Speaker | Time | Text |
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You're tuned in to the American Journal with your host Harrison Smith Underground tunnel as long as a football field linking Mexico and Arizona | |
Drug enforcement agents think it was used to smuggle tons of cocaine into the United States. | ||
They say it's like nothing they have ever seen before. | ||
This type of tunnel is not an amateur operation. | ||
It's a highly sophisticated engineering feat that took place. | ||
In 1989, the Sinaloa drug cartel dug its first drug tunnel between a house in Agua Prieta, Sonora, to a warehouse located in Douglas, Arizona. | ||
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Does this appear to be an isolated case, or perhaps is it part of a tunnel network? | |
They're not quite sure about this. | ||
They say the investigation is continuing, but they say that they believe that this is in no way a maiden voyage for these people. | ||
They must have had quite a bit of financial backing and have been working in drug smuggling for quite some time. | ||
Now, 34 years later, new evidence reveals that the Mexican drug cartels have burrowed their way into the American government. | ||
The Sinaloa Cartel is like, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa. | ||
Let me get this right. | ||
The Federal Reserve of the United States of America is now in the business of money laundering. | ||
Count us in! | ||
And so now they are laundering their money through the pot industry of Colorado. | ||
One of the many problems in Mexico today is that the cartels have diversified. | ||
They've gotten into cargo theft and kidnapping and avocados and limes and real estate and local government. | ||
And criminality is always going to exist. | ||
And they're in the process of trying to break into the United States. | ||
Economically? Yeah. El Chapo and the Sinaloa became the largest drug trafficking organization in America under the Obama administration. | ||
Arizona-based forensic investigator Jacqueline Brigger dove down a deep Since 2019, I've been a principal investigator with the Harris-Thaler law firm. | ||
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We have been investigating multiple multi-state racketeering and corruption. | |
John Harris... | ||
Mr. Thaler is our senior attorney, and he is in charge of this investigation. | ||
Mr. Thaler has been practicing law for 32 years. | ||
His firm specializes in investigating racketeering and corruption for both the public and the private sector, and he has participated in some of the largest investigations both in the U.S. and abroad. | ||
Brager claimed that while investigating a nationwide racketeering epidemic involving the Sinaloa drug cartel, their team accidentally discovered election fraud. | ||
The web involved a real estate money laundering operation infiltrating all levels of government constructed in order to trade influence to the Sinaloa cartel for backdoor money and control over elections and anyone that stood in their way. | ||
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Thank you. | |
Thank you. Bankruptcy fraud, life insurance fraud, auto insurance fraud, | ||
bribing of elected and appointed officials, creating and modifying public record, Falsifying professional licenses and related credentials, swatting individuals who pose a threat to these enterprises, and last but not least, election fraud. | ||
In addition to impacting local elections, bribes and infiltration were used to affect the outcome of the races during the November 3rd, 2020, election, including the outcome of the race for Maricopa County Recorder, And the outcome of the November 8th, 2022 election. | ||
Race for Governor, Secretary of State and Attorney General. | ||
I know you all have one burning question. | ||
I'm only going to answer it once. | ||
No, I'm not involved with the Sinaloa cartel. | ||
I'm not taking bribes from them, and I'm not laundering their money. | ||
These revelations that are just beginning to surface beg the question, how far up the government ladder does this corruption lead? | ||
As Attorney General Merrick Garland's testimony on fentanyl and the open border provides no solutions or an end in sight. | ||
Share that link, folks. Spend out video. | ||
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We'll be right back. It's Monday, March 6th, year of our Lord, 2023. | |
And you're listening to The American Journal with your host, Harrison Smith. | ||
Watch it live right now at band.video. | ||
Good morning, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
Welcome to The American Journal. | ||
I'm your host, Harrison Smith. | ||
It's Monday. 6th of March, very glad to be here. | ||
Stacked show we have for you today. | ||
Alex Stein will be joining us. | ||
The pimp on a blimp himself will be calling in, Skyping in at around 9 a.m., 10 a.m. | ||
We'll be joined by Sovereign Bra. | ||
Who has made quite an impact with his appearances on the Whatever podcast where he says very normal and reasonable things and other normal, reasonable people freak out about it. | ||
It's extremely interesting and I'm very excited to talk to him as well about what sovereignty means these days and how you too can be sovereign from everything. | ||
It's pretty interesting stuff. | ||
Very excited to talk to both of those gentlemen. | ||
Of course, we have lots of videos to show you and just tons of stuff to talk about. | ||
So let's not waste any time. | ||
Let's get right into it. | ||
Here it is, your Daily Dispatch. | ||
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All right, here it is, folks, your Daily Dispatch. | |
We're Monday, the 6th of March, 2023. | ||
3. | ||
Gateway Pundit has the story. | ||
Fake news. Liberal Daily Beast forced to correct claim that CPAC's speaker wants transgender community eradicated but continues to call remarks genocidal. | ||
Yes, it was CPAC this weekend. | ||
Lots of headlines out of that, but probably the biggest was Michael Knowles. | ||
Giving a speech where he said, quote, There can be no middle way in dealing with transgenderism. | ||
It's all or nothing. If transgenderism is true, if men really can become women, then it's true for everybody of all ages. | ||
If transgenderism is false, as it is, if men can't become women, as they cannot, then it's false for everybody too. | ||
And if it's false, then we should not indulge it, especially since the indulgent requires taking away the rights and customs of so many people. | ||
Or as the Liberal News heard it, we have to kill all the transgenders. | ||
It's okay. Whoa. | ||
All right. Calm down there. | ||
Calm down there, bucko. | ||
Yeah, he says we need to eliminate transgenderism. | ||
Which doesn't mean murder all the transgender people, just like eradicating poverty doesn't mean murder all of the poor people. | ||
This should be pretty simple to understand, and I guess we'll get into this a little bit later. | ||
We'll spend some time on that, figure out exactly what he's talking about, and whether it amounts to genocide. | ||
It's not the only headline we'll see from CPAC today, but we'll get into it. | ||
We'll get into it. | ||
Meanwhile, cite a future safety training center in Atlanta under lockdown after massive fire destroys construction site. | ||
Antifa reportedly clashing with police. | ||
During the arrest, police recovered bombs, flares, gasoline, and weapons. | ||
Additionally, the protesters torched at least two vehicles during their protest at the training center site. | ||
Thank God they weren't white supremacists, or we'd have to actually pay attention to the acts of terror that were going on. | ||
We'd have to actually care about the violence and destruction and acts of terror if they were white supremacists. | ||
They're not, though. They're not. | ||
They're leftist terrorists, so... | ||
We dodged a bullet on that one. | ||
We don't have to care about it now. | ||
We don't have to pay attention to it or care about it or do anything to stop it or even report it if we're the mainstream media. | ||
In fact, the way the mainstream media reported it was something like Antifa and police clash at protests. | ||
They're very careful to make sure that you know that they're not on either side. | ||
They're not on the side of the police protecting themselves or on the side of the terrorists burning buildings down and firebombing cars and assaulting the police. | ||
No, it's sort of just like apples and oranges. | ||
It's like they're both fine. | ||
They're both good. | ||
They're both beautiful and loving and good. | ||
Massive, huge plumes of smoke. | ||
Massive police response after Antifa protesters face off with police at the site of Atlanta's future public safety training facility. | ||
Molotov cocktails were thrown, construction equipment on fire. | ||
As again, the Antifa domestic terrorists just have a day of activism. | ||
Lovely day of activism. | ||
I'm sure the city of Atlanta is going to be so much better. | ||
It's going to be so much safer once they get rid of police. | ||
All the crime that they're experiencing, all the horrific, massive increase in crime that's causing entire suburbs of Atlanta to want to separate themselves politically from the city so they can at least get a handle on the murderous rampages and that sort of thing that go on. | ||
I'm sure it'll be so much safer once they get rid of the police. | ||
Maybe we should do something about this. | ||
I'm not a politician. | ||
But maybe when you have hordes of black-clad communists who for years on end are burning buildings and carrying out coordinated attacks on police officers. | ||
Hey, maybe we should do something about that. | ||
I don't know. Just spitballing here. | ||
Maybe we should lock them all up forever. | ||
Maybe we should just systematically... | ||
Raid all of them and lock them away and throw away the key. | ||
Maybe you can use all of the ridiculous surveillance technology that you have everywhere on all of the phones and in all of the cameras. | ||
Maybe you know exactly who all of these people are and you could just stop them at any time. | ||
Maybe that's what you should do since you're the government. | ||
I don't know. Again, I'm just spitballing here. | ||
Maybe we don't have to succumb to The total and absolute programmed collapse. | ||
Or we just let them have their way. | ||
Or we just surrender to them. | ||
And just be defenseless victims of their criminality forever. | ||
Maybe that's the answer. | ||
I don't know. I'm just spitballing here. | ||
Incredible. | ||
Fauci, this story from Infowars.com, Fauci prompted scientists to fabricate proximal origins paper ruling out lab leak, this according to the House GOP. Dr. Anthony Fauci, who offshored banned gain-of-function research to make bat coronaviruses more transmissible to humans, has been accused by congressional investigators of having who offshored banned gain-of-function research to make bat coronaviruses more transmissible to humans, has been accused by congressional investigators of having prompted the fabrication of a paper by a On February 1, 2020, Fauci and his boss, NIH Director Dr. Francis, | ||
Francis Collins, and at least 11 other scientists participated in a conference call during which several of them warned that COVID-19 may have leaked from a lab in Wuhan, China, and it may have been intentionally genetically manipulated. | ||
Three days after the call, four participants from the call Seemingly discarded their concerns over a lab leak and drafted the proximal origins of SARS-CoV-2, which they sent Fauci and Collins, also heavily involved but not credited, was Dr. | ||
Jeremy Farrar, the current chief scientist of the World Health Organization. | ||
As a related aside, the Washington Examiner revealed last week that two authors of the Proximal Origin paper also initially expressed concerns over Lab League, then changed their tune and received millions of dollars in NIH grants under Fauci. | ||
Now, according to the House Select Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Pandemic, Fauci prompted the creation of the paper. | ||
Which I know it's sort of treating this as if it's something scientific. | ||
It's not. It's mass murder. | ||
It's mass murder. So this was a murderer fabricating an alibi, fabricating evidence that they were innocent. | ||
So again, kind of like Antifa, maybe since we know who they all are and what they did, maybe we can punish them for it. | ||
I don't know. Again, just... | ||
Just a suggestion, just a humble suggestion from a regular citizen. | ||
Maybe they all deserve the death penalty. | ||
Meanwhile, thousands of Belgian farmers joined protests against globalist reset plans in Europe, this in Belgium. | ||
Last summer, thousands of Dutch farmers protested new nitrogen rules that will force approximately 30% of Dutch cattle farms out of business, according to government estimates. | ||
Farming unions contend that the planned cuts place a heavier burden on agriculture than industry. | ||
Farmers blocked traffic on the main road in Brussels, causing major traffic disruption and gridlock. | ||
Politico reports it's an economic and social catastrophe, said Nell Kempiners, a spokesperson for the Belgian Farmers Association Borenband, one of the unions that organized the protest. | ||
A lot of farms will have to limit the amount of animals they keep or simply close down. | ||
As, of course, that is the plan. | ||
That is the plan now. There's no... | ||
There's no plans in place to then create other farms elsewhere. | ||
This is just the destruction of the agricultural industry in Europe, completely at odds with the will of the people that live there, but perfectly in line with the orders from the supranational governing organizations, such as the World Economic Forum, who are simply making demands that the national governments then implement, regardless of how the people feel about it. | ||
In fact, in the Netherlands, you had a vote in Parliament that overwhelmingly failed to pass, and yet they're All right, | ||
welcome back, folks. This is the American Journal Infowars.com. | ||
We'll be joined by Alex Stein at 9am and Sovereign Bra at 10am. | ||
His name's Chase, actually. | ||
Very excited to talk to both of them, but we have a lot of news to get to before that. | ||
We'll sort of continue with the Daily Dispatch here, but we're actually going to focus on some revelations that were made over the weekend. | ||
About the COVID pandemic in the UK. Matt Hancock discussed deploying new virus variant to, quote, frighten the pants off everyone. | ||
Yeah, literally deploying the new variant to scare everyone. | ||
That's the point of it. | ||
That was the point of it. | ||
Matt Hancock discussed deploying new virus variants to frighten the pants off everyone as former health secretary demands immunity on care home deaths during the pandemic. | ||
It's really, really hard to express just what a situation we're in. | ||
Just what a conundrum we find ourselves in. | ||
People that were in charge of the response used the response not only to create the atmosphere of fear that they could then take advantage of. | ||
I'll show you a video in just a second how they did that. | ||
But also actively carried out policies that destroyed the lives of tens of thousands of people, murdered tens of thousands of people here in America and abroad. | ||
See, this was a globalist scheme that they put out. | ||
Mr. Hancock said he wanted to frighten the public into changing their behavior. | ||
It comes as he told a top law firm he should not be held responsible for failings. | ||
It follows the text yesterday showing his reaction to his affair being discovered. | ||
Matt Hancock told aides he wanted to fry the pants off everyone to ensure compliance with COVID-19 restrictions. | ||
Leaked messages reveal. | ||
As it emerges, he told top London lawyers he should be immune from prosecution just days before the WhatsApp scandal broke. | ||
In an online Q&A with law firm Michonne de Rea, Matt Hancock accused those prosecuting secretaries of state as chasing tabloid headlines. | ||
That was just 12 days ago, the Mirror reports. | ||
It comes as a new swath of messages from Mr. | ||
Hancock's WhatsApp account were revealed today involving discussions over how to scare the public to limit the spread of coronavirus and when to, quote, deploy details of a new strain. | ||
The latest set of WhatsApp exchanges show Mr. | ||
Hancock and others discussed how to use an announcement about the Kent variant of the virus to scare the public into changing their behavior. | ||
The messages among more than 100,000 WhatsApp messages passed to The Telegraph by journalist Isabel Okishat show the Cabinet Secretary Simon Kaye suggested in January 2021 that the, quote, fear factor would be vital in stopping the spread of the virus. | ||
The latest set of WhatsApp exchanges show Mr. Hancock and others discuss how to use an announcement about the Kent variant to the virus, of the virus, to scare the public into changing their behavior. | ||
The discussion took place in December, just three weeks before the whole of the country was placed back under lockdown rules. | ||
December of 2020, the exchanges show concern that London Mayor Sadiq Khan could follow the example of Mayor of Greater Manchester Andy Burnman, who had clashed with the government over the decision to impose stringent lockdown restrictions on the region. | ||
Mr. Hancock's advisor said, rather than doing too much forward signaling, we can roll pitch with the new strain. | ||
So, again, the decisions being made were not being made on account of what would be safest, what would actually help to treat the virus. | ||
It was made specifically engineered to have the biggest psychological impact because all of COVID was a massive psychological operation against the people of the world in order to get them used to and sort of test the boundaries of how far they could push people into a technocratic prison. | ||
Pretty incredible stuff. We will frighten the pants off everyone with the new strain, the then-health secretary responded. | ||
But the complication with that Brexit is taking the top line, he said, in apparent reference to media coverage of UK's EU exit. | ||
Yep, that's what will get proper behavior change, the advisor said. | ||
When do we deploy the new variant, Mr. | ||
Hancock said. The conversation on December 13th came amid concerns about the rapid spread of virus in southeast of England. | ||
Mr. Hancock announced a new COVID-19 variant had been identified in the UK on December 14th. | ||
Which variant was it? | ||
The Kent variant? Was it more dangerous? | ||
Probably not. Most of the variants were downgrades from the original. | ||
They were... Sometimes more infectious, but mostly hugely less deadly. | ||
But none of that mattered to the people in charge. | ||
No, what mattered was using the new variants to create the fear that they need to override people's basic cognition and force them to submit to ridiculous and unwarranted control measures. | ||
It's... Really not that complicated at all. | ||
It just is that evil. | ||
It really is. It really is that despicable. | ||
We'll go now to a video. | ||
The very next day, Matt Hancock had this exchange on WhatsApp where they talk about deploying the new variant and using the fear factor to generate compliance with their ridiculous claims and demands and measures. | ||
Let's go now to clip number one. | ||
Here was Matt Hancock. | ||
The very next day, Pushing lockdowns and doing what he said in the messages and using the variant to create the fear necessary to enslave humanity. | ||
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Let's watch. We have identified a new variant of coronavirus, which may be associated with the fastest spread in the southeast of England. | |
Initial analysis suggests that this variant is growing faster than the existing variants. | ||
We've currently identified over 1,000 cases with this variant, predominantly in the south of England, although cases have been identified in nearly 60 different local authority areas, and numbers are increasing rapidly. | ||
We've seen very sharp exponential rises in the virus across London, Kent, parts of Essex and Hertfordshire. | ||
Because when the virus is growing exponentially, there is not a moment to spare. | ||
The health secretary has told MPs that London and parts of Essex and Hertfordshire will move into England's highest tier of Covid restrictions on Wednesday. | ||
Under the Tier 3 rules, shops can stay open, but bars, pubs, cafes and restaurants must stay closed, except for delivery and takeaway. | ||
Indoor entertainment venues such as bowling alleys, theatres and cinemas will shut. | ||
You can't mix indoors in private gardens or in most outdoor venues, except with your household or bubble. | ||
And people are advised not to travel to and from Tier 3 areas. | ||
We have to take swift and decisive action, which unfortunately is absolutely essential to control this deadly disease while the vaccine is rolled out. | ||
So, yeah, again, it's nice to take a little trip back to that world two years ago when these ridiculous and arbitrary measures were treated very seriously. | ||
Right? Just like, you can... | ||
The movie theaters will be closed, but the bowling alleys will be open, but only from two to four. | ||
And the restaurants and pubs will be closed, but only half of the restaurant will be closed at each one time. | ||
The kitchens can't operate, but the barmaids must wear hats on their heads. | ||
Like, it's just like, okay, so what is going on here? | ||
What is this? Did any of this... | ||
Of course not. It was all totally arbitrary, completely unscientific. | ||
It was all purposefully designed to have the biggest psychological impact regardless of whether it actually stopped any new variant or whether the new variant... | ||
Even mattered in the first place. | ||
Now we actually have the WhatsApp messages. | ||
We'll show you those on the other side. | ||
So just as we wrap up here in this segment, let's just remind everybody they created the virus in a lab. | ||
They released the virus on purpose. | ||
They commissioned studies to hide the fact that it came from a lab. | ||
They used the fear on purpose to shut down the entire economy. | ||
And then they deployed a vaccine that killed more people than it saved. | ||
Do I have all of it? Is that everything? | ||
Again, just wild revelations this weekend about COVID-19. | ||
Everything we told you was true. | ||
It was all a psychological operation. | ||
It was created in a lab on purpose for the design of enslaving humanity under a technocratic world government regime. | ||
And that's what the latest theory on what the revelations show in England It's basically that they're going to say, see, the UK government was irresponsible in its reaction to COVID-19. | ||
They behaved incorrectly. | ||
So obviously, national governments can't be trusted with this sort of thing. | ||
There has to be a sort of a global council that will be responsible for coordinating and implementing the Policies, anytime there's a new pandemic, it's obviously necessary because of how clearly it was bungled by the national governments. | ||
So we better just give power fully over to the people that organized the response in the first place. | ||
That's just one of the possibilities. | ||
Here's the actual WhatsApp messages that were revealed. | ||
Matt Hancock in the UK. I was head of the response. | ||
Matt Hancock asked when the government should, quote, deploy the next COVID variant to frighten the pants off. | ||
So he says, we frighten the pants off of everyone with a new strain, but the complication with that Brexit is taking the top line. | ||
In other words, Brexit is getting more media attention, so they have to coordinate with the media as well to make sure that Their fabricated story is number one, not the story about the failure to implement the democratically decided decision to exit from the European Union. | ||
Damon Pohl responds, yep, that's what will get proper behavior change. | ||
Proper behavior change. | ||
And these people, given this process, Pathetic amount of power. | ||
Any amount of power they get, they feel like they are now the parents of all of the people in the country. | ||
Their fellow citizens, their fellow human beings aren't independent people with thoughts and ability to understand things and come to their own conclusion. | ||
They're children that have to be tricked into doing what the parents want. | ||
Sort of understandable when you have a kid, you know, sometimes you say, just do that. | ||
They don't do it. So you go, oh, don't do that when you really want them to. | ||
I mean, it's very simple psychology. | ||
Because you don't want to just, you know, you can't just force kids to do things. | ||
They'll freak out and it won't work. | ||
So they're treating you like children. | ||
They're treating all of us like we're children and they're our parents. | ||
These people are just despicable scumbags that are using their positions of power to further the agenda that maybe they don't even understand. | ||
Matt Hancock responds to this. | ||
When do we deploy the new variant? | ||
Damon Pohl says, been thinking more about this and think we need to be more cautious. | ||
The strain that is. | ||
Think you made the point earlier, but we need to keep schools off paperwork slash agenda. | ||
Yes, Matt Hancock replies. | ||
Damon Pohl says, worth doing... | ||
A bit about no leaking at the top, I think. | ||
Big risk with the variant. Right-wing papers go for renewed push for let it rip on the basis of vaccine strategy is undermined. | ||
That's why we need reassure on the vaccine. | ||
Are they talking in code? | ||
I don't even understand what they're saying. | ||
Does everyone's text messages... | ||
My text messages don't sound like this. | ||
What are they even saying? | ||
It's very confusing. | ||
Big risk with the variant. | ||
Right wing papers go for a renewed push for let it rip on the basis of the vaccine strategy is undermined. | ||
Are they retarded? Like is this? | ||
What is this? Are they just missing entire words? | ||
Are they referencing a code that we don't understand? | ||
This is not a sentence. | ||
Big risk with the variant. | ||
I am honestly trying to understand this. | ||
Right-wing papers go for a renewed push for let it rip on the basis the vaccine strategy is undermined. | ||
Anybody? Anybody understand what the hell this guy just said? | ||
It's like they're all talking this weird jargon. | ||
Clearly they all understand. | ||
They're all on the same page. | ||
They all know exactly what they're talking about. | ||
I can't figure it out for the life of me. | ||
That's why we reassure on the vaccine. | ||
Just utterly bizarre. | ||
Again, when do we deploy the new variant? | ||
That line alone tells you just about everything you need to know about the COVID-19 so-called pandemic. | ||
When do we deploy the new variant? | ||
Was there even a variant? | ||
Was there even a variant? | ||
Did they just make it up? Did they just decide that, you know, people were getting too used to it? | ||
It had already been a year or more that these people had been under the COVID lockdown measures and the COVID scam in the first place. | ||
Did they just decide, you know, in order to increase behavioral changes, we have to make up a new variant and deploy it? | ||
People are too... | ||
They've gotten used to the old variant. | ||
Roman Baber? | ||
Baber on Twitter says, Do they speak English? | ||
Do they run their thoughts through Google Translate a couple times? | ||
Just miss out on tense changes and that sort of stuff? | ||
What is this? Very confusing. | ||
You would think that when you get the leaked WhatsApp messages from politicians and the... | ||
You know, organizing authorities during a crisis. | ||
It would be about the crisis. | ||
It would be about how do we mitigate the threat that we're experiencing while maintaining as much normalcy as possible to keep the economy going. | ||
You don't get any of that. | ||
There is literally none of that. | ||
It's all how do we psychologically move people? | ||
How do we prevent mayors from ignoring our demands? | ||
How do we coordinate with the media to push this fear factor in order to, again, override people's logical faculties in order to appeal to their base fears? | ||
That's all they are concerned about because they understand that what they're doing has nothing to do with mitigating or preventing or fighting back against a crisis. | ||
It has everything to do with using that crisis to push forward an agenda of globalism that they had already long established. | ||
So anyway, Matt Hancock says, sounds like Sadiq, the mayor of London, is lining up to being burnmen. | ||
Again, I think what he's trying to say is it sounds like Sadiq Khan is talking more like this other mayor of Greater Manchester who was largely ignoring their lockdown measures. | ||
Damon Poole replies, yep. | ||
Tory MPs also furious already about the prospect. | ||
MOS leader trying to warn us off at two. | ||
Rather than doing too much forward signaling, we can roll pitch with the new strain. | ||
Matt Hancock says, we've frightened the pants off of everyone with the new strain. | ||
So again, what they're talking about here is they're going to enforce new COVID lockdown measures, which again are utterly unscientific, totally arbitrary, completely ineffective, and just, again, scientifically baseless. | ||
And they're saying, yeah, but if we roll it out with a new variant, then it doesn't matter because people will be so scared they'll just do whatever we say anyway. | ||
That's what they're saying in between the lines. | ||
And it's a crime. | ||
It's criminal. And this, of course, comes after, you know, he demands that he have immunity for sending COVID-infected patients into care homes, despite the fact that we knew here at InfoWars, we showed you the video last week, as early as January of 2020, that... It was that the virus itself was far, far more dangerous to elderly and sick people. | ||
Somehow we knew this. | ||
I have a feeling they knew it too. | ||
And yet they send people into old folks' homes with the virus already and kill tens of thousands of them. | ||
That was also a psychological trick. | ||
You get that too? Alright, welcome back folks. | ||
Yeah, a lot of news this weekend. | ||
CPAC, a lot of news there. | ||
Taking out Nick Fuentes. | ||
Nick pulling another event just outside of CPAC that was also a major event. | ||
You've got all the news about COVID coming out. | ||
Massive Antifa rallies and riots and terrorist attacks in Atlanta and Austin. | ||
More food processing plants just going right up in flames. | ||
More trains falling off the track. | ||
More failure from the Ukrainians in Bakhmut. | ||
Where again, it's just... | ||
I really don't know what to do about the memory hole. | ||
I mean, the memory hole is real, folks. | ||
It's shocking how people just forget... | ||
Everything going on. | ||
I haven't heard about the classified documents from Joe Biden in a very long time. | ||
Sort of forget the whole Hunter Biden laptop thing in the process. | ||
Just all this stuff. It's just like it's a major deal. | ||
Push for it. People in power would rather not. | ||
So it gets memory hold. | ||
And it's just over all of a sudden. | ||
It's pretty wild. | ||
It's pretty wild. So, obviously, some of the biggest stories over the weekend were about COVID. Not only did you have the email or the WhatsApp messages from old Mr. | ||
Hancock over there in the UK, just laying the whole scam out for everybody to see. | ||
Just how we must deploy the new variants to create the right amount of fear to stop people from breaking out of our lockdown. | ||
It's literally like they're prison wardens describing how to put down prisoner uprisings. | ||
Just insane stuff. | ||
But you've got to, you know, wrap all of this in with what else was revealed. | ||
New evidence suggests Fauci prompted drafting of proximal origins to squash lab leak theory. | ||
A story from Gateway Pundit from Infowars. | ||
Jim Jordan, Fauci was consumed with changing lab leak narrative because they were doing gain-of-function research there. | ||
He didn't want that out. | ||
Congressman Jim Jordan outlined Sunday. | ||
Anthony Fauci became aware that the most likely cause of the COVID pandemic was a lab leak and immediately set about changing the narrative to hide his involvement in gain-of-function research. | ||
Appearing on Fox News, Jordan, the chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, noted how Fauci received emails from prominent scientists advising him that the virus looked like it was engineered in a lab. | ||
Right at the start, that same day, Dr. | ||
Fauci organizes a conference call. | ||
Him and Dr. Collins get on there with Dr. | ||
Gary and Dr. Anderson and all these other virologists. | ||
They get on there and three days later, everybody changes their story, Jordan noted. | ||
The congressman continued, the same guy who says this would be easy to do in a lab says, oh, now you're crazy if you think it came from a lab. | ||
The same guy says, I don't know how this, that would, that this would, that this does, that this looks engineered. | ||
He changed his story. | ||
And the kicker is, three months later, those same two doctors, Dr. | ||
Anderson and Dr. Gary, get a $7 million, a several-million-dollar grant from Dr. | ||
Fauci to continue their research, Jordan further noted. | ||
So the fundamental question is, why was Dr. | ||
Fauci so consumed with making sure the narrative wasn't about the lab? | ||
I think it's because they were doing gain-of-function research there, and he didn't want that out. | ||
Of course, we know they did gain-of-function research there. | ||
We know it was funded through NIAID and the EcoHealth Alliance. | ||
Peter Daszak coordinating it. | ||
Peter Daszak was also the one sent to Wuhan to investigate the virus. | ||
I mean, it's just so weird. | ||
It's just so weird that we're sitting here discussing a mass murder program. | ||
The people who carried it out are still out there, just walking around, just living their lives, just making, just raking in millions and millions of dollars. | ||
Billions even on the scam that they created and then exploited and continued to push and then made up new variants to increase the fear factor when it looked like people were finally getting sick of obeying their ridiculous and arbitrary orders. | ||
It's just so weird. | ||
It's just so bizarre, this world that we live in. | ||
Even the BBC is reporting this. | ||
The Telegraph is reporting all of this. | ||
None of this is speculation. | ||
None of it's up in the air. | ||
Of course, all of it was imminently predictable and understandable by us at Infowars long, long before the proof ever came out. | ||
But it's not that complicated. | ||
You treat this just like you treat any crime, right? | ||
You can sit there and go, yeah, I'm pretty sure the husband's the murderer. | ||
I'm pretty sure it's the husband. | ||
It's like, well, you don't have any proof. It's like, well, it's because you haven't done any investigation, but I can connect all the dots, right? | ||
Just any murder case, you just... | ||
You just look at all the likely suspects and you go, okay, who lied about where they were? | ||
Who had motive and opportunity to commit the murder? | ||
Who's acting suspicious? | ||
Who's getting the life insurance, right? | ||
Who's benefiting from the murder? | ||
Like all these things are very simple. | ||
And so the full picture that we have now with this revelation of Fauci coordinating the response to cover up the lab leak where the virus came from, Again, gateway pundit story. | ||
New evidence suggests Fauci prompted the drafting of the proximal origins to squash the lab leak theory. | ||
On Sunday, GOP-led select subcommittee on the coronavirus pandemic released a memo saying new evidence resulting from the select subcommittee's investigation into the origins of COVID-19, the proximal origins of SARS-CoV-2, citing evidence suggesting Anthony Fauci was behind the drafting of the proximal origins paper in an effort to squash the lab leak theory. | ||
We have their emails showing this as well. | ||
Also, they're cooperating with social media to shut this down. | ||
Maybe we'll just play my COVID skit in the first five minutes because I cover all of this, right? | ||
All of this was known back when I made the skit over a year ago, right? | ||
It's all there. It's all obvious. | ||
It's all apparent. Who'd you send over to... | ||
Or, you know, oh, so you're studying the lab? | ||
Nope. Who'd you send over? The guy who ran the lab, right? | ||
That's Peter Daszak, that's EcoHealth Alliance, who Dr. | ||
Andrew Huff has said, spoke to him about the CIA wanting to cooperate with EcoHealth Alliance in certain unmentionable schemes that they had going. | ||
So again, just to, like, I don't, you know, I don't know, people don't understand what's going on here yet. | ||
I feel like I just keep having to encapsulate it all. | ||
They created this virus. | ||
This virus didn't exist in nature. | ||
They created it in a lab. | ||
They leaked it from the lab on purpose. | ||
By design. This will probably come out eventually, right? | ||
Eventually, maybe 10 years from now, right? | ||
Some document will be declassified, and there will be some very serious CNN report where they're like, new declassified CIA documents show that COVID-19, the pandemic that ravaged the world in early 2020, may have actually been released by design in order to oust President Donald Trump, whom everybody hated at the time. | ||
Maybe that'll happen. Maybe 10 years from now we'll get the full picture of what's going on. | ||
But just like we figured all of this out, you can figure everything out. | ||
You just fill in the blanks here. They created the virus on purpose from scratch by adding artificial furin cleavage sites to the virus to make it able to infect humans. | ||
Then they released it from the lab. | ||
Then they covered it up and distracted from it while it was going on. | ||
You can look back at the times when You know, Infowars was sitting here going, hey, there's this new virus in China that's spreading like crazy. | ||
Hey, here's all the videos from people in China, like, collapsing on the street and all this sort of stuff. | ||
Now, even whether or not that was real sort of up in the air, but at the time, we were reporting what was going on in China while the rest of the media and the politicians were telling you, go hug a Chinese person, go hang out at your Chinese parade, and talking about this new virus is racism. | ||
Shut up. So they release the virus, then they cover up the spread, they disguise the spread, they hide it, and they don't tell you about it until it passes into basically every country in the world. | ||
Then they impose lockdowns to destroy the economy and to get the mail-in ballots that they needed to cheat in the election. | ||
I mean, all this is imminently obvious. | ||
Then they wrote papers and got in contact with publications in order to squash the lab leak theory. | ||
That was spreading at the time. | ||
And they released new variants to up the fear factor and keep everybody in a state of fear and chaos so they could consolidate all the economic power into Amazon and other major multinational corporations. | ||
Then they release new variants by design in order to maximize the fear factor that they needed to continue the lockdown to push the vaccine, which, by the way, is a gene-altering mRNA inoculation that has nothing to do with vaccines. | ||
It's a completely different thing. | ||
That also not only makes you more likely to get the virus, will also kill you in a variety of different ways. | ||
So this is just mass murder on a global scale by people whose names we know and faces we see on TV and who are out there walking around free. | ||
We can either do something about this, solve this, punish the people who did it, make sure it never happens again, or we deserve it, basically. | ||
Or basically, we deserve to be in the prison that they're building for us. | ||
I mean, I don't know what other options there are. | ||
I think we'll play the COVID skit on the other side, just to remind everybody that none of this is new, and we knew it years ago. | ||
Yeah, we've rolled back the ban on gain-of-function research. | ||
Really? So now it's legal for us to modify viruses and make them more deadly and transmissible to humans. | ||
Why would you want to do that? | ||
Well, it's important that we be prepared in case something like that happen in the future. | ||
In case somebody modifies a deadly virus to be more infectious and able to transmit to humans? | ||
Oh, can you imagine? Yeah, sounds dangerous. | ||
No, no, no, it's fine. We're doing it at a level 4 weapons research lab in Wuhan, China. | ||
Very secure. Okay, good. | ||
Terrible news. Oh, no. | ||
There's been an outbreak of a mysterious new respiratory virus in Wuhan, China. | ||
Wuhan, China? Like where the research lab is? | ||
Yeah, yeah, exactly. Like right where the lab is. | ||
So do you think it could have come from the lab? | ||
No, absolutely not. | ||
I'd see how you could make that mistake, but no, no, no. | ||
The virus, the deadly virus with the artificial furin cleavage sites that make it able to infect humans, that came from the farmer's market down the road from the dangerous bioweapons lab. | ||
And you expect us to believe that? | ||
No need to worry. The global medical establishment's always preparing for these types of things. | ||
In fact, like, two months ago, they held a course called Event 201, where they basically predicted exactly what would happen, right down to the type of virus and where it came from. | ||
So they're, like, totally on top of this. | ||
Actually, they're gonna do nothing for months and let it spread all over the world. | ||
But it started in China, right? | ||
Like, can't we at least halt travel with them? | ||
I didn't realize you were a racist. | ||
Uh, what? Yeah, I didn't realize you had some deep, seething hatred of Asian people. | ||
Whoa, whoa, whoa, I'm talking about the virus. | ||
Oh, the virus? It's here now. | ||
Yeah, I bet. Yeah, I came on a plane from China. | ||
There was nothing we could do. Well, does it affect certain ages or populations or groups? | ||
Anything like that? Yeah, actually, it's way deadlier to the elderly and the sick. | ||
Okay, well, why don't we start by protecting them? | ||
No, we're actually going to send COVID-infected patients into nursing homes instead. | ||
Jeez, well, okay, well, what are you doing to stop the spread? | ||
UV lights, vitamin C, vitamin D? Should I wear a mask? | ||
We know that masks don't really stop you from getting this type of infection. | ||
The science is pretty much settled on this. | ||
Masks don't work. Okay, so no masks. | ||
Actually, they're mandatory, and also we're shutting down everything. | ||
What? Yeah, it's called lockdown. | ||
I'm basically declaring martial law and saying that you can't leave your house or gather in large groups. | ||
How do you think you're gonna get people to go along with this? | ||
Well, it's only for two weeks. | ||
And you're shutting everything down? | ||
Everything? Every restaurant? Every store? | ||
Yep, absolutely everything. Everything's shut down. | ||
We're all in this together. So even, like, Walmart and Target? | ||
No, they can stay open. What about, like, McDonald's or Taco Bell? | ||
Obviously, McDonald's and Taco Bell can stay open. | ||
Okay, so the big chain stores can stay open, but if a small business tries to stay open, we will send a tank and point a rifle in their face and maybe send them to jail. | ||
It's only for two weeks or years or whatever. | ||
I mean, won't that crash the economy? | ||
Oh, yeah, 100%, for sure. | ||
Okay, but this stops the virus. | ||
It does not, no. Okay, other than masks that don't work and lockdowns that don't work, is there anything else you suggest that we do? | ||
Oh, I'm not suggesting anything. | ||
I'm imposing plastic barriers and social distancing as well. | ||
Okay, so those work. No, of course not. | ||
It's ridiculous. Just think about it. | ||
But we do encourage contact tracing, where you download our app to your phone and then use it to log everywhere you go and everything you do and everyone you interact with. | ||
Sounds like a precursor to vaccine passports. | ||
No way. That's crazy. | ||
Hey, by the way, we sent an investigative team to figure out the origins of the virus. | ||
Oh, so you're investigating the lab? | ||
No. Uh, okay. | ||
Well, who are you sending to investigate? | ||
The guy who runs the lab. Yeah, this sounds suspicious. | ||
It's not. I mean, the whole thing sounds sketchy. | ||
Nothing you're saying really makes any sense. | ||
And it seems like the same people imposing the masks and lockdowns are the same people that are benefiting from it. | ||
And it seems like it's going to have way worse long-term effects than the virus itself. | ||
I mean, all of this seems arbitrary and expensive. | ||
Well, it's only until we get the vaccine. | ||
And actually, it's going to be a wonderful, revolutionary new mRNA vaccine. | ||
So, you know, thank God we have Bill Gates helping us with this. | ||
Bill Gates, isn't he the one who thinks the most pressing issue the Earth faces is overpopulation and that the best way to reduce population is through vaccines? | ||
Didn't he give a TED Talk to that effect? | ||
No, shut up. He loves you. Just a little reminder, folks, that, yeah, we've been right the entire time. | ||
We've been right the entire time. | ||
That was a skip made long after, you know, most of this had been made obvious. | ||
But now we're still seeing more and more revelations that we were right the entire time. | ||
We'll be back on the other side with Alex Stein, a.k.a. | ||
Pimp on a Blimp, Primetime 99. | ||
We'll be right back. Will you not go to InfowarStore.com? | ||
Just go to InfowarStore.com. | ||
unidentified
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Just see what we have there. | |
Just see what's on offer. | ||
See if there's something you like. | ||
And if you like people that are ahead of the curve by years, go ahead and support us by going to InfowarStore.com. | ||
We'll be here predicting things and being right. | ||
Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
Second hour has begun here on American Journal, and I am joined by the one and only Alex Stein, reporter, show host. | ||
He needs no introduction, but we'll give him one anyway. | ||
Alex Stein is a viral satirist, the biological son of Tucker Carlson, and host... | ||
Of Primetime with Alex Stein, now on Blaze TV. You know him for his public stunts and live streams, but he's here with us today to talk about his new show on Blaze TV. You can follow him on Twitter at AlexStein99, and the website to watch his show is BlazeTV.com. | ||
Alex Stein, thank you so much for being with us, sir. | ||
Well, how nice of an introduction was that, Harrison? | ||
I mean, I feel like it was almost unnecessary. | ||
You didn't write that monologue. | ||
Who wrote that? Did Sean write that? | ||
That was so nice. Who put that together? | ||
It's cobbled together by the elves at night. | ||
They just show up on the desk in the morning, and I read them no matter what they say. | ||
I'm like Ron Burgundy in that respect. | ||
You know, Alex, it feels like just yesterday that you were calling into this show pretending to be a liberal and demanding some sort of... | ||
You know, reward or recompense for your maid dying after you forced her to get vaccine after vaccine. | ||
I think that was the first time that we talked together and this was set up. | ||
We did a little bit where you're pretending to be liberal. | ||
The audience was confused. | ||
I was confused. It was a massive success, hugely hilarious. | ||
Since then, you've gone on to do just absolutely amazing things. | ||
What a ride it's been for you, Alex. | ||
Yeah, you know, everybody says that, but this is kind of the thing I was telling somebody. | ||
I was actually in, I was in Canyon County, which is outside, or which is in Boise, Idaho, speaking at this, like, Lincoln Day, Canyon County Republicans thing, and I was telling people, it's like, they're like, oh, you've had all this success and all this stuff, but it feels bad because I feel like I'm just set up to get cancelled now, and that sounds weird, but I almost feel like I can't even be my authentic self. | ||
Obviously, the Blaze has not censored me at all, but I just had Alan Dershowitz on the show, and I called him out about that. | ||
I'm just saying, I don't know. | ||
I feel like now that I'm kind of playing ball now, somebody's going to take me out. | ||
I'm running for school board, Harrison, here in Highland Park, and my opponent, this is how my school works real quick. | ||
So we have a very affluent district, Highland Park Independent School District. | ||
And I won't bogart their whole conversation, but I just want to say this. | ||
So we have a very affluent school district. | ||
But here in Texas, we have a thing called Robinhood, where they can take nearly 40% of all of the taxes for that district and give it to less fortunate districts. | ||
So at Highland Park, we have one of the biggest private fundraisers for a public school. | ||
It's called Madford Plaid. And so the woman that I'm running against is basically the Madford plaid's choice. | ||
In the past 20 years, they always do a candidate forum where they ask them questions. | ||
But this year, they're not doing it because they don't want to put that candidate in a room with me. | ||
So now that everybody knows me, I feel like I have a target on my back. | ||
Long story short, Harrison. Interesting. | ||
It was easier when you were anonymous. | ||
It was easier to do the activism when people were like, who is this guy? | ||
Because I remember when you really blew up was when you pretended to be a nurse and were rapping about Fauci, and it blew up so big because people could not tell whether it was real or not. | ||
So now that you have sort of... | ||
I don't want to say you've exposed yourself, but you've exposed yourself in public, and now it makes it that much more difficult to be effective. | ||
I mean, it's a give and take, isn't it? | ||
Yeah, I had to reinvent myself. | ||
Harrison, I had to reinvent myself. | ||
I had to get creative. I mean, how many times can I go to Barstool Sports? | ||
But this is what I'm planning, so this is an idea. | ||
I'm thinking a lot of the Barstool Sports guys are moving to Chicago, so I think I might go to Barstool Sports and bring some tombstones made with foam and hold a funeral for their New York offices. | ||
Because basically, I kind of put the kibosh on that. | ||
As soon as I went there and I tainted it, I brought my wife's boyfriend to Ontarius and he rubbed his derriere all over their place. | ||
They had to move out of there because it has the primetime 99 stank. | ||
So I'm just saying I have to keep on doing stunts. | ||
I just can't. I got to go get in politicians' faces. | ||
Everybody's like, when are you going to go see AOC again? | ||
When are you going to see Crenshaw again? | ||
Let me tell you something, Harrison, and I mean this with all due respect. | ||
I love going and confronting these politicians, but it is a pain in the butt to sit there and then walk through Longfellow, the Capitol Police, or up my derriere and around the corner everywhere I go. | ||
So, you know, now that I'm kind of known Like I said, there's a little bit of a target on my back. | ||
I don't want to be like Icarus and fly too close to the sun and then die. | ||
But my father, my biological father, Tucker Carlson, now that he's actually kind of recognizes me, I mean, he doesn't admit that he's my father and I've been trying to get his semen for, you know, now going on a little over a year. | ||
And I don't know why that's such a big deal. | ||
I don't even need that much of it. | ||
I need a very small amount for the DNA center. | ||
I don't know why he's hogging all of his semen. | ||
Let me, his biological son, have one little teaspoon. | ||
But that's neither here nor there, so I am protected. | ||
I am protected in the long run because of my biological father. | ||
It's not Icarus flying close to the sun. | ||
It's like when we see the videos of you as an anonymous citizen at the time going up and questioning the school board. | ||
That was your, like, Charmander phase. | ||
You're leveling up. | ||
You're evolving like a Pokemon, I think is how it's working. | ||
And, you know, we don't know whether this is your Charizard or whatever the middle stage is. | ||
I can't... Char Lizard? | ||
Charmander? Well, is that the... | ||
All right, well... Charmander. | ||
Charmander sounds right. | ||
I don't know if I'm there yet, but I like that. | ||
You're in the awkward middle phases here, maybe. | ||
You start off as an anonymous activist. | ||
You've moved on to a professional television host. | ||
Who knows what your final form will reach, but I don't think you've reached it yet. | ||
Tell us about the Blaze TV show. | ||
You're a pimp on a blimp. | ||
The set is hilarious, but you're not just doing stunts and stuff. | ||
You actually have big-name interviews and stuff. | ||
Tell us about the show and what it's been like for you to make this evolution. | ||
No, I mean, hosting the show is awesome. | ||
Now we're doing it three days a week, Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday night live at 6 p.m. | ||
on YouTube and the Blaze app. | ||
But listen, I love doing the show. | ||
I get to express my creative freedom, but we've done 11 episodes so far. | ||
And the problem is, is I'm not used to corporate America, so I'm just learning how to put this. | ||
That's why I was making fun of you about the teleprompter. | ||
I'm just learning how to put my monologues in the teleprompter. | ||
That took me a week to learn, you know? | ||
Took me a week to learn, you know, the protocols of Putting the thumbnail, yada, yada, yada. | ||
So really, once the show gets going, and now we're going so much smoother, we can really be creative. | ||
Because I want a show that's, you know, bizarro Tucker Carlson is the idea for the show. | ||
And that's why it's a lamp floating over Dealey Plaza in downtown Dallas. | ||
And Harrison, you've got to come on the show. | ||
I'll obviously have you over Skype, but you've got to come up to Dallas when you get a chance. | ||
I know you work really hard, but I'd love to have you on my show sometime. | ||
Okay. I think that'd be very fun. | ||
And of course, I've been to Blaze before and the studios are incredible. | ||
I mean, we really do a lot of great work there. | ||
And you've, I wonder, maybe we can't even get into it, but how's everybody feel about things like you asking Alan Dershowitz about Jeffrey Epstein? | ||
How smoothly does that go over? | ||
Was that pre-planned or were you getting a little slap on the wrist from that? | ||
Okay, so the biggest trouble that I got in so far, so like the third episode, I lit a small fire on set, and then I sprayed a fire extinguisher. | ||
And this is the thing, it was one of these fire extinguishers, I forget the technical term, but it didn't spray out the foam like fake snow. | ||
It was more like, it's kind of like a clear liquid. | ||
And so I tested the, you know, whatever. | ||
I tested the fire extinguisher, excuse me. | ||
And during the show, I went a little crazy and got it over a little bit of the cameras and a little bit of the equipment. | ||
So that was a little bit of a slap on the wrist. | ||
They said, yeah, please do not ruin the equipment with fire extinguisher spray. | ||
So yeah, that was fair. I got a little, little, you know. | ||
They're putting you in a bed. No, yeah, that's what I'm saying. | ||
They're limiting me. Yeah, this is it right here. | ||
So I went a little crazy, and at this point, I'm spraying down, Harrison. | ||
See, I should be spraying down, but then I decided to get funny, and so we were burning a Harry Potter book right there. | ||
And right there, and see, right there, and it kind of did get on the cameraman, and it was kind of a, yeah, he had to go wash off. | ||
There was a little bit of spray in an unnecessary area. | ||
So yeah, so that was my first slap on the wrist, but it wasn't, you know, they're very cool. | ||
They're very chill about it. They just I said, hey, let's run that by the crew. | ||
Maybe they can wear safety gear so they don't have to get their clothes with fire extinguisher grease on it. | ||
So that makes sense. So we got a little reprimand for that. | ||
And then I had Alan Dershowitz on, and I just played a clip of him talking about how he got a massage at Jeffrey Epstein's house. | ||
And it was just so peculiar because in that clip, he just swears, oh, it was only a neck massage. | ||
But he also says, I don't even get massages very often. | ||
But then I was at Jeffrey Epstein's. | ||
He offered me a massage. But then he contradicts himself and says that his wife books a massage. | ||
So it's just a bunch of convoluted lies. | ||
And I'm not saying Dershowitz is guilty because he's the greatest attorney, arguably, of our generation. | ||
He's like our Atticus Finch. | ||
So I'm not saying anything. | ||
I have no idea what Alan Dershowitz did. | ||
I want to make that very clear. | ||
But there are a lot of very weird red flags with his story, to say the least. | ||
Well, look, I think it's amazing, you know, what you've been able – the evolution that you've gone through, honestly, it really is admirable. | ||
And the fact that you're in a position now to be able to ask people like Alan Dershowitz questions like that or with a company that can get people like him on, I think – You're using your platform for exactly, you know, what you should be using it for. | ||
You, Alex Stein, should be using it for. | ||
So you've got a new show on Blaze TV. You're running for Highland Park School Board. | ||
I want to talk to you about that as well. | ||
We'll just get back into it on the other side again. | ||
Alex Stein, 99 on Twitter. | ||
The website, blazetv.com. | ||
And I'll be on there one day. | ||
We'll see. We'll bring that whole blimp down. | ||
You think a fire extinguisher is the worst thing we could do? | ||
We're going to get creative with it. | ||
We'll talk during the break and keep it all secret and a big surprise. | ||
Folks, we'll be back in just a minute with Alex Stein here on American Journal. | ||
Don't go anywhere, folks. Well, folks, it was a couple years ago, I think it was before even the War Room or American Journal existed, that somebody called in and was talking to Owen Troyer and said, InfoWars is tomorrow's news today. | ||
And from that moment on, we adopted that moniker. | ||
We adopted that phrase, InfoWars tomorrow's news today. | ||
We knew about COVID before anybody else. | ||
We knew about the vaccines before anybody else. | ||
We knew about, we told you about the war in Ukraine. | ||
Months before, it actually broke out. | ||
And something else we were ahead of the curve on was one Alex Stein. | ||
I don't know who discovered you first, but again, I just I think it's so amazing to see Alex Stein go from an anonymous activist blown up on Twitter because nobody knew who he was to having his own Blaze TV show and talking to some of the, you know, A-list right wing celebrities and left wing celebrities. | ||
It's just absolutely incredible. | ||
Blaze.tv is where you can find the show. | ||
Alex Stein 99 on Twitter. | ||
The show is, of course, primetime with Alex Stein. | ||
One thing I thought was amazing, we were hanging out during the TPSA event earlier this year in Arizona. | ||
And you couldn't walk down the street without, you know, people demanding you stop for selfies and point. | ||
Shut up! Do not be like this. | ||
Do not. Let's talk about the impending doom of the, you know, food shortages and energy shortages in the Ukraine war. | ||
No, I don't like you. | ||
You're buttering me up. I hate, listen, I'm so used to my dad who called me a moron my whole life. | ||
I don't like, I feel like, and I'm not trying to copyright certain, like literally my dad calls me moron. | ||
I was like, I don't like getting praised. | ||
It kind of feels weird. | ||
I'm just telling you, it's weird. | ||
I really appreciate it, and I love taking pictures with people like that, but yeah, it kind of feels weird when you're like, oh, people are taking pictures of you. | ||
I'm an idiot! I'm literally like an autistic old man now, and I just got lucky on the internet. | ||
So I'm really, anybody can do this. | ||
You can do this. I know people at home, they're like, oh, you know, I want to get out there and do some activism and make some noise. | ||
You can do it! Literally any idiot can do it. | ||
Now with a freaking camera phone, you can literally become a content creator. | ||
And as a matter of fact, Harrison, one thing I'm learning, some people like underproduced content, then overproduced content. | ||
So as an independent content creator, you literally can make a difference. | ||
Now, I know sometimes you're going to do cringe stuff. | ||
You might feel awkward. | ||
I'm not saying you need to go on there and expose your whole life. | ||
But if you actually want to go make a difference, you can. | ||
If an idiot like me, and I'm not just saying this anecdotally, I'm literally not that smart. | ||
I mean, I graduated from college barely. | ||
I mean, by the skin of my teeth from LSU, which is not a good school, bad school, a bunch of idiots. | ||
I mean, you know, honestly, I mean, they just let you basically have a degree if you can just not die of a fentanyl overdose after four years. | ||
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What I'm saying is if I can do it, you can too. - I know. | |
All right, all right. No, I'm not trying to butter you up here. | ||
I'm not trying to butter you up, but you were very gracious with everybody there. | ||
And look, I'm not saying you walked down the street anywhere and this happens. | ||
There was a lot of conservatives there. | ||
It was a big conference. | ||
It was all conservatives. It was your people. | ||
All young kid conservatives, that's why. | ||
Yeah, it was my whole target audience. | ||
That's why, yes. But you know what? | ||
But that's the point, right? | ||
It's the target audience. It's the young guys that are just looking to not be demonized and hated. | ||
And it's just this spark of joyful resistance that you represent that I think is so powerful and effective. | ||
And we'll get to the topics. | ||
We'll get to the current events. | ||
All right? We'll get to it. | ||
I did have a question, but then you went off and I completely forgot what it was. | ||
So I don't know what the hell I'm talking about. | ||
But no, your show is extremely interesting and... | ||
I mean, where are you going with this, I guess is my question. | ||
Are you going with politics? | ||
You're running for Highland Park School Board. | ||
Is that just the beginning? Is that the launching off point for a presidential campaign down the line? | ||
What's next for Alex Stein? | ||
Well, once I win my school board race or if I help another candidate get in or whatever shenanigans I do with this, you know, I'm probably going to go after a red flag law, you know, John Cornyn. | ||
I'm going to run for senator. You're going to be talking to Senator Stan here in about three or four years. | ||
They all better get ready, I'm telling you. | ||
And guess what? I'm going to go to the border. | ||
We're going to go insane for the Ukraine on the border. | ||
I'm going to have tanks. I'm going to have guns. | ||
I'm going to have the military there because we got an invasion. | ||
That's what's going to happen when primetime 99 becomes senator. | ||
I'm standing literally on Capitol Hill and saying we are sending our troops because I'm anti-war. | ||
I'm a conflict interventionalist. | ||
I hate the idea that we shoot people. | ||
We kill an Afghani that makes $500 a year. | ||
Literally, that's what they made in Afghanistan with a missile that cost $400,000. | ||
It just doesn't make sense mathematically and financially. | ||
So the military industrial complex, if we're going to have it, if it's going to exist, if it's going to ruin our lives, at least ruin our lives and help us protect our own border. | ||
So I think that would be the main thing that I would run on because the fentanyl and all of the overdoses and the sex trafficking is all based and grown off the fungus of our border issue. | ||
Yeah, no, I totally agree. | ||
And this was actually a major shift that I saw during this TPSA event. | ||
Walking around, I didn't hear a lot about, like, tax reform. | ||
I didn't hear a lot about anything that you would have heard 10 years ago in a conservative conference. | ||
I heard a lot about defeating the globalists. | ||
I heard a lot of anti-war activism. | ||
I mean, this is a sea change that's happening with conservatives. | ||
It's happening on the grassroots level. | ||
It's happening with the younger generations. | ||
It seems like the older generations are still clinging on to, like, I think we represent that change. | ||
Alex Jones has been a leader in that change. | ||
How long do you think until we actually see the Mitch McConnells and the Lindsey Grahams kicked out in favor of non-interventionalists, people that really represent the America First policies that you and I agree with? | ||
Well, you know, it's funny, Harrison, because you asked me, like, oh, you know, what is the political, you know, is that the political route that you're going to go? | ||
But let me tell you something. Really, I'm a conspiracy theorist. | ||
We have a uniparty. I mean, Mitch McConnell, they're all literally on the take. | ||
So, I mean, you look at Dan Crenshaw at one point, he was like this hero in the conservative movement. | ||
Now he's just the biggest globalist there is. | ||
So I'm anti-establishment. | ||
Forget the left wing, right wing. | ||
You know the cliche. It's on the same bird, and it's going in a play glass window. | ||
So I'm just telling you, I have very little hope in our elected officials or our federal government until we don't really basically have a federal government. | ||
And I'm not saying we should have a national divorce, even though I'm friends with MTG. I don't really like that idea, but... | ||
Our federal government has too much control, and they're all very dysfunctional. | ||
So I really have very little hope that people are actually going there and make change because once you get in there, you get bought and sold by corporations because every single politician, once they get elected into office, they'll do anything to stay in office. | ||
So even somebody with the best intentions, they go to Capitol Hill with the best intentions, can get corrupted like that because of money, because of power, because of greed. | ||
Well, but isn't it weird that, like, you know, I talk to regular conservative people out there. | ||
They aren't in favor of the war in Ukraine, but the conservative party clearly is. | ||
And we've talked about this on the show quite a bit, that, you know, nothing really illustrates the division more than, you know, the war in Ukraine, because you've got both parties at the top for it, but most of the people on the bottom aren't for it. | ||
I mean, that's the real division, obviously, right? | ||
Those in charge in the government and those who are just subjected to it. | ||
But... Like, how can they keep getting elected when they keep promoting things that nobody wants? | ||
Do people actually want the war in Ukraine? | ||
I mean, are they really that foolish? | ||
How do we break this paradigm? | ||
How do we destroy the two-party system? | ||
We all recognize it. We all recognize it's a uniparty. | ||
What steps can we take to break out of this system? | ||
Well, people always say that. They're like, Alex, you're comedy. | ||
Why don't you offer solutions? | ||
All you do is mock the system. | ||
You just make fun of things. You don't offer solutions. | ||
Well, listen, these are complicated questions with complicated answers that I don't have all the answers to. | ||
But I think the first thing that we should do is negotiate as human beings. | ||
I mean, I believe that not just in Ukraine, but literally we spent 20 years in the Middle East, didn't find any weapons of mass destruction, and nobody even bats an eye about how terrible that we bombed young children, weddings, funerals. | ||
And then now we're in the Ukraine and people are dying because of a proxy war between the West and Russia. | ||
It's insane. We're going to get into World War III. And I just feel like it's almost inevitable, Harrison. | ||
All they have to do is negotiate. | ||
The people in the Donbass region, they could stay autonomous. | ||
And then Ukraine didn't join NATO. I believe that was all they had to agree to. | ||
But because their Western allies are twisting their arm, and America and Germany and Europe are about to put us into World War III. Terrible, Harrison. | ||
No, yeah, it absolutely is. | ||
And, you know, all the other topics that we discussed sort of fall to the wayside when you're talking about nukes flying and open combat with China and Russia on one side and America, Israel, and, you know, whoever else on the other side. | ||
We'll be back again with Alex Stein on the other side to talk about, I want to get into some more of the cultural topics here in America. | ||
I won't flatter him anymore. | ||
He sucks. Alright folks, welcome back. | ||
Alex Stein is my guest. | ||
AlexStein99 on Twitter. | ||
He's got a new show on Blaze TV. It's making a huge splash, as he always does. | ||
I remember what I was going to say when you so rudely interrupted my complimenting of you. | ||
But it was that... It was the phrases. | ||
You have a particular talent coming up with little phrases that stick in people's minds that they just love, whether it's like prime time, 99, pimp on a blimp. | ||
But it's not a silly thing. | ||
I mean, if there's one thing that the left beats us in every time, it's in coming up with these little phrases That they just come up, you know, stochastic terrorism, and suddenly it's everywhere, and suddenly you have to deal with it. | ||
And they come up with these phrases that then stick in people's minds and can actually alter the way they think about things. | ||
You have sort of a talent in this. | ||
Do you do that on purpose? | ||
Is it just something that strikes your fancy that you then run with? | ||
And how can this sort of, like, sloganism be used effectively by us? | ||
Because we don't do it as well as the other side does. | ||
You know what I'm talking about? Well, let me tell you something. | ||
This is a very good question, because I'm very threatened, and I mean this. | ||
I mean this 100%. | ||
I'm an insane autist, and I can rhyme. | ||
I'm primetime 99 on the grind all the time. | ||
You know what I'm saying? I can do it all, right? | ||
But now they have this little monster called ChatGPT. | ||
This thing can rhyme better than I ever could. | ||
And of course, we need more slogans. | ||
We need to know pimp on a blimp. | ||
We need to know something that, you know, people like alliteration. | ||
But I'm saying, I can rhyme all day long. | ||
And I was talking about this earlier. | ||
My producer, he went to Princeton. | ||
He thinks he's so smart. But he uses ChatGPT and shows me all this stuff ChatGPT can do. | ||
And you can say, hey, write me a 16-line song that rhymes. | ||
And it will. I mean, the songs will be kind of weird and, you know, kind of, you know, dystopic, but that kind of makes it kind of cool, too, in a weird way. | ||
Which I'm just saying, I'm very threatened by my rhyming ability because these robots and these machines are going to take over. | ||
And this is another thing that's been a very controversial topic on my show. | ||
You know, obviously, I lost my mother unfairly to COVID. She was given remdesivir, but... | ||
How I'm honoring my mother is I actually, on my show, I can speak to my mother because I bought a device where I've uploaded her consciousness into a computer allowing me to speak to her in the afterlife. | ||
And now people are like, oh, that's so insensitive, but they don't get the joke. | ||
Obviously, my mom would love it because I'm honoring her, but that's not the joke. | ||
I'm not really talking to my mom. | ||
I'm talking to a dystopic Alexa machine, and that's the future that these people want to have. | ||
Even Jared Kushner said he thinks he can live forever. | ||
So I'm trying to poke fun at the idea of transhumanism and that people want to live forever and that they think even Elon Musk, who I love what he did with Twitter, but he even wants Neuralink where he can, you know, literally plug your brain into basically a metaverse. | ||
So, I mean, I just, I don't know. | ||
It's very, it's kind of scary, the idea of transhumanism. | ||
And that's what I'm trying to poke fun at. | ||
So people always get mad. It's like, I'm not talking to my mom. | ||
I'm talking to a representation of transhumanism trying to wake people up, but that's kind of the scary reality we live in, Harrison. | ||
Yeah, 100%. I think definitely the fact that people are okay with it, the fact that people think they can actually upload their consciousness is sort of terrifying. | ||
I have a A story about that. | ||
I've got to find it in just a second, and I'll do it in just a second. | ||
But you brought up Princeton, and that was another story that I wanted to cover today. | ||
This is from the New York Post. Columbia becomes first Ivy League school to permanently drop SAT, ACT testing requirements. | ||
For lawyers, they're dropping certain requirements to become a lawyer. | ||
They're lowering standards because they want more diverse doctors. | ||
So, of course, diversity is our strength, which means we have to lower standards across the board. | ||
That doesn't make any sense, but it doesn't have to. | ||
They're doing it anyway. What is happening here? | ||
Like, what is the outcome when you just lower standards across the board, no longer, you know, have a unbiased, just fact-based, who knows the most about this, they get the reward? | ||
Like, what happens when you remove all of that and, you know, open up even Ivy League schools to, you know, less qualified people? | ||
I mean, there can't be a good end to this. | ||
Well, no, there is, because the idea of an all-female cockpit is exactly what I want to see when I get on an airplane. | ||
There's nothing that breeds more confidence in my travel experience when I look in that cockpit, and I see two women with girl power, because that is the future, Harrison. | ||
So I don't want this bigotry. | ||
No, affirmative action is the way. | ||
But no, seriously, it's kind of a joke, and if you actually look at it, it's reverse racism, because a lot of people, even Mindy Kaling's brother, lied and said he was black on his emissions to get in. | ||
So it's weird that people actually lie to say that they're whatever box they can check in order to get in, whether it's Pacific. | ||
I think they use all kinds. | ||
I forget how many ethnicities are on that box, but if you are an ethnicity that they want to pump up, you're more likely to get into that school. | ||
So if you're an African-American, you have a better chance than an Indian. | ||
And I don't know why that is, but Mindy Kaling's brother is a perfect example of lying to get in. | ||
So because of that, we have a corrupt system. | ||
And now there are probably, sadly, and I hope this never happens, going to be a plane crash because we're more worried about the color of the captains than their ability to fly a plane. | ||
And so we should live in a meritocracy and not sort of this affirmative action nightmare. | ||
But really, with ESG and all these companies and these basically social governance rules that they're giving themselves, I have very little hope for a meritocracy ever coming back. | ||
It'll always be just you basically... | ||
Get elected or you get chosen because you're Rachel Levine and you're a transgender. | ||
It's very weird how you can be like Sam Brinton because you're non-binary. | ||
You're basically in charge of our nuclear waste, and you're stealing women's clothes and African designers' clothes, and you get picked all because you're non-binary. | ||
So because we have this weird system where we actually elect freaks like Pete Buttigieg, who has no idea about transportation, because he's gay. | ||
So, I mean, and then, you know, KJP, she can barely— I'm not transphobic. | ||
I'm not homophobic. I'm not a racist. | ||
I just want it to be a meritocracy. | ||
If it's the best black man, if it's the best Chinese man, they deserve the job. | ||
It shouldn't be based on the color of their skin. | ||
And it's so strange that that's like an antiquated view now. | ||
Like, that's like the old school, like, hey, you know, whoever it is, as long as they're the best for the company. | ||
And it's gone so far the other way. | ||
And I think you're pointing out something very important. | ||
I think the point that you're making is that all of the first gay transportation secretary, the first black lesbian press secretary, all of these first turn out to be horrible failures. | ||
Is that the point that you're making? | ||
Is that the... Exactly. | ||
But it's true, isn't it? Exactly right. | ||
Yes. I mean, honestly, even Chucky was better than KJP. It's like, listen, I want the best man for the job, and it's not easy to find that person. | ||
But if we're electing people like Pete Buttigieg, I mean, the guy could care less about Ohio. | ||
I mean, look at Joe Biden. | ||
He's like a white man. | ||
He actually stands for everything that—he's a— He's the opposite of everything the Democratic Party stands for. | ||
He's an old white man, affluent. | ||
But because he's such a puppet, they put him in there. | ||
So, I don't know. And you look at Kamala Harris, she's literally the worst vice president in all of history. | ||
And why did she even get the nomination? | ||
Because she was, you know, giving BJs to Willie Brown when she was mayor? | ||
I mean, she's literally dating Montel Williams. | ||
Like, this is not the woman that should be vice president. | ||
And God bless her soul, I actually don't hate the woman by any means, but she's not qualified for the job. | ||
So we have all these people that are unqualified because there's some deep state that's pushing all the buttons and causing all of this. | ||
And so the world's going to be gay, trans, and lesbian before it's ever going to get back to working order, in my opinion. | ||
That is the more important agenda, is making the government more gay instead of making the government run better. | ||
But, I mean, it's really just like the liberals are just the biggest suckers in the world. | ||
I mean, Kamala Harris is the perfect example. | ||
She was basically the least popular Democrat in the primary. | ||
She was one of the first to drop out. | ||
She was basically booed off of stage, and yet she's the vice president. | ||
And forever, forever for all of time, she will be the first person for all of history to be a woman and a black, although she's not really black, but the first black woman as vice president or president, right? | ||
The first one as a chief of the executive office. | ||
Forever, it's her. | ||
In all of history, this has been inscribed in stone. | ||
They got screwed over, and they all hate her. | ||
All the leftists hated her in the first place. | ||
So, like, they just get screwed over, over and over and over again, and yet they keep falling for it. | ||
They keep pushing this idea. | ||
It's like the biggest joke on the liberals ever. | ||
Well, just wait, because, you know, I have a feeling with all of these classified documents, and they want to indict Trump so bad, that they're going to give Joe Biden the old humiliation ritual, you know, maybe the Ukraine war, and it might happen, like, Three months before his presidency is over, and they're going to say, oh, let's put in Kamala just to break that quote-unquote glass ceiling. | ||
So, wow, that's going to be another affirmative action hire, all because they want to make a statement and not because they actually want to run the country at its highest efficiency. | ||
So, it's a little scary, and when she becomes president, which I'm predicting here, get your tinfoil hats ready, I predict Kamala Harris will be president before 2024. | ||
Whoa, you think this year Joe Biden is going to be out and Kamal Harris is going to be in? | ||
Well, I wouldn't bet against you. | ||
I honestly wouldn't bet against you. | ||
I'm shocked every time I see Joe Biden walking around that he hasn't collapsed already. | ||
So I think he might be on something there. | ||
We'll be back on the other side, final segment. | ||
We're going to talk about uploading your consciousness to the cloud and how that's dumb. | ||
All right, welcome back, folks. Final segment with Alex Stein. | ||
And, you know, I'm complimentary of Alex Stein, obviously, because he's had huge success, but also because I really, you know, I understand, and I want more people to understand, that you really aren't just making, like, goofy, kind of surface-level... | ||
Jokes about this stuff. You actually have a really deep understanding of what's going on in a full spectrum understanding of where this is going. | ||
It's not about left or right. | ||
It's not about Republican, Democrat. | ||
It's about the globalists taking over the world and enslaving us all in a machine. | ||
That's the truth. | ||
That's the reality. And it's just fantastic to see somebody who understands that getting the popularity that you do because those people tend to be... | ||
Tossed to the side as fringe conspiracy theorist or whatever. | ||
Now, with that in mind, I want to talk about what you just talked about, your mom being uploaded to a mainframe and being able to communicate with her. | ||
We're going to break some news here. | ||
First of all, I don't know if you've noticed, but the metaverse is over. | ||
The story's on the street. Mark Zuckerberg quietly buries the metaverse. | ||
CEO of social media giant Meta has sworn by AI, popularized by chatbot GPT. There will be no big press release, no big announcement, as Zuckerberg would have to acknowledge that he was wrong. | ||
But make no mistake, Zuckerberg just buried the metaverse. | ||
The metaverse is dead. | ||
Now... This was posted on 4chan. | ||
I don't know if it's true or not, but it strikes me as true, especially when combined with that previous story I just showed you. | ||
This says this, I'm a meta-insider working on Project Lazarus. | ||
We're building an AI that can take over a deceased person's social media accounts and continue making relevant posts as if that person is still alive. | ||
This includes age-progressed photos interacting with other people's content and everything else needed so that the person continues on in the digital realm after physical death. | ||
We were originally told this would be a service offer to people struggling with the loss of loved ones and people who had missing children. | ||
Seems like a decent idea. | ||
Things are getting weird now, and I'm having second thoughts about what this is actually going to be used for. | ||
The AI is extremely capable of impersonating people. | ||
It doesn't take as much initial input as one might think to train the AI how a certain person interacts with the digital world. | ||
It's very convincing. | ||
An entire island of people could go missing, and with little to no downtime, AI could take over their social media, and the world wouldn't have a clue that life wasn't just continuing as usual. | ||
A lot of the project is becoming compartmentalized. | ||
Things have taken a dark turn, it feels like. | ||
We've forbidden communication between people working on different projects. | ||
Something isn't right. | ||
I don't know what I should do. | ||
I'm not going to post any personally identifiable information, but I'll try it. | ||
Again, I can't confirm whether this is real or not, but it strikes me as true, it strikes me as real, and it strikes me as terrifying. | ||
Your thoughts on this, Alex? | ||
Yeah, well, I mean, honestly, even if this iteration of the metaverse gets canceled, this is what they want. | ||
This is the idea that they literally, it sounds crazy, but they're going to say, oh, because of climate change, they basically want you to live into, I mean, move into a pod where they'll basically, you know, intubate you with a tube and feed you, you know, through your arm or something. | ||
And you'll just like either look at pornography on a screen all day or you won't even be alive. | ||
But they want to basically make it like it's vanilla sky. | ||
So in this fake artificial world, you can be the quarterback of the Dallas Cowboys. | ||
You could be Alex Jones's co-host on InfoWars. | ||
You can literally do whatever you want. | ||
I mean, you could be the president of, you know, Abu Dhabi. | ||
I don't even know if they have a president, but you know what I mean. | ||
You can be a whatever cat. | ||
You could be a furry. | ||
You could have a fursona, as they call that, Harrison. | ||
Did you know that these furries, they have a fursona? | ||
So I'm just saying, we live in a very weird world where people basically would rather have almost digital sex than real sex. | ||
And it's kind of scary. | ||
I think we need to go back to... | ||
They say... | ||
Get off your computer and go touch some grass. | ||
We literally need to do that because you see all these ideas of these 15-minute cities. | ||
That's the start. It's like first they move us in a 15-minute city where everything is, you know, 15-minute walk or public transportation right away. | ||
And then you don't have a car. | ||
And then all of a sudden you're stuck at your house. | ||
And then it's easier to lock us down. | ||
So this all sounds... It's dystopic and it's probably not going to necessarily happen like in our lifetime where they'll have the technology where it'll be that smooth. | ||
But I mean, it could. I don't know. | ||
I mean, technology is progressing so fast. | ||
They probably, you know, want to get it out there. | ||
So they're going to have all these failed iterations like they had with this metaverse. | ||
But sadly, there's going to be people that line up to go have their consciousness uploaded to a computer if that is a possibility because the world is so terrible. | ||
And that's kind of the idea is they basically want to destabilize the world. | ||
They want to make you feel that you're just, you know, some sort of a cosmic accident that evolved from pond scum and that your life doesn't really matter and that you should abort your baby. | ||
And that's more important for the climate, more important to kill your baby than it is to, you know, hurt the environment and put a hole in the ozone layer, quote unquote. | ||
And I don't even think they say that that's what's causing climate change anymore. | ||
I mean, I remember when I was in college, that's what they told us. | ||
They said, because of all the aerosols that, you know, there's a hole in the ozone layer and that's why things are getting hotter yet. | ||
None of those ice caps in Antarctica have melted yet. | ||
So it's just all a joke. | ||
It's all a lie to basically make you kill yourself. | ||
And if you think I'm kidding, then why is assisted suicide so popular in Canada? | ||
Why are they telling their citizens that have like simple hip injuries that, oh, it'd probably be better if you just killed yourself. | ||
So that's literally what's going to happen. | ||
If you are a leech to the system or you don't vote for their party, they're probably going to encourage you to either... | ||
Plug yourself into your computer, which is suicide as well, because as soon as you plug into that computer, you're dead. | ||
Or they're going to just not even give you the computer. | ||
They're not even giving you the rope-a-dope. | ||
They're just going to say, hey, you know what? | ||
Life sucks! Life sucks! | ||
Here's a needle! Here's lethal injection! | ||
That sounds fun! So, you know, that's the weird reality that's actually happening. | ||
With assisted suicide, you can look it up and it's very scary. | ||
No, yeah. Made, especially in Canada, it's like people that are just like, I can't afford my rent. | ||
And the doctor's just like, maybe you should die then. | ||
Maybe you should just die and we'll sell your house to a Chinese millionaire and then the world is saved. | ||
I mean... It's one of those things that I get why people think conspiracy theories are crazy, because just in that last two minutes, you went across the board there, right? | ||
You went from assisted suicide to transhumanism to furries, but it is all connected. | ||
It is all part of the same push, and I think understanding and expressing that and expressing that the opposite is what is natural, what is real, what is tangible, what What is, you know, able to be felt, your family, your friends, the real world. | ||
Like, that's what we need to cling on to for all it's worth and beat back these people that are trying to tell us that none of it matters and that whether you're alive or dead, a bunch of zeros on the screen, it's basically your soul. | ||
I mean, it's such a despicable view, but it's like the overwhelming dominant view these days, and it's horrifying. | ||
Is there even a way to, like, if you've got somebody who's like, well, I'm just going to go commit suicide because, you know, climate. | ||
I'm going to abort my child. I'm never going to have children because I want to save the earth. | ||
I'm going to block out the sun to save the earth. | ||
I mean, is there any way to break through to those people? | ||
Like, what do we do about this? | ||
Well, I mean, literally, that's Bill Gates' idea, is to put aluminum in the atmosphere to block out the sun, so that sounds insane. | ||
Us conspiracy theorists are insane, but literally, that's a plan, and they're actually doing it. | ||
But this is the kind of weird reality in which we live in, that it's almost... | ||
I don't even know how to describe it. | ||
It's almost inevitable, though, Harrison, because I hate to admit that, but this is what I want to try to get. | ||
This is the message I want to get to the listeners right now, though. | ||
This is why it's so important to not be a Rothschild slave to the system. | ||
And we all have to have a job. | ||
We should all work. We all got to pay our bills. | ||
But life is like what you said. | ||
It's about creating something. It's about doing something we're passionate about. | ||
So I just encourage people, whether whatever your hobby is, whether it's playing sports, exercise, you know, being with your family, creating a podcast, creating art, creating anything, doing standup. | ||
You know, it doesn't matter. | ||
I'm just saying that is what's important in life is actually creating and being themselves and not just being a debt slave, not just being a slave to the system, because that's the sad reality, Harrison. | ||
And you know this. | ||
I have so many friends that have kids that have no idea who Klaus Schwab is. | ||
They don't even know the world economic forum is. | ||
And I don't even want to get into the woods about it because I don't really want to unplug them from the matrix and say, oh, here's your red pill. | ||
But these people, you know, it's just, it's really hard to kind of, you know, I don't really necessarily want to wake them up, but that's the reality in which we live in that. | ||
Most people are just a slave to the system, sadly, because the system is so strong. | ||
And people like my mother, who was just doing what her doctor told her, I mean, listening, following the protocols that she thought would be best for her, and the system killed my mother. | ||
So, I mean, the system is killing people left and right every day, and that sounds, oh, tinfoil hide conspiracy theorists. | ||
We're not. It's like... It's just a very sad, sad reality. | ||
And I don't know how we fix it. | ||
I don't have all the solutions. I don't know how I beat the military industrial complex, the pharmaceutical industrial complex, Silicon Valley. | ||
I mean, these people already have all their tentacles. | ||
You know, they are the octopus, and I'm just trying to get this octopus off me, and it's very difficult. | ||
And I don't know how we're going to do it. | ||
Yeah, it's like a hydra, right? | ||
You chop off one head and two more appear. | ||
It seems like an overwhelming thing. | ||
But, you know, I really do think it's an information war. | ||
And I really do think that, like, when people realize what's going on, when they can really be shown clearly in an effective and convincing way what the reality is, they'll stand up, they'll reject it. | ||
We're seeing the awakening. You're a huge part of that. | ||
Comedy is a huge part of that. | ||
It is the sugar that helps the medicine go down because you're right. | ||
People don't want to be red-pilled. | ||
They don't want to swallow that medicine. | ||
So sometimes you've got to coat it in a little bit of comedy just to break through that barrier they have protecting themselves from reality. | ||
You do a fantastic job of that. | ||
Again, AlexStein99 on Twitter. | ||
BlazeTV.com is the website where you can find his new show, Primetime with Alex Stein. | ||
It's on Blaze TV. It's hilarious, enlightening, and all the other great things you've come to expect from Alex Stein. | ||
Thanks so much for being with us, Alex. | ||
I'll have to have you on again very soon. | ||
Keep up the great work, sir. And live Tuesday! | ||
This Tuesday on YouTube. Please watch the show. | ||
I love you guys. Thank you to all the info warriors out there. | ||
I love you, Harrison. Thank you guys. | ||
You put me on the map. Couldn't have done it without you and the crew. | ||
So thank you guys so much for all the hard work you're doing in this information war. | ||
So God bless you guys. | ||
We just love seeing it. | ||
We're the launching pad. | ||
You're the rocket going into space, which I'm told on very reliable. | ||
It's not real. Space is not real. | ||
It's fake, and I'm sure you're checking that out from your blimp. | ||
The Pimp on a Blimp, Alex Stein, Primetime99. | ||
Thanks so much for being with us, folks. | ||
Stay tuned. We're going to come back in the second hour with Sovereign Bra. | ||
His name's Chase. That's all I know about him. | ||
Although you've probably seen him if you've been on Twitter in the last few months. | ||
You might not know who he is, but you will when we talk to him. | ||
Don't go anywhere, folks. It's the American Journal Infowars.com. | ||
InfoWarsStore.com. | ||
Support us there. | ||
It's often said that America's power grid is the Achilles heel of the U.S. | ||
And it seems that tendon is about to snap. | ||
According to a confidential industry analysis conducted by the North American Electric Reliability Corporation, Physical attacks on the U.S. power grid rose 71% last year compared with 2021, and they're likely to increase this year. | ||
Their study claims that ballistic damage, intrusion, and vandalism largely drove the increase. | ||
In clusters of attacks on infrastructure in the Southeast, Midwest, and the Pacific Northwest, these deliberate acts of violence to disrupt power supply appear to be carried out by members of various extremist groups. | ||
Who all share the common goal of destabilizing the grid. | ||
Sometimes politically or ideologically motivated, the groups include environmental extremists, Antifa members, and the mainstream media's favorite to discuss, white supremacist neo-Nazis. | ||
Two of which were caught planning an attack on Baltimore's power grid. | ||
In December of 2022, several substations in Moore County, North Carolina, were attacked with gunfire, putting 45,000 people in the dark without power. | ||
And a similar incident occurred in Randolph County on January 17th. | ||
Also in January of this year, three substation attacks in Pierce County, Washington state impacted thousands. | ||
And the culprits have yet to be caught or identified in any of these cases. | ||
The millions in damages has led the state senate in North Carolina to create and present legislation titled Protect Critical Infrastructure, which would increase the severity of punishment for those who, quote, Knowingly and willfully destroy, injure, or otherwise damage, or even attempt to damage an energy facility. | ||
However, if our power grids are still the weak point of the nation, what can we do to strengthen them? | ||
And what legislation can help in the event of an electromagnetic pulse attack from a domestic or foreign enemy? | ||
The policies from the Biden administration in the name of environmental, social, and corporate government's principles Are certainly helping to weaken America's power grid. | ||
As InfoWars' Jamie White reported, quote, One of America's largest grid operators is warning of future energy imbalances due to Biden-led green policies. | ||
And their inability to meet the growing energy demand. | ||
So should Biden's administration be classified as an ideologically motivated extremist group who is attacking American infrastructure? | ||
Instead of shooting substations, they're closing down coal plants and making it impossible to provide for our booming population. | ||
With domestic pipelines shut down to sabotage our energy independence, oil refineries bursting into flames in Texas and Mexico, our food processing plants burning to the ground on a daily basis, poultry populations decimated by bird flu prevention procedures, Train transportation derailed across the country almost simultaneously. | ||
The loss of reliable electricity to help preserve our food, pump water and power the lives of millions of Americans would certainly be the last nail in the coffin for preserving our current way of life. | ||
The more we rely on electricity, the more of an Achilles heel it becomes. | ||
So pray for the best, but prepare for the worst. | ||
Consider purchasing storable food, storing water, and purchasing a gas-powered generator. | ||
Because sooner or later, whether we like it or not, that tendon is gonna snap. | ||
This is Brian Wilson with InfoWars.com. | ||
All right, folks, find and share that video at band.video. | ||
That is the latest from Red Pill TV. New trend power grid attacks growing in the U.S. We'll be back on the other side to talk to Chase, a.k.a. | ||
Sovereign Bra. He's, well, they call him a Twitter personality, but it's more than that. | ||
If you've been on Twitter recently, you've probably seen clips from the podcast where he states basic facts and everybody flips out about it. | ||
It's hilarious, and we'll talk about what he's doing to help make a more stable and just world. | ||
Alright, welcome back. Ladies and gentlemen, third hour has begun here on American Journal, Infowars.com, Band.Video. | ||
Infowarsstore.com is how you support us. | ||
It's the only way we get support from you, the American people. | ||
It allows us to do everything we do here, including getting our great guests, such as Chase, a.k.a. | ||
Sovereign Bra on Twitter. | ||
He's a man in the pursuit of truth, liberty, Jesus Christ, and personal sovereignty. | ||
Again, you can follow him on Twitter, at Sovereign Bra. | ||
Welcome, Sovereign Bra. | ||
unidentified
|
Welcome, Chase. Thank you for having me, bro. | |
It's an honor to be here. How are you today? | ||
I'm doing great. It's my pleasure. | ||
You know, I was a follower of your Twitter for a very long time. | ||
I was also seeing these videos of this podcast. | ||
I wasn't quite sure what it was. | ||
It's a dating podcast, but there's just one dude on it that is always saying based awesome stuff and everybody flips out about it. | ||
And then sure enough, one day you come out and go, oh yeah, this is me. | ||
Sovereign bra. I'm the one who's on this podcast doing all this. | ||
So, if anybody's been on Twitter in the right-wing sphere recently, they've seen clips from this podcast. | ||
Tell us about this and how you got started in all this and just what you're up to these days. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, absolutely, man. | |
It's funny how life works out. | ||
So, when I was in college, my freshman year of college, I saw videos that were going viral online from this YouTube channel, whatever. | ||
The guy who has the channel, he's a genius when it comes to creating video concepts. | ||
And I saw some videos my freshman year of college back in 2013. | ||
Love them. And I was walking on State Street in Santa Barbara in, I think, 2021. | ||
And I saw Brian, the owner of the Whatever YouTube channel, filming a video on State Street in Santa Barbara. | ||
And I was like, dude, I used to watch your YouTube when I was in college. | ||
What's up, man? Him and I started talking. | ||
We hit it off, exchanged phone numbers. | ||
And he texted me like, I don't know, like six months later. | ||
And he was like, Hey, man, I've got a podcast that I'm starting. | ||
Do you want to come on it? I was like, Yeah, sure. | ||
What's the subject? He was like dating. | ||
And I was like, Okay. So I, you know, started doing the podcast with him. | ||
It's been fun because I'm a conservative Christian. | ||
And here in Santa Barbara, we're surrounded by a lot of like very liberal, degenerate women. | ||
And, you know, we would just go back and forth. | ||
And I kept it pretty quiet on Twitter for a while because I've stayed relatively anonymous. | ||
And then these clips just started to explode in the past month. | ||
And I was like, you know what? I should probably capitalize on this moment. | ||
I'll tell people that I'm the guy in the clips. | ||
It's been a freaking rollercoaster since, man. | ||
Those clips have been seen like tens of millions of times in the past couple weeks. | ||
And they've resonated with a lot of people. | ||
A lot of people are super pumped to just see a normal guy saying very normal things that a lot of people are afraid to say. | ||
And it's been cool, you know? | ||
Yeah, no, it's been great. | ||
And again, it's just hilarious because what you're saying is not crazy. | ||
It's not out of nowhere. | ||
It's just like very normal stuff that I think a lot of people believe, maybe even most young men believe. | ||
And yet it's treated like you were just this ravenous hate monster. | ||
Like it's crazy. It's totally crazy. | ||
And it's extremely entertaining. | ||
I mean, I've tried desperately to get liberals to call in. | ||
I want to argue with them. They won't do it. | ||
So you found a situation where, like, they have to sit there and contend with your ideas, and it shows that they can't. | ||
And the reaction is always to call you a racist or a sexist. | ||
I mean, they just, you know, it's typical. | ||
They bring these phrases out. | ||
But, I mean, some of the stuff you hear on it, It's wild. | ||
At one point there's a clip, and maybe we'll play it a little bit later, where a girl is saying, it's unfair that you want a girl with less than seven former, like, sex partners. | ||
And it's like seven. Seven's a low number apparently now. | ||
I mean, this is just, it's insane. | ||
It's kind of a view into, I haven't dated in 15 years. | ||
I never really dated. I met my wife in high school and we were married in, or, you know, together in college. | ||
So, is this what dating is like these days? | ||
It seems horrifying. | ||
unidentified
|
It is here in California. | |
It's honestly, I tell my friends, you know, I've been looking for a godly wife for a long time. | ||
And here in California, it's kind of like a spiritual wasteland. | ||
A lot of the girls have slept with at least a dozen dudes by the time they're 20 years old. | ||
Here in California, there's a couple colleges and all the girls just get ran through at, you know, parties on Fridays and Saturday nights. | ||
And A lot of the girls on the show, man, by the time they're in their mid-20s, they've got 20, 30 dudes that they've slept with. | ||
And I'm just like, man, what is going on around here? | ||
This is crazy. And it's interesting because when a guy with standards and just basic standards of like, hey, I don't want a wife who's had sex with a ton of dudes comes along. | ||
They're I can't believe this. | ||
This is so not cool. And it's funny, man. | ||
Do you think it's just a personal reaction from them that they know that they've done things in their past that make them less valuable as long-term partners? | ||
And so they just feel like it's a personal attack, and so they just feel like they have to defend themselves even if they know they're wrong? | ||
Or do they legitimately think that there's no... | ||
What's the reason that anybody would want this? | ||
And they actually think it's a good thing that they've slept around so much. | ||
unidentified
|
A lot of them actually do think it's a good thing. | |
A lot of them, you know, I've heard girls on the show say, well, how am I going to know what I like unless I play the field for years and I'm with a bunch of guys? | ||
And it's like, you don't really need to do that in order to know what you like. | ||
And a lot of them also do get super defensive because they feel kind of ashamed that they've been with a bunch of guys by the time they're in their early 20s. | ||
And then when a guy comes along who's like, hey, yeah, that's a deal breaker for me. | ||
Some of the girls, I could tell on the show, they had crushes on me. | ||
And then I came along and I was like, yeah, this is a deal breaker for me. | ||
This is a deal breaker. This is a deal breaker. | ||
And the girls are like, whoa, holy crap. | ||
They start examining their life decisions and they're like, maybe I've been I'm doing some stuff that I shouldn't do. | ||
Honestly, I think it's been a good wake-up call for some of the girls on the show. | ||
What's been really cool is I've gotten a lot of messages from both men and women who have been like, dude, thank you for just standing up for basic traditional values. | ||
Because these are looked down upon in the culture. | ||
And when somebody stands up who says, yeah, no, this is my line in the sand. | ||
Like, I want this basic traditional morality, you know, basic virtue when it comes to sex and promiscuity and stuff like that. | ||
It's really encouraging for people to hear who also value that because you don't get a lot of voices in the culture that are speaking up about that. | ||
I think you're right, and I think also it's maybe not as important for the women that you're talking to, but I think the younger kids, I'm sure there are kids in middle school and high school that are, you know, watching these clips, and if the message is always like, it's hopeless, you'll never find a virtuous person, so you might as well enjoy yourself, because, you know, there's no point in waiting, because that's just, nobody else is going to wait, you're going to be the only one. | ||
When People hear that, like, no, there's other people out there that value this stuff. | ||
There's other people out there that are waiting for the right person, you know, to get married, you know, before they become intimate with them. | ||
Like, I think that's a valuable thing to tell, like, younger kids, like, no, it's worth it. | ||
It's worth waiting. It's worth not indulging in this stuff right now because you're not alone in this. | ||
Like, honestly, I think that's a super valuable thing that I know I didn't believe growing up. | ||
It was like, well, everybody's, you know, what, I'm going to stay a virgin. | ||
Nobody else is. So, like, why would I do that? | ||
It's not true. | ||
There are people out there that are virtuous and looking for other virtuous people. | ||
I think that alone is an important message for people. | ||
unidentified
|
It is. | |
It is, man. | ||
And I've gotten a bunch of messages from like 15, 16-year-old boys that are like, dude, it's so encouraging to see that there are older guys that feel this way. | ||
And my message to all the guys out there, because it's hard to find women that are virtuous today, especially in California, where all of the girls get indoctrinated at colleges and universities with like feminism and like sexual liberation and all this stuff. | ||
My message to all the guys out there is like, in the weeks since this stuff has gone viral, I've received so many messages from women that are like, it's really encouraging to know that there's guys like you who actually care about this stuff. | ||
And you guys need to know, those girls are out there. | ||
And to the women that resonate with these traditional values, you guys also need to know, there's a lot of guys out there that really want a woman who has traditional values, and they struggle to find them. | ||
And as you know, we're actually building a solution for that, but maybe we can get into that. | ||
I am excited to get into that. | ||
I'm excited to get into a lot of this different stuff. | ||
But also, you know, I definitely don't... | ||
I shouldn't say I don't like being judgmental on this show. | ||
But I know there's people out there in the audience that might feel personally attacked by what we're saying. | ||
But I don't think they should be. | ||
I don't think it's even a matter of opinion, which is one of the things I like about the fact that you do this podcast and you have this Twitter account that's very active and informative. | ||
You say stuff like this where you're talking about wanting a virgin wife and that sort of stuff, and you actually say, the data is clear, the higher number of premarital sexual partners a person has had, the higher their odds are getting divorced. | ||
Aside from choosing to believe in Christ, choosing a spouse is the most important decision we make in our entire lives. | ||
You've got to choose wisely. There's data to back this up. | ||
This isn't just like a preference. | ||
It's like to have a functional society, you've got to have functional people. | ||
To have functional people, they've got to be raised by a father and a mother. | ||
It's like you've got the data to back up what you're saying, and it's about more than just personal preference. | ||
I think that's an important point to make. | ||
You make it online. And I'd like you to make it again when we get back from the other side. | ||
We'll be back with Sovereign Bra. | ||
His name's really Chase. You can follow him on Twitter at Sovereign Bra. | ||
Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
I'm your host, Harrison Smith. | ||
This is the American Journal. My guest is known on Twitter as Sovereign Bra. | ||
And, man, I want to get into that. We have so much to talk about. | ||
I want to get into what sovereignty means to you. | ||
You have a great take on that. | ||
You know, of course, the podcast stuff is fantastic as well. | ||
We have so much to talk about. | ||
But we sort of left off in that last segment talking about premarital sexual partners and just the fact that being virtuous is not only a spiritual act. | ||
It has tangibly good benefits. | ||
And this is one of the things that I've talked about on this show, that people feel like in the past, well, you know, our parents were virtuous and didn't have sex until they were married because they were just scared of going to hell. | ||
And they were frightened by superstition. | ||
And we're above that now. | ||
But even outside of faith or superstition or anything, having virtue just makes for a tangibly better life. | ||
Can you expand on that idea? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, 100%. One of the things that John Adams wrote... | |
This is the American Journal. | ||
It's totally on brand. One of the things that John Adams wrote during the founding of this country is that this nation and its constitution were founded for a holy, moral, and religious people. | ||
You need a morally sound country... | ||
Right. | ||
Right. | ||
And as we were talking about on the break, I believe that the family is at the bedrock of civilization. | ||
And when it comes to, you know, promiscuity, premarital sex, all of this kind of stuff, like we were talking about before the break, the data is clear, man. | ||
The higher the higher the number of premarital sexual partners a person has had prior to getting married, the higher their odds of getting divorced. | ||
Right. | ||
And you look at the statistics on fatherlessness and kids growing up in homes without their dads It massively increases a person's risk of not graduating high school or going to college, ending up in jail, getting addicted to drugs, committing suicide. | ||
And I think we live in this society that's kind of falling apart right now. | ||
And really strengthening the family is something that will strengthen our civilization and society as a whole. | ||
And for me, giving up premarital sex, that was something I really, you know, I've been saving myself for my future wife. | ||
I want to have the most rock-solid marriage that I can possibly have because I know that, you know, if a kid grows up in a broken family or if their parents go through divorce, that has an impact on the rest of their life and it damages a lot of people. | ||
You know, I grew up in a divorced family and, dude, it was a lot to work through, man. | ||
There was a lot of brokenness and damage that it left on my spirit. | ||
And at the end of the day, dude, like, I could not agree more. | ||
And the strange thing is that, you know, obviously, well, it's sort of like this idea has been monopolized by the religious side of things. | ||
But also the psychiatrists know this, the therapists, the doctors know this. | ||
I mean, you can ask any of them. You know, if they're looking for signs of mental instability, they're literally like, well, are you from a divorced home? | ||
You know, where you... I mean, they'll say, like, the best way to raise a responsible, productive, happy person is you got to have a mom, you got to have a dad, and they got to be involved in the kid's life. | ||
But then suddenly, when it comes to, like, government policy, it's like, well, but, you know, but it actually doesn't matter. | ||
But it does, and they know it does. | ||
Scientifically, it matters. In the development stages, it matters, and they know this. | ||
And yet, they're not the ones standing up for basic traditional morality. | ||
It's the religious people. | ||
They're the only ones doing it. | ||
When really, it should be the scientists and the doctors who are saying, no, we need to have pretty strict rules in all of this. | ||
And as you point out, what I would say is liberty is not a... | ||
Grant to do anything. | ||
It's an obligation. | ||
You have to deserve the liberty. | ||
You have to deserve the freedom. | ||
And if you don't act in a moral way, then it's going to go away. | ||
I mean, I think exactly what you're saying. | ||
It's dead on. | ||
Hitting the nail on the head here. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, and if I could add, freedom comes with responsibility. | |
You know what I mean? We have this incredible country with all these liberties entrusted to us, but that's not necessarily a license to just go out and do whatever you want. | ||
If everybody's doing that, it's going to degrade, again, the foundations of your nation. | ||
I have an incredible amount of freedom as an individual to go out and do whatever I want, but not everything that I want to do is good for me. | ||
Not everything that I want to do is going to have a positive impact on the rest of my life. | ||
I think Discipline, self-control, virtue. | ||
These are things that people should be practicing in their lives, not just for themselves, but also for the future of our country. | ||
I think that's really important. | ||
I definitely want to say that here on the American Journal. | ||
No, 100%, absolutely. | ||
And of course, you know, with the podcast, the Whatever Podcast, that's what it's called. | ||
It's called the Whatever Podcast, in case people missed it earlier. | ||
We weren't just saying the YouTube channel Whatever. | ||
No, it's the YouTube channel called Whatever, and it's at Whatever on Twitter is the name of the podcast. | ||
You know, it... It really demonstrates that having those virtuous qualities actually makes you a more attractive partner. | ||
It actually makes you a more valuable person in the eyes of the opposite sex or whoever you're trying to be attractive to. | ||
And we're in this weird cultural milieu now where even on the right wing, it's like the options being presented to people is you need to be an incel. | ||
You need to be lonely and miserable and by yourself and unattractive. | ||
Or... You know, you go the Andrew Tate way and you buy hookers and just, you know, go to... | ||
So you either have no companionship or you pay for impermanent companionship. | ||
And it's like, it's a false dichotomy. | ||
And I think it's important for all of us to go, no, there is another way. | ||
It's the American way. | ||
It's finding a virtuous person to share your life with, you know, and, you know, swear loyalty to under God. | ||
I mean, it's an option that's like, people act like it's not available, but it is. | ||
unidentified
|
It is. And not only is it available, there's a lot of men that want it that are struggling to find virtuous wives. | |
And there's a lot of women that want it that are struggling to find virtuous husbands. | ||
And I speak with a lot of the quote-unquote incels on Twitter. | ||
There's a bunch of dudes that proudly label themselves incels as sort of like a rejection of the degenerate women of today. | ||
And I talked to these guys, and a lot of these guys, they care about the future of America. | ||
They care about the future of the West. | ||
They care about the demographic replacement that's happening in the West. | ||
They want to make sure that we maintain a really solid country moving forward. | ||
I tell these guys, I'm like, dude, if you guys really care about this stuff, you got to go out there. | ||
You got to find a virtuous wife and you got to put a bunch of children inside her and And, you know, Psalm 127.4, in the Bible, it says, like, arrows in the hands of a warrior are the children of a man's youth. | ||
Right? So the Bible essentially describes having kids when you're young as a man, like arming yourself with artillery. | ||
And... I try to think long-term game plan always. | ||
Like, I look at where we are in this broken culture right now. | ||
I see it intensifying. | ||
I see it getting a lot worse in the decades ahead, unless we take action to do something about it. | ||
And for men to go out there and to not sleep around with a bunch of women, because that's bad for society. | ||
It damages everybody involved. | ||
For men to go out there and find a good woman and build, ideally, a godly Not religious, just a virtuous family. | ||
To do that and to raise your kids up with good values and to raise your kids up with courage and strength and faith and then to send them out into the culture. | ||
I mean, this is ultimately how we save the West and America long term. | ||
You know what I mean? We need to outbreed our enemies. | ||
And honestly, Harrison, I don't think it's going to be a difficult thing to do to outbreed our enemies because our enemies, they're into eating the fake meat. | ||
The soy slob, all this kind of stuff. | ||
Literally killing themselves. Now they're into literally killing themselves and castrating themselves. | ||
So no, it'll be easy and it'll be fun to do. | ||
All right, welcome back. | ||
Ladies and gentlemen, Sovereign Bra is my guest. | ||
His real name's Chase, but he goes by Sovereign Bra on Twitter, and you should follow him there. | ||
Not only is he making a huge blast with these podcast appearances where, again, he just says normal things, and these brainwashed people just flip out about it, and it's hilarious. | ||
But then, you know, you actually go back to these clips and expand on it and explain, you know, what you're saying, and it really gives ammunition to people who... | ||
Because I think a lot of people feel like you do, but don't even necessarily have the intellectual backing to explain why. | ||
They're just like, this is just what I want. | ||
But you can actually explain it and dig into it and get it, which I think is extremely valuable. | ||
I want to play a video here. This video was posted by Josh Lekic, actually. | ||
It's just a 15-second video. | ||
And I wasn't going to play it earlier, but I think you're the perfect person to sort of comment on it. | ||
Let's go to the video now. | ||
This was posted. It's a TikTok video. | ||
Here's a guy bragging about the fact that he lives alone in a house that's silent as a tomb. | ||
unidentified
|
Let's watch. I got 10 hours of sleep last night, and now I'm enjoying an iced coffee in the peace and quiet of my own home. | |
Do you know why I'm able to do that? | ||
Because I don't have children. Choices. | ||
Choices. I don't have kids. | ||
My house is silent and lifeless like a tomb. | ||
I drink iced coffee that I paid five dollars for. | ||
I mean, it's just... What is this? | ||
unidentified
|
What is this, Chase? It's Cope, bro. | |
It's Cope. These people, man, they love to brag about how they don't have kids and how their life is so much more free because they don't have kids. | ||
And don't get me wrong, having kids is a huge responsibility. | ||
And if you want to live it up and you want to travel and party and do all that stuff, obviously kids are going to be a weight that drags you down. | ||
But really, at the end of the day, I think having kids is... | ||
I talk to my friends that are parents. | ||
They're like, dude, it completely changed my life. | ||
I've been filled with love and motivation like I've never experienced before. | ||
It makes my life a thousand times more meaningful. | ||
And I feel like this impulse that these people, particularly on the left, have to brag about not having kids, I honestly feel like it's like... | ||
You know, this is totally okay. | ||
I totally love this. | ||
Like, yeah, I'm proud that I don't have any progeny or legacy to leave in the world. | ||
And it's just... I see right through it, you know? | ||
You know, maybe we could do a skit or something. | ||
Because I can see it now. I can see him, like, bragging about it. | ||
And he's like, post. And then he just sort of stands there. | ||
And you hear, like, the clock ticking. | ||
And he's just like, hmm. | ||
He just turns on a TV show that he's watched a million times before. | ||
And it's like, what... Really, this is what you're ending your genetic line for so you can watch more parks and recreation or, you know, whatever it is that you're into. | ||
It's like, it's so worthless. | ||
Yeah, having a kid is not easy necessarily, but it's like... | ||
I don't know. I almost can't even describe it because, I mean, if you haven't experienced, I really can't convey to you what it's like. | ||
But it makes everything else just seem like childish and shallow in comparison. | ||
I mean, I was thinking about the other day just like... | ||
I'm literally going to start crying. | ||
It's beautiful. | ||
It's beautiful having a child and it makes everything else just seem pathetic and worthless beforehand, quite frankly. | ||
Yeah, you can go travel. You can see the world. | ||
That's nice. But by the time you're 25, haven't you had enough of that? | ||
Aren't you done with that? | ||
And can't you now delve deeper into what it means to be a human being? | ||
I mean, they're cutting themselves off from their genetic reality. | ||
It's... Sort of horrifying. | ||
I know you don't have kids yet, but you're looking forward to it, right? | ||
unidentified
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Dude, I cannot wait, bro. | |
I cannot wait. When I was 18 years old, there was a day when I was like, man, It just hit me. | ||
I was like, I cannot wait to bring children into this world. | ||
I can't wait to bring kids into this world and to have a legacy and just these miniature versions of myself and the woman that I love that I can pour my love into and that I can raise. | ||
Dude, I've wanted to have like 10 kids for like years now. | ||
And honestly, I cannot wait for it. | ||
It's one of the things I'm most excited for in life. | ||
And you mentioned that you're a father. | ||
How would you say that being a father has changed your life? | ||
How has it added meaning to your life, Harrison? | ||
Well, it's, I mean, it just literally becomes the most important thing ever. | ||
And again, it's just, it's hard to describe. | ||
unidentified
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What was that moment like when you first looked into your child's eyes? | |
All right, you're literally going to make me cry. | ||
That's okay, man. No, it also, I mean, it gives you a whole new perspective on women. | ||
Like, my wife was in labor for, like, 24 hours or something, and, like, I'm falling over exhausted, and she's been up as long as I have, but also flexing every muscle in her body, and it's just like, wow, I should worship this person. | ||
Like, she's a goddess. This is something unbelievable that I can't even fathom how she's achieving this right now. | ||
And it's like, you know, women empowerment, it's like, I'm not impressed by a woman in a suit, Karen, a briefcase. | ||
Like, well done. You filled out the right forms and now you're getting paid money. | ||
That's great. When you see somebody actually giving birth, it just opens a whole new dimension of your appreciation for who they are and what they're capable of. | ||
unidentified
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I feel like true female empowerment is telling women God has blessed you with the ability to bring humans into this world. | |
You literally have the capacity to create souls with your body and to bring them into this world. | ||
That's incredible, dude. | ||
Women are portals from beyond space and time into space and time with their ability to create children. | ||
It's incredible. | ||
It's truly a miracle. I think there's a very intentional agenda to try and Label childbearing and childrearing as this thing that oppresses a woman. | ||
Yeah, it's like a burden and it limits a woman's freedom, but it's a miracle. | ||
Communicating that it's a miracle is one of the ways that we can dispel this entire satanic narrative. | ||
For sure. And another thing that I've noticed with people my age especially, I'm 33 years old. | ||
And I have friends that are my age that are like, yeah, I'm looking forward to having kids. | ||
And it's like, look, before you have kids, you got to find the right person. | ||
Or you got to marry the right person. Before you marry the right person, you got to find the right person. | ||
So it's like, you can't just go, okay, next year I'm going to have a kid. | ||
kid. | ||
You've got to sort of start laying the groundwork when you're young, knowing that's what you want. | ||
It can't be just like, well, one day I'll do that and we'll see how it goes. | ||
If you want to have kids, if you want to have a fulfilled life, in my opinion, you've got to be setting the groundwork now. | ||
You've got to be laying those paving stones now so that you can actually fulfill your desires down the line. | ||
And people don't realize that. | ||
It seems like you don't. | ||
It seems like that's what a lot of what you're involved in is about. | ||
I do want to talk about the dating app that you're talking about on Twitter and It's called Based Dating. | ||
Is that what it is? Because I think that's what's needed for people to actually find somebody because that's the first step. | ||
You've got to find someone. You've got to make sure they're right. | ||
You've got to get married to them. | ||
Then maybe you want to spend a little bit of time just with them. | ||
And then you get married. | ||
So if you want to have a kid, you've got to start laying the groundwork now because it's going to be a couple of years before it actually comes to fruition. | ||
unidentified
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100%. How much time do we have before the next break, Harrison? | |
Two minutes before the next break. Yeah, so I'd say let's get into base dating after the break. | ||
But what I want to tell all the men out there is like, especially the dudes that are younger, you mentioned you have some young men in your audience. | ||
I had this realization when I was 19 years old, after a bad breakup, I was like, dude, I want to become the best man I possibly can for my future woman, my future wife. | ||
And I spent from 19 up until now, I turned 28 shortly, just working on becoming the strongest, most competent man that I could possibly be to provide for a wife and a family, to effectively lead a family. | ||
And there's a lot of demoralized young dudes out there, but I will tell you this. | ||
It is God's will that we be fruitful and multiply. | ||
It is God's will, as a man, that you find a good woman and a good wife to create children with. | ||
And God listens to our prayers. | ||
I've seen prayers answered in my life over and over again. | ||
So for all the black-pilled dudes out there that feel hopeless, Focus on becoming the best man that you can possibly become. | ||
Pray to God for your future spouse. | ||
Pray to God that God helps you become that fantastic man and partner and leader of a household. | ||
And pray to God for your future partner, and he will absolutely deliver it to you in due time. | ||
You just gotta have faith. I've prayed on this for years, and now, you know, the opportunity to create a family with an incredible woman has opened up in front of me. | ||
And you just gotta have faith, you know what I mean? | ||
Absolutely, absolutely. And again, it's, I really can't express how fun it is. | ||
I really cannot express what it's like. | ||
This guy's like, I slept for 10 hours. | ||
Yeah, you know what? Sometimes I don't get to sleep a full 10 hours. | ||
Sometimes I don't get to sleep a full 8 hours. | ||
But when I do wake up, it's because a 2-year-old is jumping on me and demanding we go out and play in the yard. | ||
And it's like, I'll take that over sleeping a full night's sleep any day of the week. | ||
We'll be right back, folks. All right, folks, I've really, really, really been enjoying this conversation with Sovereign Bra. | ||
Even off air, it's been just super fun to talk to Chase. | ||
Chase is better known as Sovereign Bra, and you can follow him on Twitter there, where most of his activities take place. | ||
And one of the things that you talk about on your Twitter account is some new apps you're working on, some development you're doing. | ||
I mean, you're doing what I wish more people would do, and that's sort of build... | ||
Platforms and apps and ways for people who believe in tradition, traditional marriage or traditional anything to actually connect with one another. | ||
Tell us about the based dating app and what else comes along with it. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah, absolutely. So, you know, living here in California, I've been frustrated by the fact that there's literally millions of absolutely gorgeous women walking around But they're all captured by, like, leftist ideologies, like feminism, Marxism, and they're getting ran through in their 20s, and they're not interested in, you know, a traditional godly marriage. | |
And it's been a frustrating thing for me for a long time, and for a lot of my friends as well. | ||
You know, this is, California is like a spiritual wasteland. | ||
And I've been talking for the past couple years about like, I wish there was like a based dating app where, you know, people that are like-minded could connect with one another. | ||
And I tweeted about it last year. | ||
And since this rise that I've had on social media in the past week, I've been talking about the fact that it's important to build businesses and a parallel society that kind of rejects all of the satanic ideologies that are being pushed on us and all of the woke nonsense. | ||
And a Bitcoiner reached out to me, the guy who created Novaxmandates.com, to help people find employment during the vax mandates with companies that were not pushing vax mandates. | ||
And he was like, bro, I want to build an app with you. | ||
And he suggested building essentially a social media site for people that want to find employment or business partners or opportunities with companies and people that reject all of the woke ideology. | ||
And he was like, you know, I want to call it based prose. | ||
And he mentioned in his email to me, potentially creating some sort of, you know, dating aspect to it as well. | ||
And I was like, well, you know, what if we created a dating component to this app, or like a separate app? | ||
You know, I've wanted to build something called Based Dating for a while, an app like this. | ||
And he was like, well, you know, funny that you mention it. | ||
I own the URL Based.Dating. | ||
And I was like, you're kidding me. | ||
Yeah, dude, I was like, you are kidding me, bro. | ||
This is such a God moment. | ||
Yeah, dude. So he offered a partnership with me, and that's what we're doing, man. | ||
We're building two apps, Based Pros and Based Dating. | ||
Based Pros, like I said, is for people to find employment or business partners with people that reject everything that's going on. | ||
Based dating is for people to find partners that are unvaccinated, Christian, whatever their religion is, aligned in values, rejecting all of this woke nonsense. | ||
And the goal is really to connect people that have these traditional values or based values, whatever it is that people want. | ||
We're going to optimize it. | ||
We're going to dial it into the app. | ||
And for people that are listening who want to find, you know, based employment opportunities or a based partner, hopefully that they can get married to and have kids with, you know, this is a difficult thing for a lot of people to do, especially with the vaccines that have been pushed on humanity in the past couple of years. | ||
A lot of people want unvaccinated partners. | ||
If people are interested in this, go to get based dot org, pop your email into the little email box and we'll we'll be sending you some updates on this in the weeks ahead because we are we are hard at work on it right now. | ||
We are trying to build solutions for people so that they can get linked up because ultimately this is how we strengthen ourselves against this entire woke ideology. | ||
All of these narratives that are being pushed on society right now They are, there's a reason they spend billions of dollars trying to propagandize the masses. | ||
And it's because not everyone believes in this stuff that they're pushing, but a lot of people are afraid to speak up about it. | ||
Because they're worried about losing their jobs. | ||
I've connected with so many people in the past few weeks that have been like, dude, thank you for saying what I want to say. | ||
I want to say these things, but I'm worried about getting fired from my job. | ||
Based Pros is a solution to that. | ||
And for people that are looking for unvaccinated, you know, based partners that they can create families with and get linked up with, based dating is a solution for that. | ||
And honestly, man, glory to God for setting all of this up. | ||
Like, I'm truly amazed how he's working right now And, you know, we're just trying to build this parallel society and sovereignty against everything that's being pushed on us. | ||
Yeah, I want to talk about that, too, because you have a really great tweet about what true sovereignty is, and I want to talk about that in just a second. | ||
But just to pile on to what you were just saying, you know, it's taken decades to get us to this point. | ||
It's taken decades of concerted propaganda tactics and psychological operations to get us to this I don't think it's going to take decades to roll everything back. | ||
We can really see a sea change here and a shift that, if nothing else, will put the globalists on their back foot and force them to change their tactics because, really, there hasn't been a lot of pushback up until now, and people like yourself are leading that charge. | ||
And people ask me, like, do you think we're doomed? | ||
Do you think the world is doomed? Do you think America is doomed? | ||
And, of course, the answer is, like, well, I'm not doomed. | ||
My family's not doomed. | ||
You're not doomed. So how can we be doomed? | ||
So we want to undoom people. | ||
We want to give people the... | ||
Hope. A path forward and real hope for success in the future. | ||
So here's the tweet that you put out and I thought this was so brilliant. | ||
You said true sovereignty is being able to walk away from anything at any moment in time, being able to draw a line in the sand, being able to defend yourself and those you love, control over your mind, being above the criticism, the haters, the doubters and the naysayers. | ||
I think that's absolutely true. | ||
What does sovereignty mean to you? | ||
I mean it is your name. It's got to be important to you. | ||
How do you see sovereignty in your own life? | ||
unidentified
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Great question. I'm glad you asked. | |
So back in 2016, 2017, I was working as an ocean lifeguard. | ||
And, you know, I would be listening to the Joe Rogan podcast. | ||
And I would be I was just kind of like red pilling myself every day while I was at work and picking through the illusions of the world. | ||
And I was thinking to myself, man, like there's so much that needs to be spoken up about that people aren't speaking up about yet. | ||
And I was like, dude, I never want to work at a job where I could be fired for saying something that I truly believe that isn't It doesn't have to be hateful. | ||
It doesn't have to be whatever. I mean, even what I said on that podcast, I don't want to have sex with a trans person because then it would make me homosexual. | ||
People can get fired for stuff like that. | ||
And to me, true sovereignty, like I said, it's being able to walk away from anything at any moment in time. | ||
A lot of people, they're tied to their jobs and their careers. | ||
They're kind of shackled by it. | ||
And it shackles their voice. | ||
It makes it so that they can't speak up about what they actually think. | ||
A lot of people are shackled to bad relationships. | ||
There's a lot of men out there who can't defend themselves and the people that they love. | ||
And I think sovereignty is really... | ||
It's being independent from all of the things that are trying to hold you down. | ||
It's being above all of these narratives. | ||
It's being... And who can do what he wants without fear of getting canceled or fear of getting attacked by people. | ||
People will attack me for the things that I say. | ||
But I run my own business. | ||
I don't care. It doesn't matter. | ||
You can't end my client relationships because my clients are aligned with me in values. | ||
You can't mess with my life because I've built a degree of sovereignty in my life. | ||
And having a degree of sovereignty in your life is something that really allows you to be the person that you want to be. | ||
And we need more people like that. | ||
Because all of these narratives that are being pushed on us, like I think part of the reason why that clip of me telling, you know, that podcast that I wouldn't have sex with a trans person because it would make me gay. | ||
Part of the reason why that resonated with so many people is because it's like we're all thinking it. | ||
We're all thinking it. | ||
And very few people are actually saying it publicly because they don't want to get attacked. | ||
And if millions of people develop sovereignty in their life to the point where they can speak up against these narratives, dude, like the elites in their agenda that they're pushing on humanity, it's done. | ||
Because courage, it's like a torch, dude. | ||
And it shines in the darkness of the night of our current situation. | ||
And when one person speaks the truth, that gives all of the people around them a bit more courage. | ||
And they're like, wow, somebody else feels the way that I do. | ||
And then people start to speak up. | ||
And as people start to speak up, more and more people realize, yeah, dude, all of these narratives, man, they're a And reclaim territory in our culture. | ||
And that's, you know, that's my goal, man. | ||
I want to pursue sovereignty in my own life, but I also want to help people develop sovereignty in their lives so that they can reclaim territory in our culture, so that we can take back our country. | ||
And I have a lot of hope, man, you know, especially now that we're creating base dating and base pros. | ||
I've got a lot of hope for people building sovereignty in their lives and building sovereign relationships where they can start not only holding the line, but reclaiming territory. | ||
Tremendously hopeful. And as you know, we have God on our side. | ||
We're up against satanic ideologies and narratives, and we have God on our side. | ||
And this is the God of the universe, the God of Isaac, Abraham, and Jacob, Jesus Christ. | ||
He is a God that works miracles and wants us to win, you know? | ||
100%. Brilliantly said. | ||
Everybody, that's Chase, also known as SovereignBraw on Twitter. | ||
Follow him on Twitter at SovereignBraw or go to getbased.org. | ||
Send in your email and get on the mailing list. | ||
That's fantastic stuff. | ||
Thanks so much for joining us, Chase. | ||
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That's the discussion on the conservative side of things, especially the younger side. | ||
That's because of Infowars, and that's because of you. | ||
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