Speaker | Time | Text |
---|---|---|
unidentified
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Well, | |
the Pentagon has publicly greenlit the cruise missile attacks inside the Russia that have been going on for a week and a half. | ||
unidentified
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We can see a Russian tank. | |
We can see a Russian APC. We can see a Russian missile get launched. | ||
And that information gets fed to the Ukrainians, and they could actually act on it almost immediately, which is something I think the Russians never contemplated. | ||
Well, if Putin didn't contemplate that, his intelligence services didn't contemplate that, they're idiots. | ||
Because I knew it, and I told you that. | ||
Oh, the spin is, when the Russians fire a missile, we give them a lifetime. | ||
unidentified
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Like when Ukraine fired those missiles into Poland to blame it on Putin and tried to get a nuclear war going a month ago? - - This is a very dramatic potential escalation, obviously, because Poland is a NATO country. | |
There were ongoing cruise missile attacks being carried out in the west of Ukraine, close to Poland's border at the time that these projectiles landed on Polish territory. | ||
It is conceivable that they are Russian missiles. | ||
I'm not pro-Russia. | ||
I'm pro non-nuclear war. | ||
unidentified
|
Shall we play a game? | |
How about global thermonuclear? | ||
And Russia's got its problems and has committed its crimes. | ||
But compared to the New World Order, they are amateurs, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
But they've got a giant nuclear weapons arsenal. | ||
unidentified
|
They're being pushed into a corner, and now Putin's threatening nuclear war. - - Russia might as well be fighting Martians right now. | |
The technology's 30, 40 years in advance. | ||
Can Russia deploy tens of thousands of one-man team launched? | ||
One guy can put two switchblades on his back, and those switchblades can go out and take out multiple Russian vehicles. | ||
Over the top dangerous. | ||
The Pentagon is greenlit. | ||
You've been seeing for two weeks. | ||
For 12 days, almost two weeks, daily cruise missile attacks into Russia, blowing up military bases. | ||
So Putin goes, OK, I may do a first strike with nukes. | ||
I said I wouldn't, but now I may. | ||
I mean, this is just huge. | ||
unidentified
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And now we have strikes at at least three bases inside of Russia. | |
Exactly. And for him, that is very worrying, because now he knows that Ukraine could hit—I mean, we're talking about very close to Moscow, right? | ||
This is the center of the Kremlin and the center of Russian economy and power. | ||
Here we are, ladies and gentlemen, in the year 2022, and everything else, quite frankly, pales in significance. | ||
Now, why is war already started, and why is more war coming? | ||
Because they're at the end of a currency bubble. | ||
They need a big global emergency to be able to basically make us forget that this is a giant Ponzi scheme that makes Bernie Madoff and FTX and the tulip mania that, you know, happened hundreds of years ago pale insignificance. | ||
unidentified
|
Do you hate America? No. | |
You know, in fact, I'm knowing many inmates. | ||
I figured out who's sharing way more common. | ||
Maybe America is Very much similar. | ||
Look, it's the same size. | ||
It's the same kind of this. | ||
And when you talk to them, there is nothing there even to beef about. | ||
We are naturally, you know, born not to be enemies. | ||
And whenever there's conflict, it's elites. | ||
You know, every, you know, American I met in the prison who is from rural area was very easy to deal with. | ||
He has no problem with Russia, and he was curious about Russia, despite all propaganda. | ||
They're losing their Christian values. | ||
They're losing their families. | ||
They're losing, literally, their countries. | ||
You'll be laying in your bed one night, we're gonna be driving down the highway after work, and there'll be big flashes You see, and then 10 seconds later, your car is going to be overturned, probably on fire, and then life as you know it's over. | ||
You won't get back to your family, there'll be mass starvation and death, and there'll be a new literal dark age with enough dust in the atmosphere to cause a mini ice age, and they estimate 7 billion people will die in a nuclear war. | ||
Good morning, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
Welcome to the American Journal. I'm your host, Harrison Smith. | ||
Hope everybody's having a good Friday today. | ||
We got a lot of stuff to talk about. | ||
Just chaos on Twitter, folks. | ||
Good Lord. It was a bloodbath. | ||
A real red wedding last night. | ||
We'll get into it. We're going to take your calls throughout the show today as well. | ||
Talk about what's been released in the JFK files. | ||
Something like 13,000 new files have been released. | ||
Of course, they are thoroughly redacted, so that's a little bit of trouble. | ||
But we'll talk a little bit about the role that the JFK assassination played in the worldwide coup that took place over about a decade or so in which the intelligence agency's Really came into their own and took absolute control of politics around the world and have wielded it ever since. | ||
We'll get into exactly how that developed and how the intelligence agencies themselves have an international character that they don't advertise exactly. | ||
We'll get into all of it. | ||
Take your calls and more on today's program. | ||
Stay with us. Infowarsstore.com is how you support everything we do here. | ||
here let's begin today as we do every day with our daily dispatch all right here it is folks your daily dispatch for friday the 16th of december 2022 twitter Twitter suspends far-left reporters from CNN, NYT, Washington Post, and other independent reporters related to doxing event that endangered Musk's child. | ||
On Thursday night, Twitter banned more than half a dozen far-left journalists from CNN, New York Times, Washington Post, and other independent reporters who'd been reporting on Elon Musk and Tesla. | ||
The decision came after Elon Musk declared war on sharing location information on the platform following a stalking incident with his son, X. Last night, a car carrying Lil X in LA was followed by a crazy stalker, thinking it was me, who later blocked a car from moving and climbed onto the hood, Musk wrote. Legal action is being taken against Sweeney and organizations who supported harm to my family. | ||
Jack Sweeney is a 20-year-old college sophomore and programmer who started the At Elon Jet account to track Elon Musk. | ||
Musk suspended Sweeney's account immediately, saying, quote, On Thursday evening, Musk also suspended MSNBC host Keith Olbermann, The New York Times' Ryan Mack, CNN's Donnie O'Sullivan, Mashable's Matt Binder, Mika Lee of The Intercept, and independent journalists Aaron Rupar, Keith Olbermann, and Tony Webster. | ||
Musk said the same doxing rules apply to journalists as to everyone else. | ||
And, of course, this has been a massive conflagration, a real flame war taking place on Twitter. | ||
I guess... | ||
I guess my opinion on this is good riddance, scumbags. | ||
Get out of here. Banking a permanent ban. | ||
What do I care? We'll get into this a little bit later and explain exactly what's going on here. | ||
unidentified
|
Those people who hate on Alex, you know, those journalists doxed the father who lost a child. | |
Elon Musk is a father who lost a child and he's been doxed by those journalists. | ||
Yeah, I mean, the fact is, these people, and we've got all sorts of tweets from, you know, from the right, from the left, people, you know, reacting to this, and you have a lot of people on the left trying to call it hypocrisy, I guess, that left-wing people are banned. | ||
I'm all for free speech. | ||
I want Keith Olbermann to be on Twitter. | ||
We need that entertainment. | ||
We need that humor. We need to let insane leftist people act like idiots in public because that's the fodder for my show. | ||
I need that. I need to laugh at it and talk about it and mock them. | ||
So I need that content for selfish reasons. | ||
Obviously, you know... All about free speech. | ||
Everyone should have free speech. | ||
The thing is that this is a war that we're fighting against people who do not believe in free speech. | ||
So, I'm all for free speech, but I'm not for a single second going to let these absolute tyrannical morons try to throw hypocrisy in my face about these people. | ||
They don't believe in free speech. | ||
My belief has always been you should get what you want for other people. | ||
If you think that other people should be suspended for the things that they say, then you should be suspended for the things that you say. | ||
If you celebrate people being banned for no reason, then you should be able to be banned for no reason. | ||
These are the rules you made. | ||
Now you have to play by them. | ||
This is the bed that you made. | ||
It's time to go to sleep in it. | ||
And again, we'll get into this a little bit more later because... | ||
I get the impulse to like... | ||
Because obviously you love free speech. | ||
You don't like censorship. You don't like seeing it happen to anybody. | ||
But again, this is war. | ||
To me, this is like... | ||
To me, this is like you have some Nazi battalion who just revels in storming into a Jewish ghetto, lining people up against the wall, shooting them dead, men, women, children, innocent, doesn't matter. | ||
They're laughing. They're smearing the blood on their face. | ||
They're kicking down the door and holding the husband down while they violate the wife and spit in their face and shoot them in the legs and light the house on fire and leave. | ||
And they're just loving it. | ||
They just think it's the best thing ever. | ||
They're just reveling in the destruction. | ||
And the chaos that they're perpetuating on innocent people. | ||
But then, flash forward a month, and suddenly that same battalion, that same leader, has an American GI's boot on his neck. | ||
And he's saying, but we thought you guys wanted peace. | ||
But I thought you guys were the peaceful guys. | ||
You're really going to kill me? | ||
But that makes you a hypocrite because actually you say you want peace. | ||
Don't kill me. I'm innocent here. | ||
And it's just like... We did want peace. | ||
We did. We really did. | ||
You people broke that peace, so now we have to punish you for it. | ||
Now we have to engage in this practice to punish you and show an example for people coming forward of what happens when you go too far. | ||
Honestly, you think we're going to have sympathy for you? | ||
Well, I guess it does make me a hypocrite. | ||
No, it doesn't make you a hypocrite. | ||
These people, they don't, you know, it's not like they were out here calling for free speech when people were being banned for no reason, but now they want us to live up to those standards that they denied for the rest of us. | ||
Bye. Bye-bye. Good riddance. | ||
See ya. Be gone. | ||
I think Elon Musk should ban more people. | ||
I think he should ban them all. | ||
Screw them. Who cares? | ||
Moving on. Russia launches major missile attack on Ukrainian energy facilities infrastructure in multiple cities. | ||
Ukrainian authorities reported explosions in Kiev, southern Krivri, and northeast Kharkov. | ||
Explosion. Pronouncing Ukrainian names is like trying to talk with sand in your mouth. | ||
Explosions were reported in at least three Ukrainian cities Friday as authorities said Russia launched a major missile attack on energy facilities and infrastructure. | ||
Local authorities on social media app Telegram said air raid sirens sounded across the country as explosions were reported in those three cities. | ||
The attack on the Capitol continues. | ||
Klitschko wrote on social media, he urged residents to seek shelter, reminding them that subway services in the Capitol were suspended as people flocked to the underground tunnels for protection. | ||
Thankfully, we have it on good authority that the First Lady of Ukraine is safe in a Saks Fifth Avenue in Paris, France. | ||
So, thank goodness she got out of there just in time. | ||
Losing the plot. Trump mocked after announcing superhero card collection. | ||
So you remember on Wednesday, Trump said, I have a big announcement tomorrow, and then yesterday, Thursday, after our show was over, he made his big announcement, and it was playing cards. | ||
And he's being mocked for this. | ||
On Wednesday, Trump used his truth social media platform set up after he was done off Twitter for inciting the Capitol attack to trail a major announcement. | ||
Within what, with hindsight, appeared a clue with the forthcoming announcement might not be a traditionally dignified vein of statements from former presidents. | ||
That video featured Trump saying America needs a superhero over an animation of himself standing outside Trump Tower, ripping open his suit to reveal a superhero costume and shooting lasers from his eyes because he's awesome and we love him. | ||
I don't get the, like, outrage, but people are so weird about Trump. | ||
Trump's just, like, making a big announcement, and people, like, get all these expectations. | ||
They're like, What's he going to announce? | ||
Is he going to announce his VP pick? | ||
What's he going to do? And he's just like, I've got cool new playing cards for sale. | ||
And they're just like, what? | ||
I can't do this anymore! | ||
I can't do it! Like, Steve Bannon was like, I can't do this anymore! | ||
It's like, what is the big deal? | ||
Trump's trolling a little. He's saying he's going to make a big announcement, and then he makes an announcement about trading cards. | ||
It's kind of funny. Like, who cares? | ||
unidentified
|
He's selling these trading cards. So you're going to write Trump in in 2024? | |
What do you mean write Trump in? | ||
He's running. You're going to write him in? | ||
I'm going to write him in the, yeah, next to where it says Republican candidate for president. | ||
I'm going to vote for Donald Trump. | ||
But then actually Donald Trump released a comprehensive free speech plan, including a digital bill of rights. | ||
Pretty incredible stuff, actually. | ||
It's exactly what he should be doing. | ||
And that was actually probably the major announcement he was making. | ||
We'll show you that video on the other side. | ||
Stay with us. Alright, welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
Continuing on with our Daily Dispatch here. | ||
The Senate has passed a $847 billion defense bill forcing Biden's hand on the vaccine mandate. | ||
It repeals the Pentagon vaccine mandate within 30 days of enactment. | ||
The provision is a win for Republicans who argue that forcing thousands of people out of the ranks for not getting the shot has compounded an already tenuous recruiting and retention environment for the military. | ||
I just... I can't read a single sentence of liberal media without just... | ||
I don't know. | ||
Without just, like, wanting to dissect it for the subtleties of the psychological operation being carried out. | ||
It's just like... | ||
They just can't... | ||
I don't know. It... It's not that Republicans are arguing that this is the case. | ||
It's that this is the case. | ||
It's that this is actually reality. | ||
There actually is a very tenuous situation. | ||
The army actually is incredibly desperate for new recruits, and they actually are kicking tens of thousands of people out of the ranks for refusing to take this experimental shot. | ||
They can't just say that. They have to say that it's Republicans arguing that that happened. | ||
Yes, yes, the Republicans are arguing that reality exists. | ||
Thank you for framing it that way. | ||
Incredible. Administration officials say Biden and Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin stand by the vaccine mandate as a matter of health and readiness for the armed forces. | ||
But in signing the bill, Biden will effectively agree to end that policy. | ||
The White House has given no indication. | ||
The commander-in-chief is weighing a veto of the must-passed bill. | ||
The measure also significantly revises Biden's $802 billion budget request, which took heat from both parties. | ||
Lawmakers agreed to boost the top line to buy more weapons and address the impact of stubborn inflation on the Pentagon troops and the supply chain. | ||
Classic, classic maneuver, right? | ||
Just cause a bunch of problems and oops, now we need $800 billion to fix it. | ||
The final bill authorizes $847 billion in national defense funding, $45 billion more than Biden sought. | ||
The Pentagon receives $817 billion of that, while $30 billion will go towards nuclear weapon development overseen by the Energy Department. | ||
That total comes out to $858 billion when factoring in accounts that normally fall under the Armed Services Committee's jurisdiction. | ||
So yes, folks, we are... | ||
Spending nearly a trillion dollars in a single year on national defense while also expecting 14,000 people to cross the border every single day as soon as the stay in Mexico policy ends. | ||
Do you see anything sort of contradictory about that? | ||
Anybody see anything kind of strange about the fact that we're spending a trillion dollars in a single year and not actually getting what we're paying for? | ||
You'd think at $800 billion you might see some benefit from that, but... | ||
No. No, no. | ||
It all just goes towards whatever else we're doing to protect our interests. | ||
We've got to protect those American interests overseas. | ||
But whatever they are, that's where all the money's going, right? | ||
None of it will benefit America. | ||
Again, our border is wide open. | ||
Where is the national security on that? | ||
The crime rates have, like, doubled year over year for the past two years. | ||
Where's the, uh... Where's the national security on that? | ||
We feeling secure as a nation in that regard? | ||
It's just full-on theft. | ||
It's just full-on looting of American wealth to just such... | ||
Outrageous degrees. It's almost impossible to even explain. | ||
And of course, tens of billions of those dollars apparently are being sent to places like Africa to get them to not use the coal plants that they have. | ||
The operational, functional coal plants that they get energy from, we are now spending tens of billions of dollars to force them to shut it down. | ||
Just why? Why are we doing this? | ||
Why do we have a government? | ||
Like, what are they doing? | ||
There's literally no benefit for the American people in the existence of the American government. | ||
It just exists to rob us. | ||
That is literally its only purpose. | ||
It's the only thing they do. It's the only thing they're good at. | ||
It's just incredible. We'll get into some of where those hundreds of billions of dollars are going a little bit later in the show. | ||
Finally, we have this. | ||
We have a video to go along with it to show you just how monumental this disaster was. | ||
Clip number four. | ||
Huge Berlin aquarium damaged. | ||
Water spills onto street. | ||
A 14-meter-high aquarium in a hotel in central Berlin has burst, and the leaking water has forced the closure of a nearby street. | ||
Police and firefighters said Friday. | ||
Berlin police said on Twitter that as well as causing incredible maritime damage, the incident left two people suffering from injuries from glass shards. | ||
The incident happened at the Aquadome Aquarium at 5.50 a.m. | ||
The cylindrical aquarium contains over a million liters of water and is home to around 15,000 tropical fish. | ||
And it's located in the foyer of a Radisson Blue Hotel. | ||
It has a Clear World elevator built inside to be used by visitors to the Sea Life Leisure Complex. | ||
And you can see just the total destruction that this wrought. | ||
I mean, hopefully there were like security cameras or something in there because that must have been like a disaster movie. | ||
I can only imagine. It doesn't look like it was a crack and a leak and a slow sort of thing. | ||
It looks like it must have just exploded. | ||
I even wonder if there's foul play involved. | ||
How do you... How does this happen? | ||
How did the engineers not guard against something like this? | ||
Pretty incredible disaster. | ||
Unfortunate for the people that were injured, but frankly, seeing the damage that was done, surprised no one died. | ||
Really incredible stuff. Alright folks, we're going to continue to talk about the Elon Musk, the red wedding, the massacre, the bloodbath, the conflagration, the holocaust of liberals on Twitter who just obstinately posted the thing that Elon Musk announced like, I'm banning anybody that posted this. | ||
And then they're just like, well, I'm going to post it. | ||
And then they get banned. They're like, what? | ||
unidentified
|
What? Me? Little old me? | |
I think I know the answer. We're getting this directly from Keith Olbermann. | ||
Elon Musk is scum! | ||
Russian scum! | ||
I mean, the honest fact is these people should have been kicked off of Twitter years ago for their misinformation. | ||
It's just like everything else in this country. | ||
It's like People on the right get kicked off for just literally no reason. | ||
Just being correct about things or like me, like making a joke, you get kicked off. | ||
Like, just, you know, totally arbitrary, totally just based on politics. | ||
Just like Savannah Hernandez is another good example where it's just like she's just making videos that exposed... | ||
Bad things going on. | ||
They never even pretended that she broke any rules. | ||
It's just like, she makes us look bad, so ban her. | ||
So just like innocent people being... | ||
Banned continuously for no good reason. | ||
But no one cares. | ||
They all celebrate that. They all say how wonderful it is. | ||
Sweetie, it's a private company. | ||
They can do what they want. They're not obliged to give you a platform. | ||
They can do with it what they want. | ||
This condescending, snarky kind of attitude that they'd always have. | ||
And then the left is actually out there Knowing that Elon Musk just had his child assaulted because somebody was posting his location and some stalker showed up to attack his child, some mask-wearing COVIDian. | ||
So, like, Elon Musk is like, alright, from now on I'm banning anybody that posts my live location because it's endangering me and my young family. | ||
And they're just like, we're gonna do it anyway. | ||
So they just, like, do it anyway, post it anyway. | ||
actual legitimate you know threat of violence and then they cry about getting banned it's it's not just unequal it's not like well they do it and they get banned and they do it and they don't get banned no no one side's innocent and get banned gets banned the other side is guilty and doesn't get banned it's more backwards it's inverted it's it's all upside down Elon Musk is helping us put it right and that's a wonderful thing welcome back ladies and gentlemen this is This is the American Journal. | ||
I'm your host, Harrison Smith. | ||
Thanks so much for being here with us. | ||
We're going to open up the phone lines today and take your calls throughout the show. | ||
I'll go ahead and open up the phone lines right now. | ||
I'll do it nice and early since it's Friday. | ||
The number to dial is 1-877-789-2539. | ||
1-877-789-2539. | ||
Give us a call here at American Journal. | ||
Open line Friday and call about whatever you want. | ||
I have a feeling a lot of people are going to be calling about Elon Musk and the Twitter bans of all of these leftist journalists. | ||
I don't know how the audience is going to feel about this. | ||
So, call in. Tell me what you think about the massacre, the Twitter massacre. | ||
Massacre of the innocents. Alright. | ||
Boy, I'm thinking of a bunch of jokes I'm not going to say. | ||
We're just going to move on here. | ||
Actually, we're not going to move on. We're going to actually continue to talk about free speech because Donald J. Trump yesterday... | ||
Released a statement, indeed a list of proposals for a free speech policy initiative, which he lays down some, I think, very thoughtful and appropriate responses to the revelations contained in the Twitter files. | ||
So I'm just going to go to this full video, the latest announcement from President Donald Trump. | ||
It's a seven-minute video, but I'm just going to let it roll because I really do think it... | ||
It shows Trump back in sort of peak form. | ||
He definitely is looking very presidential, actually reading off the teleprompter, not just rambling incoherently, as he's wont to do. | ||
And actually, these policies are exactly what America needs right now. | ||
He understands, it seems, the importance of free speech in this country and The policies that he's proposing I think actually will have positive impacts on all of this. | ||
So let's go now to clip number six. | ||
Here's President Donald J. Trump with his free speech policy initiative. | ||
If we don't have free speech, then we just don't have a free country. | ||
It's as simple as that. | ||
If this most fundamental right is allowed to perish, then the rest of our rights and liberties will topple, just like dominoes, one by one. | ||
They'll go down. That's why today I'm announcing my plan to shatter the left-wing censorship regime. | ||
And to reclaim the right to free speech for all Americans. | ||
And reclaim is a very important word in this case, because they've taken it away. | ||
In recent weeks, bombshell reports have confirmed that a sinister group of deep state bureaucrats, Silicon Valley tyrants, left-wing activists, and depraved corporate news media have been conspiring to manipulate and silence the American people. | ||
They have collaborated to suppress vital information on everything from elections to public health. | ||
The censorship cartel must be dismantled and destroyed, and it must happen immediately. | ||
And here is my plan. | ||
First, within hours of my inauguration, I will sign an executive order banning any federal department or agency from colluding with any organization, business or person to censor, limit, categorize or impede the lawful speech of American citizens. | ||
I will then ban federal money from being used to label domestic speech as mis- or disinformation. | ||
And I will begin the process of identifying and firing every federal bureaucrat who has engaged in domestic censorship Directly or indirectly, whether they are the Department of Homeland Security, the Department of Health, Human Services, the FBI, the DOJ, no matter who they are. | ||
Second, I will order the Department of Justice to investigate All parties involved in the new online censorship regime, which is absolutely destructive and terrible, and to aggressively prosecute any and all crimes identified. | ||
These include possible violations of federal civil rights law, campaign finance laws, federal election law, securities law and antitrust laws, the Hatch Act, And a host of other potential criminal, civil, regulatory, and constitutional offenses. | ||
To assist in these efforts, I am urging House Republicans to immediately send preservation letters — and we have to do this right now — to the Biden administration, the Biden campaign, and every Silicon Valley tech giant, ordering them not to destroy evidence of censorship. | ||
Third, upon my inauguration as president, I will ask Congress to send a bill to my desk revising Section 230 to get big online platforms out of censorship business. | ||
From now on, digital platforms should only qualify for immunity protection under Section 230 if they meet high standards of neutrality, transparency, fairness, and non-discrimination. | ||
We should require these platforms to increase their efforts to take down unlawful content such as child exploitation and promoting terrorism while dramatically curtailing their power to arbitrarily restrict lawful speech. | ||
Fourth, we need to break up the entire toxic censorship industry that has arisen under the false guise of tackling so-called mis- and disinformation. | ||
The federal government should immediately stop funding all nonprofits and academic programs that support this authoritarian project. | ||
If any U.S. university has discovered to have engaged in censorship activities or election interferences in the past, such as flagging social media content, For removal of blacklisting, those universities should lose federal research dollars and federal student loan support for a period of five years and maybe more. | ||
We should also enact new laws laying out clear criminal penalties for federal bureaucrats who partner with private entities to do an end run around the Constitution And deprive Americans of their First, Fourth, and Fifth Amendment rights. | ||
In other words, deprive them of their vote. | ||
And once you lose those elections, and once you lose your borders like we have, you no longer have a country. | ||
Furthermore, to confront the problems of major platforms being infiltrated by legions of former deep-staters and intelligence officials, there should be a seven-year calling-off period before any employee of the FBI CIA, NSA, DNI, DHS, or DOD is allowed to take a job at a company possessing vast quantities of US user data. | ||
Fifth, the time has finally come for Congress to pass a Digital Bill of Rights. | ||
This should include a right to digital due process. | ||
In other words, government officials should need a court order to take down online content, not send information requests such as the FBI was sending to Twitter. | ||
Furthermore, when users of big online platforms have their content or accounts removed, Throttled, shadow banned, or otherwise restricted, no matter what name they use, they should have the right to be informed that it's happening, the right to a specific explanation of the reason why, and the right to a timely appeal. | ||
In addition, all users over the age of 18 should have the right to opt out of content moderation and curation entirely and receive an unmanipulated stream of information if they so choose. | ||
The fight for free speech is a matter of victory or death for America and for the survival of Western civilization itself. | ||
When I am president, this whole rotten system of censorship and information control will be ripped out of the system at large Pretty incredible. | ||
I mean, that is what we need from Trump. | ||
This is what he should be doing. | ||
I'm glad he's getting started on this. | ||
This is what we need. I mean, who else is making statements like this? | ||
A ban on federal agencies colluding to censor American citizens, a ban on taxpayer dollars from being used to label free speech as mis- or disinformation, firing every federal bureaucrat who's engaged in domestic censorship, a digital bill of rights, criminal penalties for federal bureaucrats, a seven-year cooling-off period for deep state actors like FBI agents before they can go join a company like... | ||
Big tech. I mean, if these were implemented, it would solve a whole host of problems that we're dealing with. | ||
Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
This is American Journal. Infowars.com, band.video. | ||
Please do share those links. | ||
I also redid my website. | ||
Offlimits.news is back, up and running, better than ever. | ||
You can go to Offlimits.news to find links to this show and a number of other things. | ||
We're going to go out to your phone calls here in this segment. | ||
I just want to go over real quickly again what Donald Trump just laid out there in that seven-minute video that he posted yesterday. | ||
Donald Trump Jr. on Twitter posted his restoring free speech overview It says this, they're going to ban federal agencies from colluding to censor American citizens, ban taxpayer dollars from being used to label speech as mis- or disinformation. | ||
This, of course, in response to the Disinformation Governance Board that the Biden administration created and then announced they were creating and then pretended they weren't creating and then kept going and then folded into the rest of the Department of Homeland Security programs. | ||
So again, it's just, I'm so glad to see this. | ||
He also wants to fire every federal bureaucrat who's engaged in domestic censorship, immediately send preservation letters to Biden administration and big tech giants, in other words, telling them you are going to be subpoenaed for this information, do not destroy your communications. | ||
Order the DOJ to investigate all parties involved in online censorship regime and prosecute any and all crimes identified. | ||
Revise Section 230 to drastically curtail big tech platforms' ability to restrict lawful speech. | ||
Stop federal funding for all non-profits and academic programs engaged in censorship. | ||
Suspend federal dollars to any university that has engaged in censorship support activities. | ||
Which I think would be all of them. | ||
I think when you're looking at universities who have used university laws and rules and regulations and security guards to silence conservative speakers or allow leftist activists, agitators to exercise their heckler's veto and prevent an invited speaker from... | ||
Actually holding a meeting with people that invited them. | ||
I don't know if there's a single university that has actually stood up for the rights of free speech in this country. | ||
Not any time recently, anyway. | ||
So that would be great. That would be incredibly fun to actually be able to participate in university life as a conservative. | ||
Wouldn't that be something? And they would make changes. | ||
If universities thought that their federal dollars were going away, if they Exceed the bounds of free speech. | ||
They'll make changes. | ||
It's not hard. Again, all the problems that we're facing in America aren't difficult to deal with. | ||
They're all just incredibly simple. | ||
The university invites a speaker and there's a bunch of leftist agitators that come riot to try to stop them. | ||
You just call the police and just get rid of the rioters and let people have free speech. | ||
Instead, what the universities do is tell their police to stand down and allow the leftists to shut down the event. | ||
So, you can just not do that and keep your money. | ||
So there you go. He also wants to enact criminal penalties for federal bureaucrats who partner with private entities to violate your constitutional rights and impose a seven-year cooling-off period before former intel and national security officials can work at big tech platforms. | ||
He also wants to pass a digital bill of rights that would include things like digital due process, saying that you have to treat punishment in the digital world the same as you treat punishment in the physical world, in the real world. | ||
Considering the fact that so much of our lives are digital now, it's not just a matter of choice to use some of these platforms like they're necessary in a lot of parts of life. | ||
So to be banned from those is just as damaging as being put on house arrest or something. | ||
So you have to have due process in that. | ||
So again, really brilliant move by Trump. | ||
I would like to see more attention on this. | ||
I would like to see even mainstream media on the left contend with what Trump has suggested. | ||
Actually argue against his proposal if they disagree with it. | ||
Why? Why would you disagree with what he's putting forward? | ||
I'd like to see that conversation. | ||
I'd like to see them actually have to Argue against this or come up with a better proposal. | ||
I don't think they have one. We're gonna talk a little bit more about the Elon Musk bloodbath coming up. | ||
We're gonna talk about what's been discovered in the JFK files as well. | ||
And we're gonna talk about a number of other issues. | ||
I mean, the Elon Musk thing really spirals. | ||
It's so funny the way these leftists act when they get a taste of their own medicine, when they're subjected to the same rules that they advocate for everybody else. | ||
It's just, it's the worst thing in the world. | ||
They can't have it. The EU is warning of sanctions. | ||
CNN is like, we're not going to be on Twitter anymore. | ||
Okay, bye. Okay, bye. | ||
Bye. See ya. | ||
See ya later. Bye. Goodbye. | ||
Go away now. Go away. | ||
Please, go away. Seriously, go away. | ||
I'm serious. They should go away. | ||
And again, we'll get into that, but I want to hear what you fine people think about it. | ||
So we're going to go out to phone calls now. | ||
Before we do, I do want to remind you that we have a brand new supplement line at InfoWarsStore.com. | ||
It's called InfoWarsMD, and it's all new creations. | ||
All of these supplements are utterly and completely unique and totally unlike the supplements that we have on InfoWarsStore and have for a while. | ||
So you're getting things like the Mushroom Max product that has things like Lion Mane and a number of other nootropic things, which, honestly, I've been waiting for Infowars to get one of these. | ||
These are like some of the most popular nootropics on the market right now. | ||
You see them promoted by all sorts of people across the Internet. | ||
I mean, lifestyle people, health people. | ||
I mean, everybody recently has come to realize the power of some of these mushrooms and their nootropic qualities. | ||
And Infowars is maybe not on the forefront of this trend, But instead, we've sort of waited until all of the experimentation has been done and taken just the best of the best when it comes to nootropic mushrooms and combined them all into one supplement to just really maximize the effect of these incredible ingredients. | ||
So InfoWarsMD is the new line available at InfoWarsStore.com. | ||
An introductory price of 25% off because we want you to just go ahead and try it. | ||
Give it a try. If you like it, we know you're going to want more and come back and double up next time. | ||
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Take advantage of this introductory sale and get your Infowars MD supplement line on sale right now at Infowarsstore.com. | ||
And of course, it keeps us on the air. It's a true 360 win. | ||
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Let's go out to your phone calls. | ||
Richard in Georgia has a question for me. | ||
Thanks for calling in. Richard, you're on the air. | ||
unidentified
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Hey, can you hear me good? | |
Yes, sir. Hey, yeah, so that was incredible what Trump just said. | ||
Like, he pushes and pulls you, you know? | ||
Some stuff he does, like, you're like, what? | ||
But... Actually, though, the reason I wanted to call in is because, you know, supplements are rad, some people think, some people think they're hocus-pocus, whatever, but I have your water filter, and in my mind, water filtration is not like a luxury, it's like a necessity. | ||
And I was in another place, I was living in another state, and the water filtered Kind of slow, but, like, it's still filtered. | ||
And here where I'm at, it took forever. | ||
I went out to work for a few weeks and then came back, and the water finally has filtered through, and I came back. | ||
And so the only conclusion from this is, like, the water where I'm at is, like, incredibly toxic. | ||
So just, even just lie to me, just say, please, you think that, because I know it's super tough now, like, with the supply chains and everything but just please say that there are water filters that you're gonna get back in stock because Are we out of water filters right now? | ||
Looks like someone should have ordered a water filter a couple months ago. | ||
Looks like you should have stocked up, man. | ||
Don't make the same mistake Richard made. | ||
Stock up now because things do sell out of the InfoWars website. | ||
So if there's something that you want, you see it's available, especially if you see it's on sale. | ||
You got to buy it then because it might not be there any longer. | ||
You pull that trigger. You make that purchase because, hey, you'd rather have it and not need it than need it and not have it. | ||
Thanks for the call, Richard. | ||
unidentified
|
Is there anything else? No, that's just it. | |
I'll keep working, man. | ||
All right. Thanks, Richard. By the way, it's so funny when he just said some people think our supplements are like a trick or something. | ||
What do you say? A hoax? Something like that. | ||
It's like... I don't know. | ||
Is it a hoax to say that caffeine wakes you up? | ||
Is it a hoax to say that melatonin makes you go to sleep? | ||
unidentified
|
Caffeine does not actually wake you up. | |
It makes you feel awake, doesn't it? | ||
When you drink a strong cup of coffee really fast, you feel it, don't you? | ||
Like, that's not psychosomatic. | ||
unidentified
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Yes, you feel it. | |
Yeah, you feel it. It has an effect. | ||
Like, it's just so funny to me. | ||
You know, one of our most popular products is fish oil. | ||
It's like, is anybody saying fish oil is a hoax? | ||
Everybody who, you know, demonizes InfoWars, I guarantee you 90% of them take a fish oil supplement. | ||
It's just probably not as good as ours. | ||
It's just probably not as strong, not as powerful, not as healthy, not as natural as ours is. | ||
But they all take fish oil. | ||
I mean, I don't know. You can call the InfoWars supplements a hoax all you want. | ||
We'll keep taking them. We'll keep benefiting from them. | ||
And you can keep taking, you know, the worst quality ones of them. | ||
It's hard to believe. All right. | ||
Welcome back, folks. We're going to go back out to your phone calls here. | ||
Second hour has begun. We're going to try to get to as many phone calls as possible today. | ||
So let's go now to One Card Monty in Hawaii. | ||
Thanks for calling in. One Card Monty, you're on the air. | ||
unidentified
|
Isn't it delicious irony? | |
That an immigrant from the land of Mandela, where he probably saw them whipping them uppity Negroes down there and immigrated to the United States, became the richest man in the world. | ||
And now, with his position of power, he wants to punch out an uppity black man here in this country who only says, I love everyone. | ||
And that's the message of Jesus. | ||
And we know what happened to Jesus, preaching a message like that. | ||
It's probably only second to the fact that you've got a Kiss and Tell book that was promoted yesterday by someone who was deeply involved in the development of the COVID scandemic, who now has a book and says, That he was assaulted and threatened by federal police but seems none the worse for wear of it. | ||
I find these things laughable. | ||
Do you? That was a rollercoaster of a call there, Monty. | ||
I didn't know where you were going with that. | ||
I don't know what I agree with and what I don't. | ||
I mean, it is pretty interesting. | ||
The richest man in the world, although apparently second richest now. | ||
Of course, the richest man in the world, not including the actual richest people in the world who control those lists and keep themselves off of them, obviously, right? | ||
unidentified
|
You are right about that, because the richest who's gotten fat Off of government subsidies in his land of arrival. | |
Not only that, he wants to push you and take away from your gasoline-powered car and push you into a car that doesn't work. | ||
You know, nothing funny about that. | ||
Well, he's—see, I don't understand that. | ||
He sells electric cars. | ||
He's not making anybody buy them, though. | ||
He is getting subsidies from the government. | ||
I'd lay the blame for that on the government in that case. | ||
But, yeah, I appreciate what you're saying. | ||
Not... I'm not sure what you're saying, actually, but I appreciate it, and I thank you for the call. | ||
Let's go to another call now. Greg in Chicago has comments about Trump's trading cards. | ||
Are you infuriated, Greg? | ||
Is this an insult to you? | ||
unidentified
|
No, it isn't. No, it isn't. | |
Good morning. Good morning. | ||
Look, I like Infowars, because Infowars really depict what The whole thing is about information to people. | ||
And the enemy has gotten control of all of the information and has manipulated the public to a certain way. | ||
So that's what we need in for war, thanks to Alice Jones. | ||
Now about the trading cards, I think the trading cards have to show some kind of superhero to the children or somebody because If we don't have some other images to put out, then the left keep putting out these negative images of men being women and things like that. | ||
I think that some people are using some religion to insulate themselves to manipulate the public and Cause fear in people to speak against what they are doing to this country. | ||
This country is taking over almost, but taking over without a single shot fired. | ||
During the Federal Reserve, some people think that Trump, they say that Trump, Mitch McConnell and McCarthy spoke against Trump in his meeting with Ye and whoever. | ||
And they know that Trump is not a racist. | ||
They know this. They know that he's not against anybody and what religion that they practice. | ||
But they spoke against it because they thought that they would get a public uprising to attack Trump. | ||
Mm-hmm. Yeah, they'll cynically use whatever they can get to try to destroy him. | ||
They couldn't care less. Thank you for that call, Greg. | ||
That was fantastic. We'll be back with more on the other side. | ||
Don't go anywhere. All right, welcome back, folks. | ||
Second hour of American Journal has begun. | ||
You know, I guess it's like... | ||
I don't feel any hypocrisy. | ||
I don't feel like a hypocrite. | ||
I don't feel the need to acknowledge the criticisms of the left. | ||
I mean, I feel like this is... | ||
We're in a war. We're in an information war where you use the weapons that are available to you and you... | ||
Show no mercy until you've achieved victory. | ||
I mean, that's how you wage wars. | ||
It's like, I love peace. | ||
I'm all about peace, but sometimes you've got to go to war to ensure peace. | ||
I know, it seems kind of, seems kind of, you know, unlogical, but it's not at all, right? | ||
You can't just... | ||
Allow somebody to abuse you endlessly and never stand up for yourself. | ||
Never punch them back, right? | ||
If somebody punches you in the face and you hit them back, and then they're like, but you said you didn't like being punched. | ||
It's like, well, I didn't. That's why I punched you. | ||
It's not very difficult for me to wrap my mind around why... | ||
These people who have gone out of their way over the last several years to utterly and totally destroy free speech in this country, they need to be shut up. | ||
I know. It's kind of ironic, I guess. | ||
It's kind of hard to wrap your mind around. | ||
It seems like cognitive dissonance, but it's really not. | ||
It's really a matter of... | ||
Setting things right. Getting back to where we were. | ||
These people have destroyed free speech in this country. | ||
And they have to deal with that now. | ||
They have to live by the rules that they created. | ||
I don't know if there's a way to do it, but it really would be great if you had to... | ||
Like when you signed up for Twitter, you had to check a box. | ||
Like you either think that free speech is absolute and absolutely everything should be able to be aired, or you think that for the safety of humanity, certain viewpoints have to be silenced. | ||
And then when you choose what you believe, you are then subjected to that rule. | ||
See, I believe that everybody should have free speech. | ||
I believe that everybody should be able to talk and have platforms where they personally can espouse their view on any topic whatsoever. | ||
I want that right, so I want that right for everybody else. | ||
I'm a Christian, right? Treat others as you would like to be treated. | ||
I want the right to speak for myself and to say what I want without the fear of retribution. | ||
I think everybody deserves that right. | ||
But if you think that People deserve to be censored, even when they're right, even when what they're saying is in no way in violation of legal limits on free speech, like certain pornography or other things or threats or anything like that. | ||
If you believe that people should be censored for their opinions, then you should be censored for your opinion. | ||
I really think that's fair, but that's sort of impossible. | ||
So instead, how about we're in charge now? | ||
How about we're in charge now? | ||
Twitter's Elon Musk's. | ||
You people have paved the way for him to be able to ban whoever he wants, and now that it's turned on you, you act aggrieved. | ||
I couldn't care less. | ||
I could not care less about these people whining about getting kicked off. | ||
Now, Elon Musk—well, I'll just give you the whole laydown of what actually happened. | ||
I went over it a little bit in the Daily Dispatch, but essentially— A number of people were posting Elon Musk's current whereabouts and, you know, doxing him. | ||
Here's the story on CNN by Oliver Darcy. | ||
The most, you know, just ironic thing ever, right? | ||
Oliver Darcy, whose entire existence is dedicated to getting people banned off of The internet, right? | ||
That's his entire purpose of being. | ||
That's his beat. It's his beat. | ||
Yeah, it's his beat. Like he's a reporter. | ||
That's hilarious. Yeah, yeah. | ||
His beat is sniffing out rotten meat from the carcass of farm animals. | ||
But, you know, in the meantime, he does spend hours a day just trolling the Internet for people saying things he disagrees with and then using the power of CNN to demand responses from big tech as to why they haven't been banned yet. | ||
That's what he does. | ||
So hilarious that he's the one writing this article. | ||
Twitter on Thursday evening banned the accounts of several high profile journalists from top news organizations without explanation. | ||
There was an explanation, actually. | ||
That's a lie. | ||
Apparently marking a significant attempt by new owner Elon Musk to wield his unilateral authority over the platform and to censor speech. | ||
Dear God. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
The accounts belong to CNN's Donnie O'Sullivan, which frankly... | ||
Come on. | ||
Donnie O'Sullivan? What are you, an extra in an 80s sitcom? | ||
What do you hang out at Cheers all day? | ||
Sorry. The New York Times' Ryan Mack, The Washington Post, Drew Harwell, and other journalists who have covered Musk aggressively in recent weeks were all abruptly and permanently suspended. | ||
The account of progressive independent journalist Aaron Rupar was also banned. | ||
Oh dear. Let's all cry. | ||
Let's all cry for the people who got banned. | ||
It's so sad. Did they do something wrong though? | ||
Oh, they did? Okay, so they deserved it? | ||
Oh, so they broke an explicit rule that has been thoroughly explained to them and they openly violated it and then they got banned? | ||
Wow, how tragic. I can't believe it. | ||
I'm still not on Twitter. I got kicked off Twitter five years ago for saying a joke. | ||
Spare me your request for sympathy. | ||
unidentified
|
Can you retell the joke for those who are just tuning in? | |
It wasn't even a joke. | ||
It was AOC saying that Republicans don't really care about the border. | ||
They just love seeing kids in cages. | ||
And I said, yeah, yeah, that's right, yeah. | ||
Think we care about the border? | ||
No, we just love suffering, right? | ||
You just take their views and you just pretend that they're real and it just is obvious how ridiculous they are. | ||
It's like when they're like, they don't care about abortion, they just want to control women. | ||
It's like, it's a literal joke, right? | ||
It's a literal like stand-up joke. | ||
I think there's a stand-up who... | ||
Who says it where he's like, I don't care about babies. | ||
I just don't like women having a choice. | ||
It's like such a ridiculous claim. | ||
So you say something that's obviously sarcastic, say something that is obviously designed to illustrate what a ridiculous projection the Democrats are projecting onto you, and you get banned. | ||
So again, who cares? | ||
Just who cares? Who cares about these people? | ||
They should all be banned forever. | ||
What are they going to do? Complain? | ||
Can't hear them. They're not on Twitter. So who cares? | ||
Doesn't matter. I love it. | ||
Elon Musk came out saying, Criticize me all day long. | ||
It's totally fine. But doxing my real-time location and endangering my family is not. | ||
See, they say that saying things like men are men and women are women, they use a complex system of equations and algorithms to come to that as violence, right? | ||
Well, if you say men are women, if you say men are men and women are women, you are actually causing the death of trans people in Nebraska, right? | ||
It's just like some sort of weird algorithmic function they run to come up with that. | ||
Meanwhile, they're like... | ||
Oh, Elon Musk is the worst man ever. | ||
He's Satan. He's Hitler himself. | ||
And by the way, right now he's at Denny's on, you know, I-35. | ||
It's like, so actually giving coordinates to somebody that you've spent time demonizing and who's actually been assaulted and stalked by people because people are posting his real-time information, that's actually a cause of violence. | ||
unidentified
|
But I digress. | |
Erica Marsh, the girl that we covered yesterday or the day before or whatever, was saying hilarious stuff yesterday. | ||
And it's just, again, it's just, I don't get the mindset of these people, right? | ||
She asks, did Elon ever visit Epstein Island? | ||
Yes or no? Right? | ||
The implication would be that she has some information that he did. | ||
But he didn't. He never did. | ||
So it's like, so those things where it's like, did Elon Musk ever visit Epstein Island? | ||
You're so against pedophiles. | ||
What about Elon? Did he go to Epstein Island? | ||
And it's like, no, he didn't. Well, but what if he did? | ||
It's like, no, the people who did are Bill Clinton and Hillary Clinton. | ||
And Bill Gates went there like 37 times. | ||
I mean, the dude practically lived there. | ||
Harvey Weinstein, all the leftist Hollywood actors, they all did go to Epstein Island. | ||
So comment on that. | ||
And they're like, but did Elon? | ||
Like, no, he didn't actually. Actually, he didn't. | ||
And there's this image that people have been spreading around. | ||
Maybe you guys can find it. | ||
It was on this thread where they show Epstein's Island and they show like a... | ||
A red line and it says, like, this is Elon Musk's jet path landing on the island. | ||
The island doesn't have an airport, you morons. | ||
It's like one acre big. | ||
It doesn't have an airport. Where did it land? | ||
All right, folks, we're going to go back to your phone calls here in just a second. | ||
We'll finish up with talking about old Elon and the bloodbath. | ||
The greatest crime to ever happen on Twitter. | ||
Leftists got banned instead of right-wingers. | ||
Now it's unacceptable. Again, these people don't actually care, right? | ||
That's the point of talking about this tweet where this girl's like, did Elon ever visit Epstein Island? | ||
It's like, you don't care. You don't care. | ||
You're saying this to try to hold the right to our own standards, but you don't have standards. | ||
You're just trying to project... | ||
On to right-wing, like you're trying to use right-wingers' arguments against them, but it doesn't make any sense because you don't actually care. | ||
So why should we care what you have to say about it? | ||
The people who did Elon Musk ask why DOJ hasn't leaked Jeffrey Epstein's client list. | ||
Yeah, sounds real guilty to me, right? | ||
He's like advocating for the list to be released. | ||
So it's like, you know... | ||
They want to throw shade on Elon Musk because Elon Musk is actually bringing back free speech to Twitter. | ||
They try to tie him in with Epstein Island. | ||
The people that are tied in with Epstein Island are all of the heroes of these people. | ||
So they don't care about who went to Epstein Island. | ||
They don't care who's implicated in the wholesale rape of children. | ||
They don't care. They celebrate these people. | ||
They want to surrender their sovereignty to these people. | ||
They want these people to guide every aspect of their lives. | ||
So they don't care. | ||
So why should we care when they bring it up? | ||
If you care about Epstein Island, then how about you disavow Bill Gates? | ||
How about you disavow the Clintons? | ||
How about you disavow all the left-wing celebrities that are constantly championing your cause? | ||
They don't care, so you can just ignore them. | ||
You can just ignore them. It's okay. | ||
It's okay to ignore them. It's okay to ignore them, just like the example I said in the Daily Dispatch, where You've got just like vicious, brutal murderers who are just like reveling in destruction and death and just mocking the innocent people they're murdering. | ||
And then when they suddenly find themselves, you know, facing a firing squad, they're begging for mercy. | ||
No, but you didn't like it when I was killing the innocents and now you're going to kill me. | ||
Does that make you a hypocrite? | ||
It's just like, wow, very interesting. | ||
Face the wall now, please. Oh, wow, very compelling argument. | ||
Turn around. Face the wall. Close your eyes. | ||
Just shut up. We have to do this. | ||
See, we have to do it. We have to regain free speech. | ||
We have to reestablish the foundational fundamentals of this country. | ||
And you people are the biggest threat to that. | ||
So, you know, just like I was saying, I thought you were peaceful. | ||
I thought you guys liked peace. | ||
We did. We did. We really did. | ||
We really did. We're fine with a peaceful coexistence. | ||
You people started it. | ||
I mean, I really hate to go to the basic schoolyard rules, but they're in play here. | ||
You started it, so deal with the consequences. | ||
You would think if they had just an ounce of self-reflection in their entire body, they would maybe think, gee, this is what I've been doing to people. | ||
This is what it feels like to be banned. | ||
Again, it's not even equal because these people actually violated the Twitter rules that Elon Musk clearly laid out days before. | ||
They did it explicitly because Elon Musk said he was going to ban people for it. | ||
So... It's not even the same because... | ||
Anyway. But they revel in people getting kicked off and now it's done to them. | ||
You would think maybe they would say, hey, we're kind of being hypocritical here. | ||
Hey, we are the ones who have called for censorship and called for banning and now we're the subject of it and we don't like it. | ||
God, we kind of look like idiots, don't we? | ||
Yeah, you do. You really do. | ||
This, I just, you know, it's just a fantasy of mine. | ||
Elon. Elon, I mean, I'm jealous. | ||
I'm jealous of Elon Musk. | ||
Good lord, what I would be doing if I was Elon Musk. | ||
Will Bunch on Twitter says, Hey Elon Musk, we are all Aaron Rupar. | ||
This is the voice I hear it in. | ||
Good thing you sleep in the office that you don't pay the rent on. | ||
Because you're going to have to suspend every damn one of us. | ||
Let that sink in. Suspend. | ||
Wouldn't that be fun? Wouldn't that be... | ||
You're going to have to suspend every one of... | ||
Account not found. Wouldn't that be fun? | ||
Just to suspend this guy? | ||
I don't know. I would do it. I would forgive Elon for doing it. | ||
I think he should absolutely do that. | ||
He should ban all these people. | ||
Matt Walsh has a correct reading on this. | ||
He says, you can always count on some conservatives to rush to the left's defense when they finally get a dose of their own medicine. | ||
No, don't hold them to their own standards. | ||
We're better than that. Pathetic. | ||
Seriously, let the libs reap what they sow for a change. | ||
Enjoy it. And again, The only argument that conservatives ever have when liberals are just trampling over their rights, when liberals are just using their power to destroy conservatives in the most illegal and unethical ways possible, the only argument conservatives have is, well, you better not open this door because if you do, we're going to walk through it. | ||
You better not set this precedent because it might come back to bite you. | ||
And they're just like, oh well, too bad. | ||
I'm going to do it anyway. They don't care because it's an empty threat. | ||
Because when conservatives get power... | ||
We go, wow, it would be wrong for us to do. | ||
No, these people are destroying the country. | ||
Banning them from Twitter should be a warning shot across the bowels for them. | ||
At CNN threatening to quit Elon Musk's Twitter over its employee being suspended over doxing Musk. | ||
Oh, no. No, what will we do? | ||
What will we do? Who will lie to us? | ||
Where will we go for our lies if CNN's not on Twitter? | ||
Where will we go to find out what the latest is on the Trump-Russia collusion? | ||
Where will we go to be told to take the vaccine for the 900th time in a day? | ||
What will we do without CNN's stalwart journalism? | ||
Incredible. Jeez, don't go anywhere, CNN. We need you. | ||
We love you. EU warns Musk of sanctions after Twitter suspensions. | ||
EU on Friday warned Elon Musk that Twitter could be subject to sanctions under a future media law after worrying suspensions of several journalists from the messaging platform. | ||
Again, the only other time this happened was when you had heads of state who were... | ||
It got a little bit uncomfortable when Twitter deleted Donald Trump because they thought they might be next. | ||
But other than that, EU and other governing bodies have been suspiciously silent when it came to the arbitrary banning of anybody who disagreed with them on Twitter. | ||
But now, now it's something else. | ||
Now people that have actually broken the rules and given the personal location data of Elon Musk while demonizing him and inspiring violence against him get banned. | ||
And suddenly they have to step in and do something about it. | ||
Here's the image I was talking about earlier, Keith Edwards. | ||
This is the old data from Elon's jet, so it's okay to share, he says. | ||
And it has a jet call sign with a line to Epstein Island, Little St. | ||
James. Utterly bizarre. | ||
I've seen this posted so much. | ||
I mean, liberals are running with this. | ||
It is so transparently fake. | ||
It's hard to imagine. | ||
Hold on, bring it back up. | ||
We've got to look at this. We've got to look at this. | ||
The red line goes over the, I mean, it's, this is a Google Maps image, right? | ||
Obviously, screenshot with like a very poorly photoshopped line in it. | ||
Like, somebody just made this in Photoshop in five minutes. | ||
Little St. James Island does not have a runway. | ||
It is not big enough to hold any size jet or airplane at all. | ||
Even in the slightest. There's a nearby airport on the U.S. Virgin Islands that Epstein did fly into, but it's not this one. | ||
So, like, just on its face, transparently, this is just an utterly, hilariously false image. | ||
It's been spread endlessly, by the way. | ||
And of course, this guy who posted this said, hey, I'm a Democrat who helps get Democrats elected. | ||
Follow me if you're on the side of decency and democracy. | ||
Let's work together to counter right-wing narratives. | ||
Gee, the guy who posted the blatant misinformation is a Democratic activist? | ||
I'm so shocked. The guy that is remaining on Twitter despite posting fake news about Elon Musk? | ||
It's just an utterly hilarious joke. | ||
Hilariously fake image. | ||
Is a Democrat activist? | ||
I'm amazed. | ||
I'm amazed. It's so confusing. | ||
A Democrat operative posting false information? | ||
What? Alright, welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
COVID data is showing the real damage done by the vaccines. | ||
We have a lot of news on that today. | ||
We also have the new CIA culpability in the JFK assassination being revealed. | ||
We'll talk about that a little bit more later in the show as well. | ||
But for the meantime, let's get out to your phone calls. | ||
We've got 10 stacks in Kansas, 10 stacks in Kansas, calling in about the Trump trading cards. | ||
Thanks for calling in. 10 stacks, you're on the air. | ||
Or you will be shortly. All right, there you go. | ||
All right, you're on the air now. Thanks for calling in. | ||
unidentified
|
Hey, Harrison. Howdy. | |
Hey, so first I'd like to start with the vaccine and what you guys have done. | ||
You saved myself and about 15 of my friends and family, and I just wanted to thank you guys and all the listeners and the crew for that. | ||
You know, it's really important. | ||
Keep pounding that. | ||
Also, the water filters, the first... | ||
Yes, sir. The first caller talked about the water filters. | ||
I like to... Remove the reservoir from the basin, and anytime anybody comes over, stick their head in the basin and smell the clean water, and then open the lid to the reservoir and have them smell the reservoir, and it's just a little different. | ||
They usually go out and buy one. Tell them about Infowars then. | ||
Yeah, absolutely. | ||
I mean, once you start drinking... | ||
When I first met my wife, she was just like, tap water's fine. | ||
Like, why do you worry so much? | ||
It's like, just drink tap water. | ||
Like, it's weird to go out of your way because she's very frugal, too. | ||
So it was like the idea of, like, buying bottled water. | ||
She was like, it comes out of a tap. | ||
Just get it there. But, man, once you start drinking filtered water or just nothing but spring water and you go back to the tap, I mean, it tastes like you're drinking out of a public swimming pool. | ||
It's disgusting. But you don't realize it. | ||
If that's all you drink, you think that's how water tastes. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, and your filters, they last forever, too. | |
And if they get dirty, you can just wipe them off with some hot water. | ||
I mean, I've got two in my Alexa Pure right now, and I've had those for probably about a year. | ||
And there's three people drinking out of it regularly. | ||
But, yeah, awesome products. | ||
And then when you mix it with the iodine, it just takes it to the next level. | ||
I take Rainforest, too. | ||
Every day, taking brain force every day for eight years, seven years, you know, during the work week, and can't recommend that stuff enough either. | ||
Well, thank you for that. Infowarsstore.com, folks. | ||
Go there now. You, too, can appreciate the value of these things. | ||
unidentified
|
Donate. The listeners are saving people's lives by supporting Infowars. | |
Just give money by product. | ||
You saved my family's life. | ||
Thank you. Wow. Thank you for that. | ||
And just on that note, I mean, I think it's almost like we also benefit from this because it's not just the information that you need to... | ||
The vaccine thing. | ||
It's like such a good example because it's like... | ||
If you don't have the information, how are you going to be confident in your decision? | ||
And if you don't have, you know, the knowledge that there's other people out there that are feeling the same way you are, how are you going to have the confidence or the ability to stand up against this overwhelming, you know, influence? | ||
And so, you know, even Arcella, you know, when I got COVID and then, like, my son got COVID, he was like one years old, and I'm sitting there thinking, oh, God, if I just got vaccinated, maybe my son wouldn't have gotten it. | ||
You know, what's going to happen, you know? Something like this virus was hugely emotional. | ||
And so, you know, even for ourselves, it was like we need to, like, drill back in. | ||
Like, nope, the vaccine is death. | ||
The vaccine is poison. | ||
The vaccine is not necessary. | ||
It's like you need to be reminded of that because you've got to do something to push back against the overwhelming censorship on the other side. | ||
So I think... I think you're right in that we provide a valuable service here, and we also benefit from that service we provide because without knowing that there's so many people out there who agree with us, it's hard to maintain confidence in the face of all this alternative information. | ||
Sorry, go on 10 seconds. | ||
unidentified
|
Humanity is on the ground getting stomped, and InfoWars is that hand reaching out to save humanity. | |
The NFTs and the Trump cards, yesterday I think will go down in history as one of the most important days in this new revolution. | ||
Yesterday with the announcement, the second announcement is epic, but the cards are introducing people to digital wallets. | ||
That yesterday was the salvo towards the Federal Reserve and the First Amendment. | ||
And we'll look back and be thankful. | ||
It's important to remember that what we see, what we hear, and what we experience is rarely absolute, right? | ||
The world is dynamic. | ||
Yeah, absolutely. I mean, yeah, that's interesting. | ||
Both the callers about the trading cards have brought up things I hadn't... | ||
Really considered. I mean, it's kind of silly, but, you know, the other call, the previous caller. | ||
It's for the kids. Right, it's for the kids. | ||
And it's like, you know, all you see are these, like, cartoons of Trump where he just looks like a, you know, a fat orange with a wig on. | ||
Like, you know, every depiction of Trump in the left is so unflattering and incorrect. | ||
unidentified
|
And preconditioning. And that's why so many of us on the right are so quick to jump on, oh, Trump's an idiot, like, you know, how everybody's all mad at him because of that. | |
It's just like Q. Q is for the kids. | ||
It's for the next generation to be like, oh, let's be esoteric and think in multidimensional facets. | ||
Very interesting. And I hadn't considered the thing about the wallets, too. | ||
I mean, I don't know if that's part of it. | ||
I mean, honestly, I just think he, you know, he's, you know, my friend, I'm in a group text, and they were like, who is going to buy these cards? | ||
And I think the answer is... | ||
Grandparents who think they're buying something really cool for their grandson. | ||
I think it's kind of a grift. | ||
I think it's kind of a scam. But at the same time... | ||
unidentified
|
Well, let's get everybody to Bitcoin. | |
Let's get everybody off the USD and into Bitcoin. | ||
And that's what he's doing. | ||
That would be great. It's digital wallet. | ||
All right. Thank you so much for the call, Ten Sacks. | ||
I don't want to get to some others. | ||
Sorry, these calls are so good. I like talking to them for a while. | ||
Let's go to Brandon in Wisconsin, who's a first-time caller doing a shout-out. | ||
Thanks for calling in, Brandon. You're on the air. | ||
unidentified
|
Who do you want to shout-out? Hi, I just wanted to shout out and say I'm super grateful to InfoWars for all they do. | |
I'm 32 years old and I was lucky enough at 16 to have a friend introduce me to InfoWars and Alex Jones. | ||
You know, I don't find a lot of like-minded people around myself, so being able to listen to your show each day and the other broadcasts are wonderful. | ||
I guess I really wanted to call though and urge the listeners and even yourself to Continue doing self-work. | ||
Alex Jones had Mark Passio on quite a few times, and he's somebody that's really helped change my view on if we don't all get right with ourselves, all these changes we want to see, all these things we're pushing for are never going to happen. | ||
You know, I appreciate that, Brandon. | ||
I'm the same age you are, so I'm glad that, you know, we can connect this way through Infowars, because, yeah, there's not a lot of people our age that are exactly open about, you know, the beliefs that we share. | ||
And, you know, I think, like, everybody, you know, you need to be self-reflective. | ||
You need to, you know, understand... | ||
You know, what's going on in your own life and make work to correct it. | ||
But I also think that, you know, a lot of times by doing work outside of yourself, you're helping yourself too, right? | ||
Like I have friends that are like, you know, they haven't had a girlfriend in a long time. | ||
They're like, well, I don't want to try to go out in the dating pool until I fix myself. | ||
And it's like, well, then you're going to be waiting forever, dude. | ||
Like go out and find the girl that can benefit you, that can help you fix the things that you think We're good to go. | ||
To take care of yourself and get yourself right, if you want to help other people, I think that a lot of people can fall into the trap of, well, I can't help anybody else until I get myself fully fixed. | ||
And if that's how you feel, then you'll just never help anybody. | ||
You probably won't even help yourself. I totally agree with you. | ||
Don't wait to get yourself right. | ||
You can be imperfect and still go out and make changes and make a positive difference. | ||
Anything else before I let you go, Brandon? | ||
Brandon may have dropped already. | ||
Alright folks, we're going to take more of your phone calls on the other side. | ||
We're going to get into the JFK documents as well. | ||
Go to Infowarsstore.com to keep us on the air. | ||
We don't tell our callers to plug Infowarsstore, but there's a reason that so many do. | ||
It's not because they've been paid to or that we tell them to. | ||
It's because they take the products and they realize how amazing they are and they actually want to spread the gospel to other people. | ||
Maybe that was blasphemous. Spread the good word. | ||
Is that also blasphemous? Whatever. | ||
Spread the news about Infowarsstore.com to other people. | ||
Because, uh... | ||
unidentified
|
Alright, welcome back, folks. | |
Let's go to your phone calls once again. | ||
Brandon in Michigan's called in about Infowars. | ||
Thanks for calling in, Brandon. You're on the air. | ||
Hi, Harrison. How are you? Good, thanks. | ||
unidentified
|
Good. I'm calling because I wanted to talk about the Inforced products. | |
I've been taking them probably at least six years now, but not as consistent as I should. | ||
And I've been doing the Fizzy Magnesium mixed with Brain Force, Alpha Power, and the X3 every day for the last couple weeks now. | ||
And one thing it's done for me is I'm dreaming again. | ||
I haven't had a dream in feels like years. | ||
And I had one the other day. | ||
I woke up at 2 in the morning with a vision of how to create a new banking system. | ||
It would basically destroy all the current banking. | ||
We could take over consumer lending. | ||
And I wanted to share that with you guys to use it as a way to fund Infowars. | ||
Okay, that's awesome. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, so I don't want to talk too much about it on the air because I don't want it to get stolen. | |
But basically, there would be no interest loans. | ||
You wouldn't have to take deposits like a bank. | ||
Everyone would do it. I've been sitting here for the last day and a half trying to figure out ways to prove it, like that it wouldn't work. | ||
And I've got seven years in the banking industry, and I just, I can't find any holes in it. | ||
And I think it's a killer idea. | ||
Could possibly be, you know, a billion dollars, trillion dollar business. | ||
If you took over, you know, consumer, that is at like $925 billion in the U.S., autos at like $1 trillion, and you could take all that. | ||
Interesting. Well, I'm tantalized. | ||
I'm interested in learning more. | ||
If you don't want to give it out on air, how can we learn about your revelation? | ||
unidentified
|
Can we talk just off air on break? | |
Sure. If you want to stay on the line, I'll talk to you during the break. | ||
Thanks. Just stay there. | ||
Let's go to Don in Florida. | ||
You want to talk about the Brunsons versus Alma case on January 6th. | ||
Go ahead, Don. You're on the air. | ||
unidentified
|
How you doing, Harrison? | |
Good, thank you. Yes, I just want to get some media play. | ||
You guys put it out there and let the public know SCOTUS is going to rule, you know, January 6th. | ||
State loves irony. That's a great date. | ||
Hopefully we can get it through to a hearing. | ||
We only need four justices. | ||
These are the brothers from Utah? | ||
Yes, sir. We covered this earlier this week. | ||
Maybe it was last week. But we did an extensive breakdown of this. | ||
And I said, I'm not holding my breath. | ||
I'm going to be very happy to be surprised if something positive comes out of this. | ||
But they're not deciding on it on January 6th. | ||
They are discussing it on January 6th. | ||
The Supreme Court will convene and actually read the case and decide whether or not they're going to take it into consideration or whether they're going to pass on it. | ||
So, yes, we are eagerly awaiting January 6th. | ||
And the potentiality that this really ground shaking lawsuit comes to fruition, it's a very ambitious law. | ||
It's so ambitious is why I sort of have my doubts about it. | ||
It would essentially be the remaking of the entire government in one fell swoop. | ||
I mean, they would be like kicking out half of Congress and the president by order of the Supreme Court. | ||
But, you know, the idea is that the scuttlebutt on all this is that apparently the Supreme Court is very hesitant to do something like this, but they are willing to do it. | ||
If they are under the impression that if they don't do something like this, then the nation really is lost. | ||
I mean, I know people that have put cases before the Supreme Court, and they all say the same thing. | ||
It's basically like, you know, they are—a lot of them are as worried about what's going on in this country as we are, especially Clarence Thomas. | ||
And, um— They will do something like this if they think it's necessary. | ||
This may be why they're bringing this case, you know, further down the pipeline. | ||
But we'll wait and see. | ||
What do you think is going to happen with it? | ||
Or do you have any new information about this? | ||
unidentified
|
Well, I don't have any... | |
I know it's... I don't have any new information. | ||
I just... I pray that Amy Comey Barrett will come through. | ||
Kavanaugh, I think, is pissed off. | ||
Like, they... It's a very, you know... | ||
It's a very tempting thing. | ||
I mean, it's a possibility that the Supreme Court could be the saving grace of this country and really set us back on the right track. | ||
So we are keeping an eye on that. | ||
We'll have to wait until January 6th to see if it progresses any farther. | ||
Thank you for that call, Don. Let's go to thecaptainofpirateinfowars.com. | ||
Thanks for calling in, Cap. | ||
unidentified
|
Skipper, you're on the air. Well, Merry Christmas and good morning to you and the staff there, Harrison. | |
It's great to be on. | ||
So let's talk about Trump and I just want to comment on what I heard him say. | ||
Absolutely fantastic news. | ||
I see light breaking every day. | ||
When I log on to PirateInfoWars.com and pull up all the news that is set to Pirate, you know, from News Wars on the site. | ||
And, you know, I can see the headlines just slowly, gradually changing. | ||
We've got to keep up the momentum. | ||
We have to not forget it's an info war. | ||
Keep fighting, keep fighting, keep fighting. | ||
I think it needs to go a little further. | ||
I don't think he talked enough about the integration of the social credit score, and maybe I missed it, but I think maybe we need to talk about that seriously. | ||
And a lot of legislators here in West Virginia are even telling me things like, get me the language. | ||
So maybe it's time to talk about the language. | ||
Maybe if any caller out there I know there's a lot of brilliant people politically in this movement, so maybe if we could start talking more about what's the language we need to get in front of our legislators, you know, what is it? | ||
I think that would be great. | ||
Absolutely, and that's what I loved about Trump's speech is he's talking about a digital bill of rights. | ||
He's talking about concrete, you know, policy proposals that would correct a lot of the abuses that we've seen so far, even, you know, going so far as just... | ||
And the thing is, it's... | ||
It's sort of typical. We don't need new laws. | ||
We don't need new changes to the Constitution. | ||
We need to enforce what's already there. | ||
The government is not allowed to censor Americans. | ||
That is number one on the list. | ||
So if they're working with big tech to censor Americans, that's a violation of the law. | ||
And you have to carry out the redress measures to get back in line with the law. | ||
It's you know, he's not suggesting anything other than impose the law as it should be for this new digital paradigm that we're dealing with. | ||
Again, when they say the press in the First Amendment, the five freedoms, one of which is freedom of the press, they mean the physical press. | ||
They don't mean it like we say press. | ||
Back then, when you printed something for mass distribution, you used a giant press. | ||
And during the revolution and up to the revolution, there would be gangs. | ||
One printer would be printing out pamphlets talking about revolution and the British guards would go and destroy the press and shut it down or catch it on fire or steal it and take it away to print their own pamphlets. | ||
There were... There was like physical, you know, press destruction going on during the Revolutionary War. | ||
And what we're dealing with now is just a graduated version of that. | ||
It's just a new digital version of the same thing that our founding fathers went through. | ||
So they gave us the blueprint. | ||
All we have to do is follow it. | ||
Thank you for that call, Captain. | ||
I do want to go to Nick in Colorado, who also wants to talk about Trump's speech, although you say it doesn't seem like enough. | ||
Thanks for calling in, Nick. It's a good start, isn't it? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, good morning, Harrison. Good morning. | |
Hey, I just want to say thank you guys for your awesome products. | ||
X2, Super Male Vitality, and all the other ones you guys got going on. | ||
It's awesome. And I appreciate you guys. | ||
Well, thank you. We appreciate you. | ||
Infowarsstore.com. But tell me, what did you think about Trump's speech? | ||
unidentified
|
Man, I love Trump's speech, but it's just missing and lacking a whole lot. | |
Like this virus about Wuhan lab, Dr. | ||
Fauci, and Bill Gates, and It just doesn't seem right that he hasn't denounced these vaccines. | ||
You know what I mean? And that's the only thing scary about Trump. | ||
I love Trump. I've been supporting him since day one. | ||
But it just doesn't seem right here that DeSantis is going right after him. | ||
It's awesome to see him fighting for us in that regard. | ||
And Trump's just on the back line, back burner, not even mentioning it. | ||
I just don't get it. | ||
Yeah, I agree. I mean, he hasn't mentioned it yet. | ||
I mean, the speech last night was strictly about free speech, so, you know, I'm not sure if that would have been the appropriate place to bring in, you know, the topic of Fauci, but, you know, this would be one of the—perhaps the only good thing about, you know, the Ron DeSantis-Trump contest or, you know— War that they're waging, which is not really happening. | ||
I mean, you can tell the left is desperate for it. | ||
There's all these articles like every day on CNN. They're like, why hasn't DeSantis officially announced his run for president? | ||
They're like, why? Why aren't they fighting? | ||
Why can't we divide the Republicans? | ||
With DeSantis and Trump. | ||
Why aren't you focusing more on that? So clearly they want it. | ||
But it would be nice to see DeSantis and Donald Trump trying to outdo each other in terms of, yeah, is Ron DeSantis the future? | ||
Like, they're desperate to cause this rift. | ||
But here's an idea. | ||
How about they team up and we take the best of both and DeSantis pushes Trump on the vaccines and Trump pushes DeSantis on free speech and we come out better than ever because, like, two, you know, steel swords, they sharpen one another. | ||
Wouldn't that be something? Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
So glad you're here with us on this December Friday. | ||
We're going to go out to your phone calls once again. | ||
Still in this hour to come, we are going to talk about the latest documents released by the government that pertain to the Kennedy assassination. | ||
I think a lot of people are missing some pretty big pertinent points about that. | ||
And it's also not just about the Assassination itself, it's about the changes in the very form of government that took place following the creation of the nuclear bomb. | ||
Completely changed. You know, what it makes me think of is the speech from Dr. | ||
Strangelove, where General Ripper is like, Mandrake, do you remember what Clemenzo once said about war? | ||
He said, war is too important to be left to the politicians. | ||
Or no, I'm sorry. He said, war is too important to be left to the generals. | ||
When he said that 50 years ago, it may have been true. | ||
But now, war is too important to be left to the politicians. | ||
They have neither the time nor the inclination for strategic thought. | ||
See, when... It was still traditional non-nuclear war. | ||
You had months of buildup before conflict happened. | ||
Once nukes were invented, your reaction time went down to about five minutes. | ||
So you couldn't have debates about what to do anymore. | ||
You couldn't have discussions and reasonable conversations about how you address the threat. | ||
You have to have a permanent state that is ready on a moment's notice To launch nukes. | ||
And you can't, you know... | ||
That means a presidential transition could be an existential threat if there's a time period where America's not ready to respond within a single minute because of mutually assured destruction. | ||
If one of those people is not mutually assured to be destroyed, then they're at a major disadvantage. | ||
So you had to... | ||
So that was where the intelligence agencies really became the deep state, became the permanent... | ||
You know ruling class of this country and really countries around the world and combined with that you had of course the information of nuclear power the you know scientific Proofs and concepts that needed to be safeguarded and or stolen from the enemy. | ||
So during the Cold War is when the intelligence agencies really came into their own. | ||
But that's not when they started to exist, right? | ||
They've been in existence since the 1700s at the very least. | ||
And the thing is, where did they come from? | ||
Where did the intelligence agencies originate? | ||
Well, they originated with banks. | ||
Banks were the original intelligence agencies and they used the information that they were able to get faster than anybody else. | ||
There really wasn't a very powerful media You know, existence back then. | ||
And governments had to rely on embassies and, you know, legates and people they would send and get information back. | ||
But the banks, the banks would have... | ||
They were international in character, so they weren't bound by, you know, national borders. | ||
They... Had a faster method of transmitting information than any other organization. | ||
And they used that information to enrich themselves and gain power over different countries. | ||
And as intelligence agencies really came into their fore, they really matured during the Napoleonic era. | ||
And Napoleon was a big part of that. | ||
He used spies to a greater degree than anybody else since ancient Roman emperors. | ||
We also had a prototypical form of spy agencies. | ||
But all this sort of culminates in the 60s when they ran into a roadblock that was John F. Kennedy who wanted to deprive them of their unelected power and was a major roadblock to their really codifying their existence as an international, supranational organization. | ||
And so he had to be done away with, and it was his replacement, LBJ, who, of course, Roger Stone will tell you was behind the entire assassination in the first place. | ||
Whether he was or not, he certainly was the one that benefited most from it, except, of course, for the CIA because it was LBJ who gave them the go-ahead to create the international money laundering and drug trafficking ring that has made them untouchable ever since. | ||
We'll get more into it on the other side. | ||
All right, welcome back, folks. | ||
We'll go out to your phone calls this hour, but since I've already started on it, I guess I'll sort of continue. | ||
You've got to, there's two histories, right? | ||
There's the public history and the secret history of all the world throughout all of time. | ||
And I'm trying to think of a good example in recent times. | ||
Essentially, you have like the outward media, you know, reported reason for things that are happening. | ||
And then you have the real reason things are happening, which often have nothing to do with the excuses given in the higher levels. | ||
And this has been true, you know, throughout most of history, but it really accelerated in the 1960s. | ||
And really in the time period between the 1960s and the 80s during the Cold War. | ||
And of course, it always comes back to information. | ||
That's why there's the title Infowars. | ||
It's not just that we're currently in an Infowar. | ||
It's that the term Infowar describes the relationships of humans to tyranny for all of time. | ||
How did the ancient Egyptian priests keep control over their population for thousands of years? | ||
Well, because they had strict control of information. | ||
Information as to... | ||
The rotation of stars and when crops would come, they were able to predict things and keep their society in a state of prosperity because of the celestial patterns that they knew and the secret information that they knew. | ||
They were priest kings, right? | ||
So it was the information that they safeguarded and Doled out to other people. | ||
That was how they gained power. | ||
How did the Rothschilds take over the British economy? | ||
It was information, right? | ||
It was the information of Napoleon's defeat at Waterloo that they used, you know, through trickery to buy up the entire British stock market at rock-bottom prices. | ||
And so, you know, that's sort of the event that really brings it all together. | ||
I'm sure a lot of our audience already knows, but for those who don't, the Rothschilds were a family bank in Germany. | ||
It was founded, I think, in the 1700s. | ||
And there was one guy who changed his name to Rothschild, means Red Shield. | ||
And he had five sons, and he sent all five sons to the five major capitals of Europe to create their own banks. | ||
And they really invented the check. | ||
They invented the idea that you would deposit gold in one bank and We're at Vienna, and then you could go to Germany and withdraw gold from that bank in Germany so you didn't have to carry gold along with you. | ||
It's also the way the Knights Templars came to be. | ||
It's the same type of thing. Crusaders that were going to the Holy Land, instead of trying to carry all their stuff all the way to the Middle East, they would deposit gold in England or France, and then in the Middle East, you know, with the Templars, then when they get to the Middle East, they could withdraw that money from the Templars. | ||
But the Rothschilds really... | ||
You know, technologically advanced that by the use of banknotes. | ||
And what this allowed just naturally as a consequence of the fact that they had to have very good communication between one bank and another crossing national borders, they just naturally developed an intelligence system by which they were able to receive intelligence from all over the world faster than anybody else. | ||
And they used that to their own benefit like the Battle of Waterloo. | ||
And some people knew this. In case you don't know how the Battle of Waterloo worked out, Rothschild, the banker in London at the time, was the first one, essentially the first one in the country to know that Napoleon had lost. | ||
So everybody in the country knew that he would be the first one to know because everybody knew that he had the best intelligence agencies. | ||
And they all knew that the battle was happening. | ||
They were all eagerly awaiting the outcome. | ||
And they all knew that Rothschild, I think it was Nathaniel Rothschild, right, would be the one to first know whether England had lost or won the Battle of Waterloo, which is a major defining battle. | ||
And so he went in the morning after the battle, and everybody's watching him, everybody's watching him to see what he's doing, and he starts selling. | ||
He just starts selling all of his stocks as fast as he possibly can, signaling to everybody else, Britain lost. | ||
Britain lost the Battle of Waterloo. | ||
The stock market is about to tank because Nathan Rothschild is... | ||
Selling his stocks at rock-bottom prices, when in reality, he had his agents buying up stocks in the background at those rock-bottom prices. | ||
So everybody followed his lead. Everybody went, he knows what we don't know. | ||
He knows that Britain lost. | ||
We better sell also. They all sell their stocks at rock-bottom prices. | ||
Then the news comes in that England won. | ||
The stock market skyrockets, but by that time, the Rothschilds had already bought up all of, like, the majority of the British stock market. | ||
So that's how they had it. So information has been a major tool of Banking cabals since that time and even before. | ||
And they continue to be the primary authorities when it comes to intelligence agencies. | ||
So in the 1960s, when intelligence agencies were... | ||
Really developing and understanding how much power they could wield and having the excuse of the Cold War and nuclear weapons to justify their extreme secrecy, their manipulation, their control of the media. | ||
I mean, this was a fate of the world here. | ||
We could have the whole world. | ||
We could have nuclear winter if we aren't allowed to keep our secrets. | ||
So, of course, they're allowed to keep their secrets. | ||
And they get more powerful and they get more conniving. | ||
And the only way that they are... | ||
Given any oversight whatsoever is by the purse strings, is by having to go to Congress and ask them for the money to carry out the missions that they want to carry out. | ||
That's very inconvenient for them because they want to do things that Congress wouldn't approve of. | ||
And so the way you can think about this is if the wife controls the bank account and the husband wants to cheat on the wife and go out to an expensive dinner with his mistress, he's got to get that money from somewhere else because if the wife sees a... | ||
A bill at a steak restaurant on the credit card bill, she's going to ask the husband who he went with. | ||
What was that about, right? | ||
So he's got to cover that up. | ||
He's got to get his money from somewhere else. | ||
And so where the CIA decided to get their money from was drug trafficking. | ||
Again, this isn't a conspiracy theory. | ||
This is a proven fact. | ||
Gary Webb, who revealed this in the 1980s, the drug trafficking to Los Angeles was killed for it. | ||
But it was proven out. It was revealed. | ||
It was also revealed in the church hearings and the Iran-Contra debacle. | ||
But this all came about in the 1960s during Vietnam when the CIA started drug running to U.S. soldiers in Vietnam. | ||
This had a myriad of positive effects for the CIA. Not only did they have the money from the drug running that they could then use on Black side operations around the world without having to get the oversight of Congress, but they also were drugging and destroying the veterans who would You know, pose a threat if they were to be trained and armed and then sent back to America. | ||
You'd rather have them addicted to heroin if you're, you know, worried about the potentiality of some sort of revolution happening in America. | ||
You'd rather have those well-trained and highly regarded veterans be zonked out on heroin. | ||
So a couple, you know, convenient things for this to happen. | ||
And so they were moving along. | ||
They were, you know, getting this plan to get this alternative funding to carry out the black side operations. | ||
When they ran into a bit of trouble with a young man named John F. Kennedy who saw what they were doing, saw what they were about, what they were up to, and decided to scatter the intelligence agencies to the wind. | ||
And suddenly he finds himself shot in the head In front of all of America. | ||
Very conveniently he was replaced by LBJ who was happy to sign on to the CIA's plan which they actually floated to the White House via Alan Dulles They called it the Committee of Five, on which were George H.W. Bush, who, by the way, was in Dallas right outside the book's depository, very ironically, on JFK's, the day of JFK's assassination. | ||
And by the way, said he didn't remember where he was. | ||
Said he didn't remember where he was. | ||
Where were you when JFK was assassinated, sir? | ||
Gosh, I don't remember. | ||
Really? Because you were in Dallas watching the parade. | ||
You'd think you would remember that sort of thing. | ||
Kind of suspicious. So George H.W. Bush, William Lansdale... | ||
Lieutenant Colonel Robert Ferreira and a couple others were impaneled to be this committee of five who would establish the drug trading activities of the CIA in Vietnam, commit tens of thousands of murders to keep this all quiet. | ||
It eventually morphed into Iran-Contra. | ||
And in fact, George H.W. Bush was placed in his position as president in order to cover up All right, | ||
folks, welcome back. It should not surprise you. | ||
That not much has come from the tranche of documents about the JFK assassination. | ||
Tucker Carlson did a segment on this. | ||
I think the clip's a little bit too long for me to play right now. | ||
But he made some good points in it. | ||
One of which, of course, is that this happened so long ago, anybody who was potentially involved has to be dead by now. | ||
So they're not protecting any living person from their participation in this. | ||
So who are they protecting? | ||
And it's not about protecting people, it's about protecting organizations. | ||
I would also say it's about protecting our friendly relations with foreign countries. | ||
On Infowars.com, you can find this story. | ||
The CIA was involved in the assassination of President Kennedy, top source tells Tucker Carlson. | ||
We can't see classified information about maybe the most pivotal event in modern American history, and now we know why. | ||
An extremely high-level source verified that the CIA had a hand in the assassination of former U.S. President John F. Kennedy. | ||
Fox News host Tucker Carlson has reported. | ||
Tucker Carlson Tonight, which aired Thursday evening, the Fox News host said a source who is directly and personally familiar with the internal documents the CIA is refusing to disclose confirmed the records do indeed show the CIA was responsible for killing the popular U.S. president. | ||
Yes, I believe the CIA was involved in the assassination of President Kennedy, the source stated, according to Carlson. | ||
It's a whole different country from what we thought it was. | ||
It's all fake. The CIA released another trove of internal documents relating to the investigation into the killing on Thursday, but the agency's latest dump of JFK assassination papers failed to disclose documents of any significance. | ||
So why would they? Who's going to hold them to account? | ||
Who's going to make them release stuff? | ||
These are the professional assassins we're talking about. | ||
Who's going to make the professional assassins? | ||
It's like the Praetorian Guard. | ||
Again, nothing is new in history. | ||
Just go read about the Roman Empire, and you see that it was very, very quickly taken over by the Praetorian Guard. | ||
You entrust people with the sole monopoly on physical force. | ||
You give them a license to kill. | ||
Suddenly, they stop listening to you. | ||
It's actually not that complicated. | ||
Experts suggest the lack of new information being revealed in the document shows the CIA has something to hide. | ||
What the CIA has determined is the following. | ||
It's better to expose themselves to public criticism and literally act against what U.S. law says that is preferable to having to deal with what can be published, stated JFK researcher Ferdinand Armandi. | ||
Skeptical observers have long contended that Lee Harvey Oswald, the man who the U.S. government claims killed Kennedy, was actually a CIA asset. | ||
After the foreign Marine supposedly defected to the Soviet Union, he was able to return to the U.S. freely and face no apparent barriers to reintegration. | ||
Both pro- and anti-Cuban activists in Dallas, Texas, reported frequent contact with Oswald, suggesting he was seeking to influence both camps. | ||
So they're still pushing the single-shooter Oswald narrative. | ||
Perhaps the most suspicious thing is the man with the umbrella. | ||
If you know that one, there's a video of a guy who right as the shots are about to be fired, he raises his umbrella and brings it down. | ||
And they were actually asked about this during the hearing in the 70s that brought back up the... | ||
Discussion of the assassination. | ||
It was another thing that Tucker Carlson talked about in his report, the fact that this bipartisan investigatory committee convened by Congress found that JFK was most likely assassinated as the result of a conspiracy. | ||
They just couldn't say who it was. | ||
But during that, they asked about the umbrella man, and the CIA said, oh, we found the umbrella man. | ||
Here he is. And they brought him in, and he walked into the room holding an umbrella. | ||
And they all went, all right, well, he's got an umbrella. | ||
That must be him. Good to go. | ||
And the guy was like... Just, I'm innocent. | ||
And they were like, great, as long as you say you're innocent and as long as you have an umbrella, we're going to believe you. | ||
Just totally absurd, right? | ||
It makes no sense at all, but this is the way that the investigation went. | ||
Within the U.S. government, there are forces wholly beyond Democratic control, which, quote, are more powerful than the elected officials that supposedly oversee them, he noted. | ||
And, of course, we played the video yesterday of Tucker Carlson revealing that he talked to a congressman who was supposed to be head of the committee that oversees the NSA. We're good to go. | ||
They can't do anything because the only thing they used to be able to do was withhold money. | ||
They don't need to do that anymore. | ||
They can't do that anymore because the CIA gets its own money from its drug running operations. | ||
So I've covered this a bunch, but it is the most important document I think I've ever read in my understanding of how we got to where we are and the makeup of the world. | ||
So we're going to touch on it again. | ||
It is, of course, the Eagle II Studebaker document from 1989 that was published by the FBI, or not published by the FBI, rather, but sent from the FBI to Ted Kennedy, and they describe exactly how the international intelligence agencies were created. | ||
They say this during the tenure of Richard Helms as director of the Central Intelligence Agency's decisions were made by the director with the implied approval of the Oval Office. | ||
That's LBJ to draft a blueprint and put into motion a plan by which the CIA could have as much funds as and when needed without the knowledge of Congress. | ||
This would accomplish the dual purpose of carrying out clandestine and covert operations without the clearance of Congress, as well as to avoid the necessity of having to request any extra funds and thus divulging the workings of any covert operations in progress or planned. | ||
Director Helms wrote a memo to the Oval Office that the FBI intercepted in which he said in part, quote, if Congress or any other uniformity do-gooders ever become aware of this operation, this agency and its director will invoke the 1949 Central Intelligence Agency Act, which exempts the CIA from all laws requiring the disclosure of functions, names, which exempts the CIA from all laws requiring the disclosure of functions, names, official The five experts picked were General Edward Landale, William Colby, George Bush, Richard Armitage, and Lieutenant Colonel Robert Ferreira. | ||
Having secured the implied go-ahead, the five experts were called in and the task put forth to them. | ||
They were given a space of three days to solve the problem and come up with a viable solution. | ||
This was approved of by LBJ with John Foster Dulles serving as the go-between. | ||
And of course, they... | ||
In this document described John Foster Dulles as still being the head of the CIA despite the fact he'd been retired for years at that point. | ||
It goes on to discuss Operation Phoenix as well as the overseas national airlines. | ||
All of this can be found on Wikipedia of all places. | ||
All of this is well known essentially. | ||
You just have to draw the connecting lines and you see the whole panoply come into focus. | ||
It talks about the creation of the Liberal Democratic Party in Japan. | ||
Another thing that if you go to Wikipedia and go to the Liberal Democratic Party of Japan, it says it was funded by the CIA in the 1950s. | ||
All of this is confirmed, right? | ||
But where it gets really interesting is when the whole thing starts to fall apart. | ||
Since the inception of Eagle II in 1966 to 1976, the original Gang of Five has gone in different directions. | ||
When in 1973, Helms decided he could better control international operations from outside the CIA instead of as the actual director, James B. Schlesinger was named for a brief period as director. | ||
And then William Colby started to make loud noises about the promise that had been made to him, as promised by Helms. | ||
Colby assumed the post of director of the CIA, with Schlesinger being given another assignment. | ||
So again, Colby was told if he goes along with this Eagle 2 plan, he would be made eventually the director of the CIA. He, you know, made noise to make sure that happened. | ||
This was done in order to avoid any movement that could endanger the operation of Eagle 2. | ||
Again, Eagle 2 is the drug-running operation to Vietnam and elsewhere, including South America. | ||
That would eventually be uncovered with Iran-Contra. | ||
it actually goes much, much deeper and farther back than that. | ||
It was all very close to being made public. | ||
So Helms, in the meantime, had formed a totally strong relationship with Baron Philippe du Daphne, who represented the real capital of the world, the Rothschild Empire, who decided to stop Operation Eagle II and saw another clandestine money-making operation and leave Japan. | ||
Baron du Daphne, by the way of information, later took complete control over the international organization, the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, which, of course, is essentially what the World Economic Forum is now. | ||
All right, folks, I'm just going to finish up with this coverage of the development of the CIA. I'm so excited. | ||
So excited, I can't wait for the... | ||
whatever that's called. | ||
So we're going to finish up here with the discussion of the CIA and how the CIA has been morphed into an international body. | ||
You know, there's a reason they say the intelligence community. | ||
The intelligence community is an international community. | ||
It does not serve the American people. | ||
It has no oversight from the American government. | ||
It operates on its own proclivities. | ||
It prioritizes its own policies and The American people are the least of its concerns. | ||
Except, of course, for the awakening that would reveal all of this and undo their power. | ||
But again, we've got to go back into the history here. | ||
And just to remind you with where we left off, you have the CIA running drugs to and from Vietnam and South America in order to get money to carry out other operations around the world that we don't even know about because, again, this was the whole point of the plan. | ||
But this report that reveals all of this and connects so many dots that are readily available in mainstream media, whether it's the Liberal Democratic Party of Japan or Operation Phoenix or Iran-Contra, all of these are well-known as disseparate events in history, and you can find them on Wikipedia or any other reputable historical site. | ||
I'm not saying Wikipedia is reputable, but it's well-trusted these days. | ||
If something's going to be contentious or questioned, it's not going to be up on Wikipedia. | ||
You can go there and read up on all this and start connecting the dots for yourself. | ||
It's one of those things, like what I was talking about, the secret history and the real history. | ||
The Or rather, the fake history and the real history, the public history and the private history. | ||
So the public history of something like the Vietnam War would be something along the lines of an offensive in the north of Vietnam has gone badly. | ||
So the president of the United States is sending another 10,000 troops to batten down the hatches and really give it to the communists. | ||
When in reality that decision was being made because the CIA wanted more customers for their drug running, right? | ||
That type of thing where the public reason why we're staying in a war might be about ideology or about strategic maneuvers on the battlefield. | ||
When in reality, the reason these decisions are being made has everything to do with their own agenda, which was one in which they were unaccountable to anybody and had unlimited funds to do whatever they want around the world without oversight. | ||
So they get that. They do that. | ||
They kill JFK, who was their one bulwark against that. | ||
And there's another way that this is all entangled as well, and we'll get to that in just a second, because this all has to do with the Rothschilds. | ||
Because as we discussed before, the Rothschilds were really the first international intelligence agency in the world. | ||
And it allowed them to do things like buy up the English economy at rock bottom prices by tricking people into thinking that England lost at Waterloo. | ||
I bring that up again, not just to remind you of it, but because it's all tied in together. | ||
But returning to Eagle 2 and this clandestine money-making operation that almost got exposed in Japan, which is why they had to found the Liberal Democratic Party. | ||
Because they realized that if the party in power stays in power, they're going to expose us. | ||
So we're going to have to fund a new party to take over Japan. | ||
That party that is CIA-funded and CIA-controlled, by the way. | ||
you I believe it's still in power to this day. | ||
I know Shinzo Abe was a liberal Democrat in the Liberal Democratic Party of Japan funded and controlled by the CIA. So this is the way that client states are governed these days. | ||
It's by the CIA controlling places like Japan. | ||
So Baron du Daphne, by way of information, later took complete control of the international organization, the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, headquartered on Rue Chardon-la-Garche in Paris, France. | ||
This gave Helms and du Daphne complete control over any development operation in the world and thus a carte blanche for covert clandestine CIA operations. | ||
With Prime Minister Tanaka being forced to resign, the decision was reached to name George Bush to terminate Eagle II and to wash away any traces for this. | ||
He was named director of the CIA so he would have a clear way of doing away with any evidence. | ||
This, by the way, has been done. | ||
This was accomplished to a certain degree prior to Governor Carter assuming the presidency. | ||
unidentified
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So. - Nope. | |
You have Baron du Daphne, a French man, and a Rothschild representative, essentially taking control, along with former CIA Director Helms, of the CIA, along with the French Intelligence Agency and the Mossad and the English Intelligence Agency. | ||
See, all of these cooperate, and they all take orders from these international economic cooperation groups, the precursors to things like the Trilateral Commission, the Club of Rome, and all of these others. | ||
And so, finally, how do we tie this all back together? | ||
Well, not only was JFK throwing a wrench in the works of the CIA by threatening to expose them and cast them into a thousand pieces and throw them into the wind, but he also was causing trouble for Israel in getting their nuclear weapons. | ||
So, if you know anything about the history of Israel, you know the Rothschilds have played a major role in the creation of that country. | ||
So, what you have is you have The Rothschilds creating an intelligence network by having banks in different countries and having an extremely efficient communication web that they could get information. | ||
They use that information to basically scam the British economy and buy it at rock bottom prices. | ||
They then use the leverage and the control that they have over Britain through its banking system To get the Balfour Declaration, where the British, who had taken over the Palestinian mandate, were going to give it to Jews to create the State of Israel under the auspices of the Rothschilds. | ||
So then you have the State of Israel getting nuclear weapons in contradiction to the treaties that had been signed, stopping nuclear proliferation. | ||
So when JFK wants to step in and stop that from happening, the Rothschilds, who by this point have taken over... | ||
Almost completely, the intelligence agencies of all of Western Europe, they were the controllers of the Marshall Plan, which was how the Organization for Economic Development got created in the first place to help dole out money from the Marshall Plan. | ||
And they step in to stop JFK and by eliminating JFK and probably bringing LBJ into the conspiracy with them, they get LBJ to agree to sign off on the CIA secret plan to start the drug running operation and really completely divorce the intelligence agencies from any semblance of oversight from national authorities and go truly and fully, completely into the international control of the banking cartels from which they originated in the first place. | ||
So it all comes full circle. | ||
The creation of nuclear weapons Is integral in this. | ||
The proliferation of nuclear weapons is integral in this. | ||
The creation of, you know, the banking combines and the, you know, intelligence power is integral in all of this. | ||
The Rothschilds are at the center of all of it. | ||
And is it any wonder why some of these documents remain redacted? | ||
Is it any wonder what organizations they're protecting when all the people who were involved have long ago passed away? | ||
These organizations are still in control. | ||
While Iran-Contra was a big scandal, they didn't do anything to stop the CIA from continuing this operation, and it's continued ever since. | ||
So... That's my reading of the JFK assassination. | ||
It was just one sort of final coup de grace in the complete emancipation of the intelligence agencies from any government oversight or ability for the duly elected leaders of the world to have any say or prevent the actions of the banking combine. | ||
But that's just me. | ||
But that's just me connecting dots. | ||
Maybe you can go do your own research and prove me wrong, but I doubt it. | ||
With that, we're going to go out to your phone calls. | ||
We only have a minute left in this segment, though, so I don't want somebody to get cut off. | ||
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I didn't realize how long I'd spent talking about JFK. But hey, it's a complicated business. | ||
You've got to get the details right. | ||
But I'm just going to go out to phone calls for the rest of this segment. | ||
Joe in the USA has comments about Rob Reiner. | ||
Thanks so much for calling in, and thank you for holding, Joe. | ||
You're on the air. Hey, Harrison. | ||
How's it going? Good. So isn't Rob Reiner like the poster boy for liberals? | ||
And especially, I think, his character and all in the family is But I'd have to say, I mean, basically, he ended up living with his girlfriend's parents, giving them crap the whole time he lived with them, got himself educated, and then had a baby with her. | ||
And then I think in the end, he either just left her or he divorced her. | ||
And he acted like he was doing them a favor. | ||
And to me, that would pretty much describe You know, a lot of liberalism in this country right now. | ||
And also, as far as like drugs and everything, no one can tell me that a couple local junkies in every state are consuming the amount of drugs that are being pumped into this nation. | ||
So all these stories you have and all these crazy people... | ||
That would probably explain where a lot of these drugs are going, that's for sure. | ||
Yeah, I mean, I think the drug problem is hugely widespread in this country. | ||
I don't even think it's... | ||
I don't think we have any idea how bad it really is, especially when, as we just discussed, you've got the intelligence agencies actively involved in the trade. | ||
I mean, all that's been exposed forever, but it's still going on. | ||
Yeah, I mean, what it... | ||
unidentified
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Like, I hate to just... | |
What is it about liberals? What is it about liberals, Joe? | ||
Like, why are they such bad people? | ||
They all act like they're doing you a favor, just like his character did in All in the Family. | ||
You know what it is? They SHIT where they eat, Harrison. | ||
That's their problem. | ||
I guess it is. | ||
I don't know what it is, man, but... | ||
It's a lot of things. | ||
I mean, obviously, nobody's perfect. | ||
I mean, you know, I'm not going to sit here and say, you know... | ||
I'm perfect, or if you're not a liberal, you know, you're some kind of perfect entity. | ||
That's far from the truth, but man, I'll tell you, they are just a complete mess. | ||
Yeah, yeah, they really are. | ||
It's a lack of principle, I guess, a lack of morals. | ||
I really don't know what it is, but... | ||
I wish it wasn't like that. I mean, I really wish I could just say, like, hey, you can be Democrat, Republican, but, you know, we're all Americans. | ||
But it's like, I don't know, half you people are just freaking insane and unbearable. | ||
So I guess that's what it is. | ||
It's funny, I was just scrolling through Rob Reiner's filmography here. | ||
I didn't realize he'd done a movie about LBJ, just to bring back that old topic. | ||
There's also a time... I wish I could remember the exact example, but he did The Princess Bride, one of the best movies of all time. | ||
And in The Princess Bride, the main plot is that these guys are doing a false flag attack to try to start a war. | ||
By faking a kidnapping of a princess and then blaming it on an enemy when really it was the prince in the first place that brought it all about. | ||
It's just interesting to me, like Rob Reiner at one point during Trump's presidency was basically falling for that exact thing, right? | ||
It was some false flag attack that Rob Reiner was shrieking about on Twitter. | ||
Saying, Donald Trump is a Russian agent, that's why he's not doing this. | ||
And it's like, dude, did you not see your own movie? | ||
Like, this is the thing I don't get. | ||
It's like, they can conceptualize these ideas. | ||
They get how this type of thing would work. | ||
Right in the—Vincini in Princess Bride is—he says, you know, we're going to put this patch of Gilder—we're going to kidnap the princess killer, and then we'll put this patch of Gilder. | ||
So Gilder will get in—you know, they'll go to war with Gilder, what really the prince just wanted war in the first place and was— Sending his princess off to be killed so he could have the excuse to do it. | ||
And it's like, you know, such similar things have played out here in the real world, and yet the same people that make the Hollywood version, they can't see it in real life. | ||
They can't envision it in reality. | ||
So it's very bizarre to see these people who clearly have the cognitive ability to understand what's going on just reject reality outright. | ||
Thank you for that call, Joe. Let's go to Tony in Wisconsin who has a comment about Trump's announcement. | ||
Thanks for calling in, Tony. You're on the air. | ||
unidentified
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Hey, Harrison. Well, first, you had someone call about the water filters earlier, and I didn't hear you guys mention that you can still go to Prepare Today or Prepare with Alex, and you can get them. | |
And then you also got 50% off, which provides a compatible one. | ||
But anyway... | ||
There you go. Thank you. Yeah, I was a bit disappointed because the way he... | ||
I said we need a superhero. | ||
I thought maybe it might be something. | ||
I don't know, maybe about the vaccine, but obviously he couldn't do that. | ||
His message after the card thing was pretty good, but I don't know. | ||
The video should have been edited better. | ||
Yeah. Here's what Laura Loomer just said on Twitter. | ||
She says, I think that's a really good reading of the situation. | ||
It's not that it's not that it's bad that he's selling NFT. It's that he had a real, actually impactful and important policy proposal. | ||
That got overshadowed by his dumb playing cards, which, by the way, apparently have completely sold out at this point. | ||
Apparently, 45,000 cards have been sold for $99, so you made a lot of money off it. | ||
We know that. Thank you for the call, Tony. | ||
Let's go to Ghost in FEMA Region 3. | ||
You want to talk about In-Q-Tel. | ||
Ghost, did you call in yesterday? | ||
I saw somebody called in, and Dr. | ||
Huff actually brought up In-Q-Tel. | ||
unidentified
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Yes, sir. That was me. I found that to be pretty incredible, too, that I called in about In-Q-Tel. | |
I had a comm line breach or something where I don't know what happened, but I found it funny that you brought in somebody to have a very extensive insider from In-Q-Tel sector come on. | ||
That was cool. Yeah, and I wanted to go to you, but obviously we had these great guests. | ||
I wanted to spend as much time with them as possible, so I'm glad you've called in again. | ||
What did you want to say about In-Q-Tel? | ||
unidentified
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He covered most of it. | |
At this point, really, can I say one very quick thing about Elon? | ||
Sure. And then we'll get to Ian Kutel very briefly. | ||
When it comes to the whole Baphomet thing, this nonsense has to stop. | ||
He's not a Christian, at least not yet. | ||
I have a feeling he will be by the end of this war we're in. | ||
He's not a bad guy. | ||
Sorry, I had a lot of coffee this morning. | ||
I think that he is being red-pilled right now. | ||
He's like everybody else that called us, said, oh, that can't be. | ||
You're crazy. | ||
That's ridiculous. | ||
But he is very, very quickly learning that it's very, very real. | ||
But he's doing the right things, acting accordingly. | ||
Like imagine if you said, oh, yeah, yeah, well, yeah, yeah. | ||
I'm like, oh, my God. | ||
I don't know what I'm trying to say here. | ||
All right, let me get to the point about In-Q Talks. That's right. | ||
Yeah, tell me the thing about In-Q Talks. | ||
Yeah, I generally agree with you about Elon Musk, although the tweets or the texts, rather, that Kanye West shared with Elon, Elon is, without prompting, tweeting him or texting him the Lord's Prayer. | ||
So, I don't know, maybe he is Christian. | ||
unidentified
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Oh, that'd be great if he's coming around. | |
I only recently came around myself. | ||
I grew up in a Pentecostal cult. | ||
I know exactly what we're facing here. | ||
Well, that's great. | ||
Well, tell you what, we're running out of time here, so you've got about a minute left. | ||
What's your comment on In-Q-Tel? | ||
unidentified
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It's just a plea. | |
Elon, Greg Reese, Alex Jones... | ||
In-Q-Tel. We have to dive into In-Q-Tel. | ||
There's a specter. | ||
This is the specter's specter. | ||
They put seed money in Google, eBay, Facebook, PayPal, all these entities that have been coming to amalgamated conglomerations that control 95% of technologically-based information where everybody gets info from. | ||
It all stems from In-Q-Tel, which is CIA, DIA, DHS, DOD, It's a venture capitalist branch of the intelligence and military complexes. | ||
If we need investigations, we need exposés. | ||
My main thing was to plead to Greg Reese because he's so brilliant to do an in-depth, very extensive... | ||
I mean, not extensive, he's very brief. | ||
I completely agree, Ghost. | ||
I mean, the only sort of issue that I have is that it's not necessarily a bad thing for... | ||
Like, the idea is that you want the best of the best for your intelligence agency, and you want, you know, you want the best technology, you want the best communications for your... | ||
And so, like, it makes sense to a certain point that the intelligence agency would have a venture capital firm or something like it that would help to bring all of the emerging technology, you know, first and foremost to serve the military and industrial complex. | ||
Like, that... That sort of makes perfect sense. | ||
I don't want my government to be outgunned in the digital sphere by some private actor. | ||
I think the purpose of a government is to guarantee that those types of powers are relegated to a public office. | ||
But they get abused, and we know, of course, the intelligence agencies, as we just laid out over the last hour, aren't working for us. | ||
And if you really want to get to the bottom of Everything from the media to big pharma to big tech, you find that deep, deep under the weeds is the intelligence agencies directing it all and operating it all for their own ends. | ||
So it really is the intelligence agencies. | ||
They really did, you know, crown themselves with the killing of JFK. That doesn't mean they're undefeatable. | ||
We can still undo them. | ||
We just have to learn about what they've done first. |