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After seven years of violent revolution, our American founders were well aware that political factions were most often used to divide and conquer the people. | ||
And they knew that the republic they created would only last as long as the people could remain educated. | ||
In 1816, Thomas Jefferson wrote, If a nation expects to be ignorant and free in a state of civilization, it expects what never was and never will be. | ||
By the end of the Civil War, the two-party system became the norm. | ||
The globalist system we face today was born. | ||
And the deliberate dumbing down of the American citizen began with our great-great-grandparents. | ||
In the late 1800s, the Skinner-Pavlovian method was brought into American schools by Johns Hopkins. | ||
These psychological methods allowed teachers the ability to program students' behavior in the same way that Pavlov did with dogs. | ||
In 1934, the Carnegie International Endowment for Peace published the report on the Commission on Social Studies, which explicitly stated the goal of eventually taking away people's land, and noted that most people would obviously oppose this. | ||
The solution was to begin using the school system to recondition the minds of children. | ||
In 1976, the bicentennial year of the Declaration of Independence, 124 congressmen signed the Declaration of Interdependence, which stated that two centuries ago, our forefathers brought forth a new nation. | ||
Now we must join with others to bring forth a new world order. | ||
And it pledged to give children special attention in distributing a common education to suit their goals. | ||
By the 1990s, this globalist dumbing-down system was perfected, and America began exporting it worldwide in what is known as outcome-based education. | ||
Starting in 2010, Common Core began in the United States. | ||
It outlined what students were expected to know at each grade level and enforced ways to assess those standards. | ||
Charlotte Iserby, author of The Deliberate Dumbing Down of America, has traced most of this agenda stemming from the Order of Skull and Bones at Yale, through both Republicans and Democrats, two wings of the same globalist bird, which understood that dumbed-down people have a base desire for a simple dualistic choice. | ||
In 1953, the Rockefeller Foundation funded the Robbers Cave Experiment, wherein 11-year-old boys, who thought they were signing up for summer camp, were organized into two separate tribes and were manipulated into fighting each other, which was easily accomplished by having a single resource that the two groups competed for. | ||
The Henry Toshfell experiments of the 1970s showed that by simply dividing people into two groups, they would naturally identify with their own group and discriminate against the other. | ||
The basic ego mind is constantly making preferences. | ||
No matter how dumb you are, you have an opinion about everything. | ||
And if you can keep the population dumb enough and give them two parties to choose from, they will innately identify with one and despise the other. | ||
This allows the globalist system the cover they need to implement unpopular policies, such as a central bank digital currency, while we the people ignorantly fight each other. | ||
United we stand, divided we fall. | ||
And we've been falling for it for generations. | ||
The American people have been so thoroughly dumbed down that we think freedom is the ability to choose between two parties working for the same control system. | ||
And we have been made so weak that we are afraid to even discuss the option of violence, which is most often the only remedy for tyranny. | ||
But if we were an enlightened people, we could simply unite together as one and just say no to the tyrants. | ||
The answer to 1984 is 1776. | ||
Reporting for InfoWars, this is Greg Reese. | ||
Two-party system in the dumbing down of America. | ||
They're trying to keep us divided. | ||
They are the Democrats. | ||
unidentified
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It's Thursday, June 29th, the year of our Lord, 2023. | |
And you're listening to The American Journal with your host, Harrison Smith. | ||
Watch it live right now at band.video. | ||
Good morning, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
Welcome to The American Journal. | ||
I am your host, Harrison Smith. | ||
Very glad to be here today. | ||
We've got a big show for you. | ||
We've got lots of videos to show you. | ||
Lots of international news to get into today from riots in France. | ||
Welcome to the World Economic Forum's summer session, kicking off in China. | ||
We've got some videos from that. We'll be joined in the third hour by John Doyle, conservative commentator. | ||
He just did an Ask Me Anything. | ||
No, not Ask Me Anything, Change My Mind segment for the Stephen Crowder style. | ||
Set up a booth at a college and talk to liberals. | ||
Only they... John Doyle did it at an HBCU with the topic being America is not racist changed my mind. | ||
And it turned out exactly as you would expect. | ||
Extremely entertaining video and I want to talk to him about what that experience was like. | ||
Whether he's going to try for it a second time. | ||
It ends with the cops being called and just chaos. | ||
Unrelenting chaos. It's... | ||
It's a very good video, and I'm very excited to talk to him about that, since it clearly took quite a bit of production to get that going. | ||
And it's an important conversation to have. | ||
We're going to get into all of that and more. | ||
Your phone calls, of course, as well. | ||
Well, let's get into it this morning as we do every morning with your daily dispatch. | ||
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All right, here it is, folks. | |
Your Daily Dispatch for Thursday, the 29th of June, 2023. | ||
First on the docket. | ||
It's actually a slightly older story, but we missed it and it started being spread around Twitter recently. | ||
Worth a note. U.S. to challenge a Mexican ban on genetically modified corn. | ||
The Biden administration said it would take initial steps towards challenging a ban Mexico's placed on shipments of genetically modified corn from the United States, restrictions that have wrinkled farmers and threatened a profitable export. | ||
Yeah, I'm sure it's those farmers. | ||
I'm sure it's the farmers. | ||
I guess it is the farmers, but the farmers themselves have been extorted and Blackmailed and forced in many cases to use the genetically modified corn only to find that they can't sell it to Mexico. | ||
But don't worry. Here comes the American government to force Mexico to take our genetically modified poison corn. | ||
Mexico has planned to phase out the use of genetically modified corn as well as a herbicide called glyphosate. | ||
By 2024, about 90% of corn grown in the United States is genetically modified. | ||
Senior administration officials have expressed concerns to the Mexican government about the measures for more than a year in a virtual and in-person meeting saying they could disrupt millions of dollars of agricultural trade and cause serious harm to U.S. producers. | ||
Mexico is the second largest market for U.S. corn after China. | ||
You must take our genetically modified corn. | ||
This is the important activity of the U.S. government taking. | ||
Could just grow natural corn, but that's too simple and healthy and normal. | ||
Meanwhile, the great grift, more than $200 billion in COVID-19 aid, may have been stolen, federal watchdog says. | ||
More than $200 billion may have been stolen from two large COVID-19 release initiatives, according to new estimates from a federal watchdog, investigating federally funded programs that helped small businesses survive the worst health crisis in more than 100 years. | ||
The numbers issued Tuesday by the U.S. Small Business Administration Inspector General are much greater than the office's previous projections and underscore how vulnerable the paycheck protection and COVID-19 economic injury disaster loan programs were to fraudsters. | ||
Particularly during the early stages of the coronavirus pandemic. | ||
The Inspector General's report said, quote, at least 17% of all COVID and PPP relief funds were dispersed to potentially fraudulent actors. | ||
The fraud estimate for the COVID-19 Economic Injury Disaster Loan Program is more than 136% Billion dollars, which represents 33% of the total money spent on that program, according to the report. | ||
The paycheck protection fraud estimate is $64 billion, the inspector general said. | ||
And all of that money could have gone to Ukraine. | ||
What a shame. What a shame it is. | ||
Just absolutely insane levels of theft. | ||
You know, during like an emergency crisis, Charitable fund essentially just robbing the needy in a time of strife. | ||
This is why our country is where it is. | ||
Everything is grift. | ||
Everything is waste. | ||
Everything is controlled by criminals. | ||
Isn't that something? Meanwhile, France arrests 150 and are now mobilizing 40,000 police to tackle protests. | ||
The fatal shooting of a 17-year-old teenager by police officers has incensed France as the police made 150 arrests overnight during renewed rioting and angry protests, while Interior Minister Gérald Dharmanin said that more than 40,000 police will be deployed across France, as President Emmanuel Macron on Thursday police will be deployed across France, as President Emmanuel Macron on Thursday Around 40,000 police will be deployed across France on Thursday to deal with any further protests, Dharmanin said. | ||
Some 5,000 police will be deployed in and around Paris after two nights of sometimes violent protests over the death of a 17-year-old shot dead by police during a traffic stop. | ||
Nahel M17 was shot in the chest at point-blank range in a Paris suburb Nanterie on Tuesday. | ||
Nanterie? | ||
I don't know. | ||
It's French. | ||
In an incident that has reignited debate in France about police tactics long criticized by rights groups. | ||
We will get into this. | ||
Seems to me like it's less of a riot over police violence than it is a race riot. | ||
As this is a Muslim teenager or a migrant teenager killed by police. | ||
And now we have... | ||
Migrant riots breaking out all over France, and we'll get into that a little bit more later in the show, as once again, just like everywhere else in Europe, the latest polls out of France and discussions or, you know... | ||
Surveys of the French people have found that a vast majority think there are too many migrants, don't want any more migrants, and are asking for some sort of reform in the immigration system, including deportations. | ||
This, of course, despite being approved of and co-signed by the vast majority of the French population, is being promptly ignored by the government, because that's our democracy, after all. | ||
Then we have this, actually a, to me, sad development in the collapse of the old mainstream media. | ||
National Geographic lays off its last remaining staff writers. | ||
Like one of the endangered species whose impending extinction it has chronicled, National Geographic magazine has been on a relentlessly downward path, struggling for vibrancy in an increasingly unforgiving ecosystem. | ||
Yeah, struggling for vibrancy. | ||
It just wasn't vibrant enough. | ||
When you go to National Geographic to read some in-depth scientific survey of some uncontacted tribe, what you really want is vibrancy. | ||
It's just completely absurd. | ||
Now, this is just the latest in the saga of the downfall of National Geographic. | ||
It all kicked off around 2017 with a new set of owners that decided the entire history of the magazine they now have. | ||
Head was racist and needed to be corrected. | ||
Oh, and it's also owned by Walt Disney. | ||
Yeah, it's owned by Walt Disney now. | ||
So, just tack National Geographic onto the ever-growing list of, like... | ||
Foundational, like, ultra-important cultural icons that the Walt Disney Company has subsumed and then destroyed over the very recent past. | ||
National Geographic, Lucasfilms, Indiana Jones, Star Wars, just one by one going through all of America's... | ||
Most powerful and important cultural output and eviscerating them piecemeal. | ||
Very interesting stuff. Again, we'll get into the recent history of National Geographic and what exactly has led to this downfall. | ||
Spoiler alert, not exactly a lack of vibrancy. | ||
That wasn't actually the issue. | ||
You'll be shocked to know. | ||
Finally, in health news... | ||
Aspartame sweetener used in Diet Coke is possibly a carcinogen, WHO's cancer research agency to say. | ||
One of the world's most common artificial sweeteners is set to be declared a personal carcinogen. | ||
Carcinogen next month. | ||
Carcinogen. Carcinogenic. | ||
It means it causes cancer. | ||
Diet Coke, the sweetener in Diet Coke causes cancer. | ||
This is what they're saying. Of course, Diet Coke told you that from the way that it tastes. | ||
I don't get artificial sweeteners. | ||
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They taste like chemicals because they're chemicals. | |
We'll get into this as well. | ||
Just another shortfall from our EPA. Alright, welcome back. | ||
Ladies and gentlemen, American Journal, Infowars.com, band.video. | ||
Remember, the Independence Day sale, July 4th Super Sale, is on right now at Infowarsstore.com. | ||
You're getting up to 60% off, plus double Patriot points at Infowarsstore.com, plus best of all, it is a true 360 win as you keep us on the air and in the fight, and we so appreciate it when you do. | ||
We're going to start today with... | ||
The President of the United States, one Joseph Robinette Biden. | ||
What a saga of embarrassment this man has been. | ||
Just daily. | ||
It's a daily thing with this guy. | ||
Almost hourly, actually, when I think about it. | ||
I mean, it's every time the man goes in public, it's just... | ||
I mean, I gotta wonder what the anxiety medicine intake is of his staff around him. | ||
I mean, can you imagine living a life where you are responsible for taking care of an 85-year-old dementia patient with the nuclear codes? | ||
Who goes out in front of the world's media on a daily basis, and every time he steps up, you are sitting there just cold sweat, just shaking, just, God, please just get in the helicopter, just stop talking, get in the helicopter, just walk away from the cameras, Joe, please, for the love of God. | ||
Okay, alright, he only embarrassed himself a little bit like this. | ||
It's got to be a constant rollercoaster of just like, okay, alright, we're not in front of the cameras anymore. | ||
He can't embarrass himself anymore right now, but in 30 minutes we're going to be at some lunch and dinner and he's going to be groping little girls and yelling out names of people that died 10 years ago and he's going to be just sniffing people. | ||
It's not going to be good. | ||
I mean, I can't imagine. It makes me anxious. | ||
Like, I'm getting anxious right now just thinking about what it would be like. | ||
To have to be responsible for this guy as he just makes a mockery of the office he holds on an almost hourly basis. | ||
It really is something else. | ||
It really is something else. And you saw that picture there. | ||
That was from the video that we showed yesterday where he is, for once, being politely asked about, you know... | ||
The time that Hunter Biden said that he was there blackmailing a Chinese person for millions of dollars. | ||
You know, the reporters always have this kind of like, Sir, so were you with Hunter? | ||
You can just compare it, right? | ||
Trump, it's just like, Sir, sir, are you in favor of the mass shooting that just happened, sir? | ||
Sir, the mass shooting, it's your fault? | ||
Care to respond? Just, you know, whatever just nonsense they could throw at him. | ||
Meanwhile, Joe Biden just has scandal after scandal. | ||
It's like a... Some sort of scandal cluster bomb, right? | ||
You just got what you think is one scandal that then burst into a thousand different flares of a thousand different corrupt activities that this man and his family are involved in. | ||
It really is something else. Anyway, this video is from yesterday. | ||
That video... The image that you just saw is from yesterday. | ||
We showed the video where he's just yelling at the guy. | ||
No! No! | ||
Just like, okay, Joe, calm down. | ||
Calm down. You're the one who you put yourself in this position. | ||
It's not his fault that he has to ask about the scandal that you and your family have gotten us all into. | ||
Story from Infowars. | ||
Biden shouts at reporter asking if he was with Hunter when coercive text message sent to Biden official. | ||
A Chinese official, rather. | ||
And you can see in that video and in the images, he's got indentations on his face. | ||
It's really kind of weird looking. | ||
Well, the White House has now admitted he uses a respiratory device After indentions are seen on his face, indentions spotted on Joe Biden's face prompted immediate questions Wednesday, with the White House having to release a statement admitting that the sitting president and probable Democratic nominee for 2024 needs to use a respiratory device to help him keep breathing when asleep. | ||
Here's the problem with that, though. | ||
Here's a little issue I have with that. | ||
The man is on the lawn, talking to reporters. | ||
He's in a suit. | ||
Now, we've all experienced where you wake up, you've been in deep sleep, you've got pillow marks on your face. | ||
By the time you get dressed, those marks are gone. | ||
By the time you get up, get ready, those marks have largely faded. | ||
These are very clear indentations on his face, meaning to me that he had a mask of some sort on immediately prior to, you know, this footage being taken. | ||
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So, Either that or they strap him to a table so he doesn't wander away. | |
Maybe they strap him to a table so he doesn't wander away. | ||
It could be that as well. But unless he's just like taking a nap in his suit, you know, fully dressed and just takes the thing off and wakes up. | ||
Okay, time to go. | ||
And then walking out. Or this is not what they're saying. | ||
It's not for something that he uses while he sleeps, which is... | ||
Not that weird of a thing. | ||
I have family members. They, you know, CPAP machines or whatever they're called to help you breathe at night. | ||
Like, that's an unfortunately common type of thing, which is what they're trying to play this off as. | ||
Oh, well, you know, so many people of any age, really, but over 60. | ||
You know, a lot of people wear masks while they sleep. | ||
Yeah, but how many people have to also wear masks while they're awake? | ||
That, I think, is the real question. | ||
He says, since 2008, the president has disclosed his history with sleep apnea through medical reports, adding he used a CPAP machine last night, which is common for people with that history. | ||
So again, I don't think that's true. | ||
I just don't think that's true. | ||
To me, this is just not... | ||
Because unless he was immediately sleeping right before this, wearing a full suit and tie, I don't think these marks are from a time when he was sleeping. | ||
Just me. Just my suppositions here. | ||
Biden's 2019 medical records also revealed he had multiple surgeries on his sinus and nasal passages. | ||
Former White House physician turned rep... | ||
Ronny Johnson, who'd repeatedly called for Biden to undergo independent health and cognitive checks, wondered what else is being hidden regarding Biden's health. | ||
Saying, quote, it's now been revealed that Biden is using a CPAP machine when he sleeps. | ||
Why hasn't Biden's medical team previously disclosed this? | ||
If they are hiding this, what else are they hiding? | ||
Concerned that Joe Biden does not have the necessary mental and physical health to be president. | ||
Kamala Harris is hysterically laughing in the wings. | ||
Meanwhile, Biden was seen barely holding it together Wednesday, snapping and yelling at a reporter when he was asked questions about the alleged shakedown of a Chinese businessman by the Bidens. | ||
And we showed you that. | ||
We also showed you the other response from that day where he said that Russia, or I'm sorry, what exactly he said? | ||
He also said he was very confident that Ukraine can win the war in Iraq. | ||
So, hey, that would be something, wouldn't it? | ||
Wouldn't that be a twist for the ages? | ||
America attacked by guys from Saudi Arabia or slash our own government on 9-11, go to war with Iraq. | ||
It all seems to be just a major disaster, absolute failure of a military campaign only to be saved, rescued. | ||
Victory grasped from the jaws of defeat at the last minute by Ukraine of all places. | ||
Maybe Joe's fantasy world would be a nice place to live. | ||
But that's not even why I wanted to talk about this. | ||
We're going to show you the clips on the other side of his speech in Chicago yesterday. | ||
It's where he was going when he made all these other embarrassing comments and outbursts. | ||
He was on his way to deliver a speech that was just replete with embarrassing outbursts. | ||
unidentified
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It's amazing. With your host, Harrison Smith. | |
Alright, welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
A lot to talk about today. | ||
I gotta show you these videos. | ||
I mean... I don't think I have to intro or explain these at all. | ||
I mean... It's troubling. | ||
It's troubling where we are at this point. | ||
We'll get to some more... | ||
Just Hunter News in a second, Hunter and Joe Biden News in a second, since it's all intimately intertwined. | ||
But Biden traveled to Chicago yesterday to give a speech on what he calls Bidenomics. | ||
Bidenomics. Bidenomics is when you can't afford to feed your family, but the Biden administration tells you it's the best economy there's ever been. | ||
It's when prices of staple goods double, and then they spend $200 billion on a war in Ukraine. | ||
It's an interesting economic philosophy, let's just say. | ||
But that's not the interesting part about this speech. | ||
The interesting part about this speech is that we're able to watch in real time as a man's brain shuts down. | ||
It's like going through shutdown protocols. | ||
Like when RoboCop tries to arrest the executive. | ||
It's like Joe Biden has been programmed not to be able to give a speech. | ||
And if he starts to try, his brain starts going through the shutdown process. | ||
It's absolutely insane, all of this. | ||
It's the President of the United States. | ||
Let's go to clip number three first. | ||
Which maybe takes a little bit of... | ||
Setting up a little bit of context for you. | ||
Let's just go to clip number three. | ||
This is a key core of Bidenomics. | ||
Let's watch. You're not going to see anybody building a new coal-fired plant in America. | ||
Not just because I'd like to pass a law to say that. | ||
It's too expensive. | ||
It doesn't work anymore. | ||
Yeah, too expensive. | ||
Doesn't work. Why is that? | ||
Well, probably because of all the laws that we passed make it more expensive. | ||
Probably because we... | ||
We've used restrictive creep to prevent people from doing things that we don't want them to do, but that we can't pass laws against because we actually can't make our case or argue it. | ||
Out in the open, right? | ||
We want to pass a law saying no more coal power plants, but that's like unfeasible. | ||
It doesn't make any sense. Nobody would fall for it. | ||
So instead, we'll have the EPA, just a bunch of regulations, a bunch of red tape you have to get through. | ||
We'll make it economically impossible to do, but it's not illegal. | ||
So then we can point to it and say, look, we didn't even pass laws and people aren't building coal. | ||
So isn't this wonderful? It's just interesting how this works when simultaneously, literally less than a week ago, On Sunday, January 22nd. | ||
No, exactly one week ago. | ||
Oh, January. | ||
I'm sorry, January 22nd. I thought it was June 22nd. | ||
Yeah, so, okay, six months ago. | ||
Sorry. My bad. | ||
A little under six months ago, China to accelerate construction of coal-fired power plants. | ||
China expects to add 70 gigawatts of coal-fired power generation this year, up from 40 gigawatts of capacity in coal. | ||
Installed in 2022, a report from the power sectors group China Electric Council showed coal additions, however, will not be the biggest capacity increases in China in 2023, per the report quoted by Bloomberg, as they're also increasing massively wind and solar. | ||
So how's that work out? | ||
What's China have that we don't have? | ||
Why is it economically feasible for China to, like, double their capacity of coal-fired power plants, but it's just too expensive for us to do here? | ||
Is it because it's a giant racket? | ||
China building six times more new coal power plants than other countries, report finds. | ||
Say it again. Whoa. | ||
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It's also more economically feasible because they're probably using dirty coal, like lignite. | |
Maybe that's what it is. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah, there's different grades of coal, and in America we need clean, burning coal, and our plants are... | |
More heavily equipped with the things like scrubbers. | ||
Yeah, well, don't worry. | ||
Now all of that industry that could be powered by the coal power plants will just be shipped over to China. | ||
So they'll get all of the economic benefit of building the coal power plants and all the industry that that comes along with. | ||
And then they'll also be actually polluting the planet to a massive degree in a way that wouldn't happen if we'd build coal power plants here and have all of the scrubbers and clean coal. | ||
unidentified
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I'm sorry. Hey, allow me to correct myself. | |
Actually, lignite is actually the least amount of carbon. | ||
So they're probably using anthracite. | ||
Interesting. Yeah, anthracite. | ||
And they're not using the ligma coal? | ||
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The ligma? Is that different? | |
That's different stuff? I understand. | ||
So that's the only clip we have where Biden actually is coherent. | ||
Now, what he's saying doesn't really make any sense. | ||
Logically, it's completely fallacious, but at least the words came out right and not too much of a jumble. | ||
This next one, good Lord. | ||
Let's go to clip number six here. | ||
Joe Biden is absolutely gone. | ||
Let's watch. I've long said, and I mean this, I was on the Tibetan Plateau with Xi Jinping. | ||
I've traveled 17,000 miles with him. | ||
I've spoken with him more than any other head of state, because it started when I was vice president. | ||
And President Hu was the president, and he was the vice president. | ||
We knew he was going to be successful. | ||
It was inappropriate for Barack to spend that time with him, but I spent a lot of time with him. | ||
I met alone with him, just he and I, and a simultaneous interpreter, 68 times, 68 hours. | ||
68 times, more than 68 hours. | ||
By the way, I turned in all my notes. | ||
Okay, a couple things about this. | ||
A couple things about this. First of all, if only we had a real, like... | ||
Comedy show like SNL. I mean, if you couldn't make something out of the president who, you know, who's on first, who's the president of China, I mean, it's just Joe Biden going around about, who? | ||
Who is? Yes, who? | ||
No, who is? I mean, it would be so easy. | ||
So very, very easy to make comedy out of this. | ||
I mean, it is comedy as it is. | ||
The other thing, clearly Biden, a little bit nervous. | ||
Clearly he's a little bit preoccupied With appearing to look like he is in some way selling out America to China, right? | ||
I kept all my notes, by the way. | ||
I kept all my notes, right? | ||
This is like... Revolving in the back of his head, like all the criminal activity he's been up to. | ||
He's like, I want to talk about this, but did I keep all my notes? | ||
Was that the time that I got that million dollar bribe? | ||
Should I maybe not talk about that? | ||
You can tell he's kind of nervous about this. | ||
I don't even get his comment about it's inappropriate for Obama to do it. | ||
Like, what does that even mean? | ||
God only knows? Was that written on the teleprompter? | ||
Like, what? Is he just going off the cuff? | ||
I don't understand. Then also, can you not just see Xi Jinping just like, oh yeah, well, and also obviously this is because Joe Biden called Xi Jinping a dictator and China got very mad at that and Basically slapped Biden about it. | ||
So this is Biden showing contrition, talking about what a great friend to Xi Jinping he is. | ||
They spend more time together than anybody else. | ||
But he also called him a dictator. | ||
So he's trying to make up for calling him a dictator by salivating over him. | ||
But he's also now talking about what a great buddy he is with somebody that he himself considers a dictator. | ||
A little bit odd. Just nothing about this really makes any sense. | ||
And I also would just love to see Xi Jinping just like... | ||
Don't bring me into this, Joe. | ||
Please don't mention we're very good friends. | ||
We can say hi when we're in the same place, so we can be friends, but I don't want to be part of your troubles. | ||
Please, Joe, don't mention me so much. | ||
Thanks. And finally, we have this clip, clip number seven here. | ||
Joe Biden struggles to stay consecrated. | ||
My favorite part about this clip is the way that everybody laughs. | ||
Joe turns this into a joke, but it's like totally silent. | ||
And then the laugh is less of a laugh and more of like a... | ||
Because there's like this moment where it's like you can tell everybody watching is like, oh God, and like cringing. | ||
And so the laugh is less of like, Joe's so funny and charming and more of like relief that the awkwardness stops. | ||
Let's go to clip number seven. | ||
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Economic theory, three quarters of U.S. industries grew more consecrated. | |
I mean, excuse me, consecrated. | ||
unidentified
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I'm thinking I didn't go to mass. | |
They were moving to diminished competition. | ||
Okay. | ||
All right. | ||
President of the United States, everyone. | ||
unidentified
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All right. | |
Welcome back, folks. | ||
All right. | ||
To continue our cavalcade of embarrassments brought upon us and our nation by the Biden administration and his despicable family, Hunter Biden settles with baby mama under a condition child can't use his last name. | ||
Hunter Biden and London Roberts, the mother of his four-year-old child, reached a settlement in their explosive child support dispute in court last week which prohibits the first son's daughter from using the Biden family name. | ||
London Roberts, 32, a former stripper that Hunter Biden impregnated in Arkansas, had petitioned the court to rename her daughter Navy Joan Biden after a paternity test confirmed that Navy's biological father is Hunter Biden. | ||
Roberts reportedly wanted to change their daughter's surname so that Navy could, quote, benefit from carrying the Biden family name, according to Daily Mail. | ||
However, Hunter Biden, who has never met Navy and refuses to acknowledge her existence, submitted court filings that oppose Navy Joan Roberts changing her surname to Biden, claiming he wants her to have a peaceful existence and live a life free of public scrutiny associated with the Biden family. | ||
Can you imagine? | ||
I mean, the nerve. | ||
The nerve of a deadbeat dad who's never met his four-year-old daughter to claim that his rejection... | ||
Of this sweet little girl is somehow beneficial for her. | ||
It's for your benefit, sweetie. | ||
I'm actually such a good guy that I want to protect you from being acknowledged as my naturally born daughter. | ||
Just... My God. | ||
My God. It's one thing to be a scumbag. | ||
It's another to try in vain to couch your scumbaggery in... | ||
The cloak, the mask of charity and loving care. | ||
It's just like... | ||
Again, it's not like this is high crimes and misdemeanors. | ||
It's just... Just adding to the general outlook that the Biden family, in total, and Hunter in specific, are just really the worst people. | ||
Just the worst types of people in the entire world. | ||
Just incredible. But when it comes to high crimes and misdemeanor, there's no lack of smoke there. | ||
Lindsey Graham sent a letter to U.S. Attorney David Weiss saying, quote, I have been informed that you and your office were briefed on allegations in a FD1023 form suggesting there may have been phone calls recorded between Hunter Biden and Joe Biden with a senior official at Burisma Holdings. | ||
So that's Lindsey Graham continuing to chase this fox, I guess. | ||
I don't know what you call it, but this is the 1023 form that has really been a saga, right? | ||
It was first the FBI denied it existed, then senators were like, we've seen it already, so what do you mean it doesn't exist? | ||
They're like, oh right, no, okay, you've seen it. | ||
So yeah, it does exist actually, but it doesn't say the things that you think it says. | ||
And then they present it to them. | ||
They have to threaten Chris Wray with contempt of Congress before they finally get an agreement to, okay, fine, some of you, the select committee, can come in and look at it in a skiff, but you can't talk about it, and you can't take pictures of it, and you can't actually have a copy of it, even though it's not classified. | ||
We are withholding it from you, the civilian oversight of the deep state spy apparatus. | ||
And even then, it was redacted, and parts of it that were redacted were the most important parts, like where the person admits they have 17 audio recordings of Hunter and Joe Biden discussing the $10 million bribe to the Biden family. | ||
And so then Chuck Grouse was like, you know, I've seen the unredacted version, right? | ||
Like, you know that I know what you redacted? | ||
And they're like, oh, right. Oh, so you know about that. | ||
Okay, shoot. Darn it. | ||
We thought we were getting away with this. | ||
So this is that 1023. | ||
And so now Lindsey Graham is asking David Weiss, who was the attorney that was ostensibly in charge of the Hunter Biden laptop or the Hunter Biden laptop. | ||
Laptop slash bribery slash general scumbagness investigation that was going on. | ||
He's asking him. | ||
And of course that, as we talked about yesterday, and the New York Times confirmed, he wasn't actually the Last, you know, the buck didn't stop with him, let's just say. | ||
He was not allowed to bring the charges he wanted to bring or do the investigation he wanted to do because he was stopped from the people at the head of the DOJ, such as Merrick Garland. | ||
So Lindsey Graham is pursuing this. | ||
James Comer, of course, has been sort of on the forefront of all of this from the New York Post today. | ||
Overseas payment to Biden family could exceed $40 million, Comer says. | ||
Quote, this was organized crime. | ||
Members of President Biden's family may have accepted in excess of $40 million from foreign nationals in exchange for favorable policy decisions, House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer suggested Wednesday. | ||
The Kentucky Republican said that his panel had identified six specific policy decisions where Biden, 80, took actions that indicate he may have been compromised during an appearance on John Kastamitidis' Kat and Cosby show on WABC 770 Wednesday. | ||
Comer noted that of six policy decisions, four of them were made while Joe Biden was president early on, where we cannot come to any other conclusion as to why these decisions were made other than the fact that the president is compromised. | ||
There's no... Other way to define it, Comer says, this was organized crime. | ||
So, just, that's your quick Biden update here at Infowars. | ||
Just horrific embarrassments, followed by horrific embarrassments, followed by just blatant lies and weird doublespeak slash can't-read-the-words-off-a-teleprompter. | ||
Followed by Hunter Biden just being the worst person ever. | ||
Followed by the massive cover-up with the DOJ and FBI curtailing investigations into the Biden crime family. | ||
Just unrelenting corruption from the Biden family. | ||
Yet, you don't hear word one about it in the mainstream media. | ||
That's one of the articles that we covered last week, where during this big outrage about the recordings and the bribes, the $10 million bribes, all the congressmen having to threaten Christopher Wray with contempt of Congress and force him to let them look at the document. | ||
And not a single second was this story featured on mainstream media, from CNN to MSNBC. All the little outlets in between. | ||
None of them had the slightest bit of curiosity about what was going on. | ||
Not a single one of them even reported on the circumstances, let alone the details of this back and forth between the deep state and their civilian oversight in Congress. | ||
Mainstream media just does not care. | ||
But I guess that's what we're here for. | ||
I guess that's why we have a place in this society, because somebody's got to tell you about the blatant and outrageous criminality taking place in the highest halls of our government. | ||
We'll continue to do that as long as you support us by going to InfoWarsStore.com. | ||
InfoWarsStore.com. The July 4th Independence Day Super Sale is on right now. | ||
You're getting up to 60% off just about everything in the store, plus double Patriot points. | ||
You can redeem your freedom discounts now as we declare independence once again from the globalist cabal that is attempting with ever greater severity to imprison us Some sort of open air concentration camp. | ||
Everything from the air filters to the water filters to the toothpaste, the InfoWars MD line, Survival Shield, X3, down and out, Brain Force Plus, Brain Force Ultra, prebiotic fiber, immune support. | ||
Like, unless you are Superman, there's something that will benefit you at InfoWarsStore.com. | ||
Unless you don't age and are immune to bullets and you fall asleep like a baby and you wake up, Like a young hunting dog. | ||
There's got to be something in your life that maybe you wish was a little bit better. | ||
Maybe it's that persistent ache and pain that you experience that some of our turmeric supplements could help with. | ||
Maybe it's just dealing with the stress of everything going on in your life, plus the world collapsing around you. | ||
Well, we've got products for that as well. | ||
There's a little something for everyone at Infowarsstore.com, and of course it keeps us on the air, keeps us exposing all of this outrageous and ridiculous nonsense, and hopefully you agree, treating it with the appropriate... | ||
What would you say? | ||
Opprobrium? What does opprobrium mean? | ||
It feels like it's the right word. | ||
The appropriate amount of dismissiveness, I don't know. | ||
I mean, how are you supposed to be serious? | ||
How are you supposed to treat this country seriously when our president is such a bumbling, bungling mess? | ||
Every time he opens his mouth, it's a new highlight reel for the Biden cringe compilation. | ||
Every time he gives a speech... | ||
It's like everyone in the audience is just like cringing and just like, oh god, how long is it gonna take it for him to say the word consecrated? | ||
This is so painful. Which would be fine. | ||
It would be fine if this was the case. | ||
We've had silly kind of nonsensical presidents in the past. | ||
The difference is that we've got an entire media establishment that pretends it's not happening, that just turns a blind eye to this. | ||
That's the weird part of all. | ||
Welcome back, folks. Second hour of American Journal. | ||
We just have so much to cover now, and we'll get into it here in this second hour. | ||
John Doyle will be joining us in the third hour to talk about his Change My Mind segment he did at a historically black college that got real out of hand but was still extremely informative and interesting. | ||
Very excited to talk to him about that. | ||
This story is from Telegraph. | ||
School girls sexually assaulted in gender-neutral toilets. | ||
A school has called in police over allegations that female pupils were sexually assaulted in its gender-neutral laboratories. | ||
A teenage boy has been arrested over four allegations of serious sexual assault at the Essex School. | ||
The Telegraph understands three of the alleged attacks took place in laboratories used by boys and girls. | ||
The case has led MPs and campaigners to question the safety of mixed-sex laboratories. | ||
And changing rooms days before the government is expected to release its transgender guidance for schools. | ||
The guidance is expected to say that students should not be allowed to use facilities designated for the opposite sex, but the advice on mixed sex laboratories remains unclear. | ||
And this is unfortunately a less than rare occurrence. | ||
And in fact, this topic was discussed at a school board meeting recently where a man brought receipts and absolutely destroyed the school board on this bathroom policy debate. | ||
Let's go to it now and see what the blessings of the transgender activists have brought to the innocent girls. | ||
unidentified
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Several weeks ago, in a vote to allow trans students to use whatever bathroom they wish, you assured us that these policies were perfectly safe, as neither yourself nor law enforcement could provide a single example of any trans student assaulting any girl in any bathroom, in any school, in any state, anywhere in all, in fact. | |
But not to worry, since you couldn't locate them, I took the trouble too. | ||
See, Loudoun County, Virginia, where last year, under district policy, a trans student was allowed into the women's bathroom where he assaulted a girl. | ||
To cover it up, they moved him to another school where he did it again. | ||
See Irvine, California last month, where a trans student entered the women's locker room and flashed the girls there. | ||
When they confronted him, he mercilessly beat them. | ||
This happened again in Gwinnett County, Georgia. | ||
This happened again in Oklahoma City. | ||
This happened again in Ohio, where a trans man was allowed to use the locker room where he was arrested for flashing little girls. | ||
The judge dropped the charges after he ruled that this man was too fat for them to see anything. | ||
Last month, in this city, a man using they-them pronouns in a scene straight out of Silence of the Lambs hunted down and killed a female jogger because he, quote, wanted to look just like her. | ||
And before you say that these are anecdotal evidence, just note That in a survey of trans inmates in federal prisons, half were convicted of sexual assault and 90% were convicted of violent crimes well above the general prison population. | ||
Now, it should also be noted that in each of these cases, each of these perpetrators had either changed their pronouns, had undergone transition, or had received gender-affirming therapy and accommodations thereof. | ||
Why is this important to note? | ||
Probably for the same reason we recognize as a society that you do not affirm that people with anorexia can be healthy in any way. | ||
You do not affirm that somebody with schizophrenia is hearing voices. | ||
And you do not affirm that somebody in a manic episode is having great ideas. | ||
Because when you leave somebody to languish in their false mental state, i.e. | ||
men who think they are women, they will inevitably lash out and harm themselves and those around them. | ||
Hurt people Hurt other people, but I don't want to pretend and have the hubris to think that I'm going to be the one to change your mind. | ||
I'm happy to share any and all of these examples with you, but you will most likely leave here tonight believing that men can become women, affirming care works, and that you made the right vote. | ||
But you will no longer be able to look into the eyes of your constituents and honestly say that you are unaware of the assaults that inevitably take place when we declare to women you have no right to privacy. | ||
Thank you very much. Incredibly powerful stuff. | ||
The way this telegraph report puts it is perfect. | ||
Whilst, of course, the vast majority of males do not mean females any harm, the few that do will inevitably seek to take advantage of this. | ||
Alright, welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
We have a lot of international news to talk about today. | ||
Well, there's more cultural news as well. | ||
And I guess that's where this next story lands under. | ||
The cultural degradation that America has been subjected to for the last little while as we watch one by one our vaunted institutions be infiltrated, subverted, destroyed. | ||
It's very sad, very pathetic how this happens. | ||
The latest, this is truly brutal. | ||
Eviscerated is National Geographic. | ||
National Geographic has laid off its last remaining staff riders. | ||
On Wednesday, the Washington-based magazine that has surveyed science and natural world for 135 years reached another difficult passage when it laid off all of its remaining staff writers. | ||
The cutback, the latest in series under owner Walt Disney Company, involved some 19 editorial staffers in all who were notified in April that these terminations were coming. | ||
Article assignments will henceforth be contracted out to freelancers or pieced together by editors. | ||
The cuts also eliminated the magazine's small audio department. | ||
The layoffs were the second over the past nine months and the fourth since a series of ownership changes began in 2015. | ||
And we'll talk about what that means in just a second. | ||
In September, Disney removed six top editors in an extraordinary reorganization of the magazine's editorial operations. | ||
Departing staffers said Wednesday the magazine has curtailed photo contracts that enabled photographers to spend months in the field producing the publication's iconic images. | ||
So, it's just going to be, what, like a Twitter page now? | ||
It's just nothing? | ||
It really is sad. | ||
Like, it really is kind of heartbreaking to me. | ||
I always grew up with National Geographic, which is by far my favorite magazine as a little kid. | ||
My favorite memory of it is, I used to have a, everybody remembers Pogs, right? | ||
Back when Pogs were all the rage. | ||
You get a pog maker. | ||
You could go through National Geographic and it was just like pictures of animals and like tombs and the Iceman article. | ||
I remember that one really well. | ||
I get that cool skull pog. | ||
Cut the picture out of National Geographic. | ||
I just have a lot of fond memories of National Geographic and I'm sure a lot of people do including just the sheer age of the magazine. | ||
My mom used to I worked in an elementary school where somebody had donated every issue of National Geographic back to the first issue so you could go and open up these magazines from 1910 and read articles and see advertisements for a brand new type of bar of soap. | ||
Try the new Ford Model T. It runs on water. | ||
It's just really an institution, really just like an American aspect of our glory. | ||
That has, just like so many other things in our culture, just been ripped apart, been destroyed piecemeal by activists. | ||
And I mean, this is go woke, go broke, but to a much more significant degree. | ||
And all of this really started to come about with these changes in ownership. | ||
The magazine was eventually surpassed for profits and attention by the society's video operations, including flagship National Geographic Cable Channel and Nat Geo Wild, the channel focused on animals. | ||
While they produced documentaries equal in quality to the magazine's rigorous reporting, the channels, managed by Rupert Murdoch's 21st Century Fox, also aired a pseudoscientific entertainment programming about UFOs and reality series like Sharks vs. | ||
Tunas. At odds with the society's original high-minded vision. | ||
Just the commodification of our institutions. | ||
Even things like, I mean, it's so typical, but like the History Channel or TLC, like any of these things that used to be when I was growing up, you just turned it on, it would just be some high quality, usually very dry, probably not very flashy or flamboyant. | ||
Documentary about the Second World War, about some aspect of the Civil War, just interesting stuff that was educational, and sure, maybe it didn't draw eyes like Keeping Up with the Kardashians did, but there's a place for all of these things in the American media landscape, unless, | ||
of course, all of these outlets and all of these magazines and Channels and film production companies are all owned by the same massive conglomerates who only care about profit and find it's more profitable to produce cheap, poorly made reality TV show that is completely devoid of factual or interesting or enlightening content but lets you sell a few more sneakers and cheeseburgers, I guess, during the commercial breaks. | ||
It's just... I guess this is what we get. | ||
The magazine's place of honor continued to dim through a series of corporate reshufflings that began in 2015 when the Society agreed to form a for-profit partnership with 21st Century Fox, which took major control in exchange for $725 million. | ||
The partnership came under the Disney banner in 2019 as part of a massive $71 billion deal between Fox and Disney. | ||
So yes, we have Disney to thank for this new reimagining of National Geographic. | ||
They're reimagining National Geographic right out of existence. | ||
135 years. | ||
Things were going pretty well, you know. | ||
It's the type of magazine that if you only subscribe to one magazine, it's probably National Geographic. | ||
Even if you don't have any other subscriptions whatsoever, National Geographic might still be one that you get delivered to your house because of... | ||
Beautiful pictures because it actually had decent, informative, again, enlightening content. | ||
But see, that all changed very recently. | ||
And they explained it themselves as they say this. | ||
For decades, our coverage was racist. | ||
To rise above our past, we must acknowledge it. | ||
This was two years ago, March 12, 2021. | ||
This story is part of The Race Issue, a special issue of National Geographic that explores how race defines, separates, and unites us. | ||
Oh, great! Oh, wonderful! | ||
Oh, good! So we have 135 years of a top-of-the-world scientific institution that becomes a cultural juggernaut, that becomes an iconic symbol of Advancement in science. | ||
The Anglo-American spirit. | ||
And then it gets taken over. | ||
They decide all that was actually racist. | ||
And we're going to correct that. | ||
We're going to stop being racist now. | ||
And two years later, it's entirely shut down. | ||
They don't even have writers anymore. | ||
Definitely no photojournalists. | ||
You know, spending months getting, you know, photographs that bring to light, you know, these hidden secrets. | ||
These mysterious gems from the depths of the rainforest, like the beautiful, amazing stuff that National Geographic was known for. | ||
Just not anymore. No, that's all racist. | ||
That was racist, they decided. | ||
So now it's just trash, just absolute trash. | ||
And I actually noticed this because I am one of those families. | ||
We are one of those families that we have one subscription, and it's to National Geographic. | ||
And you could see the obvious and... | ||
Undeniable change that took place when Rupert Murdoch and Disney took over. | ||
And they decided, I remember this issue. | ||
I remember the cover. | ||
I was like, we were racist before, but we're going to correct that now. | ||
I just thought, this doesn't look good. | ||
This doesn't bode well. | ||
And sure enough, from then on out, every single issue was... | ||
Liberal nonsense propaganda. | ||
No, very little scientific value whatsoever. | ||
Still had the nice pictures, but that's that, you know. | ||
It went woke, and it just became utter and complete trash from there on out. | ||
Which is so strange, because it's so... | ||
It was so not racist. | ||
It was so the opposite of racist. | ||
I mean, just imagine. You're some uncontacted tribe on some Javanese island or something, and here comes a steamboat with these men wearing clothes you've never seen before, speaking a language you've never seen before, with technology 2,000 years beyond what your tribe has ever been able to manage. | ||
And these people are coming not to... | ||
Take your stuff, not to enslave you, not to do battle and kill you, but to take pictures of you, to learn about you, to write about you, in order to tell your story to the people across the world so that your story, which otherwise would have gone totally untold in the shadows of your forest. | ||
Now is celebrated and cared about. | ||
People know about you and want to help you maintain your lifestyle or, you know, enter the new world. | ||
It's the most beautiful advancement of the age of exploration that there's ever been. | ||
But it's over now because that was racist. | ||
unidentified
|
All right, welcome back, folks. | |
We'll see you next time. | ||
We'll move on here in just a second, but... | ||
unidentified
|
I don't know. | |
It's like a day of mourning. | ||
The funeral for National Geographic. | ||
135 years. | ||
Exemplary publication. | ||
Some of the most iconic covers, photos. | ||
It's just really something we could all be proud of until we decided that it was actually all racist and needed to be burned. | ||
How typical is it that it was Disney presiding over this downfall? | ||
Just everything they get their hands on. | ||
Just the all-consuming blob. | ||
Just get their hands on something that everybody loves. | ||
Tell everybody that loves it, actually it's terrible and you're terrible for liking it and we're going to remake it in our image and if you don't like it, then you're really terrible and hateful and bigoted. | ||
So you have to like it. | ||
Nobody does like it. They go out of business. | ||
They get another cash injection from their friends at the ESG banks. | ||
Pretty amazing stuff. | ||
So I do want to spend another second on this because we can, it's not like, it's not like this was natural, right? | ||
It's not like this was a natural collapse. | ||
People just not wanting to read it, not caring about it. | ||
That the American public just doesn't want to learn things anymore, just doesn't care about humanity and exploration and animals like That didn't happen, right? | ||
This wasn't a slow degradation. | ||
It wasn't like National Geographic. | ||
Like, we're doing the best we can. | ||
We're doing what we've always done. | ||
It's, you know, people are just not interested anymore. | ||
Nobody wants to buy a scientific magazine. | ||
No, it would be incredibly popular. | ||
It would still be in operation, still have all of its writers and all of its photographers if it just kept doing what it did. | ||
So it's not like this was a natural... | ||
A natural circumstance of America's interest moving on and National Geographic being stuck in the past. | ||
No, it was National Geographic willfully changing itself on purpose because people that bought it hated the organization, hated what it stood for. | ||
This happens over and over. | ||
It happens in everything that Disney gets its hands on. | ||
I mean, it's interesting and kind of bizarre how similar the trajectory is to something like Star Wars. | ||
It's just like, everybody loves it. | ||
Everybody thinks it's great. | ||
And then it gets bought by people who are just like, actually, the dark side is good. | ||
And the Jedi are patriarchal and racist. | ||
So we're going to change it to be better. | ||
Everybody's like, your new movie sucks. | ||
It's not interesting. It's not compelling. | ||
The characters are bland and... | ||
Just nobody cares. You haven't come up with anything new. | ||
You've just perverted and destroyed the stuff that we already knew about. | ||
And they're just like, oh, so now you're a racist. | ||
Oh, so now you're a racist and a sexist for not liking this amazing thing we made. | ||
It's just, it's exactly what happened with National Geographic. | ||
So again, it's not like this was just a natural collapse, a natural moving on of the target audience. | ||
We can actually pinpoint almost exactly the time when the downfall truly kicked off. | ||
And it's this article right here, March 12, 2021. | ||
For decades, our coverage was racist. | ||
To rise above our past, we must acknowledge it. | ||
Okay, how about acknowledge it like this? | ||
Man, when this magazine was first founded, it was basically still in the age of colonization. | ||
It's 135 years ago when we were still in a Compared to today, very backward and brutal world where there were still colonies, people from thousands of miles away ruling over the natives of certain areas. | ||
And this magazine represented a major advance towards a world where that wasn't the case anymore. | ||
A world where those far-off Tribes were not treated as a commodity to be exploited, but as something interesting and worthy in its own right that had stories that could be told and human beings who were more like us than we'd like to believe. | ||
So, I mean, when you go from sending ships of soldiers to take over a place and subject them to colonialism and take their resources to a ship full of photographers and scientists to go study and tell the story of these people, that's a major positive advancement. | ||
And even if it sounds kind of racist now, like you look back and maybe the words they use aren't the words we were used. | ||
Hmm, they called those people who... | ||
Sit around naked eating each other, savages. | ||
Well, that's kind of a mean thing to call them. | ||
Okay, sorry, the words they used are a little outdated at this point. | ||
It still represents a major positive advancement, and it's something to be proud of, not something to be ashamed of. | ||
It's something to uphold and uplift and say, look at how far we've come, not something to look back at and say, see how evil we were back then, see how wrong all of this was, let's tear it down and undo it and demonize the people that made the progress that we now celebrate and actually allows us to... | ||
Sit on our high horse and pretend like we're better than anybody else. | ||
This article begins, quote, I'm the 10th editor of National Geographic since its founding in 1888. | ||
I'm the first woman and the first Jewish person. | ||
A member of two groups that also once faced discrimination here. | ||
It hurts to share the appalling stories from the magazine's past. | ||
Well, I mean, I guess no comment. | ||
I guess no comment about that. | ||
No patterns to recognize here. | ||
And then it just goes into just full-on neo-communist racialism. | ||
Race is not a biological construct, as writer Elizabeth Colbert explains in this issue, but a social one that can have devastating effects. | ||
Again, it's not subtle. | ||
It wasn't like, gee, what happened with National Geographic? | ||
They made some poor choices. | ||
They sort of fell off in their quality. | ||
No, they willfully changed the entire purpose of the magazine to one of exploration and celebrating the natural world and the sociological variations and interesting aspects of humanity into one that just promotes the same communist swill you get everywhere else. | ||
They got this guy Mason to tell them why National Geographic was so bad, and these are some of the worst examples they could find. | ||
What Mason found in short was that until the 1970s, National Geographic all but ignored people of color who lived in the United States, rarely acknowledging them beyond laborers or domestic workers. | ||
Meanwhile, they pictured natives elsewhere as exotic, famously and frequently unclothed, happy hunters, noble savages, every type of cliché. | ||
Well, maybe those things became cliche because people just went out and photographed what was actually happening. | ||
Maybe they really are hanging out without clothes on. | ||
Okay. That makes it bad to report on it? | ||
It makes it bad to just mention it? | ||
Insane. Unlike magazines such as Life, Mason said, National Geographic did little to push its readers beyond the stereotypes ingrained in white American culture. | ||
So National Geographic, just the latest victim, just the latest casualty in the war on white people. | ||
It even has this thing about a string of oddities, photos of a native person fascinated by Western technology. | ||
It really creates the us-first-then dichotomy of the civilized and the uncivilized. | ||
No, it's literally just a fascinating thing to see people from un-technologically advanced societies interact with technology. | ||
It's inherently fascinating. | ||
One of the most popular viral videos of all time was a bunch of African tribesmen using an escalator for the first time. | ||
That was like two years ago on YouTube. | ||
But that's bad, apparently, and you're racist now for thinking it's interesting. | ||
Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
This is the American Journal halfway through today's program. | ||
A lot to talk about. | ||
We'll be joined by John Doyle in the third hour to talk about his latest video. | ||
I do want to remind you that what's happened to National Geographic is truly a tragedy. | ||
Luckily, InfoWars doesn't have to actually worry about going out the way that National Geographic did. | ||
I don't think That the Walt Disney Corporation is going to be snapping up our intellectual property anytime soon. | ||
So no need to worry about that. | ||
However, we are, as you might put it, an endangered species. | ||
We are... | ||
And this is, you know... | ||
It's in contrast to National Geographic, right? | ||
And yet there are certain similarities where if Infowars goes down... | ||
It's not going to be because people just stopped listening. | ||
It's not going to be because Infowars just fell off. | ||
It's just, you know, it's not doing the same that it used to. | ||
It's not, you know, breaking the news that it used to or anything. | ||
So it just, you know, people stopped watching. | ||
Like, that's not the case. We have more viewers now, more listeners now than probably ever before, and we continue to grow. | ||
But it will be because of outside undue influence from people who hate us and want to destroy us. | ||
But it's not because we're destroying ourselves. | ||
It's not because we came along one day and went, you know what? | ||
M4 has been going for 25, 30 years at this point, pretty successfully. | ||
But what if we're just globalists now? | ||
But now we're just globalists and we love Satan and we want you to sacrifice your babies to Moloch. | ||
And it's like, we shut down. | ||
So weird. America, so racist. | ||
Can you imagine? Can you imagine? | ||
But, you know, unlike all of these other places, Vice News, just injections of hundreds of millions of dollars, then just completely fails, bankrupts and has to sell out completely to George Soros, even though he was a majority owner in the first place. | ||
These people have the support of the entire establishment and can't keep their lights on because nobody's interested. | ||
We, on the other hand, are under the constant attack of the establishment. | ||
And yet we continue to operate because we have the support of our audience. | ||
And yet we continue to operate because we have the support of our audience. | ||
We thank you so much for that support and we ask you to continue. | ||
We thank you so much for that support. | ||
And we ask you to continue. | ||
And if you can expand that support as we move into the future, as we promise, we will not change. | ||
We will continue to do what we've always done, which is to champion humanity of every race, color and creed and their right to live lives unmolested by deep state globalist tyrants, despotic madmen who are attempting to take control of everyone's life down to the most minute detail. despotic madmen who are attempting to take control of everyone's We'll keep doing that. All we ask is that you support us in this mission by going to infoowarstore.com. | ||
We've paid the price for our activism. | ||
We've paid the price for our positions. | ||
We have withstood the attack of the globalists, and we will continue to fight as long as humanly possible. | ||
It's entirely up to you and whether you go to Infowarsstore.com or not. | ||
Now's a great time to do it. The July 4th Super Sale is on, 60% off, plus double Patriot points at Infowarsstore.com. | ||
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Fun fact. If you're a person who is trying to save a buck or two, right, and you purchase things while they're on sale, this is our second largest sale of the year. | |
It's pretty much the 4th of July and Christmas. | ||
Those are our two biggest sales. | ||
Two best holidays. You're darn tootin'. | ||
And also, yeah, this is going to be our biggest sale until Christmas. | ||
Okay, so now's the time. | ||
Stock up now. | ||
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Words of wisdom from the producer. | |
I'll tell you, even though it's summer, and traditionally summer is not the time of cold and flu, I know in my circles, people have been real sick recently. | ||
Now, that might be because... | ||
Somebody destroyed everyone's immune system with poison shots. | ||
But regardless, now's the time to stock up on all the products that we have that help you naturally support your immune system and empower your body's own natural superpower that it has to protect itself from infection from the outside world. | ||
You don't need some gene-altering experimental serum Inject it into your bloodline. | ||
All you need is to empower your body's own natural processes. | ||
And we help you do that with our incredible products at InfoWarsStore.com. | ||
Now, let's move on, shall we? | ||
We have some, I guess, good news here. | ||
I don't know. It's like everything is like, is it good news? | ||
I guess. It's good in the sense that it's the American people flexing their economic muscle. | ||
It's bad news in the sense that just like National Geographic, just like Walt Disney's corporation, yet another American powerhouse corporation industrial job creator has been taken over by globalists and is being destroyed. | ||
Bud Light to permanently lose nearly 25% of its business. | ||
After self-destructing in the name of virtue signaling, Bud Light is looking at a permanent loss of nearly 25% of its business, according to Deutsche Bank analyst Mitch Collette in a recent Barron's article, saying, quote, We believe the recent underperformance implies a permanent reduction in ABI's U.S. business, writes Collette, referring to Anheuser-Busch InBev, the parent company of Bud Light. | ||
Our proprietary survey data suggests these headwinds are likely to fade even if we do not expect the U.S. business to ever fully recover from its current challenges. | ||
Data gathered by the Deutsche Bank suggests that 24% of Bud Light consumers no longer purchase the brand while another 18% are buying less of it. | ||
Taken together, our survey data shows that Bud Light as a brand faces significant challenges, particularly with older consumers. | ||
However, we believe the forward-looking data set The challenges will at least partially fade, wrote Colette, who actually upgraded shares of AB InBev to buy from hold to a new target price of $65.92, up from $64.83. | ||
So this boycott has had a tangible, noticeable, and truly devastating effect on Bud Light. | ||
And I say, hold the line, folks. | ||
Don't become lukewarm. | ||
In your white-hot hatred of the way that these corporations force destructive and bizarre alternative lifestyles on the American public. | ||
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From the king of beers to the king of queers. | |
King of beers to the queen of queers. | ||
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Tranheiser Bush. And again, you know, Tranheiser, yeah. | |
No, it's... It really is this easy. | ||
It really is like, is this a sacrifice? | ||
Is anybody out there like, God, I just, I really want to bud light, but I just can't support them. | ||
No, it's easy. You just get a different beer. | ||
You get a better beer. It's like not even a sacrifice. | ||
So... Just nothing but a win-win for us. | ||
We send a message. | ||
We let everybody and all the other corporations know, yeah, don't hire Dylan Mulvaney to be your spokesperson. | ||
Just don't do it. Just don't do it. | ||
It doesn't matter if you do it and then apologize and, you know, try to backtrack. | ||
Oh, no, we're just kidding. | ||
Actually, we're actually super manly. | ||
Hey, remember the night? | ||
Remember we had a night that would wear Bud Light armor? | ||
Remember that? Like, nobody cares anymore. | ||
This was a thing that happened on Twitter. | ||
Bud Light is, like, desperately trying to get back to... | ||
So a couple months ago before everybody hated them and they're like revamping or reintroducing some old like a little bit more manly a little bit more traditional a little bit more fun and you know effervescent sort of spokespeople stuff like that and so they're trying to do this and every comment underneath is like nice try trannies just like yeah cool cool night What is a woman, | ||
by the way? Can you answer that question before I buy your stupid beer? | ||
So, yeah. See you, Bud Light. | ||
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Bye-bye. Man, alright. | |
They might have gotten removed. I was about to show y'all something here. | ||
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I guess maybe they got removed or something? | |
So, on TikTok, we've been posting the little short videos. | ||
I like to call them shortcuts. | ||
Little TikTok videos. | ||
You know, you see them play as the promos during the commercial breaks. | ||
And the one where I'm just listing off conspiracy theories, it starts off with Elon Musk saying, or being asked, like, what conspiracy theories are true? | ||
And I just list them off. | ||
Like, that got removed immediately from my TikTok. | ||
But then over the last couple of days, people have been sending me other accounts that have uploaded these videos to TikTok that have, one had over half a million views, more like 600,000 views. | ||
Another one had 1.2 million views on somebody else's TikTok page. | ||
And I was going to show that, but then on... | ||
So I repost them on TikTok through my account, but then they aren't showing up. | ||
So maybe they got deleted now at this point. | ||
I don't know why our account would have these videos deleted and other accounts wouldn't. | ||
I don't know if it was the hashtags I used or what. | ||
But the point of all of this is that that's probably worth a chunk of change. | ||
I don't know. I mean, none of our stuff is monetized on social media because, thank God, we have the Infowars store to keep us afloat and we don't have to worry about You know, pertaining exactly to the strictures of things like TikTok and Instagram. | ||
Because we know that you'll support us at Infowarsstore.com. | ||
We have this as a base of operations, ban.video, Infowars.com. | ||
But we are posting stuff to TikTok and Instagram and stuff. | ||
And I don't know. My accounts aren't monetized. | ||
If your account is monetized and you put up a video that gets 1.5 million views, I got to think that represents some chunk of change to the person who uploaded it. | ||
And frankly, good. | ||
Good for you. You too can be making money on TikTok by uploading our videos. | ||
I couldn't care less. As long as it's up there, as long as people are watching, as long as it's getting views, I'm happy. | ||
So you can go to Instagram. | ||
You can go to my Twitter. You can go to band.video. | ||
You can download these videos. Upload them yourself. | ||
Figure out which hashtags get a lot of views and don't get you banned. | ||
And monetize your account. | ||
Rake it in. I couldn't care less. | ||
Do whatever you want. But that's the... | ||
Philosophy here at Infowars, everything we have is free to air, free to take down, re-upload, cut up into memes. | ||
Whatever you want to do, do it. | ||
And at the very least, we really appreciate it when you just share those videos because it helps get the information out there. | ||
But God only knows how many views these videos have because... | ||
I don't even know where they're being posted. | ||
I don't even know where they're going up, but pretty incredible. | ||
The millions upon millions of people that have now seen our videos, thanks to other people taking them down and uploading them themselves, you can do that yourself. | ||
Go to AmericanJournal.info to find links to all of our social media and go for it. | ||
I also have people more and more asking me about the music that we use in our show. | ||
Go to AmericanJournal.info and there's actually a Spotify website We're about to welcome John Doyle, and there's still so many other... | ||
Stories here that, again, you've got to go to AmericanJournal.info and go to our sub stack if you want to read these for yourselves. | ||
We've got a Penn State professor who sued the school, says the faculty was labeled racist white supremacist. | ||
A former Pennsylvania State University professor is suing the school and alleging he was subjected to racist attacks and forced to teach that, quote, all students see that white supremacy manifests itself in language and in writing pedagogy. | ||
Zach DePiero, a former English professor at the school's Abington campus, is suing Penn State and several members of the university's current and former staff after he was, quote, individually singled out for ridicule and humiliation because of the color of his skin, according to a lawsuit filed by the Foundation Against Intolerance and Racism on DePiero's behalf. | ||
So we'll see how this goes. Penn State treats the anti-racist movement, championed by people such as Ibram X. Kendi and Robin DiAngelo, who are often cited in critical race theory materials, incredibly seriously, according to DePiero. | ||
DePiero said he was forced out of his position at Penn State after questioning that ideology. | ||
This actually really relates to the video that John Doyle made, so maybe we'll save that and ask him about it for comments. | ||
But this is happening across universities across the country and across the world not just in terms of race but in terms of all of the normal things that everybody knows to be true like the fact that women and men are separate genders and sexes and that a woman can be a mother and a man can be a father. | ||
But nothing in between. University creates language guides that erases quote man and mother from existence. | ||
The University of North Carolina has shared an inclusive language guide laying out guidelines for what students and staff are and are not allowed to say. | ||
Their guide essentially wipes the word man out of existence and discourages the use of the words mother and father. | ||
A statement from the university claims, Carolina is committed to creating an inclusive and equitable learning environment for every Tar Heel. | ||
To fully represent the diversity of our students, faculty, staff and everyone in our community, it's important to use language that supports these values. | ||
You must ignore physical reality. | ||
It's uncomfortable for some people to acknowledge that reality exists and that truth is objective. | ||
It continues, the inclusive language guide will act as a starting point for communicating in a way that supports a diverse and welcoming community. | ||
So they actually give you alternatives. | ||
Instead of saying man, say person or individual. | ||
Which is interesting, but what if you're talking about a man? | ||
Instead of saying ladies and gentlemen, say friends, colleagues, esteemed guests, students. | ||
Again, just why and what? | ||
Instead of saying mankind, say people, human beings, esteemed guests, students. | ||
Yeah, yeah. That doesn't work, though. | ||
Yeah, it doesn't make any sense, though. | ||
Mankind is a different word. | ||
That doesn't mean any of the things that these other words mean. | ||
So what are you supposed to say? | ||
It's just completely absurd. | ||
But, I mean, it's just literal doublespeak, just Orwellian thought control by limiting the words you're allowed to use. | ||
And we can joke about this and laugh about this, but other people take it seriously. | ||
And it's kind of pathetic, but it's true. | ||
It's a story at Infowars.com. | ||
University creates language guide that erases man and mother from existence. | ||
Yeah, people really take that seriously. | ||
Again, it's pathetic, but it's true. | ||
It would be like, oh, oops. | ||
Oh, I accidentally said ladies. | ||
Sorry. Sorry, I didn't mean to call you ladies. | ||
It's just like, ugh. Just ignore these people. | ||
Ignore these people and laugh at them when they try to bully you into using their establishment-approved language. | ||
What are they going to do? Like, hello, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
Somebody's like, excuse me, sir. | ||
What about the non-binaries in the class? | ||
And you're just like... | ||
Okay, anyway. Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the class. | ||
Just ignore it. Like, it doesn't matter. | ||
It doesn't matter what they say. They can be mad. | ||
They can be vicious little psychopaths. | ||
You can just ignore them. | ||
That's how it works. Meanwhile, another racial story here. | ||
Accused J-Train Stabber acted in self-defense, won't face charges in fatal New York City subway brawl. | ||
So we actually talked about this when it first broke. | ||
And I remember I sort of held off on my reaction to it because Daniel Penny was arrested and charged with Murder, manslaughter for putting a crazy homeless guy who was threatening people in a headlock, an event that somehow accidentally killed him. | ||
Obviously not on purpose. | ||
It's obviously the right thing to do. | ||
Everybody who was involved was like, that man is a hero. | ||
He did what was necessary to protect the innocent people on that train. | ||
He was helped by two other black guys that were helping to hold him down. | ||
But he was charged because he's white. | ||
He's white and there's a different standard of justice in this country for white people versus black people. | ||
And it has a lot to do with the social manipulations that go on. | ||
But that's the same as it was back in the Jim Crow era, right? | ||
It's no different. It's just like some black guy gets accused of something. | ||
And, you know, the police are like, well, we don't have evidence, so we're not sure. | ||
But then, like, a mob of white people show up and are like, you know, going to lynch him. | ||
So the police are like, okay, fine, we'll arrest him and do it. | ||
It's the same way that that worked out in the old days. | ||
Just the races were reversed. | ||
And it's no different. So now you have mobs of black people that are, you know, rioting and committing violence because they want to see blood. | ||
They want to see the white guy go down for his heroic action. | ||
Pretty horrifying stuff. You know, this had video, like the Daniel Penny situation had video. | ||
It was a headlock situation where, you know, he didn't stab a guy in the chest. | ||
That was a little bit different. So when this happened, I was like, you know, I'm not just going to go, oh, this is just like Daniel Penny. | ||
It's exactly the same. Free this man. | ||
He must go free. Because it's like, well, he stabbed a guy in the chest. | ||
That's a little bit different. And there's no video. | ||
So we don't actually know what happened. | ||
We just have one side of the story. | ||
I'm going to withhold judgment. Well, now this man has been... | ||
Had his charges dropped. | ||
I guess it's good that his charges were dropped because apparently that means it really was like self-defense. | ||
He really was doing what was necessary to prevent a violent person from attacking an innocent person. | ||
At the same time, it's just blatantly obvious the racial divide and justice in this country. | ||
It's not even like you do one thing and black people get away with it and white people do the same thing and don't get away with it. | ||
It's two different things. | ||
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No 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 for 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. | ||
Then 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 exempt? | ||
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. | ||
Lopez 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? | ||
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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. | ||
It 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 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, what the other reason we're seeing this Is the Putin government has, this has been reported by U.S. 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 pathologists. | ||
They knew what they were doing, hurting the public and setting the precedent to weaponize big pharma and the media. | ||
The hour of the American Journal has begun. | ||
My guest this hour is John Doyle. | ||
He's a conservative commentator who discusses news, culture, and politics, and is universally despised by liberals, socialists, and communists. | ||
You can find him on his website, heckoffcommie.com, and of course his YouTube channel is John Doyle. | ||
Thanks so much for coming on, John. Yeah, thanks for having me. | ||
Always great to be here. Well, I had to get you on because of your latest video. | ||
It's a two-hour epic. | ||
I mean, it's like a full-length movie. | ||
It's got drama. | ||
It's got a sort of a twist ending. | ||
It's really incredible stuff. | ||
And actually, we have the intro that I want to play for everybody. | ||
But just give us a little breakdown. | ||
What is your latest video on your YouTube channel? | ||
Well, it's exactly as you described. | ||
It is an epic tale of adventure and the quest for knowledge and truth at what Google told me was one of the best, if not, I think actually the best public HBCU in the country, which is North Carolina Agricultural and Technological University. | ||
And yeah, so we headed over there and we set up a table with a sign that just said America is not racist, and we invited the students to discuss it. | ||
And the reason behind it was obviously because, you know, we wanted entertaining and good content. | ||
But typically when the right tries to have discussions about racial politics, they do it in a way that is much safer, which is to say they either will go and talk to white kids about race or they'll preach kind of a very watered down message of how races get along, how cultures get along, things like that. | ||
And so I wanted to just kind of shine a big bright light on the actuality of these conversations by just going to an HBCU, which is supposed to be the most educated, the most intelligent type of young black people in the country probably existing there to have these conversations. | ||
And it went probably about as we would have expected, as the average viewer would have expected. | ||
But nonetheless, it is good content. | ||
It is very good content, and I don't have a lot of spare time, so I don't watch a lot of two-hour-long YouTube videos. | ||
I watched this entire video. | ||
Of course, I was just listening to it for part of it, but, I mean, the whole thing was just... | ||
I couldn't look away. | ||
I mean, it was really fascinating. So, yeah, people are familiar with the Change My Mind segment. | ||
Steven Crowder sort of, you know, he invented it where he goes and set up a table and talks to usually college students and has some sort of topic that they're on. | ||
This one is unlike any... | ||
Change my mind segment I've ever seen. | ||
A lot of different people are doing it now. | ||
This one was really something in a class of its own. | ||
So let's go now to the quick little intro so people can see what it's all about. | ||
And we'll come back and get John's take on all this. | ||
So here is the video. | ||
It's America's Not Racist Change My Mind at HBCU. No, I think that it just acknowledges that America used to be a great country and it's not anymore. | ||
And it just wants to be made great again. | ||
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Okay, what about mass incarceration? | |
Do you think that has any factor? | ||
Because you're not going to like this. | ||
I actually think we have an under-incarceration problem. | ||
What the hell? Even when black Americans have that generational wealth you're talking about, it's not, it's not, well, I like to have research so I can come have these conversations. | ||
I'm not wrong, though. | ||
No, this is from the Bureau of Justice Statistics, Bureau of Labor Statistics. | ||
So white people are incapable of honesty. | ||
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We're misaligned with reality. We just get rid of everything and just look at the generational wealth that your family was allowed to pass down onto each other, not your family specifically. | |
I mean the white man, so you don't think I'm talking directly about you. | ||
But the white man, the amount of things that you guys were allowed to pass down that we don't have? | ||
Yes, sir. | ||
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If you're white and you're racist, you don't like me because I'm black. | |
If I'm black and I don't like you because you're white, I don't like you because of my history with white people and because of my ancestors' history. | ||
Races rank each other. | ||
What we see is that white Americans rank themselves pretty much in the middle, every other race also pretty much in the middle, but every other race, whether it's Hispanics, Asians, or blacks, all rank themselves the highest in terms of who they want to be around, and they all rank whites the lowest. | ||
I don't know why. Maybe we're just that off-putting. | ||
Everyone wants to be around a white person. | ||
Look at you right now. | ||
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You won't want to be around the white people. | |
Okay. I appreciate that. | ||
I appreciate that. Yeah. We want to educate you. | ||
That's just a little smattering of clips from that two-hour-long video. | ||
So, I mean, was this a success in your books? | ||
Did you get the quality conversation that you were after by setting up there on the HBCU? I actually think I did, largely. | ||
I mean, there were a handful of students who really were interested in having conversations, and I almost felt badly for them because they were very aware of how the other students were making them look and also the university in itself look. | ||
And I kind of felt bad because in the back of my mind, I knew, and I knew that they knew this too, that I was just like reveling in it. | ||
I was like, yes, I'm getting the content I'm here for. | ||
Every time they say something particularly inflammatory or racist towards me because I'm white. | ||
So I think it was a success. | ||
Maybe we'll even do a few more. | ||
And yeah, like you mentioned, this was Steven Crowder's thing. | ||
But on the one hand, I don't think that that should be a monopoly. | ||
I think that people should be able to do this if they want to. | ||
Though there is some sort of etiquette as people who make We're good to go. | ||
Oh, yeah, absolutely. It made me want to go do it, honestly. | ||
Like, watching this, I was like, oh, man, I want to go do this. | ||
This looks fun. But to be clear, the entire time, and I have to compliment you on this, you are so respectful, you're so polite, you're so soft-spoken. | ||
So you may have been reveling in it a little bit, as, of course, the viewers will sort of revel in it as well. | ||
But no way were you being provocative or trying to get the reaction that you got, which was this anger and the vitriol and the shouting. | ||
At one point, they're tearing your cameras down. | ||
I mean, it got crazy. | ||
Right. You were doing nothing to provoke that response, as far as I could tell. | ||
Yeah, the thing that I did do that maybe was the most transgressive, which even then, it's at such a low bar, it's like, can you just take a joke, was the font on my sign was, I think the words I used, playfully insensitive. | ||
I used this, like, ethnic tribal font for the, which it wasn't even that bad. | ||
- Not that bad, it was like the Lion King font. | ||
You know, it was just like vaguely African. - Right. - Just to say that America's not racist, which again, you know, it's like when in Rome, you do as the Romans do. | ||
So I was just trying to fit in, if anything. | ||
But that wasn't what, you know, sparked the big issue. | ||
The issue is that I was saying that America's not racist. | ||
I was on their HBCU, as they told me, and I'm not allowed to do that as a white person. | ||
And if I am, it's only on temporary visitor paths if I go along with everything they say as they're trying to educate me, which in black vernacular, that word means they are going to tell you how the world works, and you don't get to respond or have a back and forth because they're educating you. | ||
It's like settled knowledge. It's not even their beliefs. | ||
It's knowledge, and they are being polite enough to transmit it to you, and if you disagree, you are not educated, which is why they got a really big kick out of finding out that I dropped out of college personally. | ||
Right after, by the way, this girl was giving me a hard time because she's like, it's not fair that you're here talking to students because you know too much about it. | ||
And then right after, she's like, so he wants to come talk to us even though he's not educated. | ||
Keep that in the video. And I'm like, okay, fine. | ||
Yes, I will. That makes me look better. | ||
Like, obviously, I'll keep that in the video. | ||
Well, and there was this fascinating kind of like you would – they have these beliefs that are predicated on facts that they have. | ||
Then you would counter those facts, and it was like they couldn't deal with – it was just – it was always pivot. | ||
It was never like, oh, that's interesting. | ||
Although, to be fair, there were people that were actually interested in having a conversation. | ||
I'm right with you. | ||
I feel sorry for these people that are like they're trying to have a conversation with you, and they're being drowned out and being called names by their own side for actually being like intellectually curious and wanting to know why you believe what you believe and trying to explain to you in good faith why they believe what they believe. | ||
And yet they're drowned out by the mob around them shouting them down. | ||
I feel bad for those guys too and girls that were doing it. | ||
and girls that were doing yeah yeah there was that one girl there in the green um shirt in particular who i felt bad for because she really was a sweetheart and she was trying to talk to me and she kept getting like manipulated by the crowd forces like she would say something like you know obviously you're very educated on your side so why is it and someone would bark like he's educated on his side and then she would have to like correct herself so i felt badly that it was girls like her um the guy in the white shirt there too that really were interested in trying to you know do something productive | ||
Yeah, there was that one girl there in the green shirt in particular who I felt bad for because she really was a sweetheart, and she was trying to talk to me. | ||
And she kept getting like manipulated by the crowd forces. | ||
Like she would say something like, you know, obviously you're very educated on your side, so why is it – and then someone would bark like, he's educated on his side. | ||
And then she would have to like correct herself. | ||
but everybody else was much more interested in just shutting down the conversation uh in itself which you know there is a trend obviously like anybody who's uh will say a democrat will do things like that they'll shut down the conversation but i'm not one of these people who's gonna like take that that out I mean, there is a racial component, obviously. | ||
It's not just because they disagree with me politically. | ||
It's because I am white and I am saying these things. | ||
It would be a much different story if I were black. | ||
I mean, that's what they said a hundred times in the video, which you can see. | ||
Right. That's not you supposing that. | ||
That's literally what they told you in no uncertain terms. | ||
And again, this wasn't even just spectacle. | ||
There's actually really interesting dynamics at play here, and it really does give an insight into what's going on in this country, which is why I think it's such a valuable video. | ||
More on the other side with John Doyle. | ||
Don't go anywhere, folks. Heckoffcommy.com is the website of my guest John Doyle. | ||
You can also find his YouTube channel. | ||
Just search John Doyle there on YouTube. | ||
His latest video is America is not racist at the HBCU. It's a change my mind segment where the police actually have to break it up. | ||
I don't know if I've ever seen the police break up a change my mind segment that anybody's done. | ||
John, is this a first historical first here? | ||
I'm not. Hold on. Hold on. | ||
We're sorry. Sorry. Sorry. | ||
We didn't have your audio up. Sorry, John. | ||
If you could start that answer over. | ||
I was just going to say this may, in fact, be the inaugural occurrence of that. | ||
And the reason for that was they I think the police were called by the students, actually, which is, you know, so funny in itself, just because these are the people who want to defund the police, abolish the police, because when the police do their jobs, it's racist or something. | ||
And actually, in this case, the police doing their job was racist because the reason they were called was because I'm a white man on the HBCU campus. | ||
But we knew that we were well within our rights to be there so long as we were not doing something that could be reasonably understood to be inciting some sort of like, you know, violence or riot, which would be like you mentioned earlier. | ||
If we had, you know, a megaphone and we were just, you know, barking hateful rhetoric and statistics or whatever and trying to, like, provoke them. | ||
We just sat there with a sign. | ||
We were like, hey, come talk to us. | ||
And so the conversation that we had with law enforcement towards the end of the video was interesting because they even conceded that. | ||
And they basically told us, like, look, you know where you are and you kind of understand that the students are going to react this way just because of, you know, how the culture is. | ||
And I almost appreciated that honesty from the police officers. | ||
So I and I described this in the video as my last gesture of dissent against the student body, which was my choice to cooperate with law enforcement and just say, like, look, I'm not going to make your lives more difficult. | ||
I'm going to leave. Because at that point, the crowd had gotten so unruly that I'm not going to get content anyways. | ||
And so my purpose there is to get content. | ||
If I can't do that, I'm going to leave. | ||
And I saw there was one guy who left a comment who was like, John Doyle says that he's going to sacrifice his rights if it makes his life easier. | ||
And it's just like... That's obviously not what I mean. | ||
Do you think that I'm going to just be like, oh, I'm going to give my guns up because I guess that makes things easier? | ||
Like, I flew here to get content. | ||
I can't get content anymore. | ||
I already have content. | ||
Okay, I'll leave. Like, I'm not going to be like, no, officer, you must restore order to the campus now because then they have to call in all these other police officers. | ||
The crowd's going to get more unruly. | ||
At this point, I'm concerned about the safety of not only me, but I have like a whole team of, you know, Videographers, audio people. | ||
It would have been selfish of me to just be like, no, I'm going to just spend the rest of the day making my point here. | ||
It's like, okay, whatever. It sort of keeps you above reproach because you're not responding to them with the same vitriol they're responding to you. | ||
At the end of the day, you can go, look, I was very polite the whole time and they got out of control and I'm not to blame for that. | ||
The whole thing was, but again, the interesting part to me, it is a spectacle. | ||
It was sort of Sort of thrilling in a way. | ||
I think you even described, you're like, this is a movie. | ||
I mean, it's the length of a full-length movie. | ||
And there is kind of a like, I can't wait to see what happens next. | ||
What's going to... I mean, this guy is clearly getting angry. | ||
Is he going to do something? I'm wondering what's going to happen. | ||
But beyond that, I think there really was some valuable insight into why these conversations don't happen more often. | ||
And it has a lot to do with they have a belief that is predicated... | ||
On some statistic or something, for example, they'll say, well, you know, black schools don't get the same funding that white schools do. | ||
And you point out, well, actually across the board, on average, white schools get 1% less funding than black schools. | ||
And it was like, instead of actually contending with that You know, fact, they would either, they would question, they would say that's not true, and then if it was proven to be true, there was a pivot, and it was like, well, that's not important anyway, and they move on. | ||
Describe a little bit about, you know, what that was like trying to actually argue or have a conversation with people who just refuse to acknowledge what you're laying out. | ||
It's pretty much impossible. | ||
And honestly, you know, five years ago, I would have maybe been a little bit more optimistic about things like this because, you know, I was coming up and I was watching guys like Crowder, guys like Dave Rubin, you know, Joe Rogan. | ||
And you're like, wow, you know, maybe productive dialogue is something that can save our country as long as people talk to each other. | ||
And that's true. | ||
But you have to understand, like, the Western tradition is based in English common law. | ||
And when you start dealing with groups of people who are incompatible with English common law or who can't cultivate a culture that wants to coexist with that, the idea of a productive conversation is going to be impossible. | ||
I mean, you'll have exceptions, as you see in the video, but largely what you're going to see is just a bunch of different groups competing for power and competing for, like, the big nest egg that is the American empire. | ||
That's kind of where we're at now, I think. | ||
And that's why, you know, you see this behavior with white leftists. | ||
You see this behavior with, like, black college students. | ||
It's not because it's political necessarily. | ||
It's because the political is personal, which is to say that white liberals don't like right-wing thought, don't like conservatism, don't like America because they don't like excellence. | ||
They do not believe that they can compete in a free society, and so they want state-enforced equality. | ||
And every metric would suggest—every metric meaning every metric by which you would try to measure a healthy culture—suggests that for whatever reason, black Americans have failed to cultivate a culture that is capable of competing in a free society, which is why until, I guess, today you had things like affirmative action. | ||
You have all these different programs and societies giving them free money, subsidized loans, literally every opportunity as discussed in this video to try to close that gap— And for whatever reason, the gap hasn't been closed. | ||
And by many metrics, it's actually widened since even the 1960s in terms of unemployment rate, in terms of home ownership. | ||
And so that's why these conversations are so difficult to have, because they're uncomfortable. | ||
I mean, they touch on taboos. | ||
It's not just like a matter of, you know, I think? | ||
I was told that Martin Luther King wouldn't like things like this. | ||
And you go back and study the history of the Civil Rights Movement, and you're like, wait a minute, we've kind of been dealing with the same thing for more or less the better part of a century at this point, and nothing's really changed. | ||
I mean, look at the debates we're having now. | ||
These were the same debates they were having in the 1960s, and they've actually gotten what they wanted in many cases, and nothing has changed. | ||
And so I am trying to steer people towards a more sobering analysis of the situation. | ||
Well, and I think things have changed, but they've changed for the worse in almost every metric you can find when it comes to the black community in terms of what we know makes healthy, happy, productive people, two-parent homes and owning your own home and even things that the people you were talking to were concerned about, intergenerational wealth, that sort of stuff. | ||
All of that has collapsed since the civil rights movement when really it was 100 years of amazing progress that the black community made from Abject slavery to the 1960s where they're almost on par with the white Americans in all of these regards. | ||
And then it goes downhill, which if you actually want to help the black community, which I do, right, I don't want to live in a world where we have a massive segment of our population is just in permanent poverty and wracked by crime and, you know, half their population is in jail. | ||
I don't. That's not healthy for anybody. | ||
It's not healthy for the white people or the black people. | ||
And so if you want to actually solve these problems, you have to contend honestly with the things we know have occurred and the trends that we see and the statistics. | ||
And if you can't honestly contend with that, then you're going to be stuck having these same conversations 50 years from now, just like we were having them 50 years ago. | ||
I mean, so your takeaway from this was kind of like, I mean, is it hopeless? | ||
Are you going to do another one of these things? | ||
Like, what was your takeaway at the end? | ||
Not that it's hopeless. | ||
I think that exactly as you laid out, there was a period of time in this country where black and white Americans didn't get along perfectly, maybe didn't even get along well, but it was certainly a lot better than it was now. | ||
And those were periods of time where we were actually governing our society across the board much more competently. | ||
So if you want black communities to be healthy, you actually need things like law and order. | ||
And especially to get it in control now, you would need basically like a militarized presence in black neighborhoods because otherwise you're not going to get the businesses to return. | ||
You're not going to get economic investment. | ||
Absolutely. I'm sorry. We have to go to break, but you make that argument very well in the video, of course. | ||
We'll be back on the other side with John Doyle. | ||
Don't go anywhere. Atrazine, by the way. | ||
Welcome back, folks. Harrison Smith here with John Doyle, heckoffcommie.com, heckoffcommie, c-o-m-m-i-e.com. | ||
It's his website, John Doyle, on YouTube as well. | ||
That's where you find his latest video that we're discussing right now. | ||
It's a change my mind that he did at a historical black college and university, the top one in the country, apparently. | ||
And there's so many things to say about this and about the discussion and also about their reaction. | ||
We have a video that I think we'll play in the next segment of a faculty member actually like trying to dox you guys while you were there. | ||
I mean, just almost everything you would expect, everything you would expect to happen, you have happened in this video, but in a way that's different than you've ever seen before. | ||
Really fascinating stuff. But there were times where it seemed like you were tantalizingly close to being on the same team. | ||
There were things that the people around you were saying that it was like... | ||
Okay, you almost get it, but then there's this racial aspect to the discussion that precludes them from what I believe, like, coming to the real understanding. | ||
This might be kind of confusing, but, for example, they talk about the way that the black community was destroyed because the government was actually dropping off crack cocaine in black communities in the 1980s. | ||
Totally real, totally happened, totally despicable act by our government and, you know, led to horrific outcomes. | ||
And then they actually mentioned the fact that the opioid epidemic is affecting white people now. | ||
To me, this is a gap that can be bridged. | ||
This is like, see, it doesn't matter what race you are. | ||
They're going to target you one way or another. | ||
They do it to black people. They do it to white people. | ||
But to them, it was like... | ||
Well, but white people don't get arrested for pills, so it's more examples of racism. | ||
Was there anywhere that you felt like, okay, now we can see that we're on the same side here, trying for the same things, and there's just this tension stopping us from coming together as one? | ||
Was there anywhere you saw that the gap could be bridged? | ||
Maybe I'm a bit more cynical or pessimistic, but not really. | ||
And I think that's largely because we don't control nearly enough opinion curating institutions in this country to be able to maybe begin to bridge that gap. | ||
Because when they say the government did this, that's a stand-in for powerful white people or rich white people. | ||
They certainly don't mean a diverse government or maybe a government that looks more like we have now. | ||
Even now, if they're saying the government is doing things that are presently unjust to the black community, what they mean is powerful white people Or even if it is a diverse government, well, the institutions and the laws in themselves, the Constitution in itself, as I say in this video, is inherently racist because of the stock of people who wrote it. | ||
And so the whole thing needs to be uprooted and rewritten to be more accommodating to a equitable, not even necessarily equal, but equitable society. | ||
Yeah, and that's sort of the issue, isn't it? | ||
If you're trying to tackle an issue that's happening today, it's like suddenly stuff from 200 years ago is being brought up as if it's still happening. | ||
And it's like, how are we ever going to move forward when we can't deal with the problems that we have today because you're likening it back to slavery that hasn't been around for three generations? | ||
Like, how are you ever going to move forward? | ||
I mean, how do you think we move forward in this regard? | ||
Oh, man. I don't know. | ||
I'm not necessarily good at prescribing the solution. | ||
I can identify the problem, which is like, okay, this is going on. | ||
This dynamic is unsustainable. | ||
But in terms of solution, I don't exactly know. | ||
I think it does at least, though, start with highlighting the issue as it is. | ||
Like even, you know, you mentioned the slavery example. | ||
There's data that we bring up in this video that proves that the wealth gap between descendants of slaves and descendants of freed blacks actually closed within two to three generations. | ||
And so, you know, when they talk about the generational wealth argument, that's one of their stronger arguments in terms of explaining the, you know, average standard of living gap between a white American and a black American— But you can see that even the effects of slavery don't seem to translate into explaining fully these gaps that you see between white people and black people. | ||
I think one of the stats we brought up too was black people who are born in the top 20% income bracket are equally likely to remain in that top 20% as they are to fall into the bottom 20%. | ||
Even controlling for income, black people are less likely to save money, more likely to spend money on luxury vehicles, costume jewelry, things like that. | ||
And so for whatever reason, these patterns that you would need to have within your culture that would translate to that generational wealth being aggregated, being handed down to your children, it just doesn't seem to manifest as well across all groups. | ||
And there are differences between Asians. | ||
And it's funny, every time you view these statistics by race, the pattern always holds up, which is Asians are doing it the best, then whites, then Hispanics, then blacks. | ||
I don't know why that is, but that tends to be the pattern that we see. | ||
Yeah, and that, of course, belies the whole white supremacy thing when Asians are exceeding whites in almost every one of these regards. | ||
But let's not get too bogged down in facts and logic here because there's emotion flying. | ||
So another one of the examples of where I felt like we almost could have some common ground here is they talk about COINTELPRO. They talk about the FBI infiltrating black groups in the 1960s. | ||
And then they say it's still going on today, but it's like, look at who the FBI is targeting today. | ||
Clearly, it's white people. | ||
White people are the biggest threat. | ||
White Christians are the biggest threat. | ||
They're surveilling Catholic churches now. | ||
Again, I saw a chance there to be like, don't you get that the FBI is going to do this to anybody it perceives as a threat? | ||
If it sees the black community as a threat in the 60s, it does it to them. | ||
They see the white community as a threat nowadays. | ||
They do it to us. It's not about race. | ||
It's about the power structure defending itself. | ||
Again, you don't think there's some way that we could have common ground? | ||
We can at least agree. | ||
F the feds, screw the FBI. Can we not come together on that belief? | ||
I think that we could if the conversation weren't in front of an audience. | ||
I think that if I had put out a Craigslist ad or something asking for volunteers and it were just one-on-one, I think we probably could. | ||
It certainly did not help that there was that crowd, even though that is sort of the nature of the type of format we were pursuing. | ||
Because like we mentioned, there were students who were... | ||
discussion who were then pressured by their peers to sort of you know go on the offensive or play the part that they were cast into by choosing to sit in that chair things like that so I do think it's possible but maybe not in that format. | ||
You know it's it's sort of an old talking point at this point but the victimhood complex was so apparent here where it's like you're sitting there trying to be like you're not victim. | ||
And they're like, we are victims. | ||
We are victims and we always will be victims. | ||
And it's like, to really get to the heart of it, I mean, that's really at the core of all of this, isn't it? | ||
It's just like this indoctrination into you are victims, you will never succeed. | ||
So any attempt to succeed is folly. | ||
And even trying to understand, like, is victimhood really, like... | ||
Problem that we still haven't solved from back when it was the main talking point in 2015. | ||
We still haven't solved that issue yet. | ||
You're absolutely right. | ||
I felt like I literally could not say anything correct. | ||
Even there was a point in the video where one of the guys asked me, would it be wrong if I flipped over your table? | ||
And I said, yeah, you shouldn't do that. | ||
And one of the reasons you shouldn't do that just for your benefit is if you do that, you're going to make all of these students look bad, and then they're going to get mad at me. | ||
And I think I used the word them. | ||
I was like, if you do that, you're going to make them look bad, and they're going to get mad at me. | ||
And he's like, who's them? | ||
What do you mean them? | ||
Any opportunity to cast me as a racist with even just some semantic choice that I made was taken. | ||
And, yeah, I mean, honestly, look, I'm of the opinion that if you really care about a person or people, you have to be honest with them. | ||
And so that's why I speak about this issue honestly. | ||
It's not because I'm, like, hateful. | ||
It's because, look, I want Black America to succeed, but clearly what we've been doing hasn't been working out for them, so maybe we should just approach the situation with a bit more honesty, even if that is, like, tough love. | ||
And I fully understand, you know, the inclination towards the victim mentality, because It is that victim mentality that keeps the whole machine running. | ||
Because if we weren't told from practically infancy as people going through the public education system, viewing popular culture, that white people have just been oppressing black people and being racist in jobs, in college, everything, every aspect of life, white people have been keeping black people down. | ||
If you weren't taught that, we would start to look at the state of Black America and be like, what is going on here? | ||
Why are you producing this outcome? | ||
What are you doing within your community that is producing this as a result? | ||
And so that's why, because if it isn't true, which it's not, that white people are responsible for the state of Black America, then they actually have a lot to answer for. | ||
Because the Civil Rights Movement, I mean, they said in the 60s, once we get this, give it 20 years, we'll be fine. | ||
Well, it's been 60 years now, and there's been virtually no change. | ||
And if any change has been made, it's been worse. | ||
Yeah, absolutely. And I think that was one point you made where the crowd actually got kind of quiet, and you were actually, like, making points about this, about, like, the, you know, insurance companies don't want to cover, you know, stores in these areas because they get robbed. | ||
If you don't fix that up, you can never have economic progress. | ||
And another point where it's like, it's breaking through. | ||
Nope, nope, it's not. Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
This is the American Journal. | ||
My guest is John Doyle, heckoffcommy.com on YouTube at John Doyle, and you can see their latest video. | ||
Really incredible stuff, and you can tell the work that he put into it, so go check it out. | ||
Give it a thumbs up and share it as well. | ||
I want to play a little segment of the video now, John, where an interesting thing happened. | ||
And you can see even some of the clips that we're playing are playing in the background. | ||
People are holding up stuff in front of the camera. | ||
There's a lot of disruptive activity trying to stop you from having this simple, pleasant conversation. | ||
This was one of the oddest occurrences, I thought. | ||
And I'd love to get your take on this, your takeaway, and what's happened since this video has come out. | ||
But let's just roll the tape now and get your comment on the other side. | ||
This is a little more than halfway through the video. | ||
unidentified
|
This happens. We've had everything taken from us, where we've had everything done to us, and we're merely trying to survive. | |
That's what it comes down to. Y'all try to criminalize the survival of it when you've taken away everything that we've... | ||
And I'm not saying you specifically, but I'm talking about the people in power, where they've taken away our job, where they've introduced this addiction, where to feed my family, I got two choices. | ||
I got two choices. I can either go hustle this or I can smoke it because I can't feed my family. | ||
Right? So then we're going to criminalize addiction, which we now see reaches out to white people a lot. | ||
We see the pill epidemic, right? | ||
Yeah, but the difference is when it was in black communities, y'all over-policed those communities, arrested everybody. | ||
But when white kids started doing pills, it was the opium epidemic, and now we have to fix the pharmaceutical companies. | ||
There we go. There we go. | ||
unidentified
|
There's a difference between fixing a pill and trying to sell the white areas either. | |
Mind if I respond to that? Hold on, hold on, hold on. | ||
So, yeah, hold on. | ||
So this part was interesting. Some faculty member at the university comes over and picks up the box that we had behind us and tries to take a picture of the shipping label so we can get our names and addresses. | ||
And so we get into this back and forth with him because there's absolutely no innocent reason to be doing that. | ||
Like, if you want to know who we are, just ask. | ||
We're within our rights to be here. | ||
At that point, it hadn't gotten too crazy. | ||
So it's extremely bizarre that this guy would just come up from behind us and try to start going through our stuff to find out our personal information. | ||
But the funniest part about this Which the guys in the HOC Discord will appreciate, is that since we film this at North Carolina Agricultural and Technological University, we ship the stuff to our guy who lives in North Carolina. | ||
And that also happens to be the guy that everyone on the Discord server routinely doxes as a meme, like in school presentations, bathroom stalls. | ||
So even in this guy's best efforts to expose our operation, he recovers virtually no new information. | ||
But even then, it just goes to show the type of people working at these places. | ||
Like, I'm trying to talk to black students about race in America. | ||
Some white faculty member starts trying to take photographs of our private information for God knows what purpose. | ||
Just very unsettling behavior. | ||
Again, like, so weird. | ||
I don't know if there's anything you have to add to that, but just a weird but very predictable occurrence. | ||
A faculty member coming up and trying to intimidate you by taking a picture of your address. | ||
Just weird, right? | ||
Yeah, yeah, and I don't know if I would... | ||
I don't bet that this happened, but it is something to take into consideration. | ||
I mean, the type of people who staff these universities or these institutions are like activists. | ||
I mean, they view themselves as activists. | ||
And so it wouldn't surprise me at all if this person were doing that with intent to leak that information to some leftist paramilitary group, whether it's Antifa or Black Lives Matter. | ||
But it is very funny because, like I said in that segment, the address that we shifted to is the address of one of our guys in North Carolina, who everybody on our Discord server likes to dox as a meme. | ||
They'll post pictures of themselves giving school presentations, and they'll use this guy's actual address in their school presentations. | ||
And so it's so funny. | ||
The attempt that this guy had to get a new piece of information on us, everybody who's in the community already knows that guy's address. | ||
So his attempts... | ||
We're futile at best, but another big shout out actually to that stocky guy in the blue blazer, David Carlson with American virtue. | ||
That guy's a bulldog. | ||
He was there helping out that day. | ||
It was like a fish in water. | ||
I mean, he's like barking orders at people. | ||
He's 20 years old. He was ready to like fist fight that guy for trying to dox us. | ||
I cut that part out because I didn't want people to think that we were trying to fight faculty members, but he like got right up in this guy's face. | ||
He's like five foot seven stocky guy. | ||
He's like Hi, yeah, David Carlson. | ||
What are you doing? Are you trying to get our information ready to go? | ||
So we appreciate the bulldog, David Carlson, for helping out. | ||
No, I mean, it's an appropriate response. | ||
I mean, as you said in that video, there is no innocent reason to be doing that. | ||
Like, clearly, that's going to be sent out to some, as you put it, paramilitary networks. | ||
And that's something that people don't understand is how real and How ubiquitous these networks are. | ||
I remember going to UT a couple years ago, just doing a little, you know, man on the street thing, and Antifa shows up like five minutes later with the mask, with the sign prepared, like somebody had seen us, they sent out a message, other people showed up ready to shut us down. | ||
Like, these exist on American college campuses, these networks of activists who are ready and willing to commit violence in the name of their ideology. | ||
Yeah, and that's something that the right really needs to wake up to. | ||
And I don't say this to disparage us, but to help us. | ||
We have no idea as a group how organized these leftist paramilitary groups are. | ||
I mean, they are very organized. | ||
The only thing that we really have going for us is that they're very skinny and they don't go outside. | ||
So they're very unhealthy people. | ||
But in terms of their ability to, like, mobilize people, they far outdo people on the right. | ||
And it's not even close. | ||
And that's because, I mean, you know, they do have the advantage. | ||
They are state adjacent. | ||
They do the dirty work. | ||
So the Democrats occupying Congress can just be like, oh, you know, we vaguely don't like that. | ||
But they'll never disavow it because they like that. | ||
They like when that happens. | ||
AOC, Nancy Pelosi, even the most mainstream Democrat, they like it when these people are going out there assaulting their political opponents. | ||
They just won't say it. It's sort of horrifying because even if people think that what you were doing was somehow provocative, which I don't think it was, and if people watch the video, they'll see you were not being provocative at all. | ||
You really were just sitting down trying to have a conversation. | ||
But yeah, they think it's justified somehow, and it's sort of terrifying that this is the case in our institutions these days. | ||
One of the other things I noticed here as we get towards the end, things in history that are extremely complicated, that are not well understood, get boiled down to this almost religious narrative. | ||
The Tulsa race riots was one. | ||
And it's one of the reasons that I – on one hand, it's frustrating. | ||
But on the other hand, I used to fall for these lies. | ||
You know, I remember when I first heard probably in middle school or high school about the Tulsa race riots. | ||
And it was presented to me in the way that they present it to you as just like this black community that was doing really well, that one day whites for no reason firebombed. | ||
The government just sent planes to destroy it for no reason. | ||
And you read that, and you're like, this is terrible. | ||
But then when you learn more about it, and you see that it wasn't quite as clear-cut as, pardon the pun, but it wasn't quite as black and white as it may seem, then you come to a better understanding of it. | ||
So... But with you, you're trying to explain this to the people that you're talking to, and they're just like, no, the American government bombed us because it was Black Wall Street and they don't want us to have money. | ||
And it's like when it takes on this simplistic religious nature, it's almost impossible to break through. | ||
But it's not impossible, right? Because they could learn if they're really interested, right? | ||
Yeah. Yeah, it's just a matter of our guys taking power and basically doing the same thing, but with things that are true, basically. | ||
I mean, the average person is never going to have a really, you know, sophisticated or refined understanding of history. | ||
You really do kind of have to just boil down. | ||
And, you know, every political group has always had some sort of—I forget who coined this term—but, like, political theology. | ||
Meaning some almost, like you said, religious belief that justifies their right to have political power, whether it's like a divine right to rule or, you know, in America we have ours. | ||
But now it's been usurped into this idea that, like, look, what justifies the existence of our state is that it protects minorities and gay people from white people and evil, you know, old people, things like that. | ||
And so when they believe things like that, they refuse to believe anything counter to it because they need to believe that those injustices and that danger exists because that is what justifies everything that they want to happen. | ||
And there's also this very interesting trend where, you know, I thought about this the other day with everything that's going on with Donald Trump and the leaks, where it's like, We're good to go. | ||
And they're telling me that like, no, it's because the auto industry, blah, blah. | ||
And it's like, that's not true. Everyone who's from Detroit, even the liberals know it's because of the riots in the late 1960s. | ||
And so I like look it up to see like, what is the common like leftist narrative on this? | ||
And I find out there was a movie made in 2017, I think. | ||
Maybe 2019, called Detroit. | ||
And it's this big, dramatic movie about the riots and everything. | ||
I haven't seen it, but I've heard the comments, wow, I had no idea it was like this. | ||
It really is the same systemic racism we're seeing now. | ||
And I go to the Wikipedia page for the actual 1967 riots. | ||
They don't even pretend that what happened wasn't what happened. | ||
And they're like, oh, yeah, there was this illegal nightclub and the police staged a raid. | ||
And then the black people started throwing police bottles at the police. | ||
And then a riot broke out and there was looting and there was rioting. | ||
Fifteen hundred buildings were burned down. | ||
Forty people died all within the span of five days. | ||
And it's like because they what? | ||
Tried to like enforce the law. | ||
And I'm like, wait a minute. | ||
Time is a flat circle. | ||
Everything's the same. | ||
And they don't even pretend that that's not what happened. | ||
They're like, oh, yeah, you know, the riots were the what do they say? | ||
Like the cries of the unheard. | ||
unidentified
|
You were breaking the law, and we tried to stop you, and then you staged a riot. | |
I was like, this is insane. They don't even pretend that's not what happened. | ||
They're just like, it's self-evident that this is justified. | ||
unidentified
|
This is our granddaddy's struggle, and it's like, okay, whatever. | |
Yeah, yeah, yeah. And then the Hollywood depiction becomes the new gospel. | ||
Same thing happened with the Tulsa race riots in the new Watchmen movie. | ||
They dramatized that in a way that was just completely dishonest. | ||
Oh, in the Watchmen? | ||
Yeah, yeah. The new Watchmen. | ||
So over. Yeah, yeah. I didn't know that. | ||
No, yeah. You're telling me this now for the first time. | ||
That one's really bad. All right, folks, that's going to do it for us. | ||
Thank you so much to John Doyle for coming on. | ||
Incredible video. Heckoffcommy.com. | ||
John Doyle on YouTube. Check it out. | ||
Share it. | ||
I can't wait for the next one. | ||
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