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You're tuned in to the American Journal with your host, Harrison Smith. | |
Maybe the establishment doesn't know it due to their narcissism and their symbiotic CDC, FDA, Pfizer, cash cow that they're shooting up into their veins. Pfizer, cash cow that they're shooting up into their veins. | ||
But no matter how many bots try to prop it up on Twitter, the world is no longer buying the vaccine lockdown great reset prison planet lie anymore. | ||
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Many Americans are under-vaccinated, meaning they are not up to date on their COVID-19 vaccines. | |
Not all people over the age of 50 have received their first booster dose. | ||
Of those who received their first booster dose, only 28% of those over 50 have received a second booster dose. | ||
And of those over the age of 65, only 34% have received their second booster dose. | ||
So my message right now is very simple. | ||
It's essential that these Americans, as Dr. | ||
Shah said, get their second booster shot right away. | ||
Everybody wants to put this pandemic behind us and feel and hope that it doesn't exist. | ||
The Johns Hopkins pandemic study showed that the lockdowns did more harm than good. | ||
Hundreds of people under 40 are going into cardiac arrest and suffering from sudden adult death syndrome. | ||
athletes are dying countless vaccine injuries and deaths are all over twitter media and advertising panic as blood clot gas lighting is coming out of the woodwork stillbirth numbers are skyrocketing while the ineffective vaccines themselves can't compete with natural immunity and recently a swedish study revealed what had been relegated to conspiracy theory to be absolutely horribly true | ||
The first demonstration in a human hepatic or liver cell line that the Pfizer vaccine in fact reverse transcribes and installs DNA into the human genome. | ||
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Basically, there's an enzyme that can take that messenger RNA vaccine information and put it into the DNA of the person. | |
The spike proteins and the chemicals in these shots are breaking down the blood-brain barrier. | ||
And as that gets broken, we can actually measure something called tau proteins, spelled T-A-U, tau proteins in the blood as an acute independent marker of cognitive dysfunction. | ||
So these people that you're seeing That can't talk, can't finish sentences, are really grasping for different types of things that they didn't do before. | ||
And this is just one element of the neurocognitive decline. | ||
The other is the cardiovascular markers and what we're seeing with myocarditis. | ||
I wrote another article on my substack about myocarditis. | ||
And all of these things are happening. | ||
And Alex, these are just two of 1,100 different things. | ||
To add to the massive violation of the Nuremberg Code, even the masks not only never worked, but research is now showing that masks don't protect you but may actually make you sick. | ||
Using CDC data, researchers with the University of Louisville calculated total COVID-19 case growth and mask use for the U.S. | ||
No significant differences were found in case growth between mandate and non-mandate states during periods of low or high transmission. | ||
The widespread use of masks did not reduce COVID-19 transmission in Europe. | ||
COVID-19 case rates in Kansas, counties with a mask mandate, had significantly higher COVID-19 case fatality rates than counties without a mask mandate. | ||
One way masks cause harm may be the Fogan effect. | ||
The idea that deep re-inhalation of droplets and virions caught on face masks might make COVID-19 infection more likely or more severe. | ||
In fact, Dr. Shana Swan, a professor of environmental medicine and public health at Mount Sinai Health System, warned in a book that phthalates, a chemical commonly used in the manufacturing of plastics, can shrink penises And decrease male fertility. | ||
Fauci and company need to prepare for the inevitable repercussions they cannot escape. | ||
Everyone knows or will soon know that the entire pandemic response has been a blatant ruse that created 500 new billionaires, crippled our economy, Good morning, | ||
ladies and gentlemen. Welcome to the program. | ||
This is the American Journal. Welcome. | ||
If you're watching us on AppleWords.com or Band.Video, please do share the links. | ||
The live links, of course, are a fantastic thing to share. | ||
Also, download and share the videos at Band.Video. | ||
Whatever you can do to help spread the word, we so appreciate it. | ||
As folks, we're all in this together. | ||
It's the good, normal people versus just the agents of hypocrisy. | ||
And that'll be a pretty major theme throughout the show today. | ||
Just the shameless hypocrisy of... | ||
These people, my goodness, it's real bad. | ||
I mean, it's hilarious, and they deserve to be shamed for it, but I don't know if they have that particular emotion, so we'll just have to laugh at them instead. | ||
We'll be joined by Robert Wright in the third hour to talk about what the Fed is doing and what we can expect to happen when the bubble bursts, you might say. | ||
What is the future of inflation and collapse? | ||
And, of course, we have lots and lots of videos to show you, so let's just get right into it. | ||
to it. | ||
Here it is, your daily dispatch. | ||
All right, here it is, folks, your daily dispatch for Thursday, the 14th of July 2022. | ||
too. | ||
A first in our series on hypocrisy. | ||
New York Times defends January 6th provocateur Ray Epps as, quote, a victim of conspiracy theory. | ||
That's right. How dare you smear this upstanding domestic terrorist as an FBI agent? | ||
The New York Times wants you to know this man is not an FBI agent. | ||
How dare you float that conspiracy theory? | ||
He is a domestic terrorist that should spend the rest of his life in prison. | ||
So they want to make it very clear that they're not okay with Ray Epps being called an FBI informant or activist or agent provocateur. | ||
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He just wanted to storm the Capitol. | |
He just wanted to innocently take over the United States and cause an insurrection and destroy democracy. | ||
So how dare you frame him as an FBI agent? | ||
The man is a domestic terrorist and you will treat him with the respect he deserves. | ||
I'm confused. I really am confused by all of this. | ||
They're bemoaning the fact that Ray Epps has been accused of being an FBI agent because he's on video very explicitly encouraging violence at the Capitol, encouraging them to go into the Capitol. | ||
And of course, at the time, he was called a Fed. | ||
I mean, this wasn't something that people came up with later. | ||
It was happening in real time on the video on January 5th, the day before the We're good to go. | ||
But is this something that, like, you can sue people to their immediate reaction to your behavior? | ||
I don't know. I don't know if it is, right? | ||
You say something like, let's go into the Capitol, the people around you go, that sounds like you're a Fed, and then you're going to, what, sue them for that? | ||
How dare you? Think about what I'm saying. | ||
It's just incredible. The story is at Infowars.com. | ||
New York Times defends January 6th provocator Ray Epps as victim of conspiracy theory. | ||
The New York Times inexplicably came to the defense of January 6th provocator Ray Epps on Wednesday, characterizing him as a victim of a conspiracy theory that he was involved in the riot as an asset for the federal government on that day in Washington. | ||
Yeah, I mean, to me, the biggest evidence that Ray Epps is in fact a federal agent is that the New York Times wrote an article defending him. | ||
I mean, come on, guys. | ||
Come on, folks. Like, the deep state, it's getting a little sloppy. | ||
It's getting a little desperate. It's getting a little confused. | ||
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This is the work of a junior propagandist. | |
Yeah. New York Times has had to fire so many of their other writers. | ||
Yeah, deep state agent in training. | ||
You know, please, please show deference. | ||
It's just incredible. | ||
The Times first had to admit that Epps did in fact encourage people to breach the Capitol building because he was, you know, caught on video doing so, but downplayed his role, knocking down the barriers that the paper itself reported culminated in the first major breach of the Capitol at 12.50 p.m. | ||
Now, the not funny part about this, the real hypocrisy of this, is of course they are bemoaning the fact that this man has had his life disrupted by the fact that he very suspiciously incited people to charge the Capitol, was put on a... Wanted list for the capital and then was removed without ever being arrested and his name was never mentioned by the January 6th committee. | ||
All of these very suspicious things and his life has been ruined because, you know, people saw this and recognized what was going on and that's very bad. | ||
Not a single story in the New York Times about people who have been in solitary confinement for a year. | ||
For doing less than Ray Epps. | ||
Who's the real victim here? | ||
Who do they really care about? | ||
Who is the victim of the conspiracy theory? | ||
The conspiracy theory on, you know, evidence right now is the January 6th conspiracy committee who is desperately trying to draw lines between people that aren't connected and show evidence of collusion that didn't take place and establish a narrative of a conspiracy between the Proud Boys and the Oath Keepers and Donald Trump and probably Vladimir Putin They're the conspiracy theorists, and they aren't just ruining people's lives. | ||
They are killing people. | ||
People have committed suicide because of their actions. | ||
People have been incredibly injured and developed sicknesses in prison, being kept behind bars for a year without trial based on their conspiracy theory. | ||
So, again, it's something beyond hypocrisy. | ||
It's just something like unrepentant evil that we're dealing with here. | ||
But on the note of hypocrisy here, drama queen AOC claims she was going to deck comedian who catcalled her on the Capitol steps, which is just incredible. | ||
Of course, that comedian who catcalled her is the one and only Alex Stein. | ||
And let's go ahead and watch the video of Alex Stein, this, again, domestic terrorist assaulting AOC. Let's watch. | ||
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AOC, my favorite big booty Latina. | |
I love you, AOC. You're my favorite. | ||
She wants to kill babies, but she's still beautiful. | ||
You look very beautiful in that dress. | ||
You look very sexy. Look at that booty on AOC. That's my favorite big booty Latina. | ||
I want to do a little selfie. | ||
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I love it. My favorite, AOC. Nice to meet you, AOC. Look how sexy she looks in that dress! | |
Woo! I love it, AOC! Hot, hot, hot like a tamale! | ||
Oh, my God. Oh, dear. | ||
What are we going to do? AOC? Yes, AOC. Yes, Alex Stein attempts to rape AOC on the steps of the Capitol. | ||
You heard it here first, folks. | ||
AOC, that was an attempted rape. | ||
We know how, you know... | ||
Sensitive AOC is about this stuff. | ||
When she's in her own office, in a locked bathroom a block away from other people wandering through the Capitol, she considers that a rape attempt. | ||
So, I mean, I can only imagine what she thinks happened between her and Alex Stein. | ||
We're actually going to talk quite a bit about this a little bit later. | ||
But just know, AOC is not shy and is not coy about the fact that she encourages people to... | ||
To harass people like the Supreme Court justices, to harass her political opponents when they're out eating dinner, when they're just in their personal lives, when they're at home. | ||
When it happens to her, however, she demands the Capitol Police commit violence on the person talking to her. | ||
The person saying, quote, I love you, AOC. You're my favorite. | ||
Oh, no! So you've got, like, masked hordes of communists like, ah, we're gonna kill you, Justice Kavanaugh, we're gonna kill you! | ||
And she's like, well, maybe you shouldn't have tried to take away abortion rights. | ||
You deserve this, and go get him, boys. | ||
And then you have somebody going, hey, I love you, AOC. And she flips out and is like, where are the Capitol Police and why are they not beating this man? | ||
Why are they not severely beating this activist? | ||
I'll beat him myself if I have to. | ||
I'm not joking. That's literally what she said. | ||
She literally claimed that she was going up to Alex Stein to, quote, deck him. | ||
She was going to fight Alex Stein. | ||
I'm for it. I think we're going to try to get out... | ||
Actually, Alex Stein is doing Marjorie Taylor Greene's podcast today, but we're going to try to get him on tomorrow. | ||
And... Maybe we'll set up a boxing match. | ||
Maybe AOC and Alex Stein can get into the ring together. | ||
I mean, she's going to deck him. | ||
She's so sure that she can beat him up. | ||
Let's see it happen. Wow, I've really rambled on this one. | ||
This is a long daily dispatch, so I'm going to hold over to the other side. | ||
But boy, when you get the New York Times defending Ray Epps and AOC flipping out about somebody going up to her and saying, I love you, while she's on a public street... | ||
Sometimes you really have to just delve in. | ||
You really have to dive into the deep end on these and savor it and sort of float around like you're in a hot tub, just enjoying the atmosphere of this insane hypocrisy that goes completely unnoticed by the wider American public. | ||
It's baffling. | ||
It's confusing. It's infuriating. | ||
It's also hilarious. | ||
We'll finish up The Daily Dispatch on the other side, and I'll go faster this time, I promise. | ||
unidentified
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Stay tuned. Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | |
Continuing on with our Daily Dispatch here. | ||
It turns out that the story of the 10-year-old girl who had to drive for an hour to get an abortion, which apparently was a violation of human rights and unconscionable overreach by the American government. | ||
But also an extremely suspicious story begging the question, how many 10-year-olds get abortions that we don't hear about in this country? | ||
And are the abortionists providing these abortions and then not reporting it and just sending the children back to the people who impregnated them? | ||
I mean, is this not a horror beyond description that we should... | ||
Be taking a bigger look at. | ||
Begged a lot of questions. | ||
Raised a lot of eyebrows. Of course caused a lot of outrage. | ||
Not about the rape of course. | ||
Not about the... Impregnating a child, not about then forcing that child to get an abortion. | ||
All of that is perfectly peachy keen and fine. | ||
It's the fact that they had to drive across state lines to make that happen, which, of course, is actually not true. | ||
And according to Ohio law, she was actually eligible for an abortion in Ohio, so she didn't even have to Have to leave anyway. | ||
So none of what they said was true, except apparently there was a 10-year-old. | ||
We now have confirmation there was a 10-year-old who was impregnated via rape. | ||
It's just the guy who did it was an illegal alien. | ||
So they don't want to talk about it anymore. | ||
They're done talking about it. | ||
They're like, never mind. Well, never mind about all that. | ||
That was fine. That whole situation, forget about it. | ||
Stop talking about it. | ||
Why are you still talking about it? Why are you so obsessed about this story of a 10-year-old? | ||
We don't care. We never brought it up. | ||
Incredible. Illegal alien charged in the rape of a 10-year-old girl who traveled for an abortion. | ||
An illegal alien is accused of raping a 10-year-old girl whose story was cited by President Joe Biden after she traveled from Ohio to Indiana to seek an abortion. | ||
Gershon Fuentes, a 27-year-old illegal alien, was arraigned in court on Wednesday after he was arrested and charged. | ||
He allegedly admitted to raping the 10-year-old girl on two occasions in Columbus, Ohio. | ||
The girl traveled to Indianapolis, Indiana to get an abortion. | ||
A saliva sample was collected from Fuentes at the time of his arrest. | ||
And detectives said the DNA samples from him and from the girl's siblings are being tested to verify the felony charges. | ||
So again, you know, I just think, I think maybe the solution to all of this is to charge the people responsible for the border with the crimes committed by the illegal aliens that they let in. | ||
I mean, if you hire a security guard to protect your family and instead of protecting the family at night, he secretly unlocks the door for his friends so they can come in and rape your 10 year old daughter and then lets them out again and didn't act like he doesn't know what's going on. | ||
You know, wouldn't you hold him at least a bit responsible, not just for failing to uphold his duty in protecting your family, but actually contributing to and facilitating the act? | ||
That would be, I think, a pretty fair legal response because God only knows how many times this type of thing happens in America these days that we don't hear about unless it can be twisted and used conveniently to progress the narratives of the Democrats. | ||
Who are just absolutely shameless about standing on the dead and raped corpses of children to tell you what a bad person you are. | ||
It is really incredible. | ||
Meanwhile, the U.S. and Israel signed a joint pledge to deny Iran nuclear weaponry, which is a pretty tame way of saying that Joe Biden has promised proactive military measures against the nation of Iran on the basis of wanting to deny them a nuclear weapon. which is a pretty tame way of saying that Joe U.S. President Joe Biden and Israeli Prime Minister Yar Lapid signed a joint pledge on Thursday to deny Iran nuclear arms, a show of unity by allies long divided over diplomacy with Tehran. | ||
The undertaking, part of a Jerusalem decoration crowning Biden's first visit to Israel as president, came a day after he told local TV station he was open to last resort use of force against Iran, an apparent move towards accommodating Israel's call for a credible military threat by world powers. | ||
Aren't we just so blessed to have them as our allies? | ||
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Thank you. | |
What would America do without Israel? | ||
Can you even imagine the last 20 years without the Iraq war, without the war in Syria, without the conflict with Russia that that has inspired? | ||
I mean, what would we do without Israel getting us into these horrific, deadly wars and conflicts that we have absolutely no interest as Americans in? | ||
It's really a great question to ask yourself. | ||
So yeah, they... Biden basically came out and said that we will go to war with Iran if they try to develop a nuclear weapon, which is fun. | ||
How did Israel get its nuclear weapons? | ||
That's a question nobody seems to care about. | ||
Los Angeles DA George Gascon moves to dissolve division that notifies victims of attackers' parole hearings. | ||
I might have to spend a little bit longer on this later in the program because, again, you just really have to delve in. | ||
You have to dig into these sorts of stories and really think about it and consider what exactly they're saying. | ||
So the Parole Division Bureau of Prosecution Support Operations, whose job it is to notify the victims of a crime when the parole hearing is scheduled for the perpetrator, has been disbanded, or at least he's moved to disband this organization. | ||
The George Soros-backed DA told members of the group they will continue working through October, but that starting in November there will not be any forthcoming assignments. | ||
So as I understand this and as I read this, A parole hearing happens once somebody has been in prison for a little while and served the minimum sentence and is eligible for parole. | ||
Then they go in front of the parole board and at the time they can make their case for why they should be let out. | ||
But at the same time, the people's victims can come forward and say why they shouldn't be let out. | ||
So this is just stacking the deck in favor of the parolee or of the prisoner and denying the victims their right to have a say in the justice system. | ||
It is pushing the victims of the criminals off to the side and giving the criminals the benefit of the doubt. | ||
So it's a more one-sided argument in front of the parole board in hopes that the parole will be successful and they'll be allowed to go out. | ||
And of course, you know, not only will they not be able to Actually, you know, write a letter to the parole board and say, hey, this guy should not get out. | ||
He's destroyed my family. My life has been ruined forever. | ||
I'm still suffering the consequences. | ||
He should not be out of jail because I think he's going to do this again. | ||
So it denies you that right to do that, but it also makes it more difficult to even know that the person may be getting parole and may be out on the streets. | ||
So wouldn't that be a shock to think that your victimizer, your, you know, the person who You know, beat you or attempted to murder you or robbed you or whatever it is. | ||
Is it just out on the street and you had no idea? | ||
I didn't even know he was up for parole. | ||
Well, that's because we explicitly went out of our way to hide that from you. | ||
Because we're evil people that love criminals and hate everybody else. | ||
Pretty much is how that works. | ||
And of course, this is all perfectly in line with the ongoing communist revolution taking place in this country. | ||
As you may know... | ||
Alexander Solzhenitsyn wrote about this in the Gulag Archippel, talking about pro-social and anti-social crimes. | ||
Essentially, if you rob somebody or murder somebody, that is a pro-social crime, because it's not your fault. | ||
You're a victim of the circumstances. | ||
It's just the mindset held by all these people. | ||
It's not your fault that you're a criminal. | ||
It's big bad capitalism for not giving you everything you want, and so you have to go take it for yourself. | ||
And these types of crimes are punished far, far less, and actually in some cases rewarded, compared to crimes like disagreeing with the state. | ||
Like saying things that the state doesn't like, that will get you sent to the gulag. | ||
Murdering somebody or robbing somebody, that gets you sent to the gulag, but as a counselor, as a camp counselor at the gulag, right? | ||
As a gulag guard. | ||
This is what actually happened in... | ||
Russia and the Soviet Union. | ||
And it's what's going to happen here because we're being run by communist criminals. | ||
Couldn't be more obvious. We'll be right back. | ||
Alright folks, welcome back. | ||
I have to say, Alex Stein, what a king. | ||
What a king amongst men. | ||
Every time you think that he's topped himself, he just, you know... | ||
He starts off on one thing and then he moves to the next. | ||
Not a lot of people can come up with so many different ways to make viral content. | ||
Whether it's his skits and his raps that he does at the city council meeting or the interactions that he has with Antifa on the streets. | ||
But now he's trolling the members of Congress in really the most brilliant way ever. | ||
I gotta give him kudos, because I wouldn't have even thought to do it this way, but honestly, watching the video, it's like, this is brilliant. | ||
How can you complain about what he's saying? | ||
He's literally complimenting and saying I love you to people like AOC, and... | ||
Getting the exact hysterical outrage that he expected, despite it being completely unwarranted. | ||
He's not attacking anybody. | ||
He's not even being mean to them. | ||
He's not scowling at them. | ||
He's not targeting them for anything. | ||
He's literally saying, I love you, my big booty Latina. | ||
Which, of course, AOC says is racist. | ||
It's also stupid. | ||
So we'll show you the video again from Alex Stein and then show you AOC's response, which is just as petulant, hysterical, obnoxious, and hypocritical as you can possibly imagine. | ||
Stories at Gateway Pundit. | ||
Drama Queen AOC claims she was going to deck comedian who catcalled her on the Capitol steps. | ||
Here's a video of what really happened. | ||
Here's her threatening to deck. | ||
I'm going to deck Alex Stein. | ||
Really? Six, six foot tall dude. | ||
You're going to deck him? | ||
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Is that right? AOC, my favorite big booty Latina. | |
I love you, AOC. You're my favorite. | ||
She wants to kill babies, but she's still beautiful. | ||
You look very beautiful in that dress. | ||
You look very sexy. Look at that booty on AOC. That's my favorite big booty Latina. | ||
Why don't you do a little selfie? I love it. | ||
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My favorite, AOC. Nice to meet you, AOC. Look how sexy she looks in that dress. | |
Ooh, I love it, AOC. Hot, hot, hot like a tamale. | ||
Obnoxious? Yeah, yeah, yeah. | ||
Inappropriate? Debatably. | ||
Hilarious? Absolutely. | ||
Threatening? No, not in the slightest. | ||
Scary? Yeah. | ||
She didn't look very scared right there as she stops and turns around and comes towards the person catcalling her. | ||
I mean, just compare that. To what you've seen from leftist organizations, whether it's the ones, you know, firing at the softball game with Rand Paul and the other representatives there, or trying to assault Rand Paul and his wife. | ||
As they attempt to leave the White House and are actually having to scuffle and physically fight with the crowds attempting to lynch them in the streets. | ||
Or the scenes that we don't have video of because Antifa attacks people who try to video them. | ||
But the recent occurrences of things like the Supreme Court justices having to flee out the back door of restaurants because angry mobs of mass communists threaten to disrupt their Daily business and commit violence on them. | ||
And of course, in all of these cases, AOC is absolutely in favor of the activists. | ||
Absolutely in favor of the protesters and the intimidators and the attackers. | ||
She thinks it's great. She thinks it's deserved. | ||
She thinks it is valid political expression to intimidate, harass, and assault her political opponents. | ||
But when somebody compliments her, she's mad the Capitol Police didn't beat him. | ||
She's on the spot right there, right? | ||
This very upstanding. | ||
She loves democracy, free speech. | ||
Hey, this is what you get. | ||
This is what you get. | ||
And then it's like someone's like, hey, I love your big butt. | ||
And she's just like, where are the police and why are they not beating this man? | ||
Do I have to beat this man myself? | ||
I will beat this man myself. | ||
And if he touches me, he will go to jail for the rest of life as a terrorist, okay? | ||
I mean, she's so hysterical, so hypocritical, so... | ||
Incapable of having, even pretending to hold a singular view. | ||
Here, of course, it's her jumping up and down like a child. | ||
You know, telling people to go assault verbally or physically, whatever. | ||
Just get in the face of and harass her political opponents. | ||
She is all in favor of that. | ||
Just how dare you? | ||
How dare you do it to her? | ||
So let's watch her video response now. | ||
Clip number 16. Here's AOC's response to this harrowing moment when Alex Stein attempted to murder her on the streets of the Capitol. | ||
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Let's watch. Hey everybody, I'm here in the Capitol. | |
See this guy right there? | ||
Right there. He waved. | ||
When I was walking up, he said, hey, right in front of a Capitol Police officer, hey, Here's this, look at that big ass, look at that big juicy booty, this Latino, like whatever. You know, all the bunch of racist, sexist stuff. | ||
Oh yeah, racist, sexist stuff. | ||
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Yeah, that's what it was. Nobody can do anything. | |
What do you want them to do? Because this institution is not designed to protect people. | ||
She's like me. It should be designed to protect me. | ||
And it's really hard and it's really sad that my only recourse is to just let you know about it, but... | ||
Yeah, that's it. | ||
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That's the institution we're in. | |
Oh my God. You're so brave. | ||
You're so strong. | ||
You're such a victim. | ||
unidentified
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What should the institution do, my lady? | |
They should beat the man on the steps of the Capitol. | ||
Matt, they should throw him in the gulag. | ||
They should put him in jail. | ||
They should take away his bank account. | ||
What shouldn't they do? | ||
unidentified
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The shortcoming of the institution itself. | |
Yes, it's the institution. | ||
unidentified
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I was surprised she didn't drop a systemically on us or... | |
Well, institutionally, systemically, the point is that their conception of the Congress or the function of government is that they deserve total and complete protection, total privacy, total... | ||
Separation from the people that they rule over while they should be allowed to stick their own little communist black shirts on anybody who disagrees with them. | ||
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I think what I liked most about that is when she's totally started that live stream you could tell she didn't quite know what she was gonna say she was like Um, this guy down here, by the way, he... | |
He's just waving. He's just way far away, like, hey! | ||
He's so funny. But it's the perfect, like, Alex Steiner has the perfect, like, attitude for it. | ||
He's smiling. He's not even, like, looking at him. | ||
Like, he doesn't approach her. | ||
He's actually standing away. She approaches him. | ||
And then he sort of, you know, returns the approach. | ||
And she's like, I was gonna deck him. | ||
I was going to physically beat him because the police wouldn't beat him for me. | ||
unidentified
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Does he get a restraining order on her? | |
On her? Yeah, well, yeah. | ||
Alex, that would be funny. | ||
unidentified
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Alex died. You should file for one. | |
File for a restraining order. But let's see. | ||
Let's see. Hold on. We got one more video to play. | ||
Let's go to clip number 14. AOC talking about the Capitol Police. | ||
And again, she literally looks like a preschool child in this. | ||
I don't know who's filming it, but they're like taller than her. | ||
But she's wearing it. She's wearing her cute little dress with pockets. | ||
And she's a child. | ||
We're being ruled by petulant, stupid children. | ||
Let's watch. These insurrectionists. | ||
Like Antifa? And that there were actual officers working with this, and we never got to the bottom of that, and we never got any answers about that. | ||
And then to this day, we're just supposed to pretend that that never happened. | ||
I have no idea what happened to the people on the inside who were very clearly sympathetic with what was going on and opening the doors wide open for that. | ||
And I'm supposed to sit here and pretend like none of that ever happened. | ||
And then right afterwards, you have a massive, you know, you just have this idea that throwing money at that problem is going to make it go away without any accountability. | ||
And so this is where these things are breaking down. | ||
We're not safe. And it's not just about members of Congress not being safe. | ||
The food staff workers aren't safe. | ||
The janitors aren't safe. | ||
Janitors aren't safe, folks. | ||
We need to get to the bottom of this. | ||
We need to get to the bottom of this. | ||
So that's Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, big booty Latina, with her own conspiracy theory that the Capitol Police were in on the January 6th event and were opening the doors and letting people in because they wanted the people to go assault AOC. Can you imagine being a Capitol Police right now and actually defending... | ||
This broad. And then she tries to throw you under the bus and claim that actually you were a part of it and you're the dangerous one. | ||
But it's not about her. She's really standing up for the janitors. | ||
She wants you to know that she doesn't care about her. | ||
No, she's fine. | ||
But the Capitol Police should beat anybody that approaches her because I care so much about the... | ||
Janitors and little people. | ||
And of course, when it comes to people interrupting Supreme Court justices at dinner, she says, oh, poor guy. | ||
He left before a souffle because he decided half the country should risk death if they have an ectoptic pregnancy. | ||
Nothing but lies, nothing but hypocrisy. | ||
unidentified
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Shut up, AOC. Go away. Welcome back, folks. | |
I don't even know where to go with this. | ||
Again, we're confronted with this thing where it's like, if you can't recognize this for yourself, I don't know if I can explain it to you. | ||
I don't know if I can explain to someone that the sky is blue if they just can't see it for themselves. | ||
It's so obvious. It's so blatant. | ||
It's only possible that they get away with this stuff because the media is just as hypocritical as they are, is just as signed on to this dishonest ideology, like an ideology of dishonesty, that they refuse to point out the obvious hypocrisies, and I guess people just can't see them for themselves. | ||
And it's something beyond hypocrisy, but if you just think about what's going on in the last... | ||
There's a couple of months, just since the first leak about Roe vs. | ||
Wade came out, and you had AOC actually leading groups of protesters, holding a bullhorn, calling for people to go and harass her political opponents. | ||
And when they do get harassed, not by a smiling person in the middle of the day, out in the public, in front of the police, just filming and saying, hey, I love you. | ||
You're my favorite big booty Latina. | ||
Right? Like, this to her is... | ||
Indicative of somebody who is trying to kill her and is a threat not just to her, but to the regular workers at the Capitol. | ||
In her fetid, twisted, bizarre, perverted mind, Alex Stein represents an existential threat to the lunch lady at the Capitol. | ||
What is she talking about? | ||
Meanwhile, you have mobs, groups of masked people attacking people in their private lives when they're by themselves, not on public property. | ||
Not fulfilling professional government duties, but just by themselves, like at a restaurant, trying to enjoy their life in private. | ||
And they are set upon by mobs actually attempting to attack them, harass them, get close to them. | ||
They have to flee out the back door. | ||
And Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, in that case, her response is to... | ||
Mock the person being assaulted, being attacked. | ||
This, of course, the video of Rand Paul and his wife physically being attacked by mobs of black shirts. | ||
I'd like to see, can we find, what did AOC respond to that event? | ||
Like, if we can go back and see... | ||
Like on her Twitter timeline, did she have a response to that? | ||
Did she condemn this? Did she say this is incredibly disturbing? | ||
This is just unbelievably upsetting. | ||
How did we get to this point? | ||
Maybe she did. Hey, if she said that about Rand Paul, kudos to her, I think I'd remember something like that. | ||
I don't think that happened. I think instead it was probably something like, well, that's what happens when you try to enslave black people again. | ||
She's like, what are you talking about? | ||
What are you talking about, you child? | ||
And hey, if they're going to be children, if we are being ruled by little baby children, you know, operating on a preschool-level intelligence, maybe we need to go with schoolyard tactics. | ||
Maybe it needs to be, you started it. | ||
Maybe it needs to be, we never wanted to get it to this point, but you started it, so maybe you can't go to restaurants anymore. | ||
Maybe you'll be confronted in your own home. | ||
By insane people. Maybe what Alex Stein did was really something you should have just laughed off and maybe played along with and would have actually looked good for you. | ||
Instead, you look ridiculous. | ||
You look like a complete incompetent and hysterical hypocrite. | ||
And you're right. | ||
It did just sort of wet the beaks, I think, of people who despise you. | ||
Because I want to see a lot more of this. | ||
I'm greedy now. I want to see Alex Stein compliment her in all sorts of different ways. | ||
And see what she comes up with as a response. | ||
Because here's what she said in response to this. | ||
She said, I posted about a deeply disgusting incident that happened today on the Capitol steps. | ||
But took it down because it's clearly somebody seeking extremist fame. | ||
Yes, it's Alex Stein. | ||
Extremist. He extremely loves big Latina booty. | ||
That's why it's so brilliant the way that Alex Stein phrased this, because it really highlights how hysterical and dishonest her reaction is. | ||
When he is smiling, she's throwing the peace sign. | ||
He's like, I love you. I love you. | ||
You're my favorite. You want to kill babies, but that's cool. | ||
You're still beautiful. And she is just like, I was almost raped today. | ||
And again, I wouldn't say these types of things if she wasn't the one saying it. | ||
She started it. She's the one that makes hysterical, completely baseless claims about people attacking her, coming after her, trying to rape her. | ||
Like, she's the one that says this stuff. | ||
So we throw it back in her face, trying to illustrate to her what a joke she is. | ||
What a ridiculous, hysterical child she is acting like. | ||
And hopefully, you know, pointing out to other people, like, supporting this woman. | ||
It's just embarrassing. | ||
You should be embarrassed. You should be shameful that you... | ||
Aren't able to see this sort of stuff for what it is. | ||
She says, It's just a bummer. | ||
It's just a bummer to work in an institution that openly allows this, but talking about it only invites more. | ||
Just really sad. She's so sad. | ||
You're not allowed to make AOC sad, you guys. | ||
Here's a video he posted of the incident. | ||
I was actually walking over to deck him. | ||
I was going to deck him. | ||
I was going to physically assault him. | ||
I was going to punch Alex Stein in the face for complimenting me. | ||
No, she wasn't. | ||
She went over and threw up the peace sign. | ||
She wanted to deck him. He was literally looking away from her and, like, very close. | ||
Like, she could have. Why didn't she deck him? | ||
What changed? She's like, I'm gonna go punch that guy in the face. | ||
Oh, wait, I'm a tiny lady. | ||
I'm just gonna throw up the peace sign behind my mask, wearing my mask. | ||
She says I was actually walking over to deck him because if no one will protect us, then I'll do it myself. | ||
But I needed to catch a vote more than a case today. | ||
I'm just AOC from the streets. | ||
I was about to scrap up with this dude, but I got a job to do. | ||
I got important business to get to. | ||
Well... You're dumb. | ||
You're just a dumb person and it's very sad. | ||
And of course, the hypocrisy is what really drives the point home. | ||
Because again, after Supreme Court Justice, I think it was Kavanaugh, was eating at a steakhouse and was assaulted and harassed by A mob of Antifa and had to flee out the back in fear of his safety. | ||
Her response was, poor guy. | ||
He left before his souffle because he decided half the country should risk death if they have an ectopic pregnancy within the wrong state lines. | ||
It's all very unfair to him. | ||
Just like condescending, just dismissive. | ||
She could not care less when it's actually, you know, A dangerous situation. | ||
It's also completely untrue that anybody would have to risk death if they have an ectopic pregnancy. | ||
That is certainly not a part of the Supreme Court decision. | ||
So it's just, she's... | ||
Giving rise to facilitating, giving cover to political violence based on a complete lie. | ||
She's a bad person. Oh, we have another AOC response? | ||
Wow, she just keeps responding, huh? | ||
Tell you what, I don't know if her parents never taught her this little lesson, this little idiom. | ||
It's a pretty important one. | ||
When you're in a hole, stop digging. | ||
My parents used to say that to me all the time. | ||
When you're in a hole, just stop digging. | ||
So she's just digging her own grave, a political grave, as she talks about this. | ||
Let's go to this new AOC response. | ||
The thing that was so crazy about that incident is not even that it happened, but that it happened on the Capitol steps right in front of a Capitol police officer. | ||
And this dude was engaged, like, this wasn't about a political opinion or a protest or anything like that. | ||
He was engaged in very clearly sexually threatening, aggressive behavior. | ||
Threatening, aggressive behavior. | ||
I love you, AOC. You're my favorite big booty Latina. | ||
And he wasn't even asked to take a step back. | ||
You walked towards him, idiot. | ||
This officer was away from you and you walked towards him. | ||
And it just, like, I really just can't help but think about all of that footage and evidence that we saw the day of, of all these Capitol Police officers helping and being sympathetic to the insurrectionists on January 6th. | ||
And everyone just decided it was too politically difficult to deal with. | ||
So they all just brushed it under the rug. | ||
And to this day, there has never been an investigation into that. | ||
Never. So as a result, we have no idea which officers are safe to be around. | ||
We have no idea if any of those officers and the ones holding massive weapons were with that crowd or if they weren't. | ||
And, but, if you raise questions about that, or if you don't feel safe, it's construed as you attacking the entire institution of public safety. | ||
Riddle me that. Riddle me that. | ||
unidentified
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And we saw a lot of that show up, not just in our politics. | |
You're out of your depth, lady. You're very confused. | ||
I get it. I understand. | ||
You're just, you're baffled, you're scared, you're confused. | ||
You're a frightened chihuahua shivering in their comfy little bed. | ||
It's funny to see her starting to ask these questions, but it's also sort of terrifying. | ||
Seems to me like this is the way you get paramilitary groups. | ||
I think her next move will be to say, I need supporters here to defend me because I can't trust Capitol Police. | ||
I need black shirts and uniforms around me at all times. | ||
This is a communist takeover. | ||
We're doing it. | ||
What we are seeing in Sri Lanka is system failure, and that is nothing to celebrate. | ||
There is no victory in system failure. | ||
In fact, it is what these tyrants are counting on. | ||
It's part of the plan, and it's been their business model for decades. | ||
As simple as the mafia movies on TV. The World Bank and the IMF strong arm world leaders into accepting loans that are designed to bankrupt the nation. | ||
While the CIA acts as management, secretly administering to the overthrow of national sovereignty and the looting of the nation's wealth. | ||
This international mafia organization has been doing it like this for years because it always works. | ||
They know that once the people become a hungry, angry mob, they can be controlled like animals. | ||
And this reactive behavior is exactly what these globalist crooks are counting on. | ||
It's why they are destroying the world's economies and creating a food crisis. | ||
So the answer is to become proactive. | ||
And that is exactly what the Dutch are now showing us. | ||
How the people of the world can achieve victory against the tyrants of the New World Order. | ||
The prolific farmers of the Netherlands are the second biggest food exporters in the world. | ||
And they know that the World Economic Forum is planning on buying up their land and cutting off the food supply for billions of people. | ||
And they also know that the people united are an unstoppable force. | ||
And so they united against tyranny and peacefully, with unstoppable strength, shut down the system. | ||
The shelves in many stores are now empty, but it's on their terms. | ||
And the people now have the upper hand, as it should be, and could be everywhere if we want it. | ||
The New World Order's plan is for all nations to collapse, which tells us that we must not wait until system failure. | ||
We must act now. | ||
Many people all over the world are now starting to rise up together with the Dutch farmers. | ||
Rising up, not as a reactive, hungry, angry mob, but as a righteous people united in a love for humanity. | ||
Society is made up of we the people, and we must now peacefully take control of it. | ||
This is the path to victory. | ||
And time is quickly running out. | ||
The lockdowns are coming back. | ||
unidentified
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The pandemic isn't over. | |
As we've said, The pandemic is not over. | ||
We need more money to plan for the second pandemic. | ||
There's going to be another pandemic. | ||
We have to think ahead. | ||
China has announced five more years of lockdowns. | ||
And if you're awake by now, then you know they're coming back everywhere with quarantine camps and forced business closures. | ||
All designed to mentally break us and collapse society. | ||
If we were to believe that we are powerless and weak or domesticated pets, then yes, the only path would be to wait until the food runs out and then join the angry mob. | ||
But if we were to believe that we were righteous and powerful, Then we would just fix it. | ||
So what's the plan, fellow humans? | ||
Do we wait for the inevitable collapse and lose everything, celebrating system failure? | ||
Or do we learn from the Dutch and take control of everything and fix the system so that it serves we the people? | ||
Reporting for InfoWars, this is Greg Reese. | ||
Alright folks, that is the latest really powerful work by Greg Reese. | ||
I pointed out yesterday when we watched it for the first time together on air, especially that line about not reacting as a hungry, desperate force. | ||
It's like what I said on Twitter, saying that the real controllers of the world will sit comfortably back watching as angry, hungry controllers. | ||
Mobs of citizens will, like, get very mad at the people sitting in office, but the people actually orchestrating this aren't going to suffer that consequence because they're not the ones on the ground, you know, as the face of these things. | ||
So how about before it gets to that point, we can prevent it from ever happening. | ||
We can prevent it from ever getting that bad. | ||
We can actually take proactive steps to dislodge these people from power and regain semblance of normalcy. | ||
All right, welcome back. Ladies and gentlemen, this is the American Journal. | ||
Second hour has begun. | ||
In the third hour, I will be joined by Robert Wright to talk about the Federal Reserve and how all of this got started. | ||
So this hour, I'll be taking your phone calls. | ||
Give us a call about any and all topics. | ||
1-877-789-2539. | ||
1-877-789-2539. | ||
Give us a call here at American Journal. | ||
And really, I need people to call in, especially if you go to my substack, harrisonelsmith.substack.com, and look at all of the stories that we have there. | ||
It's not that we don't have enough stuff to talk about. | ||
It's that we have too much stuff to talk about. | ||
And I don't even know what you guys want to hear about. | ||
Do you want to hear about the war in Ukraine and the fact that the Biden administration apparently may soon infuse the International Monetary Fund with $650 billion for the Ukraine? | ||
$650 billion. It's a joke now. | ||
These are joke numbers. And you're the punchline. | ||
You want to talk about crime? | ||
You want to talk about just the horrific and widespread... | ||
Criminal underclass that is being supported and facilitated by the authorities, including organizations such as the Innocence Project that gets guilty people out of prison because of their race. | ||
A New York serial stabber was actually wearing an Innocence Project t-shirt while killing homeless people. | ||
Do we want to talk about the cooperation, the interaction between these international billionaire-funded, non-governmental organizations that are helping to facilitate, encourage, and provide Support for ruthless criminals in this country. | ||
Do you want to hear about that? Should we just keep talking about AOC? Because we could keep going. | ||
We could keep talking about AOC and her new conspiracy theory that the Capitol Police were actually in on the insurrection on the side of the Trump supporters. | ||
Just okay. | ||
Bizarre. Should we maybe take a little breezy stop by the border to see the tens of thousands of people that are crossing on nearly a daily basis at this point? | ||
Just massive lines of not refugees or asylum seekers, but just criminals crossing the border by the hundreds of thousands. | ||
Anything we want to talk about that? | ||
What about just the overall global collapse in absolutely everything? | ||
London's Heathrow Airport caps daily passenger numbers to quell summer travel chaos. | ||
Yeah, that's what it is. | ||
It's not what we revealed earlier this week on this show, that an insider in one of the largest airlines, I believe it was in New Zealand or Australia, It's one of those countries. | ||
You can go back to yesterday's show and check it out where they said, hey, you know, the airlines are going to start cutting off travel. | ||
There's going to be a lockdown. | ||
They're going to blame it on something else. But the reality is that the airlines can't get insurance because insurance companies are having to pay huge amounts of money for the medical episodes that pilots are having because of the vaccine. | ||
And it's all being kept under wraps. | ||
And it's just very interesting that yesterday we read this story from an insider saying, hey, they're about to limit travel because of the vaccine reactions. | ||
And then the very next day, you have a story about London Heathrow Airport limiting the number of customers to something like 10,000. | ||
Because, you know, summer travel chaos. | ||
Because for all of time... | ||
You know, these organizations, these industries have been able to handle the workload without a problem. | ||
But now, just because of chaos, because of circumstances, because of coincidence, they can't handle it anymore. | ||
Just bizarre. Do you want to keep talking about Hunter Biden and the fact that our country is ruled by a criminal mafia family of total and utter degenerates that are openly and with evidence involved in human trafficking organizations? | ||
Sex crimes, drug trafficking, and all sorts of other stuff. | ||
And what do you guys want to talk about? | ||
Want to talk about January 6th committee and the fact that the New York Times is now writing defensive articles in support of people they previously characterized as domestic terrorists in an attempt to protect them from accusations that they're FBI agents? | ||
Ironically, providing the best evidence available that they are somehow connected with the deep state when you have the New York Times defending you despite being on video, calling for the invasion of the Capitol, despite being on video as a primary mover in the first instance of breaking through the barricades in the Capitol, never being arrested, never being charged, being taken off of the Wanted list for no reason? | ||
And then have the New York Times come out and write a defense for you? | ||
Okay. | ||
All right. | ||
That's not suspicious at all. | ||
unidentified
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I don't know. | |
Call in. | ||
Let me know what you want to talk about. | ||
We'll go to your calls. I think in the first place, we'll cover a story that I really should have gotten to yesterday. | ||
But I'll get to it now. In fact, I just put a video in the folder, guys. | ||
It's one from yesterday that I didn't get to play. | ||
It's John Bolton talking about pulling off coups in countries, overthrowing the duly elected or legitimate rulers of countries for the benefit of the deep state, not the benefit of America. | ||
Recognize this. There are two different interests at play here. | ||
One is the American people. | ||
One is the people that rule over us like tyrants. | ||
So let's go to this video now. | ||
I'm sure you've seen it, but it's worth a refresher. | ||
It is John Bolton on CNN admitting to being involved in coups. | ||
Again, there's a struggle between his narcissism, ego and self-importance and lying to serve the interests of the deep state. | ||
And he accidentally slipped a little far into the ego side of things in this interview. | ||
Let's watch. | ||
unidentified
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Not an attack on our democracy. | |
It's Donald Trump looking out for Donald Trump. | ||
It's a once-in-a-lifetime occurrence. | ||
I don't know that I agree with you. | ||
To be fair, with all due respect, one doesn't have to be brilliant to attempt a coup. | ||
unidentified
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I disagree with that. | |
As somebody who has helped plan coup d'etat, Not here, but other places. | ||
It takes a lot of work. | ||
And that's not what he did. It was just stumbling around from one idea to another. | ||
Ultimately, he did unleash the rioters at the Capitol. | ||
As to that, there's no doubt. | ||
Definitely not here. Not overthrow the Constitution to buy more time to throw the matter back to the states. | ||
I kind of love it. I mean, it's kind of hilarious. | ||
It's like, not here. | ||
Not here, obviously. I mean, I've never... | ||
I've helped to plan coup d'etat, sure, in other countries like the Ukraine. | ||
I mean, oh, crap. | ||
Syria. No, wait. | ||
Sorry. Sorry. | ||
Other places. Yeah, the Iraq War, Syria, you know, Iran. | ||
I mean, the CIA, this is sort of what they were founded to do. | ||
It's what they do as a course of business. | ||
Nicaragua, right? | ||
Trying to plan them in Cuba didn't quite work out there. | ||
Of course, an ongoing attempt in Russia. | ||
But I'd love to hear some examples when he's like, oh, it's so complicated. | ||
You know, it's actually really hard to plan a coup d'etat. | ||
It's like, take a look at Ukraine. | ||
I mean, it took us years with Ukraine. | ||
We had to stage a fake revolution. | ||
We had to, you know, put snipers on the roof and kill innocent people to blame it on the government. | ||
I mean, we had to have NGOs, like, ceding money and people and organizations for years and years and years. | ||
We had to have special forces on the ground. | ||
I mean, we had to train the Ukrainian army. | ||
We had to—it was a lot of discussion as to who we put on the— You know, in the presidency of Ukraine, I mean, look at Ukraine, and you'll really get a good example of the time and the intelligence and the coordination it takes to, you know, pull off a coup and overthrow the legitimate rulers of a country. | ||
I mean, if you want to see a coup, take a look at Ukraine. | ||
Or hell, I mean, and look, if you were going to put—he's like, you know— If you're going to pull off an insurrection or an overthrow of the government in America, you can't just send a bunch of rabble-rousers to the Capitol. | ||
That's not how it works. Now, see, to do a coup—and everybody knows this in the CIA—you've got to have cooperation on many different fronts. | ||
You've got to have the media on your side so they can tell your side of the story and keep the mass of people believing that what's occurring isn't a— I'm in charge now. | ||
Nobody's going to fall for that. So, you know, a way that you do it in America would be maybe falsifying certain election results. | ||
You don't have to falsify all of them, but you do have to, you know, be very intelligent and you have to identify exactly which, you know, important metropolitan centers have to be taken over with agents seated into the end for months in advance to change the results of an election. | ||
And then you've got to have the, you know, deep state military spy apparatus in place to surveil your opponents and arrest those who are causing trouble. | ||
I mean, to pull off a coup in America... | ||
Would be very difficult. | ||
I mean, just look at 2020. I really don't know what's happening. | ||
We're going to go out to your phone calls. | ||
unidentified
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But it's all just so wild. | |
It's all so wild and baffling. | ||
I mean, what a time to be alive. So you got John Bolton. | ||
A perennial neocon, perennial warmonger, responsible for coordinating and helping to bring about the most horrific, devastating, consequential, and damaging wars in America's history. | ||
Not just for America, but for the hundreds of thousands of people, Iraqis and others, killed in these coups. | ||
He actually goes on CNN, and I guess because his ego was insulted, By claiming that Donald Trump could pull off a coup. | ||
He's like, no, he's not smart enough. | ||
I am. I'm smart enough to pull off a coup. | ||
I've done it. And everybody's like, what? | ||
He's like, yeah, we overthrow countries for our own benefit and our own interest. | ||
Because I'm so smart. | ||
Because I'm super smart like that. | ||
And they're like, what? | ||
And so then the CIA actually comes out and goes, John Bolton is not smart enough to pull off a coup. | ||
We are, though. Okay? | ||
I'm not kidding. They literally did. | ||
Newsweek has the story. John Bolton is full of blank, says ex-CIA officer after coup revelations. | ||
Of course, John Bolton was told that coups are simple to pull off. | ||
John Bolton says, I disagree with that. | ||
As somebody who helped plan coup d'etats, this guy named John Seifer, who I don't think exists. | ||
I'm just going to come out and say it. John Seifer, come on, you guys. | ||
Come on. No, he probably does exist, but you understand that the CIA actually is embedded in our media now. | ||
And if they want, they can come up with a terrible name like John Cipher. | ||
I don't know, let's come up with like a cool spy name. | ||
Cipher. We'll call him Cipher. | ||
John Cipher. Yeah, call him that. | ||
It's just like a blacked out image. | ||
Like anonymous source, John Cipher. | ||
It's like, okay, you made him up, didn't you? | ||
You're the CIA agent, the one writing this. | ||
unidentified
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And we'll talk about that in just a second. | |
Cypher responded to Bolton's remarks on Twitter saying he's full of blank. | ||
He never planned a coup. He never planned a coup. | ||
I know all the coups that were planned. | ||
I was involved in them. We're the ones smart enough to pull off the coups. | ||
Not John Bolton. We do. | ||
What? What are you talking about? | ||
Of course he's pulled off coups. | ||
And of course you've pulled off coups. | ||
Nobody's saying you're not smart enough to pull off a coup. | ||
All right? Calm down. You're both cuckoo. | ||
Just incredible. So you've got a CIA agent saying John Bolton is full of crap. | ||
He never planned any coups. | ||
That's what we do. Remember that Juan whatever dude that they were claiming was the actual president of Venezuela and like introducing him to the State of the Union? | ||
He'd never been elected to anything. | ||
And they're like, the actual president is right here. | ||
Here he is, the president of Venezuela, CIA agent Juan whatever. | ||
People in Venezuela are like, wait, who? | ||
Who is that? And CIA's like, we're doing a coup. | ||
We're super smart. | ||
We're doing a coup. Now, this all ties into the fact that we're basically run by the CIA now. | ||
Over the last couple of years, they have come out very openly. | ||
They're now running candidates for public office that they still control. | ||
They're also embedded in our... | ||
And, of course, thoroughly involved in big tech censorship, which they, of course, started out in the very beginning by creating things like Facebook and others. | ||
They've been in it for a long time. | ||
We'll talk about that in just a little bit with some of the new evidence of this. | ||
Stories like this meet the ex-CIA agents deciding Facebook's content policies. | ||
I need to let everybody know right now. | ||
There is no such thing as an ex-CIA agent. | ||
There are CIA agents, and there are dead CIA agents. | ||
There's nothing in between, just so we're clear. | ||
CIA is like a mafia. | ||
You don't just leave the CIA. You don't just retire from it and forget everything you were involved in and no longer have the context. | ||
You see, because what they're involved in is so horrifically dangerous and illegal that if you try to leave the CIA, they will kill you to eliminate a possible threat. | ||
Mole or rat or whistleblower. | ||
So if you're alive and previously a CIA agent, you are still a CIA agent. | ||
Please don't be fooled by the term ex-CIA agent. | ||
There is no such thing. Let's go now to your phone calls. | ||
InfoWarrior in Seattle has super news for us. | ||
Awesome. Thanks for calling in. InfoWarrior, you're on the air. | ||
unidentified
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Thank you, Harrison. I do have super news. | |
Super blue news. | ||
I was going to my local drugstore and picked up a Red Bull, and I normally walk around just to kind of see what's going on, what's coming in new, and I just saw they have nanosilver breath spray, and they also have nanosilver toothpaste from their actual product. | ||
CVS brand from their store, not like they're going through a third company. | ||
So I thought if this is the case, this would be a great time for us to push a lawsuit against whoever's stopping us from selling Super Blue. | ||
So why I'm calling in is if you guys think this is a good idea, and I'm not talking to Harrison, but I'm talking to all of our info warriors out there, this is something to Take $20, donate it. | ||
Put Super Blue on it in the description. | ||
If we get enough, we might be able to push back Super Blue, whoever's attacking it, and we can get more funding. | ||
How's that idea? Well, I like that idea. | ||
I just... I'm not even going to comment on it, Infoware, because I don't know the details of the lawsuit or anything, and I just don't want to get us in more trouble. | ||
We're not allowed to say the S-word. We're not allowed to say the S-word, apparently, I hear. | ||
Well, and I heard... | ||
unidentified
|
New York District Attorney wants our heads on a pike. | |
Yeah, see, that's all I know too. | ||
So I can't talk about it. | ||
So no comment, InfoWarrior. | ||
Very good call. Thank you so much for that call. | ||
I do appreciate it. No comment on that because, you know. | ||
unidentified
|
Although we hear the toothpaste is good stuff. | |
We hear. Word is on the street. | ||
Thank you so much for the call, InfoWarrior. | ||
It's great. I wish I could talk about it, but, you know, there's like two things I can't talk about on this show, and both of them have to do with lawsuits, so we're very open about that. | ||
I'll talk about everything else, but it's literally just the threat of legal consequence from other people that keeps me silent about anything on this show, just so we're perfectly clear. | ||
Let's go now to Robin in North Carolina. | ||
I want to talk about AOC leading to the Hunger Games. | ||
Thanks for calling in, Robin. You're on the air. | ||
unidentified
|
Hi, Harrison. Thanks for taking my call. | |
And love Super Blue. | ||
Love, love, love, love Super Blue. | ||
But next to that, I love Alex Stein. | ||
And I guess I'm just as inappropriate because I actually believe that AOC's call for the full activation of the Hunger Games Society, I know that's a little bit Unpopular, | ||
but if you go back and watch the old Hunger Games movie where the society wants to be separated from the rabble browsers, the lower classes, just look at where we started with the inauguration, with Biden's inauguration. | ||
Right. Well, yeah, with the big fences around the Capitol. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, yeah, no, you're a great point. | |
Oh yeah, but not only that, then you have Lady Gaga trading down the steps on the arm of a valiant Marine with her head up in the air and she comes down to the podium and sings our national anthem. | ||
The arrogance of all of this is just really telling because I really believe that that's where we're at. | ||
And what I'd love What I'd really, really, really love to see is Ben Garrison and Alex Stein getting together and doing a movie about... | ||
Oh my God. That's a dangerous idea, Rob, and I'm in full support of that. | ||
Ladies and gentlemen, it has never been more obvious, and increasingly so, that Infowars is just right about everything. | ||
I mean, there's no other explanation. | ||
This stuff is not happening by accident. | ||
It's not happening spontaneously and uniquely, independently. | ||
Just out of the blue, what's happening in this country is a coordinated effort to destroy this nation as this nation represents the last bastion of freedom on earth, essentially, and the last population with the context and history of liberty that represents a threat to the total control of a bunch of elitist psychopath, billionaire control freaks. | ||
So hey, even if you've never supported us before, it's not too late. | ||
We're still on air. We're still going to be spreading this message. | ||
We're still going to be trying desperately, begging the American people to wake up from their induced slumber and join the world of the living and the awake to actually care about humanity and try to reach for something greater than ourselves, not degrade ourselves begging the American people to wake up from their induced slumber and join the world You can support us in this mission, the best way to do it. | ||
In fact, the only way to do it, since we rely on you entirely and exclusively, is the trust we have in you, and we hope that it's returned. | ||
We know that if we aren't giving you what you want in terms of news, you're not going to support us. | ||
So we don't have anybody else to answer to. | ||
We're not a part of any big scheme. | ||
I wake up every morning, read the news, come here and talk to you about it. | ||
And hopefully, if you appreciate that and want to support that, you'll go to Infowarsstore.com. | ||
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And a sincere thank you to everybody that goes to InfoWars store and supports us. | ||
Now we'll be joined in the third hour by Robert Wright to talk about the Federal Reserve and their role in the total breakdown of this country. | ||
We're going to go out to your phone calls first. | ||
There are a couple things that I haven't gotten to talk about in the last couple days that I just want to mention here. | ||
We won't spend too much time on it. | ||
Maybe you've heard this story. | ||
It's just, I didn't mention it yesterday. | ||
It's too good to pass up. | ||
It's the type of thing you can almost predict it, but it's worse than you would guess. | ||
First half of the headline would set you up for all sorts of possibilities, and the one they chose is worse than any I could come up for. | ||
The start of the headline is Zelensky to consider replacing Catherine the Great statue with Monument 2. | ||
Fill in the blank, right? | ||
What would you think that it was? | ||
The obvious answer would be something like, you know, queer BIPOC star of something, you know, just something that doesn't represent like a cultural significance, but more of... | ||
Forcing their perverted ideology down your throat or just the anti-white agenda. | ||
Whatever it is that they would typically suggest that you put up in place of statues of actual heroes that helped to dictate the entire course of your country. | ||
And well done. | ||
Before we say what they really are putting up, understand that Catherine the Great... | ||
Like brought Ukraine into the Russian Empire hundreds of years ago. | ||
So they're taking it down to destroy the historical links between Ukraine and Russia. | ||
They want to destroy the actual history, the truth of the fact that Ukraine as a country is an outgrowth of Russia. | ||
So they want to destroy that because the way you remake history is you destroy history as it stands. | ||
So what they're actually replacing this statue of Catherine the Great with is a monument to a gay porn star. | ||
Could not have ever guessed that's what they were going to go for. | ||
No idea. | ||
I mean, you think it's a joke, but it's actually not. | ||
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky will have to consider replacing a statue of the Russian Empress Catherine the Great in Odessa with a monument to a gay porn star after a petition calling for the change on the Ukrainian government's website passed 25,000 votes. | ||
The monument of Catherine the Second in Odessa, which depicts the Empress and four of her companions, was erected in 1900 by Yuri Meletiv Dmitrenko, but later removed in 1920 by the Bolsheviks. | ||
It was restored in 2007 in a move that was opposed by Ukrainian nationalists. | ||
Gosh, it's like literally everything. | ||
It just couldn't be more obvious, right? | ||
They're opening up the Bolshevik playbook and just going down the line and checking off all the boxes. | ||
Destroy the old statues, right? | ||
Cause... Outrage and riots in the people. | ||
Use that as an excuse to crack down with agents of the state. | ||
It's all so gay. | ||
It's all just so very gay. | ||
And yet, utterly and completely predictable. | ||
American actor Billy Harrington. | ||
Fantastic. Let's go to your phone calls, shall we? | ||
Jason in Tennessee wants to talk about the taco tamale debate. | ||
Thanks for calling in, Jason. | ||
AOC, taco or tamale? | ||
unidentified
|
Harrison, thanks for taking my call. | |
Love the show. Certainly agree that the Infowars Life's products are the best supplements you can buy. | ||
I did stock up on Super Blue. | ||
I'm very happy I have a bunch of it still. | ||
But every product I try, especially the bodies, the vitamin, mineral fusion, excellent. | ||
I know you've got a lot of topics, a lot of news going on. | ||
I certainly appreciate you taking my call. | ||
We learned from Dr. | ||
Jill that Latin people, Latinxs, Latinos, Latinas, they're really just unique tacos. | ||
But Alex Stein referred to AOC as a tamale. | ||
I would love to be able to ask Alex Stein, but unfortunately I'm banned from Twitter and Facebook right now. | ||
Wanted to see if you had any insight into what makes AOC a tamale and not a taco. | ||
Is it because she's from New York? | ||
Is she a little bit more spicy? | ||
Does it have something to do with that slinky brown dress wrapper? | ||
Is it the big booty angle? | ||
Does she just identify as a tamale? | ||
Any insights so we can get to the bottom of this one? | ||
You're trying to delve into the psychology of the Latinx community at this moment and Alex Stein's interpretation of it. | ||
Frankly, you're a racist, Jason. | ||
I refuse to acknowledge you. | ||
No, of course, there's lots of things to say about this. | ||
I would say that AOC is kind of like the... | ||
She's like the tamales that are on display at the front of the Mexican restaurant. | ||
She's completely empty and fake. | ||
She's not so much the tamale as she is the corn husk on the outside devoid of any substance and providing nothing to anybody except for frustration and annoyance. | ||
I think that might be the case. | ||
unidentified
|
I don't know. I think maybe Alex Stein saw right through it, as you did, and if you guys get him on the show, perhaps you can ask him for his insight. | |
We're going to try to talk to him tomorrow. | ||
I think we're going to make that work, because it's great. | ||
I'll ask him that question. | ||
Why Tamale? And, you know, why is he a racist that tried to kill AOC? We all saw it. | ||
We all saw the video. We all pray for AOC's lengthy recovery. | ||
All right, folks, we'll go directly to your phone calls. | ||
I'd like to say thanks to the live show chat at band.video, making some great suggestions as to the categorization of AOC as Mexican food. | ||
Like Dr. Jill said from Critical Inquisitor, he says that AOC is a gas station tamale. | ||
It might look good, but it'll make you sick. | ||
I think that's pretty accurate. | ||
Somebody else says she's simply the mild sauce packet from Taco Bell. | ||
That's also pretty good. | ||
So let me know. | ||
If you're on the Bandai Video Live chat, let me know what you think AOC is in terms of Mexican food. | ||
It's like, if you really think about... | ||
Just imagine, like, the wife of the president of Mexico coming to America and being like, there's a great variety of Americans, as many as there are hamburgers. | ||
unidentified
|
Just be like, what are you talking about? | |
Did you just call us hamburgers? | ||
And to be honest, there's not that much variety in... | ||
Breakfast tacos. There's only like three types. | ||
unidentified
|
So maybe that's what she was saying. | |
That's my assumption is that Jill Biden was claiming that there's only three types of Hispanic people. | ||
unidentified
|
They all come with beans. | |
I mean, it's just such a bizarre statement. | ||
She's like, the ones from Venezuela are chorizo. | ||
unidentified
|
It's just bizarre. It's just weird, folks. | |
It's very weird. Finally, I do want to talk about this, because this is just... | ||
It's just everything. | ||
It's just everything that we're dealing with here. | ||
unidentified
|
It's a woman named Anika Molesworth. | |
She posted a series of very thoughtful selfies. | ||
Two selfies that shows how thoughtful and caring she is. | ||
And yet, she looks up in a way that is optimistic and... | ||
Forward thinking. I personally was inspired by the selfies alone, but she accompanies them with this statement saying, I am causing climate change. | ||
See, this is a confession for her, a confession of faith. | ||
I'm causing climate change, and with my fear, grief, responsibility, determination, hope, and vision, I will do all I can to help fix this problem. | ||
So you're going to complain. | ||
What she means is that she's going to complain. | ||
That's what they do. That's what their solution to the climate problem is. | ||
She's doing it, actually. | ||
You're right. This is what she's doing. | ||
This is what she's doing. | ||
She's doing it. She has promised. | ||
She has sworn. She has confessed her responsibility. | ||
She has offloaded that guilt. | ||
And now she is working in a method both stunning and brave to correct her own sins. | ||
By demanding other people do stuff about it. | ||
Demanding that other people's rights and privileges are taken away. | ||
Demanding that our country is sold down the river so that China and India and other countries can continue to just destroy the entire earth with pollution with no concern whatsoever. | ||
Because they don't allow petulant children like this to say thanks in their country. | ||
We allow it and it's interminable. | ||
With my grief, fear, responsibility. | ||
This is it, right? | ||
That's what I mean by this is it. | ||
This is our opponents. | ||
It's not just the AOCs. | ||
It's not just the people in power. It's not just the George Soroses and the Rothschilds and these super evil multinational families that live on yachts and pull the strings of international commerce. | ||
It's also their mindless little sycophant slaves that are just like... | ||
I am scared. I am sad. | ||
And I will complain until something is right. | ||
And that makes me a hero. | ||
Hashtag climate crisis. | ||
Hashtag climate emergency. | ||
Hashtag climate action. | ||
Hashtag climate solutions. | ||
Hashtag never trust a woman in a hat. | ||
It's actually something Chase Geiser told me. | ||
Never trust a woman who wears a hat. | ||
Baseball caps are fine in certain situations. | ||
If you're taking selfies, or you're trying to look thoughtful and yet hopeful, and also acting like you are confessing your faith, just wear a hat so everybody else knows what to avoid you, I guess. | ||
I'm kidding. I like girls in hats. | ||
Let's go out to the phone calls. We have Outsider in Alabama who wants to talk about old Hunter Biden. | ||
Thanks for calling in, Outsider. You're on the air. | ||
unidentified
|
Hey, Harrison. I just want to make some quick plugs real quick. | |
I'm a big fan of all the products. | ||
On my Saturday mornings with my girlfriend, I like to make a little tincture cocktail. | ||
Put my Super Mel, my turmeric. | ||
I'll put a little bit of other extracts in there. | ||
In your cauldron, like you're boiling a potion. | ||
Bubble, bubble, toilet trouble. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, that's great. Mix up my vitamin and mineral fusion with it. | |
Top it off so you can take a little shot. | ||
But I was getting ready to take my output power and I dropped one on the counter. | ||
And I'm looking and I'm like, what would Hunter do? | ||
And so I just kind of opened the capsule and it fell out onto the counter. | ||
I'm like, man, this is chunky. | ||
So I had to take my mortar and press it all up. | ||
And I'm like, which way would Hunter do it? | ||
So I took a little sniff of it. | ||
It was a little bit harsh. | ||
I'll just say that. It burned a lot. | ||
I don't know. You ever snorted crack? | ||
I mean, you know, you think that's harsh. | ||
Folks, follow the instructions. | ||
I have to say, no, don't smoke it. | ||
unidentified
|
You don't snort crack, Harrison. | |
Well, you might not snort crack, but let's see what Hunter Biden has to say about that. | ||
Just saying, when you're desperate, you're snorting Parmesan, you're snorting carpet lint. | ||
Look, all I can say is, legally, I have to tell you, follow the instructions on the bottle. | ||
Do not snort or smoke Alpha Power. | ||
unidentified
|
It's too powerful. It makes for a good day, though, I'll tell you that. | |
Well, thank you for that very much, Outsider. | ||
unidentified
|
Great stuff. Anything else we want to let you go? | |
Yeah, I just want to touch on Hunter a little bit. | ||
I think y'all should have Freeway Ricky Ross come in. | ||
And talk with you about the harsh crack law sentencing that Joe Biden imposed on him back in the 90s. | ||
Yeah, of course. Irony, hypocrisy, it's all there. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, you know, direct to the White House? | |
I mean, I'm sure Hunter's getting it from pretty much the same position in the White House. | ||
Yeah. Like, that's why he goes to visit the White House. | ||
There was a very funny meme. | ||
I don't know if you saw it, Outsider, but it was the footage recently from, like, a week ago of Hunter Biden walking around the White House and greeting people, and they just have subtitles that's him just asking everybody for cocaine. | ||
It's just going up to everybody and being like... | ||
Hey, how's it going to you? You got any cocaine? | ||
Are you holding? Are you holding right now? | ||
Just a despicable embarrassment. | ||
Everything about this administration is a shame on this country. | ||
Thank you so much for that call, Outsider. | ||
Let's go to Josh in FEMA Region 8. | ||
Thanks for calling in, Josh. You're on the air. | ||
unidentified
|
Hi, Harrison. | |
I just wanted to say that I'll say the S word. | ||
Silver and gold just hit their... | ||
Bottom level. So it might go down just a little bit. | ||
But I was just going to tell everybody that you want to get out of the market. | ||
You want them to stop manipulating with your money. | ||
Invest in gold and silver. | ||
Right now is a good time. Awesome. | ||
We can talk about silver when we're talking about investing it. | ||
I don't think there's a prohibition against that. | ||
Yeah, buy silver. Buy gold. | ||
That's a great call. | ||
And we'll talk to Robert Wright about that on the other side. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, I was going to say, you guys should get Peter Schiff on if you can. | |
He's been really hyping it. | ||
And I think you guys need to push more on the white protein causing frontal lobe degeneration. | ||
I think that's a big problem, especially with job participation percentage going down. | ||
Yeah, you know, we talked about that. | ||
I mean, that was just sort of an observation that we made. | ||
It was that weird actor from Boston that was, like, mocking people for not getting the shot, and then he got it, and then, like... | ||
He was talking about how painful or how awful it was, but the thing that we pointed out was, like, his cognitive decline was noticeable. | ||
He went from, like, very, like, upbeat and, like, very fast talking to, like, he was under a wet blanket and was, like... | ||
I mean, he seemed drugged. | ||
So, yeah, and of course, you know, whether it's the blood clots... | ||
Causing pilots to pass out or die, you know, and crash airplanes, or just the uptick of sort of the zombification where it affects your brain in a lot of negative ways. | ||
It is an absolute death shot worldwide, and it's going to kill a lot of people and do a lot more damage that we're not going to get answers to because they're more interested in protecting their narrative than they are protecting you and your health. | ||
Thank you for that call, Josh. I do want to get to one more. | ||
It's got a Lynn in Indiana. | ||
Says it's all rope-a-dope. | ||
Are you calling me a dope, Len? | ||
Who's calling in? Yes, sir. | ||
unidentified
|
I believe the New World Order was hanging on the ropes and letting President Trump just punch at him for fake news and all like that. | |
Yeah. You know, I think they were preparing for a long time, and we're a common law society, but the majority wants the will of the people, and we let them change the Change our attitude, our thoughts. And I look at you. | ||
I always review your show because you are my thought adjuster. | ||
You get me right. | ||
And I appreciate it. | ||
Thanks for that. That's just me trying to pass on the people in my life. | ||
My wife is that for me, where I'm like sitting there like, I have to attack these people. | ||
I have to go after these people. | ||
I have to do something. And she's just like, you want to enjoy the day? | ||
And I'm like, oh right, life is beautiful and I shouldn't let these people get me down. | ||
So I'm glad I can somehow pass that off to the audience here. | ||
This should be one of the top stories in the country right now, yet it's received zero press coverage. | ||
A top UK government official admitted, live on television, that they considered seizing COVID positive children from private homes up and down the country, separating them from their parents and placing them in quarantine isolation facilities. | ||
Take a look at what slipped out when Nadine Dorries, who was a health minister at the time, appeared on GB News. | ||
unidentified
|
Um... Jeremy contacted me as a health minister and said, you've got to speak to Matt. | |
It was at the time the Nightingale hospitals were being built. | ||
You've got to tell him that you don't put sick people in the hospitals. | ||
You follow a zero COVID policy. | ||
My wife's family have experienced this. | ||
When someone tests positive, you take them from their home and you take them to an isolation centre and you leave them there in the isolation centre. | ||
That's the only way you can beat COVID. And I said, Jeremy, the British public will not stand for mothers and fathers and families and children being removed from their family and their home and put in isolation. | ||
He says, who said they won't? | ||
And I said, well, the Behaviour and Insights team who I've discussed this with, they won't wear it. | ||
He said, I don't believe it. | ||
I don't believe it. Show me the evidence for that because I don't believe it. | ||
That's the way we have to deal with this is a zero Covid policy. | ||
Now, we would still probably be in some sort of lockdown if Jeremy Hunt had been made Prime Minister instead of Boris Johnson. | ||
To reiterate, prominent players within the government, Jeremy Hunt, chief amongst them, wanted to directly copy China's draconian method of kidnapping both parents and children. | ||
From their homes in the United Kingdom and sending them to quarantine camps. | ||
And remember, even SAGE thought that the British public would never accept lockdown. | ||
Never mind being forcibly torn from their homes. | ||
Until Italy did so. | ||
Professor Lockdown himself, Professor Pantsdown, Neil Ferguson, told the Times, quote, China is a communist one-party state, we said. | ||
We couldn't get away with it in Europe, we thought, and then Italy did it, and we realised we could. | ||
Given this shocking new revelation, which has received virtually no media coverage, what could they be planning to get away with this coming winter? | ||
Don't forget, the guy who called for this is running for Prime Minister. | ||
He could be our next leader. | ||
And he could take charge in early September, right when they're going to push for Covid restrictions to be reintroduced. | ||
Government ministers have said lockdown measures will return if necessary to protect NHS hospitals. | ||
Yeah, the same NHS hospitals that were 40% empty at the height of the first outbreak. | ||
We have 1300 excess deaths per week in the UK right now. | ||
Primarily caused by untreated illnesses that went untreated because of lockdown. | ||
Listen, I know all sane, rational people want to believe that this is over. | ||
But there's a whole army of cult Covidians and a phalanx of control freak technocrats who are waiting for autumn in feverish anticipation at the prospect of bringing it all back. | ||
unidentified
|
Welcome back ladies and gentlemen, This is The American Journal. | |
Third hour has begun. | ||
You're watching us on Infowars.com and Band.video. | ||
My guest for this hour is Robert E. Wright. | ||
He holds a Ph.D. in history and is a senior research fellow at the American Institute for Economic Research. | ||
He has co-authored over two dozen major books, book series, and edited collections, including AIER's The Best of Thomas Paine and Financial Exclusion. | ||
Robert has taught business, economics, and policy courses at Augustana University, NYU's Stern School of Business, Temple University, and the University of Virginia. | ||
He's here today to talk about one of his most recent articles called Strike Three for the Federal Reserve, where he provides a great argument for a return to the gold standard. | ||
His website can be found at aier.org slash staffs slash robert-e dash right or allseasonspress.com slash feedback. | ||
Thank you so much for coming on with us, Robert. | ||
unidentified
|
Howdy-ho! Howdy-ho, indeed. | |
How are you? And how are things looking in America these days? | ||
unidentified
|
Well, that was my terrible impousination of Mr. | |
Hankey from South Park. | ||
Of course. And I started with that because the American economy is, and I'm not sure what language I can use here, but I think I'm safe within the crapper. | ||
I think that's acceptable. | ||
We are on terrestrial radio, so I appreciate your tempering it down a little bit. | ||
But, all right, in the crapper, that's about as low as we can go. | ||
I guess we haven't been flushed yet. | ||
Is that the bright side of this? | ||
unidentified
|
That is the bright side, yes. | |
We're circling the bowl, but we haven't gone down the hole quite yet. | ||
Thanks so much for having me on, by the way. | ||
This is the first time that my sons, who are 19 and 21 years old now, have been genuinely impressed with anything that I've done in terms of media. | ||
They're like, you're going to be on Infowars? | ||
No! I can't believe it! | ||
Well, fantastic. Hopefully we can live up to expectations then. | ||
unidentified
|
I wrote an op-ed in the LA Times. | |
In early 2008, it helped to launch the Tea Party movement. | ||
And I tell them that, and their faces just go blank. | ||
Right, well... | ||
unidentified
|
I'm on Infowars, and bam! | |
You know, uh... | ||
Things are so fast moving these days. | ||
History, you know, major, major political movements. | ||
Who really cares? We're moving on now. | ||
There's new important things. No, but of course the Tea Party movement was hugely impactful and sort of laid a lot of the groundwork for Trump. | ||
So that's amazing. | ||
I mean, that one article has had a huge impact. | ||
We'll see what today's episode of American Journal can do. | ||
That's a pretty high level to get to. | ||
But this article, Strike Three for the Federal Reserve. | ||
Can you explain to us just Quickly, I guess. | ||
What are the three strikes that they've experienced? | ||
unidentified
|
The Great Depression. | |
The Great Depression is the 1930s, basically. | ||
The great inflation of the 1970s. | ||
Then they followed one off with the Great Recession in 2008-2009. | ||
And now with the Bidenflation, or the COVIDflation, whatever you want to call it, they've whiffed. | ||
They've struck out. | ||
And so I used to be a baseball fan, you know, National League, before they got rid of the designated hitter. | ||
But I still love the game, and so I used a baseball fan. | ||
Uh, analogy, uh, to say that, uh, you know, the Fed is like the worst, uh, the worst baseball player of, of all time. | ||
And it's, it's, it's weird that we, uh, John Gocknauer, I think his name, name was the one who's generally attributed as being the worst But the weird thing is that we have great pinch hitters on deck who could take over. | ||
And so I went with Ty Cobb on this one as being the greatest batter of all time. | ||
I know that's disputed. | ||
Early draft, I had Babe Ruth as well, but... | ||
The pinch hitter, of course, would be something like the gold standard. | ||
But really, anything that removes discretion from Federal Reserve policymakers, the FOMC, the Federal Open Markets Committee, the ones who set the overnight interest rate, would be An improvement, I think. | ||
And it's not clear that, you know, the Federal Reserve officials just suck, like Gocknauer, or if they're betting on the game like Pete Rose was accused of doing at one point. | ||
It doesn't really matter. | ||
They've struck out. | ||
Right, it's almost like they've swung that third time, they whiffed, but they're just standing there as if they expect another hit and everybody's going, okay, I guess we'll keep pitching these guys even though they keep failing, even though everything gets worse. | ||
And it's interesting that you ended that statement The way that you did, because the first question I wanted to ask you when you came on was, and I have it written down here, incompetence or malice? | ||
I mean, is this incompetence or are they doing this on purpose? | ||
Is there a difference? | ||
I mean, and you sort of alluded to it there. | ||
What you're reading on what the Fed is doing and in general, the American economy, is what's happening happening on purpose or because they can't do any better? | ||
unidentified
|
Banners always have excuses. | |
You know, the sun was in my eye. | ||
I didn't get the right sign. | ||
You know, all sorts of things. | ||
But ultimately, one reason I went with baseball is because it's Partly a game, but it is reality. | ||
We can't set up a tee and switch to tee ball. | ||
Fed has to deal with the With the real world. | ||
And for whatever reason, it's not doing a very good job. | ||
And it's probably a combination of the two. | ||
I know that, for example, the Minneapolis Fed for about five years or so has gone woke and they stopped paying attention to monetary policy and started paying attention to what they call social justice or equity issues. | ||
And they went about it in a way that was the typical government top-down approach. | ||
We know what's best for you, specifically in the Minneapolis district with Indians. | ||
And that is what they prefer to be called, by the way. | ||
I'm not being deliberately politically incorrect saying I know many Indians having lived in South Dakota for a decade. | ||
And they all want to be called by their tribal name, like Lakota. | ||
Or if speaking generally, they want to be called Indians, not Native Americans. | ||
because I'm a Native American. | ||
Right. I was born in Rochester, New York. | ||
I'm sure you're a Native American in that sense. | ||
Very much so, yeah. Yeah, so it's very, very confusing. | ||
But anyway, the Minneapolis Fed started pushing this top-down agenda, and that's why I wrote the book for AER called Financial Exclusion, which simply points out that... | ||
Throughout American history, groups have been excluded from the financial system. | ||
Women and Blacks and Hispanics and various immigrant groups like Germans, the Irish, who were extremely discriminated against. | ||
And the solution was always the same. | ||
They went and formed their own financial institutions. | ||
Very interesting. Yeah, you brought up a bunch of interesting points, and I think what you're pointing to is something that we talk about here on this show every day. | ||
It's the forcible remaking of what even the economy is, like why it exists, why we have markets, like what they are supposed to respond to, what they do respond to. | ||
I mean, the economy, the market, it's supposed to reflect reality. | ||
It's supposed to just be sort of a... | ||
It's supposed to be the umpire in our little scenario here. | ||
It's supposed to be non-biased and just help to facilitate what people are already wanting to do. | ||
And yet recently, and forcibly, that has been altered in a really insane way with ESG scores... | ||
And suddenly, whether you make money and whether people want to buy your product is less important than whether you're serving certain social justice priorities. | ||
And if we want to continue with the baseball analogy, I mean, this would be like choosing baseball players, not because they're actually good and skillful and able to play the game, because it doesn't matter to you what the score is at the end of the day. | ||
You consider winning when you have the most... | ||
We have disabled players on our team, so we're better. | ||
It's like, yeah, but you also are getting blown out in the first inning, so you keep losing because you're not reflecting reality. | ||
Hopefully that makes sense. We'll get into it on the other side with Mr. | ||
Wright. Stay tuned. Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
My guest is Robert E. Wright. | ||
You can find his website at allseasonspress.com slash fearless. | ||
That's allseasonspress.com slash fearless. | ||
And you can actually pre-order his new book called Fearless, and that's where you do it. | ||
He co-wrote it with Wilma Sauce. | ||
Oh, I'm sorry. | ||
It's about Wilma Sauce. | ||
I'm sorry. I'm all mixed up here. | ||
But we'll get it all straightened out here with Mr. | ||
Right. And we'll touch on that in just a second. | ||
But you can go to allseasonspress.com slash fearless to preorder that book. | ||
And we'll tell you about it in just a little bit. | ||
But let's go back to where we were at the end of the last segment, which was this idea of the economy no longer serving its purpose, I would say, or the market no longer serving its purpose. | ||
That's my reading of it, that it no longer reflects the will of the American people making everyday decisions on what they want, what they don't want, what they value and what they'll pay for. | ||
But rather trying to put forward an ideology or some sort of scheme or plot that has nothing to do with what people actually want on the ground. | ||
I'd love to get your comments on that, Mr. | ||
unidentified
|
Wright. Yeah, absolutely correct. | |
And that's why I would like to see the Federal Reserve, if not completely ended, at least return to a place where it doesn't have what economists call monetary policy discretion. | ||
And they use that word discretion to mean that the Fed can influence the money supply. | ||
But another equally valid word to use there would be power. | ||
And that's why it's so difficult to go back to older arrangements like the gold exchange standard under Bretton Woods or the straight-up classical gold standard because then central bankers wouldn't have that monetary policy power. | ||
And obviously would have much less influence over the economy and the people within it. | ||
And I mean, do you think gold is the right things? | ||
It seems like at this point, cryptocurrency is all the rage. | ||
I don't trust cryptocurrency just like I don't trust Wall Street. | ||
I don't trust things I don't understand. | ||
So I tend to go away from it. | ||
And of course, we know that the people in power at the World Economic Forum and elsewhere Are saying that the CBDCs, the central bank digital currencies, they think are the future. | ||
I mean, that gives them total control, total surveillance capabilities and a whole bunch of other things that they're desperate to get that they aren't able to achieve with cash and actual physical money. | ||
So you think gold, going back to the gold standard, is viable and an appropriate response to what we're seeing with the economy? | ||
unidentified
|
Well, the classical gold standard would require other major economies to get on board, but there is a technique where the Fed could simply peg the dollar to gold, say $1,700 an ounce, and then buy and sell gold to maintain that peg. | |
And then that removes their monetary policy discretion or power because they have to maintain the peg. | ||
So if Congress comes along and says, oh, there's some sort of illness that's killing some old people and whatnot, we need to lock the economy down and we need the Fed to produce a bunch of money to support that, the Fed can then say, nope, sorry, can't do it. | ||
We have to maintain this peg. | ||
It adds another constraint against overreaching government. | ||
Another way to do it would be to adopt a monetary policy rule like the Taylor rule. | ||
Same sort of idea to constrain the Fed to stop that. | ||
What's the meme now? | ||
Brrr! To stop that. | ||
or at least to decrease their discretion or their power significantly so they can't just print money on demand. | ||
And we're supposed to have checks and balances in our system. | ||
And the Fed was supposed to, in its original creation, back just before the start of the Great War in the 1910s, it was supposed to act as yet another check through the gold standard mechanism. it was supposed to act as yet another check through | ||
It could have served as a check in 2020 when Congress wanted to support the crazy lockdown movement and the backs and mask mandates by printing money. | ||
The Fed could have said, no, we're not going to do that. | ||
But it turns out that the Fed is independent of the Right. | ||
They didn't just print money. | ||
They printed more than they ever have before in a more rapid way than they ever have before. | ||
You know, I make no bones about it. | ||
I'm a simple man when it comes to money. | ||
I give you money, you give me thing. | ||
That's as complicated as I want it to be. | ||
So I just get suspicious of all the complications that come in with the market. | ||
I just sort of reject outright. | ||
But am I missing something here? | ||
Because we've played the video before of Jerome Powell or whoever at the Fed... | ||
Using the phrase, yeah, we digitally print money. | ||
And to me, I'm a simple man. | ||
I go, okay, so you, this regular person, nobody's voted for them. | ||
They're not a member of the government. | ||
They're a private citizen with a private bank who has the power to, with the click of a button, summon money out of thin air. | ||
Just on a simple basis, that is... | ||
Horrifically unfair to me because I don't have that power. | ||
So, I mean, am I missing something here or is it really just that corrupt and so separated from any semblance of reality or normalcy or fairness in the market? | ||
unidentified
|
Yes, but it didn't start that way. | |
I'm reminded of that old adage about throwing the frog in a pot of water. | ||
One of our favorites, yeah. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, and then it warms up slowly. | |
So the Fed started when we were on the gold standard. | ||
The gold standard was supposed to be a check. | ||
Yeah. And then we switched to this Bretton Woods system after the Second World War, which was great for America at first. | ||
But then we started spending too much money fighting wars in Southeast Asia and with the so-called Great Society of LBJ. | ||
And other countries were like, oh, you are spending too much money. | ||
So they started to take their dollars and to return them for the Fed demanding gold. | ||
And so, you know, starting in 68 to 73 and a series of steps, we delinked the dollar from gold, which was something that Wilma Sosso, I know we'll talk about later, was adamantly opposed to and exactly for was adamantly opposed to and exactly for the right reasons. | ||
Yeah, it seems like almost a – because I was just looking again at this article of yours that – The latest can be found at AIER.org. | ||
Strike three for the Federal Reserve. | ||
And in one of the statements, you say lockdowns arguably made the stimulus necessary, but the lockdowns themselves were clearly unnecessary. | ||
AIER vigorously argued against lockdowns for over a year. | ||
And it's almost like That's the way that you know who to trust. | ||
You go back in time and you go, who predicted the outcome before it happened? | ||
And of course, Wilma Sauce did when it came to the gold, getting off the gold reserve. | ||
And we all did, including yourself in that group, predicted what was going to happen when it came to the lockdowns. | ||
And of course, at the time, we were scolded and said, how dare you value the economy over people's lives? | ||
Now here we are a year later. | ||
The economy is destroying people's lives, and they act like they don't even remember a year ago or a year and a half ago when they were advocating for the exact policies that are destroying the economy now. | ||
We'll talk about that, about what's happening with the economy today, what you can do to protect yourself or help mitigate the danger. | ||
On the other side, with Robert Wright, stay tuned. | ||
Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
My guest is Robert E. Wright. | ||
PhD in history. He's a senior research fellow at the American Institute for Economic Research. | ||
And you can find his articles there at AIER.org. | ||
You can find his latest article, Strike Three for the Federal Reserve. | ||
And of course, you're a historian on top of being an economist. | ||
It must be a fascinating time to be a historian and an economist these days with these... | ||
Brand new, unprecedented things like Wall Street bets and GameStop stuff that happened earlier this year and the inflation and ESG changes. | ||
I mean, is it exciting on an academic level to see all of this happen? | ||
Or is it all just how do you feel about all of the changes happening to the economy these days? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, and I hate to smile, but when the world goes south, my income goes up. | |
It happened in 2008 when suddenly I'm on Fox Business News for a whole hour with David Asman because nobody knew what was going on. | ||
But I had studied... | ||
Numerous, five actually, previous real estate bubbles that burst, that involved securitization as well in U.S. history. | ||
And nobody knew anything about it because hardly anyone reads history and even fewer people read history. | ||
Economic and financial history and policy history, which is my main area of expertise. | ||
But I'm not behind any of this stuff. | ||
I just report on what I see, given what I know from what we've experienced in the past and what people like Wilma Sauce have said and thought and done in the past. | ||
Right. And, you know, since you bring that up, you know, most people don't recognize it. | ||
Less people read it. | ||
Even fewer people understand it, I think. | ||
So you have really three up on everybody. | ||
But when it comes to bubbles bursting, I mean, the... | ||
The alarm bells are sounding. | ||
We had somebody calling yesterday, a caller, a researcher who said that he was sure mid-August would be the collapse. | ||
I see a lot of other people, online professionals, saying we're not going to make it through the week before something major happens. | ||
I mean, are you seeing the same thing that our audience is seeing, that it's sort of a perfect storm of problems that are going to coalesce and really... | ||
Yeah, it's really hard to time these things. | ||
unidentified
|
Sometimes it's just a random thing. | |
Occurrence can trigger underlying issues. | ||
But yeah, there's clearly trouble brewing with the enormous size of the U.S. national debt. | ||
The very short maturity on that debt, which is a technical issue that we probably shouldn't get into right now, but basically the Treasury has messed up by not taking advantage of that long period where we had very low interest rates, even on long-term debt. | ||
They continue to borrow short, and that means that the U.S. government's debt structure is going to be very costly very soon because they're going to have to pay more and more for money. | ||
You can see that just in the yields on I-bonds, which is a personal savings investment that people can make up to $10,000 that's yielding over 9% interest, which is not great compared that's yielding over 9% interest, which is not great compared to inflation, but is better than what most banks are paying right now. | ||
So the Fed's going to be caught in a tough position where it's going to have to decide between keeping the U.S. government's interest costs lower by buying up its bonds or allowing the nominal yields on U.S. Treasuries to increase. | ||
And if they do that, more and more of our tax dollars are going to be going to pay the U.S. national debt. | ||
Not to pay the level down, global's enormous, but just to service it, as they say in finance. | ||
Just to pay the interest on it. | ||
in order to repay debt that's coming due that we can't afford to pay. | ||
So that's a huge problem. | ||
Right. That means that workers are essentially being paid less in real money in actual goods and services and purchasing power. | ||
And so that's why they haven't been fired yet, because they're getting relatively cheaper and cheaper. | ||
So if that stops, then we're going to see unemployment go up, and that's going to lead to defaults that can lead to financial problems. | ||
Or their real wages are going to continue to decline, and that's going to lead to all sorts of unrest. | ||
Oh yeah, I see you have it up there, almost $0.6 trillion in spending money. | ||
Ever upward. So yeah, there are all kinds of warning signs. | ||
So many warning signs, in fact, that I devoted a couple of articles earlier this year on the AIER A website to just helping people to prepare. | ||
And it's probably not for your audience per se, because it was some pretty basic stuff like, hey, how about growing a garden just in case, you know? | ||
Hey, you know, you might want to keep some cash or some monetary silver or monetary gold if you can afford it on hand. | ||
in case the ATM machines stop working, like they do periodically in Canada, or in case we have bank runs and deposits are frozen, like recently happened in China, which happened in the United States in the 1930s because of the Federal Reserve favoring which happened in the United States in the 1930s because of the Federal Reserve favoring big | ||
So, yeah, there's all kinds of trouble brewing, and exactly how it will all play out is difficult to foresee, but any number of scenarios from a random exogenous shock is, | ||
as economists call it, like a major natural disaster, or civil unrest in parts of the country, or whatever triggers that, Could also start a cascading effect. | ||
The energy grid going down in part of the country, apparently Texas is having problems again. | ||
Any one of these outside things at any time could occur. | ||
And then start a cascading effect that could hit the rest of us and cause serious disruptions to our lives. | ||
Yeah, and I think it seems like the people in power are preparing for that, if not actively sort of desiring that. | ||
And just in a pure speculation here, But if you were in charge and you wanted to save your power and your economy, if you were an evil person that was in charge of the Federal Reserve, what would your action be to try to prevent what's going to happen or try to take advantage of what's going to happen? | ||
unidentified
|
Well, I think, and I wrote an article about this, I think if there is some sort of very big disruption, that the Fed will use it to try to introduce the CBDC, the Central Bank Digital Currency. | |
And that will give them a substantial amount of control over U.S. citizens and the U.S. economy, because they'll know how much money you receive exactly, So they can tax it. | ||
They'll see what you're spending it on. | ||
So they can take punitive action. | ||
If they find out that you're spending your money at Infowars.com, for example, then they can put you on lists and decrease your social credit score and all of that sort of awful stuff. | ||
So I think we're about to go to break here, so we'll pick this up on the other side. | ||
But I do think you're exactly right. | ||
And when you put it that way, I mean, we know they want to enact these central bank digital currencies. | ||
They want this control. It seems like, you know, when the disaster comes, it's not going to be a natural disaster. | ||
It's going to be something that they do on purpose because that's the outcome that they want. | ||
But hey, maybe I'm just a conspiracy theorist. | ||
We'll get back into it on the other side with Robert E. Wright. | ||
unidentified
|
Stay tuned. Welcome back, folks. | |
Final segment of American Journal here on Infowars.com and Band.video. | ||
The Daily Mail asks this question. | ||
Would you implant a tiny debit chip in your hand? | ||
Forget fingerprint or facial recognition. | ||
Biometric payment is being touted as the future. | ||
Yeah, combine a implant that controls your money with central digital banks where they have a transaction level surveillance and approval or disapproval of the purchases that you make and you have a recipe for total control of a population. | ||
And of course, InfoWars has talked about this for a very long time, and we will continue to talk about it as long as you keep us on the air. | ||
We rely on our audience and our listeners going to InfoWarsStore.com to keep us on the air right now. | ||
ease is 25% off, but there is a huge collection of storable food and survival gear and all sorts of stuff that may be necessary in the very near future. | ||
Because when we talk about the economy these days, it's not just stocks and bonds and interest rates, it actually comes down to a matter of survival. | ||
And you really need to be, you know, taking that into account and having either hard currency, you know, gold, silver, that sort of stuff, but also just food. | ||
Because when we look at the world today and the collapse that seems to be imminent and seems to be, you know, on the table and in accordance with the agenda of the people in charge, then we understand that it's not just about losing your life savings. | ||
It may very well be about losing your life if you aren't prepared. | ||
So better to have it and not need it than need it and not have it. | ||
Storable food available now at Infowarsstore.com. | ||
And of course, my guest is Robert E. Wright. | ||
You can find his work at A-I-E-R dot O-R-G. Because, of course, he is a Senior Research Fellow for the American Institute for Economic Research. | ||
And you have a new book, Mr. | ||
Wright, called Fearless, Wilma Sauce and America's Forgotten Investor Movement. | ||
It's been co-authored by yourself and Janice M. Trafflett, and it can be pre-ordered at the website allseasonspress.com slash fearless. | ||
Tell us about this book and what it represents in the modern world as you look back at Welcome to my show! | ||
unidentified
|
So, she went out into the business world and became a PR star during the 1930s. | |
She was pulling in $20,000 to $30,000 a year, which back then, you know, yeah, that was a lot of money. | ||
I mean, you could buy a pound of top sirloin for 50 cents and a gallon of gas for a quarter, and That was a tremendous amount of money to make, especially for a married woman. | ||
After the Second World War, she got into what's called corporate activism. | ||
She had all this money. She invested it in the stock market. | ||
She started going to annual stockholder meetings. | ||
And discovered this old boys' network of guys patting each other on the back and paying themselves too much and giving themselves perks. | ||
And she says, I'm not going to put up with this. | ||
So she literally stood up because that's what you have to do in stockholder meetings when you speak. | ||
She literally stood up and lambasted these people, said you need more women on corporate boards because women were more numerous than men in the stock market, which many people even today don't understand. | ||
They didn't own as many shares as men, but they were more numerous. | ||
Interesting. So she's showing up at these corporate annual stockholder meetings in costumes because she had been in the PR game. | ||
She knew that she could attract attention. | ||
And she became famous. | ||
In the mid-1950s, there was a Broadway play made about her. | ||
It was later turned into a Hollywood movie called Solid Gold Cadillac that did extremely well at the box office. | ||
And she kind of leveraged that into getting an NBC radio show weekly called Pocketbook News, where she tried to explain how the week's news events could impact small investors. | ||
And she also used it as a platform to push her agenda for corporate governance reform and for more qualified women on stockholder boards and so on and so forth. | ||
One key was that she was fervently independent. | ||
She said what she thought on air. | ||
And I'd gone through her archives out in Laramie one Wyoming with a fine-tooth comb and saw all of these complaints coming into NBC Radio. | ||
And to their credit, back then, the executive said, we don't care. | ||
This is her show. | ||
She backs everything up that she says. | ||
So, you know, it's too bad. | ||
Don't listen if you don't like it was sort of their response. | ||
Wow, what an attitude. Yeah, and she had a corporate sponsor the first year, a big pharmaceutical company that I won't name. | ||
But after that year, she said, I do not want this sponsorship because I do not know if the products that they are pushing actually do what the pharmaceutical company claims. | ||
And I don't want my name associated with it. | ||
And so she actually earned less money because she didn't have a corporate sponsor. | ||
She was just on NBC's, you know, general payroll. | ||
There were ads before and after her show, but nothing, you know, nothing in the middle. | ||
And she didn't have to do any product promos or anything anymore. | ||
And it increased her audience, which was started in the hundreds of thousands, but got into the millions over time because people knew that they could trust Wilma Sauce. | ||
She was right most of the time, not always, because nobody's perfect, but she spoke the truth as she saw it. | ||
And she did research and could back up her claims. | ||
And so her show ran nationally syndicated NBC Radio from 1957 to 1980. | ||
I remember she was born in 1900, so she started this career at age 57 and did it all the way up to age 80 when it just became too much. | ||
Her husband had passed. | ||
And she wanted to concentrate on her corporate activism. | ||
Till the month that she died, she kept showing up at corporate stockholder meetings and trying to get cumulative voting rights for stockholders, the secret ballot. | ||
For stockholders and, of course, always more qualified women on corporate boards, because that's the right American way of doing things, right? | ||
If there's something you don't like, you explain it to people and tell them what they can do to voluntarily make the choice. | ||
more of a moral suasion approach and a rational approach, instead of whining and complaining about it and going to government and trying to get, you know, something like a quota passed like they did in California, which thankfully was struck down as horrifically and clearly unconstitutional. which thankfully was struck down as horrifically and clearly unconstitutional. | ||
Right. This whole other avenue that if activists would just read the book and discover Wilma Sauce's techniques, they could apply them today and they might actually be able to change the world for the better. | ||
Right. Wow. Instead of just creating tumult. | ||
What a fascinating intersection of so many different topics that we discuss on an everyday basis. | ||
And of course, as you just mentioned, sort of the heart of her argument was that even if you just own a single share, you should have a say in the operation of the business, whereas at the time, small shareholders were more or less ignored. | ||
Do I have that more or less right? | ||
unidentified
|
Yes, that's correct. | |
So one of the One of the arguably good changes that she made in the world was, along with other corporate gadflies as they were called, is that stockholder annual meetings started to become an important thing. | ||
A place where stockholders could interrogate corporate boards and corporate executives and ask questions. | ||
compensation and their various perks if they really needed three jet planes. | ||
Right. | ||
If it was a good idea for the directors of the New York Central Railroad to fly to Chicago for their annual stockholder meeting. | ||
Right. | ||
No, that's great. | ||
unidentified
|
It was kind of a signal that passenger rail was dead. | |
And that led to my other recent AIER article called The Amtrak Abomination. | ||
Oh, good Lord. Well, we could get into that, but we only have a minute left. | ||
But that sounds incredibly interesting, actually. | ||
A real historical, underreported story that sounds fascinating. | ||
Again, you can pre-order that book at allseasonspress.com slash fearless. | ||
And, you know, I think that really goes to the heart of what we're experiencing here because for all of time, the shareholders have had a say in the operation of the business and their goal was to make money. | ||
money. | ||
And now we're moving away from that with the World Economic Forum concept of stakeholder capitalism that is causing so many of the problems that just collapsed the government in Sri Lanka. | ||
And of course, we see how it's affecting people here. | ||
So a very pertinent story for the times. | ||
I just want to thank you very much, Mr. Wright, for coming on with us and sharing your wisdom. | ||
We'd love to have you on again soon. | ||
Again, folks, you can go to aier.org to find his stories and his latest articles and his book Fearless will be coming out soon. | ||
It's available for pre-order now. | ||
Thank you so much for coming on, Mr. | ||
unidentified
|
Wright. Thank you, Harrison. | |
Anytime. All right, folks. | ||
Stay tuned. The Alex Jones Show begins in two minutes. | ||
Please go to Infowarsstore.com to support us. | ||
We rely completely on your support. | ||
unidentified
|
See you tomorrow. Five years ago, | |
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But when you experience how amazing it is, I know you're going to be blown away, and you're going to want to order it again and again and again, which is a 360 win, a symbiotic relationship. | ||
This summer, so much is going on, whether it's for your outhouse, or whether it's your pit toilet, or whether it's your RV, or your boat, or port-a-potties, or septic tanks, or for your drains like I mainly use it, it is a game changer. | ||
Now, before it was only available at thebiopros.com. | ||
You should go there, watch the instructional videos, read all the amazing science behind it, American-made, American-developed, incredible. | ||
But you can also now get it at InfoWarsStore.com. | ||
It works great. It's made in America. | ||
And it funds the InfoWars. | ||
A total win. Seven months ago, in December of 2021, we launched the first in the three-coin founding member series, George Washington, Slaying the Dragon. | ||
Then, we launched the Tree of Liberty coin, and finally, the Second Amendment, come and take it, Molon Labbe coin. | ||
There are only 75 coins left in the three-coin. | ||
This is history happening now. |