Speaker | Time | Text |
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...adverse effects to the nose, throat, and sinuses. | |
And it comes from a doctor who's been examining a group of Chesterfield smokers as part of a program supervised by a responsible, independent research laboratory. | ||
Now, after a full year and four months, the doctor reports again No adverse effects to the nose, throat, or sinuses from smoking chesterfields. | ||
A COVID jab shill Peter Hotez attacks Alex Jones, claims he never took money from Big Pharma. | ||
Now, he's really jumped the shark on this one. | ||
He's playing a shell game. | ||
He says, I take money from Bill Gates and the NIH. Well, that's the top. | ||
They pay for policy, and then the research is done, the dummy research, that they've requested the outcome they want, and then that is given back to Big Pharma That then produces the poison and is given liability protection by the NIH and by the federal government. | ||
And then the money travels back to Bill Gates and a few other big companies and his tax-free foundation and he pays no taxes. | ||
About 10 years ago, We got approached by a group at the New York Blood Center, led by Shibu Jiang and Lan Yingdu, that had a pretty good idea for coronavirus vaccines. | ||
And at the time, nobody cared about coronavirus vaccines. | ||
They were sort of orphaned, and so we adopted it. | ||
What about Big Pharma being tax exempted? | ||
And that's really what's happening here, is that Bill Gates brags, oh, I get 20 to 1 return on my vaccine investment. | ||
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You've invested $10 billion in vaccinations over the last two decades, and you figured out the return on investment for that, and it kind of stunned me. | |
Can you walk us through the math? It's been $100 billion overall that the world's put in. | ||
Our foundation is a bit more than $10 billion, but we feel there's been over a 20 to 1 return. | ||
So if you just look at the economic benefits That's a pretty strong number compared to anything else. | ||
Hotez has a lot, when I say a lot of nerve, I mean he has a lot of nerve to sit up there and tell the world that I am making this up. | ||
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And what do you have to say to people who think they're a vaccine injured? | |
Anything for them? | ||
I mean, do you have anything to say to people that think Do you have anything to say to people? | ||
Yeah. I mean, do you think vaccine injuries are real, Peter? | ||
Sure, he's worth $35 million on record. | ||
That's just what he shows on his taxes. | ||
$35 million, and the man is a pediatrician who runs a children's hospital, think guinea pigs. | ||
And he thinks your children should be made to take the shots. | ||
It's all about mask compliance. | ||
That's going to be absolutely critical. | ||
Because if you don't have masks, remember, this virus aerosolizes. | ||
So even six feet is not enough. | ||
They can go 17, 18 feet, several meters. | ||
What we really have to do is have vaccine mandates in the schools. | ||
We should have a rule that anyone who walks into a school over the age of 12 has to be vaccinated. | ||
This is the nation's The nature of the anti-vaccine movement in this country, it's somehow married now to far-right-wing extremism and white nationalist groups. | ||
Anyone who's unvaccinated and has been lucky enough to escape COVID, your luck is about to run out. | ||
I call it anti-science aggression coming from Senator Rand Paul. | ||
Senator Johnson, members of the House of Representatives, in addition to those two senators, are killers. | ||
Starting to see now those same anti-vaccine messages that's coming out of the U.S. and now we're finding it in Africa and Latin America. | ||
And remember, the other reason we're seeing this The Putin government has, this has been reported by US and British intelligence, has been piling on with this whole systematic program of what's being called weaponized health communications, trying to destabilize democracies with anti-vaccine, anti-science messages. | ||
The Biden administration has to realize that anti-science is a killer. | ||
Disinformation, it's not even just disinformation. | ||
This is an anti-science empire right now and we need Homeland Security, we need the Justice Department. | ||
We've really got to figure this out. | ||
And Health and Human Services will not be able to figure this out on their own. | ||
This is so criminal. | ||
This is so in America. This is so evil. | ||
Plus, everything they said the last three and a half years was a lie. | ||
These are epidemiologists. | ||
These are scientists. These are virologists. | ||
These are pesticides. Mythologists, they knew what they were doing, hurting the public and setting the precedent to weaponize Big Pharma and the media against the people and get away with murder. | ||
Because you can get away with murder, you can then do whatever you want, and you can play God. | ||
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It's Tuesday, June 27th, Year of Our Lord 2023. | |
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 am your host, Harrison Smith. | ||
Thank you so much for being here with us for this live Tuesday broadcast. | ||
A lot of videos to show you today. | ||
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Some longer videos to show you as well. | |
We're going to take up some cool segments here, including statements from both Putin and the President of Belarus, Lukashenko, which has gone a bit viral over the last day or so. | ||
We have a lot to talk about. | ||
We'll be taking your calls throughout the show as well. | ||
Let's just get into it, shall we? | ||
Here it is, your daily dispatch. | ||
unidentified
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All right, here it is, folks. | |
Your Daily Dispatch for Tuesday, the 27th of June, 2023. | ||
After mutiny, Putin says Wagner fighters can join army, go to Belarus, or return home. | ||
The Russian leader accuses the West of seeking fratricide as Prigozhin defends his aborted rebellion, claims aim was to highlight military failures in Ukraine and not to challenge the Kremlin. | ||
So this is sort of the last gasp, the end of this aborted coup. | ||
Russian President Vladimir Putin accused Ukraine and its Western allies Monday of wanting Russians to, quote, kill each other during a revolt by mercenaries of the Wagner group, which stunned the country with an aborted march on Moscow over the weekend. | ||
In his first address to the nation since the rebels pulled back, Putin said he had issued orders to avoid bloodshed and grant an amnesty to the Wagner fighters, whose mutiny served up the greatest challenge yet to his two-decade rule. | ||
Quote, from the start of events, on my orders, steps were taken to avoid a large-scale bloodshed, Putin said in a televised address, thanking Russians for their patriotism. | ||
It was precisely this fratricide that Russia's enemies wanted, both the neo-Nazis in Kiev and their Western patrons and all sorts of national traitors. | ||
They wanted Russian soldiers to kill each other, Putin said. | ||
Putin also thanked his security officials for their work during the armed rebellion in a meeting that included Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shogyu, a main target of the mutiny. | ||
Again, we'll show you that video here in just a little bit, show you what Putin said about the failed coup that went on there. | ||
And of course, the insinuation he's making that this was somehow either financed or perpetuated by the Western enemies of Russia, which seems to be like a pretty good guess. | ||
If you had to make a bet... | ||
I'd say that there was some Western manipulation going on in there, but we'll cover a little bit more of that later. | ||
Meanwhile, in a blow to the censorship industrial complex, the House of Representatives bans the Pentagon from funding disinfo monitors like NewsGuard. | ||
The House of Representatives included a role in the annual defense bill passed last Thursday banning the Department of Defense from funding organizations that police and rank news sites according to how, quote, reliable they are. | ||
This is particularly good news because the rule singled out the Global Disinformation Index, GDI, Grafica, NewsGuard, and other organizations that deliberately tried to disrupt the funding of news publishing sites on the grounds they published, quote, misinformation, disinformation, malinformation, and hate speech, deliberately vague terms that are often applied to information and opinions that these organizations disprove of or even their funders disprove of. | ||
This is Rich McCormick, a Republican representative from Georgia, who said, He says, | ||
This is fairly obvious. | ||
Twitter Files journalist Matt Taibbi and his colleagues recently compiled a top 50-style ranking of the main players of this nascent industry. | ||
And at number 37 sits the GDI, which currently receives taxpayer money via the Foreign Commonwealth and Development Fund. | ||
What's particularly striking about the GDI is that, unlike, say, the UK government's secretive counter-disinformation unit, which spent the pandemic clandestinely flagging perfectly lawful social media posts by critics of lockdowns to companies such as Facebook and Twitter to encourage swift takedown, it's an outfit that's entirely transparent about its sensorial ambitions. | ||
Again, we'll get into this a little bit later as there's some other major... | ||
Major news coming out about so-called dis or misinformation from the U.S. government. | ||
Our third story is this. | ||
BlackRock CEO drops ESG term after blowback. | ||
On Sunday, BlackRock CEO Larry Fink revealed at the Aspen Ideas Festival that he had abandoned the term ESG, environmental, social, and governance, because it had been highly politicized and even weaponized. | ||
and he is ashamed to be a part of the debate, according to Axios. | ||
Fink acknowledged at the event that Florida Governor Ron DeSantis' decision to yank $2 billion in assets hurt his firm. | ||
Governor DeSantis pulled state assets managed by the world's largest money manager in late 2022 over woke capitalism policies. | ||
Lawmakers from red states have called out BlackRock for its toxic woke capitalism push in corporate America. | ||
Besides, Besides Florida, states like Louisiana, South Carolina, Utah, Arkansas, West Virginia, Missouri, and Texas have withdrawn funds from the asset manager. | ||
Recall Fink was very nervous earlier this year over the, quote, demonization of ESG. You can actually see a map of the U.S. articles at zero hedge. | ||
And you can see that almost a majority of states have some pushback on ESG. When you really consider what ESG is and the true scope and scale, what it represents, they're basically just saying, well, we're not going to call it ESG anymore. | ||
But they still have this ultimate corruption of Free market capitalism, where instead of giving money to people who will make the most money, it's giving money to people whose leadership is composed of the right color people. | ||
And that will certainly continue. | ||
They'll just call it something different, because that's the way these people operate. | ||
Then we have this story. | ||
Hundreds of Canadian military members file a $500 million lawsuit over the COVID jab mandates. | ||
Hundreds of members of the Canadian Armed Forces last week signed onto a $500 million class action lawsuit against military leaders over the imposition of unlawful COVID jab mandates. | ||
According to the legal challenge, the mandates caused the plaintiff's harm and constituted a breach of the public trust. | ||
A victory in the case could set an important precedent to all Canadians who have been pressured to get the experimental shots against their will. | ||
In the 137-page statement of claim filed with the federal court on June 21st and viewed by LifeSite News, 329 individuals who served in the CAF, Canadian Air Force, argued that the Canadian Chief of Defense Staff, General Wayne Iyer, issued unlawful orders on October 25th, | ||
2021 in violation of established law and constitutional rights by removing members of the armed forces to get the experimental by requiring members of the armed forces to get the experimental COVID-19 shot or face removal from the service. | ||
On October 8th, 2021, the CAF handed down a military wide COVID jab mandate requiring all service members to become fully vaccinated against the coronavirus or be discharged from service. | ||
Hundreds of unvaccinated service members were subsequently discharged. | ||
Mandate was finally partially rolled back last year, though troops supporting operational readiness are still required to get the injections. | ||
Last year, military leadership said they would still discharge soldiers who chose to remain unvaccinated. | ||
So we'll see how this goes, but. | ||
This is just the first and what should be a series of lawsuits about these unlawful orders. | ||
And finally, we have a story from Washington Post, and we'll show you this video on the other side. | ||
But in an audio recording, Trump is heard discussing sensitive Iran documents. | ||
Washington Post has obtained the 2021 audio recording in which the former President Donald Trump appears to brag about possessing a classified document related to Iran that he acknowledges he did not classify before leaving office. | ||
The recording made it a meeting at the We'll show you that clip from CNN. We'll show you the audio recording what this is all about. | ||
We'll look a little bit more into it. | ||
Dig a little deeper into it. | ||
I don't think it's quite the smoking gun that's being portrayed as, but we'll let you decide. | ||
All right, welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
unidentified
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and We've watched cover today. | |
A lot about sort of the overall... | ||
Globalist scheme to just, well, establish a unelected global government that does whatever the hell it wants, regardless of the feelings of the people who those policies affect. | ||
I'm sure I could spend too much time on political domestic news, but we'll get into it here. | ||
From Washington Post. | ||
This is a story from Daily Dispatch. | ||
The recording, made at a meeting at Trump's golf club in Bedminster, New Jersey, is an important piece of evidence obtained by Special Counsel Jack Smith. | ||
It appears to undercut Trump's claim that he declassified documents before leaving office or didn't know about possessing restricted documents after leaving the White House. | ||
Which is sort of interesting, right? | ||
Because here's this important piece of evidence apparently from this trial that's going to be presented by Prosecutor Jack Smith, and yet CNN and Washington Post somehow got their hands on it. | ||
Okay, so I guess Jack Smith is leaking things to the media now. | ||
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Well, I mean, those institutions are both tight with the CIA, too, so you never know. | |
Yeah, I mean, but, you know, when it's Trump having classified documents, it's extremely dangerous. | ||
When it's Deep State, they can simply leak that information to the press, and it's no big deal. | ||
Trump having it and not leaking it, very dangerous. | ||
Deep State leaking it to the press, totally normal business as usual. | ||
It appears to undercut Trump's claim that he had declassified documents after leaving office or didn't know about possessing restricted documents after leaving the White House. | ||
The recording referenced in the federal indictment against Trump and first aired Monday by CNN features Trump describing a multi-page document that he alleges is about possibly attacking Iran See, as president, I could have declassified it. | ||
Now I can't. Isn't that interesting? | ||
It's so cool, Trump said on the recording. | ||
Trump's facing 37 federal charges relating to the alleged mishandling of classified documents. | ||
In a recent interview, Trump claimed that he was unaware of the Iran document being among the materials in the boxes recovered at Mar-a-Lago, his private club in Florida residence by the FBI and Justice Department. | ||
He also continued to claim that everything he took with him was declassified, We plead not guilty earlier this month during an arraignment at a federal courthouse in Miami. | ||
Prosecutor's 49-page indictment outlined two instances in which Trump disclosed sensitive papers in unsecured environments post-presidency to individuals who lacked the necessary security clearances required to view any classified information. | ||
The second instance described in the indictment was an August or September 2021 meeting where Trump showed an unnamed representative of his political action committee a classified map of, quote, We're good to go. | ||
Meadows described the scene in his book, The Chief's Chief, indicating that Trump described a four-page document he claimed was an invasion plan for Iran that he said was written by Defense Department and General Mark A. Milley, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. | ||
At that time, Milley was a frequent target of Trump's ire, and the former president was hoping to push back against articles and books in which Milley was described as having to... | ||
Describing as having had to restrain Trump from irresponsible military action in Iran. | ||
So I guess what's going on here is you have Milley and others going to the press and going, Trump wanted to attack Iran and we had to stop him. | ||
And so Trump is like, that's BS. Here's a plan that Milley drew up for attacking Iran and wanted my approval of, and I didn't give it to him. | ||
He's like bragging that he has the proof that Mark Milley is lying to the press. | ||
Yeah, again, would you rather have a president that shows potentially clandestine or secret plans to his inner circle or trusted people around him? | ||
Or would you rather have a president that is on board with starting a new war against another foreign power for no discernible reason whatsoever? | ||
I don't know. To me, the bigger deal is that you've got the Joint Chiefs of Staff trying to start a new war with Iran for no reason. | ||
reason but I guess that's not as important as kind of showing somebody a map at some point. | ||
So let's go to this video. | ||
This is clip number seven. | ||
CNN got the tape of Trump's conversation about classified documents. | ||
Here it is. | ||
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These are bad sick people. | |
That was your cue, you know? | ||
Against you. Well, it started right at the beginning. | ||
Like when Millie's talking about, oh, you were going to try to do a... | ||
No, they were trying to do that before you even were sworn in. | ||
That's right. Trying to overthrow your election. | ||
Well, with Millie... | ||
Let me see that. I'll show you an example. | ||
He said that I wanted to attack Iran. | ||
Isn't it amazing? I have a big pile of papers. | ||
This thing just came up. Look. | ||
This was him. But they presented me this. | ||
This was him. This was the Defense Department and him. | ||
Wow. We looked at him. | ||
This was him. This wasn't done by me. | ||
This was him. All sorts of stuff. | ||
It's pages long. | ||
Wait a minute. Let's see. | ||
I just found... | ||
Isn't that amazing? This totally wins my case, you know. | ||
Except it is, like, highly controversial secret. | ||
This is secret information. | ||
Look at this. | ||
You attack. Hillary would print that out all the time, you know. | ||
Private email. No, she'd send it to Anthony Weiner. | ||
The pervert. By the way, isn't that incredible? | ||
Yeah. I was just saying, because we were talking about it. | ||
And, you know, he said, he wanted to attack Iran and what... | ||
These are the papers. | ||
This was done by the military, given to me. | ||
I think we can probably, right? | ||
I don't know. We'll have to see. | ||
Yeah, we'll have to try to figure out a, yeah. | ||
See, as president, I could have deglazed about it, but now I can't, you know, but this is classic. | ||
Yeah, now we have a problem. | ||
Isn't that interesting? Yeah. | ||
It's so cool. I mean, it's so, look, here and I have a... | ||
And you probably almost didn't believe me, but now you believe me. | ||
No, I believe you. It's incredible, right? | ||
No. Hey, bring some Cokes in, please. | ||
We're joined now by CNN senior political commentator Adam Kinzinger, a former Republican congressman who served on the House... | ||
Look at his face. | ||
Smug, kind of, sly smile. | ||
You know, again, to me, it's like... | ||
What this is illustrative of is... | ||
You know... | ||
Trump, I guess he had declassified documents. | ||
I really don't care that much. | ||
It really doesn't seem like that big of a deal to me that he's got declassified documents that he's showing people. | ||
I don't know. I mean, maybe that's just because, like... | ||
I like Trump and I think he's on behalf of America fighting to keep us out of these wars. | ||
That to me is sort of the takeaway from this is you've got the military industrial complex is trying to start a war with Iran that Trump is able to stop. | ||
You've got a prosecution that's leaking this recording to the press to try to win the case in public opinion. | ||
We'll cover more on the other side. | ||
Was the crime that Trump committed Not letting us start another endless war in the Middle East for Israel. | ||
Is that his greatest crime? | ||
Could he have just given the military-industrial complex carte blanche to launch another decade-long catastrophe? | ||
Kill a million people? | ||
Squander trillions of dollars? | ||
Is that the crime that he committed? | ||
Is that what he really did to offend the deep state to this degree? | ||
Again, I just, this is like, compared to everything else we know, All of these other people do. | ||
I mean, they even joke about it in that clip. | ||
They're like, Trump's just like, look, look, here's an order. | ||
Here's an order to attack Iran. | ||
I didn't make this, Mark Milley did. | ||
And it's like, that apparently is worse than having a secret email server that was totally unsecured, hidden, used to arrange, you know, selling... | ||
Missiles that can take down airliners to terrorist groups. | ||
That's what Hillary Clinton did. | ||
This is worse, apparently. | ||
This is where they draw the line. | ||
Well, look. Here's an order that Mark Milley gave me showing that he wanted to attack Iran, and I said no. | ||
People are acting like this is the bombshell of bombshells. | ||
The only thing in there is that I guess he said he didn't declassify it. | ||
Even then, it's like... | ||
So, again, I really don't... | ||
I don't get how this is such a bombshell thing, but again, it's like this audio recording they got presumably from the prosecution, right? | ||
So you've got the prosecution leaking evidence to the Washington Post and CNN in order to perpetuate the fabricated scandal that they're coming up with in order to try to get Donald Trump... | ||
Seems like that might be a bit of a violation as well. | ||
I mean, the fact that you've got Mark Milley... | ||
Mark Milley is just like... | ||
He's got to be the number one treasonous actor... | ||
In all of Washington, D.C. at this point, he's in contact with the Chinese, telling them, like, don't worry, if Donald Trump wants to do anything to you, I'll protect you. | ||
I'll warn you about it first. | ||
I won't let them, I won't let the duly elected president do anything without warning you first. | ||
He's drawing up blueprints to launch an attack on Iran for, again, just no discernible reason whatsoever. | ||
But Trump showed that paper to somebody, so he's the bad guy. | ||
He's the bad guy for not letting them start a war with Iran. | ||
I'm a bit confused. | ||
I'm a bit confused by all this. | ||
I guess their big slam dunk about this is that the audio runs counter to what Trump told the Fox News anchor, Brett Baer. | ||
In the interview, Trump denied having referred to actual document during the conversation at Bedminster. | ||
Rather, he said he was discussing newspaper stories, magazines, and articles. | ||
Which he was. He was just also talking about the document that Mark Milley created. | ||
Trying to get him to go to war with Iran. | ||
Thank God. Thank God we had Trump. | ||
Thank God we got Trump in office for four years. | ||
Hillary Clinton would have been in place. | ||
It would have been hate speech laws and war against Iran. | ||
God only knows how many lives we've saved by electing Trump into office for those four years. | ||
unidentified
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People in Iran be thanking Allah right now, right? | |
Absolutely. Thank Allah for Trump. | ||
Thank God. Thank God Trump was there to prevent these warmongers from launching yet another catastrophe. | ||
But, you know, I guess it was a secret paper, so, you know, obviously that's the big deal here. | ||
Of course, at the same time, Other footage has come out with President Biden literally bragging about selling state secrets. | ||
It's so crazy. Let's go now to clip number two. | ||
Here's Joe Biden during a meeting last week with Prime Minister of India Modi saying, I sold a lot of state secrets. | ||
Just a funny joke Biden makes. | ||
unidentified
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Let's listen to that. I was just thinking... | |
Anyway... | ||
I started off without you. | ||
And I sold a lot of state secrets and a lot of very important things that were shared. | ||
What? Now, people are fact-checking this. | ||
They're saying, no, but Joe Biden said just kidding right after this. | ||
Apparently in a longer clip he's like, no, no, but in all seriousness, though... | ||
Something, something, something. | ||
And it's like, yeah, but you know Joe Biden says that after pretty much literally everything he says. | ||
See, half the time that he says something serious, everybody laughs at him. | ||
So he's like, no, no, I'm being serious, actually. | ||
No, but I'm just kidding, but also being serious. | ||
But also, I did totally sell state secrets. | ||
I also totally made tens of millions of dollars through my son, Hunter, by using my power as vice president. | ||
unidentified
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I said, fire that son of a bitch, or... | |
Yeah. Yeah. Oh, he was just kidding about that, too. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah, that was totally kidding. No, it was all jokes. | |
Just all jokes. Sounds like what Trump was saying was just jokes. | ||
See, that was Trump's big mistake. | ||
He didn't say JK afterwards. | ||
He didn't say JK. He wasn't like, just kidding, just joking, because that makes everything that you say, you know, not mean anything. | ||
unidentified
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But I think legally he did cover his bases when he said, you know, that that conversation was off the record, right? | |
He did say it was off the record. | ||
That's, you know? You know, to quote Hillary Clinton, at this point, what difference does it make? | ||
He stopped the war in Iran. | ||
He is being attacked by the deep state at every level. | ||
Of course they're going to pull out something like... | ||
Again, I just really don't get what the big deal is about it. | ||
He's just like, look, they wanted to start a war with Iran. | ||
And I stopped them. And now they're saying, I wanted to start a war with Iran. | ||
Well, here's the proof. Here's the proof that I didn't want to start a war with Iran. | ||
They did. It seems to me like we have some bigger concerns here than whether the paper he was showing was stamped appropriately or not. | ||
But, hey, that's just me. | ||
That's just me. Now, there's another actually much bigger... | ||
And I've heard some pretty interesting speculation as to why things are going the way that they're going. | ||
We can go to this article by Emily Berman, University of Houston Law Center. | ||
The Espionage Act is not the right statute to criminalize Trump, she says. | ||
If the U.S. government can prove its allegations in its indictment of former President Donald Trump for mishandling national defense information and obstructing justice, there's no question the prosecution is righteous under current law. | ||
People have done significant prison time for having done far less. | ||
The documents he retained concern some of the nation's most sensitive secrets. | ||
Yeah, our willingness to go to war in the Middle East for Israel. | ||
With details about the US and foreign nuclear and military capabilities, US foreign intelligence collection, military contingency planning, and more. | ||
The former president retained these documents longer than he was entitled to have them and stored them in insecure locations. | ||
Well, I mean, that's actually debatable whether he stored them in insecure locations or not. | ||
See all the pictures they show you of all the boxes in, like, Bedminster or whatever? | ||
Those are not the documents that they're actually concerned about. | ||
The documents that they are concerned about, according to Trump and many of the others, were actually kept in secure locations in places like safes. | ||
This is more just manipulation through the media, right? | ||
He has all these documents that are sensitive, and they just show all these pictures of boxes in a ballroom. | ||
It's like, well, these aren't the documents we're talking about, but these are documents, so we'll show you pictures of these just to make you think that that's what we're talking about. | ||
They say he's potentially endangered U.S. national security, damaged relationships with close allies, Israel, that entrust the U.S. with secret information, and threaten the lives of intelligence community assets around the world. | ||
Oh dear. Oh dear goodness me. | ||
The behavior is unacceptable from a former commander-in-chief. | ||
But here's the problem. None of this is appropriate to be charging under the Espionage Act. | ||
She says, but this unprecedented indictment calls for attention to profound flaws in one of the relevant criminal statutes, the Espionage Act. | ||
The Espionage Act is not there for... | ||
It's supposed to be for, like, spies. | ||
And she says three categories of individuals might run afoul of this provision. | ||
First are spies, individuals actually engaged in espionage in the service of a foreign power. | ||
Second are whistleblowers. | ||
Third are individuals with purely personal motive to keep information. | ||
So if he is being charged under this, it should be... | ||
Through the Presidential Records Act, unless he wasn't really the president at the time. | ||
They're charging him as if he was not the president, which is an interesting thing to consider. | ||
We'll look into it on the other side. | ||
unidentified
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All right, welcome back, folks. | |
A little bit of A couple problems with using the Espionage Act to charge Donald Trump. | ||
You know, Donald Trump in his speech in Michigan, you know, they're sort of treating Trump like they were treating Alex Jones, where they're saying, you know, to Trump, you're not allowed to mention to the jury the Presidential Records Act. | ||
You're not allowed to mention certain things that would provide a different perspective on this. | ||
Because they're charging with the Espionage Act. | ||
But see, the Espionage Act is supposed to be for civilians, military contracts. | ||
I mean, the idea is that it's for spies in general. | ||
And that the President of the United States would have a different set of legal standards that would apply to them. | ||
Why is he not allowed to mention that? | ||
It's a different story if you have just some guy with these documents, some guy who was never president, right? | ||
Even if they've got security clearances and stuff, it's still different than being the president of the United States. | ||
You'd think there'd be a little bit of a difference there. | ||
What's this say? It was to prohibit interference with military operations or recruitment to prevent insubordination in the military and prevent the support of United States enemies during wartime. | ||
I mean, none of those things are even suggested that Trump did. | ||
I'm not saying that he sent this information to our enemies. | ||
I'm not saying that he is using us for personal gain or anything else for that matter. | ||
In fact, if we go back to this Article about the Espionage Act. | ||
This lawyer at the University of Houston says, three categories of individuals might run afoul of this provision, the Espionage Act. | ||
The first are spies, individuals actually engaged in espionage in the service of a foreign power. | ||
The second are whistleblowers, people who retain secret information to publicly expose what they believe the government, what they believe is government waste, fraud, or abuse. | ||
Third are individuals with purely personal motives to keep the information. | ||
Perhaps they have an obsession with classified information. | ||
Perhaps they want to use it to express, to impress their friends, or possibly they can't even explain their motive. | ||
The Espionage Act is surely intended to apply to spies. | ||
That's why it's called the Espionage Act. | ||
Trump's prosecution provides an opportunity to ask, however, whether individuals in the second and third categories are appropriate targets of the Espionage Act prosecution. | ||
Regardless of the nature of the underlying charges, alleging a violation of the act inflicts enormous cost on defendant, cost to reputation and career prospects, and the financial cost of mounting a defense, even if the charges are ultimately dropped and the defense is acquitted. | ||
The starkest example of this problem is that the act fails to require a specific intent either to harm the national security of the U.S. or benefit a foreign power. | ||
Its scope isn't limited to individuals engaged in what we actually consider espionage. | ||
As a result, the Espionage Act has been a powerful government tool to prosecute individuals in that second category, whistleblowers. | ||
Senator Thomas Drake, a former national security official who was prosecuted under the act for leaking classified information to a reporter to expose what he believed was the unconstitutional surveillance of Americans. | ||
After years of legal wrangling, the government dropped all espionage charges against Drake. | ||
The victory was somewhat hollow, however, as the ordeal bankrupted Drake and cost him his government job and pension. | ||
Reality winner and NSA contractor was sentenced to over five years in prison under the act for sharing one document about Russia's 2016 election activities with a reporter because she thought Americans were being misled. | ||
Edward Snowden remains under indictment on multiple espionage act charges for his massive 2013 leak of information about NSA activities. | ||
Whatever one thinks of Snowden's actions, he acted to reveal objectionably problematic and arguably unlawful NSA surveillance of Americans. | ||
The list goes on. Unfortunately, efforts to amend the Espionage Act to limit its reach to behaviors traditionally conceived of espionage have failed. | ||
Eschewing the use of Espionage Act in cases that don't actually involve spying doesn't mean the mishandling of information potentially damaging to national security should or would go unpunished. | ||
There are many tools available to address such concerns that don't bear the espionage label. | ||
Take, for example, the recent case of Jack Texiera, a Massachusetts airman who shared numerous classified documents with his friends on a Discord server. | ||
He's charged under the Espionage Act but also faces charges under 18 U.S. Code 1924, which... | ||
Prohibits unauthorized removal and retention of classified information. | ||
Wouldn't this be more like what Donald Trump is accused of doing? | ||
Why is he being charged under the Espionage Act? | ||
Because it's convenient? | ||
Because it I don't know, sounds bad maybe? | ||
Who knows? | ||
Who knows why? | ||
The speculation I've heard is that there's going to be some sort of Secret sort of behind-the-scenes agreement between the judge and the prosecutors not to treat President Trump as president because maybe he wasn't really the president. | ||
Maybe he wasn't actually given all of the rights and privileges that presidents are supposed to have once they take that office. | ||
Maybe this all needs to be covered up under claims of national security. | ||
And so the reality of what's actually going on in the courtroom will be hidden from the wider American public under those claims of national security as they prosecute Trump, not as a former president, but as a normal civilian because he was never actually allowed to operate as president. | ||
Julie Kelly has this. | ||
They say this is why they want to get rid of Judge Eileen Cannon in the classified documents case, her first smackdown of special counsel Jack Smith. | ||
Quote, paperless order denying without prejudice government's motion to implement special condition of release. | ||
The government seeks an order implementing a special condition of bond related to defendant Trump and NADA's communication with 84 listed witnesses about the facts of the case except through counsel. | ||
The government's condition, the government conditions its request on the filing of non exhaustive list under seal. | ||
Defendants take no position on the government's seal request but reserve the right to object to the special condition in the manner by which the government intends to implement it. | ||
In the meantime, numerous news organizations have moved to intervene to oppose the government's motion to file witness list under seal, citing the First Amendment and related legal principles. | ||
Upon review of the foregoing materials, the government's motion is denied without prejudice, and the motion to intervene and accompanying motions to appear pro-hack vice are denied as moot. | ||
The government's motion does not explain why filing the list with the court is necessary. | ||
It does not offer a particularized basis to justify sealing the list from public view. | ||
It does not explain why partial sealing, redaction, or means other than sealing are unavailable or unsatisfactory, and it does not specify the duration of any proposed seal. | ||
The clerk is directed to return the pro hoc vice fees to the filing attorneys. | ||
Signed by Judge Eileen M. Cannon. | ||
He says, This is the order Jack Smith wanted the former president to sign. | ||
I, Donald Trump, acknowledge that I've received a copy of the list of witnesses with whom I shall not communicate about the facts of the case except through counsel. | ||
I further acknowledge that I've read the list. | ||
Pretty interesting. They're trying to stop Donald Trump from talking to witnesses in this case except through counsel. | ||
Again, it just seems to me like the big takeaway here, without getting into all the legal nitty-gritty, you simply have the state charging Trump on something that he really shouldn't be charged under the Espionage Act while preventing him legally from mentioning the statutes that actually give him permission to do what he did, which is the Presidential Records Act. | ||
It all just seems like a big game of sleight of hand as they do everything they can to hamstring Trump ahead of the 2024 election, not even really caring whether or not they get the conviction at the end of the day, but caring that they stop him from being the Republican frontrunner. | ||
Ahead of 2024. Remember, that's exactly the same thing that old Jack Smith is kind of known for, right? | ||
Getting convictions that ruin somebody's political career, cost them millions of dollars, takes up their time for years upon years, only to be absolutely thrown out in a unanimous verdict by a higher court. | ||
But it didn't matter because he got what he wanted. | ||
He stopped the political opponent from achieving political victory. | ||
So just utter and endless corruption, all centered around the fact that Donald Trump didn't want to go to war, prevented us from starting a new war in Iran, and then bragging about that through his inner circle. | ||
So we'll be back from the other side. | ||
Remember to go to Infowarsstore.com to support everything that we do here. | ||
The Independence Day sale is on, and just about every product is on massive discount. | ||
unidentified
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Good evening. I've been a supporter of green energy and a keen environmentalist since my 20s. | |
My office is solar-powered, so I was mortified to discover that a single lithium mine causes millions of tonnes of waste every year laced with sulfuric acid and radioactive uranium, polluting the water supply for 300 years. | ||
Not to mention the unacceptable human costs with child labour to mine cobalt. | ||
When I researched which solar panel to purchase, I did not for one minute consider it would be made by people trapped in razor-wire enclosed labour camps, being exposed to large quantities of quartz dust which causes silicosis. | ||
Please note that the Ethical Consumer Organization report that it is hard to avoid forced labour in the solar panel supply chain. | ||
Wind turbines, which last about 20 years, consume a colossal amount of resources and energy to manufacture and install, not to mention the blight and birdkill. | ||
They require diesel engines to start them up and then gallons of oil to lubricate, and they can't readily be recycled. | ||
Solar panels are also extremely difficult to recycle, costing more than the production of the panel, and lithium batteries pose steep challenges too. | ||
Add to that the human suffering, which we've all unwittingly been part of just by owning a laptop or mobile phone, which is minimal compared to what's required for an EV or solar farm. | ||
These so-called green or ethical solutions aren't solutions at all. | ||
Just very good marketing from the $1.5 trillion a year climate change industry. | ||
That's $4 billion a day, by the way. | ||
None of us can undo what's already been done, but what we can all do is make sure this doesn't escalate exponentially with fleets of unnecessary EVs and acres of solar farms eating up our precious farmland. | ||
It is your obligation to always seek the best available knowledge, and that should it so transpire that any policy, howsoever well-intentioned, may subsequently prove harmful, and then the Council are obligated to stop. | ||
Sorry, I have finished. | ||
What was the interruption? | ||
The second bell rang, which indicated that the allocated time available had expired. | ||
As explained when you came to the desk, there's a bell at two minutes and then there's another bell at three minutes. | ||
Yes, and I have one sentence left to finish, and you let the last gentleman go on for about another 30 seconds after the bill. | ||
So it needs to be rules that apply to everybody, not just the ones that you don't like what they're saying. | ||
Respectfully, I don't dislike what you're saying. | ||
This is the first time I have heard it. | ||
All I'm trying to ensure is that the meeting runs smoothly. | ||
That's all I'm seeking to do here. | ||
Well, basically my last question is, does the Council agree that your obligation to always seek the best available knowledge? | ||
And should it so transpire that any policy, howsoever well-intentioned, may subsequently prove harmful, then the Council is obligated to stop. | ||
If you invest money in these substandard technologies, you will just increase them. | ||
Whereas it would be better to hold out until the real brain solutions do come on board. | ||
And we're not there yet. I appreciate that you have made your contribution. | ||
Thank you. You get an extra minute to rebuff? | ||
No. Then my apologies. | ||
Please do respond. Can I ask the members of the public gallery to show respect to the board and everybody who's trying to do their best, ensure that a meeting is held that everybody can engage in with respect. | ||
Thank you. I think they're being very respectful. | ||
As I was saying, unless you have really good solutions, you are investing money in things that ultimately you're going to waste money on. | ||
You'll just get EV points everywhere and then the government will turn around and say, oh, no, they're no good. | ||
So you're going to waste money. | ||
You're investing in slavery. | ||
Which is unacceptable. | ||
If it was your family members that had children that were being crushed to death down these mines, would this be your answer? | ||
It's too costly to find alternatives, especially when no one here can actually fully Explain what the climate emergency is. | ||
By your own admission, the Council doesn't have an official definition of a climate emergency. | ||
So the Council's actions have sprung from a claim of emergency which no one here is able to define. | ||
If you cannot clearly define the emergency, how can anyone possibly know when it's over? | ||
Or moreover, look to impose rationally any policy response Without knowing. | ||
The emergency needs to be properly defined and evidenced if you were to get the public on board with your associated proposal. | ||
All right, welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
Zero Foxtrot on Twitter's DME. Step back from the Trump recording. | ||
They added themselves that they did, in fact, have a plan to attack Iran. | ||
Yeah, that's sort of what I'm saying. | ||
That's my takeaway from this. | ||
They're like, here we have a recording of Trump on tape showing somebody a document, you know, about our plan to attack Iran. | ||
It's like, you plan to attack Iran? | ||
No, but Trump is talking about a classified document that he's not supposed to have. | ||
About your plan to start a war with Iran? | ||
Stop focusing on that. | ||
Stop focusing on the part where we're trying to start a war. | ||
Focus on that Trump stopped us and that we don't like that. | ||
That's illegal and that he's not supposed to tell people that we were doing that. | ||
I think you're missing the forest for the trees here. | ||
I think you were trying to start a war with Iran. | ||
A giant, powerful nation that would have cost trillions of dollars in God knows how many lives. | ||
So maybe that's the thing we should be concerned about. | ||
It's just crazy. | ||
Totally crazy. Yeah, he... | ||
That guy stole my computer password and got into my emails and saw that I was trying to hire a hitman to kill him. | ||
You were what? No, focus on the password thing. | ||
Focus on the thing where he violated my privacy. | ||
Yeah, but he found out that you were trying to kill somebody? | ||
Well, yes, but it was the privacy thing that we're supposed to be... | ||
No, but it was the documents were classified, okay? | ||
He wasn't supposed to say classified things. | ||
Classified things about the war you were trying to start. | ||
About the hundreds of thousands of people you were trying to kill. | ||
Is that what you're mad about? | ||
That he revealed that? You psychopaths? | ||
That's my takeaway. | ||
I totally agree. Zero. | ||
Completely agree. | ||
Completely insane. | ||
Utterly and totally insane. | ||
We're going to get into a whole bunch of crazy stuff here, including just across the board, it's almost hard to describe just how Little the people in power care about the feelings of the people that their policy affects. | ||
Okay, so we're going to get into what the so-called democracy that we're fighting for really is. | ||
First, I want to talk a little bit about... | ||
These two stories, this is, I got this from, you know, just mainstream media. | ||
New York Post, malaria found in U.S. for the first time in 20 years. | ||
Alarming officials, my goodness. | ||
Malaria, a potentially deadly disease caused by mosquito-borne parasite making inroads in the U.S. What? | ||
How could this be? | ||
Five new cases of malaria, one in Texas and four in Florida, are alarming officials because they were locally acquired, meaning a mosquito in the U.S. was carrying the parasite. | ||
That's a big deal because that hasn't happened since 2003 in Palm Beach, County, Florida, according to the Centers for Disease and Prevention. | ||
Almost all the cases of malaria now seen in the U.S. are from people who traveled outside of the country where they were exposed to disease carrying mosquitoes. | ||
So from 2003 till 2023, so for 20 years, every case of malaria in America was acquired outside of America. | ||
In other words, there were no mosquitoes in America that we knew of carrying malaria. | ||
No mosquitoes in America carrying malaria. | ||
For 20 years, all of a sudden, we've got five cases in Florida and What are the odds? | ||
What could be behind this? We'll look into it here, but let's continue for now with this story. | ||
It's always worrisome that you have local transmission in an area. | ||
Estelle Martin, an entomologist at the University of Florida who researches mosquito-borne diseases, told Vox, Malaria spreads when a person carrying the parasite gets bit by a mosquito. | ||
The parasite develops inside the mosquito, which then bites another person or several other people, infecting them with the parasite. | ||
But people with the parasite in their blood don't always have symptoms, making it easy for the disease to spread when an asymptomatic person is bit. | ||
Symptoms of malaria include fever, shaking, chills, headache, muscle ache, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, and tiredness, according to the CDC. | ||
If it's not treated promptly, the infection can cause jawnness, anemia, kidney failure, seizures, mental confusion, coma, and death. | ||
malaria can be treated when it's diagnosed early enough and a vaccine is now available. | ||
These recent cases show how a warming climate... | ||
Oh my God, it was climate change. | ||
It was climate change after all. | ||
Oh, what's this? | ||
Oh, I'm sorry. What's this? | ||
Bill Gates releasing genetically modified mosquitoes in Florida? | ||
Well, certainly that has nothing to do with it, right? | ||
I mean, that can't be the case, can it? | ||
You've got 20 years with not a single mosquito carrying malaria in the United States. | ||
Bill Gates decides to release mosquitoes carrying malaria in a genetically modified form, and suddenly you have cases, five of them in Florida, where malaria has been contracted from a mosquito. | ||
Why? This is... | ||
This is so strange. | ||
This is so odd that this is happening in this particular way. | ||
Bill Gates is not himself releasing mosquitoes into the wild. | ||
However, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation did award grants that funded biotech company Oxitec's work to develop genetically modified mosquitoes that may help reduce the spread of malaria and other mosquito-borne diseases. | ||
Yeah, they might. | ||
And they might do that. | ||
Of course, we went 20 years without... | ||
Mosquito-borne malaria in the United States until these guys showed up. | ||
So that's kind of odd how that works, isn't it? | ||
Isn't that odd? I find that odd. | ||
In April 2021, it was announced that approximately 150,000 mosquitoes would be released across six locations in Florida. | ||
Several state and federal agencies have been involved in the approval of this project. | ||
A multi-year research project to genetically modify Aedes aegypti, a mosquito species that's known to carry and transmit infectious diseases to humans, was slated to move from the labs to the fields of Texas and Florida in mid 2021. | ||
Well, what are the odds, folks? | ||
What are the odds? | ||
What are the odds that we go 20 years without mosquito-borne malaria in the United States, and then a mere year after mosquitoes genetically modified are released in Texas and Florida, do we have five examples of mosquito-borne malaria in Texas and Florida? | ||
I mean, if I was a conspiratorial type of person, I would think that this is the consequence of releasing those malaria infected mosquitoes in both Florida and Texas. | ||
unidentified
|
Do you remember in years past when they released genetically modified mosquitoes and they were like, oh, it's fine. | |
No, these mosquitoes will literally breed with the existing population of mosquitoes and then they'll produce infertile mosquitoes that can't reproduce. | ||
It'll be amazing. Yeah. | ||
And then it turned out that they produced super resilient mosquitoes that are like super buff, like really jacked, had like little mosquito six-packs. | ||
It's also probably where, like, Zika virus came from. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh, yeah. Well, probably not where Zika came from, but they were able to transmit it. | |
Yeah. Oh, yeah. No, seriously. | ||
Yeah. Yeah. So, you know, I'm just connecting lines here. | ||
I'm just, you know, pure speculation here. | ||
Far be it from me to, you know, without solid evidence, implicate some massive pharmaceutical gene alter gene modification thing. | ||
We're actually starting and spreading malaria in the United States. | ||
But, gee, sure does seem like a coincidence. | ||
We go from 2003 to 2023 without a single case of malaria being spread by a mosquito. | ||
So, you know, even that is kind of bizarre, right? | ||
You've got 20 years where there are no mosquitoes spreading malaria. | ||
And then along comes this company funded by Bill Gates to solve a problem that doesn't exist in the United States. | ||
Right. | ||
Malaria born by mosquitoes does not exist, has not existed since 2003. | ||
And even that was like a one off, you know. | ||
Total, total outlier. | ||
It's not like it's a regular thing here. | ||
For 20 years this problem doesn't exist. | ||
Along comes Bill Gates to solve this non-existent problem and suddenly in the exact places where he released mosquitoes we have an outbreak of malaria that we haven't had in 20 years. | ||
I mean it's kind of coincidental isn't it? | ||
Isn't that just the biggest coincidence you've ever heard of? | ||
I mean, it would be one thing if they released them in Connecticut and Michigan, and these cases were in Florida and Texas. | ||
But no, they released these in the fields of Texas and Florida in mid-2021. | ||
Under the project, thousands of these mosquitoes were altered to make their reproduction more difficult, thus slowing and eventually preventing the spread of mosquito-borne illnesses like Zika and dengue fever. | ||
But when the internet caught wind that Bill Gates may have been behind the project, posts circulated on social media that questioned the real motivation behind the project. | ||
So that was from 2021. | ||
That's forward a couple years, and we have the first cases of mosquito-borne malaria in the United States, exactly where they released them. | ||
All right, welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
I'm going to go ahead and open up the phone lines for your calls now. | ||
If you want to give us a call here at American Journal, now is the time to do it. | ||
1-877-789-2539. | ||
That's 1-877-789-2539. | ||
Give us a call now. You're on American Journal. | ||
We'll take your phone calls throughout the rest of the show. | ||
Let's just do a couple more things here. | ||
The 4th of July Super Sale is now on at Infowarsstore.com. | ||
You're getting up to 60% off plus double Patriot points at Infowarsstore.com. | ||
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And of course, best of all, it keeps us on the air. | ||
It is a true 360 win in celebration of July 4th, this Independence Day, as we once again reassert our independence from the unelected neo-feudal overlords that are now operating a global government. | ||
I forget who it was. It may have actually been Matt Baker. | ||
We're going to show a video here of Matt Baker, but it may have been him yesterday that was like, you know, just showing a video of what's happening in Europe as their borders are totally open. | ||
There's just... Tens of thousands, hundreds of thousands of Africans pouring across the border. | ||
And he just puts it very simply, like, if we don't have a global government, why are all of these countries experiencing this at exactly the same time? | ||
Like, it would be one thing if you had different countries with different, you know, levels of activity in this regard. | ||
England is, or, you know, British Isles, they're... | ||
All four are bringing in people from overseas, but Germany, they're locked down a little bit. | ||
France, they're locked down a little bit more, but Ireland's sort of in the middle. | ||
But it's all across the board. | ||
Across the board, everybody adopts exactly the same policies at exactly the same time because they're not being guided by any semblance of democracy or politics. | ||
Representative government, they're all having orders given to them by the global government that meets in Congress in places like the World Economic Forum and Bilderberg and the Davos Group, and then implement those policies at their national level. | ||
So this is the You know, unelected, neo-feudal substrate that we're at war against at this very moment. | ||
Information war. | ||
Now I want to go to this video by Matt Baker where he's talking about the American Liberty Awards. | ||
Clip number five here. | ||
There's a... There's a call for help for the American Liberty Awards. | ||
Here's Matt Baker talking about this event coming up on the 12th of August here in Austin, Texas at the Vulcan Gas Company. | ||
Buy your tickets today. | ||
Here is Matt Baker. | ||
unidentified
|
What up, everybody? | |
It is Matt Baker here representing the American Liberty Awards award show for all the freedom fighters that have been in the trenches fighting for our freedom, the musicians, The news agencies, the people that refuse to bow. | ||
Now, we have lists. | ||
We have categories. | ||
We have 18 categories as of now. | ||
We have probably 12 or more people nominated in each category. | ||
I would like to enlist your help in deciding who We are going to have win these particular awards. | ||
If you could, I'm going to be posting different sheets, which are going to have the names of the people who are nominated and the categories they're nominated for. | ||
If you guys would do me a favor, get involved, leave me some comments, and if you think we might have missed someone, we're pretty much dialed in with where we want to be with the nominees, but there might be someone we're missing. | ||
If so, leave us the name of that person, and we will consider them. | ||
For an award. And in the meantime, we're going to be looking at consensus, who people think, you know, the best news agency is, best podcaster, best musician, best meme maker, best print media. | ||
You know, you'll see all the things anyway. | ||
So get involved. Let me know what's up. | ||
And then don't forget to see us there. | ||
There's still, I think we're sold more than half the tickets. | ||
It's a pretty small venue, so I think there's maybe 200 or so tickets left. | ||
You can find out at AmericanLibertyAwards.com. | ||
I'll leave a link here for everybody. | ||
Get involved. Let's see you there. | ||
The tickets are very reasonable. | ||
$76, as in 1776, where your basic ticket gets you in and you can meet all the great people Alex Jones will be there. | ||
Owen Troyer will be there. I will be there. | ||
Allison Steinberg will be there. Lila Hart will be there. | ||
Jimmy Levy, Forgiana Blow, Nick Natoli. | ||
There's gonna be amazing people there. | ||
Sam Tripoli's gonna be there. | ||
Anyway, more people than I can actually shake a stick at and tell you, but you can look at our thing and see who's gonna be there. | ||
Let everyone know. Come on by. | ||
meet us all, be a part of the first ever American Liberty Awards. | ||
All right, the American Liberty Awards coming up this August, August the American Liberty Awards coming up this August, August 12th here in Austin, Texas, | ||
Tickets still on sale and you can go to AmericanLibertyAwards.com to see the list of categories and nominees of which yours truly, I've been nominated for two of these awards. | ||
And I don't know how they're deciding it, so I don't know where to send the checks to, but I want to win this. | ||
I want to win this thing. So reach out to Matt Baker and demand Harrison Smith to win whatever the heck I'm nominated for. | ||
We've got most trusted print media, most trusted broadcast media, most truth-revealing movie, best medical provider, best comedy skit creator, number two Harrison Smith in the Pitch series. | ||
This is what I'm gunning for. | ||
I want to win. Sorry, J.P. Sears. | ||
I'm going to blow you out of the water. | ||
But of course, all your favorite InfoWarriors will be there. | ||
Most truth-revealing book. | ||
Best medical freedom organization. | ||
Most truthful writer. | ||
Including all of the InfoWars writers. | ||
Don Salazar, Jamie White, Kellen McBreen. | ||
We've got Tom Papert, Cassandra McDonald, Patrick Howley, Alicia Powell, Scott Greer, Jim Hoff. | ||
I mean... Everybody, everybody who has been helping to fight back against the globalist takeover. | ||
Best legal bulldog from Robert Barnes, Norm Pattis, Tom Rins. | ||
A lot of good options here. | ||
Best meme maker, best stand-up comedian, best public servant, best investigative journalist, best analysis broadcast, best topical broadcast, which I think, oh yeah, number 10 right there, Harrison Smith. | ||
Two for two. Best Culture Jammer slash Patriot in the Arena. | ||
Best Infobomb Creator. | ||
Most Powerful Song. | ||
Lifetime Achievement Awards as well. | ||
I don't know. A lot of good options. | ||
I don't know who I would give these awards to. | ||
Like Lifetime Achievement Awards, you got Michael Savage, Alex Jones, G. Edward Griffin, Mike Adams, David Icke, Ron Paul, Gavin McGinnis, Steve Bannon, James Wood, Mike Lindell, and I think it's supposed to be Wayne Allen Root. | ||
I mean, you got to give it to Alex Jones, right? | ||
I mean, he's the whole reason this whole thing's going on. | ||
But at the same time, are you going to deny Ron Paul? | ||
I don't know. But it'll be exciting. | ||
I don't know who's going to win. I honestly have no idea who's going to win. | ||
I will be presenting an award there. | ||
I hope to see you there as well. | ||
AmericanLibertyAwards.com. Welcome back, folks. | ||
We got your phone calls now. | ||
Got a couple people calling in about this mosquito story. | ||
Bart in Georgia. | ||
Thanks for calling in. Line number one. | ||
Go ahead, Bart. You're on the air. | ||
unidentified
|
Yes, sir. Knowing something and proving something are two different things. | |
We all know Bill Gates did this thing with the mosquitoes, but we may not be able to prove it yet. | ||
I think that this is maybe a probing attack to wipe out the population with mosquitoes as opposed to an airborne virus. | ||
What do you think, Harrison? Well, it would certainly be convenient for them. | ||
I mean, they have a malaria vaccine that they could force on everybody once again. | ||
I mean, and they're also talking about genetically... | ||
Well, they already are genetically modifying mosquitoes. | ||
There's the... There's an article. | ||
I mean, we covered it not too long ago because we showed the video of the mosquito factory where they're going around bragging. | ||
We produce and release 50,000 mosquitoes a day to release it out. | ||
And the story was like, the mosquitoes did the vaccinating. | ||
Genetically modified mosquitoes vaccinate a human from the countersignal.com. | ||
A box full of genetically modified mosquitoes successfully vaccinated a human against malaria in a trial funded by the National Institute of Health. | ||
So, I mean, they're saying that they're going to vaccinate you, which, you know, we always said, like, if they're going to force a vaccine on you, does it matter if you know that they're going to do it? | ||
Like, what's the difference between, like, if they don't need your permission, why do they need your awareness? | ||
When you talk about what these people are up to, it really is so far beyond the pale. | ||
They are literally blocking out the sun by spraying poisons into the sky. | ||
They are literally genetically modifying mosquitoes and then releasing them into the human population in order to vaccinate you. | ||
But essentially, mRNA vaccines are changing your DNA through releasing genetically modified mosquitoes into the population. | ||
This is... Super villain level stuff that they are actually engaged in right now as we speak. | ||
So, I mean, what do you need to prove? | ||
They're doing it. They're doing it and they're bragging about doing it. | ||
I don't think we need to prove anything, Bart. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, well, you know what? | |
Most people are afraid of sharks and crocodiles and all, but you need to be scared of mosquitoes. | ||
They're the deadliest animal in the world next to humans as far as I understand it. | ||
unidentified
|
Absolutely. Thanks for taking my call, Harrison. | |
Of course. God bless you. Thank you. | ||
Let's go to SOS in FEMA Region 9. | ||
Same thing. Pest control, mosquitoes, a major problem in LA this year, I guess. | ||
Go ahead, SOS. You're on the air. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, so they're literally everywhere. | |
If you go down to residential neighborhoods, the little anchor biters, the small ones, they're everywhere. | ||
And I can see that being the new boogeyman because nobody really likes bugs. | ||
Nobody likes mosquitoes. So if you basically scare people and you tell people, hey, the stuff going around outside is going to get you sick and kill you, that's going to terrify people because that's one of those unknown things, right? | ||
But I want to make mention of a technology called Chromac, Harrison. | ||
Chromac basically has biological detection and it can, quote, detect SARS-CoV-2 in the air. | ||
So when they corral people into smart cities, they'll be using Chromec technologies to essentially figure out who may not be vaccinated, who may be intruding, things of that nature. | ||
It even says on their website, there's a whole thing. | ||
It's chromec.com biodetector overview. | ||
How do you spell that? | ||
unidentified
|
It's K-R-O-M-E-K, Chromec. | |
Interesting. And they have biological detectors. | ||
So this is like one of those missing puzzle pieces to it all to help understand smart cities. | ||
Because it says themselves on the website that they're trying to... | ||
There's biological threats that are transmissible agents that spread from person to person and animal to animal. | ||
And sometimes those toxins and those threats may not be visible or whatever, like... | ||
What's that magic word they say? | ||
I can't think of it. | ||
You're sick, but you're not sick. | ||
You're asymptomatic, basically. | ||
Asymptomatic, okay. Yeah, yeah, yeah. | ||
unidentified
|
So basically things like that. | |
So they say on their website that they have the capability. | ||
Well, it started with scrubbing for radiation, like radiation particles in the air. | ||
But now they kind of developed their whole SARS-CoV-2, Ebola, smallpox scrubbers, basically, since COVID started. | ||
And it says right here, DNA sequencing provides a sample of the pathogenic burden, and basically it says that it's crazy because they include CRISPR in their website and everything. | ||
I just stumbled upon this, and it's blowing my mind because they're literally saying that next generation sequencing can identify anastically biological entities, bioterroristic agents, From a variety of sample types. | ||
And currently their NGS needs expert users and scientists to perform the technology in centralized laboratories. | ||
So basically they'll get people paid off, you know, to lie essentially some more, right? | ||
And the whole thing is crazy. | ||
I know you guys can do a deeper dive on it. | ||
I want to make mention because they mentioned DARPA. They mentioned CRISPR. They mentioned SARS-CoV-2. | ||
It's wild, dude. | ||
It's crazy. And no doubt, when they do the smart cities, this is going to be one of the things on top of, you know, the luminescence of the vaccines to help lock people down on top of an ESG score system. | ||
You know? It's pretty wild what they have out there. | ||
And it says it's fully autonomous and unmanned and it combines the best-in-class technologies for air sampling. | ||
So just use AI. Oh, you're sick, and it's like there's no proof. | ||
Oh, your QR code comes back red. | ||
Oh, the arrow around you is no good. | ||
It's wild, and it's all right here. | ||
It's all right here for everyone to read out in the open. | ||
This is very odd. | ||
Yeah, they have like a little map of the city. | ||
they say things like this with the stadium they read data from a mobile or receive it as an audio through earbuds with small detectors discreetly worn on a belt or grouped into a backpack to provide directional data yeah drones | ||
Yeah. Traffic entering or leaving the event can also be monitored with high sensitivity to ensure no vehicles are carrying radioactive material, minimizing exposure to those attending the event as well as the wider public. | ||
But this is under the biological threat. | ||
Therefore, as soon as a biological threat is detected from anywhere in the stadium, remote decision makers must have access to agnostic biological data straight from the event to initiate the appropriate response to reduce the risk of it spreading from the event to the rest of the public containing it before it becomes an epidemic or pandemic. | ||
Yeah, kind of creepy. I hadn't heard about any of this. | ||
unidentified
|
There you go, Harrison. I just want to give you guys that puzzle piece because it's crazy. | |
It's literally wild. | ||
Yeah, that is... | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, I can definitely see that being utilized in a smart city, you know, definitely. | |
Why would they not utilize that in a smart city? | ||
Yeah, makes sense to me. | ||
Interesting stuff. Thank you for telling us about that. | ||
Hadn't heard of it. Thank you. | ||
Let's go to, we've got, thank you for the call sauce. | ||
Let's go to Emily in Colorado, because you also want to talk about the mosquitoes and parasites. | ||
Go ahead. Emily, you're on the air. | ||
unidentified
|
Hi, Harrison. Can you hear me? | |
Yep, go ahead. Oh, cool. | ||
unidentified
|
All right. So I've been studying this for a long time. | |
And I watched on Maria Z. She had on a guest. | ||
It was Dr. Anna Maria Myelcha. | ||
I think that's how you say her name. | ||
She's been studying the cross-domain bacteria that Clifford Carnicum set up the Carnicum Institute to study. | ||
And that's all, you know, when he studied the chemtrails, that's what he discovered was in there. | ||
Well, If they're trying to do all this mind control stuff, like, that's their end goal. | ||
Like, just imagine how much more susceptible these simple organisms are and parasites, which their whole way to survive is to penetrate and get inside your skin. | ||
And they've been doing it forever, you know? | ||
Like, the United States kind of makes it so We think somehow parasites don't come through our borders, which is totally ridiculous. | ||
And that's why doctors make so much money, treating all the symptoms of parasites, but ignore the fact that we have them. | ||
So people really need to do cleansing. | ||
I've been doing a lot of parasite cleansing. | ||
After I got COVID, I got really, really sick, and I had every parasite known to man. | ||
Interesting. It's very important that people do that. | ||
Yeah, thank you for that call. | ||
Emily, we'll go to more of your calls here on the other side as well as some pretty incredible news. | ||
unidentified
|
All right, welcome back, folks. | |
We'll go out to your phone calls again here in just a second. | ||
We have a lot of other stories to cover. | ||
Let's take a moment to talk A little bit more about the coup that took place in Russia over the weekend. | ||
A couple videos from this. | ||
From Infowars.com, Biden stresses U.S. quote, not involved in the Wagner uprising. | ||
Furious Putin says the West wanted Russians to kill each other. | ||
Within hours ahead of Putin's big speech Monday evening, the Kremlin touted there would be several major announcements, but there was really nothing earth shattering. | ||
In fact, much of the fairly short address to the nation on the Wagner rebellion was a reiteration of prior Kremlin statements, and it didn't exactly appear tough. | ||
While Putin stressed that traitors will face justice and that we defeated a colossal threat, He at the same time seemed to offer a bit of an olive branch. | ||
At the same time, we knew and know that the vast majority of fighters and commanders of the Wagner group are also patriots of Russia, devoted to their friends and the state, Putin said. | ||
He said Wagner fighters could sign contracts with the Russian army, saying, quote, today you have the opportunity to continue serving Russia by entering into a contract with the Ministry of Defense or other law enforcement agencies or to return to your families and friends. | ||
Anyone who wants to can go to Belarus, he said of the mutineers. | ||
The promise I made will be fulfilled. | ||
I repeat, the choice is yours, but I'm sure it will be the choice of Russian soldiers who have realized their tragic mistake. | ||
Very bizarre, very strange how all of this went down. | ||
Now, America and the American authorities are denying any participation in this. | ||
But I mean, they also denied participation in the blowing up of the dam and also blowing up of the Nord Stream pipeline, for which there has now been a plethora, an overabundance of evidence to show that we were in fact, if not completely behind it, at least doing our part in that particular attack. | ||
But they are very certain that we had nothing to do with this. | ||
Absolutely nothing to do with it. | ||
And no one believes you. | ||
That's what happens when you lie continuously about everything forever. | ||
So let's actually go to one of these videos. | ||
Here's Pentagon spokesperson Kirby. | ||
Jack Kirby? John Kirby? | ||
John Kirby? Being asked about whether this attempt to oust Vladimir Putin from office in Russia was in line with the desires of the United States. | ||
unidentified
|
Let's watch. Is the president at all disappointed that this episode came and went and Vladimir Putin is still in power? | |
The president is focused on supporting Ukraine. | ||
We're not taking sides in this internal matter. | ||
The president is going to make sure that we're staying focused on Ukraine. | ||
unidentified
|
He did say, though, in March 2022, for God's sake, this man cannot remain in power. | |
And this might have changed that. | ||
Regime change is not our policy. | ||
We've been very, very clear about that. | ||
What we're focused on is making sure Ukraine can succeed on the battlefield. | ||
This is a Russian internal matter. | ||
We don't care about who's in charge of Russia. | ||
Sir, Biden recently said, for God's sake, this man cannot remain in power. | ||
So that's the complete opposite of what you just said. | ||
Yeah, well, you know, whatever. | ||
Who cares, I guess? | ||
I guess the point is, it doesn't matter what we say, what we don't say. | ||
It's everything we say is lies. | ||
So you know that. We know that. | ||
Let's just move on from here on out. | ||
You ask us questions that you know the answers to. | ||
We lie about them. And then you report our lies as if they're facts. | ||
We know how this game is played. | ||
We get that. We get it. | ||
We get how this goes. Just incredible. | ||
We're not involved in this at all. | ||
We love Putin, actually. | ||
It's just like, okay, come on. | ||
Stop being ridiculous. | ||
Stop doing what you're doing. | ||
Stop it. No, no. You have to stop it now because you people are psychopaths. | ||
Now, I don't know if this is translated or not, so we'll go to this. | ||
I saw the translation of it, but I'm not sure if I downloaded the right video here. | ||
But this is a French TV host talking to John Kerry, the climate czar, the climate envoy of Joe Biden, but taking him to task over the just sheer hypocrisy of American foreign policy. | ||
unidentified
|
Let's watch that video. You, the Americans, you have committed the crime of aggression in Iraq. | |
And these countries of the South say, but is it necessary to judge George Bush? | ||
Why George Bush is not judged by the same way? | ||
Would you be favored? No. | ||
Well, because there's never even been a direct process of accusation. | ||
Translating it to French instead of translating it to English. | ||
unidentified
|
And there were abuses. | |
I saw them. We can take it down. | ||
We have the wrong translation here. | ||
But you heard the French guys like, what about Iraq? | ||
Are you saying that... | ||
If Putin needs to be brought up on war crimes, why isn't Bush judged in the same way? | ||
French TV anchor confronts John Kerry on U.S. condemning of Putin's Ukraine invasion. | ||
Why isn't Bush judged in the same way? | ||
I just love John Kerry's response. | ||
It's like, no. No. | ||
No, it's different. | ||
It's different this time. Because it's not us. | ||
Because Russia doesn't control the U.N. So, you know, when you're going to bring us up on charges, you can't. | ||
We control the courts. So that's the way this works from now on. | ||
Yeah, America's been run by war criminals for the last several decades, with the brief and chaotic exception of Donald Trump. | ||
So it's just like, we have no... | ||
We have no standing in the international community. | ||
This is what the occupation by our globalist-occupied government has brought us. | ||
We have no standing to say anything about any other country invading another country. | ||
We just look at the biggest hypocrites in the world and they can just throw Iraq and Afghanistan back in our face and we have to take it because our country has been ruled by despicable, warmongering liars for my entire lifetime. | ||
And it's ruined our reputation overseas and it's destroyed any foundation that we ever had of portraying ourselves as some sort of disinterested purveyors of justice. | ||
We're not. And they know we're not. | ||
And we should be. We could be. | ||
The American people like to think that we are. | ||
But we also routinely fall for the lives of these people because we have an establishment that is consisting entirely of the most despicable, hateful, moronic people on the face of the earth like John Kerry himself. | ||
So they occupy the offices of government. | ||
They use our power and our influence and our goodwill to prosecute senseless, endless, destructive wars overseas. | ||
And then they walk around acting like, you know, they're the good guys when everybody in the world knows that they're not. | ||
And we do regular American people have to pay the price for that. | ||
It's sickening, but it is, at the end of the day, our fault for letting these two skull-and-bone pervert compatriots run our country for the last several decades. | ||
That is all of our fault, obviously. | ||
For allowing this to go on. | ||
And actually, Putin makes a point about this. | ||
We can go to clip number nine here. Here's Putin just telling the truth about the West. | ||
Let's watch. Many Euro-Atlantic, the West states, have taken the way where they deny or reject their own roots, including the Christian roots of their countries. | ||
In these countries, the moral basis and any traditional identity are being denied. | ||
National, religious, cultural, and even gender identities are being denied or revised. | ||
There, politics treats a family with many children as equal to a homosexual partnership judiciously. | ||
The excesses and exaggeration of political correctness in these countries indeed leads to serious considerations in the legitimization of parties that promote the propaganda of pedophilia. | ||
People in many European states are actually ashamed of their religious affiliations and are indeed frightened to speak about them. | ||
Christian holidays and celebrations are abolished or neutrally renamed as if they were ashamed of those Christian holidays. | ||
With this method, one hides away the deeper moral values of these celebrations. | ||
So, yeah, translation, Putin says that the West is ruled by satanic pedophiles, and he's exactly right. | ||
Hard to deny. Really hard to deny. | ||
Just all of this to say, pretty obvious who the good guys and the bad guys are in this particular dichotomy. | ||
It's unfortunate that Americans have allowed this downfall to take place under our watch. | ||
Now we'll be back on the other side, take more of your phone calls and talk about what democracy looks like in Ukraine as they have decided to forego the election part of the democratic process. | ||
Yeah, no more elections until the war is over. | ||
The war is not going to be over until they say it is. | ||
No more elections for the foreseeable future. | ||
After all, we're waging a war to defend democracy. | ||
We're waging a war to defend democracy, so even if you don't like it, it's going to keep going, and even if you want to vote your way out of it, you can't. | ||
We're defending democracy after all. | ||
Democracy is more important than letting people have their say and vote for what they want their government to do. | ||
Again, it's beyond description at this point, but we'll talk about it all through the third hour and your phone calls as well. | ||
Stay with us. Go to Infowarsstore.com to support everything that we do here. | ||
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We'll be back with your calls and more for the third hour of American Journal. | ||
unidentified
|
Stay with us, folks. All right, welcome back. | |
Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
We've got your phone calls now. | ||
We've got Robert in Brooklyn who wants to talk about mandates. | ||
Go ahead, Robert in Brooklyn. | ||
Thank you for calling in. | ||
You're on the air. | ||
unidentified
|
Robert. | |
Robert in Brooklyn. | ||
Going once, going twice. | ||
unidentified
|
Hello, hi, hi. Hello, good morning. | |
Just under the wire there. | ||
Thanks for calling in, Robert. You're on the air. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, even before I get started, I just want to say I'm holding in my hand from info was the CBD full spectrum 1,000 milligrams recommended by Mike Adams. | |
So I just want to thank you guys for the CBD full spectrum 1,000 milligrams that you're putting out. | ||
Thank you. Yeah, and the other thing is what I wanted to talk about is Trump and also Kennedy, those are the two people who I'm considering voting for, both of them, especially Trump, they should be pushed, pressed in terms of their position on the mandate and the right to try. | ||
In terms of the mandate, Trump said he was against the mandate. | ||
But then he went on to say, well, federalism, meaning the states, he left it up to the states to limit. | ||
He left it up to the states. | ||
And I don't think the state should have the right to force people to take vaccines, especially if it's an experimental vaccine like the COVID. But even if it's a vaccine like the measles, I don't think it's right to be able to force people to take vaccines. | ||
In New York, they closed down private schools because apparently some of the parents didn't want their kids taking vaccines. | ||
And, you know, it's not right. | ||
It's a violation of the First Amendment if there's religious reasons involved. | ||
But there should be a law that should, federal law prohibiting anyone, whether it's on a state level, federal level, that you can't force people to take a vaccine, especially experimental stuff. | ||
And the other thing is about the right to try. | ||
That was a great thing, it seems, that he came up with, the right to try. | ||
But meanwhile, when the situation happened with COVID, doctors were afraid to prescribe stuff like hydrochloroquine or ivermectin. | ||
So what good is it if you have a right to try when then effectively it becomes almost impossible to get stuff like hydrochloroquine and ivermectin? | ||
So there has to be some sort of expansion of the right to try that they can't threaten doctors that they feel uncomfortable, you know, Serving the interests of their patients because they're scared they're going to lose their license. | ||
I mean, so I think that Trump and Kennedy, they should be pushed that they're going to do something to prevent us from ever being forced to have to be mandated to make something like this again. | ||
And also that we should have the right to take stuff that we need. | ||
The doctors shouldn't be afraid to prescribe things that people need. | ||
Yeah, no, I completely agree. | ||
I mean, this is the problem with, you know, it's like it's not even a matter of law. | ||
It's like a matter of morality and a lot of like you can't legislate this sort of stuff. | ||
Necessarily, I don't think like, why not? | ||
Well, I mean, I guess you can, but it just, like, it gets messy in the term... | ||
Like, so what's happening now is that you have organizations that are, like, collections of doctors basically saying that they're going to disbar and, you know, remove the licensing from doctors that go against their orders. | ||
I guess you can make a law saying you can't do that, but then what if you have a doctor who is, like, legitimately a quack and is legitimately, like... | ||
Not performing his duties, you know, up to standard. | ||
And that licensing apparatus wants to, you know, stop people from going to him. | ||
Like, what have you got? A guy who's, you know, whatever. | ||
Maybe he's castrating children and they want to go, okay, we're going to take your license away. | ||
But then you've got a law that says they can't do that. | ||
It just seems like this isn't the place for, like... | ||
It seems like no matter what you do, you're just going to make laws to deal with it, and you're going to make laws to deal with the laws, and then more laws to deal with those laws, and it's like a cascading effect, where in reality, if we just had decent people running these organizations, this would never be an issue in the first place. | ||
So I guess we do need laws to justify this stuff. | ||
It's just a sad thing, and it's just, you know, it's like that... | ||
I'll find that quote about Rome, and it's just like, you know, the more numerous the law is, the less moral a state. | ||
That's essentially where we are now. | ||
It's sad, but I guess you're right. | ||
All right, we'll be back on the other side with more calls. | ||
unidentified
|
All right, welcome back, folks. | |
I want to talk about more of a general trend that we see going on. | ||
And that is the truly bizarre and hypocritical nature of so-called democracy these days. | ||
This might be the best example. | ||
Obviously, the war in Ukraine must be fought forever for the sake of democracy. | ||
Zelensky has now stated there will not be a presidential election in Ukraine before the end of the war. | ||
I'd say that's nothing unusual. | ||
Great Britain also suspended their elections during World War II. A little bit different. | ||
A little bit different there. | ||
After all, they have a prime minister, they have a parliament, they also have a king, right? | ||
They have sort of a parliamentary monarchy, not a democracy that Ukraine says it is. | ||
So this election was originally scheduled to be held in spring of 2024. | ||
So in other words, he gets to be president as long as the war goes on. | ||
In other words, he's incentivized to keep the war going on as long as humanly possible. | ||
Because until it ends, he gets to be president for life. | ||
Seems kind of strange. Seems a strange way to operate your democracy that you're sacrificing hundreds of thousands of lives to maintain, canceling the election. | ||
Okay. Kind of weird. | ||
Kind of bizarre. Kind of doesn't make any sense whatsoever, actually. | ||
Actually, if you think about it, not even a little bit. | ||
Meanwhile, M4s.com has this story, quote, I do not know the plans of our government, but it looks like the extermination of its own population. | ||
The Zelensky regime's goal in Ukraine appears to be the extermination of its own population, according to a Ukrainian soldier who served on the front lines in Bakhmut. | ||
Quote, I do not know the plans of our government, but it looks like the extermination of its own population, Ukraine soldier on Bakhmut. | ||
The soldier made the comments as part of a Vice documentary released on Saturday. | ||
As the Wall Street Journal reported last month, the Lezinski regime is drafting poor, untrained men, some of whom have never held a gun, and sending them straight to the front lines to serve as cannon fodder. | ||
On Monday, horrific video was released showing inexperienced Ukrainian soldiers with U.S.-supplied Bradley fighting vehicles taking part in the U.S.-backed counteroffensive, getting their legs blown off while traversing a minefield. | ||
The poor sap can be seen jumping right onto a mine and getting his legs blown off before his comrades drag him back into the tank, leaving behind a huge trail of blood. | ||
And we've seen videos throughout this conflict of men literally being picked up off the street. | ||
They're like out shopping one day and an army vehicle rolls up and just throws him in the back and goes, you're going to the front line to fight and die for Zelensky, who you can't even vote on. | ||
He's just president for life now. | ||
Incredible. But it doesn't stop there. | ||
The whole idea of European democracy is just a big, unfunny joke at this point. | ||
For example, you have this. | ||
Nobody ever wanted to open their borders. | ||
The population never voted on, was never asked if they wanted their island home to become a place of so-called refuge for an infinite number of Middle Easterners and Africans who were ferried here by the UN. But they got it anyway. | ||
That was forced on them. | ||
And they're like, yeah, we're going to house them all at your... | ||
I'm like, no, we don't want that. | ||
Well, too bad. You're going to get it. | ||
Oh, the entire community is against it. | ||
The entire population is against it. | ||
Thousands and thousands of people are telling you, don't do this. | ||
We don't want it. Well, too bad. | ||
This is a democracy. We are in charge. | ||
We do whatever the hell we want, regardless of how you feel. | ||
The appeal is allowed and the planning permission is granted for a change of use from student accommodation to a silent seeker accommodation at Stafford Education and Enterprise Park, Weston Road, Stafford, in accordance with the terms of the application. | ||
Again, you have thousands of people in this area like, no, we don't want hundreds of foreign men living on our college campus. | ||
We don't want that. | ||
We never wanted that. | ||
If you're going to ask us, we're going to tell you no, and then they just do it anyway. | ||
This is the way it works in Europe at this point, and this is the democracy that they claim to be fighting for. | ||
What about in Ireland? | ||
Irish justice ministers tweet on hate speech laws. | ||
It's 2 million views, under 200 likes, over 2,000 comments, all of them negative. | ||
80% of the population is against any hate speech laws, according to an RTE poll. | ||
Over 70% of responses to government consolation of the laws were negative. | ||
Senators reporting record numbers of emails and phone calls from citizens opposed to the law. | ||
But the laws will pass with overwhelming political support anyway. | ||
Welcome to liberal democracy. | ||
This is a tweet from Keith Woods. | ||
So, yeah, I mean, this is the state of European democracy. | ||
It is at complete odds with the demands of the demos, of the people, of the polity that they're actually representing. | ||
They don't want any of this but they're getting it anyway. | ||
Massive protests against immigration, they're getting it anyway. | ||
Well, we got the immigration. | ||
Fine, you're doing that to us. | ||
But at least don't house them at our college campus where we send our daughters to school. | ||
Well, they're doing that anyway, too. | ||
Okay, but can we at least speak out against this? | ||
Like, just don't pass the hate speech laws that mean we can't even organize or campaign against this. | ||
Well, they're passing those anyway as well. | ||
Like, it just doesn't matter what the people want. | ||
This is tyranny. | ||
Straightforward. Without tyranny. | ||
Qualification, this is tyranny full bore. | ||
Infowars has a story. The UN wants people to report each other for hate speech. | ||
There's been a lot of talk about the United Nations and its actions of late. | ||
Mostly, these actions fall way beyond the scope of what its founding charger designates the organization to be. | ||
That's a good point, too, right? | ||
It's like you've got this organization that's like, our purpose is to be a forum where countries can resolve their differences instead of going to war. | ||
Like, oh, that's not a bad idea. | ||
It sounds kind of nice. | ||
We can have little rules and arguments, and that way we don't have to resort to physical violence. | ||
And they're like, okay, well, we're in charge now. | ||
You can't speak out against us, or we call it hate speech, and we're also going to fund the transportation of millions of foreigners into your countries. | ||
It's not war, though, because we're the ones doing it, I guess. | ||
So they're just abolishing democracy across the European landmass and then telling you it's democracy while they do it. | ||
Please don't tell me you're fooled by any of this. | ||
And we'll go to a video from Irish citizens on the other side. | ||
But first, let's go out to your phone calls. | ||
Let's go to Larry in Florida. | ||
You have comments on the Gates mosquitoes. | ||
And you say there's more cases than are being reported. | ||
Go ahead, Larry. You're on the air. | ||
Well, thank you, Harrison. Appreciate it. | ||
Well, these are actually what is being reported, at least locally here in the west coast, central west coast of Florida. | ||
There have now been, as of last night, based on media, so you have to take that with a grain of salt. | ||
But it's local media, so I think it's probably accurate. | ||
There have been four cases between the two counties already. | ||
And obviously, having lived here for over 60 years, The mosquitoes that are here this season are distinctly different from last season. | ||
They're smaller. | ||
You used to be able to feel the bigger mosquitoes when they landed on you. | ||
You brush them off. These guys are so light, you don't really feel them until they bite you. | ||
And vector transmission, which is what they call disease transmission by insects, that's been around for 40, 50 years, the knowledge of it. | ||
So, just a couple observations. | ||
Is this the beginning of another surge against the populace of the United States? | ||
Hard to say, but, you know, Bill Gates released them. | ||
A couple of observations. | ||
Texas and Florida, coincidental that the populace of those states is still at least red. | ||
I would suggest a couple of observations, and then I'd like to make one comment or two comments on last Sunday evening's program, Evening with Alex, which was great. | ||
But one comment is our governors in our states ought to be saying, at least in the red states, To Bill Gates and his crew and his British company that, you know, Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation funded, ought to be saying, no, no, you're not releasing those things in our state. | ||
It makes no sense whatsoever. | ||
Tell you what, it's down the line, Larry. We'll go back to you and we'll go to some more phone calls on the other side. | ||
unidentified
|
Stay with us, folks. All right, welcome back, folks. | |
Larry in Florida, I wanted to give you a second to finish up your thoughts since we got cut off by the break. | ||
unidentified
|
Larry, go ahead. Appreciate that, Eric. | |
Sure, absolutely. Go ahead. And I guess just one last thought, at least on the whole malaria mosquito thing, is hopefully maybe the good doctors that have been really in the trenches here for a couple of years on this COVID scam I might start looking at what we can do to deal with malaria and potentially being injected with malaria vaccines. | ||
Because I know enough to know that's potential. | ||
I don't know whether it takes multiple bites from mosquitoes or what. | ||
unidentified
|
So that's the thought. | |
And then I just wanted two words. | ||
Sunday night was incredible. | ||
It was an incredible program. | ||
Alex did a great job. | ||
Pastor Brown at the F. River Church did a great job. | ||
My wife and I, my son and his wife and my granddaughter were all there. | ||
Oh, y'all were actually there at the event. | ||
That's cool. Yeah, I mean, I'm only an hour away from it. | ||
And so we went and it was great. | ||
It was crowded. | ||
Alex and Pastor Brown drew a big crowd, a good crowd, pushed the capacity of the facility we were in. | ||
And, you know, it was the music, the words, the inspiration. | ||
And frankly, I'd never seen Alex do a one-on-one and do two hours worth of questions and handshakes and pictures. | ||
And it was really incredible. | ||
That's great. I wish I had been there. | ||
Yeah, it was great. | ||
The other interesting piece, and in hindsight, it's not surprising, but we got there slightly later than most. | ||
We had a traffic problem on the way, so we ended up parking in one of the far parking lots from the facility, and when we came out, much to our surprise, there was a DHS trailer parked there, and it appeared to be Octopod lights on inside and outside. | ||
unidentified
|
So, you know, those folks are just everywhere they don't need to be. | |
You know, they need to be protecting us on the border and places like that. | ||
But that trailer was, you know, it was marked enough. | ||
I mean, you know, that's pretty straightforward. | ||
And I walked up close enough. | ||
Unfortunately, I had a brain injury. | ||
I'm old enough. | ||
I had a brain fart, so to speak, forgive the language, and I didn't take a picture. | ||
But yeah, it was a DHS trailer. | ||
My son and my wife saw it, too. | ||
Well, I believe you. You've got people coming together to praise the Lord. | ||
That's clearly a security threat, too. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, absolutely. Well, that's great. | |
Thank you so much for the comments. | ||
And, of course, that entire program is available on Bandot Video. | ||
And, yeah, I wish I'd been there, too. | ||
It seemed like a very, very fun time. | ||
Thank you for the call, Larry. | ||
We'll go out to a few more phone calls here. | ||
I still want to talk about what's going on in... | ||
You're up a little bit more since we have a video I wasn't able to get to last time. | ||
But we'll go to phone calls this segment. | ||
We'll save that for the next one. Let's go to Clown Car. | ||
We haven't heard from him in a while. | ||
Thanks for calling in. Clown Car on Coney Island. | ||
Thank you for calling in, Clown Car. | ||
unidentified
|
You're on the air. How you doing, Harrison? | |
Thank you. 100%. You should win that contest. | ||
You're definitely one of the funniest, serious dudes I've ever seen. | ||
Your delivery is impeccable. | ||
And your timing is way on as far as, you know, take that from a guy who's been paid to do comedy before. | ||
Thank you. So, I wanted to say... | ||
You're welcome. I wanted to say, I think we are in a precarious situation now. | ||
The frequency I'm noticing of people falling, everybody in their family has known somebody who's fallen recently, whether that's due to the equilibrium being set off within their bodies because of neurological issues starting to form from whatever is going on, And a lot of H. pavlori showing up. | ||
Almost everybody who's been vaccinated has H. pavlori. | ||
They should need to go get tested for that. | ||
Now, the one thing that I also kind of tried to decipher is, is it due to a frequency? | ||
Is it due to something they're putting in the air? | ||
Because I kind of noticed all these people fell around the same time. | ||
So I think we need to start measuring radio frequencies, radiation frequencies, We need to start testing the air in New York City on a constant basis. | ||
The only reason why they didn't turn around and tell us what was in that 8,000 times more deadly air than anywhere else in the world was in New York for a day, they won't tell us what was in it because they know what was in it. | ||
They know that it's the morning light rays and all the stuff that was burning, even if it's not coming from Which has never been heard of before. | ||
But, you know, we live in a lifetime of once in a lifetime. | ||
So, you know, I'm trying to figure when is going to be the point where people wake up? | ||
Wake up! No, it's a good question. | ||
And of course, you know, it's obvious when it's like somebody gets the vaccine and then they, you know, start having seizures or they get the vaccine and, you know, they suddenly develop You know, some sort of immune system or blood clots. | ||
Obviously, that's, like, the major one that's happening. | ||
But, like, for every... | ||
unidentified
|
Let's go back. Let's stop cooling the blood clots because they're not made out of blood. | |
Right. Yeah, whatever the snake venom clots they are, whatever it is. | ||
But it's, like, those are the obvious overt things. | ||
But, like, do you think that's the only thing that is being affected? | ||
How many, like, very subtle changes have been made? | ||
I mean, we have a story. | ||
I think I can find it. I mean, we've covered it before. | ||
unidentified
|
The massive... We can go back to the guy who did the spreadsheet. | |
Remember? And he said, this vaccination with this lot number is going to give you this. | ||
This vaccination with this lot number is going to give you that. | ||
Yeah, different lot numbers. | ||
But then there's just like the massive rise in cancer that's occurred over the last, well, two years or so. | ||
I had a story about it here. | ||
Cancer cases in people aged 25 to 49 rises 22% in 30 years. | ||
What's behind the worrying rise in cases of cancer in young people? | ||
And this goes back 30 years, but actually over the last just couple years, the rise in cancer is absolutely unprecedented. | ||
And so, you know, you've got the overt, obvious vaccine effects, but then you also have the much more subtle ones. | ||
And we've always pointed out like the changes in mental capacity. | ||
We showed the video of... | ||
There's that one obnoxious actor guy that is always making videos where he's yelling at Donald Trump or whatever, and it was like... | ||
We pointed it out very early on. | ||
You could see a noticeable difference where before he got the vaccine, he was fired up and angry, and his eyes were clear, and then he gets the vaccine, and he's a lot slower, and he can't think of the words he's trying to say, and his eyes are all blurry, and he's not focusing them, and it's like... It seems like a vaccine side effect to me. | ||
Yeah, Michael Rappaport, it seems like something that you can't exactly measure. | ||
You can maybe feel it yourself, and you wonder how many people just have this brain fog, this constant brain fog as a result of their vaccine ingestion. | ||
Again, you can't really measure. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, go ahead. Real quick, think of the fake movie of Funvax. | |
Remember Bill Gates and the Department of Defense when he did a DOD pitch in 2003 for the FUNVACs where it takes fundamentalist brains? | ||
That's a fake video. Yeah, I guess it is, but it sounds like what they were working with. | ||
So, you know... | ||
Regardless fake or not, I believe they can't control things in our minds. | ||
Obviously they can. They can take away the addiction to heroin. | ||
I'm sure they can figure out, take your addiction away from God and love. | ||
Yeah, and I mean, look at the way these people talk and the way these people act. | ||
I mean, the World Economic Forum, it's not like this is something that they would go, well, but we have to respect people's beliefs and we can't be doing that. | ||
No, they think they're God and they think that you worshiping actual God is like, it's offensive to them. | ||
And you don't think that they would... | ||
Give you a vaccine for your own good, maybe without your knowledge, to cure you of your belief in God. | ||
Of course they will. These people are evil. | ||
Alright, welcome back, folks. | ||
A couple blocks to cover here. | ||
Last couple segments of American Journal. | ||
It's about to be even more expensive to get into New York. | ||
We'll go to that in just a second. | ||
But I want to go to this video. Touching on what we were discussing a few minutes ago. | ||
Again, it's hard to even wrap your mind around how this is playing out. | ||
The people of Ireland don't want their borders to be wide open. | ||
Have you ever seen the map? There's like the map where it's just like the, you know, Ireland overlaid over Africa. | ||
It's just like, Africa's like literally a thousand times bigger than Ireland. | ||
Why everyone from Africa has to come to Ireland? | ||
Mystery to everyone. | ||
It's very bizarre how this is happening. | ||
Why Ireland? Who just has throughout all of their history been nothing but a subject and a victim of imperialistic aggression and colonization. | ||
Why they suddenly have to open up their border to a bunch of Algerians, Libyans to come across. | ||
I mean, it just makes no sense at all. | ||
The Irish people don't want it. | ||
Even if they are over in Ireland, they don't want them in their neighborhood. | ||
And they don't want hate speech laws to be enacted to prevent people from arguing against it, yet they're getting all of these things. | ||
And you just think about everything else that happens in Europe that the people clearly don't want, vote against. | ||
Look at Brexit. | ||
Brexit never happened, basically, right? | ||
All of Brexit was about the migrant crisis. | ||
Even the detractors said that, right? | ||
It was like, well, this Brexit, this is all predicated on racism. | ||
Because you don't want to be a part of the EU invasion program. | ||
It's like, yeah, no, we don't want to be invaded. | ||
That's the fact. They voted for it. | ||
Doesn't matter. They canvass and ask the people in Oxford, do you want to be a part of a 15-minute city? | ||
Do you want to have ULEZ, the ultra-low emission zone program, to be implemented here? | ||
The vast majority says no. | ||
They get it anyway. You look at the Netherlands, the Dutch Farmer Party, coming from nowhere and taking seats in the parliament. | ||
As people use their electoral voice to oppose the dictates being handed down from on high in the EU and World Economic Forum, they reject it outright at the polls. | ||
Too bad they're getting it anyway. | ||
What about AFD in Germany, which won a seat in parliament for the first time just last week or so? | ||
Clearly, people are voting for them. | ||
People want them in office. | ||
They like the policies that they promote, yet the German government considers them essentially a terrorist group and surveils all of the members and has laws in place to prevent their members from organizing and actually having a political say. | ||
The entire facade of democracy is such a blatant falsehood. | ||
It's really outrageous at this point. | ||
So whether it's 15-minute cities, nobody wants, they get them anyway. | ||
The Dutch farms being eliminated. | ||
Nobody in Netherlands is for it. | ||
It's happening anyway. The AFD being treated as a terrorist group. | ||
Well, they get votes from their constituents, but it doesn't matter because the government says that they're bad, so they're treated as if they're evil. | ||
In Ireland, nobody wants immigrants. | ||
They're getting them anyway. Nobody wants them in their neighborhood. | ||
Too bad. Your college is being... | ||
Going to be occupied by them now. | ||
Whether it's Ireland or UK, I mean, it's just the same across the board. | ||
Yeah, this is the map of Ireland overlaid on Africa. | ||
And they're just like, we have to open the borders for everyone from Africa. | ||
It's like a tenth the size of Equatorial Guinea. | ||
It's like a tenth the size of Nigeria, which itself is just like one one-hundredth of... | ||
Africa in total. Why are they having to be the subject of mass importation of foreigners? | ||
It makes no damn sense whatsoever. | ||
So the Irish people are standing up against this and now they're being told that that's hate speech and they'll be charged for opposing this mass invasion where the government themselves and the corporations that run the government say that we need 4 million immigrants to this island of 5 million people. | ||
It's replacement migration. It's genocide. | ||
It's happening right out in the open. | ||
Nobody defends them. Nobody wants to talk about this. | ||
Horrifying. Let's go to clip number 12 here. | ||
This is an Irish citizen saying too many economic migrants are coming in. | ||
A little back and forth between a poor, innocent, asylum-seeking refugee and the native Irish person that doesn't want them there. | ||
Let's watch. Some Irish citizens are fed up with the ongoing migrant crisis and the economic migrants arriving. | ||
We're not fleeing war. | ||
Which country are you from? | ||
unidentified
|
Are you fleeing war? You're from Algeria? | |
So you're fleeing war in Algeria? | ||
Yeah. Sorry about that. | ||
Sorry about that. Do you know Ireland has... | ||
There's no war now, Jim. I know, I know. | ||
There is currently no war in Algeria. | ||
Most Algerian migrants pass through many safe countries on their way to Ireland. | ||
unidentified
|
So why are you here? | |
Can I ask you? I'm here. Where are you? | ||
Everyone coming. Can we have a conversation? | ||
Can we have a conversation? You don't have to ask me why I'm here. | ||
I don't have to. I'm entitled to ask you anything I want to ask me. | ||
No, I am. I'm worried about... | ||
Did you produce your passport? | ||
What about your country? | ||
Is there people coming into your country? | ||
Did you bring a passport? | ||
Did you bring a passport? You're asking me about my passport. | ||
Anyway, by the way. Yeah, because there's weird... | ||
Listen to me. Listen to me. | ||
Don't ask me many questions. | ||
Don't ask me many questions about, like, where I live. | ||
I'm a journalist, why I live. | ||
This question, all of this one, put it and throw it. | ||
You know what I'm saying? So, we are people. | ||
You know what I'm saying? We respect every person in the world. | ||
Respect us. That's why we are in the world. | ||
Are you claiming asylum? I'm claiming asylum, yeah. | ||
A new poll showed that a whopping 75% of Irish say there are too many refugees in the country. | ||
Too bad. Yeah, three out of four think Ireland is taking in too many refugees. | ||
Local activists are confronting politicians, police, and the migrants themselves as the crisis rages. | ||
I mean, just the... | ||
Where's this from? | ||
Some liberal... | ||
CNN. Fleeing violence and persecution, asylum seekers in Ireland find themselves threatened by far-right activists. | ||
So, your country will be invaded by people who insult you, despise you. | ||
Clearly that guy wearing just like designer clothes, designer glasses, designer hat. | ||
It's like clearly wealthy. | ||
It's like, yeah, I'm fleeing war in Algeria. | ||
There's no war in Algeria. | ||
They're just lying to you. | ||
So your country will be invaded. | ||
Your country will become the dumping ground for millions upon millions of foreigners who don't care about you or your culture or your civilization. | ||
And if you oppose that peacefully, patriotically, if you just use your voice as a citizen in a democratic society, It's happening in Germany, it's happening in France, it's happening in England. | ||
It's happening in Sweden. It's happening everywhere across Europe and only in Europe and America, of course, although we still have at least the symbol of the First Amendment that allows us to say, no, we don't want to become Mexico. | ||
No, we don't want to be flooded by millions upon millions. | ||
I mean, we still are. It doesn't matter. | ||
It doesn't matter if we say it. | ||
It doesn't matter if we advocate for this because they're doing it anyway. | ||
But it's just sort of horrific. | ||
It's just sort of horrifying seeing this take place, seeing this slow motion genocide unfold with the full support of people that are simultaneously waging an ultra destructive war in Ukraine over the sacred democracy that we must defend. seeing this slow motion genocide unfold with the full support I've never seen anything like it. | ||
I've never seen anything like it again because this is the end. | ||
unidentified
|
All right, ladies and gentlemen, welcome back. | |
final segment of American Journal this morning. | ||
A bunch of interesting stories to still get to here. | ||
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This story we'll have to get into a little bit. | ||
But it's a report from the Committee on the Judiciary and the Select Committee on the Weaponization of the Federal Government from the House of Representatives. | ||
It's the weaponization of the CISA, how a cybersecurity agency colluded with big tech and disinformation partners to censor Americans. | ||
The executive summary is this. | ||
Well, it says this. Quote, one could argue we're in the business of critical infrastructure, and the most critical infrastructure is our cognitive infrastructure. | ||
So building that reliance on misinformation and disinformation, I think, is incredibly important. | ||
That was the statement from the CISA director, Jen Easterly, on November 10, 2021. | ||
They're calling it cognitive infrastructure. | ||
Which is just completely insane, but there it is. | ||
The First Amendment recognizes no person or entity has a monopoly on the truth and that the truth of today can quickly become the, quote, misinformation of tomorrow. | ||
Labeling speech misinformation or disinformation does not strip it of its First Amendment protection. | ||
As such, under the Constitution, the federal government is strictly prohibited from censoring Americans' political speech. | ||
The government also may not use third parties to bypass the First Amendment and conduct censorship by proxy, which is exactly. | ||
Thank you. | ||
What they've been doing for the past little while, and we've been talking about it ever since they started, outsourcing their tyranny through public companies. | ||
Of course, this is the entire goal and point of so-called stakeholder capitalism and the World Economic Forum's design to bring about the great reset, or what we call the great consolidation, the great cooperation. | ||
The committee on the judiciary and select subcommittee on the weaponization of the federal government have been conducting an investigation into government-induced censorship on social media. | ||
Although the investigation is ongoing, information obtained to date has revealed that the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency We're good to go. | ||
In the years since its creation, however, CISA metastasized into the nerve center of the federal government's domestic surveillance and censorship operations on social media. | ||
By 2020, CISA routinely reported social media posts that allegedly spread disinformation to social media platforms. | ||
By 2021, CISA had a formal miss, dis, and malinformation MDM team. | ||
In 2022 and 2023, in response to growing public and private criticism of CISA's unconstitutional behavior, CISA attempted to camouflage its activity, duplicitously claiming it serves a purely informational role. | ||
This interim staff report details, among other things, That one. | ||
CISA is working with federal partners to mature a whole-of-government approach to curbing alleged mis- and disinformation. | ||
CISA considered the creation of an anti-misinformation rapid response team capable of physically deploying across the United States. | ||
This is not speculation. | ||
This is not... | ||
Conspiracy theory. This is a report from the Committee of the Judiciary on the Judiciary and the Select Subcommittee on the Weaponization of Federal Government from the U.S. House of Representatives. | ||
So this official government report says that the American government is going to deploy physical rapid response teams to take out misinformation and So they're going to have literal thought police deployed across the United States under the guise of homeland security. | ||
I mean, this is the end of the First Amendment, which is the end of a truly free government, which is the end of the American experiment, which is the end of the revolution of 1776. | ||
It's the end. It's over. | ||
You lose the First Amendment, you lose the world. | ||
Because America is the last bastion of freedom of speech. | ||
The only country in the world with the First Amendment. | ||
Other countries have similar but not nearly as robust protections for free speech. | ||
So this is it. I mean, if they get away with this, they can get away with anything. | ||
Because what are you going to do? Talk about it? | ||
I don't think so. Not anymore. | ||
So, they get caught censoring American people. | ||
They get called out for this and sued for this, and their reaction is to go, well, we just outsourced it now. | ||
Now, instead of us doing it, it's going to be us providing the money for a nonprofit organization to do it. | ||
So, problem solved, I guess. | ||
CISA wanted to use the same CISA-funded nonprofit as its mouthpiece to, quote, avoid the appearance of government propaganda. | ||
They don't actually care about not having government propaganda. | ||
They just don't want you to know about it. | ||
They just don't want... I mean, this is horrifying. | ||
The amount of duplicity, the level of dishonesty, the level of manipulation and psychological operations going on here are truly... | ||
Nation-destroying. They are working stridently to destroy the First Amendment at every different level. | ||
And they are succeeding in this in a lot of ways. | ||
And then there's things like this. | ||
This guy David Greenfield of New York comments on these people holding a swastika. | ||
Neo-Nazis, so Daily Mail says, Neo-Nazis wave swastika flags outside synagogue with police refusing to intervene. | ||
Police are refusing to intervene on this free speech. | ||
David Greenfield said, Swastikas in front of a synagogue is not protected hate speech. | ||
Yeah, it is buddy. | ||
No, it absolutely is. | ||
It's meant to inspire fear of bodily harm as the Nazis systematically killed millions of Jews. | ||
Police must arrest these bigots and let them appeal their case to a higher court. | ||
To be honest with you, saying this, David Greenfield should probably be arrested. | ||
Because this is actually an existential threat. | ||
To our ability to have free speech. | ||
Do I agree with people waving swastikas? | ||
No. That's why it's a beautiful thing that they can express something that 99.9% of people disagree with. | ||
That's the entire point of the First Amendment. | ||
That's the entire point of us going to war with the Nazis in World War II was because we believe that these foundational rights Aspects of our country are of infinite importance. | ||
In other words, you can't have a free country if you can't freely express even ideas that are highly unpopular. | ||
Unless you're calling for violence explicitly at that moment, unless you're yelling fire in a crowded movie theater, you get to say things that are unpopular. | ||
That's what differentiates us from the Nazis, you idiot. | ||
Do you not get that? | ||
You don't understand that? That this is the entire point. | ||
It's like burning the American flag. | ||
Yeah, we hate it, but ironically it's the American flag that gives you the right to do that because we actually believe in freedom of speech. | ||
We actually believe that people have the right to express things that are highly offensive and highly objectionable to the vast majority of the people. | ||
That's the point. That's the robustness of our system. | ||
That's the... It's actualization of our founding principles that you get to do things like this. | ||
So if you're out there as a, I assume, representative of our government, NYC Greenfield, he sounds like he's You know, has some sort of government position. | ||
He's out here being like, the police must arrest these people for speech because I'm Jewish. | ||
I'm like, what? The hell are you talking about? | ||
That's not the way this works. | ||
If you learned any lesson from Nazi Germany, it's that that's how it starts, moron. | ||
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