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unidentified
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You're tuned in to the American Journal with your host, Harrison Smith. | |
Watch it live right now at band.video. | ||
The two-party system in America that we have today is a result of the Civil War. | ||
The Republican Party stood to abolish slavery, and the Democrat Party stood to abolish the Republic. | ||
For years after the Civil War, the Democrat Party created Ku Klux Klan, killed black political leaders, kidnapped heads of families, and leaders of churches and community groups. | ||
In 1870, John Stevens, a Republican state senator who advocated for the rights of African Americans, was murdered in the Caswell County Courthouse by the Ku Klux Klan as part of a terror campaign being carried out by the Democrat Party. | ||
By the end of the century, the Democrat Party helped foster several radical left pro-communist groups such as the National Labor Union, the Revolutionary Socialist Labor Party, and the Social Democratic Party. | ||
In the 1900s, the Democrat Party's new radical left began killing members of law enforcement and government officials in several major U.S. cities. | ||
Which culminated in 1920, when U.S. Attorney General Alexander Mitchell Palmer ordered a series of raids that targeted these leftist organizations. | ||
By the 1940s, the Democrat Party had to go underground with their communist plans to overthrow America. | ||
But this did not last long. | ||
The leftist media soon labeled this pro-American movement as McCarthyism and portrayed it as un-American. | ||
During the early 1970s, with the support of pop culture media, the Democrat Party's Weather Underground started riots, murdered police, and bombed government buildings, including the United States Capitol building. | ||
And today, the Democrat Party's anti-American communist crusade has grown into an unstoppable force with the support of Hollywood, the big banks, corporations, and private think tanks, as well as the majority of the Republican Party. | ||
Today, the Democrat Party's radical BLM and Antifa are able to murder Americans in cold blood and burn down cities while law enforcement defends them and the average American supports them. | ||
What we are witnessing today is the final act of the destruction of individual liberty, natural law, and the Bill of Rights. | ||
And what follows will be a tyranny unlike anything we have ever seen in recorded history because the average American no longer cares about freedom. | ||
Today's liberal Democrats are all on board with illegal wars for profit, imprisoning their opposition, and exploiting the most innocent among us, our children. | ||
The American people have become fat, drunk, and stupid, with swollen egos incapable of seeing even the most minute flaw in their own character. | ||
The American people have become so dumbed down that all the enemy has to do is lie. | ||
And no matter how radical the lie is, they will believe it. | ||
Some of us would gladly die for freedom. | ||
Thousands already have. | ||
But unfortunately, most of us will do nothing but comply. | ||
The biggest cowards in all of human history can be found today in America. | ||
Because with only the slightest bit of courage, we could turn this all around. | ||
Reporting for InfoWars, this is Greg Reese. | ||
unidentified
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What's up, guys? | |
This is Savannah Hernandez at DC Pride Athletics. | ||
As you can tell, I'm very excited to be here at this family-friendly event that smells like Snoop Dogg's house and where people are openly drinking alcohol in the streets. | ||
Let's go check it out. Shake a little something. | ||
You know what I'm saying? Have more gay sex. | ||
She spoke for it. She said it all. | ||
Okay, y'all. So we're in Washington, D.C. celebrating Pride. | ||
Why are we here today? Why is this important? | ||
Pride is very important to me. | ||
I just came out as pansexual this past year. | ||
This is actually our first Pride. | ||
So we're just seeing things that we've never seen before and accepting all kinds of new things. | ||
and it's just been amazing. - As a trans woman, I just feel so alive here. - You're tuned in to the American Journal with your host, Harrison Smith. | ||
Watch it live right now at band.video. | ||
Good morning, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
Welcome to the program. | ||
It's American Journal. I'm your host, Harrison Smith. | ||
You're watching us on Infowars.com and Band.video. | ||
Very exciting show we have for you today. | ||
So many videos to get to, and we'll be joined by Chase Geiser in the third hour. | ||
He'll be in studio. Maybe we'll be taking your calls. | ||
Regardless, I will be taking your calls throughout the show. | ||
Today, we'll open up the phone numbers nice and early to make sure we get in enough. | ||
Lots to talk about today, so let's just get right into it, shall we? | ||
Here it is, your Daily Dispatch. | ||
unidentified
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Here it is, folks, your Daily Dispatch. | |
For the 13th of June, 2022, Trump's big lie takes center stage in second January 6 hearing. | ||
Former Trump campaign director Bill Stepien and Georgia-based U.S. Attorney President Trump Wade Firing are among those who will testify Monday as the January 6th show trial works to show how the former president forged ahead with plans to remain in power despite being, quote, told again and again he didn't have the numbers to win. | ||
Yes, folks, Trump's big lie takes center stage at the show trial. | ||
We'll be investigating thoroughly the claims that Trump made about election fraud and debunking them one by one. | ||
Kidding, of course, they're not going to do that because they can't because the claims that Trump was making, he didn't come up with. | ||
No, he was repeating those from researchers and investigators and normal American citizens who recognized beyond any reasonable doubt that what happened in November of 2020 was a criminal enterprise to completely subvert the United States election. | ||
So no, it'll be part two of the show trial coming tonight. | ||
I'm excited for it. I think it's going to be fun. | ||
I can't wait to see what witness testimony they've plucked three or four seconds out of completely out of context to give people the wrong interpretation. | ||
I can't wait for the next iteration in this episodic show trial we have going on. | ||
It's what happens when your entire country is run by Hollywood executives slash and or by which I mean pedophiles. | ||
Moving on, bipartisan gun deal announced no assault rifle, no assault weapons ban and no raised minimum rifle age. | ||
We will get into this a little bit later. | ||
A bipartisan group of senators announced a deal on gun control legislation Sunday in the wake of a recent mass shooting. | ||
Though the compromise excludes President Joe Biden's assault weapons ban and raised minimum wage for rifle purchases, the deal includes Republican priorities such as expanded mental health services and school safety, which is just... | ||
unidentified
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Oh, it's just the worst. | |
It's all just the worst. | ||
You don't have to be a genius, you don't have to be a policy wonk to understand how off the mark all of this stuff is. | ||
Funding for school safety resources may be the only... | ||
Part of this bill that might potentially maybe kind of go towards protecting children. | ||
Funding for school-based mental health and supportive services. | ||
This is my question because, of course, this bill. | ||
Invest in programs to expand mental health and supportive services in schools, including early identification and intervention programs and school-based mental health and wraparound services. | ||
This is being proposed to supposedly prevent mass shooters, particularly young mass shooters, targeting schools. | ||
Will this, A, be used to prevent school shooters committing violence, or B, used to put rambunctious boys on mind-altering psychotic drugs? | ||
Will this be used to punish children who are committing crimes in the hopes that holding them to account early on means they're Antisocial behavior won't increase into the future, perpetuating the school-to-prison pipeline? | ||
Or B, will it be used to further indoctrinate your children, this time with a state-approved priest of the state religion, the psychologist there to... | ||
Inform and educate your children on why all of the things they see with their eyes are tricks of their mind. | ||
And you have to take drugs to get the chemical balance back better. | ||
What does this have to do with gun control? | ||
Absolutely nothing. Nothing at all. | ||
No, but that's the way the Democrats work. | ||
I'll explain it all to you in just a little bit. | ||
We're going to do a Democrat proposal flow chart that will illuminate everything. | ||
This, again, one of the craziest stories I covered yesterday on the Sunday Night Live. | ||
If you want to see a more thorough breakdown, we'll probably cover it again today because it is one of the most important stories I've ever seen, I think. | ||
Patriot Front leader among those arrested near Idaho Pride. | ||
Long story short, you had a Pride parade in Idaho. | ||
You had dueling protests go on there. | ||
You had Antifa show up. | ||
And you had the Patriot Front show up. | ||
And only one side got arrested. | ||
There was no violence. There was no clash. | ||
There was no riot. | ||
There was no interaction between the groups. | ||
That's not what they're arrested for. | ||
No, they're arrested for, quote, conspiracy to riot. | ||
Conspiracy to riot. In other words, protesting. | ||
Yes, they were arrested for protesting. | ||
See, they brought shields because they knew Antifa was going to be there, and they know that if Antifa decides to attack Patriot Front or any right-wing group, the police will not protect the right-wing group. | ||
But if the right-wing group fights back against Antifa, they will go to jail perhaps for years. | ||
Just go ask the Proud Boys. | ||
So they bring shields so they can at least defend themselves while still attempting to, you know, exercise the First Amendment. | ||
So... This is horrifying. | ||
It really is horrifying. | ||
So apparently the police had informants in Patriot Front who apparently told them, oh yeah, the Patriot Front's going to go riot. | ||
And so they arrested all of them and charged them with conspiracy to riot, including the leader. | ||
So January 6th was a big event to get a lot of dissident leaders. | ||
That was maybe the modus operandi they were going with at the time. | ||
Hold a fake event, move the police out of the way, let the people into the building, then arrest the dissidents. | ||
But now, if you're just a completely non-violent... | ||
Group of protesters that's all dressed the same and have shields to protect yourself from the leftist agitators. | ||
Then you'll just be arrested and charged with conspiracy to riot. | ||
And it'll be a planted federal agent in your own ranks who probably encourages violence and then tattles on himself to the authorities and gets you all arrested. | ||
It's pretty insane what's going on here. | ||
But you know, it's Patriot Front though, so I don't know. | ||
I've heard they're white supremacists and Nazis, so maybe they deserve to be arrested for not doing anything. | ||
Maybe their thoughts are actually dangerous and violent, and so they should be arrested for the things that they think or the words that they say when they gather together in a group. | ||
Maybe just arrest them. | ||
Because they're Patriot Front and they're bad. | ||
And I'm sure it's going to stop after that. | ||
I'm sure once they get Patriot Front, that'll be it. | ||
That'll be all. And it won't set a precedent or be any sort of slippery slope. | ||
Just let them constrict the noose that much tighter. | ||
It really is completely insane. | ||
And we will talk more about that. | ||
I'll show you the videos with the police... | ||
You know, saying basically that they set the whole thing up and then arrested them despite no actual crime occurring. | ||
Incredible stuff. Meanwhile, New York Times has this article. | ||
What a change from a few years ago. | ||
A migrant of caravans is heading towards the U.S. border. | ||
Well, okay. | ||
It's a statement of fact right there. | ||
No judgment, of course. | ||
No outrage. It just is. | ||
A caravan of migrants is heading towards the U.S. Some 6,000 migrants, many of them from Venezuela, set off from southern Mexico last week as leaders from across America meet in Los Angeles to discuss issues including migration. | ||
Look at all these poor, innocent women and children struggling just to find a bit of safety in this world. | ||
Of course, for our radio listeners, we are looking at an image of nothing but men. | ||
Nothing but young, fit men in brand new clothes. | ||
They don't look poor. They don't look desperate. | ||
They don't look like refugees. | ||
No, they look like invaders. | ||
And that's exactly what they are. But it is a refreshing thing to see the New York Times actually admit that what they are looking at with their eyes is real. | ||
It's nice. It's good to see. | ||
I don't know if you remember four years ago. | ||
When there were headlines saying, Donald Trump makes up a caravan. | ||
Donald Trump is claiming that a caravan is coming towards the southern border. | ||
Can you believe this? We are not going to fall for these racist lies of Donald Trump. | ||
Fast forward four years and they're just like, hey, another sixth caravan on its way. | ||
Hey, by the way, this month's caravan is getting closer and bigger and angrier. | ||
So it's good. | ||
It's good to see them tell the truth every once in a while. | ||
Final story here from InfoWars.com. | ||
New study concludes lockdowns caused at least 170,000 excess deaths in the United States. | ||
But if it saves just one life, it's worth it if it saves just one life. | ||
If what saves one life? | ||
killing 170,000 people. | ||
unidentified
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Now when I was a young boy, at the age of five, my mother's child gonna be... | |
Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
What a weekend it was this weekend. | ||
What a strange set of headlines I got to go through yesterday on the Sunday evening show. | ||
What a bizarre collection of madness we have captured on video from this weekend. | ||
The state religious ceremony known as Pride Month is in full swing at this point. | ||
I covered a lot of it yesterday, but in case you missed it, in case you didn't tune into the Sunday evening show, but our loyal American Journal viewer, I want to play... | ||
A couple videos here. This is from Savannah Hernandez, who was at the Pride March in Washington, D.C. We're going to go to clip 23 here. | ||
This is Savannah interviewing a couple people. | ||
She starts with some little kids and asks them about their journey to arriving as they are now. | ||
Looking like weird ghosts and pale geisha-style makeup while remaining completely outside of and, I guess, in opposition to the gender binary. | ||
Here's just some of the very clear-headed, morally secure... | ||
Strong foundation. Really a lot of stuff going on upstairs for these people. | ||
They've got things figured out and this shows it. | ||
Clip 23. I'm gay. | ||
unidentified
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What age did you know that you were gay? | |
I think at like 10, I knew that I, I think at 10, but I wasn't like, I wasn't clear on my gender. | ||
Yeah, I knew she was gay, but didn't know what gender she was. | ||
10 as well, when I started questioning if I was bi. | ||
And then since then, it was kind of like a slippery slope because I kept, I was like, am I bi, omni, lesbian? | ||
And then I kind of like came to the point, and now recently I've been like, am I pan? | ||
But then I like, I think... | ||
Now I'm starting to realize that I'm queer, but yeah, it started around 10. | ||
It wasn't, like, fully formed, but I guess, like, that's when I realized, wait. | ||
Can I just pause real quick? | ||
Yeah. Just to be very clear, especially in case you're a radio listener and can't see the image on the screen, these are girls probably in eighth grade. | ||
These are probably 13-year-old girls. | ||
Uh... I doubt either one of them has actually had a sexual experience. | ||
So it's a little weird, isn't it? | ||
Well, I was bi and I didn't know if I was poly or if I was pan or if I'm genderqueer. | ||
And it's just like, well, you've never been with anyone ever. | ||
So what are you talking about? | ||
What are you talking about? I don't get it. | ||
I just don't get it. It's very weird having a very in-depth, like clearly their identity is centered around sexuality that they are too young to have even experienced yet. | ||
It's very weird. | ||
It's very weird. This whole thing has nothing to do with acceptance. | ||
It has nothing to do with Homosexuals just being able to live their lives and not being discriminated against because of how they were born. | ||
Just so we sort of reorient and go, oh right, that's what this was about, I guess. | ||
The entire idea of pride. | ||
Saying, look, we were born this way and we're not going to be ashamed and we don't want to be discriminated against because of who we choose to love. | ||
Fine. That's great. What is this, though? | ||
That's all fine. I'm fine with that. | ||
Great. Here's the deal. | ||
For our gay viewers, for our trans viewers, your sexuality It's something I don't care about. | ||
Okay? I just want everybody to know that if you're gay, if you're a lesbian, if you're a trans person watching this, I frankly don't care. | ||
I don't care what your sexuality is. | ||
I could not care less. | ||
Are you a good person? Are you a nice person? | ||
Are you a decent, smart, intelligent, thoughtful, caring, clever person? | ||
Like, who are you? Oh, you're gay? | ||
Great. Great. | ||
Okay. That's nothing. | ||
That literally doesn't mean anything to me. | ||
It's weird that you define yourself that way. | ||
I'm judging you on the fact that you think your sexuality is your identity. | ||
Very strange. Very very very weird. | ||
I don't need to know. | ||
I don't care. I don't need to know. | ||
And children don't need to be attempting to define their own personal identity Based on sexual proclivities they've never embodied. | ||
It's just so bizarre. It's so bizarre and weird and wrong and creepy and strange. | ||
It has nothing to do with homophobia, being anti-gay or anti-trans. | ||
It has to be anti-whatever this dislocated What fabricated, purposefully indoctrinated mental illness is that we're dealing with. | ||
Okay, so let's go back to the poor, mentally ill, abused children desperately trying to explain who they are in terms of who they have sex with, despite the fact that they're both young enough that I don't White girls in this country don't have sex in middle school. | ||
It just doesn't really happen that much. | ||
So, let's just be clear. I mean, it is now. | ||
Now that, you know, the middle schoolers are going to have, like, little sex rooms in the back. | ||
Maybe, you know, maybe we'll be Brave New World, you know, fully sexualized infants pretty soon. | ||
But for now, just so we know, these are little children identifying themselves with something they've never experienced. | ||
It's very sad. | ||
unidentified
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Let's go back. I am genderqueer, trans, mask, and queer. | |
What's trans mask? Trans mask is, like, people under the non-binary umbrella identifying, like, or presenting mask. | ||
You're a confused little girl. | ||
What about you? I'm so sorry about what they've done to you. | ||
unidentified
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I'm trans and, uh... | |
My sexuality is unlabeled. | ||
Unlabeled. I use he, him pronouns. | ||
Yeah, and I use he, they pronouns. She's off-brand. | ||
Tell us what you guys identify as. | ||
We're asking everyone here today. | ||
She's an off-brand. | ||
Store-brand sexuality. | ||
unidentified
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What is it? Cisgender male. | |
There we go. I don't know. | ||
All of the adults don't even, like, really care. | ||
unidentified
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Gender fluid. I think that's what they said. | |
I don't know. I'm confused. She's gender fluid. | ||
unidentified
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Do you identify as gender fluid? | |
Her tits are female. The rest are gender fluid. | ||
It, I feel like, honestly, honestly, it should not be a bad thing. | ||
Like, I've talked to people who go with they and them. | ||
I'm like, well, in the grammar. | ||
It is weird because it's depersonalizing, but I guess you're dehumanizing yourself enough. | ||
I'll call you it. That's fine. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah, you're an it. That man is gay? | |
What? I'll call you gay. | ||
You're gay, bro. Homo fluid? | ||
What did he just say? Fluid sexual? | ||
unidentified
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These people. | |
Good lord! Good lord, folks. | ||
Again, what could this possibly have to do with... | ||
What are you trying to achieve? | ||
I don't know. Is there such a thing as too far? | ||
Because we can look back in the 70s and 80s and you can see gay bashing taking place and sort of hateful behavior, people really being bullied just for being a little effeminate. | ||
You go, ah, that's not good. | ||
You shouldn't label somebody just because they don't fit in this certain box. | ||
We hadn't gone far enough by that point. | ||
And by the 90s, I think we'd gone far enough. | ||
Now I think we've gone too far. | ||
Can we just say that? We all get together as Americans, gay, straight, lesbian, whatever, trans. | ||
Can we all come together and go, yeah, this is too far. | ||
It's too much. It's too far. | ||
It's not helping anybody. | ||
This isn't good for anybody. It has nothing to do with acceptance or tolerance. | ||
This has to do with weird perversion on the streets of America. | ||
unidentified
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You're watching The American Journal with your host, Harrison Smith. | |
Watch live right now at band.video. | ||
I gotta say, I love InfoWars. | ||
I just think about InfoWars. | ||
I'm really glad I work here. | ||
Of course, we're going to talk about social issues. | ||
We're going to talk about war in Ukraine. | ||
We're going to talk about the criminal COVID reaction. | ||
We're going to deal with a lot of real, modern, you know, political reality. | ||
But meanwhile, our online chat are cursing each other over ancient Egyptian gods like Horus. | ||
We run a wide gamut here at InfoWars. | ||
You don't really know what you're going to get. | ||
In fact, I was tempted to actually play this newest video on Bandad Video. | ||
Do angels breed a race of giants? | ||
Did angels breed a race of giants? | ||
It all comes together here, folks. | ||
Ancient mystery religions from far-flung and long-dead civilizations, as well as our own civilization decaying and declining and collapsing in real time. | ||
It's all part of this great continuum of history that we're just here to document and try to make some sense of. | ||
I hope you support us in this mission by going to Infowarsstore.com. | ||
We do rely on... | ||
You, the audience, going to InfoWarsStore.com, purchasing the products to keep us on the air. | ||
It is our only source of funding. | ||
And boy, does the media hate that. | ||
Lots of hit stories. | ||
I have a feeling that they time hit pieces against Alex Jones for when he's on vacation. | ||
I think they wait for him to go on vacation and then they start launching attacks against InfoWars, primarily against our method of funding, acting as if it's somehow bad or dishonest for us to sell products to an audience. | ||
Like every retailer in America, it's capitalism. | ||
See, they hate it because we're using tools of capitalism and tools of American economy, which is still somewhat protected because it's the lifeblood of our entire civilization. | ||
So they can't exactly tell people, well, you can't sell this product anymore. | ||
I think we're good to go. | ||
Don't like what we're doing. Don't like what we're covering. | ||
Don't like how we talk about things. | ||
You won't support us. And if you get the products and don't think they're good, then you won't buy them again. | ||
That's why we have great products. | ||
That's why we try to tell the truth as much as we can and not flinch away from the horrific news while also not succumbing to the therapeutic hopelessness. | ||
Of just going, ah, it's all screwed, you know, run away. | ||
No, we can change things. We can get back. | ||
We can actually right this ship and, you know, sail once again with the wind at our backs as a country, as a civilization, as humanity, as a whole. | ||
And if you resonate with that and if you appreciate that there's a completely independent organization out here trying to tell the truth, please go support us at InfowarStore.com. | ||
It really is necessary. Now, we're going to talk more today about what we can expect tonight on the January 6th event. | ||
It's going to be a very long day for me. | ||
Got started nice and early. | ||
Could not get to sleep last night because I made the mistake of drinking caffeine to try to pump myself up for the big Sunday Night Live show. | ||
So then at... 2 o'clock in the morning, I'm laying in bed going, that was stupid, Harrison. | ||
That was a very dumb thing to do. | ||
Drink Turbo Force, drink coffee. | ||
6 o'clock in the evening when you have a show the next morning. | ||
But I'll be up tonight watching the January 6th show trial. | ||
Dog and pony show kangaroo court outrageous violation of our most basic freedoms. | ||
I'll be up tonight watching that and clipping it so we can have the rebuttal to present tomorrow, the defense to tonight's prosecution. | ||
But we'll be talking about gun control and the latest measure passed and what we can expect to see from that. | ||
But I'm going to move on from Pride. | ||
I covered it quite a bit yesterday. | ||
And... Also, again, one of the most important stories from the Daily Dispatch, the arrest of the Patreon front, guys. | ||
I spent a good 30 minutes on it yesterday, so go to band.video and find the clip from Sunday Night Live talking about that if you're interested in more and seeing the videos of that. | ||
But we've got so much other stuff to cover. | ||
I don't want to retread the same ground over and over again. | ||
In fact, what I want to do now is go to a couple videos. | ||
of some absolute fire that was spit at the Houston ISD school board by two concerned parents. | ||
We'll go first to clip number 17. | ||
Here's a parent in the Houston ISD area alleging at a meeting that a teacher took his underage son to a drag show with a sex offender without his permission. | ||
This complaint in this video has since launched a state investigation by the governor. | ||
But here's the parent of a child Completely at a loss as to what to do when it is the schools, the authority, the government entity itself, who is the one abusing and corrupting your children. | ||
unidentified
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Let's watch. My son attended Sam Houston MSTC. His teacher, Mr. | |
Patrick Pitler, he was his chemistry teacher. | ||
He was also a writer for About Magazine, an LGTBQ magazine. | ||
He published an article with a lot of students. | ||
And a lot of students without authorization. | ||
He recruited my son. | ||
He also took my son to a track show when he was underage. | ||
He took him to a track show when he was underage and it was really bad. | ||
It was a really bad experience. | ||
He also put him next to this sex offender when he was out there with my son. | ||
There's a lot of stuff that nothing got done. | ||
I have a lot of info, a lot of videos, text messages. | ||
Police, HSD has a lot of messages. | ||
It was really bad. You're out of time, sir. | ||
Please shut up and go away. | ||
I mean, I don't know if people, I guess they have the idea that because it's a governmental If you have authority because it's like a school teacher, they somehow have the right to do this to your children, just take it on an interpersonal level. | ||
If you ask your neighbor to babysit And you come back, you're like, how was it? | ||
And they're like, oh, it was good. You know, we put up the inflatable swimming pool and he swam a little. | ||
And then, you know, we had a snack. | ||
He ate really well. You know, I had a lot of applesauce. | ||
My gosh, he loves applesauce so much. | ||
Then I, you know, I explained to him anal sex, okay? | ||
And I showed him what toys and sex play is for. | ||
And then we watched, you know, a drag queen show. | ||
And I put him in a little dress. | ||
I brought a dress over. You'd be like, what the? | ||
Hold on. After the applesauce, I heard everything up until you talked about applesauce, and then my mind just went blank, and I just saw sort of a fuzzy red blob. | ||
So, sorry, explain to me again, what did you do to my son? | ||
What did you do with my son without my permission and without telling me? | ||
Who the hell do you think you are, right? | ||
It would be an act of, you know, child grooming. | ||
It would be abuse. It would be something that parents would not let happen, right? | ||
And when it's a school, somehow it's as if it's not as bad. | ||
No, it's worse. No, it's worse when it's a school. | ||
It's worse when it has the backing of the state. | ||
It's worse when it's the authorities empowered and paid by your tax dollars doing this and hiding it from you. | ||
It's horrific. But people are waking up to this. | ||
People are realizing it. And here's a woman. | ||
Her Twitter account is GabsClark5. | ||
GabsClark5. Here she is, spitting fire at the Houston School Board. | ||
And I hope we can take this energy, maximize it, make use out of it. | ||
unidentified
|
Here it is. Hello, my name is Gabrielle Clark. | |
I filed the first federal lawsuit against woke indoctrination in America. | ||
My daughter goes here now, and I will not tolerate any kind of indoctrination of my daughter at all, period. | ||
Three of those people that Jackie talked about, I found lawyers for this morning. | ||
We're done with that. We're done with our children being groomed. | ||
We're done with having to deal with boys and girls' bathrooms. | ||
We're done with all of that nonsense. | ||
Everywhere around this country, people are sick and tired of listening to all of this yaggity-smaggity about equity and inclusion and all of this nonsense, when we really need to be talking about reading and writing and math. | ||
We're done with that. Y'all need to get your budget right. | ||
Get this school district right. | ||
Because we are sick of it. | ||
All over the country we are sick of it. | ||
Parents are done with this nonsense. | ||
Amen. Amen. Amen. | ||
Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. Amen. ladies and gentlemen. Amen. | ||
Lots of stuff going on. | ||
Of course, we're going to talk a little bit more about January 6th. | ||
We'll take your phone calls in the second hour. | ||
Joined in the third hour by Chase Geiser. | ||
He'll be in studio with us. | ||
Maybe taking your calls. | ||
unidentified
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We'll see. We'll see what we feel like doing. | |
You know, there's a... | ||
Here it is. All right. Got to prepare things here. | ||
Okay. So we're going to talk about gun control in this segment. | ||
we get into the nitty gritty of what the actual proposal is and how the Republicans who have been tasked with the sacred obligation to preserve our foundational liberties have completely turned coat and are hanging us out to dry. | ||
But before we get into, again, the particulars of the bill, I'd like to do a little flowchart here. | ||
I'd like to explain a very simple grift that the Democrats are involved in. | ||
And it goes a little something like this. | ||
It goes, Democrats propose bill, right? | ||
And whether it's a real issue or not, whether the thing that they're claiming is a big problem, whether it can be fixed, it's a complicated thing. | ||
The bill itself is usually just full of bureaucratic fat, right? | ||
Surplus, corporate interests, lobbying interests, all sorts of other nonsense. | ||
But that's not included in the title. | ||
The title is what's important. And so they titled their bill something unobjectionable that acts as if this bill is the solution to a major problem. | ||
So in this case, Major problem may be your ice cream melts too fast. | ||
So the Dems propose the stop ice cream from melting bill. | ||
It's a major problem in this country and we need to have it solved. | ||
So then you've got two options. | ||
It either does not pass. | ||
The Republicans shoot it down and they don't let it pass, which is sort of the best. | ||
It's a win-win for the Democrats because if the bill that they propose, the stop ice cream from melting bill, doesn't pass, then from then on they can just blame Republicans. | ||
They just get to blame Republicans forever. | ||
People say, hey, my ice cream is melting. | ||
Well, the Republicans didn't vote for the stop ice cream from melting bill. | ||
So that's why your ice cream is melting. | ||
And we see this time and time again. | ||
And it's not... | ||
Like far-fetched, right? They have the like, provide baby formula bill. | ||
Does not like to provide baby formula. | ||
Pays a bunch of FDA salaries and expands a bunch of oversight organizations that actually caused the baby formula crisis. | ||
So it wouldn't have actually solved the baby formula crisis. | ||
And so Republicans look at that and they go, this bill is nonsense. | ||
We're not going to vote for it. | ||
They don't vote for it. And then anytime the baby formula crisis gets brought up, the Democrats go, well, the Republicans didn't vote for the bill, so it's the Republicans' fault. | ||
If they had voted for the provide baby formula bill, then we would have provided baby formula, but they didn't vote for the bill, so it's their fault. | ||
It's a very simple little trick they play, but what if it does pass? | ||
What if the bill actually passes? | ||
Gets through the Senate, you know, they pass it. | ||
Joe Biden signs on his desk the stop ice cream from melting bill and it passes. | ||
Well, then you're left with two other options. | ||
Either it solves the problem or it doesn't. | ||
So if it does not fix the problem, which is usually the case, then What you know is that the Democrats will never, ever, not once in their entire history, have they decided, well, it's because our bill was wrong. | ||
It's because what we proposed as a solution to the problem wasn't an effective solution, so let's roll it back, and let's hit the thinking table, and let's figure out a better solution. | ||
That has never happened in the history of democratic politics. | ||
No, what happens is they say, well, it's because you didn't give us enough. | ||
It's because we don't have enough. | ||
It's because we just need... A little bit more. | ||
And by the way, at least we tried. | ||
At least we tried, and we will take credit for trying. | ||
At least we're out here trying something, right? | ||
Stop your ice cream from melting. | ||
What are the Republicans doing? | ||
Nothing. They're doing nothing to stop ice cream from melting. | ||
Sure, it may just be a fact of life. | ||
It just may be an aspect of immutable nature. | ||
But it's not acceptable. And so we're trying to change it. | ||
And we failed to, which means we didn't do enough. | ||
We don't have enough money. We need to double down the entire, you know, the new... | ||
Apparatuses of government. They'll remain. | ||
They'll stay there. They didn't solve the problem they were formulated to tackle. | ||
But they're not going to go away. | ||
We're going to double down. We're going to do even more. | ||
Obviously, we did not get enough funding. | ||
And that's if it doesn't fix the problem. | ||
But what if it does? What about on the rare occurrence that it actually fixes the problem that they're trying to solve? | ||
Now that, like I said, almost never happens. | ||
You can think of very few times in history where the proposed solution to something actually does the thing it's supposed to do. | ||
But if that does happen, usually what ends up happening is you find out later there is a whole host of other issues that have come up. | ||
Just a huge amount of other unforeseen problems that we actually all foresaw and that were completely ignored. | ||
So in this case, it would be something like, well, yes, you stopped ice cream from melting. | ||
It worked. You fixed the problem. | ||
Ice cream doesn't melt anymore. | ||
Unfortunately, you did that by embedding microplastics into the ice cream. | ||
Or putting some bizarre untested chemical in the ice cream. | ||
So yeah, okay, you solved the ice cream melting problem. | ||
But now we have 10 million kids with cancer, right? | ||
Now we've got... A whole host of other issues. | ||
And of course, what is the answer to that? | ||
It's another bill, right? | ||
It's the stop childhood cancer from eating ice cream bill that the Democrats propose. | ||
And once again, we enter into the top of this little flow chart. | ||
And they do this time and time again. | ||
And really, it's this first two separation that makes the most difference, right? | ||
Is that if it passes, it doesn't matter if it fixes the problem or not. | ||
It's the passing of the bill that matters. | ||
And they get to say that they are trying to do something to pass it. | ||
And, you know, even though they've gotten everything they wanted, everything's gotten worse. | ||
It's not their fault. It's because they didn't have enough. | ||
They need to do more. Double down continually over and over. | ||
But most importantly, what they sort of really want is for the bill not to pass so they can then just blame Republicans because they didn't vote for the nicely named bill. | ||
If your ice cream melts, it's because the Republicans didn't vote for our stop ice cream from melting bill. | ||
It's their fault that temperature melts ice cream. | ||
It's the Republicans' fault. | ||
It's not nature, and certainly not anything Democrats have done in the past. | ||
If you think I'm joking about this, just think about some of the latest ones. | ||
I talked about the baby formula. Crisis. | ||
Provide baby formula bill, alright? | ||
Well, it does nothing. It pays the FDA. By the way, the FDA is the one who shut down inappropriately and without justification shut down the baby formula plant. | ||
So why we'd be giving them more money, that makes no sense, but doesn't matter because the bill didn't pass. | ||
So now Democrats get to point at Republicans and say, see, they didn't pass the bill. | ||
And it really is that simple and stupid. | ||
Like, that's how... Opaque, like obvious this scam is. | ||
They do it over and over and over again. | ||
They did it with the price gouging, right? | ||
Inflation has been up and up and up and up. | ||
Keeps going up. Been up for a year and a half at this point. | ||
Everybody's been talking about it. | ||
What? Four months ago, Bloomberg wrote that article saying it would cost the average family $5,000 a year. | ||
God only knows how much it'll cost the average family now. | ||
I know it's costing me $50 every time I go to the gas tank. | ||
The doubling of gas prices. | ||
Everybody recognizes this. | ||
Everybody knows that the cause of this is a myriad of very complex issues that are intertwined with each other. | ||
And all sort of have their root at democratic policy in the first place. | ||
The lockdowns, the shutdowns, the war in Ukraine, the sanctions against Russia. | ||
All of these have been inflicted. | ||
The canceling of the Keystone XL pipeline. | ||
All of these have been inflicted on us by Democrats. | ||
They are the ones that have caused the inflation. | ||
They are the ones that have caused prices to skyrocket. | ||
It's everywhere. It's not price gouging. | ||
These people aren't just making inordinate amounts of money. | ||
They are having to spend more on their raw products that they, whether it's the raw oil or whatever. | ||
It's not price gouging is the point. | ||
It's Democrat policies. | ||
It's a complicated issue. | ||
But they proposed the stop price gouging bill. | ||
Publicans look at it and go, this is stupid. | ||
It's not solving anything. We're not going to vote for this. | ||
And then they get to say, well, it's because they didn't vote for the... | ||
Well, you're not allowed to complain about prices anymore because you didn't vote for our bill. | ||
Like, that's how it works. You're not allowed to complain about it anymore because you didn't vote for our bill. | ||
Even though our bill wouldn't have solved anything. | ||
And if it did solve something, it would cause a whole bunch of other problems. | ||
To the side. Another good example, just from recent history, would be the Black Lives Matter defund the police. | ||
The problem it was trying to stop was the murdering of unarmed black people. | ||
Now this is an interesting version of this flowchart because the problem that they're approaching, it doesn't even exist. | ||
So it's even more nebulous and dislocated from reality. | ||
But they're trying to solve the problem of police murdering unarmed black men without reason. | ||
Doesn't actually happen. | ||
So the bill they propose is defund the police. | ||
So they do defund the police. | ||
The problem of black men being killed by police did not go down at all. | ||
Not even a little bit. | ||
Just as much if not more. | ||
Encounters between police and young black men just as deadly. | ||
So no problems were solved, but they did cause 10,000 extra murders last year. | ||
They did cause the collapse of safety and decency and just a whole host of other major, major issues, crime rates just through the roof countrywide. | ||
So you vote for it. | ||
Democrats get to say, see, we're doing something. | ||
See, we're on your side. We hadn't voted for it. | ||
All the problems that happened, well, it wouldn't have happened, but then Republicans would have gotten blamed for it. | ||
unidentified
|
You're watching The American Journal. | |
Watch live right now at band.video. | ||
Welcome back, folks. Still to come in today's program as our second hour begins on this Monday edition. | ||
You should know that the talk behind the scenes is all about whether Horace truly is the recipient of the blessing of Set or whether... | ||
No, no, that's not what we're talking about. | ||
No, no, we're talking about the fact that the government is... | ||
Openly and actively trying to destroy our First and Second Amendment. | ||
That's actually what we're doing. | ||
Hey, if you want to call in, tell us what you think about ancient Egypt or whatever, we'll talk about it. | ||
I've recently become very well informed about ancient Egypt, actually. | ||
Fascinating place. Give us a call. | ||
You can talk about any and all topics. | ||
Again, later on, we're going to talk about January 6th, what we can expect to see tonight. | ||
We're also going to show you some video, some behind-the-scenes, some withheld evidence from the January 6th committee. | ||
We'll also be talking, continue to talk about gun control. | ||
We'll talk a little bit more about LGBTQ. Nonsense and so much more. | ||
So give us a call about whichever topic you desire. | ||
The number to dial is 1-877-789-2539. | ||
That's 1-877-789-2539. | ||
Give us a call now and we'll answer all of your Egyptian deity-related questions. | ||
So Senate has reached an agreement on gun control. | ||
How foolish we were to see this gun control pass through the Congress and go, well, but it'll get stopped in the Senate because we have an almost equal playing field there. | ||
They'd have to get a bunch of Republicans to go over to gun control, and Republicans know that is not possible for them. | ||
I mean, they know... That the American people recognize what gun control is really all about. | ||
It's not about preventing deaths. | ||
It's not about stopping school shooters. | ||
it's about gaining control. | ||
It's about setting the stage for what they want to do next. | ||
Just like in the same way that, you know, kicking everybody in the military out who cares about the Constitution, who has a Gadsden flag or, you know, recognizes individual liberty and knows the limits that the government is supposed to be restrained by in the Constitution. | ||
You get rid of those people because they're going to cause trouble if you give them orders that are contradictory to the Constitution. | ||
So they're setting the stage for whatever they want to do next. | ||
And gun control is a similar measure. | ||
So Republicans know that. | ||
The Republican people know that. | ||
So thank goodness the founding fathers set up the Senate to be a more deliberative, calm, level-headed place where, yeah, sure, the House of Representatives, they can come up with all sorts of crazy stuff. | ||
They can be moved by the vicissitudes of, you know, modernity. | ||
And it doesn't matter because we have that solid rock of the Senate preventing things like this from passing. | ||
Except, oh yeah, I forgot. | ||
We're completely infiltrated by rhino Republican turncoat. | ||
unidentified
|
I don't know. | |
False scumbags. | ||
Apparently on Sunday night we don't have to beep things. | ||
Sunday Night Live, it doesn't go out on the radio, so we get to curse on Sunday Night Live. | ||
It's a luxury that... | ||
I sure miss in the mornings here on radio, here being withheld, because, boy, there are some very choice words I have for these Republican morons. | ||
Senators reached a deal. | ||
Ten RINO Republicans are reported to join Democrats in a 60-vote threshold. | ||
The deal does not include Joe Biden's proposal to ban assault weapons or high-capacity magazines and raise the minimum wage age of purchasing firearms to 21, but it does expand background checks for individuals under 21. | ||
Additionally, the deal includes Republican proposals like expanded mental health services and school safety measures. | ||
However, the agreement would incentivize states to pass their own red flag laws to establish gun purchase restrictions on individuals a judge has deemed a threat. | ||
Biden thanked the Senate for getting a gun control deal ironed out, despite the fact it doesn't ban assault weapons, saying, quote, it does not do everything I think is needed, but it reflects important steps in the right direction, he tweeted. | ||
With bipartisan support, there are no excuses for delay. | ||
Let's get this done. | ||
Let's get this started. | ||
Are they going to be satisfied? Of course not. | ||
Not even a little bit. They're going to immediately try to expand on this. | ||
Do you realize what you're doing? | ||
You have in front of you an insatiable beast. | ||
The drooling, slathering maw of a dragon. | ||
And it wants to eat you. | ||
And it keeps telling you, I want to eat you, I want to eat you. | ||
And you're sitting there going, well, let's just give it my finger and then it'll be satisfied. | ||
And then it won't try to eat me. | ||
You're just feeding its bloodlust, you morons. | ||
Don't do this. | ||
We'll show you more on the other side. | ||
unidentified
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You're tuned in to the American Journal with your host, Harrison Smith. | |
Watch it live right now at band.video. | ||
They're doing it again, folks. | ||
They're whetting the appetite of the insatiable beast. | ||
The Rhino Republicans. | ||
In office and tasked with that most sacred duty of upholding and maintaining our foundational and inalienable human rights are once again completely abandoning their posts and surrendering to the Democrats. | ||
Just a simple compromise, right? | ||
Just a simple, easy compromise. | ||
And this will put it to a rest. | ||
Democrats are just so insistent. | ||
They constantly want gun control, gun control. | ||
It's exhausting. It's exhausting hearing them demand our rights over and over again. | ||
So let's just give them a little bit. Let's just give them a little bit. | ||
Then they'll be satisfied. | ||
We won't have to talk about this anymore. | ||
We won't have to go over this over and over. | ||
We give them what they want. | ||
Gun deaths go down. | ||
They'll be satisfied. We see the compromise works. | ||
We see there's some sort of middle ground to get here. | ||
There's one little issue in that, in that the Democrats are psychopaths. | ||
They're bloodthirsty. | ||
They want your rights. | ||
And they can't get your first right until they get your second. | ||
So they're going after that right now. | ||
I'm not just speculating. | ||
Democrats are saying this. | ||
This is the craziest thing. For the first time in a very long time, again, Egged on, you know, encouraged by very mysterious mass shooting with a bunch of inconsistencies and a bunch of bizarreness going on behind the scenes. | ||
It looks like federal or state agencies are somehow complicit in this action. | ||
It's all very weird, but ignore all of that. | ||
Focus on guns. So in this emotional high that we're experiencing, they're going to try to pass this right now. | ||
And as they pass this first major... | ||
You know, leap towards greater gun control, first major surrender and retreat on behalf of the Republicans in a very long time. | ||
The Democrats don't wait a single day before announcing their intention to take the tiny step they've been given here and go full force ahead. | ||
Right? They aren't seeing this as a victory. | ||
They aren't seeing this as a compromise. | ||
They aren't seeing this as reasonable, common sense coming together of two sides. | ||
They're seeing this as... | ||
Oh, the Republicans just blinked. | ||
The Republicans just retreated a little bit. | ||
We just got a foothold on the Republican land. | ||
Now it's time to charge. Now it's time to launch the full offensive. | ||
They cannot, and they're so open about this, like they cannot even wait a single day. | ||
Biden thanked the Senate for getting the gun control deal ironed out. | ||
But says, I do not think, it does not do everything I think is needed, but it reflects important steps in the right direction, he tweeted. | ||
With bipartisan support, there's no excuses for delay, let's get this done. | ||
Important steps in the right direction. | ||
In other words, you've got, you know, two forces opposing each other. | ||
You've got this pseudo-wrestling match, a Republican and Democrat. | ||
And the Republicans just took a big step back. | ||
Towards the outer edge of the ring. | ||
Big step towards just total loss, total failure. | ||
Democrats aren't going, all right, now we'll come back this way a little bit. | ||
We'll go back and forth. | ||
You get some of what you want, we get some of what we want. | ||
They're going, they're on the back foot. | ||
Now we drive. Now we push harder. | ||
Biden sort of hinted at it there. | ||
Important steps in the right direction. | ||
But it didn't quite go far. | ||
But we appreciate your help in this, Rhinos. | ||
We appreciate your help, Republicans, in getting a step in the right direction. | ||
So he hinted at their true intent, pushing this even farther. | ||
The governor of New Jersey was less tactful or subtle in the way he put it. | ||
Phil Murphy, governor of the state of New Jersey, issued this statement immediately after achieving this statement. | ||
Unity in this compromise. | ||
He said, quote, And while this agreement is only a narrow first step, it is recognition that the ability of the gun lobby to block any and all common sense gun safety laws by its mere presence is waning and that reform is possible. | ||
The door has cracked open. | ||
We must open it wider. | ||
So make no mistake about what the Republicans are doing right now. | ||
What we want them to do is be there as the security guards at the door, adding more locks, adding the anti-thief barrier bar, right? | ||
Putting in alarm systems and cameras to increase the protection of our Second Amendment. | ||
What they're doing is they're unlocking the door and opening it for the criminals. | ||
They're going, well, it's compromise. | ||
Well, it's just compromise common sense, you know? | ||
Open the door and unlock it for the criminal. | ||
What's the compromise? What are we getting from the criminal? | ||
Mental health reform? | ||
Okay, what is that? | ||
What does that mean? I don't know. | ||
It doesn't mean anything. It's nothing. | ||
Just insane. | ||
So again, going back to this InfoWars article, we can see what's actually in this bill. | ||
unidentified
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Has things like this. | |
Intervention orders provides resources for states and tribes to create and administer laws that help ensure deadly weapons are kept out of the hands of individuals whom a court has determined to be a significant danger to themselves or others consistent with state or federal due process and constitutional protections. | ||
unidentified
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Interesting. | |
Seems like to be consistent with state and federal constitutional protection. | ||
this would not be passed as a law. | ||
We're not getting rid of your Second Amendment. | ||
We just want to infringe it a little. | ||
We just want to infringe it a little bit. | ||
Where does it say we can't infringe your right to own arms? | ||
Just a little bit. Of course, like I was saying with the flow chart, who knows what unintended consequences this will have. | ||
All I know, if you're in a state that has these laws and you like having your Second Amendment right, if you're going through some sort of mental crisis, definitely don't go to the doctor. | ||
Definitely don't try to get help for it because the doctor will... | ||
Probably call you dangerous and turn you over to the state, and then they'll come and take your guns away. | ||
So, like, this is the thing people don't consider. | ||
They're just like, yeah, well, crazy people shouldn't be allowed to have guns. | ||
That makes sense. Yeah, you don't want crazy people with guns. | ||
It's like, no, you're not saying... | ||
You don't pass a law, and then all of a sudden, like, as if by magic, crazy people no longer have guns. | ||
What you mean is that people who the state deems crazy will have their arms forcibly taken by them from other men with guns. | ||
And you're... You're disincentivizing people who want to maintain their rights, who understand the Constitution. | ||
You're disincentivizing them from going and getting mental help. | ||
So now these people are going to have guns and not have any mental help because they know if they try to go get mental help, they'll get their guns taken away. | ||
A bunch of other side effects that they don't consider. | ||
And this is one of those like, well, you know, it solves the problem but creates a whole host of other crazy issues, right? | ||
And one of the best examples of that, just going back to the flowchart idea, right, is the school-to-prison pipeline law that they passed in Florida to prevent students from being arrested by police and getting a, you know, rap sheet, criminal rap sheet and being sent to prison. | ||
They wanted to prevent that. | ||
So they just stopped calling the crimes crimes. | ||
They stopped punishing the crimes. | ||
They stopped keeping track of and documenting crimes. | ||
And so then they said the crime rate lowered. | ||
The problem they were trying to fix was children being sent to prison for the crimes they commit. | ||
Now they solved that problem by just not sending them to prison. | ||
The crimes continued and actually got bigger. | ||
And what happened was you ended up missing people like... | ||
The shooter, the Stoneman Douglas Nicholas whatever shooter, who then went on to kill a bunch of his classmates. | ||
That's the unintended side effects, right? | ||
That's in that best case scenario for the Democrats where they propose a bill, it gets passed, it actually solves the problem, right? | ||
Solve the problem of high crime rates by not documenting the crime. | ||
Hey, problem solved. Good job, guys. | ||
But the unintended consequences were a massive spike in... | ||
Actual crime, literal undocumented crime, as well as the mass murder of dozens of students in a high school. | ||
So you can expect a lot more stuff like this. | ||
So intervention orders are just red flag laws. | ||
And they are unacceptable because they're simply incentivizing the government to deem dissent as mental illness, which they already are doing. | ||
They're already calling climate change a mental health crisis or a public health crisis. | ||
They call racism a mental health crisis, and they're passing laws from this. | ||
So they'll put you to the test, and if you show any proclivity of racism, Appreciating your culture, your history, preferring one race over another, just even on an instinctual level like babies do, then you're a racist, which means you're insane, which means you're dangerous, which means we need to take your guns. | ||
It's just not hard to figure out where this goes. | ||
And this is how you know the Republicans that call themselves Republicans aren't. | ||
They're not stupid. | ||
They know what this is and they're still going along with it. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay. | |
You know, the real, A real sweet part of red flag laws is the fact that they've been working for a while on basically framing anybody that believes in the Second Amendment and likes guns as a crazy person. | ||
Common sense gun control insinuates that if you're against it, you don't have common sense. | ||
You're crazy. You're an insane person. | ||
So that, I think, is very convenient, is that having guns makes you a crazy person, and being a crazy person means you're not allowed to have guns. | ||
Isn't that convenient? Isn't that nice how that works? | ||
It's a mental health crisis that we're dealing with, this love of guns. | ||
See? It'll be in the DSM-6. | ||
Right? Believing that God put you in the wrong body, You're actually a girl, but you're in the body of a boy. | ||
That's not mental illness, okay? | ||
Wanting guns is. | ||
I mean, this is the world that we're headed towards. | ||
Firearm-a-file. Firearm-a-file. | ||
It's pretty good. I like that. | ||
You're an amopath or something. | ||
unidentified
|
An amopath. Just horrible. | |
Look, she's got to be crazy. | ||
This image makes me scared. | ||
I'm scared. Stop her. | ||
Stop her. I'm scared. Take her guns away. | ||
I'm very scared. Literally the argument that they make. | ||
So let's take a quick look at some more of what's being suggested here. | ||
What's being proposed? What's going to be passed, right? | ||
Intervention orders. That's red flag laws. | ||
Horrific abuse of combination of the police state and the mental health industry. | ||
They also are suggesting investments in children and family mental health services, a national expansion of community behavioral health center model, major investments to increase access to mental health and suicide prevention programs, and other support services available in the community, including crisis and trauma intervention and recovery. | ||
Good, I guess. | ||
It's fine. It's fine. | ||
I mean, mental health in this country is just a giant scam run by the pharmaceutical companies to sell chemical lobotomies to their, you know, willing test subjects. | ||
So that's fine, I guess. | ||
That's great. Pharmaceutical companies will make out very big in this. | ||
Whether we'll actually help, who's to say? | ||
unidentified
|
Who knows? I don't know. | |
But it will create more disconnected and zombified lobotomized Walking dead. | ||
Stumbling around your community. | ||
Protections for victims of domestic violence. | ||
Convicted domestic violence abusers and individuals subject to domestic violence restraining orders are included in NICS, including those who have or have had a continuing relationship of a romantic or intimate nature. | ||
So, as we know, people never file false restraining orders. | ||
And again, if you think about it, maybe this could protect some people. | ||
I'd like to see the evidence. | ||
I really can't imagine that this would solve that many problems. | ||
If you already have a restraining order on somebody, That should be enough, but you're going to go take their guns too. | ||
So now you've just weaponized restraining orders to where people are actually denied their rights. | ||
Like, restraining orders should be very easy to get. | ||
It really shouldn't be an issue. | ||
It should just be a request and an approval, in my opinion, right? | ||
Because I think you should be able to go, hey, look, I don't want this person around me anymore. | ||
I need a court order to keep them away. | ||
And the judge should go, alright, done. Boom. | ||
That person doesn't have a right to bother you. | ||
They don't have a right to be near you all the time. | ||
So, boom. | ||
He can't come within 500 feet of you. | ||
If he does, call the cops. We'll take them away. | ||
It's a beautiful thing. It's an amazing thing. | ||
It's part of living in a society, right? | ||
This is good. | ||
It's a good thing. So why would you want to add the destruction of someone's rights on top of that? | ||
Now it's not just, okay, he's got to stay away from you, it's, okay, he's got to stay away from you, and we're going to send police to take his guns from him. | ||
Is this incentivizing people to make claims of domestic abuse, to get guns taken away from, you know, just to be vindictive to somebody? | ||
Is it really helpful? It's not. | ||
It's not helpful. But they're doing it anyway. | ||
Just another excuse to enact red flag laws, which are just a Trojan horse for total confiscation. | ||
Funding for school-based mental health and supportive systems. | ||
They're going to invest in programs to expand mental health and supportive services in schools. | ||
So that's good. We'll have an agent of the pharmaceutical industries in the school there with the children. | ||
Making sure that they're appropriately medicated. | ||
Funding for school safety resources. | ||
Hey, maybe the only thing that's good in this, but even that, like, yeah, we'll just make our schools more like prisons. | ||
That's a good idea. Clarification of definition of federally licensed firearm dealer to crack down on criminals who illegally evade licensing requirements. | ||
I'm sure the cartels and the criminal gangs care a lot about that. | ||
Telehealth investment, investment programs that increase access to mental and behavioral health services for youth and family crisis via telehealth. | ||
Under-21 enhanced review process for buyers under 21 years of age requires an investigative period to review juvenile mental health records, including checks and state databases, local law enforcement, penalties for straw purchasing, to crack down on criminals who illegally straw purchase and traffic guns. | ||
Republicans joined this, including rhinos like Senator Mitt Romney, Lindsey Graham, Susans Collins, and Bill Cassidy. | ||
With 10 Republicans on board, the Democrats should be able to clear that 60-vote threshold to pass gun control bill. | ||
That will then head to Biden's desk. | ||
And that, again, will just be the starting pistol for the race of total confiscation. | ||
That's obviously their goal. | ||
That's obviously what they want. | ||
They obviously want that because they intend to do things for which you would want to shoot them. | ||
And the Republicans, in name only, such as Lindsey Graham, once again contribute and help the enemies of this country and our people to further oppress and restrict our rights. | ||
With that, we go out to the phone calls. | ||
I see Mike in Seattle wants to talk about Egyptian pyramids. | ||
But quickly, since we only have about two minutes left, we'll go to Marcus in Ohio. | ||
Marcus has another five conspiracies for me to rate. | ||
You know how the game is played. | ||
The rules are simple. | ||
One means I completely disbelieve the official story and believe fully in the established conspiracy version of events. | ||
And 10 means I'm fully on board with what everyone says to be true in the mainstream media. | ||
Marcus, five new conspiracies for me. | ||
We've covered the typical ones. | ||
I have a feeling we're about to get weird. | ||
I'm ready. I'm ready to play. | ||
unidentified
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All right. Good morning, sir. | |
Here we go. Number one, Project Blue Beam. | ||
Ooh, Project Blue Beam. | ||
I'm like a... Wait, 10 is, I believe, the official story. | ||
I'm like a 7 or an 8 on that because I think it's been tested. | ||
I think it's been talked about a little bit, but I don't think it's anywhere near operational. | ||
unidentified
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Okay. How about the advanced warnings of the Pearl Harbor attack? | |
Wait, I think I flipped them around. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah, you did. I was going to let you go, though, since you're in charge. | |
Okay, so, yeah, because I want to say I'm a 10 on that, as in I completely believe that, yes, we not only knew that Pearl Harbor, the attack was going to happen. | ||
I mean, that's basically a historical fact at this point, but we allowed it to happen on purpose to satisfy FDR's warmongering and wanting to get us into Second World War. | ||
So, okay. I'm sorry, I said the wrong way. | ||
So, one means I believe the official story. | ||
Ten means I believe the conspiracy. | ||
unidentified
|
So, ten on Pearl Harbor. All right, I had you down for a five on the first one, a ten on the second one. | |
And then on the next three, you only have a combined total score of eight. | ||
So here we go. The Admiral Richard Byrd diaries or testimonies, whatever you want to call them. | ||
As far as Antarctica. | ||
Oh, yeah, the Antarctica. | ||
Yeah, I'm like a 7 or 8 on that one, too. | ||
Definitely weird stuff going on in Antarctica. | ||
I don't know if we've ever gotten to the bottom of it, but certainly go back and look at some of the stuff the Nazis were up to and some of the things that have taken place since World War II on Antarctica. | ||
There's definitely some strangeness happening. | ||
We'll be back with the last two on the other side. | ||
unidentified
|
You're watching The American Journal with your host, Harrison Smith. | |
Yeah. | ||
Welcome back, folks. Marcus in Ohio has a couple more conspiracy theories for me to... | ||
Say what I think about them before we take some other calls. | ||
So, Marcus, I'm like a three or four on Project Blue Beam. | ||
I don't think that's a major threat right now. | ||
I think they have other ways to fake things. | ||
Pearl Harbor definitely was an inside job and purposeful in order to create the atmosphere to get America into the Second World War. | ||
And Antarctica is for sure the site of very mysterious goings-on. | ||
And I think animal bird was probably a respectable source on that. | ||
So you got two more for me, Marcus? | ||
unidentified
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Yes, sir. This one I got you pretty low on. | |
How about birds aren't real? | ||
Have you ever seen baby birds, Marcus? | ||
Have you ever seen a little baby pigeon? | ||
unidentified
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I'm not going to comment too much after the last time I got intercepted on the call, if you remember. | |
Oh, that's right. Yeah, yeah. | ||
No, you know, this might be a controversial take here. | ||
Birds are real. Birds are real, folks. | ||
The earth is around and birds are real. | ||
Yeah, I'm the one on that one. | ||
unidentified
|
And then this one, the Simpsons prediction. | |
I think, you know, it's funny. | ||
I was actually talking about that with Chase Geyser yesterday. | ||
We were talking about South Park and Simpsons and the way they predicted stuff. | ||
I think it's a matter of scale. | ||
I think it's just a matter of they throw so much stuff at the wall, some things stick. | ||
Yeah, and they've sort of got their finger on the pulse of... | ||
Of, you know, society anyway. | ||
So I don't think their predictions were premeditated. | ||
I think it's mostly just coincidence. | ||
So I'm pretty low on that one, maybe a two or three on that one. | ||
I don't want to give the Simpsons writers too much credit now. | ||
If you can predict events 20 years in the future, why can't you write a decent episode? | ||
That's my question. | ||
unidentified
|
Awesome. I would like to leave everybody with a quote. | |
You got to stand for something or your fall for anything. | ||
100%. Hey, keep calling in, Marcus. | ||
This is really fun. I really enjoy doing this. | ||
I think the audience likes it, too. | ||
Thank you all for all you do. Thank you, sir. | ||
That was Marcus in Ohio. | ||
I think we're just going to get weirder and weirder, folks. | ||
Every time he calls in, we're going to get five new conspiracies deeper down that rabbit hole. | ||
With that, we go to Mike in Seattle who wants to talk about the Egyptian pyramids. | ||
Thanks for calling in, Mike. You're on the air. | ||
unidentified
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Harrison. What up? Can you hear me, sir? | |
Yes. Awesome. | ||
unidentified
|
Hey, I'd just like to say thank you to you and your team for always being there for us. | |
Products are great. | ||
They've changed my life in the last three years. | ||
About the pyramids. | ||
So, you know, they used to be covered in alabaster, correct? | ||
Right. They must have shown. | ||
I mean, can you imagine seeing that gold top with the alabaster shielding on it? | ||
unidentified
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Incredible. Yeah. And then, you know, there's actually eight faces to the pyramid, right? | |
There's a valley that runs down the middle. | ||
Right. Yes, yeah, I do know that. | ||
You can kind of see it in the shadow sometimes. | ||
unidentified
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It's very subtle. So, my theory is that the pyramids were water collection systems. | |
They would pull water out of the air through condensation, and it would drip down the valley, and it would go into cisterns, and it would go into pipes that would feed the city. | ||
I mean, that's interesting, but why would they do that, though? | ||
They have the Nile, don't they? | ||
unidentified
|
The Nile floods, and then it recedes, and it floods, and it recedes. | |
There's going to be certain times where you're not going to be able to access clean water from the Nile. | ||
Plus, the elites aren't going to drink water. | ||
River water. That's interesting. | ||
I hadn't heard that theory yet. | ||
unidentified
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I just thought it up, to be honest, last week. | |
I've seen some pretty strange things about the energy generational aspect of the pyramids in the early days of exploration in Egypt before these sites were protected. | ||
People would go on tours and guides would take them to the top of the pyramid and they would hold a light bulb and the light bulb would turn on. | ||
Wouldn't be connected to anything, but it would turn on because there was electricity flowing out through the top of the pyramid. | ||
Like, there's lots of stories about stuff like that. | ||
So, you know, I think ancient technology, ancient energy is definitely a possibility. | ||
I don't think the water... | ||
unidentified
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Occam's razor, simplest answer is usually the correct one. | |
Yeah, well, I think the simplest answer would be that they're tombs, but I don't think that they're... | ||
Well, I think there's a lot going on there and I think it's definitely worth speculating because I definitely don't think that the Egyptologists have a monopoly on Knowledge about ancient Egypt and the point of the pyramids. | ||
But the whole point of Egypt was that it was fed by the Nile that flooded on the same day every single year. | ||
The important thing to understand about that is that provided for the incredible stability of Egypt and it's reflected in its gods. | ||
The Egyptian gods are very calm creatures. | ||
By the way, I see people in the chat saying Horus is a fake bird. | ||
birds exist but horus doesn't um but no so you know if you read the if you read gilgamesh the gods of ancient ur and all these you know the mesopotamian valley they're like crazy gods that constantly lash out and are fighting each other and just like go on rampages for no reason well that's because the rivers in that part of the world couldn't be predicted and would occasionally just wipe out a village for no reason so | ||
So, you know, it was this, like, reality of Earth as these people understood it was that the gods of nature were angry and unpredictable and bizarre, whereas Egypt, it was like, well, it happens every time at this year, and so you could predict it, and so their whole society was, like, more stable and calm, and they believed that the, you know, the reality... | ||
unidentified
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One thing you have to remember about those rivers is that they changed paths constantly. | |
Yeah. You could build a city right next to it, and within 10 years, that river could be migrating a couple miles away. | ||
Yeah, well, but the thing about the Nile was that it was so regular that then if you understood, you know, if you could read the stars and understand date and time, which they did very well, then you could predict when the Nile would flood. | ||
And when you had that knowledge, you, you know, without that knowledge, the civilization couldn't function. | ||
So, you know, this is why, like the Illuminati trace their origins back to Egypt, because they understood that Egypt existed for 4000 years under the auspices of this priest class who withheld secret knowledge from their underlings. | ||
And so they were kept in positions of power because they had the secret knowledge and they could, you know, dazzle and impress their subjects by seeing, you know. | ||
The eclipse is going to happen tomorrow and then it happens and they say, see, I'm a prophet now. | ||
No, they just had the secret knowledge that was withheld from the people underneath them, and so it lasted. | ||
It was a single civilization, 4,000 years, without even the art style changing in that 4,000 years. | ||
That type of permanence is what our elites want for themselves, so they like to hearken back to Egypt, and they go, hey, if we just hoard all the knowledge for ourselves and deny it to the people underneath, then that's our source of power. | ||
And that power, of course, came from the regularity of the Nile and the connection to the stars that it could be seen. | ||
So all of this is intertwined and all provides a basis for the tyrants that are attempting to take us over now. | ||
But thank you so much for the call, Mike, and I do appreciate it. | ||
I was hoping somebody would actually call in about Egypt. | ||
I wasn't joking when I requested that. | ||
Let's go to Adam in Ontario now. | ||
We only have about a minute left, Adam, but you're on air about Canadian gun laws. | ||
unidentified
|
Yes, I just wanted to... | |
Just to kind of mention how, you know, Justin Trudeau, just the little handgun ban, you know, it's going to happen soon. | ||
So I think he's a sneaky rat. | ||
So I think what he's trying to do is get everybody who has a restricted license to buy a firearm so they can get the address of those people. | ||
Because for the last 10 years, you could go buy, not a handgun, but a rifle, a long gun, and all you have to do is show you... | ||
It's called a PAL. It's a license that says that you can get it. | ||
All you have to do is show you didn't have to copy anything down. | ||
So I think it might be a bit of a sneaky way to track people who have guns and Because everyone's buying handguns right now. | ||
Everyone who can are buying them. | ||
So they basically announced, in a month you won't be able to buy handguns, knowing that everybody's going to rush out and buy handguns, and you think they're just keeping track of who's buying it. | ||
I wouldn't be surprised. | ||
I'm sure they are keeping track of that. | ||
unidentified
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That's right, because they've actually sent a law saying that if anybody complains about you, that the police can come in and take your guns without any warrants. | |
So, it's kind of all adding up to being real sneaky, and I don't trust that puppet guy. | ||
No, nor should you. In fact, you've preempted me, because that's what I'm going to cover in the next segment. | ||
I'll show the videos of Justin Trudeau making some of the most absurd statements he's made, which is an achievement for him. | ||
He keeps topping himself. | ||
So, thank you for the call, Adam. | ||
Godspeed there in Canada. | ||
You guys are, you've got a tyrant to overthrow. | ||
It's going to be hard without guns. | ||
unidentified
|
Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | |
Taking your calls, showing you some videos this segment. | ||
Reminder, go to Infowarsstore.com right now if you want to take advantage of our summer super sale. | ||
You're getting up to 60% off our top-selling products. | ||
And you know you work at Infowars for a long time when you say things like 60% off as if that's normal. | ||
As if that's a normal thing to hear. | ||
It's not normal. It's completely out of the ordinary. | ||
How often do you see any... | ||
Items that you buy on sale for more than 10% off. | ||
I remember my girlfriend's mom in high school would collect the Bed Bath& Beyond coupons that were like 20% off and they would just stack them. | ||
It's like, 20% off? | ||
You can get 20% off something? | ||
That's a fifth off. That's incredible. | ||
It's like, well, 60% off. | ||
60% off some of our toxin line products. | ||
It really isn't saying the savings that you're getting. | ||
And it's on some of our best-selling products like Alpha Power, Brain Force Ultra, the Vitamin D3 gummies, the Ultimate Fish Oil, the Ultimate Krill Oil. | ||
All of these are 40, 50, or 60% off. | ||
The Immune Support, 60% off. | ||
Whole Food Multivitamin is 40% off. | ||
It gives you all of the vitamins and nutritions you need in a single supplement you can take in the morning. | ||
I think the crew is trying to call me some sort of cartoon doctor. | ||
I'm not sure what's going on there. | ||
I'm not a doctor. I'm simply a health enthusiast wanting you to get the help that you need to be as healthy as you possibly can be. | ||
And the way you do that and save money and support this InfoWar, it's a 720-1080 double backflip victory at InfoWarStore.com right now. | ||
Summer Super Sale is on. | ||
Best-selling products. Brain Force Ultra is a total bombshell product, and it's, what is that, 50% or 40% off? | ||
Yeah, 50% off Brain Force Ultra. | ||
Try that one. It tastes great and is better than an energy drink, in my opinion. | ||
With that, we go to some videos here. | ||
We've got Justin Trudeau, who is just a cartoonish man. | ||
Him and Gavin Newsom is like, if you wake up from a coma, you would think you were watching a parody. | ||
You would think you were watching some sort of Saturday Night Live Simpsons parody of a politician presenting complete nonsense tyranny in the most bland, professorial way. | ||
It's infuriating to anybody who is not soothed and calmed by A false demeanor. | ||
You should be able to see through this. | ||
It really shouldn't be hard. You shouldn't have to be suspicious. | ||
You don't have to be suspicious of Justin Trudeau. | ||
You can even be a liberal and believe him on most things. | ||
Your hair should still stand up on the back of your neck when you hear this bureaucratic doublespeak and this just false persona he puts on. | ||
It's just dripping in condescension and Self-importance. | ||
And normal people shudder at these things. | ||
So let's go now to... | ||
Clip number 18, Justin Trudeau at the Summit of the Americas in California, saying we cannot let these authoritarian forces undermine our democracies and institutions, so we must restrict their rights and seize their bank accounts. | ||
Let's watch. We discuss trade and economic growth, promoting and protecting democracy. | ||
This weird-looking Steve Irwin cosplayer in the background. | ||
LGBTQ rights. She looks like she's drugged. | ||
Are you being held hostage, ma'am? | ||
If you're being held hostage, you should nod creepily. | ||
Oh, look, there it is. Yeah, nod like a weirdo if you're being held hostage. | ||
This is something we talked about during the roundtable I hosted with progressive leaders on Wednesday with Barbados, Belize, Chile, Ecuador, and Jamaica. | ||
We're continuing our work to eradicate poverty, strengthen the middle class, address food shortages, and grow truly equitable economies, ones that are diverse, with true gender and racial equity and equality. | ||
This week we also discussed challenges like global inflation. | ||
Everyone agrees that we need to do more to make life more affordable for our citizens. | ||
It starts with strong, inclusive institutions that underpin our work to tackle the many challenges we face. | ||
We can't let authoritarian forces undermine our democracies or institutions, including online. | ||
We were very clear that Canada is committed to help safeguard democracy in the digital age, and will continue to stand up for human rights, media freedom, and equality. | ||
Like, you understand, what we just saw is just the modern version of a Hitler speech. | ||
Like, you get that if Hitler was around these days, if he was in the modern world, it wouldn't be, we will wage total war and we will take them down and they will not stop us. | ||
It would be... We're involved in creating a more inclusive society for all Germans. | ||
It'd be the same program. | ||
It'd be the same initiatives being proposed. | ||
It'd be the same restrictions. It'd be the same limitations and authoritarianism. | ||
It's just this is the modern way of doing it is the way Justin Trudeau is doing it. | ||
About diversity and inclusion. | ||
Like, when you hear him talking in this pleasant sort of NPR preschool teacher voice, what I hear in the background is just Satan laughing, right? | ||
Just tackling. You just hear, just like, you will surrender all of your goods to us. | ||
We will own everything. | ||
You will own nothing. We will have guns. | ||
You will be defenseless, right? | ||
Like, that's all you need to hear. | ||
That's what's really being said to you right now. | ||
I hope we can all recognize this. | ||
I mean... You want to talk about getting a blackout on buzzword bingo. | ||
That was it right there. | ||
Just diversity. I can be president of Canada. | ||
Why not? Can I be president of Canada? | ||
This is my tryout here. | ||
Diversity. Inclusion. | ||
Protecting democracy from authoritarianism. | ||
Seize their bank accounts. | ||
Disarm the dissidents. | ||
You cannot speak up to us. | ||
Your protests are illegal. | ||
Stomp the protester with a horse. | ||
Diversity. Acceptance. | ||
Gay. It's just buzzwords. | ||
There was no substance there. | ||
Nothing substantive. Nothing good. | ||
Nothing important. Nothing revolutionary. | ||
No actual proposals as to what the actual effects of these initiatives will be. | ||
Just buzzwords protecting democracy from authoritarianism. | ||
Hand over all of your money, your rights, your guns, and your children. | ||
Just hope you can see through this. | ||
Don't let their mask fool you. | ||
Hey, speaking of mask, here is again just Justin Trudeau just politicking all over everybody's face. | ||
Just spewing his rhetoric into your face as if we don't see what he's doing. | ||
As if we're so stupid that we can't see the forest for the trees. | ||
I mean, it's just... Hilarious. | ||
Here he is being asked a pretty simple question. | ||
You're imposing mandates and restrictions on the Canadian people based on COVID, but you've been gallivanting around the world, not adhering to any of these restrictions. | ||
How do you justify that? | ||
What do you think his answer is? | ||
You think he even approaches the question? | ||
unidentified
|
Of course not. Not even close. | |
Let's watch. Your government continues to support mask mandates in the House of Commons and in federally regulated places like airports, for example. | ||
But it appears that you wear a mask inconsistently and depending on different situations. | ||
The Ontario government is lifting the remaining mask mandates very shortly. | ||
Do you still believe that a mask mandate should be in place and if so, in what types of situations? | ||
First of all, I understand how tired everyone is of the pandemic, of the- Not you, though. | ||
The rules and restrictions that we have to go through. | ||
The rules and restrictions that you flaunt. | ||
That was the question, sir. But most people understand that this pandemic is not over yet. | ||
Okay, but why are you flouting the rules that you're putting on everybody else? | ||
We continue to see hospitals filled with people suffering tremendous consequences. | ||
We continue to see more spread. | ||
Why don't you wear a mask? We continue to run the risk of new variants. | ||
Okay, why don't you wear a mask? | ||
Every step of the way, we will continue to be guided by the very best science we can. | ||
But why don't you wear a mask when you're making everybody else? | ||
And primary responsibility is to make sure We're doing everything we can to keep people safe. | ||
Okay, but it doesn't keep you safe because why don't you wear a mask? | ||
Do you don't want to keep yourself safe? | ||
You're not trying to keep the people around you safe? | ||
Answer the question, Justin. | ||
Again, it would just be, just sometimes, just every once in a while, I just fantasize what would it be like to be a liberal? | ||
What would it be like to be able to get away with this sort of stuff? | ||
To just impose completely pointless, baseless, tyrannical measures on your citizens that you completely flout and completely ignore and completely are not subject to. | ||
And then when you're asked about this, point blank, you just ramble for a minute about, we're all sick and tired of this. | ||
I mean, it would just be so easy. | ||
It would be so easy. My God. | ||
I'd love to see some of these politicians have to actually think on their feet and actually be held to account for things. | ||
It's entirely the media's fault for letting them get away with this sort of stuff. | ||
When you ask them a question and they just ramble about something else for a minute, Don't just nod, okay? | ||
That's what happens, right? | ||
You're forcing children to wear a mask, but you are traveling around the world not wearing a mask, so what's up with that? | ||
Well, I believe that the science is the most important thing, and COVID is, we're all tired of COVID, and they're just like, oh, okay, right. | ||
I forgot my question, so I'll take that answer as a yes. | ||
What is going on? | ||
But just so we know, folks, Canada is protecting democracy from authoritarianism by restricting everyone's rights, silencing dissent, confiscating the goods and livelihood of people who disagree with the state because you can't survive without authoritarianism. | ||
unidentified
|
You're watching the American Journal with your host Harrison Smith. | |
Did angels fall to earth and breed a race of giants? | ||
One of the most contentious passages in the Old Testament is found in Genesis chapter 6, where the beginning of the worldwide flood history is given by its inspired author, Moses. | ||
Here is described the sinful state of the world as humanity has fallen out of grace with their creator. | ||
And it came to pass, when men began to multiply on the face of the earth, and daughters were born unto them, that the sons of God saw the daughters of men that they were fair, and they took them wives of all which they chose. | ||
There were giants in the earth in those days, and also after that when the sons of God came in unto the daughters of men, and they bare children to them, the same became mighty men which were of old, men of renown. | ||
And God saw that the wickedness of man was great in the earth, and that every imagination of the thoughts of his heart was only evil continually. | ||
And it repented the Lord that he had made man on earth, and it grieved him at his heart. | ||
And the Lord said, There are two main ways scholars understand this text. | ||
One, angels impregnated women on earth and bred giants. | ||
Or two, followers of God took ungodly women as wives and their children turned out to be tyrants, bullying other people across the face of the earth. | ||
Either way, God was not pleased with this behavior. | ||
And it motivated him to destroy his creation with the flood and start over with the remnants that remained in Noah's Ark. | ||
The two verses that stick out most to Bible scholars are verses 2 and 4 where the sons of God take daughters of men for wives and bore giants as children. | ||
What does this all really mean? | ||
Well, the best way to analyze scripture is to study the original text in its original language, and to use other parts of the Bible with the same phrases and words to decipher what the scripture is saying. | ||
The root word for son in sons of God is the Hebrew ben, which means son in a wide sense. | ||
A family relationship as a son, a subject, a nation, a quality as a son, or a condition as a subordinate. | ||
In short, it can refer both to spiritual disciples of God or to the heavenly court of angels. | ||
Both are sons of God. | ||
While sons or daughters of man refers to the boastful, proud, and sinful among mankind, those that do not follow God. | ||
Similar to the fallen angels who were cast out of heaven for rebelling against God and exalting themselves above Him. | ||
Both of these definitions of sons of God can be found in other places in the Bible. | ||
In Exodus 4, 22-23, all of Israel's descendants are referred to as the Son of God. | ||
In Luke 3, 38, Adam is called the Son of God. | ||
And most strikingly, in 1 John 3, 1, disciples of God are referred to as sons of God. | ||
Behold what manner of love the Father has bestowed on us that we should be called sons of God. | ||
However, there are times in the Bible where angels are referred to as sons of God, such as in Job 1.6, when his heavenly court assembles. | ||
Now there was a day when the sons of God came to present themselves before the Lord, and Satan came also among them. | ||
It's important to note that Satan is not included in with the sons of God because he no longer serves or follows God. | ||
This is significant because the angel-woman hybrid theory suggests that fallen angels are called sons of God when they have actually rejected God, becoming sons of sin. | ||
The book of Job twice again refers to angels as sons of God. | ||
Making it clear that angelic beings are in fact sons of God. | ||
But does that mean human beings cannot also be sons of God? | ||
Of course not. Sons of God are created beings, man or angel, who serve and follow their Creator as disciples. | ||
In Genesis 6 verse 4, the infamous giants are mentioned. | ||
Which are the offspring of sons of God and daughters of men. | ||
This would either mean angels bred with humans or disciples of God intermarried with sinful humanity. | ||
The root word in Hebrew for giant comes from nephel, meaning a feller, as in one who falls victoriously upon others in war or battle. | ||
It also means a bully or a tyrant. | ||
Find and share that video, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
Band.video is by Red Pilled TV. Did angels breed a race of giants? | ||
Send it to your friends and family. | ||
unidentified
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Band.video. You're listening to The American Journal with your host, Harrison Smith. | |
Watch it live right now at Band.video. | ||
Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
Third hour has begun. | ||
You're watching The American Journal on Infowars.com and Band.video. | ||
I'm your host, Harrison Smith, joined in studio by the one and only Chase Geiser. | ||
He's the host of the One American Podcast, dedicated to exploring American values, politics, and philosophy with political influencers. | ||
Chase started the One American Podcast because he realized there's a concerted effort to shame America and what it means to be American. | ||
At OneAmericanPodcast.com, you'll find conversations with key influencers from different backgrounds and beliefs who share one thing in common, the belief in America and that America is inherently good. | ||
Again, that website is OneAmericanPodcast.com. | ||
Thanks so much for coming on, Chase. It's an honor and a pleasure to be with you, Harrison. | ||
How are you? Very good. | ||
Very glad that you're here. I understand you were supposed to be here last week when I got sick, so thank you so much for rescheduling with us and joining us in studio. | ||
You have a lot of really interesting conversations on your podcast. | ||
Who are some of the latest people that you've talked to that have sort of stood out? | ||
Yeah, I really enjoyed having Cassidy Campbell on recently. | ||
Oh, yeah. He's a great guest, funny guy, smart, and insightful. | ||
And obviously, his YouTube content is all the rage. | ||
Top notch. So he's great. | ||
But, you know, I've had great guests. | ||
Every guest that I've had, I've really enjoyed. | ||
I've had Roger Stone on, Brandy Love on, and a number of other influencers in the conservative space. | ||
And so it's really been a joy and an awesome experience the past year. | ||
I thought you were going to say me, but that's fine. | ||
Everybody already knows you've been on. | ||
That's how we met. Yeah, that's right. | ||
No, I was on it, and it was very fun. | ||
And I like, I mean, you tend to focus on, like, proto-America. | ||
What America used to be and what it still kind of pretends to be, but we're sort of losing what we were. | ||
Is there a way to get this back? | ||
Like, how do we reignite the flame that, you know, burned so bright in America for so long? | ||
Like, the flame of liberty. | ||
Like, what it means... Being an American is cool. | ||
People forget that we're not like other countries. | ||
We have this rebellious aspect. | ||
We have this sort of Wild West aspect to us. | ||
But at the same time... | ||
We've been able to create a world that both has freedom and safety, freedom and a complicated and well-functioning society. | ||
But we're clearly losing that. | ||
Why are we losing it and how do we get it back? | ||
That's a great question and I think that's probably a puzzle that we're going to have to continue to solve over the next several years. | ||
I don't really think of America as a place or a nation so much as an ideal. | ||
And, you know, people were critical of the Make America Great Again slogan because they're like, oh, America was never great. | ||
It used to, you know, have slavery or it used to be so racist before the Civil Rights Movement. | ||
And regardless of any mistakes that the United States, which I distinguish from America, has ever made in the past, the American ideal is still pure. | ||
And I believe that the American ideal behind the United States is actually the foundational reason that we rectified all of our sins in the past, right? | ||
Right. Right. | ||
Right. Right. | ||
Right. And so I think that rather than considering what policies to enact in order to make America America again, we have to think more about what culture or values that we can really support in order to do that. | ||
So things like individualism, freedom of thought, freedom of speech, Second Amendment, I mean, those are policy issues, but actually... | ||
Emphasizing that as an individual, you can accomplish your own self-actualization and you aren't failing because of whatever group you're a part of or whatever environment that you're in. | ||
You're failing because of the own decisions that you make. | ||
You can't choose the environment that you're in, but you can always choose how you respond to it. | ||
And I think that we really rob people of their individual sovereignty when we convince them that the reason that they're failing or struggling is because of some sort of systemic problem or systemic injustice. | ||
It's like that may be the case to a certain extent, but you're definitely never going to reach your own self-actualization if you believe that everything that happens to you is a result of factors outside of your control. | ||
Right. I completely agree. | ||
And just going back to what you first said, this idea of America was never great. | ||
What are they talking about? | ||
This is an incredibly bizarre thing. | ||
I need to do a longer piece on it or something because you hear it all the time. | ||
You see a Norman Rockwell painting and people just go, that never existed. | ||
That was an illusion. A popular meme that was going around was just classic 1950s You know, a picnic scene, and it's the dad grilling and the mom, and, you know, on each label is like, the dad's like, I'm secretly gay. | ||
The mom's like, I'm zonked out on pharmaceuticals, you know, and I don't know. | ||
You know, the son, like, you know, my preacher touches me. | ||
You know, it's like they see the beauty and sort of innocence of the 1950s, and they say either that doesn't exist or it was just a facade hiding this nasty, dirty underground thing, which is ironic because if you want to talk about People being on pharmaceutical drugs and having bizarre sexual secrets that they're into. | ||
Way more of that now than there ever was back then. | ||
But I mean, it's so strange to me when you then look at video from the 1950s and images from the 1950s and it looks so idyllic. | ||
And you hear anybody talk about growing up in the 1950s and it sounds like a Norman Rockwell painting. | ||
It sounds like, you know, leave it to Beaver. | ||
Why and how are they convincing people that that never existed? | ||
Well, I think that there's an effort to shame America because America is fundamentally an individualist ideal, and empowered individuals can't be subjugated. | ||
And so they're really trying to loop everybody into group and group identity because it's much easier from a political standpoint to manage groups than it is to manage individuals. | ||
And so by shaming individualism, weakening individualism, and being a proponent of group identity, you could say, listen, if you're black, you should vote for me because we have these policies that are going to help the black community. | ||
Rather than having to go to every single individual black person and say, this is why you should vote for me, this is why you should vote for me. | ||
So I think that there's just a natural tendency among established powers to lump people into groups and convince them that their identity is actually the group identity, not an individual identity, because they're easier to manage and coerce that way. | ||
No, yeah. And it's interesting that, you know, this concept of identity, we start off the show with the pride, you know, parade and these little girls, these like middle school age girls, trying to come to terms with their identity, which they can only conceive of in terms of sexuality when they're at an age where they're probably not even engaged in sexual activity. | ||
And I hope they're not, right? | ||
I mean, they're young kids. | ||
So it's like, There's something very deep here, and there was a tweet that I saw yesterday that was saying, you know, there was this guy who was like, you know, when I was in the CIA, one of the things they taught us was destroying someone's identity is the best way to break their will. | ||
To get them to come along with you, you have to first destroy their identity, whether it's their participation in a community or a group. | ||
You want to, like, break that down and destroy it so that you can fold them into your identity. | ||
I mean, it's cult programming, right? | ||
So... Yeah, I think this concept of identity is, I think you're right, it's just a very convenient control mechanism for people. | ||
Do you think that's why they're targeting kids so much these days with the transgender stuff? | ||
What do you think that has to do with it? | ||
Yeah, I think that it's more than just a transgender issue. | ||
I think they're absolutely making an attempt to target children because they know that as soon as a child steps into his own, then they can't be led to the slaughter. | ||
And I think that they're trying to navigate the way the next generation of Americans grow up. | ||
And we saw this with the advent of inflation, starting with going off the gold standard. | ||
That catalyzed a whole generation of American families where both parents had to work. | ||
And when both parents had to work, they had to give their children to the state at younger and younger ages to be educated. | ||
And we're seeing the ramifications of that today where we have generations in leadership running this country right now, whether in the private sector or the public sector, who were raised by the state. | ||
And I think that's why we're seeing all the problems that we've seen, because we have a generation of Americans that weren't raised by American families, but by the United States government. | ||
Oh, God. So, yeah, I think you're right, and I think, you know, putting it that way really makes you realize, like, what we're experiencing now is not necessarily new problems. | ||
They are just the consequence of very old problems, right, of things that started, I guess, as you point out, yeah, in the 70s, but really just got worse and worse and worse, and nothing has been done to reverse it. | ||
And so we're dealing with sort of the culmination of decades of, yeah, kids being raised by the state and not having anyone to look up to. | ||
And again, it just sort of goes back to, like, the basic American morality that America was founded on and that it was made great through. | ||
It's not just like superstition. | ||
It's not just like, oh, we're scared of sky daddies. | ||
It's like, no. The best way to build a community is to build strong families. | ||
The best way to build strong families is to follow this certain moral framework. | ||
When you lose that Everything starts to collapse, and we're really just dealing with the very beginning of this. | ||
We're going to get into some more headlines from today's news, just mind-blowing stuff. | ||
I know Chase is going to have some good input on this, because you approach things a little bit differently than me, which I... Really appreciate, which is why we want to have you on. | ||
We don't want a bunch of guests that all believe the same thing. | ||
But again, folks, if you want to go and follow Chase's podcast, it's the One American Podcast at oneamericanpodcast.com. | ||
And of course, you can follow Chase on Twitter. | ||
What's your Twitter, Chase? At RealChaseGeyser. | ||
You're on Getter a lot, too, right? | ||
unidentified
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Yes, sir. All right, welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | |
I'm in studio with Chase Geyser, oneamericanpodcast.com. | ||
What was your Twitter again? Real Chase Geyser. | ||
And, yeah, very in-depth conversations he has on his podcast with a bunch of names you'll recognize, people that have been on this show, other people that haven't been on this show. | ||
His latest, Cassidy Campbell, Joseph Tully. | ||
And you put together a really good, your triumph, Of Trump, like, documentary. | ||
You threw that together fast, too. | ||
Yeah, one night. It was an all-nighter. | ||
Triumph 2024. Yep. | ||
You know, it was inspired by one of Bannon's sort of propaganda pieces from a couple of years ago. | ||
And I thought, man, I can make something like this. | ||
That would be really fun. And so it was an exercise I did. | ||
And it ended up being a really cool learning experience to put that together. | ||
That's on the YouTube channel as well. | ||
Yeah, it kind of blew my mind because we were hanging out. | ||
That day. And you said, yeah, I think I'm going to do this documentary. | ||
And then like the next morning, you're like, I finished it. | ||
What? How did you do that? | ||
So yeah, a lot of great stuff you can check out on Chase's page. | ||
This concept of identity and group identity, it really can't, I think, be overstated. | ||
But I think also a lot of people like myself... | ||
We've always considered ourselves libertarians. | ||
I mean, liberty is our highest goal, and you want it for everybody. | ||
And yet, I feel like the concept of individuality has been a little bit of a trick. | ||
I think we've been hampered in some ways about focusing on individuality instead of wanting to come together and combine forces and fight back as a group. | ||
So how do we come together and fight as a group without succumbing to this identity manipulation? | ||
That's a really good question, and I'm not sure that I know the perfect answer to it. | ||
I think that consensus is really important. | ||
I think one of the strengths that we had with the American Revolution is that there was a tremendous amount of consensus among the leadership about the first 10 or 15 steps that needed to happen. | ||
There were the federalists and there were the anti-federalists, but there was already sort of a government in place before the revolution, which is kind of rare. | ||
We see a lot of other revolutions fail because they overthrow the government, and then they're like, now what? | ||
They already had the Continental They all had a consensus about what their values were. | ||
They believed in things like freedom of speech, the right to bear arms, things like the Fourth Amendment. | ||
We don't want troops just staying at our house. | ||
I think that the amount of cultural consensus that they had, even though they were individuals fighting for individual rights, they at least agreed to come together and fight for individual rights. | ||
I think that's what we forgot. | ||
forgotten is there's no consensus anymore in American culture about what we should do next. | ||
And we need to reestablish that. | ||
Yeah, no, I think I think you're exactly right. | ||
And I mean, I think that's why sort of nationalism is the is the solution to all of this. | ||
Right. | ||
Sure. | ||
Sure. | ||
You can have a bunch of different groups within the national. | ||
But at the end of the day, we all need to come together and go. | ||
We're all Americans. | ||
So what happens to one of us affects every other one of us. | ||
And, you know, the concept of being an American is an ideal and it's an ideal that you stand for for individual freedom. | ||
I think you're right in that. | ||
And it's almost like the founding fathers, because they didn't have that individual freedom, they had to actually lay down the moral groundwork. | ||
Right. | ||
They had to explain, here's why it's good that people be able to speak freely. | ||
Here's why this needs to happen. | ||
Now, people, I think, just take it for granted and think you can just throw that stuff away and maintain all of the blessings that all of this moral framework built for I think it happens with Christianity too. | ||
People want to throw away... | ||
The moral framework, but maintain the gifts of that moral framework, I don't think it's possible. | ||
Yeah, and I think one of the things, too, is people in America have forgotten that if someone else doesn't have rights, then you don't have rights, right? | ||
So there's a lot of people, like, with this gun control debate going on, they're like, well, I don't use high-capacity magazines, you know? | ||
And so why should anybody? | ||
It's like, whoa, whoa. Just because you don't want 30 rounds in a magazine doesn't mean that it's not important that you have that right. | ||
And so if you take that away from everybody else, it actually erodes the foundation of freedom in the country for everybody. | ||
And eventually it will come to pass that there will be a reckoning if you allow the rights of others to be eroded. | ||
And that's one of the sacred things about the Second Amendment, the right to self-defense. | ||
It's like if you don't believe that someone else has the right to defend themselves, then how can you believe that you have the right to defend yourself and And if you don't believe that individuals have a right to defend themselves, then how can you believe that the nation has a right to defend itself? | ||
And so I honestly think that this is sort of like a globalist thing, where if we attack an individual's sovereignty, then we can attack national sovereignty. | ||
Because if there are no individuals with sovereignty, then there can be no national sovereignty. | ||
And if we attack national sovereignty, then we can enforce globalism. | ||
And I think that's ultimately what's playing out here. | ||
Yeah, they're clearly working their way... | ||
You know, towards that, I guess I was going to say, up the pyramid. | ||
But probably you guys would be down the pyramid. | ||
But yeah, they're definitely putting that into place. | ||
We have a couple people hanging on phone calls, and I want to go ahead and take these with Chase, if you're cool with that. | ||
We'll go to Hobbs in Nebraska, who wants to talk about a couple things. | ||
But maybe if you can just pick one topic to bring up, Hobbs will take your comment and then get Chase's view on it. | ||
Thanks for calling in, Hobbs. You're on the air with Harrison and Chase. | ||
Hey, good morning, Harrison. | ||
Good morning, Chase. Good morning, InfoWarriors. | ||
It's your boy, Hobbs, again. | ||
So, yeah, you want me to pick just one thing? | ||
I guess that what I want to talk about is something I've been trying to call in for like a week and a half now. | ||
Two Fridays ago, I heard your producer, Matt, mention that you might be trying to get Maj Touré on to talk about gun control. | ||
And, uh... If you do, or if Alex ever wants to have Michael Malice on his show, again, you guys can talk about the other great reset, which is the Reno reset of the Libertarian Party, where the Libertarian Party Mises Caucus Did basically a clean sweep of the Libertarian Party leadership over there. | ||
I'm very glad you brought this up, Hobbs, because I haven't been paying too much attention to this. | ||
Chase, have you been following what's going on with the Libertarian Party? | ||
Just very loosely. Yeah. | ||
Tell us what exactly is happening with the Libertarian Party, Hobbs. | ||
I understand because I was watching, it's Dave Smith, right? | ||
Dave Smith? Yep. | ||
So what's happening with that exactly? | ||
Alright, so after 2016 and Trump won the first Republican nomination and then the presidency, there was a kind of a weird shift within Libertarian Party leadership. | ||
Right. | ||
was that they were going to try to appeal to more of the disaffected Bernie Sanders people who were pissed off about Hillary more or less stealing the Democrat nomination. | ||
Right. | ||
And me and a bunch of other people, You cannot square the ideals of socialism with the libertarian ideal of personal responsibility. | ||
It just can't work. But, you know, I'm just one guy. | ||
I'm not anybody important. | ||
So, you know, from 2016 on up until, you know, basically just a few weeks ago at the National Convention in Reno, there was, like I said, that big cultural shift within the party leadership, a lot of pandering to Weird, woke ideology, and a lot of people were pissed off. | ||
So some guys got together, they formed the Libertarian Party Mises Caucus, and just campaigned, hit it hard. | ||
And they did basically a clean sweep. | ||
There's a lot more practical, I guess you could probably say, in a lot of ways, the LPMC is It's like if Ron Paul and 4chan had a baby. | ||
They've got the... | ||
Stop it. | ||
Beautiful, beautiful. Stop describing my dreams. | ||
Yeah, yeah. No, that's fascinating. | ||
And it's great to see because I've been so disappointed in the Libertarian Party. | ||
And you're right. I mean, talk about going woke. | ||
I mean, they were all in for Black Lives Matter and all this stuff. | ||
What do you think the future of the Libertarian Party is, Chase? | ||
I mean, do you think it's a viable alternative? | ||
Yeah. Yeah, so I love the Libertarian Party, and I think the challenge that they face is that there's so much infighting, and their resources are so scattered. | ||
So if you look historically speaking, when the Nazis came to power in, I think, 1933 it was, there was only like 1 in 30 or 1 in 40 Germans that were members of the party. | ||
But they consolidated their power in a very focused way, and that they were able to leverage the existing parties once they were in in order to get total control. | ||
We'll be right back. We're on the other side. | ||
unidentified
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You're watching The American Journal with your host, Harrison Smith. | |
Watch live right now at band.video. | ||
Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
We are talking about the Libertarian Party at the moment with Chase Geyser. | ||
And of course, during the break, I just searched Libertarian Party, hit the News tab on Google, and the first response that comes up is, the Libertarian Party goes alt-right. | ||
By embracing bigotry, libertarians are poised to help elect Trump. | ||
So of course that's how it's being phrased, that the libertarians, by refusing to any longer go along with the socialist Trojan horses of Black Lives Matter and others. | ||
The way the media is reading that is the Libertarian Party is going alt-right. | ||
No, they're just sticking to libertarian principles. | ||
But you got cut off there by the break, Jason. | ||
You're talking about a way that sort of the Libertarian Party can take, even though it's sort of small, it is established, it does have name recognition, and it could perhaps use its third-party position to actually stage a takeover of some sort. | ||
Yeah, so if I was running for president under a Libertarian ticket, I would focus my entire campaign efforts, and if I was the leader of the Libertarian Party, I'd focus my entire efforts on Texas alone. | ||
Because we live in an electoral college society. | ||
And if the Libertarians can pose a viable threat to the Republicans' electoral strength in Texas, then they can absolutely leverage all of the Republican Party's policies nationwide. | ||
So they can say, listen, we're going to put all of our resources in running our presidential candidate to get as many Republican votes away from the Republicans as possible in Texas. | ||
And then the party would have to come crawling to the Libertarian Party in order to get endorsement for the candidate. | ||
Right? And so that's how you have to leverage it. | ||
Like, they're running, and Joe Jorgensen's getting 15,000 votes here, 20,000 votes here, 30,000 votes here, all over the United States. | ||
If she would have just campaigned in Texas alone, the whole entire Republican Party would have been forced to change its policies to a more libertarian direction. | ||
So rather than trying to get libertarians to win, they should leverage their power in order to totally transform the Republican Party, in my opinion. | ||
See, that's interesting. But I get a little bit nervous when you... | ||
When you talk like that, because Texas is on the cusp right now, and I don't want to do anything that, as much as I despise large chunks of the Republican Party, I do not want Texas to be Democrat. | ||
So, I mean, what's the danger of drawing votes away from Republicans by focusing on a... | ||
Well, if the Republican Party doesn't concede to the libertarians' demands, then it would be the Republican Party's fault for letting that happen, in my opinion. | ||
I think that radical problems require radical solutions, and we have to start realizing that we're in a fight with two giants, and we need to start throwing stones like David and Goliath. | ||
We need to think smart and consolidate power and hit them where they're weak, and there's tremendous vulnerability right now. | ||
I do think consolidation is the right way to go. | ||
And just looking at it strategically, I always describe it as if you're playing Risk or as if... | ||
I know you play Total War, like the Total War games. | ||
If you've ever played these games, you know you can have a ton of soldiers. | ||
But if they're spread all over the map, they're very ineffective. | ||
In fact, they're just waiting to die. | ||
They're waiting to be attacked and killed. | ||
So if you want to expand, the first thing you do is contract. | ||
The first thing you do is have one area that you can control and protect. | ||
And once you have that battened down, then you expand out from there. | ||
And that's how I feel right now. | ||
There's plenty of patriotic, red-blooded Americans out there that believe in the First Amendment, believe in the Second Amendment, that believe in states' rights and individual rights. | ||
The problem is that everywhere there are these people, almost everywhere they're outnumbered by Democrats. | ||
So it's like if I could wave a magic wand, I'd go everybody who's Republican, you know, alakazam, you now live in Texas. | ||
And so now every conservative, we're in Texas, and Texas will never, in all of history, it will never be anything but Republican, and we can secede from the union and then start from there. | ||
But yeah, I think consolidation has to be the first move. | ||
Yeah, and I think one of the challenges too is that, culturally speaking, the Libertarians in the Libertarian Party are very averse to leadership, right? | ||
Like, I'm a Libertarian, every man's a king in his own castle. | ||
It's the poison pill of this ideology. | ||
And this sort of thing requires a dedication to some leader. | ||
And that's just a challenge. | ||
Like, Ron Paul is a great leader. Dave Smith, I think, is a great leader too. | ||
But these are all informal authorities, right? | ||
These are people that have informally risen among the ranks because of the ideals that they espouse and the things that they have done. | ||
But if either Dave Smith or Ron Paul ever tried to tell a libertarian what to do, they would immediately be alienated, right? | ||
And so that's the challenge. | ||
I think that the libertarians have to realize that if you want more liberty, you're going to have to trust in a leader. | ||
I don't know who that is, but you're going to have to find somebody, you're going to have to trust them, and they're going to have to have the audacity to do some radical things. | ||
You know, you're exactly right, and I always describe it as the Gordian Knot situation. | ||
I mean, when you really dig into the corruption in this country, you realize you can't just start untangling this. | ||
You deal with the education system, you realize that bureaucracy is 10 million people deep and as corrupt as it comes. | ||
But then you've got to deal with the FDA, and that's been corrupt since the 80s. | ||
I mean, it's just so bad. | ||
The solution to the Gordian Knot was, of course, the sword. | ||
You didn't try to untie it. | ||
You just sliced it in half and started over. | ||
So I'm always looking for that sword, and I would love for the Libertarian Party to be that sword, to be able just to slice through the Republican-Democrat paradigm and just set things on the right track. | ||
And I guess there's some good movement in that direction. | ||
So we'll be following up on that. | ||
Any last comments about the Libertarian Party? | ||
I want to take another call from B.S. Sasson, but let's finish up with this. | ||
Yeah, I love the Libertarian Party. | ||
I hope that they continue to grow in power and influence. | ||
And that was a great input from Hobbs there. | ||
Yeah, thanks so much, Hobbs. We appreciate that call. | ||
And maybe we'll reach out to some people. | ||
We're not reaching out to Magetor. | ||
I'm not sure... I'm not sure where you heard that, but we're not reaching out to him. | ||
But I'd love to have any Libertarian Party members. | ||
Maybe after the show, we'll get together with my producer and find some movers and shakers in the Libertarian Party, see if they can come on and make their pitch for us. | ||
But let's go to BS Assassin in New York City. | ||
Mr. Assassin, you are on the air with Chasen Harrison. | ||
I think we must never forget as American people that the protocol for a lung infection was death. | ||
All right? We're moving past this and we need to really look at the empirical evidence which is presented, which I don't know how anybody could come up with any other conclusion that this was the cold and the flu that they caused mass hysteria with. | ||
Cause death and destruction and to change people's perception how we view the cold and the flu. | ||
To terrorize these children by putting masks on them to show that America is on the chopping block and these kids are ready to be subjugated. | ||
Yeah, no, no, you're exactly right. | ||
I mean, I still, I was driving down the street the other day and just started cracking up to myself just thinking about the phrase I read in mainstream media that said the flu took a year off this year. | ||
I mean, Chase, are historians going to be fooled by the smoke and mirrors that we experience? | ||
I have to have hope that 100 years from now, they have to laugh at the idea that we were convinced that the flu took a gap year. | ||
The flu went backpacking around Europe for a year while COVID took its place. | ||
I mean, did people really fall for that? | ||
Yeah, I think they did. They really did, didn't they? | ||
I think they really did. And the thing that's so alarming about it, and this ties into a lot of the issues that we're facing, is that they always say, the leftists always say that it's about safety, safety, safety. | ||
They always say masks for the children's safety, safety. | ||
They always say no high capacity magazines for safety purposes, more regulation for safety purposes. | ||
And it's never about safety. | ||
It's always about control. | ||
And one One way to just poke a hole in it is like, alright, so if you want to lower the capacity of magazines in order for safety to a maximum of seven rounds, so it's okay to kill seven people, just not 30. | ||
You know what I mean? It's never about safety. | ||
They're just trying to weaken people. | ||
81% of mass shootings are done with handguns, not with AR-15s. | ||
Why are they going after the AR-15? | ||
They're going after the AR-15 because it's the weapon that you use in the advent of a war against tyranny. | ||
Right, right, right. It's a rifle, right? | ||
It's a long-range weapon. | ||
And the only reason these mass shooters use AR-15s when they do is because it's intimidating. | ||
It's not actually more effective than a handgun. | ||
Like, if you walk into any public situation with a handgun and you know how to reload, you're probably more dangerous because no one's going to grab the barrel of the handgun like they could, like the AR or something, right? | ||
Right, right. It's never actually about safety. | ||
It's never because they actually care about you. | ||
It's because they want to subjugate you. | ||
But this is what gets so frustrating is it's the same thing over and over and over and over again. | ||
I don't know if you saw where I did the flowchart, but it's like whether it's baby formula or mental health or the lockdowns, their proposals make everything worse. | ||
They... Make claims about public safety, but the public gets less safe and tyranny comes about. | ||
It's so frustrating that the Democrats just fall for it over and over again. | ||
Are they just that stupid, Chase, or do they know what's happening and they're going along with it willingly? | ||
I think there's an element of both. | ||
I think that most Americans don't have the time to really look into stuff. | ||
If you're a struggling family of four and you're making the average household income, which I think is like $63,000 or something of that nature, then you don't have time to go down rabbit holes for three hours a night to figure out what's really going on. | ||
You don't have time to investigate the Great Reset, to figure out who Klaus Schwab Because you're working two jobs, and so is your spouse, and your kids are who knows where. | ||
So the only thing you have to believe are the headlines that get pumped to your phone that are all lies. | ||
Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen, to the American Journal. | ||
I'm your host Harrison Smith, brought to you by the finest crew that God ever put on this green earth. | ||
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With that, we go back to my guest, Chase Geyser. | ||
Chase, tonight, are you excited to tune in to the next episode in the reality TV show of the greatest show trial ever put on the January 6th committee hearing? | ||
Any predictions for what we're going to hear tonight? | ||
Lies, lies, and more lies. | ||
But we're not going to hear anything about Ray Epps, are we? | ||
We're probably not going to hear anything about Ray Epps, rather. | ||
I know because we watched it together, the previous one. | ||
I mean, what's your takeaway from what's happening with January 6th show trial? | ||
Well, first of all, I think it's an attempt for the legislative branch to be the judicial branch. | ||
Right. And we're seeing all of the powers of the judicial branch without any of the rules that the judicial branch is required to follow, right? | ||
So there's no cross-examination. | ||
There's no right to defense. There's no alternative argument being made. | ||
We are just seeing opening and closing statements of the prosecution, and that is it. | ||
It's political grandstanding. | ||
It's trash. I can't believe my tax dollars are being used to hire Hollywood producers in order to shame me and the likes of me and other people who believe in America. | ||
You know, I think that there were mistakes that were made on January 6th, but I think the biggest mistakes that were made on January 6th were all the protesters that were killed by the government. | ||
Right. And the fact that I firmly believe, I agree with Darren Beattie, that it was a setup. | ||
I think that it was the feds. | ||
Just totally coaxing the whole thing. | ||
You can see the footage of Ray Epps. | ||
And the whole thing is a total travesty. | ||
It makes me sick. And it's like a car accident, Harrison. | ||
When you drive by, you don't want to look, but you can't look away. | ||
So I'm going to watch it. You can't help but... | ||
Yeah, well, because, you know, and part of it is that they, you know, so many friends of ours, you know, people that have been in our show and stuff, went and gave testimony behind closed doors in secret, you know, committee meetings. | ||
And now they're picking and choosing what part of those videos to show. | ||
So it's almost like you got to watch to go. | ||
We don't know what... What statement from who is going to be aired? | ||
The whole time I was sitting there watching going, oh God, they're about to show me on Infowars. | ||
Because I interviewed Stuart Rhodes days before January 6th. | ||
So I expect I'll make an appearance at some point on there. | ||
So it's almost like you have to watch just to see who's going to be there and what's going to be involved. | ||
Boy, it makes for some great hate-watching, just fury-watching these scumbags parade in front of us. | ||
But it's so funny, because you're exactly right. | ||
January 6th panelist, enough evidence uncovered to indict Trump. | ||
Well, I have enough evidence to indict Adam Schiff. | ||
Here's the problem that he and I share. | ||
Neither one of us have the ability to indict somebody for a criminal offense. | ||
So just because you're a congressman doesn't mean you have the rights of the judiciary all of a sudden. | ||
So it's not just that, as you say, they're acting like the judiciary. | ||
That's what they're saying. They are saying that they are going to turn this into a criminal investigation. | ||
Horrific. Yeah, I think they're doing everything they can to prevent any hope for Trump to be reelected in 2024. | ||
I think he's gonna run and I think he's gonna win, frankly. | ||
But this is an ongoing effort for the establishment political class, both right wing and left wing, to prevent any outsiders from ever coming into power again. | ||
They did everything they could while he was in power to lie about him, to cheat him. | ||
And frankly, don't forget that in 2016, they said the election was illegitimate. | ||
They said it was Russian collusion, which is now known to be a proven lie. | ||
And there's footage of Hillary Clinton saying that she believed he was an illegitimate president, right? | ||
But she never had—there was no Hillary Clinton trial, and it's probably because it would show that all the politicians are culpable for all the crimes that Hillary Clinton committed, right? | ||
Yeah, yeah. Her tenure, so— Just on that note, while you bring it up, people are confused at how the Clintons have so much power and why they will never be held to account. | ||
I don't think they understand that the Clintons are in the CIA. They're CIA operators. | ||
They're involved in networks and criminality that involves just everybody in the deep state. | ||
Everybody from Nancy Pelosi to Chuck Schumer and everybody in between. | ||
You're not going to get Hillary Clinton and Bill Clinton because they're just agents of the apparatus that controls the justice system. | ||
So it's never going to happen. | ||
And they'll kill you. Right, and they'll kill you. | ||
Wasn't there a guy last week they found that was associated with the Clintons hanging from a tree with shotguns? | ||
He was shot with a shotgun several times. | ||
Yeah, shot himself in the chest while hanging from a tree. | ||
Yeah, come on. I mean, yeah, they'll kill you. | ||
Right. And they'll let you know. | ||
Like, they'll do it in such a way that it's like... | ||
It's an insult and it's a threat, really. | ||
So I guess tonight is going to be the headline from the Hill is Trump's big lie takes center stage in 2nd January 6th hearing. | ||
Again, do people believe that Trump just came up with this on his own and that everybody is a cult member who just believes him without question? | ||
I mean, was it Trump? | ||
First of all, do you think the 2020 election was legitimate? | ||
I was on the fence until I saw 2,000 mules. | ||
And now I absolutely do think that it was stolen illegally. | ||
Yes. But not because you listened to Trump. | ||
This is the bizarre thing to me. We saw with our own eyes the corruption happened. | ||
We saw with our own eyes the election being stolen. | ||
But for some reason, they've convinced everybody that it was just an idea Trump came up with. | ||
What's behind this? Well, and here's the thing. | ||
Of course the left thinks that it's one man's rhetoric that's responsible for the behavior of millions of people. | ||
Because the left doesn't realize that individuals can make decisions or think for themselves. | ||
They don't even believe that they should make decisions or think for themselves. | ||
So like, oh, everything that happens. | ||
And frankly, we were watching the January 6th thing together. | ||
And you remember the testimony of the documentarian? | ||
Yeah. You know, oh, it was before Trump spoke and we were already on our way to the Capitol. | ||
So it's like, obviously his speech didn't incite anything that happened because people were already heading to the Capitol to protest before he even spoke. | ||
It's just a bunch of baloney. | ||
Total cognitive. Frankly, I think Biden and NATO have incited way more violence this year than Trump did in the entirety of 2016 to 2020. | ||
I mean, we literally gave $40 billion to Nazis. | ||
Self-proclaimed Nazis. Like, how is that not the incitement of violence? | ||
No, yeah, we literally started the war. | ||
No, you're exactly right. | ||
The people who... Left Iraq and Libya and Syria and Afghanistan smoking craters and just ruinous disasters are telling us that a quick jaunt through the Capitol is the end of the world. | ||
I mean, it's so insane. | ||
And, you know, we're watching. | ||
They don't actually prove anything. | ||
You don't think they're actually going to... | ||
I think that their strategy over the next several weeks is to draw this out so they can get as much publicity as possible up until the midterms. | ||
I think that's really what's going on here. | ||
And what they're gonna do is they're gonna nitpick testimonies, and they're going to use a lot of hearsay examples, or I heard the president say this, or I heard the president say that, and they're gonna try to make everything look out of context and really bad, and they're gonna try to make him look like a sore loser who lied and was totally wrong, and try to leverage the powers of the executive branch in order to overthrow the legitimate election of Joe Biden. | ||
They're going to make all this crap up, and they're going to push it, and they're going to push it in hopes that the damage can be mitigated on them in the fall, this year, 2022 midterm elections. | ||
And frankly, their lies are going to lead them to no salvation, because I think everyone's figured out that they're just totally full of crap. | ||
Yeah, I don't think it's going to work. And the stories from last time, made-for-TV hearings are a ratings disaster. | ||
So nobody actually tuned into this and watched it. | ||
I think even if you did tune in and watch it, it wasn't convincing. | ||
It wasn't... Even if I believed what the committee was proposing in the first place, it wouldn't have been something that I could point to and go, ha, see? | ||
They're proving what we know to be true. | ||
They weren't proving anything. | ||
It was really kind of an embarrassment. | ||
Do you think it's going to backfire, or do you think it's going to be successful? | ||
I don't think anybody's going to watch it. | ||
I think it's going to create a lot of great content for the Democratic Party to use in ads over the next couple of years. | ||
And I think that's why they have the Hollywood producer coming in. | ||
It's like C-SPAN on steroids, right? | ||
It's like C-SPAN with a producer, right? | ||
Right, right, right. And so I think that's really what's going on. | ||
But frankly, I think people would rather go see Top Gun Maverick than... | ||
Yeah, I think so too. | ||
And the number show, right? Yeah, I think it's going to backfire as well. | ||
as well. | ||
But we'll wait and see. | ||
We'll watch it today and tune in tomorrow and you'll see the rebuttal to the prosecution. | ||
Again, Chase Geyser is my guest. | ||
OneAmericanPodcast.com is where you go to find his podcast. | ||
It's also on YouTube. | ||
He's on Twitter at Real Chase Geyser. | ||
Thanks so much for coming and joining us, Chase. | ||
Honor and a pleasure to be here, Harrison. | ||
Do you have any guests coming up that you want to preview? | ||
I don't have any book right now. Okay. | ||
You just know who you get, and if they're good, we'll snipe them from you. | ||
Folks, go watch Chase's interviews. | ||
They're extremely entertaining. | ||
And go watch his Trump documentary as well. | ||
That's free on YouTube. Share these links. | ||
Go to band.video, share these interviews, and tune in tonight for the big show trial. | ||
I want to take a minute out. | ||
To address the viewers and listeners of InfoWars and to remind you that we've been vindicated and that world government and its tyrannical aim of depopulation is now out of the open. | ||
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The internet and talk radio are on fire with the slogan, Alex Jones was right. | ||
People ask, what's it like to be vindicated? | ||
Well, it's actually a very sick feeling because I knew this was coming. | ||
I tried to stop it. | ||
And now everything I've talked about is going to become more important than ever because the globalists aren't hiding it anymore in policy reports and documents. | ||
It's now out in the open. | ||
Klaus Schwab said last week that they rule the earth. | ||
The Bilderberg Group founded Davos Group. | ||
So now The fight's out in the open. | ||
They're making their move because they know they're behind schedule. | ||
We're going to win this thing. God's watching. | ||
The children are counting on us. | ||
I just want to thank the viewers and listeners for your word of mouth and your prayer and your financial support because without you, InfoWars would not be here. | ||
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I don't care if you work in a cafeteria or pump gas or whether you're a farmer, a rancher, a doctor, a lawyer, or a millionaire. | ||
Fortune and Money Magazine have all done these profiles. | ||
You see it every year. 30 different tax returns, 30 different answers. | ||
50 different tax returns, 50 different answers. | ||
And almost all of them just screw you over, especially the big firms and the big tax groups, because they're part of the system and they don't want the general public understanding this and knowing this. | ||
So it's a very important situation with inflation and all the things out there hurting everybody to be able to do things tax-wise that's legal and lawful that allows you to keep all your money. | ||
We wouldn't even be here if I hadn't gotten great tax advice in the last few years. |