funds to maintain this thing.
Again, it always comes back to the money, uh, so they don't have a legal fight over this.
It's like I'll give you money if you do 55 mile an hour speed limit.
And by the way, you get to keep all the revenue from the tickets that you write.
Uh so you can either do that or I will take the highway funds from you, and you will have to pay to maintain the interstate yourself.
So there is uh something that they could do about this.
But we had not just, you know, it's a couple of weeks ago the thing that outraged everybody was that ridiculous U-turn that um 18-wheeler guy did, didn't speak English, and uh, and you can see it on the uh on the video camera that's in his cab.
You can see him driving, and then you can see over his shoulder as he's got his turning his thing in a U-turn, and it's across the road.
This car can't stop and go sliding into it.
Killed all three people in the car.
And uh so that really got everybody's attention.
And this is getting a lot of attention as well.
This is a uh foreign trucker that was going the wrong way down the interstate, and he gets stopped by an American trucker.
There's a little bit of language in here.
Do we get that TV hit me?
Oh, good, thank you.
I mean, what the f are what?
He's gonna get in front of him here.
I guess he can't read the signs that say which way the road is.
What are you doing?
I'm going that way.
But it's not working.
I'm doing it, John.
I'll go down the side.
Let me ask you a question, man.
Okay.
You are going the wrong way down the freeway.
You are committing a felony right now.
Okay.
Well, one, why the fuck going the wrong way down the freeway?
Well, no, I I'm I'm just asking because I'm I'm sorry.
Yeah.
Turn around when you have a clear spot.
Don't even move your truck.
Turn your hazard lights on for one.
Turn your hazard lights on now.
Your hazard lights, your blinkers.
Teach them how to drive.
Turn your hazard lights on.
they're on okay Yeah, that's gone pretty viral.
So uh Department of Transportation issued an emergency rule tightening up who can hold U.S. commercial drivers' licenses.
This will limit the CDLs to U.S. citizens and lawful permanent residents until states prove that they are following federal standards.
Wait a minute.
What's that about?
Until.
Why wouldn't you just limit it to U.S. citizens and lawful permanent residents?
Why this until thing, right?
I I don't get that.
This is like saying we're going to stop the nine billion dollars to Harvard that we're giving them each year from the federal government until uh they stop these protesters of what Israel is doing.
Then we'll give them the nine billion dollars again.
Some DMVs found them pushing unqualified applicants through the system.
As a matter of fact, we had that uh report that we showed where they were actually uh the people at the DMV were working with these guys who uh couldn't pass the test, helping them to pass the test.
We're talking about drivers who couldn't read road signs, couldn't communicate with law enforcement, might even wind up going the wrong way on the interstate.
The result is, of course, massive chaos on the highways, a lot of fatal crashes that should have never happened.
I tell you, I was in um I would go in early in the morning when I was in Austin, driving in at four a.m. and it was a uh divided highway, four lanes, two on each side of the division.
And um I'm driving along all of a sudden I see headlights on my side of the road and it's like, what's going on?
And I get over to the right as far as possible, and this person just goes barreling by, thinking that they were on a two-lane road, and uh they were going the wrong way, going really fast, too.
So it's not just uh not just the truckers are there.
Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy said Americans who've been in the trucking industry for fifty years through family businesses can't do business anymore because you have these illegals coming in, living out of their trucks.
You have teams of drivers, and they're not safe.
They can't speak the language, they come in underprice, way underpriced, he said.
Uh Bill Skinner, a trucking expert warned, he said almost a third of our nation's freight is hauled by non US non-citizen drivers.
That's not just a safety issue, he said.
There's other issues involved in that.
And as a matter of fact, on some positive news, one trucker posted on X about a run that he had from Chicago to Fargo.
He said, Normally I do this for twelve hundred dollars, but I had a delivery broker call and offer me eighteen hundred dollars.
So they're starting to feel the pinch of having some of this cheap labor uh because they get people who don't know how to read signs.
Craig Fuller, who runs freight waves, pointed out the shift.
He said, volumes are anemic.
In other words, the economy is turning down.
Nevertheless, spot rates rose two percent anyway.
He said we're seeing the bottom feeders get squeezed out of the market since these firms don't operate in the contract market.
A series of busts that reveal just how deep the problem ran.
In Oklahoma alone, a three-day sweep along I-40 netted over 90 illegal drivers and semis, with reports putting the number as high as 120 or even 130 in related stings.
Agents confiscated licenses from those lacking proper entry papers, like the I-94 form proving legal arrival.
And uh that was where they found the New York commercial driver's license uh that said no name given.
It's the uh license holder.
Well, um uh when we uh look at what is happening here, I've got one more uh story here before we run out of time.
We've got some comments that I want to carry, but uh this I thought was very interesting because there's a new book out, and it's actually free, you can get it online.
As the uh title here from uh WNG.org said it's another case for case for Christ.
This is a groundbreaking defense of the historical account of Jesus.
And of course, um, if you know anything about uh Josephus and his history books, he wrote uh significantly about the fall of Jerusalem.
Um in uh 70 AD.
And there was a passage there where he talked about Jesus Christ, and a lot of people, because it was uh so um fit the biblical account so much, a lot of people discounted it and said it must have been added later.
However, this guy, his name is uh T. C. Schmidt.
And the book is Josephus and Jesus.
New evidence for the one called Christ.
And in it, what he did was he looked at it linguistically and other uh issues to say that no, I think what he wrote, uh, I think this was actually written by Josephus and not put in later on.
So this is a um a uh scholarly analysis.
He uses cutting edge stylometric analysis to show the passage's vocabulary and style align very closely with Josephus' other writings, dispelling doubts about his authorship.
He further demonstrates that ancient Christians, unlike modern skeptics, often read the testimonium as neutral or even slightly negative.
In other words, uh they weren't looking at this saying this validates what we said about Jesus.
They said, well, no, actually a lot more to it than that.
Um not as a glowing endorsement of Jesus.
So for Christians, this is a game changer.
The earliest non-Christians reference to Jesus documented within six decades of his crucifixion, confirms his historical existence, his miracles and the enduring faith of his followers.
Schmidt's study transforms a long-debated text into a powerful apologetic tool, offering external independent and non-Christian validation of the gospel accounts.
Again, the book is um Josephus and Jesus, and the subtitle is New Evidence for the One Called Christ.
And you can find that free online uh if you're interested in reading it.
And uh one of the one of the things when we talk about martyrs, Christian martyrs, you know, that is the Greek word for witness.
And it was the people who were actually witnesses to it that were killed, and that's one of the best um uh affirmations you can have of the truth of something.
Most people uh when they uh make a deathbed confession or it can or they stick to a story upon penalty of death, uh a story that will get them killed.
Uh that's a pretty good confirmation that those people believed that it was absolutely true.
So that's why when you see uh um uh people like um Cole Case Christianity was his uh J. Warner uh Wallace.
Wallace, yes.
Um things like that that as a coal case uh detective.
Uh those are the types of things that carry a great deal of weight.
Well, before we run out of time, Travis, see how many of these comments you can get here.
Let's go, Brian and Deb McCartney.
I had to have my hand swabbed in Cincinnati yesterday because I do not have real ID.
I'm a terrorist to them for not complying with it.
You must have dirty hands if you don't have real ID, yeah.
Brian Deb also asked if I was more dangerous than most.
He was not amused.
I refused the facial scan too.
Niburu 2029, biometric passports from Emperor Trump's biometric ID track and trace company.
Yeah.
Brian Deb McCartney also says I got flagged flying out in September as well.
I had to remove my shoes and got pulled aside for public groping.
I told them to do the humiliation ritual where all the other sheep could see.
Yeah, I make them do that.
Uh, but I don't fly anymore.
That's the last time I I'd done that for years.
It's like I'm gonna be the the as much of a cog in uh as much of a monkey wrench in the uh in the machinery as I can.
If you get enough blood in the gears, eventually they stop to function.
Yeah.
Real Jason Barker remember when you were hard pressed to get a four-year car loan, three years was standard for a new car.
Niburu 2029, 50,000 car equal 2,000 year insurance costs with equal registration costs.
Yeah, that's part of the reason uh insurance is going up.
Eric Peters has talked about that.
I think he mentioned it when he was on with me that one time.
Yeah.
How it's bloating the cost on everything.
Steve Abs, Eric Peter.
Oh, wow, yeah.
Look, Eric Peters had a few articles on why, even for me, no accidents, no tickets as to why my car insurance keeps going up.
It's those 50K car owners.
See?
Yeah.
You guys are sharp.
You guys get it before even I do.
It's all about 50 Minutes Cities, is Brig Bitt, Nibiru 229.
Once the Mark's Mary Keep Industries decimated that we'll let China flood the nation with cheap junk EVs.
The federal government increases gas prices exponentially for sales.
Thank you all very much.
Have a great day.
We can get you to read the ads at the disclaimer for pharmaceutical companies.
Thank you.
Have a good day.
The Common Man.
They created Common Core to dumb down our children.
They created Common Past to track and control us.
their commons project to make sure the commoners own nothing.
and the communist future.
They see the common man as simple, unsophisticated, ordinary.
*Mario*
But each of us has worth and dignity created in the image of God.
That is what we have in common.
that is what they want to take away.
Their most powerful weapons are isolation, deception, intimidation.
They desire to know everything about us while they hide everything from us.
It's time to turn that around and expose what they want to hide.
Please share the information and links you'll find at the David Nike Show.com.