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Taking a record of the hearts and minds of the American people, it's the American Journal with your host, Harrison Smith. | |
Harrison Smith. | ||
Now you were thinking things couldn't get any more insane. | ||
Now America is shooting down UFOs. | ||
On Friday, it was revealed that the US military had spotted a high-altitude object near Alaska. | ||
It was flying at 40,000 feet, posing a threat to civilian aircraft. | ||
Out of an abundance of caution and at the recommendation of the Pentagon, President Biden ordered the military to down the object, and they did. | ||
The UFO, which was unmanned, was witnessed to be the size of a small car. | ||
Far smaller than the Chinese balloon that was shot down last week. | ||
The object took at least two flights, one in the day and one during the night, which is when it was shot down by a USF-22 Raptor jet fighter. | ||
And here's where it gets seriously weird. | ||
The pilots were unable to tell what the object was, and it had a very unusual propulsion system. | ||
Those pilots, we have learned, have given very conflicting accounts of what they actually experienced, with some pilots saying that the object interfered with the plane's sensors, other pilots saying that they didn't really experience that, other pilots saying that when they looked at the object they could identify no identifiable propulsion system and they did not know how it was actually staying in the air cruising at that altitude of about 40,000 feet. | ||
On Saturday night, another unidentified flying object was tracked flying over the Yukon after it invaded Canadian airspace. | ||
On the orders of Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, a U.S. fighter jet shot down the object. | ||
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I ordered the takedown of an unidentified object that violated Canadian airspace. | |
The North American Aerospace Defense Command shot down the object over the Yukon. | ||
Canadian and U.S. aircraft were scrambled and a U.S. F-22 successfully fired at the object. | ||
NORAD spokesman Major Oliver Garin asserted that the military knew what the object was, but they wouldn't be revealing details to the public. | ||
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It appears to be a small cylindrical object and smaller than the one that was downed off the coast of North Carolina. | |
There were then reports of another UFO over mainland United States. | ||
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There have now been three objects shot down in a week, and there were worries that a fourth might have been spotted in Montana. | |
Just hours after the object that was shot down over Canada, the FAA briefly shut down airspace over Harve Airport in Montana due to an object that could interfere with commercial air traffic. | ||
NORAD sent fighter jets up, but there was nothing there. | ||
The airspace above Lake Michigan was then shut down after a UFO was spotted on Sunday. | ||
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The Federal Aviation Administration briefly closed airspace over Lake Michigan in the US for, quote, national defence reasons. | |
Fighter jets scrambled to the area. | ||
Turns out that the same object initially spotted over Montana was subsequently shot down over Lake Huron by an F-16. | ||
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For the fourth time in eight days, the U.S. military has shot down an object over North America, and this time it's closer to home. | |
An F-16, using an A-9 missile, had shot down an octagonal structure. | ||
Over Lake Huron, the altitude was about 20,000 feet. | ||
According to NORAD, the UFO flew in close proximity over sensitive DoD sites in Montana, which is home to many of the country's missile silos. | ||
U.S. Air Force General Glenn Van Herc was even asked if the object was extraterrestrial in nature, and he refused to rule it out. | ||
Not to be outdone, China then announced that it was tracking an unidentified flying object over waters near the port city of Qingdao. | ||
Now, what I learned from the articles on Ground News is that fishermen and boats were told to be on high alert because the authorities planned to shoot the object down. | ||
In this case, it probably wasn't a flying visit from ET, but Beijing hyping its own foreign threat in retaliation for the US shooting down the Chinese spy balloon. | ||
But it still wasn't over then. | ||
The Uruguayan Air Force said that they'd investigated a UFO sighting. | ||
What the hell is going on? | ||
This rash of random objects in the sky has set speculation raging on social media. | ||
Now Congressman Jack Bergman is demanding the American people be given better answers. | ||
Shortly after news of the UFO shootdowns broke, Project Bluebeam began trending on Twitter. | ||
And a conspiracy boomer meme fest found new life. | ||
Yes, while most believe the UFOs to be tools of spycraft, A hardcore of believers think that they represent a nascent alien invasion. | ||
Project Bluebeam is a shadowy conspiracy born in the early 90s. | ||
Sorry, folks, that is the latest from Paul Joseph Watson asking, what the hell is going on? | ||
Well, we're going to try to answer that question. | ||
In fact, a lot of people are answering that question because it's obvious. | ||
We're under attack. | ||
And a lot of it's distraction from the greater attack going on. | ||
We'll draw the lines together in this tangled web being weaved. | ||
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Stay with us. It's Tuesday, February 14th, year of our Lord, 2023. | |
And you're listening to The American Journal with your host, Harrison Smith. | ||
I think it's time to blow this thing. | ||
Good morning, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
Welcome to The American Journal. I am your host, Harrison Smith. | ||
Just a lot to talk about today. | ||
Yesterday went... | ||
Wow, no pun intended. Yesterday went off the rails a little bit. | ||
A lot of people on Twitter asking, are we under attack? | ||
Is this an attack that's happening right now? | ||
You've got trains derailing across the United States all on exactly the same day. | ||
Most carrying hazardous material of some sort or another. | ||
You've got the UFOs appearing and being fought by... | ||
Jets above American skies. | ||
Are we under attack? I don't know. | ||
What tipped you off? | ||
Was it the two years of lockdown where you were forced inside of your home? | ||
Was it the massive riots during that time? | ||
Which... Entire cities were burned. | ||
Was it the teachers teaching your children that they're a different gender? | ||
Were the doctors castrating them? | ||
I mean, what tipped you off that we might be under attack? | ||
Is it the plummeting fertility rates? | ||
Is it the open border with the millions of people pouring across on a daily basis? | ||
I mean, tell me when I get to the part where you feel attacked because... | ||
Yeah, we're under attack, folks. | ||
The humanity itself is under attack by a vicious and ruthless cabal. | ||
Yeah, we're under attack. | ||
That's kind of the whole point of this. | ||
So, yes, we've been under attack for several decades. | ||
It took a couple trains falling over for people to realize that. | ||
A couple oversized balloons. | ||
Everything became clear all of a sudden, I guess. | ||
Yeah, we're under attack. | ||
And hopefully today we can paint a picture for you of what this attack looks like exactly and also who's carrying it off. | ||
But we're going to get into a ton of stuff. | ||
We're going to be joined by Matt McCaw in the third hour. | ||
He's part of the Greater Idaho Movement. | ||
Citizens of Oregon attempting to break away from that state in order to actually have some political say in their Local government. | ||
We've got tons of videos to show you. | ||
I just, I don't even know. I don't know how we're going to get to all of these, but we're going to try our darndest. | ||
So let's just get into it. | ||
Here it is, your daily dispatch. | ||
All right, here it is, folks. | ||
Your daily dispatch for Tuesday the 14th of February. | ||
Oh yeah, it's Valentine's Day. | ||
Hey, happy Valentine's Day everyone. | ||
Hope everyone is feeling the love today. | ||
Eat lots of candy. | ||
Here's our first story. Hours later, | ||
a train also derailed in Innory, South Carolina on Monday with no reported fatalities. | ||
A CSX Transportation, which owns the railway, is on site along with emergency crews. | ||
I guess we just get used to this now. | ||
Three major train derailments in less than a week. | ||
And we have a video of Pete Buttigieg. | ||
Literally still don't know how to say that dude's name. | ||
Should we just call him Gay Pete? | ||
Mayor Pete. Sorry, Mayor Pete. | ||
We'll call him Gay or Pete. Mayor Pete. | ||
Dang it. We'll call him Pete. | ||
We'll keep it safe. We'll call him Pete. | ||
Pete gave a statement yesterday at a... | ||
I don't know, something or other, press conference of some sort, didn't even mention the train going off the track. | ||
He did make a point to say that there were too many white people working construction, which is weird. | ||
It's like, okay, but we'll show you those videos a little bit later. | ||
Doesn't even mention the train derailments. | ||
And I think now maybe it's a good time to remind everybody. | ||
I don't know if everybody forgot, but Pete, Old Pete, we'll call him Old Pete. | ||
We'll call him Pete. I hate this guy. | ||
We'll call him CIA Pete. | ||
CIA Pete was actually ahead of Joe Biden in a lot of the polls during the presidential campaign primary. | ||
But he dropped out. | ||
But before he did, just a few hours before, he called Biden. | ||
At least he thought he called Biden. | ||
He actually accidentally called somebody else and left a message saying, Essentially discussing how they were going to barter for him dropping out and endorsing Biden and what he would get in return. | ||
What he got in return, of course, was Secretary of Transportation positions. | ||
So all of these disasters that we're seeing as a result of either criminal activity, intentional sabotage, or just Basic incompetence. | ||
It all goes back to a dirty deal made during a presidential campaign. | ||
Just basic corruption as well as, you know, you got to get that diversity point. | ||
So, yeah. Just remember that, you know, five years from now when the leukemia has taken out your town. | ||
Meanwhile, Nevada Governor declared a state of emergency over fuel pipeline leak. | ||
Nevada Governor Joe Lombardo declared a state of emergency on Friday night after a leak forced the shutdown of a fuel pipeline that supplies Las Vegas and Southern Nevada. | ||
I hadn't actually heard about this, but it's still going on, apparently. | ||
We actually have a video of that. | ||
Clip number two, and we can just roll that without audio, is a video of the cars waiting in line for fuel for miles and miles and miles. | ||
This captured in Las Vegas. | ||
The leak, which was detected at a pumping station in Long Beach, California on Thursday, resulted in a closure of the Kinder Morgan pipeline that runs between Los Angeles and Las Vegas. | ||
He said, today I'm declaring a state of emergency for the fuel pipeline leak impacting southern Nevada, Lombardo said in a statement posted to Twitter. | ||
This emergency declaration will allow us to receive federal waivers and resources as we navigate the evolving repair time and it will allow us to increase transportation of fuel by other means during this time. | ||
To avoid unnecessary shortages, I strongly urge all Las Vegas residents to avoid panic buying while awaiting repair timeline updates. | ||
I would also add to avoid any unnecessary shortages, I say we cast off the chains of the Great Reset Punish those who have put us in this position and just go back to the way things were when everything worked pretty well. | ||
Maybe we should do that. Meanwhile, a mass shooting in Michigan State. | ||
Three killed, five wounded at Michigan State campus. | ||
The suspect is dead. | ||
A suspected gunman who killed three people and wounded several others on the campus of Michigan State University was found dead late Monday night from an apparent self-inflicted gunshot wound. | ||
Police said the 43-year-old suspect was located off campus and died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound. | ||
MSU Police Interim Deputy Chief Chris Rosman said a campus-wide shelter-in-place order was lifted. | ||
Shortly after midnight Tuesday, quote, this is truly a nightmare that we're living tonight and tomorrow and the day before this and the day after this. | ||
It's a nightmare that's being created for us continuously by the stochastic terrorism of the hateful bigots that run our media. | ||
Because after all, unless I'm wrong, but I'm just going to make a guess here. | ||
No basis for believing this, but we do know that the shooter was black. | ||
I'm going to guess not a single victim was black. | ||
I'm going to guess this was racially motivated in some way. | ||
So just yet another example of black-on-white murder. | ||
So can't talk about that. | ||
Meanwhile, multiple pedestrians struck, dragged by U-Haul truck in NYC Rampage. | ||
A man driving a truck went on a rampage and hit several pedestrians in Bay Ridge, Brooklyn on Monday morning, said a New York City councilman. | ||
And there's actually a video of this as well, but it's pretty horrible. | ||
You see him driving down the road and just obviously intentionally running people down. | ||
No ideas about the motive, but it definitely wasn't an accident. | ||
All right. This happened on the same day that a convicted terrorist, Sefulo Saipov, is facing sincing for killing eight people in a 2017 rampage while driving a U-Haul truck down a New York City bike path. | ||
That was like one of those incel people. | ||
He thought he was like, that dude was in contact with Elliot Rogers and was like... | ||
It was the day of reckoning, actually. | ||
I had to run people over with a truck. | ||
So I don't know what the deal with this one was, but very... | ||
Apparently it was Trevor Bickford, a 19-year-old from Maine who was arrested. | ||
Yeah, there's no information about who this guy was. | ||
So we're going to go ahead and assume he wasn't exactly a right-winger. | ||
We'll do more on the other side. | ||
Stay with us, folks. All right, welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
Finishing up with our daily dispatch here. | ||
Dick Durbin, Lindsey Graham proposed Dream Act amnesty for nearly 2 million illegal immigrants. | ||
That's 2 million down, 28 million to go. | ||
Senators Dick Durbin and Lindsey Graham have proposed their Dream Act amnesty that would provide green cards and eventually naturalized American citizenship to nearly 2 million illegal aliens. | ||
Graham and Durbin, who hold powerful positions in the Senate Judiciary Committee, reintroduced the amnesty after repeatedly proposing the plan since 2017. | ||
With friends like this, right? | ||
With friends like this, who needs rules and laws and standards? | ||
Lindsey Graham. He's got to just be the worst person ever. | ||
He's just the worst. | ||
He's just constantly waffling between... | ||
We're gonna go to nuclear war with Russia. | ||
Hey, Putin, you better watch out or I'll send 15,000 young men to go whoop your butt or die in a trench, whatever. | ||
Whatever happens, who cares? | ||
It's not me. I'm not the one going. | ||
Right? Just like warmongering. | ||
Half his time's doing that. | ||
The other half is just like giving the Democrats everything they want by being like, I'm proposing a bill to ban all abortions, specifically rape victims and incest. | ||
You have to have the baby. | ||
I know it's not going to pass, but I gotta suggest it so they can get the headlines and campaign against me like this. | ||
It's just like, or, and then he's giving amnesty to illegal aliens. | ||
Just like, where's he from? | ||
South Carolina? South Carolina, get your act together. | ||
Send this man back to where he came from. | ||
Hell. Moving on. | ||
Nikki Haley announces 2024 White House bid. | ||
Oh, another gift from South Carolina. | ||
What is going on? Let's have a little talk, South Carolina. | ||
What are you doing? What the hell's going on with you? | ||
Nikki Haley? Lindsey Graham? | ||
I mean, come on. I don't have anything to say about it. | ||
It's just like, what the hell, you guys? | ||
Former South Carolina Republican Governor Nikki Haley announced Tuesday in a video that she will run for president in 2024. | ||
Haley is expected to deliver remarks Wednesday in Charleston at a campaign launch event. | ||
The Washington establishment has failed us over and over again, she said. | ||
So it's time for a new generation of leadership to discover fiscal responsibility, secure our borders, strengthen our country, our pride, and our purpose. | ||
Sorry, sorry. | ||
It's just, she's so boring. | ||
Yeah. UN ambassador. | ||
That's really what we need in the presidency. | ||
No, she sucks. | ||
She's always sucked. I don't even understand why she's, like, still around. | ||
She's just the lady that you, like, forget exists every once in a while until, like, this establishment media all publishes on the same time. | ||
They're like, Nikki Haley is doing something! | ||
Nikki Haley! Nikki Haley! And you're just like, who is that again? | ||
Who is that? What is she doing? | ||
Why is she smiling like that? | ||
Why does her face look so weird? | ||
Why are you talking about her? | ||
And then she just goes away. And then she just fades away until the next time that she just appears all of a sudden to be talked about for no reason. | ||
She stinks. She can go away. | ||
And I hope her defeat is humiliating. | ||
That's my take on that. | ||
I'm sick of all of this, folks. | ||
It's all so terrible. | ||
It's all just everything is terrible. | ||
And it's all getting worse. | ||
And the people doing it are the ones in charge. | ||
This is the thing. There was a poll yesterday I saw... | ||
I think it was Battle Beagle on Twitter put up. | ||
It's like, is what we're going through attentional attacks or just an accident? | ||
And it's like, the answer is obvious. | ||
It's intentional. I mean, it's impossible to be this wrong this many times in a row. | ||
Like, it's not just intentional, it's covered up as well. | ||
Because even if it was just mistakes, everybody else would be like, hey, that was dumb. | ||
You should not be doing this anymore. | ||
You should not be in charge of this anymore. | ||
That doesn't happen, though, does it? | ||
Because the media covers up for everything. | ||
I mean, the train derailment is kind of the perfect example. | ||
So we always talk about how the media is there to, you know, tell you facts but leave you believing a lie. | ||
That's part of what they do. | ||
The other part is to be there as the – to tell everybody to calm down, right? | ||
I mean it really is amazing. | ||
It's like they've got water faucets. | ||
They can just like turn on outrage or turn off outrage. | ||
The classic line of I was asking now is like, you know, how many people do you know turned their – you know, with a Ukrainian flag in their profile? | ||
How many of them turn that Ukrainian flag into a Turkish or a Syrian flag after the earthquake? | ||
Nobody because they weren't told to. | ||
Because they weren't told that they need to care about it, so they just don't care about it. | ||
Like, they just don't think for themselves. | ||
It's shocking, really. | ||
And so, like, you can't... | ||
Like, the media can fabricate outrage. | ||
They can make up stories about a, you know, black criminal being killed by the police. | ||
They can just, like... It's, you know, hands up, don't you? | ||
Just like total falsehoods, total lies, and they can push those and, you know, cause outrage and then go cover the protest and act like it's a very peaceful and respectable protest that reflects the real outrage people are experiencing. | ||
Then they can pass laws based on that. | ||
Like, they can inspire the outrage. | ||
They can take advantage of the outrage. | ||
They can do all that. They can also do the reverse. | ||
They can also take things that are... | ||
It should cause absolute outrage and just brush it off to the side. | ||
A train derailment in Ohio occurred. | ||
It was a terrible accident, and emergency crews are cleaning it up, and the water is safe to drink next at 5. | ||
And people just go, oh, okay, well, they don't sound so crazy about this. | ||
It doesn't sound that bad. | ||
I don't know. I saw about it on the news, and they said it wasn't that big of a deal. | ||
So, you know, who cares? | ||
And there's just, like, dead animals all around them just, like... | ||
Green sludge water going through. | ||
And there's like, it's safe to drink. | ||
The news told me so. | ||
So it's really amazing what they're able to, like the strings they're able to pull on the American people. | ||
And the American people just go along with it. | ||
It's sort of horrifying, actually. | ||
But I've yet to hear, you know, Pete, old Pete, old gay CIA Pete talk about it. | ||
And again, it's like, Who cares if he's gay, right? | ||
They do. So we're going to mention it. | ||
Pete Buttigieg doesn't mention Ohio derailment at conference, but finds time to say there are too many white people who work in construction. | ||
Has he ever been to Texas? | ||
I don't think I've ever seen a white person working in construction. | ||
Let's go to clip number four here. | ||
Here's what Pete... | ||
Ol' Pete thought that he should mention instead of the Chernobyl-level natural disaster chemical attack that happened in Ohio, directly next to the Ohio River in the heart of Amish country, poisoning the water supplies for upwards of a million people. | ||
Here's what he thought was more important than that. | ||
To work with your contractors, to work with your community colleges, on building a workforce that reflects the community. | ||
We have heard way too many stories from generations past of infrastructure where you got a neighborhood, often a neighborhood of color, that finally sees the project come to them, but everyone in the hard hats on that project looking like, you know, doing the good-paying jobs, don't look like they came from anywhere near the neighborhood. | ||
Right. You can build community wealth that will help close wealth gaps in this country if we can tear down those barriers. | ||
But that happens at the delivery level. | ||
What the hell is he talking about? | ||
I mean, it's... | ||
Like, what is he talking? | ||
Honestly, what is he talking about? | ||
It's just like there's too many white guys building... | ||
Again, I've... | ||
Never seen a white guy doing construction in Austin. | ||
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Austin or Houston. Wait, did he say white guys though? | |
People who don't look like they're from here. | ||
Maybe he was talking about Hispanics. | ||
Maybe he was disparaging them. | ||
Okay, so he's mad that the Hispanics are getting all of the high-paying construction jobs in the white neighborhoods. | ||
That's low-key racism from Big P. His sentence actually makes... | ||
Makes sense in that regard. | ||
But yeah, so I guess he's mad that all the Hispanics are getting all the jobs. | ||
No, it makes no sense at all. | ||
It's completely ridiculous. But this is what they care about. | ||
I mean, this is the socialist model. | ||
You get that, right? We'll discuss it on the other side. | ||
We'll show you more videos of this, and we'll show you what's really going on in Ohio. | ||
All right, welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
This is The American Journal. | ||
I'm just finishing up a little edit here. | ||
A little commercial time editing. | ||
I think we take breaks here at InfoWars. | ||
We don't take breaks. We take time out of our busy schedule to do more work. | ||
I thought I'd do a little video edit. | ||
I think we'll show it to you in the next segment. | ||
I think it'll be informative. | ||
I think it'll be good. Well, it won't be good because you'll have to look at Chelsea Handler while it plays, but other than that, I think you'll enjoy it. | ||
I really do. I'm going to go ahead and drop it in the show folder and we'll get to it in the next segment, folks. | ||
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We're going to continue to talk about old Petey Boy. | ||
Petey Boy doesn't mention Ohio derailment at conference, but finds time to say there's too many white people who work in construction, which again is just wild. | ||
But, you know, we talk about this quite a bit. | ||
It's just amazing how pervasive this is. | ||
Mindset is and it's not just It's not just something that we're projecting onto them. | ||
This is just the status quo at this point. | ||
It's the idea that whatever position you put a leftist in, they will use that position solely, exclusively, and only for the purpose of advancing their own social engineering goals. | ||
Like, that's it. You put somebody in charge of transportation, they have no honor, they have no shame, they don't take it upon themselves. | ||
They've trusted me with this You know, burden of responsibility. | ||
I am in charge now of Trying to coordinate and organize transportation across the United States. | ||
I will do my best. | ||
And once they see how good I am at this, then they'll reward me for something. | ||
It's not even remotely—it doesn't even enter into their mind. | ||
They're like, oh, I'm in charge of transportation now. | ||
How can I use this to progress my social agenda? | ||
How can I use this to blame bridge collapsings on white people? | ||
How can I use this to, you know, force diversity quotas into construction companies? | ||
That's all they care about. | ||
That's all they do. So transportation collapses. | ||
The actual physical infrastructure of the country takes a backseat to the human infrastructure that they're trying to manipulate. | ||
And it's just pervasive. It's across the board. | ||
You cannot put people like this in any position of power. | ||
All they see it as is a blank check to write to their friends. | ||
Like, that's it. That's all they do. | ||
So, you know, that video we saw at the end there where he's just like, well, you know, infrastructure is really important because we have to make the construction crews reflect the community. | ||
It's like, just what are you talking about? | ||
Your job is not diversity officer. | ||
It's transportation secretary. | ||
And I don't know if you've noticed... | ||
But there are more trains lying on the ground than there are on the tracks at this point. | ||
That's your job, you psychopath. | ||
None of these people could make it for a single minute in the private world, private industry. | ||
I mean, just imagine putting somebody in charge, like, on the border. | ||
Okay, you're in charge of security for the warehouse. | ||
And they're like, great, well, I have friends that really need a place to stay tonight. | ||
So I went ahead and opened up the back door and let them in. | ||
Because, see, I'm the security guard now, so I have the key, so I can do that. | ||
It's like, but that's not your job. | ||
You're supposed to protect the place. | ||
And they're like, no, no. You put me in charge of security, so now I'm going to use that position to benefit my friends and destroy your warehouse and, you know, get something for myself while I'm at it. | ||
And we just sit here like... | ||
Gee, where is he? | ||
Where's Pete? What's going on? | ||
It's like what's going on is these are all criminals and they all need to be destroyed politically, I guess. | ||
Clip three here is Buttigieg, you know, at least acknowledging that there are problems with the infrastructure. | ||
At least he's gone that far. | ||
What he blames it on is... | ||
as predictable as it is nonsensical let's go now to Pete Buttigieg laying the blame for his infrastructure failures over the last two years on a virus from three years ago let's watch It's had its challenges. | ||
Right. I mean, if you look at what the American transportation systems have faced in the last two or three years, partly because of the pandemic, we've faced issues from container shipping to airline cancellations. | ||
Now we've got balloons. | ||
That's right. The drinking water of... | ||
A million people has been tainted with one of the most carcinogenic poisons known to man. | ||
No, but it's funny, though. | ||
It's so funny. It's COVID's fault. | ||
It's COVID's fault. Of course, it's COVID's fault. | ||
COVID did none of this. | ||
COVID didn't shut the schools down. | ||
COVID didn't shut the... Ports down. | ||
COVID didn't cause a container crisis. | ||
COVID didn't destroy our supply lines. | ||
That was all you people. It's all you. | ||
You did it. You keep doing it. | ||
Cannot believe people are falling. | ||
I mean, I cannot believe the American people are not, like, uprising right now. | ||
Like, what is going on? Two more trains derail in U.S. Collision with an oncoming train in southeastern Texas. | ||
It's in Houston. Another incident in South Carolina. | ||
Saw three cars come off the track. | ||
This is not normal. I don't know if I need to tell you this. | ||
Again, I guess this is what the media is for, right? | ||
It's just like, well, it's just another train falling over. | ||
It's just another person dying suddenly. | ||
It's just another mass shooter. | ||
It's just another thing. | ||
This has always happened. | ||
America was never good. | ||
You were never safe. We're going to destroy history so we can pretend like it's always been this way. | ||
Cities hundreds of miles away from East Palestine and Ohio are experiencing the effects of the mass poisoning that took place. | ||
Greater Cincinnati Water Works monitoring water quality after East Palestine train derailment. | ||
Cincinnati City Manager Cheryl Long says the Greater Cincinnati Water Works is monitoring water quality in Cincinnati after the train derailment released toxic chemicals in East Palestine. | ||
Crews released toxic chemicals into the air from five derailed tankers. | ||
You know all of these things. | ||
The chemicals are detected far upstream of Indiana, or of Cincinnati, rather. | ||
But they are on their way. | ||
They are certainly on their way. | ||
And the just complete insanity that is funding all of this is just totally absurd. | ||
This is another thing. | ||
I've got to pull up the comments here. | ||
Because I got to see the comments to these tweets. | ||
And I see all this in a couple different situations. | ||
This one's from Terrence Williams. | ||
And he says, there's no way six trains derail in one day. | ||
No way. Something's not right. | ||
Now, I don't know about six trains. | ||
I know two trains derailed yesterday and more the day before. | ||
But maybe there are some that I'm missing. | ||
But the reaction to this is hilarious. | ||
Everybody, believe it or not, are blaming Trump for this. | ||
You've got, like, multiple trains with hazardous waste crashed on the same day. | ||
Very suspicious. | ||
Very unusual this would happen. | ||
Very much the responsibility of the people currently in charge. | ||
And they all blame it on Trump. | ||
That's how mind control these idiots are. | ||
I hope you have so much other stuff to cover. | ||
I'm just going to finish up with the train track stuff here. | ||
But again, it really is amazing, the programmability of the NPCs and the wider American public for a lot of this, but certainly the leftists. | ||
It's just... It's so easy for them to just, like, come up with... | ||
They just come up with something, come up with a talking point, and it just proliferates with just incredible speed. | ||
It's unbelievable how fast they get these messages out there. | ||
And everybody just aligns to it immediately, right? | ||
So what happens is there's a question out there, and everybody's kind of free-floating. | ||
And some people, like us over here, are actually trying to... | ||
Get to the bottom of it. | ||
It's not an easy road to take. | ||
It's like chiseling through a mountain. | ||
It's like a path that we're trying to find out where the treasure of the truth is hidden as we mine deeper and deeper. | ||
People can follow us, but they might get lost along the way, or, you know, they just stay on the outside and wait for us to pull the truth up from where we get it, but with the NPCs, they all just like, they're just like, the answer is this, and they all just go, shoop, the answer is this. | ||
They all just like, all along, and they just say that one thing, and even if you point out, well, that doesn't really make sense logically, they just like, smile condescendingly and are just like, that's what the answer is, the news told me, so get over it, right? | ||
It's It's really, like, astonishing how good they are at this. | ||
And so the latest one is this. | ||
So Terrence K. Williams asks, like, this is kind of weird. | ||
Three major train derailments in a single day? | ||
He said six in a single day. | ||
And it turns out, you know, train derailments are not quite as rare as you might think. | ||
There's like a train derailment every two weeks or so, or maybe even more of that. | ||
So it may just be that we're focusing on this, but we're focusing on it because one particular train derailment has poisoned the entire state of Ohio and the entire area around there from multiple states. | ||
And it's going to be causing significant health crises for the foreseeable future. | ||
So it makes sense why you'd be focusing on this. | ||
But in response to this, the NPC programming has dictated this is how everybody will respond. | ||
With this, Trump rolls back train-breaking rule meant to keep oil tankers from exploding near communities. | ||
An Obama rule to require new brakes to reduce the risk of oil train derailments causing explosions and spilling gas was reversed by Trump. | ||
This from September of 2018. | ||
So a rule about oil tankers from five years ago is responsible for multiple hazardous waste trains derailing this week. | ||
There's no logical consistency to it. | ||
There's nothing actually there. | ||
And this has nothing to do with the actual causes of the derailments. | ||
Now, we don't even have for sure answers on what caused the derailments. | ||
But it doesn't matter. | ||
They've decided this is the answer, so now that's the answer. | ||
Now that's what they're going to say. They're going to blame it on Trump. | ||
A decision made by Trump five years ago is causing train accidents this week but never caused any previous to this. | ||
Does this make any sense to anybody? It does to them. | ||
It makes sense to them. It's insane, but it does because they're insane. | ||
Truly incredible. And just like so many people respond to that very same sentiment, it's complete nonsense. | ||
Here's the reality. Posted by Wright Winger at Wright, spelled like W-R-I-T-E, Winger. | ||
Joe Biden forced the rail unions to stop striking by threatening them all with life in prison. | ||
The rail unions were striking in November slash December over something called PSR, We're good to go. | ||
On February 3rd, a train heading from Illinois to Conway Station ran over a sensor that detects heat on the train wheels and axles that told them their wheels were on fire. | ||
We covered that yesterday. Instead of stopping and inspecting and repairing the damage, the crew on train was ordered by dispatch to keep going towards Conway. | ||
So for over 20 miles until it hit East Palestine, the train was going 30 plus miles per hour with its wheels melting, and they knew it. | ||
And then they have the... | ||
Stock listing showing who owns Norfolk Southern. | ||
And would it surprise you? | ||
It's the Vanguard Group, J.P. Morgan, BlackRock, and State Street Global Advisors, a.k.a. | ||
the people that own everything. | ||
Or, you know, it's a vague rule about oil tankers that Trump passed in 2018. | ||
I don't know. I mean, I don't know. | ||
I'm an idiot, so I can't figure out which one of these it is. | ||
Just mind-blowing stuff. | ||
Alright, we're going to move on from that now. | ||
We'll be taking your calls throughout the second hour of today's program. | ||
I'll go ahead and give out the phone number now if you want to call in. | ||
It's 1-877-789-2539. | ||
That's 1-877-789-2539. | ||
And crew, I think, I don't know if I told you, but I put in a new video called Edit. | ||
Starts with the word Edit. Alright, so we'll play that second. | ||
First, I want to play the original. | ||
So this is a little editing I was doing during the commercial breaks here. | ||
Chelsea Handler has posted just the most depressing video I've ever seen in my life. | ||
It's so sad. But she seems very happy in it, which makes the whole thing all the more sad, in my opinion. | ||
Let's go now to that Chelsea Handler video. | ||
I can't find which one it is. | ||
Yes, let's go to clip number six here. | ||
Chelsea Handler, A Day in the Life. | ||
unidentified
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Let's watch. This is a day in the life of a childless woman. | |
I wake up at 6 a.m. | ||
I remember that I have no kids to take to school, so I take an edible, masturbate, and go back to sleep. | ||
I wake up at 12.30 p.m. | ||
and get ready for a busy day of doing whatever the f*** I feel like. | ||
I put on my most impractical and stylish shoes since I won't be chasing a child around the grocery store. | ||
I go to my fave spa in Paris to grab a croissant. | ||
I do a meditation sesh on the plane since I have no screaming kids, allowing me all the time in the world to become enlightened. | ||
The weightlessness of my existence has granted me superhuman powers. | ||
I teleport myself back home. | ||
Then I get ready for a night out with whatever hot guy I met on Raya that morning. | ||
I call up a babysitter and tell her that I don't need her since I still don't have kids. | ||
Now it's time for a workout, so I hit Mount Everest for a quick climb. | ||
I invent a time machine. | ||
Go back in time and kill Hitler. | ||
Freeze, you bastard! | ||
It's amazing what you can do when you have this much free time. | ||
And that's a day in the life of a childless woman. | ||
You ever just wonder how these people got famous in the first place? | ||
Oof. I mean, you think... | ||
It'd at least be funny... | ||
It's just... Right? | ||
And there's a lot to say about this, but I went ahead and just swapped the audio with a different audio from a different video that I think is actually more informative as to what exactly is going on here. | ||
Let's roll the Chelsea Handler video, this time with the audio from a YouTube video called Nine Signs Someone Is A Narcissist. | ||
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Let's watch. The signature characteristics of many personality disorders can be quite unpleasant, such as the case of narcissistic personality disorder. | |
The NPD individual will often overlook or ignore many of these traits that make them unlikable. | ||
They constantly need to be admired. | ||
If you've seen a narcissist, maybe you've seen that they almost swagger, oozing conceit and arrogance with every breath. | ||
They may look like they possess tremendous confidence, but it's not enough. | ||
They need constant admiration. | ||
To them, there's no greater rush than being put on a pedestal and worshipped by their fans and followers. | ||
They see themselves as more attractive than they really are. | ||
Despite the fact that everyone should feel attractive, there's a fine line... | ||
Oh. | ||
I glitched out. | ||
There's a fine line between being self-confident and having a delusion, is what it was saying. | ||
It's just narcissism. | ||
It's just self-worship. And it's off-putting. | ||
It's weird. It's not attractive. | ||
I mean, that video was just an Andrew Tate video, but with an old woman instead of Andrew Tate. | ||
That's all it was, right? Then I go out and I get a chick, and then I go fly to Paris. | ||
I'm super rich, and you're not. | ||
It's just like, blech. | ||
unidentified
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Okay. She's literally the female Andrew Tate. | |
Dude, you just nailed it. Yeah, she's the female Andrew Tate. | ||
Here's some other things. Here's some other nice facts and figures here. | ||
Chelsea Handler. Used to be a comedian. | ||
She was never funny, but that doesn't matter if you know the right people. | ||
She's 50 years old, meaning that if she had her children at 30, they would be adults now. | ||
She could do all of this stuff and also have adult children to fulfill her life. | ||
It's actually very simple. She's also a multi-millionaire, meaning that she could and would hire people to do all the things that she's talking... | ||
Do you think she goes grocery shopping ever? | ||
She never goes grocery. She has people to grocery shop for her. | ||
Do you think she would be taking her kids to school? | ||
I doubt she even drives herself anywhere. | ||
She's got a driver. She's got a private jet. | ||
She's a multi-millionaire. | ||
So it's like... Having a kid, she wouldn't be losing out on anything. | ||
Her life would be fulfilled and probably worth living and she wouldn't feel this necessity to make these pathetic, desperate videos to try to make her own life choices seem valid in other people's lives. | ||
People with kids don't have to validate why they have kids. | ||
They're just playing with their kids and having a great time. | ||
If you're like, I'm happier without kids, they're just like, oh, I'm sorry, what? | ||
I'm drawing a Barney right now. | ||
It's very fun. What are you doing? | ||
All right, welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
I honestly don't care if you don't want to have kids. | ||
If you don't want to have kids, that's fine. | ||
It's your choice. Or if something has made it to where you can have kids, or something tragic has happened... | ||
I hate to think that people like that think I'm making fun of them. | ||
I'm not. But also, if you're going to sit there and flaunt not having kids as if it makes you better than people who have kids, I'm going to point out how asinine and delusional that is. | ||
It's insane. Apparently, Patty from Boston wants to talk about my obsession with reproduction. | ||
Yes, my instinct. | ||
My innate instinct to want to see the race progress. | ||
To see human beings flourish. | ||
It's an obsession I have. | ||
Let's go to Patty in Boston. I wasn't even going to go to calls right now, but I saw that and it falls in line with what I'm talking about. | ||
Patty in Boston. My obsession with the continuation of the human race. | ||
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Kind of weird, isn't it? Yeah, I think it's pretty bizarre. | |
I think that this is a right-wing thing that crossed up over the last couple of years that I think is really strange. | ||
And you hear it on Tucker Carlson and all sorts of right-wing shows. | ||
People are almost shaming couples who don't want to have children. | ||
And I've got to say, look, I've been married for eight-plus years now and know my wife for more than 20 years. | ||
And we just decided a long time ago we didn't want to have kids. | ||
And that was nobody's business. | ||
But all of a sudden, it's Tucker Carlson's business. | ||
It's your business. It's Owen's business. | ||
Everybody's up in my business. Hold on, hold on, hold on. | ||
No, no, I get it. | ||
I get it. No, no, I'm on your side, Patty. | ||
I'm on your side. I just said, I think, you know... | ||
If you don't want to have kids, that's fine. | ||
That's your choice. Am I the one that made that video of Chelsea Handler? | ||
Did I start that conversation? | ||
Or are people without kids trying to propagandize people into not having kids? | ||
And this is the thing with liberals. | ||
They never notice what they do. | ||
They never notice that they're the ones that start these issues. | ||
Everybody just used to have kids. | ||
It was the liberals and leftists who were literally telling people don't have kids. | ||
There are big signs, you know, get sterilized. | ||
You know, in Austin, there's big billboards that are like, the best thing you can do for humanity is to get your stuff snipped off and not have kids anymore. | ||
So, like, does that ever enter into your mind or do you only see the reaction to that Because I get it. If all you saw was the reaction, it would seem insane. | ||
Just like it would seem insane if, you know, some guy was jumping up or down on a car in a parking lot because you refused to acknowledge that he was being chased by a rabid dog, right? | ||
Like, if you're only taking the reaction, I can see how it seems insane. | ||
Do you not notice that there's an antenatal movement that's happening right now? | ||
I'm very confused at this. | ||
All right. My problem is that I hear people saying that it is somehow the white man's job to reproduce because we're having this great replacement situation going on. | ||
And you hear it on Tucker Carlson and Fox News all the time. | ||
You know, white people need to have more children. | ||
Everybody needs to have more. Did I say anything about white people? | ||
There you go again, like putting words in our mouths. | ||
But also, also... | ||
Isn't it the people that aren't having kids that should probably have kids? | ||
Don't you think the Japanese should have kids since they're having an infertility crisis and a population crash? | ||
I don't think the people in Nigeria whose average reproduction is like seven kids per adult, I don't think they need to be encouraged anymore. | ||
I think it's good they have lots of kids. | ||
They don't need to be encouraged. It's the people who live in countries with a less-than-replacement-level population creation that need to be told to... | ||
unidentified
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Procreate. What are you opposing? | |
I cannot believe that I am having a conversation with somebody I know who is a libertarian. | ||
And I'm taking the libertarian position of mind your own damn business. | ||
My favorite Hank Williams song is mind your own business. | ||
unidentified
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Because if you're minding your own business, you won't be minding mine. | |
But you refuse to acknowledge that there's an antenatal movement going on that we are reacting to. | ||
No, because that's as real as the Easter Bunny. | ||
Okay, so we're not looking at posters that say get sterilized. | ||
We aren't showing on screen right now. | ||
Nobody cares. Oh, nobody cares. | ||
Nobody cares, right. So you start it. | ||
You start a movement. | ||
You start a propaganda campaign. | ||
We react, and they're like, why are you obsessed with this? | ||
Liberals, folks. I can't deal with them. | ||
with them. | ||
It's insane. | ||
unidentified
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All right. | |
Welcome back, folks. | ||
I don't know how to deal with these. | ||
I don't know how to deal with these people, man. . | ||
It's something pathological, honestly. | ||
It's like cult programming of some sort. | ||
I actually noticed this. I was going to talk about this anyway. | ||
I didn't even bother, though, because it's just kind of a side issue, but now it's a thing, so I guess we're going to do it. | ||
The same thing happened with... | ||
There's some guy... | ||
So since I got my old Twitter account back, there's all these people that I used to follow that I'd completely... | ||
Literally had forgotten existed. | ||
And then I got back on my old Twitter account and I was seeing all these people pop up again. | ||
I'm like, oh yeah. I forgot that these people are out there saying stuff. | ||
It's just terrible. This guy's name's Kyle Kalinsky, I think. | ||
And he posts an image of... | ||
And he's like, let's check in, see if the far right is still laser-focused on helping the working class. | ||
And it's a picture of two people on Twitter saying, huh, they're bringing Barney back. | ||
Gee, I hope it's not woke-ified. | ||
I hope it's not some horrific transgender abomination version of Barney. | ||
Right, and the response to this is condescension. | ||
It's sarcasm. | ||
Here it is. Checking in on far-right Twitter, and they're laser-focused on helping the working class. | ||
Bridget Gabriel says, Barney is returning. | ||
They better not make him woke. Someone responds, Barney will probably go by Barnett. | ||
Okay, pretty funny. Who cares? But remember, AOC did the same thing at the Web... | ||
I think it was the Webstation of Government... | ||
Committee that she's on, right? | ||
Where it's like, here we are talking about how the deep state is turning our various spy agencies against the American people. | ||
And she's like, we could be dealing with prescriptions! | ||
We could be dealing with the working class! | ||
And it's just like, it's fine, lady. | ||
Calm the hell down. You are the ones that started all of this. | ||
Like, we have to react to you. | ||
We have to respond to you. But they literally think... | ||
The reason I didn't want to cover this is because I couldn't think of a good way to put it to where it, like, crystallizes what's going on here. | ||
To where they honestly feel like they should be permitted to just force their ideas on everybody. | ||
And that any response that the people have is somehow either hypocritical because they should be focusing on something else. | ||
Or is an attack acting like they're completely blind to the fact that they started it. | ||
That they are the ones that were pushing things that we are reacting to. | ||
So they push antinatalism and then you go, actually you should have kids and it's not evil to want children. | ||
And they're like, why are you obsessed with pushing people to have kids? | ||
And it's like, we're responding, you freaking weirdos. | ||
You're the ones that weaponize these various factors of government against the American people. | ||
We respond to that. | ||
And they're like, why are you focusing on this? | ||
And it's just like... So it's honestly like a pathology. | ||
It's honestly like a mental illness these people have. | ||
Unless they're choosing to do it, these are the only options. | ||
Either they are willfully blind to their own actions that cause the reaction, and this is the narcissist aspect of all of it, right? | ||
They cannot be self-reflective. | ||
They cannot think that they themselves did anything wrong. | ||
They have to project everything they do onto everybody else. | ||
You know, and it's either willful or it's just a pathology. | ||
It's something wrong with their brain. | ||
But it's got to be one of those two things. | ||
And it's continuous and it's forever and it just happens over and over, right? | ||
Or, you know, and it's the same thing like trying to And honestly, I mean, you just go on and on about this, right? | ||
Checking in on far right Twitter, see if they're laser focused on helping the working class. | ||
You know, you know what's affecting the working class right now? | ||
Is that they can't afford to send their kids to private schools and can't afford to stay home and homeschool them. | ||
So they have to send their kids to public schools. | ||
And in public school, their children are being shown pornography. | ||
And being told to go into a closet and change into, boys changing into a little dress. | ||
And don't tell your parents, but we're going to transition you secretly at school. | ||
Yeah, I think working class people are being affected by that and need to be protected from you psychopaths who are going after their children. | ||
So yeah, it actually is about helping the working class because they don't have the time or the energy to deal with the continuous onslaught that they're facing. | ||
By people with seemingly infinite time and infinite money to try to propagandize and subvert their entire nation. | ||
So yeah, we have to protect the working class while they're out there working and you people are being funded by billionaires to castrate their children. | ||
Yeah, we have to protect them from you. | ||
You freaking psychopaths. | ||
Again, it really, it's just like widespread mental illness on a level that is truly absurd. | ||
I mean, they just don't care. | ||
They really just don't care. | ||
We're going to go to your phone calls now. | ||
I've got more videos that I really need to get to, but we'll go to your phone calls first. | ||
Let's go to Angus in Pittsburgh. | ||
Thanks for calling in, Angus. | ||
You're calling in about Russia and Ukraine, I guess. | ||
unidentified
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You're on the air. No, my point was, Harrison, first of all, happy Valentine's Day. | |
Valentine's Day. Make sure you kiss your sweetheart. | ||
We don't know how much time we all have left. | ||
Yeah, Vladimir Putin, why not? | ||
Why shouldn't we trust Vladimir Putin? | ||
Maybe your staff can pull up a young picture of Vladimir Putin. | ||
This guy tried to join the KGB, the communists. | ||
No, he was in the KGB. He was a KGB member. | ||
unidentified
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Well, no, no. He tried to join when he was 14 years old, and they wouldn't allow him to join. | |
That was a communist organization. | ||
Now he says he's Orthodox Christian. | ||
The other thing about Vladimir Putin recently, within the last few months, was he wanted to get all of his military injected with the shots. | ||
He knows fully well that those shots are dangerous. | ||
It was a different shot, though. - Yeah. | ||
Russia had their own shot. Okay, maybe they got a sugar shot, right? | ||
Or a vitamin C shot. I don't know. | ||
But that's what he was doing. | ||
Now he says he's an Orthodox Christian. | ||
I don't believe... | ||
I think they're all working together. | ||
I actually believe Elon Musk is the Antichrist. | ||
I believe he just took over Twitter. | ||
I believe he's going to run for president in 2024. | ||
And I believe he's going to get shot or killed or something. | ||
Elon Musk. Yeah, Elon Musk. | ||
And then he's going to hook himself into a quantum computer with his Neuralink or something and say he's God. | ||
Yeah. Yeah, that's the whole picture. | ||
I think they're all working together. | ||
It sounds crazy, but I think they're all working. | ||
I think all these leaders are all bought and paid for, blackmailed, and bought and paid for, and I think we're all in serious danger. | ||
I mean, I agree with you about halfway, but also you trust the people that prove themselves to be trustworthy, or you trust people... | ||
unidentified
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I trusted Bolsonaro in Brazil, or Argentina. | |
I trusted him. Anybody that actually does what's right, they get attacked. | ||
I think that Marjorie Taylor Greene might get assassinated, just like the other ones, the Republicans. | ||
I think that you guys should amp up your security. | ||
I think that we're all in serious danger, every one of us, even people that call in, including myself. | ||
I think all of us are in danger. | ||
If these crazy people are not stopped, we are in serious danger. | ||
Yeah, I mean, I agree with that. | ||
I definitely don't think Putin is on the side of these people. | ||
And again, it's just like, because when he says things, typically, if I know whether they're true or not, they're true, what he's saying. | ||
So, you know, you've got... | ||
unidentified
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Okay, do you believe he's an Orthodox Christian? | |
Yes. An Orthodox Russian Christian. | ||
You really believe that? Yes. | ||
But he tried to join the KGB. That's a killer organization. | ||
Yeah. Have you ever read a book about what it was like to live in communist Russia? | ||
So Putin's mother was a very faithful Orthodox Christian who kept her faith alive throughout the oppression under the communists. | ||
And then when the communist party fell, Russia was taken over by oligarchs. | ||
And for several years, almost more than a decade, Russia was kept in... | ||
Yeah, I think. | ||
Like, way of life and their technology and the westernization of Russia happened very rapidly under him. | ||
So, I mean, that's history. | ||
That's what Putin did. | ||
He was in the KGB at a time when to refuse to be in the KGB was to be sent to the gulags. | ||
So I need to have some empathy for these people. | ||
All right, welcome back, folks. | ||
We'll go out to your phone calls momentarily. | ||
unidentified
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I just want to go to this video first. | |
DeMar Hamlin, the football player who collapsed and for a brief time died on the field before being resuscitated, finally gave an interview about what happened. | ||
And when asked the reason the doctors gave for his heart stopping, he had a very interesting response. | ||
Let's go now to clip number nine. | ||
unidentified
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From the ICU, the question on so many minds, what caused his heart to stop beating? | |
You're 24, peak physical condition, could run circled around me right now. | ||
How did doctors describe what happened to you? | ||
Um... That's something I want to stay away from. | ||
I know from my experience, the NFL, they do more tests than anything. | ||
And in the course of you having your physicals, did anybody ever come back with any, say you had a heart issue or anything that was abnormal? | ||
Honestly, no. I've always been a healthy, young, fit, Okay, well, Well, it was the vaccine, so I hope that cleared that up. | ||
I'd rather not talk about that. | ||
Something I'd rather not get into. | ||
Yeah, I can understand why. | ||
I actually can't understand why. | ||
I cannot imagine nearly dying because somebody forced me to get a vaccine and then not telling people that that's what it was. | ||
was. | ||
I honestly can't imagine that. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I can't imagine, but hey, you know, I can't imagine a lot of things people do out there these days. - It's like it's a suicide cult, so I can't imagine being in a suicide cult, I guess. | ||
Let's go to your phone calls now. | ||
Christopher in New York, you say an Outer Limits episode explained the UFO balloons. | ||
A little bit of predictive programming then. | ||
unidentified
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Thanks for calling in, Christopher. Yes, there was an episode from The Outer Limits from 1963. | |
It's called The Architects of Fear, starring Robert Culp. | ||
And the storyline is that World War III, or back then, whatever it was, was going to be imminent. | ||
That scientists surgically altered a person, Robert Culp, into an alien. | ||
And then they would say the alien invasion is imminent in the hope to stop World War III. But more important than that, that's interesting, but more important than that, Chicken egg yolk antibodies. | ||
They have PubMed. | ||
PubMed is a peer-reviewed studies around the world that are peer-reviewed say that chicken yolk antibodies Help stop COVID, too. | ||
So, yeah, this was going around a couple weeks ago. | ||
We had raw egg nationalists on the day that that broke, but then our editor, Reese, actually was reading through the study and discovered something interesting, and I think most people missed this. | ||
They're talking about chickens who had been vaccinated. | ||
The chickens who had been vaccinated had antibodies in their egg yolks. | ||
So it wasn't just regular chickens. | ||
It was chickens who had been vaccinated. | ||
So that's sort of a key aspect of that that I think a lot of people missed, if you don't read the whole thing. | ||
unidentified
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But also, the chicken feed that made chickens have no AIDS. That's a big thing. | |
And I'll tell you something else. | ||
You said, I think it was you that said, they won't try one thing against you. | ||
They'll try like seven, eight, nine, and they'll go down the line. | ||
And this is part of it. | ||
If chicken, eggs, yolks can help people fight SARS, they don't want it. | ||
Because their whole thing is to depopulate the world. | ||
Yeah, well, I mean, yeah, they don't want... | ||
Farming at all. | ||
They don't want natural food production at all. | ||
They literally would rather have food production be a process of growing seaweed in an underground vault and then extracting it into some sort of fake meat. | ||
You know, to sell a slop. | ||
I mean, no, yeah. They're trying to destroy farming in and of itself. | ||
The natural way where humans can just exist and just grow things and just take advantage of the bounty of the earth. | ||
That is what they hate. | ||
They're in competition with God. | ||
See, they're mad that God has given us all this for free when they think they can destroy all the free versions and then monetize the... | ||
I mean, that's what it's all about. | ||
So you're right about the chicken eggs being a part of this. | ||
But again, if you go to that study, it says that egg yolks from immunized chickens can help prevent COVID. So it's essentially saying that the antibodies get passed on to the eggs, which to me is, again, sort of Horrifying. | ||
I mean, you talk about biblical, where it's like this attack's not just against humans. | ||
They're literally changing the genome of animals as well as they pull this off. | ||
But you're right, Christopher. | ||
I mean, it's an attack against the natural way of life. | ||
Let's go to Thomas in Denver. | ||
You want to talk about the Project Blue Beam distraction. | ||
unidentified
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Go ahead, Thomas. Well, what I got to say, I mean, all of a sudden we're dealing with UFOs, right? | |
Jets are firing rockets. | ||
First it was the Chinese spy balloon, even though it wasn't even the Chinese spy balloon. | ||
I believe it was a co-op by the deep state knowing that the Pentagon admitted on launching these things. | ||
But now we got another distraction. | ||
Aliens! Which we all knew that this was going to happen from the beginning. | ||
Like, now we're on the verge of World War III with the whole Ukraine-Russia because of the neo-Nazi government. | ||
And the puppet Zelensky going out to Putin. | ||
Oh, now we have train derailments, launching dangerous chemicals into the air in Ohio. | ||
And from what I heard this morning, Texas now. | ||
So here we go. | ||
I mean, they're trying to do everything they can to keep us distracted, saying, oh, an alien invasion. | ||
Oh, we're launching rockets, even though Biden and his administration are sending over our weapons, our tanks, to go fight a country that we should not be fighting with. | ||
But they just want us all in the dark. | ||
It's like 1984, George Orwell is just happening before our eyes. | ||
They want us to feel bad for certain things, even though they don't want us thinking for ourselves. | ||
But on this project, Bluebeam, it's interesting what we are seeing right now. | ||
Like, where's the evidence of the fallen flying saucers that they're shooting down? | ||
Like, let's see the debris that our jets are shooting down. | ||
There has not been any evidence besides what we're hearing about From the Biden administration, the press conference, which, that woman's crazy. | ||
She's not really giving out any answers. | ||
And Kirby, I mean, the biggest sleazebag, like, they're not really wanting to answer our questions. | ||
They just want to be like, oh, here's what's going on. | ||
And then they leave, and we see that they're not really calling on our people on answering our questions. | ||
Like, that's right there. | ||
That's messed up. That's against us. | ||
No, you're exactly right. | ||
We're being attacked on all sides. | ||
And, you know, honestly... | ||
If they wanted, they could just do it. | ||
They could just go, we're being attacked by aliens, and everybody would lock themselves in their home just like they did for COVID. Welcome back, folks. | ||
This is the American Journal. | ||
Here's some breaking information about the shooting that happened yesterday at Michigan State University. | ||
From twitchy.com, MSU shooter convicted felon. | ||
Anthony McRae's background, very, very inconvenient for gun grabbers. | ||
You saw the typical responses yesterday when news of an active shooter broke out. | ||
Saw people on Twitter and elsewhere saying it's time to ban assault rifles. | ||
Those dang white supremacist shooters, we have to stop them. | ||
It's just, it's just one of those things, isn't it? | ||
None of their proposals would do anything to accomplish the problems that they actually are trying to solve. | ||
Not even a little bit. | ||
Doesn't matter. They are not dedicated to these movements because of logic or reason. | ||
They're dedicated to them because of ideological insanity. | ||
Color us shocked, they say. | ||
The Michigan State University 43-year-old Anthony McRae has a history of weapons and not in a good way. | ||
Seems he's been arrested in the past for breaking gun laws. | ||
And if those precious gun laws actually worked, McRae would never have been able to get the gun in the first place. | ||
And yet here we are, another horrific shooting and the left is still screeching about the gun. | ||
It's illegal to get a gun. | ||
But he did it somehow. | ||
What? What? State officials Tuesday identified 43-year-old convicted felon Anthony McRae as the attacker who shot and killed three people and wounded five others in Michigan State University. | ||
McRae has a history with firearms. | ||
He was sentenced to 18 months in state prison November 2019 after being convicted of possessing a loaded firearm in a vehicle. | ||
He was released from supervision May 2021. | ||
Wait, you mean a convicted felon ignored the law? | ||
Get out of here! Look at all those gun laws. | ||
Democrats love to pretend to make a difference, not making a damn bit of difference over under on how quickly this story disappears. | ||
Yeah, not convenient, unfortunately, for the people who want to use tragedy to take your constitutional rights. | ||
Again, it's just, you know, would you keep going to a doctor that kept misdiagnosing your issue and giving you medicine that not only did not solve the thing you went in there for, but also gave you horrendous secondary effects? | ||
Would you keep going to that doctor? | ||
These people just keep going to that doctor. | ||
That's just, it's... | ||
They're going to do it, though. | ||
They're going to ban guns. | ||
And they're going to come after guns, and they'll do it one by one. | ||
They'll do it with SWAT team raids on just normal people who own a lot of guns. | ||
And they'll rush in, and if you try to oppose them, they'll kill you. | ||
And they'll take your guns, and they'll do it piece by piece, right? | ||
One person by one person, so you don't even have time to organize. | ||
If you do try to organize, and then they'll stick the military on you, you would think that the American military wouldn't attack the American people But our American military has been purged of patriots and anybody who shows any appreciation for the historical reality of America and is not wholly dedicated to the New World Order masters that they currently serve. | ||
So they're not going to have any qualms about firing on the American people. | ||
They're going to be radicalized against you. | ||
Just like the FBI has been. | ||
They also might just be foreigners, right? | ||
They might just be people from other countries who... | ||
I think a quick way to get into America is to join the army. | ||
They might not even know what constitutional rights are. | ||
People in America don't know it. | ||
How are we going to expect people not from this country to? | ||
So that's all coming. | ||
I mean, we could stop it now. We could just stop all of this now. | ||
But that's a choice that we have to make. | ||
And everybody would just rather keep acting surprised as we're attacked over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over again. | ||
So we'll be here to document it. | ||
Let's go out to the phone calls. | ||
Andrew from New York has called in. | ||
You're red-pilled. You say there must be answers. | ||
I have a few answers, Andrew. | ||
unidentified
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Go ahead. In Fort Worth, Pennsylvania, Senator. | |
So, um... I guess it's like going to school when I was younger, it was like, hearing all the anti-white, anti-US, that's garbage, and seeing how all the people were mind-controlled. | ||
They went from yo-yos to scooters to Pokemon and all the stuff. | ||
Yeah, trends. No, that's a good point. | ||
They've weaponized trends, essentially. | ||
And you're right. It used to be fairly, you know, unimportant, right? | ||
It was like yo-yos were a trend. | ||
Everybody had to have a yo-yo. | ||
Pokemon card. You know, it used to be weaponized by... | ||
Yo-yos are cool, dude. Yo's are awesome. | ||
Got that X-Brain? Yo. | ||
Alright, let's not get into the yo-yo topic. | ||
I love yo-yos. | ||
Yeah, jump Pokemon. Right, it wasn't being used to do anything other than make money for toy companies. | ||
Now, it's being weaponized to destroy your child's chance at a future and to make them hate themselves and to cause irreconcilable differences in the population of the United States in order to bring about the chaos that requires an authority to step in and set things right. | ||
It's all a massive plan and... | ||
It's all right out there in the open. | ||
I mean, again, you can stop this, you can prevent this, you can get involved and combat this, or you can just watch it happen from the sidelines. | ||
I think we'll stay involved. | ||
Thank you very much. Let's go to Hobbs in Nebraska. | ||
You want to talk about the balloons in the Nord Stream pipeline. | ||
So, let me get you. | ||
You think the balloons are just a distraction from the revelation that it was America that did the Nord Stream pipeline? | ||
Uh... Yes, there's a big disparity between what I think it is and what I desperately want it to be. | ||
But before we get into that, I have to say that I've noticed your trouble in pronouncing the Transportation Secretary's last name. | ||
Your predecessor, David Knight, was the only person in the news that I've ever seen correctly and consistently pronounce it. | ||
Booty Gay. | ||
Yes, Booty Gay is the correct pronunciation of that man's last name. | ||
Citation? Trust me, bro. | ||
Okay. Thank you. | ||
I'll get it right from now on. | ||
Right, right. So anyways, yeah. | ||
So what I desperately want it to be is just some insignificant Pacific island nation releasing a bunch of weird-shaped balloons into the atmosphere just to mess with people. | ||
But I'm pretty sure that it's China. | ||
Sending these balloons that cost a few thousand dollars tops over our airspace so that we send a multi-million dollar jet fighter with post-flight maintenance schedules that last in the hundreds of man hours and cost hundreds of thousands of dollars to shoot a million dollar missile at these things to take them down while they laugh at us, while we burn our infrastructure and our military material apart. | ||
Yeah, no, you're exactly right. | ||
All very good points. | ||
Yeah, I mean, so we're just being humiliated here. | ||
And that was my take from the beginning. | ||
From the first time there was the Chinese balloon, it was like, okay, this is China showing America that we're not in charge anymore, essentially. | ||
I mean, it's just whizzing on our face, essentially. | ||
Just open disrespect, that's the way that they do things, right? | ||
So that's been mine. | ||
That's been my interpretation for a while. | ||
Would you agree with that? Yeah, they're pantsing us in public, and it's making us look like the international laughingstocks that we are. | ||
I got an opinion on the declining birth rates, too, if you got the time. | ||
Otherwise, I'll let you get back to it. | ||
One minute left, Hobbs. | ||
Alright, so we've seen it throughout history as to the declining birth rates of advanced civilizations. | ||
It always seems to go that as the society gets better, the birth rates decline until eventually you have a massive influx of immigration to fill the gaps of basically the tax burden. | ||
It's what they're after. | ||
And the reason for that is that as the civilization advances, You offload more and more of your personal responsibilities to the state. | ||
Suddenly things like your infrastructure, well, it should be state-sponsored, your healthcare should be state-sponsored, you know, et cetera, et cetera. | ||
And as you're doing that, the state needs more and more money to keep this stuff afloat. | ||
So they start taxing the citizens more. | ||
Well, children cost a lot of money, so rather than I'd like to read a little speech here. | ||
A little speech from a guy you may have heard of. | ||
unidentified
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I'm Augustus Caesar. | |
Says, I'm at a stand how to address myself to you. | ||
Shall I call you citizens? | ||
You have done your part for the ruining of the city. | ||
Shall I call you men? | ||
Will you own you deserve the name? | ||
Shall I call you Romans? | ||
You blush not to take the ready way to blot that name out from under heaven. | ||
I confess myself in some confusion when I consider how ye are endeavoring to frustrate all the designs I've managed on the most mature deliberation for the peopling of Rome. | ||
I'm sorry I have so many to speak to that are like to bring a multitude to a few. | ||
You regard not the care the higher powers have taken to plant the Roman name. | ||
You value not the blood of your fathers shed to preserve it. | ||
You postpone all things to a humor, one which age would confute by sad experience. | ||
Were the commonality infected with this, as with many of your vices, what would become of Rome, nay, of the world of men? | ||
You are some of our principal branches, and voluntary bareness can be none of your glories. | ||
The people imitate you, and posterity may deservedly brand you. | ||
If you shoo them the way to ruin, either all will do as you do. | ||
If not, your viteous singularity renders you justly odious. | ||
You deserve to be hissed off the stage of the world that will alone act such unbecoming parts. | ||
Nay, you deserve their rage that will trample on what is so sacred in the eyes of all men else. | ||
If you find a crowd of followers, the next age will follow your memory with millions of curses. | ||
He's talking to the unmarried men who refuse to have children in Rome. | ||
This was actually a pair of speeches given by Augustus Caesar around, well, somewhere... | ||
Close to the birth of Christ. | ||
And what is this confusion? | ||
Will you profess chastity as vestal virgins? | ||
Then with them you should die if you offend. | ||
But I know none of you live without your woman, both at bed and board. | ||
All this you propose to yourselves is to range wildly. | ||
It is an uncovered brutishness you plead for, or rather have liberty to fill the city with jealousy and murders. | ||
If these bounds you will not be contained in, why may not the thief break over all hedges of the law and keep him from your riches? | ||
No man's So yeah, not a new issue we're dealing with here. | ||
So the other speech he actually gave was to the married men, in which he lavishes them with honors equal to the condemnation he reserves for the unmarried men. | ||
Yeah, it was an issue 2,000 years ago as Rome reached... | ||
A peak of its civilizational advance, and as we reach a peak of our civilizational advance, it affects us as well. | ||
A little bit different, though, because the Romans weren't being poisoned by microplastics that affect your testosterone production or your estrogen balance. | ||
Romans actually did have incredibly effective abortion. | ||
There was an herb that they could eat that would perform abortions. | ||
It was basically a morning-after pill, but it was an herb that they consumed to such an extent that it doesn't exist on Earth anymore. | ||
Thank God, I might add. | ||
But they weren't being poisoned by their water. | ||
They weren't being poisoned by their food. | ||
They certainly weren't being poisoned You know, convinced to take on debt and to go to college and to put off any marriage or having of children until late in life to where you're naturally going to be limited in the number of children you can have. | ||
They had invasions from foreign powers. | ||
But they at least fought them as long as they could. | ||
They weren't until much later than this instance inviting entire nations of people into their borders. | ||
They at least still reserved citizenship for those that deserved it. | ||
They also, you know, didn't have... | ||
They had the corn dole, but they didn't have Social Security and the Ponzi scheme... | ||
That requires people now to bring in millions of people to pump up the economy. | ||
Of course, we've exposed how absurd that is. | ||
In fact, you have places like Sweden and France actually recently. | ||
France was rioting over this a couple weeks ago. | ||
The fact that they're raising the retirement age, saying you can't retire for another couple of years. | ||
Why? Because you have to pay into Social Security. | ||
Why are... Why is Social Security not covering things? | ||
Because so much money is going towards paying for welfare for migrants. | ||
Why did you bring the migrants in? | ||
Because we needed more people to prop up the Social Security net. | ||
Do you get the cyclical, retarded nature of this? | ||
Right? You bring people in to prop up Social Security, but then they all go on welfare. | ||
So then you have to retire later to prop up Social Security to pay for all the people on welfare. | ||
I mean, this is what's happening in Sweden. | ||
I did a big report on this, I think, when I hosted War Room a couple weeks ago. | ||
And it's happening in Ireland. | ||
As we speak with the Irish, I think it was the Irish Times, publishing the article. | ||
Ireland needs 5 million people to prop up the Social Security net. | ||
I mean, they're saying it. It's not speculation. | ||
We're not having to determine what their real... | ||
Motives are from their actions. | ||
They tell us what their motives are, and their motives, especially in the case of Ireland, is to double the population of that island, increase it by 5 million, a population of 5 million increased by 5 million, in order to prop up the Ponzi scheme economy. | ||
Now, call me crazy, I think the economy serves the people, not the other way around. | ||
I don't think you depopulate an island... | ||
And completely replace the population of an island in order to prop up an economy or a market. | ||
But that's what they're doing. The market is more important than the human beings, obviously. | ||
You know, again, this is one of those issues I was talking about before. | ||
Some of the issues we face, we solve tomorrow like that. | ||
You want to close border, close the border. | ||
It's done. Over. Crisis averted, crisis delayed. | ||
It's over. Other problems like fertility aren't going to be solved like that. | ||
But you put a few things in place. | ||
You give tax breaks to people with kids. | ||
You... Really, that could be all you do. | ||
But you do other things. | ||
You just incentivize marriage. | ||
You, as a nation, decide to mock and belittle and humiliate people like Chelsea Handler, who are desperate to convince everybody not to have kids. | ||
And you uplift people who have lots of kids. | ||
I mean, you do that culturally by getting new people in Hollywood. | ||
But Then that would take effect, and we've seen it with Hungary, where they were in a declining population, and they reversed that and are now in an incline of their population's slope in just a couple years. | ||
There were a few simple, like, if you have three kids, you never pay income tax for the rest of your life. | ||
That's all it takes. People go, great, I was going to have kids anyway. | ||
I'll do it even faster now. | ||
That's all it takes. So, I mean, all these problems are very easy to solve. | ||
They're not insurmountable. | ||
They are not the end of the world. | ||
They're choices that the people in charge are making. | ||
As long as those people are still in charge, they'll continue to make those choices. | ||
Until we have four more babies in Hungary, you'll never pay income tax for life, Prime Minister says. | ||
And you see a massive spike that's continuing to rise, and of course that's why Hungary is being threatened with a color revolution as we speak. | ||
Speaking of the immigration crisis, I really want to get somebody from Patriotic Alternative on the show to talk about their actions in the UK. They're having a pretty big effect, but I wanted to point to this flyer. | ||
I don't know if this is real or fake. | ||
The reason I think it's real is because searching for it, I have not found it being fact-checked anywhere. | ||
This is the type of thing where if it gets spread around, the mainstream media is very quick to jump on it and go, oh, no, it's fake. | ||
Nobody ever put that out. I haven't seen that, which makes me think this is real. | ||
Because they're not going to report on this being real. | ||
They're not going to go, Irish people troubled by the flyer that they found on their homes. | ||
They're not going to report that. | ||
They don't care. They're in favor of this. | ||
Here's what the flyer says. | ||
Girls to stay indoors after 6 p.m. | ||
until farther notice. New arrivals to this area are not accustomed to Irish culture norms at this transitionary time. | ||
Thank you for your compliance. | ||
The Irish Center for Diversity, a partnership with Rylitas and Hellerone, which I'm sure I'm pronouncing wrong. | ||
It's probably something in Irish. So again, I don't know if this is real or not. | ||
I know the... Implication is real. | ||
I know that that's true. | ||
I know that whether they get the flyer or not, girls that live around refugee centers are scared to go out at night because of the treatment that they receive. | ||
So they'll keep themselves inside. | ||
They'll imprison themselves in their own home to avoid the harassment and the assaults and the attacks that they face by going out. | ||
So whether it's Sharia law, de facto Sharia law, or just Sharia law by the people who Claim and support Sharia law or whether it's in de facto Sharia law from just the government saying they care about your safety. | ||
So they're going to bring in 500 military-aged men who are pretty open about their desires and why they're coming to Ireland. | ||
And then we're going to put them in the house next door to you and tell you that it's now unsafe to go outside. | ||
You better stay inside for a little while. | ||
So until somebody proves this is fake... | ||
I'm fairly certain this is real. | ||
The Irish Center for Diversity has given flyers out to native Irish people telling the girls to stay inside after 6 p.m. | ||
so as not to be attacked by the new migrants that they are bringing in by the millions, despite the fact that the vast majority of Irish don't want them. | ||
It's not about what you want. It's about what the top of the pyramid can do to you. | ||
We'll be back from the other side. | ||
unidentified
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Stay with us. | |
The world's a stage. | ||
Then is it far-fetched to say that many people simply look the part? | ||
Imagine that a newscaster loses his job and, say, opens a daycare business. | ||
Would you sign your kid up if the owner looked like this? | ||
If asked why you said no, and you did say no, you might say, it was something about his face. | ||
Since we form this opinion about someone in less than 100 milliseconds of seeing them, what data goes into that decision? | ||
Are these judgment calls influenced beyond someone's beauty and attractiveness? | ||
As it turns out, humans have been reading each other's faces for thousands of years. | ||
This practice is called physiognomy. | ||
Physiognomy dates back to ancient Greece and China as a way to predict one's outcomes in life. | ||
In the Middle Ages and beyond, This means that... | ||
unidentified
|
What you learn, what people tell you, your environment affects the expression of your genes. | |
And your genes express it and manifest it on your facial structure. | ||
I know some people say, oh, you should not be so judgmental. | ||
Oh, you should not discriminate. | ||
Science call it profiling. | ||
I like this guy. Skeptics may dismiss Chua's analysis as unscientific, but what if we harnessed the impartial power of artificial intelligence to do the face reading for us? | ||
A study conducted by Stanford professor Dr. | ||
Michal Kaczynski used machine learning to scan thousands of faces in order to predict political orientation, left or right. | ||
The results of the study were shocking. | ||
Once trained on a large enough dataset of faces, the AI was able to predict whether someone was right or left politically with up to 73% accuracy. | ||
Humans attempting the same task performed only slightly better than chance, with a score of 55% accuracy. | ||
In a companion study, the author noted that liberals were more likely to face the camera directly, less likely to express disgust, and were more likely to express surprise. | ||
Soyboys! Another machine learning study conducted by the same Dr. | ||
Kaczynski also found that AI was able to predict whether or not someone was homosexual based on their face alone. | ||
Given a single facial image, a classifier could correctly distinguish between gay and heterosexual men in 81% of cases, and in 74% of cases for women. | ||
Humans once again performed poorly compared to the machine, with scores of 61% accuracy for men and 54% for women. | ||
Leftist media naturally lost their minds at this and made articles attempting to poke holes in Dr. | ||
Kaczynski's study. What's that? | ||
Making judgments based on outward characteristics? | ||
Who would ever do such a thing? | ||
So is artificial intelligence proving that our story is written on our face? | ||
For now, it appears that the answer is yes. | ||
But we must remember that human interaction is a nuanced, context-heavy phenomenon that is full of exceptions. | ||
Someone with an inviting facial presentation may have horrible intentions within. | ||
Someone with a harsh, uninviting facial presentation may have good intentions within. | ||
Our gut intuition, however, can bridge these gaps of uncertainty and make accurate assessments of someone for us. | ||
All right, folks, I hate to interrupt this report. | ||
I was just really enjoying it. | ||
Incredible stuff. That's, uh, Reese, you can find that on the PsyOpCop channel on Bandit Video called AI Technology Vindicates the Lost Art of Face Reading. | ||
Absolutely brilliant stuff. | ||
That's, of course, the editor of the American Journal, PSYOPCOP, Reese. | ||
Really hilarious stuff. | ||
I was cracking up during that, but also extremely informative. | ||
Please do share that video. | ||
Folks, we're about to be joined by Matt McCauley. | ||
He's a spokesperson for the Greater Idaho Movement. | ||
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unidentified
|
We'll be right back. Welcome back, folks. | |
Third hour has begun here on American Journal. | ||
I'm your host, Harrison Smith, joined today by Matt McCaw. | ||
He is a spokesperson for the Greater Idaho Movement, which advocates uniting conservative counties from rural Oregon with Idaho to deliver them from liberal policies that just don't suit them. | ||
You can find their movement at the website, greateridaho.com, greateridaho.com. | ||
They've actually had some major victories recently, and I'm very excited to celebrate this and find out more about it. | ||
Thanks so much for joining us. Matt McCaw. | ||
unidentified
|
Absolutely. Thanks for having me, Harrison. | |
I'm very happy to have you, and congratulations on the success that you are having right now. | ||
I'm sorry, I think I have a correction. It's greateridaho.org. | ||
If people want to go to the website, it's greateridaho.org, not.com. | ||
That's my mistake. So greateridaho.org. | ||
Tell us, just give us the rundown about you guys' movement, what some of the new advancements have been made. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, so I'll just give you a real brief background on our movement. | |
So, Oregon, people know Oregon and they think of it as a very liberal blue state, but Oregon is like a lot of places in the United States, a lot of states. | ||
It's really one big urban metropolitan area that's very, very blue, and the rest of the state is rural and very conservative. | ||
So, in Oregon, we have this big urban-rural divide between Portland and the west side of the state, and the east side of the state, which is very conservative, And it is very, very similar, the people there in the economy to Idaho. | ||
So the people in Eastern Oregon are socially, culturally, politically similar to Idaho. | ||
And so they have for a long time had this tension because state government policy gets forced on Eastern Oregon that we don't want. | ||
And so we would much rather prefer the state governance of Idaho. | ||
So we came along two years ago and we said we've had this long-term problem where the east side of the state doesn't feel like they're heard, respected, understood by the west side of the state. | ||
And the west side of the state forces policy on us that doesn't make sense for our communities. | ||
What if we took the border between Idaho and Oregon and we simply moved it to where the actual cultural divide is in our state, which is essentially the Cascade Mountain Range? | ||
And so it's important for people to understand borders are a tool and borders are an invisible line that you can place and have been placed wherever they make sense to be put. | ||
So the border between Oregon and Idaho was placed there 160-some years ago. | ||
It made sense 160-some years ago to put the border there. | ||
It no longer makes sense where it's at. | ||
It would make far more sense to move that border, move that state line westward so that the people in eastern Oregon could get state-level governance from Idaho, which matches their values much better than western Oregon does. | ||
So that's the background. | ||
That's the history. That's what we're trying to do. | ||
We've been going county by county in Eastern Oregon. | ||
So over the last two years, we've had 11 counties in Eastern Oregon that have passed ballot measures at the ballot box saying they want their elected leaders to look into moving the border. | ||
And so there's 15 full counties that we're trying to move. | ||
As I said, 11 of those have already voted to say we want our elected leaders to try to make this happen. | ||
And so that's where we're at now. | ||
We've spent two years going to the people saying, do you want We want this to happen. | ||
And what we've heard is resoundingly, yes, we do want this to happen. | ||
There's a solution that makes sense. | ||
We want our elected leaders to move it forward. | ||
So that's where we're at now. | ||
So the big news we had yesterday, we were in Idaho. | ||
I was at the Capitol in Boise yesterday. | ||
The process to move a border is for two states. | ||
To form an interstate compact or a contract that moves it. | ||
So we were in the Capitol yesterday because the Idaho legislature is moving forward a bill in the House, and it's a memorial that's inviting the Oregon legislature to begin talks on this. | ||
So we were in committee yesterday. | ||
That bill got moved out of committee overwhelmingly positively, and it will go to a House—the floor vote in the House in Idaho. | ||
So this is the next step in the process for making this happen. | ||
Get the two state legislatures talking. | ||
Well, I think that's brilliant. | ||
Of course, I have a lot of questions, you know, just hearing you speak. | ||
I'm inspired by this. | ||
Obviously, I'm a big fan of the idea of Texas secession, but that's sort of entirely different. | ||
That's about wanting to break away from the federal government. | ||
This is just a simple matter of almost just swapping state governments. | ||
I mean, my first question is, like, who would oppose this? | ||
This seems like a natural thing if people go, well, you know, everybody in this county wants to be under that state. | ||
Are they just not letting you? | ||
Is it Oregon that's opposing? | ||
Are there any barriers opposing this, or is this just going to sail through? | ||
Who's opposing this, I guess, is my main question. | ||
unidentified
|
Well, there is opposition, and primarily, Harrison, our opposition is just this Status quo. | |
This is not a solution. | ||
This solution makes sense. | ||
And when we ask people, do you want this to happen? | ||
People say, yes, it makes total sense. | ||
In the United States, we've always wanted to match people to the government that matches their values. | ||
We put a lot of effort to let people choose the government that they want that makes sense for their communities and matches their values. | ||
So when we ask people in Eastern Oregon, do you want this to happen? | ||
Overwhelmingly, they say yes. | ||
And that polling that was done in Western Oregon last year, 68% of people in Western Oregon said we should And in Idaho, the polling, it was over two to one when they asked Idahoans, should we move Eastern Oregon counties that are similar to you, vote similar to you, and financially would be a benefit to you? | ||
Would you support moving those counties into Idaho governance? | ||
Over two to one, voters said yes, they would like to do that. | ||
So there's a lot of popular support. | ||
people understand why this solution makes a ton of sense. | ||
Our barrier is getting over this hump of the state of Oregon has looked the exact same way for 160 plus years. | ||
And moving, using a border and moving a border to be a solution, a political tool to solve problems, is not something that's been done in a long time in this country. | ||
So that's really our biggest barrier is getting people to understand that you can do this, There's a legal pathway for it. | ||
There's a precedent for it. | ||
It has been done in the United States multiple times. | ||
Oregon and Washington just moved their border. | ||
They adjusted their border in 1958. | ||
And they didn't move it a lot, but there is a process there. | ||
So it's legal. | ||
It's doable. It's a matter of political will. | ||
And just getting people to understand that this is doable, this is possible, is our biggest barrier at this point. | ||
That's changing, Harrison. Every step forward we take, more and more people come on board and they say, oh man, this is possible. | ||
This does make sense. | ||
Let's make this happen. It doesn't just seem possible. | ||
It seems easy. It seems like it wouldn't be that big of a deal, honestly. | ||
This isn't anything radical. | ||
It seems perfectly reasonable to just, you know, you swap the flags and that's – I think it's exciting. | ||
I think it would be a really fun thing to see happen. | ||
And, of course, you know, it makes perfect sense for people, you know, in the eastern part of Oregon to not want to be really under the thumb of the cities in the western part of Oregon who don't even pretend to take their cares into account. | ||
I mean, really, it's a lot more about enforcing things on them than actually listening to them. | ||
So I get why they would want to leave. | ||
I also get why Idaho would want to almost be reinforced by these eastern counties. | ||
I talk to a lot of people in Idaho. | ||
There's a lot of great activism that goes on there trying to keep Idaho as conservative as it is. | ||
Is that an aspect that Idahoans are taking into account? | ||
Going, hey, if we get these, you know... | ||
Hardcore, you know, rural conservatives into our state, you know, that'll help bolster our, you know, being a stronghold of conservatism. | ||
Is that being taken into account as well? | ||
unidentified
|
Absolutely. Idaho is a very conservative state. | |
Their legislature is like 80-20 Republican. | ||
They're very conservative. They're very rural. | ||
And they have traditional values. | ||
And Eastern Oregonians have all those same things. | ||
We vote the same way. We live our lives the same way. | ||
We make our livings the same way. | ||
The people in Idaho absolutely see the value of bringing 400,000 Eastern Oregonians that have similar values to them. | ||
But, you know, they don't want their state to change. | ||
They don't want their state to drift leftward as population centers grow in Idaho. | ||
They want Idaho to stay Idaho. | ||
And bringing us in, bringing 400,000 very similar and conservative people into their state would benefit them in that it helps bolster, as you mentioned, it helps bolster their values. | ||
in that you've got all these people that have similar values and want Idaho. | ||
We'd be coming to Idaho because we want what Idaho's got. | ||
We don't want to come to Idaho and change it. | ||
We want to come to Idaho and bolster it. | ||
And it makes perfect sense. | ||
I mean, if you're more similar, you know, culturally, ideologically to the people 100 miles to your right than the people 100 miles to your left, it makes sense that you'd want to be with the right people. | ||
I mean, it all just makes so much sense to me. | ||
And it's just, it's almost bizarre we have to, like, explain this. | ||
But I'm just excited that y'all are moving forward because we know that there's... | ||
Sort of a similar movement happening in California, but they want to create a whole new state. | ||
Texas, obviously, a big secession movement here. | ||
That's totally different. But really, you guys are having the most success out of anybody. | ||
So we want to celebrate that and, again, identify how you've achieved that. | ||
Hopefully we can replicate it elsewhere. | ||
unidentified
|
We'll be right back. Welcome back. | |
Ladies and gentlemen, this is the American Journal. | ||
I'm your host, Harrison Smith. My guest is Matt McCall, a spokesperson for the Greater Idaho Movement. | ||
They're making big moves in an attempt to extricate themselves out from under the thumb of the Oregon cities, the rural parts of eastern Oregon, would simply like to join Idaho. | ||
I think it makes perfect sense, and so do a lot of the people who live there and a lot of people in charge. | ||
In fact, 68% of those polled in northwest Oregonians say they want to at least have a hearing about this and figure out what it's going to be. | ||
And this is part of a wider trend that we're seeing across the United States. | ||
People being fed up with their local governments and just wanting to be out from under their thumb. | ||
In fact, there's a story from yesterday here on Gateway Pundit called Moving Onward, the state of New California sends delegates to Washington, D.C. California, very similar situation. | ||
A rural state with blue pockets in these big cities. | ||
And those are the ones that dominate the rest of the state. | ||
They don't want to be a part of that anymore. | ||
My question to you, Matt, is... | ||
Why choose to join Idaho? | ||
Did you consider making a new state and decided to join Idaho? | ||
I'm just wondering, you know, tactically, why choose to join Idaho rather than maybe just declare independence and make a new state altogether? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, that's a great question. | |
So there have been movements, multiple movements throughout the years to get... | ||
This problem of Eastern Oregon being very different than Western Oregon, these urban areas being very different than these rural areas, this is not new. | ||
This has been around for decades, probably longer than decades. | ||
And so over the years, there have been other movements, State of Jefferson, State of Liberty, where people in Eastern Oregon or people in rural parts of Northern California and Eastern Washington have... | ||
Wanted to change their state-level governance because the state-level governance was not working and was not matching their values. | ||
The beauty of our movement is that if you're talking about creating a new state, You're talking about—it's a big change, and what we're proposing is a big change, but you're also talking about adding two new senators to the U.S. Senate. | ||
In our current world, where people are so polarized and there's such a focus on the national political power structure, we feel like adding new senators that are going to be conservative or whatever, It just would not. | ||
That is a really high mountain to climb. | ||
And the mountain we've chose to try to climb is already big enough. | ||
We're making it. | ||
But we see this as a much more doable, much simpler solution. | ||
And it doesn't involve creating new states, adding new senators. | ||
It doesn't affect the power structure in Washington, D.C. in any meaningful way. | ||
By moving a border, we can take and get governance that matches people's values for 400,000 people. | ||
And it doesn't really affect other people outside of that. | ||
We just redistricted in the United States and And so the state of Oregon, who'd had five representatives for a very long time, added a sixth this year. | ||
So if we moved these 400,000 people into Idaho governance, it's possible that that representative that represents Eastern Oregon would be an Idaho representative. | ||
So that new representative that was just granted to Oregon would go to Idaho. | ||
But you're talking about only one out of 538 electoral college votes. | ||
And that really would be the extent of the impact nationally. | ||
So we feel like border relocation, moving state lines is much simpler. | ||
There's much less reason for people to oppose it. | ||
And in our case, it makes a ton of sense because Eastern Oregon and Idaho are so similar. | ||
And so if you were drawing a map today, if there were no lines on the map whatsoever, and you were drawing new state lines, you would never think to cut Idaho and Eastern Oregon apart from each other. | ||
Because we're the same people. | ||
We have the same geography, the same economy, the same values. | ||
People in Eastern Oregon, a lot of people in Eastern Oregon do much more business in Boise. | ||
Boise is the big city that's closest to them than they do in Portland. | ||
And so it makes just so much sense. | ||
And it's something that is a common sense solution to That ends up being a win-win for everybody. | ||
And so that's why we focused on this as a strategy. | ||
And I think it's proving out with our success and how far we're getting that that was the right choice. | ||
Yeah, no, I completely agree. | ||
And it does, like I said, just seems, excuse me, it just seems so easy. | ||
It just seems like it's a matter of formality, shake a few hands, sign a few papers, and it's done. | ||
There's no, you know, big debate about what type of government are we going to have and who's going to be in charge. | ||
It's just, we're just going to be a part of Idaho now. | ||
I mean, it really is as simple as that. | ||
I think it's brilliant. | ||
Some are going to just want to leave and take the part of the state to Idaho with them. | ||
Yeah, and they should be allowed to do that. | ||
I mean, again, I don't even understand what the protest against this would be other than they just don't want you to do your own thing. | ||
I don't get that. I wonder, have you tried selling this to the people of Western Oregon by sort of putting on the liberal mask and going, let's kick these rural guys out. | ||
We don't need them anymore. | ||
Kick them out to Idaho. | ||
Have you tried that? Maybe that'll get them on board. | ||
unidentified
|
Well, there are several reasons that we think Western Oregonians—and that actually was part of the polling that was done. | |
They asked, you know, why would you be willing to let them go, or what's the biggest reason why you'd be willing to let Eastern Oregonians go? | ||
So a couple of big reasons that resonate with people in Western Oregon and make sense is that because Eastern Oregon is more rural, it's not quite as wealthy as the West side of the state, and because Oregon uses an income tax— The way that works is they gather taxes from across the state, and then they redistribute those back out. | ||
And because of the system and because of the disparity between the east side wealth and the west side wealth, what ends up happening is that Western Oregon ends up subsidizing Eastern Oregon. | ||
And that works out to about $360 per person. | ||
And Western Oregon every year sends that Eastern Oregon to subsidize Eastern Oregon. | ||
So when that polling was done in last year where they talked to Western Oregonians, they said, how much would you be willing to pay, you know, personally pay to keep Eastern Oregon as part of Western Oregon? | ||
And the number one response was zero. | ||
People in Western Oregon don't want to be paying. | ||
They don't want their tax dollars to be going to Eastern Oregon. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Uh-oh. | ||
Sorry. I think we had a little... | ||
unidentified
|
No, no. Internet out here in Oregon is not always super reliable, Harrison. | |
Well, you know, there's a give and a take. | ||
Internet, not quite so fast. | ||
Beautiful mountain ranges, wildlife. | ||
That's right. It's a give and a take, yeah. | ||
unidentified
|
Internet, not. Yeah. The number one response that Western Oregonians said was, we don't want to pay anything. | |
We would pay zero dollars of our own money to keep Eastern Oregon as part of Oregon. | ||
Only three percent of respondents were willing to pay the amount that they actually send to Eastern Oregon every year. | ||
So it makes far more sense. | ||
Again, for everybody, Western Oregon, they have problems that are specific to Western Oregon. | ||
We don't have huge homeless problems. | ||
We don't have big city problems out here in Eastern Oregon. | ||
So it doesn't make any sense for Western Oregon to be sending their tax dollars to us. | ||
They could keep those tax dollars at home. | ||
They could use them to solve the problems they've got. | ||
And that's what the people want to do. | ||
And the other piece, you kind of mentioned this, Harrison, is people should have government that they want. | ||
People understand their communities the best, and they should have the government that they think they need to make their communities better without interference from people that live hundreds of miles away and have a culture and value set that's very different from them. | ||
So by letting Eastern Oregon go, Eastern Oregon could no longer interfere with Western Oregon, what they want to do policy-wise. | ||
Western Oregon has problems. | ||
You know, everybody knows that they've got their own problems and their own specific things. | ||
I know we know a lot more than we even want to about the problems of Western Oregon. | ||
I mean, it's almost a nationwide problem that goes on up there. | ||
We'll be back on the other side. | ||
GreaterIdaho.org is where you go to support this. | ||
We'll be right back with Matt McCaw. | ||
Don't go anywhere, folks. Alright, welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
Matt McCaw, spokesperson for the Greater Idaho Movement, is my guest. | ||
We're here, really, what I'm doing is celebrating a very rare thing in this business, which is celebrating a victory for just the normal people of America, actually getting what they want from their government. | ||
Well, knock on wood, it's not done yet, but the success that you guys have had in the attempt to Peel away some of the rural counties from Oregon and simply join Idaho up has been really incredible. | ||
I mean, I was surprised how rapidly this has moved. | ||
I mean, you think of a lot of these movements, they take 10, 20 years to get going. | ||
You were just telling me during the break that it was as little as two years ago that people were saying, ah, you're crazy, that'll never happen. | ||
Now there's a bill already being passed. | ||
There's discussions taking place at the highest levels. | ||
How have you guys had such rapid success in all of this? | ||
unidentified
|
I wasn't part of the team that made this decision when we started, but I think the key to our whole movement was we had a good idea and the decision was made to go to the people first. | |
Our strategy was, we had this great idea, and we thought, oh man, this makes perfect sense. | ||
But elected leaders will never move on this until they know that a broad base of people want this to happen. | ||
So our strategy was to go county by county, and that's what we've been doing in the last two years. | ||
And what we've proven through our votes is that the people in Eastern Oregon want this to happen. | ||
They think this is a great idea. | ||
They want their elected leaders to move it forward. | ||
And so now that we've, over two years, 11 out of the 15 counties that we're hoping to move have voted and voted very strongly that they want their elected leaders to do this. | ||
Now our elected leaders, they have the data points they need to know we can move this forward because we know what the people want. | ||
And we can go out on a limb and start this process because we have the backing of the public support behind us. | ||
And so I think that was key, was going and getting these votes on record and saying, look, the people want this. | ||
They want you to move this forward. | ||
Now that we've done that over two years, now our elected leaders are hearing that, and they're advocating, and they're moving. | ||
And to their credit, they're moving these things forward. | ||
They've heard the people, and we're pushing forward. | ||
Yeah, again, I think it's brilliant. | ||
And just racking my mind about why anybody would want to oppose this, I can't come up with a good reason. | ||
In fact, you were talking about some of the financial aspects that Eastern Oregon is maybe subsidized to some degree by people in Western Oregon. | ||
So the people in West are like, we don't want to be subsidizing people in the East. | ||
Let them go. But also, it... | ||
Strangely, it works the other way around. | ||
There's been an economic analysis published last week for the Claremont Institute, which shows that rural Oregon counties would be a net benefit to Idaho financially. | ||
So, Idaho would benefit. | ||
Western Europe would benefit. | ||
Western Oregon would benefit. | ||
Eastern Oregon would benefit. Everybody benefits here, and yet... | ||
Maybe one of the first times I heard about this movement was when The Daily Show did a segment where they were mocking and belittling y'all. | ||
And they had no argument. It was just the typical liberal condescension, just like, we're just going to make fun of these people for no reason, really, but just attempting to make you guys look stupid. | ||
It seemed kind of desperate. | ||
But the question you have to ask is, why do they even care? | ||
And why would they be against this at all? | ||
I mean, what is inspiring the sort of condescending aspect of people from L.A. talking about this? | ||
unidentified
|
Makes no sense. Yeah, you know, I don't know. | |
You always have a segment of people that will think anything that's a new idea is stupid and, you know, like these people are, you know, pie in the sky, wasting their time. | ||
You know, that's fine. | ||
We take that in stride. | ||
We've had plenty of people that thought we were wasting our time and that this was, you know, it could never happen because they haven't seen it happen in their lifetimes. | ||
We don't let that slow us down or bother us. | ||
We know this is a great idea. | ||
We know the public supports it. | ||
We know it makes sense for everybody involved and is a win-win. | ||
And because everything is doable and there's a political process in place and precedence for this to happen, we've known all along this was just a matter of political will, of just getting elected leaders to recognize that this is a win-win for everybody and that the people want it to happen. | ||
And once we get that political will, which we're getting there and we're almost there, where we have elected leaders saying, yeah, this makes sense, let's do this, then we knew we could make progress. | ||
And that's what you're seeing. So just real quick, Harrison, I want to make sure people kind of understand where we're at in the process. | ||
The process for moving a state line is for two states to come together and form an interstate compact. | ||
So it's the two state legislatures. | ||
That's what the Constitution provides is any two states can sit down and decide where it makes sense to have their state line. | ||
And if those two states agree that it would make sense to move their state line to a certain place, then they write a contract that basically codifies that, puts in the details of what assets and debts or whatever are going to go to the new state. | ||
and then that goes to U.S. Congress to be signed off. | ||
It's happened multiple times in the history of the United States. | ||
So there's precedence and there's a legal pathway. | ||
And so where we're at right now is we have the state of Idaho has introduced, Representative Boyle and Representative Ehart introduced a bill in the Idaho House inviting the Oregon legislature to begin these border talks. | ||
And so that's moving forward in the Idaho House. | ||
It came out of committee yesterday. | ||
It's going to the House floor later this week, probably. | ||
We feel really good about that. | ||
We also have a similar bill on the Oregon side in the Oregon State. | ||
That invites Idaho to begin these talks. | ||
So that's our next focus. | ||
As the Idaho bill moves forward, our next focus is to get that Oregon bill moving forward, get that into committee, get it to a vote on the Senate floor. | ||
And once these two memorials are through their two state legislatures, Then the state legislatures can begin talking and can have hearings, meetings, send delegations to hash this out and figure out where it makes sense to put the border. | ||
This all could be done over the course of the next year, and you could have a state line moved by next year if we can get these things through their respective legislatures. | ||
Wow. I mean, it's so amazing. | ||
It just, it really is. | ||
There's so much stuff about this that is worth highlighting. | ||
The fact that it's local. I mean, we always say, you know, local is where you can have the biggest impact. | ||
Local to a state, local to a state. | ||
The smaller you get, the more of an impact that you have. | ||
This is just proving it. | ||
It's proving that if you, you know, really put your mind to it and have a plan ahead, you can achieve this type of stuff. | ||
And I think, you know, a big part of what the, you know, propaganda is always telling us is just like, just sit back and let the people in charge take care. | ||
Let the experts take care of things. | ||
No, not if they're attacking you, not if they're ruining your life, not if they're taxing you for stuff you don't believe in. | ||
You don't have to stand for that. You can actually use this function of government that's still there, as neutered as it is in so many cases, you can still use this to get your way, which is what you deserve as a human being. | ||
I mean, it's just beautiful stuff. | ||
How can people help you? | ||
I know they can go to greateridaho.org. | ||
Greateridaho.org is your website. | ||
How can people help you? What do you need people doing right now to move this movement forward? | ||
unidentified
|
So, two things that we need. | |
Number one is we need people to contact legislators in both states. | ||
We need people to contact legislators in Idaho and say, thank you for hearing the people and advocating for what they want and moving this bill forward, and thank you for having the courage to do something Stick your neck out a little bit and move this forward. | ||
So we need people to contact their state legislators and let them know they are supportive and that they appreciate it. | ||
Likewise, we need people to let our state Senate president in Oregon, Senate President We're good to go. | ||
My mission now is to convince him to move that into committee and off his desk. | ||
So people can contact President Wagner and let him know, hey, the people of Eastern Oregon are speaking. | ||
They want this conversation to happen. | ||
The people of Western Oregon and Idaho want this conversation to happen. | ||
Let's move this bill forward and start talking about what makes sense for everybody involved. | ||
And then secondly, they can go to our website. | ||
We always need donations. | ||
Things cost money. This is a grassroots organization. | ||
It is, you know, we do not have big corporate sponsors. | ||
We do not have, you know, big organizations, parent organizations pouring money into us. | ||
This is a grassroots organization of local Eastern Oregonians that have been doing this, you know, in our spare time, basically, because we think it's such a good idea and we want to advocate for the people here. | ||
So we can always use donations. | ||
We can always use people that want to come on board. | ||
And help us contact legislators and get our message out. | ||
And things like this are helpful, Harrison. | ||
I sure appreciate the opportunity to come on and speak to your audience. | ||
It's my pleasure. Thank you so much for coming on. | ||
Get involved, folks. GreaterIdaho.org. | ||
Set the precedent. Start a movement in your location. | ||
Brilliant stuff. Well done. | ||
Matt McCaw, thank you so much for joining us. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you. Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | |
Just an absolutely insane number of things popping off as we speak. | ||
World War III, a fake alien invasion, trains going off the tracks, Chernobling of Ohio. | ||
And that's just the tip of the iceberg, folks. | ||
What a week it has been, what a month it has been, what a year, what a decade we are living through right now. | ||
And what strange allies we find in these times. | ||
And you can't rely on the mainstream media, obviously. | ||
You certainly can't rely on the Hollywood celebrities to tell you anything other than vapid nonsense that they are just parroting. | ||
Like parrots, right? | ||
You might as well get information from the parakeet that's been trained to repeat after its master. | ||
But there are the occasional... | ||
Shining light. There is the occasional A, B, even C-list celebrity that is willing to buck the trend and say what's really going on. | ||
I'm surprised there's not more because I'll tell you, in my personal life, every single time I talk to people that are tuned in to or like in the Hollywood crowd, I know weirdly a lot of people like that, they all say the same thing. | ||
They all go... Everybody in Hollywood listens to InfoWars. | ||
Everybody knows what's going on. | ||
Oh, you have no idea how many red pills... | ||
They can't say anything because of their careers, but there's a lot of people that are awake. | ||
And it's like, well, then they're cowards. | ||
That's nice. It's very nice. | ||
World's biggest tree fell in a forest. | ||
No one was around to see it, right? If you're not speaking up about this, if you're not exposing what you know, you're as bad as the people doing it, right? | ||
And I mean, that's how I feel about it. | ||
So... But you hear that all the time. | ||
I hear it all the time from people. | ||
People that are, you know, guests on this show that are clued in with Hollywood. | ||
They'll tell it to you. But also just people I know that, like, grew up in L.A. and just happened to run in the same circles of celebrities. | ||
Like, it's crazy how many of them are awake. | ||
The crazy part is that none of them talk about any of this stuff. | ||
But all of this is just to run up to another very... | ||
Very sort of unexpected occurrence. | ||
Tom Green made a video showing that he's awake. | ||
He knows what's going on. | ||
People don't. Tom Green, you know, big comedian back growing up. | ||
He was sort of outrageous. | ||
He had a very interesting style of comedy. | ||
I wasn't a big fan of it growing up. | ||
I think I was like too young to really appreciate it when he was in his prime. | ||
But not too long ago, I watched a YouTube video that was breaking down sort of the meta-comedy that he was involved in. | ||
And the movie he made, Freddy Got Fingered, it was all about... | ||
How he was basically using his position as a celebrity to kind of screw over the studios and make the worst movie possible. | ||
I can't remember the details, but it gave me a whole new appreciation of his style of comedy in that it was meta-comedy. | ||
It was making fun of the idea that this movie would be made. | ||
It's kind of complicated, but... That was sort of my first hint. | ||
I was like, this Tom Green guy, maybe a deeper cove than it seems at first. | ||
And actually, Tom Green may have had one of the first successful podcasts of all time. | ||
You can actually see the episode where Joe Rogan goes on Tom Green's internet radio show, internet TV show that nobody was doing at the time. | ||
And you can see Joe Rogan go, this is awesome! | ||
I think I might start doing this. | ||
So in a lot of ways, we have Tom Green to thank for the Joe Rogan experience because he laid the groundwork and was really in a lot of ways a trendsetter in all of this. | ||
So again, just interesting combination or interesting allies that we find out there. | ||
And clearly, Tom Green is one of them. | ||
Let's go now to clip number 22. | ||
Here's a little TikTok video he released showing, yeah, he knows what's going on. | ||
unidentified
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Let's watch. Hi, I'm Tom Green and forgot to mention the other reason this UFO information is coming out now is because they're trying to distract us all from the fact that we're about to get released the Epstein Island list as well as what's going on in Palestine, Ohio with the train derailment and the chemical release of chemicals into the air which is being called possibly as bad as Chernobyl. | |
And the fact that World War III might be about to start in the Ukraine war between USA, Russia, and China. | ||
So that's what's going on. | ||
Good to see you guys. Hope you guys are having a great day. | ||
There's UFOs! | ||
I love it. I feel like that's the best way to red pill people. | ||
It's just like, I'm sure you have people in your life right now like, whoa, what's going on with these UFOs? | ||
You're a conspiracy guy, right? | ||
What are the aliens? And it's just like, you know, you don't have to like blow their minds. | ||
You don't have to like We're under attack! | ||
It's all crazy! Like, you can just be like, oh, well, they're just distracting from the Epstein client list and the World War III stuff going on and the massive chemical spill in Ohio. | ||
Have you heard of that? Like, yeah, it's all pretty crazy. | ||
You know, it's just like, just calm, kind of like off the cuff and like, but people who don't know this... | ||
It's got to be mind-blowing. It's got to be mind-blowing stuff. | ||
Yeah, here's the story from Daily Mail. | ||
Final trove of court documents related to Jeffrey Epstein will finally be unsealed. | ||
Naming the names, final batch of documents containing salacious allegations related to Jeffrey Epstein associates, including Prince Andrew, will finally be made public after dozens of John and Jane Doe's agree to unsealing. | ||
JalenMill.com can reveal the last of the sealed court documents related to 167 of Epstein's associates will finally be made public. | ||
The paper refers to, quote, alleged perpetrators or individuals accused of, quote, serious wrongdoing. | ||
Pretty interesting stuff. | ||
So that should be released in the coming months, it says. | ||
You can imagine the people on this list. | ||
We'll do just about anything to not be revealed in this, but we're excited to learn about it. | ||
Of course, that's not the only thing that they are distracting from. | ||
In fact, the signals of World War III are becoming deafening at this point. | ||
NORAD gives off notice of air defense exercise around Washington, D.C. set for Tuesday. | ||
The announcement comes after a fourth object shot down over North America. | ||
So the North American Aerospace Defense Command, or NORAD, will conduct an air defense exercise on Tuesday, today, between midnight and 2.30 a.m. | ||
Eastern Time, according to officials, around the Washington, D.C. area. | ||
So, just patrolling for balloons, preparing for invasion. | ||
Who knows? All we know is that it fits in line with the rest of the signals that we're seeing. | ||
Two Dutch F-35 fighters intercepted a formation of three Russian military aircraft over Poland and escorted them out, the Netherlands Defense Secretary said in a statement late on Monday. | ||
This according to Reuters, and here's the story. | ||
two Dutch F-35 fighters intercepting a formation of three Russian military aircraft. | ||
And, of course, this comes after Russia has warned UK, but they said, you know, we're warning UK and the rest of Europe that there will be massive consequences if you continue to supply Ukraine with weapons, specifically fighter jets in this case. | ||
We also know that NATO, despite the fact that Ukraine is not a NATO member, and we have no ally agreement with them that we're having to uphold, it still actually has soldiers on the ground now That was confirmed by an Austrian general. | ||
Says, well, they changed their uniforms into Ukrainian, but they are NATO soldiers on the ground there. | ||
And, of course, NATO is coordinating and helping to provide information to Ukraine. | ||
I mean, except for some very, you know, particular... | ||
Like, ceremonies that have to be done. | ||
NATO's at war with Russia. | ||
America is at war with Russia. | ||
We're at least paying for a war with Russia. | ||
And it looks like Russia's getting fed up with it. | ||
And it's starting to menace its neighbors in a way that it wasn't doing before NATO started to poke them in the eye. | ||
And also, they're having just steady progress in Ukraine. | ||
What I've heard from some people in the know, The idea is that Putin is very aware of how unpopular the Ukraine war is becoming in America. | ||
And so he's not looking to, you know, do a big knockdown brawl, get it over with quick. | ||
In Putin's calculation, the longer he can drag this out, the more public sentiment will turn against the Western hegemony. | ||
And so really the longer he can drag this out, the better it is for him. | ||
On Twitter... Chbureki Man says roughly 700,000 Russian troops in three zones are getting ready to roll across the border and unleash hell on Ukraine. | ||
Putin is expected to give a major speech soon detailing how the Washington Deep State has been controlling Ukraine for its own nefarious purposes. | ||
Potentially 3.5 billion people will hear the speech, rumored to touch on Joe and Hunter's corrupt activities, NATO malice, evidence of bioweapons research, possibly even a clandestine Pentagon nuclear program in Ukraine. | ||
We've already witnessed just how far the U.S. is willing to go with its anti-Russia, anti-EU agenda when it brazenly sabotaged a $12 billion joint Russian-German pipeline. | ||
So a clandestine Pentagon nuke program is certainly within the realm of possibility. | ||
Of course, that would also be another major thing they would want to distract from the revelation that it was in fact America that sabotaged and destroyed the pipeline. | ||
NATO flag defaced as thousands rally in Paris against NATO's involvement as they demand their government stop supplying weapons to Ukraine. | ||
I mean, it is really getting messy out there, folks. | ||
All I know is that we'll be here to cover it all and to try to get to the truth of all of it as long as you support us at Infowarsstore.com. | ||
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unidentified
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Hey, what's up, Owen? | |
Hey, McBreen. What's going on, man? | ||
Hey, really liked that work you did on the AI piece. | ||
I'm going to use that on the show today. | ||
unidentified
|
Right on, I worked hard on that. I'm working on another project, so I'm going to be up late again tonight, and I was hoping you had some Brain Force Plus. | |
Oh, um, no. | ||
No. | ||
Nothing. | ||
Nothing. | ||
What about Brain Force Ultra? | ||
Um. | ||
No. | ||
Hmm. | ||
Okay. | ||
Thanks anyway. | ||
Yeah. Good luck with that project though! |