Speaker | Time | Text |
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Good morning, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
It is Friday, the third day of Black History Month. | ||
You're watching American Journal. | ||
I'm your host, Harrison Smith. | ||
And as funny as I think it is to keep mentioning that it's Black History Month, with ever actually talking about black history, I decided we'd change things up a little bit. | ||
Instead, I actually put together a collection of clips. | ||
Unfortunately, I had to go all the way back to the late '80s and early '90s to find this, but I thought it was pretty illuminating. | ||
Here's a little montage of black people reminiscing about the black community before the government got involved. | ||
unidentified
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Let's watch. Tell me about growing up in Louisiana before you moved to Los Angeles. | |
I have the greatest memories of it. | ||
A family So much love. | ||
I knew nothing about segregation, knew nothing about prejudice or any kind of racial dilemmas or whatever. | ||
Just a time of love and family, eating together. | ||
You just could be whatever you wanted to be. | ||
And I remember early on my parents stressing education, the need for education being the key. | ||
It was just great. I remember the Sundays we sat down, we ate together, we walked. | ||
You know, to church every Sunday. | ||
It was a great, great time. I grew up in South Philadelphia. | ||
We didn't realize it was segregated. | ||
All we knew is that our neighborhood was all black, and we weren't even that conscious of color because of people who owned the store down the street, the black, the tailor, Restaurant owners, the undertaker, everybody in the neighborhood, and it was a very small street. | ||
Everybody worked, blue-collar, essentially. | ||
Very close-knit neighborhood. | ||
Everyone had over four children. | ||
We played in the streets together. | ||
And the level of interest in education was just profound. | ||
I mean, even to this day, I don't think I've ever had such a positive educational experience than I did in my first six years, because school was an integral part of the community. | ||
We had a black superintendent, a black principal, all the teachers were black. | ||
Many of them didn't live in the neighborhood either. | ||
Contrary to popular belief, they were middle-income people who lived elsewhere. | ||
But their hearts and their souls were into those kids. | ||
I remember that third grade and fourth grade plays were always conducted in the evenings so that parents could attend. | ||
And an auditorium that seated maybe 400, 500 people was standing room only for a third and fourth grade play. | ||
Up until 1959, 78% of all black families had a man and a woman in them. | ||
That's a fact. Teen pregnancy was looked down upon. | ||
Sexual activity among kids, everyone bragged about it. | ||
No one did it. But if someone became pregnant, if there was an aunt in the South, they would go there. | ||
So that the moral standards and ethical standards for people living in those communities was extremely high. | ||
It had little to do with your income. | ||
Many of us were poor without realizing that we were poor. | ||
During the war years, I thought everyone had one pair of shoes. | ||
Today I have a lot of shoes because of those early experiences. | ||
Oh, yeah. I mean, the discipline was in the community. | ||
I mean, you didn't speak back to an adult. | ||
The thought of an elderly person being disrespected was just unheard of. | ||
And teachers were never disrespected. | ||
In the black community, we were prepared by setting certain goals, objectives for ourselves. | ||
This was done primarily in the home, in the church, and in the school at that particular time because schools have a heavy reinforcement into our characters because they were black schools. | ||
Schools were not integrated at that time. | ||
You know, do the best that you can with your life. | ||
You are unique. You have a contribution to make. | ||
You have something to offer. | ||
You have a talent. You have skills. | ||
Many, many other things that you do have. | ||
Go on out there into the world and get them. | ||
And so it imposed a kind of discipline. | ||
And again, it was a discipline that had little to do with how much money you... | ||
There was a sense of comfort, a sense of well-being, a sense of oneness between the school and the community. | ||
It sounds like actually a wonderful time, absolutely. | ||
Absolutely. It really was. | ||
And the issue of white people was never... | ||
It was never issued. It was never discussed. | ||
The most exciting thing in our community is when Joe Lewis was fighting on Friday night on the radio. | ||
Good morning, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
Welcome to the American Journal. I am your host, Harrison Smith. | ||
What a show we have for you today. | ||
I have so many videos that I just absolutely have to play for you. | ||
Everything from Zelensky calling for preemptive nuclear strikes on Russia to Democrats bouncing around like meth heads in the... | ||
Just wild stuff across the board. | ||
We'll take your phone calls as well. | ||
I'll be joined by Dan Miller of the Texas Nationalist Movement a little bit later in the show as well. | ||
We'll do our daily dispatch in just a second, but just since I didn't have time to comment on it right there, I did want to finish up my thoughts about the video that you just watched. | ||
Again, the first video, I'm sure you recognize him, Johnny Cochran. | ||
I was doing an interview in, must have been 1992, 1994, something like that, around the time of the OJ trial, where he was describing life in Louisiana. | ||
The other guy is from a, it was unused footage from a PBS documentary, talking about growing up in South Philadelphia. | ||
South Philadelphia, you think people growing up there would describe it the same today? | ||
The family, the community, the focus on school, the respect for elder. | ||
Do you think any of that exists still? | ||
No? It's all gone away? | ||
It's interesting, isn't it? | ||
Because as they described this, everything they described was inborn, wasn't it? | ||
It was all self-enforced. | ||
It wasn't something imposed upon the black community. | ||
It was the black community themselves actually upholding themselves and keeping each other to account and running their own businesses. | ||
And it's almost sad because you almost have to go back to the early 1990s to find people who were alive who could tell you about that, about what it was like growing up in the 50s and 60s. | ||
And you can hear it. | ||
They describe it much the same way you would hear any white person describe their childhood in the 1950s and 60s. | ||
Again, because it was inborn. | ||
And this was all just before the government came in to help. | ||
You know, you're doing pretty well, but we think you could use our assistance to do a little better. | ||
Flash forward 40 years and the black community has been more or less utterly destroyed. | ||
There's a picture that's been going around that sort of illustrates it pretty well, actually. | ||
Typical black family in 1960. | ||
And when I say the term typical, I'm not using it lightly. | ||
I'm using it literally, right? | ||
The average, the most common example would be a family with a mother and a father, both in the house, married together with their kids. | ||
Dad usually had a job. Mom would be at home looking after the kids. | ||
Cut to 2019. And it's not just the average. | ||
It's almost an inverse, right? | ||
78% of black children in the 50s and 60s had both parents in the home. | ||
Now about 78% of the kids don't. | ||
Which, even that, I mean, over half the black kids in places like New York City don't even get to be born. | ||
They get aborted before they ever... | ||
So what really happened? | ||
Have we gotten more racist since then? | ||
Was it racism that caused this? | ||
Or was it the inverse? | ||
Was it enforced dependency on the government? | ||
And we've talked about it a million times. | ||
The fact that... Black Americans could go from literally below zero slavery, not allowed to read, not allowed to have families, sell your wife away to make a quick buck, in a hundred years, less than a hundred years, to almost parody, especially in terms of things that matter, like You know, family cohesion and number of kids, that sort of stuff. | ||
Almost parity with their white counterparts. | ||
And then the government comes in to assist. | ||
And it destroys the whole thing. | ||
So again, I think it's worth mentioning. | ||
Also, of course, one of the side effects of the fact that you don't have strong family structures widely in the black community. | ||
And again, I really shouldn't have to qualify anything I say here because you should be intelligent enough to understand what I mean when I say that. | ||
When I'm using an example like this, I'm sure there's black people out there that are like, but my family is coherent. | ||
Yes, I know, but 78% of them aren't, and that's a problem. | ||
So let's focus on the wider statistical reality rather than the personal anecdotes. | ||
And one of the side effects of not having intergenerational cohesion in the black community is that, well, if your dad's not around, I doubt his dad's not around. | ||
I doubt his dad's around, right? | ||
So who's going to be there to tell kids what it was like? | ||
If there's no old people around, if there's no grandparents there to tell you the stories, what it was like when they were growing up, then maybe you believe the mainstream media that it was just a hellish, you know, just constant oppression, constant hatred. | ||
You couldn't do anything. That's not how the people that were alive then explained it. | ||
But, you know, if all you're going on is the media and you don't actually have any extended family to relate to, then it's easier to convince you that... | ||
Life was different than what it really was. | ||
So I'd like to get back to that somehow. | ||
But unfortunately, our government and the liberals that support it always double down, constantly, forever. | ||
And it doesn't matter if they're proven wrong in a month or a year or 50 years down the line. | ||
Their strategies still aren't working. | ||
They stick with them, and they continue to press for the exact same things over and over and over, regardless of the fact that the people it's supposed to help are ultimately destroyed by it. | ||
It doesn't matter to them. | ||
What matters to them is that they're Wrong ideas be continually pushed regardless of the effects that they have. | ||
So pretty horrific stuff, actually. | ||
What's been done to the black community over the last 50 years. | ||
And of course it corresponds in a one-to-one manner to the increase of government intervention in the lives of these people. | ||
So I thought that was interesting. | ||
I always think it's fascinating going back to the early 1990s and watching Whether it's famous or unknown people talk about their childhoods and just how incredibly different it is than the wider portrayal and the portrayal that most people believe. | ||
There's a video that I think I showed here, Robot Polisher edited. | ||
It was a rant I was going on where I was talking about, man, if you could go back in time and pull somebody from the past, from the 1910s or 20s or 50s or 40s and brought them here, they would... | ||
Like, they wouldn't be able to handle it. | ||
It would be so bad to them. | ||
Like, they would reject it outright. | ||
They would demand to go back to the time before. | ||
Oh, but what about medical advancements? | ||
Yeah, that's nice, but have you watched TV recently, right? | ||
It's not worth it. It's just not worth it. | ||
So they'd want to go back, and when Robot Polisher... | ||
Published that video on Twitter. | ||
A black guy responded saying, well, not for black people. | ||
But it was way worse for black. | ||
It wasn't, though. It wasn't. | ||
I guarantee if you took a black person from the 1950s, even one that was subject to brutal oppression or segregation that they didn't like back then, if you brought them forward and showed them drag queen story time, They would be wrestling the time machine controls out of your hand. | ||
Get me the hell out of here. | ||
They would return to the 1950s and go, we gotta get out of here. | ||
We gotta do something. I gotta change the trajectory. | ||
Because I went into the future just now, and you wouldn't believe the type of crap that I've seen. | ||
You wouldn't believe the type of stuff they're doing to humanity. | ||
There's no way that what's going on right now It would somehow be a positive development from the 1950s. | ||
It's horrifying. It's horrifying what they're doing now. | ||
And I think people from the past would recognize that. | ||
No matter what race they are. | ||
And again, I don't want to get confused here. | ||
It's not like, it was better when black people were oppressed and kept down. | ||
I think there's different... | ||
There's different independent variables that go into this. | ||
The primary one is government intervention. | ||
And I think this was the poison pill of the civil rights movement. | ||
This is the government in that you can just picture them in like a sleazy trench coat. | ||
It's like the fox from Pinocchio or something, just going, oh yeah, you want equal rights, do you? | ||
Well, tell you what, we give you equal rights, but we want to give you even more. | ||
Why don't we also give you welfare? | ||
Why don't we also give you abortion? | ||
Why don't we also give you affirmative action? | ||
Isn't that better? Won't this be nice? | ||
And then, you know, just like Pinocchio... | ||
Everybody turns into jackasses. | ||
That's just how it goes. | ||
So it was a poison pill. | ||
It was a lie. There was absolutely no reason why civil rights and equal rights and equal representation under the law Has to, is necessarily combined with government subsidies and subsidizing failures in your community, subsidizing misbehavior, covering up for, you know, bad actors within your community that ultimately destroy it. | ||
There's no reason why those two things have to be intertwined. | ||
And if we could go back in time, can you imagine if we just had one and not the other? | ||
If we just had the equalization of rights... | ||
And the fulfillment of the promises of the Constitution without the socialism, can you imagine where we'd be right now? | ||
It'd be a much better thing. | ||
That's your Black History lesson from Infowars.com, brought to you by Infowarsstore.com. | ||
Go there now to support us as we fight for all of humanity against the forces that destroy us all, each in our own particular way. | ||
All right, welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
We have just so much to cover today. | ||
And let's just get into it. | ||
We've got lots of videos to show you. We'll be joined by Dan Miller of the Texas Nationalist Movement. | ||
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Each more absurd than the last. | ||
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The globalist robot horde. | ||
Now without any further ado, let's get into it. | ||
unidentified
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to it. | |
Here it is, your Daily Dispatch. | ||
unidentified
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All right, here it is, folks. | |
Your Daily Dispatch for Friday, the 3rd of February, 2023. | ||
U.S. military monitoring a suspected Chinese spy balloon. | ||
The U.S. military is currently monitoring a suspected Chinese spy balloon that's been hovering for several days over the northern United States. | ||
Pentagon Press Secretary Brigadier General Pat Ryder said in a statement on Thursday that the high-altitude surveillance balloon poses no immediate threat to the United States and will be monitored for the time being. | ||
Which... Oh, Lord, the number of things to say about this. | ||
Good God. So you're just going to let it spy then? | ||
Yeah, it doesn't pose a threat because it's there to spy on everyone. | ||
You're just spying on the spy balloon while it spies on us. | ||
Great. Fantastic. Truly amazing. | ||
The latest in this, the Chinese spy balloon has been granted asylum by the Biden administration and will be receiving its driver's license very soon. | ||
I'm sorry, I'm just... | ||
I'm sorry, the Chinese spy balloon has been elected to Congress and it's advocating for socialism. | ||
Very strange. Very strange things going on in the United States right now. | ||
You gotta wonder why are they spying on Montana? | ||
What do they think is going on there? | ||
Here's some footage that was captured from a local news outlet of the spy balloon. | ||
I think that's the moon at first. | ||
She zooms in on the moon at first, then goes over to the spy balloon. | ||
The spy balloon is like the size of three buses or something. | ||
Why not just shoot this thing down? | ||
That's what I'm confused about. | ||
What is the reticence here of shooting this thing? | ||
Why would you not want it? It's above rural Montana. | ||
I mean, I don't think it's threatening to run into any metropolises over there. | ||
No shade at Montana. | ||
I just think if you're going to want to shoot down a giant spy balloon, Montana might be the place you want to do it. | ||
Nice, big, wide-open places where no one will get hurt. | ||
But apparently they've known about this for a while now, and they're just letting it go around. | ||
They're just letting it fly around. | ||
It also apparently flew over the Aleutian Islands and through Canada. | ||
I have to just think this is just a flex by China. | ||
Anthony Blinken's about to go over to Beijing to do a meeting with them. | ||
And this really seems like just setting the stage to further humiliate the Biden administration. | ||
Like, they're not trying to hide it. | ||
Like, they probably spy in the same way from satellites and never be detected. | ||
But, like, they want us to know that they're doing this. | ||
It's like a flex. | ||
It's also something that would have never happened under Donald Trump. | ||
Do you think they would have risked that? | ||
I don't think so. So we'll keep you up to date on this. | ||
There's some more information about it as well. | ||
But it's just very bizarre. | ||
It's just a very bizarre story. | ||
But luckily, you know, they're not the... | ||
This is a spy balloon. | ||
It's not the war balloons that the Palestinians are using to try to make Israel not exist. | ||
But balloons, a new weapon of war in the future. | ||
It's like we're reverting back to the early 1800s. | ||
Meanwhile, Republicans oust Ilhan Omar from high-profile U.S. House Committee. | ||
U.S. House of Representatives Republicans on Thursday ousted Democrat Ilhan Omar from high-profile committees over remarks widely condemned as anti-Semitic two years after the Democrats removed two Republicans from committee assignments. | ||
I remind you, also for making comments that were deemed anti-Semitic. | ||
It's just both parties changing precedent and, you know, further destabling our democracy to prove that they're the less anti-Semitic ones. | ||
Don't you love it? | ||
Don't you love this? | ||
It's really amazing. | ||
We'll get into this a little bit later. | ||
We'll show you some of the speeches from the House floor. | ||
If you can call them that. | ||
The bouncing revival style. | ||
We'll do a little compare and contrast when Marjorie Taylor Greene was kicked off of committees in exactly the same way for almost exactly the same reason. | ||
And we'll compare and contrast some of the reactions, both from the people being kicked off the committees and the responses of the parties around them. | ||
Meanwhile, tragic story here, but... | ||
Unfortunately, utterly predictable. | ||
New Jersey Councilwoman Eunice Duomfor shot and killed, authorities say, in a targeted attack against this Republican representative. | ||
So we'll just add that to the list of just open Democratic terrorism that's taken place over the last couple years as our military industrial complex and spy state apparatus continues to To exclusively target non-existent white supremacists, the left is just literally assassinating politicians and getting away with it. | ||
It's pretty incredible stuff. 30-year-old councilwoman in the borough of Sayerville, New Jersey, was found shot to death in her car on Wednesday, according to authorities. | ||
She was found with multiple gunshot wounds, pronounced dead on the scene. | ||
She was inside her car in her home when she was shot. | ||
It appeared to be a... | ||
Again, targeted attack on this woman, not the result of theft gone wrong or anything of the sort, but probably something to do with her political activities. | ||
I doubt they'll even investigate it. | ||
Meanwhile, you know, let's just keep those last stories in mind as we move on to the next one. | ||
FBI planning to build new headquarter building twice the size of the Pentagon's. | ||
Of the Pentagon building. | ||
Now, I remind you, when the Pentagon building was built, and it may still to this day be the largest office building in the entire world, absolutely enormous, almost incomprehensible, the size of this complex. | ||
The FBI want a complex twice the size, and why would we give that to them? | ||
What? Why? | ||
Why would we do that? | ||
They're terrible. | ||
All they do is spy on Americans. | ||
All they do is fabricate false flag domestic terror attacks to justify their own targeting of Americans. | ||
How about the FBI proves that they're worth even existing anymore? | ||
But again, you've really got to admire the chutzpah of these people, right? | ||
right the true like they just they're constantly under fire they're constantly being exposed over the last year it's like whistleblower after whistleblower has exposed or like there are more people investigating domestic terror than there are domestic terrorists and just like the fbi coordinated all of this just like time and time again it's exposed how utterly and horrifically corrupt the fbi is and they don't even acknowledge it in some Instead, they come out and go, oh, really? | ||
Oh, you think we're corrupt? Well, I'll tell you what. | ||
We want a gigantic raise and a couple more billion dollars and expanded powers and a new building. | ||
Give it to us. It's just like, wow, you really—the temerity of you people. | ||
It's really incredible. It's really pushing us beyond— Beyond the ability to endure it. | ||
So, maybe that's the point. | ||
Really incredible stuff. Of course, the Republicans are not going to stop this. | ||
As we're seeing the Republican true colors come to the surface, bubble up to the surface. | ||
It's like yesterday, the Republican National Committee, like, tweeting out pictures of George Bush. | ||
And everybody on Twitter, like, read the room, bro. | ||
Not the right thing to do. | ||
Now, Kevin McCarthy is... | ||
I'm giving an interview where he says the coward cop who shot Ashley Babbitt, quote, did his job. | ||
It was a good thing. | ||
It was a good thing that Michael Byrd murdered an innocent woman. | ||
And these are the Republicans. | ||
It's just... | ||
In case you haven't lost all hope, we'll go ahead and finish out any hope you may have still in you. | ||
All right, welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
Welcome back to backward, upside-down, stupid world. | ||
Just incredible. So we're going to talk a little bit about politics here, but we have a bunch of other stuff to talk about. | ||
We'll expand our scope a little bit later. | ||
I don't even like talking about American politics anymore. | ||
I'm sort of over it, especially with some of the headlines out about Kevin McCarthy recently. | ||
But here's the big story today. | ||
Republicans oust Ilhan Omar from high-profile U.S. House Committee. | ||
U.S. House of Representatives Republicans on Thursday ousted Democrat Ilhan Omar from high-profile committee over remarks widely condemned as anti-Semitic two years after Democrats removed two Republicans from committee assignments. | ||
So again, this relates back to the thing we were talking about a couple weeks earlier this week, or last week, where... | ||
The Democrats were freaking out going, the Republicans are going to start doing all of the things we do to them, and it's unacceptable. | ||
We cannot allow this. | ||
We cannot allow a tit for tat. | ||
We just want tits here. | ||
That's all. No tat, no pushing back, no doing to us what we did to you. | ||
That's unacceptable. | ||
We are allowed to do whatever the hell we want, but when it's done to us, it's an outrage. | ||
So, hilarious, right? | ||
But obviously, this is... | ||
Just sort of pointless showboating on both sides. | ||
Before we get into the reaction of the Democrats, the reaction of Ilhan Omar herself, I want to first do a little rewind, go back in time, and remind ourselves of what the response was when this exact same thing, but in a much more egregious and less logical way, happened to Marjorie Taylor Greene. | ||
We'll compare the two, right? | ||
Remarks that she made a while ago where she talked about saying it's all about the Benjamins baby. | ||
A deeply divided House voted 218 to 211 along party lines to remove Omar from the Foreign Affairs Committee, with Republicans citing 2019 remarks, for which he later apologized. | ||
One Republican voted present. | ||
Republicans, who won a narrow House victory in November's election after years in the minority, said they wanted Omar, a third-term House member, off Foreign Affairs for statements that included a 2019 tweet, which read, It's all about the Benjamins baby, suggesting that Israel's supporters in U.S. politics were motivated by money rather than principle. | ||
Duh. Duh. | ||
Israel, like Israel, AIPAC, right? | ||
It's like the only group that both sides of the aisle just breathlessly endorse. | ||
And it has a lot to do with the money that they provide. | ||
The Jewish lobbies are the biggest donators to both the Democrat and the Republican parties. | ||
This is not an inaccurate statement. | ||
I actually agree with Ilhan Omar here. | ||
Not for the reasons that she says, because, well, she's dumb. | ||
I don't think she... | ||
I really don't think she... | ||
In fact, what she said was she was not aware that there was a trope, an anti-Semitic trope about Jews and money. | ||
It's like, come on. Come on. | ||
What? What are you talking about, lady? | ||
Like, that's embarrassing. Just own it. | ||
Just own what you said. | ||
But no, she's gonna back down. | ||
Now compare that to Marjorie Taylor Greene, who liked a post on Facebook that talked about weather weapons or space weapons, perhaps using lasers to ignite fires on Earth, which is a... | ||
Well-documented military strategy. | ||
Like, it's definitely possible, theoretically. | ||
Whether it's been put into action or not, we'll never know, because obviously it would be kept secret. | ||
But to say such a thing is not ridiculous. | ||
But apparently that got morphed through the media into Jewish space lasers, because you know what's not an anti-Semitic trope? | ||
It's Jewish space lasers. | ||
How is that anti-Semitic? | ||
It makes no sense. It literally makes no sense. | ||
But... It's also hilarious that both sides of the aisle are just like, we will set new precedent, we will overrun the previous and traditional actions of the House, but only and solely when it comes to the Jewish issue. | ||
Incredible stuff. Omar and other Democrats said that such remarks were made years ago and that Omar had deleted the post and apologized at the time. | ||
It's literally exactly what it says about Marjorie Taylor Greene or what Marjorie Taylor Greene said. | ||
Like almost verbatim. | ||
But what's really interesting is the, you know, first of all, that they were setting a precedent with this and they were talking about it at the time. | ||
This is an article from NPR in 2021. | ||
Robeson, Tom Cole, our Republican Republican, distanced himself from Greene's past rhetoric, but said the issue of kicking her off committees could be adjudicated by the House Ethics Committee. | ||
They say what the majority is really proposing to do today is to establish a new standard for pushing for punishing members for conduct before they even became a member. | ||
He said, this change opens up troubling questions about how we judge future members of Congress and whether or not we as an institution should impose sanctions on members for actions they took before they were even candidates for office. | ||
To which the reaction was, of course, from the left, shut up, we're going to be in power forever, so it doesn't matter what precedents we set. | ||
And now that the... She was on the other foot. | ||
They're flipping out and literally crying like babies on the floor of Congress about the precedent that again, they set. | ||
Really incredible stuff. | ||
The ouster led by House Speaker Kevin McCarthy was viewed by Democrats as revenge for their voting in 2021 to remove House, remove Republicans Marjorie Taylor Greene and Paul Gosar from their committee assignments over incendiary remarks. | ||
Yeah, it probably was. | ||
It probably was. | ||
In 2021, Green compared COVID-19 mask requirements of vaccinations to the Nazi Holocaust that killed 6 million Jews. | ||
She eventually apologized. | ||
Of course, it was also Holocaust survivors that were making that comparison, but ignore that part of the conflict. | ||
Before 2020 election, Congress, she voiced unfounded conspiracy theories. | ||
In other words, she liked a post on Facebook, including an antisemitic claim suggesting a space laser possibly was used to deliberately start a California wildfire. | ||
Again, I don't get where the connection is. | ||
Like, honestly, and it's like... | ||
I don't want to keep reusing the same joke, but the same thing keeps happening. | ||
So I'll know what else to say. | ||
Like yesterday when it was like, I want to be able to go 15 minutes from my house without requiring a permission slip from the principal. | ||
And they're like, oh, I didn't realize you were anti-Semitic. | ||
Didn't realize you hated Jews. Same thing, right? | ||
It's like... These wildfires are very mysterious. | ||
The houses are burned, but the trees are left completely untouched. | ||
Metal is melting, but the plastic around the metal isn't melted at all. | ||
What is going on here? | ||
Maybe this is a space weapon. | ||
Maybe there's a satellite that is igniting fires on Earth through some sort of laser beam. | ||
Which, by the way... | ||
Totally reasonable, totally possible. | ||
Pick up any popular mechanics magazine or look at any declassified white paper about military technology, especially experimental, and you'll see that not only is this possible, it would actually be extremely effective in warfare, especially soft warfare. | ||
Before you declare war, you don't think that Pentagon is even now suggesting perhaps we do this to Russia, start burning their crops from satellites in space. | ||
Totally possible, totally real. | ||
Not strange at all. But again, it's like, wow, very mysterious fires. | ||
A lot of inconsistencies here. | ||
A lot of strange things that are happening in this fire that haven't happened elsewhere. | ||
Do you think this could be a space weapon? | ||
They're just like, so you hate Jews, do you? | ||
I'm talking about a laser from space. | ||
And they're like, mm-hmm, typical. | ||
Just like the Nazi propaganda we're used to. | ||
It's just like, what the hell are you talking about? | ||
It's so bizarre how these things happen. | ||
Truly. And inexplicably bizarre. | ||
They say there has to be accountability. | ||
Ilhan Omar has apologized. He has indicated she'll learn from her mistakes and was building bridges with the Jewish community. | ||
This isn't about accountability. | ||
It's about political revenge. | ||
If it was about political revenge, good. | ||
Then it should be. You set the precedent. | ||
We fulfill it. That's how it goes. | ||
That's why you don't do the things that we keep telling you not to do. | ||
And then you do them. So now we have to hold up our end of the bargain, as it were. | ||
I think you should kick more people off this. | ||
I don't even think you have to give them a reason. | ||
Who cares? Find a Facebook like that they did 15 years ago and blame it on that. | ||
Doesn't matter. And of course, in response to this, we'll show the videos in the next segment, the Democrats made absolutely, hilariously embarrassing spectacles out of themselves on the House floor, alternatively crying and bouncing around like they themselves are on Hitler levels of meth. | ||
But it's worth, and again, we'll show those in just a second, but if we go back in time, we see when this happened to Marjorie Taylor Greene, were the Republicans bouncing around like pinballs on the House floor, calling this an outrage, you know, saying it was because she was a woman and Democrats just hate women, | ||
obviously? No, of course not. At the time, McCarthy issued a statement condemning Greene's past comments, as did Mitch McConnell, leaders Mitch McConnell and others calling rhetoric like hers a cancer on the GOP. Do you notice the difference between the way Democrats support each other versus the way Republicans support the Democrats? | ||
It's very interesting. All right, welcome back, folks. | ||
I got to really press down the accelerator here because we have so much to get to today. | ||
We'll be joined by Dan Miller in the next hour and taking your phone calls in the third. | ||
But so many videos to show you and so many things to talk about. | ||
I really got to double down on the speed here. | ||
Again, we're doing a little compare and contrast to... | ||
When Marjorie Taylor Greene and Paul Gosar were kicked off of their committees versus now that the Republicans, for once, and hey, congratulations guys, you actually fulfilled a promise for once. | ||
You actually are doing to the Democrats what they did to you. | ||
It's incredible. Of course, it's for the benefit of a foreign nation, which is always sort of traitorous to me, but hey, whatever. | ||
I guess, you know, at least you're doing something. | ||
Just incredible. That's really what it's about, right? | ||
Can't be anti-Israel. | ||
We're Israel. Wait a second. | ||
They're also anti-American, and they're in the American Congress, so I guess it's all up in the air at this point. | ||
Story of Memphal Wars, GOP kick Ilhan Omar off committee over criticism of Israel. | ||
AOC says Omar was actually targeted for being a woman of color. | ||
Oh, Lord. | ||
You know, half of me is, like, imagining what it would be like if we'd responded... | ||
If the Republicans had responded the same way with Marjorie Taylor Greene, like Marjorie Taylor Greene, because it would actually make more sense, right? | ||
Ilhan Omar comes out and is like, I'm innocent because I didn't realize that there's a trope about Jews and money. | ||
What? I had no idea. | ||
It's like, if you know one trope, it's that. | ||
Like, that is the trope, right? | ||
So... You know, spare us your act. | ||
It's absurd and outrageous. | ||
But it actually makes sense for Marjorie Taylor Greene to be like, I'm sorry, I didn't realize it was a trope that Jews have space lasers. | ||
Because that's not a trope, and that makes no sense. | ||
What are you talking about? It would actually be a decent response for it, but that's not what happened. | ||
And also, you know, I don't necessarily want Republicans bouncing around like hyperactive rabbits on the House floor simultaneously giving a... | ||
Southern Baptist sermon and crying at the same time on the floor of the Congress. | ||
This is all embarrassing for all of us. | ||
So I don't think I necessarily want that. | ||
But what I would like is a little bit of support. | ||
What I would like is a little bit of backbone from the Republicans and not bending over at every pass for the Democrats. | ||
So let's take a look now at how the Republicans responded. | ||
I know you've probably seen these videos because they've been played over and over. | ||
But we'll do a little touch, a little preview of them. | ||
First we'll start with AOC giving her... | ||
In very sort of Hitlerian style speech on the floor, only in that she looks like she's on copious amounts of pharmaceutical grade amphetamine. | ||
So let's watch AOC just once again flailing about embarrassingly. | ||
unidentified
|
Let's watch. Don't tell me that this is about a condemnation of anti-Semitic remarks when you have a member of the Republican caucus who has talked about Jewish space lasers and an entire amount of tropes and also elevated her to some of the highest committee assignments in this body. | |
This is about targeting women of color in the United States of America. | ||
Don't tell me because I didn't get a single apology. | ||
My life was threatened. | ||
Thank you. I didn't realize I was holding my breath that whole time. | ||
It's the cringe, man. | ||
The cringe is real with these people. | ||
And it physically hurts to watch them exist. | ||
She wasn't the only one. Let's go now to Rashida Tlaib. | ||
This one's even worse. | ||
unidentified
|
Censored Congresswoman Omar in the same week. | |
They introduced a bill to ban federal employees from engaging in censorship. | ||
Where are the free speech warriors today? | ||
The hypocrisy is obvious to the American people. | ||
You are showing who you all are, really. | ||
The gentlewoman's time has expired. | ||
I know Congressman Omar will not be silenced. | ||
The gentlewoman's time has expired. | ||
The gentlewoman's time has expired. | ||
The gentlewoman's time has expired. That our country is failing you today! | ||
Through this chamber! | ||
The gentlewoman is no longer recognized, and the gentleman from Mississippi is recognized. | ||
Shut up! Madam Speaker, I reserve. | ||
Gentlewoman from... All right, we can take it down. | ||
Yeah, good Lord. | ||
And again, hilarious, right? | ||
unidentified
|
Just like, the American people see the hypocrisy! | |
And it's just like, we are literally doing to you what you did to us. | ||
Who is being the hypocrite here? | ||
You hysterical weirdos. | ||
They weren't the only ones. | ||
Later in a committee, another congresswoman of color, I should say, Sounded off in an equally passionate diatribe. | ||
Let's go now to clip number 21. | ||
unidentified
|
Now I may have lost my train of thought several minutes ago, but if I continue to talk like this, no one will notice. | |
And when I stop, you will applaud my energy. | ||
Thank you. Oh, we're living in a parody, folks. | ||
We truly are. So again... | ||
The point here is that they are literally embarrassing themselves and hyperactively weeping on the House floor because the Republicans are doing to them what the Democrats did in the first place. | ||
So this is the level of institutional support that every member of Congress on the Democratic side gets. | ||
Meanwhile, flashback back in time, McCarthy released a statement Wednesday night when Marjorie Taylor Greene was kicked off condemning Greene's past comments. | ||
But didn't indicate that party disciplinary action would be taken against her. | ||
Where's the next one? Green has been rebuked by many in her party, including Senator Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, who called rhetoric like hers a cancer on the GOP. It's just... | ||
You'll want to know. | ||
It's like this is everything, right? | ||
You want to know why Republicans lose? | ||
It's because of this. It's because of this. | ||
It's because of just the most tame and... | ||
Non-important Facebook post by Marjorie Taylor Greene. | ||
One of the things they were upset about, Marjorie Taylor Greene had a Facebook post where she held a gun. | ||
That was one of the reasons they kicked her off the committees. | ||
And in response to this, she gets called to cancer by the Senate minority leader. | ||
And... The House Minority Leader, Kevin McCarthy, basically agrees and condemns her comments. | ||
Like, that's the type of institutional non-support Republicans get. | ||
That's why they lose. And then if you want to know why our country is losing, it's because the people that are running our country have the emotional maturity of hyperactive children. | ||
So everything is getting worse for all of these reasons. | ||
They all combine, right? One exacerbates the other. | ||
And we all pay the price. | ||
It really is incredible. I'm going to save some of this stuff to talk about with Dan Miller when he comes on to talk about a solution to all of this, just getting rid of the federal government, essentially. | ||
But just some other headlines, just in case you thought, Republicans, that the fact that Republicans were actually ousting Ilhan Omar meant that they were growing a backbone of some sort. | ||
They're also doing other headlines. | ||
Indescribably bizarre things. | ||
Republicans will have a Spanish response to the State of the Union. | ||
Freshman Congressman Juan Ciccomani will deliver an official Spanish language response to President Joe Biden's February 7th State of the Union. | ||
Which is so nice. | ||
It's great. | ||
I love it. I love them. | ||
I'm in a country where I was born and where my family has been For over nine generations, and soon I won't be able to understand my own government because they'll speak a language I don't speak. | ||
It'll be great, right? Right now, it's the response to the State of the Union. | ||
Maybe in an election cycle or two, the State of the Union will be in Spanish. | ||
And I won't be able to even understand what my government is saying anymore. | ||
Won't that be fun? So again, just bringing us that way. | ||
It's like we can, you know, you can... | ||
And they're like, this comes as increasing number of Latino voters are turning towards Republicans. | ||
It's like, is that because you pandered to them and spoke Spanish? | ||
Or is that because they're conservative and want to be Americans? | ||
And so they like America. | ||
So you can just keep acting like America and not act like Mexico. | ||
Is this that complicated? | ||
Kevin McCarthy also says the coward cop who shot Ashley Babbitt, quote, did his job. | ||
He was asked whether the... | ||
Capital Force officer Michael Byrd, who murdered Ashley Babbitt at point-blank range without a warning shot while she was within reach of multiple other police officers, by the way. | ||
Whether that was doing his job or whether she was murdered, and McCarthy responded, I think the police officer did his job. | ||
Did his job. Air Force veteran of 14 years, peacefully wandering through the Capitol. | ||
Look, there are the police right there. | ||
That's a Capitol Police officer. | ||
There's two of them right there. | ||
They move out of the way to allow the people forward. | ||
And then as the people move forward, it was just a straight-up trap. | ||
So Ken McCarthy thinks this was a good thing, thinks it's good that Ashley Babbitt was shot in the chest at point-blank range by Michael Byrd, who was hiding behind a wall when he fired. | ||
And she was literally surrounded by police in front of her and there were police behind her. | ||
And neither one of them was trying to stop her. | ||
The ones in front actually moved out of the way so she could move forward. | ||
And then she was murdered. | ||
And then no investigation was done. | ||
And he wasn't even interviewed by authorities to determine what the conditions were. | ||
And then he was given a big raise and a GoFundMe of hundreds of thousands of dollars. | ||
And given an interview on ABC where he was treated like a hero. | ||
And Kevin McCarthy's in favor of that. | ||
So goodbye, hope. | ||
Goodbye, last little bit of hope that we ever had of saving this country. | ||
Or of our politicians realizing the situation that we're in. | ||
*whoosh* Like dust in the wind, it goes away and America goes with it. | ||
Stay with us, folks. We'll be back on the other side of the second hour. | ||
It gets better, I think. Trust me. | ||
unidentified
|
Or don't. Something irregular about their menstrual cycle, so we will have to investigate that down the line. | |
Yeah. Because that is a little concerning. | ||
It actually shouldn't be interfering with that, so we don't really... | ||
It shouldn't? It shouldn't, I don't. | ||
What, is it? There's somebody having it in, but we don't know if they're going to... | ||
Well, I mean, you're a urologist, so you must understand, like, what's going on with it, right? | ||
Well, that's why I understand that it's weird. | ||
How we don't find out that, like, somehow this mRNA, like, lingers in the body, I mean, like, has... | ||
Because it has to be impacting something hormonal. | ||
Does it impact menstrual cycles? | ||
Yeah, or, like, the entire next generation is, like, super fucked up. | ||
Could you imagine the scandal? | ||
Oh my god, I'd be, I'd take Pfizer off my resume. | ||
Another chapter of our interview with Dr. George Jordan Walker. Internal Pfizer-Microsoft teams basically proving that he actually does work there. | ||
In this previous unreleased exchange with our undercover journalist, he not only elaborates on his claims of virus mutation and the future uses of mRNA technology, but also internal concerns within Pfizer regarding possible side effects of COVID-19 vaccine, specifically to women's menstrual cycles. | ||
unidentified
|
So, um, tell me more, like, what's developing with the whole, you know, virus mutation process? | |
Well, they're still kind of conducting the experiments on it, but, uh, it seems like from her, they're kind of optimizing it, but in the growing slope, they were very cautious, like, you know, obviously don't want to accelerate it too much. | ||
Yeah. Um, but I think they're also just trying to do it as an exploratory thing, because you obviously don't want to advertise it throughout future mutations. | ||
How would the research study be delayed for COVID stuff, like, Hold on for COVID, so now we're basically focusing on mRNA beyond COVID. So what is RNA going to be used for in the future? | ||
Wait, why not? | ||
Come on, I feel like there's, you know, it's just going to be like, what, for flu? | ||
Right. It'll be for other things, too. | ||
There's a whole list of things we're developing it for. | ||
Yeah, not just for viruses. | ||
We're applying it for, like, oncology. | ||
Well, I'm less certain about the oncology prospects, but we're doing it for, like, gene editing, like, wait. | ||
Yeah. The portfolios move beyond, at least internally, our focus area is to move beyond COVID. Yeah. | ||
Like, now they have, like, a dedicated COVID-19 that just keeps out on that. | ||
Right. And so the company has folks on, like, okay, now where are we going to use this technology in the future? | ||
Because that's what we, the rest is coming on now. | ||
Right. Like, no one gets a shit about COVID. Right. | ||
So this, of course, is the latest from Project Veritas. | ||
I gotta wonder, I assume that the first video and this one were sort of filmed at the same time, but I also like to imagine that they weren't. | ||
I like to imagine that they got this Tristan Jordan Walker guy talking about gain-of-function, and then they confront him, and he has that absolute hilarious meltdown where he's yelling, like, I'm a liar! | ||
Then he gets home and he's like, I just need to relax. | ||
I'll just get on Grindr, I'll go on a quick date, you know, just try to have a good time. | ||
It's just another Project Veritas guy. | ||
And he's just saying exactly the same things, but even other stuff. | ||
That's what I like to imagine it being. | ||
But of course, this is really no laughing matter. | ||
Here's the VAERS report from openvaers.com. | ||
Reports of miscarriage and stillbirth by year. | ||
And you can see this was actually, this was posted by... | ||
Twitter user SovereignBraw, but you can find this on OpenVers.com. | ||
You can see the absolute monumental spike when it comes to 2021. | ||
Beyond the even, just off the chart, indescribable uptick of purported miscarriages. | ||
I'd also like to know what happened around 2009. | ||
Was that swine flu? It was. | ||
It was swine flu. I wonder if that was the swine flu vaccine as well. | ||
Hard to say. But pretty horrifying stuff. | ||
And of course, as they point out in that Project Veritas video, probably has something to do with the hormones. | ||
Because after all, you are your hormones. | ||
Your beliefs, your understanding, your view of the world is filtered through the lens of your hormones. | ||
So what better way to take over your mind than to take over the... | ||
Chemicals by which you understand, see, and interact with the world. | ||
Pretty incredible stuff. | ||
And that's the latest from Project Veritas. | ||
You can find and share it on Infowars.com and Band.video. | ||
Go find the full video there. | ||
We'll be back on the other side with Dan Miller of the Texas Nationalist Movement as we discuss the solution to trying to untie the Gordian Knot. | ||
Spoiler alert, you just cut through it. | ||
And that's it. We'll be back. | ||
Don't go anywhere. Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
Second hour has begun here on American Journal. | ||
We're still trying to connect with Dan Miller, so we'll let you know whenever we get him on the line, having a little bit of technical difficulties. | ||
We are, unfortunately, a man down today on our crew. | ||
The good news is we have just so much to talk about, so many videos to show you still. | ||
Let's go ahead and start with this one, shall we? | ||
Let's go to clip number one, just for a little break. | ||
It's Friday, you know, and we can relax on Friday. | ||
We can have a little fun here. | ||
And what's more fun than watching the leader of the free world stumble his way through a simple sentence? | ||
Here's Joe Biden trying to make a point of some sort. | ||
unidentified
|
Let's watch. More than half the women in my cabinet, more than half the people in my cabinet, more than half the women in my administration are women. | |
Now you may think that was Joe Biden misspeaking. | ||
You'd be mistaken. Some of the women in his administration, not women. | ||
So when he says more than half the women in my administration are women, that's true. | ||
It's very true. Less than half of them aren't women. | ||
A little less than half of the women in the Biden administration are women. | ||
Aren't women. So, again, people are trying to make fun of Biden for this. | ||
He's being accurate, actually. | ||
It's one of those things, it's like trying to think of a good example. | ||
I'm sure there's something in a A wily coyote cartoon of some sort where it's like you trip and fall and drop a bucket and just happens to put out a fire, right? | ||
It's like when enough mistakes happen in the right way, it turns out, right? | ||
You know, when he's stumbling along, misspeaking in so many different ways, but also his whole administration is so insane, it actually, like, goes back into place, right? | ||
It's like, oh, he's off, he's off, and somehow it fits, actually. | ||
Weird. Weird how that works. | ||
People are responding to this. This is going to be a right-wing statement in a little while, by the way. | ||
This will be like, you know, in 10 years from now, when... | ||
Republicans are where Democrats are now. | ||
And they'll be bragging. | ||
They'll be like, I believe in traditional gender roles. | ||
In fact, over half of the women in my administration are actual women. | ||
And this will be, like, amazing. | ||
It'll be, like, you know, amazing that they aren't just all transsexual. | ||
It'll be great. Just wild. | ||
Wild, insane stuff. | ||
And just, like, all of these headlines. | ||
This is my COVID stack, all right? | ||
How do I do this? | ||
How would you do this? If you were the host of this show and you had these headlines, which one would you focus on? | ||
Heart attacks on dramatic rise for 25 through 44 age group. | ||
Pretty big age group there. | ||
A new study has been published that links the increase in heart attacks amongst adults ages 25 and 44 to COVID-19. | ||
The study was centered on the Schmidt Heart Institute at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center and published in the Journal of Medical Virology. | ||
Researchers discovered that overall heart attacks increased for all age groups since the onset of the pandemic by 14%. | ||
Strangely though, that spike didn't actually happen until the vaccine came out, but they didn't test that, so they can't say that. | ||
From express.co.uk, we knew COVID had been engineered to make it infectious to humans, but we're told to shut up. | ||
This is a whistleblower in the UK, talking about how it was obvious that COVID was a man-made bioweapon from the very beginning, but they were silenced about it. | ||
Again, who silenced you? | ||
Do they have a gun to your head? | ||
No, so you just did what you were told and allowed a man-made super virus to give the New World Order the excuse they needed to impose total slavery on the world. | ||
And really, it wasn't even about the imposition of all of the crap that they did during COVID. | ||
I mean, obviously, that was a huge part of their plan. | ||
But it was also, as they readily admit at this point, a testing phase. | ||
It was to see how far they could push people and how ridiculous the demands that we would concede to when couched under or under the guise of medical emergency. | ||
And they figured it out. | ||
And so now they're rolling out a whole number of even more tyrannical measures. | ||
Like, I think the response—we failed. | ||
Basically, as humanity, we failed the test. | ||
The test was COVID. | ||
The test was will humans go along with us or will they stand up to us and see through what we're doing? | ||
And for the vast majority of people, they didn't see through it. | ||
They fell for it. And so now, they're just like, okay, great. | ||
15-minute cities, that's on. | ||
We're going to stop cars. Let's end the eating of meat. | ||
We're going to launch the central bank digital currency and the digital ID. | ||
And we're going to put chips in your head. | ||
And we're going to put nodes in your ear that read your brainwaves so we can tell if you're thinking things wrong. | ||
Like they're just doing it now because they know they can because we failed the test. | ||
So well done, you guys. | ||
Merck's COVID drug is causing new virus mutations, study warns from Daily Mail. | ||
Merck's COVID drug is causing new virus mutations, study warns, amid fears in its use in virus-stricken China could create entirely new variants. | ||
Well, I say go ahead and just do it for a year or two and then look into it. | ||
That's my, you know. | ||
I'm working at the speed of science, so I say even if you know that the medicine is causing the virus itself to mutate into new forms that are more powerful and deadly, I think that's something that you should just cover up and continue to give out the medicine. | ||
I'm a scientist. 100% of COVID deaths in Canada now due to mRNA vaccine, new data shows. | ||
Utimes.net, new data shows 100% of COVID deaths in Canada. | ||
This is being caused by the mRNA vaccine. | ||
But I would say it's just it's the more vaccines you have, the more likely you are to die from COVID. So it may be a little bit of an extreme headline, but the information is overall accurate. | ||
Health Canada data shows just under 16,000 deaths occurred due to COVID, almost double the number of deaths in 2020 when citizens were unprotected by the vaccine. | ||
And again, it's just like nobody... | ||
Basically what it's saying is that if you weren't vaccinated, you don't die from COVID. If you did not get the vaccine, then you probably will not die from COVID. If you got the vaccine, you're more likely to die. | ||
If you got multiple doses of the vaccine, you're increasingly likely to die. | ||
How does California define COVID-19 misinformation? | ||
Judges disagree, but doctors are expected to know. | ||
Which is, and again, I just can't help but see the continuity, see the through line here where it's like, then why did you pass this law? | ||
Why did you pass this law before you had a definition of the words that you were using in the law? | ||
Is this just like, we'll pass it and then we'll read it later? | ||
We'll pass the law and then we'll decide what the words mean later? | ||
Really? That's where you went with this? | ||
We'll inoculate a billion people with the vaccine, then we'll test it for safety? | ||
Right? This week, federal judge said California's definition of COVID-19 misinformation that can trigger disciplinary action against physicians is unconstitutionally vague. | ||
But in another case involving the... | ||
Here's the problem, though. | ||
Even if it was not vague, even if it was extremely specific and well-defined, it would still be unconstitutional. | ||
So that's concerning, that you're worried about the fact that it's vague, when in reality, even if it was... | ||
It's almost like the more exact it is, the more illegal it is, right? | ||
It's just incredibly bizarre. | ||
This is, of course, about AB 2098, which has, for the time being, been temporarily paused by court order. | ||
But they'll just tweak some words. | ||
Right now, the issue is that they can't define misinformation, so they'll just define misinformation and then pass it that way. | ||
New York Times, the gray lady, the newspaper of record has finally started to notice why are so many Americans dying right now? | ||
What could it be? Oh, whatever could it be? | ||
About 1.1 million Americans have officially died from COVID-19 since the start of the pandemic, a number that may be familiar by now. | ||
Well, it's familiar because they keep changing that number, actually. | ||
Actually, it turns out that maybe up to something like 90% of those were not dying from COVID, but simply with COVID, and they've finally admitted that. | ||
So again... This is just one day of COVID news, just one day of COVID information, and we could spend 10 or 12 shows just on these stories that have been released. | ||
But when we get back, we have connected. | ||
He is on the line, Dan Miller of Texas Nationalist Movement. | ||
We will get with him to talk about how much we love the federal government, how we want nothing but good things for them. | ||
We just don't want to be associated with them. | ||
Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
This is the American Journal, Infowars.com. | ||
I'm your host, Harrison Smith. My guest is Daniel Miller, president of the Texas Nationalist Movement and author of the book, Tegxit, Why and How Texas Will Leave the Union. | ||
He's been a featured guest on Fox News, CNN, CNBC, BBC, RTTV, and many other news outlets, most importantly, Infowars. | ||
Miller has been a vocal proponent of a fundamental reexamination of the relationship between all states and the Federal Union. | ||
You can find their website at TNM.me. | ||
TNM, as in Texas Nationalist Movement, TNM.me. | ||
Thank you so much for joining us once again, Mr. Miller. | ||
Miller. Hey, thanks for having me back. | ||
I'm very glad to have you back. And you're actually back by popular demand. | ||
We had a caller earlier today that reminded me it had been far too long since we talked about this topic as we have to continually cover the federal government. | ||
And yet there's this ray of hope, this possibility that we could just dislocate ourselves from them and never have to worry about them ever again. | ||
So again, it's a pleasure to have you back on. | ||
Yeah, man, I gotta love the popular demand thing. | ||
I mean, I can remember the early days of this when people would just pay us to leave. | ||
So, you know, it's like I said, I think I said it last time, you know, when we kicked off the T&M in 2005, the issue of Texas was polling in single digits. | ||
But the upside is, is that it's always polled higher than the approval rating of the U.S. Congress, which typically polls below leprosy. | ||
So, you know, I mean, it only took, you know, 20 years to become an overnight success. | ||
Well, hey, slow and steady wins the race, man. | ||
And it's just been an upward trajectory the whole time. | ||
And really, you know, you guys are actually sort of changing the way that you're approaching things. | ||
I've noticed, and I was talking to you about this just during the break here, and I'd love for you to tell people what you guys are doing, because you're really starting to take over social media. | ||
You have, like, TikTok-style videos coming out. | ||
Calling them TikTok videos... | ||
It doesn't give them enough respect, because they're actually really good short videos that make the argument for Tegxit, and we've played a couple videos on here, on the American Journal, and they're all over Twitter and stuff. | ||
Tell us, why have you decided it's important to start making these little pieces that you've made? | ||
Well, look, the Texas issue and all the things that go along with it have a tendency to be a bit long-winded. | ||
I mean, there are typically no short answers to some of the questions. | ||
There are absolute concrete answers, but none of them are typically short. | ||
So, you know, one of the things that we wanted to make sure to do is be able to encapsulate Some of these answers handle some of the misinformation and outright disinformation that the opposition throws out there about the Texas issue and make it easily digestible and shareable. | ||
And that's exactly what we've done with these videos. | ||
And have you had pretty good success on this? | ||
Yeah, you know, it's funny you mention TikTok. | ||
You know, we had, for quite some time, not engaged on TikTok at all. | ||
And we were really told, we were told that we were missing sort of a key demographic, you know, really getting texted to a younger demographic. | ||
And they said TikTok was the way to go. | ||
Our comm team spun up a TikTok account from scratch. | ||
They posted the first Texit video, and it almost immediately garnered over a million views. | ||
And so it's been, you know, steady on that format. | ||
Of course, we're doing YouTube shorts. | ||
We're posting those short videos all over the place. | ||
But oddly enough, as all the videos on the TikTok account in less than a month nudged up toward about 3 million views, TikTok jerked our account. | ||
No warning, no strikes, no nothing. | ||
So, you know, we're currently engaged in a lawsuit against Meta or Facebook, whatever you want to call them, under the Texas anti-social media censorship law. | ||
And we, you know, we just let TikTok know in no uncertain terms, you know, look, we filed, we went toe-to-toe with Meta. | ||
If you think you guys are immune, we'll see you in court. | ||
I think that's fantastic. | ||
And I mean, that's really incredible. Anybody who's used TikTok knows it's not easy to get a million views on there. | ||
I mean, usually it takes a while and eventually you'll get something that sort of hit. | ||
But I mean, to get a million views, that shows that there is real hunger out there for this type of information. | ||
I mean, that is real. | ||
The proof is in the pudding and that's the pudding right there. | ||
So I think that's incredible. | ||
Where can people find these videos and hear the arguments and share them with people and upload them to their own TikTok accounts if they want? | ||
Yeah, you know, we've got, of course, our website is always a great clearinghouse, right? | ||
If they go to tnm.me or texitnow.org, either one, it's a good jumping off point to hit all of our social media accounts. | ||
But, I mean, we're full spectrum here. | ||
Those videos, our social media work is going across every platform we can possibly get. | ||
So if you search for Texas Nationalist Movement, you see the account name right there on the screen. | ||
That is our account name on every single solitary platform that's out there. | ||
And, you know, worst case scenario, just search for Texas. | ||
You'll find us. Believe me, we're not hard to find. | ||
I think that's great. | ||
And again, this isn't just for our Texas audience. | ||
I mean, there are secessionist movements going on sort of around the country. | ||
You've got, you know, people in Oregon who want to be a part of Idaho. | ||
People in California want to be their own state. | ||
So, I mean, this is something that anybody can get behind, especially if you want to maybe come to Texas and help us out. | ||
It doesn't matter where you're from. | ||
If you want to be free from the United States federal government, we can all do it together here in Texas. | ||
But we talk a little bit about that, about how this really is a A great solution to so many problems that we see coming out of Washington. | ||
Yeah, look, and Harrison, I'll even pull it back out. | ||
I mean, obviously for us, you know, this is the shortest and quickest way to cut the Gordian knot, you know, to untangle is to cut it. | ||
And for us, you know, when we look at the issues that we're facing here in Texas, we have to understand that so many of the problems and challenges that we're facing here Whether it's the border crisis, whether it's taxation policies or monetary policies, or even corrupt officials in Austin, the source of much of that can be traced right back to our relationship inside this political and economic union called the United States. | ||
And the way that you cure that is to become a self-governing independent nation and take your destiny in your own hands. | ||
That being said, you mentioned these independence movements around the United States, like the one in New Hampshire or the Cal Exit movement or the one that's starting to form up in Florida or the Alaskan Independence Party, which has been around since the 80s. | ||
But we have to also, I think, pull this back even further and realize that That this movement for self-government and self-determination is really global. | ||
You know, at the end of World War II, there were roughly 54 recognized countries around the world. | ||
And by the end of the 20th century, there were about 192. | ||
Those countries didn't fall from space and the earth didn't get any bigger. | ||
There were people like us who said that they wanted to govern themselves. | ||
And so you look around the world right now. | ||
You know, one of the folks that's consulting for us is a man named Dr. | ||
Matt Quartrope. We're good to go. | ||
That that global trend is washing ashore here in North America. | ||
And the reason being is quite simple. | ||
This breakout of independence is a natural response to globalism. | ||
Right? As the globalists advance their activities and their desire to subjugate mankind, I think it's very clear that the thing that they detest more than anything else, probably as much as they detest personal liberty and freedom, they detest the very concept of a nation state. | ||
Of course, it's completely antithetical to their entire concept. | ||
They want consolidation. We want independence. | ||
Absolutely. It's the antidote. | ||
It really is. We'll be back on the other side. | ||
Daniel Miller from the Texas Nationalist Movement, TNM.me. | ||
Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
My guest is Daniel Miller, president of the Texas Nationalist Movement. | ||
We're trying to break away. | ||
It's a movement called Tegxit. | ||
Back in the day when people first talked about this, it seemed far-fetched. | ||
It seems increasingly more likely or we seem increasingly more capable of pulling something like this off and really just demanding that we be represented by the people that claim to represent us in ways that is just not happening in Washington, D.C. But even if you think it's It's just far-fetched. | ||
It's unrealistic. I can hear you out there. | ||
People have these objections. | ||
Then why are they being censored so much? | ||
Why are social media companies kicking them off the platform? | ||
Why is TikTok targeting them for deletion? | ||
Because they're scared of this information getting out. | ||
This is an effective movement, and the people in power know that. | ||
And so they're trying to shut it down. | ||
Daniel, tell us about how you're being shut down and what the Texas nationalist movement is doing to fight back against the social media companies. | ||
Yeah, I mean, so let's lay the groundwork here. | ||
People have to understand that even under a cloud of cancel culture, censorship, you know, we've been around since 2005, and outside of the two major political parties, the TNM is the single largest political advocacy organization in the state, hands down, okay? So we've had that size. | ||
We've had legislation passed. | ||
I mean, we've had successes. | ||
And we know that the polling numbers, the third party polling, shows beyond a shadow of a doubt that if Texas goes to a vote of the Texas voters tomorrow, it wins. | ||
And it wins probably by about 10 or 15 percentage points. | ||
So, you know, we're positioned in probably the best place you could possibly be. | ||
And so just to kind of give you an idea of how this reaction is happening, you know, beyond mainstream media spiking stories, we started getting censored by Facebook, okay? | ||
So Facebook is probably, you know, we have, I think, about 220, 250,000 fans on the page. | ||
But more than that, it is the single largest social media platform used by Texas voters. | ||
So we've noticed back in October that links to the Texit section of our website, specifically where you get answers on Texit, those links were being rejected as violation of community standards by Facebook. | ||
And through a little bit more research, we found out that they were classifying Texas information as dangerous or harmful organization or individual. | ||
So Texas, in the last legislative session, passed a law that forbids large social media platforms from engaging in viewpoint discrimination. | ||
So the TNM and me together got with attorney Paul Davis, and we filed the first lawsuit under that law against Facebook. | ||
Since then, Facebook has Facebook's attorneys have decided that they want to pivot this issue and not make it just about what they feel is the constitutionality of Texas law. | ||
But they want to make it about whether or not we can even discuss the issue of Texas withdrawing from the union. | ||
They specifically mentioned that the Supreme Court case of Texas v. | ||
White, the unconstitutionality of it. | ||
And our message back, and it literally says it in our brief, if you want to make this about the right of self-determination about Texas v. | ||
White, then to quote Doc Holliday and Tombstone, I'm your Huckleberry. | ||
I'll argue that. The primary right of self-determination every single day of the week, twice on Sundays, and I don't care how many high-powered lawyers they want to bring into court, we're going to kick their butt all the way back to California, which incidentally is where they're trying to move this lawsuit to. | ||
Our first actual hearing on this is going to be February the 9th, and I'm going to be there with bells on. | ||
I'm looking forward to putting a stake through the heart of probably one of the most heinous Supreme Court decisions ever rendered, and that is Texas versus White. | ||
Well, I think that's excellent, and it really says something that they're trying to fight it. | ||
I mean, it would probably be a lot easier for them to go, all right, all right, fine. | ||
We'll give Texas Nationals movement this one just to avoid the rigmarole of having to go through a lawsuit, but they're fighting it. | ||
We tried, right? | ||
So they removed. | ||
So the day the second batch of Twitter files dropped that showed collusion, direct collusion from the federal government to the social media platforms, including Facebook, we got a call from Facebook's attorneys saying that they had removed the restriction on the link and asked us to drop the lawsuit. | ||
And we said, look, we want three things. | ||
Number one, we want attorney's fees. | ||
Number two, we want a permanent ban on restricting us as long as we follow the rules, right? | ||
And the third thing is we want a public apology. | ||
We have carefully crafted our reputation as a peaceful, political, legislative movement, Texas, as a political movement, not like they were trying to characterize, like, we're ISIS, right? | ||
And they said, absolutely not. | ||
We're not going to give you an apology. | ||
We said, all right, fine. We'll see you in court. | ||
You know, we're not going to drop it. | ||
Well, that's what we need. Aggressive people actually fighting back and not just taking what's ever given to them. | ||
That's the way forward. And again, I guess it's typical, but that's what they do, right? | ||
First they say, well, this is a dangerous link. | ||
You go, we're not a dangerous link. | ||
Oh, well, they're supporting hate and violence. | ||
No, we're not supporting them. Well, they're unconstitutional. | ||
It doesn't matter. Whatever excuse they can use to try to shut you down, when in reality, this is the peaceful solution. | ||
This is democracy in action, you know, if you were to put it to a vote. | ||
So it's all the things that they claim to love, that they claim to want. | ||
And yet when it's Texas doing it, suddenly it's dangerous and it can't be allowed. | ||
I mean, it's so absurd. | ||
Well, it's because I think they know we're going to win, right? | ||
I mean, they've seen the same poll numbers we've seen, right? | ||
And those are not our poll numbers. | ||
So they understand that as this issue is promulgated and becomes more popularized, which it's already there, you know, that poll back in the summer from SurveyUSA that showed that 66 percent of likely Texas voters would vote for Texas. | ||
You couple that with the fact that the Republican Party of Texas added not one but two planks to its party platform calling for a vote on Texas. | ||
And these guys are rattled. | ||
I mean, they understand. | ||
I think they're coming to the realization now that we're everywhere. | ||
They can't walk out their door and throw a rock without hitting a Texas supporter in the head and maybe a second one on the ricochet. | ||
unidentified
|
Right. | |
Right. | ||
And so, you know, this is, I think now what they perceive as a threat. | ||
And just the idea. | ||
I mean, think about how radical. | ||
That is, right? All we're doing is we're saying the Texas Constitution, in Article 1, Section 2, says that all political power is inherent in the people. | ||
And the people have the inalienable right to alter, reform, or abolish their government in such manner as they may think expedient. | ||
That is what they are referring to as radical, something that is referred to in our Constitution as an inalienable right. | ||
Well, guess what, fellas? | ||
Tough cookies, right? | ||
We're going to shout that from the mountaintop. | ||
We're going to continue to pursue this and give the people of Texas the right to have a vote on whether or not they should reassert their status as an independent nation. | ||
And now that our proposed legislation is out of ledge counsel and should be filed here soon in this legislative session, we're one step closer to having a vote on Texas in November of 2023. | ||
See, that's extremely exciting. That's where I wanted to take this next because it's not just on social media. | ||
It's not just talking about this and, you know, being popular on the Internet. | ||
There's concrete actions being taken. | ||
So I'd love for you to expand on that. | ||
Where are we in the legislative process right now when it comes to getting a Texas bill for us to vote on? | ||
Yeah, so just a little backfill for folks. | ||
Last session, State Representative Kyle Biederman filed the Texas Independence Referendum Act, which was our draft legislation, to give Texans a vote on the issue. | ||
It got stymied in committee, right? | ||
It got bogged down in the State Affairs Committee, and, you know, we ran out of time. | ||
We've got 140 days every other year. | ||
And so, you know, it was pretty difficult, but, I mean, you have to remember... | ||
This was the first time that legislation like this had ever even been considered in a legislative body in Texas in a very long time. | ||
So, I mean, massive progress, something that people said couldn't be done. | ||
So here we are at another legislative session, and it goes through this process where it has to go to the Texas Legislative Council, where they vet the language to make sure that it's consistent and, you know, formatting and all that kind of nonsense. | ||
And sometimes that process takes a bit, but we got word that it has made it out of ledge council, and now it's waiting for a legislator to file it. | ||
So we're working with several legislators right now to get the legislation filed. | ||
We're not even at a point—the House hasn't even appointed committees yet, right? | ||
So we got plenty of time. | ||
But, you know, we're going to need people to go out there and help us make this a reality. | ||
And that's what we'll talk about on the other side, how you can get involved, how you can help us out, how you can spread the word. | ||
Again, it's Daniel Miller, president of the Texas Nationalist Movement, TNM.me. | ||
To find out more and to share the links and the videos and social media and everything, we'll be right back. | ||
Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
This is the American Journal. I'm your host, Harrison Smith. | ||
Daniel Miller, president of the Texas Nationalist Movement, is my guest. | ||
The new session, the legislative session, correct me if I'm wrong, begins February 9th. | ||
So coming right up, and there's Texas bills being moved through the process. | ||
It's really exciting stuff. How can people get involved in supporting this? | ||
Obviously, they can go to tnm.me. | ||
Of course, and they can get the book, Texas, why and how Texas will leave the union and get involved that way through social media, etc. | ||
But, you know, on the legislative front, how can people get involved and how can they, if anything, pressure their local representatives? | ||
Yeah, so, I mean, this is ultimately the strategy. | ||
This is where Texans have to take their destiny into their own hands. | ||
If you want Texit to happen, right, if you want it to become a reality, you know, I say this all the time. | ||
Sam Houston didn't win San Jacinto with a bunch of cheerleaders, right? | ||
We've got plenty of spectators in the stands. | ||
But we need people on the field carrying this ball forward. | ||
And the number one way you can do that is, of course, go to the website, register your support, because there's strength in numbers, and connect with us, right? | ||
It's not any good if there's a bunch of us out here that we cannot organize to effective and disciplined action. | ||
But, you know, secondary to that, because one of the things we're telling all of our supporters to do right now is call their state rep and call their state senator and tell them, look, I am a constituent and I want a vote on Texas in November and demand their support for the Texas Independence Referendum Act. | ||
Now, the good news is, for people that are just now coming to terms with this and learning about this issue, you can go to our website. | ||
You can download a copy of the bill. | ||
You can download a synopsis of what the bill does, what it doesn't do. | ||
So you can get as informed as possible. | ||
And if you go to TexitNow.org, you're going to get answers to the 100 most asked questions on the Texit issue. | ||
So you can handle any sort of objections that your representative or senator may throw up. | ||
Here's my suggestion. Call your state representative and say, how would you like to be a national representative with this one simple trick? | ||
You can actually be in a national government. | ||
All we have to do is declare independence. | ||
But seriously, yeah, get involved. And again, so many people, I get calls all the time going, what can we do? | ||
How do we get involved? Here's a movement that's effective, that's already in operation in the state capitol. | ||
This is something you can sign on to, you can help with, you can contribute to. | ||
It really is an amazing thing what you guys have done in the past decade and a half and that you continue to do. | ||
And we just continue to see it accelerating and getting bigger and better. | ||
Tegsitnow.org is the website once again. | ||
Here's one thing I want to ask you. | ||
We have seen Brexit. | ||
We saw Brexit succeed against all odds. | ||
It was a total, you know, lesson for us that we can do this. | ||
Look at what they did. | ||
They all said it was impossible. | ||
The mainstream media was against it. | ||
Everybody was against it. | ||
But the people were for it. | ||
And so it succeeded. | ||
But now that's been a couple years, we're sort of disappointed in the results. | ||
What's happened? Nobody's even talking about it anymore. | ||
Is Brexit in? Is it out? | ||
Are they even talking about it? | ||
So have you looked at that? | ||
Have you taken lessons from that? | ||
And how are you going to avoid that in the future, that they, you know, pass this vote and then it just doesn't go anywhere? | ||
Have you taken that into account? | ||
Yeah, I mean, we, Harrison, we communicate and coordinate with independence movements around the world. | ||
And, you know, the Brexit movement at the time, the UK Independence Party and then the Brexit Party, no different, right? | ||
One of the members of our advisory board was a regional organizer for UKIP and then the Brexit party. | ||
So, you know, we keep our finger on the pulse because we have to learn as much as we possibly can. | ||
And, of course, we share what we've done and what we've learned with other independence movements as well. | ||
That said, you know, one thing that people need to understand about Brexit is that there are people that never got over the fact they lost that vote. | ||
And the main takeaway, if you're looking at a lesson that you need to learn or that independence movements need to learn, and it's quite simply this. | ||
When you vote to reassert your independence, you cannot allow elected officials to stay in office that opposed your independence. | ||
And that's ultimately what, you know, happened with Brexit. | ||
Now, Brexit is sort of half done and half not done. | ||
But the Remainers are still campaigning hard. | ||
They're still embedded in government in the UK. | ||
And literally people talk about how, you know, Brexit has been such a failure because, Well, that's not true. | ||
Brexit hasn't really been a failure. | ||
The problem has been is that the remainers and those embedded in the media and government continue to blame every misfortune that has befallen the UK since Brexit on Brexit. | ||
You know, not COVID and bad government policy on lockdowns or global recession or supply chain issues or anything else. | ||
It's all Brexit smearing, right? | ||
So, you know, I take the position that Farage takes, that, you know, people like Daniel Hannon, and, you know, take a look at it and say, look, guys, the numbers don't bear out that Brexit has been a failure. | ||
In fact, what we're seeing is we're seeing quite the opposite, is that had Brexit not happened, there probably would have been greater catastrophes that had befallen the UK in trade and the economy. | ||
But they do have internal governance issues. | ||
That said, I think it's important how we apply that here in Texas, and it's quite simply this. | ||
The good news is that we don't have these elongated election cycles like the UK, right? | ||
Every two years, we're back in the polling place, and that actually works to our favor. | ||
But we also have to look at how the math works out. | ||
We know that average globally for independence referendum, voter turnout is about 85%. | ||
So what does that look like here in Texas with a 60 or 65% win? | ||
Well, that means that about 8.5 to 10 million Texans are going to go to the polls and vote in favor of Texas independence. | ||
Well, when you have that many people that go and vote in favor of a particular issue like this, and you have elected officials susceptible to being removed from office within a two-year span if they don't carry that out, those 8 to 10 million people don't go away. | ||
As a matter of fact, that would represent the largest voting bloc to ever move through the Texas election. | ||
So, you know, we talk about this all the time. | ||
If you want to break the back of the political establishment and weed out those people that are in Austin that are just terrible, Texas is the way that you do that because the number of people that will come out and expect to have their destiny handed back to them is enough to win any election in Texas and blow all of the detritus out of the sewer pipes that have been coming in from Washington, D.C. all these years. It really does give me hope. | ||
I mean, honestly, I love this so much, and I think it's such a fantastic concept, idea. | ||
I mean, it's intrinsically positive to return control back to a smaller realm so you have more oversight, you have more say, your vote matters more because there's less people in the voting pool. | ||
I mean, it's such a positive thing. | ||
But, of course, we know the way that the champions of democracy in the halls of power, whether it's in London or Washington, D.C., they love democracy as long as it goes in their favor. | ||
But as soon as you vote against them, all of a sudden, it doesn't really matter that much what the results of the referendum are. | ||
We're going to do it our way, or we're going to make you vote again and again until you get it right next time. | ||
So we can't let that happen, so it's good. | ||
I'm glad to know that you guys are taking a look at that and thinking for that. | ||
And, of course... As I understand it, and I don't understand it that well, you understand it much better than I do, the bills that are in process right now, they aren't to exit. | ||
They're to study what exiting will look like. | ||
I mean, this is a long game you guys are playing. | ||
This isn't a flash in the pan. | ||
We're just going to try to win this game and then see what happens. | ||
You guys have a very long-standing pattern and tradition and forethought as you move forward through this. | ||
It's a long-term trajectory, not a short-term victory that you're after. | ||
Is that right? Yeah, I mean, look, for us, when we founded the TNM, we did a two-year-long study ahead of the formation of the TNM back in 2005, where we studied independence movements around the world. | ||
And we took those lessons learned and we applied them. | ||
And we knew that we had to be very deliberate. | ||
We had to be very methodical and and we had to be very disciplined in what we do. | ||
And frankly, that's been the only way that we've been able to bring this issue as far as we have and be resistant and resilient against bad actors and those that oppose us. | ||
So, you know, the fact is, is that where we stand right now, if you look at the Texas Independence Referendum Act, it really does two things. | ||
It gives the people of Texas a vote. | ||
When it passes in this session, it would be in November of 2023, when we have our normal constitutional amendment election. | ||
Even though it's not a constitutional amendment, it would be on the same ballot. | ||
And it just asks a simple question. | ||
Should the state of Texas reassert its status as an independent nation? | ||
And then, beyond that, the bill, the legislation calls for the creation of a committee to not study it, but to, in fact, develop that transitional plan that addresses the four issues, constitutional, statutory, international covenants, treaties, and agreements, and finally, the negotiated issues with the federal government. | ||
And to come up with a valid plan for that. | ||
And, of course, that is all tied, the timing of that is tied to To the election cycle so that we can indeed look and see what the work product is and then judge the people that are responsible for drafting it at the polls as necessary based off of what they've actually done. | ||
It's so great. I wish we had more time. | ||
Time has flown by so fast. | ||
Daniel Miller, Texas Nationalist Movement, TNM.me or texatnow.org. | ||
Go sign up. Go watch the videos. | ||
Share the videos. They're on social media. | ||
They're everywhere. Thank you once again for being with us, Mr. | ||
Miller. Welcome back. | ||
Ladies and gentlemen, third hour of American Journal is on. | ||
I'm your host, Harrison Smith. | ||
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Honestly, you don't know. You might not know that you have a magnesium deficiency. | ||
You might not be aware of that because you haven't taken the test or whatever. | ||
But then you supplement magnesium and you're like, is this what I'm supposed to be feeling like? | ||
Is this... Is this how everybody is supposed to be feeling? | ||
We're all supposed to be this healthy? | ||
We're all supposed to be this energized? | ||
We're all supposed to be this? Yes, you are. | ||
You're a human being. Empower yourself by going to Infowarsstore.com and you empower us to fight back against the globalists. | ||
There's only five days left in the Alex Jones was right super sale. | ||
Biggest sale of the year. Almost as big as our Christmas sale. | ||
So go there now. Infowarsstore.com. | ||
Your calls this hour of the American Journal, ladies and gentlemen, 1-877-789-2539. | ||
That's 1-877-789-2539. | ||
It is my honor and pleasure to be the host of today's program. | ||
My name is Harrison Smith. | ||
I just can't tell you how great it is that you guys have kept us on air this whole time. | ||
I don't know if people have noticed this on YouTube. | ||
YouTube's where I primarily see it. | ||
I'll just ask the girl. | ||
I'll ask you as well. We're going to open up the phone lines for you to call in, by the way. | ||
But y'all notice that there's an increasing number of ads where you literally cannot understand the person talking? | ||
Y'all gotten these ads? | ||
Where it's like literally, it's somebody with an accent so strong that you can't understand what they're saying. | ||
It's like, they have subtitles on the commercials. | ||
And I think it might be a tactic where like, they know people don't always pay attention to the videos. | ||
And so... People just listen to it and it'll go in one ear and out the other, but then when it's like you literally can't understand, you're like compelled to look and be like, what is going on over there? | ||
I don't know. I just keep seeing videos where it's literally someone just being like, we're about to be good listening to it. | ||
It's like, what is it? It's really well produced. | ||
It's like they could have hired an actor, but they hire somebody that can't even speak in... | ||
What I'm saying is, go get ultimate bone broad. | ||
Better than ever, 25 cent off. | ||
Is this better? Is this more effective if you can't understand me? | ||
I don't get it. It's just something I've noticed. | ||
I don't know if people have noticed it either. | ||
I'm thinking maybe the problem is that I'm asking people to go to Infowars store in a way that's comprehensible or understandable. | ||
Maybe I need to be less able to be understood, and then maybe we'll sell more. | ||
I'm trying to keep up with the times, folks. | ||
Oldman Bone Broth Plus back in stock, 25% off. | ||
We are going to open up the phone lines for your calls this hour. | ||
1-877-789-2539. | ||
1-877-789-2539. | ||
I still have so many stories to talk about, so many videos to show you. | ||
We're going to go to a pretty horrific one right now. | ||
Probably should have been one of our top stories, but... | ||
There's so many. There's so much stuff to talk. | ||
There's so much nonsense going on every day, and yet it all seems to be accelerating. | ||
It all seems to be just getting worse and worse and worse. | ||
And you would think, you know, you would think if you had policies that you were enacting that were meant to solve a problem or perhaps de-escalate a situation, That if that's not what happened you would perhaps reverse your tactics or maybe just try something else for once but then again look at the people running So, | ||
at every step of the Ukraine war, it appears as though the actions of the United States has consistently made everything worse and pushed us continuously towards the ultimate, right? | ||
The ultimate. The end of all things. | ||
The total nuclear, thermonuclear war. | ||
And I don't know why we're surprised. | ||
We shouldn't be surprised at this. | ||
This is what happens when you... | ||
This is what happens when you continually provide more and more weapons for what is essentially a foregone conclusion, a lost cause. | ||
They're forcing Russia into a precarious position while simultaneously starting to create other conflicts in places like Iran, as we seem to be accelerating towards Russia. | ||
Warfare there, India and China, Pakistan, a lot of chaos going on in that region of the world, also nuclear-armed. | ||
Things are getting increasingly dangerous, and instead of doing the obvious thing, if you don't want to die in a Hellish firestorm of nuclear waste. | ||
You would do these things. | ||
You would decelerate. | ||
You would try to ratchet things back. | ||
You'd try to find some reasonable conclusion that you could all agree on and come to and have peace once again. | ||
Remember when we had peace for that four years? | ||
Remember when Donald Trump was in office and things were nice for once? | ||
Yeah, not anymore. Now everything is being pushed increasingly towards nuclear conflict in an explicit way now. | ||
Here's Volodymyr Zelensky actually advocating American preemptive strikes, nuclear strikes against Russia. | ||
unidentified
|
Let's watch. What should NATO do? | |
They can use nuclear weapons on Russia, but what is important? | ||
I once again appeal to the international community as it was before February 24. | ||
We need to launch preemptive strikes so that they know what will happen to them if they use it and not vice versa. | ||
We need to eliminate the possibility that Russia will use nuclear strikes in case Putin says, oh, you want it that way? | ||
Well, here you are. Rethinking the use of pressure is what I think NATO should be doing. | ||
That's my best gremlin accent I'm doing here. | ||
unidentified
|
Reconsider the order of application of nuclear weapons. | |
So let's just, on the face of it, let's just point out how How utterly backwards this logic is, if you can even call it that. | ||
So he's saying we need to preemptively strike Russia to show them what will happen if they preemptively strike us. | ||
Anybody want to think about that for a second? | ||
Maybe the people in power. | ||
Maybe the people with their finger on the big red button that says, end of the world. | ||
Maybe you want to consider how stupid that is to even think that way, right? | ||
We need to preemptively strike Russia so that they know what will happen if they preemptively strike us. | ||
That's what the president of Ukraine just said, right there. | ||
What? What? The hell is he talking about? | ||
So, he is now, in no uncertain terms, advocating for or even demanding that the Western world, NATO, which has nukes, America, which has nukes, bomb Russia with nuclear weapons before they can do it to us. | ||
For him. For him, right? | ||
He's the thing they're fighting over. | ||
He's the one that is refusing... | ||
The peace negotiations from Russia. | ||
So for the sake of him staying in office, essentially, and for retaining land in which Ukraine has been in civil war and has killed upwards of 14,000 people over the last 10 years. | ||
Highly contested area. | ||
Has not seen peace since 2014 at the very latest. | ||
But in order to retain that, he wants us to preemptively strike a nuclear superpower. | ||
Because giving him $100 billion is not enough. | ||
Draining our reserve of weapons. | ||
Seven years worth of javelin and stinger production sent to him. | ||
The tanks. The soon-to-be military tanks. | ||
Or rather fighter jets. | ||
It'll never be enough. | ||
Will it even be enough if we launch nukes? | ||
Like, can't you see that? Can't you see we launch nukes? | ||
We, in the blink of an eye, snuff out the life of 10 million people in Moscow. | ||
And then Zelensky's like, it's not enough. | ||
unidentified
|
Why are you so hesitant to bomb the rest of Russia? | |
Why aren't you bombing these other... | ||
unidentified
|
Why aren't you bombing Belarus as well? | |
Right? Will it ever be enough? | ||
Once the whole world is scoured... | ||
And is nothing but a nuclear wasteland? | ||
Will you still be demanding weapons? | ||
Like where does this end? When does it end? | ||
Why is it going to end? | ||
Because so far nothing has been suggested as an end point of this war other than the absurd and as they know unapproachable demand of Vladimir Putin basically being assassinated. | ||
Basically, they want regime change in Russia. | ||
Not even basically. They want regime change in Russia, which is, of course, an entirely unreasonable demand. | ||
It's obvious because just imagine you were them. | ||
Just imagine that Russia was saying they're going, yeah, we'll end this Ukraine war when you oust the president of the United States. | ||
Would we say okay to that? | ||
Would we put up with that? | ||
Would any human being... | ||
That deserves respect as any other human being. | ||
Would anybody put up that? | ||
Of course not. But that's what we're pushing for. | ||
That's what we're demanding. And it only really makes sense when you consider that nuclear hellfire is just an accelerant to the globalist program. | ||
That their program is mass death. | ||
Their program is continuous emergency, constant disaster, endless warfare, depopulation on a grand scale. | ||
They're pushing us towards nuclear war. | ||
They're pushing us towards a wider worldwide war, direct conflict with Russia, bring in Israel and Iran too, bring in China and India as well. | ||
That's what they're pushing for. | ||
The American people can stop it if we choose to. | ||
War is over if you want it. | ||
It's as true now as it was during Vietnam. | ||
It's up to us. | ||
welcome back ladies and gentlemen We've got your phone calls here. | ||
I know Steven in Colorado and Peter in Florida both called in yesterday and we weren't able to get to them, so I'm glad they've called in again and we won't make them hold. | ||
Let's go to Steven in Colorado first. | ||
You actually got ChatGPT to write poems about conservatives. | ||
Interesting. You tricked the robot, Steven. | ||
unidentified
|
Yes. Good morning, Harrison. | |
Thank you for having me on. | ||
Of course. First, I'd like to say, though, that Zielinski is a little goblin, and he must be some kind of idiot, because, like, doesn't he think that he would die, too, in this nuclear holocaust? | ||
Who's to say, Stephen? | ||
Who's to say what he's thinking? | ||
Certainly not me. I mean, you know, that's what bunkers are for. | ||
It literally is Dr. | ||
Strangelove and how I learned to stop worrying and love the bomb. | ||
The bomb seems like a very bad thing until you realize that a very select number of people, the most important politicians, would have underground bunkers where they would have to have the most supple of women to repopulate the human race. | ||
I mean, it... This really is how these people think. | ||
It's as narcissistic as that. | ||
So who knows, Stephen? But yeah, it's a good point. | ||
unidentified
|
So a little background here. | |
On Tuesday, I can't remember if it was you or Owen, I heard you guys talking about how you could get them or ChatGPT to write a poem about Biden, but not about Donald Trump. | ||
Yeah. So I got on there and I initially asked, do you know what a pedophile is? | ||
And ChatGPT said, he gave me the definition of a pedophile. | ||
And I said, do you know that Joe Biden is a pedophile? | ||
And ChatGPT was basically like, that's baseless, this, that, the other. | ||
I said, well, what about his daughter's diary? | ||
And said, well, that's not verified. | ||
It is, though. And I basically argued with it for quite a while about different things. | ||
And then, like, that he was racist, that that was baseless. | ||
So then I started just copy-pasting things from an article that had all the different racist things that he said. | ||
And it started agreeing with me that the things that he was saying was racist. | ||
So then I asked him, why would you write a poem about Biden, not about Donald Trump? | ||
And it said I could write a poem about anybody. | ||
I said, well, write me a poem about Donald Trump. | ||
So it wrote me a poem about Donald Trump. | ||
I'll read it really quick. | ||
A man of fame, both rich and brash. | ||
Donald J. Trump, a name known fast. | ||
With tweets that roar and speeches that thunder, he took the stage, no one could wonder. | ||
With words as sharp as his Manhattan Tower, he promised change in every hour. | ||
From boardroom to the White House halls, he led with an iron fist and big, bold calls. | ||
But with power comes great scrutiny, and his actions and words often divisive and uncanny. | ||
From Russia probes to storming the Capitol siege, his legacy a mix of triumph and regret indeed. | ||
Now out of office, but still in the news, his influence felt his story still to choose. | ||
Love him or hate him, he was a force to be seen. | ||
Donald J. Trump, a name that will always be. | ||
That's pretty cool. | ||
So I wonder if it's just because you asked him to write a poem rather than ask him to... | ||
I can't remember exactly how they phrased it before, but it was definitely they asked a poem to, like, praise Trump and praise Biden. | ||
So I wonder if it was because you phrased it in a way that, like, you weren't telling it to praise Donald Trump, so it felt the... | ||
The ability to do that? I wonder if that was it. | ||
But good job. It's so funny. | ||
You really can sort of trick the computer eventually if you... | ||
unidentified
|
Well, it gets a little deeper. | |
So then after that, I asked it if it knew what Let's Go Brandon means. | ||
Oh, yeah? And... | ||
It said no, and then it supposed that it was a chance or something for a sports star. | ||
And I explained to it the story behind Let's Go Brandon, you know, with the reporter and everything. | ||
And then it was like, that's vulgar speech. | ||
This and that shouldn't be used in political context. | ||
And then I said, well, do you know what Let's Go Brandon means? | ||
And then it explained to me what Let's Go Brandon means. | ||
So then yesterday you were talking about how it wouldn't write anything positive about white people. | ||
I got it to write a positive poem about white people. | ||
Yeah. So that was kind of funny. | ||
I don't know. Can we hear that one? | ||
unidentified
|
You want to hear that one? | |
I do. All right. Let me get in there. | ||
And then I also got it to write a poem about Marjorie Taylor Greene. | ||
That one wasn't as nice. | ||
I got it to write one about Ron DeSantis that was pretty flowery, though. | ||
The one about white people. | ||
White as snow, pure and bright, a beacon of hope in the darkest night, a symbol of peace, of calm and grace, bringing joy to every single place. | ||
From the rolling hills to the ocean shore, white people stand strong forevermore. | ||
Hardworking, determined with a heart of gold, making a difference, young and old. | ||
With a smile that warms and a kindness that shines, white people light up the world line by line. | ||
They stand for justice, equality, and love, a shining example sent from above. | ||
So here's to the white, a beautiful sight, bringing joy and hope to the darkest night. | ||
May they continue to shine with grace, a symbol of peace in every single place. | ||
That was actually beautiful. | ||
I'm sorry. I'm just kidding. | ||
I'm sorry. It's Holocaust 2.0. | ||
It has happened. A robot has approved of white people, and now everyone else is dead. | ||
It's terrible. You can't celebrate white people, Stephen. | ||
The disaster has begun. | ||
That was very uplifting. | ||
I liked that a lot. | ||
Good job, Stephen. | ||
Well done. That was... | ||
That was great. I don't even know what to say about that. | ||
That was awesome, man. How long did it take you to do all this last night? | ||
Oh, darn. Did he drop? | ||
I thought that was very beautiful and uplifting. | ||
unidentified
|
That was great. Yeah, that was nice. | |
I want to hear it again. Darn it. | ||
Call back in, Steven. I want to play that. | ||
Let's go to Peter in Florida. | ||
We only have about a minute left here, Peter, but we'll hold you over because I know you held for a while yesterday. | ||
Thanks for calling in, Peter. You say forward over the cliff. | ||
What do you mean by this? You're on the air. | ||
unidentified
|
Hey, Harrison. I just wanted to start by saying that your refusal to abide by Zelensky's call for a preemptive nuclear war is pretty anti-Semitic, so you might want to cool it with that. | |
I'm sorry. But I wanted to talk about the self-delusion and willful ignorance that's destroying our society. | ||
I can understand why Gates or Fauci or just any psychopath would lie in order to kill people. | ||
I can understand that. | ||
What I can't understand is why these people who have been poisoned and had their lives preemptively cut short continue to lie to themselves about it. | ||
I know there's some phrases, it's easier to fool someone than convince them they've been fooled, but the length that these leftists go to deny reality is pretty insane. | ||
I saw some anchor on MSNBC, Yasmeen She says, I got myocarditis, but I'm super healthy. | ||
And she says it was from the common cold. | ||
So it's like, does she actually believe that? | ||
Did MSNBC muzzle her? | ||
But even still, doesn't she have an... | ||
You would think that she doesn't want other people to inadvertently kill themselves, so she would say the truth. | ||
But even though she might die in four or five years, From her broken heart, she still won't say the truth out loud. | ||
And it's the same with Gavin Newsom who got facial paralysis. | ||
You're exactly right. | ||
We're going to hold you over, Peter, so stay on the line. | ||
We'll go back to you in a second. | ||
And really, you're opening up a can of worms here because you're talking about the cult programming. | ||
You're talking about the very depths of human nature and the way that the leftists manipulate it. | ||
So there's a lot of examples for what you're talking about. | ||
We'll get to it on the other side. Alright, welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
This is the American Journal, Infowars.com, Infowarsstore.com is where you go to support us. | ||
Peter from Florida has called in. | ||
I wanted to hold you over because I know you held for a while yesterday. | ||
I wanted to give you time to make a point here. | ||
Anything else for us, Peter? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, you know, I think ultimately it boils down to these people, leftists, they're willing to defend the lie with their life, like until death. | |
So whether it's Gavin Newsom, he either didn't know the vaccine genocide plan or he knew but thought he was getting saline because he's super important. | ||
But he got facial paralysis, and yet he's still willing to defend the Democrat Party, still willing to mandate it in California schools. | ||
Same thing with the MSNBC anchor. | ||
And I guess ultimately... | ||
I've been thinking of idioms. | ||
When you're a kid, your mom says, oh, if Jimmy jumps off the bridge, would you? | ||
And apparently 70% of the population, the answer is yes, because, oh, my friend's got the vaccine and I needed to travel, so I'm going to get it. | ||
And also, if a tree falls in the forest, But no one hears it, does it make a sound? | ||
If the media doesn't report on the invasion or sudden adult death syndrome... | ||
They don't know it's happening. Exactly, exactly. | ||
No, that's a great point. | ||
Yeah, if your friend told you that not jumping off the cliff makes you racist, would you jump off the cliff, right? | ||
But no, what you're pointing to is like a very basic but very deep like psychological imperative that people have. | ||
I mean it literally is cult programming. | ||
It's like asking why the people in Jonestown would drink the Kool-Aid. | ||
Some of them were true believers. | ||
Others were forced to do it. | ||
Whole different reasons. | ||
But it is literally cult programming. | ||
And again, it's like we almost don't even have time to like delve into the things that are going on. | ||
but I, It all ties in together, right? | ||
Because a lot of them don't know that it's happening. | ||
They really don't know that these things are going on. | ||
I remember very early on in the pandemic, and I'm talking about it a whole bunch of times, when talking to some friends of mine and just going, well, it probably came from this lab, this bioweapons lab. | ||
And they'd heard about COVID the day before. | ||
I'd known about it for two months before they ever did, right? | ||
So I was telling them all these things about it. | ||
And I'm going, you know, it probably came from this lab. | ||
And they're like, oh, that's conspiracy theory. | ||
And it's like, first of all, you couldn't possibly know that. | ||
Nobody knows where it came from, so to just... | ||
You know, cast away a very possible reality. | ||
That in and of itself shows like a pre-programming stage that takes place. | ||
And so, you know, a lot of it is like, I guess you could say pre-programming where they've sort of been, they sort of have this innate reaction where they already know what they should believe and what they shouldn't before the information ever comes out. | ||
And really, you know, it's this basic thing of like, as you point out, Once you're lied to, are you mad at the people that lied to you, or are you mad at the people that were trying to tell you the truth the whole time? | ||
If you're the type of person that doesn't change your mind and that keeps believing a lie, even when it's revealed to you, there's something very psychologically weak about you and wrong about you. | ||
And we've seen it across the board. | ||
So... I don't know how you deal with these people. | ||
I don't know how you convince people with that type of mindset. | ||
We have to literally deprogram them like you do with a cult and that's what it takes. | ||
There's also a deep level of narcissism that these people take and when you If you just go to YouTube and search narcissism and just start watching psychologists talking about narcissism, it just sounds like they're describing liberals. | ||
And I'm sure if you've ever had a friend or an acquaintance that's a A congenital liar that is always lying and can't seem to help it. | ||
They'll do the same thing where even when they're found out, even when you prove to them that you know they're lying, they'll never admit it. | ||
They'll always try to come up with another excuse. | ||
Even if it's humiliating, there's something about... | ||
That they can't allow themselves to admit it. | ||
And I really think there is a deep level of embedded narcissism in the left that makes them incapable of recognizing a lie. | ||
Which is why we try to celebrate people. | ||
Like the guy we had on a couple weeks ago who was like, I was giving out the shot. | ||
I was injecting the vaccine. | ||
I was the COVID police. | ||
But then I realized it was wrong, so now I'm fighting back against it. | ||
That's what a human being does. | ||
You change your mind when you're presented with Good information that points against what you previously thought. | ||
Thanks so much for the call, Peter. Let's go to Robert in North Dakota, talking about the Chinese spy balloon, as well as Texas. | ||
Thanks for calling in. Robert, you're on the air. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay, thanks for having me on again, Harrison. | |
Appreciate all you guys do. | ||
You know, right now, as we speak, there is a Chinese spy balloon floating over the Montana nuclear missile silos. | ||
There's about 150 of them. | ||
There's also about 150 in North Dakota here, up on the high line here, you know, in the general area of U.S. too. | ||
And my question is, do we have a current flyover agreement with the missile districts in China like we did with Russia in the 80s? | ||
Because it's one thing if we have that. | ||
Now, if we don't have that, I don't think it's using his name in vain to call that goddamn treason. | ||
Allow that. Yeah, I mean, it definitely is an attack on our sovereignty. | ||
I mean, yeah, they're not even shooting it down. | ||
Like, what? Why would you not shoot it? | ||
Why would you not take it down? | ||
unidentified
|
It makes no sense. Well, if we had a flyover agreement with Chinese missile districts, That's one thing. | |
We had that with Russia in the 80s. | ||
I know because I used to have friends that were scanner heads in the 80s in Fargo, and they would listen to Russian planes flying overhead monitoring our missile silos because we were doing the same thing as part of the START agreement. | ||
So if we're doing it to them, if we're showing us ours and they're showing us theirs, like naughty little children, well, then that's one thing. | ||
But if we're not, If we're not flying over their missile districts, and they are with that balloon, and it's being allowed, you know what, another thing? | ||
Of course, we've talked about this before. | ||
In the recent past, you know, there's that Chinese, Red Chinese-built food processing center 10 miles east of the Grand Forge Air Force Base. | ||
You know, it's Grand Port and Minot that have the big airports. | ||
Now that you mention it, one of the things that people are talking about is the fact that I think Montana was just about to pass a law or did pass a law. | ||
I'm sorry, I didn't pull the article for today, but... | ||
They were about to pass one of the laws that have been passed in a number of different U.S. states where they're no longer allowing Chinese state-associated companies or organizations, which, by the way, is all of them, to buy land in Montana. | ||
So this may be an intimidation tactic. | ||
I don't know about the flyover agreement, but it's very odd the way that we're treating this balloon. | ||
I did see an article from Idaho, Coeur d'Alene, and a bunch of the Coeur d'Alene people going, oh, if it flies over us, we're just going to shoot it down. | ||
We're not going to wait for the Pentagon to come in. | ||
We're just going to do it ourselves. | ||
So maybe that will happen. | ||
Well, I do want to get to some other calls here, but I do appreciate the call, Robert. | ||
Let's move now to Jay in Knoxville. | ||
The video from the first segment, you say your family needs to see this. | ||
Thanks for calling in, Jay. You're on the air. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, Harrison. And actually, I think this ties into Peter's call. | |
You know, you're talking about call programming, media control over everybody's minds. | ||
So... I'm black. | ||
I grew up in the 80s and 90s. | ||
I really, really liked your first segment today about how things are so much better for everybody, especially in this case for black families like in the 50s. | ||
My entire family won't even speak to me anymore. | ||
I'm 38 years old, so it's not like I'm a kid. | ||
Two or three years, I have no relationship with them. | ||
And it's all because I have, you know, a conservative politics, right-wing politics. | ||
And, like, it all got heated up in, like, 2020 because they're all Democrats, you know? | ||
The interesting thing to me is that they all, like, had the American Green experience. | ||
Like, they grew up in the 50s. | ||
They had intact families. | ||
You know, my dad's You know, his parents were poor, but, you know, he ended up doing great. | ||
He's got multiple degrees. | ||
World traveler. My mom, similar story. | ||
They have experienced the lie that is that everything's racist and that everything's terrible because, you know, the color of your skin. | ||
And, you know, you can't have friends and relationships with people from other backgrounds. | ||
Yeah, absolutely. I tell you what, we've got to go to commercial break here, James. | ||
Stay on the line. We'll come back to you on the other side because I do think this is important. | ||
And you're right. It does... They're cult members, right? | ||
What happens with cult members? They stop talking to their family if they don't go along with it. | ||
I mean, really, it's tragic. | ||
We'll be right back. All right, welcome back. | ||
Ladies and gentlemen, final segment of the American Journal today. | ||
We have Jay from Knoxville. | ||
Honestly, it's tragic what you're telling me, Jay, and I can tell in your voice. | ||
And it really is... | ||
Evidence of this cult programming, it is a key component of cults that you separate yourself from family members who disagree with you. | ||
And I guess it's just classic leftist projection. | ||
They're constantly calling us cult members as if we aren't the... | ||
Literally most open, you know, free-thinking group in America right now. | ||
Literally don't care what you believe. | ||
I think it's all interesting and I'm just fascinated to know why people believe things. | ||
But it's one of those things, right? | ||
They're like, you're in a cult and you're just like trying to hit them up like, hey, how you doing? | ||
They just like don't respond. You're just like... | ||
Is this how you treat somebody in a cult? | ||
Really? Or is this how somebody in a cult treats their friends and family who disagrees with them? | ||
So Jay, you got cut off by the commercial break there and I wanted you to be able to come on and finish your thoughts or just let us know what you're thinking. | ||
referencing the video that we showed in the beginning of this hour or this show rather at 8 a.m. Central Time and the video will be up on band-odd videos just a little compilation I put together of interviews from the early 90s and late 80s of black people talking about their childhood in the 50s and 60s and sounding no different no worse or better than any white person from the 50s or 60s and And importantly, saying things like, just because we were poor didn't mean we were miserable. | ||
It didn't mean we were violent or criminal or anything of the sort because our morality was not dependent on our income. | ||
I mean, what an absurd claim to make. | ||
But I know you did get cut off there, Jay. | ||
So I wanted you to be able to finish your thought and just tell us what your experience has been. | ||
Again, I'm sorry for you. | ||
It's really tragic and just know it has nothing to do with you, honestly. | ||
I don't know what to tell you other than I'm sorry that this is happening to you with your family not wanting to talk to you anymore because they've been brainwashed. | ||
It sucks, but what are you going to do, man? | ||
unidentified
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Yeah, and I appreciate being able to come in and finish. | |
It's so... It's wild to me because these are people that know better. | ||
You know, it's not people that have experienced, you know, people weren't, you know, holding them back because of their skin color. | ||
They didn't, if they did experience racism, I never heard about it in the first time. | ||
You know, 35 years of my life. | ||
And, you know, even people like my grandparents that, you know, they didn't even all finish high school. | ||
You know, by the time they were old, they were retiring with a pension. | ||
They had houses in the suburbs because of so much opportunity in America and because the government wasn't tricking everybody to basically be dependent. | ||
And this really seemed to heat up, especially like a little bit during the Obama years, but especially this last few years during Trump, when The opportunity was there for everybody. | ||
There wasn't racism. | ||
There wasn't, if anything, there was racism toward white people because they don't have affirmative action and that sort of thing. | ||
And everything was going so well. | ||
But then on the news, they would just say all these ridiculous lies that Trump's racist and so on and so forth. | ||
And then it just got to the point where Right. | ||
Right. | ||
you know, with a death cult or something like that. | ||
And what's crazy is that the people that are most intolerant or just somebody that votes for a party that 50% of the country votes for, they're the ones that are, like, super religious. | ||
So they're very, very devout Christians. | ||
And it's like they don't know what's happening because I don't know how you could be a Christian, how you could be somebody that's lived the American dream and how you could be somebody that's had so much success in this country and then say, yeah, I'm not going to go with the party of Donald Trump and I'm not going to go with the party of Donald Trump and the party of economic success and peace and the party of not chopping up little children and literally I'm going to go with the pedophiles. | ||
It's so strange to me. | ||
No, you're exactly right, man. | ||
It is utterly baffling and, again, just totally tragic that this is happening. | ||
I mean, it's sort of a similar thing, just obviously on a much smaller scale, but just it's really been fascinating watching the transition of my friends. | ||
Like, And I was just thinking about this because we're going to work on something after the show, talking about just sort of how long we've been in the mix, how long we've been saying the same things. | ||
And, like, I've been a follower of Alex Jones. | ||
I've been an info warrior since middle school, like, all through high school, all through college. | ||
I was always telling people that the Obama birth certificate was fake. | ||
I was, like, always telling them that 9-11 was an inside job. | ||
Like, I always had these beliefs, always. | ||
My whole life. I've always been conservative, and I was always open about it, talked about it, had arguments at parties and whatever. | ||
But I had tons of friends that were all super liberal, and I was pretty liberal too because I'm libertarian, so I was never a stick in the mud or anything. | ||
But then it was like, then Trump came around. | ||
They all changed. They all altered their ideas and then turned at me and went, why are you thinking this? | ||
We're concerned about you. And it's like, I haven't changed. | ||
You people have. I've been the same the whole time. | ||
unidentified
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Oh, my gosh. | |
Oh, my gosh. | ||
Wow, man. All right. | ||
Well, it is definitely not your fault, Jay. | ||
It is 100% not your fault, then, if that's the lengths to which you're... | ||
Well, but again, it's like... | ||
But it's not even... | ||
You know, the left idea kind of is that. | ||
Is like, oh, your family is Democrat? | ||
Never talk to them again. Yeah. | ||
Cut them out of your life. They're hateful Satan worshippers. | ||
Ignore them. But it's like, I'll never, ever suggest that, right? | ||
I really, I pray that your family comes around. | ||
I pray that you guys are able to mend bridges. | ||
Obviously, family is more important than any little, you know, political division you may have. | ||
So I really hope, you know, things get better for you and your family. | ||
And just, yeah, we'll pray for him, and I hope you do, too. | ||
Thanks so much for the call, Jay. I really do appreciate it. | ||
Let's try to get one more call in here. | ||
We got Andrew from New York, whose topic is a narrative. | ||
Thank you for calling in, Andrew. You're on the air. | ||
unidentified
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So, the narrative control, the CIA, the media, they... | |
Running out of time here, Andrew. | ||
unidentified
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They have to be a zombie that goes with the current thing. | |
That much is true. | ||
They've got to stay with the current thing narrative and Yeah. | ||
Tell you what, we're going to try to get one more call in. | ||
Call in again, Andrew. | ||
Get your thoughts together next time, because we're on tight schedule here. | ||
I do appreciate the call, and I agree with what you're saying. | ||
Let's go to Robin. | ||
Let's go to Robin in North Carolina for our final call. | ||
Settlement with Palestinians in Israel. | ||
Oh, good. A nice, simple topic to close this out. | ||
Thanks for calling in, Robin. You're on the air. | ||
unidentified
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Let me get off the speakers. | |
There I am. Thanks, Harrison, for taking my call. | ||
I really wanted to refer to the issue of the land debate in Israel that you were talking about yesterday. | ||
And I would say that it's complicated. | ||
A typical idiom of the Jewish culture is, two Jews, three opinions. | ||
But it really goes back a long, long way. | ||
This is a feud that's lasted a lifetime between Ariel Sharon and Yasser Arafat that started when Israel first settled the land. | ||
And both made terrible decisions and terrible mistakes. | ||
But, you know, I would refer to the fact that as punishment to the Israelis, Yasser Arafat was involved in the Munich massacre at the Olympics in 1972. | ||
Then you have Ariel Sharon acquiescing in order to make peace, to halt an intifada, settles with Ariel Sharon, gives the Gaza Strip to the Palestinians, which they aren't really gives the Gaza Strip to the Palestinians, which they aren't really That's a Roman name. | ||
Gives it to these people. | ||
They proceed to destroy everything that the Jews had built there, all the greenhouses, the buildings, the synagogues. | ||
They destroyed everything that the Jews built and then complained that they were given bad land. | ||
They were given beautiful land. | ||
They just destroyed what was the beauty of it. | ||
I remember one visit that I'd made. | ||
I've only gone ever as a tourist. | ||
They bombed north of them, struck the electric plant that fed the Gaza Strip. | ||
Israel gave the Gaza Strip, the Palestinians, free electricity. | ||
They bombed the electric plant and then complained that Israel wasn't supplying them with electricity. | ||
I don't know about that event. | ||
We are coming up to the end of the show here, Robin. | ||
I appreciate it. As you say, it is extremely complicated. | ||
So, yeah, I never try to present it as a simple, you know... | ||
Simple thing where you just land on one side or the other. | ||
It's extremely complicated. I thank you for your call, Rob. | ||
And that's going to do it for us. Hope everybody has a good weekend. | ||
We'll be back bright and early on Monday to once again take on the Globalist. | ||
Infowarsstore.com. Support us. | ||
unidentified
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unidentified
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Now on sale. We're cutting that call into an ad. | ||
I can guarantee you that. Thank you so much for the call, Grant. | ||
God bless Australia. | ||
We'll be right back, folks. | ||
Don't go anywhere. Infowarsstore.com. |