Dark Journalist - Dark Journalist & Dr. Joseph Farrell: The Secret Money Confederate Gold Bearer Bonds! Aired: 2022-09-03 Duration: 01:06:30 === Taipei's Secret Access (12:45) === [00:00:02] Hello, everyone. [00:00:03] This is Dark Journalist. [00:00:04] Today, I have a special part two episode for you with Oxford scholar and Giza Death Star book series author Dr. Joseph Farrell. [00:00:12] Today, Dr. Farrell will go deep on the secret system of finance, tracking it from America, the Civil War, all the way to Taiwan and Taipei. [00:00:21] Does the UFO file and the FBI raid on President Trump link directly to the secret money? [00:00:26] Please join us now. [00:00:40] Joseph, let's start with President Trump and his relationship to secret finance. [00:00:45] Let's put that differently, Daniel. [00:00:47] Yeah. [00:00:51] How do you think he was so effective in dealing with China? [00:00:55] Yeah. [00:00:56] Because if there is one government that is up to its earlobes in involvement in financial shenanigans and that would know about the extent of that hidden system, it's China. [00:01:08] Wow. [00:01:09] Yeah. [00:01:09] And by the way, it's also Taiwan. [00:01:15] How does Taiwan get in there? [00:01:17] Kobintang. [00:01:19] Oh, right. [00:01:20] The Morgenthau bonds were Kobintang bonds. [00:01:23] Yes. [00:01:24] So, you know, they have known about this hidden bond market thing for a very long time and they have kept their mouth shut. [00:01:33] Incredible. [00:01:36] That might be the key to their survivability. [00:01:39] I don't. [00:01:42] Look. [00:01:47] My speculation is that, as you know, if you listen to my news and views, I think Nancy Piglossi's little trip was all about Taiwan from the get go, number one. [00:02:00] It was a trip to reassure allies in the region that no, the American government is not completely nuts in spite of what you see on television. [00:02:09] And we're making our visit right after that Taiwanese announcement oh, yeah, our missiles can hit the Three Gorges Dam. [00:02:18] Amazing. [00:02:20] Yeah. [00:02:21] I suspect Taiwan, the Kuomintang government, what you have to remember is that there are places in China, communist China, that remember Chiang Kai shek fondly. [00:02:37] Interesting. [00:02:38] Yeah. [00:02:39] I also suspect that any Chinese realist, be they in Beijing or Taipei, Know that at some point those two Chinese governments have to get back together. [00:02:59] So, how do we do it? [00:03:02] I suspect that there are factions within the Communist Chinese Party that have some very hidden ties to Taipei. [00:03:11] Fascinating. [00:03:12] I suspect that they would both like to be rid of Mr. Xi Jinping because he's much more of a Maoist than the rest of them. [00:03:26] I suspect that. [00:03:27] I suspect that if you really get right down to it, Taipei's investments in mainland China give it a say way out of its weight on the boxing circuit. [00:03:45] Hmm. [00:03:46] Now, there's something going on with all of this financial crisis going on inside of China. [00:03:53] And I'll be very blunt, honest, I haven't a shred of evidence for this, but I smell Taipei. [00:03:59] Fascinating. [00:04:00] Wow. [00:04:01] That's incredible. [00:04:03] The whole thing reminds me when I think about the secrets of the people who know and the people who are on the outside of the story that you covered about Yamashita's gold. [00:04:15] Ding, ding, ding. [00:04:16] Yes. [00:04:18] Because the Kuomintang nationalist Chinese bonds, the so called Morgenthau bonds, well, those bonds were given to the Kuomintang, to the nationalist Chinese government, to Chiang Kai shek. [00:04:33] So, in other words, whatever's going on there, that's your first hidden bond market. [00:04:38] That's your first indicator that you've got a hidden bond market. [00:04:43] And it's the nationalist Chinese government that knows all about it. [00:04:47] And then let's add something to that, Daniel. [00:04:51] Remember when Trump met with people that held those bonds? [00:04:57] Right. [00:04:58] And were wanting to get him to negotiate with the Chinese, the mainland Chinese, to honor those bonds? [00:05:06] Yeah. [00:05:06] That was a big thing, I blogged about it. [00:05:09] Right. [00:05:09] Oh, I thought, what's going on there? [00:05:12] So, in other words, that right there tells you that Mr. Trump knows about at least that aspect of the history of the hidden system of finance. [00:05:25] Excellent point. [00:05:26] You know, this is really making me think because I came across a story about in 2020, this Chinese woman was grabbed on the grounds of Mar a Lago. [00:05:39] And she, they, they remember that. [00:05:42] Yeah. [00:05:43] Yeah. [00:05:44] And what they found she was doing was taking pictures. [00:05:48] And when I think about the idea of them raiding the place later or planting something there later, and I think about, you know, if there was any country that was involved besides the deep state itself, but an actual country sponsoring this thing about the raid, who would it be? [00:06:03] All right. [00:06:04] Now let's go further with your MacGuffin theory. [00:06:06] Yes. [00:06:09] Do you remember the head of Chinese counterintelligence, the defector? [00:06:16] Yes. [00:06:16] That comes to this country, and who does he defect to? [00:06:21] He defects to the DIA. [00:06:24] Right. [00:06:26] Not the CIA. [00:06:28] Yeah. [00:06:29] Not the FBI. [00:06:31] He avoids all of the intelligence agencies that have been overstepping their bounds in this country that have been in the news regularly. [00:06:40] He goes to the one agency that nobody ever hears about. [00:06:44] And incidentally, the agency that John Kennedy set up because he didn't trust the CIA either. [00:06:51] That's his intelligence agency. [00:06:52] That's his intelligence agency. [00:06:57] So, you know, what does that tell you? [00:06:59] Yeah. [00:07:00] I strongly suspect that this defector is the other MacGuffin hiding in the background. [00:07:06] Interesting. [00:07:07] Because what that chain of connection tells me is he's. [00:07:14] Interested in getting whatever information that he had access to, which head of Chinese counterintelligence, that's going to be a lot of information. [00:07:23] Yeah. [00:07:24] That's not in the New York Times. [00:07:27] You're probably working for China. [00:07:29] Yeah, that's my point. [00:07:33] What government in power right now in the West has the most interesting back connections to communist China? [00:07:43] Joe Biden. [00:07:44] Yes, yes. [00:07:47] As far as I'm concerned, the man's a shill for the Chinese Communist Party. [00:07:52] I think Hunter Biden's laptop proves it. [00:07:55] Yeah, bingo. [00:07:56] Ding, ding, ding. [00:07:57] You know, we have effectively an agent of provocation for the Communist Chinese in the White House. [00:08:08] I'll be blunt and use the treason and traitor word because that's the implication of what we're dealing with. [00:08:16] So, would you weaponize the FBI if you were afraid that Trump might know something about that? [00:08:21] Wow. [00:08:22] Via a communist Chinese defector? [00:08:24] That really is a high possibility. [00:08:28] And would you be willing, let's just extend the scenario a little bit? [00:08:34] Would you be willing to send Nancy Piglossi, of all people, to Taipei? [00:08:42] Wow. [00:08:43] To see what they might know and think about all of this? [00:08:47] Yes. [00:08:48] That they can't put in, you know, on the telephone or, you know, whatever. [00:08:52] Right. [00:08:53] I have to meet you in person. [00:08:54] I have to meet you in person. [00:08:56] So I'm sending an emissary, and you're not going to guess who it is. [00:08:59] Right. [00:09:01] Yeah. [00:09:01] Would she be a logical choice? [00:09:03] Yes. [00:09:04] Why? [00:09:05] She's number three in line. [00:09:07] That's true. [00:09:08] Yes. [00:09:09] Does anybody trust Joe Biden? [00:09:11] I don't. [00:09:13] No. [00:09:14] Does anybody trust Kaklan Kamala? [00:09:17] I don't. [00:09:18] Definitely not. [00:09:19] Now, I don't like Nancy Piglossi as far as I can throw her. [00:09:23] No. [00:09:24] Would I trust her for something like this? [00:09:27] Yeah. [00:09:29] I would. [00:09:29] Well, the family is just skeezy enough with all the mafia. [00:09:32] Yeah, I know. [00:09:35] We're back to the mob again. [00:09:37] Well, an interesting thing happened where I found out that as Trump was leaving office, these documents came out and they completely covered them over. [00:09:48] There was no coverage on them at all. [00:09:50] And it was all about how John F. Kennedy had ordered an investigation into her uncle. [00:09:56] Oh, I can believe that. [00:09:57] Yeah. [00:09:58] And trying to figure out what is this guy doing with the organized crime and the unions? [00:10:06] And so he orders a gigantic investigation into Pelosi's uncle. [00:10:11] And those records finally come out and they're dribbled out just as Trump is leaving office and there's no coverage, nothing. [00:10:17] Well, what do you know? [00:10:20] And would Mr. Trump be willing to use those records to get Nancy to do something, a little favor for him? [00:10:26] I think he probably would. [00:10:29] And would Nancy probably see her way straight to do it? [00:10:32] Well, I think she probably would. [00:10:34] Yeah. [00:10:36] Well, it's interesting because publicly, Stepford Biden there was saying, no, you know, I don't want her to go to Taiwan. [00:10:44] I wonder why. [00:10:45] Yeah. [00:10:46] That's a rare break. [00:10:48] Well, here's the problem. [00:10:50] Here's the problem with Piglosi in Taipei. [00:10:56] Taipei, whether we like it or not, there are people, families in Taiwan that have families in the mainland. [00:11:04] I mean, this is just the way it works. [00:11:06] Right. [00:11:07] So, there are connections. [00:11:09] There is a network of information transfer, in other words, between Taiwan and the mainland. [00:11:16] And let's not forget to add the third interested party here that keeps a watch on everything going on over there and keeps their mouth shut Japan. [00:11:28] Right. [00:11:29] Japan. [00:11:31] So, and by the way, yes, Japan is very serious when they say, okay, China, you better watch out because if you If you move into Taiwan, we will protect them. [00:11:43] So, this is a very delicate geopolitical dance that you're watching. [00:11:49] And there's something in Taipei that the Taiwanese have access to or know about this whole situation. [00:11:56] And I think that's why all the attention has been focused there. [00:12:02] Would Xi Jinping want it to become publicly known that he has a shill in the White House by the name of Joe Biden? [00:12:10] Would he want absolute irrefutable proof of that? [00:12:15] To come out. [00:12:15] No, no, no. [00:12:17] Would the Taiwanese probably know about it? [00:12:19] Yeah, you betcha they probably would. [00:12:23] And so much of this, they could be saying, look, you know, you have to help us because we don't want any information about that secret system of finance to come out. [00:12:32] Bingo. [00:12:34] Bingo. [00:12:35] That really makes sense. [00:12:36] Both the mainland and Taiwan are involved in that. [00:12:40] And let's not forget, Taiwan has its own peculiar connections to our dear friends, the Nazi international, the Davos set. === Biden as a Shill (02:51) === [00:12:48] Interesting. [00:12:48] Don't forget that for a moment. [00:12:51] Is that through the world communists? [00:12:54] Bingo. [00:12:55] Yeah, it's now the World League or something for democracy. [00:12:59] Right. [00:13:00] They got rid of communists. [00:13:01] Yeah, they got rid of communists. [00:13:04] We're updating. [00:13:05] Yeah, we're updating our fascism. [00:13:08] And besides that, the communist Chinese aren't really communists anyway. [00:13:11] They are fascists. [00:13:13] Right. [00:13:16] Yeah, actually, it's a good point. [00:13:18] The murderous state and corporate power, they fit the bill. [00:13:24] Oh, they're much more like Nazi Germany than they are Soviet Russia. [00:13:28] Much more. [00:13:29] Fast. [00:13:30] That's where that social credit score is coming soon to a United States near you, right? [00:13:36] Well, hopefully not this part of the United States. [00:13:41] You know, I'm all for adopting another name, but the names I'm favoring right now are in the Beauregard variety. [00:13:52] We'll just go Francis Bacon and go New Atlantis. [00:13:54] Francis Bacon, yeah. [00:13:58] Yeah, we're the New Atlantis folks. [00:14:02] Joseph, this is amazing. [00:14:05] And of course, you've written about these things extensively in the Breakaway Civilization book and the Secret Space Program books, which are fascinating. [00:14:15] And I swear, read the headlines seven years out before things happened. [00:14:20] I do want to ask you how is this going to turn out with the raid on Trump? [00:14:26] What are they going to pull? [00:14:27] What are they going to pull out of their hat? [00:14:30] I think the next thing you're going to see is you're going to start seeing. [00:14:35] Serious attention in the mainline news about a breakup of the country. [00:14:40] I think they have decided that it's much easier to manage a smaller country rather than to try and get this thing into our new world order all in one swallow. [00:14:54] And they've got to walk away from obligations, too. [00:14:58] I also think it's going to be their huge miscalculation. [00:15:05] Mm hmm. [00:15:05] For the reasons I outlined earlier. [00:15:08] But I honestly suspect that now there's no turning back. [00:15:12] They've crossed the Rubicon quite literally. [00:15:14] And you're going to see much more open talk about secession, states' rights, nullification. [00:15:21] It's going to be like living in the last days of the Buchanan administration all over again on steroids. [00:15:30] The thing that I'm afraid of is the same thing that you're afraid of, is that we're going to get some corporate right wing demagogue like a Lincoln. === Confederate Money Secrets (15:14) === [00:15:39] To try and come in and wave the magic wand and solve it all. [00:15:44] I don't have any love lost for Jeff Davis either. [00:15:47] He's got his own murky connections. [00:15:50] But of the two, Lincoln is by far the worst of the two in terms of what he was doing and what his aims were. [00:16:00] I mean, he was a corporate railroad lawyer, pure and simple. [00:16:04] And the last thing we want is those Southerners getting their transcontinental railroad before we do. [00:16:12] Oh, there's a lot of control games. [00:16:14] Oh, yeah. [00:16:15] Period. [00:16:16] Oh, yeah. [00:16:16] Yeah. [00:16:17] And I mean, it is interesting. [00:16:20] Jim Mars used to always point this out. [00:16:22] He said, You know, there are three people in history who try to issue their own money, and they, you know, all went down pretty hard Abraham Lincoln, Adolf Hitler, and JFK. [00:16:32] Yeah. [00:16:33] But it is interesting if you go back into that Lincoln period that he issued those greenbacks. [00:16:39] And again, you're getting outside of that central bank control piece. [00:16:47] You're getting outside, but there's an interesting aspect to that story that no one talks about. [00:16:53] And that's the Confederacy. [00:16:55] What were they doing? [00:16:57] Yes. [00:16:58] Well, if you look at Confederate money, and I can't imagine Mr. Central Bankster being all that in favor of the Confederate system either, but you really have to think deeply about it. [00:17:12] If you look at Confederate money, I don't know if you've ever seen any. [00:17:16] I used to collect gobs of it when I was a kid. [00:17:18] Oh, yeah. [00:17:19] I just thought it looked cool. [00:17:20] So I used to have these collections of Confederate money. [00:17:24] But if you look on. [00:17:26] A Confederate paper note, it will say something to the effect that 10 years after the conclusion of a treaty of peace between the United States of America and the Confederate States of America, the Confederate States of America will pay to the bearer on demand such and such a sum of money in specie, meaning gold or silver. [00:17:47] So, in other words, what the Confederate government was doing was it was doing essentially the same thing as Lincoln. [00:17:56] It was issuing paper money. [00:17:59] But in the form of IOUs as a promise to pay in specie at some time in the future. [00:18:07] Now, if this was causing Nathaniel Rothschild, if Lincoln's greenbacks were causing Nathaniel Rothschild to melt down in apoplectic fits to the extent that he would write that op ed editorial in the London Times in 1864. [00:18:29] What is a government that is printing paper money being backed by amounts of gold and silver astronomically way beyond anybody's ability to back at that time? [00:18:45] What's that going to do to a central bankster like Nathan Rothschild? [00:18:49] All right. [00:18:51] Now, I suspect something here that most people don't. [00:18:56] And that is, as we all know, at a certain point, the United Kingdom was thinking very seriously. [00:19:02] About entering the American Civil War on the side of the Confederacy. [00:19:07] Or at least lending, you know, Britain had already recognized the Confederacy as a belligerent in that war. [00:19:15] People forget that. [00:19:17] So at the least, what Britain could have done was enter the war as a participating belligerent and lent naval power to the Confederate cause, which would have, you know, broken the back of the Union blockade and. [00:19:34] Made General Grant's difficulties beyond those of Robert E. Lee. [00:19:41] So the suspicion I've had, I've never been able to find any evidence of this because I'm sure that if there is evidence, it's buried in the British archives very deeply. [00:19:53] But I suspect that Britain's chilling toward the Confederacy had less to do with the Confederate defeat at Gettysburg and more to do. [00:20:05] With the realization that this paper money that the Confederacy is circulating is yet an entirely new thing that we've not seen before on the world stage. [00:20:16] Yeah. [00:20:17] IOUs, basically IOUs payable in specie at some future date after a particular benchmark is held. [00:20:30] This goes beyond anything that Lincoln, that Hitler, or that JFK ever dreamed of doing. [00:20:36] It's an actual rival to the central bank system. [00:20:39] Yes. [00:20:40] Yes, it is. [00:20:42] Wow. [00:20:42] It is. [00:20:43] And I'm thinking, okay, Jeff, and. [00:20:49] You know, just put yourself in the position of the Confederate cabinet. [00:20:56] And you've got people in Jeff Davis' cabinet like, what's his name, Judah Benjamin, you know, and people like this. [00:21:07] What in the name of sense are they thinking when they come up with a financial system like that? [00:21:15] What are they thinking is going to be the source for all that silver and gold? [00:21:21] Do they know something the rest of us don't? [00:21:23] Right. [00:21:24] Where are they going to get it? [00:21:27] Huh. [00:21:28] It's really fascinating because it reminds me of the story that we covered in the last episode we did about a strange haul of Confederate gold that was around the Keksberg UFO crash. [00:21:43] Yeah, and yeah, ding, ding, ding. [00:21:47] Where is the Confederacy getting amounts of gold like that? [00:21:51] Yes. [00:21:52] You know, I don't recall gold mines in the Shenandoah Valley or the bayous of Louisiana. [00:22:01] Joseph, where was it coming from? [00:22:03] I have no idea. [00:22:06] You know, even before there's any Confederate gold to be discovered, what in the name of sense is Jeff Davis' cabinet thinking when they decide to come up with that kind of money? [00:22:19] Fascinating. [00:22:21] They had to have, you know, you don't make decisions like that on a whim. [00:22:26] Particularly if you're Jeff Davis and the former U.S. Secretary of War. [00:22:31] This is not a stupid man, folks. [00:22:35] This is not the shamed leader of the Confederacy who is a stupid man. [00:22:40] No, this is not what you're dealing with here. [00:22:43] Interesting. [00:22:46] It has bothered me. [00:22:47] It's one of those obvious things that you don't think about the American Civil War until it's pointed out to you. [00:22:52] And this is a system of money that's quite unique. [00:22:59] And, you know, for a while it actually works, you know, until the Confederacy really starts losing, you know, after the Union defeat at Chickamauga, when you've got the Confederacy basically really starting to fall apart, that system is managing to keep at least the war effort going. [00:23:21] So something is going on here, and they know something. [00:23:24] So, where are they getting their promises to pay off all of this? [00:23:31] Money in specie. [00:23:35] It boggles my mind. [00:23:36] These are not stupid men. [00:23:39] These are not stupid men. [00:23:41] Whatever mistakes they may have made in running the Confederacy, this wasn't one of them. [00:23:49] They had to have something up their sleeve. [00:23:52] And I'll tell you what's interesting in this respect, too, to consider is that after the war, when Jefferson Davis is actually let out of prison, you know. [00:24:05] Let alone to live his life. [00:24:07] Where does he end up? [00:24:11] He ends up in Louisiana in the insurance business. [00:24:20] Insurance? [00:24:21] And by the way, so does General Beauregard. [00:24:24] That's pretty wild. [00:24:26] Yeah. [00:24:27] Pure Beauregard in insurance. [00:24:31] And incidentally, a civil rights activist. [00:24:34] Oh, yeah, right. [00:24:36] How'd that happen? [00:24:38] Nothing about this narrative, you know. [00:24:40] It's really interesting. [00:24:42] I wonder if insurance isn't a cover for that. [00:24:45] That's precisely what I'm thinking. [00:24:47] Interesting. [00:24:49] You made a point in the Thrice Great Hermetica book that the Templars were coming over here long before Columbus. [00:24:56] And it was either in an episode or in the book itself where you theorized that they had figured out a gold system here and didn't want anyone to know about it. [00:25:07] Oh, they, I'm at, no, it's in Financial Vibers of Venice, it's in Thrice Great Hermetica. [00:25:12] Okay. [00:25:12] That, yes, there's absolutely a source of gold over here. [00:25:16] Interesting. [00:25:17] And, you know, the Indian tribes, for one thing, are mining gold, you know, wearing it on trinkets and using it to exchange stuff. [00:25:24] So, you know, you got a bunch of blonde haired, blue eyed people show up. [00:25:27] Oh, yeah, we like that stuff too. [00:25:30] And they're connected with Venice, by the way. [00:25:35] Do you think that this might have something to do with Venice's ability to manipulate the bullion markets in Europe for so long? [00:25:41] I do. [00:25:43] If you have a secret source of gold that Genoa, Florence, Byzantium, and the Germans and Amsterdam don't know about, mm hmm. [00:25:51] Are you going to use it to your own? [00:25:53] Yeah. [00:25:55] Of course you are. [00:25:56] Wow. [00:25:57] Yeah. [00:25:57] Ding, ding, ding. [00:25:58] There you go. [00:26:00] That really opens up a lot, actually. [00:26:03] Well, why, you know, if you take the fact that, as I believe, that Venice's real goal in the Fourth Crusade, when, you know, oh, yeah, we're going to go fight Arabs, and they end up in Constantinople. [00:26:17] Right. [00:26:19] Fighting Christians. [00:26:23] There's a reason for this. [00:26:26] And it's got nothing to do with crusades. [00:26:29] I think, as I pointed out in Financial Vipers of Venice, that Constantinople was Venice's goal all along. [00:26:36] Interesting. [00:26:37] And what they were really interested in doing is getting into the imperial archives and getting their hands on those maps. [00:26:45] Right. [00:26:46] Why? [00:26:48] Because when Venice takes over in Constantinople, they appoint a Latin emperor. [00:26:54] And that emperor is from the Zeno family. [00:26:59] And it's the Zeno family that subsequently, according to the Zeno manuscript, makes that voyage with the Scotsman to the New World. [00:27:11] And guess what they find there? [00:27:13] They find Micmac Indians and gold. [00:27:16] Wow, right. [00:27:18] There you go. [00:27:20] And remember what Queen Isabella said to Columbus. [00:27:25] After she met him, and he says, Oh, yeah, we got, you know, we found this new world. [00:27:32] And Queen Isabella, remember what she says. [00:27:34] This is very interesting. [00:27:36] She says, Sir, it's almost like you've been there before. [00:27:42] Oh, it's a dead giveaway. [00:27:44] Yeah. [00:27:45] Hmm. [00:27:46] There's so many weird things that you point out with that, including the fact that Columbus sails with Templar flags. [00:27:54] And that he shows up at the Pope's funeral and draws those weird occult symbols. [00:28:01] Yeah, he was probably an illegitimate son of the Pope at the time who gave his blessing to the whole thing. [00:28:07] Yes. [00:28:07] You know, well, come on. [00:28:10] The gold aspect is absolutely fat. [00:28:12] We should do a show on that, just that, sometime because, well, really, the gold aspect is so interesting. [00:28:18] I've got right across the room from me, I'm looking at them right now. [00:28:21] There's two books up on the top shelf in the bookshelf that I had to get to write Financial Vipers of Venice. [00:28:28] They were books about the Venetian manipulation of bullion markets. [00:28:33] Interesting. [00:28:34] And they're scholarly monographs. [00:28:38] Those two books, when I finally found them, both cost me in excess of $300 a piece. [00:28:45] Wow. [00:28:46] And my suspicion is that those books had been bought up to keep the information in them from getting out publicly. [00:28:54] Yes. [00:28:56] And it's very clear when you read those books in conjunction with other studies, scholarly studies of the Middle Ages, that Venice could not have accomplished what it accomplished without, so to speak, insider information. [00:29:16] Like secret maps, secret sources of gold, and so on and so forth. [00:29:22] If you've got a secret source of gold, that allows you to manipulate markets to the extent that you can ruin your major competitors. [00:29:35] It's kind of like the London gold markets today. [00:29:38] Right. [00:29:41] Wow. [00:29:41] It's the same game, folks. [00:29:43] It's fascinating because. [00:29:46] I've been reading a lot of Hapgood's work lately, but I found some letters that Charles Hapgood wrote to Eisenhower about how they needed in the Spanish archives to make sure that they got the original source map that Piririris got his map from. [00:30:02] Right. [00:30:03] And he was convinced it was in those archives. [00:30:05] And there's a whole approach, aggressive diplomatic approach by the Eisenhower administration to Spain saying, Cof it on. [00:30:16] I would. [00:30:17] Wager that the Spanish archives don't have the original basis of the period of Eastman. [00:30:27] If there is a source or exemplar or prototype of that map anywhere, my guess is that it's either deeply buried in the Venice City State Archives to this day, or it made its way up to Amsterdam. [00:30:51] And then across the channel to England. === Imperial Bullion Maps (03:40) === [00:30:54] Because what we're dealing with here are maps that indicate possible secret sources for lots of bullion. [00:31:04] This is why, ultimately, I think these maps were so carefully guarded during the Middle Ages by anybody that came into contact with them. [00:31:15] So they would have been regarded as state secrets. [00:31:20] It's not that people didn't know that they're, you know, A whole continental system over there. [00:31:24] They knew about it all along. [00:31:26] It was just a state secret because it was a source of bullion. [00:31:33] When the Spanish jump on board, if you look at the way that Columbus's voyage is staged, it's really staged as an announcement voyage. [00:31:44] Interesting. [00:31:45] We're going to take the whole thing public. [00:31:47] Yeah. [00:31:49] It's not a voyage of exploration or discovery. [00:31:51] They already knew about it. [00:31:53] Mm hmm. [00:31:55] Joseph, who mapped out the Periris map? [00:31:58] How'd they do it? [00:32:01] Well, Piri Reis, the Turkish admiral, states that he's drawing this or compiling this map from exemplars that he has access to. [00:32:12] Well, the only exemplars that a Turkish admiral at that time would have had access to would have been the old Byzantine imperial archives, which are still in Constantinople and part of the Ottoman Turkish archives. [00:32:28] That's the only thing that I can think of that he would have used and had. [00:32:32] Access to. [00:32:33] Where those exemplars are coming from, in my opinion, are ultimately from Alexandria. [00:32:39] Because you've got to remember that the Byzantine Empire, for a considerable period of its existence, had Egypt as one of its major provinces. [00:32:48] And we know that the several different dispersals of the Library of Alexandria, that at least some of that stuff made its way to Constantinople. [00:33:00] So I'm thinking that ultimately a lot of this is probably coming from whatever. [00:33:05] Made its way from Alexandria up to Constantinople. [00:33:09] They were the ones who had the original maps before the fire. [00:33:15] As far as I'm concerned, that's where you also, if you're serious about looking for the Ark of the Covenant, you're not looking in the West, you look at Constantinople. [00:33:22] Fascinating. [00:33:24] Why? [00:33:25] Because we know that the Ark made it into Imperial Roman hands because you can see it displayed on the triumphal column of Tiberius or whatever his name was, you know, when he's parading all this Jewish loot. [00:33:38] Well, there's the Ark, there's the menorah, you know. [00:33:41] You have to be careful with the ark when they're taking it. [00:33:45] Well, yeah, that's probably a good idea. [00:33:48] Now, let's not tempt Faye here. [00:33:52] But my point is that's a clear indication that it becomes part of the imperial archives of the Roman state. [00:34:01] And when the empire is split and you're moving the main capital, well, you're going to move a lot of those archival materials to Constantinople. [00:34:10] So, you know, everybody that says, oh, the Visigoths sacked Rome and they took all this stuff away and buried it in southern France. [00:34:17] Well, that's one possibility. [00:34:19] But the other possibility that people always overlook is you've got another part of the Roman Empire that's going to last another thousand years. [00:34:27] So, you know, that's a good place to look for stuff. [00:34:30] And Venice went looking. [00:34:32] Yeah, absolutely. === Hidden Jefferson Lore (15:20) === [00:34:34] That's incredible. [00:34:37] If you were to think of that American gold story, What region in America would I look? [00:34:46] Yeah. [00:34:54] There was a Virginian, a very famous man, that knew that there was something out there. [00:35:05] And his name was Tom Jefferson. [00:35:07] Wow. [00:35:09] And he sent a couple people out there to go look. [00:35:14] Named Lewis and Clark. [00:35:16] Oh, wow. [00:35:17] Okay. [00:35:19] One of the things that he wanted them to look for were a bunch of blonde haired, blue eyed Indians in North Dakota, what we now call. [00:35:26] Interesting. [00:35:27] Okay. [00:35:29] And what happens? [00:35:30] And I'm going around Harvey's barn here deliberately because I think people are going to love this. [00:35:37] I've got a little webinar in my members' area on my website. [00:35:40] Yes. [00:35:41] About it's called A Mysterious Labyrinth. [00:35:44] It's all about the Louisiana Purchase and Tom Jefferson and Lewis Clark. [00:35:47] So that's part of the story. [00:35:50] So he sends out Meriwether Lewis and Clark. [00:35:53] I'm thinking of it. [00:35:55] Eisenhower reenacted the Louisiana Purchase in 1956. [00:35:59] Nobody really did. [00:36:00] He did. [00:36:02] I just ran across that about two weeks ago. [00:36:05] Oh, Ike, you're going to have to tell me about that. [00:36:07] I will. [00:36:07] Please continue. [00:36:08] But anyway, so you've got Lewis and Clark, and they go out looking for stuff, and they come back. [00:36:15] And then the next thing we know is Meriwether Lewis is going to take his journals and so on personally. [00:36:24] To President Jefferson and is murdered along the way. [00:36:30] And then the next thing we find out is: lo and behold, the journals of the Lewis and Clark expedition are published by, here's a name for you, Nicholas Biddle. [00:36:43] Oh, yeah. [00:36:46] So, question: how does something get from a dead Meriwether Lewis to a very Living director and president of the Second Bank of the United States, who is on Andy Jackson's hit list. [00:37:07] And what in the name of sense does Nicholas Biddle want with it? [00:37:11] Interesting. [00:37:12] Didn't know that? [00:37:13] No. [00:37:14] Oh, yeah. [00:37:15] That's what's going on here. [00:37:18] So we've got a chain of, no, we've got a non chain of evidence that whatever is published by Nicholas Biddle is claiming to be what was lost. [00:37:29] By Mary Lewis when he was murdered. [00:37:32] Very much so. [00:37:33] But more than likely, he got the real thing. [00:37:35] Well, he may have, but did he publish the real thing? [00:37:40] Right, that's what you're saying. [00:37:41] Yeah. [00:37:42] What he published is a forgery. [00:37:44] Now, during all of this, there's another bit of lore that makes its way into the circulating consciousness. [00:38:00] Of people like Jefferson who are interested in old things. [00:38:06] And that lore is the Seven Cities of Cibola. [00:38:10] Hmm. [00:38:11] Ever heard that myth? [00:38:12] Yes. [00:38:13] Okay. [00:38:14] The Seven Cities of Cibola were Indian legends in the southwestern United States that the Indians had of seven cities that were fabulously wealthy and that were lost. [00:38:29] El Dorado, whatever you want to call it. [00:38:32] All of those explorers, think Cortez and so on and so forth, at some point they're looking for those cities. [00:38:41] That's the motivation for them being there. [00:38:47] At some point, there's even an American numismatist that is a scholar of money. [00:38:55] His name is Alexander Del Mar. [00:39:00] And he's written, you know, you can look up his name. [00:39:03] Bunch of books about money in the 19th century. [00:39:05] And even he's fascinated with this legend of fabulous gold and jewels and so on in lost Indian cities somewhere in the southwestern United States. [00:39:19] And these are the kinds of legends I think that you find in those circles in Virginia, particularly, and those circles around Tom Jefferson, George Washington, Patrick Henry. [00:39:33] They hear all of these things, and Jefferson in particular. [00:39:38] Has this consuming passion to find these types of things. [00:39:43] This is the whole motivation for the Lewis and Clark expedition. [00:39:48] So I suspect that if there's a secret source that people like Jeff Davis or Judah Benjamin and people in his cabinet are looking for or thinking about, I suspect that they're thinking along the lines of these types of Indian legends that they've managed to hear about. [00:40:08] Because they know, they know that Jefferson. [00:40:14] Sent out the Lewis and Clark expedition for purposes other than just to explore the Louisiana Purchase. [00:40:21] Interesting. [00:40:22] They know that. [00:40:24] So there's something else going on here. [00:40:26] Let's remember that there is a part of the American Civil War that is almost never taught in American history books, and that's the part of the Civil War that is fought in New Mexico and Arizona and Oklahoma. [00:40:43] Why do they leave it out? [00:40:45] I suspect because it has something to do with this whole story. [00:40:48] Oh, yes. [00:40:49] Yeah. [00:40:51] I really do. [00:40:53] The Confederacy was in tight with a lot of Indian tribes, Oklahoma and then westward, and attempted to exploit those connections. [00:41:05] So I suspect that there's part of the story of the Civil War here that we're missing. [00:41:12] And in particular, that it has to deal with those Indian tribes that were. [00:41:16] You know, loosely connected with the Confederacy out in New Mexico and then further out in Arizona. [00:41:24] And let's remember the. [00:41:26] That's great because of all the mines. [00:41:27] The mines, and let's remember the story, the persistent stories that they can't seem to get rid of that there were archaeological expeditions that discovered Egyptian things. [00:41:37] Yes, right. [00:41:39] And you talk about Seven Cities of Cibola, a seed for that kind of myth among the Indian tribes. [00:41:46] Yeah. [00:41:47] Of lost gods and fabulous wealth and underground cities. [00:41:50] Well, there you go. [00:41:52] That would be a kernel for it. [00:41:55] So I think there's a lot more going on. [00:41:57] And would people like Jeff Davis and Judah Benjamin, sitting there in Richmond, Virginia, just scant days' journey from Monticello, would they not know about all of this lore surrounding President Jefferson? [00:42:12] Well, of course they would. [00:42:14] These are not stupid people. [00:42:16] Absolutely fascinating. [00:42:19] Wow, that's a big eye opener. [00:42:21] Yeah, it is. [00:42:22] It really is. [00:42:23] There's so much hidden history. [00:42:25] Yeah. [00:42:26] And the American Civil War is full of hidden history. [00:42:33] And there are financial and economic agendas on both sides of that war that really don't ever get adequately discussed, in my opinion. [00:42:44] I view it in a certain sense that the whole war as being about slavery is a bit of a distraction. [00:42:49] I'm certainly not saying it wasn't about that because it clearly was. [00:42:54] But to a certain extent, it's also a distraction from all these very odd things that no one wants to look at. [00:43:01] Who comes up with this very weird system of money for the Confederacy? [00:43:06] I mean, there's really nothing like it before, at least in modern recorded history. [00:43:13] It's nutty. [00:43:14] And to have a system like that and make it work, you have to be thinking in terms of having a source to make good on those promises. [00:43:24] Absolutely. [00:43:25] If there is a hidden gold story there. [00:43:28] Well, think of Jesse James. [00:43:30] Yes. [00:43:32] Think of the Golden Circle after the war. [00:43:34] What's all that about? [00:43:35] Why? [00:43:37] Why does that even arise? [00:43:39] Well, I think it's arising out of the fact that there are people in the Confederacy that knew something or thought they knew something. [00:43:47] And, you know, word of mouth spreads it around very slowly, but it becomes part of the lore and part of the whisper campaign after the war. [00:44:00] Right, exactly. [00:44:03] You're dealing with a South that's, you know, before the war is economically well off, and then after the war is on its knees. [00:44:10] Prostrate, you've got reconstruction and carpetbaggers. [00:44:13] Well, that's the perfect feeding ground. [00:44:17] It also explains some of the Orwellian removal and just don't ever think about the Confederacy. [00:44:23] Get rid of those statues, get rid of those names. [00:44:26] And they've got the perfect cover. [00:44:27] Right, right. [00:44:29] Yeah, maybe you're touching on something else that I've actually entertained as a scenario, but I haven't told anybody about because it's just weird. [00:44:41] Even for me, it's weird. [00:44:43] I might as well tell. [00:44:45] When these statues started being torn down, the first thing I was thinking of, I wonder what's hidden in the statue. [00:44:52] Oh. [00:44:53] Yeah. [00:44:58] You know, these things are put up by the daughters of the Confederacy. [00:45:02] So, you know, I'm wondering, I wonder what's in the base of that statue that we need to get rid of. [00:45:12] Right, exactly. [00:45:14] That's fascinating. [00:45:15] Yeah, I can see that. [00:45:17] I can too. [00:45:18] You know, the whole destruction of the Georgia Guidestones recently happened at rather fast speed. [00:45:27] There's a whole time capsule mythology written on the stones about there's a time capsule there, but there's no talk of the time capsule. [00:45:34] As a matter of fact, Fox came out immediately after the thing and said, that's just a myth. [00:45:38] Like, there's no time capsule, so just stop thinking about it. [00:45:45] But the destruction of those stones, did you make anything out of that? [00:45:49] Oh, yeah. [00:45:50] Yeah. [00:45:51] I do. [00:45:54] In fact, I blogged about it. [00:45:57] I don't remember what exactly I said. [00:46:01] I blog about a lot of things. [00:46:03] Yes. [00:46:03] Excuse me. [00:46:05] Just generally, I mean, they've always been associated, maybe over associated, with the idea of a central world government wanting to decrease the population. [00:46:15] You can read the messages there a little bit differently, too. [00:46:19] It's like, I know it, you know, and the guy who does it is R.C. Christian, and it sounds almost like Some Rosicrucians or something. [00:46:27] Rosicrucian Christian, Roman Catholic Christian, you know, could be anything. [00:46:30] Yes. [00:46:34] My take is the obvious one. [00:46:38] But in any case, the Guidestones I view just pretty much straight up as somebody took out what had come to be understood as symbols of the New World Order. [00:46:55] As symbols of what globalism is and was up to. [00:47:00] And that someone just decided to get rid of them. [00:47:05] In other words, I view it as a symbolic act. [00:47:08] And you can analyze it to death. [00:47:11] There are people out there that are doing that. [00:47:14] The Guidestones never really captivated me enough to bother with. [00:47:19] But when that happened, and it happened the way it did, and then you had the mad rush to get rid of it. [00:47:28] Right. [00:47:28] It's a crime scene. [00:47:30] It's a crime scene. [00:47:31] So, once again, we got to tear it down right away. [00:47:35] There's something going on there, but I think it was a way, someone's way of sending a message to Mr. Globaloney. [00:47:45] I really do. [00:47:46] Or there's a possibility that it was a message from one faction of Mr. Globaloney to another. [00:47:53] Right. [00:47:54] But a symbolic act, it definitely was. [00:47:58] Yeah, really fascinating. [00:48:01] I have to ask you in relation to the Trump thing, since a few years ago, whistleblower Robert Merritt came forward. [00:48:09] To me and gave me information. [00:48:12] He had worked for the Houston plan and he claimed that Nixon had left behind this letter as a time capsule in the White House, given a copy to Henry Kissinger. [00:48:23] And it was basically all about how they discovered an energy formula from working with reverse engineered UFO stuff, basically. [00:48:32] The story was weird for a few reasons. [00:48:34] When I went into Merritt's background, he was all over these early Watergate books. [00:48:37] They knew him as a character. [00:48:39] That the CIA had used and that the DC intelligence unit had used in the police force. [00:48:48] And then I talked to some people at the NYPD who had used him in cases involving the UN. [00:48:56] So he had quite a reputation as a whistleblower. [00:48:58] And when he came out with this, it was astonishing. [00:49:02] And I did my best to put it on the map. [00:49:04] And immediately when I put it out, Snopes and all these people freaked out against it. [00:49:09] And then Merritt died. [00:49:11] So there wasn't anywhere to go with the information. [00:49:13] One of the odd things that he said, though, was that Trump had learned, he had learned that Trump had learned that this letter was in the White House. [00:49:23] And there was a race basically between him and the Central Intelligence Agency to find it. [00:49:30] And the only reason that it even, I mean, it crossed my mind when this whole thing came up about a document that Trump had because they said they went through Melania's wardrobe. [00:49:38] Wardrobe, yeah. [00:49:39] Yeah. [00:49:40] So, you're thinking about how small is this thing? [00:49:43] It's actually the size of a letter, basically. [00:49:45] You could think of it that way. [00:49:47] And then I saw the very same archivist that Merritt had sent the letter to, the National Archives guy. === The Nixon Letter Race (04:24) === [00:49:55] He was involved in commenting on the raid. [00:49:57] And I said, that's kind of interesting. [00:50:01] Yeah, that's more than just kind of interesting. [00:50:03] Yeah, he lives around here, too. [00:50:07] But what grabbed me about the whole thing was, you know, Merritt's story was always free floating out there. [00:50:13] Merritt didn't have any interest in UFOs. [00:50:15] I try to get him to talk about that stuff. [00:50:17] But he told me this story of three meetings with Nixon, all in the basement, underground of the White House. [00:50:25] And a couple of Secret Service, ex Secret Service guys, wrote to me and said, You know, I worked with the Secret Service, and what he describes about going under the White House is pretty good. [00:50:34] Like, you know, he obviously had been there. [00:50:36] So it's hard to say anything about Merritt except for he wanted to get certain things off his conscious at the end of his life. [00:50:45] But this thing about the time capsule letter about UFO disclosure and then Trump and his relationship with Nixon and all that, I thought there was an interesting tie over with this situation. [00:50:57] There may be, because it's also, if you look at the Majestic 12 documents, and I'm thinking in particular of the Cooper Cantwheel set, not the original set. [00:51:09] Yes. [00:51:10] If you look at that set of Majestic 12 documents, they make the claim. [00:51:16] That it was precisely Richard Nixon who privatized the UFO files and turned them all over to corporations. [00:51:24] Right. [00:51:25] Okay. [00:51:27] And from the sounds of it, what you're describing sound to me like they're occurring within the same time frame being suggested by the Cooper Cantwell Majestic 12 documents. [00:51:41] The question I would have is Is this the MacGuffin that they're really looking for when they're raiding Mar a Lago? [00:51:52] Well, if so, then that depends on. [00:51:57] Something that is not evident, and that is that Trump was successful in finding that letter that Nixon stashed. [00:52:08] And I would have difficulty given the number of occupants, first of all, in the White House from Nixon up to Trump, plus the fact that after Nixon, there were a number of interior. [00:52:29] Construction projects inside the White House, including, if I'm not mistaken, updates during the Reagan era to the White House bunker. [00:52:41] I would suspect that if Nixon were to hide something like that in that facility, it would have to be in a place that he would have been relatively secure in thinking it's not going to be touched in any of these construction projects. [00:53:02] Periodically go through the White House. [00:53:03] It's going to have to be in a place that's secure from that and that a president would have access to. [00:53:13] And that's the other problematic here because there are precious few places in the White House where the president has a kind of exclusive private access. [00:53:25] Not even their private rooms are really all that private. [00:53:29] Right. [00:53:29] So I wouldn't doubt that Richard Nixon would do something like that. [00:53:35] I mean, it's. [00:53:36] You know, it's in his character. [00:53:40] What I'm having difficulty is not with Nixon hiding something, it's with somebody else being able to find it. [00:53:46] And then what would they do with it if they had? [00:53:49] I would put money on someone else having found it before Trump got in there. [00:53:55] Yes. [00:53:56] Yeah, it makes sense. [00:53:57] If there's any someone that's going to do that and be a lowlife enough to do that and then hide it and keep it to themselves and maybe even use it, it's going to be. [00:54:07] You know, Bush the first. [00:54:10] Unfortunately, yeah. [00:54:11] Well, you handed me that opportunity. [00:54:14] I have to bash on the Bushes. === Mr. Globalone's Chaos (03:52) === [00:54:20] They're so bashable. [00:54:23] Bush is a pretty good candidate. [00:54:24] Yeah, Bush is a pretty good candidate. [00:54:26] I mean, the man is oily. [00:54:30] He's got the CIA connection to a T, and there's all that Franklin scandal business surrounding his administration. [00:54:39] You know, the man is just oily. [00:54:40] Yeah. [00:54:41] Yeah. [00:54:42] He's got, well, he has that unique. [00:54:45] He's got cooties. [00:54:49] The unique thing about him is that Carter was like, hey, give me access to the UFO file. [00:54:53] And he said, oh, the president's on a need to know. [00:54:55] Like, you don't need to know. [00:54:57] And Carter fired him. [00:54:59] Good for Jimmy Carter. [00:55:03] Jimmy got something going for him. [00:55:07] It is very interesting. [00:55:08] I think that the National Archives piece associated with. [00:55:13] With the raid is so unusual and sits there with a weird shadow on this thing. [00:55:19] National Archives? [00:55:20] Yeah, what's this about? [00:55:22] I mean, you know, we've seen it used, you know, oh, somebody secretly ordered such and such. [00:55:29] You know, I want a court order to see that. [00:55:31] I want that taping system. [00:55:33] National Archive document? [00:55:34] Come on. [00:55:35] Daniel, I don't know about you, but I've been here since this raid more or less glued to my radio. [00:55:44] Yeah. [00:55:44] You know, just kind of turning the dial and listening to different talk stations and how they're covering this. [00:55:50] Yeah. [00:55:50] I've even broken down and tried to watch the major news networks on YouTube. [00:55:56] And you know me, I know that takes a lot. [00:56:00] Yeah, it really does. [00:56:03] I mean, I even listened to Sean Hannity for more than five minutes today. [00:56:07] And, you know, and don't worry. [00:56:10] The only thing worse is Anderson Cooper. [00:56:12] Oh, God. [00:56:16] And I, Daniel, not one of these so called journalists is really understanding the potential significance of this being about the National Archives and Records Administration. [00:56:29] Yeah. [00:56:30] There's none of them that will sit down and speculate at all about the potential of what that might mean. [00:56:39] They're all too busy basically lambasting the whole thing because this is a tempest in a teapot. [00:56:49] This is nothing. [00:56:50] Why bother a president for that? [00:56:53] Rather than stop and think what it might indicate. [00:56:57] Right. [00:56:58] There's no one doing that. [00:57:00] And to me, this is the problem that we have with the legacy media in this country. [00:57:05] These people don't think. [00:57:08] Yeah. [00:57:08] They're not even willing to speculate. [00:57:14] You know, you're going to watch Anderson Cooper or Sean Hannity for a very long time, folks, before you get into any sort of speculation like we've indulged in here. [00:57:25] Absolutely. [00:57:26] They're not going to do it. [00:57:28] They're not going to do it. [00:57:29] No, it's almost like there's a kind of a choke point. [00:57:32] From the information, it has to exist just on this level. [00:57:35] Yeah, exactly. [00:57:36] You know, let's talk about the raid and Trump in jeopardy. [00:57:39] Yeah. [00:57:40] Yeah. [00:57:41] And the legal jeopardy, and that Trump is a criminal. [00:57:43] You know, this is where they want to leave it. [00:57:45] Right. [00:57:47] The only thing we didn't cover on here and that it sort of sits outside of the stuff we've been talking about are the food plant explosions. [00:57:56] Oh. [00:57:59] What's going on there? [00:58:01] You know, I wonder. [00:58:03] I really wonder because it's very clear that Mr. Globalone wants to starve a lot of the population and create chaos just because he can. [00:58:11] Yeah. === Chemical Plant Explosions (04:43) === [00:58:12] And until we wake up and realize that there's only one language that Mr. Globalone is going to understand, we're going to keep going through this. [00:58:20] Now, fortunately, the farmers in the Netherlands understand the language that Mr. Globalone understands. [00:58:25] Yes. [00:58:26] They figured it out real fast. [00:58:28] They put it out real fast. [00:58:30] And that's the kind of thing that is needed here. [00:58:35] The Klaus Schwabs need to eat bug burgers themselves before, you know, and we need to be the ones serving it to them. [00:58:43] We need to be able to see the bugs and we need to be able to take them eating the bugs. [00:58:52] And if necessary, we need to make them do it at gunpoint. [00:58:55] This is, you know, this is your punishment, Klaus, for being a bad boy, for being the son of a Nazi general and still being a Nazi. [00:59:05] You'll eat bugs and you'll like it. [00:59:07] You'll eat bugs and you will like it. [00:59:10] Otherwise, we have ways of dealing with you. [00:59:14] You know, this guy is such a cartoon. [00:59:17] Unbelievable. [00:59:18] He just needs to be a cartoon character. [00:59:21] Yeah. [00:59:22] You know, he needs to do cartoon voiceovers. [00:59:24] I mean, he's in the wrong career. [00:59:27] But COVID is the ultimate opportunity. [00:59:33] And I was very proud to introduce His Excellency. [00:59:36] His Excellency, oh God. [00:59:40] His Excellency Bono, right? [00:59:42] Oh, Bono keeps showing up to kiss up to these kids. [00:59:46] I know. [00:59:47] Come on. [00:59:48] That's not very rock and roll. [00:59:50] Yeah, get a life. [00:59:51] Yeah. [00:59:53] Oh my. [00:59:54] Go study like rock icons. [00:59:56] They're all anti establishment, Bono. [00:59:59] Yeah, I have a difficulty seeing the Beatles doing this. [01:00:04] You know, it doesn't compute. [01:00:08] But anyway. [01:00:09] It's like, no, let me stand there arm in arm with Bill Gates. [01:00:14] There was a reason, Bono, that John Lennon was put on the FBI's co intelligence. [01:00:20] Okay. [01:00:23] Let's get real here. [01:00:24] Here's the clue. [01:00:25] All right, the food plant. [01:00:30] I'm of two minds about them because the food plants that produce food, I'm not happy about them exploding. [01:00:39] And I think Mr. Global only is behind it. [01:00:42] I mean, again, from a simple statistical common sense point of view, you can't have 111,532 votes for Joe Biden as opposed to 87 votes for Donald Trump show up. [01:00:58] As a random sample. [01:01:00] Right, right. [01:01:01] Yeah. [01:01:03] No, that doesn't happen in real life, folks, unless there's fraud. [01:01:09] And by the same token, having lots of food plants suddenly burn down or explode in the timeframes that they have done is not a statistical accident. [01:01:22] This is deliberate, and there's only one person that stands to gain from doing this sort of thing, and that's Mr. Global Army. [01:01:30] Right. [01:01:30] Okay. [01:01:32] So, if you want to know who's responsible, ask Klaus Schraub, Bill Gates, George Moloch Soros, ask the whole devil's trinity, and you'll probably find your culprits. [01:01:46] The food plants I am glad are exploding are the food plants that are doing things like making synthetic meat for Bill Gates' bug burgers. [01:01:57] There have been a few plants like that exploding. [01:02:00] And again, this is not accidental, it's somebody behind it. [01:02:05] And I'm thinking, okay, whoever you are blowing up the bug burger plants, good on you. [01:02:13] Just make sure that there's nobody innocent in the plants at the time that you blow them up. [01:02:18] Okay. [01:02:19] Otherwise, I'm not in your corner. [01:02:21] Right, right. [01:02:23] No, they're, you know, all kidding aside, there is something very weird going on. [01:02:27] So strange. [01:02:28] It is, you know, it's like all those chemical plant explosions a few years ago. [01:02:34] There is something. [01:02:35] Going on, and I think they're trying to cause maximum chaos to the supply chain that they can. [01:02:42] The bad news for them is what they're really doing is they are forcing people to set up local and regional supply chains. [01:02:51] That's all that's going to happen from this. === Inevitable System Collapse (02:12) === [01:02:55] Right. [01:02:56] Yeah. [01:02:57] They're going to look at this and say, you know what? [01:03:00] We're much better off with a local source and local farms, et cetera. [01:03:06] Bingo. [01:03:07] There should be a huge movement in that direction in any case. [01:03:11] Oh, I think that we're going to see it happen. [01:03:15] You know, it needs to happen, Daniel, but I really think we're going to see it happen within the next year or two. [01:03:21] Wow. [01:03:22] And the reason why is I think this was the crossing of the Rubicon in more ways than one. [01:03:28] People are mad, rightfully so, and they realize that this government is out of control. [01:03:38] It's insane. [01:03:39] It's corrupt. [01:03:40] It's evil. [01:03:40] It's not fixable. [01:03:42] And they're going to start taking matters into their own hands. [01:03:45] And Doing precisely those things in order precisely to prepare. [01:03:51] I see no other alternative at this point. [01:03:54] The handwriting is definitely on the wall. [01:03:57] The handwriting is on the wall. [01:03:59] Unbelievable. [01:04:00] They have screwed the pooch one too many times. [01:04:05] This is the boy crying wolf, you know, the boy shepherd crying wolf one too many times. [01:04:13] If it doesn't issue in that reaction, we're lost. [01:04:17] And we will go through a period of tyranny and evil and repression and mass murder that would make the Soviet Union jealous. [01:04:29] Wow. [01:04:30] But like all such systems, they inevitably collapse. [01:04:34] No question. [01:04:35] So, one way or the other, we're headed for bad times. [01:04:37] The question is do we want to take our destiny into our own hands or do we want to leave it in the hands of the people running things now? [01:04:49] They're going to run it right into the ground and they're going to cause all sorts of mischief, grief, and misery for a whole lot of people. [01:04:57] I'm not on their Titanic. [01:05:00] I'm sorry. [01:05:01] I'm not. [01:05:02] Absolutely. [01:05:02] Well, it's like there's no time to waste to formulate something else. === Taking Our Destiny (01:22) === [01:05:07] No. [01:05:08] The boast of the Titanic was God Himself could not sink this ship. [01:05:12] The boast of the United States is, or was, we are the exceptional nation. [01:05:16] No, wrong. [01:05:17] We are not exempt from the normal laws of history. [01:05:20] Never have been, never will be. [01:05:24] That's really true. [01:05:26] Joseph, it's great to see you. [01:05:27] Everyone can get your work available at GizaDeathStar.com. [01:05:32] Remarkable reports that you're putting out there on a regular basis, and the blog work, your seminars, the books, all available right there at GizaDeathStar.com. [01:05:42] And I want to be able to tap right in as soon as more news comes out about this and get you to talk about it. [01:05:51] Listen, be my guest. [01:05:54] I'm done. [01:05:56] With being flannel mouthed. [01:05:58] I'm done. [01:05:59] I'm done. [01:06:00] So be my guest if you want to schedule me for a rant. [01:06:04] I'm up for it. [01:06:06] I'll be there. [01:06:07] I'll be there with bells on. [01:06:11] It's great to see you. [01:06:13] See you, sir. [01:06:14] We talk soon. [01:06:15] All right. [01:06:15] Bye bye. [01:06:17] Joseph, just amazing. [01:06:19] And the rumor that there's a new book in the works is something I hope we can confirm soon. [01:06:23] Please join us on Friday nights at 8 p.m. Eastern Time for the X Steganography series. [01:06:29] See you soon.