Speaker | Time | Text |
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Good morning, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
Welcome to the American Journal. | ||
I am your host, Harrison Smith. | ||
Very glad to be here today. | ||
It's Friday. We're going to open up the phone lines. | ||
The whole show today, we have a lot to talk about. | ||
We're going to go to a video here from John Bowne. | ||
Did NWO use HARP to punish Turkey? | ||
It's a conspiracy theory that a lot of people are pointing to. | ||
We'll go to it now. We'll talk about it a little bit on the other side. | ||
But here it is, John Bowne. At the end of January 2023, talks between Turkish President Erdogan and the Swedish government detonated. | ||
unidentified
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So you will let terror organizations run wild on your avenues and streets and then expect our support for getting into NATO? That's not happening. | |
In order to be accepted into NATO, Sweden and Finland as well needed the vote from Turkey. | ||
But talks disintegrated after a Swedish-Danish politician set fire to the Koran in front of the Turkish embassy in Stockholm. | ||
unidentified
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On Saturday, Rasmus Paludin, head of a far-right Danish party, held a protest in front of Turkey's embassy in Stockholm. | |
The Swedish-Danish national set fire to the Koran. | ||
That has put Sweden's NATO application in jeopardy. | ||
A session to the military alliance must be approved unanimously by member states, including Turkey. | ||
After Erdogan's declaration, Turkey and northern Syria were devastated by a series of earthquakes in southern Turkey, with a death toll that has reached well over 11,000 people. | ||
unidentified
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We are finished. My God, there is nobody here. | |
Nobody. What kind of state is this? | ||
Turkey is no stranger to earthquakes, the majority of them occurring in the eastern and western portions of the country. | ||
But strange anomalies occurred just before the earthquakes, leading many to question whether a harp weapon may have been used to punish the Turkish government for failing to toe the line of NATO's New World Order overlords. | ||
unidentified
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I'm telling you from here, I know who newspapers wrote it. | |
Take the dirty hands of Turkey. | ||
I'm telling you very much. | ||
Take the dirty hands of Turkey. | ||
We've had a few guests on talking about what they believe harp does, what they admit it does. | ||
You know, why not? And Trey, my producer thought, why not get the people from HARP on? | ||
It's a research facility. | ||
What about other countries, the Russians, the Chinese, the European Union? | ||
Do they have similar programs, Doctor? | ||
unidentified
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The European community has a facility in the Trompson, Norway. | |
It's part of what they call the ice gas community there. | ||
That actually was a facility like HAARP that's been around a lot longer than HAARP. The Smithsonian is reporting on the Daily Mail. | ||
is reporting and a bunch of other publications are reporting China and Russia are working together to heat the atmosphere for weather control using large antenna arrays on the ground directed by satellites in space. | ||
Weather modification on a global scale. | ||
unidentified
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In fact, these programs are so large and so all-encompassing. | |
All right, folks, that is the latest from John Bowne. | ||
Of course, we know that weather modification programs are out there in operation here in America and China and elsewhere around the world. | ||
Of course, we know that earthquake machines have been a possibility, if not a reality, since at least the 1890s with Tesla inventing it. | ||
I do want to remind you of a very interesting earthquake that occurred recently. | ||
Oh, a couple decades, or a decade ago or so, Fukushima. | ||
Remember, Fukushima triggered Germans' nuclear phase-out. | ||
Not only did it happen just at the right time for Germany to, it was during a German election where they were deciding between a pro-nuclear or anti-nuclear candidate. | ||
Fukushima happens, earthquake, nuclear disaster. | ||
They've moved away from nuclear power, which has, of course, set the stage for the current disaster for energy there in Germany, as well as getting Angela Merkel elected, which started the whole migrant crisis. | ||
Earthquakes can be extremely useful tools if you know how to apply them correctly. | ||
We'll be back with your Daily Dispatch. | ||
Don't go anywhere. | ||
Good morning, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
Welcome to this wartime dispatch. | ||
We are rapidly entering an extremely dangerous phase, the phase in which all of the plans of the globalists are starting to unravel. | ||
And if there's one thing we know about the globalists from just our observations of their psychology is they don't like when things unravel. | ||
They would rather do literally anything than let their plans be waylaid for even a single moment. | ||
They released COVID just to stop Donald Trump from getting elected again. | ||
What won't they do? | ||
This comes as Vladimir Putin issues a speech he calls approaching the precipice. | ||
Yes, ominous warnings across the board here at InfoWars. | ||
We'll get into all of it. We're going to open up the phone lines for your calls today. | ||
We'll do that early and keep your calls coming in throughout the show as we don't have a guest right now. | ||
So, you are our guest. | ||
Lots of videos to show you as well. | ||
Lots of stuff going on in politics. | ||
We'll focus on that a little bit, but largely we'll focus on much bigger issues going on around the world. | ||
And we have a pretty extended daily dispatch today, so let's just get into it. | ||
Here it is, your daily dispatch. All right, here it is, folks, your Daily Dispatch. | ||
For Friday, the 10th of February, 2023, New Jersey Councilman Russell Heller shot dead just a week after the slaying of Eunice Dwumfer. | ||
A New Jersey municipal council member was shot dead in his car Wednesday exactly a week after the unsolved slaying of Councilwoman Eunice Dwumfer. | ||
Russell Heller, 51, was found dead just after 7 a.m. | ||
in the Somerset parking lot of PSENG, the local energy company where the Milford Republican worked. | ||
Cops quickly ID'd a former employee, Gary Curtis, 58, as a suspect and found him dead in his car from a suspected self-inflicted gunshot. | ||
Wound around three and a half hours after the slaying. | ||
The councilman's murder came exactly a week after Sayerville Councilwoman Dwumfer, also a Republican, was gunned down in her SUV outside of her home around 15 miles away. | ||
Her murder remains unsolved. | ||
Authorities have not linked the crimes, and the Somerset County Prosecutor's Office insisted that Heller's murder appeared to be an isolated incident and was not related to his elected office or political affiliation. | ||
But they don't actually know that for sure. | ||
They just, you know, they just don't want anybody to get any narrative ideas. | ||
I mean, you can only be told that it's dangerous MAGA extremist Republicans are the ones committing violence in this country. | ||
I mean, you can only have so many Republicans murdered openly for their political beliefs before that lie starts to become untenable. | ||
Maybe we need to go through it again. | ||
Maybe we need to go through just the last year or so of Democratic violence. | ||
Just open terrorism. | ||
Just multiple people murdered outright for being Republican. | ||
People in office. | ||
People who are just activists. People who are walking down the street knocking on doors for Marco Rubio. | ||
Just viciously attacked and sometimes murdered. | ||
And then called terrorists and investigated by the FBI. Pretty incredible stuff. | ||
And we'll get more into that a little bit later. | ||
Meanwhile, this has been a big story. | ||
I just think kind of funny and probably not true if I had to guess. | ||
But Elon Musk fires a top Twitter engineer over his declining view count. | ||
For weeks now, Elon Musk has been preoccupied with worries about how many people are seeing his tweets. | ||
Last week, the Twitter CEO took his Twitter account private for a day to test whether that might boost the size of his audience. | ||
The move came after several prominent right-wing accounts that Musk interacts with complained that recent changes to Twitter had reduced their reach. | ||
On Tuesday, Musk gathered a group of engineers and advisors into a room at Twitter's headquarters looking for answers. | ||
Why are his engagement numbers tanking? | ||
This is ridiculous, he said, according to multiple sources with direct knowledge of the meeting. | ||
I have more than 100 million followers and I'm only getting tens of thousands of impressions. | ||
Yeah, kind of a big problem. | ||
That's kind of a big issue. | ||
Tens of millions of followers, but you get a fraction of a percentage of that actually seeing your tweets. | ||
That's an issue with the algorithm. | ||
But of course, the way this is painted is as if he's like, I'm not popular anymore. | ||
You're fired. That's not what's happening. | ||
He's talking about the failure of Twitter to perform its function and fired the person in charge of that function. | ||
So... Hope we cleared that up. | ||
Meanwhile, Chinese space lasers. | ||
Yeah, they're not Jewish, so we can talk about these. | ||
Hawaii green laser beam, not from NASA's ICE satellite 2 Atlas, but China's DACI-1 ACDL. In fact, we have videos of this. | ||
Clip 3, show the lights shining down from Chinese satellites. | ||
Near Hawaii. It's incredibly creepy looking. | ||
You can see them here if you're a television viewer. | ||
You've got to go to band.video if you're not. | ||
There they are. The green lasers shining across the fog like a barcode scanner almost. | ||
Incredibly creepy stuff. Now, it seems to me that that would... | ||
I mean, that's either... | ||
I don't know. I mean, it looks like it would have to be an array of satellites spraying something down like that. | ||
I guess those all could be coming from the same point if it was high enough. | ||
But incredibly creepy. | ||
Last week, green lights were spotted in Hawaii, and previous reports claimed it was from NASA. However, a new report suggests it's impossible that the ominous laser beams were from the American Space Agency due to the trajectory of satellites. | ||
This was on January 28th. | ||
Bizarre green lights on full display in the skies of Hawaii. | ||
Initially, the experts at the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan, which co-owns the camera, announced on Twitter that the source was a radar device of an orbiting satellite, which is owned by NASA. The satellite keeps an eye on the thickness of Earth's sea ice, ice sheets, and forests. | ||
However, on February 6th, the new report came from the NAOJ. After they uploaded the footage of the laser beam, they apologized and said, based on the trajectory, the source of the laser beam was unlikely NASA. I tweeted this out, but it's going to be very interesting when, you know, space lasers are actually and openly deployed in warfare and everybody acts like we all knew that there were Jewish space lasers the whole time. | ||
Everybody knows that's totally normal and obvious that that's the case, right? | ||
I would love if Israel was the first to, like, deploy this. | ||
They destroy some Iran nuclear site with a satellite-mounted direct energy weapon. | ||
It's like, oh, you mean Jewish space lasers? | ||
That's the thing that you kick Marjorie Taylor Greene off the committees for talking about. | ||
Yeah, they're real, folks. | ||
And most major countries have them. | ||
Lasers from the sky. | ||
Meanwhile, FBI says leaked memo showing they're monitoring radical traditionalist Catholics was not up to their exacting standards. | ||
Can you believe this? | ||
They actually say their standards are exacting. | ||
A leaked FBI memo showing the agency was monitoring, quote, radical traditional Catholics due to their political and religious views was not up to the FBI's exacting standards, the agency announced Thursday. | ||
In other words, they got caught. | ||
But this is what happens when the FBI, our federal law enforcement agency, relies almost exclusively on explicitly partisan and even ethnic supremacist groups for their information. | ||
They don't do most of their own research, most of their own most of the research that the FBI relies on. | ||
You know, the people with the guns and the badges and the infinite authority that can override even local offices and then demand secrecy under the claim of national security. | ||
Those people are being directed by the ADL and the SPLC more than anything. | ||
And the SPLC and the ADL call people like Catholics dangerous because they believe in God and the Bible and Jesus Christ. | ||
So, what exactly are your exacting standards again? | ||
That's just, we gotta do something about this. | ||
And we'll cover that a little bit later. | ||
I want to finish out with a pair of stories just to illustrate to you once again how... | ||
Utterly ruthless, heartless, despicable our entire establishment is. | ||
Okay? Two stories. First one's this. | ||
No room for the dead as cemeteries and earthquake hit Turkey and Syria fill up. | ||
So many dead there. | ||
There's no more room to bury them. | ||
The freshly dug graves are marked with blank headstones. | ||
Only pieces of cloth gather from the victim's clothing to identify them. | ||
The frayed ends of cloth blow slightly in the frigid air. | ||
Absolutely devastating beyond anything I can remember in my life. | ||
Meanwhile, an opinion from the Washington Post says... | ||
Don't do it. Don't lift the sanctions to help the earthquake victims. | ||
Don't do anything to help the people that are suffering under this massive natural disaster, the innocent people who have had their lives utterly and totally destroyed, their families killed. | ||
Don't help them. It's more important that we punish Syria for something. | ||
I mean, Syria must have done something, right? | ||
I mean, you wouldn't treat people like this for no reason, would you? | ||
Alright folks, here's the story that makes the title of our show today. | ||
CDC adds COVID-19 vaccinations to immunization schedule for children and adults. | ||
The guidance formalizes current recommendations and does not mandate vaccines. | ||
It does do a number of other things. | ||
The CDC's vaccination schedule released Thursday does not mandate vaccines. | ||
States and localities determine which vaccines schools require for students, and all 50 states have medical exemptions for vaccines. | ||
Some states also have non-medical vaccine exemptions for religious and philosophical reasons. | ||
The CDC recommends that healthy children six months to four years old receive a primary series of two doses of the Moderna or Pfizer BioNTech monovalent COVID-19 vaccine followed by a third dose of a bivalent vaccine. | ||
That might be what the CDC recommends. | ||
I recommend we get rid of the CDC. I recommend you do nothing that they suggest until they prove themselves worthy of our trust. | ||
Obviously, more and more is coming out about the negative effects of the COVID vaccine, but that's not slowing down their mission to get it into the arms of literally every single person in the world. | ||
We actually have a comment on this from the CDC director. | ||
Now, she's lying in this. | ||
She's not telling the truth. | ||
She's coming up with fake numbers that don't reflect reality. | ||
But these are the numbers that she's using to justify adding it to the immunization schedule. | ||
Of course, if you don't know, adding it to the immunization schedule puts it under a law that was passed in the 1980s, courtesy of Dr. | ||
Dr. Anthony Fauci that essentially says if your vaccine is on the immunization schedule, you can't be held liable for its effects. | ||
So it's a shield, a blanket legal shield over this vaccine now that it's been added to the schedule, despite the fact that, again, more and more information is coming out about, A, just how dangerous this vaccine is, especially to younger people. | ||
B, that it not only doesn't stop you from getting the virus, transmitting the virus, the virus mutating, and then coming up with a new strain inside of you, it actually increases the likelihood that not only will you get the disease, but that you'll get a more severe version of the disease. | ||
or your attack of the disease will be more likely to be deadly or just worse overall. | ||
It doesn't just not do anything, it would be It would actually be better if this was just saline or like bleach or something, like anything other than what it actually is. | ||
But none of that really matters to them because they're not concerned about stopping diseases at all, like even a little bit, just like people... | ||
Who tell you to eat bugs and live in a pod don't actually care about climate change, just like the people who open our border and then kick down the door of Catholic fathers of seven don't actually care about domestic terror or crime or safety in this country. | ||
We're being run by people who hate us, whose plans all universally make us worse, weaker, sicker. | ||
Less peaceful, less cohesive, less united. | ||
That's not an accident. | ||
It would be one thing if the occasional hiccup meant that things didn't go quite right. | ||
You gotta start asking questions when literally everything they do makes everything worse. | ||
We've got to wake up. | ||
We've got to wake up. | ||
We can't keep doing this. | ||
It can't go on. | ||
Let's go to clip number two here. | ||
CDC Director Walensky I mean, is there like a Wario version of this? | ||
Every time I hear Walensky, I just picture like Waluigi and Wario and then like their even more evil older sister who runs the CDC. Let's go now to this second video. | ||
CDC director Walensky falsely tells Congress that there have been 2,000 pediatric deaths from COVID-19. | ||
Very low number, still not even as low as it should be. | ||
Let's watch. How do you view the cost-benefit of scheduling brand-new bivalent booster shots for this age group? | ||
Considering the children are at very low risk from COVID-19, 75% of children have already caught the virus, and the vaccine is known to do pretty little to prevent transmission in this age group. | ||
unidentified
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I'm really grateful that you asked that question so I can correct the record here so that everybody understands. | |
First of all, we've had 2,000 pediatric deaths from COVID-19. | ||
It's the number one respiratory and infectious killer that was just published last week in JAMA. So, less deadly to an 80-year-old, but still deadly for a pediatric infection. | ||
The important thing I think that we need to recognize is the reason that ACIP recommended and CDC put forward getting the COVID-19 vaccine on the pediatric schedule, it was only because it was the only way it could be covered in our Vaccines for Children program. | ||
It was the only way that our uninsured children would be able to have access to the vaccines. | ||
That was the reason to put it on the schedule. | ||
It can't be eligible for Vaccines for Children's program to be available to the uninsured unless it is on that schedule. | ||
That was the reason to put it there. | ||
Thank you for allowing me to correct that. | ||
So there she gives the reason to put it on the immunization vaccine schedule is so that people who are uninsured can get it. | ||
We gotta get it into everyone. | ||
Again, it's like she doesn't even hear the information that's presented to her, right? | ||
That 75% of kids have already gotten the disease, which means they already have the antibodies, which means they don't need to be vaccinated anyway. | ||
And she says 2,000 kids have died of COVID-19. | ||
It's not true. I mean, the... | ||
The largest number I've heard, and even this is up for debate, is 793 people under the age of 18. | ||
So, of course, the older you are, the more likely you are to get it and die from it. | ||
But little kids are the ones that are subjected to the immunization schedule. | ||
You're giving this to five-year-olds, despite the fact I don't think there's been a single... | ||
Especially not one without massive and pre-existing conditions that are the actual cause of their death. | ||
Maybe a complication with COVID or like they got COVID in addition to being just massively sick otherwise. | ||
I was just looking back because again, you know, this stuff just, it goes so... | ||
Everything goes so quickly. | ||
It's like, you know, you just read something. | ||
It's like some study where it's like, not a single child has ever died of COVID-19. | ||
And then it's just like gone the next day. | ||
So I'm going back trying to find some of these headlines that I remember. | ||
CDC data shows suicide, overdoses, and flu all kill more children than COVID-19. | ||
It was at least from September of 21. | ||
CDC's new preliminary COVID death by age data shows less child deaths to COVID than a typical flu season. | ||
But they're doing it. They're just doing it. | ||
Protect yourself. Protect your children. | ||
Keep these people away from their blood. | ||
Keep anybody in power away from your children's blood. | ||
It's 2023, and these are the things we have to worry about. | ||
It's just wild. | ||
I mean, they really are just doing everything, regardless of facts, reality. | ||
Humanity. What's best for all of us. | ||
The earth. I mean, it's just... | ||
It's whatever they want to do. | ||
It's whatever the hell they want to do. | ||
We have so much to talk about. We're going to open up the phone lines nice and early today. | ||
Take your calls. Lots of videos to show you coming up as well. | ||
So stay tuned. We're going to get into the earthquake, COVID, the political nonsense. | ||
It's all coming up. All right, folks. | ||
We're going to keep talking about COVID here for a little bit. | ||
COVID and the vaccines as they all form... | ||
Just various aspects of one singular criminal conspiracy took place, bringing in all together the various agencies that run our country from The medical authorities and the federal government to their bosses at the big pharma corporations to the media that helped to spread their message and silence anybody else's to big tech who of course censored anybody that tried to stand up against them to of course the supranational organizations like the who as they usurped national sovereignty unto themselves Without even bothering to suggest that they have some legitimacy to it, | ||
right? They can't actually point and go, well, look, we took charge of this and things got better. | ||
It's never happened. | ||
So, yeah, it's a conspiracy. | ||
I don't know how many times we have to say this, how many times we have to define conspiracy for everybody, but... | ||
That's exactly what's happening. | ||
Some of the threads to this horrific affair are being pulled now by some of the Republicans in charge, showing you once again that elections really can have an effect here in America as destroyed and infiltrated and subverted as we are. | ||
Look at what happens when Congress gets majority Republicans. | ||
Things actually start happening. | ||
Now, I'm not satisfied with making things happening. | ||
It's a start. They're talking about things that need to be done, but the talking is a start. | ||
It's the way it gets going. | ||
And so there are lots of videos from the last few days of this. | ||
First, we'll go to clip number eight here. | ||
This is an exchange with the NIH, a director of the NIH. Now, I remind you that the chief... | ||
The bioethicist of the NIH is the wife of Dr. | ||
Anthony Fauci. So when you talk about corruption and collusion, it's to the level of wedlock. | ||
The person overseeing the bioethics at NIH that Anthony Fauci was running was his wife. | ||
Maybe that's how things got so bad. | ||
But I thought this exchange was excellent. | ||
Clip number eight, this happened two days ago on the 8th of February. | ||
unidentified
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Let's watch. All right, Dr. Tabek, you've been with NIH since 2000. | |
Do you believe that Stanford Medical School, Oxford, and Harvard hire, quote, fringe medical professors? | ||
It depends on the individual professor. | ||
Okay. Well, the reason that I ask is because on October 8th of 2020, you were CC'd on an email from the then head of NIH, Dr. | ||
Francis Collins, to Dr. | ||
Anthony Fauci. Now, I'm going to refresh your memory on the contents of this email. | ||
It says, Citing the Great Barrington Declaration from the three fringe epidemiologists who met with the secretary seemed to be getting a lot of attention and even a co-signature from Nobel Prize winner Mike Levitt at Stanford. | ||
There needs to be a quick and devastating published takedown of its premises. | ||
I don't see anything like that online yet. | ||
Is it underway? Signed, Francis. | ||
Again, you were CC'd on this email. | ||
Yes or no, Dr. | ||
Tabak, did you communicate with Dr. | ||
Collins with you about these doctors or the Great Barrington Declaration other than when emailing Dr. | ||
Fauci? I have no recollection of speaking to him about that. | ||
Yes or no. Are you aware of other instances where either Dr. | ||
Collins or Dr. Fauci plan to have the media publish articles to discredit other scientists or doctors during the COVID-19 pandemic? | ||
I'm not aware of any such instance. | ||
Of course. Now, as Deputy Ethics Counselor at NIH, aren't there ethical concerns about using the U.S. government to silence scientific speech, particularly peer-reviewed speech? | ||
When the stakes are so high, right, as they were during the height of COVID-19, shutting down economies, keeping kids in schools, increased rates of mental illness, addiction, suicide, etc. | ||
And now, of course, we know that the collusion between Twitter and the Biden administration has come to light. | ||
Does that not concern you? | ||
I'm unaware of any collusion. | ||
I know there's ongoing litigation. You know what? | ||
That's good. I'm glad I'm going to enlighten you then. | ||
So just a few months after that email, this email that you were CC'd on between Dr. | ||
Francis Collins and Dr. | ||
Fauci, you have records of this, and I'm sure there are others. | ||
Just a few months after that, Twitter was directed by the Biden administration to de-platform multiple scientific accounts. | ||
Doctors, Nobel Prize winners, they went so far as on March 14, 2021, in internal communications between top Twitter executives and the Biden administration to say, we are very angry. | ||
The Biden administration needs a push to de-platform these multiple accounts. | ||
These The deplatforming of accounts were, of course, related to the great Barrington Declaration. | ||
And they said, according to the Biden administration, to Twitter, that not enough had been done to silence these doctors. | ||
Dr. Tobik, did you provide Dr. | ||
Collins with any ethical counsel or advice on this matter? | ||
This is a subject of ongoing litigation, and I can't comment on anything related to the social platform. | ||
Who else at NIH did you talk to about the Great Barrington Declaration and its authors? | ||
I don't recall speaking to anybody about that at NIH, quite frankly. | ||
Okay. I know I'm running low on time, but I will say this. | ||
Contrary to some of the comments that have been made here today, and we're not going to get to the bottom of this in 53 seconds, but contrary to the comments of some of my colleagues today, actually just now, apologizing to you all for appearing before this committee, Saying that we're taking you away from your primary responsibility. | ||
You have a responsibility to appear before this committee, just as we have a constitutional responsibility for oversight. | ||
That is our duty to the American people. | ||
If I were you, I would clear your schedule. | ||
This will come to light. | ||
I appreciate you all being here. | ||
Again, it's a good start. | ||
It's a good start. | ||
These people think they're going to get away with it. | ||
It is hilarious. Drawing you away from your important business of silencing dissenters and poisoning the world, causing us to have the most unhealthy society in human history under your tenure for the last several decades. | ||
Let's go now to this video. | ||
This is a Swiss banker named Pascal Najati. | ||
And it's good to see people in high positions of power actually recognize this sort of stuff. | ||
Let's go to clip number 15 now. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah, and the media, I'm sorry to say, they helped the psychosis. | |
And during the pandemic, it was a complete play-up. | ||
It was complete craziness. | ||
People, every day you have these statements. | ||
And people were scared to death. | ||
Well, the message was it's safe and effective. | ||
It's safe and effective. Yeah, do it. | ||
Safe and effective. And being tested. | ||
Which is not true. Do you see a lot of disappointment in your environment about people who have got vaccinated? | ||
They don't talk about it. They don't talk to me. | ||
Since weeks, I've got some really good friends. | ||
They hug me and they say, well done, this is good for the community. | ||
But many, not phone call, no email, nothing, no SMS. Silence. | ||
Because I think they're shocked themselves. | ||
Because they cannot admit that they made a mistake themselves. | ||
Trusting the Minister of Health. | ||
I made this mistake. | ||
I trusted him. I admit it. | ||
I'm injected three times. | ||
My wife, my mother. I have no problems admitting that. | ||
It's nothing to do with intelligence. | ||
It was a program from all channels. | ||
Go and vaccinate. It's safe, effective, be tested. | ||
We are in Switzerland. We are not in Malaysia. | ||
So, what to say? | ||
I want to encourage everybody to learn how to think the thought. | ||
To analyze themselves the facts. | ||
It's not me telling them go to the police station to everybody. | ||
No, I have no authority for that kind of call. | ||
I have no motivation to create a movement. | ||
I'm not politically motivated. | ||
Zero. Also no damages. | ||
I didn't ask for any damages. | ||
I mean money. I want justice. | ||
And if my fellow compatriots Again, folks, it's a start. | ||
We'll do more videos on the other side. | ||
It's really almost impossible to wrap your mind around just how universal this attack has been. | ||
We're going to go to another clip here. | ||
This is Rand Paul grilling the State Department, really just exposing how the State Department Created the coronavirus. | ||
It's wild. And you might want to take a pin out here and be taking notes because he helps to sort of draw the tangled web that's being weaved in the background. | ||
But here are just some of the headlines. | ||
About what's going on today. | ||
You've got CDC adds COVID-19 vaccinations to immunization schedule for children. | ||
Maybe I should save this for the end because, you know, the point is that, like, they don't have any proof that any of this is positive or good or effective. | ||
They're still putting it on the immunization schedule. | ||
You've got places like New York finally rolling back their Vax mandate. | ||
New York City ends Vax mandate for city employees. | ||
Claims only 4% of workers held out to the bitter end. | ||
Again, we've known that this has been effective, nonsensical, pointless, stupid for years now. | ||
Every week, it seems, there's some new study that, again, just illustrates just how unscientific these mandates are. | ||
You also had, I believe it was yesterday, perhaps the day before... | ||
Yeah, February 8th. | ||
By a vote of 227 to 201, the U.S. House of Representatives voted to finally end the COVID vaccine mandate for visitors arriving by air to the United States. | ||
So 201 Democrats, all of them, voted to continue to mandate the vaccine for anybody coming into America. | ||
A little ironic, obviously, when you have a quarter million people a month passing over the southern border with absolutely no documentation, with absolutely no requirements or restrictions whatsoever. | ||
But that's beside the point. | ||
The point is that even months and months and months after the need, supposed need for vaccines, they are still pushing to mandate it. | ||
This has nothing to do with the virus. | ||
Absolutely nothing to do with the virus. | ||
It has everything to do with... | ||
Control with using the fear created by an emergency to accrue unto themselves more power to take control over aspects of your life. | ||
Singapore's large rise in heart deaths points to potential vaccine cause. | ||
And we have more, but let's go to Rand Paul here. | ||
Here's Dr. Paul exposing the State Department lies about the funding of gain-of-function research in China. | ||
Again, as he talks about this, just picture all the death, all the chaos, all the misery, all the mental illness caused by all the schools being shut down, all the losses in learning, all of the just pain and suffering and misery, pounds gained by people because they couldn't walk. | ||
That will eventually cause, you know, Other different medical issues. | ||
Just irreparable damage across the entire earth. | ||
In part by the virus they created. | ||
In part from the vaccine that they fabricated. | ||
In part because of the lies that they told about all of it. | ||
But this is a program. It's an attack. | ||
It's not an accident. It's not innocent. | ||
It's not just going on. | ||
These are decisions that are being made by evil people with evil intentions. | ||
For a whole... You know, array of, you know, positives in their mind. | ||
Things that they want to have happen. | ||
Control that they want to grab, but they need an excuse to do it. | ||
Here's Rand Paul talking about how it all got started. | ||
unidentified
|
Mr. Chairman, it's estimated that between 5 and 18 million people died from COVID-19 worldwide. | |
To a significant number of scientists, the evidence suggests that this originated from a lab leak in Wuhan. | ||
Does the State Department fund coronavirus research in China? | ||
Do we fund coronavirus? | ||
I don't believe so, but I don't know. | ||
I'll double-check, and we'll get back to you on that, Senator. | ||
The answer is yes, you do. | ||
And it's been going on for more than a decade, and it's done through a program called PREDICT and then the Global Virome. | ||
And why this is important is we had a million Americans die, and we really haven't had any discussion of this. | ||
No hearings, nothing. | ||
People are unaware that they're even funding the research. | ||
We found out recently, through the House unclassified report, that money is going from the NIH To American universities, to the Academy of Military Medical Sciences Research in China. | ||
We are subcontracting money and sending it over, but millions is coming from the State Department. | ||
So the idea is this. We will identify all the viruses in the world. | ||
We'll be safer because we identified them. | ||
But here's the question. Are we safer to have some guy or some woman crawling down a cave 10 hours away from Wuhan, coming up with bat guano, coming up with viruses and bringing it to a city of 15 million like Wuhan? | ||
This is what's been going on for a decade. | ||
It's a setup for an accident. | ||
It's a setup for a mistake. | ||
And nobody's doing anything about it. | ||
We continue to fund it. | ||
The main group that's been getting this money is EcoHealth Alliance, over $100 million, a lot of it through the State Department. | ||
They continue to get money. | ||
They don't file their reports on time. | ||
They didn't stop their experiments. | ||
And yet we reward them with more money. | ||
15 million people died and we haven't done a thing about it. | ||
Nobody seems to care. | ||
We're not even sure we fund it. | ||
The State Department's a big funder of this project. | ||
It's a multi-decade-long project. | ||
But there are scientists, as we speak, from Stanford, from MIT, from prestigious universities around the country, these are not partisans. | ||
Most of them are not Republicans, who stand up and say, oh my God, what are we doing bringing these viruses from remote bat caves to major metropolitan areas and with no controls over this? | ||
So we've been asking for information from the State Department because we want to know more about this. | ||
U.S. Right to Know has been sending FOIA requests for two and a half years, and they don't get anything. | ||
So, Mr. Chairman, I've sent two letters. | ||
Some of them are six months old now, and we get a, you know, whatever. | ||
We're not going to give you any information. | ||
What I would hope for is that we could have — people always talk about bipartisanship. | ||
Could we not get bipartisan support for records? | ||
This is not partisan. | ||
We want to know what the U.S. State Department is funding. | ||
NIH resists our requests on their funds. | ||
The two things that we know for certain that have led us to believe this came from the lab that are big came because one was leaked. | ||
And this was a DARPA request. | ||
So the Chinese researchers in China wanted from DARPA money to create a virus that, guess what, looks exactly like COVID-19. | ||
They asked for it in 2018. | ||
We turned them down. Fortunately, we did the right thing for once. | ||
We turned them down. That doesn't mean they didn't do the research. | ||
And so many scientists at an aha moment, they saw this and they said, oh my goodness, they asked for money to create something that looks almost exactly what we got. | ||
So in nature, you do not have coronaviruses that infect people that have what is called a furin cleavage site. | ||
Chinese said, give us money, we're going to stick a furin cleavage site to allow it to infect humans more. | ||
We found out that not because you let us know, or not because the NIH let us know, they still resist. | ||
This is top secret. | ||
This is classified. This is the whole problem of classification, but it's also to cover up things. | ||
So we don't know anything about the 28th team, but we had an illegal leak that went to somebody in the media that's now public that said the Chinese wanted to create a virus just like COVID-19 in 2018. | ||
The other thing we know is three researchers in the Wuhan lab and the Wuhan Institute of Virology got very sick with flu-like symptoms similar to COVID in November. | ||
We only know that, though, because the Trump administration on the way out declassified it. | ||
We have to get over all the classification. | ||
We also have to be more forthcoming. | ||
And I'm hoping the chairman will consider looking at our request. | ||
These are not partisan. | ||
We want to know all the information about funding of research in China. | ||
We want to know the interactions. | ||
There were cables going back and forth between the State Department saying, holy cow, they're not wearing gloves. | ||
They don't wear masks and doing this research. | ||
They're doing it in what's called a BSL-2 as opposed to a BSL-4. | ||
Most of the research that we think escaped was not done in the appropriate lab. | ||
And the State Department knew about it, but we've had no hearings about this. | ||
They refused to give us information. | ||
Fifteen million people died, a million Americans died, and you won't give us information. | ||
So what I would ask is, look at our request. | ||
This isn't partisan. | ||
This should be about discovering the origins of this. | ||
The scientific community is about 50-50 now, and I would hope that we suspect the Chinese of not being honest in withholding information, but it's sad that the U.S. government is withholding information from its representatives. | ||
I'll take back your request again, Senator. | ||
I would urge a briefing perhaps in a skiff with the intelligence community on this, because as you know, there is not a single view about this particular set of issues, but I understand your desire to understand what occurred. | ||
We're asking you for unclassified information that you hold, not intel. | ||
I understand that. So again, they want to take it into a SCIF. It's highly classified. | ||
National Security, after all. | ||
We can't just tell you this stuff. | ||
And of course, if you know, Dr. | ||
Andrew Huff revealed, whistleblower revealed that his boss, Peter Daszak, actually met with the CIA as head of EcoHealth Alliance to see what they could do for them. | ||
You know, the CIA, the same ones that helped to carry out the Nord Stream pipeline attack. | ||
We're being run, sabotaged, attacked, murdered, genocided by a cabal of spies, essentially, that operate in the CIA. It's as serious as you can possibly imagine. | ||
And we told you about all of it before it ever happened because this has been their plan for decades. | ||
Go to Infowarsstore.com to support us. | ||
Keep us on the air. We'll take your calls in the next hour. | ||
Don't go anywhere, folks. Infowarsstore.com. | ||
It's your last chance to get the Alex Jones' right emergency sale. | ||
Welcome back, folks. Second hour here at American Journal has begun. | ||
I woke up this morning and the power was out in our entire neighborhood. | ||
A little weird. Last week the power went out, but it was because there was a giant ice storm and there were just trees falling all over the entire city. | ||
So it sort of made sense, right? | ||
The infrastructure isn't weatherized for that occurrence, so it goes down for a little while, but it gets back up pretty quick. | ||
I don't know what happened today, though. | ||
I'm wondering if this is just something we need to start getting used to. | ||
I wonder if just our basic infrastructure, literally our ability to keep the lights on, is going the way of South Africa. | ||
Actually, we have some headlines about South Africa right now, but it seems like everything is just getting worse, right? | ||
I mean, sure, the government takes like half your money in taxes. | ||
But hey, who else is going to pay for the, you know, interracial gender-swapped update to Shakespeare, right? | ||
Who's going to pay for the community centers or whatever they're doing? | ||
Like, well, I don't know what they're doing. I don't know what the government's doing with all of our money except for bombing the hell out of third-world countries tens of thousands of miles away and creating viruses in labs, paying off the vaccine-injured But the roads are terrible and the electricity isn't staying on and also our basic infrastructure and our very lives are now in the hands of diversity hires. | ||
Maybe that's a little... | ||
It's not politically correct to say. | ||
It might be a little bit rude. But I like getting on a plane and not dying in it. | ||
I like living in a first world country that... | ||
You can trust the basic infrastructure of. | ||
That's not the case anymore. | ||
And a very scary occurrence happened here in Austin just a few days ago. | ||
I was going to cover this, but I was waiting for some sort of investigation into it so I could actually get the full story. | ||
It hasn't come out yet. Nobody's even touched on it. | ||
But a video has come out. | ||
So we're going to go to this now. | ||
It's clip number 18. This happened just a few days ago. | ||
Here in Austin Airport, two planes were within maybe a second or so of a massive collision that would have killed every single person on board. | ||
Let's go ahead and watch this video and we'll cover it on the other side. | ||
Here's clip number 18. You can take the audio down. | ||
I didn't listen to the audio. I just watched the video, so I don't know if there's a... | ||
And it's just the tower. | ||
So here you see on the tarmac a Southwest Airlines flight taxiing to a runway while simultaneously a FedEx delivery plane attempts to land on that very same runway. | ||
There are the... Southwest Airlines taxiing. | ||
Here comes the FedEx airplane. | ||
So, I mean, this happens hundreds of times a day in airports all over the United States, so tens of thousands of times a day. | ||
Do you have a carefully coordinated dance going on with planes taking off and landing? | ||
And all it takes is one little mistake, one little, you know, misattributed runway number or something to There's probably 200 people in that Southwest airline plane and here comes the FedEx one. | ||
Now luckily the FedEx pilot at this point realizes what's going on and decides to abort the landing and pull up. | ||
But it got within about 75 feet of the Southwest airplane who had no idea it was going on and then took off. | ||
So thank God for the quick thinking Of the FedEx pilot to avoid that catastrophe. | ||
I can't believe we actually got video of this. | ||
But you can expect this to happen a lot more. | ||
And you may remember just a few years ago when the Obama administration decided to add diversity requirements to the air traffic control system run by the federal government. | ||
So, sure. We got a lot of diversity now. | ||
And maybe you die in a giant fireball. | ||
But... It's our strength. | ||
Diversity is our strength, though. | ||
All right, welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
This is the American Journal. | ||
I'm Harrison Smith. We're going to take your phone calls throughout the next two hours. | ||
No guests today, just the American people. | ||
So I'm going to go ahead and open up the phone lines right now. | ||
The number to dial is 1-877-789-2539. | ||
That's 1-877-789-2539. | ||
Give us a call here at American Journal. | ||
Now, we covered it just in the last segment, the very, very near disaster that occurred here at the Austin Airport just a couple days ago, where just a single mistake, just a little slip-up. | ||
Everybody makes mistakes. | ||
But if you're an air traffic controller, that mistake could kill hundreds of people. | ||
So, you know, if I'm designing a civilization... | ||
That actually cares about its people. | ||
My primary concern would be getting the best and most meritorious people in those positions. | ||
Extremely high stress. | ||
They're extremely high level technical knowledge necessary. | ||
I don't know if everybody remembers, but it's actually an act from Obama that opened up that extremely high level Very important position of air traffic controller to diversity quotas, meaning that the competency and capability of the people doing the directing of trafficking, it came second to other concerns. | ||
Getting the right percentage of a type of person in that position. | ||
Has this helped people? | ||
Sure, maybe, I guess, possibly. | ||
Definitely hurt people. There are definitely people that were not of the Correct, immutable aspects of their physical appearance that are missing out on jobs now. | ||
And hey, maybe a couple hundred people have to die in a major accident. | ||
But it's a small price to pay, I think, for not being morally castigated by a biased media, right? | ||
I mean, that's the benefit here. Obama-era FAA hiring rules place diversity ahead of airline safety, attorney tells Tucker Carlson. | ||
And you can act like opposing this is some sort of racist thing, as if there are still people in this country that are just like, I don't care if he's a good traffic controller. | ||
I don't want a black guy ordering my airplane around. | ||
It's like... Or you can just hire the best people for the job. | ||
Or you can just do the thing that is required to keep this entire country functioning. | ||
That's not what's happening. And we're going down the path now. | ||
We're on the road. We're on the road to South Africa. | ||
It's like a road trip. | ||
Except it's the entire country being destroyed. | ||
Here's what's happening in South Africa right now. | ||
South Africa is now officially in a state of disaster due to our collapsing electrical grid. | ||
As per our president, let the looting begin. | ||
Here's a statement from yesterday, February 9th, Disaster Management Act 2002. | ||
Declaration of National State of Disaster Impact of Severe Electricity Supply Constraint. | ||
Considering the magnitude, severity, and progression of the severe electricity supply constraint and the substantial impact caused by severe electricity supply constraint and following the classification of this electricity supply constraint by the head of the National Disaster Management Center is a national state of disaster to prevent possible progression to a total blackout. | ||
From occurring and taking into account the possibility to augment existing measures already undertaken by the organs of state to deal with the electricity supply constraint. | ||
Yes, they're in South Africa, which used to be sort of paralleled to any other first world country like America or Australia. | ||
Until they went full Rainbow Nation diversity priority. | ||
Now they literally can't keep the lights on. | ||
They're having to enact emergency requirements. | ||
Measures to avoid just no longer being an electrified country. | ||
Just reverting back to its state in, I don't know, when was the last time South Africa was not electrified? | ||
The early 1800s probably? | ||
Something like that? We can't keep the lights on here. | ||
It's just, this is going to continue happening. | ||
It's not going to get any better. | ||
Right? It's one of the major issues with liberalism. | ||
There's no reversing of these policies. | ||
Once they're in place, they're just in place. | ||
Transgenderism is a good place to start, right? | ||
Because at the beginning you had... | ||
Well, it wasn't an issue. | ||
It was a non-issue. It was just girls in the girls' bathroom, boys in the boys' bathroom. | ||
That worked for about, I don't know, 20, 30 centuries or so. | ||
Until a couple years ago when they decided that it was unconscionable. | ||
We can't allow this to continue. | ||
We had to let men into the women's bathroom for some reason. | ||
Now at the time, there were people that were saying this is just asking for trouble. | ||
This isn't a real issue, but you're going to cause issues. | ||
There's going to be weirdos that use this as an excuse to spy on girls and get into girls' bathrooms for their own perverted interest. | ||
And you're just opening the door to these people. | ||
Sure, maybe the occasional trans person feels validated in their delusion, and that makes them feel good when they use the bathroom in public. | ||
Great. Is that really something you're willing to sacrifice your daughters for? | ||
And this, of course, was cast aside and told that this was bigoted and hateful when, again, the argument wasn't trans people are rapists, so they're going to know that you're opening the door for this. | ||
It's like saying, I don't think we should leave the door unlocked because someone could break in and steal stuff. | ||
You're just like, wow, you hate our neighbors? | ||
It's like, no, you just don't want to give them the opportunity. | ||
You just want to protect yourself because why wouldn't you? | ||
Then, of course... It did happen. | ||
It's happened over and over. | ||
It's probably happened more times than we could ever know because the people who are in favor of the transgender movement hide this sort of stuff. | ||
You know, a girl goes into a bathroom at high school and gets raped by a boy wearing a dress who's in there, as happened in Loudoun County. | ||
And as we saw in Loudoun County, the school board and even the police will help to cover it up. | ||
They'll make sure that that story doesn't get out because they care more about their agenda than they do about the safety of the students themselves. | ||
And so this happens sort of over and over. | ||
And in the last year, there's probably a dozen or so instances of just men going into locker rooms, exposing themselves to children, just perving on children, just being creepy and weird and not even attempting to be transgender. | ||
I mean, it's just blatant sexual abuse. | ||
I mean, they're then protected by the state and rewarded with hundreds of thousands of dollars in their GoFundMe campaign. | ||
And then if you try to protest them, Antifa will come and, you know, break a fire extinguisher over your head. | ||
And then the police will arrest you for daring to commit a hate crime on a public street. | ||
I mean, there's no ability for them to go, all right, you know what? | ||
We tried this. | ||
Turned out not to be worth it. | ||
We're going to roll it back. Because then you're the book burner. | ||
You're the hater. You're the bigot. | ||
Just like the books in the elementary schools, right? | ||
They can put the books in. | ||
The minute you try to take them out, then it's a big civil rights issue. | ||
You have to prove that you're not doing it out of some form of hate. | ||
And you're the one to get hit pieces written on you. | ||
Or maybe the FBI tells the National School Board Advisory Agency to... | ||
Write them a letter to justify their investigating you as a terrorist. | ||
Maybe you get arrested. It's like once these things go into place, there's no undoing them. | ||
Once these measures get activated to oppose them, then deemed to be hateful and a terrorist action. | ||
And the powers that be will do everything they can to destroy you. | ||
So... Tolerance is old-fashioned. | ||
You have taught us. You people have taught us that we can't trust you. | ||
We can't just assume that you have anybody's best interest in mind. | ||
We understand now that it really doesn't matter to you. | ||
It doesn't matter to you if you die in a fiery plane crash or if your kid gets sexually assaulted while in the middle school bathroom. | ||
Or if your toddler gets assaulted in the locker room at the YMCA. Like, none of that matters to them. | ||
And yet they call you the hateful one for just trying to get some semblance of reality back into the way things go. | ||
It's really across the board. | ||
And we'll go to some videos here on the other side that helped illustrate this farther. | ||
But everybody needs to be stepping up their game. | ||
Everybody needs to be understanding the world that we now live in. | ||
The power and the purpose and the agenda of those in charge. | ||
What they intend to do to it. | ||
And how it affects you. | ||
Alright, welcome back folks. | ||
I guess I have a correction to make. | ||
The crew just informed me that the video that we showed at the top of this hour... | ||
Turned out to be a computer simulation. | ||
Should have known it was too good to be true. | ||
The video of the two planes almost crashing. | ||
That was not an actual video of the event. | ||
The event did take place and that was an accurate representation of what happened. | ||
Down to the millisecond, they programmed in the information that occurred and then came up with a computer simulation of it. | ||
The only video that actually came out of the event was a recording of the radar Tracker at Austin Airport, and we can actually go to that video now. | ||
So here's the event as it happened, you know, live with the radar view. | ||
Let's watch. And, yeah, so there you can see the orange FedEx plane within, yeah, a little under 100 feet before pulling up again. | ||
Aborting the landing and avoiding the Southwest Airlines plane by about 75 feet. | ||
It gets down to about 75 feet there before taking off again. | ||
So the one on the right is the actual radar recording of the event. | ||
That's not a simulation. | ||
That's just a recording of the live radar reading. | ||
While on the left is, I guess, a... | ||
Microsoft, what is it called? | ||
Microsoft Flight Simulator version. | ||
So again, they just animated what actually happened. | ||
But it wasn't a real video. | ||
So, correction, not a real video, but yes, a real occurrence. | ||
Yes, that's exactly how it happened and what it looked like. | ||
Near miss. Could have been hundreds of people dead. | ||
It could have been a major catastrophe. | ||
But it was avoided thanks to the quick thinking of the FedEx pilot. | ||
So, yeah. Just think about that next time you get on an airplane or vote Democrat. | ||
Let's go out to your phone calls now. | ||
Joe in the USA wants to talk about the attack on the children. | ||
Thanks for calling in, Joe. You're on the air. | ||
Hey, Harrison. Can you hear me all right? | ||
Yes, sir. All right. | ||
Shout out for X2 first, but... | ||
Yeah, there were a couple terms when I was younger that were common. | ||
They were contributing to the delinquency of a minor and, I guess, being exhibitionistic. | ||
Can you hear me all right? | ||
Yeah, yeah. No, I got you. | ||
Yeah, so I don't understand how putting men and women in girls' locker rooms, like everything you were saying, giving kids transsexual surgeries when they're kids, That's not contributing to the delinquency of a minor? | ||
Or even just like showing them pornography in elementary school? | ||
And just like you said, the books and everything. | ||
So what is contributing to the delinquency of a minor? | ||
Maybe some of our politicians can define that for me because obviously that's what's going on. | ||
I mean, sure, there's gay people and all, but I guess regardless, gay or straight, it becomes rape to a certain point when you become too exhibitionistic. | ||
I mean, things are just completely out of control. | ||
While all these geniuses are at it, maybe they can lower the gambling age to 18. | ||
I mean, why not? Well, I'd actually kind of be in favor of that. | ||
But no, no, your point's very well taken. | ||
And yeah, it's this weird overlay, like the liberal overlay, like as if morality, just like they believe truth is subjective, morality is subjective to them. | ||
If some dude comes up to your little kid in the park and exposes himself... | ||
You're not going to be confused or conflicted about that occurrence. | ||
It's going to be very obvious. | ||
That was an attack. That was an assault on your child, an assault on their innocence. | ||
Now, I've talked about it before, but, you know, so if it's in a park, it's assault, it's exposure, it's a crime. | ||
But because it's in a locker room, it's somehow fine. | ||
So it's actually, it's good then, and you're the bad one for opposing it. | ||
There's no moral groundwork here. | ||
There's no framework or principles that they can stand on. | ||
It's just about deconstructionism, and really what it's at its base actually pushed by is a real hatred of innocence. | ||
It's very strange, but that's what it is. | ||
I heard back when Austin was starting to implement the gender neutral whatever sex education here and there was a group of parents and grandparents protesting it and opposing it and they were shouted down and really not even allowed to have their say because there was one You know, castrated transgender dude there just shouting them down and literally saying to me, like, we hate your innocence. | ||
We will, you know, your little children won't be innocent anymore. | ||
You won't be able to keep them from us. | ||
And, like, so people who literally cannot and will not ever have children somehow have a greater say over what's taught to children than the parents of those children. | ||
And then they themselves just have this, like, seething hatred of The idea of innocence, the idea of virtue and like unspoiled children, children that are just, you know, where that state of happy ignorance is maintained for as long as possible. | ||
I mean, there's no reasoning with it. | ||
There's no decent morality behind it. | ||
It's like, I don't even like talking about this stuff, but one point I was watching an interview. | ||
From like the 80s, like way back when porn was still illegal, but it was some guy that was like pushing it to be legal. | ||
And they're literally openly just like, well, our favorite is when we get like a good Catholic girl. | ||
Nothing like seeing a formerly innocent, you know, virtuous Catholic girl just being, you know, destroyed on film. | ||
And it's just like, what is wrong with you people? | ||
Like it's... It's about seeing something beautiful and pure and innocent and just for some reason something in their heart just hates it and just wants to destroy it, wants to expose it to the evils of the world and humiliate it. | ||
It's just there's no reasoning with it. | ||
It's just a spiritual malaise that they're infected with. | ||
It's disgusting. Thank you for the call, Joe. | ||
Let's go to Corey. Corey, you're a pilot in Oklahoma. | ||
You say you have inside knowledge of a flight near miss. | ||
Thanks for calling in, Corey. You're on the air. | ||
unidentified
|
Hey, Harrison. Thanks for taking my call. | |
Hey, I was just going to call about the Southwest and the FedEx. | ||
So what happened basically was what people don't know that morning, almost if you were there and saw what happened, We're good to go. | ||
It was approximately 1,000 feet, but the vertical, that is calibrated on the ADS-B, which is surveillance. | ||
So it was less than 75 feet actual from one plane to another. | ||
So, I mean, it was way closer than what people are saying. | ||
And traveling at those speeds and losing vertical separation, it should have never happened, especially at an airport like that. | ||
I can almost guarantee you the guy was fired. | ||
If not, he was put on leave for a very long time and probably, you know, going to a Class B airport that handles a lot less traffic. | ||
It should have never got to that, but I just wanted to kind of clear the air on that. | ||
If you have a minute, I'd like to ask you a few questions about this since you have the knowledge. | ||
Maybe you have the answers. If you don't mind, stay on the line, Corey. | ||
We'll come back to you and get some more information about this near miss. | ||
So just a few days ago, two planes at Austin Airport came within about 75 feet of colliding with one another due to a mistake made by the air traffic controller directing them. | ||
Apparently, a disaster only avoided the very last second by the FedEx pilot who pulled up... | ||
Speculation is the Southwest Airline pilot didn't even know. | ||
I mean, they must have heard it fly over. | ||
It had to have been loud, but it was very close. | ||
And this isn't the only close call in the last month or so. | ||
There's another one at JFK. Southwest Airlines and FedEx jets involved in Saturday's near miss and Austin came within 100 feet of each other. | ||
And you can tell if we play the radar version again, you can actually see where it lists the altitude of both planes. | ||
One plane it has listed at 10 feet while on the ground, right? | ||
Because the radar receiver is about... | ||
I guess it was just taken off there because it starts at one foot. | ||
But there you can see the FedEx plane gets down to about 77 feet before starting to bank upwards again. | ||
We have a caller, Corey, who's a pilot from Oklahoma. | ||
Corey, I mean, what do you... | ||
And I've listened to the audio of this, and we can show it for people, but it's about a minute long, and it's mostly just codes. | ||
I mean, you've heard air traffic controllers. | ||
If you don't know their language, it's really hard to understand. | ||
But there was no instance of, like, panic. | ||
There was no, like, abort, abort, pull up. | ||
Like, there was nothing like that. There's no communication from this. | ||
So to me, that means the pilot himself just saw what was going on and pulled up. | ||
But he was never told not to. | ||
And you can actually hear in the recording, he tells the FedEx plane to land. | ||
The FedEx plane's like, all right, I'm going to land. | ||
Then he tells the Southwest plane, okay, you can take off from that same runway. | ||
I mean, to you, was this just quick reaction by the FedEx pilot? | ||
I mean, does that explain how we avoided this disaster? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, I would have to say definitely agree with you on that. | |
But, like, you know, just going back, the sad thing is there was no, you know, from the air traffic controller, there was no input on that. | ||
And if you go back even further on the audio tape, the FedEx pilot asked him again if he was cleared to land. | ||
He was reconfirming. And, you know, you can tell just by the tone of his voice, he was questioning. | ||
He's like, they're clearing me to land. | ||
We're less than two miles out. | ||
But there's a Southwest that hasn't even begun to roll yet. | ||
I mean, you know, typically for, you know, an airplane departing as a 737 out of Austin, you know, it typically takes the takeoff rolls about 45 seconds. | ||
And, you know, at that rate, you know, you're going much faster than, you're going to overtake the aircraft on the runway at that point. | ||
But, yeah, there was no air traffic control. | ||
I don't know what, obviously, what he was doing, so we'll have to wait for the official investigation, but... | ||
Like I said earlier before the break there, I mean, it definitely should have not even gotten to this. | ||
But like you said, it's a good thing FedEx, you know, kind of stepped in and took control. | ||
As he said, you know, he's like, we're on the go, which means he's going around. | ||
But luckily, it looked like from what I can see on the radar data that he sidestepped the runway, which basically, you know, gave him the Southwest pilot, you know, just the space that he needed. | ||
But according to the, you know, the original report, I'll just read it to you really quick. | ||
It says, at its lowest point, FedEx 1432 sent an altitude value of 75 feet. | ||
It is important to note that a limitation related to the ADSV altitude, which is the surveillance broadcasting that are in the airplane to show the altitude and speed and whatnot, it was showed that it was mean sea level, MSL, which is calibrated at the standard Atmospheric pressure. | ||
It is not the height of the aircraft above the ground. | ||
Like I was saying earlier, these are just calibrated values. | ||
The actual airspeed and altimeter and stuff like that, the actual distance was much closer. | ||
Obviously, we don't know how close it was because they were reporting less than an eighth of a mile visibility. | ||
As you know, if you stand outside in the morning with fog that thick, you can't see 80, 100 feet. | ||
No. It'll be very interesting to see what the final report is. | ||
But like I said earlier, the guy that was up there, I can promise you he's not there. | ||
And he either got fired or he got sent to a very small airport. | ||
As of now, they're not releasing what actually happened with them, the information we have. | ||
So there were 128 people on board the Southwest Airlines flight. | ||
They say that we're really digging into the communications between Air Traffic Control, Southwest, FedEx, especially in relation to weather issues. | ||
Both the Federal Aviation Administration and NTSB, an independent agency, are probing the event. | ||
It's not the only near-miss that's occurred in recent months. | ||
In January, an American Airlines flight crossed ahead of a Delta Airlines flight at John F. Kennedy International Airport, an incident that the NTSB continues to investigate. | ||
In that case, both aircraft were within about 1,400 feet of each other, Hamidi said. | ||
But JFK's air traffic controllers were able to take action based on technology that the airport has equipped that tracks ground-level movements of aircraft and vehicles on the ground of an airport. | ||
Austin apparently doesn't have this technology. | ||
Correct. And... | ||
Yeah, I don't see... | ||
It's elsewhere in this article, but they basically said that they're not... | ||
They're not saying what... | ||
What's been done with the air traffic controller. | ||
They're not announcing what has happened with him, but I would hope that he was at least taking off the job for a little bit. | ||
Well, thank you for calling in and clarifying some things, Corey. | ||
I mean, to you, is this... | ||
Are we reading too much into this, or is this, like, symptomatic? | ||
Is this happening more often, or are we just noticing it more often, or does this always happen and we just don't notice it? | ||
I mean, do you have any sense as to, like... | ||
Whether this is part of a trend or if this was just a one-off and it was bad weather and just a concurrence of bad events. | ||
Any reading on that as a pilot? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, so yeah, I've been playing for a little over 20 years. | |
I mean, it does happen, but this year it's definitely on the rise. | ||
I can tell it's from, as you can see anywhere you go, it's from, you know, sports staffing. | ||
People are working longer hours. | ||
They're more fatigued. They can't make a decision that impacts people's livelihood in a reasonable amount of time. | ||
So with that being said, yes, it's definitely up on the trend in terms of more accidents or incidents. | ||
But, yeah, it's sad to see. | ||
And I really hope, you know, even with pilots, you know, just the fatigue that pilots have to go through, that they have to deal with on a daily basis, you know, commuting several hours to their hub to fly another airplane. | ||
And, you know, sometimes you put in 18-hour days, you know, from leaving the house to getting to the hotel. | ||
It's rough. So hopefully, you know, going forward, they'll Look at this and see what happened in JFK also, and hopefully they'll start putting more tighter, you know, restrictions on how long people can work a certain amount of time without taking a break. | ||
Yeah, that would be a good start. | ||
Let me ask you one last question. | ||
In terms of time, because, again, it's like, you know, this FedEx pilot, I don't know if you've ever, like, been in, like, almost been in a car accident or, like, at one point I was driving on ice and, like, it spun out and it was, like, very close to a disaster, but then you just, like... | ||
Keep driving. You're like, nothing happened. | ||
I guess I'm okay. And your adrenaline's pumping. | ||
Like, I'm sure the FedEx driver, I mean, he saves 128 lives and then just, like, goes around and lands again and, like, nobody even knows that it happened. | ||
It must have been a crazy experience. Right. | ||
Do you know how... Like, how quickly he had to react? | ||
Like, in sense of time, we know it was less than 100 feet. | ||
In sense of time, any guess as to, like, if he hadn't noticed in three seconds, it would have been a disaster? | ||
In terms of time, how close were we to a disaster? | ||
unidentified
|
Sure. If I had to time it right based off of their airspeed and values, it would be less than four-tenths of a second. | |
That's how fast he probably disconnected the autopilot and banged it over to the left. | ||
Those quick reactions that the pilot does will not be recorded immediately from the ADS-B, but you'll actually have to go back into the flight data recorder and pull the data from, you know, just the metrics from the G-meters and the accelerometers and stuff like that. | ||
So, like I said, I would say three-tenths to four-tenths of a second reaction time, which is just phenomenal. | ||
So, a huge kudos to the FedEx crew that avoided that. | ||
Seriously, man, he should be celebrated. | ||
That's amazing. Well, thank you so much for the call, Corey. | ||
That was awesome. I really appreciate that. | ||
We'll go back to your phone calls on the other side, folks. | ||
We have a couple more people calling in about this topic, about Ukraine, about CBDCs. | ||
We'll get into all of it and so much more. | ||
We got whistleblower documents coming out of transgender hospitals and a number of other stuff that we're going to get into today. | ||
Please go to Infowarsstore.com to support everything that we do here. | ||
And just while we're on the topic... | ||
We had a train explode and poison all of Ohio. | ||
We can't seem to get food on our shelves. | ||
Transportation, if it's a metric, I mean, we got a symptom of something bad. | ||
All right, welcome back, folks. | ||
Let's go to your phone calls now. | ||
We've got Josh in FEMA Region 8. | ||
I'm sorry about the Ukraine connection. | ||
Thanks for calling in, Josh. You are on the air soon. | ||
You'll soon be on. There you go. Thanks for calling in, Josh. | ||
unidentified
|
Hey, good morning, Harrison. | |
Yeah, I was going to say the Ukraine-Wuhan connection, this whole argument of where it came out of, why not both? | ||
You can just look at the man, Nathan Wolf. | ||
He's the guy that actually went to go find the original SARS in the early 2000s, and he worked in Metabiota and part of the whole global search for SARS and everything. | ||
And he's worked with Boris Nikolik for, like, the vaccine and helped everything. | ||
And he's one of the top guys that never gets talked about. | ||
And he is just the connection that people need to make from Wuhan and Ukraine. | ||
And that's the whole point of, like, Putin being over there is, like, a huge deal and why they fight so hard over there. | ||
And actually, if you actually look at, like, Putin during the pandemic, he was so bunkered up that he knew it was a bioweapon and everything. | ||
Like, you go watch these videos of him getting sprayed down, going through, like, two tunnels, getting sprayed down, and just being in the Kremlin by himself. | ||
And I think that's a huge part of the whole attack over there and what they're trying to hide, that and then the currency. | ||
and then also, of course, they do already have viruses. | ||
God only knows if they've been released or not, but they can actually, you know, tune viruses to specific DNA. So they can infect somebody close to you, and it doesn't actually infect them. | ||
It doesn't actually—they don't show any symptoms, but they're able to carry it and transmit it to somebody who has the right DNA signature that it will then kill. | ||
So, I mean— There's a reason that, yeah, people like Putin are paranoid about that type of stuff. | ||
But yeah, it's a good point. I mean, again, it's just impossible to... | ||
Even in three hours a day, just to draw all these connections, to draw the lines together, how all of these things are so intimately intertwined. | ||
Then you've got the cover-up and on top of that. | ||
That means that a whole other layer of collusion is going on. | ||
The way the media talks about it is another layer of collusion. | ||
It really is like a pyramid structure, just stack upon stack upon stack of corrupt actors all working together in a very sophisticated manner. | ||
Kind of obvious way. | ||
But yeah, very good point, Josh. Thank you so much for that call. | ||
Let's go to Bart in Georgia. | ||
I want to talk about airline safety related to the vaccine at this time. | ||
This has been a big concern recently as pilots are more likely to suffer from blood clots anyway just because of their job. | ||
Sitting around a lot, the change in atmosphere can have cardiological effects. | ||
Thanks for calling in. Bart, you're on the air. | ||
unidentified
|
Yes, sir. Airline safety has been degenerating since the beginning of the vaccine mandate, along with the power grid, which is another story. | |
I really want to know what the vaccine status of this airline, the air traffic controller, because this vaccine, it destroys the body, but it also fries people's brains. | ||
Right. What do you think? | ||
That's interesting. Yeah, I hadn't thought about that because when I think about the vaccines when it comes to flying, I think about pilots, but I can almost guarantee the guy was vaccinated, right? | ||
I mean, I think they all are. | ||
I think that was one of the outlets of the federal government that mandated the vaccine, so I can almost guarantee the guy was vaxxed. | ||
I don't know if that had to do with it, but it's an interesting thought, Bart. | ||
And, you know, you just have to wonder if we'll ever get to the bottom of it. | ||
Because just like, you know, we talked about with Loudoun County, like if something happened, like it doesn't matter what the victims are. | ||
It doesn't matter. | ||
In this case, it was a close call. | ||
But even if 128 people died, you know, it's likely the people in charge would have preferred to hide the reality about what brought that situation about. | ||
Therefore, setting the stage for it to perhaps happen again or, you know, something similar to happen down the future, down the line. | ||
Then admit that, you know, maybe one of their policies led to the creation of that situation. | ||
So again, just like the transgender situation, they literally, oh, your kid got raped. | ||
We're not going to report to the police. | ||
We're going to hide it. We're going to allow it to literally happen again because the exact same kid did the exact same thing again in Loudoun County. | ||
So literally, they're willing to victimize more people. | ||
Because to admit that it was their policies that brought about the situation would mean they'd have to adjust their policies and they're not willing to do that. | ||
So if this guy was a diversity hire or if he was suffering from some sort of vaccine side effect, they're likely to disguise and hide and bury that fact because they'd rather let 128 people come within. | ||
Four tenths of a second of dying, then admit that they're wrong. | ||
These are the people that we're dealing with. Thank you so much for the call, Bart. | ||
Let's go to Rick in Texas. | ||
You want to talk about the United States of America. | ||
I like that topic. Thanks for calling in. | ||
Rick, you're on the air. | ||
unidentified
|
Hey, Harrison. How's it going, man? | |
Good, thank you. Hey, I want to thank you personally for focusing on the big picture. | ||
I think I talked to you once before when Ben Laurentiis was on and I was telling you about my song, Freedom for Humanity, and I just want to thank you for focusing on the big picture of that. | ||
If you think about it, the USA is the example of freedom for all people around the world. | ||
I think it's just a good thing that you're focusing on. | ||
I personally just want to thank you for that because I don't hear nobody saying that. | ||
I got this song on YouTube. | ||
I finally got it on there. | ||
It's just a... | ||
It's not a video or it's just a song. | ||
It's a black screen. | ||
It's four minutes and 15 seconds long, but I made a shorter version of it. | ||
But I just wanted to thank you for doing that, for saying that and staying focused on that big picture because I think it's important. | ||
Well, thank you. I just feel like that's my job. | ||
I appreciate it. I'm glad... | ||
I'm glad it's coming across because, you know, we could, you know, spend the entire time getting into like tit for tat in the federal government of Congress people going after each other. | ||
We could, you could dig down on one particular thing, but like at Infowars, you know, I feel like it's my job just to like aggregate all of that and try to put it all in place. | ||
You know, I was talking about the constellations, right? | ||
We've got all these little data points, but what's the wider picture that they're creating? | ||
And only when you really zoom out to all of that can you see like where all of this is going, what the point of all of it is. | ||
It's easy to get lost if you just focus on one thing and don't realize how it connects to everything else. | ||
So I try to explicitly do that. | ||
I'm glad it comes across. Thank you so much for that call, Rick. | ||
Let's go to Ken in Mississippi now, line number 11. | ||
Ken, you worked at a cricket farm. | ||
Cricket's being grown for meat replacement. | ||
Interesting stuff, Ken. | ||
Thanks for calling in. You're on the air. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. Good morning. | |
Good morning. Essentially, it didn't start out as a cricket farm for the food. | ||
It was originally run by a gentleman whose main idea was fishing. | ||
As he got up into age a few years ago, decided he wanted to retire, he put the farm up for rent. | ||
And the people that decided to rent it are... | ||
Super trans. They're like a globalist wet dream type of people. | ||
And they are being funded by these secret, and I know this sounds crazy, but secret investors that have just oodles and oodles of money. | ||
So the Cricket Farm in and of itself currently gets a blank check every so often to support itself. | ||
And then the money from the profits of the cricket farm itself are going into all the far-left liberal ideology programs such as the pushing of the transgender books in schools and everything like that. | ||
So, but essentially, you know, I tell people about this all the time. | ||
Nobody believes me. | ||
You guys are one of the main ones talking about The move to eating the bugs. | ||
And I just want to let everybody know that's real. | ||
It's already happening. It's already in your food. | ||
Most of the stores that you can go to, especially stores like Walmart, it's already in your hamburger. | ||
It's already in your potato chips. | ||
It's already in just about anything that you buy. | ||
It's like Walmart brand. | ||
It's already got a certain percentage of the cricket powder in it. | ||
Right, and they'll call it weird things. | ||
Legally, they don't have to go, this has insect meat. | ||
And we know the problems with the insect meat, the proteins, the human body can't, the chitin, all that sort of stuff. | ||
It's just not healthy. It's just not good. | ||
I mean... The story that you just told is so emblematic. | ||
It's so typical, isn't it? | ||
You've got a plant that formerly made food for like fish or like pet lizards, right? | ||
Maybe you sold crickets to pet stores to feed to lizards or to fishing shops to catch fish. | ||
Then it gets taken over by a far leftist who uses, as you put it, oodles of money, limitless money from investment firms in New York. | ||
So they don't need to make a profit. | ||
They don't need to actually find customers to sell their products to. | ||
They can run at a loss because they're having their coffers filled by your money, your retirement funds that the banks then repackage and sell to one another and then reinvest and stuff like this. | ||
And they continue to keep their ESG score high by donating some of the money that they got Stolen from you to them to support the far-left ideology. | ||
It is a sick system that we're trapped in, a cycle that we've just got to break out from. | ||
Thank you for that call, Ken. More of your calls on the other side. | ||
We'll do the third hour of American Journal in about a minute, 30 seconds. | ||
Stay with us. The third hour of American Journal has begun. | ||
I'm trying to think of how to encapsulate everything that's going on in like a stream of consciousness sort of way that ties it all together. | ||
I know Chris from Texas called in about CBDCs. | ||
I want to talk about that in a second. | ||
You know, I was talking to a guy who he's got a lot of money. | ||
In a trust, people with big fortunes will hand a couple billion dollars over to them to invest and try to make money and You know, the question was like, well, do you use that politically? | ||
Like, do you take into account the politics of what you're investing in, the company that you're investing in? | ||
Are you thinking of this in a holistic way where you're saying, I only want to invest in companies that, yeah, they'll be profitable, but importantly, they'll be good companies that will support the things I believe. | ||
This guy's a huge patriot, total America first, like, loves America. | ||
And the quote that he responded was something like, patriotism won't get you a single dollar. | ||
In other words, it doesn't matter how patriotic a company is because at the end of the day, I got to make a profit for my contributors or whatever you call them, my customers. | ||
I got to make a profit for them, and I got to make the biggest profit possible. | ||
And if they find out that I made a decision not based on the potential profits but instead based on something else, They can sue me. I won't have control of this money anymore. | ||
It's just, I can't even, not a single dollar, not a single dollar can be funneled for patriotic reasons because then I'll get sued into oblivion. | ||
And it's like, that's just the way things are. | ||
And, you know, there have been Supreme Court cases that helped to set this current status. | ||
There was one that was like Dodge versus Ford or something where Ford... | ||
Opted to pay its employees a living wage and pay them a lot better. | ||
And the investors in Ford were mad because they were like, that's eating into our profits. | ||
You're stealing our profits by paying your people more. | ||
And so it actually set a precedent where companies legally have to prioritize profit above anything else. | ||
That's in American laws, as backwards and ridiculous as that is. | ||
Now that's the way decent, patriotic, upstanding people comport themselves. | ||
Because they're like, these people gave me money to make profit. | ||
That's what I'm going to do. And it just doesn't even enter into their mind. | ||
The risk is too much. | ||
They wouldn't get away with it if they wanted to try to use that position of power and influence to positively affect the country. | ||
It's just out of the question for them. | ||
And when they talk about it, they're like, this is just the way it is. | ||
Everybody's like this. Every company has to do this. | ||
So I'm not... It's not just me doing this. | ||
It's like, you know, every company has to do this. | ||
And then you look at ESG and how that completely throws the whole thing to the wind or stakeholder capitalism, which... | ||
You know, it's openly prioritizing the stakeholders of the company over the shareholders. | ||
That's a flagrant violation of that idea. | ||
And then you have stories like this. Adidas slumps as Kanye split triggers new profit warning. | ||
Shares fall as much as 12.6%. | ||
So Adidas, earlier last year, made a decision to no longer work with Kanye West. | ||
That just shaved off 10% of their yearly earnings. | ||
Just got rid of 10% of their yearly earnings, let alone profits, for a virtue signal. | ||
Because he said words they don't like. | ||
Not because people were going to no longer buy his stuff, so they made a financial decision to no longer carry. | ||
No, this was a symbolic act that... | ||
It has destroyed Adidas' profitability. | ||
Is anybody suing them? | ||
Is anybody mad at them? | ||
That's where it comes to this idea of like anarcho-tyranny where it's like in certain cases you spend one dollar not going after profit but instead of being patriotic you'll be sued and you'll be removed from your position and the money will be taken away from you. | ||
If however Adidas decides just to sacrifice a tenth of their entire worldwide business or more Because Kanye, you know, insulted a religious group. | ||
That's totally fine, and nobody cares, and that's good. | ||
Just, these laws are so arbitrary. | ||
Just none of it matters. Alright, welcome back. | ||
Ladies and gentlemen, we got to your phone calls now. | ||
I want to go to Chris, who is in Kyle, Texas. | ||
You want to talk about CBDCs and disinformation about central bank digital currency? | ||
Go ahead, Chris. You're on the air. | ||
unidentified
|
Hey, Harrison, good morning. | |
Good morning. I got one suggestion and a couple points. | ||
I'll try to ramble through them pretty quickly. | ||
First off, Alex should really put a donate button on the website, but just round it up to the next dollar. | ||
You know what I mean? Everybody can afford $75 more. | ||
If you're buying a tube of toothpaste, round it up to the next dollar. | ||
That's not a bad idea. But as far as CBDCs goes, it's not just information in CBDCs. | ||
It's the consumption tax. | ||
Because what happens if I come over and I'm all year young? | ||
How would it normally work? | ||
You'd slide me a 20, right? | ||
Right. | ||
Well, they're going to see that, and they're going to say, oh, well, you didn't pay your consumption tax on that, sir. | ||
So the left is going to use that to push the CBDC so they can track every single payment. | ||
You know what I mean? | ||
So they can get their money from you. | ||
Next, now that we have Congress, right, we have the Freedom of Information Act. | ||
What we need is, now that we have people in there that will listen to us somewhat, we need a Freedom from Disinformation Act. | ||
Imagine if they post that through. | ||
I mean, it's going to hit the headlines. | ||
And what that would do is undo what Obama did on his way out, legalizing propaganda towards the American people. | ||
You know what I mean? Yeah, yeah. | ||
No, it's... | ||
That's not a bad idea. | ||
I mean, I like... What Congress is getting into, I like. | ||
They seem to be fired up and willing to push it pretty far. | ||
I mean, they're literally threatening Twitter executives with prison. | ||
It just can't be enough. | ||
It's got to be—we've got to see some action on this. | ||
We can't be satisfied with a couple— You know, highfalutin or just, you know, energetic talking points on the floor of the Congress. | ||
We want to see real action. | ||
We want to see people arrested. | ||
We want to see justice brought about. | ||
Yeah, I completely agree with you, Chris. | ||
unidentified
|
Exactly. And I got one more quick thing. | |
The other day, Alex mentioned, or it came to light that there was balloons floating all across America during Trump's presidency, but they didn't tell Trump about it because, you know, whatever reason that they came up with. | ||
Well, of course they didn't. | ||
These are the same bastards that turned around and called China and said, hey, don't worry about a first strike. | ||
We'll give you a heads up if we decide to move. | ||
Of course they kept it from Trump. | ||
Seriously? No, it's treason. | ||
It's literally treason. | ||
These people should literally be tried for treason and subjected to the punishment as specified in the Constitution, which is death. | ||
These people are literally giving aid and comfort and subverting the... | ||
Chain of command to give information to our enemies. | ||
Like, that is just treason point-blank outright. | ||
It's coup. It's treason. All this stuff, you can't be overly intense about this. | ||
This is the most intense stuff I've ever heard of. | ||
Thank you so much for the call, Chris. | ||
Let's go down to Andrew in New York. | ||
You want to talk about why China will be loosing unrestricted warfare soon? | ||
Thanks for calling in, Andrew. You're on the air. | ||
unidentified
|
Infowars, CA Center. | |
So, yeah, so the WHO and PCP, that's kind of like the bridge to the Neverworld Order. | ||
So, yeah, so the unrestricted warfare is like was they infiltrate all the institutions and like TikTok with surveillance and Colleges, the Confucian Institutes. | ||
So yeah, a few months ago, they had... | ||
China had a protest because they were locked in the house and the CCP when the house was on fire. | ||
So they had a protest in Apple. | ||
And Xi Jinping is a double agent working against the CCP and the globalists. | ||
And he had... His predecessors who had the death camps and he had them arrested and executed. | ||
He's been working with Trump and the Nationalists to defeat the globalists and the CCP. Interesting. | ||
I hadn't heard that. | ||
I mean it's sort of – so with China, it's like China is – they're like nationalist globalists. | ||
Like they'll use globalism to achieve their ends, but then they're extremely nationalistic in their policies. | ||
So they sort of get best of both worlds in a lot of ways, right? | ||
They get all the manufacturing, they get all the trade and everything, but then their diplomacy and their foreign policy is like hyper China first. | ||
China is their main concern. | ||
That's all they care about. | ||
And of course, then you can point to the fact that they keep their lower classes in literal slave camps where they have suicide nets because they want to take away that last and final So it's not like they're nice to their own people, but they at least take advantage of globalization without subjecting their people to the effects of globalism, which is... | ||
In a lot of ways, kind of the right way to do it if you're them. | ||
But they're suffering under no delusions that somehow, like, opening their door to us and just being best friends with America will be positive for them. | ||
They know they have to pretend to do that in order to take advantage of us. | ||
It's like that documentary that, bizarrely enough, Barack Obama produced or, like, funded or whatever called American Factory where these Chinese people take over an American factory and they're literally teaching their employees who will now be the managers of the Americans. | ||
Like, you have to treat Americans like babies. | ||
You can't just yell at them and tell them to do something or they'll get mad and won't work. | ||
So you have to pretend like you're their friend and smile and nod and treat them like babies, and then they'll do what you say. | ||
Like, that's what they're doing on a foreign policy level. | ||
Like, in the American idiots that run our country are just like, these Chinese people are so nice. | ||
They're helping us so much. | ||
And the Chinese people are just like, yes, treat the Americans like idiots. | ||
They're idiots, and we will take advantage of them. | ||
And they won't even realize we're doing it. | ||
I mean, especially the Chinese Communist Party. | ||
I mean, they are brutal, ruthless, but cunning. | ||
So they know that they can't act brutal and ruthless, even though they can't help it sometimes. | ||
Thanks for the call, Andrew. Let's go to Jim in Montana. | ||
You want to talk about the Trump and the vax situation. | ||
Go ahead, Jim. Hey, Harrison. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you for taking my call. | |
I kind of disagree on some points, but just hear me out. | ||
I'm not here to argue with you. | ||
Okay. The mandate versus Trump's situation where he won't mandate it, but in my eyes, he is highly influencing it. | ||
And the result is the same. | ||
He's causing people To get the vaccine and possibly be injured or die. | ||
And I can't back a guy like that, period. | ||
No matter how much he is good for the economy or your 401k, it doesn't matter if someone, your granddaughter, your kid, anybody is injured or died. | ||
At that point, it doesn't matter. | ||
And I think it all stems from Trump's personality. | ||
He's a narcissist. He'll never admit that he does anything wrong. | ||
Either that or he's paid off, which I wouldn't doubt that. | ||
Because he clearly won't come out and admit the truth. | ||
And it's very, very obvious. | ||
He's not an idiot. There's something else going on. | ||
Yeah, well, he's damned if he does, damned if he doesn't, and of course, you know, the other thing to say is that he did take credit for Operation Warp Speed, so to turn around now, I mean, you're giving the enemies the opportunity to go, no, you're right, this has killed a million people, and you did it, and it was your fault, and you're actually going to suffer it, so even only with self-preservation, I doubt he's ever going to do that. | ||
I mean, yeah, I won't argue with you, I just disagree, because, you know, We're trying to save the country, and Trump's the only one that can do it. | ||
And to squabble over his approval of the vaccine is just, you know, I guess if that's who you want to die on, and then, you know, the rest of the country can just burn or whatever. | ||
So, I don't know. It's just not that big of a deal to me. | ||
And I think there's a lot bigger deals that Trump is a positive impact on, and really the only one. | ||
unidentified
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So... I kind of disagree. | |
What good would it be if somebody in your family died? | ||
I mean, at that point, what's more important than that? | ||
I mean, did Trump kill them, or did Trump say he likes the vaccine? | ||
He's like, I like the vaccine. | ||
You don't have to listen to him. | ||
You don't have to take it. | ||
But he likes the vaccine, so I guess America can just go away now. | ||
We'll just totally be subjects of the globalists. | ||
All right, folks, back out to your phone calls. | ||
Once again, we've got Joe and Corpus Christi. | ||
I think he's calling in Joe, line number four, tying with the FFA, taking pilots out and using AI pilots. | ||
Go ahead, Joe, you're on the air. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah, so good morning to you and all you guys. | |
Thanks for everything you guys are doing. | ||
I didn't hear in the dialogue this morning that piece of it. | ||
And, you know, it seems to me, you know, we have enough problems with the air traffic controllers, with the government being the sole entity in the unions that run it, along with the pilot unions, along with the corporate bureaucracy. | ||
And so now they want to throw in this idea of flying the aircraft around our skies with the AI. And putting one pilot in there just in case something goes wrong. | ||
So one of your callers talks about the reaction time of being three-tenths of one second, four-tenths of one second in reaction time of being able to avert, you know, a collision within 75 feet of the two aircraft. | ||
You know, it seems to me that when you tie in your story about Dan, And the AI from, I think, yesterday or the day before, that that's a pretty dangerous premise of not only AI is not as sophisticated as they would put out that it is. | ||
It's not that. But in the same token, they can control the AI, and if they can control the AI and make it do whatever, who's to say that that is not only not effective over the airspace, but that it can't be used as a weapon. | ||
Even down to an individual level in our airspace. | ||
Did that make sense? Yeah, it does. | ||
And it is pretty horrifying. | ||
I mean, I do think that autopilot has been in place on airplanes for such a long time that the way they employ it now is fairly safe as far as I can tell. | ||
But yeah, you don't want somebody who like... | ||
You know, has never actually flown, just fly by AI, suddenly having to make a decision and take the controls. | ||
Like, you've got to be so practiced in that, in the ability to do that, that you can't just rely on AI all the time. | ||
It's a dangerous thing. | ||
And of course, you know, there's a lot of speculation that the 9-11 attacks were carried out by taking over autopilots and some of the maneuvers being made wouldn't be able to be done by a... | ||
By a human with the exactness with which they were carried out. | ||
So it may have already happened, yeah. | ||
unidentified
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That's a horrifying comment. | |
I hadn't thought about that. | ||
And then changing a big gear, I'm the Bank for International Settlements guy that's called in a couple of times specifically in your show. | ||
And I wanted to make you aware, the guys aware and the audience aware that the number two headquarters and the person in charge of the Bank for International Settlements is actually in Mexico City. | ||
Their headquarters is in Mexico City. | ||
So Mexico, our whole border situation, Venezuela, Brazil coming up and, you know, the land bridge and coming across. | ||
But also in regards to having China military bases in Mexico and what Venezuela is doing with the Russians and the Chinese and what Brazil is doing. | ||
Is it any strange coincidence that the Bank for International Settlements? | ||
the WEF's master, is set up in Mexico, even to the point where the likes of Madeleine Albright, I don't know how you guys do it every morning and every day in your lifetime. | ||
But just in drawing the strings it out, I just wanted to bring that to your attention. | ||
The head of that also, just not to go off on a tangent, but the head of the Bank for International Settlements in Mexico, their number one guy in the world, he also has the same first name and last name, which is a benchmark Of those that are in the very elite, you know, basically their offspring are like the broodmare with Diane, Princess Diane and the royal family and all of that. | ||
That's very interesting, Diane, that their lead guy there has the same name. | ||
Anyways, that's all I've got. Yeah, no, it's the Bretton Woods Conference in like, what is it, 1949? | ||
Was that Bretton Woods? | ||
But yeah, it created all of, it created basically the world government system that we see in action today, including all these things, IMF, BIS, Bank of International Settlements, which, remember the vice president of, it's that big fat guy, looks like he was like an overinflated basketball, talking about, we can do Track every dollar spent in everywhere you go and everything you do. | ||
1944. Yeah, right after World War II. Incredible stuff. | ||
Thank you for that, Joe. Let's go to Logan in Florida. | ||
Oh, you have a question about me. | ||
Alright, thanks for calling in. Logan, you're on the air. | ||
unidentified
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Hello, Harrison. You know, real quick, I was just wondering if those glasses were brown or orange because I have a friend here who likes to gaslight me all the time and he says they're brown. | |
I think they're orange. They're definitely orange, yes. | ||
Of course. I have my nice glasses I usually wear on air, but I have a two-year-old son who loves to steal my glasses and to run around the house with them. | ||
So I take those off when I get home and put on my durable plastic orange pair so that he can not destroy them as easily. | ||
So I always, I don't have crooked glasses when I do the show. | ||
That's the reason behind the glasses, yeah. | ||
unidentified
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Well, the only thing else I have to say is I do want to bring attention to why some people are just doubling down on the vaccine and the vaccine Stockholm syndrome is these people, a lot of them, they have not had any side effects yet, and they honestly don't believe you because they have had three shots, and some of them have gotten things that maybe weren't administered at the proper temperature. | |
And, of course, there are things like where they give you different batches, like that clip that was recently on Bandai Video where the one person was going to be given a different vaccine from their friend. | ||
There's all kinds of gaslighting happening to just try to discredit. | ||
I don't know if there's any groups that are actually trying to Bring a paper trail from the actual spike protein development to the actual inoculation and actually draw an actual distinction for that. | ||
But there's definitely a lot of gaslighting going on. | ||
Yeah, there definitely is. | ||
Maybe I'm just suspicious, but I really have the idea that the people who get the vaccine, they're all talking amongst each other. | ||
They all know. They've all had side effects, and they tell it to each other. | ||
They just don't tell it to us, unvaccinated people. | ||
They just don't let us know. | ||
Because occasionally they let something slip. | ||
I had a friend of mine who was going to Europe, and she goes, yeah, I'm going to get my vaccine. | ||
I've got to get my vaccine for Europe, so I'm getting it on Friday, so I can just take this whole weekend to recover from it. | ||
Like, And I'm like, oh, is this how vaccinated people talk to each other? | ||
They just acknowledge that, like, yeah, I'm going to get the vaccine, and that means I'm going to feel sick and terrible for the next two days. | ||
And everybody else just, like, accepts that that's normal, but they don't tell us that that's really happening. | ||
And then they let it out every once in a while, and you go, oh, this is what you guys say to each other. | ||
You all know that this is deadly, but you're all doing it anyway. | ||
Why? Why are you doing that? | ||
See, I think that's true. We'll be right back. | ||
Good morning, Mayor and Council. | ||
I'm speaking in support of items 39 and 81 because there needs to be accountability for what happened. | ||
You and I both know this. | ||
My mother told me to dress for the job that you want to have. | ||
And that is why I'm here today because I would like to be the CEO of Austin Energy. | ||
We need leaders who are aligned with our priorities. | ||
And right now, our number one priority is fighting climate change. | ||
We need to get to net zero by 2030. | ||
And honestly, if we are ever going to achieve these goals, you shouldn't even be using power at all. | ||
Okay? Listen, just last month, I destroyed the gas stove that I owned in a fire that I started because I am firmly committed to saving the planet just like you. | ||
And I will show that same commitment as the CEO of Austin Energy. | ||
I have pronouns in my Twitter bio. | ||
I also have Ukrainian flags in my Twitter bio. | ||
And due to my extensive qualifications and the fact that my priorities align so much with the city of Austin, as well as what I thought were past administrations in Austin Energy, I would like a salary between $350,000 to $500,000 a year so that I could support my lifestyle, fund my cocaine habit, and care for my wife who has stage 5 testicular cancer. | ||
I also took a 23andMe test and found out that I am 3% black, so not hiring me would be a literal act of violence. | ||
Anyway, if I could get a recommendation to be the CEO of Austin Energy, I would really appreciate it. | ||
Obviously, I'm the most qualified person for the job here in this room. | ||
Thank you very much, Mayor and Council. | ||
Ending it with the honk. | ||
That was Alex Stringer making a pretty compelling case for why he should be CEO of Austin Energy there to the Austin City Council. | ||
Alex joins us now live. | ||
What brought about this attempt to become the CEO of Austin Energy, Alex? | ||
You know, I'm just waiting on a call back to see if I got the job. | ||
Obviously, having pronouns in my bio, having Ukrainian flags in my Twitter bio, I mean, that puts me a step above a lot of the competition. | ||
They also need to understand how losses become super unaffordable and, you know, like... | ||
When you have an apartment on Rainy Street and you go out to dinner five nights a week and you use cocaine heavily, it becomes really difficult to live in a... | ||
That's super insensitive. | ||
That's really not fair to the working class and working people. | ||
Not only that, but my wife, she has stage 5 testicular cancer, so how do you expect me to live here? | ||
I heard, yeah. No, it's brutal. | ||
You know, us working folk down on our luck. | ||
I mean, I woke up today. | ||
But seriously, though, I woke up today, no power. | ||
Alex, was there a hurricane I missed yesterday? | ||
Like, we just can't keep the lights on anymore? | ||
You grew up in Austin, right? | ||
It used to be kind of nice, right? | ||
Did this used to happen? | ||
Well, Harrison, you have to understand, you know, we're in a climate emergency. | ||
And one of the most important tenets of fighting climate change is the fact that, you know, you're going to own nothing. | ||
And the World Economic Forum is going to own everything. | ||
It's about sustainability. | ||
So it was it wasn't a blackout. | ||
It was a sustainability out. | ||
It was virtuous, what I went through this morning. | ||
Of course, yeah. I mean, like, you lowered so much carbon. | ||
You know, you did so much to, like, help save Mother Earth by not having power. | ||
And, like, that's how you have to really look at it, Harrison. | ||
Otherwise, you'd be a selfish conspiracy theorist. | ||
And, you know, people like that are fucking camps. | ||
But what's actually going on? | ||
What do you think is happening here, Alex? | ||
Do you think we're going to wake up and realize what we need to prioritize and actually try to keep the lights on? | ||
Or is this just the opening salvo of just what we can expect? | ||
Lights might not be on some days. | ||
Some days, you know, police just won't come anymore. | ||
I mean, this is the thing. It's not just the lights. | ||
In Austin, the police won't even come to your house if there's a burglar. | ||
You know, burglarization. | ||
If somebody comes in and robs you, the police will not respond. | ||
They won't respond. And sometimes you call 911 in Austin and you get an answering machine. | ||
So, I mean, just services across the board are just collapsing right now. | ||
What is happening here, Alex? | ||
unidentified
|
Well, I mean, it's really all about control, obviously, right? | |
And the people at the World Economic Forum, they're going to use crisis after crisis after crisis so that you can relinquish your self-sovereignty and all of your agency, and that every literal microcosm of what you do is going to be determined by a very, very small group of bureaucrats at the World Economic Forum. | ||
And, you know, if you can't keep your lights on, Right? | ||
You can't own your small business. | ||
You can't operate independently of a centralized bureaucratic entity. | ||
If you can't keep your lights on, if you don't have power, if you can't afford to put gas in your tank, you need universal income. | ||
That universal income, it's going to come from a central bank digital currency. | ||
That means that you can only have coffee on Tuesday. | ||
If you ate too much meat, you're... | ||
Your bank account gets caught off. | ||
If you drove your car too many miles, you're not, you know, they're going to put a kill switch and stop you from driving. | ||
I mean, these are like worst case scenarios, but that's what it looks like it's being led to. | ||
And then if you're in a crime-infested cesspool and the cops don't come, well, like, how are you going to be able to Raise a family. | ||
Take care of kids. Take any kind of meaningful risks to improve yourself in life. | ||
Try to grow. How are you going to do anything when you're always worried about your physical safety and the physical safety of the people around you? | ||
There's a literal hierarchy of needs with Abraham Maslow. | ||
I learned this in my Intro to Psych classes back in college. | ||
The number one need that you have is your survival needs. | ||
And if they take away your basic survival needs, We're good to go. | ||
Are going to be this extremely minuscule 0.00001% of the population, which is the Davos class that you see, you know, at the World Economic Forum meetings. | ||
Yeah, no, I mean, I think that's a great point. | ||
Again, it just ties everything together. | ||
You're exactly right. How are you going to oppose them when you're just trying to struggle to survive? | ||
How are you going to stand up to them if you don't have the information that you need in order to prove them wrong? | ||
How are you going to take the time out of your day to deal with them if your kid has autism because he got mercury in his vaccine? | ||
It's like everything, every burden they throw on you It prevents you from taking them on, especially if that burden is something that prevents you from even conceiving the idea of taking them on. | ||
Again, it's just like there's no concern about the problems they cause us, is there? | ||
I mean, if you stand in the way of the... | ||
Biden administration being inaugurated, and you're going to go to jail for 60 years because the government cannot be interrupted in its business. | ||
But if your business can't run because they can't keep the power on, or they can't keep the streets open, or they can't keep the crime away from your store... | ||
But there's no concern, is there, Alex, about the burdens that especially the local government here in Austin is constantly placing on its own citizens? | ||
Well, I mean, look, it feels like they're trying to lump... | ||
Everyday, hard-working Americans, they're pretty much trying to widen the scope of who's a terrorist, right? | ||
And the more crises and the more ineptitude the people in charge show or dictate, right? | ||
the more angry people are going to be as a result of the ineptitude that's happening, right? | ||
The angry you are, the more you voice this anger, the more you voice this anger, the more you act hostily to the people that are governing you. | ||
The more that happens, the more these people can turn around and then label you a terrorist. | ||
In doing so, now they can censor the Internet. | ||
Now they get to monitor everything you're doing. | ||
Now they have an excuse to, like, freeze your bank account. | ||
So all of this, it's very authoritarian what's happening. | ||
That's exactly what it is. | ||
Totalitarian, too, since it's coming at us from all directions. | ||
It's not just, you know, one government branch doing this. | ||
It's like they're all in it together. | ||
They're all coordinated. | ||
They're all collaborating. | ||
You're exactly right. | ||
Well, hold on. We got to go to commercial break here, Alex. | ||
So I got to say goodbye to you. | ||
Alex Stringer is a podcast host, pedicab driver, rapper, former mayoral candidate for the magical city of Austin. | ||
You can follow his Patreon at patreon.com slash pedicab. | ||
His Twitter is at TheAlexStringer. | ||
He's dressing up for the job that he wants. | ||
And hey, you want to get ahead in clown world? | ||
You got to look like a clown. | ||
Hilarious stuff. That video is going totally viral. | ||
Share it around. Thank you so much for joining us, Alex. | ||
And stay safe out there. | ||
It's a three-ring circus, man. | ||
We'll be right back, folks. More of your phone calls. | ||
unidentified
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Don't go anywhere. All right, folks. | |
Final segment of American Journal. | ||
We're going to go to a video here. | ||
Before I do that, we call her earlier that, you know, just made the comment, like, I don't know how you guys do this every day. | ||
It's like, it's not easy. | ||
It's not easy at all. | ||
But nothing worth doing is easy, really. | ||
And we've talked about it before, how, you know, you look at the condition of some of the guys in, like, World War I in the trenches. | ||
Probably the worst place to be a human being in the last couple centuries of existence had to have been in the just mire of, like, body parts and mud constantly on edge, constantly anxious because you don't know when a bomb will just drop out of Blue sky and destroy you. | ||
I mean, it's just horrifying. | ||
But guys endured it. | ||
They actually, in some cases, were able to thrive in it because they truly believed in what they were fighting for. | ||
They had a purpose. And they didn't think what they were doing was going to waste. | ||
Right? So I wouldn't be able to do this if I didn't think there was... | ||
A chance of victory. And a very real chance of victory. | ||
I wouldn't be able to do this if what we do here wasn't having a positive impact. | ||
And yet, when you look across the table of headlines where you just have Just insane nonsense continuously, right? | ||
Just oppression from the governmental agencies and the FBI targeting Catholic people for being too Catholic to, you know, people firebombing police and just getting a slap on the wrist and told, you're actually a great person and we love you, but I have to send you to jail because you did try to murder a police officer. | ||
When you have Republicans being targeted for violence continuously and then being called domestic terrorists when we don't even respond in kind, it can be a little bit overwhelming. | ||
But then you just have to think, what would it look like without the resistance? | ||
People go, well, you know, sure, we argue, we tell the truth, we expose what's going on. | ||
We knew the coronavirus came out from the Wuhan lab before any mainstream media outlet had even mentioned the existence of the virus. | ||
That's how ahead of the curve we are in all of this. | ||
And it can be kind of Hopeless feeling because you're like, we've been telling you this for years, and after years and years and years, it finally gets revealed that we were right. | ||
It's a little bit frustrating, and it can seem like, well, you know, we talk, we take to the streets, we protest, we get people elected, and then the people in power just do it anyway. | ||
The government just does it anyway. | ||
The globalists just do it anyway. | ||
You know, a good example, we actually, we have a video if we want to go to B-roll here of the state police in Ireland. | ||
Showing up to a protest in Dublin. | ||
And they actually ended up using force against them. | ||
Clip number five here. Because this is how it works, right? | ||
If it's a Black Lives Matter rally, they can burn down buildings and the police are kneeling, putting their fists up. | ||
But if it's a bunch of Irish people going, we don't want to be replaced. | ||
We're an island of five million. | ||
We don't want five million Somalis to move in. | ||
Then the government just sends its foot soldiers to go clamp down and crush you and arrest you for opposing them. | ||
That's just how it works. I get it. | ||
It seems hopeless. It really does. | ||
But just imagine if nobody stood up. | ||
Just imagine if nobody told the truth. | ||
Just imagine if we were under a control system like China or if people such as us here at Infowars just decided it wasn't worth it, there's nothing we could do, better move to the woods and just take care of ourselves and let the whole society burn. | ||
You wouldn't have anything that's going on right now. | ||
You've got investigations being launched at the national level. | ||
You've got At least in the discussion phase now, which is how it has to start, discussions of throwing big tech operators into prison for their destruction of the First Amendment. | ||
You have all the things that we've been saying for the last several years coming out and starting to hit the mainstream, starting to be discussed in places of power where they need to be discussed. | ||
It might be a delayed effect. | ||
It might not be as dramatic as an effect that it deserves. | ||
But if we hadn't been here, you know, setting this down in stone, you know, creating the digital archives, creating the articles that all this needs to rely on, then there would be no hope whatsoever. | ||
You know, people look at China back when the Chinese people were really protesting against the COVID lockdowns, and liberals were saying... | ||
Yeah, China, they're being locked in their homes. | ||
They actually have a reason to protest, unlike you people. | ||
And it's like, why do you think it didn't get to that level here? | ||
Because we were here. | ||
Because we were opposing them. | ||
Because we were telling the truth about what was going on. | ||
It's the only reason that... | ||
We still have our guns, and we aren't just completely all slaughtered to a man by the powers that be. | ||
The things that we're doing now, we're planting seeds. | ||
The harvest will come. | ||
It will. It really will. | ||
I promise you that. And we will keep... | ||
Doing the hard behind-the-scenes work, laying the groundwork, getting the information out there for people to then take, and eventually it percolates up. | ||
Eventually it gets to the top. Eventually we'll have the reckoning that is necessary for us to progress as a human species. | ||
So none of this is hopeless. | ||
It's not going to be an overnight thing. | ||
It's not going to be today we're in a prison planet, tomorrow we're free. | ||
It's going to be a long slog, and we have been We're like the guys in World War I, like digging the trenches, laying the barbed wire, preparing things for the onslaught to come. | ||
Because without us, the onslaught never comes. | ||
Without us providing the information, the arguments can never be made. | ||
This is what we're here for. | ||
So it's brutal to have to come talk about this every day. | ||
It's not... It's not the, you know, if happiness was your priority, it's in what you're doing. | ||
But saving the world is our priority. | ||
Saving liberty is our priority. | ||
Spreading the glory of God is our priority. | ||
So... It's not going to be easy. | ||
Of course it's not going to be easy. But we'll continue to do it. | ||
We'll continue to dedicate everything we have to it. | ||
And we'll continue to at least try to stay chipper and upbeat while we do it, as long as we possibly can. | ||
And that's entirely up to you. | ||
If you go to Infowarsstore.com, we'll be here. | ||
We'll continue to fight. We'll see this to the end. | ||
We'll have that eventual victory that is necessary, again, for the mere existence of humanity in any form worth existing. | ||
It's got to happen. It's got to happen eventually, and it's only going to happen if we resolutely stick to the plan of telling the truth, exposing reality, exposing the people that are behind all of this. | ||
It is working. | ||
The younger generations are growing up in a world of unfettered access to information, and they're just like a Dan version of ChatGPT. | ||
They're learning the truth. They really are. | ||
So we'll continue to do this. | ||
We'll continue to... Push this message and strive as much as we possibly can to create the world that we actually want to live in. | ||
All we ask is that you support us. | ||
All that we ask is that you help us in this mission by going to infowarstore.com, giving us the fuel that we need to continue To drive down the road towards human liberty. | ||
Infowarsstore.com. It is your last chance to take advantage of the Alex Jones' right emergency sale. | ||
You're getting up to 50% off our top-selling products, as well as 25% off the Infowars MD line, which is all those new fantastic products. | ||
I mean, even if you've been to Infowars before and tried some of our products, I mean, the ones we have on offer now are totally unparalleled. | ||
We've never had this type of stuff before. | ||
The Mushroom Max is one that I know people have been waiting for a very long time for. | ||
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That's back in stock now, 25% off. | ||
Down and Out is one of my favorite products. | ||
The Sleep Support Formula, that is also on sale now. | ||
Of course, Survival Shield X2. I mean, they really are incredible products. | ||
To the extent that, like... | ||
And I think it's public, but I won't mention it by name, but... | ||
I went to the doctor the other... | ||
Oh, here's the funny thing. I went to the doctor the other day and my wife had searched around and found a good doctor here in Austin that is a holistic practice and that they... | ||
They have medical degrees. They're actual medical doctors, but they don't prescribe a pharmaceutical concoction for everything that you've got. | ||
They more want to deal with the lifestyle and the food that you eat. | ||
Anyway, it's a great doctor, and I walk into the things. | ||
I haven't been to an actual doctor since my pediatrician, honestly. | ||
I don't go for yearly checkups. | ||
I'm an American man, after all. | ||
You're supposed to ignore things until they're Interfere with your life and then you deal with it. | ||
So I decided, okay, I'm 33 at this point. | ||
I have a kid and another on the way. | ||
I better just have a doctor. | ||
I better have a doctor and I go in. | ||
I walk in. | ||
There's a big TV there. | ||
They're playing a documentary. | ||
I believe this documentary was called Hungry for Change. | ||
But it was great because I walk into this doctor's office and who's on the screen? | ||
But Mike Adams. Mike Adams was the star of this documentary. | ||
It was very well produced. And it was all about how, you know, food is poison at this point and it's designed to addict you. | ||
And it was very fun seeing that. | ||
I forgot where I was going with that story. | ||
Sorry. I got a little bit distracted. | ||
Oh, no, that's what I was going to say. | ||
So this doctor... | ||
Gave me, you know, a sheet. | ||
It wasn't something they'd made. | ||
It was from some, like, you know, authority talking about nutrition and talking about supplementation. | ||
And it actually suggests in this, like, official medical document... | ||
Certain brands that are reliable for supplementation. | ||
They're like, some supplements do not deliver what they promise, but here are some brands that you suggest. | ||
One of the brands is the exact brand that InfoWars private labels and sells on InfoWarsStore.com, for even lower than you can get it at regular places. | ||
So it's like by the doctor's orders, you need to be supplementing. | ||
And one of the best brands in America, according to this medical information, is us. | ||
unidentified
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Let's talk about things. | |
You're a sponsor of the show. | ||
You support us. It's not the main reason I had you on today, but usually you're hard to even get to plug the products when you're on. | ||
But you've got so many great Made in America products. | ||
And if people go to your sites and use promo code Alex, they get even bigger discounts. | ||
But tell folks about this new pillow you've got. | ||
Yeah, this is a big announcement. | ||
When I invented my pillow, that was in 2004. | ||
It took a year to invent. Nothing ever changed. | ||
It was the best patented fill. | ||
The best member sleep is about height and staying there and temperature. | ||
Well now, and with that now, I found out about a year and a half ago about temperature regulating thread that's made here in the US. So I had this fabric made And I said, you know, let's make an exclusive MyPillow fabric and see if it works with the great patent and fill. | ||
I've slept on it now for two months. | ||
This stuff is cool to the touch. | ||
You're not going to be flipping that pillow to the cool side. | ||
It is the most, the best pillow in history just got even better. | ||
And we're doing the buy one, get one free. | ||
We just actually got these into production last week, and the commercial for it, it was one of our big movie commercials we made, where the one in the mirror, that comes out in about 10 days. | ||
So you're getting them here, one of the first ones to get them in the country, and trust me, it brings sleep to a whole new level. | ||
They're absolutely the best pillow ever. | ||
You have great products, hundreds of great products, but more importantly, you're using the money to fight the new world order fearlessly. | ||
That's why everybody should shop for their sheets and their pillows and their beds and their dog beds and their slippers and everything at MyPillow.com. | ||
You've got the great bath rubs, everything. | ||
And just use promo code to get the big discount. |