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September 14th and 15th of 2022, the 7th Congress of Leaders of World and Traditional Religions took place in the conference hall of the Palace of Independence in the capital of Kazakhstan in Central Asia. | ||
The heads of every religion around the world were in attendance. | ||
Judaism, Christianity, Islam, Hinduism, Buddhism, etc. | ||
All coming together in the spirit of peace and unity. | ||
That all sounds good and nice, but what's really the intention of this meeting? | ||
The Congress is held once every three years in the same place, starting in 2003 in direct reaction to the events of 9-11. | ||
First focusing on countering terrorism and extremism issues. | ||
This year, Pope Francis, head of the Roman Catholic Church, attended in person and delivered the keynote message. | ||
Although his motto for the event was peace and unity, the Prince of Peace, Jesus Christ, was never mentioned. | ||
And it seems that the Pope, the supposed head of Christendom, is more concerned with uniting with other religions rather than uniting in Christ as the Bible teaches. | ||
Is Pope Francis laying the groundwork for the emergence of a one-world religion? | ||
The crux of the United Nations' one-world order is global control, in part through a new world religion. | ||
As Robert Mueller, the former Assistant Secretary General of the UN says, Was it not inevitable that the UN would sooner or later also acquire a spiritual dimension? | ||
What the world needs today is a convergence of the different religions in the search for and definition of the cosmic or divine laws which ought to regulate our behavior on this planet. | ||
My religion, my nations must be abandoned forever in the planetary age. | ||
In the opening of the Congress, the final declaration was read aloud by Joe Bailey Wells, a bishop of the Anglican Church of England. | ||
Aside from direct calls to address climate change, economic inequality, and various social justice issues, the declaration states that the Congress is, quote, guided by our shared desire for a just, peaceful, secure, and prosperous The opening statement also calls for the quote, | ||
In addressing the challenges of our world. | ||
This idea of merging the church and state is also brought to light in Pope Francis' speech when he says, quote, There is a healthy connection between politics and transcendence, a sound form of coexistence that keeps their spheres distinct. | ||
Distinct but not confused or separate. | ||
Transcendence is a word he uses in place of religion, and later in the speech, he even defines transcendence as, quote, the beyond worship, suggesting that all religions are at root worshiping the same thing, regardless of where their faith lies. | ||
He goes on to say, quote, transcendence for its part must not yield to the temptation to turn into power, further pushing the church and state into unity. | ||
Quote, know then to confusion between politics and transcendence, but know also to their separation. | ||
Just like ancient Babylon, the early Roman Church was both a church and state power, religious and political, and it was also a conglomerate of various pagan belief systems before it ultimately merged with Christianity. | ||
Is Pope Francis trying to lead religions of the world into a merger with the Roman Church? | ||
In his speech, he clearly states,"...our human family cannot advance if simultaneously united and divided." Interconnected and torn apart. | ||
The Catholic Church believes in the unity of the human family. | ||
Based on what he says, it seems he does want to unite the religions of the world under the banner of Catholicism. | ||
One world religion, one human resistance against all of it. | ||
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Find and share that video at band.video.com. | |
We'll be right back. | ||
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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. | ||
Good morning, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
Welcome to The American Journal. I'm your host, Harrison Smith. | ||
You're watching us on AppleWars.com or band.video. | ||
However you're finding this transmission, thanks so much for being here with us. | ||
Epic times. | ||
We find ourselves in, folks, and we will get into all of it. | ||
Tons of stories to cover today. | ||
As always, never any lack of absurdity to delve into. | ||
Today we'll be taking your phone calls as well and have a very special guest for the third hour. | ||
So stay tuned for that. | ||
But let's begin today as we do every day with our Daily Dispatch. | ||
unidentified
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Oh. All right, here it is, folks. | |
Your Daily Dispatch for Wednesday, the 5th of October, 2022. | ||
First up, story from Infowars. | ||
Musk plans to buy Twitter for $44 billion. | ||
Twitter intends to close the deal. | ||
It's happening. Cue the liberal meltdowns. | ||
And since this was announced yesterday, just so many changes to Twitter already. | ||
It's been noticeable. | ||
In fact, many accounts have seen their follower numbers drop by tens of thousands in some cases. | ||
A lot of speculation as to what is actually behind this. | ||
People don't know if it's... | ||
Twitter making a last round of purges before they have to hand over the keys to somebody who actually values free speech. | ||
Or perhaps these are bot networks that are being eliminated ahead of Elon Musk taking over so he won't reveal the real lack of actual human beings on the site. | ||
But certainly lots of Lots of the accounts on the right wing are finding that their follower accounts are significantly lower today than yesterday. | ||
Also, the trending tab is a little bit off the chain. | ||
This morning was a little bit nutty. | ||
With things trending like the Jews trending 30,000 tweets. | ||
Also, hashtag Democrats are evil. | ||
And 10% for the big guy. | ||
All of these things trending this morning when I checked Twitter. | ||
Which is not usually what's trending. | ||
Now it looks like maybe they've fixed it a little bit. | ||
What's trending is Chris Pratt and gays. | ||
So, okay. | ||
But we'll see what actual changes this... | ||
Makes as Elon takes over. | ||
Of course, it's so strange how Elon Musk, yesterday we had our top stories about Elon Musk as well. | ||
Him tweeting out a peace plan for Ukraine and the insanity that came from it. | ||
It really just goes to show you that if you just do things slightly out of the ordinary, It's like our whole system can't handle it anymore. | ||
If you're a billionaire or some sort of big business tycoon, literally all you have to do is just not follow the mainstream narrative and you stand out like a sore thumb. | ||
You're like a light in the darkness. | ||
Of course, Elon Musk has also tweeted out that the purchase of Twitter is just one step towards what he calls X, the everything app. | ||
It's like, no, no thanks. | ||
I'm fine with that. | ||
It's just one of those things. | ||
It's like, on one hand, he's buying Twitter and loves free speech. | ||
On the other hand, he's planting microchips in people's heads. | ||
You know, you take the good with the bad, I guess, but that's a major story, and we'll talk about it and take your phone calls about that later as well. | ||
We also have this story, made major waves when it broke last night. | ||
CEO of election software firm Koenig Arrested for storing data servers in China. | ||
Eugene Yu, the CEO of software firm Konek, has been arrested in connection with the storage of data servers in China. | ||
Yu-51 was arrested early Tuesday just outside of Lansing, Michigan, after prosecutors alleged he improperly stored the information on servers in China, according to Los Angeles County District Attorney George Gascon. | ||
Yu, who is the chief executive of a company named Koenig, is expected to be extradited to Los Angeles in the coming days. | ||
He allegedly violated its contract by storing critical information that the workers provided on servers in China. | ||
Gascon said, we intend to hold all those responsible for this breach accountable. | ||
And some pretty funny headlines from this that we'll show you later in the program, where literally two days ago, They were writing stories calling any concerns about this company, Konek, a right-wing conspiracy theory, election-denying white supremacy. | ||
And then two days later, they write, the CEO of Konek has been arrested for misdeeds. | ||
It's just very quiet. At first, it's like, these ridiculous right-wing conspiracy theorists have another... | ||
Conspiracy they're bringing about. | ||
And then it comes out and they're like, yes, the CEO of Koenig has been arrested. | ||
Nothing more to see here. | ||
Not the same vehemence when the truth comes out. | ||
Interesting how that happens. | ||
This is just a headline for the ages. | ||
It really is. It encapsulates so much of what the Democrats and the mainstream media are all about. | ||
Florida leaders rejected major climate laws. | ||
Now they're seeking storm aid. | ||
That's right. They rejected our major climate laws. | ||
Yeah, we were going to make hurricanes illegal, but they didn't want to do that. | ||
So now they're suffering the consequences. | ||
And now they come begging for help. | ||
As if the climate laws would have done anything to change anything. | ||
I mean, these people are delusional. | ||
I don't even know how much more I can elaborate on this. | ||
Let's just read that headline again. | ||
Florida leaders rejected major climate laws. | ||
Now they're seeking storm aid. | ||
As if one has to do with the other. | ||
As if the implication here is if they had voted for the climate laws, not necessarily they would have prevented the hurricane, but now they would have deserved help repairing from the hurricane. | ||
That's the point, right? | ||
It's that if you don't submit, you don't deserve our help anymore. | ||
Kind of reminds you of the vaccine, right? | ||
Well, they didn't get the vaccine, so I guess they don't get a heart transplant anymore. | ||
I guess they have to deal with that You know cirrhosis of the liver by themselves because they didn't get our vaccine has nothing to do with the other you know one is completely independent of the other but these people are petty vindictive psychopaths who Feel like you deserve to have your house leveled by a hurricane because you didn't give billions of dollars to oil companies who were paying Greta Thunberg to go give speeches to people. | ||
It's all a shell game. | ||
It's all ridiculous. It's all anti-human, anti-Christ nonsense. | ||
They rejected major climate laws. | ||
And now they got hit by a hurricane. | ||
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Told ya. These people. | |
Really is incredible. | ||
Hey, here's a horrifying revelation in pre-crime. | ||
DNA used... | ||
This is just crazy. | ||
Police used DNA phenotyping in unsolved sexual assault. | ||
On Sunday, March 10th, 2019, at approximately 5.45 a.m., police received a call that a female was found yelling for help in the area of 103rd Street and 114th Avenue. | ||
When police arrived, they located a woman in her mid-20s who sustained serious injuries, was wearing only a shirt. | ||
The person that did this got away, but they got DNA from the assault, and they have now used that DNA to come up with a mugshot of the person that they think it was. | ||
Following a long investigation where no witnesses, CCTV, public tips, or DNA matches were found, detectives took the step of enlisting Parabon Nanolabs, a DNA technology company in Virginia that specializes in advanced DNA analysis services. | ||
The services used in this case was DNA phenotyping, the process of predicting physical appearance and ancestry from unidentified DNA evidence. | ||
Law enforcement agencies used the criminal's snapshot copyright DNA phenotyping service to narrow suspect lists and generate leads in criminal investigations. | ||
elections. | ||
This would be a great thing, right? | ||
Trust the science. This is an advance in science. | ||
We can solve crime. | ||
But then you get the picture of the guy and it turns out that science is racist and we have to stop. | ||
We have to stop this right now. | ||
This is unacceptable. How dare you come up with a likely suspect based on DNA? How dare you? | ||
It's racist now. | ||
Yeah, the guy's black, so there's that. | ||
Finally, we have this story, and we'll get into this more later in the show, but Republicans are gaining ground in Senate races in Pennsylvania and Wisconsin. | ||
Oregon also now up for grabs in the gubernatorial contest. | ||
It looks like Republicans are making gains across the nation. | ||
What false flag hysterical terrorist attack will Democrats do to stay in power? | ||
Anything's on the table. | ||
Nuclear war. | ||
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All right, welcome back, folks. | |
Gas prices climbing again as OPEC cuts output. | ||
We'll get into that story and how the UAE and others are working with Russia a little bit. | ||
As the preeminence of America crumbles, as our strength crumbles here at home, as gas prices continue to go up, we all look back fondly. | ||
The good times. | ||
You know, the good old days. | ||
Back when Trump was president two years ago. | ||
It wasn't that long ago, actually. | ||
Back when men were real men and women were real women. | ||
Gas was $2 a gallon. | ||
Folks, we're going to be taking your phone calls throughout the show today. | ||
We just have so very much to cover. | ||
We're going to cover this purchase of Twitter by Elon Musk. | ||
Get into that and what's being said about it. | ||
We'll be talking quite a bit about culture today as well. | ||
Of course, I guess that's all intertwined. | ||
All of this really is deeply intertwined. | ||
It's hard to know where to draw the lines. | ||
Culture is big tech. | ||
That's where culture happens these days. | ||
It's also having an influence on academia and everything else. | ||
Figure out where to start here. | ||
I think we'll start with what InfoWars is going through. | ||
Usually after a show, I take a little break, eat some lunch, take my mind off all this stuff that I've been focusing on for three hours. | ||
Then you want to get back into it. | ||
And of course, I can't help it. | ||
It's like watching a car crash. | ||
I have to watch every minute of the trial taking place in Connecticut, which is so dumb of me because it's spending a lot of time paying attention to something that I can't talk about on this show. | ||
So I guess that's my own fault. | ||
But that's okay. | ||
It's really just the same thing over and over. | ||
But I'm not going to talk about it. | ||
Instead, I want to show you some videos of the press conferences held by Alex Jones outside of the courthouse in Connecticut yesterday. | ||
We'll start with this one. | ||
It's clip number two. | ||
Alex Jones tells media what he can't say in court. | ||
Let's watch. We have a government that just blew up the gas pipeline and is starting a massive escalation of war with Russia. | ||
We live in a country with mass human smoking across the border and a completely collapsed system. | ||
And so the establishment thinks, by demonizing Alex Jones and trying to shut me down, That they're gonna be able to intimidate everybody else to shut up. | ||
This political establishment is collapsing and is almost universally hated. | ||
And they think by turning me into a demon, they're going to be able to scare everybody else off from telling the truth. | ||
No. The front page of Yahoo News today was reporting that Google and the UN censored hydroxychloroquine and other treatments for COVID they knew would work and help people. | ||
That's mass murder. | ||
And when the corporate media promotes mass shootings, all the studies show it encourages other mass shooters. | ||
So who is indicted is the establishment hyping mass shootings? | ||
Who is indicted is the drug companies who almost every mass shooter has been on the so-called antidepressants on their own insert admits it can cause people to go psychotic and engage in mass killing. | ||
It's on the damn label. | ||
So people want to point at Alex Jones questioning an event That the politicians jumped on, that they hyped up, that looked like a media production, is an American people's right. | ||
I never harassed these families. | ||
I never sent people to harass them. | ||
They have no evidence of that. | ||
I didn't kill their kids. | ||
I'm not Adam Lanza. | ||
And ambulance-chasing lawyers have already gotten these people $73 million from America's oldest gun company, Remington. | ||
That was Alex Jones yesterday on the court steps of the courthouse in Connecticut. | ||
He was there with Robert Barnes. | ||
Let's go now to the press conference within. | ||
And again... Most of these are just put up by people on Twitter, Infowars fans, who clip this out and post this sort of stuff, which is incredibly helpful because despite the fact that you see mainstream media outlets have their mics there and are there at the press conference recording this, it usually doesn't get through the editor. | ||
It usually doesn't make the air. | ||
They don't want Alex Jones to have a voice. | ||
They certainly aren't going to turn their platform's You know, into a platform that he can use to speak. | ||
So this is what's necessary as people like you out there watching this right now, clipping this stuff and putting it up on Twitter. | ||
So thank you to everybody who does that. | ||
This posted by Declare Victory on Twitter at 9multiplied. | ||
That's at the number 9 and then the word multiplied. | ||
This one's called Alex Jones and Robert Barnes puts the judicial system on trial. | ||
Here are Alex Jones and Robert Barnes yesterday. | ||
This is American justice on trial. | ||
Even the worst people in the world, which I'm not, but even if I'm a bad person, as some say, I deserve my day in court. | ||
Even the local newspaper admits, I'm not allowed to defend myself. | ||
It's not Alex Jones saying this, it's the Hartford Courant, an article published yesterday. | ||
This is not a trial. | ||
Now, I came here to testify two weeks ago. | ||
I came here this time to testify. | ||
And the judge today said that she will hold me in criminal contempt if I say I'm innocent, if I say I'm bankrupt, if I say I wasn't the first person to question Sandy Hook, and over ten other things. | ||
No judge in U.S. history has ever told somebody what they can and can't say. | ||
I'm being ordered to perjure myself when they ask me questions, or I'll be arrested if I tell the truth. | ||
Robert Barnes is my spokesperson. | ||
He'll be able to give a statement here, and we'll both take your questions. | ||
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Robert Barnes. This is a case that has put the American justice system itself on trial. | |
And the trial that has taken place here, this show trial, is an embarrassment to the rule of law in America and a disgrace and a travesty of American justice. | ||
Everybody knows you're supposed to get your day in court. | ||
Yet the one person who is being denied any day in court is Alex Jones. | ||
To such a degree that the court has made clear today that if he testifies honestly, if he testifies truthfully, he goes to jail. | ||
But if he answers the questions in the way the plaintiff's lawyers want, then he could also go to jail. | ||
No matter what he does, he goes to jail if he testifies in his own behalf, in his own defense. | ||
That is a core American right. | ||
This is a case you have to ask yourself, what is the truth that the plaintiffs are so terrified that the people hear? | ||
What is that truth? That truth is that Alex Jones participated in discovery more than any media defendant in American libel law. | ||
A lot more than the New York Times did just down the road in New York, the Project Veritas case or the Sarah Palin case, as is detailed in the Hartford Courant publication. | ||
This is Robert Barnes going to bat for Alex Jones and again saying things that they're prohibited from saying in court. | ||
From the Hartford Courant, the article that Alex was referencing there, they say this, quote, Jones has been an unpredictable element in the trial since evidence began on September 13th, in large part because of an unusual punitive ruling by Bellis, that's the judge, that left him able to do little more than urge the jury to limit the that left him able to do little more than urge the jury to limit the the victims are seeking in damages while opening himself up to withering examination by their lawyers. | ||
He says, Jones and his company, Free Speech Systems, have been prohibited from defending themselves under default but can try to minimize what they have to pay in compensatory and punitive damages. | ||
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Yeah. | |
And of course, folks, I don't need to tell you this. | ||
There's a reason they're carrying out these trials to take us down. | ||
There's one way to stop it, saveinfowars.com. | ||
Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
This is the American Journal. | ||
Although we're going to... | ||
We'll talk about America first, but we're going to talk about where America's heading. | ||
It's heading to Europe, essentially. | ||
We are slowly but surely becoming European in the worst possible way. | ||
Let's take a look at what's happening in academia around the country real quick, shall we? | ||
Because this is sort of an underlying cause of so much of the stuff that we're dealing with. | ||
So much of the wider cultural insanity are just the ripples that are felt in After, you know, the stone being thrown in the pond, that's the initial action, and then it all spreads out throughout the rest of culture. | ||
So one of the stones being tossed into the pond of American culture these days is the lowering of standards. | ||
See, diversity is our strength, so we have to lower standards across the board to increase diversity. | ||
Don't think that makes much sense? | ||
Well, you're a racist. I'm sorry to have to tell you that. | ||
None of it makes any sense. | ||
The correct way to think about this is if you want to increase diversity you need to bring everybody up to standard not lower standards for the lowest common denominator but they're looking for a shortcut. | ||
They want the symbolic significance of diversity without the Actual work going into it. | ||
And one of the things that they've been doing in terms of lowering standards is just literally lowering standards. | ||
Not in a metaphorical way, but by actually saying, okay, the standard here is actually lower now because we want more diversity. | ||
New York University did that with their standardized testing policy in 2020. | ||
They blamed it on the COVID-19 pandemic. | ||
Okay. They say we have extended our test optional policy due to the impact of COVID-19 pandemic for the 2022-2023 application style. | ||
For students who elect to submit testing as part of their application, NYU has been one of the most flexible testing policies of any college or university. | ||
And this falls in line with the California university system and many others saying that actually standardized tests are in fact racist. | ||
And so we don't require them anymore. | ||
Things like doctors getting into medical school without taking the standard test or lawyers being licensed without having to qualify as they have before this time, this time of wonderful tolerance of the incapable. | ||
And see, it's a problem because it doesn't help anybody. | ||
Thomas Sowell covered this a long, long time ago and explained it probably better than I ever could. | ||
But it's really not even that complicated. | ||
It's not something that's hard to understand. | ||
See, if you have... A black student who in high school gets all A's and does extremely well and is on the track to, say, a state school or some accredited university, some good school, but then they get bumped up. | ||
Then they decide, actually, you qualify for University of Texas, but we're going to go ahead and send you to Yale. | ||
It's not good for that student. | ||
It's probably not good for Yale. | ||
It's probably not good for the University of Texas. | ||
And it's not good for the student either. | ||
And it's not good for his community or his family or his well-being because if you don't qualify for Yale, you probably shouldn't go to Yale. | ||
Again, it's really not that complicated because what happens is you take people who qualify for a state school, you send them to an Ivy League school, and they flounder, and they can't do it, and they are taking classes that they aren't qualified for, and so they drop to the bottom of the pack, and more times than not, they drop out of school. | ||
With the debt that they've accrued, but not the degree that they were going to earn. | ||
And they have to reverse back. | ||
And usually you can't just go, okay, I'm actually going to University of Texas now because, you know, Yale didn't work out. | ||
Like, you have to do the whole thing over again. | ||
It's just a negative process for everybody involved. | ||
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What about Obama? Well, yeah, okay. | |
The best case scenario is you get inducted through a foreign exchange student program and headhunted by the CIA, and then you become president. | ||
But that's a very rare— Gotcha. | ||
Very, very rare outcome. | ||
But no, look, if you qualify, you go to the school you qualify for. | ||
If the black student qualifies for Yale, he goes to Yale. | ||
He's successful. | ||
He didn't need any help getting there. | ||
He did it himself. | ||
He qualified legitimately, so there was no issue, right? | ||
But if you don't qualify, then you shouldn't go to a better school than your qualified I don't know how this is complicated. | ||
Obama went to Harvard? | ||
Yeah, Obama went to Harvard. | ||
All right. He probably qualified for it. | ||
Say what you want about the guy. He might be an evil socialist secret Kenyan, but he's kind of smart. | ||
You have to admit, he's a pretty smart dude. | ||
He's pretty good at what he does, which is trick people through rhetoric, and that's mostly what academia is at the end of the day. | ||
If you qualify for Harvard, you go to Harvard, you do well, no problem. | ||
No intervention needed. | ||
But if you don't qualify for Harvard and somebody intervenes and sends you to Harvard, you're going to fail. | ||
But we don't need to spend too much time on this. | ||
It's obvious. It's absurdly obvious. | ||
So what happens now is that they've lowered standards. | ||
People that don't qualify are going to fancier schools, and they're not doing well, obviously. | ||
But instead of the school saying, ooh, maybe this wasn't a good idea, bringing in a bunch of people who don't qualify and wouldn't be able to make it on their own merit. | ||
Instead, they're lowering the entire school curriculum now. | ||
So two years ago, NYU says, you know what? | ||
Standardized tests, not necessary. | ||
We're just going to let anybody come in as long as their skin color is the right tone. | ||
Flash forward two years. | ||
At NYU, students were failing organic chemistry. | ||
But who was to blame? | ||
Maitland Jones Jr., a respected professor, defended his standards. | ||
But students started a petition and the university dismissed him. | ||
That's right. So they... | ||
They allowed people into their school that didn't technically actually legitimately qualify for it. | ||
They started taking classes that they, again, weren't qualified for. | ||
They were failing the classes they weren't qualified for. | ||
They complained and the school fired the teacher for making his class too hard. | ||
Too hard for the people that shouldn't have been in there in the first place. | ||
In the field of organic chemistry, the article says, Maitland Jones Jr. | ||
has a storied reputation. | ||
He taught the subject for decades, first at Princeton and then at New York University and wrote an influential textbook. | ||
He received awards for his teachings as well as recognition as one of NYU's coolest professors. | ||
Last spring, as the campus emerged from pandemic restrictions, 82 of his 350 students signed a petition against him. | ||
Can you imagine? Can you imagine what type of mindset it takes to sign a petition against your professor for making the course work too hard? | ||
It's just pathetic. | ||
You should be embarrassed. | ||
This is shameful. Students said the high-stakes course, notorious for ending MIDI a dream of medical school, was too hard, blaming Dr. | ||
Jones for their poor test scores. | ||
The professor defended his standards, but just before the start of the fall semester, university deans terminated Dr. | ||
Jones' contract. Well, I wonder who they'll make a petition against when they are able to scam and con their way into a medical license and then their patients start dying. | ||
Who are they going to sue? | ||
We're suing the patients for being too hard to treat. | ||
This isn't a small thing. | ||
It's not just like... You know, we're trying to get the right percentage of races in the school and you're mad that they're stupid. | ||
No, no. These are doctors and lawyers that are going to have actual say in life and death scenarios in the future. | ||
They should be held to a high standard. | ||
I know. This is radical for me to say this, but I don't want to die on an operating room table and have the doctor blame the surgery for being too hard. | ||
It's just insane. But this is pervasive across academia at this point. | ||
And I was going to cover this story yesterday because it was one judge that made this announcement, but now 12 federal judges have joined. | ||
Story at Free Beacon. | ||
Citing concerns for free speech, 12 federal judges say they won't take clerks from Yale Law School. | ||
A dozen federal judges say they are no longer hiring clerks from Yale Law School, citing a slew of scandals that they say have undermined free speech and intellectual diversity. | ||
In addition to Fifth Circuit Judge James Ho, who announced on Thursday that he would no longer hire clerks from the nation's top-ranked law school, 12 federal judges, both circuit and district court jurists, told the Washington Free Beacon they're joining the boycott, saying students will be mindful that they'll face diminished opportunities if they go to Yale, because Yale has gone completely insane and is turning out political activists who aren't qualified or capable for the degrees that they hold. | ||
All right, folks, welcome back to the American Journal. | ||
We'll be taking your calls throughout the next hour. | ||
I'll go ahead and open up fun lines right now. | ||
Why not? I've been mumble-mouthed today. | ||
I don't know what it is. I need to do my breathing exercises. | ||
Just kidding. I'm not an improv troupe. | ||
Give us a call here at American Journal. | ||
The number to dial is 1-877-789-2539. | ||
1-877-789-2539. | ||
We'll be taking your calls throughout the next hour about all of the stuff we have on docket today. | ||
And of course, you can find these stories at harrisonhillsmith.substack.com. | ||
And you can get ahead of me. | ||
Go find something that's on there that I haven't talked about yet and bring it up in the call and we will get into it. | ||
I look to you to guide our show today. | ||
But I do want to continue with this story from the Free Beacon about 12 federal judges say they will not take clerks from Yale Law School anymore. | ||
They say, quote, And many students choose Yale over other elite law schools because its graduates have historically had the best shot of clerking for prominent judges. | ||
A boycott could change that calculus, forcing Yale administrators to rein in activist students and colleagues if they want to keep attracting the best and brightest, and if they want to maintain even a fig leaf of ideological diversity. | ||
One of the bizarre things about this is in this next sentence. | ||
They say the judges joining the boycott, all of whom requested anonymity in order to speak freely. | ||
Which is very ominous, in my opinion. | ||
You have judges, federal judges, in some cases, with power over life and death and the decisions that they make, power to move millions of dollars. | ||
I mean, you see it with lots of courts that you can watch on the internet. | ||
You can see that when it comes down to the actual trial, the judge is... | ||
Sort of a supreme authority, unquestionable, can make decisions without having to explain their reasoning and really have a lot of leeway in the decisions they can make. | ||
It's amazing that these guys who have so much power feel that they need to keep their thoughts secret and not be able to speak freely in the public because of how insane the media is and how You know, they might be, I don't know, disbarred or have a major media meltdown campaign of cancel culture against them for daring to speak their mind. | ||
It's troubling. It's very troubling being in a culture where these people with incredible power want to speak freely but feel like they can't because of the overwhelming influence of the media in its leftist bent. | ||
So it's like on one hand it's a good thing that they're coming out against the open ideological extremism of places like Yale, but it's already gotten so bad that these judges don't even feel like they can say this out in the open. | ||
it would be something that would be very easy to justify and discuss in any sort of rational culture. | ||
Judge coming out and going, yeah, we're not taking people from this school anymore because this school is churning out psychopaths. | ||
It's churning out people that are incapable of what we need them to do, and it's giving them degrees based on ideological reasons. | ||
And basically these people are coming out as leftist activists that don't even understand the law and are working to actively subvert it. | ||
So we're not going to take them anymore. | ||
That should be something that you can say openly because it concerns the entire structure of our delicately balanced system. | ||
Pretty troubling. And this article goes through many of the ideological factors Cluster bombs that are happening in Yale, for lack of a better term. | ||
All sorts of things. Hundreds of Yale students disrupting a bipartisan panel on civil liberties, causing so much chaos that police were called to escort speakers to safety. | ||
Though the disruption was an apparent violation of Yale's free speech policies, Yale Law School Dean Heather Gerken ruled out disciplinary action for the protesters. | ||
She even denied that the students had transgressed any formal policy, a move that sparked blowback from her colleague Kate Stith, who warned that Gerken was setting a terrible precedent. | ||
Well, that precedent has been well set by the entire culture at this point. | ||
If you break the law in pursuit of one ideology, you're let go. | ||
It's excused. | ||
You're encouraged in your activity. | ||
If you do exactly the same thing, but for a different reason, you are not just punished Appropriately for what you actually did, you are deemed a white supremacist and protesters will hound you out of the university for daring to go against the prescribed narrative. | ||
That's the issue. It's not even just that one side gets away with it and the other side doesn't. | ||
It's like one side gets off scot-free and is congratulated and rewarded for their misbehavior. | ||
The other side, even the most minor misbehavior, is treated as a misbehavior. | ||
World-ending transgression that must be dealt with as severely as possible. | ||
It's not just unequal, it's just completely arbitrary and obnoxious. | ||
Another court judge, a top, quote, feeder for Supreme Court clerkships, says he was torn on whether to participate in the boycott, but that the case for it had gotten stronger over the past year. | ||
Well, I'd say just wait until it's irreparable. | ||
You know? Why step in and stop something before it gets to be too big of a problem to handle? | ||
Again, I just don't understand this. | ||
It's like the case for it has gotten stronger over the past year. | ||
So it was strong before. It keeps getting worse. | ||
Everything keeps getting worse. | ||
And they're like, I don't know if I'm going to step in. | ||
Let's just see if something happens that reverses this trend for no reason that's never going to happen. | ||
Like, nothing's going to happen unless you stand up. | ||
Nothing's going to reverse this trend unless people like yourself speak out to reverse this trend. | ||
The atmosphere of acceptable language is so destroyed at this point, you can't even speak out against it. | ||
You've let it get this far. | ||
I really don't understand how many people see what's going on, agree with us basically, and are silent about it and are scared to speak up about it. | ||
And quietly at home and amongst their friends, they'll sort of shake their head and go, oh yeah, it's really bad. | ||
But in public or in their professional position, they are mute as statues. | ||
Why? Why are you not speaking up about this? | ||
It doesn't make any sense. | ||
And where this goes is a horrifying reality that we don't have to look too far for. | ||
In fact, it's taking hold right across the Atlantic Ocean. | ||
This is a thread from a woman named Caroline Farrow who says a thread about my evening. | ||
This is in the UK. She gives us a little narrative of what happened to her last night. | ||
She says it was tea time. | ||
I was doing a chicken roast. | ||
Knock at my door. Two cops. | ||
There's been an allegation of harassment and malicious communication, and we've come to arrest you. | ||
Well, actually, they came into the door and said there's been an allegation. | ||
Can we come in? I said, do you have a warrant? | ||
They said, we don't need one, and this 6'3 bloke forced his way in. | ||
They seized all my devices, including my work Chromebook and the homework iPad, which will upset the 10-year-old with autism even more because all her Harry Potter audiobooks are stored on there, and now she can't do homeschooling. | ||
Oh, also, her mother is being arrested while cooking dinner. | ||
That also can't be We're good to go. | ||
I was shown a load of posts from Kiwi Farms from Real Mother For Ya and KitKat. | ||
I was asked to explain that KitKat, a cartoon that KitKat had posted. | ||
I explained I wasn't responsible for these posts. | ||
Somebody else posted something on the internet, so we're here to arrest you. | ||
We're going to confiscate all your communications, go through all of your personal papers, confiscate your daughter's iPad and your wedding ring because you need to be dehumanized. | ||
You need to be treated like a... | ||
Criminal or a slave. | ||
You need to understand your position in this pecking order. | ||
You may or may not have said something that may or may not have insulted somebody who may or may not be a member of a minority group. | ||
The point is, put your hands behind your back, ma'am. | ||
Husband was furious, she says. | ||
Videoed the whole encounter. When read my rights, I was told that what I said could be used in evidence against me. | ||
I replied that women don't have a phallus. | ||
Well, now you're going away for a long time. | ||
How dare you? She's just asking for it. | ||
Police wanted to go into the parish office to seize my devices. | ||
Husband said no, they needed a warrant. | ||
Police asked why they couldn't just go in there, and my husband said because we don't trust the police. | ||
They got on the blower for the requisite permission to seize them. | ||
As I was driving off, I asked husband to tell my work that the machine had been stolen. | ||
Six foot three copper said, seize not actually stolen. | ||
Whatever. We didn't steal it. | ||
We seized it without permission. | ||
All the kids were pretty distraught. | ||
Just picked up messages from my eldest. | ||
Don't know if you've got access to your phone, but I'm thinking of you. | ||
It's not fair. This is happening. | ||
It's concerning. Also kind of irritating. | ||
Dad didn't contact me. | ||
unidentified
|
me I found out from someone else. | |
All right, folks, welcome back. | ||
Second hour of American Journal has begun. | ||
We'll be taking your phone calls this hour. | ||
We'll get into those just as quickly as possible. | ||
We have a lot of videos to show you this hour as well. | ||
We're welcoming our guest in the third hour to talk about culture and what you can do to fight back. | ||
Just finishing up here with this thread from Caroline Farrow who was arrested, dragged away from her home while cooking dinner by the police in the UK. I don't know if you know this, but there's like a race war going on in UK right now between Muslims and Hindus and the crime rate is spiking through the roof and Black Lives Matter, | ||
even though UK has no extensive history of slavery like America does, doesn't have the same racial conflicts that America did in the 1960s and beyond. | ||
Nevertheless, there has been just continuous stream of protests in America From Black Lives Matter and the Extinction Rebellion psychopath, weirdo, middle-aged women who go around smashing bank windows with police standing right there not doing anything about it. | ||
Again, folks, it's not that we have tyranny on all sides. | ||
We have all of the bad aspects of tyranny. | ||
None of the good. | ||
At least with tyranny of a classical sort, they actually punish criminals. | ||
At least, like... If you have, you know, some fascist leader, they're going to just stop criminals from running wild on the street. | ||
What we have here is like a tyranny, but only against the good people. | ||
Only against the innocent people that aren't doing anything. | ||
All the people actually out there smashing windows and knocking down statues and attacking people in the street, throwing Molotov cocktails. | ||
They're all scot-free, running around, doing whatever the hell they want. | ||
And if you say bad words on the internet, the police come knock on your door and drag you away from your home and family. | ||
Totally insane. Caroline Farrow, I mean, it's sort of summed up right here. | ||
She says, I put my side of the story to the coppers. | ||
I'd ask people not to speculate on who reported me because they will claim harassment. | ||
I'm actually feeling pretty harassed and anxious right now, as one might imagine. | ||
It's irritating that my devices have been seized, but I'm also super happy because I've not done the stuff I'm accused of, and they should exonerate me. | ||
That passage right here is a defeated people, right? | ||
unidentified
|
It's just like, you should be pissed. | |
You should be really pissed that they dragged you out of your home for something that you didn't do. | ||
It's not like, yeah, but the good news is I'm being punished for a crime I didn't commit. | ||
I guess. I mean, like, internally, you can feel justified in resistance because you're like, I am not the person they say I am. | ||
But, like, I'd be more angry in that situation. | ||
But I don't know. She says, I got the feeling from the copper who checked up on me in the cell, so they were pretty embarrassed by the whole thing. | ||
Yeah, that's the other aspect of it, right? | ||
It's like that scene from one of Alex's documentaries. | ||
I think it was Police State 2. | ||
Yeah. Where they show the National Guard going around and confiscating weapons after Hurricane Katrina. | ||
Police are like, it's pretty crazy what we're doing. | ||
Like, I don't like having to go and confiscate weapons from innocent people. | ||
So it's not good. | ||
It's not a fun thing to do. | ||
Anyway, let's go do it. And they go do it. | ||
It's like the police are there being like, it's so embarrassing how tyrannical we are. | ||
It's really embarrassing that we have to arrest you for perhaps maybe saying something on the internet. | ||
I'd rather be out there catching the police, or catching the criminals, but hey, I'm just following orders. | ||
I wonder if this was a defense at Nuremberg. | ||
Like, yes, I did herd them into the death chamber. | ||
I pulled the lever and electrocuted them with the weaponized floor, and they all died. | ||
But I was very embarrassed about the whole thing. | ||
Frankly, it didn't sit right with me while I was doing it, while they were lining up in front of the trench. | ||
I was loading my machine gun. | ||
I was thinking, this can't be right. | ||
It's just like you need to not do the thing that makes you embarrassed. | ||
You need to not be complicit and a part of the tyranny that you know is wrong. | ||
You need to be a human being and you need to stand up against this mechanized tyranny before it's too late. | ||
Everybody needs to just have a modicum of strength in their bones and know that you are a coward if you go along with this. | ||
You might be served well by the system, but it's Satan's system. | ||
So enjoy being served well by the devil himself, you idiot. | ||
unidentified
|
Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | |
We'll go back after your phone calls and see a bunch of good people calling in about a variety of different topics. | ||
A bunch of videos to show you. | ||
Again, you can find all these videos on my substack as well. | ||
You can go to offlimits.news to sign up for it if you'd like. | ||
22 photos today. | ||
So a small collection. Just a minor collection of videos today. | ||
We have the information about the vaccine and the failure of the authorities to deal with COVID is coming out at an increasingly rapid rate. | ||
We'll start with a friend of the show, Del Bigtree, talking about two of the most important papers, peer-reviewed, that you'll ever read on the COVID mRNA vaccine. | ||
Clip number eight here. It's Del Bigtree with his show, The High Wire. | ||
Let's watch. Talk about, I would say, this week's whistleblower. | ||
It's fairly new to the scene. | ||
Obviously, a prominent heart doctor in the UK. We saw him speaking out on GBN News back in October. | ||
Well, now he's written maybe two of the most important papers to be written about the COVID-19 vaccine, especially the mRNA vaccines. | ||
It's getting a lot of press. | ||
It's getting a lot of attention. In many ways, you could say he's going viral. | ||
He's on the news. He's doing, you know, conferences and talking about this. | ||
So this is just a taste of really the new star on the block when it comes to transparency and a passion for the scientific method. | ||
I'm talking about Dr. | ||
Ashim Malhotra. | ||
Take a look at this. I was one of the first people to have the COVID-19 vaccine. | ||
I helped out in a vaccine centre. | ||
I was in Good Morning Britain helping tackle vaccine hesitancy. | ||
I did not conceive of the possibility that a vaccine could cause any real harm at all. | ||
It wasn't even part of... | ||
It wasn't even anywhere in my brain. | ||
Over a few months, conversations with various people started to make me think a little bit differently. | ||
Somebody from a very prestigious British institution, cardiology department researcher, a whistleblower if you like, contacted me to say that the researchers in this department had found inflammation from imaging studies around the coronary arteries and they had a meeting and these researchers at the moment have decided they're not going to publish their findings because they are concerned about losing research money from the drug industry. | ||
Knowing this information, which is very concerning, Steven Gundry's paper in circulation. | ||
And also anecdotal evidence. | ||
I mean, I have a lot of interaction with the cardiology community across the UK. And anecdotally, I've been getting told by colleagues that they are seeing younger and younger people coming in with heart attacks. | ||
We have 14,000 extra unexplained out-of-hospital cardiac arrests in this country alone. | ||
Israel data. No one wants to talk about it. | ||
Israel data, 16 to 39-year-olds, they did a very rigorous analysis, 25% increase in heart attacks and out-of-hospital cardiac arrests in 16 to 39-year-olds, specifically associated with the vaccine, not associated with COVID. I was under the impression the vaccine would prevent transmission. | ||
We obviously now know that's completely false. | ||
unidentified
|
That isn't true. We don't even know if it was true at the beginning. | |
Oh, I know. Oh, I know if it was true in the beginning. | ||
It wasn't. It was always a lie. | ||
They always lied about everything. | ||
That's what they do. | ||
And they're getting away with it. | ||
And it is... | ||
I mean, honestly, the strangest thing about it is the fact that people are not... | ||
Aware of this. They're following the science until the science takes an unexpected turn and then they just are off the path. | ||
They just are continuing down the trail they were going down despite the fact that they were following the science. | ||
The science changed but they just kept on going. | ||
Just ignoring scientific revelations that do not comport with their preordained image of what they thought the science would say. | ||
It's just incredible. In fact, let's go ahead and go to clip number 17 here. | ||
This really makes things absurdly clear, just how so-called effective these vaccines are. | ||
This from Taiwan. | ||
unidentified
|
Let's watch. Taiwan, the number of people dying after their COVID vaccination is exceeding the number of deaths from the virus itself. | |
Taiwan's health authorities say that as of Monday, deaths after vaccination reached 865, while deaths from the virus are at 845. | ||
Vaccines currently offered in Taiwan include AstraZeneca, Moderna, Pfizer-BioNTech, and Taiwan's own vaccine, Medigen. | ||
Out of the 865 deaths after vaccination, over 600 were from AstraZeneca and nearly 200 deaths after Moderna shot. | ||
Do I need to add anything to that? | ||
More people are dying as a side effect to the vaccine than are dying from COVID. And they are calling this a successful rollout. | ||
And they're telling you, you still need to get it. | ||
They're still taking every opportunity, including things like... | ||
Announcements about hurricane preparedness to remind you to get the vaccine, get the vaccine, get the vaccine, do it now. | ||
You have to. Why? | ||
We can't tell you that. | ||
Certainly not to keep you safe from the virus that it doesn't protect you against. | ||
It actually makes you more likely to get the vaccine or get the virus now. | ||
That's pretty undeniable. | ||
This is becoming so overwhelming at this point that it's actually breaking through to the mainstream. | ||
Here is lawyer Aaron Seary on Fox News talking about the reports he obtained from the CDC. Clip number 18. | ||
Let's watch....out that it was 463 days, you tell us, from the time that you requested this V-safe data. | ||
V-safe is a CDC program where you just kind of report how you're doing after you got the vaccine. | ||
463 days to get it. | ||
Why did it take so long in your estimation, sir? | ||
unidentified
|
It's a very good question. | |
Why did it take numerous legal demands, multiple appeals, two lawsuits in fact, before the CDC finally handed over the V-safe data, which is already de-identified data for the most part that they provided? | ||
Just two days ago, 144 million lines of code that they could have provided in a matter of minutes at any point. | ||
It's a great question. | ||
Maybe the answer is, is that now that we have that data and we've looked at that data, of the 10 million users within V-safe, 7.7% of them had to seek medical care after vaccination. | ||
That is an incredibly high percentage, it appears to me. | ||
Yeah, and if I can, sir, I just want to put this graphic up to kind of follow along with you. | ||
You're right. 7.7% required. | ||
Medical care, we're talking about emergency rooms, hospitalizations, there it is right there. | ||
And on top of that, not to go you one better, but this is your information, another 2.5 million, we're talking 25%, missed work or school or had bad reactions to the vaccine. | ||
What's the takeaway for you from this? | ||
unidentified
|
Is it significant? It seems incredibly significant. | |
A big reason that they pushed the COVID vaccine is they said, look, not everybody's going to get, you know, seriously injured by COVID, but for many, it'll prevent them from having symptoms, being hospitalized, missing work. | ||
Now that we have the data, we can see that getting the vaccine caused 25% of people who got the shot within this data set of 10 million people to miss work, to have somewhat serious event affecting their normal life functions. | ||
Yeah. And you also put it out... | ||
unidentified
|
But I do leave it to folks like Marty... | |
Pretty incredible. I guess this is what you'd call mass murder. | ||
I guess the cover-up of this and the deceit that they used to bring this about is kind of like a crime against humanity that should be punished. | ||
And as we know, of course, people are trusting the science and they're coming around to this and they understand what's going on, right? | ||
Let's go to clip number 11. Where you want to treat them. | ||
unidentified
|
And it eats you up. | |
If you are there to do a job as a compassionate person, there are no resources and you are told persistently on the news that, you know, care homes are being ring-fenced. | ||
It's a lie. | ||
And I'm sorry, but if you have voted Conservative, you do not deserve to be resuscitated by the NHS. Oh, my God! | ||
What? That's a nurse, by the way. | ||
That's a nurse saying this. | ||
Medical industry. | ||
Come back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
We go directly out to your phone calls now. | ||
About halfway through today's episode of American Journal. | ||
Remember, you support everything that we do by going to InfoWarsStore.com. | ||
We make it easy for you to do it. | ||
The InfoWars Super Sale is on right now. | ||
Massive savings on all of our most desired products. | ||
These things... We're good to go. | ||
It always seems like a revelation when people call in and they say, you know, for years I was dealing with some persistent issue and nothing I tried worked until I tried one of your supplements and lo and behold, it did everything you promised and more. | ||
Try for yourself any of the wonderful products at InfoWars store and know that you can shop with confidence. | ||
And that the money that you're spending at Infowarsstore.com goes directly towards this all-important fight for the sake and future of humanity itself against a globalist technocratic takeover. | ||
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But we do need your help to continue this mission, Infowarsstore.com. | ||
Let's go out again to your phone calls. | ||
We have James in Indiana who wants to talk about big tech corruption. | ||
Thanks for calling in, James. You're on the air. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, Senator Hawley was on with Laura Ingraham a couple weeks ago on how Big Tech was giving DOJ conservatives private messages without any warrant. | |
Passwords are worthless because Big Tech can alter your accounts, send messages from your accounts to frame you, and browse or store passwords. | ||
All federal agencies are compromised. | ||
The Post Office has been using ICOP to spy on conservatives. | ||
They have a postal mail cover program to spy on people. | ||
The government can send you mail, scan it, and frame you. | ||
The states need to stop working with the feds to retaliate and frame people. | ||
Is there any word on whistleblower Whitehurst coming on the show? | ||
He was showing in the past how the federal government was framing totally innocent people. | ||
I don't know about him coming on the show, but I'm loving the things you're rattling off. | ||
Again, it's one of these things that one of these stories comes out about once a week, but it's only when you compile them all and go look at what's happening that you get a true scope of just how corrupt this system is. | ||
And yes, I think we played a video yesterday from Laura Ingram's show that was about this topic, but more and more information is coming out about just how intertwined the... | ||
Deep State and the big tech corporations truly are. | ||
Anything else, James? That was a great little rant you just did, a little list of very troubling occurrences with big tech and the deep state. | ||
unidentified
|
What else you got? Oh, lastly, Infowars should sell a sports card that has the Alex Jones Show, the War Room, and the American Journal on it and signed to the right. | |
They only cost about 10 cents, and you could sell them for probably about $60 as a fundraiser. | ||
And there should also be a donate button to the special shows like the Trucker Show and the Veterans Show. | ||
It's a win-win to give callers Infowar products on those days. | ||
Very true. I like that idea. | ||
Yeah, playing cards. That would be pretty fun. | ||
I think that would be very fun, actually. | ||
We could do it for not just people at InfoWars, but all sorts of people in the right-wing sphere. | ||
I like that idea a lot. Of course, you can always donate by going to saveinfowars.com or buying one of our collectibles. | ||
Again, it's amazing. I don't want to talk too much about the About the courtroom proceedings or anything, but, you know, there's this idea that it's like you pay less for your products than you sell them for on your store. | ||
It's like, yes, like literally every company does. | ||
Like, how do you think grocery stores make profit by selling? | ||
By selling the products at the same price they get them for, that doesn't make any sense. | ||
And I don't know if this is news to anybody, but when you buy like $100,000 of something, you tend to get a better price than when you buy just one of a thing. | ||
So if you're just going and buying one thing, it's a little different than when you're calling up the manufacturer and saying, I need $10,000 or $100,000 of this product. | ||
That's the way that merchandise works. | ||
Just to chime in on the... | ||
On the supplement side, you know, what really does set apart Infowars supplements is that Alex does spend a couple extra dollars, you know, behind the scenes to get the good formulations. | ||
A great example is our B12, you know, that's methylcobalamin. | ||
What a lot of people don't understand is that there are various forms of B12. And cyanocobalamin, which is a derivative of cyanide, actually, is a way that people get their B. And that... | ||
That version of B12 is actually toxic, and there are studies that go back tens of years, decades, that talk about links between supplementation with vitamin B and lung cancer, and lo and behold... | ||
The formulation that was most popular on the market was cyanocobalamin. | ||
And so it's not the type that we have. | ||
We have the other type. | ||
When you get the high-quality vitamin B, you feel super energized after having it. | ||
And it's one of those little things. | ||
Alex has always said his goal is just not to screw people over with supplements. | ||
And that's why people come back. | ||
Right, and that's why supplements are such a good business model, just pulling the curtain back here, but a lot of people sell supplements because if you take them and you like them, then you're going to come back and get more of them, and so it doesn't serve anybody to sell a low-quality product. | ||
And have somebody take it and go, well, this doesn't work, so I'm not going to buy this again. | ||
We want to sell you good things, so you appreciate it, you enjoy it, they make a difference in your life, and so you want to come back and get more. | ||
It really is just basic capitalism that a lot of this country is trying to treat as evil because it's, well, it's us, and we love America, and they don't want us to be able to participate in the market in the same way that the ESG-approved companies Thank you so much for the call, James. Very good. Thank you for the insight as well, Matt. | ||
Good to know. Let's go to Tim in Ontario who wants to relay something or reply to something that I said about cannabis. | ||
Thanks for calling in. Tim, you're on the air. | ||
Yeah, can you hear me? Yes, sir. | ||
unidentified
|
All right, yeah. I want to say the cannabis is like echinacea. | |
CBD oil, it'll block the ACE2 receptor for COVID. Oh, interesting. | ||
In his lungs. Actually, that's CBDA. CBDA. We were talking about this in the control room yesterday, actually. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. And, uh, good to y'all or whatever. | |
Okay, I didn't know the actual specifics. | ||
I know there's a lot of different terpenoids and stuff. | ||
You can get CBDA at most places that offer CBD supplements now. | ||
And yeah, CBDA binds to the spike protein, so the protein cannot use the ACE2 receptor pathway. | ||
Which I think is how they explained ivermectin worked as well, binding to that same receptor and blocking off from the virus. | ||
I could be wrong, though. Yeah, it is. | ||
More or less the same. Yeah, and I mean, there were even studies about nicotine having a similar effect as well. | ||
They found in France they had a study that showed smokers had a much lower rate of COVID, and they were hypothesizing that it might have been something in the chemical composition of nicotine. | ||
But thank you for that, Tim. | ||
When you smoke, people think you're cool. | ||
Hey, it also looks cool. | ||
Just kidding. We don't support that stuff. | ||
It's gross. It makes you smell bad. | ||
Let's go to Sauce in FEMA Region 9. | ||
I'm loving these calls today. You are saying that having a capitalistic society on blockchain is impossible. | ||
Explain that, Sauce. Hey, Harrison. | ||
unidentified
|
How are you doing today? Thanks for having me on. | |
Good. Thank you for calling in. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, no problem. So basically, yeah. | |
Having a capitalist society on blockchain is impossible due to the nature of how the architecture is on blockchain. | ||
And for a couple of examples I can give you is we have NFT projects, we have DAOs, and it's all revolving around community as it is. | ||
So we see us blending social aspects with finances. | ||
So we're blending social aspects with finances as it is. | ||
It's basically communist, or not communist, but socialistic by nature as it is. | ||
So when we start incorporating governance, like voting in Dallas, where everybody has to stay, that's absolutely socialistic. | ||
Now, when we take into consideration for digital IDs required to be used for CBDCs, I called in earlier about that a little bit ago, a couple days ago or something. | ||
So we're going to have, you guys essentially need to have, we need to level the playing field. | ||
And by that, the United States can no longer be a capitalistic society. | ||
By leveling the playing field, everybody globally has to be on the same page in order for this whole global blockchain essentially to work. | ||
And by that, we're seeing all the fiats dropping in value right now, but ours is still heavily inflated. | ||
And there's a good reason, obviously. | ||
Interesting. Yeah, you know, I always appreciate when people call in about blockchain because I need to be educated about it just as much as everybody else. | ||
Thanks for that call, Sauce. All right, welcome back, folks. | ||
This will be our final segment of the hour before we welcome AJ Rice, president and CEO of Publius PR and author of The Woking Dead. | ||
Very excited to talk to him, so we're going to try to get to as many phone calls here in this segment as possible. | ||
I have a special little statement to make in the first five of the next hour as well, but for now, let's go out to the phone calls. | ||
We have Brain in New York. | ||
All right, the crew's telling me to go to Brain, so we're going to Brain in New York. | ||
You want to talk about T-Rex fossils? | ||
Thanks for calling in, Brain. | ||
unidentified
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You're on the air. My name is actually Brian, but that's okay. | |
How are you, Harrison? I'm going to keep calling you Brain. | ||
unidentified
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All right, you better call me Brain. | |
Thanks for calling in. Alright, thanks for having me. | ||
So I was just calling in because last night before I turned in, I was flipping through the channels and I came across this story about the Tyrannosaurus Rex fossil they found some decades ago and they named it Sue. | ||
Are you familiar with that at all? No, not really. | ||
Alright, well it's a Tyrannosaurus Rex fossil or skeleton and they named it Sue but it happens to be a male, they determined. | ||
And they've always been curious about these holes in its jaw And apparently for decades they've been trying to research what these holes are caused by. | ||
And they came up with a synopsis. | ||
The last night in the news I heard that they determined that the Tyrannosaurus Rex must have been gay and that this was like a mating ritual that had gone rough. | ||
No. Yes. | ||
Yes. Your crew said they were going to look it up, but it was on MSNBC or CNN or something last night. | ||
They just had the article up. | ||
Guys, can we pull up that article and see what it says? | ||
So, the article is called, What Caused Holes in Sue, the T-Rex's Jawbone? | ||
Scientists are stumped. | ||
Did they come to a conclusion here? | ||
Let's scroll down. Sue, the biggest and best-preserved Tyrannosaurus ever unearthed, was no doubt a fearsome beast. | ||
When this predator prowled what is now South Dakota about 67 million years ago in the twilight age of the dinosaurs, but even this huge dinosaur whose fossils are on display in the Field Museum of Chicago is not invulnerable. | ||
The prime example is a series of circular holes in Sue's jawbone that continue to baffle scientists. | ||
New research seeking an explanation for these holes has managed to rule out one major hypothesis, although the answer remains elusive. | ||
A diameter of a golf ball on the back half of Sue's lower jawbone or mandible determined they were not caused by a... | ||
Okay, microbial? | ||
This is so strange. | ||
And so the conclusion they came up to was that the dinosaur was gay, is what you're telling me. | ||
The dinosaur was gay and perhaps had a little bit of the rough... | ||
We like to call it the monkey-style, monkey-pox-style lovemaking. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah, that's right, Allison. | |
I just had a call in with that. | ||
It sent me for a loop when I saw it last night, so... | ||
Okay, that is just unbelievably strange, but I believe it, you know, why not? | ||
Why not? It might not be true, but hey, what are you going to lose your job saying that the T-Rex wasn't gay? | ||
That's hate speech. How dare you? | ||
Incredible. It's incredible. | ||
Frankly, I'm offended that they can determine its gender from its fossils. | ||
You have no idea what it could have been a straight transgender woman. | ||
So that's not gay as far as I understand it. | ||
Brian, it's all stupid. | ||
It's all stupid. Science is stupid now. | ||
Thank you for calling in and letting us know just how stupid science is. | ||
We appreciate it. | ||
So dumb. Thank you for that, Brian. | ||
That's a very important piece of information we now have. | ||
Let's go to SAD in the DFW. That's the Dallas-Fort Worth area. | ||
You want to call in about the Russia situation and Stuart Rhodes' situation. | ||
Thanks for calling in. SAD, you are on the air. | ||
unidentified
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No, sir. No, sir. | |
No, sir. This is Thad, aka the Chief. | ||
You know me, Harrison. We did Titans of Liberty together a few times. | ||
Of course. What's up, Pat? | ||
unidentified
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Yeah, how you doing, brother? Good. | |
So, great news from Brain. | ||
It's awesome that the liberal media has established that even the dinosaurs are gay. | ||
So, yeah, hooray for that. | ||
Take that, homophobes. | ||
unidentified
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Thank you, Brain. Yeah, so I wanted to talk to you, man. | |
You know, we've entered a new... | ||
A new level of straight tyranny. | ||
They're doing it in front of our faces. | ||
The gentleman that named off all the websites that they're using and the systems that they're using to monitor not only conservatives. | ||
What the liberals don't realize is that they're being monitored as well. | ||
They have established a new precedent for dissent. | ||
They are now the arbiters of truth. | ||
They have already established what the Ministry of Truth is. | ||
It's right there. It's clear. | ||
It's in front of everybody's face. | ||
You know, Harrison, you know, my involvement with the Patriot side I hate to reference roaches in terms of my fellow patriots. | ||
But that's what's happened. | ||
You know, my own dealings with the FBI after that entire situation are deeply troubling even now. | ||
Right. You know, so it's a lot going on. | ||
Now you have Putin sending out doomsday submarines, according to the Great Health Ranger, you know, on Natural News. | ||
People don't understand. | ||
We have Radiation Awareness Month where they're trying to establish this new normal that we have to be ready for some kind of radiological event. | ||
It's insane, dude. | ||
I really wanted to touch on The Stuart Rhodes situation, because I'll tell you straight up, man, I want to run my mouth about what the feds were after, after January 6th, man. | ||
You know, they, I'm going to say it, man, they contacted me, and all they wanted to talk about was Stuart Rhodes. | ||
I've had limited interactions with Stuart Rhodes, but I think Stuart Rhodes had the right idea. | ||
You know what I mean? Maybe it was the wrong... | ||
Maybe it was the wrong strategy, but the Oath Keepers were all amazing patriots, the ones that I've worked with. | ||
I want to talk to you about a journalist that contacted me from the New York Times named Jordan Green. | ||
The gentleman hit me up on Twitter and mentioned that Kelly Sorrell, a great patriot, a lawyer here in this area, And he said that she had mentioned me in an official document in regards to myself and what I was doing in Washington, D.C. And this is all just showing the public what the DOJ was after and what they're still after. | ||
They are the long arm of this, you know, global UN, you know, strong arm type strategy, you know, to just destroy any kind of dissent. | ||
You know, Harrison, yeah, and you know, I'm gonna tell you, I'd like to tell everyone what Ms. | ||
Sorrell has told me. | ||
I want to tread lightly because I know her legal situation is rough right now, but I'm going to tell you what, Harrison. | ||
You know, it was great when Alex came out and he said exactly what's going on. | ||
You have a stay-over Nazi party. | ||
And Harrison, it's on both sides, brother. | ||
It's on both sides. | ||
You don't know who to trust. | ||
And all of these gentlemen are working towards the same ends. | ||
And it's unnerving, and the people are just watching it. | ||
It doesn't hit them until it affects their day-to-day. | ||
And I'm telling you, Harrison, you know this as well as I do, this is going to affect everybody very soon. | ||
Very soon. If you have any kind of dissenting opinion, be prepared. | ||
Be prepared to go through what you just saw, you know, with the woman that, you know, apparently got hit for no good reason by this horrible Department of Justice, if you can even call it justice anymore. | ||
You know, Harrison, you know, Stuart Rhodes, the great guys at the Oath Keepers, you know, I mean, there's always, you know, guys that, you know, There may be infiltrators. | ||
They may have the wrong direction internally, but the majority of those guys were great guys. | ||
It's disgusting to see that this Department of Justice has established themselves at the higher level. | ||
To be the arbiters of what is true and what is justice. | ||
You know, I'm sorry to go on this long rant, man, but I've been keeping my mouth shut for a very long time, Harrison. | ||
I'm ready to run it, dude. No, I love it. | ||
I didn't want to interrupt you because I just wanted you to keep going. | ||
Yeah, let's stay in touch, Dex. | ||
It's been a while, and I've... | ||
It's great hearing from you again. | ||
I think you're exactly right in everything that you're saying. | ||
I think in some parts, liberals are like kind of just barely starting to get it, but not nearly to the degree that they should. | ||
I know when you talk about, you know, is it even justice anymore? | ||
Like people like the Young Turks who forever... | ||
championed the defund the police movement are now making videos where they're like, why is this person who has been arrested 41 times out on the street, what's happening? | ||
And it's like, well, what's happening is what you wanted came true. | ||
Your desires have been fulfilled and now everything is ruined. | ||
Maybe you should think about this. | ||
And the LA Times writes this big long article about how the FBI is fabricating evidence in order to justify breaking into lockboxes in a... | ||
In a bank, what's happening here? | ||
Well, you've run cover for them while they've been corrupted over the last several years, and now you're paying the price. | ||
Now you're reaping what you sow. | ||
So I think you're exactly right, Thad, and I thank you so much for the call because you really covered a lot of good topics there and made apparent what dire straits we find ourselves in. | ||
Thank you for that, folks. We'll be back on the other side. | ||
Welcome back, folks. We will be welcoming AJ Rice in just a minute, but I wanted to play a video. | ||
Before I do, I want to give you guys some homework. | ||
I'll tell you a very quick story. | ||
I'll try to make it as quick as possible, but I was talking to my dad yesterday and he said that he was at a church event and he went up to the pastor of their church and basically said, look, we are under massive attack. | ||
Christians are being persecuted in this country. | ||
The crime rate is skyrocketing. | ||
You should really talk about some of that in your sermon because our church that I grew up with in Houston, it's all old people now. | ||
There's no young people coming in. | ||
They're Membership is dying off and is going away. | ||
And my dad was making the case. | ||
It's because young people don't see their lives reflected in the church. | ||
They don't want to come and hear about letters from Paul to the Corinthians. | ||
They want to hear about how they can put their faith into action right now. | ||
And... You know, I said, well, hopefully the guy listens to you. | ||
And my dad said, nah, I could tell the way he was treating me. | ||
It was like, oh, here's another crazy guy. | ||
He was just going to forget about me as soon as I moved on. | ||
And it's like, well, that's true if it's one person. | ||
But what if five people from the church come? | ||
What if ten people come up and say something similar? | ||
And I think that's what we need to do, and that's what all of us need to do. | ||
If you have a church that refuses to acknowledge what's happening and that Christianity and Satanism are clashing right now in this world as we speak, then you need to go up and very politely ask You know, the leadership of your church, why aren't you addressing, you know, the criminality in this country and the Satanism in this country and the transgenderism in this country? | ||
Like, why aren't you fighting for this? | ||
I think if you can get five or ten people from your church to all independently bring this up, they'll not think that you're one crazy person that wants to make religion important in the home. | ||
But will actually make a big difference. | ||
That's your homework. Here's a video that shows you how a pastor can actually use their position to help out the people around them. | ||
unidentified
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Clip number five. Let's watch. Our nation has gone mad. | |
I hope y'all like y'all's president. | ||
Because in a year's time, he screwed the whole nation up. | ||
I told you, I don't care how many blind eyes open if I say something like that. | ||
Wasn't my blind eye. I'm out of here. | ||
He must be a Republican. | ||
It only took that man one year to screw the whole country up. | ||
A year. Don't be looking at me like... | ||
Our nation's gone backwards. | ||
A year ago, you were paying $2 a gallon for gas. | ||
Yeah, let's take it where you can relate. | ||
And you're paying almost four dollars now because of his decisions. | ||
Yeah, it's his decisions. | ||
Two million people have crossed our borders from Mexico. | ||
Now he getting political. | ||
No, kingdom. And kingdom. | ||
Screw you up. And these people coming in, they don't get COVID tests. | ||
And they aren't forced to get vaccinated. | ||
And they put on airplanes. | ||
Read your paper. No, they ain't going to put this in your paper. | ||
They don't report this. | ||
But they are flying people who cross the border illegally. | ||
Your government... | ||
is flying them to cities across the United States and putting them up in hotels and paying for them with your money. | ||
Only took a year to screw the country up. | ||
Just took a year. | ||
Just took a year. He must be a Trump supporter. | ||
No, I believe In a year's time, men who say they're women are competing on the college level in women's sports and depriving women who have been working all their lives to be the best woman In their sport, | ||
the ability to be that because this man won't be a girl now. | ||
A year. | ||
One. Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
Third hour has begun here on American Journal. | ||
I am your host, Harrison Smith. | ||
My guest this hour is A.J. Rice. | ||
He is the president and CEO of Publius PR and the author of The Woking Dead, How America's Vogue Virus is Destroying Our Culture. | ||
AJ keenly identifies how and why wokeism took off, who benefits, and what you can do to stop it. | ||
His Twitter can be found at at PubliusPR, and the Instagram is at PubliusPR underscore DC. Thank you so much for coming on with us, AJ. Brother Harrison, great to be here. | ||
You're a patriot. Doing what we can here at Infowars, try to keep the spirit of liberty alive. | ||
Your newest book, which you can see displayed behind you, very, very beautiful-looking book, called Woking Dead, How America's Vogue Virus is Destroying Our Culture. | ||
What inspired you to write this book now, and why is it important that people read it now? | ||
unidentified
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Well, we're inside of a cultural tyranny, brother. | |
We're inside of it. | ||
We've been inside of it for some time. | ||
We've always fought political correctness. | ||
We've always fought the nanny state. | ||
But what's going on here in the last decade, really, with the accelerant of Barack Obama pushing some of this stuff to the surface, is, you know, unbelievable. | ||
Because the culture's kind of been captured here. | ||
It's not just the Me Too movement. | ||
It's not just Antifa. | ||
It's not just letting Steve and Gary into the women's locker room. | ||
It's not just, you know, BLM. It's all of it working in tandem, being... | ||
Basically propped up by the propagandists in the media. | ||
They find home in the Democrat Party. | ||
And, of course, the digital brown shirts allow a lot of this propaganda to spread across the Internet. | ||
So, look. | ||
I try to have some fun. | ||
I think it's always good to hang a joke on your enemies. | ||
But these guys are villains. | ||
They're after the children. | ||
They're after your entertainment. | ||
They're in your sports. | ||
So someone needs to push back against them. | ||
And look, I try not to take myself too seriously, although the definition of comedy is transferring horror into humor. | ||
Right. You know, there's—the book is—it's a fun read. | ||
I'm obviously making plays off The Walking Dead. | ||
But, look, these guys are everywhere. | ||
I mean, the vice president of the United States basically said this week we have a racist hurricane that we're fighting against, right? | ||
The president's Puerto Rican. | ||
The vice president's fighting against a racist hurricane. | ||
This stuff's everywhere. | ||
I mean, I could probably write a new chapter every day. | ||
And it looks like, you know, I've been following you. | ||
I mean, you're covering a lot of this stuff. | ||
But it's time to fight back. | ||
At the core, these are cultural Marxists. | ||
And they didn't just show up yesterday. | ||
They didn't show up with Murphy Brown and the Pantsuit Mafia from the 90s. | ||
They've been around pretty much since before World War I. They have Marx in one hand and Antonio Gramsci in the other. | ||
And they've been doing the slow Marx through the institutions. | ||
And here we are, 100 years later. | ||
And most of the villains we were fighting then... | ||
See, when they got here, it dawned on them, they weren't going to be able to flip our blue-collar workers. | ||
They weren't going to be able to get a workers' revolution. | ||
So they looked to other foot soldiers because, quite frankly, our carpenters, our plumbers, our longshoremen, our meatpackers, they had fought in the Spanish-American War. | ||
Some of them, if they were 20 at the time, might have fought in the Civil War. | ||
They loved the country. | ||
So they weren't going to be able to dissolve the middle class by getting into them. | ||
They needed some other way of doing it. | ||
So they went into the institutions, academia, the media, Broadway, the silent picture industry. | ||
Fast forward to today, it's the same villains, brother. | ||
The only difference is, of course, and InfoWars knows this, big tech acts as a force field for them. | ||
And that's what we're up against. | ||
Right, no, you're exactly right. | ||
And you put it in such a good way. | ||
And of course, it's obvious, but I hadn't thought about the Woking Dead and the Walking Dead. | ||
I mean, obviously, that's the pun in your book. | ||
But it really is a zombie culture that we're dealing with. | ||
And I mean, in every possible way. | ||
And I always sort of complain about trying to organize all the things I cover into categories because they all bleed into one another. | ||
And it doesn't seem any different to me talking about the wokeism coming out of the White House and the wokeism that's being perpetuated on the screens of Hollywood. | ||
It's all part of the same move towards destruction and dismantling of everything that we hold dear and that we love and that we know. | ||
But, you know, when I think of when you think of what's wrong with Hollywood, you think, well, it's a bunch of zombies. | ||
It's a bunch of, you know, movies from 50 years ago that they've plugged into a machine and are bringing to life. | ||
And instead of being the thing it was before, it's some disfigured undead version of what they were before. | ||
And you look at our president, he's a zombie. | ||
I mean, it's a zombie culture that we're fighting against now, isn't it? | ||
unidentified
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Well, look, I call the supposed president the reanimated corpse. | |
He's kind of the leader of the Woking Dead, shaking hands with, I guess, the invisible man or Casper the friendly ghost, wandering around, shuffling around in his footies. | ||
You know, I mean, look, he is a mess. | ||
But no, it is from the White House. | ||
It's funny. They remake all these movies. | ||
They never remake any of the good ones, right? | ||
They never remake like The Falcon and the Snowman or The Osterman Weekend or Soylent Green or any other movie that would sort of show that we're living in a captured authoritarian dress rehearsal here. | ||
Right. | ||
unidentified
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I mean, look, even before the medical tyranny that we're dealing with, the cultural tyranny, you know, predates the virus. | |
I mean, we had Madonna outside the White House saying she was going to blow it up. | ||
As far as I know, she didn't get her her wardrobe rated like Melania Trump. | ||
Right. | ||
So. | ||
So, you know, you have the Me Too movement, which is jobs, was let's make all men toxic. | ||
You know, we're all rapists. | ||
We're. | ||
We're all potential predators. | ||
Men need to be taken down a peg. | ||
So, you know, young people like Gen Z, I mean, you were talking a little bit about that. | ||
You know, these Gen Z people, they already were born with a, you know, smartphone in their hand. | ||
So they're thinking to themselves, oh my gosh, you know, I might be a rapist. | ||
I certainly can't ask, you know, Sally or Stephanie to the dance. | ||
She might think I'm a predator. | ||
Then we get hit with the medical tyranny, send all these kids home. | ||
And let's slow pump them full of wokeness, whether it's coming from LeBron James or Disney, it doesn't matter. | ||
And then all of a sudden, the patron saint of fentanyl, George Floyd, dies, and now they're all racist. | ||
So they're at home. | ||
They're masked up. | ||
They're doing remote learning where they can't learn at all. | ||
They've got no interpersonal communication skills. | ||
They're sexists. | ||
Now they're racist. | ||
And all the founding fathers are Klansmen, and not just the founding fathers. | ||
Columbus and Churchill and Thatcher and me and you. | ||
Of course. And look, this channel knows what the end result of all this is. | ||
It's one, the destruction of Western civilization, because you and I knew they weren't going to stop with Robert E. Lee. | ||
As soon as they were done with the Confederate generals, they moved on to the Union generals. | ||
And two, the destruction of the middle class, because the only way they can get the real Marxist revolution they want is if we're all peasants. | ||
Because if you look at everywhere Marxism has thrived, there was some dump That basically was a peasant class overthrowing whatever ruling elite colonial masters it was, whether it was Vietnam, Cuba, or the storming of the Winter Palace by the Soviets. | ||
It was all the same playbook. | ||
And they've accelerated. | ||
I mean Trump shows up. | ||
Because they were looking to leave from behind and do this. | ||
They had 16 years planned out. | ||
They'll do eight years of Obama, eight years of Hillary. | ||
Trump shows up and stops it for four, plugs the dam. | ||
But now they're right back at it. | ||
And you cover it here every day. | ||
And they're not just right back at it. | ||
They reacted by doubling down and accelerating their program. | ||
I mean, the reasonable thing to do at that point would go, okay, we're pushing too hard. | ||
This Trump pushback is pretty severe. | ||
Let's pump the brakes a little bit and slow down our program. | ||
But these people don't think that way. | ||
They only accelerate. They only double down. | ||
They only go even harder and faster. | ||
And so now everybody's waking up to it, whether they like it or not. | ||
And I do think people are waking up to this. | ||
We covered this story, and we'll get into it on the other side because we're about to go to commercial break. | ||
But the 12 federal judges say they are no longer taking clerks from Yale Law School. | ||
I mean, that is a pretty big move. | ||
But I don't know if you were watching earlier. | ||
I covered it. And a lot of these judges are remaining anonymous because they're afraid to speak out. | ||
And I think that's the biggest impediment to solving this problem is people are fearful of this culture that despises them and is trying to destroy them. | ||
And really, you know, I think people can take a lesson from you and be fearless in your opposition to this because you know how evil it is. | ||
You know how it ends. | ||
You know there's no good reason to go along with it. | ||
So stand up. | ||
And when they call you bad names, tell them what river to jump in. | ||
But we'll be back on the other side with A.J. Rice. | ||
Don't go anywhere, folks. | ||
The Woking Dead is his book. | ||
Available now. | ||
Welcome back. | ||
My guest is AJ Rice. | ||
He's an author of the new book, The Woking Dead, How America's Vogue Virus is Destroying Our Culture. | ||
I want to ask you about that Vogue virus. | ||
We have a lot to talk about in this hour. | ||
He's also the president and CEO of Publius PR. You can find them on Twitter at Publius PR or on Instagram at PubliusPR underscore DC and online at PubliusPR.com. | ||
Now, when we left off in the last segment, I sort of hinted at this topic that we were covering earlier today. | ||
It's the 12 federal judges that say they won't take clerks from Yale Law School. | ||
And we actually had a caller earlier in the program who brought up this and said, have you guys seen this video of Ronald Reagan 52 years ago, at least, 53 maybe at this point, 1969, talking to the Berkeley campus and debating and I want to play this video and get your response to it AJ so again this is that he was the governor of California at the time Ronald Reagan in 1969 showing you just how long this process has been going on in academia specifically but here's the video that are one of our callers pointed us to people told you for day The university sought to go ahead with that construction. | ||
They were going to physically destroy the university. | ||
Now, why did you... | ||
Negotiate? | ||
What is to negotiate? | ||
What is... The university is a public institution. | ||
That's right. But the university... | ||
unidentified
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...for its own community and for the community of Berkeley that live around it. | |
All of it began the first time some of you who know better and are old enough to know better Let young people think that they had the right to choose the laws they would obey as long as they were doing it in the name of social protest. | ||
I mean, that's amazing. From 1969, from 50-plus years ago, having an argument that really presages so much of what we're dealing with now. | ||
I mean, academia really is sort of the... | ||
It's prone to the cancerous tumor that then spreads throughout the rest of the body. | ||
Is that a fair way of putting it, A.J.? Absolutely. | ||
unidentified
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I mean, look, Reagan was one. | |
He'll take it right to you. I mean, he wasn't going to play games, and he never did play games. | ||
All this talk that there's this rough conservatism that now exists. | ||
I mean, whether it's Reagan fighting those dummies, and it's the same people at Berkeley today. | ||
They're actually more violent now. | ||
Now it's overthrow Israel and burn the whole country down. | ||
You know, Buckley got into a fight with Gore Vidal on live television because Vidal called him a proto-fascist, and Buckley told him he was going to, you know, basically beat the hell out of him on live television. | ||
So, you know, I mean, look... | ||
Too bad we didn't have a bunch of smartphones in Buckley and Reagan's hands, Goldwater's hands 50 years ago, because this illusion that the fighting began recently with shows like this and with Rush and with other talk radio hosts and with Trump, that's not true. We've been fighting these people a long time. | ||
These are the same cultural Marxists that basically are trying to push this incremental fascism on us, incremental totalitarianism on us. | ||
And, you know, and they wait to see who will speak up. | ||
It's like they'll take an inch, they'll take a mile, they'll take an inch, they'll take a mile. | ||
Let's raid the president's house and see if anybody has a problem with it. | ||
Oh, those people stuck their heads up, put their name on a list. | ||
I mean, this is where we're at. | ||
I'm not shocked to see Reagan uppercut those dummies 50 years ago. | ||
You know, the guy was an American original, you know, Midwest guy, you know, Scotch Irish. | ||
He wasn't going to play any games. | ||
And, you know, I mean, he had to deal with way worse prima donnas when he was the head of the Screen Actors Guild than a bunch of, you know, postmodern beta males at Berkeley. | ||
So, I mean, I like seeing that. | ||
But look... We need more of this now because now we've got triggerings and safe spaces and, you know, I mean, just craziness, way worse than even Reagan was dealing with then. | ||
No, that's the thing. I mean, you know, like you point out that it's this illusion that conservatives have just gotten extreme. | ||
I mean, everything conservatives are doing these days is a direct response to the extremism coming from the left that is unbounded and unparalleled in American history. | ||
And so, you know, it's like we have to stand up for children being genitally mutilated now. | ||
I mean, we're in a whole new landscape here, but not only is it not new that people are fighting, I think we need more of what we used to have. | ||
We need more people like Reagan standing up and just saying to people's faces, look, you're crazy. | ||
This is your fault. This is all happening. | ||
Now, all the people on the left, from people on the right, are treated with kid gloves. | ||
It's like the right wing, I mean, even these 12 judges... | ||
Most of them have to remain anonymous. | ||
They're afraid to even stand up and say, Yale Law School is churning out ideological psychotics. | ||
Why can they not just stand up against this? | ||
What is it going to take conservatives to have the confidence to stand up against the onslaught that we're facing right now? | ||
unidentified
|
Well, look, a lot of this craziness, the woke, you know, the Woking Dead, it used to be confined to just the humanities department, the faculty lounge at the humanities departments. | |
Right. | ||
But now it's everywhere. | ||
It's it's from basically pre-K all the way through the law school. | ||
So, you know, we're fighting these people, you know, everywhere. | ||
And now it was, you know, you said you're you used to be you said your kid off to school their freshman year. | ||
And by Thanksgiving, when they come home to visit, they hate their parents. | ||
But now. | ||
Right. Right. Right. | ||
Right. Magical underwear, Mitt Romney version. That's what they like, right? | ||
That's what they're into. They like it when we just shut up and just go home, don't cause any type of disturbance. | ||
But Trump rejected the premise of all of that. | ||
He was never going to listen to anyone. | ||
He was like Godzilla, mainly because he was raised My tough parents in Queens. | ||
He grew up with a hard hat on. | ||
And I truly believe one of the reasons he got elected was because he punched back at political correctness. | ||
He wasn't going to be manipulated into altering the language. | ||
And really, you know, I say that the Democrats really need more free speech absolutists outside of, you know, Bill Maher and Bobby Kennedy Jr. | ||
and Naomi Wolf. But the Republicans do, too. | ||
I mean, there's a lot of Republicans that accept the premise of a lot of the, you know, really fancy, uptight language that the left wants us to use. | ||
So, you know, we have to push them, too. | ||
I mean, a lot of them, look, They all were prepped the same way. | ||
You talk about the Supreme Court story. | ||
I think most of the members of the Supreme Court have Ivy League degrees. | ||
So it would be nice if members of the Supreme Court went to more of a blue-collar state school. | ||
They went to Ohio State, or they went to UNLV, or they went to Texas Tech, or Virginia Tech, or somewhere, Penn State. | ||
Right. | ||
Right. Right. No, you're exactly right. | ||
And I think, you know, another important lesson from Trump and from so many of these others, which I think politicians are learning a little bit. | ||
Of course, there's still the old guard that are just wasting time and doing the Mitt Romney style, just, you know, retreating with grace kind of style of republicanism. | ||
But you can see by the reaction to Trump... | ||
There is a political solution to this. | ||
You know, I see a lot on our side of people going, ah, politics, both sides are corrupt, so there's no point. | ||
And it's like, we got into this because of politics. | ||
We can get out of it because of politics. | ||
It just needs to be a sea change, and we need to be at the head of that and to help foster and encourage that. | ||
Again, we'll be back with more from A.J. Rice. | ||
The book is The Woking Dead, available now. | ||
Welcome back. Ladies and gentlemen, you're watching American Journal. | ||
I'm your host, Harrison Smith. | ||
My guest is A.J. Rice, president and CEO of Publius PR. You can find on Twitter at Publius PR or on Instagram at Publius PR underscore DC. In addition to being an author of books, such as the latest one, The Woking Dead, How America's Vogue Virus is Destroying Our Culture. | ||
A.J., you also come out with plenty of articles. | ||
I have a couple here in front of me just in the last couple days that, I mean, we could spend an hour on every one of these. | ||
But one that really struck me just from my own personal experience, Is Madison's Montpellier becomes race re-education camp. | ||
I noticed this years ago, long before I ever worked at InfoWars, stopping at Thomas Jefferson's house, and seeing that they promoted the theory that Thomas Jefferson was, for lack of a better word, a slave rapist. | ||
And they were happy to teach everybody about what a horrible person Thomas Jefferson was in his own home. | ||
And it was just like... | ||
You look into it later and there's no proof to any of the accusations at all and yet the foundations and the organizations that are tasked with keeping his heritage and his life alive and relevant have decided to accept this stuff. | ||
Hook, line, and sinker. | ||
And now it's happening at James Madison's home at Montpellier where they have, as you put, a political re-education effort that Dave Rubenstein has made it all about slavery all of the time. | ||
I mean, they are really going after our history with a blowtorch, aren't they? | ||
unidentified
|
So this is the new tactic. | |
And look, it's been a long time coming. | ||
And I can tell you that my bunker where I'm broadcasting from now is about 20 miles from Montpelier. | ||
So I can cruise over there and see what they're doing quite easily. | ||
I'm in central Virginia. | ||
And I can tell you, man, so the goal is to get these statues down. | ||
And when they can't get the statues down, they can't bulldoze the founders, The tactic now is to get enough left-wing, woke, globalist money onto these boards that control some of these places that if they're not controlled by the National Park Service, They're controlled by some sort of nonprofit private board, right, or a foundation. | ||
Like, they're not going to be able to do this to Mount Vernon because it's owned by and managed by the sons and daughters of the American Revolution. | ||
They can't do it to Monroe's house because Monroe's house, which is not far from Jefferson's, is owned by the College of William and Mary. | ||
So where they can burrow in, like left-wing termites, they're going to. | ||
So they've already remade Monticello, Jefferson's house. | ||
It's a disaster. | ||
It's just race and racism and just craziness everywhere. | ||
You can literally download an app that's like the slavery app. | ||
I think it's called that. | ||
And you can put a headset on and walk around and find out what a piece of crap Jefferson was. | ||
No Declaration of Independence, no Louisiana Purchase, just him and his brother having sex with slaves. | ||
That's the history lesson you get there. | ||
So now that's finished. | ||
So now they've moved on to the founder of, the father of the Constitution. | ||
And they basically liquidated the entire board Because these globalists came in and got a lot of people tossed. | ||
So now they filled it with the same crazy people we were talking about a minute ago on the college campuses across America. | ||
And now they're going to slowly remake Madison's house with the goal of putting a gigantic monument to American slavery in the middle of the front yard. | ||
Which is nuts. Now, I'm not against... | ||
You want to put a monument somewhere? | ||
There's plenty of National Park Service places all over even Virginia that you can go do that. | ||
But look, the Virginia dynasty is hated by the left. | ||
You know, they got four of the first five presidents come from here. | ||
Right. | ||
Plus, you've got you've got Mason. | ||
You've got Henry, Patrick Henry. | ||
His house is over near 95. | ||
It's called Scotchtown. | ||
I'm sure they want to try to bulldoze that. | ||
And obviously, they're always after all the Civil War guys. | ||
So Stonewall Jackson and and and all the Lees, you know, Washington and Lee University. | ||
I mean, they're after all of this stuff because the goal again. | ||
Is to bulldoze Western civilization so they can try to couch it in. | ||
This is about slavery. | ||
This is about the 1619 Project. | ||
But look, when they're done with this, they'll move on to someone else. | ||
I mean, they were just calling the Queen of England when she died, you know, white supremacist, colonizing, you know, crazy person while she was, you know, not even buried. | ||
So it doesn't matter. | ||
You can replace the Queen with Churchill or Washington or Columbus. | ||
By the way, Columbus Day's coming up. | ||
So I want the audience of this show to get ready. | ||
Get your Elizabeth Warren headdress ready because you're going to hear... | ||
You're going to hear nothing about Christopher Columbus next Monday, guys. | ||
No, you're exactly right. | ||
And the bizarre thing is, at the same time, you know, it's this schizophrenic idea they have where at the same time that they are demonizing our founding fathers as slave rapist, white supremacist evildoers, they're then, you know, giving James Madison's Flute to Lizzo to play as a celebration of James Madison, right? So it's like they want to... | ||
They want to use the image of the Founding Fathers to support their own ideas while they simultaneously castigate and denigrate and destroy the memory of our Founding Fathers. | ||
I mean, do they have any consistent views, or is this just frenetic, wild chaos that they're just trying to tear it all down with no plot or plan in process? | ||
unidentified
|
Well, look, as you know, all revolutions sort of eat themselves, and before the eating process fades, I think? | |
Says that there's no such thing. | ||
There's 170 genders. | ||
And Tommy doesn't just have two mommies anymore. | ||
Tommy's got two daddies, two mommies. | ||
Tommy's actually a girl on Wednesday and not on Thursday. | ||
And then as soon as Roe happens, women are back. | ||
They reappear. So when it comes to women in sports, there's no such thing. | ||
Then when it comes to row and birth control, women show back up. | ||
So the thing with race, I mean, look, as long as they don't put a statue of Lizzo at Montpelier, I'll be okay. | ||
Don't give him any ideas, AJ. Come on. | ||
unidentified
|
Do it! Lizzo and the magic crystal flute. | |
I mean, it's just crazy. | ||
Some of this stuff started with the Hamilton play. | ||
Look, Hamilton plays fun. | ||
It brought the American people that don't know American history that maybe would never know about American history. | ||
It brought them it. But look, cat's out of the bag now. | ||
They're just going to reimagine everyone. | ||
It's funny. It's funny when Lizzo's playing Madison's flute. | ||
That's not cultural appropriation. | ||
Of course not. But if I want to dress up as Michael Jordan or Dr. | ||
J or Allen Iverson, forget it. | ||
I'm going to woke jail for Halloween. | ||
Forget it. You'll be buried under the prison, the woke prison, I think. | ||
Yeah, that's far too far. | ||
Now, we have one more segment with you, but I want to get into, because it relates to all this, you call it a vogue virus, which I think is so appropriate. | ||
What do you mean by that term, the Vogue virus, in the title of your book? | ||
unidentified
|
Well, look, this is the trendiest thing out there, other than, you know, double vaxxed, triple boosted, and wearing a diaper on your face. | |
I mean, this is—but look, a lot of that is all sort of under the umbrella here, right? | ||
So, look, in the middle of COVID, I saw a guy, and it's in the book, riding his bike— Right off 395 near the Pentagon by the Beltway. | ||
And it was like 95 degrees. | ||
And this guy's got a mask on and no helmet. | ||
So, I mean, this is where we're at here, okay? | ||
The virtue signaling, the guy's gonna... | ||
With the mask, I mean, it's unbelievable. | ||
So, but I think... | ||
I think this is the tyranny of the minority. | ||
I don't believe... | ||
I think Bill Maher knows this. | ||
I don't believe regular people... | ||
And this is why Glenn Youngkin had a clean sweep in Virginia, where I'm at. | ||
You just had Miami-Dade County flip from blue to red. | ||
I think one of the reasons that I say that, that it's vogue, is because it's a trendy thing. | ||
And I think the true insurrection... | ||
Is the parents of America, memo to Liz Cheney, going to take back their country, okay? | ||
And they're overthrowing and pushing back on this stuff, and I think this will eventually, at least for now, the fire of this will burn. | ||
Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
Final segment of the American Journal here, Infowars.com, band.video. | ||
Please do share those links. | ||
It really does help us out when you do. | ||
We cannot rely on big tech to help us at all. | ||
In fact, they're actively undermining us, so we need your help to overwhelm them with the power of the American people. | ||
My guest this hour is A.J. Rice, president and CEO of Publius PR, and he's the author of The Woking Dead, How America's Vogue Virus is Destroying Our Culture. | ||
It can be found anywhere good books are sold, including Amazon and Barnes & Noble and plenty of other places. | ||
Again, it's Woking Dead by A.J. Rice, subtitled How America's Vogue Virus is Destroying Our Culture. | ||
And so much of what we talk about on this show ends up being culture. | ||
We talk about politics. | ||
We talk about science. | ||
But at the end of the day, all of this stuff is shaped by culture. | ||
And one of the big phenomena over the last several years is the idea of cancel culture. | ||
And people kind of don't know how to get their hands around cancel culture. | ||
Some people still to this day on the left laugh. | ||
They're like, there's no such thing as cancel culture. | ||
It's like, all right, we'll just try to say something even slightly objectionable and you'll find out how very real cancel culture is. | ||
But what's your take on this concept of cancel culture? | ||
And are they not just canceling culture itself in a large way? | ||
I mean, what's your take on cancel culture? | ||
unidentified
|
Well, in a lot of ways, in order to cancel culture, you have to cancel people. | |
So when a Bernie Sanders maniac goes to a congressional baseball game, he was there to cancel the congressional Republicans. | ||
That's what he was there to do. | ||
When Rand Paul's neighbor comes over and breaks his ribs and attacks him physically, he's there to cancel Rand Paul. | ||
And then the heritans on The View applauded. | ||
So here's the thing. | ||
The digital brown shirts try to hunt us all down online. | ||
We, however, you know, we're the rebels. | ||
We're the counterculture movement, the true counterculture movement. | ||
So we'll create new platforms and new apps, and you can, you know, eat our dust. | ||
Because by the time you bust into one room, we've already moved to the next room. | ||
But I will say this. | ||
If they can't deplatform you and they can't demonetize you or shadowban you, they may show up physically, and not just for Scalise and Paul. | ||
You had a man jump on stage with a knife and try to stab Dave Chappelle because he was goofing on the trans mafia. | ||
You had a guy jump on stage in New York and try to stab Lee Zeldin because they didn't like what he was saying about veterans affairs. | ||
And of course, recently, this was 30 years in the making. | ||
You had someone jump on stage and stab Salman Rushdie, an Islamic radical, because, ladies and gentlemen, cancel culture doesn't just have to come from the left. | ||
It can come from all versions of authoritarianism. | ||
It's like Baskin and Robbins with different flavors of ice cream. | ||
So that flavor, 30 years in the making, they came and got him. | ||
They stabbed him because he wrote, you know, the satanic verses. | ||
He was goofing on Muhammad. | ||
He was goofing on Khomeini and the wackos in Iran. | ||
And they came and got him. | ||
So if they can't get you digitally, they may come physically. | ||
They may give out Brett Kavanaugh's home address. | ||
And now you've got an assassin in the bushes. | ||
So spare me the outrage about January 6th, a bunch of people taking selfies in the Capitol Rotunda because the left And some of the sort of offshoots of different types of authoritarianism mean the Woking Dead have issued a fatwa on Western civilization. | ||
They're no different than the Taliban shooting the RPGs at those Buddhist statues. | ||
This is what they want. | ||
Greco-Roman, Judeo-Christian philosophy and culture totally destroyed, and they want to replace it with their bleak image. | ||
They want to replace it with What Antifa did to Seattle. | ||
That's coming to a theater near you if we don't take back Congress and start fighting back. | ||
Right. And that's the other thing I sort of mentioned a little bit earlier that I think comes through with your work is that there is a political solution to this. | ||
There's a lot of people out there, as I said before, that just go, ah, politics is screwed. | ||
There's no point even voting. | ||
But you see how they react with such viciousness and such intensity against people like Marjorie Taylor Greene or Matt Gaetz or Donald Trump. | ||
There's a reason that they fear these people getting into power. | ||
It's because they... They've undone things through politics. | ||
We can rebuild our nation through politics. | ||
I mean, it's one of the ways that we can directly affect our country. | ||
As corrupt as it is, and I agree the deep state needs to be rooted out, but you've got to have political power to do that. | ||
I mean, is that something that you believe in, that there's a political solution to this? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, I think that in order to kill wokeism before it becomes a full-blown jabberwocky, I mean, we've got to win some of these elections. | |
And sometimes, in order to do it, we even have to make sure some of these sort of moderates, unfortunately— We're good to go. | ||
I don't have a lot of faith in Foghorn Leghorn over there in the Senate. | ||
I mean, he's been in Washington forever. | ||
His wife has had every job known to man in D.C. from dog catcher to cabinet secretary. | ||
So believe me, I would like Rick Scott or Mike Lee or Rand or someone to replace him. | ||
But we at least need to stop the government from doing things. | ||
You know, the best government's the one that does nothing at this point for me. | ||
If I could, I'd remove all the air conditioners from the office and let the swamp creep in so that they would all leave for half the year. | ||
Because that's what they used to do before Mr. | ||
Carrier invented the air conditioner. | ||
They used to leave because they couldn't take it. | ||
So I would love for that to happen for sure. | ||
Hey, you may get your wish if they keep pushing the climate change bills that they're trying. | ||
There'll be no energy for it. | ||
So, hey, that might be a problem that solves itself. | ||
But also, you know, as much as I'm inclined, and I'm sure a lot of our audience is inclined, as libertarians, to go, the government needs to just stop doing things, there's also some things that they can start doing. | ||
In fact, this story just came across my desk at Breaking 911. | ||
Oklahoma governor signs bill to halt gender transition services at OU's Children's Hospital. | ||
I mean, this is the type of stuff we need. | ||
Enough sort of debating and then just letting the left do whatever they want anyway. | ||
When it's stuff as cut and dry, no pun intended, but as genital mutilation and removing healthy body parts from children before they're old enough to see a PG-13 movie, I mean, this is where the government does need to step in and stop these radical leftists from doing horrific things across the country. | ||
I mean, there is a place for the On behalf of the people and especially the innocent children that are getting wrapped up in all this. | ||
unidentified
|
For sure. And look, I'm not one to look to the federal government to solve anything, right? | |
So for me, and a lot of people, you know, not this audience, but the states invented the federal government, not the other way around. | ||
Right. So, you know, the states created you. | ||
So... The government that's closest to the people, I would say, that's where you need to pour your energy. | ||
Don't look to Washington to come save you, right? | ||
So, for me, it's like, let the states fight back. | ||
Let the lawsuits proceed. | ||
Let the counties and the boroughs and the cities fight back. | ||
You know, let Abbott go to war with Austin if Austin wants to act crazy. | ||
I mean, that's what you have to do. | ||
You have to allow for the checks and balances and federalism to unfold. | ||
That's why, I mean, that's the brilliance of Madison and Jay and Hamilton was that, at least in the past, there's been ways to check power. | ||
Because, look, most of politics takes place between the 40-yard lines. | ||
On a federal level, people rarely score. | ||
Reagan scored, Obama scored, Trump scored. | ||
Fine. But the way you can really make a difference, take back that school board. | ||
Flip your county commissioners. | ||
Take back the township borough. | ||
Do that and let the trickle-down liberty take effect. | ||
100%. I completely agree. | ||
I've really enjoyed our conversation. | ||
We're going to have to have you back on again. | ||
It's AJ Rice, President and CEO of Publius PR. You can find them on Twitter at PubliusPR or on Instagram at PubliusPR underscore DC, PubliusPR.com. | ||
You can also go to WokingDeadBook.com or find the book, The Woking Dead, How America's Vogue Virus is Destroying Our Culture at any bookshop near you or Amazon.com. | ||
We need more people out there making the arguments that Mr. | ||
Rice is making. Go find his articles as well. | ||
I've greatly enjoyed reading them. | ||
You do not pull punches, sir, and that's what we need more of these days. | ||
Thank you so much for joining us. | ||
unidentified
|
Thanks, brother. You're a fighter, man. | |
We love you guys. Keep kicking ass. | ||
Well, thank you very much. Same to you. | ||
And hopefully we'll see you again soon. | ||
And hopefully we'll make a difference and actually get out of this hole that the liberals are increasingly digging for us. | ||
Folks, that's going to about do it for us here at American Journal. | ||
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