Speaker | Time | Text |
---|---|---|
You need to defend your civilization against the onslaught of this cancer of progressivism, liberalism, and globalist brainwashing. | ||
This is a life or death situation. | ||
No messing around. | ||
The prescription is two doses of Infowars taken daily. | ||
Good morning, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
Welcome to the American Journal. | ||
So much to talk about today. | ||
Just so much. We're going to talk about, well, we're going to talk about gas stoves, for one thing. | ||
There's a story that we had a caller about yesterday. | ||
We broke it a little bit. | ||
We're going to spend some time talking about gas stoves, the war in Ukraine. | ||
Just a whole big number of stuff. | ||
It's going to be a very big show today. | ||
We're going to be joined by Michael Cargill in the third hour. | ||
Your calls in the second. | ||
But first, here is the latest from Greg Reese. | ||
It's titled, January 6th, Political Prisoners and the Inversion of Justice in America. | ||
Share it at Bandai Video. | ||
Here it is. On May 4th, 1970, hundreds of students were protesting the Vietnam War at Kent State University. | ||
The National Guard tried to disperse the crowd, but were met with resistance. | ||
Things escalated, and four students were shot and killed. | ||
This was rightfully memorialized as an overreach of power, but things have since changed in America. | ||
On January 6th, 2021, during perhaps the biggest peaceful protest of American history, the FBI instigated violence. | ||
Things escalated and four people died, including Ashley Babbitt, an unarmed Air Force veteran who was executed for climbing through a window. | ||
There were no rock anthems composed to memorialize her death. | ||
Instead, her killer was celebrated on TV. The almighty self-righteous liberal now celebrates tyranny. | ||
And after pretending that violent mobs burning down cities for an entire summer is peaceful, they pretend that the American patriots at the Capitol on January 6th are terrorists. | ||
And they pretend that the violent masked group Antifa does not exist. | ||
Antifa has been used regularly to silence, intimidate, and violently attack peaceful protesters, including women, children, and the elderly. | ||
And because the police have proven to be nothing but tyrants, allowing all this to happen, a group of patriotic Americans known as the Proud Boys did the right thing and attempted to protect and defend their fellow man from a criminal government, including Army veteran Joe Biggs. | ||
unidentified
|
People always ask why we come. | |
My question is, why don't more people come here? | ||
There's a lot of bad things going on. | ||
It's been 100 plus days of violence and riots, assaulting police officers, killing people, executing people. | ||
We don't like seeing that, you know? | ||
I want everyone to learn how to get along. | ||
And like today, as much as I do not like Antifa, I don't want any of those guys to get hurt. | ||
I want everyone to be able to go home. | ||
I disagree with them, but we should be able to disagree and keep our hands to ourselves. | ||
Because the police have done nothing, while innocent lives have been taken by government proxy groups, Antifa and Black Lives Matter, the Proud Boys stood up to exercise our God-given right under natural law, self-defense. | ||
And because the brainwashed masses have fallen into complete submission to the corrupt system, a new precedent is now being set that will forever change this country, strip us of our First Amendment, and further enslave us all. | ||
Joe Biggs, along with four other members of the Proud Boys, are now being tried for sedition and face up to 20 years in prison. | ||
Court reporter Alicia Pau was there to witness the lead prosecutor accusing the defense of being racist, and nearly every potential jury member has rallied for Black Lives Matter and supports Antifa. | ||
A former CIA operative has also been qualified for the jury. | ||
These political prisoners have been rotting in an American gulag for a year. | ||
Some are being starved and drugged. | ||
And our so-called leadership does absolutely nothing. | ||
The trial is set for next week. | ||
The current state of justice in America is a complete abomination. | ||
A system comprised of criminals and whores. | ||
May God bless America. | ||
Because we need a miracle. | ||
Reporting for InfoWars, this is Greg Reese. | ||
Absolutely incredible stuff as always. | ||
Please do share that link, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
If there's any hope of waking up... | ||
Brainwashed Americans. | ||
Greg Reese's reports may very well be the key good morning ladies and gentlemen welcome to the American Journal what a big show we have for you today we'll be talking to Michael Cargill in the third hour he was the litigant behind the reversal of the bump stock ban that occurred in the Supreme Court very excited to talk to him about the state of our rights not just our Second Amendment but all the good amendments very excited talk to him in the third hour | ||
We'll be talking to you as we take calls in the second hour. | ||
Also, I know yesterday I said today we'd unveil a new skit. | ||
I may have been a little excited. | ||
I may have been a little bit early on that. | ||
Turns out I forgot how long it takes to edit things. | ||
Also, I had to take my dog to the vet yesterday, so it's not totally my fault, but she's fine. | ||
Don't worry. She's all right. | ||
But I think what we'll do instead is I have an old skit that I did years ago just randomly for fun. | ||
And I was reminded of it yesterday and have been sort of looking for an excuse to play it. | ||
So in lieu of the pitch meeting skit, which will come out later this week, we'll do a little throwback skit for you later today. | ||
So we'll throw some humor in with the horror that we're about to discuss. | ||
And we have just all sorts of topics. | ||
Let's just get right into it, shall we? | ||
Here it is, your daily dispatch. | ||
All right, here it is, folks, your daily dispatch for Wednesday, the 11th of January, 2023. | ||
From Zero Hedge, CDC finally releases VAERS safety monitoring analysis for COVID vaccines. | ||
CDC's VAERS safety signal analysis based on reports from December 14th, 2020 through July 29th, 2022 for mRNA COVID-19 vaccines shows clear safety signals for death and a range of highly concerning thromboembolic, cardiac, neurological, hemorrhagic, 2022 for mRNA COVID-19 vaccines shows clear safety signals for death and a range of highly concerning thromboembolic, cardiac, neurological, So there's that. | ||
I mean... I'll just keep going here. | ||
There were 770 different types of adverse events that showed safety signals in ages 18 +, of which over 500 or two-thirds had a larger safety signal than myocarditis, pericarditis. | ||
Oh, you think it was bad getting a life-threatening, life-shortening, lifelong, crippling effect like myocarditis was bad? | ||
You got lucky. You got off easy. | ||
Once compared to the other things that could happen to you. | ||
The CDC analysis shows the number of serious adverse events reported in less than two years for the mRNA COVID-19 vaccines is 5.5 times larger than all serious reports for vaccines given to adults in the U.S. since 2009. | ||
That's right, folks. In the time period between 2009 and 2023... | ||
You had 13,000 adverse events from vaccines. | ||
In just the two years that the COVID-19 vaccine has come out, that vaccine alone has reduced 73,000. | ||
13,000 to 73,000. | ||
Twice as many mRNA COVID-19 vaccine reports were classified as serious compared to all other vaccines given to adults. | ||
This meets the CDC definition of a safety signal. | ||
I would hope. I would hope that's, yeah, pretty high bar. | ||
There are 96 safety signals for 12 through 17-year-olds, which includes... | ||
I need to read this fast. | ||
I mean... Every time you hear Joe Biden tell you to get the jab, every time Fauci tells you to get the jab, every time you see a commercial telling you to get the jab, or a poster telling you to get the jab, or a radio PSA telling you to get the jab, | ||
if it was any normal medicine, if it was Tylenol or heartworm medicine for dogs, if it was any other type of medicine, every time somebody like that in a position to benefit and profit from the Taking of a jab. | ||
They would have to list this. | ||
Please, you know, side effects may include myocarditis, pericarditis, Bell's palsy, genital ulcerations, high blood pressure and heartache, menstrual irregularities, cardiac valve incompetencies, pulmonary embolism, cardiac arrhythmias, thrombosis, pericarditals, and pleural infusion. | ||
Appendicitis and perforated appendix. | ||
Good Lord. I mean, sure, it's not going to stop you from getting the disease. | ||
It's not going to help you to get over the disease. | ||
It's not going to stop you from transmitting disease. | ||
But it might perforate your appendix. | ||
So why not? Go ahead and take it. | ||
I mean, just completely insane. | ||
I almost started the show without seeing this article. | ||
Alex actually texted me right before I went on to see it. | ||
So I haven't read this yet. We might have to delay the rest of the Daily Dispatch because I just got to keep going through this. | ||
We're just going to keep going through this for a second. | ||
So 96 safety signals for 12 through 17-year-olds, 66 safety signals for 5 through 11-year-olds, which include myocarditis, pericarditis, ventricular dysfunction, and cardiac valve incompetencies, pericardial and pleural... | ||
Some sort of effusion that I can guarantee is harder to have in your heart than it is to pronounce. | ||
Can we say that? | ||
Chest pain, appendicitis, appendectomies, Kowasaki's disease, menstrual irregularities, vitiligo, and vaccine breakthrough infection. | ||
You know, vitiligo, this might actually change in people's minds. | ||
Do black people know they might become white if they take the vaccine? | ||
We could actually save black people here. | ||
We could actually save a huge number of black Americans. | ||
Sure, take the vaccine. | ||
It's just you know you might turn white, right? | ||
You don't want that to happen, do you? | ||
That's a vitiligo. This is the lightening of the skin. | ||
It's like what Michael Jackson had. | ||
The safety signals cannot be dismissed as due to stimulated, exaggerated, fraudulent, or otherwise artificially inflated reporting, nor can they be dismissed due to the huge number of COVID vaccines administered. | ||
There are several reasons why, but the simplest one is this. | ||
The safety signal analysis does not depend on the number of reports, but whether or not some AEs are reported at a higher rate for those vaccines than for other non-COVID vaccines. | ||
Other reasons are discussed in the full post below. | ||
In August 2022, the CDC told Epoch Times that the results of their safety signal analysis were generally consistent with empirical Bayesian data mining conducted by the FDA, revealing no additional unexpected safety signals. | ||
So either the FDA's data mining was consistent with the CDC's method, meaning they generally found the same large number of highly alarming safety signals or the signals they did find were expected. | ||
Or they were lying. We may never know because the FDA has refused to release their data mining results. | ||
Well, it's probably because they're so innocent. | ||
No, it's probably because it makes them look good. | ||
That's why they're hiding it. | ||
unidentified
|
Just... Horrifying, folks. | |
I mean, what do you even say... The sheer volume, let alone the severity of some of these side effects. | ||
Two, by the way, I remind you, children, this is for children. | ||
These are the safety signals for 12 through 17-year-olds, including things like cardiac valve incompetencies, which is just a complicated, medically jargony way of saying, your heart don't work. | ||
Yeah, it doesn't stop you from getting the disease. | ||
I think we've been over that. | ||
In fact, it makes you more likely to get the disease So, I mean, daily, I am convinced that it can't get any worse. | ||
There can't be an even greater depth to plunge to. | ||
But there are no words to describe what's going on across the world right now. | ||
This is nothing short of biblical. | ||
This is nothing short of cataclysmic. | ||
They created the virus. | ||
They released the virus. | ||
They knew the vaccine would do what it's now doing. | ||
And across the whole world, billions upon billions of people were forcibly injected with poison by their government. | ||
And not just the people, the animals too. | ||
The babies. The children. | ||
unidentified
|
So what you're saying is that if you watched Infowars, we may have saved your life. | |
Folks, if we saved your life, go to Infowarsstore.com and buy a supplement. | ||
Tell you what, if our information means that your heart is still working normally and still functioning adequately, maybe spend a couple bucks at Infowarsstore. | ||
Maybe if we saved your life, maybe do that. | ||
Alright folks, I think that was a first for American Journal. | ||
I think that may have been a first. | ||
Maybe it's because I usually read the stories. | ||
And occasionally, every once in a while, I let a story on the Daily Dispatch get in my craw and it takes a little longer. | ||
I don't think we've ever had a story so jaw-dropping that we had to abandon the rest of the stories just to read it. | ||
Absolutely wild stuff. | ||
So we're going to do this again. | ||
Let's get the thing ready. | ||
ready let's fire it again uh here it is your daily dispatch all right folks here it is your daily dispatch for Wednesday the 11th of January 2023 so CDC finally releases VAERS safety monitoring analysis for COVID vaccines, and everything's fine and it works great. | ||
Kidding. It's horrible. | ||
Everything is off the charts. | ||
It's horrifying. And you'll have to watch the other segment to get the breakdown. | ||
But long story short, 770 different types of adverse events that show safety signals in ages 18 plus, of which over 500, or two out of three, had a larger safety signal than myocarditis, pericarditis. | ||
The safety signals, that is the... | ||
Damage caused by the vaccines is 5.5 times larger than all of the serious reports for vaccines given to adults in the U.S. since 2009. | ||
Five times more adverse events in the last two years than in the preceding 13 or 14. | ||
So there you go. Absolutely incredible. | ||
We'll revisit that a little bit later. | ||
We'll also revisit this story. | ||
We're going to spend some time on this story. | ||
We're going to delve into this story. | ||
We actually had this story yesterday. | ||
We had somebody call in. We mentioned it at the end of the show. | ||
But it hadn't aged appropriately. | ||
We had to let it sit in the cask for a little while. | ||
We had to let it age in the basement for a little while. | ||
It's been a day now. And now we can dig into this and see... | ||
Use it as a vector. | ||
Use it as a... As a slide into the cesspit, right? | ||
We'll use this as a vessel to venture into the mindset of the leftist because it truly is wild. | ||
The story is this. Biden ban on gas stoves, next step in great reset lockdown of energy. | ||
And we are going to spend some time on this because it... | ||
It's so emblematic of what the leftists are able to achieve, able to do. | ||
It's amazing. Nobody had ever heard of this. | ||
Nobody had ever suggested this. | ||
Nobody was thinking about gas stoves at all. | ||
This isn't a problem they're confronting, right? | ||
We can go through the crime out of control, tens of thousands of people being murdered, prisons overrun, money being spent by the hundreds of billions to wage war with no discernible purpose or end in sight, the border wide open, the mass death that's unexplained apparently but is actually caused by the fact that just the number of real issues that we're dealing with are overwhelming and now we have a new one. | ||
Now just for some reason they decide actually what they need to focus their energy on is getting rid of gas stoves. | ||
And you would think that This would be kind of a weird thing that maybe somebody would suggest and other people would go, well, that's not our highest priority, but whatever. | ||
That's fine, but that's not what happened. | ||
No, these are leftists we're talking about. | ||
So leftists, having never once ever expressed an opinion about gas stoves in their entire lives, never once thought about it, they've received the signal now. | ||
So they're all against gas stoves and they all think it's perfectly normal and reasonable and good that they should forcibly ban gas stoves by the government. | ||
And they're all just on board with that now. | ||
They all just believe that. They announced it yesterday. | ||
They are all fully committed today. | ||
It's amazing. It's truly incredible to see the way that you can just suggest some nonsensical, purposeless, unnecessary idea to the leftists and it's just their idea now. | ||
They just believe it now fully, wholeheartedly. | ||
Anybody who resists them is an idiot and a nincompoop and doesn't know any better. | ||
They're all uneducated and stupid. | ||
They didn't know about this yesterday. | ||
Yesterday, If you asked them about gas stoves, they'd be like, yeah, I have a gas stove. | ||
What about it? They would have no idea. | ||
But today, today they're on a crusade against gas stoves, and anybody who likes gas stoves or says this is strange are the enemy and will be attacked. | ||
It's... It's wild, folks. | ||
And we'll show you some reactions. It's, again, just a masterclass in mind control, the way these people operate. | ||
It is truly something to behold. | ||
Meanwhile, in Mexico, Joe Biden promotes plans to make it easier for migrants trying to enter the United States as part of the, quote, greatest migration in human history. | ||
Oh, hooray! Oh, good! | ||
Oh, wonderful! You know, when I look around the country today, when I see the state of the American people, half of all young women on, you know, antidepressants, childhood obesity skyrocketing through the roof, you know what I think? | ||
I think what this country needs is less gas stoves and more Mexicans. | ||
It'll solve everything. | ||
Everything will be fixed once we get rid of gas stoves for some reason and also just become Mexico. | ||
Just... Oh my god. | ||
unidentified
|
My god! Folks, how long are we going to put up with this? | |
Moving on. U.S. intelligence material related to Ukraine, Iran, and U.K. found in Biden's private office, source sells, tells CNN. Among items from Joe Biden's time as vice president discovered in a private office last fall are 10 classified documents, including U.S. intelligence memo and briefing materials that covered topics including Ukraine, Iran, and the United Kingdom, according to a source familiar with the matter. | ||
Oh, well, look at that. | ||
Oh, well, what do you know? | ||
What do you know? It turns out It turns out they're guilty of everything they accuse us of. | ||
It turns out that Trump was the innocent one and Joe Biden had file cabinets full of information about Ukraine and Iran and all of our enemies where he has massive investments where his son is getting $10,000 jobs. | ||
It just goes on and on. | ||
It's so infuriating. | ||
I don't. I don't. | ||
I'm going to go crazy. I'm going to go insane. | ||
You know, sometimes at times like this, sometimes when everything just rears its ugly head, you want to get away. | ||
You want to just hop on a plane and go somewhere. | ||
Unfortunately, we can't do that anymore. | ||
That's not the way the world works anymore. | ||
No, now the most simple of things that we've been doing for decades is impossible now. | ||
We just can't do them. We just can't figure out how to make it work. | ||
We just, we can't fly airplanes anymore. | ||
We can't build roads. | ||
We can't build buildings that are worth looking at to save our lives. | ||
No, all we can do is tear everything down and burn everything and cause hatred and division and psychopathy to just run absolutely wild and then try to medicate it as a response. | ||
It's just all so stupid. | ||
Major FAA outage halts all domestic flight departures in the U.S. Well, look at that. | ||
Gee, it wasn't because you put some A gay CIA agent in charge, is it? | ||
I mean, you wouldn't be so stupid as to do that, would you? | ||
To sell the Secretary of Transportation job to a political partner as part of the machinations during the Democratic primary? | ||
I mean, you wouldn't do something so heinously irresponsible, would you, Democrats? | ||
No. No, of course not. | ||
Departing flights across the United States were grounded Wednesday morning after the Federal Aviation Administration said it had experienced a computer outage. | ||
The FAA said later that it had ordered all airlines to pause domestic parchers until 9 a.m. | ||
Eastern Time. More than 3,700 flights within to and out of the U.S. were delayed as of 8 a.m. | ||
Wednesday. According to the online flight tracker FlightAware, nearly 560 flights were listed as canceled. | ||
Oh, just hundreds of thousands of people having their plans ruined, having their money essentially stolen. | ||
Just their lives interrupted severely for a short time or a long time or however long. | ||
And the people that are responsible for this will never even apologize for it. | ||
They'll never do anything to correct it. | ||
And whether it's Southwest Airlines just being incapable of... | ||
Sending people what they do send the baggages or the big shutdown at the airport in Florida that caused disruptions across the country or whether it's just, you know, somebody turned off a computer they weren't supposed to turn off. | ||
It's just everything is screwed. | ||
Everything is messed up. | ||
Nothing works. Well, it's all lands on us and the people doing it are not getting in trouble. | ||
All right. Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
Just so much to talk about today. | ||
I don't even know if we're going to be able to take calls since we have Michael Cargill in the third hour. | ||
I'll try to open up phone calls in the second hour, but sometimes when I have so much to cover, I open up phone calls, I end up not getting to very many, and I feel bad for everybody that's hanging out waiting to get on air. | ||
And we got Michael Cargill in the third hour. | ||
That's what I meant. But I was going to take phone calls to the second. | ||
I don't know. We'll see how much we can get through here because I do have a lot I want to get to. | ||
And I want to go to some a little bit longer videos here. | ||
I don't think we'll play the full one. | ||
I think we'll just play clip eight here. | ||
So we're going to talk about the Ukrainian war. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh, yeah. | |
Yeah, we're going to do that. | ||
We'll show a little skit in the next segment. | ||
I think maybe I need to calm down a little bit. | ||
Maybe I need to calm down a little bit. | ||
Just for the benefit of not saying something that I shouldn't say. | ||
So we actually have a lot of great videos to show you today. | ||
Jim Jordan gave a pretty powerful speech on the floor of the congressman. | ||
Yesterday about the weaponization of government shows he really does have an understanding of the true level of authoritarianism that's coming down right now. | ||
We also have Joe Biden addressing the mishandled classified information that was found at his little Chinese-funded think tank he has going on there. | ||
We're going to talk about gas stoves. | ||
Gas stoves and the gas light. | ||
We're being gassed. I also still want to get to my South Africa topic, but God only knows if we have time. | ||
I'm going to get to as much as possible, but... | ||
Again, folks, I wish we could have prevented this. | ||
I wish we didn't have all of these problems that we have to cover on a daily basis. | ||
It just... If only they'd listened. | ||
If only people had listened to us. | ||
Because if you've been watching Infowars, whether it's the COVID pandemic, the lockdowns, the social distancing, the vaccine passports, the vaccine itself, and the so-called safety, or the real overarching plan, you know, that's the thing about Infowars. | ||
All these other places have... | ||
They might talk about this stuff. | ||
They might just now be coming around to admitting that maybe the vaccine doesn't work. | ||
Even the places that are so-called far right, like on the right, they kind of get it. | ||
But our goal here at Infowars is to paint the clear picture that there is a conspiracy happening. | ||
There is a global conspiracy that's out in the open at this point that is as ruthless as it is anti-human. | ||
That is centralizing through corporations and governments and things like the COVID vaccine and the war in Ukraine and COVID itself and the Black Lives Matter riots in January 6th. | ||
All of these, every single one of them is a highly orchestrated event carried out for the sole purpose of consolidating power, inspiring fear in the citizens to make them more malleable. | ||
They're all deeply interconnected. | ||
They're all pushing in one singular direction. | ||
And they're doing so with ruthless abandon. | ||
So, you know, we weren't listened to before. | ||
We're seeing the outcome of that now. | ||
I can only pray that Americans actually start listening to the people who have been right the entire time. | ||
Only they'll have no one to listen to if we're not here to tell them the truth. | ||
So I would love to be here. | ||
I would love to keep trying to, you know, light the path forward. | ||
As we're continuously enveloped in this darkness of satanic malaise that comes down on us. | ||
We're not going to be here if you don't go and support us. | ||
And that's just the fact of the matter. | ||
That's just the way that it is. Please go to InfoWarsStore.com to support us. | ||
We make it so easy for you to do it. | ||
You get a fantastic product. | ||
It's a great price. | ||
It's almost always on huge discount, especially if you time it right. | ||
Real Red Pill Plus, 50% off. | ||
Just go to InfoWarsStore and start clicking around. | ||
You'll see it's rare to find a supplement that doesn't have some sort of discount. | ||
And usually the discounts are 25%, 40%, 50%. | ||
You're getting a fantastic product at a fantastic price. | ||
And continue our relentless, if not entirely hopeful, fight against the globalist lies. | ||
So we're going to go to an extended video on the war in Ukraine in the next segment. | ||
We'll play my little skit here now. | ||
Clip number 14. | ||
It was several years ago. | ||
I saw this map. | ||
It's a map from 1916 that was published in Life Magazine. | ||
And it shows America as New Prussia. | ||
And so, again, I made this a long time ago and I was kind of looking for an excuse to play this video because this is about war propaganda. | ||
And this is a look back at the war propaganda from 100 years ago. | ||
And I wonder if people 100 years hence will look back at the propaganda of the war in Ukraine and see it as being just as absurd and ridiculous and nonsensical as this map from 1916. | ||
So this is a real map. I didn't make this map. | ||
I just narrated the map, essentially. | ||
I thought it would be funny to go through and narrate the map for you. | ||
So that's what I did. | ||
And... I thought it was somewhat pertinent, and since we're not going to have the Ukraine pitch meeting skit until later this week, I thought we'd go ahead and play this one to keep you satiated for a little while. | ||
So again, folks, war propaganda is nothing new. | ||
It's just as absurd now as it ever was. | ||
Here's a little piece of that war propaganda from Life magazine from 1916 called New Prussia. | ||
Let's watch. February 10th, 1916. | ||
Life magazine, using a combination of the most recent military wires from Europe, as well as the expertise of the nation's top political scientists, has produced a map that represents accurately a future in which the Central Axis proves victorious against the Allied powers. | ||
Gaze in shocked disbelief at the horror of North America under their control. | ||
Goodbye, America. Hello, New Prussia. | ||
Adios, Mexico. Guten Tag, the province of Mexico. | ||
The west coast from California to Washington, gone, subjugated by the Nippon menace. | ||
Beautiful Florida, renamed Turconia out of pure spite. | ||
And the once proud cities and provinces of the Commonwealth of Canada, abandoned to the barbarian hordes of the frozen north. | ||
Leave it to a kraut to rename this the Gulf of Hate. | ||
And what malevolent spirit possessed the Turk who built this perfidious land bridge? | ||
One can only shudder in terror as they picture in their reeling mind German steamboats plying the Straits of Horror to the von Terpitz Sea, or as it's called for now, the Atlantic. | ||
We, dear reader, assure you, this is the fate that awaits us, should we slacken in our resolve for even a single moment. | ||
Washington, D.C., replaced by New Berlin upon the shores of the Cronprins Bay. | ||
Not scary enough? | ||
Perhaps Cape Frightfulness will impress upon you the inhuman lengths the Central Powers will go. | ||
Have you purchased war bonds yet? | ||
One struggles to even comprehend living in a world in which proud New Orleans is renamed New Hamburg, where Cincinnati is torn down and rebuilt as Hindenburg, where even the Great Salt Lake is to be called the Gross Salzlaken. | ||
What kind of way to talk is that? | ||
Baltimore becomes Heidelbergopolis. | ||
Denver becomes Denverburg, of all things, and Bismarck stays the same. | ||
The Kaiser may have ambitious plans, but I know for a guaranteed fact that the people, fine people of Little Rock, Arkansas, will die before they live in a place called Wiener Schnitzelplatz. | ||
And let us not forget the Prussians heretofore secret intention of establishing an American reservation. | ||
Capital city, goose step. | ||
Population, you. | ||
Baja California, handed over to the Austrians as if it was no better than Serbia, and woe betide the fine people of the Pacific coast. | ||
Will the Japanese treat the Californians with the same barbarity with which they subjugated Manchuria? | ||
Probably more! If you're still reading this, it means you haven't enlisted. | ||
What a cold, hard-hearted beast man can be. | ||
Sometimes it's all one can do but pray for a soul that remains unmoved at the fact that should allied powers not prove victorious, Jamaica will be given over to the dastardly Romanians to do with as they please. | ||
To that portion of our readership that numbers among the upright young ladies of good repute. | ||
Should you be acquainted with a man who, when presented with this map, does not eagerly and energetically perform his patriotic duty and join the army, it is the position of Life magazine that it's right and proper for you to roll up this issue and beat him about the years with it. | ||
unidentified
|
Cowardice is death in the face of new pressure! | |
There it is, folks. They expected you to believe that back in 1916. | ||
Nowadays it'd be, I don't know, some 60 Minutes piece about a pussy riot in Russia, right? | ||
But it's all the same. It's all just as ridiculous. | ||
And that's how you take a population where 90% wanted to stay out of the war to 90% desperately signing up to go in. | ||
You've got to change their minds before you can get them to die for your country. | ||
Welcome back, folks. We're going to go to a video here from Indian News about why the Ukraine war happened. | ||
The Ukraine war is not going as well for Ukraine as you would be led to believe. | ||
But I thought it was important to play that video from making fun of the propaganda from 1916. | ||
Because we can look back at propaganda from World War I and it's outrageous. | ||
It's absurd. It's ridiculous, right? | ||
To think that Germany would conquer all of America and rename the Great Lakes after beer, right? | ||
Pilsner Lake. I mean, it's just, it's absurd. | ||
We can look back and we can laugh at it. | ||
We can look back at propaganda from World War II and see, you know, cartoons where Superman is fighting some Japanese guy that looks like a deformed monkey with big buck teeth. | ||
You know, to treat them like that, I mean, that's kind of weird. | ||
We can look at that kind of a sconce and go, I don't get how that was so effective. | ||
This is very insulting in my opinion. | ||
I wouldn't have fallen for this. And then we can, you know, scoop forward and you can move all the way up until, you know, the war in Iraq. | ||
And we can look back now at the speeches given about how it was your patriotic duty to go engage yourself in some war in the desert for no particular reason and, you know, bankrupt your country and ruin your reputation across the globe. | ||
And we can see that and go... I was so ridiculous. | ||
It was so absurd. I can't believe we fell for that. | ||
They were pulling our heartstrings. | ||
It was so blatant. I can't believe we fell for that. | ||
And then you get to Ukraine, and they're just like, yeah, we have to go to war with Ukraine. | ||
No, it's all totally true and real. | ||
No, how dare you question the intelligence? | ||
How dare you? We have to go to war now. | ||
We have to. And it's just like, will we ever learn? | ||
Can we ever wake up from this? | ||
Can we ever see the propaganda for what it is when it's necessary to see clearly? | ||
Or is it always in retrospect? | ||
Do we always have to get several decades away to look back and go, oh, God, we were being tricked. | ||
Jeez, who knew? We knew, and we've known the entire time. | ||
But, you know, World War I especially... | ||
You look at 1916, 1915, 14, nobody in America wanted to get involved. | ||
We'd never been involved in a European war. | ||
It was something we were not even remotely interested in. | ||
Half the people in Texas were like Germans who only spoke German. | ||
They're supposed to now go to war with Germany? | ||
For no reason? It made no sense. | ||
And you talk about the Lusitania, and that may have been the big event, but that was an aspect of unrestricted warfare, unrestricted submarine warfare, where the Germans had these subs where they could blow up basically any ship at will without the ship ever even detecting them, because the Germans were the only ones with these sophisticated submarine technology. | ||
And this wasn't going well, because... | ||
Germany was blowing up ships that had civilians on it. | ||
They were blowing up ships that belonged to, like, America. | ||
And America was getting pissed off. | ||
So they said, all right, all right, we'll restrict our submarine warfare. | ||
So what they started doing was they'd come up and they'd go, look, you know, hey, we're right here. | ||
We could have blown you up, but we didn't. | ||
But we will, so you have to surrender. | ||
And they would get the ships to surrender. | ||
And if it was a merchant ship or something, it would avoid being blown up. | ||
So Germany was trying not to escalate things. | ||
So what the British decided to do was they would... | ||
Start firing at the submarines when they came up to demand a surrender. | ||
So the Germans went, okay, we're just going to start blowing up ships again. | ||
We come up out of a courtesy to you to go, hey, we could have blown you up, but we'd rather demand your surrender. | ||
And then you start firing at us. | ||
So we're just going to blow your ships up again. | ||
And also, you know, Britain was running weapons on so-called civilian, you know, vessels, and so the Germans would blow it up as a legitimate war target as it was transporting weapons, but a bunch of civilians would die, and all this was purposeful to then show the headlines, oh, Germany kills this many... | ||
We have to go to war with them. | ||
So they have to do all of this stuff in the background to both cause the conditions for the war to come about and then shape people's minds so they're okay with going to war over this. | ||
I mean, it's a very sophisticated process that's apparent if you just look and look around and, you know, understand that the goal of these people isn't peace or anything good. | ||
It's just endless warfare. | ||
Then it's easy to see this for what it is. | ||
But for some reason, the wider public seems incapable of looking at this with lucidity and clarity until 100 years after. | ||
So all we're asking is the people just take themselves out of the current propaganda maelstrom that they find themselves blinded by and just think for yourself for once. | ||
And it would really help us all not die in a flaming hellstorm. | ||
So thanks for that. Thanks for doing that, please, won't you? | ||
And again, InfoWars has been right about the war in Iraq. | ||
It's been right about the Patriot Act. | ||
It's been right about the war in Ukraine. | ||
It's been right and right and right and the war in Syria, etc., etc. | ||
So I just, again, I just hope that We can move into the future. | ||
I hope that we can continue to do what we do here, questioning the warmongers that would rather have us all fight each other than learn to progress as human beings into the future. | ||
If you support us in this mission, please do go to Infowarsstore.com. | ||
Please find a supplement for yourself and improve your own life at the same time as you're keeping us on the air. | ||
It is a true 360 win. | ||
And if you have trouble sleeping because your brain is racing from all the ridiculous nonsense that you have to deal with every single day, like yours truly, might I suggest down and out. | ||
It is 40% off. Incredibly powerful liquid tincture sleep assistant, not a medicine, but supplement. | ||
And it is really incredible. | ||
Down and out. 40% off. | ||
Now let's go to this Indian news report on why Ukraine was really attacked. | ||
Keep in mind, this has been apparent to anybody who's been paying attention the entire time. | ||
unidentified
|
Let's watch. They say there are two sides to every story. | |
Consider both before you form an opinion. | ||
Easier said than done. Look at the conflict in Ukraine. | ||
One side is dominating the global narrative. | ||
The other side has been proclaimed the villain. | ||
I'm talking about NATO and Russia. | ||
But what led the world to the point of this invasion? | ||
Leaders in Moscow say they are the aggrieved party. | ||
They are the victims of NATO's eastward march. | ||
And they're only acting in self-defense. | ||
Over the past 25 years, NATO has been creeping closer to the Russian border. | ||
Former Soviet states have become NATO members. | ||
This military alliance has technically absorbed the entire security belt of Moscow. | ||
Russia sees this expansion as a provocation. | ||
It hurts their security interests and won't end well for both sides, they said. | ||
The warnings were clear. | ||
NATO ignored them. Call it their myopia or arrogance, they downplayed Moscow's concerns, kept proceeding with new rounds of expansion until things blew up in Ukraine. | ||
Did NATO push Ukraine into this war? | ||
NATO cannot escape the blame for what's unfolding in Ukraine. | ||
In 1989, the Berlin Wall collapsed. | ||
In 1991, the Soviet Union disintegrated and the Iron Curtain was completely demolished. | ||
Europe's regional order hinged on one question. | ||
Should Germany align itself with the US and NATO, or should it join the Russians through the Warsaw Pact? | ||
The U.S. government, under George H.W. Bush, made an offer to Russian President Mikhail Gorbachev. | ||
It suggested if Germany became a NATO member, NATO would stop expanding, not one inch eastwards. | ||
No new members. Today the U.S. says it made no such promise, that no such deal was ever struck, but hundreds of memos, meeting minutes, and transcripts from U.S. archives indicate otherwise. | ||
Nevertheless, Moscow bought the offer. | ||
It demolished the Warsaw Pact in the hope that the West would follow suit, that NATO, too, would be dissolved. | ||
But that never happened. | ||
NATO refused to seize operations. | ||
And to add insult to injury, they kept the door for membership open. | ||
Russia saw it as a stab in the back, and NATO kept pushing the dagger deeper. | ||
Look at the situated in Russia's backyard. | ||
It does not end there. As of 2021, NATO officially recognized three more aspiring members, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Georgia and Ukraine. | ||
Last we checked, NATO was also in talks with Sweden, Finland and Serbia for membership. | ||
So to put it simply, much of Eastern Europe, which once used to be part of the Soviet Union, has now joined NATO. And this happened despite Russia's protests and warnings. | ||
The last reasonably friendly warning from Moscow came in the year 2007. | ||
Vladimir Putin addressed the annual Munich conference where he said, and I'm quoting, NATO has put its frontline forces on our borders. | ||
This expansion represents a serious provocation that reduces the level of mutual trust. | ||
And we have the right to ask against whom is this expansion intended and what happened to the assurances our Western partners made after the dissolution of the Warsaw Pact. | ||
These sentiments have been echoed by a host of American strategists. | ||
I'll give you a few examples. June 1997, 50 prominent foreign policy experts signed an open letter to President Bill Clinton calling America's efforts to expand NATO a policy error of historic proportions. | ||
Then we have George Kennan, the father of America's containment policy during the Cold War. | ||
He, too, called NATO expansion a tragic mistake with no reason whatsoever. | ||
The warnings went on for decades. | ||
In 2008, William J. Burns, the U.S. ambassador to Moscow, wrote a letter to the State Department where he said that Ukrainian entry into NATO is the brightest of all red lines for the Russian elite. | ||
He said that even Putin's sharpest critics at home consider Ukraine's entry a direct challenge to Russian interests. | ||
It does not end there. This is Robert M. Gates. | ||
He was the defense secretary in the Bush and Obama administrations. | ||
He wrote in his memoir that trying to bring Georgia and Ukraine into NATO was truly overreaching. | ||
Then we have Strobe Talbot, a former deputy secretary of state. | ||
He described the Russian perception in a similar way, how they consider NATO as a vestige of the Cold War and point out that if the Warsaw Pact was disbanded, why did the West not dismantle NATO? So several voices in the Western world had warned that Russia's protests have merit and that NATO expansion could spell serious trouble. | ||
Yet, successive American administrations paid no heed to these warnings. | ||
When we analyze why Ukraine was attacked, all of this needs to be taken into account. | ||
All right, we'll be right back, folks. | ||
Don't go anywhere. All right, welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
The takeover of the Congress by the Republicans... | ||
And Republicans with a backbone in certain instances is actually having some influence here. | ||
At least, I guess I'll believe it when I see it. | ||
But they're saying good things. | ||
Representative Matt Gaetz says the GOP is going to release the 14,000 hours of hidden January 6th tapes. | ||
That would be great news for anybody who actually cares about that sort of thing. | ||
But the question is, is it too little too late? | ||
Because we're about to go to a video here of... | ||
Jim Jordan. Talking about the weaponization of government. | ||
And I think it's even worse than he portrays. | ||
So we have a couple stories here that should illustrate it. | ||
Charges dropped on man who hurled unopened beer cans at Republican Ted Cruz, hitting him in the neck and chest. | ||
A grand jury has decided not to indict a Houston man for pelting Senator Ted Cruz with cans during the Astros World Series parade last year. | ||
Joseph Haum Arsendianenko, 33, faces charges of aggravated assault with a deadly weapon for hurling projectiles, but a grand jury dismissed the charges on Friday. | ||
That's right, folks. | ||
Hurl a full closed beer can at a U.S. senator, hitting him in the neck and face, and you won't even get charged for it in America, as long as you're aiming in the right direction, right? | ||
As long as the senator has an R next to his name, you apparently can attempt assault with a deadly weapon and not pay for it. | ||
I mean, just maybe try it yourself. | ||
Maybe go on the street and just whip a beer can at someone's head. | ||
See if you get assault charges. | ||
Well, not if you whip it at a Republican senator. | ||
You'll be let off scot-free. | ||
I mean, this is... And there are people who wandered through the Capitol that are sitting in prison right now for two years. | ||
But whip a beer can at a senator's head, you're totally fine. | ||
Hero customer who shot armed robber at Houston Taco Joint ordered to face grand jury by Soros-funded DA. So again, be a victim of the criminals or be a victim of the government. | ||
The choice is yours. Here's Jim Jordan to explain. | ||
A ploy. It's not a ploy when the Department of Justice treats parents as terrorists, moms and dads who are simply showing up at a school board meeting to advocate for their son or daughter. | ||
It's not a ploy when the FBI pays Twitter $3 million. | ||
Not one, not two. $3 million to censor American citizens. | ||
It's not a ploy when the Department of Homeland Security tries to set up a disinformation governance board, because we all know that the Department of Homeland Security can tell what's good speech and what is bad speech, what's mis... | ||
I mean, you've got to be kidding me. | ||
I tell you what, dozens of whistleblowers have come talk to Republican staff on the Judiciary Committee, don't think this is a ploy. | ||
That's why they came to talk to us. | ||
They know how serious this is. | ||
The former Democrat chair of the Judiciary Committee is in the press today saying we're going to fight this tooth and nail. | ||
This is political. But meanwhile... | ||
The former Democrat chair of the Intelligence Committee pressured Twitter to censor a journalist. | ||
You've got to be kidding me. | ||
This is the most important—this is about the First Amendment, something you guys used to care about. | ||
And I'd actually hoped we could get bipartisan agreement on protecting the First Amendment, the five rights we enjoy as Americans under the First Amendment. | ||
Your right to practice your faith, your right to assemble, right to petition the government, freedom of press, freedom of speech. | ||
Every single one's been attacked. | ||
In the last two years. | ||
Government was telling people they couldn't go to church just a few years ago. | ||
Your right to assemble, your right to petition the government. | ||
The Democrats kept the Capitol closed. | ||
You couldn't, as a citizen, couldn't come to your Capitol that you pay for to address your member of Congress, to redress your grievances, because Nancy Pelosi wouldn't let you in. | ||
Freedom of the press, I just told you what the head of the Intel Committee tried to do to a journalist. | ||
The most important right we have, though, is your right to talk. | ||
Because if you can't talk, you can't practice your faith. | ||
You can't share your faith. | ||
You can't petition your government. | ||
The right to speak is the most important, and that's what they're going after. | ||
And that's why we've had dozens of whistleblowers come talk to us. | ||
We want to focus on that because we want it all to stop. | ||
We want the double standard to stop. | ||
This idea that, oh, if you're a pro-life activist, you're going to get your door kicked in, you're going to get arrested and handcuffed in front of your seven kids and your spouse for simply praying in front of an abortion clinic and telling the guy who was harassing your son to knock it off. | ||
You're going to have the FBI raid your home. | ||
But the protest that went on at Supreme Court Justices' homes in the aftermath of the leak of the Dobbs opinion, oh, No problem there. | ||
Americans are sick and tired of it. | ||
And what we want, we don't want to go after anyone. | ||
We just want it to stop. | ||
and we want to respect the First Amendment to the Constitution that the greatest country in the world has. | ||
All right, folks, I might open up the phone lines just to see if anybody out there can tell me how to embed a Rumble video on a sub stack. | ||
Can't figure it out. I can't get it to work. | ||
All right. Lots to cover this hour before we're joined by Michael Cargill in the third hour of today's program. | ||
Still some more videos to show you and a lot of stuff to talk about. | ||
Let's talk about gas stoves, shall we? | ||
You know, I don't do a lot of, like, Pre-planning when it comes to the show. | ||
I mean, there's always stuff I want to talk about. | ||
I'm always doing research in the background and compiling things and that sort of stuff. | ||
But I don't have scripts, right? I don't have it pre-planned even in my head. | ||
Like what I'm going to say, I just sort of think about this stuff all day. | ||
And then I come on here and say what I've been thinking about. | ||
So I've been thinking a lot about this. | ||
So we'll just wing it and see how it goes. | ||
Because here's what I think when I hear about this. | ||
Here's the headline. Because we don't have enough problems, right? We don't have enough issues. We don't have enough things to deal with right now. | ||
Again, do we need to go through the list? | ||
From the open border to the fentanyl crisis to the rising violent crime to the overpopulated prisons to the collapse of the education system and the complete wiping out of gains that we've made over the last several years to the economic effects of lockdown to the mental health effects of masks to the transgender crisis to the population crisis to the, I mean, the number of real issues we have. | ||
It's truly overwhelming. You know what this is like? | ||
This is like a family who... | ||
The dad's got cancer. | ||
The mom's got leukemia. | ||
The kid is asthmatic. | ||
The kid just broke his leg. | ||
And the house pavements are underwater. | ||
And there's a leak that's flooding the kitchen. | ||
And the laundry room is on fire. | ||
And in the middle of all of this... | ||
The dad comes home with, you know, an untrained feral dog. | ||
And it's just like, dear, you know, I'm solving the problem of we didn't have a dog. | ||
Just adding more problems. | ||
Just making it harder to deal with all the other problems. | ||
Just coming up with something. | ||
They just come up with this stuff. | ||
And it's infuriating, for one thing, but kind of amazing. | ||
Kind of amazing, right? That they just do this sort of stuff. | ||
unidentified
|
And again, they are... | |
Very quick. To claim any response to their actions is oppressive and fascist and secret anti-Semitism or something ridiculous, right? | ||
They put pornographic books in your child's kindergarten class and when you try to take it out, they call you a book burner and a Nazi, right? | ||
So you're just reacting to what they're doing. | ||
You're just defending yourself from their attacks and you're the bad one. | ||
You're the one who wants to burn books. | ||
Meanwhile, of course, they are actually banning books Like To Kill a Mockingbird, classic American novels, because they depict racism as it existed 100 years ago. | ||
So, again, they're insane. | ||
They are banning things and silencing people and censoring things. | ||
They are censorious and tyrannical and all of these things. | ||
But if you react to them, you're the bad one. | ||
Meanwhile, they just come up with this stuff. | ||
They just go, oh, by the way, we're going to ban gas stoves now. | ||
And we're all just, like, reeling. | ||
We're all just, like, again, trying to put out this fire and trying to stop this leak and trying to resuscitate this, you know, dead person. | ||
And then it's just like, oh, and by the way, here's a feral dog for you to take care of, too, right? | ||
Here's another thing that is not a problem. | ||
Gas stoves are not a—go pull, people. | ||
I would love to see what percentage of people, if you said, what's an issue the government should be focusing on, what percentage do you think would go, the proliferation of gas stoves? | ||
What? Nope. This is not. | ||
So they just come up with, they just cause more problems. | ||
Like, it's all they do is just cause more problems. | ||
Just come up with something. It reminds me of defund the police in a lot of ways, right? | ||
Right. Not going to solve any issue. | ||
Probably going to cause massive other unseen or unforeseen problems in the future. | ||
But it's another thing that just like T-bones us out of nowhere. | ||
Just blindside, we get hit by just this absurd thing that we don't even know how to deal with because it's so absurd. | ||
Right? Remember the first time you heard defund the police? | ||
You probably just laughed. You're probably just like, what? | ||
What? Okay, no one's going to fall for that. | ||
Fast forward two weeks and your city council is just like, and they're defunded. | ||
Bang, gavel down, it's over. | ||
Enjoy the crime, everyone. | ||
Like, they just do it and everybody just falls into line. | ||
And that's the most amazing thing about this. | ||
So again, you know, why their folks, I mean, the way, I guess the way we should, okay, so the way that we react to this is to treat it like a joke. | ||
But it's not a joke. These people are serious and they're just going to do this. | ||
So it's almost the, you know, first they laugh at you, then they fight you, then we win sort of thing. | ||
It's like, first, Republicans just make a joke out of this. | ||
First they go, yeah, right, yeah, okay, we're gonna get rid of gas stoves, sure, yeah, we'll get rid of your microwave next. | ||
And then it's like, the legislation's gonna pass. | ||
And they're going to be like, wait, what? We really have to... | ||
And then we have to fight back and try to argue about like, oh, well, this gas is actually more efficient. | ||
And we have to get into the weeds. | ||
Suddenly this becomes a whole thing. | ||
We're talking about gas versus not gas versus what's it going to be? | ||
Or what about the metals? | ||
And we need to make that. And it's just like, why? | ||
Why did you make this a thing all of a sudden? | ||
And why do leftists fall for it? | ||
And how do you not see that this is just arbitrary control over something... | ||
In and of itself, it's just arbitrary control. | ||
It's just somewhere that they see they can make an excuse to have power over you in some meaningless but impactful way, and they just are doing it. | ||
It's crazy. It's crazy, and it's like there is no good way to respond to this. | ||
The only good way to respond to this is just to be like, shut up. | ||
Just shut up. When they talk, well, you have to understand the gas, but it's just like, no, no, no, shut up. | ||
We got real problems to deal with. | ||
You want to talk about gas stoves, go write a blog, okay? | ||
Go talk about it on Twitter. | ||
Just shut up and go away. | ||
And if you dare to try to make this a law, we're gonna go after you so hard. | ||
Just shut up. I mean, it's the only answer to this. | ||
Because as soon as you get into the weeds about it, as soon as you start actually trying to logically debate with these people, you've already lost. | ||
There's no logic to this. | ||
There's no reasoning behind this. | ||
And we'll get into this. | ||
I mean, okay, so we'll see how this goes, right? | ||
Oh, and we'll talk about what the real effects of this. | ||
Where's the... Well, this is another good point here. | ||
But the AOC tweet's what I'm looking for. | ||
If y'all can bring that up in the response to it. | ||
But this is a tweet from somebody that also lays it out fairly concisely. | ||
Rachel Goldsmith on Twitter. | ||
An F-35 burns 1,500 gallons of jet fuel an hour. | ||
But tell me again how I should switch to an electric stovetop for my family of six? | ||
And again, it's like, why? | ||
Why even get into the argument? | ||
Why even try to debate with these people? | ||
They don't know why they support this stuff. | ||
They don't have any idea what the... | ||
What the thing they're supporting is. | ||
But luckily for them, they have a great little tool. | ||
They have the mainstream media to tell them what to think. | ||
So they don't have to reason or rationalize or take their own conscience into account. | ||
They simply have to listen and repeat, read and believe. | ||
And so again, this is the cycle that we go into. | ||
Nobody has a problem with gas stoves. | ||
They're not a big problem. It's not a major crisis. | ||
It didn't kill 100,000 people last year like fentanyl did. | ||
It's not bankrupting us. | ||
It's no big issue. If they'd never done anything, we would continue to live our lives perfectly normal and perfectly, you know, in perfect comfort. | ||
It'd be no big issue at all. | ||
So they just come in like a feral dog to a birthday party and just wreck everything, okay? | ||
And then... Republicans treat it with the absurdity it deserves. | ||
Ronnie Johnson says, I'll never give up my gas stove. | ||
If the maniacs in the White House come from my stove, they can pry it from my cold, dead hands. | ||
Come and take it. He's just being a little ironic, right? | ||
It's like... Just mocking the idea that, like, you're going to come for our stoves? | ||
And again, this is the mistake that we make because AOC's response to this is the perfect illustration of who we're dealing with. | ||
AOC responds, did you know that ongoing exposure to NO2 gas from gas stoves is linked to reduced cognitive performance? | ||
See, she's calling him stupid. | ||
She's being a little bitchy. | ||
That's her, you know, brand. | ||
But you forget, folks. | ||
They don't find this ridiculous. | ||
They don't think it's absurd that they're going after gas stoves all of a sudden. | ||
It's their belief now. | ||
AOC is fully on board. | ||
She completely believes that she's going to fight for this. | ||
And you're stupid if you don't do it too. | ||
All right, folks. It's on display. | ||
It's on full display now. | ||
The ability of the NPCs to march in lockstep with whichever absurd pronouncement is made by their controllers. | ||
It's just, again, truly just something to behold. | ||
Never once have these people actually thought about gas stoves or considered this a big problem. | ||
Yesterday, if you'd mentioned gas stoves to them, you would get a bewildered look, confused. | ||
What are you talking about? | ||
That was yesterday. Today, they're all on board. | ||
Today, 100%, they're all completely on board. | ||
They are there to tell you, to be the warriors in the front line telling you why they need to be banned, why you're stupid for not wanting to ban them, to talk about how educated and important they are for knowing that it needs to be banned, and they're going to ban it, whether you like it or not. | ||
Because they can and they will. | ||
They'll come up with whatever excuse they want. | ||
Is it global warming? Is it toxins? | ||
Is it racism? | ||
Whatever. Doesn't matter to them. | ||
They're just on board now. They're just fully invested. | ||
They're on board. They believe this with their heart and soul. | ||
And they'll mock you for not believing this idea that they had no idea existed yesterday. | ||
Really, it is something to behold. | ||
Let's whip this up. | ||
Look at the crew making good use of the commercial breaks here. | ||
So again, you know, we see the process. | ||
We see the Republicans taking this as a joke. | ||
It's just this absurd out of left field. | ||
It's almost like, oh, well, we'll just, you know, they can't be serious, but we'll use it to mock the leftists. | ||
You don't realize the leftists are very serious about this. | ||
They don't know why. They couldn't tell you what the science is behind this or what the point is farther down. | ||
They don't know. They don't care. | ||
They just do. They just do what they're told. | ||
And they don't just... It's not like they're like, well, it's kind of a stupid idea, but it's our side, so we're just going to... | ||
No, no. They fully believe it. | ||
These people are cult members. | ||
They will argue with you. | ||
They will act as if this is a deeply held conviction, even though they just learned about it yesterday. | ||
It doesn't matter to them. | ||
And it's, again, just something to behold. | ||
It is something truly mind-boggling. | ||
But what they're going to tell you is that it's because of the noxious chemicals. | ||
The noxious chemicals. | ||
The same people that want you to eat meat made out of chemicals and want to inject your 10-year-old with hormone blockers to permanently alter their Hormone production for the rest of their lives, they're very concerned about toxins in people's bodies, you understand. | ||
The people that tell you that the childhood obesity crisis, the answer to that is to medicate them, they're very concerned about poisoning people. | ||
The people that demand that you take a vaccine, I'm not going to look at it, I'm not going to ask what's in it, I'm just going to take it in my arm. | ||
They're very concerned about toxins going into human bodies. | ||
Again, the only answer to this is shut up. | ||
But we're going to talk about it a little bit more because it actually goes into a wider conspiracy that I know a little something about from my personal life. | ||
Again, Ronnie Johnson makes fun of this. | ||
He's like, oh, you're going to come take our stoves out of my cold, dead hand, right? | ||
Like, just like you're going to take the guns. | ||
These people are just tyrants. | ||
And AOC responds in the way that you would expect. | ||
I mean, if we're playing left is retard bingo here, we just got a full blackout. | ||
We just won the jackpot, right? | ||
You've got bitchy, snarky. | ||
You've got, I mean, if we're going down the checklist... | ||
It's something they learned yesterday, but they're condescending about their knowledge and the implication of being that you're stupid if you don't agree with them. | ||
And again, it reveals their own inadequacies. | ||
It reveals their own... What they think about themselves. | ||
They're terrified of not being as smart as everybody else. | ||
They're not. See, they're kind of dumb. | ||
So they have to make themselves seem smart. | ||
They want to make themselves seem like they're educated and they're part of the highfalutin intelligentsia, okay? | ||
So we know that gas stoves are bad. | ||
We learned yesterday, okay? And you didn't. | ||
So you're dumb and we're smart. | ||
It really is that childish. | ||
But she links this story, Vox. | ||
Gas stoves can generate unsafe levels of indoor air pollution. | ||
I have an idea. Air vent. | ||
Look, I solved it. Hey guys, I solved it with something that already exists in every kitchen. | ||
I did it. I did it, you guys. | ||
I solved the problem. Air vent. | ||
Two words. Air vent. It's over. | ||
The problem is solved now. | ||
Every stove has a vent. | ||
It's what it's there for. | ||
That's alright. They say we do most of our breathing inside, so it's a little odd that we don't think more about indoor air quality. | ||
One major source of indoor air pollution, it turns out, is the familiar gas stove, which relies on the direct combustion of natural gas. | ||
Their answer to this shouldn't be surprising. | ||
It is to electrify buildings. | ||
Everything has to be electrical. | ||
Absolutely everything. Your car, your house, and sure, this gives them the ability to cut you off and control at a minute level your every action from some centralized control center. | ||
But that's not what they want. | ||
No, they are for your health. | ||
They're very concerned about your health. | ||
They're very concerned about your health, and also they want to chop your child's boobs off. | ||
Because they love health so much. | ||
They're so concerned about health. | ||
They say all cooking should be done in a properly ventilated space, and if your nose warns you something is up, you should open a window. | ||
Common sense is your guide. | ||
Again, problem solved. | ||
Open a window, open a vent, problem solved. | ||
Anyway, so this is the story that she's like, you idiot. | ||
You have to learn that if you turn your stove on and blow the pilot light out and breathe it heavily, then it'll make you sick. | ||
So, therefore, we must ban all gas stoves everywhere from now on. | ||
Absurd, right? But here's the thing. | ||
My wife is an architect, right? | ||
She designs homes. And there's a trend in architecture now, major trend, shouldn't surprise you, just like in investments and everything else, for eco-friendliness, for the Green New Deal, for making things as efficient as possible. | ||
And so what that means is that houses are becoming increasingly airtight. | ||
The problem with that is that it creates a vacuum. | ||
And people, instead of living in a house with drafts that's breezy and breathes easily, see, that lets heat out, that lets cold air in, or vice versa. | ||
So it's inefficient. So instead, we're going to seal it up, and you're going to live in a Ziploc bag, right? | ||
you're going to live in a Tupperware container that's totally sealed completely from the outside world. | ||
The problem with that is that you're breathing in your own noxious gases and it increases the amount of noxious gases in your house produced by everything. | ||
You, your fireplace, your gas stove. | ||
Like, is that what's next? | ||
Probably, you know, right? | ||
Fireplaces also release noxious gases. | ||
It's like one solution could be a chimney. | ||
Yeah, we know. | ||
Okay, so we get how ridiculous all this is. | ||
But this is like a major problem now, and these sort of fancier home architecture firms are actually having to build in air circulation systems into the homes because they're so airtight. | ||
They create vacuums and they create unsafe buildings. | ||
Levels of air pollution within the homes as a direct consequence of the so-called green building techniques. | ||
So one problem would be just don't build it that way, and you wouldn't have to do anything extra. | ||
But the solution for the leftist, the solution for the very intelligent, forward-thinking leftist is we're not just going to use old materials and wood that breathes and just build houses in the way that we've always built them because it's healthy and natural and good. | ||
We're instead going to make a plastic box made of toxic materials, coated in toxic materials, saturated in toxic chemicals for anti-fire or whatever else. | ||
We're going to build it perfectly vacuum-sealed shut. | ||
And then in order to solve the problems that we've created by this, we're going to then install electrically powered air systems to circulate air in and out of the house. | ||
I'm not kidding. This is what they're actually doing. | ||
This is actually the solution they're suggesting to the problem they saw, they created when they were trying to solve a different solution. | ||
And it goes on. Welcome back, folks. | ||
I know we have a lot of other stuff to cover, but I got to stick on this gas stove crap for a second. | ||
Again, it's not just about the gas stove. | ||
It's about the arbitrary tyranny of the leftist, the ability of the leftist to just adopt a new, again, completely illogical concept with absolutely no... | ||
You know, self-control. They have no ability to prevent themselves from accepting this idea. | ||
It just doesn't matter. | ||
I mean, they could come out saying, you know, we're going to, from now on, all cats have to have a mohawk. | ||
And they would all just be like, sweetie. | ||
Yeah, cats need to have mohawks. | ||
So, I can't believe you don't know that. | ||
Like, it just doesn't matter. They just absorb. | ||
They're just NPCs. | ||
It's infuriating. And also the way, of course, Republicans are just continually on the back foot. | ||
We can't do anything. | ||
We can't solve anything. | ||
It's so amazing that we constantly feel a need to justify any of our positions in the Paradigm that they orchestrate, right? | ||
It's like we have to try to get them to agree that like banning pornographic books in kindergarten is bad. | ||
They aren't asking us our opinion about banning gas stoves. | ||
They're just saying, they're just going, yeah, we're going to ban gas stoves. | ||
And we're like, yeah, but why? | ||
And there's like, sweetie, the gas stove is banned. | ||
Okay? It's over. Get over it. | ||
Like, that's just the way that they are. | ||
We could take a little bit of a lesson from that because we're on the other side where we're like, actually, actually take these things as if they need to be, as if logic will win through eventually. | ||
Tell you what, logic didn't get them to this position, so it's not going to get them out. | ||
They weren't convinced through argumentation that this was the right thing. | ||
They were just told this is what you believe now, so now they believe it. | ||
You're not going to be able, right, if they didn't get to this conclusion on their own through reasoning, then why are you confronting them with reasoning now? | ||
It's absurd. But again, it's not just about gas stoves. | ||
They're claiming that the reason the gas stove is... | ||
The new subject of their mindless crusade is because it's unhealthy. | ||
It's causing people to breathe in noxious gases to a minor amount, obviously. | ||
It's not actually that big of a deal. | ||
But they're pretending it is because they've been told to. | ||
But there actually is a pretty big issue in the health of indoor air. | ||
And as I just explained, it's because of Climate change and efficiency measures imposed by the government. | ||
Not kidding. It's just what's happening. | ||
And it's one of those things that... | ||
I was showing my wife yesterday a Twitter account that posts old buildings versus what they've been replaced with, right? | ||
So it'll be this old, ornate, beautiful post office or industrial building, right? | ||
Nothing like anything. | ||
One of the common ones will be a state penitentiary in 1890 and a high school today. | ||
The penitentiary from 1890 looks like a freaking castle. | ||
It's like ornate and gothic and it's got balconies and like spires. | ||
And then like the high school today is just a gray box with no windows. | ||
And it's just like, gee, architecture sure has gone down pretty bad. | ||
And so I'll show my wife this and she's... | ||
You know, she's not like a political person. | ||
She's not like a right-winger. | ||
She's not like... I mean, she is just because she likes things that are natural. | ||
She likes, like, earth and, like, family. | ||
And so she's, by default, right-wing. | ||
But, you know, that's not her concern. | ||
She just goes with, you know, what she thinks is right and beautiful. | ||
So it's not a political thing for her. | ||
It's just like... She's just like, what? | ||
What is wrong with everyone? | ||
She's just like, what is... | ||
Like... Everybody knows this building is more beautiful than this building. | ||
Why did we all agree to tear down this one and put this one up? | ||
It doesn't make any sense. And it goes further than that because then you've got things like an architecture firm is very eco-friendly and efficiency and all this sort of stuff. | ||
And so what happens is they'll have somebody with a house that was built in like 1930 with wood that doesn't even exist anymore because all the trees have been harvested. | ||
So it's thicker and stronger than wood. | ||
Would nowadays and last forever. | ||
And, you know, it was all natural. | ||
It wasn't like treated or soaked in like anti-flammable stuff. | ||
So it's healthier in general. | ||
And it's well built. | ||
And it's spacious. | ||
And it breathes. | ||
And it stood for 100 years. | ||
And it's beautiful. And it's got these ornate things. | ||
All this sort of stuff. And then in come the efficiency experts. | ||
The people who are trying to do what's best for the earth. | ||
And their solution is, well, the whole thing's got to go. | ||
We've got to tear the whole building down. | ||
Put it all in a landfill and then build another building from scratch that's sealed tight and made with plastics and woods, saturated and soaked in chemicals for the earth. | ||
And it's like just on the basic logic, basic level reasoning, you have to understand how much more impactful it is for the environment to do Tear down a house, throw that house away, build a new house, than it is just to try to patch up the house that already stands there. | ||
It's just on its face it's absurd. | ||
But it's not about logic to these people. | ||
It's like a cult. It's like a religion. | ||
It's like they just do it because it's what they think they're supposed to do. | ||
So they literally think it's more efficient and more good for the environment to tear down an old house and build an entirely new one And that makes sense to them somehow. | ||
Well, because it's more airtight. | ||
And the old one would let the heat from the air conditioner, the cold from the air conditioning out. | ||
And it's like, that is so far... | ||
How long would you have to run the air conditioning with all the windows open to come up with the same amount of pollution that you get from the several tons of materials you are both throwing away and having to create to make it? | ||
It just... It's absurd on its face. | ||
It falls apart of the most basic logic. | ||
And so it's baffling how so many people fall for this crap. | ||
And plus, the old buildings are more beautiful and stand for longer. | ||
And I mean, it goes on and on and on. | ||
But again, these people are... | ||
Educated. You understand? | ||
They're educated in this way. | ||
They're indoctrinated into this mindset. | ||
They can't deal with the reality of the logical inconsistencies of their deeply held beliefs. | ||
So again, we go to this story. | ||
Building specifier. Is airtightness exacerbating ill health amidst the pandemic? | ||
Government incentives designed to encourage energy efficiency coupled with technological advances have applied pressure on the construction industry to build increasingly airtight buildings of late. | ||
However, high levels of air tightness and poor ventilation are building up major health problems in new housing. | ||
According to a study, a major study by Glasgow School of Art's Macintosh Environmental Architecture Research Unit, Meru, building specifier Joe Bradbury investigates. | ||
Meru studied 200 modern homes and found widespread evidence of poor ventilation with bedrooms being a particular problem. | ||
That's right. You sleep eight hours a day in your vacuum-sealed room made of plastic, breathing in the PFAs and your own noxious breath. | ||
It's just... But no, it's the gas stoves that are the problem. | ||
If we get rid of the gas stoves, then all this other stuff will work itself out, I'm sure. | ||
Head of Meru, Professor Tim Sharp said, Poor indoor air quality is hard for people to detect. | ||
There are clear links between poor ventilation and ill health, so people need to be aware of the buildup of CO2 and other pollutants in their homes and their potential impact on health. | ||
Modern homes are increasingly airtight and can also contain a great number of pollutants and chemicals, many of which can have serious health side effects. | ||
If you're building a new domestic property or commercial building of a certain size, it will need to undergo air tightness testing. | ||
That's right. The air tightness is the thing that's causing the poisonous gases to remain in the house and cause negative health impacts. | ||
But also the government will come in and test to make sure it's tight enough, right? | ||
To make sure it's air tight. | ||
So they're literally, they enforce you to make your house, force you to make your house unhealthy. | ||
To save the earth, of course, for environmental reasons. | ||
This assesses the air building for air permeability, checking for air leakage through gaps, holes and other areas. | ||
The government has a standard assessment procedures in place for air tightness testing, setting standards that buildings must comply with to be energy efficient. | ||
So their solution is mechanical ventilation with heat recovery. | ||
MVHR, it provides fresh filtered air into a building whilst retaining most of the energy that has already been used in heating in the building. | ||
Heat recovery ventilation is the solution to the ventilation needs of energy-efficient buildings. | ||
So again, they're going to blame... | ||
They're going to blame whatever else gives them power. | ||
But the fact is, it is the environmental standards that are causing the air to be unhealthy. | ||
And so yet again, once again, we enter into the liberal feedback loop of solving a problem that doesn't exist and in the process, creating a whole bunch of other problems that then need to be confronted. | ||
All right, folks, final segment of this hour. | ||
We'll be joined by Michael Cargill in the next hour. | ||
I know Alex talked to him a lot about Obviously his case where he was able to get the ban on bump stocks repealed. | ||
And we'll talk a little bit about that, but we're going to talk about a lot of other rights that are being curtailed at this moment. | ||
unidentified
|
Let me tell you folks. It's... | |
It's coming down to the wire, I guess you could say. | ||
The hour is late. | ||
InfoWars will continue to fight as hard as we possibly can. | ||
And if you support us by going to InfoWars store, we will be here long into the future to hopefully help oversee and usher in a great renaissance of humanity in a world beset by technocratic zombies. | ||
But it's entirely up to you. | ||
If you want us to go away, don't go to InfoWars store and that'll be that. | ||
We'll go away. It'll be over. | ||
We will not be able to afford to broadcast 10 hours a day or host Bandot video with all the great content creators, InfoWars.com. | ||
It'll just go away. It'll be over. | ||
All it takes is you to do nothing. | ||
All it takes for evil to win is for good people to do nothing. | ||
If, on the other hand, you go to InfoWars store, if, on the other hand, we're able to get the funding that we need to make it through this most difficult time in our entire history, then we'll come back. | ||
We'll never go anywhere, but we'll be back on top and we'll be stronger than ever. | ||
And, of course, none of this has to do with our will to fight or our... | ||
You know, desire to keep this going. | ||
We will fight as long as humanly possible, or I should say as long as financially possible, and that's why it's so important that you go to Infowarsstore.com, and of course we make it easy for you to do so. | ||
I suggest Down and Out, 40% off. | ||
It's the Liquid Tincture Sleep Support Formula, and it is incredibly powerful. | ||
I use it myself. I have a lot of trouble sleeping, and yet Down and Out will... | ||
Will knock me out. It really will. | ||
So just my personal guarantee, if you are like me and have trouble sleeping down and out, can help you get a restful night's sleep. | ||
You'll stay asleep all night, at least I do. | ||
And wake up feeling refreshed in the morning. | ||
And I like the liquid tincture because unlike the pills, Knockout, which is also extremely effective and good, Down and Out I like because you can sort of tailor it to exactly what you need for that particular night. | ||
You can get a big drop, little drop, or you can just get exactly, you know, what's right for you. | ||
And so try Down and Out for yourself. | ||
It's 40% off. Find out what the amount is that you need and just notice the Miraculous changes in your life that just getting a good night's sleep can have. | ||
Go now to Infowarsstore.com. | ||
Get down and out for 40% off. | ||
And there's other stuff there, too. | ||
There's things like Diet Force. | ||
There's things like the 1776 Testosterone Boost. | ||
There's things to help you stay healthy naturally. | ||
See, our approach to things is a little different than, I guess you could say, the mainstream. | ||
And we've got some stories to highlight that. | ||
But I'm going to do a little research here. | ||
Maybe we'll do a little live research. | ||
But here's the story that's been making the rounds recently. | ||
And again, just like so many of these stories, it's not about the story itself. | ||
It's about the wider context of the story and what we can glean on the outside world from the story. | ||
Childhood obesity requires early aggressive treatment, new guidelines say. | ||
This story from NPR. Children with obesity should be offered more intensive treatment options earlier, including therapy and medication, says the leading U.S. Satanist, I'm sorry, pediatricians group. | ||
unidentified
|
And again, it's just... | |
Like we're not offering some revolutionary idea. | ||
We're not suggesting some... | ||
It's a whole new way of doing things that's better than the old way. | ||
All we do here is just advocate for common sense. | ||
All that we do here is just beg people to use their inborn, logical, reasoning capabilities and just think in a slightly wider scale than you're being told to think by the mainstream media. | ||
Just zoom out a little bit for you. | ||
Just take a step back for yourself. | ||
And just go, okay, what is the problem? | ||
What caused this problem? | ||
What's the solution to this problem? | ||
Think about any problem that we have in America as a symptom of a sickness. | ||
That's how they think about these problems. | ||
And as always, their solution to every illness or sickness or symptom is medication. | ||
Medicaid, Medicaid, Medicaid. | ||
Surgery, medication, intervention. | ||
Domination. It's never just solve the problem. | ||
It's treat the symptom and ignore what created the symptom, right? | ||
Don't treat the sickness, treat the symptom. | ||
Every one of their solutions, so-called, is like the vaccine. | ||
It really is like the vaccine. | ||
It's like you go into the doctor with a sickness and And he sees your symptom. | ||
He doesn't look any deeper. | ||
He doesn't try to find out, okay, is the rash that you're experiencing actually just the, you know, what's being shown on the surface of the skin? | ||
And really there's cancer underneath that they need to treat with radiation or, you know, anything else. | ||
They just go, oh, you have a rash. | ||
We'll tell you what, you know, put on this mercury... | ||
Uh, lotion. | ||
And you're just like, so now the rash is still there. | ||
It's still going. The cancer that's underneath is still festering and growing. | ||
And also now you have mercury poisoning because that's poison that you're putting on your skin. | ||
So just everything, every solution of theirs is poison. | ||
Every antidote to their madness is nature, is natural, is God, is family, is humanity, is togetherness, is just basic reasoning from a hundred years ago. | ||
That's all it takes. We're not suggesting anything radical here. | ||
We're not suggesting anything unheard of. | ||
You got fat kids? | ||
Make them run around. | ||
Problem solved. | ||
You want to stop childhood obesity? | ||
Stop feeding your children buckets of sugar. | ||
I know. It's so crazy. | ||
We're these wild-eyed conspirators. | ||
The rational, respectable authorities are here to tell you the solution is surgery to your child. | ||
That the solution is not a moderate alteration of your behavior. | ||
It's medication. | ||
It's some pharmaceutical potion that they've created that will cure you of your ills without requiring even the slightest medication. | ||
Example of self-control or, you know, honor or, you know, just loving yourself, right? | ||
These people are just like, you should love yourself. | ||
They think loving yourself means like indulge in your basis desires regardless of what, you know, effect it has. | ||
Now, if you really love yourself, you'll be disciplined. | ||
If you really love yourself, you will be... | ||
Caring for your own body. | ||
These people think to love yourself is to just indulge in whatever animalistic desire happens to flip through your mind at the time. | ||
This is NPR. They say children with obesity should be offered more intensive treatment options earlier. | ||
They don't include exercise. | ||
They don't include eating right. | ||
They include therapy and medication. | ||
Because they want to make you think that if you just choose to eat unhealthily and you choose to not get exercise, then really it's because you have a mental condition. | ||
It's probably because you had trauma when you were a child. | ||
So it's not your fault that you were making the choices that you're making. | ||
It's somebody else's fault. | ||
So you need to go to therapy and engage in this satanic sacrament of inversion confession. | ||
And... They can help you be okay with how fat you are. | ||
Or maybe they can get you some amphetamines to crush your appetite because apparently you can't just have self-control. | ||
This isn't leftist activists. | ||
This isn't fat activists or whatever they call themselves. | ||
This is the American Academy of Pediatrics. | ||
In the new guidance on childhood obesity, the first in 15 years moves away from watchful waiting or delaying treatment to see if children outgrow obesity. | ||
The group is now advising pediatricians to, quote, offer treatment options early and at the highest available intensity for one of the most common chronic diseases amongst children. | ||
Obesity is associated with a range of long-term health problems, including heart disease and diabetes. | ||
The goal is to help patients make changes in lifestyle, behaviors, or environment in a way that is sustainable and involves family and decision-making process every step of the way. | ||
Stop feeding your fat kid sugar. | ||
That's what they should say. Send your tubby little child outside to run around every once in a while instead of sitting them in front of a screen all day. | ||
That should be their solution. | ||
No, their solution is drugs and surgery. | ||
As young as the age of 12. | ||
While teens 13 years and older with severe obesity should be evaluated for weight loss surgery. | ||
So again, they don't want to solve any problems. | ||
They want to offer ham-fisted, no pun intended, half-assed solutions that require you to become lifelong subjects to the military-industrial fiefdom. | ||
Which is hilarious because, again, the story I'm reading is from NPR, and if you just take a quick little perusal over the NPR headlines over the last year, diet culture is everywhere. | ||
Here's how to fight it. How body positivity can lead to better health. | ||
What if the best diet is no diet at all? | ||
So they're here to tell you that dieting is wrong, that being fat is good, that being obese is healthy, and also if your child is obese, you should subject them to surgery and medication. you should subject them to surgery and medication. | ||
English historian Peter Heather controversially argued that Rome was ultimately overcome by illegal immigration. | ||
Heather accepted the academic analysis that the Huns on the Pontic Steppe in the late 4th century set these migrations in motion. | ||
unidentified
|
Those are catapults. | |
However, according to Heather, the assumption that the barbarians were then peacefully absorbed into Rome smells more of wishful thinking than likely reality. | ||
Rome had always been an inclusive society that welcomed immigrants. | ||
Immigrants were given employment in the Roman army, but were welcome only if they assimilated. | ||
Of course, Rome still fell. | ||
What makes anyone think that the United States and Europe can absorb violent, non-assimilating immigrants from all over the world, with the result not ultimately collapsing 21st century civilization? | ||
unidentified
|
The drug crisis in the United States continues to escalate. | |
This year, more than 100,000 Americans died due to a drug overdose. | ||
It is now one of the top ten reasons for deaths in America. | ||
Breitbart reported that Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton filed a lawsuit against the Biden administration over its rule change allowing immigrants into the country who will be dependent on welfare. | ||
Federal immigration law has required a public charge determination for immigrants which bars them from staying in the country if they are likely to use welfare programs like food stamps, Medicaid, or government housing. | ||
Studies show taxpayers are being billed about $1,600 a year per immigrant and that immigrants use 33% more cash welfare than American citizens. | ||
Similarly, about 63% of non-citizen households use at least one form of public welfare, while only about 35% of native-born American households are on welfare. | ||
The architects of this collapse know full well what they're doing. | ||
unidentified
|
We hear frequently that people are at the center of sustainable development. | |
And we know that, by definition, people are at the center of populations. | ||
Well, from these two simple observations, it follows that an understanding of population patterns and trends will be essential for the successful implementation of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development. | ||
Let me be clear. | ||
Title 42 or not, the border is not open. | ||
The collapse is right in front of us. | ||
As Californians flee for Mexico under California Governor Newsom. | ||
unidentified
|
Both of you are leaving California too. | |
Some fear that mass departures by the state's billionaires and tech companies could reduce local and state tax revenues. | ||
Just 1% of California's top income earners are responsible for half of all income tax revenue. | ||
Those drops could have the potential to affect government services for years to come. | ||
And illegals kill Americans at a higher rate than Americans kill each other. | ||
unidentified
|
How many American children are going to be burned alive before our elected leaders decide to take action? | |
The Republicans don't care. | ||
They don't want to stand up to the donor class. | ||
The Democrats sure don't care. | ||
They want new voters. Big business? | ||
They want cheap labor. | ||
Meanwhile, ICE is confirming that Jose Rosales, who's accused of killing Harris County, Texas, Corporal Charles Galloway, is in the country illegally when he murdered that officer. | ||
Tell us what happened to your brother. | ||
unidentified
|
He was murdered in 2018 by an illegal criminal alien. | |
She was rear-ended by Ezwin Mejia, who was 19 years old, here illegally. | ||
Margarito Quintero Rosales told authorities he fell asleep at the wheel and his van drifted into the oncoming lane. | ||
He was here illegally. There's not a day goes by in this country that there isn't at least one American citizen that dies at the hands of someone who's unlawfully present in the United States, whether it is an act of homicide, whether it's an act of willful manslaughter, whether it's an OWI on the streets of America. | ||
Hardly anybody has gone through the last 10 years and doesn't at least see that show up in their local newspaper if it doesn't show up in their neighborhood. | ||
The cold reality ignored by the media industrial complex lingers in the shadows of a crumbling America, vomiting the United Nations replacement migration directive Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
Third hour of American Journal has begun. | ||
I'm your host, Harrison Smith. | ||
Joining me in studio is Michael Cargill. | ||
He's an Army veteran, expert marksman, and co-owner of Central Texas Gunworks, a company in South Austin specializing in firearm sales, gunsmithing, personal protection, and more. | ||
As a Texas DPS-certified CHL instructor, Michael has taught thousands of applicants how to obtain their CHLs with a 99% success rate. | ||
Also happens to be my gun shop of choice, personally. | ||
It's near my home. It's very nice. | ||
He's here with us today to talk about major litigation he's behind in appealing the bump stock ban. | ||
You can find the website for Central Texas Gunworks at centraltexasgunworks.com. | ||
Thank you so much for joining us, Michael. I appreciate that. | ||
Well, congratulations on the decision. | ||
Tell us where this process is. | ||
Just lay the groundwork for us. | ||
We all know about the bump stock ban that came from the Trump administration after the Las Vegas shooting. | ||
A lot of people not happy about this. | ||
You actually took action to reverse this. | ||
You know, fiat declaration they made declaring these things illegal. | ||
Tell us about how it started and where it is now. | ||
Yeah, so once the federal government came down, the ATF basically said that they're going to ban bump stocks. | ||
They started their investigation. | ||
They went through the process of questioning, you know, Asking people to, you know, input, you know, comment and stuff like that. | ||
We knew that this was coming to fruition, that they were actually going to shut it down, which is actually crazy to me because something that we purchased legally in the United States, I have it in my house. | ||
I bought this. | ||
They actually, an agency within the federal government decided they were going to ban it and confiscate it or make you destroy them and not reimburse you for it. | ||
I'm like, well, one, you don't have that right and you need to reimburse people on top of that. | ||
You just can't ban something and take it from them. | ||
So I decided to do something about it. | ||
Everyone, you know, was complaining and griping, you know, what do we do? | ||
I said, well, you know, I'll just file a lawsuit. | ||
So I went searching around, you know, asking for attorneys to actually represent me in this case, and I couldn't find any attorneys. | ||
It was really hard. So finally we found an attorney, a group of attorneys, who decided they were going to file this lawsuit, and we filed it in federal court. | ||
And so we went to Austin, and it was a long battle. | ||
You just don't win right away. | ||
We went to Austin. | ||
We filed it in Austin, the federal court. | ||
We actually lost that case in federal court. | ||
The judge, it was really pretty amazing. | ||
The judge was probably one of the dumbest judges I've ever said in this courtroom. | ||
Well, that's saying something, because I've seen some judges in my time. | ||
And so he actually, you know, compared the bump stock to a shotgun. | ||
And so his interpretation was, okay, so you mean to tell me every time I pull my left arm, I pump my left arm, then the gun fires? | ||
And he said, oh, kind of like a shotgun. | ||
So he was actually basically saying a shotgun was a machine gun. | ||
Right. That doesn't make sense on a number. | ||
It's not like a shotgun, but if it was like a shotgun, then it should be legal. | ||
Okay. All right. So, complete idiot. | ||
So, we just sat there, didn't say anything. | ||
I let my attorneys deal with that, and we lost that case, of course. | ||
So, then we appealed the case to the Fifth Circuit. | ||
Well, we get to the Fifth Circuit. | ||
In the Fifth Circuit, the case was heard in front of three judges. | ||
And so there are actually, I think, about five Democrat judges on this panel, you know, on the Fifth Circuit. | ||
And the rest of the judges are actually Republican-appointed judges. | ||
So out of the 17 judges on this panel, guess how many Democrat-appointed judges that we pulled? | ||
Gee, I wonder. | ||
What are the odds? | ||
Let's see. One out of 17. | ||
Yeah, three out of three, right? | ||
Three Democrat-appointed judges. | ||
So, of course, you know, we lost that case. | ||
So, we appealed again, and luckily, the Fifth Circuit decided to take this case and un-bunk, which means that the entire court would hear this case. | ||
Okay. All 17 judges. | ||
So we actually were heard in front of 16 judges. | ||
One was not present. Wow. | ||
And so that happened in September the 13th of 2020, 2022. | ||
They heard that case. | ||
My attorney did a great job of defending my stance, basically defending his stance on several things. | ||
You know, the main thing is just saying that the ATF, an agency within our federal government, cannot create law. | ||
Right. You know, you can't, you know, write a bill and, you know, just make a law. | ||
Right. Right, right, right. Congress, you know, the bill goes there, it goes to the committee, it goes to the full House, Senate, they vote on it, it goes to the president, and then it becomes law. | ||
And so, they heard this case, they agree with me 100%, you know, absolutely. | ||
Bump stocks are not a machine gun. | ||
ATF cannot create law. | ||
Uh, You know, 10 years and two presidents, you know, this was legal. | ||
All of a sudden, one day, they change your mind. | ||
They say, it's illegal. Right. | ||
You don't have that right. And so they agree with us. | ||
And the funny thing about it is the ruling came down on January the 6th. | ||
Oh, good. Just another aspect of the insurrection, I'm sure. | ||
But that's amazing. | ||
So that was the Texas Supreme Court, but the battle's not over, right? | ||
And of course, you know... | ||
Well, that's actually the Fifth Circuit in New Orleans. | ||
Oh, that's right. That's right. | ||
I read that yesterday. New Orleans. | ||
And so we won this case in New Orleans in the Fifth Circuit. | ||
So what that means is if the government does not appeal this case to the Supreme Court, it's got to go to the U.S. Supreme Court, they don't appeal and ask for a stay, then bump stocks will become legal in Texas, Louisiana, and Mississippi. | ||
Oh, that's awesome. But the government's going to appeal. | ||
I'm sure, yeah. They're signaling to us that they're going to ask for a stay. | ||
They're going to appeal to the Supreme Court. | ||
If the Supreme Court hears this case, then we have to wait, have that hearing this year, 2023, and then hopefully get a ruling by Christmastime, and hopefully we'll have a nice Christmas present at the end of this year. | ||
Wow, that's amazing. Well, again, congratulations and good job just keeping up the pressure because it seems to me like it'd be easy to give up at each setback, but you kept it going. | ||
That is absolutely incredible. And I understand, obviously, this costs money to do. | ||
It takes a lot of energy and time away from your normal business. | ||
I mean, this is something you're really doing out of a passion for our Second Amendment. | ||
And so I understand there is a way for people to support you now. | ||
And I want to talk about how I got to this point. | ||
I actually play chess. | ||
I'm all about chess, not checkers. | ||
So when it comes to getting anything done, it started in Texas where I wanted to get certain things done at the Texas legislature. | ||
So in order to get those things done at the legislature, what I did was I started educating students at colleges, universities around the state of Texas. | ||
I went to Texas Tech University, taught a license to carry or concealed handgun course for 100 students, staff and faculty several times. | ||
I went to University of Texas, taught a group of students and staff and faculty of 100 of them several times of the concealed handgun license process. | ||
I went to Texas A&M, talked to different student groups of all the universities in the state of Texas. | ||
I've gone to San Antonio universities down there. | ||
And I started this 20 years ago because I wanted to change laws in Texas. | ||
Right. Right. Attorneys that are clerking for judges, and they're judges that are sitting in different courts around the country. | ||
Right. And they learned and they remembered, you know, that I know what I'm talking about, and that's how we made this all happen. | ||
So you were developing your knights. | ||
You were setting up your bishops long ago, and it would come to fruition later down the line. | ||
I think that's brilliant. I think, again, one of the important things about, you know, what you've done is at least give people a flicker of hope. | ||
I think a lot of people, they hear about the bump stock ban and they just sort of go, they're coming for our guns. | ||
There's nothing we can do about it because they think it's so hopeless with the corrupt judges and everything that we've talked about. | ||
And the fact that you've had success in this alone should inspire more people to realize it's not hopeless. | ||
Sometimes you just got to play the long game. | ||
Yeah, and the bump stock ban, it's more than just the bump stock. | ||
Right. | ||
It's about AR triggers. | ||
It's about braces. | ||
It's about AR pistols. | ||
It's about the federal government banning all these things. | ||
This is the key right here. | ||
We got an appellate court to say, you know what, ATF, you can't just pick and choose what you want to do. | ||
The federal government has to create a law. | ||
And so that means now this gives us an opportunity to stop everything that the ATF's doing. | ||
This is the most important case decision. | ||
Victory. Most important victory that we have in our lifetime. | ||
Yeah, this is huge. Yes. | ||
And so this goes to the Supreme Court. | ||
The Supreme Court rules on this. | ||
This means we're good. | ||
We can shut them down on everything we're trying to do. | ||
That's awesome because what they were trying to do was set a precedent where they could... | ||
They could, I guess the word to use would be infringe on their rights. | ||
They weren't trying to get rid of the Second Amendment, just infringe a little bit, which is... | ||
Just a little inch here. Yeah, a little, yeah, this thing we don't like and this thing that we don't like and eventually, you know, they're banning potato cannons or whatever, right? | ||
Right. And so that's why it's brilliant. | ||
The Second Amendment literally says shall not be infringed. | ||
It doesn't say it shall not be abolished, right? | ||
It's any infringement is a violation of that, you know, foundational amendment. | ||
So, but quickly, the go, give, send, go. | ||
You guys have a give, send, go? | ||
Yes, please go to our give, send, go. | ||
It's give, send, go. Michael Cargill, actually, give, send, go. | ||
Cargill, because we need this to push this case forward and all the other cases. | ||
Michael Cargill versus DOJ and ATF. You can see the Gibson go there. | ||
Contribute for all this stuff that Michael is involved in. | ||
We'll be back on the other side with more. | ||
Don't go anywhere, folks. Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
Michael Cargill is my guest. | ||
He's in studio now. | ||
He's a firearms expert, co-owner of Central Texas Gunworks, and has taught... | ||
How many people have you taught to carry a concealed weapon? | ||
unidentified
|
Tens of thousands. I was just going to say, it has to be a lot. | |
It has to be a lot. And I know, I went to your store at the beginning of COVID and it was a madhouse. | ||
It looked like Black Friday and you were teaching a class and people were running out. | ||
I mean, a lot of demand for guns have gone up recently for pretty good reason, I think. | ||
Yes. 2020 was just a really weird year. | ||
We did some really weird things, things that I never thought would actually happen in the United States of America. | ||
Yeah. And, you know, people responded to that. | ||
Like, oh my goodness, the country is shutting down. | ||
You know, what do I do? How do I defend myself? | ||
You know, if I dial 911, are the police going to respond to that? | ||
So people decided, hey, you know what? | ||
I need to get a gun. Right. | ||
I need to get some ammo. I need to, you know, get all the tools I need to protect myself and also protect my family. | ||
Right. Yeah, well, you know, with the Defund the Police program, in Austin, you know, they said, yeah, we're not going to respond to certain calls anymore. | ||
If it's somebody who broke into your house, where, you know, unless they're still there and actively threatening you, we're just not going to show up. | ||
So, of course, people are going to defend themselves. | ||
It's not... You can't be forced to be a victim. | ||
Although, that's where we're going. | ||
That sort of leads us into this next story. | ||
The headlines at Infowars.com. | ||
Hero customer who shot armed robber at Houston Taco Joint ordered to face grand jury by Soros-funded DAs. | ||
We talk about this on the show all the time. | ||
The modern paradigm is you either be a victim of a criminal, whether that's you be murdered by him or just be robbed by him. | ||
He can just have his way with you. | ||
And if you dare to try to defend yourself... | ||
Then you got the US government on your butt and they'll victimize you instead. | ||
I mean... How are people even supposed to operate in this atmosphere, Michael? | ||
Right. I mean, we saw it, like we were discussing in 2020, how, you know, you got the Chad, you know, overtaking a police department, a building and stuff like that. | ||
So, people nowadays, it's 2023, and we've decided, you know what, I need to start carrying a gun, carrying it concealed, keeping it hidden. | ||
That way, no matter where I go, you know, no matter where I am, for one, I'm at home, I'm taking a shower, I have a shower gun. | ||
Right. I'm sitting in my living room on my sofa. | ||
I got a gun, you know, near me. | ||
Right. I got a gun behind, you know, a painting on the wall. | ||
I got guns, you know, tapped underneath the counter everywhere. | ||
I got ARs. I got shotguns. | ||
Well, don't tell us where they are. | ||
You got a lot of guns and that's all anybody needs to know. | ||
That's right. So they're all over the place. | ||
And so, you know, this guy, I think he did the right thing. | ||
You know, sitting there, he had a right to be out with his family at a restaurant, you know, enjoying his meal. | ||
All of a sudden, guy comes in, decides to rob everyone inside the establishment. | ||
Wanted to take his money from him, the other, you know, patrons that are in the restaurant, the employees in the restaurant. | ||
And, you know, he decided to say, you know what, we're going to stop being a victim today. | ||
Yeah. Because police are not going to get here in enough time. | ||
This guy's going to run out with all of our money that we have. | ||
You don't know. It was a Friday. | ||
People usually have their, you know, their money. | ||
Paychecks. Yeah, yeah. In their pocket. | ||
And I've seen enough videos of people robbing a 7-Eleven and they get all the money and they just decide to kill the guy anyway. | ||
So, I mean, when somebody comes in and points a gun at your face, you can't just say, well, just give me your money and you'll leave him alone. | ||
There's no guarantee of that. | ||
The instant he pulls that gun, the criminal pulls the gun out and points it at you, I think all bets are off personally. | ||
You know, obviously you're a concealed handgun instructor. | ||
From that perspective, how would you rate what this guy did? | ||
I don't want to say his performance, but, you know, the way that this, I would say, hero, this civilian who took down the robber, how would you say he carried his handgun? | ||
Was this an appropriate use, or what did you read on this? | ||
He did an outstanding job of waiting for the opportune time to actually react and stop this guy. | ||
He waited for that right moment. | ||
You see him anticipating, should I go now? | ||
Should I wait? He waited for the guy to turn around and walk out. | ||
And just so you know, under a lot of state laws, look in the laws of the state where you live and educate yourself on what those laws are. | ||
For example, in Texas, if someone robs you and they're running away, you can actually stop them and retrieve your money immediately in fresh pursuit, immediately. | ||
So you can stop them and recover that property. | ||
So he waited for this guy to turn his back. | ||
He's going away. He shot him in the back. | ||
He was justified and he shot him in the back to get whatever that guy had taken from him because he robbed him. | ||
Whether it's robbery, aggravated robbery... | ||
Theft during the nighttime, not during the daytime. | ||
They're running away. You can retrieve that property immediately after in fresh pursuit and stop them. | ||
So he stopped that threat, returned all the money to the patrons. | ||
And I suggested he lowers up really quick, get an attorney, and let the attorney speak for you. | ||
Because the police are looking for him. | ||
They want to question him. | ||
And anytime police want to question you... | ||
They're looking to charge you. | ||
So you have a right to remain silent. | ||
Anything you say can and will be used against the court of law. | ||
So exercise those rights and remain silent and let your attorney speak for you. | ||
And they are going to go after this guy because they don't want this to be an example to other people. | ||
I mean, as crazy as it sounds, from what they do, everything they say, it's evident that they are doing everything they can to encourage this type of criminality. | ||
In fact, I believe, and I don't have the information right in front of me, but if my memory serves, maybe the crew can find the article that says this. | ||
This criminal had already been charged and convicted for a previous crime. | ||
He was supposed to be in prison for 15 years. | ||
He got early release. | ||
Whether that was part of the new George Soros DA's or COVID, whatever it was, he got early release, committed another crime, was out on bail when he committed this crime. | ||
So it's just rampant criminality. | ||
That seems to be the purpose of all of these proposals and laws being put into place. | ||
And then to demand that this innocent guy comport himself with perfect rectitude and not to fire a single bullet out of place, it's absurd. | ||
It's... I mean, am I wrong in that? | ||
I mean, they're treating this guy like he should have the training of a police officer, and even then they... | ||
But I mean, so one of the problems that they're pointing at is that he shot the guy when the guy was already down, and they're saying that perhaps that may have been excessive. | ||
But again, I think you put somebody in this position, their adrenaline is pumping, they're fighting for their life. | ||
All bets are off at that point. | ||
Yeah, so that's why he needs to lower up and get an attorney, because... | ||
And just so you know, these are repeat offenders. | ||
That's why we're having these problems. | ||
It's the same people that are committing the same crimes and because we have weak district attorneys that are not prosecuting these people that are repeat offenders, we're having to deal with them on the civilian side. | ||
We're having to defend ourselves and protect ourselves even in our home against these monsters. | ||
And so... This guy was, you know, when he pulled his gun out, he started firing, you know, your brain is going at one speed, your body's going at a different speed. | ||
You know, he's processing, you know, what's going on, his body's, you know, is actually physically reacting to that, and so reacts a little slower, you know, and it takes a little time for you to process, okay, what just happened, I just shot this guy, he stopped moving, but my body still wants to, because he's in shock. Or maybe the guy's twitching on the ground. | ||
I mean, who knows? Yeah, you're in shock and your fingers are still going. | ||
And basically that's what happened because, you know, we take people to the gun range and we train them, you know, how to shoot, how to draw from a holster and stuff like that. | ||
But the one thing it's hard to express to people is that at the gun range when we're doing training, you have eye protection on. | ||
You have ear protection on. | ||
You know, we take all these safety precautions. | ||
But when it comes to the real-world situation, when you're in that situation, there's no eye protection. | ||
There's no ear protection. | ||
There's nothing that's going to shield you from the gunshot and the ringing of that gunshot, the flash of the barrel when it actually fires. | ||
Nothing's going to protect you from that. | ||
We're in the real world situation. | ||
So this is a real world shooting. | ||
His body responded to all of that and that's how it all came out. | ||
And I think this guy is totally justified and he just needs an attorney to explain that to a jury, grand jury, or whoever it is and get this case dismissed if they do bring charges against him. | ||
Yeah, I really hope they don't bring charges. | ||
But again, I have the feeling they want to make an example of this guy to show what happens to somebody who stands up against the criminal hordes that they've released upon us. | ||
So, you know, yeah, we can only hope that he gets a good lawyer and is able to explain himself. | ||
But again, I think it's so ridiculous to expect somebody like... | ||
That's it. He didn't put himself in this position. | ||
He was put in this position. | ||
And he reacted in a way that is perfectly natural and to demand that he have... | ||
Perfect. It's absurd. | ||
That would never happen. And again, I don't think it matters how many times you go to the gun range. | ||
The target never shoots back, do they? | ||
And I think once somebody points a gun at you, I don't think it's possible to practice for what that feels like. | ||
Alright, welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
Michael Cargill is in studio with me. | ||
He is the co-owner of the Central Texas Gunworks. | ||
You can find their website, centraltexasgunworks.com. | ||
I also want to remind you to go to Infowarsstore.com to support us. | ||
We are in the fight for our lives right now. | ||
And every dollar you spend at Infowarsstore.com helps us to continue this mission to defeat the globalists and retain and regain liberty in this once great nation. | ||
What is happening to us, Michael? | ||
We're talking about gun rights. | ||
Of course, Michael was the lead litigant in, or the head litigant, I don't know what you'd phrase it, but the bump stock... | ||
Ban appeal that has succeeded now, but it's not over and there's still a lot more work to go. | ||
I don't know if we want to get into sort of the philosophy of it, but I think it's important just to set the Not necessarily said the president, but just reaffirmed that the ATF and these unelected, bureaucratic, appointed positions in our government do not have the right to write laws for us. | ||
There's a reason that the Congress exists. | ||
There's a reason the Senate exists. | ||
There's a reason we have checks and balances. | ||
And you can't just circumvent that. | ||
By making a law by some unelected bureaucrat that was appointed 20 years ago and has been there ever since. | ||
So can you talk to us a little bit about that? | ||
Because I think that is, beyond just the gun control and Second Amendment aspect, I think that's important, to just reaffirm to people that there's a reason our government does the things that it does, and you can't just circumvent that. | ||
Yeah, I try to remind people this case is not about bump stocks. | ||
It's about reining in rogue agencies within our federal government and stopping them. | ||
Let's say, for example, OSHA decides to say, you know what? | ||
You know, high heels for women. | ||
We're going to remove all the high heels from women because it's bad on their back and we're going to protect them and we're going to, you know, ban high heels. | ||
No joke, that would probably save more people than banning bump stocks would. | ||
I would have to guess. | ||
We can get some of the numbers on injuries caused by high heels. | ||
High heels are probably more dangerous than bump stocks. | ||
So we're going to ban high heels. | ||
We're going to make you remove them from your house. | ||
If you own any high heel shoes, you're going to become a felon because this is a federal law. | ||
And then we're going to put you in federal prison and get rid of all high heels. | ||
That's basically what we're saying. | ||
We're talking about reining in our federal agencies and they cannot create law, cannot write a bill. | ||
That stuff has to go through Congress. | ||
We have a Constitution. | ||
We have, you know, you've heard of the Schoolhouse Rocks. | ||
Of course, yeah. I'm just a bill. | ||
I'm only a bill, yeah. Exactly. | ||
And that's how it happens. | ||
We have to go to those basics. | ||
And this is a very simple case. | ||
I had people contact me and said, Michael, you need to argue the constitutionality of it. | ||
You need to talk about the Second Amendment rights of it all. | ||
No, I don't want to do that. | ||
The other bump stock cases, they failed because they were focusing on different things. | ||
I focused on something totally different. | ||
And there's no other... There's no other plaintiff in this case. | ||
This is just me. Me by myself. | ||
Michael Cargill against the Department of Justice and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms. | ||
Because I wanted to make sure that I did this case the way I wanted to do it. | ||
Right, right, right. I didn't want to be on someone else's train and... | ||
I have to negotiate with someone else. | ||
I wanted to do it the way I wanted to do it. | ||
And my case is the only case that has had a trial and has had a victory. | ||
No other bump stock case actually has had a trial. | ||
They've gone up the ladder on different motions and different things and they failed all the way to the Supreme Court. | ||
But my case actually had a trial in court. | ||
We've gone through the different processes of the different courts, and now we're standing at the gates of the Supreme Court saying, hey, Supreme Court, we need you to rule on this. | ||
So this becomes the letter of the law for the entire country. | ||
And so that way we can say, you know what, no federal agency can create law in the United States. | ||
We don't want it just to be for Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi. | ||
I want it to be for all 50 states of the United States. | ||
And this is such a central issue today from the CDC making up—I mean, they're not laws. | ||
They're rules. They're suggestions. | ||
But when they're enforced by the police, they carry all of the import of laws, right? | ||
Alex used the term color of law, right? | ||
So from COVID and the CDC just arbitrarily demanding things and then that being treated as law. | ||
On the southern border, the Congress never said we wanted an open border. | ||
They never passed a law saying that you could have infinite immigration. | ||
But the Border Patrol just decided by themselves to do this. | ||
So it's central to so many issues that we see beyond just the Second Amendment. | ||
So what was the argument you made? | ||
If you weren't making the argument on the Second Amendment and the constitutionality of bump stocks, what was the argument you were making? | ||
It was just that, that the agency can't create law. | ||
So we focus more on that. | ||
We're not talking about the Second Amendment. | ||
We want to make it more than just that. | ||
So they got into the Chevron difference, and I have to get an attorney in here to explain the Chevron difference and what that means and break all that stuff down because that's well out of my realm as well. | ||
But we got in so many different angles and so different points of this case where when you look at the actual ruling of the Fifth Circuit, That court was so educated on what we were doing. | ||
They were so educated on the workers of a bump stock. | ||
They were so educated to the fact that they defined what a machine gun was. | ||
So that way they made it crystal clear. | ||
This is what the law means when it says machine gun. | ||
They made diagrams or diagrams in this ruling that So when you go through this ruling, it's like, you know, 40 something odd pages and there are diagrams, there are, you know, explanations and detail, you know, going over the definitions of everything. | ||
And it was just, it is so thorough that it's just, it stops the ATF and the Department of Justice in their tracks. | ||
And that's why everyone is contacting me all around the country. | ||
RW Arms, the bump stock company, they lost $20 million they had to destroy in bump stocks. | ||
They're like, oh my goodness, your case is what we needed. | ||
It's going to get me my $20 million back. | ||
And that's for RW Arms. | ||
Another company, Rare Breed Triggers, they reached out to me. | ||
He was like, he's so excited. | ||
He's like, oh my goodness, your case is going to stop the ATF from coming after my triggers. | ||
This is what we needed. Your case is exactly what I needed. | ||
And they're taking my case and they're trying to rewrite their case and use it to bring their case forward now. | ||
So it's an example for everyone, you know, and I want it to not just be for Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi. | ||
I want it to be for all the 50 states. | ||
Yeah, it really is in a lot of ways. | ||
I guess you'd call it an info war. | ||
I guess with the right information, you can actually make changes. | ||
And I love it. It really is so inspiring. | ||
Not only does it show people that there is hope, you don't just have to let the government roll over you and just roll your eyes and run off to the woods and live off the grid in order to escape this. | ||
We can actually fight back and have victories. | ||
That alone is massive. | ||
But you're a regular guy. | ||
You're not a senator. You're a small business owner. | ||
And yet you were able to do this, achieve this, and there you've got the decision sitting in front of you. | ||
I mean, that's got to feel amazing. | ||
And it's got to be an inspiration to everybody out there who thinks, oh, I'm just some person. | ||
What am I supposed to do? You could make a court case. | ||
You could take this to the Supreme Court. | ||
I mean, people can actually do this if they are inspired by you. | ||
Just a regular old Joe that decided that, you know what, this is too much and I've got to stand up. | ||
It feels great. | ||
It feels good to actually win. | ||
My record is pretty good. | ||
I'm 2-0. I've sued the city of Austin, beat them in court. | ||
They're upset with me. | ||
Every time they see me, they're like, oh, there he is. | ||
Good. Good. | ||
The city of Austin is... | ||
Yeah. So it's good to, you know, continually win in court. | ||
And I like to play chess, not checkers. | ||
I like to look, you know, 10 moves down the road, you know, look at the big picture. | ||
Yeah. And not just focus on the little small thing, you know, focus on the bigger picture. | ||
And that's what we did. And that's why we were successful here. | ||
And we plan on being successful. | ||
We have so many different cases. | ||
This is not the only one. | ||
Currently, the ATF is going after mom-and-pop gun stores. | ||
They're trying to shut them down. | ||
And so what we're doing there is we're being proactive. | ||
I'm not being reactive. | ||
I'm not being on a defense. | ||
I want to be on the offense. | ||
They haven't come after me to shut me down, but they're coming after all these other gun stores, and they're being put out of business, and they're gone. | ||
Their gun store has been open for 40, 50 years, passed down from one generation to another, and they're gone. | ||
So what I decided was to file a lawsuit against... | ||
The ATF for them shutting down gun stores for making simple, small errors on the paperwork. | ||
Right. There's a form that you fill out when you walk into the gun store to purchase a gun, the 4473. | ||
There's a little section in there that asks for the county of where you live. | ||
People are making a mistake and thinking that county was actually country. | ||
And they were put in USA. And if you don't pick that up and catch that, what was happening is you make a certain amount of error. | ||
It's not stopping someone from getting a gun illegally. | ||
It's just a little paperwork error. | ||
Right. It sounds like how they do it with the EPA. Well, they'll go in and you can always find something wrong on a farm. | ||
Then they shut it down. | ||
And then, of course, then your only option is to go to somewhere like... | ||
I don't know, Walmart or a big store. | ||
Oh, and by the way, they just stopped selling guns. | ||
So, you know, you make it all go to the big corporate structure, which then makes the decision not to sell guns. | ||
Suddenly, you can't get guns anymore. | ||
Final segment on the other side with Michael Cargill, CentralTexasGunWorks.com. | ||
We'll be right back. Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen, the American Journal. | ||
I'm your host, Harrison Smith. | ||
My guest is Michael Cargill. | ||
We're going to get back into the conversation about guns and really the foundational purpose and why it's important that we have the Second Amendment and do everything we can to maintain it. | ||
But first, let me tell you to go to Infowarsstore.com, folks. | ||
We would not be here without your support. | ||
We will not be here without your support. | ||
But we will continue on as long as humanly possible, and that's entirely up to you. | ||
If you go to InfowarStore.com, we will be here for longer. | ||
We will continue this operation. | ||
The morale is high. | ||
We are on the march, but we can only continue this campaign if we have the supplies that we need to carry on. | ||
Just like any war, the Infowar requires, necessitates that we have the funding and the We're good to go. | ||
Continue this lawsuit. | ||
If they appeal it and it goes to the Supreme Court, he's going to have to fight it there. | ||
If it doesn't, you've still got other stuff in the works that you're doing that's having real tangible effects. | ||
You're also teaching people, so just a ton of great stuff. | ||
Go to Give, Send, Go, and you can find it at Michael Cargill versus DOJ and ATF. And we encourage you to do that. | ||
So let's just talk about the importance of why we need the Second Amendment right now. | ||
People tend to have this idea, especially in the mainstream media and just the liberal culture that we live in right now, that like it's old-fashioned, needing guns, having guns. | ||
Who needs it anymore? | ||
That's, you know, there was that way in the colonial times, but not anymore. | ||
Why is it important that we continue to uphold and reinforce and fight for our Second Amendment? | ||
You know, our forefathers, you know, decided that, you know, we have a Bill of Rights. | ||
It's not called the Bill of Needs. | ||
It's called the Bill of Rights. | ||
And so they wanted to make sure that first you have a right to, you know, say what you want to say. | ||
And then to back up that right, you can defend that right, you know, whether it's with any weapon or gun or whatever. | ||
So that was the most important thing where this country is founded on guns. | ||
You know, you go back and some of our laws are still in effect. | ||
Some laws back in the 1800s, 1869, some of the same laws are still on the books today. | ||
Right. We want to make sure that no matter what happens, whether you're in Texas, you're in Georgia, you're in Minnesota, you're in whatever state, North Dakota, South Dakota, you're in Montana. | ||
If something happens where someone decides to take over this country, they would be a fool because there are so many guns in every home in this country. | ||
We would not have something like what's going on in other countries around the world where Russia can decide to come over and do something or whatever. | ||
That would never happen here in the United States. | ||
We have too many guns here for that to allow. | ||
There's no way that an occupying force would actually land in Florida. | ||
It would be impossible. | ||
They would be fools. Have you seen those people in Miami? | ||
I know. I was going to say the Floridians would love it. | ||
Like, there's almost this part of me that's like, I wish they would try. | ||
They're standing on a ledge and waiting for the opportunity. | ||
Right. Absolutely. Absolutely. | ||
And so, you know, I made sure that I reinforced this with my family. | ||
You know, my family, they tend to vote the wrong way, but their stance on the Second Amendment is very strong. | ||
And my parents, you know, were victims of a home invasion, you know, like five or six years ago where three guys decided they were going to break into my parents' home while they were sleeping. | ||
My parents are old and retired. | ||
Yeah. And so my parents were able to shoot and kill and stop them. | ||
Wow. And send them back out from the same window that they were crawling into. | ||
Right. And so that's what it's all about. | ||
It's all about, you know, them not killing you. | ||
You, you know, you're killing and stopping them. | ||
Right. And that's what it has to, you know, we have to do. | ||
It's about wanting people to be strong and able to defend themselves and not to be scared and beaten down by anybody that's a little bit stronger than them. | ||
It's such a foundational thing for us. | ||
It's almost weird to have to explain it because it seems so obvious, I know, to people like you and I. And people, obviously, the other part of the Second Amendment is that you're supposed to defend yourself from a tyrannical I mean, | ||
that's what it was written for. And the people on the left in this country said, see, they have it bad. | ||
It wasn't like that here. | ||
And you want to tell them, no, the reason it wasn't like that here is because we exist. | ||
Because we, the gun owners, the people who refuse to bow, the people who refuse to bend, even if we don't have to use our guns, their mere existence keeps you people safe from tyranny. | ||
It keeps you people... Not like the Chinese, not being subject to this communism, totalitarianism. | ||
So thank God we haven't had to use our guns yet, but just the mere fact that we can have our guns has helped to keep away that tyranny, keep it at bay for as long as it has. | ||
Would you agree? Oh yeah, and 2020 was, I said it was like a really weird year and people tend to forget that year. | ||
But I remember when April rolled around in 2020, You know, we were still, we were busy as all outdoors. | ||
Had a tent set outside the gun store. | ||
People lined up outside, you know, trying to get people in and out, you know, as fast as possible. | ||
And I had to go to the bank. | ||
And I said, man, this is crazy. | ||
They're actually making it mandatory for people to wear masks. | ||
But we didn't have any masks. | ||
We weren't making people wear masks in the store. | ||
Not at that time. And then, you know, we actually got a visit from the police department, the fire department, the fire marshal. | ||
Not that it was a law, but the police will come and knock on your door for it, right. | ||
So, you know, I... Like, mask or mandatory? | ||
So I had to go to the bank. | ||
I said, okay, mask or mandatory? | ||
I got to go to the bank. And I say, I always carry a 1911. | ||
You know, typically, during that time frame, I was carrying a 1911. | ||
And so I was openly carrying my 1911. | ||
Had to go to the bank. And I didn't have a mask, but I had a bandana. | ||
So I go to the bank, you know, Bank of America. | ||
And I'm standing in the entrance of the bank in the glass door with Openly carrying my 1911. | ||
Right. I stood there. | ||
I looked at the inside the bank. | ||
I put on my bandana over my face and walked to the inside the bank. | ||
Right. I said, that is where we are today. | ||
Right. This is insane. | ||
It is completely insane. | ||
Where it's mandatory for me to put on a mask. | ||
So I put on my bandana, open carrying a 1911 and walked into the bank. | ||
That is so funny. Yeah. | ||
No, it just is nothing. Everything makes sense. | ||
It is so unbelievably wild. | ||
I know I've told this story on the show before, and I think I said it during the break, but I remember driving by this other gun store in Austin. | ||
I used to live near it. Every once in a while, I'd drive by, and you'd see people come out of the gun store. | ||
There's one couple in particular I remember. | ||
They looked like they were a newlywed couple. | ||
They'd come walking out with their new shotgun, and you could just tell they're excited. | ||
They're sort of handed back and forth. They're taking selfies with it. | ||
It was so like... | ||
Wholesome. I don't know. There's something about it that was like so American, this newlywed couple. | ||
Maybe they just bought a new house and they thought, let's go get a shotgun to protect our new little family here. | ||
And I don't know. People think of guns as scary. | ||
When you know guns, when you understand guns, it can be very wholesome. | ||
It's a very respectable thing to have a gun and to take your own life into your own hands and not be a subject to somebody else. | ||
People forget that and they act like guns are just this evil force. | ||
It can be a very good force in the right hands. | ||
It's very natural. I've grown up with guns my entire life. | ||
My great-grandfather, he was a minister in a church. | ||
He always carried a gun. | ||
He actually had a little Bible with a hole cut out. | ||
A little Dillinger in there? | ||
Oh, yeah. And so I actually do weddings. | ||
I'm an ordained minister, and I do weddings. | ||
And I love setting up marrying couples, you know, packing three guns. | ||
Right. I have one on my right hip, you know, one on the left and the right side of me, and make sure that the bride and groom, they were carrying guns. | ||
Right, right. Mandatory. Everyone's got to carry a gun. | ||
And so, you know, every once in a while I have that little Bible that I'm holding or a book or whatever, and inside there, there'll be a gun in there, and I read the, you know. | ||
And I bring this group together, you know, this couple together and marry them. | ||
And it's nothing like praise the Lord and pass the ammunition. | ||
Right, right. Absolutely. Praise the Lord and pass the ammunition. | ||
That's John Wick over here. | ||
Michael Cargill is the co-owner of the Central Texas Gunworks. | ||
CentralTexasGunworks.com. We only have a minute or so left here. | ||
So I just want to make sure that people can find you and support you. | ||
Obviously, the Give, Sin, Go, Central Texas Gunworks. | ||
What's coming up next for Michael Cargill? | ||
So we're still working on a lot of different other cases. | ||
We're, you know, fighting the ATF, trying to stop them from shutting down the mom-and-pop gun stores and making little simple mistakes. | ||
We're being proactive in this stuff. | ||
So we filed the lawsuit. | ||
We've made errors at our gun store, and we don't want them to come after us. | ||
I'm filing all these lawsuits. | ||
Oh, my goodness. They shut me down. | ||
So I said, I better be proactive and file a lawsuit against them for them trying to shut down mom-and-pop gun stores. | ||
Also, if you walk into a gun store and you're delayed or denied in a transaction, what the ATF is doing now is they're actually collecting information from you. | ||
If you're delayed or denied when you walk into a gun store from picking up a gun and going home with it, you're actually being reported to the FBI and your information is put in the system that every law enforcement agency in the country has access to it. | ||
Denied, that's one thing. | ||
If a person is denied, then there's something on that list there that you did. | ||
You're a felon or something like that. | ||
You're trying to get possession of a firearm. | ||
That's one thing. But delays, I have a problem with the delay. | ||
Congress did write a bill that said they're going to do that for denies, but not delays. | ||
And so we're fighting them on those delays, and we're suing them on that. | ||
So there's so many other things. This is about us. | ||
It's about all the United States. | ||
I just love that you're being proactive instead of reactive, going on the offense instead of the defense. | ||
That's the lesson that we need to learn. | ||
Thank you so much for joining us. Michael Cargill, CentralTexasGunWorks.com. | ||
That's going to do it for us here on American Journal. | ||
Thank you so much for joining us. | ||
I need to carry around more guns. | ||
That's what I'm learning. Michael Cargill vs. | ||
DOJ and ATF on Gibson Go. |