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unidentified
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You're watching The American Journal with your host, Harrison Smith. | |
Watch live right now at band.video. | ||
Good morning, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
Welcome to American Journal. | ||
I'm your host, Harrison Smith. | ||
You're watching us on Infowars.com. | ||
Band.video, as ever. | ||
Thank you so much for being here with us. | ||
We've got a pretty big show for you today. | ||
It's a little bit of a slow news day, but that's all right, because there's still, oh, just plenty to talk about. | ||
All sorts of crazy nonsense. | ||
And we'll get into all of it. We also have been a little bit light on phone calls this week, and we're going to make up for that today and be taking your phone calls throughout the show. | ||
I guess let's just get right into it, shall we, with our daily dispatch. | ||
All right, here it is folks. | ||
Your daily dispatch for Friday, the 23rd of September, 2022. | ||
Exclusive from Gateway Pundit, DOJ drops a bomb, admits federal government ran informants inside the Oath Keepers on January 6th. | ||
They sprung this on the January 6th attorneys less than one week before trials. | ||
Next week, the United States government is holding trials of several Oathkeeper members who attended the protest in Washington, D.C. on January 5th and 6th. | ||
The DOJ is hoping to convince a jury that the Oathkeepers were planning an insurrection at the Capitol on January 6th. | ||
Stuart Rhodes, the Oathkeeper founder and president, told all the members to leave their firearms and hotels outside of the city. | ||
Of course, they were working security that day at the Ellipse, where President Donald Trump spoke to a million supporters. | ||
Several Oathkeepers then walked to the U.S. Capitol, where at least two more protests were planned. | ||
A handful of Oathkeeper members entered the U.S. Capitol that day, where they stood around, picked up trash, spoke with police, and left when they were told to. | ||
You know, like an insurrection, like a deadly terrorist attack. | ||
Except not at all. | ||
Next week, the government starts its trial against Oath Keeper members they arrested. | ||
The trial for Oath Keepers founder Stuart Rhodes starts on Tuesday with jury selection. | ||
On Thursday, the U.S. government sent a letter to the attorneys of nine Oath Keep members. | ||
With the U.S. government finally admitting in this letter that they were running confidential human sources inside the Oath Keepers organization on January 6th. | ||
The government also notified the attorneys that they are issuing a protective order for the operatives that they ran inside the organization on January 6th. | ||
The feds sandbagged the defense for nearly two years and then sprang the existence of these confidential human sources at the 11th hour. | ||
On Thursday evening, sources notified the Gateway Pundit. | ||
The government admitted to defense attorneys that there were government operatives inside the Oath Keepers organization. | ||
So, in other words, if there had been a plan to stage an insurrection at the U.S. Capitol, they could have stopped it before it ever went forward. | ||
The fact that it did go forward is more or less proof that there was never a plan to be violent in the first place. | ||
Sort of destroying the entire foundation of the government's case. | ||
And destroys their reasoning for having kept these people in prison, in many cases solitary confinement, for the last several months. | ||
Just open corruption, manipulation, and yes, feds in the ranks of the protesters on January 6th. | ||
We'll report more on that later in the show. | ||
Moving on here, CNN's headline, Occupied parts of Ukraine vote on joining Russia in, quote, sham referendums. | ||
They just insert the word sham, put it in quotation marks, and change the entire meaning of the headline without adding any factual difference. | ||
The referendums which are illegal under international law, it's illegal to hold a vote. | ||
It's illegal to ask people what they want to do. | ||
This is international law after all. | ||
We uphold international law when it benefits us. | ||
So now we're very serious about it. | ||
They dismiss it as a sham by Western governments in Kiev. | ||
But it could pave the way for Russian annexation of the area, allowing Moscow to frame the ongoing Ukraine counteroffensive as an attack on Russia itself. | ||
Such a move could provide Moscow with a pretext to escalate its faltering war, which has seen Kiev regain thousands of square miles of territory this month. | ||
In an address Wednesday, Russian President Vladimir Putin raised the specter of nuclear weapons in his address. | ||
Saying that he would use all means at our disposal if he deemed the territorial integrity of Russia to be jeopardized. | ||
Again, we'll report more on this later. | ||
It probably is a sham referendum. | ||
Frankly, aren't they all? | ||
I mean, wasn't Brexit? | ||
I mean, aren't they all? | ||
unidentified
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You're tuned in to The American Journal with your host, Harrison Smith. | |
Watch it live right now at band.video. | ||
All right, welcome back, folks. Finishing up our daily dispatch on this, the 23rd of September. | ||
Britain bets all on historic tax cuts in borrowing and investors take fright. | ||
Britain's new finance minister, Kwasi Kwarteng, Unleashed historic tax cuts and huge increases in borrowing on Friday in an economic agenda that floored financial markets with sterling and British government bonds in freefall. | ||
Huartang scrapped the country's top rate of income tax, canceled a planned rise in corporate taxes, and for the first time put a price tag on the spending plans of Prime Minister Liz Trust, who wants to double Britain's rate of economic growth. | ||
Investors unloaded short-dated government gains, British government bonds as fast as they could, with the cost of borrowing over five years seeing its biggest one-day rise since 1991 as Britain raised its debt issuance plans for the current financial year by £72.4 billion, or about $81 billion. | ||
The pound slid below $1.11 for the first time in 37 years. | ||
The announcement marked a step change in British economic policy, harking back to the Thatcherite and Reaganomics doctrines of the 1980s that critics have derided as a return to trickle-down economics. | ||
Y'all know that the term trickle-down economics was never actually used in a positive way by Reagan himself. | ||
Like, they act like this was something that Republicans actually invented and were like, thought was real. | ||
But no, it was a disparaging way to describe the absolute economic boom that was experienced by all Americans under Reagan. | ||
Just a just a little historical note there for you every time you hear the words trickle down economics recognize that is a total and baseless mischaracterization of what it actually is which is just good economics which is just letting people keep their money and getting the government out of the way but we'll see how that goes. | ||
Gateway Pundit has this story. | ||
GOP lawmaker obtains new documents that show Joe and Hunter Biden working to sell U.S. natural gas and drilling assets to China. | ||
They have whistleblowers who will testify. | ||
We'll show you a video of Representative James Comer talking to John Solomon of Just the News. | ||
A little bit later in the show, Representative Comer recently obtained new documents that show Hunter and Joe Biden were working to sell American natural gas and drilling assets to Communist China. | ||
Leave him alone, you guys. | ||
Right? Joe Biden gets asked about Hunter and he's like, I love my son. | ||
He's had difficult addictions. | ||
People need to stop bullying him and being mean to him. | ||
We don't care about that, Joe. | ||
And we said you don't love your son. | ||
You probably love your kids too much from what I've heard. | ||
It's a little creepy, actually. | ||
Your grandchildren, too. | ||
We're all concerned about all that, but that's not what the concern over Hunter Biden is. | ||
What the concern over Hunter Biden is, is that you use him as a proxy to carry out your corrupt dealing where you sell the wealth and power of America to the highest bidder of our foreign adversaries. | ||
So that's a big issue, actually. | ||
Maybe stop. It's almost weird how it's like the degenerate, drug-addicted whoremonger that is Hunter Biden. | ||
It's like, shouldn't that make it worse? | ||
Somehow they deflect. | ||
It's like, this is the situation that we're in. | ||
When you talk about the son of the president, it's like, well, he's just a crack-addicted whoremonger, okay? | ||
So leave him alone. | ||
It's like, no, that's bad already, but that's actually the least objectionable thing about him, actually. | ||
It's the open and ubiquitous corruption that follows him everywhere he goes, but... | ||
We'll talk more about that later. | ||
Finally, we have this story, which really just makes me wonder how long, how long until we're at this level. | ||
Mexico City police injured by explosion at protest. | ||
An explosion occurred outside Mexico's Attorney General's office on Thursday, injuring police as protesters demonstrated ahead of the anniversary of the 2014 disappearance of 43 students clashed with officers in... | ||
Clad in riot gear. | ||
Those injured by the explosion were loaded onto ambulances. | ||
Broken glass and blood were visible. | ||
Members of a bomb squad cordoned off the area. | ||
One undetonated object that an explosives technician recovered appeared to be a small pipe bomb, a tube with two capped ends. | ||
Mexico City's police department said that 11 police officers were injured by shrapnel from fireworks and some suffered bruises. | ||
They were all taken to hospitals and the injuries were not considered life-threatening. | ||
The protest was just one of a host of activities planned in advance of Monday... | ||
Monday's 8th anniversary of the students' disappearances, protests that include relatives of the disappeared students, have usually remained peaceful. | ||
Thursday's demonstration started that way, too, with chants and speeches. | ||
Most of the protesters boarded buses and left before a small group that stayed behind clashed with police. | ||
Mass protesters threw rocks and launched bottle rockets into police lines. | ||
Other spray-painted areas around the building with demands for the missing students' safe return. | ||
In case you don't know what happened, yeah, 43 students basically were disappeared by the Mexican government. | ||
I actually did a documentary on that with Ben Swan one year and we were followed around by the feds and it was kind of horrifying, kind of terrifying because I guess it's easy to take for granted the safety and Efficiency and uprightness, I guess you'd say, of the American system, where we still, as much as it's going away, you can still question and investigate everybody except for the Clintons and feel pretty safe about it. | ||
Not so much in Mexico. | ||
If it's not, you've got the two-headed beast of the cartels and the police, and it's hard to say which is the more threatening to the average person. | ||
Normal Mexican citizen. | ||
So, you know, this is where we're going. | ||
This is where we're headed, right? | ||
I can see it happening in America within the next few years, but it's another example of why maybe we should tap the brakes on the whole collapsing into a third world status so we don't have to Have things like an election season where 300 candidates are murdered, right? Where journalists are murdered by the dozens every single year. | ||
Where the police can disappear, 43 students, and then never answer a single question about it ever. | ||
And the protests of which go on for years for culminating in a terrorist attack. | ||
Maybe, maybe we can, we can not be the corrupt people. | ||
Society that we find south of our border. | ||
But it's getting increasingly difficult as south of the border is increasingly entering into our country. | ||
So there it is. That's it for the Daily Dispatch. | ||
We're going to move on now. | ||
Folks, I don't know how much I'll talk. | ||
I watched the trial yesterday. | ||
I pretty much watched the whole thing yesterday. | ||
As much of it as I could. | ||
There's been lots of clips going around right now. | ||
I guess I won't say too much about it. | ||
What I will say is they're not shy about going after our form of income to really an absurd degree. | ||
I mean, you would never, you can never even imagine. | ||
You couldn't even fathom CNN or Fox News and the president of those companies having to get up and be bombarded with questions about the Products that they advertise. | ||
Holding up a product that they advertise and going, do you know how much this makes cost to manufacture and how much they sell it for? | ||
It's like it's an advertisement. If people want the product, they can buy it. | ||
If they don't, they don't. | ||
And of course, the entire thing is predicated. | ||
Like their entire method, their entire strategy in this court proceedings is it's a media play, right? | ||
It's for the cameras. It's a show trial with a predetermined outcome and It's a struggle session, like Alex said, on the stand yesterday. | ||
So it's mostly for the media, and they're mostly relying on the ignorance of the people watching the media to get across their point. | ||
In other words, they spent a long time talking about How cheap it is to produce the products versus what we sell it for with like a couple hundred percent markup, which is totally normal. | ||
Alex tells you about it whenever he talks about these products anyway. | ||
And I guess they just expect people not to understand that items are cheaper when you buy like 10,000 of them, right? | ||
If you buy 10,000 cans of Coke, it's going to be cheaper than buying just one. | ||
And cans of Coke are actually a pretty good example of this. | ||
You know how much it costs to produce a can of Coke? | ||
I was doing some research on the internet. | ||
The number I came up with was about five cents. | ||
It takes about five cents to produce a can of Coke. | ||
And they sell them routinely for like $2.50, $3 in some cases. | ||
It's like a 500% markup. | ||
I mean, it's even more than that. | ||
It's an insane markup. | ||
But of course, InfoWars is bad, guys, because... | ||
Because we sell things for super cheap, actually. | ||
Cheaper than you can get them at grocery stores. | ||
Infowarsstore.com. Go get a fantastic supplement. | ||
Stick your finger in the eye of the New World Order. | ||
unidentified
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All right, welcome back, folks. | |
We're going to go ahead and open up the phone lines nice and early this Friday morning. | ||
1-877-789-2539. | ||
Give us a call here at American Journal. | ||
1-877-789-2539. | ||
We have a lot of videos to play. | ||
Let's watch them, shall we? | ||
Babylon B... It's doing a pretty good job. | ||
They're doing a pretty good job at coming out with skits. | ||
They come out with them pretty regularly, and I really think they're getting better. | ||
The ideas are always pretty good. | ||
The jokes, they could use a few more jokes, but I just like seeing actually good sketch comedy. | ||
I don't even care if it's political or not. | ||
It's just I grew up with You know, the best of Saturday Night Live tapes and Monty Python tapes and even Mad TV back then had some pretty decent characters. | ||
That can make you laugh every once in a while. | ||
Doesn't really exist anymore. | ||
Really, maybe the 2000s were like the heyday of sketch comedy. | ||
Dave Chappelle, Saturday Night Live. | ||
There was actually... | ||
Actually some fun stuff going on. | ||
Nowadays it's just all pathetically bad. | ||
So it's great to see the right wing taking over that gap in entertainment. | ||
Actually producing good skits that are funny and have a political message that is not The one that you hear from everywhere else, you know? | ||
It's like the option now you get is you can watch CNN where they're very seriously telling you the talking points you need to understand, or you can go to SNL or The Late Show and hear the exact same talking points, but with a laugh track underneath. | ||
It's the death of culture. | ||
It's the strangulation of... | ||
Our entire entertainment system. | ||
And it's wonderful to see right-wingers breaking out during this drought of comedy that we're experiencing right now. | ||
So let's go to clip number one here. | ||
It's Babylon B. The FBI gets a great night's sleep after raiding the MyPillows guy. | ||
Let's watch. Hi. | ||
unidentified
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I'm FBI Special Agent Hetfield. | |
We recently raided founder and CEO of MyPillow, Mike Lindell. | ||
We expected to find evidence of election tamper, fraud, support for Trump, which, as you know, is highly illegal. | ||
We didn't find any of that, though. | ||
What we did find was a good night's sleep. | ||
I gotta say, politics aside, these pillows that we confiscated from Mike Lindell are the most comfortable, nicest pillows that I've ever slept on. | ||
I mean, all the guys in the office can't stop talking about how comfortable and soft they really are. | ||
Before we rated Mike Lindell as a political stunt, I was using a competitor's pillow. | ||
And I just couldn't get a wink. | ||
It was not a good pillow. | ||
I can't sleep. | ||
How can I sleep knowing I'm just a political arm of the Biden administration? | ||
But now, after a long day raiding Biden's political opponents, investigating concerned parents at school board meetings, and egging on disturbed young men to commit acts of terror, I can finally catch abusees with MyPillow's patented adjustable fill stay cool technology and fluffy design that will not go flat no matter how many Trump supporters I beat with it. | ||
Where were you on January 6th? | ||
Come! You want me to do it again? | ||
I'll hit you again! Is that what you want? | ||
Go ahead! It's so comfortable. | ||
unidentified
|
MyPillow. The official pillow of the FBI. When you can't sleep at night because your conscience is bothering you from all the raids on American citizens you're carrying out each and every day, make it a MyPillow. | |
Order yours today and save with promo code B1. That's B-E-E and the number one. | ||
Yeah, pretty good stuff. | ||
Yeah, didn't find any evidence of terrorism, didn't find any evidence of election tampering or anything of the sort, but did find a wonderful night's sleep. | ||
Sometimes the simplest ideas are the best. | ||
We have another really good video here. | ||
Yeah, we'll continue on a high note here at the beginning of the show before we delve into the depths of corruption as we begin talking about politics in general. | ||
I'm going to go to clip number 10 here. | ||
This is a representative or at least a member of Gays Against Groomers speaking out at a city or county council meeting there in California with a very powerful diatribe against the perversion and manipulation of children happening at schools. | ||
Again, this is the group that was just banned from PayPal, banned from Google, banned from a number of platforms, banned from Twitter. | ||
At some point, the word itself, groomers, banned from Twitter because how dare you suggest that we not... | ||
Please proselytize and propagandize your child into our particular religious view. | ||
These are sick people. | ||
They are groomers and enablers of groomers. | ||
And it's wonderful to see Americans of every stripe, of every, you know, whatever, sexual inclination. | ||
Like, it doesn't matter. You're an adult. | ||
You can do whatever you want. Just stay away from our children. | ||
And it's great to see people standing up against this. | ||
You just have to wonder if the people listening... | ||
Even care a little bit. | ||
They should. | ||
Let's watch. | ||
unidentified
|
Good evening. | |
My name is Mario Presents, and I'm here as a representative from Gays Against Groomers Coalition with over 250,000 followers across social media and as the uncle of two students in your district. | ||
It has come to our attention that the district intends to teach transgenderism to children under the age of 10 without parental consent. | ||
If I were to teach your child about my sexuality without your consent or involvement, I'd be arrested. | ||
But when the school district does it, it's education. | ||
Districts are teaching transgenderism when they should be teaching science, math, and language. | ||
Instead, teachers are hiding student pronouns from their parents under the guise of gender affirmation. | ||
Can you imagine the uproar if schools were evangelizing or baptizing children without parental consent? | ||
Isn't that sort of what you're doing? | ||
You don't tuck these children in at night, you don't teach them to stand up to bullies, you don't pay their medical bills, and you certainly don't hold their hands in the hospital. | ||
These parents do. Simple truths based in science need to be upheld for our society to flourish. | ||
The gross indoctrination we're seeing is creating a lifetime of medication and hormones because you can't simply pause puberty. | ||
Men cannot become women and sex chromosomes are encoded into the fabric of our DNA. Simply affirming a teenager's gender is akin to affirming anorexia. | ||
Both are body dysmorphic disorders, yet we don't teach the starving teenagers how to binge and purge or affirm that they are indeed overweight. | ||
However, school districts, including yours, seem to have no issue secretly teaching girls that they can be boys because they feel uncomfortable in their bodies. | ||
A grown adult woman can't get a hysterectomy without extensive medical forms and doctor's visits. | ||
But Dr. Safir, over the hill in Sherman Oaks, is willing to do top and bottom surgery, sterilizing children for life. | ||
Parents must be a part of the education process when teaching sexuality to students, and it definitely doesn't need to happen under the age of 10 years old. | ||
And the applause continues unabated for like a good 30 seconds until the speaker has to shut everybody up. | ||
Shut up, okay, shut up. | ||
We know he's right, but we're going to ignore him and continue doing what we're doing. | ||
It's really amazing how much you can fit into two minutes. | ||
That was a two-minute speech there that covered the entire topic from just about every single angle. | ||
Bravo. Incredibly well done. | ||
And when you realize that this really is proselytizing a religion, you understand just how objectionable this type of programming is in public schools. | ||
Incredible stuff. We'll be right back. | ||
unidentified
|
You're watching The American Journal with your host, Harrison Smith. | |
Watch live right now at band.video.com. | ||
Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
This is American Journal, Infowars.com. | ||
Infowarsstore.com is where you go to support us. | ||
And you can. | ||
As much as they don't want you to, as much as powers that be, you want to portray Infowars selling products as some sort of devious scheme to raise money. | ||
It's just what everybody does. | ||
It's just literally the same thing everyone does. | ||
So... Sorry. | ||
Sorry. Yeah, we got to keep ourselves on air. | ||
I guess we could go to some sort of subscription model and then that would be portrayed as some devious scheme. | ||
You expect people to pay you money just to watch the stuff you produce? | ||
What sort of sick game is this? | ||
I mean, we're up front about literally everything, so here's how it goes. | ||
We give you the information for free. | ||
We stream live for free. | ||
We have our videos up forever as soon as they go up. | ||
We have band.video, and we have one source of advertising. | ||
It's Infowars Store. | ||
You can get everything you need at Infowars Store, whether it's for your own personal life or do your holiday shopping. | ||
Get it done early. Get it out of the way. | ||
Get some air filters and some water filters. | ||
It doesn't matter who you give it to. | ||
They'll love it. | ||
Their life will be improved by it. | ||
They don't have to know where it comes from. | ||
Go to InfoWarsStore.com right now. | ||
Take advantage of the immunity supercharger sale and keep us on the air and fighting back in the face of overwhelming, tyrannical, authoritarian attacks. | ||
By the way, this is my first time holding the Theodore Roosevelt Citizen in a Republic Man in the Arena coin. | ||
I've already blemished it with my fingerprints. | ||
But my goodness. | ||
The Man in the Arena, one ounce,.999 fine silver. | ||
You can get this at 1776coin.com. | ||
It is a keepsake. | ||
It is a token of your participation in the Infowar. | ||
And it is really a beautiful work of art. | ||
It's almost... It's the type of thing, I don't want to compare it to the blood clots that were pulled out right in front of me, but it's the type of thing that watching it later on TV, it doesn't have the same impact as seeing it in person. | ||
I'm getting kind of the same feeling here. | ||
I've seen so many videos of this coin, and it's a beautiful coin on video. | ||
But man, holding it in your hand, it really is a beautiful thing. | ||
Silver. Rings like a bell when you strike it. | ||
But there it is, Theodore Roosevelt, citizen in a republic. | ||
Man in the arena coin. | ||
Get yours today at 1776coin.com. | ||
We're going to take your phone calls now. | ||
We have a lot of phone calls coming in, so we're going to get to as many of these as possible. | ||
Still more videos to show you. | ||
Still more pretty jaw-dropping revelations in the political sphere. | ||
We also have some interesting developments in the European sphere. | ||
Some white pilling. | ||
Some good news. Out of the countries of Europe where both Italy and Sweden have recently taken a hard right turn in the most recent elections. | ||
Both Sweden and Italy now to be ruled by the far right members of that society, meaning they may be getting back on track. | ||
And there's a pretty interesting dichotomy that we'll get into between the countries actually Good morning, | ||
Harrison. Good morning, sir. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, I've been thinking a lot about, you know, what's the best way to hit these people, proverbially, of course. | |
And they are so into material things that we know. | ||
They want the globe, right? | ||
These are globalists. They want the globe for themselves only. | ||
And This vaccine thing that they've done, again, this isn't the first time. | ||
There was the vaccine that was reportedly back in 1819, the Spanish flu of 1819. | ||
Yeah, 1919, I think. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh yeah, sorry, 1918. | |
Yeah, I had that reversed. I'm a little dyslexic. | ||
So that was reportedly, you know, the joke going around in the hospital, not the joke, but the sarcasm was that there were more people dying of shots in the hospital than were out on the battlefield. | ||
And that's really how many that vaccine plan back then killed. | ||
And they, of course, blamed it all on the Spaniards, which still detests us for that very thing. | ||
Well, you know what's amazing? | ||
So I was listening to an episode of Hardcore History. | ||
There's a podcast called Hardcore History, very well done by a guy named Dan Carlin. | ||
And he did—it was just incredibly interesting to listen to it. | ||
I listened to it last weekend, and it was— I wish I could remember the exact name of it, but it was a podcast about a history of plagues and sicknesses and pandemics and epidemics, and it was recorded before coronavirus, and so hearing the way that plagues or pandemics were talked about, and he sort of Ask the question, what would it look like if something like this happened in the modern day was extremely eye-opening. | ||
And when he gets to the Spanish flu, and he's talking about the Spanish flu, it was one of those things where it was just like, you wanted to stop and go, well, hold on. | ||
There's something missing here. | ||
Because the history of the Spanish flu, as I understand it, the official history, was that the Spanish flu cropped up at a military base in the U.S. in like the middle of America, right? | ||
So... And he's talking about all these different flus or all these different viruses and how they come about and blah, blah. | ||
And he's like, yeah, then in 1918, this flu cropped up at this military base. | ||
And it's like, where did it come? | ||
Well, hold on. Pump the brakes there for a minute. | ||
unidentified
|
History repeats itself, right? | |
Right, yeah. And so I want to get it out there. | ||
I'm so glad there's some other people like Stu Peters. | ||
And I talked with Josh Lakash not too long ago, and he's They're anti-vaxxers now, and more people are heading that way. | ||
And I really want to hear you guys say, what we need to do is stop it with the kids. | ||
I mean, that's where they got us. | ||
They had us already on this mandate thing with our children. | ||
And it's never really been shown to do anything, even with polio. | ||
It was like the sanitation took half of that away before the vaccine ever came out. | ||
And they took the credit for it. | ||
I'll tell you, it makes perfect sense, doesn't it? | ||
If you're trying to take advantage of somebody, if you're trying to manipulate someone, the most vulnerable person maybe in the world is a parent with a sick child, right? | ||
unidentified
|
Of course. | |
A parent who has their child suffering in their arms and is looking for any professional answer, anybody who can say, I understand what's going on and I can help you fix it, they'll do anything to help the child get better. | ||
So it makes perfect sense that they use the children and they use the pressure on the parents and go, it's going to be your fault if the child dies, if you don't let me stick them with this needle. | ||
And that is the most powerful form of persuasion you can possibly get. | ||
So I think you're exactly right. | ||
And, you know, again, this is what Bill Gates was pointing to when he said we're in a worse position than we were before. | ||
They expected the coronavirus to be such an overwhelming, I mean, and it was. | ||
Obviously, it completely changed the entire world for all of history. | ||
It'll never be the same, regardless of if we get back to some sense of normalcy. | ||
The changes that have been made are already incontrovertible or irreversible at this point. | ||
But, you know, his point was that now people looked into the coronavirus vaccine. | ||
They had some questions about it. | ||
They saw that maybe we weren't getting the full truth about it. | ||
And so then they started asking questions about other vaccines. | ||
And this has been one of the main backlashes against coronavirus and one of the failures of the New World Order in this regard. | ||
They wanted all of us to come begging on our knees, please give us more vaccines. | ||
Instead, People went the other direction. | ||
And I think you're also seeing that on evidence in Europe. | ||
And again, we'll get into this a little bit later. | ||
Maybe I'll cover it in the next segment, but I want to take more phone calls. | ||
But Europe is major backlash against the Great Reset. | ||
Electoral victories on the far right on explicitly anti-immigrants and anti-Great Reset positions. | ||
I mean, they push too hard, too fast. | ||
They overplayed their hand and they're now suffering the consequences of it. | ||
Let's go to... Thank you so much for the call, Dr. | ||
J. Very good stuff. Let's go to U-Haul in Alabama. | ||
We have about a minute left in this segment. | ||
U-Haul, you're on the air. All right. | ||
unidentified
|
I'll try to make it as fast as possible. | |
Tomorrow, I just want to warn all the listeners along with yourself, Mr. | ||
Harrison, about sort of the end of something called the Schmitta or the... | ||
Yeah, the Schmidt, the S-H-M-I-T-A, the sabbatical year, the year of the Sabbath. | ||
Basically, what it is, is that at the end of every seven years, we have 9-11, we have the mortgage meltdown, we have the Chinese banks meltdown in 2015, and the migrant crisis, and also in 2015. | ||
This year, we have the Russian election going on in the poor region. | ||
There? And what's that? | ||
I don't know if you could hold me over to the break unless I have to go. | ||
Sorry, I hear the music. Well, this is something that I have not heard before, so I would like to hold you over. | ||
So every seven years, something bad happens. | ||
We'll hear more about this on the other side with U-Haul from Alabama and take more of your phone calls. | ||
Don't go anywhere, folks. Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
American Journal, Infowars.com, still going strong. | ||
We go out to your phone calls now. | ||
U-Haul in Alabama, you were saying that every seven years something bad happens, like it's cyclical or even almost planned. | ||
I mean, to be honest with you, I'm a little bit skeptical because it seems like the type of thing that... | ||
You know, I'm sure I could come up with something every eight years that's bad and go, see, I told you something bad happened and, you know, something bad happens every year. | ||
So what is your evidence that this is something that's actually on a cyclical cycle and not just something that you can sort of impose upon world events and sort of, you know, find patterns that maybe don't exist, you know, outside of your perception? | ||
unidentified
|
Sure. No, I'm not a part of the Jewish faith or whatever, but every seventh year is the year of the Sabbath. | |
No, there's Shemitah, or S-H-E-M-I-T-A. It's every seven years, and so, yeah, it's basically according to that, and I don't know if it's more than just some Zodiac calendar, but what it is is that when you kind of look back at what happened in 2015, the Chinese bank, 2008 Lehman Brothers, that was here in us. And also in 2015, it was the start of the migrant crisis, demographic change in Europe, the entire continent. | ||
2001, we know what happened there. | ||
And so just according, and then now that I look at it, or at least if I were to kind of add things up for this year, overnight at midnight, you had Donetsk, Luhansk, Pearson, and Zephyrsia basically had their elections. | ||
And so what Putin says is that, well, if you do anything to our territories now, this is considered a nuclear war. | ||
And so their elections that took place overnight, basically they didn't have any voting places or polling places at all. | ||
I think it was door to door. | ||
So it was all ballot harvesting. | ||
So with the, whatever happens with that result, it wouldn't surprise me that something ominous happened this weekend. | ||
And then you look at this country, that railroad strike did not end with Amtrak or the railroad yards in the union. | ||
FedEx already gives a bad forecast. | ||
And so kind of what we saw back in a way, but it's just, again, uh, and of course I'm not here to push paranoia or nothing. | ||
It's just something to be on the lookout because the cycle, the start of Rosh Hashanah starts, I believe, tomorrow night into Sunday morning. | ||
So I'll call you again on Monday in case I'm longing to have egg in my face and then buy like 10, 17, 76 points from you just for that. | ||
So I wouldn't mind doing it. | ||
Thank you for this call. | ||
Yeah, I hadn't heard about this. If y'all could bring up that page again, I just want to read from this Wikipedia page for our radio listeners in case you can't read it on your screen. | ||
I'd never heard of this. | ||
Shemitah, the Sabbath year, meaning release, also called the sabbatical year or seventh year of the land, the seventh year of a seven-year agricultural cycle mandated by the Torah in the land of Israel and observed in Judaism. | ||
During Shemitah, the land is left to lie fallow, and all agricultural activity, including plowing, planting, pruning, and harvesting, is forbidden by the Great Reset. | ||
I'm sorry. | ||
Forbidden by the World Economic Forum. | ||
No, I'm sorry. | ||
Is forbidden by Jewish law. | ||
Other cultivation techniques, such as watering, fertilizing, weeding, spraying, trimming, and mowing, may be performed as a preventative measure only, not to improve the growth of trees or other plants. | ||
Additionally, any fruits or herbs which grow of their own accord and which no watch is kept over them are deemed ownerless and may be picked by anyone. | ||
A variety of laws also applies to the sale, consumption, and disposal of Shemitah produce. | ||
All debts except those of foreigners were to be remitted. | ||
That's very interesting. | ||
And the current Schmitte year is 2021 to 2022. | ||
Or Anomundi 5782 in the Hebrew calendar. | ||
Pretty interesting. | ||
Chapter 25 of the book of Leviticus promises bountiful harvest to those who observe the Shemitah and describe its observance as a test of religious faith. | ||
Interesting stuff. I hadn't been aware of that, U-Haul. | ||
Thank you. And of course, you're bringing up September 24th. | ||
There's been a lot of talk about September 24th. | ||
I haven't really been able to put my finger on exactly where this talk comes from. | ||
Apparently there was a person speaking to either German Parliament or European Parliament who just made an offhand comment. | ||
It may have been Polish, actually. | ||
I'm sorry, I don't have the exact details, but I'm sure people have seen this. | ||
It's been going around. He's saying, September 24th will be a day everyone will remember. | ||
It's kind of like everyone's going, why? | ||
Why would he say that, and what is this about? | ||
I can't really put my finger. | ||
I see a lot of talk about it, but I can't figure out where it's coming from or what people think is happening. | ||
We have Beau in Arizona who's called in about this topic. | ||
Let's go to line 11 here. | ||
Bo, thanks for calling in. | ||
What is happening on September 24th, Tamara? | ||
What do you think is going on? You got me? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, I got you, Bo. Yeah, so, well, and I, again, I'm not Jewish either. | |
I'm going to follow up. So, yeah, we have Rosh Hashanah on Monday, it looks like. | ||
And this is basically just the Sabbath year every seventh year. | ||
Everything biblically is in, um, In the certain numbers, there's sevens, there's 33s when you look at generational stuff in the Old Testament. | ||
And so everything is very, very cyclical. | ||
And it's also, from what I hear, now I couldn't dig too deep into this. | ||
My girlfriend got a flat tire, I had to take off. | ||
But it's also September 24th, 25th is the end of a 50-year jubilee on the calendar is what I've seen as well. | ||
So it's a bunch of Date cycles coming together at one point. | ||
It's a very interesting theory. | ||
I just want everyone paying attention this weekend. | ||
Is the Jubilee another Jewish thing? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, I do believe so. | |
Again, I had to take off before I dug into it. | ||
I'm going to dig into it deeply after work. | ||
I might call in on Monday with egg on my face too, but it's something to keep your head around on a swivel for. | ||
Yeah, it is interesting. It's just one of these things where this date, September 24th, about two weeks ago, people started talking about it as if it was something important. | ||
And that's why actually I named the... | ||
Daily Dispatch on my substack, a little subtitle of it is The Calm Before the Storm because today was such sort of a slow news day. | ||
It was kind of like, well, maybe it's a slow news day before a very big news day tomorrow. | ||
I guess we'll wait and see. If anybody else has any information about why September 24th is important, give us a call. | ||
1-877-789-2539. | ||
Thanks for that call, Bo. | ||
Appreciate it. Remember, you can find all the stories that we cover and the ones we don't even get to every day. | ||
Big link dump of the daily news at harrisonhillsmith.substack.com. | ||
And of course, you can support us by going to infowarstore.com, keeping us on air, keeping us in the fight as we attempt to bungle our way through the hints and... | ||
You know, clues as to what the globalists have in store for us, you can go to offlimits.news to subscribe as well. | ||
Let's go to, ooh, I'm excited to go to Jefferson, but he just called in, so we'll go to some people who've been on hold for a while. | ||
Marina in Idaho says, there is hope. | ||
Good, Marina. I'm glad to hear it. | ||
What's making you feel hopeful today? | ||
unidentified
|
Hi, Harrison. It's so great to be on here. | |
I'm a first-time caller. I'm from Idaho, or I'm from California, converted to Idaho. | ||
I'm a stay-at-home mom of four, young kids. | ||
I'm a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, and I just know that there's so many people out there just like me, paired with a husband that are just trying to raise their kids right, and there's probably millions of you out there. | ||
And there's so much to be done on our part, for sure. | ||
I don't really know what to say. | ||
I've planned so much. | ||
But my dad turned me on to Alice Jones probably about 10, over 10 years ago. | ||
And I've just been learning so much. | ||
And I've been really keen about what I put in my kids' bodies, what I put in my own body. | ||
And I just think that everyone out there needs to be mindful, be mindful of themselves and everyone around them. | ||
Yeah, no, absolutely. And I think what you're talking about really is the quiet revolution going on right now because I'll tell you, you're not the only one and it's people that aren't They aren't necessarily political. | ||
They aren't even necessarily aligned with us politically. | ||
But just about everybody I talk to, especially the young women having babies, are so awake now to the poison in everyday foods. | ||
I mean, my wife is like... | ||
I mean, it's... | ||
It's next level, you know, the care that she puts into preparing food and making sure the food that we're getting is not GMO or tainted with seed oils and soy and all this sort of stuff. | ||
And my wife is not political in the slightest, right? | ||
But she, you know... I hear her all the time listening to these podcasts about gardening, about homesteading, about food and how to get the best food and how to prepare it and store it and keep it. | ||
I mean, this is really a quiet revolution going on, which people might not see as political and the people involved in it might not have a political impetus behind them. | ||
But that's when you start looking into now. | ||
Why is our food poison? | ||
Who allowed our food to be poisoned? | ||
You know, how did these laws get passed and how are they getting away with this and who's profiting from it? | ||
And then you start asking questions and looking into it and you realize it's not just a tangential sort of something that's just happening because it's the modern world. | ||
It's all a part of the same plan. | ||
I think people are really recognizing that and waking up to it. | ||
unidentified
|
Well, and in my church, we believe in the Book of Mormon, which is another testament of Jesus Christ. | |
And in that book, there's what we call secret combinations. | ||
And it's pretty much everything you guys talk about is people out there to get us for power and gain and control and control over the minds of people. | ||
And that's exactly what's happening. | ||
And we learn from our history, which is in that book, which, you know, is a testament from the Americas in the early, early days. | ||
I'm sorry we have to go to break our hours ending, but thank you so much for the call. | ||
Thank you, Harrison. Well, thank you for everything that you do. | ||
Poor kids, man. That's got to be tough. | ||
We'll be right back, folks. Don't go anywhere. | ||
unidentified
|
You're watching The American Journal with your host, Harrison Smith. | |
Watch live right now at band.video. | ||
Welcome back, folks. We've been getting some really great calls today, and we're going to keep that train rolling. | ||
We'll go to a video here first, and we'll come back and take more of your phone calls on the other side. | ||
But, you know, as the last caller was pointing out, this battle that humanity is engaged in It's a physical battle with the food that you eat and the medicine that you're given and the literal physical components of your brain being manipulated through chemical activation by dopamine receptors and other sorts of things. | ||
There's a spiritual element to it where, such as for myself, I was always Christian. | ||
But once you get into the fight, once you start really looking into what's going on, you realize it's more than just fairy tales. | ||
It's more than just... You know, some wisdom from some ancients. | ||
It's like very real and still going on. | ||
So there's spiritual aspects. There's physical aspects. | ||
There's the political aspects. | ||
And it all ties in together. | ||
It's all one big conflict taking place between good and evil. | ||
And it all centers around, or the main method of combat, I should say, is information and the flow of information and the control of information. | ||
So we're going to watch a video here. | ||
That really elucidates and illuminates the way that information is weaponized these days. | ||
The story can be found on Gateway Pundit. | ||
Representative Bishop calls out lying Democrat for saying Trump supporters, quote, bludgeoned a police officer to death during hearing. | ||
So they just drop this in, right? | ||
It's a total lie. It's completely fabricated. | ||
It's totally baseless. And yet, they're just saying this. | ||
On the record, as a Congress member, I just hope it goes by unnoticed as a police officer was bludgeoned to death on January 6th. | ||
Then anyway, we're going to talk about other stuff. | ||
And this other representative had to go, hold on, what did you just say? | ||
And what is your proof of this? | ||
Let's hear this exchange. We'll talk a little bit about it on the other side. | ||
Again, this is Representative Bishop. | ||
Did you say a police officer was bludgeoned to death by the crowd at January 6th? | ||
Did I hear that right? Let's listen. | ||
unidentified
|
I wasn't listening. We were conversing a bit. | |
But did I hear, and I think, did you say that a police officer was bludgeoned to death by the crowd at the January 6th riots? | ||
I said a police officer was bludgeoned to death. | ||
I did not say at the hands of whom, Mr. | ||
Bishop. Who are you referring to, if you don't mind? | ||
I can get that information for you in a few minutes. | ||
I just want to make sure. | ||
Are you denying that at least one Capitol Police officer was murdered in the midst of what happened on January 6th? | ||
I think I am denying it. | ||
I understood that there were reports early on that Sicknick was struck with a fire extinguisher, and that subsequently was debunked as false. | ||
He died of natural causes. | ||
That we're not connected to the event. | ||
Are we talking about the same person, Sicknick, or are we talking about somebody else? | ||
Seriously, I mean... | ||
It's a genuine question. | ||
The medical examiner... | ||
The U.S. Capitol Police put out a report agreeing with the medical examiner finding the USCP officer... | ||
Mr. Bishop, just an initial thought, and I know that Mr. | ||
Roy, you too are an attorney. | ||
Mr. Bishop speaks often about how brilliant of an attorney he is. | ||
You know, we're talking about but for causation of Officer Sicknick's death. | ||
And so I would hope that you would at least concede at a minimum... | ||
That Mr. Sicknick died as a result of what happened on January 6th. | ||
And I'm disappointed if you would suggest otherwise, sir. | ||
I mean, look, I don't think that's correct either. | ||
But just was he bludgeoned to death? | ||
Is that because I think Ms. Demings was even looking at where a sort of voce between me and her saying he was. | ||
I'm sincere as I can be. | ||
My understanding is that that was debunked. | ||
And Mr. Roy just read the medical examiner's information. | ||
Do you guys contend that he was bludgeoned to death? | ||
I contend that 138 Capitol and D.C. police officers were injured and that multiple Capitol police officers died as a direct result of what happened on January 6th. | ||
And I hope that you... It's your time. | ||
You don't have to answer. I hope you can see how one would question the sincerity of such a minute point in the midst of the gravity of everything else. | ||
Would the gentleman yield... | ||
How amazing is that? | ||
I'm going to say that next. | ||
I'm just going to start using these tactics, right? | ||
You just openly lie, and when they go, hey, hold on, that's a lie, go, I would hope that such minutiae would not get in the way of us understanding the reality of the city. | ||
Just full-on lawyer-speak, weasel words. | ||
I mean, if that doesn't explain everything right there, I'm going to expand on this more on the other side. | ||
You really need to delve into the unbelievably dishonest tactics that these people wield when they're caught lying. | ||
unidentified
|
We'll be back. You're listening to The American Journal with your host, Harrison Smith. | |
Watch it live right now at band.video. | ||
We just watched that video of Representative Bishop calling out a blatant, bold-faced blood libel. | ||
Just a total lie about a police officer being bludgeoned to death by Trump supporters. | ||
Of course, this is a lie that is continually spouted out by the entire establishment lie factory. | ||
The mainstream media. Joe Biden is from Breitbart from March 3rd of this year. | ||
Joe Biden falsely claims five police officers killed by Trump supporters on January 6th. | ||
No fact check. | ||
It's just utterly false. | ||
Totally baseless. Did not happen. | ||
You really have to comprehend what's going on here. | ||
They are making things up. | ||
They are just completely bald-faced lying to the American people. | ||
And then they get outraged when you point it out. | ||
So this guy, this other representative... | ||
Lies about this. Just slips it in. | ||
Just says casually, as if it's true, that a police officer was bludgeoned to death. | ||
He's called out on this lie. | ||
And good on Representative Bishop for calling it out. | ||
And his reaction is to start quibbling. | ||
Start quibbling over minutia. | ||
Well, I would hope that you wouldn't say that Brian Sicknick wasn't killed by the... | ||
Well, but he wasn't, though. | ||
But he wasn't. And I would be... | ||
He says, I'd be very disappointed that you would... | ||
Deny what I'm claiming to be true. | ||
I'm disappointed in you. | ||
I thought you would care more. | ||
Care more about what? You're lying. | ||
You're full of crap. | ||
You're making things up. | ||
So you're disappointed that I'm not going along with it? | ||
You're disappointed that I'm not falling for your lie? | ||
They really throw everything there is, right? | ||
He says something that is an assertion of fact, right? | ||
He said a police officer was killed. | ||
He was bludgeoned to death by January 6th protesters. | ||
He says, wait, wait, that didn't happen. | ||
He says, oh, well, I meant that his death was caused by the January 6th people. | ||
Okay, but that didn't happen either. | ||
The medical examiner and the Capitol Police have admitted that his death had nothing to do with the January 6th protest. | ||
Well, are you saying that 138 officers didn't die, right? | ||
Just like changing the topic, just dodging and chucking and jiving and trying to weasel his way out of... | ||
His assertion. He made the assertion and he can't back it up. | ||
So, you know, part of me is like, okay, good on Representative Bishop for hearing that lie and calling it out and not letting it just pass, you know, giving it the tacit approval of not objecting. | ||
He should object. But maybe, I don't know, maybe I'm just, I just want more. | ||
But you hear the confidence and the Like superiority of the Democratic representative, who is completely lying, but using this facade of self-importance to try to impose the lie on everybody else, right? Well, are you saying that 38 officers weren't injured and that four died as a result of... | ||
No, no, you're just making all of that up, and that's not the claim you originally made. | ||
Stop changing the point. I don't want... | ||
I mean, I do want representatives who call out the lies. | ||
But the way that they do it, I'm just disappointed in. | ||
Because Bishop knows that he's right. | ||
He knows that Brian Sicknick was not killed. | ||
So why would you go, I'm sorry, are you talking about Sicknick? | ||
I'm just confused here. In all sincerity, I'm confused at the assertion that you made. | ||
No, no. You know the guy is lying. | ||
lying. | ||
So why don't you go, you're full of crap. | ||
You're lying. | ||
You're trying to libel the peaceful protesters of January 6th with a death that never occurred. | ||
You're making this up. | ||
You're blaming them on bludgeoning a police officer death. | ||
That is a horrific, slanderous lie, an attempt to gin up hatred for innocent people. | ||
I demand an apology right now. | ||
Now retract that statement before we go on. | ||
Retract that statement before we go on. | ||
That's the type of aggression that we need from our representatives because they know the truth. | ||
They know these people are lying, and these people are going to weasel and try to make all these different claims as if their original lie was just, oh, well, maybe it was a little bending. | ||
No, it was a lie. | ||
It was a lie, and they need to be called out for it. | ||
And when they try to bring up other stuff as if that allows them to lie, you need to call it out. | ||
You need to call it out up front, and you need to be mad that they're lying about your constituents. | ||
You need to be mad that they're making things up. | ||
They're literally making up deaths. | ||
A police officer was bludgeoned to death on January 6th. | ||
The truth is, as the Gateway Pundit reports, four Trump supporters were killed on January 6th. | ||
2021 at the US Capitol, including two female Trump supporters that were killed by police that day, and it was all caught on video. | ||
One female Trump supporter was shot dead in cold blood. | ||
That needs to be the reaction. | ||
That needs to be the response. When they say a police officer was bludgeoned, you need to say, hold on. | ||
First of all, it's a lie, and I demand an apology. | ||
Second of all, the only people that were killed on January 6th, if you care so much about the people killed during this protest, were people murdered by the police. | ||
So do you care about them? | ||
Or are you just going to make up somebody that doesn't exist and care about that fantasy of yours to portray Trump supporters as violent? | ||
How dare you? How dare you lie in such flagrant disregard for the facts in this Congress? | ||
And how dare your Democrat colleagues support you in this? | ||
You're all on this lie together? | ||
You're all in favor of slandering innocent American citizens who themselves were under threat or actually were murdered that day? | ||
Her name was Ashley Babbitt. That's the way you need to respond to these despicable liars. | ||
But you can only respond that way if you truly are knowledgeable of the truth and confident in your veracity of what you believe and your rightness. | ||
Then you can come out hard against these people. | ||
You know, instead we get people going, excuse me, I think maybe that you're mistaken on this. | ||
No, they're lying. They're despicable scumbag liars that are lying. | ||
So call them out for lying. Please, won't you? | ||
Won't you please call out the liars? | ||
It'd be very nice. Let's go out to your phone calls once again. | ||
Omar in California wants to talk about the corruption in the Sunshine State. | ||
Thanks for calling in, Omar. You're on the air. | ||
unidentified
|
Hey, Harrison. How you doing, brother? | |
Good, thank you. Hey, check it out. | ||
unidentified
|
We have a small business out here in California. | |
In Central California, and the crime is just skyrocketing. | ||
I mean, it is going out of control like there ain't no tomorrow. | ||
Young kids walking around with guns, young, especially in the minority areas, you know, like the low-income areas. | ||
Kids walk around with guns shooting at each other, especially since they passed that bill or that law or whatever, where the minors don't get serious time for shooting or murder or whatever. | ||
It's just, it is, I can't believe it. | ||
Every day at our store, we just, another shooting, another murder, and I literally see people get out of jail within a week or two. | ||
I see the same. | ||
I'm dead serious. | ||
I am not even playing. | ||
We run a little smoke shop, and we see the people come right out of jail. | ||
And we're pretty good with the neighborhood, so we're kind of neutral on it, but we see people that literally the other day some guy stole a car right in front of the store and got out two days later. | ||
Just no punishment. People act like criminal gangs are not human beings, but it happened because we were looking into this with the Parkland shooting and looking into the school-to-prison pipeline. | ||
It happened in Florida. I guess it's happening in California now, too, where they changed the law to go, look, minors shouldn't face jail time. | ||
They shouldn't even be Sent to the police. | ||
We'll handle it in the school, and we'll suspend them for a few days, but we don't want it going on their record because we want to stop the school-to-prison pipeline. | ||
And what happened is the criminal gangs in the area went, oh, let's just use little kids for our crimes. | ||
unidentified
|
So they literally would recruit kids. | |
Now a lot of them are using the youth to do everything, and I know a lot of them because we're familiar with the neighborhood. | ||
We're pretty good with them. | ||
And they admit it. | ||
They admit it. And I want to talk about another thing, just one more quick thing about Yemen. | ||
Yemen, I'm from Yemen. | ||
It is destroyed. | ||
I mean, people out there, a lot of the people I grew up with out there, I'm in my early 30s. | ||
A lot of the guys I grew up with are like, I don't know why a lot of people are suffering from kidney failure out there a lot. | ||
Yeah, they're being starved out, man. | ||
There's no nutrition for them anymore. | ||
unidentified
|
Well, yeah, and I also noticed when I was out there that the bottles of water, they actually put down how much fluoride is in the bottled water out there. | |
I think it was somewhere around.01, and I started noticing in the past 20 years how men are becoming more More feminine out there in their walk and how they walk and how they talk. | ||
It's just they're becoming demoralized by the chemicals in the water or whatnot. | ||
I don't know, but I'm starting to notice it from when I was there 20 years ago until now. | ||
It's getting bad. And if you can, can you give Alex Jones a message? | ||
You know, thumbs up from... | ||
His brothers in Yemen, we love him. | ||
We appreciate him. | ||
We pray for him every day. | ||
Yeah, absolutely. And I know, at least personally, that the thought has returned. | ||
Yemen is... It's amazing how strong Yemen is and how it's been able to resist the attacks it's been under for the last several years that nobody talks about in the mainstream media. | ||
Tragic. All right, folks, welcome back. It's AmericanJournalInfoWars.com. | ||
We're going to take more of your phone calls in just a second. | ||
I do want to remind you, maybe tell you about it for the first time, that there's a backlash coming to the Great Reset. | ||
The powers that be, the New World Order, the global government system. | ||
Really thought that they could get it done with a combo of Black Lives Matter riots and defunding the police and mail-in ballots and the coronavirus pandemic and the vaccines and the January 6th event and calling all of the Trump supporters domestic terrorists. | ||
They really thought they'd get a lock on this whole human freedom thing. | ||
But humans instead are... | ||
Realizing what's going on, waking up to the reality of the situation, and are fighting back against it electorally for now. | ||
Will the powers that be allow that to happen? | ||
They say no. | ||
And we'll show the video in just a second. | ||
But just as some examples as to the panic of the world order, this story from New York Times. | ||
Now the original... Title of this story, when I looked at it, was, it's an opinion section in the New York Times. | ||
It was originally titled, Sweden's Far Right is Rising. | ||
The current title? | ||
Sweden is becoming unbearable. | ||
Sweden is becoming unbearable. | ||
Now, this isn't about the skyrocketing rape statistics or crimes or number of bombings that have happened in Sweden, which may seem unbearable to some people, but that's being caused by the rapid influx of immigrants. | ||
So that's fine. That's good. | ||
That's not unbearable. What's unbearable is Swedish people being conservative. | ||
That's unbearable to this person who wrote this. | ||
It's incredible. So what happened is that the far-right party took 20% in Sweden's general election last week, sending shivers down the spines throughout the country. | ||
I mean, not in the 20% of people who voted for them, right? | ||
Not in the supporters of this. | ||
Like, it's just amazing how they project their feelings on everybody. | ||
So, again, to report on this, they're saying that the Swedish electoral process yielded results that were very favorable to the right wing. | ||
In other words, a bunch of Swedish people went out and voted for right wingers. | ||
And the New York Times interpretation of that is that it sent shivers down the spine all over Sweden as if the people in Sweden aren't the ones who actually cast these votes. | ||
So, yeah, it may be sent shivers down the spines of the weird little control freaks in the New York Times – Sure, you can express that for yourself, but you're putting that... | ||
Like, it's this weird cognitive dissonance where they love democracy unless it goes against what they want, and then suddenly it's terrifying and horrifying, and it's not representative of the will of the people. | ||
It's actually just a small group of extremists that are imposing it on everybody else, and everybody's scared, and we're all scared, and you're scared. | ||
It's really amazing how they... | ||
I think this way. It's very bizarre. | ||
Miss Falkenvist was quick to disavow any Nazi associations because she said, Hellseger, the Swedish translation of the Nazi, wait, what is this? | ||
Oh, it means weekend victory. | ||
Okay, it means weekend victory, but it sounds kind of like Sig Hale. | ||
So Hale Seger sounds a little bit like an inverse and reorganized version of Sig Hale. | ||
So they're scared now. | ||
So now they're very scared. I mean, this is the insanity. | ||
It's like, you know, every once in a while, you'll find Infowars reports of like the Pope or maybe the President of the United States like doing some hand symbol, right? | ||
Yeah. And it's like, whoa, that's the hand symbol for the devil. | ||
Why is this world leader doing like a weird occult hand symbol? | ||
But then it's like, well, no, that's the, that's the hand, it's the UT, it's hook'em horns, it's not, it's George Bush, he went to UT, he's doing the thing, it's not that big of a deal. | ||
But there's still like, there's suspicion, and we're always kind of looking out for like little symbols to each other. | ||
But man, That's like, that's nothing compared to the way the people who run the world right now are obsessively looking into every little thing. | ||
Remember, we covered it yesterday. One finger up, well, that looks kind of like a Sig Hale, actually. | ||
That kind of looks like what Hitler does. | ||
No, it doesn't. Raising your hand to pray? | ||
Well, they're raising their hand to pray, which actually means they're all secretly Nazis, and they all get together and talk about the white race, and they're all white supremacists because they raised their hand to pray. | ||
Like, they're paranoid about this stuff. | ||
And so now I guess they have this phrase, Weekend of Victory, which sounds kind of like a reorganized and mistranslated version of Sig Hale. | ||
So now she has to disavow Nazis. | ||
Now she has to disavow Nazis because the term Weekend Victory sounds kind of like, but not really at all like Sig Hale. | ||
So... This is how paranoid these people are. | ||
And this is the way they have to try to portray it to try to impose to everybody else that it's not okay to vote for right-wingers. | ||
It's not okay. It's not alright. | ||
They say it's not alright. They don't want you to vote for right-wingers. | ||
So they're going to take whatever you say or whatever you do, try to somehow, however tangentially or That's how it works. | ||
And it's very clever. | ||
It's very clever, you guys. | ||
You're so clever. | ||
For Sweden, a country that trades on being a bastion of social democracy, tolerance and fairness, it's a shock. | ||
and fairness, it's a shock. | ||
So shocking. | ||
So shocking. | ||
But perhaps it shouldn't be. | ||
But perhaps it shouldn't be. | ||
Steadily rising for the past decade, the Swedish far right has profited from the country's growing inequalities, fostering an obsession with crime and antipathy towards migrants. | ||
Steadily rising for the past decade, the Swedish far right has profited from the country's growing inequalities, fostering an obsession with crime and antipathy towards migrants. | ||
Again, you've really got to be able to read this for what it is. | ||
Again, you've really got to be able to read this for what it is. | ||
The fact is that with the Democrats and the left wing in control, the country has grown massive inequalities. | ||
There has been a massive rise in crime, and most of that has come from migrants, which are and have swelled Sweden with unprecedented numbers. | ||
But the way they present that is as if it's the right wing profiting off of this stuff by claiming it's the migrants and claiming there's crime. | ||
No, no, it's just a natural reaction. | ||
When one political party gets in power and everything gets worse, people go to the other side. | ||
They realize that these policies that sound good actually are horrific. | ||
And so I guess, you know, and again, this is just – to put yourself in the mindset of these New York Times writers is like – It's, I don't know, it's really like looking into the eye of a demon and realizing he's looking back into you. | ||
It's like, imagine, you know, being a Swedish person, and we've heard so many stories of people going, I grew up here, it was safe, it was pleasant, we played outside. | ||
Now, I wouldn't let my daughter walk through the streets. | ||
It's horrifying. She would be kidnapped and raped, and then the people wouldn't even be charged. | ||
They'd be given a two-week suspended sentence and be back out on the street the next day. | ||
Something is wrong here, to which the New York Times writer replies, oh, so you're racist and a Nazi, huh? | ||
Yeah, that's what it's like. | ||
You have personal experience in the negative effects of policies, and then you're called a Nazi for not wanting those policies to continue. | ||
But it's not just in Sweden. | ||
In Italy, the far right is expected to win Italy's election and Rome's biggest political shift in decades. | ||
Italy's voters head to the polls on Sunday in a snap general election that's likely to see a government led by a far right party come to power. | ||
The far right Fratelli d'Italia party, led by Giorgia Meloni, is expected to win a majority of the vote, leading a far right or a right-leaning, it should say, coalition into power. | ||
The vote could mark a big political shift for a pivotal European country dealing with ongoing economic and political instability. | ||
See again. | ||
Ongoing. The people in power have created an atmosphere of ongoing instability, inequality, lack of safety, lack of care for the actual citizens of the country. | ||
And so the citizens of the country are using their electoral rights and their power at the ballot box to reject the policies that are targeting and injuring them. | ||
The powers that be are very mad, but they have plans. | ||
I'll show you the video on the other side. | ||
The EU commissioner, Ursula van der Leyen, saying that they have tools to prevent this type of thing happening in the future in their will of them. | ||
unidentified
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You're watching The American Journal with your host, Harrison Smith. | |
Watch live right now at band.video. | ||
Alright folks, just to remind you, Sweden is experiencing a hard shift to the right as the far-right party took 20% in Sweden's general election last week, which the New York Times is here to tell you is unbearable. | ||
Unbearable, this democracy when people vote wrong. | ||
We have to save democracy! | ||
Except when they vote wrong, then it's terrifying and unbearable, and we have to stop it. | ||
Amazing. It's not just Sweden. | ||
Italy as well has taken a hard shift right. | ||
The far-right Fratelli d'Italia party, led by Giorgia Maloney, is expected to win a majority of the vote, leading a right-leaning coalition into power. | ||
It's the Brothers of Italy party. | ||
Stands out from the crowd and expected to gain the largest share of the vote for a single party. | ||
It's been getting almost 25% of the vote, according to poll aggregator Politiche 2022, far ahead of its nearest right-wing ally, Lega, which is expected to get around 12% of the vote. | ||
So again, other European countries leaning to the right, becoming more right-wing, seeing what's happening with the effects of liberal policies and not liking it, and also... | ||
The Great Reset and voting for people who promise to stand up against it and not, again, use the fabricated fear of things such as the coronavirus to destroy all of your rights, privileges, and abilities in the country. | ||
Again, BBC, Italian elections, far right leaner Maloney tells Italians, don't be afraid. | ||
Don't be afraid. Yeah, there it is, that right-wing fear-mongering. | ||
Playing on people's fears by telling them not to be afraid. | ||
What? Wait, hold on. Pretty amazing stuff. | ||
Italian election explained. | ||
Who's likely to win? Of course, the right-wing is. | ||
But they're not going to let this happen so easily. | ||
No, the loving, good controllers and elites and scions of... | ||
Noble families, such as Ursula van der Leyen, who is the—we'll get into her— Ancestry in just a second. | ||
Just know she was not elected by anybody. | ||
She was appointed by the EU Parliament. | ||
She's head of the EU Commission, which is the executive branch of the EU, but it's also the branch that proposes bills that can be passed. | ||
They have total control, but she can't be unelected. | ||
She wasn't elected by people. | ||
It wasn't a democratic process. | ||
It was very much a bureaucratic process that got her into power. | ||
Here she is responding to the news that places like Sweden, in this case what she's responding to is Italy, moving more to the right, she let slip a pretty daunting threat, honestly, is what you should call it. | ||
unidentified
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Let's watch. We'll see if things go in a difficult direction. | |
I've spoken about Hungary and Poland. | ||
We have tools if things go in the right direction and people as a body that is always where always governments have to be accountable to play an important role. | ||
They play an important role. | ||
Do you hear that? If people vote to go to the right wing, we have tools for that. | ||
Look at Poland and Hungary, we have tools that we can use to get them back, get them thinking correctly once again. | ||
But if they vote for the left, then it's good and we will accept the results of the election. | ||
Veiled warning to Italy's right wing. | ||
This is the vaunted democracy that they're saving. | ||
This is the world order that they're desperate to preserve. | ||
This loving, good democracy. | ||
You know, people-focused democracy that they love so much, as long as you vote the right way. | ||
Yeah, of course you can vote. | ||
It's up to you. It's your decision. | ||
Just choose correctly. | ||
If you choose wrong, then we'll have to use the tools at our disposal to get you back on the right track, okay? | ||
It's a veiled threat, but not even that veiled. | ||
Basically an open threat. But it's interesting, because you sort of wonder, why is this happening in some... | ||
Countries and not others. | ||
It is a good question. | ||
It's hard not to get into the ancestry of these people. | ||
But this woman, Ursula van der Leyen, she's married to another guy who's like... | ||
In 1986, she married fellow physician Heiko van der Leyen of the van der Leyen family of silk merchants. | ||
Mother of seven children. | ||
They're all literally just like their families have been nobles and... | ||
You know, unelected, like, feudal leaders for hundreds of years, and they all just happen to be appointed to these positions where they then use the power at their disposal to correct the democratic results of elections. | ||
So loving and good. | ||
But so half the countries are going right-wing and going, hey, actually, we don't like our countries being destroyed for the benefit of some unelected bureaucratic corporate leadership that despises us pretty openly. | ||
But in places like France and Germany, it's... | ||
I mean, they're just openly acting against their own interests and against their own people. | ||
We covered the story yesterday, but it's from the Telegram. | ||
Send asylum seekers to underpopulated countryside, says Macron. | ||
So the people in the French countryside are like, we are collapsing, sir. | ||
unidentified
|
We are being destroyed. | |
We cannot survive in this world. | ||
And they're like, don't worry. | ||
We're going to replace you with Syrians. | ||
So it's fine. | ||
It's fine. | ||
Your farms are going to become ghettos and hovels where government-supported migrants get flown by us to replace you. | ||
So you're welcome. | ||
It's good. | ||
German government. | ||
Germany doesn't have a big right-wing push right now. | ||
That might be because the German government is actively subverting and destroying their ability to get any electoral victory. | ||
German government creates hundreds of fake right-wing extremist social media accounts. | ||
German domestic intelligence agencies are operating hundreds of fake right-wing extremist accounts on social media, according to a report by German newspaper Zeitung. | ||
These fake agents are inciting both hatred and violence, the report states. | ||
This is the future of information gathering, an agent told the newspaper. | ||
So again, you've got... | ||
Just think about how hard it is to get anything even remotely right-wing done in Europe where you have the European Union actively undermining your attempts to govern the country that you love and care about. | ||
And you also have the intelligence agencies going in and disrupting any attempt to organize by injecting violence and anger into it and then saying, oh, see, they're extremists. | ||
So we have to shut them down. I mean, just imagine. | ||
but of course in addition to macron announcing that he's going to destroy french towns by over loading them with migrants germany greens plan to ban native germans from a third of jobs to promote diversity in the name of promoting diversity the ruling green party in germany the city of hanover plan to ban a third of native citizens from applying for government jobs so they can be given to migrants it's not even subtle it's | ||
They don't even try to couch it in a way that it seems like it's beneficial for the German people or the French people. | ||
They are just openly telling you now, we are replacing you. | ||
We are banning you from holding jobs that you, the natives of this country, the natives of Germany, the indigenous people of this country are now being openly discriminated against in favor of foreigners who just arrived a couple years ago. | ||
Unbelievable. | ||
And you wonder why the right wing is rising in Europe. | ||
It's because the entire continent would be overwhelmingly right wing if it weren't for the concerted and continuous efforts of the government bureaucrats and intelligence agencies to constantly keep down the right wing vote. | ||
This isn't democracy. | ||
They claim democracy and they are as authoritarian as they get. | ||
It's a one party rule. | ||
It's all populated by people who have, you want to talk about generational wealth, generational wealth and privilege and superiority that goes back hundreds of years. | ||
And then they tell you that if you're against them, you're a dangerous extremist who is a threat to democracy. | ||
That's how open this despicable lie is. | ||
And thank God, at least some of the European people... | ||
are using the little power that they have that little vote that they have to push back against this monstrosity that's attempting to dismantle them. | ||
Right out in the open. All right, we're going to go directly out to your phone calls in the next segment. | ||
Fear not, Paul in Montana, Jennifer in Pennsylvania, definitely Jefferson in South Dakota. | ||
We're going to talk to all of you on the next side. | ||
I do want to take this moment to remind you, go to InfoWarsStore.com right now. | ||
Get the Immune Super Pack. | ||
It's three of our best-selling and most powerful supplements and vitamins. | ||
And look, folks, if you're not taking vitamins, you should be. | ||
And if you are taking vitamins, you should be buying them from the good guys. | ||
It's the same stuff that you can get on the shelf at any natural grocery store. | ||
It's just you're buying it directly from the good guys, meaning that 100% of the profits go right back into waging this war of information. | ||
DNA Force Plus, Vitamin D3, and the Vitamin C with rose hips. | ||
All of these, combine them up, get a bigger discount than ever before, and get your immune system working well. | ||
unidentified
|
Alright folks, directly out to your phone calls. | |
We'll be joined by Dave Lugo in the third hour to talk about his new movie called Welcome Home. | ||
The first original production by My Movies Plus. | ||
We've been championing My Movies Plus here because America needs good content. | ||
We need good entertainment. We need good stories told by decent people. | ||
Instead, what we get is recycled Hollywood hogwash. | ||
50-year-old stories retold in a worse and more disgusting way. | ||
Why would we ever want that? | ||
We need new stories. There's not a lack of creative or artistic people. | ||
There's a lack of decent people at the top to let them do their craft. | ||
But I won't get on about that. | ||
Let's go to Paul in Montana. | ||
You have intel on pre-election inspections and audits. | ||
unidentified
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Give us the intel, Paul. First, I want to say God bless you, and you're a smart man. | |
May the Lord Jesus Christ protect you and your family. | ||
And let's all say a prayer for Alex. | ||
Let's pray all the time, because the most powerful weapon in the world is the Holy Spirit. | ||
In the name of Jesus, we pray that the angels surround Alex and his family, and this show trial gets over quick. | ||
Amen. Now, first thing I want to say is, I've talked to a retired judge, and I know Alex has got a smart attorney, but they asked him to ask his attorney to see if the subpoena of the phone records Because we're getting some static that the lawyer went around calling the parents. | ||
The parents didn't say, like, I'm so depressed, I need to call a lawyer and sue somebody. | ||
This goon, this ambulance chaser, called all the people up and talked them into signing up. | ||
So if that's the case, they can throw it out. | ||
And the other thing is the subpoena of the judge and that lawyer's records, because there's some intel saying that they met and had dinner before the show trial started. | ||
Let's move on to the next thing. | ||
Regarding the elections, dear God, please, Mike Lindell, everybody, listen to this. | ||
If you go to, like, I got a friend down in Nevada, the Democracy Suite 5.12 high CC scanner, all the evidence we need are in the Secretary of State's website. | ||
They installed these new Democracy Suite Dominion scanners from the guy, Walt D. Singh, salesman for Dominion. | ||
And what they are, she wrote, Barbara Zagaski's got all memos submitted as evidence that they're failed. | ||
So what they do is they load these scanners with paper, and they push a button, and they wait for the score, and then they just, the scanners are failing. | ||
And they know it, but she let it happen anyway. | ||
So what we need is a pre-election inspection of the software and the systems right now. | ||
Because we always get our butts whipped and then try to figure out what happened later. | ||
The best thing is that we need to do that now because they installed these scanners. | ||
It's digital computers counting paper. | ||
So we need to do that right now. | ||
It's a big deal, an emergency on that. | ||
That's a very good thought. | ||
No, it's a bunch of good information very rapidly. | ||
Thank you, Paul. I want to go to some other callers. | ||
We do have some more, and this will be our last chance to take them before we welcome our guest. | ||
But that's a very good thought, and please do reach out to your local representatives and advocate for this and let them know. | ||
It doesn't matter how hard you campaign, how good your argument is, if your enemies are counting the votes and are not being held accountable for you. | ||
The mistakes or the crimes that they commit. | ||
The mistakes they make or the crimes they commit. | ||
So that would be a very good first start. | ||
Since we were on the topic of the trial, I'm not going to say too much about it, but I do want to hear from you. | ||
Let's go to Jefferson in South Dakota who wants to talk about Norm Pattis, who I will say is doing a fantastic job. | ||
I mean, my goodness, if I'm ever in trouble, Norm Pattis will be the first person I call. | ||
What are your thoughts on this, Jefferson? | ||
unidentified
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Oh, big Norm Pattis shout out for his courage. | |
He's a true legend. | ||
He's securing his place in American history, in my opinion. | ||
I've been watching the recent stuff on the Kangaroo Court channel, and with all respect to the people that want the trial to end early, if these plaintiffs were smart, they would end this thing early. | ||
Keep this trial going. | ||
It's the most legendary, classic stuff you've ever seen, and it's making Alex look like the real man, the hero that he is, which is why we've got to support Because they just happened to leave out that, yeah, you're making money on this and that. | ||
Yeah, he's running Infowars, folks. | ||
And what, he's supposed to get money the honest way? | ||
Like, doing people over their speech? | ||
Or sending armed IRS? You know, I mean, it's just, it is classic, folks. | ||
It is pretty entertaining. You know, one of the clips that has gone pretty viral was the last part of yesterday's questioning of Alex Jones, where it really got out of control, and it was pretty wild. | ||
And you gotta go watch it for yourself. | ||
A lot of people were complaining about the judge, saying she needs to control her courtroom. | ||
I would agree with that. But the clip that's been going around, the YouTube video that they cut out, We're good to go. | ||
And watch what Norm Pattis has to say about his objections afterwards. | ||
And it really puts in perspective who was in the right and who was in the wrong during that contentious exchange. | ||
But thank you for that, Jefferson. Let's go to, we've got Tim in California who wants to talk about the Border Patrol seizing enough fentanyl to kill 2.7 billion people. | ||
Good Lord. What is that? | ||
A cup and a half of fentanyl? | ||
I mean, that stuff's so dangerous. But no, that's a lot of fentanyl. | ||
Thanks for calling in, Tim. You're on the air. Yes. | ||
Yesterday, 2.7 billion lethal doses, which turns out there's 333 million Americans. | ||
So every man, woman, and child, there's enough doses there to kill them, times eight. | ||
8X. You've got eight times enough doses to kill every single man, woman, and child in America. | ||
But check this out just this morning. | ||
Patrick Morrissey, the West Virginia Attorney General, has asked the DEA to start looking into this new drug. | ||
They don't have a name for it, but it's ten times more lethal than fentanyl. | ||
unidentified
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Oh, good Lord. And by the way, fentanyl... | |
Well, fentanyl, as is, is 50 times more deadly than heroin and 100 times more deadly than morphine. | ||
So just add in zero onto both of those. | ||
Jeez, yeah, it's the new hip drug cyanide. | ||
I mean, how could it even be that dangerous? | ||
I mean, that is almost unbelievable. | ||
I don't even think it's drugs at this point. | ||
I really do believe this is just poisoning. | ||
They're just preparing a mass poisoning type thing. | ||
There's not enough people to take that much drug. | ||
It's a poisoning thing. | ||
They're killing us without anyone putting on uniforms. | ||
It's horrific. Matt, my producer, came up with the title of the big segment we did on fentanyl earlier this week, calling it a second opium war. | ||
That's what it is. | ||
Go look at the old opium war between England and China, where they were using opium as a weapon to destroy and weaken their opponents before You know, attacking them militarily. | ||
I mean, that's exactly what's happening here. | ||
It's incredibly worrying. | ||
I did just see that Biden has put aside $1.5 billion to dealing with opiate overdoses, which, you know. | ||
Which is fine. Which is good. | ||
Good. If we're going to be spending a billion dollars, I'd rather it go to helping Americans who are dealing with drug addiction or withdrawal or overdoses than being spent on Sidewinder missiles to blow up Russians in Ukraine. | ||
Like, good. That's where the money should be going. | ||
It's just the track record of the United States government. | ||
When they get involved, is anything is that it gets significantly worse. | ||
So who knows? It'll be like, we put $1.5 billion into this fund to stop opium addiction and So what we're going to do is spend that $1.5 billion to create opium dispensary machines on every corner, right? | ||
It'll be something like that that'll just completely backfire. | ||
So I don't have a lot of hope, but hey, they're desperate, right? | ||
The Biden administration is like, we got to act like we're doing something. | ||
The world is going to crap in our hands, and we need to... | ||
Before the midterms, do something to try to stop things from absolutely spiraling out of control. | ||
So that's good to see. It's good to see. | ||
Let's go to... We only have time for maybe one more. | ||
Let's go to Jennifer in Pennsylvania. | ||
Thanks for calling in, Jennifer. | ||
You're on the air. Good morning. | ||
unidentified
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How are you this morning? | |
Good. Thank you, ma'am. All right. | ||
unidentified
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Well, I was on CNN yesterday, actually. | |
Oh no, she dropped her call. | ||
Darn it. I'll tell you what she told us. | ||
She said that she was on CNN yesterday and they interviewed her, but she said they did not want the truth. | ||
So I was looking forward to hearing how they tried to manipulate her statements. | ||
But unfortunately, it sounds like maybe she... | ||
The call dropped. | ||
Unfortunate. Let's go to Steve in Illinois. | ||
He wants to talk about the mayor of New York who has now announced that they're going to be housing illegals on cruise ships. | ||
Isn't that nice, Steve? | ||
unidentified
|
Hey, how you doing, man? Yeah, I've seen that on the news the other day, and it just kind of made me stop and wonder, like, is the Democratic Party really putting these people here specifically just to exploit the system? | |
Because even if they wanted to embrace it, how are you going to embrace it when you're stuck living on a cruise ship? | ||
There's nothing you can really do. Right. | ||
It's like a floating prison. | ||
It's great. It's wonderful and loving, Steve. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah, so that just kind of threw me, man. | |
And it also kind of struck my mind while I was waiting on the call. | ||
Could the coronavirus lockdown be a way that when they lock down cruise ships, could that be like what they're going to do to them and maybe possibly send them back on it? | ||
You know, I don't know. It is pretty ridiculous, though, especially when you consider that New York State has upwards of like 100,000 homeless people right now, and it's the immigrants that get to live on cruise ships courtesy of the taxpayers. | ||
Send them back. Put Americans on the cruise ships if you have to put anybody. | ||
I'm sick of this just suffocating our country for the benefit of foreigners who have no desire to even be Americans. | ||
It's absurd. | ||
We'll be back on the other side. Stay tuned. | ||
unidentified
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You're tuned in to The American Journal with your host, Harrison Smith. | |
Watch it live right now at band.video. | ||
I'm throwing a curveball here. | ||
I told the crew I was going to go to a video, but I'm actually not going to. | ||
The video I was going to go to is an interview between John Solomon and Representative James Comer of Kentucky. | ||
New documents show Joe and Hunter Biden are working to, were working, perhaps still are, to sell U.S. natural gas and drilling assets to China. | ||
He has whistleblowers who will testify. | ||
If you want to see that video, you can sign up for my substack and it'll be on there. | ||
You can find it on Gateway Pundit. | ||
It is a good video, but I see that we have two more callers that have been holding for a while, so I don't want to leave them hanging. | ||
And let's just go to calls for this first five. | ||
Before we welcome Dave Lugo, filmmaker for the third hour to discuss his latest project as well as some of his previous documentaries that are streaming now on band.video and MyMovies+. Let's go first to Ventura in California. You | ||
unidentified
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know, I'd like everybody to go to bmstalkshow.com right now, and of course infowars.com right now, and everybody go follow my GETTER in all caps, bms underscore talkshow. | |
I'm exposed into high school propaganda. | ||
I post daily about it. | ||
This is still going on, and I hate that I have to call in every show and address the indoctrination and stuff, but I got in trouble just for saying that God was real yesterday. | ||
Really? Yeah. | ||
unidentified
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This gay kid told me it was an illusion. | |
And I told him that it was not. | ||
And I was being polite. | ||
He was cussing me out. And I got sent to the office and I got in trouble. | ||
So they're going after me now. | ||
They found out that, you know, I'm a talk show host and all my things, whatever. | ||
And now I'm being targeted. | ||
And I don't understand, Harrison. | ||
Yeah, God, I wish I had some words of encouragement for you. | ||
Just stay strong, man, because that sounds horrible and completely predictable and exactly what I would expect from a California high school. | ||
So this... The person is cussing you out, telling you there is no God. | ||
You calmly tell him that actually you believe in God and you think he's real. | ||
And you get sent to the office and to the principal. | ||
And he probably gets a pat on the back and told how brave he was for standing up against the oppression of Ventura. | ||
It's mind-blowing, but I think kids across America are experiencing this. | ||
unidentified
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And why should we experience this? | |
I mean, it is ridiculous. | ||
I am a high school... | ||
I'm a teenager, and I get targeted because I'm a conservative, and they call me a right-winger. | ||
Conspiracy theorist, by the way. And I'm like, how am I a right-wing conspiracy theorist because I believe in the Lord? | ||
Right. That's not a crime, right? | ||
So I don't want to take up any more of your time, but if everybody could go to vmstalkshow.com and follow my Getter account and help me spread the word. | ||
I'm coming out with a podcast next month on the 5th on vmstalkshow.com of exposing the propaganda. | ||
I love it. I'll reach out to your getter. | ||
We're going to have to get you on, and you're just going to have to come on for an hour and promote your stuff and talk about what it's like being a high schooler. | ||
unidentified
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I would love that, Harrison. I need that. | |
And we need this, right? | ||
We need people like you. We need young kids who aren't afraid to stand up against all of this stuff and are already setting the groundwork and laying the roots for a Profession in this in the future, already having your own talk show. | ||
I mean, that's what we need. So we want to support you and anybody like you in any way that we can. | ||
So thank you so much for calling in. | ||
unidentified
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Do you want the crew to get my information? | |
You know, we're connecting with Dave Lugo right now, so I'll reach out to you on Getter. | ||
You'll look for me. Just keep your DMs open. | ||
I'll DM you. Thank you for the call. | ||
I do want to get to Roy in Florida. | ||
We only have a minute left, but Roy, thank you so much for holding. | ||
You have a comment on the Sandy Hook court case. | ||
unidentified
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What do you got? Hey, I just want to make three quick observations. | |
I don't have much time and then just a quick thing of what I think Alex should consider doing. | ||
One is just trying to make Alex Jones look like he's just all about the money and he's not about the feelings of the people. | ||
He's trying to make them look rich so they can do him for everything they can get. | ||
They also won't let him talk about politics and that keeps them from being able to talk about what false flags are. | ||
And how the government could do it. | ||
And also, you know, the judge won't allow Alex to say he's innocent, which means basically the prosecuted attorney already wins. | ||
So all they got to do is determine how guilty he is and how much money he should give up. | ||
And the thing that I think Alex should do is I think he should ask for them to give him something in writing about what he can't talk about in court. | ||
I wonder if he's done that. | ||
Thank you for the call, Roy. We'll be right back. | ||
unidentified
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You're watching The American Journal with your host, Harrison Smith. | |
Welcome back. Ladies and gentlemen, third hour has begun here on American Journal. | ||
I'm your host, Harrison Smith. | ||
My guest this hour is Dave Lugo. | ||
He is the filmmaker behind Sensational and Antifa Rise of the Black Flag, which can be found on band.video. | ||
His new film, Welcome Home, is a journey into the mind of an Afghanistan war vet as he struggles with PTSD and white supremacists attempting to force him from his home. | ||
It can be found at mymoviesplus.com. | ||
You can also go to the website el-ride.com. | ||
That's lride.com. | ||
And, of course, the website to find the movie is mymoviesplus.com slash welcome-home. | ||
Thanks so much for joining us, Dave. | ||
unidentified
|
My pleasure. Thank you for having me. | |
Well, very glad to have you. And of course, you know, this is what we need. | ||
We need creative people, patriots making good movies that aren't just Hollywood hogwash. | ||
So tell us, what was your inspiration for Welcome Home? | ||
Just tell us about the movie and what people can expect to find when they go to My Movies Plus and start to watch it. | ||
unidentified
|
Sure. I mean, the inspiration... | |
Obviously, I have friends who went to the military. | ||
We served in Afghanistan. | ||
And when they came back, life was just really tough because it was like they came home and had another front. | ||
So what I wanted to do was show, you know, the duality of like what their lives were in terms of leaving one war to come home to another and kind of dealing with what's going on. | ||
And the film's, you know, a little different because we take a more conservative approach to the whole racist topic. | ||
And, you know, Cooper, who's our main character, he wants to do the right thing. | ||
He wants to be a good man. | ||
But every step of the way, he's having something push him back. | ||
So it's a great film. It's been a little bit of a journey, and we're really excited to have it on Movies Plus. | ||
We just had our first film review from Film Threat. | ||
They gave it an 8.5 out of 10. | ||
Wow. And we're really excited, yeah. | ||
So, you know, like we said, MoviesPlus.com. | ||
They're really here to start pushing independent cinema, and we're all about that. | ||
Yeah, so this is, technically as I understand it, the first My Movies Plus original. | ||
So it's premiering on My Movies Plus. | ||
It's considered a My Movies Plus original. | ||
What does that entail and what does that mean for other people? | ||
I know there's people watching us right now, like myself. | ||
Heck, I'm one of these people. | ||
Tell me, how is this helping to open up the door for independent creators who maybe wouldn't get a chance in Hollywood, but now are given a chance through the power of this technology to get their movie seen by millions of people? | ||
Tell us about what it means to be a MyMovies original. | ||
unidentified
|
Well, I mean, it means that you are partnering with the people who are putting it out now. | |
I don't know if many people understand independent cinema or distribution, but it's a very cut-throat industry. | ||
And the artist oftentimes gets pushed into a big pile of movies and just sold. | ||
And so now it's the wholesale of films. | ||
What Movies Plus wants to do is focus on independent cinema, And really the best films that aren't getting highlighted. | ||
So we have on the platform, you know, films that have been at Sundance, have been at South by Southwest, any of the big, you know, festivals, Toronto, et cetera, et cetera. | ||
And we highlight them as our big films of the week or, you know, month or whatever. | ||
You know, next month we have a whole bunch of Halloween films coming. | ||
But that's what separates us. | ||
And for filmmakers coming out there, it's just... | ||
It's exciting because we spend our money on marketing you. | ||
We do what distributors are supposed to do now. | ||
We get film reviews. | ||
There are going to be several film reviews coming out over the next week. | ||
That wouldn't be possible if you were getting thrown into the mix and just thrown on Amazon Prime or Tubi or whatever. | ||
It's not the world or industry it once was, but Movies Plus is looking to make it that way. | ||
Yeah, and that's really what we need. | ||
And, you know, it's interesting the evolution that these distribution sites have gone through. | ||
Obviously, Netflix is so interesting. | ||
It started off sending DVDs, then it started streaming, and that was a great idea. | ||
Everybody loved it. And then they came out with Netflix originals. | ||
I think the first one was House of Cards, brilliant show, incredibly well done, beautiful. | ||
Wasn't it like David Fincher was the director of the first episode or something? | ||
I mean, big name, Hollywood-style production, and it really got people excited going, oh, now there's going to be these independent distributors who are producing movies. | ||
This is really, you know, something to look forward to. | ||
And then since then, I mean, you scroll through the Netflix originals or Amazon Prime originals now, you can scroll through for three and a half hours and find nothing different. | ||
You've really dropped the ball, and hopefully MyMoviesPlus can pick this up. | ||
Tell us again a little bit more about the movie Welcome Home. | ||
For people that this might interest, is it an action movie? | ||
Is it a drama movie? | ||
What's Welcome Home centered on? | ||
unidentified
|
It's a thriller. | |
It's very much a slow burn. | ||
It's a true indie film. | ||
We had raised about $600,000 to do the movie. | ||
I met a financier who's now one of our partners in Elride and also in Movies Plus. | ||
He said, you know, I have a house, I have a bar, and I have a little bit of money. | ||
Go make a movie. So we wrote a script around, you know, this house, this bar, and this small town. | ||
And it's just a very isolated, blue-collar type film. | ||
I come from a blue-collar background, and it's what I know. | ||
And they tell you, wherever you are, you know, in cinema, I just wrote about a struggle. | ||
The war that's happening here with drugs, opioids, that's all in there. | ||
Racism, that's in there. | ||
And again, as I said earlier, it's a different approach. | ||
And I think people forget that it was conservatives who really helped end racism here. | ||
And I think as a Cuban-American, I just have conservative roots. | ||
and I thought that it would be great to see a lead character of color showing those characteristics. | ||
So you see it, and Eric Roberts is in it, Michael Potts, you know, there's a lot of good cameo actors, and then Jordan Tisdale, who plays Cooper, he was a Broadway actor, or off-Broadway actor, he was in plays a lot, and we found him and just really connected, and he connected with the role, and, you know, and we found him and just really connected, and he connected with the role, and, you know, I don't want to give too | ||
It has a lot of relevant topics, PTSD, the division in our culture right now, which you have the Patriots, which are represented by Cooper, people who are kind of at that tipping point, and then people who are here who just want to get into the sex, drugs, and rock and roll of everything. | ||
And we meet in the middle, and we see what happens, and it's very much an anti-war movie, in my opinion. | ||
Because at the end, I don't want to spoil it, you see that if we keep going down this dark road, it's not going to end well. | ||
And we don't want that. | ||
So in my opinion, I like the happy endings, but for where we are, I think it sends a message and makes you think. | ||
You're kind of sitting there and saying, hey, how do we fix this? | ||
And that's what I hope for people to see. | ||
I don't want to fight. | ||
And we're just in that moment in history where... | ||
And Alex talks about this all the time. | ||
Culture, what we're doing, what you're doing, what all these other content creators are doing, we're peacefully participating in this culture war. | ||
And we're trying to make sure that we never get to that violent moment. | ||
And what I show in that movie is what happens if we do get to that violent moment. | ||
And it's just, you know, art has always been used as a tool to send, you know, those sorts of messages and they resonate because it's one film, sit down with your loved ones, sit down with your buddy, or just sit down by yourself, light a cigar up and watch it. | ||
And it's something that's a slow burn that makes you think. | ||
And that's what we did. | ||
We did what we could with the money we had. | ||
And the team, I love everyone on this team. | ||
We had a lot of young kids, you know, like 23 years old. | ||
Our cinematographer was 23 years old. | ||
Now that guy is out there shooting some of the biggest music videos for names everyone knows. | ||
So this is kind of our moment where we made a name for ourselves. | ||
We took our time with it. | ||
And I hope, you know, people have a chance to go out and look at it this weekend. | ||
It's a good film. Like you said earlier, it has that high cinema quality. | ||
I went to film school, all my buddies and I. The co-director, Matt Schwartz, unfortunately couldn't be here today, but... | ||
He and I have been making movies since we were 13. | ||
We're good friends, and this is just something we wanted to do. | ||
So we put our name on it, and I'm very proud of this film. | ||
No, it sounds like a dream come true. | ||
And for those who don't know, $600,000 sounds like a lot. | ||
That is literally nothing when it comes to filmmaking. | ||
I mean, they say, you know, you're zero budget if you have under a million. | ||
So this is a zero budget film, but it looks beautiful. | ||
It really does. And of course, just from everything that you mentioned, it's so much of what we talk about here from the Afghanistan war, the PTSD, the way veterans are abused, the racism. | ||
I mean, it sounds like so much of what we talk about is coming together in this film and being presented in a way that Hopefully it's not bashing you over the head, right? | ||
It's not a documentary. It's not something where you're just telling the audience what to think. | ||
That's the power and beauty of film is you take people through a journey and leave them with a feeling at the end that hopefully is then reflected in their everyday life. | ||
Mymoviesplus.com slash welcome-home is how you get directly to the page. | ||
You can go to l-ride.com, e-l-ride.com to find the website as well. | ||
We'll be back with Dave Lugo on the other side. | ||
Don't go anywhere, folks. Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
A new movie is premiering. | ||
It can be found at mymoviesplus.com slash welcome-home. | ||
Welcome Home is the movie Journey into the Mind of an Afghanistan War Vet as he struggles with PTSD and white supremacists attempting to force him from his home. | ||
I was saying during the break talking to Mr. | ||
Lugo, Dave Lugo is my guest, the filmmaker behind this movie as well as behind Sensational and Antifa Rise of the Black Flag. | ||
Those are both documentaries that can be found at band.video as well as MyMoviesPlus. | ||
But this new movie is not a documentary. | ||
It is a narrative film. | ||
It's a... You know, your typical Hollywood sort of style blockbuster thriller. | ||
And looks beautiful. | ||
Looks amazing. I haven't had a chance to watch the whole thing, but the few minutes I did watch were of extremely high quality. | ||
So that in and of itself is perhaps unique in today's world where so much trash gets put out on streaming sites. | ||
We're trying to Really just maintain what America's always been about, the highest quality entertainment with real meaningful values baked in. | ||
And that's why we're so happy to welcome Mr. | ||
Lugo. And we were talking during the break. | ||
I said there's so many topics that you've brought up, and it sounds like it's all stuff that we talk about on the show. | ||
And that's not a coincidence, is it? | ||
There's a reason why Infowars seems to be so reflected in this movie. | ||
unidentified
|
Can you tell us about that? I started listening to Alex about 2013. | |
This crazy guy screaming from Texas, and he just started making a lot of sense. | ||
And contrary to what you are seeing, as everyone in this audience knows, contrary to what you see in public now, I mean, this guy was fighting against racists. | ||
I mean, he was fighting against the war, and he was supporting the soldiers. | ||
So if you take those three elements right there, I mean, those are very much incorporated in the lead character, Cooper Higgins. | ||
And it's just somebody coming and looking for peace. | ||
And that's all he ever talks about, Alex. | ||
And we're told that he's some crazy guy with a bullhorn. | ||
He's trying to start a civil war, but he's changed the culture, and I think history will tell that to everybody. | ||
I mean, he's done one thing. | ||
He's fought for you, and that inspired me to get involved. | ||
And what I was good at, and what I've always wanted to do, as I mentioned earlier, was make movies. | ||
So, fortunately, I was blessed with the ability to make this movie, and I put everything I had into it, and I nurtured it, because this was my participation in the culture war. | ||
And hopefully there will be more. | ||
As you mentioned, I was fortunate enough to be able to do a documentary where I interviewed Alex, Sensational. | ||
Jack Posobiec reached out to me to do the Antifa doc, so I did that. | ||
You know, it's time, as Alex says, to Put your money where your mouth is. | ||
And believe me, I can prove it. | ||
I've gotten the CAA contracts. | ||
Our company has worked with companies like that in the past. | ||
I'm kind of a middle-of-the-road guy. | ||
If you ask me my politics, Rand Paul is my guy. | ||
So it's not... | ||
It's more than what we're being told. | ||
And Alex inspired me to do this movie, but he inspired me to do Sensational and cover propaganda. | ||
That's what that film's about. | ||
And as I mentioned to you during the break, that film, because I interviewed Alex and Roger, got me dragged into the Russia investigation. | ||
You can Google my name and Roger Stone and Washington Post will pop up at CNN. And it's essentially I'm an associate now of Roger Stone because I interviewed him. | ||
You know, it's to another level, but I was prepared for it because I listened to Alex. | ||
I really just kind of, I knew what would happen if you step into the limelight, but I was ready for it because I am firm in my beliefs. | ||
I want to see a peaceful change to the way our country's operating because it's getting scary now. | ||
It really is. And it's such an inspiring thing. | ||
And yeah, during the break, when you said that sort of listening to Alex Jones, at least in some part, inspired you to make this movie, my responses were, like, me too. | ||
You know, the reason I'm here is because one day I turned on the radio and there was Alex Jones yelling about George Washington. | ||
It was just like, and soon I'm driving down the street yelling myself along with him, right? | ||
And... It really is amazing. | ||
No matter what they do to Alex, no matter what mud they drag him through and how they try to distort and destroy his perception in the public mind, he's already lit the fires that are now themselves spreading and catching more fires. | ||
I can only hope that people are inspired by your movies to go out and make movies of their own. | ||
own. | ||
I hope they're inspired by me to know that you don't have to be shy about your beliefs and to stand up for them and not feel like you have to succumb to the characterization that they want to impose on you to talk about things like race and do it in a way that's totally unique and yet is not racist, but it doesn't shy away from the topic either. | ||
We love all human beings and we see the way that race is manipulated. | ||
So we want to talk about and fight back against it. | ||
And then people call us white supremacists for that. | ||
You don't have to listen to them. | ||
You can go out and be an Alex Jones. | ||
You can promote what is right and good and not have to succumb to the fear. | ||
And I wonder if involving you in the Russia investigation was an attempt to cause fear in you and get you to You briefly mentioned this during the break. | ||
I'd like to get into it. What exactly happened? | ||
You interviewed Roger Stone and then you got a knock on the door from the FBI. How did this play out? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. So, Randy Credico, who was the man who claimed Roger intimidated him, he was the person who connected me with everybody. | |
He connected me with Roger Stone. | ||
He connected me with Alex and everyone I interviewed. | ||
And essentially, I had text messages and information that the FBI wanted to see because he was really going after Roger. | ||
And when I had the information that I mainly supported what Roger was saying. | ||
It didn't really work out for me. | ||
Suddenly, all at once, every major media outlet had my contact information. | ||
They had my cell phone number. | ||
My phone was ringing off the hook. | ||
People are trying to claim that I'm far right. | ||
I had to explain to them, no, that's wrong. | ||
Not so many words. | ||
Yeah, I mean, it was difficult. | ||
I was smeared. | ||
We had people who were on projects with us. | ||
We started going away in meetings with people because our company, a lot of what we do is raise money for people. | ||
I've had people walk away because they claim I'm, like you said, I'm a white supremacist, even though my family's from Cuba, my father's side, my mother's side from Puerto Rico. | ||
So it doesn't make sense anymore. | ||
But as I mentioned, I was prepared. | ||
I knew what was going to happen because I listened to Alex. | ||
And it's kind of... I don't want to say he's almost like a psychic, but the guy... | ||
He says he just reads. | ||
And he read it before me, so he knew and he shared the message. | ||
And now that's what I'm trying to do with what I do. | ||
And the same with you. | ||
And I love what you guys do here. | ||
You really give a channel to people who should be... | ||
You know, all over CNN, you know, some of your guests, they should be on the headline main 60 minutes, but they're not. | ||
And you give them an area and you give them hope. | ||
And that's, you know, that's so inspiring. | ||
So thank you guys. Well, thank you. | ||
And of course, you know, we all do it for the same reason. | ||
And, you know, your story is so reminiscent of some of the other people we've had on, including, you know, some of the other film directors, where it's kind of the same type of thing where you guys aren't extreme. | ||
You aren't, you know, like they would frame you as far right. | ||
You're not white supremacist. | ||
And you get into this Just sort of probably like I did, right? | ||
I'm going to join InfoWars because we're still America and everybody loves truth and he's against the elites and everybody can be behind that. | ||
And suddenly you find this deluge of hatred and lies about you. | ||
But if you have the right mindset and you sort of knew it was coming the whole time, then you can have the strength and the will to continue doing what you're doing regardless of the attacks. | ||
It's so powerful and that's why we love supporting people such as yourself. | ||
We'll be back with David Lugo on the other side. | ||
unidentified
|
Stay with us. You're tuned in to the American Journal with your host, Harrison Smith. | |
Watch it live right now at band.video. | ||
Mr. Higgins, you were diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder about six months ago, is that correct? | ||
Yeah. I can't just leave. | ||
I need this job. I need more. | ||
No, no, Chrissy. | ||
That bar belongs to Gunnar Hansen. | ||
The guy's an animal, Coop. | ||
Doesn't matter what good deeds you've done for him. | ||
The way you've explained everything seems a little more like a personal grudge. | ||
Bigger than racism. Gunnar's son was part of my unit. | ||
You're welcome here. You got to the end of the week. | ||
I hate doing this. | ||
You're gonna be a good girl. | ||
We all know what you do. | ||
People put their trust in you, don't we? | ||
Gunners really got you all shook around here, huh? | ||
I'd say everything that comes through here... | ||
unidentified
|
About half the shit going into the city starts with him. | |
I'll give you a chance. | ||
Use your head. You hear me? | ||
Yeah, I hear you. Trevor and, uh, Christy, if I can get me. | ||
I think I'll try it too. | ||
I'd say I'm ready to see what's next. - - Alright folks, that is Welcome Home. | ||
That's the trailer for the new movie by L-Ride Productions now available on mymoviesplus.com slash welcome-home is how you find it. | ||
You can also find the L-Ride website at l-ride.com. | ||
We have the filmmaker with us here, Dave Lugo. | ||
And just again on the topic of the culture war, the information war, this other battlefield that we're currently making some pretty big gains on I think your movie falls in line with what I think we need more of. | ||
When you look at the way the liberals and the leftists have taken over culture, it's not because they've made overt propaganda about the left. | ||
They make compelling, interesting narrative stories that just conveys their message in sort of a subtle way. | ||
Do you think that's what you've done? | ||
Was that a conscious decision or were you just trying to make a good movie and because you believe the things you believe, these types of values were imbued in your work? | ||
unidentified
|
I always aim to make my work full of some sort of value, like morals, ethics. | |
My father always raised me to believe in that. | ||
I wanted to find the best way to tell the racism story In a different way from what we are normally, where it's just hitting you over the head, where it's like, yes, there's racism, and everyone who's not a person of color should bow down and say sorry. | ||
No, it's not like that, in my opinion. | ||
And I grew up in a very diverse neighborhood. | ||
But yeah, and then right under that is good quality cinema, something that is a story that People can attach to. | ||
As I mentioned, it's a blue-collar film, so I want that audience. | ||
I want people to understand, hey, this could happen in my town. | ||
How do I change it? | ||
How do I make things different? | ||
Those were the two main priorities, great cinema and entertainment. | ||
Send my values to the audience. | ||
Because at the end of the day, even Quentin Tarantino, everyone, they say, I don't make movies for audiences. | ||
I make movies for myself. | ||
But there are millions and millions of people who think like me. | ||
And I think what you're doing and what Alex is doing, it shows it. | ||
So if I'm making a movie for myself, that means I make a movie for millions of people. | ||
So I have to make it good. | ||
So that's what drove me throughout the whole process. | ||
Yeah, and again, when you look at the stuff that they're coming out with on Amazon, people have an option these days. | ||
They can watch a remake of Pinocchio that's significantly worse than the cartoon version, or they can watch a complete bastardization, distorted view of Lord of the Rings, or they can watch something original that's compelling and actually has good values and is made by people that probably think like you. | ||
I think that's so obvious when you're watching movies from people that think... | ||
In a way that is diametrically opposed to the way that you think, there's a reason it doesn't resonate with you. | ||
There's a reason you don't feel any empathy for the characters. | ||
It's because you don't have the same values as the people making the movie. | ||
So how are you going to enjoy it? | ||
So this is something that people who watch Infowars or who are just patriotic Americans or blue-collar people can actually relate to and enjoy instead of the hogwash coming out of Hollywood. | ||
I mean, what's your opinion on what's happening in Hollywood? | ||
I say Hollywood, but now it's from San Francisco. | ||
It's all over California and New York. | ||
I mean, nothing is new. | ||
I did a report a couple years ago, actually, where it was like the newest movies that were coming out at Comic-Con, and it was like there wasn't a single one that was even just a remake. | ||
It was all the sequel of a remake of a rebooted franchise. | ||
It was the reboot of a sequel of a remake of a... | ||
I mean, they can't come out with anything original. | ||
What is behind this, do you think? | ||
unidentified
|
I don't want to assume that I know, but as someone who works behind the scenes, and I know how movies get made. | |
I know how movies get financed. | ||
I've done movies. | ||
I have a movie on Netflix right now that we help produce with Paramount. | ||
We have three films right now on Hulu. | ||
We had one of our films as the number one movie on Hulu for a couple weeks. | ||
So I know how the process, and it kind of makes me upset. | ||
But that opened up a market for us, for Movies Plus, for L-Ride, and going back to the old-school Roger Corman days. | ||
If your audience isn't aware of who Roger Corman is, if you have a moment, take a look. | ||
Google him. He created the environment that started Scorsese. | ||
James Cameron. His assistant was Gail Earnhardt, who wrote the Terminator series with James Cameron. | ||
They married each other, but she found him working for Roger Corman. | ||
And out of that came a golden era of cinema. | ||
And that's what we're essentially trying to do here. | ||
And I tell everybody, leave your politics at the door. | ||
And I actually have to give Netflix some credit. | ||
They're starting to do that too. But this is the foundation of who we are. | ||
Leave your politics at the door. | ||
You can put it in your work. | ||
I'm not going to censor you. | ||
But, you know, don't bring it to the environment behind the scenes is what you're talking about. | ||
The behind the scenes stuff is great. | ||
You just see the hypocrisy everywhere. | ||
But to give the audience some hope, I'm not going to out anybody. | ||
There are a lot of people who think like us. | ||
Big names. Big, big names. | ||
There's just nowhere for them to go. | ||
You tell them that there's a place for them to go where they can get paid and support their family, they will come here. | ||
And they will come here in a big way. | ||
And you don't need that they... | ||
Hollywood tells us you need $25 million for this guy. | ||
No, I mean, we've made movies. | ||
We have a movie called Rome with the Haunted. | ||
We premiered, and it's on the website, we premiered in the Rome International Film Festival alongside Martin Scorsese's The Irishman. | ||
Now they spent over $100 million to get there. | ||
Our movie spent $1.2 million. | ||
So you think about that. | ||
We can do it. It's not hard. | ||
And we're kind of mastering the shoestring budget. | ||
But what InfoWars does and the Audience participation, which is unbelievable. | ||
I mean, from when Corey, our business partner at Movies Plus, went on, you know, his previous interview with you, your audience is so, they're so dedicated. | ||
They came right away, they supported, and the movie, you know, they're watching movies, the hours, the streaming hours are going up, and that's what you do. | ||
We're creating that infrastructure for these people, you know, kind of like the John Voits, the Dean Caines, who have already kind of come out. | ||
You know, Rob Schneider, look at this. | ||
It's It's going to get bigger. | ||
And, you know, it's just we have to create the base. | ||
We've got to create the platform. And I have some really cool projects that I'm working on specifically. | ||
Sam Tripoli is a good buddy of mine. | ||
He's helped me out with comedy. | ||
So this is just the beginning. | ||
And we love the fact that you're supporting us and we're going to support you no matter what. | ||
We stand behind what we say and your audience is welcome with us. | ||
It's so good to hear it. | ||
I've heard that a lot. | ||
You know, Jason Jones is another filmmaker that's been on Alex's show and has been on our show as well. | ||
Talking to him, he said the same thing, sort of in a hushed tone. | ||
He said, you know, there's a lot of people in Hollywood that agree with us and they get what's going on. | ||
They sort of feel trapped there. | ||
We are opening the door. We are unlocking the cage. | ||
We are freeing the creative power of Americans from the grip that the liberals have over them right now. | ||
Man, that is inspiring stuff. | ||
More on the other side. Don't go anywhere. | ||
Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
Final segment of American Journal on this Friday. | ||
So glad that you're here with us. | ||
Remember, you go to Infowarsstore.com to support everything that we do here. | ||
That is our one and only way of raising money. | ||
That's the way that we stay on air. | ||
They don't like it, but they can't stop us. | ||
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Very reasonable when you take into account the discounts that we give you. | ||
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So won't you support us at Infowarsstore.com? | ||
I'm joined... It sounds incredibly interesting. | ||
It sounds like a true story. Infowars-style movie. | ||
You can also find the production company L-Ride at l-ride.com. | ||
Now, Dave, something you said in the last segment reminded me of a video that started making the rounds on Twitter today. | ||
It's Sylvester Stallone. | ||
It's an interview from either the early 80s or late 70s, and he's talking about the nature of film and why he wanted to create Rocky. | ||
I want to play a little clip of this because, again, it reminded me of what you were saying, and then I want to ask you about it on the other side. | ||
But first, here's a... Interview that's going around Twitter of Sylvester Stallone from the 1970s. | ||
unidentified
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Let's watch. You've written several scripts before, but was there any special reason for you to write this one, to write Rocky? | |
Well, I felt at the time that cinema, at least the movies I had been seeing, were at an all-time low. | ||
Everything was anti-society, anti-Christ, anti-government, anti-everything, and there was no one to root for. | ||
And I also feel that films are very cyclic, so I wanted to get back into the cycle of the films of the 40s and the 50s, where people say, Gee, I missed the good old films, yet Hollywood hasn't taken heed and hasn't made any good old-fashioned type films where morality was at the forefront. | ||
So I took the opportunity to write this particular film, of course, being somewhat selfish because I had myself in mind for it, but that was the main motivation. | ||
So we can cut it off there. | ||
It goes on for a little bit longer. | ||
But I thought that was such an interesting comment since he says it's cyclical. | ||
And I feel like we are now on sort of the tail end of that cycle where everything's negative, everything's hateful and anti-everything, anti-Christ, anti-government, anti-everything. | ||
And I think people are hungry for that classic old-fashioned good guy versus bad guy sort of breakdown. | ||
What do you think about that? | ||
Have you seen that clip? And do you think that's true now? | ||
Are we in that cycle as we speak? | ||
unidentified
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I have not seen that clip, but I feel like I say that every day. | |
Sylvester Stallone, I mean, Rambo, at least the premise, is very inspiring to welcome home. | ||
You'll see a little bit of elements to it. | ||
But what he's saying is true. | ||
How do we get better if we hate ourselves? | ||
Our mindset is just so warped, and that plays out in our film. | ||
We have a warped point of view towards this country that has accepted everybody. | ||
We've inspired the world for 200 years. | ||
We've been the last bit of hope for some people. | ||
Our Christian moral values, and I don't care what your religious points of view are, I mean, mine are Christian, but those values, they're being thrown away again. | ||
We're entering that dark period where it's hopeless. | ||
I mean, movies draw hope, and we need to do that. | ||
We need to show people that, as we mentioned, there are other people who create these things that think like you. | ||
Just like books, just like news. | ||
That's why people love InfoWars. | ||
You guys show. | ||
There are other people who think like you. | ||
You're not alone. And it's amazing to me, just thinking about Rocky or Star Wars, like there are some of these movies, especially in the 70s, but even up to the 90s and beyond, you had these movies that came out and they just blew the door off the cinemas. | ||
Everybody loved them. They were events. | ||
It was totally unexpected, right? | ||
Nobody started making Rocky or Star Wars going, this is going to be a huge one. | ||
But it did turn out to be. | ||
And when they asked the filmmakers, it was always this return to simplicity. | ||
The return to something that resonates with us. | ||
We don't need anti-heroes. | ||
They can be entertaining, but they don't resonate with people the way that kind of the old-fashioned, almost morality plays do. | ||
And that's exactly what Star Wars or Rocky is. | ||
It's just like the simplest, almost cliche stuff. | ||
Don't give up. You know, have hope. | ||
There's good in everyone. | ||
It sounds cliche, and so Hollywood has this disdainful, kind of cynical view about it, but this is what resonates with people, and this is what they want to see. | ||
And you said, during the break we were talking, you said you want to do with MyMoviesPlus what InfoWars did with news, and I thought that was a very sort of, just a great statement. | ||
Can you explain what you mean by that? | ||
unidentified
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I mean, look, Alex said that you started off on public access, Now he is, in my opinion, the most famous man in the world. | |
Right, one of them for sure, yeah. | ||
unidentified
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You can't tell me, even Joe Rogan, I don't think he's as big as Alex. | |
I mean, Alex has influenced the world. | ||
I mean, this century, you know, Alex Jones has been the Paul Revere of this century. | ||
And now we've taken his message. | ||
And as he says, I'm the mothership. | ||
Go off and build your own ships. | ||
This is what we have to do for film. | ||
It can't always be depressing news. | ||
And you can see it wears on Alex. | ||
It wears on him. | ||
He needs a little support, support where he can go and escape for two hours and see a film. | ||
That just lets him get away. | ||
And hopefully we'll get back into the movie theaters. | ||
I mean, eventually this is not just going to stop here. | ||
We have to bring people together again and enjoy that message. | ||
Alex does it with his rallies. | ||
Alex says, I'm going somewhere. | ||
You can expect a pretty big crowd. | ||
So that's what we need to do. | ||
We need to bring people to places and get them out of their cubbyholes. | ||
I mean, I love computers and technology as much as anybody else, but We need to come together. | ||
We need to rebuild this society. | ||
And we've hit this point over and over again. | ||
Culture is a huge part of that. | ||
Movies, cinema. So we go take Sylvester Stallone's cue and let's bring back the good guy. | ||
Let's bring back America for what it is. | ||
It's not perfect. | ||
Far from it. But it is great. | ||
I do believe so. Yeah, absolutely. | ||
No, I'm so excited about all of this. | ||
And I know when Corey Tusik, the CEO of My Movies Plus, was on, he wanted to just reach out to the InfoWars audience. | ||
And we don't have an agreement with y'all. | ||
We don't gain anything from it. | ||
But I thought it was nice you guys wanted to give the InfoWars audience a discount code to welcome them to My Movies Plus. | ||
So if people go to MyMoviesPlus.com, they can enter a promo code. | ||
Is it just InfoWars? | ||
What's the promo code they need to use? | ||
unidentified
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Yes, it's InfoWars, one word. | |
You use that and you get 25% off, I believe. | ||
I have to double check it, but yeah, you'll get a nice discount for a year. | ||
And it's, you know, it's $25, but you get hundreds of films. | ||
You're supporting the cause. | ||
Like Alex said, like you buy, you know, X2, which I pretty much live off of right now. | ||
You know, I'm hoping it grows my hair back one day, but you guys get that. | ||
But, you know, support. | ||
Put your money where your mouth is. | ||
And we deliver the good products. | ||
We're going to deliver exclusive films for you, our subscribers only. | ||
And last time, when Corey was on, Your audience is just so amazing. | ||
What you guys did, you pushed us up. | ||
We started gaining traction. | ||
Now here we are. And we want to keep growing. | ||
And we would love to give you guys as many perks as possible. | ||
So yes, InfoWars, one word, promo code. | ||
You'll be able to check out the whole collection, not just Welcome Home. | ||
Well, and again, you know, we don't have an agreement. | ||
We don't gain anything from this. | ||
I just thought it was nice that you guys were reaching out to the InfoWars audience with this special promo code. | ||
So if you want to take advantage of it, go to mymoviesplus.com. | ||
And it works just like Netflix or anything else. | ||
Once you sign up, you don't have to pay for more movies. | ||
You just get to stream all the movies in their library. | ||
So it's really a wonderful thing. | ||
And again, we hope that we can support them, they can support us, and together we can build this alternative platform. | ||
I learn more about the world from fiction than I do from non-fiction. | ||
Honestly, I can read the news and history books all day, but I learn more about the human condition from reading a fantasy novel or watching a good movie than I do from a million articles. | ||
And there's something to that. | ||
So it really is a powerful force for information, these films and all this stuff. | ||
So, again, I just want to thank Dave Lugo, filmmaker. | ||
Go watch Sensational or Antifa Rise of the Black Flag on band.video. | ||
But go to mymoviesplus.com slash welcome dash home to see the first My Movies Plus original. | ||
It looks extremely good. | ||
It looks extremely thrilling, and I'm excited to watch the full thing myself when I get home. | ||
So thank you again, Mr. | ||
Lugo, and good luck in the future. | ||
We hope to see you back for your next premiere. | ||
unidentified
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Thank you, Harrison. I appreciate it. | |
Thanks for having me on. Thank you. | ||
All right, folks, that's going to do it for us. | ||
Everybody have a good weekend. Stay tuned. | ||
The Alex Jones Show begins in just a minute. | ||
Don't go anywhere. Go to infowarsstore.com to support us in everything that we do. | ||
Get some X2. It'll grow your hair back. | ||
Just kidding, it won't, but you should try. | ||
One of the ways that you encourage your audience to give you money is in cryptocurrency donations, right? | ||
unidentified
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Yes. Infowars.com forward slash crypto. | |
That will end up as a clip on your show tonight. | ||
Objection. Your advertising for your cryptocurrency page. | ||
unidentified
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People care about the First Amendment. And in the cryptocurrency page, people can give you a bitcoin, yes? | |
Yes. Ethereum, right? | ||
Yes. As well as XRP, Monero, Litecoin, USD Coin, Dogecoin, and Stellar. | ||
unidentified
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This is it. Give Crypto Fun Info Wars. | |
Sponsor us with Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies. | ||
Thanks to your donations and your support at Infowarsstore.com, Infowars is able to broadcast free worldwide, combating the lies of the Great Reset. | ||
Get crypto. | ||
Fund Infowars. | ||
Donate now. | ||
Infowars.com forward slash crypto. | ||
unidentified
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Why don't we talk about cryptocurrency? | |
Because one of the ways that you encourage your audience to give you money Is in cryptocurrency donations, right? | ||
unidentified
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Yes. And you have a page on your website that's just for cryptocurrency donations, right? | |
Infowars.com forward slash crypto. | ||
Is that a little advertisement just there? | ||
unidentified
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Well, we're fighting the deep state. | |
We need money. All right. This is it. | ||
Give Crypto. Fund Infowars. | ||
unidentified
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Sponsor us with Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies, right? | |
That will end up as a clip on your show tonight. | ||
unidentified
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Your advertisement for your cryptocurrency page. | |
You know... I mean, people want to keep us in the fight. | ||
So, I mean, I hope whoever the big whales are, they'll give us money before we keep going. | ||
We'll just keep mincing money as you're in this courtroom. | ||
All right, let's move on. | ||
People care about the First Amendment. | ||
Info Wars! Info Wars! | ||
Info Wars! Speaking of InfoWars, I brought you a gift. | ||
I just got it today. | ||
The number one selling book on planet Earth, but the New York Times said it's not. | ||
Apparently it's like, I'm glad my mother's dead is the number one book. | ||
The Great Reset and The War for the World by Alex Jones. | ||
Signed. And I was actually there the day that these came into the studio, my lovely. | ||
What an honor. If you want to know what's going to happen next by the prophet himself, read the book. | ||
And people want to know how he knows what he knows? | ||
Because he reads their writings. | ||
They tell you what they're going to do. | ||
They do. So everyone needs to go out and get this book. | ||
If you have not already, I have been dying to read it myself. | ||
I can't wait. Thank you so much, Matt. | ||
Thank you so much, Alex Jones. | ||
You are the legend himself as well as Matt, the dreadlock Alex Jones. |