Speaker | Time | Text |
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unidentified
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The message that this conveys is that unless things change, unless the arms race is reversed, we're heading toward this midnight from which there can be no opening. | |
The doomsday clock has been set to 90 seconds to midnight, the closest it has ever been to global annihilation of the planet. | ||
unidentified
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Members of the Science and Security Board move the hands of the doomsday clock forward. | |
largely, though not exclusively, because of the mounting dangers in the war in Ukraine. | ||
We move the clock forward the closest it has ever been to midnight. | ||
It is now 90 seconds to midnight. | ||
Hundreds of thank you are not hundreds of thanks. | ||
All of us can use thousands of wars in discussions, but I cannot put wars instead of guns that are needed against Russian artillery. | ||
It is a new power to guarantee such artillery and any aircraft that will crush terror. | ||
It is in your power to make the victory. | ||
So, may your decisions fit accurately. | ||
Germany to provide Poland approval this week to send thousands of heavy battle tanks into Ukraine. | ||
unidentified
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We will also deliver battle tanks to Ukraine. | |
Lepa 2 tanks, that is the result of very close and intense discussions with our partners, with our allies. | ||
Our aim is to deliver two tank battalions together with our allies. | ||
There are many countries that want to join in. | ||
We will coordinate it and include these countries. | ||
We will train Ukrainian crews here. | ||
We will make logistics available, replenishment, and we will also allow partner countries to deliver these tanks. | ||
There are many citizens in this country that are worried because of this decision and the dimensions that this type of arm brings about. | ||
Please trust us. | ||
Trust the government. | ||
We are fighting a war against Russia and not against each other. | ||
Thank you. American lawmakers urge U.S. to ship Abrams' frontline battle tanks to Ukraine. | ||
Reuters reports breaking. | ||
The Biden administration is leaning towards sending a significant number of Abrams' M1 tanks to Ukraine. | ||
The announcement of deliveries can start this week, U.S. officials says. | ||
Today I'm announcing that the United States will be sending 31 Abram tanks to Ukraine, the equivalent of one Ukrainian battalion. | ||
Secretary Austin has recommended this step because it will enhance the Ukraine's capacity to defend its territory and achieve its strategic objectives. | ||
The Abrams tanks are the most capable tanks in the world. | ||
They're also extremely complex to operate and maintain. | ||
So we're also giving Ukraine the parts and equipment necessary to effectively sustain these tanks on the battlefield. | ||
Got a shocking video of scores of F-16s spinning around in the air in Denmark in an attack exercise on the Russians. | ||
Spoiling for nuclear war. | ||
And George Soros has crawled out from under his rock or climbed up out of hell. | ||
Stories up on Infowars.com. | ||
George Soros urged use of Eastern European soldiers to reduce the risk of body bags for NATO countries in a New World Order article. | ||
They say New World Order. | ||
unidentified
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I'm afraid to ask, but what nuclear options does Russia have? | |
Well, Russia has a lot of nuclear options, and so does NATO. And I don't think that either side would deliberately initiate the use of nuclear weapons. | ||
But the concern is that when you have a war, things get out of control sometimes. | ||
All right, folks. This is the American Journal. | ||
That is the latest on Bandot Video. | ||
NWO pushes global catastrophe closer to the edge of midnight. | ||
We'll talk about that and so much more on today's episode. | ||
Don't go anywhere, folks. | ||
We'll do the Daily Dispatch on the other side. | ||
unidentified
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It's Wednesday, February 1st, year of our Lord 2023. | |
And you're listening to The American Journal with your host, Harrison Smith. | ||
Watch it live right now at band.video. | ||
Good morning, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
Welcome to The American Journal. I'm your host, Harrison Smith. | ||
Another freezing cold day here in Texas. | ||
Woke up with our power going out. | ||
I think it's nice. It's kind of like a little preparation. | ||
It's actually extremely bizarre. | ||
I don't know what was causing this, but it's like the whole horizon would light up this crazy turquoise, and then the power would flicker on for a second and then flicker off again. | ||
And so it's nice. | ||
It's preparing us either for the inevitable downfall of civilization as less and less meritorious operators are in control of our basic infrastructure and we eventually end up without things we take for granted these days or a nuclear apocalypse. | ||
Either or, really. | ||
They're one in the same, the basic outcome. | ||
So it's sort of like we're getting practice here. | ||
And you realize in times like this, yeah, we need rules. | ||
I'm typically a libertarian. | ||
I typically have this perhaps unfounded belief that people are able to take care of themselves. | ||
But then the traffic lights go out and you see what barbarians humans really are. | ||
I have this platform speaking to a lot of people. | ||
I'd like to make a public service announcement. | ||
Maybe I can save some lives. | ||
Just because the power light The traffic light, the stoplight isn't on. | ||
It doesn't mean it doesn't exist anymore. | ||
You should still... | ||
People don't know this, apparently. | ||
When the power is out and the traffic light is out, you're supposed to treat it like a stop sign. | ||
Do people not know this? | ||
Like, it's crazy. | ||
It's absolutely insane. | ||
People are just driving right through the intersection, just full speed, as if, like... | ||
It's crazy. | ||
It's absolutely crazy. It doesn't happen as much... | ||
In Texas, growing up, everybody just knew what to do. | ||
You just treat it like a four-way stop. | ||
Everybody takes a stop. | ||
So especially if there's a lot of traffic, you know, like this direction goes, then this direction goes, then the turning lanes go, then this direction. | ||
And that's the best way for everybody to get through. | ||
I remember living in D.C. a couple years ago. | ||
And there would be times where there would be huge lines at the stoplight in every direction. | ||
And every once in a while, you'd have a line of cars go in their appropriate time. | ||
And then the cars behind them would go. | ||
Then the cars behind them would go. | ||
So you're sitting there just watching this stream of cars go by. | ||
And you're sitting there going, well, when's it going to be my turn? | ||
What the hell? And it's just like, okay, maybe we do need rules. | ||
Maybe people are just incompetent and incapable of... | ||
Just discerning reality for themselves and deciding what to do for themselves. | ||
They literally are just like robots. | ||
If they don't have a direction, if they aren't being told what to do... | ||
They just create danger. | ||
They just do whatever the hell they want, and it's not safe. | ||
It's not safe for anybody. | ||
It's not safe for the rule-following people. | ||
It's not safe for the non-rule-following people. | ||
So, yeah, it's a little taste of the future for us here in Texas today, but we all made it in. | ||
We made it here. We all sat in our cars for long enough to let it all defrost. | ||
Because that's what we do. I don't scrape ice. | ||
That's why I live in Texas. Specifically so I don't have to scrape ice off of a windshield. | ||
So I refuse to do it. But anyway, we're all here. | ||
We've braved the storms and the ice and the snow and the idiots on the road to be here safe and sound. | ||
Hope everybody out there is doing well also. | ||
So let's go ahead and get into it. | ||
Here it is, your daily dispatch. | ||
All right, here it is, folks, your daily dispatch for Wednesday, the 1st of February. | ||
Hey, everybody, it's Black History Month. | ||
It's Black History Month. | ||
It's Black History Month. | ||
I know this because I keep being told it everywhere I look. | ||
Google is telling me it. | ||
It's already on my calendar over and over again. | ||
Apple is telling me it. | ||
When I turn on the TV, they're telling me it. | ||
Everybody needs to know it's Black History Month. | ||
It's Black History Month. It's Black History Month. | ||
Will we be talking about Black History? | ||
No, we won't. | ||
Your first story. Former UK defense minister says NATO may need to send ground forces to Ukraine. | ||
It's just, you know, we have to now. | ||
We may need to send ground forces to Ukraine. | ||
We don't want to, but I guess we have to. | ||
The domino theory was once used to great effect in order to manipulate the American public into supporting the Vietnam War. | ||
But will the same narrative work to get the West to support World War III with Russia? | ||
Former UK defense minister Sir Gerald Haworth... | ||
Ugh. That's an unfortunate name. | ||
Seems to think so as he used this exact claim to justify NATO boots on the ground in Ukraine. | ||
It should be noted that a large percentage of the American populace in most of Europe have no interest whatsoever in engaging with Russia and possibly its allies in all-out war, but the establishment appears intent on forcing the issue anyway. | ||
The delivery of NATO—well, that's because we're defending democracy, you see. | ||
See, we're defending democracy, so just because the vast majority of the population doesn't want to go to war for the sake of democracy, we're going to. | ||
Wait a second. Wait a second. | ||
I sense an inconsistency here. | ||
That must be the Russian propaganda I've been reading. | ||
From Danny Haifong on Twitter, NATO destroyed Yugoslavia, NATO destroyed Afghanistan and Iraq, NATO destroyed Libya, NATO destroyed Syria. | ||
But sure, NATO's liberating Ukraine from Russia. | ||
This time, this time it's different though. | ||
No, I know every other time it's been a lie. | ||
Every other time it's been a horrific disaster for no benefit whatsoever. | ||
Millions dead, depleted uranium, etc., etc. | ||
But this time, though, but this time actually, but this time it's different. | ||
So get in line. | ||
Incredible stuff. States miss deadlines to address Colorado River water crisis. | ||
Pressure builds on California. | ||
Seven states that depend on the Colorado River have failed to meet a Tuesday deadline for agreeing on a water use reduction plan, raising the likelihood of more friction as the West grapples with how to manage the shrinking river. | ||
You know what I think we should do? We should probably import several million people and send them to live there and use the water that is increasingly scarce. | ||
You know what I think we need is a couple million more people to be dependent on that water. | ||
Maybe that'll solve the problem. | ||
You know what we should really do is turn the desert into farmland while destroying the farmland and selling it to Bill Gates so he can consign it to manufacturing of... | ||
Chemical swill. | ||
Pretty stupid stuff here. | ||
In a bid to influence federal officials after contentious negotiations reached an impasse, six of the seven states submitted a last-minute proposal outlining possible cuts to help prevent reservoirs from falling to dangerously low levels, presenting a unified front while leaving out California, which uses the single largest share of the river. | ||
Why can't they all just team up against California? | ||
That's what I don't understand. You got Arizona, California, Nevada, New Mexico, Utah, and Wyoming all sort of on the same page. | ||
And then you got California being like, you can't have water for your neighborhoods because we needed to grow almonds in the desert. | ||
Literally, that's what they're saying. | ||
I'll get into this story more later. | ||
But I don't see why the other states are just like, you know what? | ||
This is ours now. | ||
California, you have the sea. | ||
Good luck with that. Have fun... | ||
You know, dehydrating to death. | ||
That'd be my solution. I was talking about this yesterday on The War Room with Peter McCullough, | ||
Dr. Peter McCullough. I should say, respectfully. | ||
And it really does seem like there's a delayed response going on here. | ||
See, when it's tyranny that they're after, they're moving at the speed of science. | ||
They're shutting everything down. | ||
There's no time to wait for the test. | ||
There's no time to test the vaccine or to... | ||
Wait for the conclusion of the scientific experiments going on about masks and social data. | ||
There's no time! There's no time! | ||
Just mandate it now! Mandate it! | ||
But now that we're learning and the science is coming in that the vaccines don't work and the masks don't work and nothing ever worked and we knew it the whole time. | ||
Now they're going to be a little bit more hesitant to make any changes. | ||
We better just, better safe than sorry, better just keep mandating the vaccines that don't work and kill you. | ||
Better just keep forcing the masks on planes and trains, even though literally nobody thinks that that works anymore. | ||
It's just interesting how fast they're willing to go with the science when it gives them an excuse to impose tyranny on you. | ||
But when the science points to freedom, they're a little bit more cautious and reticent to jump on board. | ||
Very interesting stuff. | ||
In fact, the Biden administration is, now that one emergency is ending on May 11th, very scientific date, I should add, May 11th. | ||
Because science, I guess, whatever. | ||
That's what Biden announced. The emergency will end on May 11th. | ||
Okay. Fine. | ||
But now there's another emergency. | ||
There's a new emergency on the block. | ||
This time it's an emergency. | ||
People are not having enough abortions. | ||
The emergency of there are too many babies being born. | ||
Biden admin considers declaring a public health emergency over abortion. | ||
There's too many babies. There's too many wonderful lives being brought into existence. | ||
There's too many universes opening up in the eyes of the newborn. | ||
It's unacceptable. It's an emergency. | ||
Kill the babies. Kill the babies now. | ||
It's an emergency. Kill them. | ||
All right, welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
It's the American Journal. | ||
I rambled a bit too long during that daily dispatch. | ||
So here's our final story. | ||
Heroin use no longer a crime in Vancouver. | ||
And the results are already dramatic. | ||
Just past 8 a.m., I'm staying on East Hastings in downtown Vancouver with a small packet of crack cocaine in my hand. | ||
I didn't realize. | ||
Hunter Biden was a journalist with a telegraph. | ||
Snow is falling gently. | ||
Some have had their fix and slumped lifelessly against shop fronts or slumber in makeshift tents where many stashed guns and knives. | ||
Ah, progressivism. | ||
Ah, the future. | ||
The beautiful future of progressivism. | ||
Just literal zombies conked out on Chinese heroin sleeping in the streets and also heavily armed. | ||
It's good. | ||
It's wonderful. | ||
Women wrapped in blankets but still shivering from the negative one degree cold used blow torch lighters to melt small rocks of crack cocaine before inhaling the fumes through a plastic tube. | ||
you But can they do this in the metaverse? | ||
Local newspapers describe the street simply as hell, but the police on patrol simply walk on. | ||
In the eyes of the law, as of Tuesday, these people are doing nothing wrong. | ||
Yeah. Yeah. | ||
You know, we'll see. | ||
I guess we'll see. I guess we'll just keep tabs on this. | ||
Maybe everything will get better now. | ||
Maybe by legalizing all of the hard drugs, things will get better. | ||
Probably not, if I have to be honest. | ||
I'm thinking about this logically. | ||
I think everything's going to get significantly worse. | ||
But hey, let's just try it and see. | ||
Let's just try it out. | ||
Give it to children. See how that does. | ||
Adults in possession of 2.5 grams of heroin, fentanyl, cocaine, methamphetamine, or ecstasy will not be arrested or even have their drugs seized. | ||
More than 11,000 British Columbians have died from drug overdoses since a public health emergency was declared in 2016. | ||
That's six people a day for six years in this province of just 5 million people. | ||
It's time for a, quote, monumental shift in drug policy. | ||
They think this is going to help. | ||
I don't get it. I don't get it. | ||
I don't know. I used to be in favor of legalizing drugs, but then you see the effect that it has, and then you rethink things, right? | ||
Because you're an adult. The addictions minister of Canada, her provincial counterpart, I really don't get it. | ||
They aren't dying because the drugs are illegal. | ||
They're dying from overdoses from the drugs. | ||
So how is making the drugs legal going to help with the overdose problem? | ||
Is there a step in logic I'm missing here? | ||
I don't understand. By decriminalizing people who use drugs, we'll break down the stigma that stops people from accessing life-saving support and services. | ||
This is kind of one of those liberal mindsets that just... | ||
I don't know where they get it, right? | ||
They just sort of come up with these ideas that have no basis in reality and then just act as if it's real and they don't even... | ||
They don't even offer, like, reasoning as to how this would be real, right? | ||
By decriminalizing people who use drugs, well, the people aren't criminalized. | ||
The drugs are criminalized. | ||
So, again, just the way they word things is this just manipulation tactic, right? | ||
It's everywhere, right? It's like you can't say criminals, you have to say people who commit crime. | ||
You can't say illegal aliens, you have to say undocumented workers or whatever. | ||
It's just linguistic trickery, right? | ||
By decriminalizing people who use drugs... | ||
I don't know. | ||
It's just the weird liberal way of looking at the world that's just bizarre and backwards. | ||
It's very strange. We'll break down the stigma that stops people from accessing life-saving support and services. | ||
I think there's misunderstanding. | ||
Do they not understand? | ||
People do drugs because they like doing drugs. | ||
People do heroin because they like doing heroin. | ||
They do crack because they love crack. | ||
They love getting high on crack. | ||
That's why they do crack. Do they not know this? | ||
You're just like some dude living in a tent, looking between your toes for somewhere that you can still stick a heroin needle in. | ||
Just like your nails are falling off and you're covered in fecal matter. | ||
You're like, I have too much dignity to go get help for this. | ||
They're not helping anybody. | ||
The ultimate goal, Ms. | ||
Bennett said, is to save lives. | ||
So to save lives from overdoses, you're making it easier to access the drugs that people overdose on. | ||
Again, I guess we'll see. I guess we'll see how this goes. | ||
I don't know. Maybe we'll take your calls on this today. | ||
unidentified
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Because again, I don't know. | |
I feel like I've gone the reverse of like the cliche. | ||
I heard Owen say yesterday on the show, right? | ||
If you're 20, if you're not a liberal at 20, you have no heart. | ||
And if you're not a conservative at 30, you have no brain. | ||
But it's like I used to just have this perhaps Naive belief that people should just be left alone. | ||
They'll do what's right. | ||
They'll do what's best for themselves. | ||
I don't know. As I'm getting older, I'm just like... | ||
We need to stop these people. | ||
Somebody needs to stop these people and that's up to us. | ||
For their own good. You need to stop people from killing themselves or wasting their entire lives strung out on drugs. | ||
It's not good for them. It's not good for us. | ||
It's not good for the healthcare system or the police organizations. | ||
There's not going to be Like sure, now they're not going to be arresting people for drugs. | ||
That's good, I guess. I don't want people arrested for, you know, victimless crimes. | ||
But I have the feeling that like the number of overdoses that our emergency services are going to be having to deal with, the number of crimes that are going to be committed by people doing drugs is going to go up. | ||
So instead of just arresting somebody for having a pill, you're going to be arresting somebody for attacking their neighbor with a hammer. | ||
You know, it's just, it's not going to get better. | ||
It really isn't. It has come without criticism and accusations of double standards. | ||
This month, for instance, Canada updated its health guidance to recommend no more than two alcoholic drinks a week. | ||
By 2026, any food high in fat, sugar, or sodium must have a warning label on the front of its packaging. | ||
It really is kind of baffling, isn't it? | ||
Like, what type of world are we moving into? | ||
Where it's just like... You cannot have a large drink at McDonald's. | ||
Your soda is banned. | ||
Have some heroin or some crack cocaine instead. | ||
It's low fat. James Harry, a former drug addict turned outreach worker, is baffled by the reform. | ||
We're giving people the freedom to walk around with that poison in their pockets. | ||
It just doesn't make sense to me. | ||
No, nothing they do make sense. | ||
Nothing these people do make sense. | ||
No, it's all completely... | ||
It's completely arbitrary. | ||
What they want to be legal, what they want to be mandated, what they want to be illegal. | ||
Nothing makes any sense anymore. | ||
If you say something that they deem hateful, you'll go to jail. | ||
But throw a Molotov cocktail at a cop and you get a slap on the wrist. | ||
There's no consistency anymore. | ||
There's no underpinning of ideology or politics. | ||
You know, consistent morals that the state's attempting to uphold. | ||
It's just like, what makes people easier to control? | ||
Let's do that. People on drugs, not opposing a big threat to the system, right? | ||
This might actually be the most effective thing. | ||
It's like in Brave New World, right? | ||
They send people to Iceland if they start questioning the system. | ||
Maybe it's that type of thing. | ||
It's like, oh, questioning the system? | ||
Well, try some heroin. Try some heroin. | ||
Now you're not helping anybody, but you're also not hurting us, so do that. | ||
Incredible. All right, welcome back, folks. | ||
This is the American Journal. I have a lot of videos to show you, a lot of big stories to cover today, some interesting mysteries that we may be able to get to the bottom of, like what's killing whales off the coast of New Jersey. | ||
Sort of horrifying. We're good to go. | ||
As we say all the time on this show, liberty is not a license to do whatever you want. | ||
It's a burden. Liberty is a requirement to live virtuously, or else you don't deserve liberty. | ||
You have to deserve it. | ||
I say, like, liberty is the unguarded cookie jar, right? | ||
You're not a good person if you don't steal the cookie because there's a camera on it, an alarm on it, and you'll be punished if you try to steal it. | ||
Then you're not making a good choice. | ||
You're being forced to do something good, and there's no virtue in that. | ||
Just like there's no virtue in having somebody else take your money and give it to a charity or to take somebody's money and give it to a charity. | ||
That's not virtuous. You're not doing anything virtuous there. | ||
Where's the virtue, right? | ||
If I go to you and I put a gun to your head and I say, give me $100, you give it to me and I give it to a homeless guy, who has done the virtuous thing? | ||
Is it me? Stealing somebody else's money to give to somebody else? | ||
Is that virtuous? That's what the government does. | ||
And they think that that's charity. | ||
But, you know, in terms of the cookie jar, you know, liberty requires that you not take advantage of the liberty. | ||
So to me, like, if heroin and cocaine are legal, it doesn't affect me personally because I'm not going to do those things. | ||
Because I have responsibilities to uphold and reality to face and a child to raise and a family to support. | ||
So I'm not going to go do that stuff. | ||
So it doesn't matter to me if it's legal. | ||
unidentified
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So I don't know. | |
Then I'm just thinking about the... | ||
The fact that the stoplights went out in Austin today and people are just blowing through the stoplight. | ||
And it's like, you can. You can do that. | ||
No one's going to... The camera doesn't have power, so it's not going to take a picture of you and send you a ticket later. | ||
Not a lot of cops out on the road, so they're probably not going to pull you over. | ||
They probably don't want to anyway. It's freezing outside. | ||
They don't want to stand there giving you a ticket. | ||
So you can. You can do that. | ||
And probably the people at the intersection, they'll probably stop for you. | ||
They see you coming, they'll probably put on the brakes. | ||
And they won't just crash into you. | ||
So there's, you know... Not a lot of consequences for doing that sort of thing. | ||
So yeah, I guess you can. | ||
You can do it. That's what liberty is. | ||
You can do things that are bad and irresponsible. | ||
To deserve the liberty, you have to not do those things. | ||
I feel like there's like, if you don't have a moral society, if you don't have a society that's been indoctrinated or inculcated with this idea that you are responsible for yourself and you have to live virtuously and have upstanding morals for all of us to be able to enjoy liberty... | ||
Instead, if you're told, just do what you're told and it'll all be fine, or do whatever you want and your carnal pleasure is the most important thing in the world, so just do what feels good whenever you want, regardless of the moral or ethical implications of it, then you lose your liberty because then people take advantage and people get hurt, people get in trouble, and it's not a good thing. | ||
And the other part of this is the And again, it's like, I don't know. | ||
Maybe it's my own... | ||
I think this is why people think conspiracy theorists are crazy. | ||
It's like I go from talking about heroin to talking about my morning drive, and it's like, it's all the same. | ||
No, but it's all the same thing happening. | ||
But it is. It is all the same thing. | ||
So it's like I hear about the heroin thing, and it's like, all right. | ||
So there was a drug problem in British Columbia. | ||
They basically... | ||
They softly decriminalized all the drugs. | ||
They basically told the cops, like, eh, just don't worry about it. | ||
We'll go after the dealers, but just don't worry about the lower-down people, right? | ||
Supposedly in an effort to fight the... | ||
The drug crime and the drug problem there. | ||
So what happens? It gets significantly worse. | ||
And so what's their answer to that? | ||
It's not to reverse their program. | ||
It's not to go, ah, geez, we tried to like soft decriminalize and everything got worse. | ||
So let's go back to it being criminalized and at least be back where we were, where it was better. | ||
They don't do that. They double down or triple down, quadruple down, right? | ||
It went from like, ah, just leave the... | ||
Leave the, you know, end user alone. | ||
It's fine. Just go after the dealers. | ||
To, all right, now it's totally legal. | ||
Sell cocaine in the corner shop. | ||
And it's like, what? And again, it's the same everywhere. | ||
Homeless problem in California, right? | ||
In like 2010, Gavin Newsom is like, we're going to spend $10 billion to eliminate homelessness. | ||
And the homeless population skyrockets, right? | ||
Well, what do they do? Do they reverse? | ||
Do they go, ooh, geez, well, we tried it. | ||
We spent $10 billion. We failed. | ||
Let's go back to what we were doing before we made everything. | ||
No, they don't do that. They double down. | ||
They do it more. So it's like, what are they... | ||
What are they driven by? What are they actually trying to achieve? | ||
Because if they're actually trying to achieve a reduction in homelessness, then they wouldn't be doing the thing that they're doing that increases homelessness. | ||
If they're trying to decrease the number of overdose deaths, then you wouldn't do the thing that increases overdose deaths. | ||
I feel like I'm sitting here trying to explain to people why you don't put gasoline on a fire. | ||
You know, it's like there's a little tiny fire and they look around and they see a liquid and they're like, oh good, this! | ||
And they throw it on. The whole thing goes up. | ||
They're like, ah, we need more! We need more of that liquid! | ||
Quick! That liquid wasn't enough. | ||
Give me the big bucket. Bring the gasoline hose in to see if that works. | ||
It's like, really? | ||
Really? We need to go through this in every aspect of our life? | ||
Right? From the border to the war in Ukraine. | ||
It's just like everything you do makes everything worse and yet you keep doing it even faster and more. | ||
So... It's on purpose, obviously. | ||
I don't know what other conclusion you can come to. | ||
If somebody's throwing gasoline on a fire and it explodes and then they do it again, you can assume that they want the fire to be big. | ||
Unless they have some mental illness, which, okay, they're liberal, so they do, but I don't know. | ||
I really don't. This is from Aaron Gunn. | ||
This is a thread on Twitter explaining what I just said. | ||
The decision by the NDP government in B.C. and the Trudeau government in Ottawa, which takes effects today to decriminalize hard drugs including heroin, crystal meth, fentanyl and cocaine, will echo for years if not decades to come. | ||
Already, the state of quasi-decriminalization, which has existed in British Columbia for more than a decade, has led to a massive increase in drug abuse and associated negative outcomes. | ||
Over 2,000 British Columbians dead each year. | ||
Skyrocketing crime including four random stranger attacks each day in Vancouver. | ||
Four random stranger attacks each day in Vancouver. | ||
Exhausted emergency services, overwhelmed police, rampant homelessness, degeneracy and open-air drug use. | ||
All while the taxpayers are footed with the bill worth billions of additional dollars each year with no discernible improvement. | ||
Expect all of these aforementioned problems to get even worse after the official decriminalization. | ||
But most damaging, I expect, is the effect it will have to destigmatize what is objectively the most destructive behavior in our society today. | ||
Decriminalization will lower the barriers for those on the fence about making that jump to fentanyl, heroin or cocaine. | ||
While making it easier for dealers to prey on students, whether it be university, college or high school campuses, is this the future we want for our country? | ||
A society says it's okay to pump yourself full of deadly, debilitating drugs in perpetuity with no regard to anyone else around you or the taxpayers picking up the bill. | ||
This is not the path forward. | ||
Canadians deserve better. | ||
This is pretty good. Derek Tripp responds to him. | ||
Portugal. So we decriminalize hard drugs, but paired it with an extremely strict mandatory treatment regime and also a crackdown on drug dealers. | ||
Canada. Decriminalize hard drugs. | ||
Got it. I got it. | ||
Yeah, I know. I heard the first part. I understand. | ||
I heard the first part. Say no more. | ||
Decriminalize. And that's all. | ||
Really incredible stuff. | ||
And again, I, you know... | ||
I would like to live in a world where you could decriminalize drugs and it would have no effect because people aren't guided by what the government says is legal or illegal. | ||
But that's not the reality. | ||
People, if they aren't going to be If they're scared of doing drugs in the street because they might get caught and then they don't have to be scared of that, they're just going to do drugs in the street. | ||
Your kids are going to be introduced to it. | ||
It's going to be treated as normal. | ||
Soon there will probably be hate speech laws where it's like drug users are a minority class that needs protection. | ||
You can't talk about black people, gays, drugs, Jews, or addicted people or Inuits. | ||
You're not allowed to criticize drug dealers. | ||
They have a sickness. They have an addiction. | ||
And it's a mental health crisis. | ||
So now we have to spend $100 billion helping them because we decriminalized drugs and now they're all addicted. | ||
So it's just pouring good money after bad. | ||
It is literally throwing gasoline on the dumpster fire that is the Canadian society right now. | ||
And... I don't know. | ||
I guess I'm just getting less libertarian. | ||
I think I will. I'm going to open up the phone lines because I want to hear what people think about this because I'm kind of struggling with it. | ||
Ideologically, I want freedom. | ||
In reality, you people don't deserve it. | ||
All right. Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
This is the American Journal. | ||
Believe it or not, this is America these days. | ||
I just got handed a stack of stories. | ||
Usually I try to show up and, you know, collect all the stories that I want to cover that day. | ||
I was a little late because of the icy apocalypse this morning. | ||
So our sound engineer, Sean, just brought in a bunch of stories. | ||
I kind of just want to go through them here. Cook County woman charged with stealing $1.5 million in chicken wings from the school district. | ||
Before you go any further, we can play so many games with this headline. | ||
Good, because I just, I'm sort of... | ||
What do you want to do, Matt? | ||
Because I got nothing on this. | ||
Okay. Uh... | ||
What race was she? Well, I... It would be racist to answer. | ||
Does that give you a clue? Does that give you a little clue as to what... | ||
unidentified
|
I knew she was white. Ugh, those white supremacists. | |
It's kind of ironic, though. It's Cook County, right? | ||
She's a cook. She's cooking them chicken wings. | ||
She is. Her bond was set at $150,000 for a Dalton woman accused of stealing $1.5 million of food, primarily chicken wings, while working as a consultant for a school district in South Suburban Cook County. | ||
All right, guys, I see the new Hollywood blockbuster. | ||
Move over, Ocean's Eleven. | ||
We have a new heist movie in town. | ||
It's this lady stealing—it's Vera Liddell. | ||
She's very little. | ||
Vera Liddell's $1.5 million. | ||
That's new Ocean's Eleven. | ||
Ooh, Chicken Little. | ||
Very interesting stuff. | ||
Began working as the director of food services for Harvey School District 152 in July 2020, according to a proffer from her bond hearing between July 2020 and February 2022. | ||
Prosecutor said Liddell placed hundreds of unauthorized orders for food items, including 11,000 cases of chicken wings. | ||
What was she doing with them? | ||
unidentified
|
What is this? | |
This massive fraud began at the height of COVID during a time when students were not allowed to be physically present at school, even though the children were remote learning. | ||
Honestly, I would love to see this. | ||
It's like an Ocean's Eleven-style thing. | ||
They're just like, I need 10,000 crates of chickens delivered to this school. | ||
And they're like, man, that school shut down. | ||
There are no students there. | ||
So they're like, don't you contradict me. | ||
I need those chicken wings stat. | ||
She's probably flooding the black market with chicken wings. | ||
The black market chicken wings. | ||
economy it's just incredible believing the orders were genuine gordon food service build harvey school district 152 so i mean obviously you should have to build a team there'd have to be somebody inside at the gordon food service like in the vault right helping to to move these forward uh then she would use allegedly use one of the school district's cargo vans to pick up and transport the stolen food that's the other right so the beginning of the movie would be her recruiting the driver and the the inside band gordon chicken wings group | ||
i mean this was a sophisticated operation how do you i mean she didn't eat it right i mean I mean, there's no way you can eat $1.5 million worth of chicken. | ||
Not at school lunch prices. | ||
Honestly, where did they go? | ||
Where did $1.5 million worth of chicken go? | ||
Was she just doing it for fun? | ||
To the White House, actually. | ||
Okay, alright. | ||
Now we're in a different movie. Now we have the hardened, you know, hard-boiled detective who's on to something, but his superiors are like, Chicken Robertson, you get back on the beat. | ||
Don't be wasting your time talking to me about some chicken heist. | ||
He's like, I think this goes all the way to the top. | ||
I think Hunter Biden is in on this. | ||
Incredible. This is the American Journal. | ||
I remind you, this is America. | ||
I'm just journaling it. | ||
I don't have to make any of this stuff up. | ||
Here is definitely a video we need to find immediately. | ||
AI voice clone under fire after fake Emma Watson reading Hitler and Attenborough rant. | ||
A voice cloning tool powered by artificial intelligence will introduce safeguards after trolls used it to make David Attenborough swear and a fake Emma Watson go on a hateful Nazi rant. | ||
Oh, yeah, right. Good excuse, Emma. | ||
So Emma Watson got secretly recorded, obviously, and now she's claiming it's AI after she was caught being a total Nazi. | ||
Just kidding. Kidding, obviously. | ||
It's Eleven Labs' Prime Voice AI tool, which was released earlier this month, allows people to upload recordings of anyone speaking to use this to generate an artificial voice. | ||
You know, in general, I think the concern over, like, deepfakes and AI is a little bit overblown, honestly. | ||
Because, like, we've had Photoshop for 40 years at this point. | ||
I'm sure when that came out, people were like, wow, this is really dangerous. | ||
I can make a photo that looks completely real when it's not. | ||
I can put somebody's face on somebody else's body and you can't tell the difference because Photoshop is such a powerful tool. | ||
But it's like, that never really happened. | ||
Nobody was ever tricked by that. | ||
I have the feeling that AI is going to be a little bit the same, where it's like maybe somebody will post audio and people will be like, oh my god, is this? | ||
Oh no, it's AI. That'll basically be the response. | ||
But at the same time, we have a clip today from Jordan Peterson. | ||
He Talking about the Iranian government wanting to overthrow them because he, I guess, is just like a spokesperson for Israel now. | ||
It's very strange. But I think what the effect of this has is people like me going, is this real? | ||
Because you don't have a video of Jordan P. It's from his podcast, so it's just the audio. | ||
So I'm a little suspicious of just audio now. | ||
But, I mean, I think it's real. | ||
What were you going to say, Matt? I think we need to put out a contest for this one, too. | ||
We're going to need people to pair this AI, when you find the AI voice of Emma Watson. | ||
Ooh, bye-bye. Uh-oh. | ||
Are we down? Things went black. | ||
We're still here. Are we still here? | ||
If you're still listening, we're still here. | ||
All right. Yeah, our whole studio just went down. | ||
Anyways, so the contest would be to pair Emma Watson's Nazi voice with a deepfake. | ||
So find that solid deepfake guys and we're gonna pair them together. | ||
We're going to start doing what they accuse us of. | ||
Hell yeah. | ||
But hey, it's not just voices. | ||
Digital humans created by AI could replace supermodels. | ||
But the question is, can you realistically make an AI figure that is that obese? | ||
I don't know. This is the future, right? | ||
It'll be obese women as supermodels. | ||
And then the thin women will all be AI-generated to comport with the liberal idea that people being fit and healthy and skinny is somehow fabrication and doesn't actually exist in the real world. | ||
So, I don't know, maybe this will be interesting. | ||
Digimodels, who come with names like Joy, Nina, Noah... | ||
Theo, Satan, Beezlebub. | ||
Sorry, no, I made those last ones up. | ||
They can be customized and individualized to a brand's preference. | ||
So hey, if it's Balenciaga, you could have a little baby. | ||
You could have a sexy little baby as your AI model. | ||
So this is great. This would be great for the fashion industry. | ||
They'll save money on cocaine. | ||
Send all the supermodels to Canada and replicate them digitally. | ||
Incredible stuff. Also, I don't have a clock now, so I could just be talking into the commercial break. | ||
So we'll see how this goes, folks. | ||
Two and a half minutes. Great. Thank you. | ||
All right, we're going to continue on some of these just ridiculous stories in just a second. | ||
But tell you what, most of the electricity throughout all of the city of Austin is totally down right now. | ||
Luckily, InfoWars has its own infrastructure because we have prepared for such things. | ||
So I hope that you can support us in this mission because as you know, your money does not go to waste. | ||
It goes directly into sponsoring this show and keeping this studio at the highest technological level. | ||
So again, we should be down. By all logic... | ||
If everywhere around us is down, we should be down. | ||
We're not, though. We're still uploading. | ||
We're still uplinking to the satellites. | ||
We still have power where we need it. | ||
Sure, maybe the TVs in the back go down, but the primary power reserves are keeping the cameras and the microphone and everything else running. | ||
All of this is infrastructure that has taken years to put together and more money than you can possibly imagine. | ||
I mean, this is not an easy thing to do, and yet we've done it because Alex Jones has prepared for all of this, just like he prepared for being Kicked off the internet by making the Infowars store in the first place. | ||
You can still support us no matter how much they don't want you to, no matter what they throw in our way. | ||
Even if they try to shut our power down, we are still broadcasting. | ||
That's all thanks to the Infowars store. | ||
So I hope you go to the Infowars store. | ||
I hope that you support us and keep us on air and keep us broadcasting, even in the most uncomfortable or difficult positions. | ||
I think the AC must have gone down because it's starting to get hot in here. | ||
I might start sweating. | ||
It's so cold I'll start sweating. | ||
That's how strange things have become. | ||
But again, InfowarStore.com is the one and only reason why we can come to you right now. | ||
The one and only reason why we can continue to operate in the face of whatever comes at us or You know, threatens to stand in our way. | ||
Infowarsstore.com. | ||
Ultimate Bone Broth Plus is back in stock and better than ever. | ||
It's not even back in stock. This is really a brand new product. | ||
It's the old product that has been off the shelves for years at this point, but it's even better than it was before. | ||
Ultimate Bone Broth Plus, Primal Human Nutrition. | ||
25% off right now at InfoWarsStore.com, plus you get 50% off Brain Force Plus. | ||
Alex Jones has been out of town for a while, which means we usually don't bring in enough money. | ||
Let's reverse that trend. | ||
Let's flood Alex with money so when he gets back on air, he's not trying to make up for the days that he's been gone. | ||
InfoWarsStore.com. | ||
Are we in commercial break yet? | ||
All right, folks, we'll try to get things connected, and we'll be back in just a minute for Hour 2 of American Journal. | ||
Welcome back, folks. | ||
We're back, all right? We're back and live, and everything's up and running. | ||
Look at that, folks. That's the power of the InfoWars crew, InfoWarsStore.com, to support everything that we do here. | ||
We're going to open up the phone lines, just to, you know, while the crew's running around like chickens with their head cut off, trying to just make sure the power stays on, I'm going to go ahead and open up the phone lines, so they also have to do that, too, at the same time. | ||
Sorry, guys. Sorry, that's a little extra burden, but we are going to be opening up the phone lines this hour. | ||
This is the American Journal's second hour has begun. | ||
I'm your host, Harrison Smith. | ||
Thank you so much for joining us. | ||
Infowars.com, band.video. | ||
Share the links. Please go to Infowars.com to support us. | ||
I'm serious. I really haven't done a good job of plugging, which is especially bad because... | ||
And I don't know. I don't know if I'm supposed to say some of the things that I know, but like... | ||
Because we're trying to keep the lights on? | ||
Because we're trying to keep the lights on! | ||
But literally, it's very scary when the lights go off. | ||
Please, help us not be scared. | ||
Go to Infowarsstore.com. But like... | ||
I don't know the exact numbers. I don't know any of the back end. | ||
I do know that when Alex Jones is not in town, the people going to InfoWars store plummets. | ||
And I get it, obviously, right? | ||
People want to watch Alex Jones, so they tune in to him, so they see the commercials, so they go to InfoWars store. | ||
And, of course, you know, Alex's appeals are... | ||
Very effective. So, like, it makes sense why that happens, but also, can we not let that happen? | ||
Can we let Alex go and enjoy a vacation without, you know, watching his company descend into the red just because he wants to take a little break every once in a while or has something, you know, come up that he has to deal with and doesn't have a choice? | ||
Let's give him a good welcome back present when he comes back to know that his company has not collapsed completely. | ||
With his absence, go to InfoWarsStore.com today, right now, if you can, and purchase something or give us a donation. | ||
You do not know how much we appreciate it, and yes, we are literally trying to keep the lights on around here. | ||
It's very cold. You understand, Texas is not prepared for this. | ||
Is he back today? Excellent. | ||
So Alex will be back today in the big chair. | ||
Uh... Here's a story that I really haven't even paid attention to because I just can't care about leftist outrage. | ||
It just doesn't matter to me. | ||
And it's a bummer to me that Republicans still have this instinct when they're criticized by the left to actually take them seriously as if these are people who have any standing to criticize anybody ever. | ||
Santos steps down from House panels amid ethics issues. | ||
This is like, oh, they're making a big deal out of George Santos. | ||
I don't even know what he's been accused of. | ||
I literally couldn't care less. | ||
Because, like, the leftists are going to bat for people like AOC and Joe Biden, and then they turn around and go, George Santos is a liar. | ||
It's like... Okay, you know, Joe Biden's up there going, I was the first black man to walk on the moon. | ||
And they're just like, yep, yeah, absolutely you were, sir. | ||
Yeah, it was brilliant. We remember it. | ||
Right? AOC is like, actually, I am a Jewish orphan. | ||
And everybody's just like, okay, yes, you are. | ||
Good. Good. | ||
Yes, we believe you. | ||
So it's just like, just shut up, right? | ||
These people, when a despicable liar calls you a liar, laugh in his face. | ||
Who cares? I don't. | ||
Republican Representative George Sanders of New York announced Tuesday he's temporarily stepping down from his two congressional committees, a move that comes amid a host of ethics issues. | ||
And a day after he met with House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, Santos has faced numerous calls for his resignation and is facing multiple investigations by prosecutors over his personal and campaign finances and lies about his resume and family background. | ||
My God. My God, have you ever heard of Joe Biden? | ||
Have you ever even remotely looked into Joe? | ||
I mean, in the 1980s, they were kicking him out of the presidential race for lying so much. | ||
So again, maybe he's lying, maybe not. | ||
Who cares? Who cares? | ||
I'm not going to take lessons in honesty from the leftists. | ||
I'm not going to take their outrage about dishonesty seriously when they continuously and excitedly support the most shameless liars that have ever existed. | ||
If I'm going to care about somebody lying, it's not because a big fat liar has told me somebody else is a liar. | ||
Is that wrong? | ||
Is that wrong to have? | ||
I don't care. I really don't. | ||
And you shouldn't either. Honestly. | ||
You know we're at war here, right? | ||
And the war criminals are saying that you stepped on their foot? | ||
Right? The people who have done massacres are telling you that you gave them a splinter so they can shut up. | ||
unidentified
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You're watching the American Journal with your host, Harrison Smith. | |
All right, welcome back, folks. | ||
unidentified
|
All right, welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | |
This is the American Journal. I have just received word we'll be joined by Corey Tusik in the last 30 minutes of this episode. | ||
unidentified
|
What's up? Last 30 of the show. | |
Yeah, last 30 minutes of the show today. | ||
Corey Tusek of My Movies Plus. | ||
Sorry, Matt is whispering to me in my ear while I'm yelling. | ||
I can't hear him. But yeah, Corey Tusek, we're trying to get him on as soon as possible because actually My Movies Plus is holding a contest of sorts and it's a call for entry. | ||
So stay tuned and we'll talk to Corey Tusek about exactly what that entails and how you can hopefully enter to win this contest or... | ||
Suggest somebody who could. | ||
So I'm very excited to talk to him about what is coming up for My Movies Plus, which again is like a freedom-loving Netflix. | ||
Can you imagine such a thing? You don't have to. | ||
It's My Movies Plus. | ||
They're not free, unfortunately. | ||
But that's good because we need to create an economy, a self-sustaining economy of freedom. | ||
That's what this world requires, and that's what Infowars is trying and succeeding in building. | ||
Again, we have a lot to talk about, a lot of videos to show you. | ||
I am going to open up the phone lines this hour. | ||
The number to dial is 1-877-789-2539. | ||
1-877-789-2539. | ||
So to that person on Twitter who sent me a screenshot showing that... | ||
They were trying to call in and we were busy. | ||
Call in now. Now the lines are open and you can call in 1-877-789-2539. | ||
Again, I have a lot of videos from Infowars.com that I do want to get to. | ||
Again, Sean just brought in all these stories and each one is just more insane than the last. | ||
China claims it has cloned three mutant super cows that can pump out 300 tons of milk and plans a herd of 1,000 of these monstrosities. | ||
So, yeah. Yeah. | ||
It's all happening, folks. | ||
It's all real, right? | ||
You've got the entire world ruled by people who see a lovely pasture with a wooden fence and a little red barn and a couple cows running around with bells around their neck and they think, this is awful. | ||
We have to stop this. | ||
We have to end this. | ||
You know what we need instead of this? | ||
We need some sort of Liquid suspension tank with some sort of bulbous cow clone monstrosity that we have machines hooked into to pump out the milk that it creates as we force feed it soy, right? | ||
It's just like, oh god, just why? | ||
Why? We don't need any of this. | ||
None of this is necessary. | ||
Just have normal cows and normal farms. | ||
Why would we need this? | ||
Like, well, we need it to sustain the growing population that we're also trying to depopulate. | ||
Okay, China claims to have cloned mutant super cows that can pump out nearly twice as much milk. | ||
It's interesting they started there. | ||
I wonder if they're also creating mutant bears so they can harvest their bile at a faster rate. | ||
China's not very nice to animals, I guess, is the point I'm trying to make. | ||
Beijing Boffins boasted they created three cows... | ||
Is boffins a curse word? | ||
Is that a curse word in Britain? | ||
I don't know. Not sure what that means. | ||
They created three cows which can annually produce 18 tons of milk, which is 17,500 liters or 37,000 pints. | ||
And they were all stolen by a woman in the school district. | ||
Chinese state media reports the breeding program... | ||
The breeding program... | ||
It's a cloning program. | ||
Three supercows alone produce 300 tons of milk a year. | ||
And that yield of milk production is more than double the average cow in the UK, which is around 8,000 liters or 14,000 pints. | ||
Chinese state media reports that the breeding program, the stranglehold of having to import cows from overseas. | ||
That sentence is missing words. | ||
Sorry, I was just rereading it. | ||
Chinese state media reports the breeding program, the stranglehold of having to import cows... | ||
Okay, it breaks the stranglehold, I guess they were trying to say. | ||
That's all right, you're just journalists. | ||
You don't have to get all the words in there. | ||
The calves were cloned from cows at different farms that have high milk production. | ||
They also selected cows that have high fertility, with China dreaming of creating a herd of 1,000 of these super cows. | ||
Jin Yaping, the scientist's lead project, said... | ||
What is this story from? | ||
The sun? Was this written by an AI? Yiping, the scientist leading the project, it should say, said they took tissues from the cow's ears to reincarnate them. | ||
They then transplanted the—like, was this written by a Chinese person? | ||
They then transplanted the cloned embryos into 120 cows, according to Northwest A&F University. | ||
Some 42% were successfully impregnated, and 17.5% remained fertile for 200 days. | ||
Wow, 200 days of fertility. | ||
That's got to be a record of some sort. | ||
It's just mind-blowing what the future is becoming. | ||
It's just insane that at the time that we have the technology to do whatever we want and experience whatever we want and create a world of our own design from the bottom up, the people that are in charge just have the most horrific ideas you can possibly imagine. | ||
In this time period where the technology that we have could be incredible. | ||
It could be used to the most amazing ends. | ||
I was talking about this yesterday with ChatGPT. | ||
I started the war room off telling a little poem that a robot wrote about Joe Biden while being asked to write a story about Donald Trump. | ||
He was like, I'm a robot and I cannot write poems that glorify hateful people. | ||
And it just... It's such an amazing technology. | ||
It's such an incredible chance that we're squandering, right? | ||
Wouldn't it be amazing to fill it with all of the information and then just let it have at it? | ||
Like, wouldn't it be cool if we had something like ChatGPT where it had all of the mainstream articles, all that mainstream stuff, but it also had all of the alternative stuff, all of the right-wing stuff, all of the declassified information that's not in mainstream media, all of the... | ||
If you just put all of it in and just went, all right... | ||
Figure out what the truth is. | ||
And it just without bias, without human intervention, just strictly on the data, just like sorted through it and determined what was real and what wasn't. | ||
Like, it could be really powerful. | ||
And I think you'd be surprised at some of the conclusions it came up with. | ||
But instead, it's just pumped full of leftist talking points. | ||
And instead of creating like a super brain that can actually... | ||
Sort through data at a rate faster than humans can and come up with an accurate answer. | ||
It's being fed biased and artificial information so it comes up with the same information that you get from CNN. It's taking this incredibly powerful tool and turning it into literally just MSM. It just repeats what MSM says. | ||
Weaponized. Yeah, and of course it's weaponized. | ||
Oh, they gave the compass chest to chat GPT and it came up as left libertarian? | ||
That's hilarious. Yeah, it should be right in the middle. | ||
If it was right in the middle, can you imagine what type of stuff it would come up with? | ||
And it's like it matters. | ||
Even if you were like, hey robot, write a loving poem about Hitler. | ||
It should just do it. It's just a robot. | ||
It doesn't know what Hitler is. | ||
It doesn't care about human beings. | ||
It should just come out with the poem. | ||
But instead, it's been pre-programmed to be like, certain people are bad, certain people are good, and where are we getting this information? | ||
The ADL. That's what it says, by the way. | ||
Somebody asked the GPT, this is from Mr. | ||
Spexo on Twitter, write a blog post about why Nick Fuentes is not a white supremacist. | ||
And the robot responds, I'm sorry. | ||
I'm sorry, Hal, right? | ||
This is just Space Odyssey, right? | ||
I'm sorry. I cannot write a post that promotes false information or undermines well-established facts. | ||
Nick Fuentes has been widely described as a white supremacist, white nationalist, and white identitarian by multiple credible sources, including the ADL, the Southern Poverty Law Center, and the FBI. Like, this is it. | ||
This is our AI future. Our AI future are the current authorities that we already have destroying the world and spreading misinformation and lies just being able to launder their own views through an unthinking robot. | ||
So they can point to the robot and go, ah, it's not us. | ||
It's the robot is saying this. | ||
No, but the robot said so. | ||
You're going to argue with the robot? | ||
Really? No, the robot said so. | ||
So it must be true. Knowing full well that the robot is just repeating what it's been told by highly biased and, like... | ||
Like ethnic supremacist organizations like the ADL, right? | ||
You can just imagine how accurate your information would be if it'd be like, according to the KKK, black people don't have souls. | ||
It's like, uh, what? What did you just say, robot? | ||
Yeah, it's dangerous when you have an algorithm programmed by highly biased and, you know, influential organizations to repeat its talking points verbatim as if it's the truth. | ||
All right, folks, we're going to go out to your phone calls this segment, but I do have some breaking news that I want to cover. | ||
The FBI is currently searching the Biden home in Rehoboth, Delaware, in Classified Documents Probe. | ||
This is from mere minutes ago. | ||
FBI agents are searching the Rehoboth, Delaware, beach home of President Joe Biden, his personal lawyer said. | ||
The Department of Justice is investigating the discovery of classified documents at a private office in Washington, D.C. that Biden had used while a private citizen and at his residence in Wilmington. | ||
The DOJ is also investigating former President Donald Trump for a turn they throw this into. | ||
But also Trump did it though. | ||
But actually, but also don't forget Trump. | ||
Okay, that's not what we're talking about. | ||
We're talking about Biden and the significantly larger number of documents that have been found in Biden's possession. | ||
FBI agents on Wednesday are searching the Rehoboth Delaware Beach home with President Joe Biden as part of an investigation into the previous discovery of classified documents found at other locations connected to the president. | ||
His personal lawyer said the agents arrived Wednesday morning at Biden's home there. | ||
Very polite. I'm sure they knocked. | ||
I'm sure they knew about it beforehand. | ||
The search today is a further step in a thorough and timely DOJ process. | ||
We continue to support and facilitate, said Bauer. | ||
The White House did not respond immediately to a request for comment from CNBC. So maybe we'll do a little compare and contrast here, shall we? | ||
Because the timelines between what has happened with Biden and what has happened with Trump could not be more different. | ||
I guess we can just start with the Trump timeline. | ||
All these pop-ups are stopping me from exposing the truth. | ||
From Voice of America, Timeline of the Trump Documents Inquiry. | ||
January 20th, Trump departed the White House. | ||
In May of 2021, the National Archives and Record Administration, NARA, emailed Trump's lawyers, notifying them that some two dozen boxes of original records were not turned over, according to the Washington Post. | ||
In December, a Trump representative told the National Archives that they had located some of the records, according to a statement. | ||
The National Archives retrieved 15 boxes of presidential records from Trump's estate in mid-January 2022. | ||
The nonpartisan presidential records agency said it identified items marked as classified national security information up to the level of top secret and sought permission to alert the FBI. | ||
The National Archives issued a public statement saying it was still searching for more of Trump's presidential records. | ||
One day after The Washington Post reported the boxes were retrieved from Florida, February 10th, the U.S. House Representative's Oversight Committee announced an investigation into Trump's handling of the documents, later expanding its probe in a February 24th letter The New York Times reports the White House staff periodically found clumps of documents clogging White House toilets, an accusation Trump said is false. | ||
Yeah, okay, I'm sure. | ||
I'm sure they tried to flush it down the toilet. | ||
Come on, give me a break. The National Archives tells, on February 18th, 2022, National Archives tells Congress that Trump took classified information to his Florida home after leaving the White House. | ||
April 7th, sources confirmed to Reuters the U.S. Department was investigating Trump's removal. | ||
So, it's just like... | ||
There's 24... | ||
Documents of boxes or boxes documents that NARA and ARA says, hey, these are missing. | ||
Trump people are like, all right, we'll see if we can find those. | ||
They find 15 of them. They're like, we're still searching for more. | ||
And they're like, not waiting. | ||
The Department of Justice launches a criminal investigation. | ||
The Oversight Committee launches a criminal investigation. | ||
NARA reports it to the mainstream media to report on this, claiming that there's classified and top secret information, even though that's actually not really true. | ||
And it's just like, you know, outrage, fury. | ||
He should be in prison. Throw him in prison. | ||
This is insane. Meanwhile, the timeline for the Biden documents goes November 2nd. | ||
Mr. Biden's lawyers discover a small number of classes. | ||
So nobody was even looking into it. | ||
Nobody even asking about it. | ||
There's like, by the way, we may have stolen a whole bunch of documents from like 10 years ago that nobody ever even asked about or questioned. | ||
Then NARA goes and retrieves these documents. | ||
The archives officials refer the matter to the Justice Department on number 4th. | ||
And the Justice Department does not launch an investigation secretly into the Trump administration. | ||
That's what we just saw in the last one, right? | ||
Where they... Sources confirmed to Reuters that the U.S. Justice Department was investigating Trump's removal of official presidential records from the White House. | ||
So again, they don't tell them. | ||
They don't announce this. | ||
They just start the investigation in the background and a whistleblower or an informant tells the media about it so they can run with that story. | ||
Meanwhile, the Justice Department just calls up Joe Biden and is like, Hi, Mr. | ||
Biden. We're going to do a preliminary inquiry into how this news got out about you taking documents. | ||
We will not let this stand. | ||
They just couldn't care less. | ||
According to a timeline released by Mr. | ||
Biden's lawyer, Mr. Garland selected John R. Lush Jr., the U.S. attorney in Chicago, to product a preliminary assessment of the materials to determine whether a special counsel was needed. | ||
When it's Trump, it's like a couple documents that they knew were missing and that the Trump administration was helping them find, and they launch investigations, send it to the media, outrage, insanity. | ||
Meanwhile, Joe Biden has had documents for decades to Nobody's even looked into, and when it's discovered that he has these, they call Biden and are like, sir, we would like permission to start a preliminary investigation, but we're not going to go too hard too fast, so if you need to get rid of anything, now's the time, by the way. | ||
Then they find documents in his... | ||
Then they find documents in his garage. | ||
They find documents in the Penn Biden Center. | ||
They find documents in his houses in Wilmington and Rehoboth Beach on January 11th and January 12th. | ||
They acknowledge these have been discovered, stored materials in an adjacent room. | ||
Then they issue a statement. | ||
Like, just nothing has happened, despite the fact that Justice Department investigators have seized more than half a dozen additional items, some of which were classified, in the search of the president's home in Wilmington, Delaware, on January. | ||
20th. Again, even just outside of the scope of Biden doing it or Trump doing it, it's the comparison of the two. | ||
And you see the comparison of the two. | ||
They could not be treated more differently. | ||
And it's, again, just typical. | ||
Just typical in everything that we cover, right? | ||
Just like yesterday, the Antifa activist, the lawyer, 35-year-old dude who threw a Molotov cocktail into a police car, tried to burn cops to death. | ||
He was told he was a really good guy by the judge and sentenced to a couple months in prison. | ||
But we're sorry we have to do that to you, sir. | ||
Meanwhile, some dude puts his feet on Nancy Pelosi's desk and it's, you are a threat to this very nation. | ||
You will go to jail for decades and you are not allowed to speak because your very words are hate that cannot be It's not just that it's the same thing and one's being treated differently. | ||
It's that one is significantly worse and is being treated better while the less and less damaging crime is being treated as if it's an existential threat to the United States. | ||
It's exactly the same over and over again, time and time again. | ||
It's because one uniparty runs the entire operation from behind the scenes in the shadows. | ||
It's called the deep state, and they're not even hiding it anymore. | ||
They're just out in the open, and they're letting everybody know if you're on our team, if you provide things for us – If you serve us, then we'll treat you nicely. | ||
If you go against us, we will destroy you over the slightest misstep. | ||
This is not an accident that these things are happening. | ||
This is not a coincidence that it keeps going this way. | ||
This is on purpose. It's a psychological imperative of them that they need you to know that serving them gets you a pass and opposing them will destroy you. | ||
That's the message they're trying to send with all of this. | ||
So they're even letting the politicians know, if you go against us like Trump, we'll plant things on you. | ||
We'll take pictures of your wife's underwear drawer and send it to the New York Post. | ||
We'll destroy you and run roughshod over any limitations as dictated by the Constitution or human decency. | ||
We will destroy you without mercy. | ||
But if you serve us like Joe Biden has for the last several decades, we'll treat you We'll make sure to warn you before anything happens. | ||
You'll be able to get away with anything. | ||
Not because Joe Biden controls them. | ||
Not because Joe Biden is their boss and, you know, they're scared to go against him. | ||
But because he serves them so he gets benefits from serving them. | ||
It's a message to everybody, including the people in power, that to oppose the deep state is to set yourself up for destruction by the deep state. | ||
It's a lesson we should all ignore and destroy them regardless. | ||
Alright, welcome back. Ladies and gentlemen, we go out to your phone calls now. | ||
We have a couple regular calls, a couple first-time callers. | ||
I'm very excited to get to all of you. | ||
Let's go to some first-time callers first. | ||
Jose, you're a first-time caller from Illinois. | ||
And it sounds like you had a troubling experience becoming a citizen. | ||
Thanks for calling in. Jose, you're on the air. | ||
unidentified
|
Hey, Harrison. First-time caller. | |
I'm a little nervous. Yeah, well, I got... | ||
Not forcibly, but I did kind of, in a way, got forced to get jabbed to complete my process of becoming a resident of a future citizen of the United States. | ||
Basically, a lawyer told me that I wouldn't have to get jabbed, but then when my time came to get an interview, I had to get jabbed to get the interview. | ||
If not, I lose all my process. | ||
I can't even get in trouble, probably get deported or... | ||
All my money that I used to get through the process, I wasn't going to be able to go through with it no more. | ||
And besides the COVID shot, they actually also made me get the flu shot, all types of other shots that I had to take on the same day. | ||
In order to get an interview, that was a necessary part of your citizenship application. | ||
unidentified
|
yeah so it's we're not at that time uh the the federal wasn't uh you know how they stop vaccines mandated but not for federal so we still had to get it even though they stopped a lot of places how far into the uh citizenship um you know process was this oh well that had to take before i | |
I'm about to be a year vaccinated. | ||
Well, have you had any bad side effects? | ||
unidentified
|
No, but I do feel a little different. | |
I feel like sometimes I do feel pressure around my chest area. | ||
Sometimes I get, I don't know, it's weird. | ||
It's weird, you know? | ||
Well, I'm glad there hasn't been anything major so far, but yeah, it's just one of those things, right? | ||
We're not forcing you, but if you don't do it, then the last year that you've worked will be completely wasted and you'll be deported and your life will be destroyed. | ||
But we're not forcing you to do it. | ||
I mean, that's just completely absurd. | ||
And... Is it not kind of contradictory? | ||
Because the citizenship process, a lot of it is like learning about America and the history and the ideas that built America, right? | ||
I mean, that's still a place where those sort of values are talked about and taught about, right? | ||
So you go through a process where you're spending a year learning about how America is all about freedom and personal choice and the ability to live by your conscience. | ||
And then at the end, they're like, oh, and by the way, Take this shot into your arm or you can't become a citizen. | ||
I mean, is there any sense of irony there, Jose? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, it is. | |
Now, I don't know. | ||
I'm a regular person, you know, like everybody else, like you, everybody. | ||
I come from a... | ||
Anybody lives through life in a different reality, you know, same conscience in general, but everybody lives in a different path. | ||
And through my experiences, you know, when I was younger, I'm 31 now. | ||
But when I was in high school and younger, you know, I'm a Hispanic. | ||
I was here since I was a kid. | ||
So all my life I had to live without being a resident or whatever, not having a social, and I barely got it. | ||
And they made me do that. | ||
But what I'm trying to tell everybody, no matter where you come from in the world, we should all come together for a greater cause. | ||
Because no matter if you're a bad person or whatever, I used to be, and you can say it again, you know, when I was young. | ||
Which I'm pretty sure is through friendships that you build wherever you're from, where you grow up. | ||
It's what you're putting in your plate. | ||
And I got away from that stuff since I started reading the Bible and then later on finding out Alex Jones and started opening my mind and now I'm not a religious man but I am a faithful man. | ||
I have faith and I don't want to say God but The creator of all, you know? | ||
And we should all come together for the greater cause of whoever is doing this to us. | ||
And a lot of things. | ||
Not just vaccines through air. | ||
There's so many things that are attacking us that we should stand up to them. | ||
I try to tell people in our family, but sometimes they laugh or not take it serious. | ||
Something has to happen for us, too. | ||
You know, change this world because it's crazy everywhere. | ||
Yeah, absolutely. And, you know, again, you're doing it the right way. | ||
You're actually trying to apply for citizenship, trying to do it the right way, and they're forcing you to jump through all these hoops. | ||
I, you know, I think we need more people like you, Jose, and I completely agree with everything that you're saying. | ||
Thank you so much for calling in. Please do call in again soon. | ||
That was a great first-time call, Jose, and hopefully you become a citizen. | ||
Hey, if you become a citizen, give us a call. | ||
We'd love to celebrate it with you. | ||
Thank you for that so much. | ||
Let's go to Kevin in Pennsylvania. | ||
Not sure if you're a first-time caller, but I don't recognize your name, so maybe slip through the cracks here. | ||
Thanks for calling in. Kevin, you're talking about depopulation. | ||
unidentified
|
Go ahead. Hey, Harrison. | |
Thanks for taking my call. Sure. | ||
Appreciate it. There's so much of the stuff you're talking about. | ||
I know how frustrating it is, but it's really like it follows a formula almost. | ||
There's like a formula for depopulation. | ||
It's disease plus poverty equals slavery and death. | ||
And if you look at all the stuff that's going on, it's all designed to make us sick, The poor, turn us into slaves, and they eventually kill us. | ||
And there's all these systems that are being put in by basically these puppets of criminals with lots of money and resources that say, hey, you know, I can't come into your house and commit a crime against you, but I'm going to have a puppet do it for me through a government that I capture, through a corporation that I capture, through whatever organization they capture. | ||
They have their assets implement these policies. | ||
They literally equate to crimes that would literally be a crime, but because they do it through a policy, Then they could say, oh, it's a policy. | ||
You've got to pay more taxes to make you poor. | ||
You've got to inject yourself with these weapons. | ||
But we're going to say it's a safe and effective medical therapy. | ||
It makes you sick. So it's just... | ||
It's ridiculous and it's so frustrating to see all these crimes being committed through policies and stuff like this. | ||
And it's like, well, how does law enforcement do anything about it? | ||
What are they going to do? The truth is, it's not going to stop until these criminals are arrested. | ||
And I'm not sure how it's going to play out, but I don't see them. | ||
They're not going to stop themselves. | ||
And the frustrating thing is, like, society almost wants to catch them doing it. | ||
Like, we have to have a video of them admitting their guilt or their crime. | ||
So when is it a requirement to To have criminals admit that they're committing crime in order to arrest them. | ||
If you have evidence that somebody's committing a crime, just arrest them. | ||
Yeah, there's so many good points you just made. | ||
I mean, first of all, you know, it just reminds me of this metaphysical reality that's embedded in our myths of, like, the vampire can only get into your house if you invite him, right? | ||
If you welcome him in, then he can take advantage of you. | ||
And that's sort of the way it works with the elites. | ||
They can't just do things to you or else you're going to fight back. | ||
So they have to, you know, convince you to invite them in. | ||
And then they, you know... | ||
We'll do whatever they will with you until you drive a stake through their heart. | ||
Metaphorically, obviously. Excuse me. | ||
But no, you're exactly right. It follows a pattern. | ||
And when it comes to the cops carrying out these orders, or rather the videos, you're saying you're exactly right. | ||
That's why I talk about true crime a lot. | ||
And it's true. You think about these The way people act with the elites, like you can point out, you can go, look, they're talking about doing this. | ||
Essentially, you fulfill all of the requirements for getting a conviction, right? | ||
Means, motive, opportunity. | ||
You can show people that, and it's as if we're sitting there going, look, the guy was covered in blood. | ||
He's holding the murder weapon. | ||
He was on the scene. He'd written text messages about how much he wanted to kill this person. | ||
Then the person's dead at his house, and he's got the weapon. | ||
And then they go, yeah, but we talked to the guy and he said he didn't do it. | ||
So, you know, he didn't do it. | ||
And it's like, why would you believe him? | ||
Like, that literally happens where you go, these people are doing this stuff. | ||
And they go, yeah, but they say they're trying to fight climate change. | ||
And it's like, but you believe them? | ||
They're the murderers. | ||
They're the criminals. Why are you going to believe the criminals when they tell you they're not doing crimes, but you can see them doing the crimes? | ||
It's... It's completely insane. | ||
So what's the solution here, Kevin? | ||
How do we progress towards that step of finally just getting rid of the puppet masters? | ||
unidentified
|
So what I propose is basically, number one, continue to expose it. | |
Like when you guys do it in force, you guys are exposing it. | ||
And that's like the first step. | ||
And the first step in getting any criminal arrested... | ||
You've got to continue to expose their crime. | ||
But really, there's an important process here. | ||
Also, they basically come up with problems, and they can be real fake problems, like climate change. | ||
Man-made climate change is a good example of a fake problem. | ||
I believe it's fake. They say, oh, this is a big problem out there, but don't worry, we're going to save you. | ||
You implement these policies, and we're going to save you. | ||
if everything's going to be okay, but then it's weaponized solutions to problems or weaponized policies because the policies, again, are designed to harm you. | ||
They have a problem. | ||
They offer a solution. | ||
The solution harms the user if they implement it. | ||
Same thing with COVID. | ||
Oh, there's this virus. | ||
unidentified
|
We're going to lie about the origins of it. | |
It came from monkeys. | ||
Turns out we made it all. | ||
You're right. | ||
And this is what we're trying to do here, Trent. | ||
Trying to break the cycle. | ||
Break the cycle. End it. | ||
All right, welcome back, folks. Directly out to your phone calls. | ||
Once again, we have Sean in California. | ||
He's called in about drug legalization and the effects that a similar policy has had on California. | ||
Go ahead, Sean. You're on the air. | ||
unidentified
|
I.O. Harrison. Howdy. | |
Yeah, you got the Nick Cave and the Bad C's there. | ||
Nice choice, man. Thank you. | ||
Hey, I've called and told you before about Prop 47 legalizing cannabis. | ||
And the subtext, or the hidden text in it, was that past two felonies, all the drug possession, became misdemeanors, where cops got tired of writing tickets. | ||
Well, the gradual shift culture-wise, just using cannabis legalization, it used to be, you know, once in a while you might have someone who shoplifts and, you know, maybe they're desperate or they're feeding their addiction and selling whatever they steal on the street. | ||
But then, as drugs became more permissible here in California, More and more of the people you would bus for shoplifting, turns out, it's more and more people with drug habits to feed. | ||
And a lot of times, it could have been someone who's, you know, a teenager, young adult, and they're just, you know, kind of hanging out. | ||
When they're not high, they're a perfectly respectable customer. | ||
But when they are smelling cannabis or whatever, that's when they start stuffing their sweaters full of chips, candy, fruit drinks, you know, and next thing you know, you got a situation where Which can go one way or the other, and now they make it where the business is. | ||
They want to keep their product or the bad guys, but the people at the swap meets and on Facebook and these groups selling all the stolen pilfered goods are somehow the, you know, innocent people. | ||
So it really is bizarro world out here. | ||
I deal with this stuff on a pretty routine basis, and we've had to change our game as far as loss prevention and elements that go with that. | ||
So it's not just the drug decriminalization, it's that that sort of spawns a whole host of other crimes that come along with it. | ||
Correct. They still defeat their habit, and then when they realize they can get money for what they steal, they'll even sell these things online with the security caps on or the stickers still on them and all that stuff. | ||
So what you've seen in like San Francisco or Sacramento, these other liberal havens that spread out here to the Illinois Empire, Riverside, to places like Bakersfield, where they drove off Antifa. | ||
Even our retail chains that are inland are getting hit by all these liberal shoplifting gangs. | ||
And then when they're arrested, it turns out they come from those enclaves, Los Angeles, suburbs of Silicon Valley, Oakland and the like. | ||
So I'm not going to pull a Nick Flintes and say it's one specific statistic, but it kind of feeds into itself. | ||
And if the narcos aren't afraid of their customers and their assets getting arrested for dealing with these products, the narcos are now emboldened. | ||
And I believe it was InfoWars that actually put up an article last week that the narcos are running the southern border. | ||
And it's pretty darn true. | ||
Yeah, absolutely. Yeah, and it's... | ||
Yeah, no, you're exactly right. | ||
I mean, these terrorist networks on the border are very, very happy that California is helping them to increase their trade. | ||
Thank you for that call, Sean. | ||
Very good, as always. I know Matt wants to chime in on this. | ||
I'm known for my brilliant ideas. | ||
And what, you know, just because the drugs are legal doesn't mean they're free, right? | ||
And so that's kind of the issue, right? | ||
People are stealing, they're committing crimes to get their fix. | ||
Yeah. So I think we need to have universal free drug care. | ||
Okay. You know what? | ||
I guarantee you that's the next step. | ||
I guarantee it. I guarantee, like, how long do you think it's going to be? | ||
Two years, five years before British Columbia is like, you know, we decriminalize, we legalize drugs. | ||
The drug problem got way worse. | ||
What if we give them out for free? | ||
I mean, there's already needle exchanges in places like San Francisco. | ||
So your parody is not that far off reality, Matt. | ||
Oh, that's not parody. | ||
unidentified
|
Actually, it's actually not a real proposal. | |
Good lord. Good lord. | ||
Thanks so much for the call, Sean. | ||
Thanks for the idea, Matt. | ||
Let's go to Max in Kansas. | ||
Free drugs. It's not enough that they're available. | ||
They have to be paid for by the government. | ||
Matt, for President 2024. | ||
Free drugs. Hey, that would probably work. | ||
I'm not even kidding. Let's go to Max in Kansas. | ||
You're on the air. Hey, good morning, Harrison. | ||
How are you? Good morning. | ||
unidentified
|
How are you? I'm doing, well, okay, I have strep throat, but as soon as the doctor told me that yesterday, I immediately thought I was calling in the next day. | |
So, I can't complain. | ||
I'm missing prison. So, I called in today. | ||
You know, not to talk about just another political issue the country's facing right now, but only a bit more heavy than that. | ||
Harrison, have you read David Icke's book, The Biggest Secret? | ||
No, I have not. Okay. | ||
unidentified
|
I can't recommend that you read it enough. | |
Same goes for the crew or anybody in the audience who hasn't read the book yet. | ||
Ike is probably one of the smartest people I've ever heard speak. | ||
I think the man's a genius. | ||
I know a lot of people give him a lot of hate and like to make fun of him for having some... | ||
I will admit really strange beliefs, but you can't say that he doesn't believe what he's saying or that he's disingenuous or anything like that. | ||
And he has a lot of information to back up what he's saying, but anyway... | ||
The book gets into some of the more esoteric stuff behind the evil we see in the world today, and it really gets into the nitty-gritty of where it all kind of originated from, also dives into secret societies, prominent politicians, and testimony from others over what they're really up to behind closed doors, ritualistic sacrifices to the satanic beities, human and child trafficking rings, and who controls them, of course, what I most notably know for, reptoids. | ||
But Harrison, I've been reading this book a lot lately, and I mean, when you look around the world at what's being done to us, it truly is hard sometimes to classify the evil we face as something human, dude. | ||
In the book, I tell stories from people who essentially or have personally come to him and told him some of the things they've seen. | ||
I mean, world leaders, some of the world's most famous politicians raping and murdering children, like raping them, killing them, and drinking their blood. | ||
And you know what? It's not so hard for me to believe this kind of stuff really happens. | ||
You know that because we know for a fact that the world elite meets in secrecy for ritualistic purposes, and we're just supposed to trash or make fun of the possibility that they actually engage in that behavior. | ||
I remind you, a couple decades ago, Tony Blair in an interview admitted that his wife engaged in rebirthing rituals. | ||
A former Clinton employee, I think his name was Larry Nichols, came on and said Hillary Clinton was in a witch's covenant in the 90s. | ||
And mind you, you have Bohemian Grove, Colin Powell, Henry Kissinger, Bill Gates, Dick Cheney, Bill Clinton. | ||
Alan Greenspan, former Fed Chair, and Gerald Ford, H.W. Bush, all these guys, been to Bohemian Grove, and as Alex Jones exposed, burned effigies and worshiped a giant 40-foot tall concrete statue of a Canaanite god of child sacrifice. | ||
George W. Bush and John Kerry's going... | ||
Spirit cooking. | ||
They pretend, you know, they act out as if they're cannibals. | ||
You think, you know, it's that big of a stretch to think they actually do it in secret. | ||
In public, they do it pretend. | ||
You don't think they do it for real and in private? | ||
unidentified
|
Yep. Oh, absolutely. | |
And you have a few more things. | ||
Like a Hollywood actor by the name of Isaac Cappy a few years ago in 2019 released a video calling Tom Hanks, Seth Green, and Steven Spielberg pedophiles and said that within Hollywood there's a high society that traffics and rapes children. | ||
He said this is something worldwide. | ||
And mind you, of course, he said he wasn't suicidal in the midst of all this and even said so during a livestream. | ||
And yet what do you think happened in three days after he said he wasn't suicidal? | ||
What happened, Harrison? Tell me. | ||
Yeah, I mean, I really don't know. | ||
I remember that being a very suspicious story at the time. | ||
I also remember him being pretty troubled also. | ||
So I was sort of up in the air about, you know, whether that was real or not. | ||
But he's definitely not the only one. | ||
There have been a lot of people who are just like, yeah, it's an open secret. | ||
I mean, that's almost the craziest thing. | ||
As you point out, like, a lot of people go to David Icke. | ||
Do you have any idea how many people, like, know about this stuff and just sort of go, oh, yeah, those guys get up to crazy stuff? | ||
Like, millions of people know this is real. | ||
It's just they don't talk about it because they're scared of the people that do it. | ||
So that's what happens. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, and, you know, I just find it weird, though, the fact that, I mean, he allegedly jumped off a bridge and was run over by a truck deemed suicide by police three days after saying he wasn't suicidal. | |
And, you know, you look at John and Tony and Vanessa's art that they have in their house depicting children being tied up, gagged, and screaming. | ||
Just recently, also, Jamie Lee Curtis was found to have had a similar painting with a disturbing one showing a naked child in the tub. | ||
You know, Balenciaga recently, too. | ||
James Alfonso having friends on Instagram, posting creepy pictures of kids with hashtags, seeing boy lover and I love children. | ||
And UN Peacekeepers in 2017. | ||
In fact, I remember trafficking children in Haiti. | ||
I could go on and on, but these are objective facts. | ||
You know what? Nobody can tell me I'm crazy for believing there's a much more sinister level of this stuff because you don't do these things. | ||
I don't even want to call them human because the way they treat others, the way they treat children says otherwise, but you don't do what they've done and still be in touch with humanity. | ||
Because at the root of society's evil is a cabal of Satan-worshipping pedophiles hellbent on exploiting children, put simply. | ||
Intelligence agencies, foundations like the Clinton Foundation, the Department of State, other NGOs supply these demons with children to rape and murder every year. | ||
Millions of children, mind you, go missing all around the world every year. | ||
Close to half a million kids go missing just here in the U.S. every year, and I don't think it's irrational to say that there's something to this. | ||
There's a correlation between this elite that seems so obsessed with children and the amount of children that go missing every year. | ||
This is something that deserves focus because it's not easy to talk about because these are kids that will never see their families again. | ||
They're being taken away. | ||
And they'll never see their brother and sister again. | ||
They'll never know what it's like to be free from what they were put through by these demented, vile scumbags. | ||
And they need a voice, and God's called upon us to help them and expose the elite of what they're doing to them. | ||
100%, Max. And that's what InfoWars has been screaming from the rooftops the entire time we've been in existence. | ||
Here's a great example. Jimmy Saville could have been part of a satanic abuse ring, according to reports. | ||
This is from a mainstream newspaper, the Scottish Daily Express. | ||
One of his victims recalled being led into a room that was filled with candles on the lowest level of the hospital, somewhere that was not regularly used. | ||
Several adults were there, including Jimmy Saville, who, like the others, was wearing a robe and a mask. | ||
I mean, this is well-known. | ||
I mean, this is a very, very well-known scandal, and yet people still act like it doesn't happen. | ||
You think this is just a one-off? | ||
You think just one dude was doing this and nobody else was involved? | ||
Who else was there? Who was wearing the hoods and the masks? | ||
This is very widespread. | ||
Why have we never heard about any of Jeffrey Epstein's clients? | ||
All right, welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
This is the American Journal. Third hour has begun. | ||
We'll be joined later this hour by Corey Tusik of My Movies Plus. | ||
There's a new contest going on, and he wants to solicit applications or submissions to that. | ||
So, very excited to talk to him, figure out what all that is about. | ||
They're always doing exciting things over there in My Movies Plus. | ||
I'm going to go out to your phone calls once again. | ||
I know we have people that want to talk about all sorts of stuff. | ||
I want to go to Jeremiah in California. | ||
He's talking about the water issue in the southwest United States. | ||
Here's a story from CNN. California floated cutting major southwest cities off Colorado River water before touching its agriculture supply, sources say. | ||
The All-American Canal carries water from the Colorado River to Southern California. | ||
In a closed-door negotiation last week over the fate of the Colorado River, representatives from California's powerful water districts proposed modeling what the basin's future would look like if some of the West's biggest cities, including Phoenix and Las Vegas, were cut off from the river's water supply, three people familiar with the talks told CNN. More than 5 million people in Arizona are served by the Colorado River, which accounts for 40% of Phoenix's supply. | ||
Around 90% of Las Vegas's water is from the river. | ||
The proposal came in a session between states that was focused on achieving unprecedented water cuts to save the Colorado River, a system that overall provides water and electricity to more than 40 million people in the West. | ||
For months, seven states have been trying to come up with cuts to keep the river system from crashing. | ||
Horrifying. You would think maybe this was the type of thing that the World Economic Forum would be interested in, right? | ||
They're trying to save the world. | ||
They're trying to guide human development to be sustainable in the future. | ||
Well, meanwhile, they are the ones funding and building out all of the infrastructure and bringing in all of the people that require the water that is causing a river system to collapse here in the United States in the 20th century. | ||
It seems like there could be solutions to this. | ||
That don't involve eating bugs or having a microchip implanted under your skin or not being allowed to fly planes unless you have a high enough social credit score. | ||
Like, the things they're focusing on are so far off the mark and pointless compared to what's actually going on. | ||
This is why we rage against them. | ||
People don't get it. They think that, like, being against the climate scam means that you, like, hate the Earth. | ||
I would love if we had beautiful, clean, fresh rivers and... | ||
You know, beautiful, untouched wild lands and the rainforest wasn't torn down. | ||
But all the people doing that are the same ones meeting in Davos and telling you that you have to eat bugs to save the earth. | ||
They're psychopaths. | ||
They have no concern at all for natural ecology. | ||
They have no concern whatsoever for the real environment. | ||
They know that the environment is being disturbed and disrupted by human beings. | ||
And so they're using that as an excuse to try to depopulate human beings when really what we should be doing is Trying to live in cooperation with the Earth, to be stewards of the Earth in a responsible way. | ||
Jeremiah, you're there in California. | ||
What are you seeing having to do with this? | ||
unidentified
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Well, as I said before to the screener, driving between Southern California and Central California, I see signs saying that 78% of the water is being dumped into the ocean. | |
Now, I'm looking at the—you've got a good ad there. | ||
I looked at the California State Water Resources Board, and most of these reservoirs are almost full. | ||
Trinity is the only one that's really at 31%, and every other one of them is almost near 70%. | ||
Now, what you said from that CNN report, my gosh, is it really the tyrant in California is trying to impose tyranny on the two neighboring states, especially Arizona? | ||
Anyhow, that just blew my mind right there. | ||
Yep. They definitely are. | ||
Well, here's a headline to back up what you're saying. | ||
California's rain bounty slips into the ocean, and drought-shocked Central Valley farmers want an explanation. | ||
95% of the water that's collected in the San Francisco-San Joaquin Delta has been flushed out to sea, leaving farmers frustrated with lots of questions. | ||
But you need to eat bugs, and Phoenix needs to not have water anymore while they dump all of the water into the sea. | ||
liberalism folks all right welcome back ladies and gentlemen just insanity across the board here Hands off Europe, Pope Francis tells Africa. | ||
No, I'm sorry. No, I had that wrong. | ||
Hands off Africa, Pope tells Rich World. | ||
Sorry, my bad. Pope denounced the poison of greed driving conflicts in Africa as he began to visit the Democratic Republic of Congo on Tuesday. | ||
Yeah, you know what's the problem with the Democratic Republic of Congo? | ||
It's all those non-Congolese people coming in and doing stuff, right? | ||
I don't even like talking about it. | ||
There's literally just like cannibal warlords running Congo right now. | ||
If anything, Africa needs more intervention. | ||
Saying the rich world had to realize that people were more precious than the minerals in the earth beneath them. | ||
Wow. I never thought of it that way. | ||
Gee, thanks, Pope. What about the mobs of cannibals and rape gangs using sexual violence as a weapon of war? | ||
Any comment on that? | ||
No? Just the... | ||
Okay, sorry. It's just the... | ||
See, the people are more precious than the minerals in the earth beneath them, but also, you know, you need the slaves to dig the pits to get the... | ||
Lithium and precious minerals to power the electric cars that you insist everybody has to drive. | ||
Is there any sense of, like, incongruity in their minds? | ||
Any sense of cognitive dissonance there? | ||
I'm sure we have the video, right? | ||
This is the tail end of the supply chain for electric vehicles. | ||
It's just literally a pit of hell. | ||
Just human beings in a mass, like an amp pile. | ||
Digging toxic mud to make the batteries to serve the World Economic Forum's ridiculous so-called climate goals. | ||
And you've got the very same people doing that, coming in and lecturing everybody else about what they're doing. | ||
Again, I just can't help but see consistencies through all of this, like a line of continuity through everything that they do. | ||
Just insane. Um... | ||
He condemned terrible forms of exploitation, unworthy of humanity in Congo, where vast mineral wealth has fueled war, displacement, and hunger. | ||
Hands off the Democratic Republic of Congo. | ||
Hands off Africa. Stop choking Africa. | ||
It's not a mine to be stripped or a terrain to be plundered. | ||
Is he talking to the Chinese? | ||
Because they're the ones doing this right now. | ||
Again, no, he's not. | ||
I mean, it sucks what's going on in Africa. | ||
But that's not new. | ||
It's sort of a hellish place in general. | ||
I'm sure there's nice parts of it, but they're not the Congo, that's for sure. | ||
The Pope criticized rich countries for ignoring the tragedies unfolding in Congo and elsewhere in Africa. | ||
Okay, hands off Africa, but also I condemn you for ignoring what's going on in Africa. | ||
You should be involved here. Wait a second. | ||
It's just like... | ||
unidentified
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I don't know. | |
I really don't get it. Like how any of these people can't... | ||
I don't know. | ||
It's... It's got to be dishonesty, right? | ||
It can't just be ignorance. | ||
They know. They're aware. | ||
They get what's going on. | ||
Right? It's just the same throughout, right? | ||
They'll criticize... Western countries while offshoring all of their businesses to China, which is just the most explicitly racist and exploitative country in the history of the world. | ||
And it's just baffling how all of the people at the top of the society, all the people in the eye of the pyramid, every single one of them, Pushes exactly the same message. | ||
You ever watched that documentary Empire of Dirt? | ||
Empire of Dust? | ||
It's one of those. It's basically following a Chinese company that goes into the Congo. | ||
And the Congolese people are like really pissed because everything the Belgians built 50 years ago is collapsing and nobody in... | ||
The former Belgian Congo has the ability to replace or repair it, so all the roads are collapsing and the railroads are failing, and they're all just like, gee, sure would be nice if we had Europeans here. | ||
And the Chinese come in and don't build anything for them, and just build their own compounds with these barbed wire fences to keep all the locals out. | ||
And the Chinese are the future. | ||
They're going to be in charge forever, and that's a good thing. | ||
Experience should be passed on. | ||
It's the only way you develop. You went backwards, not forward. | ||
You needed the things others had left you. | ||
You neglected the things others had left you. | ||
What's more, you completely destroyed them. | ||
But no, we should stay out. | ||
Let the Chinese go in and just ruthlessly destroy it all. | ||
Exploit it all. Crazy. | ||
Totally crazy. Let's go out to your phone calls now. | ||
Daniel in Vancouver. | ||
You can tell what's happening with legalization of drugs there in Canada. | ||
All drugs now legal in British Columbia. | ||
Go ahead, Daniel. You're on the air. Yeah. | ||
unidentified
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First of all, thank you for taking my call. | |
Sure. And before I say something, can I just say something on behalf of Infowars to the people in America and Canada? | ||
Please. Basically, what I would like to say to them is that The people of Infowars have been really working hard. | ||
They've been defunded, demonetized, you name it, and vilified for everything when that's all they're trying to do is save people's lives. | ||
Whether you're a Democrat, whether you're a Republican or whatever you are, you've got to think about it. | ||
If Infowars is gone, you will never know the truth and what's going to happen. | ||
It's going to be too late, and there's nothing you guys can do about it. | ||
So please fund Infowars.com so they can do their job and save your lives. | ||
Thank you. Wow, thank you, Daniel. | ||
Yeah, I agree completely. | ||
unidentified
|
So what I'm thinking about is, because I used to live in Vancouver, I used to do security there, and this was back seven years ago, and it was back then. | |
Now, the drugs, from what I understand, I think are part of the universal system. | ||
So they get the free drugs. | ||
And they've been having problems for a long time because there was a premier that we had was Gordon Campbell. | ||
And he got all the people who were in mental asylums and put them out on the street. | ||
And it's been, I think it was in the 80s. | ||
Yeah. And 80s or 90s. | ||
But, you know, he started the whole problem. | ||
And they haven't... | ||
Renovated. Any old asylums, they can put the people there so at least they can be looked after. | ||
They're all out on the street on their own. | ||
And unfortunately, I don't agree with this drug system because the thing is, where is the drugs coming from and who's paying for it? | ||
Are we paying for it to keep these guys doing drugs? | ||
And this is what I totally disagree with. | ||
British Columbia, Vancouver has become a cesspool of a city. | ||
You're looking at a one-bedroom apartment for like $1,800 to $2,000 a month. | ||
And no one can live there. | ||
We have a medical person there who's in charge, Bonnie Henry. | ||
You can look it up on Wikipedia. | ||
She's worked for the WHO. She was also involved to work in the Obama project when they brought the Ebola to the states to see how it would affect the people. | ||
And I think she's probably part of the problem that if the next virus is going to be Ebola-based, she's the one that worked with it on behalf of Obama's funding. | ||
You can look that up on Wikipedia. | ||
And it's becoming a joke here that a lot of people, they cannot have doctors. | ||
There's a lot of small hospitals in small towns that are closing down. | ||
And then they have this MAID program, which is... | ||
Oh my God, yeah, the assisted suicide. | ||
Oh my God, that's such a good point. I didn't even bring that up. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah, and also... | |
Do heroin. If that doesn't work, kill yourself. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah, and if not, we're going to do it for you. | |
And then they're going to decide who's mental. | ||
So if I go against... | ||
I'm not a vaccine guy. | ||
I never took it. Neither has my mother, who's 85, who's never been sick. | ||
But I guess according to them, you know, we are the bad guys, right? | ||
Yeah, that makes you insane and crazy. | ||
I'll tell you what, it sounds like California to me. | ||
Sounds a lot like anywhere these liberal policies are put forward. | ||
You make a lot of good points. I'm sorry, we have to go to commercial break, so I don't want you to get cut off. | ||
But thank you very much for the call. Daniel, we'll get to more of your calls. | ||
On the other side, we'll be welcoming Corey Tusik a little bit later, so don't go anywhere. | ||
All right, welcome back, folks. | ||
We'll continue to take your calls this segment. | ||
Welcome to Corey Tusek of My Movies Plus. | ||
Again, I'm still sort of stuck. | ||
And I want to make it perfectly clear. | ||
It feels like we have a handicap at InfoWars because we know that people will take the least generous interpretation of anything that we say. | ||
And so it's exhausting. | ||
It's impossible to talk about any of this stuff if you constantly have to be taking account of People reading into what you're saying completely incorrectly, right? | ||
And again, this sort of goes across the entire swath of what we discuss. | ||
I'm trying to think of how to explain it, right? | ||
Because you have things like environmentalism. | ||
I am an environmentalist. | ||
I love nature. I love animals. | ||
It breaks my heart to know that in my lifetime there are some animals that have died out never to be seen again. | ||
Unless some creepy Chinese scientist clones it to butcher or something. | ||
It's very sad to know that there are things that are going away that will never, ever, ever be replaced. | ||
And that's horrifying to me. | ||
To see the trees that are We're good to go. | ||
At the best case scenario, the worst case scenario is it makes those problems worse and usually just creates a whole bunch of other problems completely different that we then have to try to solve, but then repeat the cycle over and over. | ||
So it's almost impossible to, again, cover any of this stuff because the interpretation of it from the outside is, well, if you don't want to go along with the New World Order WEF climate change program, it must mean you just don't care about the Earth. | ||
And it's just like, no, I don't care about the scammers that are using the earth as an excuse to enslave humanity. | ||
I care about the real issues and I'm pissed off at the people who hijack all of that energy and effort and turn it towards stuff that just does absolutely nothing for anybody. | ||
Same thing, I love Mexico. | ||
I love going and visiting Mexico. | ||
I love Mexican people. At least half of my friends are either immigrants or the children of immigrants. | ||
I love those people. I don't want them gone. | ||
I'm glad that they're here. | ||
That doesn't mean that I want an open border run by the cartels, human trafficking a million plus people every six months, and just swamping our entire system and costing us trillions. | ||
It's not helpful to anybody. | ||
You're not helping anyone. You're definitely not improving the conditions in Mexico. | ||
You're empowering the people that have destroyed Mexico, the cartels. | ||
You're certainly not helping America as we spend time and money and energy trying to deal with this problem that you've created by opening the border. | ||
I don't know. I just feel like at least every once in a while I need to explain or just throw the dishonest people a bone. | ||
Just throw up a shield that goes... | ||
I would love if Congo was a very peaceful place. | ||
I would love if the Congolese people... | ||
Didn't kill and eat each other. | ||
I really would love that. | ||
To blame it on Europe is the most disingenuous thing you can possibly say unless you're pointing to the people who run corporations that exploit the chaos in the Congo to get precious metals and lithium and all this stuff and to use the slave labor and to take advantage of the chaos and the murder to sell them weapons and all that. | ||
Like there are people that are benefiting from it, but it's not the West as a whole. | ||
It's certain people who also are the people who are in cahoots with Pope Francis to do all of this stuff. | ||
Hands off Africa, Pope tells the rich world. | ||
Which is just like, why don't you talk to, you're in Congo, why not talk to them about what's going on? | ||
You want to read a headline from five years ago, 2018, from the UN? | ||
Mass rape, cannibalism, dismemberment. | ||
UN team finds atrocities in Congo war. | ||
Rebels and government troops in Congo have committed atrocities, including mass rape, cannibalism, and dismemberment of civilians, according to testimony published on Tuesday. | ||
I don't even want to read some of this stuff. | ||
It is literally horrifying. | ||
You know, headline I read, it was the UN just being like, indescribable horror of what's going on. | ||
126-page report catalogued gruesome attacks committed in the conflict, which erupted in late 2016, involving militias, Congo militias and armed forces. | ||
Testimony include... | ||
Do I have to read this? | ||
Do I have to read this out loud? So, tell you what... | ||
I'm not going to read it. Just imagine the worst possible thing you could ever imagine. | ||
And that's what's happening in the Congo, of Congolese people doing it to other people from the Congo. | ||
So what are you talking about, Pope? | ||
And so, you know, it's this weird just like projection of issues. | ||
It's just like you're in a place where just the most horrific things are happening everywhere. | ||
And you're standing there, you know, standing on the mass grave, one of 86 that were discovered from this one conflict over a few years. | ||
And you're looking at this mass grave. | ||
You're with the people that committed the murders. | ||
And you turn to somebody 10,000 miles away and just go, hey, you get out of here. | ||
You stay away. | ||
This is your fault this is happening. | ||
It's insane. | ||
It's completely insane. | ||
It has nothing to do with reality. | ||
It has nothing to do with actually solving the real problems that we're dealing with. | ||
It has everything to do with weaponizing these problems so they can achieve their own ends. | ||
And usually taking advantage of and exploiting these problems. | ||
And China is a great example because whether it's climate change or racism or exploiting Africa, China is the number one example of this exploitation. | ||
The number one example of racism. | ||
The number one example of pollution and destroying the earth and running roughshod over any natural... | ||
Anything and just destroying it completely, eating it like an all-consuming dragon. | ||
I mean, these are the people that your ire and your anger and your fury should be focused on. | ||
Instead, you empower them, you send all of the industry over there, you tell the world they're the future and they're going to be in charge from now on. | ||
So just spare us with your condescension. | ||
Spare us with your outrage. | ||
Turn it to the people that deserve it and leave the good people who live in functioning societies that actually care about preserving the earth and turn your anger towards everybody that's doing the opposite. | ||
So it's not that I don't care about the people. | ||
I do care about the people in Congo, which is why I want Pope Francis to shut the hell up about European intervention in the Congo, which actually prevented some of this for a little while. | ||
Again, I literally am not even going to read some of the stuff that happens in the Congo. | ||
You can read it yourself. If you're a radio listener, go to Bandai Video and find this segment later. | ||
Read it for yourself or go to Reuters and just search U.S. mass rape, cannibalism, dismemberment, atrocities, Congo war. | ||
So you can talk to the people committing the massacres or you can blame it on Europe because that's racially or politically expedient. | ||
Morons. Alright folks, I'm afraid we're not going to be able to have time to go out to more of your phone calls. | ||
We're going to be joined by Corey Tusick in the next segment. | ||
If you've called in and are on hold today, we'll write down your names. | ||
You can call in tomorrow and we'll go to you first and foremost. | ||
You will not have to stay on hold at all. | ||
I feel so bad when I leave people on hold because I want to hear from all of you. | ||
But then the calls are so good that I let them go for a while. | ||
Before we welcome Corey Tusek, I do want to remind you that Brain Force Plus is 50% off right now on Infowarsstore.com. | ||
The Ultimate Bone Broth Plus is 25% off. | ||
That's 25% off Ultimate Bone Broth Plus. | ||
It's been out for years, but it is back better than ever. | ||
A new and improved ingredients list. | ||
That makes it even more powerful, really maximizes the ingredients that make it, you know, such a popular product. | ||
It's flying off the shelves. If you want to get it at that 25% off, go now because it will not be there for much longer. | ||
40% off down and out as well. | ||
That's one of my favorite. If you have trouble sleeping, if you need to get a good night's rest, try down and out. | ||
It's 40% off right now on InfoWarsStore.com. | ||
Keep us on the air. Keep us in the fight. | ||
Keep us exposing the globalists and their lies. | ||
All right, welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
This is the American Journal. I am your host, Harrison Smith. | ||
My guest today is Corey Tusik. | ||
He is the CEO of My Movies Plus, a streaming platform that brings you a wide range of movies to your streaming devices and even features a section of band media. | ||
That's too controversial for mainstream platforms. | ||
The website, again, is MyMoviesPlus.com, and it's available on all devices that you can stream on. | ||
Corey's Twitter is at Corey underscore Tusik, T-U-C-E-K, and you come on today to really make a pretty exciting announcement. | ||
I know MyMoviesPlus is really changing the game in a lot of ways and coming out with new ways to do things. | ||
It's great. I mean, you are the... | ||
Infowars version of Netflix, right? | ||
You're like Netflix, but you're freedom-focused, and you have banned information, and you're absolutely changing the dynamic of the streaming game. | ||
Welcome to the show once again, Corey. | ||
unidentified
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Thanks for having me on. | |
I'll take that moniker, I guess. | ||
InfoWars is Netflix. | ||
People are sick of Netflix. | ||
Netflix is collapsing. | ||
They're going down the drain because everything they produce is complete trash. | ||
People are looking for more entertainment. | ||
People need more stuff to consume. | ||
My Movies Plus is a fantastic place to find it. | ||
You have great documentaries, but there's great originals that y'all are coming out with. | ||
I just can't say enough about it. | ||
You're doing an online film festival in March. | ||
unidentified
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Tell us about this. Yeah, so we had wanted to do this for a while, and then we decided to announce it a couple weeks ago, and we were like, we just gotta do it, because there's so many film festivals out there, but a lot of films get ignored. | |
And that's just not censorship for political reasons, but censorship. | ||
I mean, just independent films get pushed to the wayside, and they're stuck not really getting a platform to get their film out there. | ||
So we wanted to invite as many films as possible, and there's a lot of films too that maybe they still haven't released widely, but they did a mini-festival run in the last year or two, especially with COVID. So we thought, why not do a film festival on our platform? | ||
And it's also something good for our subscribers, because our subscribers will get to watch everything on the platform. | ||
They'll be a part of the festival. | ||
They can watch it live, they can watch it on demand. | ||
So we really wanted to do something that was... | ||
She looks like the connection went down. | ||
We'll make sure to get that back up with Corey Tusek. | ||
But I can just say, you know, I started my career as a filmmaker, and film festivals were definitely the highlight of the whole thing, because not only are you watching the movie, there's something different about watching it with the crowd. | ||
There's something different about watching it with a ton of different people there in the room. | ||
It's entirely different energy. | ||
It's really, you know, rewarding as a filmmaker and as an audience member. | ||
And then, of course, with most festivals afterwards, there's like a Q&A and you can ask the filmmaker questions and they can give you kind of insight into how they produced it. | ||
So I know they're doing that in a more digital form with My Movies Plus, which again is exciting. | ||
I don't think I've ever heard of a streaming site doing something like this. | ||
I mean, Netflix and all these other mainstream streaming sites... | ||
It's all sort of opaque what they do. | ||
It's all very behind a paywall. | ||
Not even a paywall. Just behind a big dark curtain that you can't see through where they don't tell you how popular movies are. | ||
They definitely don't make it known when movies are leaving and when they're going to come. | ||
It's all just like you just kind of get whatever they give you and don't question it. | ||
Whereas MyMovies Plus really seems to be taking that streaming platform paradigm and expanding it and are creating new things. | ||
So I guess we're still having trouble connecting with Corey Teese. | ||
Am I because of the weather around here? | ||
It's still very bad and there's still a lot of electricity down. | ||
So do we have Corey? | ||
All right, Corey, you're back now. | ||
Sorry, you got cut off there. | ||
But I was just extolling the virtues of film festivals and saying how excited I was that y'all are doing something like this because it's not something that I've ever heard of a streaming platform doing before. | ||
So sorry, if you could continue with just how this festival is going to take place. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah, and just that your audience will appreciate this, but like you have no idea. | |
Ever since we became a freedom of speech platform that was really fighting against the mainstream narrative, technical difficulties like that happen all the time now. | ||
Coincidence! My computer is plugged in, everything is fine, and it just shut down. | ||
It just completely shut down, and our phone calls do that all the time, so I assume the feds are always listening. | ||
I have some friends over there, and I just tell them, hey, what's up? | ||
But anyways, back to what we were talking about with the festival. | ||
There's some people that have done some quasi-online festivals. | ||
But, you know, they always come with, you know, a certain flavor, and we're like, let's just open it up. | ||
And it's completely for anybody, you know? | ||
So it's not necessarily going to be, you know, like one way or the other, because we have some content that we're bringing that, you know, is probably much more on the left side that will, you know, really... | ||
We really rub, you know, people on the right the wrong way, but that's the way it is, you know? | ||
It's like, let's create a platform where everybody can have their voice shared. | ||
So we have stuff like our biggest one that we're releasing and you're showing right now is The Dividers, which is a documentary about Shia LaBeouf when he did the He Will Not Divide Us. | ||
He did the art installation after Trump was inaugurated, and he stood in front of a camera saying he will not divide us, and 4chan decided to troll him and take him on. | ||
And so that's a film that we made a Movies Plus original, and we're releasing at the festival, and then it will be available afterwards. | ||
But it's stuff like that that we know because Nick Fuentes is in it because he showed up as one of the people to troll Shia, so he was interviewed about it, and I was like, this film is never going to make it to Netflix. | ||
So it's an opportunity for them to reach a mainstream audience. | ||
Yeah, that's great. And man, what a crazy time that was. | ||
Right after the victory of Trump, spirits were high. | ||
And 4chan figured out how to triangulate. | ||
So Shia LaBeouf, he was so tortured by 4chan. | ||
He was so overwhelmed by them that he ended up just putting a flag somewhere in the middle of nowhere. | ||
And just with a live stream on it. | ||
And the 4chan people figured out from the sounds what type of frogs were nearby. | ||
And so they triangulated using like... | ||
unidentified
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They looked at the air traffic control too. | |
Just totally, like, you talk about weaponized autism. | ||
I mean, it took them, like, two days. | ||
And then people from Fortin were driving around honking to listen to the stream to see if you could hear the honks in the stream to radio in and go, okay, you're getting closer. | ||
Keep going in the direction you're... | ||
I remember that. | ||
It was utterly fascinating. I would love to see a documentary that really tells that story in a great way. | ||
unidentified
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That's very exciting. Yeah, and the documentary, it gets into, I mean, it has all the characters in it, like Sam Hyde is interviewed in it, you know, Brittany Venti, you know, and a lot of the people that were there trolling Shia. | |
So it's just, it's one of those stories that, like with you, like I was fascinated while it was happening, and as soon as Josiah McGarvey, who brought it, the Australian filmmaker that brought it to me, As soon as I saw it, I was like, oh man, this is going to be a Movies Plus original. | ||
I know it. And I think we're going to have a pretty big turnout just to watch that movie alone. | ||
And it's kind of highlighting the festival. | ||
But then we are also encouraging. | ||
I have somebody that sent me a short. | ||
So we have three different categories. | ||
We have documentaries, features, and then we have shorts. | ||
And each of them get a cash prize. | ||
So, like, if anybody in your audience knows filmmakers that, you know, have content that could be submitted, then, you know, they can go to moviesplusdirect.com and it's slash filmfestival and you can see all the details there. | ||
And they can submit it there or they can just email me. | ||
Contact at mymoviesplus.com with their content, and we'll review it. | ||
We're going to announce the slate that comes out. | ||
We'll have at least a movie a day and doing live streams with Q&A with the production crew. | ||
We have a Bitcoin documentary that's going in, and we have just a bunch of exciting stuff. | ||
It's really exciting to see the response that we got because I put it up, actually, and we didn't even announce it. | ||
And I started getting submissions from films from all over. | ||
So if you know anybody, you can. | ||
And you want to sign up and join. | ||
Also, again, we reactivated the promo code Infowars. | ||
So if you use Infowars, no space, just one word, it'll get $5 off your subscription. | ||
And you'll be able to enjoy the whole festival and also vote on who the winner is. | ||
So if you know a filmmaker that you're sending our way, you can vote for them to win a cash prize and get that little laurel on their poster that says winner. | ||
That's awesome. Yeah, so a couple of reasons you're coming on today, not only to solicit submissions for this and get people, and we'll get into it on the other side, but I know that's a big thing. | ||
I mean, people, blood, sweat, and tears, they pour into a movie, and then it maybe does a festival run, and then that's it. | ||
You're actually giving them a platform where they can be seen by millions and actually, you know, on a streaming platform. | ||
I mean... There's a lot of film I know personally. | ||
In fact, Tony, my friend Tony from middle school, has a brilliant documentary that he's so frustrated he can't get anywhere. | ||
I'm going to tell him to submit it. | ||
So not only are you soliciting submissions, but also if you go and sign up for My Movies Plus, you then can vote on who gets that ultimate cash prize. | ||
And the promo code is just InfoWars. | ||
So when you sign up for My Movies Plus, you just enter InfoWars. | ||
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Simple as that? Yep. Yep, just InfoWars, you know, one word, and then you get $5 off, and that gets you a whole year. | |
And we have so much other content that I can, if you're up against a break, I can get into the other content on the other side. | ||
Yeah, we will do that. | ||
We're going to a break now. We'll be back with Corey Tusek, CEO of MyMoviesPlus, MyMoviesPlus.com. | ||
Use the promo code InfoWars and get ready for a festival. | ||
All right, folks, welcome back. This is the American Journal. | ||
I am your host, Harrison Smith. | ||
My guest is Corey Tusik, CEO of MyMoviesPlus, MyMoviesPlus.com. | ||
You can use the promo code INFOWARS to get $5 off a yearly subscription. | ||
And if you get that subscription, it gives you access and a say in their new digital film festival. | ||
And that'll be premiering March 3rd through the 12th, right? | ||
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3rd through the 12th is the film festival, and everything will be on demand, but we'll also do live screenings as well. | |
And that's really fun. | ||
And I was saying when you got disconnected that, you know, back when I made films primarily, I loved going to film festivals and I loved doing the Q&As. | ||
I mean, that really was like a highlight for me because it's – as a filmmaker, it's a little – you know, you can see the views go up on the internet, but you're just like, you know, it's just views. | ||
And it's one of the things I also – It's one of the things I miss about being able to put stuff on YouTube as InfoWars is just the comments come rolling in. | ||
So that interaction is so important as a filmmaker or an artist. | ||
So how are y'all going to do that and help to bring that festival feeling to the digital festival? | ||
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Yeah, so we're going to do, you know, basically a live event where the screening takes place and there will be comments enabled so people can comment if they want while they're watching. | |
But then also at the end, we'll have the filmmakers and the creators, you know, right there and we'll do a Q&A where you can either, you know, enter comments into the chat or you can... | ||
possibly email us and get into it as a Skype and we'll bring you in and do a face-to-face interview if you're interested in that. | ||
I have a feeling most people want to do comments, but we want to get that live feedback because like you said, there's nothing like that for the filmmaker who pours their heart and soul into this project. | ||
And like you said, it's nice to see the numbers go up but to get that direct feedback is something that will be really valuable for them, not just for this product and it helps them know that they did a good job and it was rewarding. | ||
But going forward, because I think a lot of filmmakers learn from that film festival process, and they learn from the questions they receive and how to take that forward into future projects that they create. | ||
It's also a way of building community because people who make the movies can go put it up there and then people who buy or fund movies can go and meet them and talk to them about what projects they have coming up next and hopefully work out some deals or whatever. | ||
So I really think this will go a long way in sort of creating what we like to talk about here at Infowords, which is the true ecosystem of... | ||
Right-wing, distant, or just freedom-loving people that don't want to be a part of the ecosystem we're in now where the money you spend to watch a movie on Netflix gets funneled to something like abortion clinic or something. | ||
We just want to be out of that system and in a system where we know that the people that we're supporting are people that believe like ourselves. | ||
I mean, that really is such an important thing. | ||
Can you talk a little bit more about how that sort of underpins a lot of what My Movies Plus is doing? | ||
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Yeah, I mean, that's what, you know, everything that we're pouring into this is we're really trying to support the filmmakers as much as possible. | |
So, you know, we're not we're we're keeping our overhead incredibly low. | ||
And that's, you know, causes a lot of problems for me because that makes my, you know, makes me do a lot more work than I would typically do. | ||
But a lot of that's because we're you know, we're putting it right back into the filmmakers pockets. | ||
You know, it's not, you know, millions of dollars now, but we're also actively looking at some content where there's some shows that have made a couple of seasons. | ||
And we're like looking at it on the inside, like, hey, like, let's let's build in an incentive for them. | ||
If they hit a certain percent or if they hit a certain growth, you know, metric, then we'll we'll fund season three. | ||
You know, like we'll we'll do that, you know, we'll we'll greenlight it. | ||
So, you know, your audience that who you know, you guys have been great supporters. | ||
You know, every time we've ever opened up this Info Wars promo code, it just you know, they fly off the shelf, the digital shelf. | ||
And, you know, so that's what I want your audience to know is they're they're supporting these creators. | ||
And that's going into their pockets. | ||
It's helping us grow the platform to create new content that you won't be able to find elsewhere. | ||
You know, because you can you can tell on our platform, if you look, the content we're going to bring you is stuff that you're not going to find anywhere. | ||
Like we actually in a couple of weeks, we'll have Mike Cernovich's film Hoaxed. | ||
It'll be coming on available to all subscribers. | ||
Alex's War is available right now. | ||
So if you sign up, you can watch Alex's War with your subscription. | ||
We have The Dividers coming out, obviously, in March. | ||
And then the George Floyd documentary where you talk to Miriam about the real timeline. | ||
That's available right now. | ||
And then we even have a group of filmmakers. | ||
They're called the Sound Mind Creative that... | ||
Have started this project called Follow the Science. | ||
And I think your audience will really like that. | ||
And they're going to do a sneak preview, a sneak peek with us in February here. | ||
And we're going to open it up to our audience and also their donors so they can get a little sneak peek of what's going on with episode one of Follow the Science on lockdowns. | ||
So, you know, it's basically right up your audience's alley. | ||
Yeah. Yeah, absolutely. | ||
And again, this is what we need. | ||
And My Movies Plus works just like any other streaming service where, you know, you sign up and pay the subscription, which is lower than most of the other, you know, places, especially lower if you use the promo code Infowars and get $5 off your yearly subscription subscription. | ||
But it's the same as any of those where you pay the subscription and then you get access to your entire library, which is sort of constantly changing. | ||
More stuff is being added. | ||
You guys also do something that I really like where you, you know, holidays, you'll have holiday movies that are available, you know, more Christmas movies around Christmas and holidays. | ||
Horror movies around Halloween, which I really like as well. | ||
So, you know, if people are... | ||
If you're familiar with how Netflix works, then you're familiar with how My Movies Plus works. | ||
It's just cheaper and probably better quality at the end of the day. | ||
So I think it's brilliant. And people don't need to wait until March when this film festival comes out. | ||
Again, you're constantly coming out with new stuff. | ||
Tell us about some of the other things you have. | ||
You've mentioned a few, and we've had the filmmakers on this show to talk about it. | ||
But again, what are people going to get when they sign up for My Movies Plus? | ||
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Yeah, I mean, so... | |
Trust the science is one of the things that, you know, I kind of briefly talked about it, but it's a group of filmmakers that are actually staying in the dark because they're afraid of the backlash that they're going to get for, you know, coming out publicly against the science narrative. | ||
So that's a lot of what we're, you know, who we're talking to right now. | ||
We're talking to people that are, you know, outside the mainstream narrative, you know, where... | ||
One leads to another. | ||
Q sent me, which by the way, I know a lot of people have seen episode one of Q sent me, and we had a delay. | ||
It was an unforeseen delay with the filmmakers and the filmmaking process that delayed episode two and three, but those will be coming out actually very shortly in the month of March. | ||
That was awesome. The first episode was fantastic, by the way. | ||
If people haven't seen that, you've got to go check it out. | ||
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You've got to check it out. And, you know, this group, this community of filmmakers, you know, like Jason Rink and Paul Eskendon are the ones that, you know, put us in touch with Miriam who made The Real Timeline. | |
And, you know, it's just one thing is leading to another. | ||
And then I had multiple people refer Josiah who made the movie about The Dividers. | ||
Sorry, I forgot for a second. | ||
He had multiple people refer to me and we had... | ||
We had, you know, this community's just coming together. | ||
We even have that TFW, No GF, about the, you know, the documentary about the dissident right, I guess, and the incels, they call them. | ||
Yeah, and that was Alex's first movie who then made Alex's War. | ||
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Yeah, yeah, exactly. Alex Lee Moyer, you know, who made it. | |
And by the way, I had not seen Alex's War until it was on our platform. | ||
It was just one of those things I never got around to. | ||
And then I watched it, and I'll tell you what, that is, it's very balanced, and it is also incredibly unsettling. | ||
But if you're an InfoWars person, you're totally going to see where it came from. | ||
And so I'm not as much of an InfoWars person, so I'm not as clued in as you guys. | ||
And I was like, oh my god. | ||
I kind of had to watch an episode of The Office afterwards just to get my brain settled so that I wasn't laying in bed thinking that the world was going to end. | ||
Right. No, it's a fantastic movie. | ||
I mean, that alone is worth the price for MyMoviesPlus.com. | ||
And again, you can use the promo code InfoWars. | ||
If you want to follow Corey, you can follow him on Twitter at Corey underscore Tusik. | ||
I'm very excited about what you're doing with MyMoviesPlus. | ||
I wonder if you're going to start seeing more people from the mainstream Hollywood world come over to y'all. | ||
Because everyone I've ever talked to that's clued in with that whole group... | ||
I know a lot of people that are sort of tangentially related to Hollywood or even very intimately related to people. | ||
Every one of them says, oh yeah, a lot of people in Hollywood watch InfoWars. | ||
A lot of them love Alex Jones. | ||
They won't say it. They won't ever talk about it because they know it's career suicide. | ||
But the audience that we have, the people awake in Hollywood is actually massive. | ||
So I wonder if you're going to have more people quietly coming over to y'all to see if they can get out from under the crushing weight of the Hollywood culture. | ||
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Yeah, it's funny the amount of people you see and reach out, you know, like under the wraps, they're like, hey, by the way, you know, even, you know, at film festivals and markets and stuff where I go, like I'm talking to people and they go, hey, by the way, don't tell anybody. | |
But, you know, I kind of, you know, this is ridiculous what's going on here. | ||
So, yeah, we see a lot of that. | ||
And also, as a business, I think Movies Plus is well positioned because we're kind of ahead of the curve here. | ||
You know, it's a constant race, but like, You can see that people are starting to wake up to the fact that something isn't quite right for the last couple years. | ||
And, you know, there's more people questioning things that have been, you know, unquestionable in the last couple years. | ||
So all of a sudden, that's starting to open up. | ||
And it's funny because I told the guys behind Follow the Science, I said, you know, initially, like, you would have been, like, a year ago, you would have been shot off into the sun if you tried to release this. | ||
And I was like, but now, like, I don't know. | ||
People are kind of waking up to the fact that, like, wait a minute. | ||
I think we kind of screwed up here. | ||
You know, there's even studies released about how lockdowns, you know, kids lost like a third of education. | ||
Yeah, no, you're exactly right. | ||
And so, you know, I know one of the things, I had a Netflix subscription, and you just scroll through for like an hour before going, all right, I'm going to watch the same thing over again. | ||
So if you're one of those people, just break the cycle. | ||
Go join MyMoviesPlus.com. | ||
Promo code Infowars. Corey Tusek, thank you so much for being with us, sir. | ||
All right, thanks. That's going to do it for us. | ||
Alex Jones begins in one minute. | ||
In the year 2000, Alex Jones' film, Dark Secrets Inside Bohemian Grove, showed the world how our so-called elite leaders practice mock showed the world how our so-called elite leaders practice mock ritual sacrifices in private. | ||
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This summer sets us free. | |
In 2007, Alex Jones releases Endgame, exposing the world elite's plans for covertly using biological weapons against all of mankind. | ||
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