Speaker | Time | Text |
---|---|---|
unidentified
|
You're watching the American Journal with your host, Harrison Smith. | |
Watch live right now at band.tv. | ||
Good morning, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
It is Good Friday. | ||
It's Friday, April 2nd, 2021. | ||
My name is Harrison Smith. | ||
You're watching us on American Journal, InfoWars.com, Band.Video. | ||
What a show it's going to be today. | ||
I have more video clips for you today than any other show, I think, and I'm going to play them all because they all need to be seen to be believed. | ||
Truly incredible stuff from Outright insanity on display. | ||
Violent, hysterical leftist as always. | ||
We'll show you that. | ||
Some funny stuff as well. | ||
Mocking the violent, hysterical leftist. | ||
Many other just bombshell videos that I can't wait to show you. | ||
I'm going to show them all to you in the first half of this program. | ||
Because in the second half, I'll be joined by a series of special guests. | ||
The first will be Jason Jones, filmmaker and author. | ||
Very excited to speak to him. | ||
And then Drew Hernandez, of course, of videographer fame. | ||
He's one of these incredible independent reporters that goes on the ground at, you know, really dangerous sites around America. | ||
We'll be talking about the border crisis going on right now. | ||
So tons of videos. | ||
Two great guests, your calls, and of course, all of these headlines, which once again, on a daily basis, there is no shortage of news to cover. | ||
But briefly, it is Good Friday, and I love Good Friday. | ||
I love Good Friday because You have to think about Jesus Christ not as a mythological or legendary figure, but as a real human being with real human drama. | ||
And, you know, when I was in high school, I guess, I read this book called Zealot by cannibal Reza Aslan. | ||
And it essentially tries to make the case that Jesus Christ was just another in a long series of itinerant Jewish preachers that claim to be God. | ||
And in fact, lists a whole bunch in the first introduction of the book. | ||
He says this trope of this Jesus-like character was so common, it had become a kind of caricature among the Roman elite. | ||
And he lists a series of supposed prophets, preachers, and messiahs trampling through the Holy Land, delivering messages of God's imminent judgment. | ||
uh They actually have names of these people, and he goes one after another. | ||
And the interesting thing to me is that, without exception, every single one of these guys that he mentions, that were sort of the forerunners of Jesus claiming to be the Messiah, with a couple of followers wandering around the Holy Land, every single one of them | ||
died violent deaths most of them died uh hold up in a compound somewhere attempting to reignite the jewish kingdom and claiming they were the king and he portrays this as you know evidence that jesus was just another one of these and it's so weird that we care about this one why don't we care about all these other ones well jesus did something different didn't he and the the the primary difference between jesus and all these others was good friday was the fact that | ||
Jesus didn't run off to a castle and try to defend himself to be overwhelmed by Roman soldiers. | ||
But that's the human reaction, isn't it? | ||
And you can imagine Jesus Christ and all of his followers were real human beings with real human concerns. | ||
They didn't know how the story was going to end. | ||
They were worried. | ||
They were concerned. | ||
They were rebels. | ||
And they found that they were slated for execution. | ||
They were kind of on the run. | ||
They were in hiding. | ||
They knew people were after them. | ||
I can only imagine they were saying, Jesus, let's grab some swords. | ||
Let's go. | ||
They're going to come for you. | ||
We have to defend you. | ||
And not only did Jesus say no, he turned himself in. | ||
And then you can imagine, you know, the Last Supper and the feeling that Judas must have felt sitting there pretending to be friends, knowing he'd singled this guy out for execution. | ||
You know, he's going to snitch on him. | ||
And then to see Jesus turn to him and go, yeah, I know. | ||
I know you're going to do that. | ||
And not only am I not running away, I'm delivering myself to you. | ||
And so it's like all these people, they see these historical accounts, they go, Jesus was just another one of these guys, nothing special about him. | ||
When the reality is the presence of all those guys reveals how truly special this fellow Jesus really was. | ||
And it's worth remembering on this Good Friday, as we look at this wonderful background that we have of what America used to be like in 1956, where we actually thought and cared about these things. | ||
We'll be back with your Daily Dispatch. | ||
unidentified
|
You're tuned in to the American Journal with your host, Harrison Smith. | |
Watch it live right now at band.video. | ||
Here it is. | ||
Your Daily Dispatch for Good Friday, April 2nd, 2021. | ||
The Derek Chauvin trial continues. | ||
We entered day five yesterday. | ||
There were some interesting revelations. | ||
Derek Chauvin trial. | ||
George Floyd became addicted to opioids after chronic back pain, says girlfriend. | ||
Courtney Ross, 45, says Floyd became addicted after taking prescription drugs and returned to illicit opioids two weeks before his death despite having suffered an overdose from similar pills that required hospital treatment two months earlier. | ||
After telling the court how devastated Floyd was by the death of his mother in 2018, Ross said that his pet name for her was Mama. | ||
As Floyd lay dying on May 25, struggling to breathe, he called out for Mama. | ||
Most people say he's calling for his mother. | ||
That may not be the case. | ||
Ross confirmed to Eric Nelson for the defense that Floyd had bought drugs illicitly about a week before he died that resembled those he overdosed from in March, requiring five days treatment in hospital. | ||
And of course, the person he was arrested with in the car was his drug dealer. | ||
Now, the supervisor of Derek Chauvin has come on and he said, When Mr. Floyd was no longer offering up any resistance to the officers, they could have ended the restraint. | ||
This is being spread across mainstream news is saying that the supervisor claimed that he was incorrectly using. | ||
Use of force. | ||
Of course, this would. | ||
Contribute to their claims that he was killed because of this, I. | ||
I take a little bit of issue with that because obviously if you have a very strong, very tall dude out of his mind on drugs just because you get him restrained and he stops fighting for a second doesn't mean you just let him up and then it's going to be fine. | ||
It's a dangerous individual wiling out with the cops and That's all I'll say about that. | ||
Well, let's go back in time to the preceding excitement before George Floyd. | ||
Remember, George Floyd was the event that really kicked off the completely unnecessary and wrongheaded riots that cost $2 billion in damage. | ||
Burned entire city blocks, went on for an entire year. | ||
But before that flame got roaring, they had to prime the pump. | ||
They had to ignite the starter pilot light. | ||
And that was Ahmed Arbery. | ||
And this video of Arbery's death was released all of a sudden, very mysteriously, a few months before George Floyd. | ||
And that sort of got the ball rolling where it really hit its stride with George Floyd. | ||
Well, new evidence has just now been introduced in the Ahmed Arbery case that shows he had a history of pretending he was jogging while breaking into places and stealing from stores. | ||
He was literally known as the jogger to some locals and this. | ||
Thread on Twitter has example after example. | ||
August 21st, a woman witnessed him pretending to jog while he was sneaking into backyards and looking through car windows. | ||
Happened again on October 23rd. | ||
In 2019, witnesses say they saw this as well. | ||
Removing screens from windows pretending to jog. | ||
But I gotta say, this account here of an event There's a series of events in 2019-2020, honestly hilarious. | ||
I mean, if this is a gag, Carmen Arbery was a funny guy. | ||
In 2019 and 2020, local convenience store witness interviews reveal Mr. Arbery became known as the jogger for his repeated conduct and behavior of running up, stretching in front, and then entering several convenience stores where he would grab items and run out before he could be caught. | ||
I mean, that's funny. | ||
That is hilarious. | ||
I want to see a skit of a guy going up, getting in front of the convenience store, giving a big stretch, lean over, touch your toes, really get ready, and then just grab something and run away. | ||
That's good. | ||
That's a good bit. | ||
That's a good bit, I have to admit. | ||
That is funny. | ||
That is funny. | ||
Moving on, shall we? | ||
U.S. | ||
is now working with the International Monetary Fund to provide $650 billion in currency aid to countries hit by pandemic. | ||
You know, like us. | ||
Like how we were hit by the pandemic. | ||
Like how we were locked down. | ||
Like how our economy was destroyed by the pandemic. | ||
Now we're giving, again, even more money. | ||
More than half a trillion dollars more to other countries that were also hit by the pandemic. | ||
So thank you, IMF. | ||
Thank you, United States government. | ||
Thank you for robbing us and giving our money away to other people. | ||
We so appreciate it. | ||
What would we do without you? | ||
Where would we be? | ||
It's almost impossible to tell. | ||
Now, this is a The theme that we're seeing move forward, and again, this is part and parcel with the Great Reset. | ||
This is all a part of the Build Back Better capitalism at the center of it all concept that's being pushed forward by everybody from Bill Gates to Klaus Schwab to the Royal Family to the Pope to the Rothschilds, Marc Benioff and others. | ||
That is that you have massive multi-billion dollar multinational corporations dictating what you can and can't have on your law books. | ||
With the Coca-Cola CEO Quincy saying it's unacceptable. | ||
Georgia voting laws need to be remedied. | ||
And of course, they're one of the largest companies in Georgia, perhaps the largest, one of the largest companies in the entire world. | ||
And if this corporate, you know, mega conglomerate Coca-Cola decides that they don't like what the people of Georgia voted for, well, their opinion's more important. | ||
And they'll bankrupt you if you disagree. | ||
Same with Home Depot. | ||
Same with Major League Baseball. | ||
And Biden's come out and said, no, I think it's good. | ||
Major League Baseball should move the all-star game out of Georgia for daring to question our dictates. | ||
How dare they try to make their voting system safer? | ||
We will bankrupt them. | ||
We will take billions of dollars away from their economy. | ||
We will make people lose jobs. | ||
We will use every ounce of our ill-gotten force to Cajole the Georgians to bend their knees. | ||
This is literally what's happening. | ||
Of course, this goes right in line with everything we've seen so far. | ||
Now it's happening in Texas. | ||
Corporate giants come out against Republicans' efforts to restrict voting in Texas. | ||
Don't you just love how honest these people are? | ||
It's like we have to go back every time and remind you mail-in voting was an emergency, temporary, haphazardly enacted procedure because of the dire circumstances surrounding the coronavirus. | ||
We have to save lives and it'll be perfectly safe and it's fine but we just have to do it. | ||
Now it's like if you try to remove this you are a racist and you're trying to restrict voting and we will bankrupt you because we control the money. | ||
We are the corporations. | ||
American Airlines and Dell Technology on Thursday publicly declared their opposition to Republican legislative proposals that would impose new restrictions on voting. | ||
You know what would make it easy? | ||
Let's just give the government to the corporations. | ||
Let's just have our bettors, the billionaires and the millionaires and the trillionaires, they'll just decide for us and we can just do away with this whole dog and pony show of We're actually trying to vote on what our laws are. | ||
Those days are over. | ||
That's the old America. | ||
That's the way it was. | ||
Now it's time for the Great Reset, where you're a slave. | ||
You get no say in what your government does, local, national, statewide, or otherwise. | ||
It's up to the corporations, and if you disagree with them, you deserve to be bankrupted. | ||
You deserve to lose your job. | ||
You deserve to have the power of these billion-dollar companies turned against you to destroy you, because this is freedom, according to these absolute scumbags. | ||
Now, Lieutenant Governor Dan Patrick has hit back at American Airlines, saying, as Lieutenant Governor of Texas, I'm stunned that American Airlines would put out a statement saying, quote, we are strongly opposed to this bill, Senate Bill 7, just minutes after their government relations representative called my office and admitted that neither he nor American Airlines CEO had actually read the legislation. | ||
I don't need to read the legislation. | ||
It's racist. | ||
I was told it was racist. | ||
Therefore, we oppose it. | ||
Therefore, you cannot get rid of the mail-in ballot temporary procedure that was put in place because of coronavirus. | ||
It's here forever, and if you oppose us, we will bankrupt you. | ||
What do you not understand about this? | ||
Kevin McCarthy has come out with a great little statement about the so-called infrastructure plan. | ||
You know, just like the COVID relief bill that we had to pass didn't actually give that much money to COVID relief, and a lot of it went to, you know, Saving San Francisco from their horrible policies. | ||
Most of the money that's coming to Austin goes directly towards dealing with the homeless crisis that was created by their problems or by their proposals. | ||
And Kevin McCarthy points out only 6% of the so-called infrastructure plan goes to bridges, highways, and roads, while 94% of it goes to payoffs for labor unions, job-killing regulations, and Green New Deal mandates. | ||
It's all a scam. | ||
It is 100% top-to-bottom. | ||
This entire government is a giant, tick-sucking scam. | ||
unidentified
|
Hey, Mac folks. | |
Special Good Friday edition of American Journal. | ||
I'm staying white-pilled. | ||
That's your love, that neighbor, not the back. | ||
And back, folks. | ||
This is a special Good Friday edition of American Journal. | ||
Staying white-pilled. | ||
It's always darkest before the dawn. | ||
Just remember, as Christians, it may seem like we are down and out at the moment. | ||
There's still being anything There was one point where there were like 12 of us. | ||
And our leader had just been killed. | ||
Holy crud. | ||
I mean, can you even imagine? | ||
How are you supposed to have hope after that? | ||
Fast forward a couple thousand years. | ||
And suddenly, you know, you've created civilization. | ||
You've conquered the world. | ||
You've created the most amazing, beautiful, uh, pieces of art humanity's ever manufactured, created the most fair, open, and joyful societies that mankind has ever devised. | ||
And yet for a brief period, can you imagine how hopeless it would have felt? | ||
Oh my gosh. | ||
Wow. | ||
Can you possibly imagine how down and out that little group of fellows was? | ||
After seeing their leader crucified. | ||
Don't lose the faith, folks. | ||
Always darkest before the dawn, and that is the theme of the program. | ||
Because obviously, pretty dark. | ||
We're in a pretty dark situation here. | ||
And I'm going to play a video for you that illustrates exactly how dark it is. | ||
This video is truly incredible and we're going to dissect this video. | ||
We're going to slice it apart, inspect its innards. | ||
We're going to really delve in and analyze the psychology or psychopathy? | ||
I don't know. | ||
The insanity that we see on display here, as well as the bravery and the cool-headedness. | ||
So you may have seen this video going around. | ||
I'm going to play the whole thing here. | ||
Watch this guy who is a Total champion, by the way. | ||
This guy's going around with a bullhorn out of his car window. | ||
People calling all the time. | ||
What can I do? | ||
I want to spread the word. | ||
This guy's doing it, man. | ||
He didn't ask permission. | ||
He didn't make a big plan. | ||
He drove around his car with a bullhorn, just telling people what the real situation was. | ||
And look at the outrage that he inspires. | ||
Look at the fury and insane rage. | ||
That is on display by people just being told simply, you're being lied to. | ||
Let's roll the tape. | ||
unidentified
|
Isolate yourselves. | |
Wear your masks. | ||
Social distance. | ||
Just trust the narrative. | ||
You've never been lied to about anything. | ||
The government loves you. | ||
Trust the media. | ||
You're all doing a great job. | ||
Keep wearing those masks, guys. | ||
Keep wearing those masks. | ||
You two are a little bit too close together. | ||
Sorry. | ||
Can you guys social distance? | ||
You in the orange. | ||
Come on. | ||
You're right next to all these people over here. | ||
Come on. | ||
Think of your grandparents. | ||
This is crazy. | ||
But other than that, you're all doing a great job trusting the narrative. | ||
Do what the news tells you. | ||
Do what the government tells you. | ||
You're all doing a great job. | ||
Congratulations. | ||
We love you. | ||
Congratulations. | ||
For following the narrative and trusting the news and not questioning anything. | ||
You're all doing a great job complying with the narrative. | ||
There is definitely not a psychological operation happening when you're convinced of a reality that's based on fear that has nothing to do with what's actually happening. | ||
you shut the fuck up you I'm gonna get a fuck up get the fuck out of here You're f**king insane, bro. | ||
Get the f**k out of here. | ||
You're insane, bro. | ||
Dude, you're insane. | ||
Get the f**k away from this guy. | ||
Dude, get the f**k out of here, man. | ||
I'm gonna kick you in the f**king head. | ||
We're trying to wake people up because you've been psy-opped. | ||
We love you people, but you've been psychologically... You've literally been psy-opped. | ||
Okay, are you happy now? | ||
Are you happy now, you f***er? | ||
We're trying to wake you people up over here. | ||
You've been PSYOPT, brother. | ||
You've been PSYOPT. | ||
That's what a psychological operation is. | ||
Yeah, you want to know the truth? | ||
You want to know the truth? | ||
The same number of people died this year and last year and last year. | ||
You've been psychologically manipulated, my friend. | ||
We still love you, but you need to wake the f*** up. | ||
Incredible. | ||
unidentified
|
Absolutely incredible. | |
You realize you just committed a serious crime. | ||
He doesn't care. | ||
By the way, the guy not wearing a mask, right? | ||
He's so mad that he's being told not to wear a mask, but he's also not wearing a mask. | ||
A little bit of irony there. | ||
A couple things about this. | ||
First of all, what this dude with the bullhorn is doing, absolutely fantastic. | ||
I want to I want to bring him on the show, I want to send him a new gold-plated bullhorn so he can continue this incredible work. | ||
I love it, going around telling people, good job, good job, you're separating, you're believing the narrative. | ||
I mean, absolutely fantastic, his attitude. | ||
And then when he gets attacked, he's so calm about it. | ||
I gotta tell you, man, if somebody came up and You know, slammed a bullhorn into my face that I'm car- I would not react so calmly. | ||
I would be out of that car in a millisecond. | ||
I would, uh... I won't say what I'll do, but, uh, one of us would have less teeth at the end of the day. | ||
And... So, kudos to him for remaining calm. | ||
I'm not sure I could do that, but it's the right thing to do. | ||
It's, you know, you stay calm, you let them be the insane ones. | ||
And how insane is that guy? | ||
Shattering a window, attacking a guy, uh, absolute frothing at the mouth fury, and why... | ||
Because he is being told that he's being lied to. | ||
That's it. | ||
That's all. | ||
Remember that scene in The Matrix where they're like, people believe in The Matrix so strongly they'll attack you if you reveal to them that it's fake? | ||
This is literally what we're seeing here. | ||
It's literally a guy going, you're in The Matrix, what you believe is a lie, and this is the fury that he's met with. | ||
The anger, the hatred, the incoherent madness. | ||
Of just being told you're being lied to. | ||
Just being told, hey, you know, the media lies to you and the government lies to you. | ||
Undeniably true. | ||
It's absolute, but this is the matrix. | ||
This is the world that we're living. | ||
This is the power of the narrative. | ||
That these slaves will rabidly attack people trying to cut their chains. | ||
These puppets will lash out in fury and incoherent Rage against anybody who's trying to cut their marionette strings and tell them to think for themselves. | ||
This is how they've been programmed. | ||
This is the consequence of the atmosphere created by the mainstream media and it's absolutely despicable. | ||
That this guy not only would attack somebody for just announcing something, the guy's not even going around, he's not cursing, he's not yelling profanity, there's nothing he's saying is racist or hateful or would be anything that would actually inspire vitriolic reaction. there's nothing he's saying is racist or hateful or would He's literally just saying in a mocking tone, yeah, you're doing a great job, you're all obeying the dictates, keep being slaves. | ||
And it's just this frenetic chaos going on in this guy's head with the bike. | ||
And he just can't handle it and he has to lash out. | ||
Now, clearly assault, right? | ||
Clearly, you know, intense, you know, you did physical damage, shattering a car window. | ||
Clearly he's trying to hurt this guy. | ||
I don't know what sort of charges that would reach. | ||
You have to ask a prosecutor. | ||
But, you know, if that guy's found and actually charged for this, picking up your bike and smashing it into a car and trying to hurt somebody, Like he could be in jail for years. | ||
That doesn't enter into his mind, does it? | ||
Because it's a madness. | ||
Because it isn't logic. | ||
It isn't clear thinking. | ||
It isn't rational. | ||
It is a rationale blinding, a logic blinding fury that comes over people for simply being told you're being lied to. | ||
For simply being told you are not thinking for yourself. | ||
You are obeying people who don't like you. | ||
You are obeying people who don't have your best interests in mind. | ||
And this is the angry, the frenetic, the fury. | ||
And I bet a lot of people on the street were congratulating this guy. | ||
Good job. | ||
Good job. | ||
You told that guy who was trying to free us. | ||
We love being slaves. | ||
unidentified
|
You're tuned in to The American Journal with your host, Harrison Smith. | |
Watch it live right now at band.video. | ||
Incredible insanity on display by the liberals day in, day out. | ||
The chaos, the violence, the madness, the forcible insanity that we're facing. | ||
Truly incredible. | ||
Feels good to be some of the only ones fighting back against it. | ||
You can support us by going to InfoWarsStore.com. | ||
The Vitamin Mineral Fusion product is perhaps one of our most popular and is now on sale 40% off. | ||
It's back! | ||
Ladies and gentlemen, you don't want to miss it. | ||
This is probably the one we get the most calls about. | ||
People call in, they say, I start my day every day with a scoop Of that delicious vitamin mineral fusion in my water filtered through the Alexa Pure Pro and they say I've never felt better after drinking this. | ||
Try it for yourself. | ||
It's 40% off right now. | ||
50% off lung cleanse. | ||
$17.76 for every shirt. | ||
I'm wearing a Molon Labe shirt under my suit right now as I do almost every day. | ||
Because, uh, slowly but surely, having worked here, one by one, my old t-shirts have been replaced by InfoWars t-shirts because they're just more stylish, more comfortable, more well-made. | ||
And they, uh, say something to the people who I meet in everyday life. | ||
I swear I get, I get more compliments and more, like, what's up, more, like, friendly interactions because of the InfoWars t-shirts that I wear, uh, than I get negative stuff. | ||
Like, I've, I don't think I've ever gotten, like, a negative, Look for wearing an InfoWars shirt. | ||
I can't think of a time where I've been like, where someone's like seen my shirt and like said something to me negative. | ||
I get a lot of people saying positive stuff to me. | ||
People you'd never expect, especially ones like I wear the, uh, there's poison in your tap water shirt with the skull on the floor. | ||
And it's like, you know, there's a burger place I'd go, a burger truck. | ||
I used to go all the time and I was kind of friendly with the guy, you know, we knew each other cause I was a regular and, uh, But we never really talked or anything. | ||
So I wore that shirt and he's like, man, that's so true. | ||
There's poison in our tap water. | ||
And we get into a big conversation about it. | ||
He's an immigrant from the Philippines, I believe. | ||
But yeah, wear these shirts around. | ||
You'll meet fellow info warriors where you've never expected. | ||
You'll get in conversations. | ||
And it's really wonderful. | ||
So take advantage of that as well. | ||
$17.76 for every shirt because they are of the highest quality. | ||
I assure you, every single one is really fantastic. | ||
And you'll meet great people by wearing them. | ||
I guarantee it. | ||
All right. | ||
I have so many videos to show you and more videos pouring in by the minute. | ||
In fact, I kind of want to go to that one first, but I got to play this one because this one that I'm about to play blew my mind and it's short. | ||
So I really thought about doing like today on this show, starting every segment with this 38 second clip, because it perfectly illustrates everything you need to know About the motive and the mindset and the true impetus behind the vaccine, the vaccine passports, the lockdown, the coronavirus measures, all of it is laid out perfectly clear right here on CNN. | ||
It's clear to them that the vaccine is the ticket back to pre-pandemic life. | ||
And the window to do that is really narrowing. | ||
I mean, you were mentioning, Chris, about how all these states are reopening. | ||
They're reopening at 100%. | ||
And we have a very narrow window to tie reopening policy to vaccination status. | ||
Because otherwise, if everything is reopened, then what's the carrot going to be? | ||
How are we going to incentivize people to actually get the vaccine? | ||
So that's why I think the CDC and the Biden administration needs to come out a lot bolder and say, if you're vaccinated, you can do all these things. | ||
Here are all these freedoms that you have. | ||
Because otherwise people are going to go out and enjoy these freedoms anyway. | ||
Incredible, isn't it? | ||
How incredible is that? | ||
Because otherwise people are going to go out and enjoy these freedoms anyway. | ||
Incredible, isn't it? | ||
It really illustrates perfectly clearly how these people think about you. | ||
You're not a human being that gets to decide what you want to do. | ||
You're not a thinking, rational, independent person with an ability to weigh pros and cons. | ||
You are a slave. | ||
You're an animal. | ||
You're a dog. | ||
You're a horse. | ||
You're a draft horse that they have to trick into going into the stable with the carrot. | ||
This is how they think about you. | ||
It's being posted around a lot saying, you know, they said the quiet part out loud. | ||
It's not very quiet though, is it? | ||
Because they've been saying this for a while. | ||
There you have it laid out perfectly clearly what the real intention, what the scheme is behind the vaccine rollout. | ||
You don't have to do this for things that are actually good. | ||
If it's actually something that people want, That people need, they'll get it. | ||
She says, what's going to be the carrot for getting the vaccine? | ||
What's going to be the reward? | ||
How are you going to, uh, you know, trick the dog into taking his medicine? | ||
You have to wrap in a little piece of bacon because we know what's good for the animals. | ||
We know what's good for the cattle. | ||
They don't, they're dumb. | ||
They're stupid. | ||
They're mindless. | ||
They have to be psychologically tricked into doing what we want because they won't obey us otherwise. | ||
It's a sickening mindset, and she might be the one expressing it, but it is exactly the same opinion held by people in power. | ||
From Dr. Fauci to Bill Gates to Andrew Cuomo to, well, Joe Biden doesn't know what day of the week it is, so who knows what he thinks. | ||
But how incredible. | ||
I want to play that video again, just so again, you can hear exactly what Her plan is what she thinks, because again, Dr. Lena Wynn, public health professor for George Washington University, one of the most prestigious Ivy League institutions in our country. | ||
Here's what she says about withholding your freedoms until you obey. | ||
clear to them that the vaccine is the ticket back to pre-pandemic life. | ||
And the window to do that is really narrowing. | ||
I mean, you were mentioning, Chris, about how all these states are reopening. | ||
They're reopening at 100%. | ||
And we have a very narrow window to tie reopening policy to vaccination status. | ||
All right, let's pause that. | ||
Let's pause that right there. | ||
Let's pause it right there. | ||
So after some of the most extreme lockdowns, you have some of these states. | ||
I have the story here. | ||
I should have pulled it out before this. | ||
I think it was Michigan. | ||
Highest rates of coronavirus. | ||
Across the board. | ||
Texas, meanwhile, reopens and has a complete collapse of coronavirus. | ||
Some of the lowest rates we've ever had and dropping fast after brutal lockdown. | ||
Michigan now leads the nation in COVID-19 cases per population. | ||
So the evidence is out now. | ||
It's been a year. | ||
The masks, according to the CDC, at the very most, decreased transmission by 1.5%. | ||
Minuscule, almost negligible, would have been Far, far more effective to mandate vitamin D supplementation, to mandate exercise, would have actually maybe decreased cases by potentially 60-80%, 1.5% from the mask mandates. | ||
The lockdowns we've seen, not only were ineffective, they were counter-effective. | ||
They were the reverse of what they were supposed to do. | ||
Sweden has the lowest spike in Europe, didn't have a lockdown. | ||
Same numbers, more or less, as California. | ||
California's economy is wrecked. | ||
Florida's is flourishing. | ||
New York has some of the highest rates. | ||
Michigan, most brutal lockdown in the nation. | ||
Highest rates in the nation. | ||
So these lockdowns weren't based on science. | ||
The social distancing they've admitted now? | ||
Yeah, we made it up. | ||
They changed it to three feet because why not? | ||
When asked, well, what was the six feet based on? | ||
They said, nothing. | ||
What do you mean? | ||
unidentified
|
Nothing. | |
We made it up. | ||
We made it up. | ||
It's nonsense. | ||
It doesn't matter. | ||
But you believed it. | ||
You trusted them. | ||
You thought they actually had your best interests in mind. | ||
You thought this was all actually because of a dangerous disease, and these were necessary procedures that we had to undertake, like mail-in balloting. | ||
We had to. | ||
We had no choice. | ||
It's to save lives. | ||
And now it's here forever, and it'll never leave. | ||
And you're racist if you disagree. | ||
It's the same scheme over and over. | ||
This woman just exposes it probably, uh, accidentally. | ||
I mean, she doesn't, maybe she doesn't realize how she sounds because this is what they say normally. | ||
This is what they say to each other. | ||
This is what their mindset is. | ||
They think it's okay to think this. | ||
They think it's, they think they're on, they're on top. | ||
They're in charge. | ||
They're the only smart ones. | ||
She says the window of opportunity is closing. | ||
Our window of opportunity is closing because these places are opening up and we're missing a chance to tie the vaccines in with giving you back your freedoms. | ||
If this isn't worth revolution, I don't know what is. | ||
The globalists are... | ||
unidentified
|
All right, folks. | |
It's American Journal, InfoWars.com, BAM, dot video. | ||
Share these links, would you please? | ||
Would you please share these links, take the videos down, upload them on your own sites, do whatever it takes, uh, to spread the word that there is an alternative out there to the mainstream. | ||
There is somewhere people can go to not be lied to, to not be pulled around by the nose, to not be treated like a mindless animal, and, uh, Tricked or bribed or threatened into doing the right thing. | ||
There's actually an outlet out here that believes you have the conscious ability to make your own decisions. | ||
That you not only have the ability to do it, you have an obligation to do the research, to find out the truth and to act on it. | ||
Is there any other outlet that actually treats you like a human being? | ||
I don't know. | ||
They treat you like cattle. | ||
That's what you want to be treated like? | ||
Fair riddance to you. | ||
So many more videos to show you. | ||
I got to keep going to these because they're so good. | ||
But I do want to read this very quickly because it is so important. | ||
It's a statement by Ashley Babbitt. | ||
Ashley Babbitt's husband released his first statement in three months after her death. | ||
He says, We can't begin to express our sincere gratitude for the outpouring of support and generosity that's been received both from here in America and honestly from around the world. | ||
It's been a difficult three months without our Ashley. | ||
She's missed every minute of every hour of every day. | ||
The void is tremendous and overwhelming at times with the love that's been shown us. | ||
That her name will not be forgotten. | ||
Her lesbian that's been shown shows us that her name will not be forgotten. | ||
We cannot and will not let her name be forgotten. | ||
It will be etched in the history books of our future, honoring the life of an amazing woman taking from this world far too soon. | ||
This world is far from a better place without her. | ||
She had so much to offer and give. | ||
Thank you to all of you amazingly loving people. | ||
Your comments and donations have been a beautiful symphony to drown out the other noise and have helped in ways we cannot express. | ||
The world doesn't know who she was to us, but that's what we cling to. | ||
Regardless of the bad reporting, the slanderous rhetoric, we know who our girl was. | ||
We know our Ashley. | ||
Our Ashley that wanted nothing but to help people at their worst and to make the world a better place for everybody. | ||
A combat veteran, a true American, a true patriot, murdered and taken from the world far too soon. | ||
A simple thank you doesn't begin to describe our attitude. | ||
And, uh, but it'll be, it'll have to suffice for the moment as we begin our long trek of bringing justice for a beautiful, magnanimous, larger-than-life Ashley. | ||
Much peace and love, Aaron Babbitt. | ||
Uh, heartbreaking, isn't it? | ||
Tragic. | ||
It's good to know that, you know, they're receiving that love, that, uh, people actually understand what's going on and what happened, uh, to that young woman was a, I won't say a tragedy. | ||
It was a crime. | ||
It was a murder. | ||
It was despicable. | ||
A tragedy is something you can't control. | ||
A tragedy is something that happens outside of the realm of human action, as far as I'm concerned. | ||
A hurricane that kills your family, that can be a tragedy. | ||
A fire can be a tragedy. | ||
This wasn't a tragedy, this was an outrage. | ||
It was a murder. | ||
It was violence. | ||
Without reason, without purpose, that killed, as far as I can tell, a beautiful, patriotic, hard-working woman. | ||
Her death is bad enough. | ||
He's a positive guy, so he doesn't stick too long to it. | ||
But just this line. | ||
Regardless of the bad reporting, the slanderous rhetoric, we know who our girl was. | ||
That's all he says about it. | ||
Bad reporting and slanderous rhetoric. | ||
They killed her. | ||
Then they slandered her. | ||
Then they called her a terrorist. | ||
Then they said she was an insane QAnon cult member that probably deserved to die. | ||
And that mindset seeped into the American people. | ||
They agree with that. | ||
Well, didn't she believe in QAnon? | ||
Didn't she deserve to be shot in the chest? | ||
Unarmed? | ||
Innocent? | ||
So, you know, the murder is one thing, and it's bad enough, and that should cause national outrage. | ||
Instead of national outrage, what you get is national adherence to the narrative, saying that actually she deserved it. | ||
I can't imagine. | ||
I can't imagine how some of these people | ||
Survive under this abuse how Aaron Babbitt hasn't gone absolutely insane Shows a tremendous amount of strength Absolutely incredible absolutely incredible I hate to move on to Something that we can actually Sink our teeth into here. | ||
We'll do this now. | ||
Let's go to this. | ||
This is a clip number 11 This is Lady Gaga and other celebrities endorsing a new tax for you. | ||
They have a new tax for you. | ||
Made up out of nowhere and it'll be everywhere now. | ||
It's incredible the way this is rolled out. | ||
So let's listen to the braindead Satanists from Hollywood tell us what a good deal this new tax is. | ||
Clip number 11. | ||
unidentified
|
If you want to get back to your favorite places and feel confident, they have put your health and safety first. | |
Look for the Well Health Safety Seal. | ||
I'm Dr. Richard Carmona, the 17th Surgeon General of the United States of America. | ||
This is the Well Health Safety Seal from the International Well Building Institute, the global authority on healthy buildings. | ||
The Well Health Safety rating was informed by years of research and input from hundreds of leading virologists, health experts, epidemiologists, and building professionals around the world. | ||
It took years to come up with this ugly Offices, banks, child care centers, all the places we go. | ||
The WellHealth safety seal means that we'll feel better going into restaurants, theaters, stores, hotels, stadiums, and all the places that we love. | ||
Everything may look the same, but the WellHealth Safety Seal means that your health and safety are top of mind when it comes to cleaning and sanitizing procedures, air and water quality management, emergency preparedness programs, and health services. | ||
So look for the WellHealth Safety Seal outside and feel more confident going inside. | ||
Learn more about the WellHealth Safety Rating at WellHealthSafety.com. | ||
It's honestly hard to believe that that isn't a parody. | ||
It's honestly hard to believe that this isn't a parody of the modern Hollywood drivel social activist scams that we're seeing. | ||
Because think about this. | ||
And it's almost the perfect anatomy of this scam, of everything else that we're seeing. | ||
There's almost not a word to describe it. | ||
Other than scam or other than, uh, you know, performative bullcrap, right? | ||
Okay. | ||
So people, these people are literally Satanists, right? | ||
Like Lady Gaga, you know, holds these like mock human sacrifices where they pretend to eat, uh, dead people. | ||
Just most wicked, evil, fallen, decrepit people in the history of the world. | ||
Um, they don't tell you one thing about what it actually is. | ||
You know, if this was a legitimate thing, It would be about like, well, here's what it means to be healthy. | ||
No, no. | ||
It's just like, if you see the sticker, it's safe. | ||
The sticker means safeness. | ||
And they don't even say that, like, it does mean it's safer. | ||
It's like, when you see the sticker, you'll feel better. | ||
You'll feel better when you see the sticker. | ||
The sticker means good. | ||
It's just like, what? | ||
But what is it? | ||
What does it mean? | ||
What the hell are you talking about? | ||
Building safety? | ||
I'm in charge of the building safety! | ||
No, building health! | ||
I'm in charge of building health for the UN! | ||
I make sure buildings are healthy! | ||
It's just like, what is this? | ||
What does this mean? | ||
It is literally just a sticker that says that they have paid money to a corporation that gives them stickers! | ||
That's literally all it is! | ||
Because, yeah, believe it or not, they are actually charging money for this! | ||
Small businesses have to pay a little less than $3,000, all the way up to high-volume multi-use companies that have to pay almost $13,000 to get this little sticker. | ||
What does it mean? | ||
It means it's a scam. | ||
It means that they get Hollywood celebrities, right? | ||
Humans are trusting people, right? | ||
And when we see somebody we recognize, we tend to want to trust them, especially if we like them. | ||
We like them if they've been portrayed in the media as good. | ||
Not me. | ||
I hate these people. | ||
I think they're all worthless scumbags. | ||
But I'm talking about for the regular person out there. | ||
They see J-Lo. | ||
They see Lady Gaga. | ||
They think they can trust these people. | ||
They don't know any better. | ||
So you get these people to come out. | ||
And you put the soft music behind it. | ||
You do the nice lighting. | ||
It's very professional. | ||
All the money that's behind this program to make this video clearly adds credence to it. | ||
So you spend a couple thousand dollars to get a couple of scumbag celebrities to say, when you see the sticker, you'll feel good. | ||
A sticker in the window means you can feel safe knowing that the sticker's in the window. | ||
And then they charge companies tens of thousands of dollars to put it on their window. | ||
Then other companies are like, crap, we're losing out on business. | ||
We better do it. | ||
It's a money-making scheme. | ||
It means nothing. | ||
Don't fall for it. | ||
unidentified
|
You're tuned in to the American Journal with your host, Harrison Smith. | |
Watch it live right now at band.video. | ||
The mainstream media has been talking about a surge at the border, but the real story is a massive illegal immigration pipeline run by the Biden administration. | ||
We witnessed it running nonstop in McAllen, Texas. | ||
First, Border Patrol delivers busloads of illegal immigrants to a secured tent processing center on the corner of U.S. | ||
Business 83 and West 15th Street. | ||
We are told by sources well over a thousand each night in this area alone. | ||
And what we witnessed during the day certainly substantiates this number. | ||
We were told by a driver of their operation that they are being tested for COVID-19 at this processing center. | ||
They all leave with manila envelopes in hand. | ||
Those that do test positive for COVID are driven to one of the several hotels who have contracted with the federal government to act as COVID quarantine shelters, where they will quarantine for seven days before being released into the U.S. | ||
And the rest are either bused or walked down the street to the Humanitarian Respite Center, operated by Catholic Charities of the Rio Grande Valley. | ||
Where they are brought in through the front door with their manila envelopes inspected. | ||
They are housed, given bags of clothing, and are then sent off through the back door to various U.S. | ||
cities via bus and airplane. | ||
It's a non-stop flowing pipeline. | ||
Those that take the bus are led across the street to the bus station, and the rest are given rides to the airport where they present Border Patrol and TSA with the paperwork inside their Manila envelopes and set off to various U.S. | ||
cities where they are either meeting up with some other government agency, NGO, or perhaps even Mexican cartels operating within the U.S. | ||
It is the biggest illegal immigration smuggling operation in U.S. | ||
history, and it is being run by the federal government on behalf of the United Nations to destroy all American liberties and put us under the boot for a thousand years. | ||
For InfoWars.com, this is Greg Reese. | ||
All right, folks, you can find that video and share it, won't you please, at Band.Video and InfoWars.com. | ||
That is, uh, it's called Exclusive Video, Biden's Massive Illegal Immigrant Pipeline Exposed by Greg Reese. | ||
And that's the type of on-the-ground reporting you get here at InfoWars by going to InfoWars store. | ||
Now, I'm very excited to have an in-studio guest. | ||
His name is Jason Jones. | ||
He's a proud father of seven and a grandfather of two who currently lives, you're a grandfather? | ||
I would have never believed it. | ||
My goodness. | ||
You look young. | ||
Maybe it's because you live in Hawaii. | ||
I started young. | ||
Well, that's great. | ||
That's everybody should. | ||
So, president and founder of Hero Incorporated and Movie to Movement, film producer, author, activist, and human rights worker. | ||
Your mission, I read here, is to promote the incomparable dignity and beauty of the human person through the power of film. | ||
And you also host the Jason Jones Podcast. | ||
The websites are Movie2Movement.com and The Great Great to be here. | ||
Thanks. | ||
Thank you. | ||
I'm very happy to have you here because not a lot of people know this. | ||
I did film for a long time before I got my job here at InfoWars. | ||
I did short films and music videos and all that sort of stuff and I think it is the most powerful art form in the entire world. | ||
It combines like every discipline from every other art form into one from audio to video and it really is. | ||
The most powerful way to tell a story or to, you were saying before the break, to create empathy. | ||
So, I want to talk about filmmaking with you. | ||
Yeah, no, I'd love to. | ||
I'd love to talk about movies. | ||
Yeah, that's awesome. | ||
So, what is it about film that is so special? | ||
Well, first of all, you know, Roger Ebert called the motion picture an empathy generating machine. | ||
Right. | ||
I started out with my mission as a, in college I decided I wanted to live my life between the vulnerable and the violent. | ||
You know, we were coming out of a century of genocides, democides, and total wars. | ||
Right. | ||
And I lost my first child to a forced abortion when I was a 17-year-old. | ||
Private and basic training. | ||
My high school girlfriend, her father forced her to have an abortion. | ||
And that sort of woke me up to the fragility of human life. | ||
And then as a young infantryman. | ||
And so I just, you know, I wanted to amplify my influence. | ||
I wanted to amplify the message and share the truth about the human person through stories. | ||
Right. | ||
And the movie is the best way, I think, to tell a story. | ||
unidentified
|
You're watching the American Journal with your host, Harrison Smith. | |
Watch live right now at band.video. | ||
All right, all right. | ||
Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
Second hour of American Journal. | ||
Jason Jones is my guest. | ||
Movietomovement.com, thegreatcampaign.org, and the Jason Jones Show podcast, which can be found on Apple Podcasts. | ||
And again, I'm very excited to speak to you as a filmmaker. | ||
Of course, your films cover topics that we could do an hour on, you know, each one of these films, right? | ||
But to me, I really love the art of film and I think, you know, you can present people with information and it can just go in one ear and out the other. | ||
When you show somebody a story that presents information, it hits them so much deeper and it can really resonate and affect people. | ||
So I think, you know, as many documentaries are being made out there, what we really need is info warriors or, you know, people with good values making narratives that don't hit, don't beat you over the head with some sort of moral. | ||
But they just tell a story that takes people into, you know, the mindset that they may not have otherwise and shows them a different angle on something. | ||
I mean, that's real truth, right? | ||
Yeah, it builds empathy. | ||
You think of today, it's Good Friday. | ||
Right. | ||
Think of the passion of the Christ. | ||
You know, I say sometimes, and Mel Gibson probably wouldn't appreciate this, because he's a Christian who makes films. | ||
He's not a Christian filmmaker. | ||
To me, Christian film is you're making a movie to serve a niche market. | ||
Right. | ||
But, and I ask people, is The Passion of the Christ a Christian film? | ||
And people think, maybe no? | ||
Yeah, because it transcends. | ||
It transcends the faith-based market. | ||
So you don't think of it as that. | ||
But it tells the truth. | ||
It tells the truth about God. | ||
It tells the truth about the human person. | ||
It makes violence repulsive. | ||
And when I say that, I think Mel Gibson is really one of maybe only three, you know, truly Christian filmmakers. | ||
And what I mean by that is he tells the truth about violence. | ||
And that's what Good Friday tells the truth about. | ||
You think of the crucifixion. | ||
How many times have we read that? | ||
But it wasn't until you saw the film that you understood the brutality and the violence. | ||
And people say, oh, it's such a violent movie. | ||
Really? | ||
I think only you saw three people die. | ||
And you can turn on any other film and you see 100 people die. | ||
But it's actually thrilling. | ||
It's exhilarating. | ||
It's not repulsive. | ||
All of Mel Gibson's films, if you think of his first film, Uh, it was set in Australia about World War I. I forget the name of it right now, but Braveheart, Apocalypto, Hacksaw Ridge, they all make violence repulsive. | ||
I made a film with his producer, Steve McAveety, who is the producer of The Passion. | ||
We made a film called The Stoning of Soraya M. Again, and it won the NAACP Image Award for Best Film. | ||
It was kind of snubbed by the Academy. | ||
But it was the true story of a woman who was framed for adultery and stoned in Iran, makes violence repulsive. | ||
And so that's what, even when I make a film that has a lot of violence in it, like The Stoning of Sir Iyam, it reveals the truth. | ||
The truth is the fragility of human life, how enthusiasm sweep communities and inspire people to horrible acts of cruelty and violence. | ||
And inspires us to want to live in solidarity with those who are vulnerable. | ||
And so that's what I look to do with film. | ||
So it's like here we're describing like the beautiful amazing things that we've done with film then you look at what's doing what's being done with film or mass media or music or the Grammys you know whatever these you know nationwide pop culture sort of events or displays whatever you want to call it it's complete opposite of that right and but You know, the people in Hollywood, they're perfectly aware of how powerful this medium is. | ||
And so they use it for the alternative, which is to like tear down, not to build up, to build empathy for evil people. | ||
I mean, there's been this big trend recently where like every bad character is getting their own movie, right? | ||
recently where like every bad character is getting their own movie right you have all of the all of the evil villains from the old disney movie from you know now they're making the you know cruella de vil her name is cruel devil right and now they're making a movie where she's the protagonist because you want to have empathy for her uh so i mean i think we're missing out here because i think our enemies are using all of these incredibly powerful tools to put forward their perspective | ||
You have all of the evil villains from the old Disney movie. | ||
Now they're making the, you know, Cruella DeVille. | ||
Her name is Cruel Devil, right? | ||
And now they're making a movie where she's the protagonist because you want to have empathy for her. | ||
uh while meanwhile there's a very you know the exception of you and a few others there is a major lack of like decent people using these uh using these mediums to to promote good you Yeah, and you know, you think of the folks in Hollywood, I see them as the first victims. | ||
They're poisoned by the poison they're serving. | ||
You know, you look at their lives and how tragic they are and how they end and they spiral. | ||
They keep spiraling out of control. | ||
This young man, Lil Nas X, my heart breaks for him. | ||
You know, the Bible verse they put on those shoes, it's from Luke, I see Satan fall like lightning. | ||
And Christian anthropologists have said that that's really informative, that Bible verse, on how we as human beings learn. | ||
Scripture revealed the truth. | ||
We learn by imitation. | ||
They have on the shoe the Bible verse that tells the truth about how humans learn. | ||
We learn through imitation. | ||
We're imitative. | ||
And so we look to Lil Nas X, we see this music video of his. | ||
So many times I think that they're playing, they're play-acting with this repulsive behavior, but we better be careful what we pretend to be, we become. | ||
unidentified
|
Right. | |
And so many people in the entertainment industry, they get swept away, they begin to fake it, and then they become it, and they're the first victims. | ||
They're the first victims of the poison they're selling, but then our children are also victimized by this poison, and so are we! | ||
We have to be very diligent in protecting our moral imagination. | ||
Yeah, and they always take what's good about humans and turn it against us. | ||
One of these things is like wanting to be loved, wanting to be popular, not wanting to, you know, cause trouble. | ||
So people tend to go along with it or they see something that's portrayed as popular. | ||
And so, you know, it's just that sort of almost evolutionary drive to want to conform to whatever that is. | ||
And so, of course, children have that to an even greater degree. | ||
And when they see Lil Nas X is being celebrated or Cardi B is being celebrated for doing these horrible things, it's that impulse to like, I want to be a part of the herd. | ||
I don't know if wanting to be part of the herd is a good thing, but it's an empathy that they take advantage of. | ||
But is it that they're the victims of it, or is it that misery loves company? | ||
unidentified
|
Right. | |
Well, both, right? | ||
I mean, the crowd is all powerful. | ||
unidentified
|
Right. | |
The only thing more powerful, it's Good Friday, so, you know, the only thing more powerful than the spirit of the crowd is the Holy Spirit. | ||
Right. | ||
Think of Peter. | ||
Right. | ||
You know, he denied Christ. | ||
He was in a crowd and, you know, the woman's like, you're with the Galilean, you have that accent. | ||
No, no, no. | ||
He denies Christ three times. | ||
He's in a crowd. | ||
Right. | ||
Would he have denied Christ if he wasn't in a crowd? | ||
You know, so the spirit of the crowd can sweep all of us away. | ||
We have to be very careful with that. | ||
And I think a lot of young people in the entertainment industry, they're very insecure. | ||
And they're, the world, they're on stage with the world to see. | ||
And, but you know, I pray that for grace upon this, this kid, Lil Nas X, he's a young man. | ||
I mean, I have two kids older than that young man. | ||
And my heart breaks for him. | ||
He could do great things. | ||
He could influence people in a very positive direction. | ||
Look at Alice Cooper. | ||
Alice Cooper loves Jesus Christ now. | ||
He's out there. | ||
Look at Kanye. | ||
And I pray, what's his name? | ||
Madeiro? | ||
I don't know. | ||
What's his real name? | ||
Lil Nas X. | ||
I'm not sure. | ||
But, you know, but we have to be diligent in protecting our children's moral imagination. | ||
And, you know, today is Good Friday. | ||
You think of the great artwork of our Western civilization. | ||
To me, my favorite work of art is the Pieta. | ||
And that's where Jesus is draped across the lap of his mother Mary. | ||
Right. | ||
And that to me says something. | ||
And what that work of art says, it's really one of the pillars of beauty in Western civilization. | ||
And it tells so much truth. | ||
That God became man, that God suffered and died for us, and then even descends to hell for those righteous souls prior to his incarnation. | ||
But that Mary is with her son until the end, that although she's a creature, she has the all-powerful second person of the Trinity draped across her lap. | ||
That work of art conveys a truth. | ||
Unfortunately, I have seen this Lil Nas X video. | ||
If you've seen those disgusting images, that conveys something else. | ||
We have to be careful what we look at. | ||
As a filmmaker, we always say we don't want any hair in the soup. | ||
You know, we want to make sure that when people watch our films, they want to love more, judge less. | ||
They see the human person. | ||
It points to the truth about who the human person really is and inspires people not to stand with the crowd when they're swept away, but to stand alone with the vulnerable. | ||
And think if today, again on Good Friday, on Palm Sunday, the crowd was out there cheering for Christ, but when he's on the cross, he could just look down and see his mother and two friends. | ||
How things change in a single week, it really is incredible. | ||
I want to get more into, I want to inspire, because I know there's people out there listening right now, young people that want to get into film, and they don't know how to do it, and they especially don't know how to do it, since if you try to go the more traditional route, what you run into is people who don't believe the same things that you do, and will either put roadblocks in your way or make it that much more difficult. | ||
So I'd love to be able to give them some advice. | ||
unidentified
|
All right. | |
Welcome back, folks. | ||
We continue our conversation with Jason Jones, and you guys are missing out during the commercial break. | ||
I think we're having a pretty good conversation off air, too. | ||
We'll try to recreate some of that. | ||
The Jason Jones podcast, movietomovement.com, thegreatcampaign.org, just in case anybody's tuning in right now and want to find Jason Jones and his work and everything. | ||
So I guess we ended that last segment talking about the young people out there that I'm sure are watching this or they'll be shared this video later who maybe want to go into to film. | ||
You know, I was pursuing film for a while. | ||
I was working on sets and it was during the 2016 presidential election and the hatred that I felt from them. | ||
I felt like I had to keep my opinion secret. | ||
I felt like I don't want to work with these people. | ||
I don't want to work in this. | ||
And so it's so sad because I know there's young people out there that want to make film that have the capacity to make really great impactful film. | ||
They're probably being turned away by the spirit and the attitude that is pervasive through this industry. | ||
But I don't want them to get turned off by that. | ||
I want them to to power through and to, you know, create an alternative system that's making good stuff that has good spirit in it. | ||
So, you know, you're somebody who's actually had success in this realm. | ||
What would you say to people, young people who want to get into film and are maybe a little bit hesitant because of, you know, they're like, I'll never succeed in Hollywood. | ||
I'm Christian. | ||
I'm whatever. | ||
Well, you know, there's something I wish everyone, young person who's looking at getting in Hollywood would watch, and it's Dave Chappelle's interview on Inside the Actor's Studio. | ||
Right. | ||
Have you seen that? | ||
Absolutely. | ||
It's just beautiful because what Dave says is, you know, his dad didn't want to, he said, Dad, I want to be a comedian. | ||
His dad said, well, you'll never be a success. | ||
So I don't give my support. | ||
And he goes, well, Dad, how much do you make as a schoolteacher? | ||
And he said, you know, this is, I guess, in the late 80s, because I make $32,000 a year. | ||
He said, well, Dad, if I could make $32,000 a year standing on stage making people laugh, I'd be a success. | ||
His dad said, well, if that's your attitude, then you will be a success and go for it. | ||
And, of course, we know Dave Chappelle was eventually a tremendous success. | ||
You might have to, if you're not willing to wait tables, for 20 years. | ||
Right. | ||
Don't, don't do it. | ||
If you're not working to build movie sets, if you're not working, you know, willing to do other jobs, if you're having dreams of fame or fortune. | ||
I just had this conversation as I was driving my nine-year-old daughter who's really talented to musical theater yesterday. | ||
And it was just then a famous producer called and I said, tell my daughter, I said, don't pursue, you know, don't, you know, fame. | ||
Fortune, that's not what you want to create. | ||
unidentified
|
Right. | |
You want to elevate people's life. | ||
You know, to me, comedies and entertainment, comedians are great humanitarians, right? | ||
Because all of us, they alleviate our state. | ||
But anyone can be a success. | ||
But you need to know, like Dave Chappelle knew, you have to know what is success. | ||
Success is to be a storyteller, to be a comedian, to be a writer, director. | ||
Yeah, you can do that. | ||
Guaranteed. | ||
No one can stop you. | ||
There's no barriers to entry. | ||
It's the Wild Wild West. | ||
Does that mean you're not going to have to work 40 hours a week at a hardware store? | ||
You might. | ||
I mean, these are all things I've done. | ||
Right. | ||
And I'm willing to do again and will do again. | ||
I mean, I was 31 years old. | ||
And I was doing day labor with immigrants. | ||
In Honolulu, I was a bouncer at a bar. | ||
I was doing day labor. | ||
Anything I could, and I was writing. | ||
And so you have to be willing to do that. | ||
But so what? | ||
That's great. | ||
And by the way, you get to learn the human condition and struggle. | ||
So anyone can do it. | ||
I have ADD, dyslexia, was a teen parent, was last in my class in high school before I dropped out. | ||
You'll never succeed! | ||
If I can do something, it's like, hey, come on guys, come on guys, we can all do it. | ||
Yeah, yeah. | ||
unidentified
|
I made it. | |
I climbed up. | ||
You know, if I can do it, anybody can do it. | ||
unidentified
|
Right. | |
But you have to be a team player. | ||
You have to be... | ||
Really strive to have humility and don't think the muses only speak to you. | ||
I love going to these film festivals and you know it's me with a baseball hat and a t-shirt and my wife and seven kids and team and then you see all of these young filmmakers and I say their films aren't works of art but they are. | ||
unidentified
|
Right, they're peacocks walking around. | |
You know, they're works of art in and of themselves, of course, and then my films will crush their films. | ||
Right. | ||
And, you know, they don't care about... I do, actually, because when I make a film, I want to win film festivals because that helps with distribution. | ||
I make a film to be seen. | ||
Right, yeah. | ||
So I want to do those things. | ||
I enter festivals to win. | ||
unidentified
|
Right. | |
And I want to win, like our first film, Bella, won the Toronto International Film Festival. | ||
We were all newbies. | ||
A young, you know, my friend Alejandro Monteverdi, you know, went to UT Austin, didn't speak a word of English. | ||
A young telenovela star. | ||
Our film would have never had distribution, let alone triple our production budget and ticket sales, which we did if we didn't win Toronto. | ||
unidentified
|
Right. | |
So, you know, anyone can be a success. | ||
You just have to be willing to To work hard with discipline and dedication. | ||
And what's great about film is it's a team sport. | ||
You know, I've had the privilege of being on InfoWars several times in studio now. | ||
Like, this is a team. | ||
Oh yeah. | ||
Like, this is a team. | ||
This is like the New England Patriots, right? | ||
Oh yeah. | ||
And by the way, there's a lot of humility and kindness, and I see how people interact with each other. | ||
And you can see this is why this is a successful team. | ||
It's the same thing with film. | ||
Right. | ||
Making a film is like tightroping between two biplanes with 120 other people walking across with you, right? | ||
Yeah, it is. | ||
And there's a pressure with film that's intrinsic. | ||
There's a pressure here, and I think the pressure from the outside helps us because it can be a high-stress situation. | ||
There's news flying. | ||
We're trying to do stuff at the last minute, but nobody's at each other's throats, right? | ||
Maybe you'll have a flare-up here or there. | ||
I said to get this. | ||
Okay, I'm getting it right now, and then it's over, and it's like, cool, we won, guys. | ||
We're on the same team at the end of the day. | ||
Yeah. | ||
There's lots at stake. | ||
And you're working together, and it really is like one of the most fun things. | ||
I started making movies in middle school way back. | ||
I mean, this feels like forever ago now. | ||
Now everybody's got a high-definition camera. | ||
I could never have imagined the quality that you can get out of these phones. | ||
I was filming on tape. | ||
I was printing out DVDs to sell around my middle school, you know, for friends. | ||
And, you know, it ended up that that group of friends that I made movies with all through high school and everything, every single one of them is in film now. | ||
Every single one of them, like, made that their career. | ||
So it's something that When you start doing it, other people see you start doing it and they want to join in because it seems so fun and you're making something together and some guy who you never knew had a funny bone in his body makes a crack that's the most hilarious thing you ever saw. | ||
We got to put that in the movie and so you write that in. | ||
It's such a fun experience and such an impactful experience and nothing in my life will ever, I think, compare to sitting in a theater And having 100 people laugh at a joke that I wrote on screen. | ||
I mean, it really is an incredible experience. | ||
And you can change people's minds with film. | ||
You can really expand their world. | ||
Yeah, my film Bella, our film Bella, over a thousand women wrote us letters that they were scheduled to have an abortion, went to see our movie, and chose life. | ||
I once was speaking in Washington, D.C. | ||
This was a couple of years ago. | ||
I was emceeing the Students for Life of America annual convention. | ||
I had a young man with Down syndrome who was wanting to propose on stage to my personal assistant. | ||
And he had a movie that was out at the time. | ||
And I'm like, you can't propose to her. | ||
I'm trying to manage that. | ||
And then my assistant comes up and she's like, there's a young woman. | ||
She's 16 years old. | ||
She took a bus to a train to a bus to come here because she needs to talk to you. | ||
And I'm like, I can't talk to her right now. | ||
I'm seeing an event in front of 5,000 people. | ||
She goes, she's pregnant. | ||
And she's really insistent. | ||
And my assistant's like, it's really weird. | ||
So, and she said she has to leave in 10 minutes to catch the bus to the train back. | ||
Oh my gosh. | ||
So she came here just as... I said, okay, I have to meet her. | ||
So I said, just bring her backstage. | ||
She said, hi, yes? | ||
Right. | ||
I'm ready to go back on stage. | ||
She said, I just want to let you know that a couple months ago in Spanish class, my teacher showed us your film Bella. | ||
I was supposed to have an abortion the next day. | ||
I just thought you might want to touch my belly. | ||
Whoa, man. | ||
You're going to make me cry. | ||
That's crazy. | ||
That's movies. | ||
How can I not keep making movies? | ||
I got a hero next to me, a lifesaver over here. | ||
That is absolutely incredible. | ||
I promise I'm going to ask you about this hat next because I don't know what this is and I'm going to find out and I know our viewers do too. | ||
Save lives, make people laugh, make films, change the world. | ||
We'll be right back. | ||
unidentified
|
You're listening to the American Journal with your host, Harrison Smith. | |
Watch it live right now at band.video. | ||
All right, folks. Jason Jones is my guest, filmmaker, author, a proud father of seven and grandfather of two, believe it or not. | ||
I would never believe it. | ||
So young looking. | ||
Jason Jones Show podcast can be found at Apple Podcasts. | ||
The websites are movietomovement.com and thegreatcampaign.org. | ||
During the break here, our conversation very naturally moved from talking about films, you know, arguing against abortion and the incredible impact that they can have to geopolitics in the Middle East. | ||
So you're... To how there are no ugly people in Lithuania or Lebanon. | ||
Yeah, very compact three minutes we had there. | ||
So your movies run the gamut across the board. | ||
You are working on documentaries. | ||
That's a new foray for you, right? | ||
Typically you do just strictly narrative But your narrative work has a heart that is, is it putting a message across consciously or are you just telling a human story that happens to speak, like is it a conscious thing? | ||
No, you have to, yes, like if you choose the story, don't change the story. | ||
Right. | ||
You know, you choose the story that sort of exemplifies a truth. | ||
Right. | ||
And, but you don't change the story. | ||
If you see some of my films, like Crescendo, For the first, you know, it's a short film, only 15 minutes. | ||
For the first nine minutes, people watching go, is this guy advocating abortion in this movie? | ||
unidentified
|
Right. | |
Well, no, but we don't... | ||
We don't change the story. | ||
It's a true story about a woman who gave birth to one of the most beloved human beings in the history of the human family. | ||
But yet, that pregnancy, she had an abusive husband who was an adulterer, who would give her STDs, who would beat her. | ||
She was suicidal and despondent. | ||
We're not going to not tell the story. | ||
And Bella, we reveal the truth about We talked before the show started about how single moms, as a new father, are the heroes. | ||
Right. | ||
It's my wife and I working together. | ||
We can barely handle it. | ||
You just put yourself, you go, what if my wife was doing this alone without family around her? | ||
It gave me a whole new respect for senior mothers. | ||
My wife and I will take naps. | ||
My greatest claim to fame is my wife gets to nap every day. | ||
She homeschools, we have five children at home, she homeschools five children and she needs a nap. | ||
But we do, you know, sometimes we'll be taking a nap at two o'clock in the afternoon and we'll say, we're just exhausted. | ||
And my job can be writing on genocide, democide and war as a columnist and as an activist can be exhausting. | ||
Absolutely. | ||
Homeschooling five children is exhausting. | ||
Well, I in bed and take a nap and I'll say, how do single moms do this? | ||
Yeah, it really is. | ||
How in the world? | ||
And it's maybe half the moms now. | ||
Right. | ||
Brutal. | ||
And so many times they don't have a husband that's helping them. | ||
I was a single dad. | ||
So, you know, both. | ||
Right, right. | ||
I had two children as a teenager myself. | ||
So, I know how hard it can be. | ||
But we've digressed. | ||
Where are we going? | ||
Let's bring it back to movies. | ||
Well, it's for you guys' movies, and I also promised I would ask about this hat. | ||
So what is this beautiful silken hat you have here? | ||
It is a beautiful hat, isn't it? | ||
And this is actually the hat of the Uyghur from Chinese-occupied East Turkestan. | ||
This is actually the symbol of their people, which is really amazing. | ||
It's a child in the womb. | ||
Isn't that amazing? | ||
Oh, is it really? | ||
And I didn't know that. | ||
But this is the Dopa. | ||
It's Good Friday. | ||
And to me, as a Christian, Christian solidarity is standing with the people no one else in the world will stand with. | ||
The media slanders. | ||
No one has suffered more slander than Alex Jones and the team at InfoWars. | ||
But this outlet has been really one of the first and the most vocal advocates for a Muslim Ethnic minority that's being crushed. | ||
And so I just I brought this and stealthily put it here. | ||
And this is just my way of trying on this Good Friday to stand in solidarity with the Uyghur. | ||
Three million in concentration camps. | ||
Having their organs harvested. | ||
The women suffering forced abortion. | ||
You know how we were talking about how in Hollywood the people that shovel the poison are actually its first victims. | ||
unidentified
|
Right. | |
Same thing about in China. | ||
The first victims of the CCP were the Han Chinese. | ||
The Han Chinese are the first and greatest victim 500 million Han Chinese babies destroyed from abortion. | ||
unidentified
|
Right. | |
Of course, the Uyghurs and other ethnic and religious minorities in China, and I'm Christian Catholic, we suffer brutal oppression at the hands of China. | ||
But there's been nothing since the Holocaust like what's happening in China. | ||
It's very similar in these concentration camps to what it was like in Nazi-occupied Germany and Nazi-occupied Europe prior to the Wansi Conference, where a decision was made to turn the concentration camps into death camps. | ||
A lot of death in those camps, but they became death camps. | ||
Those concentration camps in Chinese-occupied East Turkestan are drifting from camps, concentration camps with a lot of death and suffering and torture and slave labor within them. | ||
But they're quickly drifting into just outright death camps. | ||
So I just brought this on this Good Friday to like the Blessed Virgin Mary with Jesus draped across her lap. | ||
You know, I always say these vulnerable communities are not weak. | ||
They're just people placed in impossible situations. | ||
Think of what's happening in Lebanon or Poland in the 20th century. | ||
The people of Iraq today, the Kurds, and the minorities that live in Kurdistan, like the Assyrians, Chaldeans, and Yazidis, these are beautiful and strong people placed in impossible circumstances. | ||
Or like the vulnerable teenage mother. | ||
You know, at my first, in an unexpected crisis pregnancy, my first movie, Bella, I mean, I'm sorry, my first really real short film, Crescendo, I made with Patty Millett, the mother of Justin Bieber. | ||
That movie raised six million dollars for pregnancy centers and women's shelters. | ||
unidentified
|
Wow. | |
Because even in our own country, I think those pregnancy centers and women's shelters that serve young women in crisis pregnancies, those young women, when they're thinking about going to Planned Parenthood or a pregnancy center, she's truly the most vulnerable woman in the world. | ||
unidentified
|
Right. | |
So we don't have to look to the other side of the world. | ||
But on this Good Friday, to me, the message is the Christian and the social life should be to share his life with the vulnerable. | ||
And that's something that InfoWorks has done consistently. | ||
In fact, I think that's the inner passion that drives you. | ||
unidentified
|
Right. | |
It's thoughtfulness. | ||
The things that you were saying two decades ago here. | ||
That seemed just insane, impossible. | ||
It has to be a kooky conspiracy theory, because God forbid it be true! | ||
Right. | ||
Right? | ||
But yet, here we are. | ||
Yeah. | ||
And that inner necessity to defend the vulnerable, I think, is what InfoWars is about. | ||
And when I make movies, that's what drives me too, is I want to share the truth about the beauty of the human person, and I hope that my film inspires solidarity. | ||
Yeah. | ||
It's a natural impulse to have for me. | ||
You go for the underdog. | ||
You go for the person being oppressed. | ||
You want to support the person who is having their land or their way of life taken away from them. | ||
Regardless who's the one taking, you know, it doesn't matter to me. | ||
Well, they have a better way of life, so let them come in and wipe them out. | ||
No, that's awful. | ||
It's horrible. | ||
You know, whether you're talking back in the, you know, Native Americans being wiped out, horrible, I wish that had never happened, or what's going on today with the Uyghurs or the Irish or anybody else in between, you go, whoever's the imperialist here, I'm against, right? | ||
Whoever's the one enforcing their beliefs on somebody else, we stand up against, because it's that Christian idea of, I want others to do or I do to others what I want them done unto me. | ||
I don't want anybody coming in and forcing me to change. | ||
I don't want anybody coming in and telling me what to do. | ||
So I don't want anybody else telling anybody else what to do. | ||
I want them to decide for themselves, right? | ||
And it goes back to that very basic. | ||
I want to go quickly. | ||
We only have about a minute left. | ||
Your book. | ||
Oh, thank you. | ||
I have here and you have a copy there as well. | ||
The Race to Save Our Century. | ||
I wanted to bring this up as well because you're talking about, you know, things back in Nazi Germany and everything else. | ||
This is a jam-packed full of history. | ||
In the very beginning, you're talking about 1914 and the world as it was then on the brink of of utter destruction with World War I and World War II following it, and you draw parallels to our modern world. | ||
Just quickly, and we'll continue this into the next segment, what are the five core principles to promote peace, freedom, and culture of life, as this subtitle says? | ||
Well, you know, I'll go over the first principle. | ||
So when I wrote this book, you know, I started writing it as an undergrad, and I wanted to find principles that I could advance in the face of ideologies, in the face of conspiracies that would protect and shelter the vulnerable, that would promote the common good. in the face of conspiracies that would protect and shelter You know, in 1914, you had the outbreak of genocide of the Armenians and the Greeks and the Christians, the Syrians and Chaldeans in Iraq and Syria and the Levant and Turkey. | ||
And then a hundred years later, We had the same people suffer a similar genocide with the rise of ISIS. | ||
And I saw this coming. | ||
This book was actually even published before the rise of ISIS. | ||
But the first principle is, the foundational principle, is the principle of the West. | ||
The human person, every human person, has an incomparable and inviolable dignity and worth. | ||
And if we just acknowledge that, which is embedded in our Declaration of Independence... Right, that's the start. | ||
It all comes from there. | ||
It all comes from there. | ||
Brilliant. | ||
unidentified
|
All right, folks. | |
We are back with our final segment with Mr. Jason Jones. | ||
Movietomovement.com, thegreatcampaign.com, thejasonjonesshowpodcast, oh, I'm sorry, thegreatcampaign.org. | ||
Thank you very much. | ||
And then his book, The Race to Save Our Century, Five Core Principles to Promote Peace, Freedom, and the Culture of Life, right there. | ||
And it's not a thick book, but it's a compact one, a lot of truth, a lot of history in here. | ||
Even just the first few pages, it's like, The whole setup of World War I, I mean, you really get into the history, the facts, the passions behind the scene. | ||
And you were saying just before we came back on that you really had a simple goal with this, right? | ||
Can you explain that again? | ||
Yeah, as a young man just sort of staring the evil in the face, I realized, am I ever going to be able to really understand, unravel every conspiracy? | ||
Am I ever going to be able to understand every... | ||
Powerful cabal that's seeking to control us. | ||
No, but what if I just and this was as a young undergraduate what if I could come to understand the Ideologies they used to control us and divide us and then those principles that would Protect us from those ideologies. | ||
And so I thought I'd published I had this idea for this book in 1999 I'm sorry 1996 and I'm like, I'll publish it when I graduate in 1999, but then I realized this is a much longer I'm going to have to figure this out. | ||
And then I set a new goal of publishing it on the 100th anniversary of World War I. And that's when it came out. | ||
And I've been, you know, Eric Metaxas and Pat Buchanan and so many others have celebrated this book. | ||
And Eric Metaxas said, if there's one book you could give every college student in the world, it'd be this book. | ||
Oh, fantastic. | ||
Yeah, and if you go to thegreatcampaign.org, you can get the book right there for only $20, and it's $30. | ||
Okay. | ||
And it's tax deductible. | ||
But yeah, the five principles, really, and let's just focus on the principles. | ||
Do we have time for that? | ||
Yeah, please. | ||
First and foremost is the truth, the founding principle of Western civilization, which the West learned from Christianity. | ||
Right. | ||
In Jewish scripture, we learn that we're made in the image of God, that our soul is God-breathed. | ||
Right. | ||
But that mystery is even taken to a new level with Christianity and the incarnation of the second person of the Trinity as man. | ||
Right. | ||
And that really revealed to those communities that became Christian, the first Christian community in the world was actually in Iraq, of all things, but that's where the truth about the human person was really revealed. | ||
1,700 years later, the founding fathers called that the self-evident truth, but it really wasn't self-evident. | ||
It was self-evident to them. | ||
Because it had been 1,700 years of Christian culture, of this understanding. | ||
And of course, that has to do with just sort of almost the basic part of Christianity, which is that I can't force you to be Christian, right? | ||
You know, I can't hold a gun to your head and say, Believe in Jesus. | ||
Like it doesn't work like that. | ||
You have to accept it personally. | ||
I have to... Because I respect your dignity. | ||
Right, right. | ||
A Muslim friend of mine was actually a general for Saddam Hussein when he came here. | ||
He's a beautiful man. | ||
When he came here, I brought him here and we took him around. | ||
I said, what is most surprising to you about the United States? | ||
He said, first of all, I thought everyone's gonna hate me. | ||
I felt more at home here than in any other country in the Middle East other than Iraq and even more at home here than in neighborhoods in Iraq. | ||
Wow. | ||
And he's like, I know I'll never get to be an American, of course, but I'm going to take what it means to be an American with me. | ||
He goes, the other thing that was really shocking to me is I didn't see Muslims anywhere, but I saw Islam everywhere. | ||
And I said, what do you mean by that? | ||
Well, by Islam, I just mean people thinking about God, talking about God, reaching for God. | ||
Well, that was the genius of what our founding fathers gave us. | ||
They gave us a society where we're not smothered by dogmatism, by denominationalism, that we're all free to talk and communicate about God. | ||
And when we argue and debate and think and talk about God, that isn't a way of prayer. | ||
But that is grounded in the fundamental truth of the human person, that we are made in the image and likeness of God, have an incomparable dignity, transhumanism is subhumanism, like all these other ideologies of evil that are denying the truth of the human person. | ||
And so if we could just inculcate that truth, which my new movie, Divided Hearts of America with Benjamin Watson, is all about. | ||
That founding truth. | ||
The second principle is there's a transcendent moral order. | ||
As the Reverend Martin Luther King used to quote Thomas Aquinas, a just law is a man-made law that corresponds to the divine will. | ||
You can even go back to Plato that there's a republic of idea in the clouds that we can judge this republic by. | ||
We can judge the laws of man by something else, something higher, a higher justice. | ||
And so when we look at all these ridiculous COVID restrictions, if we had a community that really recognized human dignity and also acknowledged a law above the laws of man, we wouldn't see the municipalities and states brutalizing people. | ||
I just saw that ridiculous clip on your show. | ||
Where the woman was saying, um, Oh yeah, yeah. | ||
You know, we, we, we, we can't give these people their freedoms. | ||
Yo, yo, you don't give me any freedom. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
If we don't, if we don't correspond the freedom to the vaccine, they'll enjoy the freedoms without getting the vaccine. | ||
That woman does not understand there's a transcendent moral order. | ||
Right? | ||
She doesn't get that. | ||
Number three, this is the key one. | ||
Subsidiarity. | ||
What is subsidiarity? | ||
That the further an institution is away from you or I, the less influence it should have in our life. | ||
See, that is key. | ||
Especially, you know, one of the things that started going around when COVID first came out is what they call the lockstep document. | ||
And I don't know if you're aware of this. | ||
It's the Rockefeller document that basically laid out a narrative that was COVID verbatim, exactly what happened. | ||
And that entire document, their whole thesis is the bigger the bureaucracy, the bigger the organizations that control us, the better it is. | ||
And their worst case scenario is decentralization or localism. | ||
And it's like, these people have an ideology completely opposite to my own. | ||
Well, and think about the great tragedies of the 20th century. | ||
Hitler, there would have been no genocide, there would have been no Holocaust without obliterating the free institutions of civil society in Germany first. | ||
Right. | ||
That had to happen first. | ||
The Soviet Union, the gulags, the vast economic control, they had to destroy the church, they had to destroy the family, they had to break down all of the free institutions between the person and the state. | ||
Mao starving 60 million people. | ||
million people was the breakdown of subsidiarity. | ||
So we need to fight for our families, our neighborhoods, our non-governmental organizations and associations, primarily, of course, and first and foremost, the church. | ||
unidentified
|
Right. | |
But also, you know, we need to guard our states and our counties and our municipalities. | ||
And look, if in New York City, they want to pass stupid COVID restrictions by all means, but me and the hill country of Texas step away. | ||
Right. | ||
So subsidiarity is key. | ||
The next is, I want to go to solidarity. | ||
Solidarity is that we have to have a preferential option for the vulnerable. | ||
That in our families, in our communities, in our church, we need to serve the vulnerable. | ||
I tell people, you're either kissing up or kissing down. | ||
You're either kneeling to serve the vulnerable or you're kneeling to serve the powerful. | ||
And I want to live a life of service. | ||
I want to live a life of serving the vulnerable. | ||
That is a dignified way of living. | ||
That has nobility. | ||
These thin-souled ghouls that kneel To the powerful again, that goes back to subsidiarity. | ||
How many of our elected officials are behaving not as elected representatives, but administrators of some world homogenized state? | ||
We already have this new world order. | ||
We already have a world homogenized state. | ||
In my home state of Hawaii, you have the governor behaving as a bureaucrat, as an agent of a distant Bureaucracy not even set in the United States! | ||
Right, that we didn't have a say over. | ||
They have their own ideology and their own plans and yet our servants, our governmental servants, are serving them instead of us. | ||
Yeah, and then you look at that woman that you just mentioned on CNN. | ||
She's not interested in serving the vulnerable. | ||
She's interested in controlling the dissident, right? | ||
There's a dissident right there getting arrested. | ||
There you go. | ||
And by the way, our mayor, who had me arrested, was kissing up. | ||
Our governor was kissing up. | ||
I was worried about the seven mile long lines for food in Hawaii. | ||
If our governor and mayor were thinking about the suicides and the long lines for food and the destroyed businesses, if they were serving the vulnerable. | ||
And then a humane economy. | ||
What is the humane economy? | ||
This is the fifth of the principles to defeat this world homogenized state. | ||
And what is that? | ||
A just social order is grounded in private property rights. | ||
You cannot have a just social order that is not grounded in private property rights. | ||
But those of us have to recognize that we're stewards of our property for ourselves, our children, our community, and our posterity. | ||
But there will be those who aren't thoughtful. | ||
So what? | ||
We'll be thoughtful to our posterity. | ||
And so these five principles, if we just had one of these, this last year would not have been a nightmare. | ||
Right. | ||
If subsidiarity alone was protected. | ||
We've seen a concerted attack against that with all of the small businesses shutting down and corporations scooping up that economic power. | ||
I mean, that's directly counter to what you're describing. | ||
Yeah, now Amazon destroying all of our businesses. | ||
So this book, and I'm glad, when I wrote this book, my first goal was to get it to you guys. | ||
And this is the guide to breaking the Great Reset. | ||
This is the guide to protecting your posterity. | ||
And then once you know what those monuments we need to walk towards, those mountains, we're going to have a society that protects the inviolable dignity of the human person. | ||
We're going to make sure that our laws are just and transcend to truth, that correspond to truth. | ||
We're going to protect those free institutions of civil society. | ||
And how do you do that? | ||
Me getting arrested. | ||
You know, I'm not wearing a mask at church. | ||
Because it is connected directly to my posterity's freedom, their prosperity, their health, their ability to worship God. | ||
Right. | ||
And you have to stand up for it, or else it'll be lost forever. | ||
My gosh, I wish we had three more hours. | ||
Well, you'll have to come back, of course. | ||
Anytime. | ||
It's Jason Jones, the website MovieToMovement or TheGreatCampaign.org, the Jason Jones Show podcast on Apple Podcasts. | ||
Thank you so much for coming on, sir. | ||
unidentified
|
You're listening to The American Journal with your host, Harrison Smith. | |
Thanks, bro. | ||
Watch it live right now at Band.Video. | ||
Owen Schroer here for Infowars.com and I am standing on the side of Highway 281 North, just outside of McAllen, Texas. | ||
And you'll notice a sign behind me. | ||
that says smuggling illegal aliens is a federal crime. | ||
And just so you know, this is real. | ||
unidentified
|
Yep. | |
Yep. | ||
Yep, that's a real sign right there. | ||
Smuggling illegal aliens is a federal crime. | ||
I guess, unless you're the federal government, then I guess it's okay. | ||
Let me explain what I have witnessed in McAllen, Texas for the last three days. | ||
Thousands of illegal immigrants are rushing the US-Mexico border every day. | ||
Men surge on one side, women and children surge on the other. | ||
They run to Border Patrol, the women and children, so they get picked up, and most of the men just get through and into the country. | ||
So the women, illegal immigrants, run to Border Patrol. | ||
Run to ICE agents. | ||
And then they pick them up, They take them to facilities, processing centers in McAllen and spread throughout Texas. | ||
McAllen is one of the centers. | ||
When they're there, they get processed and they get an envelope that has a paper ID, it has services, it has maps, it tells them what flight they need to get on, what bus they need to get on, addresses. | ||
And some sort of ability financially, whether it's a debit card or cash, to move about freely. | ||
They then get taken to a COVID testing center. | ||
If they test positive for COVID, they get picked up and taken to a hotel, which ICE got a contract and gave it to a company called Endeavors to rent out all the hotels in McAllen, Texas indefinitely so they can quarantine The illegal immigrants in the hotels in McAllen, Texas. | ||
So for seven days now, they're in the hotels, children, women, men, in the hotels quarantining for COVID. | ||
And then after that, they don't know what's gonna happen. | ||
They don't know yet. | ||
If you test negative, you then get shipped to a Catholic Charities building, which then can shelter you, feed you, And also, take you wherever you need to go. | ||
And we have all of this on footage. | ||
They leave the building, they get into a vehicle, private vehicle, and then they get dropped off at the airport. | ||
Carrying their envelope the entire way. | ||
Many of these people can't speak English. | ||
They show up at the airport. | ||
How do they get in? | ||
They don't know. | ||
They look around. | ||
They finally figure it out. | ||
They see Border Patrol. | ||
They see TSA. | ||
They show them a piece of paper, like printer paper, that has their picture and whatever was processed at the facility. | ||
They could be making up names. | ||
Nobody knows. | ||
They don't do DNA testing, so nobody knows if the parents are with the kids. | ||
And so they're sitting there now at the airport, and they've got in with a paper ID. | ||
And then they're kind of lost inside. | ||
And so they look around, and they look at their thing. | ||
Okay, I'm Las Vegas, gate 3. | ||
And they look around, and they figure out, okay, this is where I'm at. | ||
Some of these people, though, seem to know exactly what they're doing. | ||
They look like they're coming into the United States to have a party, wearing heels and crop tops and fancy earrings and jewelry and smartphones, and they're calling their friends, I'm coming in tonight, it's going down. | ||
And this is all happening on taxpayer dime. | ||
unidentified
|
So let me get this straight. | |
Smuggling illegal aliens is a federal crime. | ||
Well, I just witnessed thousands of illegal aliens being smuggled right in front of my very eyes by the federal government. | ||
Is that not a federal crime? | ||
Who's making these orders? | ||
Who's dictating this policy? | ||
Is it Joe Biden? | ||
And if it is, will Joe Biden be arrested for committing a federal crime of aiding and abetting and smuggling illegal immigrants? | ||
Or will Joe Biden and administration get away with the greatest crime in world history, wide open for all to see? | ||
unidentified
|
You're listening to the American Journal with your host, Harrison Smith. | |
Watch it live right now at Band.Video. | ||
Third hour of American Journal has begun. | ||
You're watching us on InfoWars.com, Band.Video. | ||
And flying across the airwaves around the world from our central Texas headquarters here in Austin. | ||
So glad that you're with us. | ||
I got good news and bad news, folks. | ||
The bad news is we'll not be joined by Drew Hernandez. | ||
A scheduling conflict came up. | ||
So luckily, he's done a couple interviews the last few days. | ||
So you can find out what he has to say on InfoWars.com and Bandai video. | ||
That's the bad news. | ||
The good news is That means we're taking your calls. | ||
That means we're playing more videos. | ||
It means we're getting to more bombshell news in this third hour and you're not going to want to miss it. | ||
I'm going to go ahead and give out the number right now. | ||
unidentified
|
1-877-789-2539. | |
That is the number to dial. | ||
unidentified
|
1-877-789-2539. | |
And since we only have an hour to take calls today, I'm going to be taking almost entirely new callers. | ||
1-877-789-2539. | ||
And since we only have an hour to take calls today, I'm going to be taking almost entirely new callers. | ||
So if you've never called in before, now is your chance to get in and say your piece, whether it's about anything that you heard Jason Jones and I discuss in that last segment. | ||
If it's about Derek Chauvin or these corporate takeovers or the Biden infrastructure bill, whatever is on your mind, folks, the number to dial, 188. | ||
Call 1-877-789-2539. | ||
Right now I want to play a video that came out from CBS mere hours ago. | ||
And I'm very excited to see it. | ||
I haven't actually watched this clip, so we're going to enjoy it together. | ||
It's Hunter Biden answering questions about his laptop. | ||
Believe it or not. | ||
Let's see what the guy has to say. | ||
Shall we? | ||
Roll the clip. | ||
Was that your laptop? | ||
unidentified
|
For real, I don't know. | |
I know, but you know that's... I really don't know. | ||
Oh, yeah. | ||
unidentified
|
You don't know, yes or no, if the laptop was yours? | |
I don't have any idea. | ||
No idea. | ||
It could have been yours. | ||
unidentified
|
Of course, certainly. | |
There could be a laptop out there that was stolen from me. | ||
Stolen from... It could be that I was hacked. | ||
unidentified
|
It could be that it was Russian intelligence. | |
Oh, it could be. | ||
It could be. | ||
unidentified
|
It was stolen from me. | |
Yeah, maybe. | ||
It could be. | ||
Perhaps. | ||
Liar. | ||
Scumbag. | ||
Liar. | ||
Wow. | ||
If the answer was no, the answer would be no. | ||
Like he doesn't know. | ||
Like he doesn't know if it's his. | ||
Just a quick little refresher here. | ||
What happened was, he sent his laptop in for a repair. | ||
The guy who repaired it, he never went and picked it up, the guy who repaired it gave it to Mayor Giuliani and the NYPD and the FBI, because he found some questionable material on there. | ||
You think Hunter Biden doesn't know? | ||
He's like, it could be. | ||
I mean, I took my laptop to a Delaware repair shop. | ||
I mean, it has photos of me on the laptop that are nowhere else in the world. | ||
I mean, I did have a laptop that I gave to a guy who then gave it to some. | ||
So I guess it could be mine. | ||
It also could have been stolen by Russian intelligence. | ||
My God. | ||
I have no idea whatsoever. | ||
That's what a liar says. | ||
There could be, it was, it could have been Russian intelligence stole it. | ||
Maybe, maybe James Bond came in, uh, you know, maybe he repelled in on a rope, uh, into my apartment and, and stole it from me. | ||
Maybe he, maybe he shot me with a tranquilizer dart and stole it from me and, and repelled down the side of the building. | ||
We just don't know. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I just don't know. | ||
unidentified
|
Wow. | |
The son of the President of the United States. | ||
A laptop full of incriminating material. | ||
A laptop full of pictures of this scumbag that are nowhere else in the world. | ||
A laptop full of information that only Hunter Biden would know. | ||
Audio recordings, emails, discussion, correspondence. | ||
Just without a doubt, his laptop. | ||
Without a doubt, an accurate story. | ||
unidentified
|
It's truly amazing. | |
It is truly amazing. | ||
What a story this is. | ||
Because remember, okay, his laptop gets discovered. | ||
Bad material on it. | ||
It's given to the authorities. | ||
The authorities don't look into it. | ||
Don't inspect it. | ||
They don't want to know. | ||
unidentified
|
Corruption. | |
Who cares, right? | ||
We're going after Russian collusion here. | ||
We have important things to do. | ||
We have to investigate Matt Gaetz, right? | ||
All this very vital stuff. | ||
Oh, what, the sitting president has a son who admits working directly for the, as he puts it, spy chief of China? | ||
Nah, not a concern, not an issue. | ||
Who cares about it? | ||
Then this story comes out. | ||
Not only does Twitter censor it outright, you're not allowed to post it, they actually Completely ban the Twitter account of the New York Post, one of the oldest newspapers in America. | ||
They eliminate that tweet on the basis that this is somehow hacked information, which again, the excuses they use, they don't matter. | ||
They censor whoever the hell they want and they tack on a thing anyway. | ||
And then like last week, you had Jack Dorsey saying that was a mistake. | ||
It was a major mistake. | ||
It was an accident. | ||
No, you put out a statement saying why you did it. | ||
Don't tell us it's an accident or a mistake. | ||
Completely on purpose. | ||
Then you had the story banned off Facebook, and Facebook actually had the temerity to come out and say, we don't know whether this story is true or not, but we're going to go ahead and ban it anyway. | ||
Knowing full well was accurate. | ||
Knowing full well it was true. | ||
But they're letting you know. | ||
This is all kind of part of the psychological operation. | ||
And you see it with cult leaders to just people who are abusive to their spouses. | ||
Everybody in between. | ||
Anybody who's trying to control other people, you push the envelope. | ||
You see how far you can go. | ||
You judge the pushback. | ||
You judge the reaction. | ||
And if the reaction is less than overwhelming, then you push a little farther next time. | ||
and a little farther after that, right? | ||
So this was that pushing of the line. | ||
This was them saying, here's a story that while being undeniably true, while being a primary source of a major, major issue with the family of and including the candidate for presidency, Joe Biden, what if we eliminate this Joe Biden, what if we eliminate this story because it reflects badly on him, We don't even give an excuse. | ||
We don't even bother coming up with a reason. | ||
We let everybody know we're doing this strictly for political convenience because it's a story that hurts the person we're trying to get into office. | ||
And they did it. | ||
And there was no outcry. | ||
And there was no pushback. | ||
And there was no punishment. | ||
And there was nothing. | ||
They got away with it. | ||
You think they're going to stop there? | ||
Well, it was a mistake. | ||
We didn't mean to. | ||
They're laying the groundwork for the world that we're in now. | ||
If it's material, it doesn't matter how true it is. | ||
If it hurts their side, it gets buried. | ||
If it benefits their side, even if it's a lie, it gets exalted. | ||
It gets upheld. | ||
It gets spread around. | ||
They're letting you know that. | ||
And now they're putting Hunter Biden on. | ||
I don't know. | ||
It could be. | ||
It could have been. | ||
It could have been hacked. | ||
It could have been stolen from me. | ||
Or you could have left it at a Delaware repair shop, forgotten to pick it up, and he gave it to Rudy Giuliani. | ||
Which do you think is more accurate? | ||
Wow, I can't believe they let him do this. | ||
It could have been. | ||
Of course, certainly, there could be a laptop out there that was stolen. | ||
Maybe. | ||
Well, is the material accurate? | ||
Oh, it is? | ||
Oh, so you are working for China? | ||
Oh, so you are making billions off of your father's position in office? | ||
Oh, you are involved in blackmail schemes? | ||
Oh, you are involved in bizarre sexual activity with members of your family? | ||
Oh, all of that is true? | ||
Well, it kind of doesn't matter whether the laptop is real or not. | ||
The information's real. | ||
The pictures are real. | ||
It's accurate. | ||
For real, I don't know. | ||
I don't know. | ||
Who knows? | ||
You know, if you're a fan of true crime, you've probably watched a lot of, um, you know, uh, video, YouTube videos or podcasts, whatever, where you watch, uh, interrogations. | ||
And it really is fascinating watching a police interrogation with a guy who is beyond guilty. | ||
With a guy who is caught, cut and dry. | ||
They have little, they have little words they use. | ||
They have little ways of framing things. | ||
And that's one of them. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I guess it could have been. | ||
There's a woman who was a L.A. | ||
police detective for like 20 years. | ||
And then 20 years after this murder occurred, they find out she was the murderer. | ||
They interview her, and you can watch the whole thing. | ||
And she says, I don't know, about 10,000 times. | ||
Well, did you ever meet the woman? | ||
I don't know. | ||
I don't know. | ||
unidentified
|
Maybe. | |
I guess I could have. | ||
I don't know. | ||
Mr. Biden just doesn't know. | ||
He's just an honest guy. | ||
He's a smart guy. | ||
In fact, Joe Biden tells us he's the smartest guy that Joe Biden has ever met. | ||
And he's stupid. | ||
All right, folks, here's how we are going to do it for the remainder of this show. | ||
I'm going to play a video for you. | ||
We're going to laugh at it. | ||
We're going to comment on it. | ||
We're going to have a great time. | ||
I'm going to go right out to your phone calls because the phone line's filled up like that. | ||
And I'm told we have some fantastic callers waiting to tell their story. | ||
It's going to be a rapid-fire session here. | ||
I will take a brief moment to remind you that Infowars.com is where you go to support this show. | ||
Everything that we do here... | ||
This week, I think, has been the best week of interviews we've had in a very long time. | ||
From Wurzel Root, to Jim Bob, to Jason Jones, to Gerald Salente, everybody in between. | ||
It's been such a wonderful week of interviews. | ||
And I'm really privileged to be able to bring these people on and have a platform where they want to go to share their message. | ||
It's entirely because of InfoWarsStore.com. | ||
So I hope you're sharing those videos. | ||
I hope you're finding joy or inspiration or knowledge from these interviews. | ||
And I hope you're sharing them and I hope that you support us by going to InfoWarsStore.com. | ||
Now enough of that. | ||
We're trying to get to your phone call. | ||
So let's play this video first. | ||
It's Pete Buttigieg. | ||
Doing what politicians do best, which is performative good. | ||
They do things that look good. | ||
They do things that they want you to do all the time. | ||
They'll do them for about 30 seconds to make you think they do them all the time. | ||
It's really an amazing piece of footage I'm about to show you here. | ||
Let's roll this Pete Buttigieg video. | ||
I'll narrate here as we're looking in. | ||
There's the Mr. Mayor. | ||
Uh, getting on a bike. | ||
He's got his little helmet on. | ||
He's surrounded by, uh, armored cars and, uh, personnel. | ||
He's got his mask on. | ||
He probably has two masks on. | ||
So he's got both masks and he's, uh, he's on his bike. | ||
So what you're seeing here is Pete Buttigieg, whatever his name is, uh, being given a ride in armored vehicles to the Capitol. | ||
Where he then removes a bike from the trunk of the car, gets on it, and pretends like he rode the bike there. | ||
He pretends like he's riding the bike, he's saving the globe, he's saving the carbon, he's getting his exercise, he's wearing two masks while he rides his bike, just like you, the slave. | ||
He's just a slave like you. | ||
Here he is, biking. | ||
There he goes. | ||
Yeah, he just got a ride to the parking lot. | ||
He gets on the bike and he rides the bike through the parking lot to get that that sweet photo op showing that he rides his bike. | ||
It's just like the guys who put on a mask right before they go step up to the to the podium, right? | ||
It's all performative. | ||
They're lying to you. | ||
It's like John Kerry taking a private jet to Iceland to receive an environmental award. | ||
They don't adhere to the laws they enforce on you because they're scum, because they're feudal overlords, because Their reality, your reality, is manufactured. | ||
There's the truth, which is what actually happens. | ||
Then there's the reality television version of the truth, which is what you see on the mainstream news. | ||
That was a little peek behind the curtain, a little peek around the fake set walls of our false reality to the truth behind it, which is that all of these people are scumbag. | ||
All of these people are completely fraudulent. | ||
They all are tricking you. | ||
With that, we go out to your phone calls. | ||
Matt in California has a very interesting idea. | ||
Thank you for calling in, Matt. | ||
You're on the air. | ||
unidentified
|
How are you doing today? | |
Good, thank you. | ||
unidentified
|
I am just calling to make the listeners aware of the Ashley Babbitt Official Memorial Fund. | |
They're having a fundraiser to help with her memorial. | ||
She was the young patriot that was murdered by the Capitol policeman. | ||
And so there, I just wanted to make people aware that they're trying to raise a little money for her memorial. | ||
Okay. | ||
And where do they find that? | ||
unidentified
|
That can be found at GoFundMe and it is titled the Ashley Babbitt Official Memorial. | |
Yep, I see it right here actually. | ||
Justice for Ashley Babbitt. | ||
There's a Twitter account called it's at for Ashley F-O-R-A-S-H-L-I and they have a link there. | ||
Ashley Babbitt Official Memorial organized by Destiny Condon. | ||
GoFundMe. | ||
It's a fundraiser for Aaron Babbitt, Ashley Babbitt's husband, and for Ashley Babbitt's official memorial. | ||
Thank you so much for bringing our attention to that. | ||
There should be millions of dollars in this fund. | ||
unidentified
|
My God. | |
I also sent an email to President Trump on his website basically Requesting that it would be great for him to attend the memorial. | ||
You know what? | ||
That's a great idea. | ||
The fact that he hasn't spoken out about it, that Ted Cruz, that no Republican has spoken out in defense of Ashley Babbitt, is in itself indefensible. | ||
It is an absolute disgrace that a 14-year veteran, patriotic woman, is gunned down in cold blood by the Capitol Police and The Republicans can't even bother to bring her name to their lips. | ||
They won't even say her name. | ||
They won't advocate for her. | ||
It's absolutely despicable what was done to her and how she's been smeared and how nobody will stand up for her. | ||
She gave 14 years of her life to the U.S. | ||
military just to have the United States government she fought for spit on her grave. | ||
And it's beyond description how and what low lives these cowards are. | ||
And they absolutely should be standing up for Ashley Babbitt, making her a center point in the ongoing, you know, the narrative, the true narrative, which is the ongoing destruction of Trump supporters at large, conservatives in general. | ||
They'll do they'll do to you just like they did to Ashley Babbitt. | ||
They'll gun you down in cold blood. | ||
They'll blame your death on your friends, and they'll use your murder that they committed in order to carry out greater oppression against people like you. | ||
It is emblematic of our situation, and thank you for pointing out that people can go to GoFundMe.com. | ||
And donate to the official Ashley Babbitt Memorial. | ||
I think everybody should. | ||
Thanks for that call, Matt. | ||
Let's go down to Matthew in Ohio who wants to talk about school indoctrination. | ||
We got two minutes for the break. | ||
Matthew, you are on the air. | ||
Matthew in Ohio. | ||
Hold on, Matthew. | ||
There you go. | ||
You're on the air. | ||
unidentified
|
I just wanted to call, uh, I have a couple of cousins that are, uh, go from middle school up to the college level and just the amount of pure nonsense. | |
And I consider child abuse. | ||
They have to go through my seven year olds. | ||
I'm in Toledo, Ohio. | ||
I'm not sure it's like 90 miles outside of Detroit. | ||
So it's roughly the same demographics outside of rural areas. | ||
She, uh, she had to go up in a zoom in front of everybody. | ||
And, you know, she's a white girl, obviously, whatever. | ||
And she had a, you know, repent. | ||
And this is at like a rural school outside of Toledo. | ||
of her atrocities and her sins of her forefathers and ancestors. | ||
And I remember overhearing this conversation and talking to her about this, and I was thinking, I don't know if anybody's used this phrase, but it's, you know, we're committing generational genocide is what's happening. | ||
Because like, I think Drew Hernandez or perhaps yourself this week was talking about how they're getting the children with all aspects, but this whole You know, it breaks my heart. | ||
racial narrative how everything's about race that I just you know I say we're a human race but you know it's just heartbreaking to watch her go through that and you know all my my other cousins as well but just her being seven years old first grader having to do this and it just breaks my heart I don't know you know it it breaks my heart it's heartbreaking more so it enrages me I it It's not sadness I feel, it's rage against these people. | ||
Because you're exactly right. | ||
They are psychologically destroying these children. | ||
You know, generational genocide? | ||
It's just genocide. | ||
You target the kids when you commit genocide. | ||
Uh, so it's genocide of all of us. | ||
The kids are, uh, the key to it because they're the future, and if you can destroy them, uh, then your work is done for you. | ||
It's absolutely despicable. | ||
Frankly, I don't understand how people whose kids go through this You're watching the American Journal with your host, Harrison Smith. | ||
unidentified
|
Watch live right now at band.video. | |
Last two segments of the show, ladies and gentlemen, it'll be a lightning round free-for-all. | ||
We've got the phone lines full with great callers, all first-time callers. | ||
We're going to get to them. | ||
ASAP. | ||
And of course they're all keeping their comments a little bit short so we can make sure to get everybody in and I appreciate that. | ||
So let's go down the line, shall we? | ||
We'll start with Tom in California who has a comment about an assembly bill. | ||
Let's not get too stuck in the weeds here because these can get rather intricate. | ||
But what do you got for us, Tom? | ||
unidentified
|
I'd just like to make people aware of Assembly Bill 534 in the state of California. | |
It's a complete assault on our fisheries, and I'd like them to take a look at whalesafecrab.com and get the truth. | ||
And you can sign the petition against the bill. | ||
Okay. | ||
All right. | ||
Thank you very much. | ||
California Assembly Bill 534. | ||
Was that right? | ||
unidentified
|
Yes. | |
Okay, Assembly Bill 534. | ||
And there you see the website, Whale Safe Crab. | ||
And yeah, I'll encourage people to go check that out for themselves and let us know what they think. | ||
Thanks so much for the call, Tom. | ||
Thanks for raising awareness for that. | ||
Yet another policy pursued by California that we could all do without. | ||
I'm not surprised, but we've got to do something to stand up against this. | ||
Thanks so much for the call. | ||
Let's go now to U-Haul in Pennsylvania. | ||
Cancel Bank of America, he says. | ||
Thanks for calling in, you all. | ||
You're on the air. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, thanks for taking my call. | |
I'd like to make this call brought to you in part by InfoWarsTore.com. | ||
I got my $1,400 directly deposited from the IRS. | ||
It might not sound like all that much, but still, make it a point to spend or at least invest something while they're still around. | ||
I have my XP spray and it works very well as opposed to the drops. | ||
All right, so anyway, I was originally going to call for what the bank did in February 5th of where they submitted a bunch of arrests. | ||
trying to play FBI or NSA. | ||
And none of the violations on January 6th violated BSA or warranted. | ||
But also one of the things about it, too, is that they want to play legislators from the boardroom. | ||
What do I mean by that? | ||
Who needs lobbying when you can make laws yourself? | ||
It's an oligopoly. | ||
It's an oligarchy. | ||
It's a question. | ||
Look at Coca-Cola. | ||
Look at Delta Airlines. | ||
Whereas these corporations are playing government from the boardroom. | ||
They don't need the lobby anymore. | ||
Who needs B.C.? | ||
They do it all from Charlotte, North Carolina already. | ||
Yeah, absolutely. | ||
Look at Coca-Cola. | ||
Look at Delta Airlines. | ||
Look at American Airlines now and Dell and Home Depot all coming out and basically saying we're going to withdraw our support from your state, withdraw billions of dollars from your state if you don't do as we say. | ||
It's the great merger, not the great reset, creating exactly what you're describing, a corporatocracy. | ||
And Bank of America is as enmeshed in all of this as the rest of them. | ||
So fight back against the corporatocracy. | ||
Don't support these globalist combines, these massive institutions who openly desire your disenfranchisement and your destruction and now actively seek to overwhelm your electoral will by enforcing, through their dictates, extortion. | ||
They will extort you into doing their will or they will bankrupt your state now that they have all of the power that they do. | ||
It's completely despicable and must be pointed out and resisted. | ||
Thanks so much for the call, U-Haul. | ||
Let's go now to Drew in California who wants to talk about the border crisis. | ||
Thanks for calling in, Drew. | ||
You're on the air. | ||
unidentified
|
Cool. | |
Thanks for taking my call again. | ||
Let's plug real quick. | ||
Yeah, all products are awesome. | ||
X2 is my favorite. | ||
All right, second X2 plug of the segment. | ||
Very good. | ||
unidentified
|
And whatchamacallit? | |
Tumeric. | ||
Awesome. | ||
I have very bad back problems. | ||
Helps me a ton. | ||
I suggest everybody to at least try it once. | ||
All right, besides that, let's talk about the border. | ||
We'll just say I live in the Port of LA area, and I don't know if it's a coincidence or not, but since the border surge, There's been a lot more shootings and a lot more robberies and a lot more everything around this area. | ||
And I'm just, you know, plain and simple. | ||
I also want to say this. | ||
I started listening around the Fukushima, all that, when all that stuff started, I've been a fan since then. | ||
And you guys woke me up so much. | ||
It was just everything that I was thinking of. | ||
You guys are saying it, you guys are awesome. | ||
So anyway, the border and talking about in fours, I, uh, I wouldn't say I woke up some friends, but just, it's so hard to talk to friends about what's going on at the border and everything else. | ||
I have Mexican-American friends that came here, their parents came here from Mexico and they worked their ass off and did everything the right way to get here and do everything the right way, you know? | ||
Right, right. | ||
unidentified
|
And they're very successful. | |
They're more successful than I am and I'm, you know, I'm a white boy, you know? | ||
Right. | ||
unidentified
|
White family. | |
You have privilege, yeah. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh yeah, but I have white privilege, exactly. | |
So they worked their ass off and they have everything. | ||
And they didn't like Trump at all. | ||
They had the F Trump everything, you know, in their house and everything. | ||
And I'm, you know, I helped them with construction and stuff too. | ||
But they came easily. | ||
unidentified
|
But they did everything legally. | |
And they worked their butt off. | ||
Yeah, that makes no sense to me, man. | ||
You have people who worked their butts off, they came across legally, they did all the hard work, and now they just want to let people who did none of that cut in line and, you know, take advantage of this system? | ||
You know, to be quite honest with you, if you're going to come into a different country and then subvert its laws and open its borders for, you know, everybody else, whoops, broke my pen, then I don't know. | ||
Maybe you shouldn't be here. | ||
I mean, you're supposed to love this country, and if you do love this country, you shouldn't want to open it up to everybody else. | ||
I love Mexico. | ||
I love my next-door neighbor. | ||
Mexico is our next-door neighbor. | ||
I love them. | ||
I want them to do well. | ||
I think it's a fantastic country. | ||
I love my next-door neighbor. | ||
I still lock my door at night. | ||
You know, he can come in. | ||
He's got to knock. | ||
He's got to knock first. | ||
You don't just walk right into somebody else's house. | ||
And this nation, this landmass is our house, and we are allowed to protect it, and if You know, I give my neighbor a spare key in case, you know, there's an emergency and he needs to get in and he starts making copies for all of his friends so they can come in whenever they want. | ||
That's an issue. | ||
That's a violation of trust. | ||
So it's utterly despicable. | ||
And then what you're talking about the crime. | ||
I mean, the crime wave is across the board all over and it's all part of not necessarily the same cause, but all part of the same swing, which is lawlessness, which is whether they're letting criminals, rapists, murderers out of prison. | ||
No bail because bail is racist, and then they go on to kill more, or the rising crime rates because of defund the police, or the lack of border control. | ||
It's all part of the same movement, which is the destruction of our laws, the rules of people, not laws, and it's all leading to the same cacophonous chaos that we're seeing around the country. | ||
Thank you so much for the call, Drew. | ||
Let's get to one more here. | ||
Ken in Florida has a comment. | ||
We got two minutes for the break, Ken. | ||
The floor is yours. | ||
unidentified
|
Hey Harrison, thank you for taking my call. | |
Man, I want to encourage every single listener, now is the time to get big. | ||
What I mean by get big is make yourself a target. | ||
What I mean by that is don't go out And perpetuate trouble. | ||
But go out and speak your mind. | ||
Go out and say the truth. | ||
Right now, I've got about $1,000 worth of work I had done to my truck so that it stands out and speaks a message. | ||
I fly four flags on my truck at all times. | ||
Two inverted American flags, one on each side, so everyone's aware I have the Christian flag on the back of my truck. | ||
I have my Trump flag on the back of my truck. | ||
They will not come down. | ||
they will not be messed with. | ||
I go out on the street corners with my bullhorn, a sign that's 12 foot tall, and it's made out of wood and construction paper. | ||
And it's got Lindell's Website on it. | ||
And I go out there in rush hour and I try to get people to go to the website. | ||
I know I'm reaching people. | ||
I come in contact with people every single day. | ||
I get negative feedback. | ||
I get positive feedback. | ||
I get threatened. | ||
I don't care. | ||
I'm not afraid of dying. | ||
What I'm afraid of is giving our country to the communists and not having a chance. | ||
That's what terrifies me. | ||
I fought for this country. | ||
I was in the United States Army and I'll be damned if I'm gonna surrender. | ||
I don't know that language. | ||
I love it, man. | ||
I love it, man. | ||
We need 10,000 kins out there spreading the message. | ||
Or like that guy in the video we just showed you with the bullhorn. | ||
A bullhorn, a sign, a street corner, and a soapbox. | ||
All it takes is getting the message out there and showing them that you will not be intimidated, you will not be scared into silence, and you will not surrender without a fight. | ||
That's what they want. | ||
They want you to roll over and capitulate. | ||
Don't do it. | ||
unidentified
|
Don't do it. | |
American and British allied forces stormed the beaches of Normandy with the largest invasion force the world had ever seen. | ||
A mass of humanity strong enough to free the entire continent of Europe from the Nazi grasp. | ||
There were 156,000 soldiers as a part of that movement. | ||
The numbers have just been released four minutes ago. | ||
Border crossings in March number 171,000 people. | ||
Almost 20,000 more people have crossed the border in March than stormed Europe on D-Day. | ||
Just to put in perspective, What a modern invasion force truly looks like. | ||
Absolutely incredible. | ||
Uh, we're doing a rapid fire lightning round with calls here. | ||
The colors have been absolutely fantastic and helping us get through this, uh, helping us get to as many calls as possible. | ||
Get through this like it's a chore. | ||
unidentified
|
It's not a chore. | |
We want to get to as many as possible. | ||
So it's fun. | ||
Uh, let's go to a clay in Texas. | ||
Uh, you have a comment about, uh, the days of creation. | ||
Thanks for calling in clay. | ||
You're on the air. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, I wish I had taken my brain force because I could talk for an hour about this. | |
I'm gonna try and keep it as quick and concise as possible. | ||
Brevity is the soul of wit, they say. | ||
unidentified
|
Well, we all know that God created the earth in six days and rested on the seventh. | |
And we also know that with the Lord a day is a thousand years. | ||
So I am a young earth creationist. | ||
I believe that We are in the end of the sixth prophetic day before the seventh day, which is the day of the Lord, the millennium. | ||
And I also believe, I've come to believe that we need to be observing the whole law. | ||
Jesus said, if you love me, keep my commandments. | ||
And one of these commandments is the Sabbath day. | ||
Rest on the Sabbath day, the seventh day of the week, which is Saturday. | ||
And you notice, Like, when you live like this, when you live the commandments, that the normal work days, they're all the same. | ||
And then Friday rolls around, which is preparation day. | ||
And we're in preparation day right now for the great day of the Lord. | ||
And as you're trying to get everything ready to eat the next day, it gets a little hectic. | ||
And then it gets more and more hectic as sunset approaches. | ||
And that's where we're at right now. | ||
We're getting more and more hectic as the day of the Lord approaches. | ||
Yeah, it's all very biblical. | ||
The darkest before the dawn. | ||
unidentified
|
100%. | |
You can only imagine those three days in between Good Friday and the resurrection, how miserable the followers of Jesus must have felt, how defeated they must have felt, how hopeless they must have been. | ||
Little did they know that the sun was about to rise on them with a glory they never could have imagined. | ||
And we have to keep that faith, certainly. | ||
And also on top of it, you know, they've done research Uh, you know, scientific... | ||
Just across the board, they've gone around the world, they've, you know, investigated all of these areas where you have a lot of people that live over 100. | ||
What they found is that the healthiest people in the entire world that live the longest, that have the most health, the least instances of cancer, all of this stuff, turns out to be little islands around Greece and little places like the coast of Lebanon, where they eat a lot of fish, they eat a lot of olive oil, and they follow the biblical schedule of fasting. | ||
And they found that this creates the most healthy people in the entire world, bar none. | ||
It's people around the Mediterranean. | ||
It's their diet. | ||
And it's also their fasting schedule that usually corresponds with the orthodox fasting schedule where you're fasting a few days a week and then a few weeks a year. | ||
And it actually creates not just spiritual health but physical health beyond anything achieved anywhere else in the world. | ||
So there's spiritual and physical reasons to be adhering to these commandments like Clay suggests. | ||
Thank you so much for the call, Clay. | ||
Let's move on to Sarah in Minnesota. | ||
She has a comment about the infrastructure bill. | ||
Infrastructure, as they call it. | ||
And they're spending all of our money on mind control deputies. | ||
Thanks for calling in, Sarah. | ||
You're on the air. - Okay. | ||
unidentified
|
Hi, Harrison, when I saw that headline, Biden infrastructure bill includes 20 billion to destroy highways for being racist. | |
It made me think of like the art of war. | ||
And if you look at history, they would strategically bomb bridges and destroy infrastructure. | ||
So it just really I don't know. | ||
I kind of saw a parallel there, but, you know, it's concerning. | ||
Yeah, that is interesting. | ||
Of course, right now, sort of in this information war, the infrastructure that we rely on is the communication network. | ||
So it's interesting that you bring that up because now we've moved on to this new realm of war and them deleting our Twitter accounts, that's like the bombing of a major supply route, right? | ||
Them trying to get rid of payment processors, that's them bombing our supply route and trying to You know, encircle us and take us from the rear. | ||
So you're right. | ||
The art of war lives on. | ||
It takes on new shapes. | ||
It takes on new forms. | ||
We meet new challenges. | ||
But those central tenants remain the same. | ||
As they say, war never changes. | ||
And it's a very good thought. | ||
And yeah, this story you can read, I'm going to cover it today, but it's at InfoWars.com. | ||
Biden infrastructure bill includes $20 billion to destroy highways for being racist. | ||
Truly, truly incredible stuff. | ||
Pete Buttigieg, the actor, pretending to ride his bike, and now he's pretending to build infrastructure when, in fact, he's destroying it. | ||
Big surprise. | ||
All these people are lying. | ||
Scumbags. | ||
And, yeah, we're at war with them, folks. | ||
It's an information war. | ||
That doesn't mean the stakes aren't even higher than wars we've fought before because what is at risk here is humanity itself, the human soul, freedom, and liberty worldwide. | ||
So it's even more important than ever that we watch, you know, cover your six, maintain roots of supply. | ||
Uh, uh, always have, uh, a, uh, exit strategy. | ||
Remember those, uh, you know, know your enemy, know yourself, know these, uh, strategies of war because they're more important now than ever. | ||
Thank you so much for that, Sarah. | ||
Let's go down to, uh, Michael in Florida. | ||
Let's comment about conspiracy theory depopulation. | ||
Thanks for calling in Michael. | ||
You're on the air. | ||
unidentified
|
Hey, first off, um, you're doing a great job. | |
And I gotta say, thank God for Alex Jones and the InfoWars crew and all the work you guys have been doing. | ||
Because I hate to think where we would be right now without you guys. | ||
To keep it quick, Beagle.com, they track population. | ||
And for years, they've had U.S. | ||
population dipping in 2025. | ||
And it's been some weird thing. | ||
You know, nobody's known why. | ||
And Bill Gates came on not too long ago. | ||
And he was talking about pandemic one and pandemic two. | ||
Yep. | ||
unidentified
|
And, uh, you know, it's just real creepy. | |
Yeah, there's another story on InfoWars.com as well. | ||
I don't have the headline in front of me, but it's something like, you know, the next pandemic will make this pandemic look like a soft caress, I think is the title. | ||
It's a video. | ||
I think it's an epidemiologist or a virologist explaining this. | ||
Yeah, yeah. | ||
They're, as they always do, they're priming the pump. | ||
They're setting the groundwork. | ||
They're getting us all used to this idea of pandemic lockdowns. | ||
They've succeeded thus far in a pandemic so-called that is, you know, just about as deadly as the common cold. | ||
What happens when the next pandemic is, you know, a variant of Ebola? | ||
And it's brutal and it's incredibly fast spreading and incredibly deadly. | ||
The lockdowns that we're seeing now, they will look like a soft caress because the ones coming up will be the FEMA camp mass depopulation level. | ||
So we can stop these people now. | ||
We can stop them from carrying out their schemes now by revealing what they've already done, getting them out of power and returning power to the people and the strongholds. | ||
Thanks a lot, man. | ||
Love your show. | ||
as they were designed, not the corporate overlordship that we're experiencing now. | ||
We can stop them now. | ||
And if we don't, we know what's coming. | ||
And it will be a second pandemic. | ||
It will be more brutal and more insane than this one. | ||
And all of the signs are there. | ||
They've published it in their own documents. | ||
Truly incredible. | ||
Final call of the day goes to Mark in Delaware. | ||
Thanks so much for calling, Mark. | ||
You got about one minute. | ||
Make it quick. | ||
unidentified
|
Hey, Harrison. | |
Thanks a lot, man. | ||
Love your show. | ||
Love Alex, Owen. | ||
Anyways, I want to call. | ||
I had a, somebody told me yesterday, they brought their daughter to the emergency room at the hospital. | ||
And she broke her arm at home. | ||
And they were filling the paperwork out. | ||
And the people, you know, the nurses or the administrative people that filled the paperwork out wrote down that it was COVID. | ||
And the guy was like, what are you doing? | ||
She doesn't have COVID, and they told him not to worry about it, that they've got it taken care of. | ||
And he says, I don't understand what you're talking about. | ||
My daughter doesn't have COVID. | ||
They said, well, because she's not in school right now, it's a COVID-related issue. | ||
What? | ||
What? | ||
Okay, so. | ||
Okay, so COVID, they use COVID as an excuse to shut down the school. | ||
So then if an accident happens, they say the reason that accident happened is because she wasn't in school. | ||
They're not in school because of COVID. | ||
Therefore, the accident happened because of COVID. | ||
Is that what you're saying? | ||
Is this the issue? | ||
unidentified
|
Yes, dude. | |
I swear to God, it blew my mind. | ||
I said, I have to call Alex Jones. | ||
I have to tell this story. | ||
Wow. | ||
unidentified
|
freaking believable. | |
It would be unbelievable, except I'm aware of what's going on. | ||
Not just is it imminently believable. | ||
I don't doubt it for a single second. | ||
I'd bet my life that what you're telling me is exactly the truth and this is exactly the scams they're playing. | ||
She'll be another statistic boosting the reason for lockdowns and that hospital, they get a chunk of change for every COVID, so they're making off like bandits. | ||
The general public has finally figured out why I'm upset. | ||
They figured out that the globalists are literally trying to kill us. | ||
They're trying to take over civilization and society. | ||
And they depend on the public being ignorant. | ||
That's why Jesus said, My people perish for lack of knowledge. | ||
Knowledge is power. | ||
Like, our bodies are made up of all these tissues and all these systems that die without essential vitamins and minerals. | ||
And that's why they don't want you to know about essential vitamins and minerals. | ||
Because it's so simple. | ||
Because you won't be under their control anymore. | ||
Well, the Vitamin Mineral Fusion, the highest quality Vitamin Mineral Fusion system out there in a liquid vitamin form, is now back in stock at InfoWareStore.com. | ||
And it's not just an incredible formula at a great price, it funds the InfoWare at the same time. | ||
No other product you can buy does that. | ||
So again, InfoWareStore.com, it's back in stock, 50% off. | ||
Vitamin Mineral Fusion, I'm gonna keep it at that until it sells out. | ||
So take action today and give it to your friends and family as a gift. | ||
When I give out advice about vitamins and minerals and supplements and I talk about how to be healthy, you have to understand, I have knowledge about the globalists, the new world order, how they operate. | ||
I have all sorts of knowledge about how if I had a thousand calorie a day diet, I'd probably live to 120. | ||
Doesn't mean I follow it. | ||
I burn the candle at both ends and then some. | ||
And when I'm pointing a finger at you, giving you advice, three more are backing me. | ||
I take on the weight of the world, and I couldn't do it if I wasn't taking those supplements at InfoWareStore.com. | ||
But on the subject of iodine, the good halogen, the fluoride, the chlorine, the bromide, all the others are bad and toxic. | ||
It's the big enchilada. | ||
The UN even estimates over 2 billion people have cognitive disabilities because of iodine deficiency in the womb and when they were growing up. | ||
Iodine is everything, and it's not in the soil anymore. | ||
It's essential, meaning you die if you don't have it. | ||
For your immune system, for every part of your body, it is so important. | ||
Instead, we're bombarded with the bad halogens. | ||
We're running a special until Wednesday. | ||
It ends Thursday. | ||
It's part of the mega blowout sale of free shipping and 50% off all four of our iodine products. | ||
X2, X3, X2 spray, which is to be ingested, and then the other industrial strength iodine we have that is not for ingestion, that is a topical spray for stainless steel, porcelain, things like that. | ||
It is super strong, next level cleaner. | ||
All of those are free shipping and 50% off at InfoWareStore.com. | ||
And it's your purchase that funds the InfoWare. | ||
But I'm telling you, I'm telling myself, when I forget to take the iodine, the X2, the X3, I feel it. | ||
It is the building block to everything. | ||
It's as important as D3, as vitamin C, you name it. | ||
You've got to have it. | ||
We've got the best. | ||
And it funds the InfoWare 360 win. | ||
So thanks for your support. | ||
Get these great products right now. |