Speaker | Time | Text |
---|---|---|
They really despise you and they're no longer even bothering to hide it. | ||
The far-right's obsession with fitness is going digital. | ||
Because if you don't look like this, you're a dangerous, radical, racist threat to society. | ||
Yes, the community of people that encourages you to engage in behaviours and activities that will boost your happiness, enhance your enjoyment of existence and help you live longer. | ||
They're the bad guys. While the group that wants you fat, tired, diabetic, stressed, miserable, lonely, and prematurely dead, well, they're the virtuous ones, obviously. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah, sure, I have five personality disorders and mental illnesses, hate my life, myself, my job, and my family, but trust me, dude, my worldview and ideology are the key to a healthy, happy life. | |
MSNBC exclusive. We take a deep dive into the weird world of far-right Americans and their bizarre infatuation with eating healthy, going outside, staying fit, and having meaningful relationships. | ||
Note how this article was originally written and published well over a year ago. | ||
Yeah, MSNBC apparently thought it was so important to drive the message home. | ||
They tweeted it out again like it was brand new. | ||
MSNBC thinks you're a Nazi if you work out. | ||
Being healthy is far right. | ||
unidentified
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Holy f***. Are you cautious about your diet? | |
Yeah, I'm a junk foodaholic, actually. | ||
Better to just accept the inevitability of obesity, or the media will call you racist. | ||
From the same people that told you the body mass index was racist. | ||
From the same people who demand you genuflect before and worship celebrities who are morbidly obese and celebrate getting fatter. | ||
Then ban the term morbidly obese, It might hurt someone's feelings. | ||
But they told me Lizzo was beautiful. | ||
Surely that should be the go-to compliment. | ||
unidentified
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Do you find Lizzo attractive? | |
She's beautiful. She's beautiful? | ||
Okay. But it's her body. | ||
How would you feel if I said, you look like Lizzo? | ||
- Whoa! - I just said she's beautiful, so why you can't look like Lizzo? - Did you see the dog saying it right there? - You just said Lizzo's beautiful, I said you look like Lizzo, and you're like, "Nah, this has to." You said Lizzo's beautiful. | ||
It doesn't matter what part of you looks like Lizzo, except the compliment, she's beautiful. - Psychological warfare on her. - Meanwhile, on Twitter, the original sin of whiteness continues to be scrutinized, with serious questions being asked about why white people are hanging out with each other. | ||
unidentified
|
Serious question for well-meaning white people. | |
When you show up at a get-together like this, do you notice there are zero black people or nah? | ||
If so, do you say or do anything about it? | ||
To who? Please be honest. Oh, no, a group of white people gathering for a friendly dinner party. | ||
The sheer temerity. | ||
I mean, it should be illegal. | ||
We should at least enforce diversity quotas for friendships. | ||
Wait, but most of them are left-wing celebrities. | ||
I guess their Juneteenth invite must have got lost in the mail. | ||
A celebratory scene showing young white people enjoying themselves on a New York subway also caused deep consternation. | ||
unidentified
|
It's entering season in the year. | |
Must be white boy summer season once again. | ||
unidentified
|
Unspeakable levels of whiteness on display. | |
21 million views, 41,000 likes. | ||
unidentified
|
This is by far the worst type of white guy. | |
Yeah, because the worst thing about the New York subway is a group of clean-cut white people acting joyfully in a manner that doesn't upset anyone else. | ||
With absolutely no one getting stabbed, assaulted, or violently intimidated. | ||
I mean, where are all the deranged crackheads when you need them? | ||
Unspeakable levels of safety on display. | ||
And while our reptilian overlords continue to be mad at us for being fit, healthy and happy, they're also fuming over the popularity of a new movie that denounces child sex trafficking. | ||
unidentified
|
Sound of Freedom is a superhero movie for dads with brain worms. | |
The QAnon-tinged thriller about child trafficking is designed to appeal to the conscience conspiracy, Adel Boomer. | ||
Sound of Freedom, the QAnon-adjacent thriller seducing America. | ||
Jim Caviezel stars as a hero trying to stop child traffickers in a paranoid new movie. | ||
A paranoid movie. | ||
Which is based on a true story. | ||
This is the same media that not so long ago spent an entire summer defending Cuties. | ||
A Netflix nun's fest that sexualized underage girls. | ||
Literally, in some cases, the very same publications. | ||
Such an empowering movie. | ||
unidentified
|
This is just QN on propaganda. | |
A strong, positive male role model in a film battling against child sex trafficking. | ||
No, we can't have that. | ||
Films are created out of moral panics. | ||
They're created out of bogus statistics. | ||
They're created out of fear, and with something like Sound of Freedom, it specifically is looking acute on concepts of these child trafficking rings that are run by the high-level elites, and only people like Tim Ballard and only people like Jim Caviezel, and by extension, only people like the ticket buyer can help bring these trafficking rings down. | ||
Jim Caviezel, we're going to expose child trafficking to the left and the media, but f*** you up. | ||
What kind of people get so worked up over an anti-child trafficking movie? | ||
unidentified
|
I want you to imagine my shock. | |
Being anti-child trafficking and pro-fitness is far-right extremism. | ||
And while the media scolded toxic masculinity in the form of buff gym bros, they celebrated feminine beauty in the form of someone who was born a man winning the Miss Netherlands Beauty Contest. | ||
Ricky Valerie Colley, on the left, defeated the woman on the right to win a beauty contest. | ||
unidentified
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It's Wednesday, July 12th, year by Lorde 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. | ||
unidentified
|
Glad to be here with you on this Wednesday morning. | |
Coming to you live from Austin, Texas. | ||
Another kind of slow news day. | ||
Got to admit, no major events over the last 24 hours. | ||
Just, again... | ||
Further progressing towards World War III, illegal weapons being sent to Ukraine. | ||
Just madness when it comes to the cultural side of things. | ||
So we'll get to all of that. Still plenty to talk about, don't you worry, and lots of videos to show you as well. | ||
Some pretty funny ones, actually. | ||
It's pretty funny and illuminating ones. | ||
Some very interesting videos. | ||
We have a video of Henry Kissinger being fooled by Russian pranksters. | ||
I assume it's the same guys that keep doing this. | ||
They keep getting world leaders to believe that they're Vladimir Zelensky and talk to them. | ||
It's pretty wild how he responds to some of the questions they ask him. | ||
Yeah, a lot of really good stuff to show you, but we'll be opening up the phone calls today and taking your calls throughout the show. | ||
Let's just get into it, shall we? | ||
Here it is, your Daily Dispatch. | ||
All right, here it is, folks, your Daily Dispatch for Wednesday, the 12th of July, 2023. | ||
Judge denies Biden administration's attempts to halt injunction against censorship. | ||
On Monday, a federal judge from the Western District of Louisiana, Terry Dowdy, upheld his ruling, preventing the Biden administration from engaging in specific types of communication with key social media entities. | ||
The initial request to lift the ban on these interactions came from the administration on July 6th, but has now been met with a refusal by Dowdy. | ||
The judge had previously instituted this ban in response to a lawsuit by the Republican State Attorneys General of Missouri and Louisiana, who are challenging the manner in which the government agencies cooperate with social media behemoths to curb propagation of inaccurate or misleading information regarding the COVID-19 pandemic and election security. | ||
So, in other words, the government did, without permission and flagrant violation of the First Amendment, cooperate with the social media to outsource their censorship. | ||
In other words, well, you know, a lot of the arguments for social media censorship are like, well, the First Amendment only says the government can't censor you. | ||
I've never agreed with that argument anyway, but how would the government censor you if not Through this sort of process. | ||
Like, this is the government censoring everybody. | ||
Flagler violation of the First Amendment. | ||
So, attorney generals sued, saying you can't do this just because you go to the social media company and demand they do the censorship for you. | ||
Still the government censoring. | ||
Still illegal. You can't do this. | ||
They sued. The judge decided they were right. | ||
The government can't do this. | ||
They can't use social media to censor. | ||
And then the government... Asked again, please, can we, but we really want to though, but actually we think we should be able to and we're going to continue to, so can you please let us do that? | ||
Judge was just like, no, no you can't. | ||
So, sorry, there is the First Amendment still. | ||
As much as you're trying to circumvent and eliminate it, it does still exist and you still have to adhere to it. | ||
Or do they? From TheLeadingReport.com, whistleblowers claim FBI is ignoring orders to cease collusion with big tech on censorship. | ||
According to The Washington Times, whistleblowers claim that the FBI is not seriously considering the recent judgment on free speech made by U.S. District Judge Cherry Dowdy of Louisiana. | ||
The Missouri v. Biden case, which cited MRC Free Speech America Research, made efforts to hold the Biden administration's feet to the fire. | ||
For colluding with social media companies to silence American speech in a July 4th preliminary injunction, Dowdy ordered that the Biden administration no longer engage in communication of any kind with big tech companies. | ||
However, whistleblowers told the House Judiciary Committee that the FBI is not complying with the order, according to The Washington Times, which reviewed the agent's disclosures. | ||
Well, I mean, it's national security. | ||
So, you know, all laws and... | ||
Normal ways of doing things go out the window. | ||
It's national security after all. | ||
This is the FBI and it's national security so they get to censor you, I guess. | ||
That's probably the argument. They call it a coup against the Constitution. | ||
It's the guys with guns telling the American public and the judiciary that we don't count anymore. | ||
That they're in charge and we have to bow to them. | ||
We must not stand for this any longer. | ||
In an official statement to the Times, the FBI denied the accusations, saying any suggestion that the FBI did not provide official guidance on this matter is false. | ||
Yeah. Well, I think we can all trust the FBI, right? | ||
I mean, they're so trustworthy. They always do what they're supposed to, and they don't lie about... | ||
When they break laws and circumvent the Constitution. | ||
What do you do about that? | ||
I mean, what do you do when the guys with the guns don't feel like following the direction of the duly elected and appointed authorities over them? | ||
What do you do? What does one do? | ||
I can't answer that. | ||
I mean, I know the answer, but I can't answer it. | ||
Meanwhile, breaking, Trump slams Biden for sending cluster bombs to Ukraine and dragging U.S. further towards World War III. | ||
President Donald Trump has spoken out unequivocally against the Biden administration's promise to send nuclear cluster bombs to Ukraine, saying that peace must be the driving factor in U.S. engagement in the war and not escalation. | ||
Joe Biden should not be dragging us further towards World War III by sending cluster munitions to Ukraine, Trump said in a statement. | ||
He should be trying to end the war and stop the horrific death and destruction being caused by an incompetent administration. | ||
These unexploded cluster bomb munitions will be killing and maiming innocent Ukrainian men, women and children for decades to come. | ||
Long after the war, we pray, has ended, Trump said. | ||
In February 2022, the Biden administration said unequivocally that Russia's use of cluster bombs was a, quote, war crime. | ||
And now they're sending cluster bombs to Ukraine. | ||
When asked about this, Biden said outright that it was because Ukraine was running out of ammunition. | ||
The administration claimed that since Russia was using them and that the dud rate that the U.S. made munitions was lower, it really wasn't so bad. | ||
Yeah, it's not so bad. | ||
I mean, it's a war crime, but it's like one of those, like, okay war crimes. | ||
It's like a war crime that, like, it's fine, though. | ||
It's actually fine. Like, sure, it's going to pockmark entire swaths of the Ukrainian countryside with unexploded ordinances that, you know, will Represent de facto landmines for the foreseeable future, but whatever. | ||
But whatever, though, I mean, you know, we have to protect democracy after all. | ||
I mean, if we don't spread unexploded ordinances all over the landmass, how are we going to win? | ||
How are you going to save democracy without, you know, sending weapons that just kill without regard to Actual combatants just rains death upon an entire swath of area and then remains there for decades to come. | ||
I mean, this is democracy after all. | ||
I'm pretty sure that's what democracy means if I understand my Greek. | ||
Meanwhile, Zelensky is just, he's outraged. | ||
He's outraged. After Biden rejects Ukraine's NATO membership, quote, unprecedented and absurd, he says. | ||
What? You aren't going to start a world war over me and my presidency? | ||
My presidency for life now that I've gotten rid of elections? | ||
This is unprecedented. | ||
It's unprecedented not going into World War III. No, what would be unprecedented would be a defensive alliance allowing a member in that's already engaged in an active land war. | ||
That's unprecedented in human history. | ||
That doesn't exist. It's never happened before. | ||
Zelensky, this petulant little gremlin, I swear, it's just like... | ||
He's outraged. | ||
Oh, he's outraged. We give $100 billion every month for a year just wasting all of our money, wasting all of our ammunition, just pouring out... | ||
Our largesse into this black hole of Zelensky's ego. | ||
But now he's outraged he doesn't get more. | ||
He's outraged he doesn't get more. | ||
It's like that old children's book, To Give a Mouse a Cookie. | ||
Except in this case, the mouse is a creepy little gremlin from Ukraine. | ||
And the cookie is hundreds of billions of dollars of weaponry. | ||
It's just no good deed, huh? | ||
No good deed goes unpunished. | ||
Honestly, you know, it's... | ||
I'm sure you've seen it if you watch this show. | ||
It's like, I didn't start off hating Zelensky. | ||
Now I just... | ||
Nothing would make me happier than Putin teaching that man a lesson. | ||
I want to see Putin arrest Zelensky, put him in a dungeon, and livestream his misery for the next 40 years. | ||
Just stop trying to get us into war and killing millions of people, you psychopath. | ||
unidentified
|
All right, welcome back, folks. | |
We're going to play a little video here. | ||
Since we're on the topic of the Ukraine war, the facade of democracy, you know, one of these words just plastered on something completely unrelated to the actual definition of the word. | ||
It's our democracy. | ||
Even when the people disagree, it's our democracy. | ||
Even when the vast majority of the population Absolutely, diametrically opposes your policies. | ||
You implement it anyway and say anybody opposing you is opposing democracy. | ||
It's a very bizarre trick they pull. | ||
It's bizarre that it works. | ||
Let's go here to clip number seven. | ||
This is a man giving a speech at the EU Parliament, absolutely eviscerating their fake version of democracy. | ||
unidentified
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Let's watch. Two minutes of truth, of bitter truth. | |
And the bitter truth is that European Parliament has done a lot of damage in Europe. | ||
It has been sending a false message. | ||
It represents European demos. | ||
There isn't and there won't be any European demos. | ||
The Parliament infected Europe with shameless partisanship. | ||
And the infection became so contagious that it spread to other institutions, such as European Commission. | ||
The Parliament has abandoned the basic function of representing people. | ||
Instead, it has become a machine to implement the so-called European project, thus alienating millions of voters. | ||
The parliament has become a political vehicle of the left to impose... ...to impose | ||
their monopoly with their fierce intolerance towards any dissenting view... | ||
No matter how many times you repeat the word diversity, diversity is becoming an extinct species in the European Union and particularly in this chamber. | ||
The Parliament is a quasi-parliament because it rejects the essential principle of parliamentarism, namely accountability. . | ||
The deputy, let me remind you, is elected by the voters and must be accountable to the voters that elected him. | ||
Not so in the European Union. | ||
The idea that, say, Spanish, German, French, etc., deputies accountable to their own national electorates Can dictate something to, shall we say, a Hungarian society or any other society to which they cannot be held accountable and which cannot take them to task is simply preposterous. | ||
Call it what you will, but democracy it is not. | ||
To sum up, the Parliament represents the demos that does not exist, works for the project that ignores reality and law, Shuns accountability, turns its back on millions of people, and serves the interest of one political orientation. | ||
And this is just the tip of the iceberg. | ||
Having said that, ladies and gentlemen, I rest my case. | ||
Yeah, pretty good breakdown of how undemocratic these institutions are. | ||
It really is pretty amazing and obviously I'm not actually the biggest fan of Actual democracy. | ||
Like, actual democracy is just mob rule. | ||
Everybody sort of realizes that. | ||
So, I mean, this kind of is actual democracy, if you really want to get it down to that. | ||
But the point he's making is exactly right. | ||
They aren't representing the people because they aren't accountable to the people. | ||
They aren't elected by the people. | ||
They aren't doing things that the people want. | ||
They're forcing things on people that they think are good for them, even if the people don't want them. | ||
Which is the opposite of what Government is supposed to do at this point. | ||
And again, you can look at the myriad examples, ones we've pointed out many times, like the Dutch farmers, obviously the 15-minute cities in the UK and elsewhere, the Irish immigration, the French immigration for that matter, similarly polls out about the French riots are still going on. | ||
We're flaring up recently. | ||
75% of French something like that are just like they want them arrested. | ||
They want them deported if they're foreigners. | ||
None of that's going to happen though because it's not about serving the people. | ||
It's about serving the system overall. | ||
Actually, we have a pretty interesting story from that from yesterday that I don't think I ever got to where it was basically the In Germany, the headline was something like, Germany's aging population poses a major problem for their pension system. | ||
And I guess that's sort of the central question. | ||
Is it like, do these systems exist for the people or do the people exist for the sake of the system? | ||
Is the economy set up to facilitate people wanting to buy and sell things that they want to achieve the goals that they have in life, to provide for their family, or are the people simply the It's a fleshy embodiment of the economy, and it's the economy that's the real important thing. | ||
And if you need to wipe out all the people and replace them with other people, that's fine because the economy must continue. | ||
It's a complete inversion of what these things were created for. | ||
The parliament, the economy, these things are supposed to be organizations to allow humans to better achieve their dreams, Fulfill their destinies, do whatever they want to do. | ||
But it's been inverted now, and the people, if they're not serving the economy, then it's the people that need to go, not the economy. | ||
If the people are against the government, it's the people that are in the wrong. | ||
The government will destroy or replace them in favor of a population that's more amenable to their desires. | ||
And of course, that's what's behind so much of the migration. | ||
That's what's behind so much of The 15-minute cities, like all these things. | ||
All these things that the people don't want. | ||
It's getting in the way of what the bankers want. | ||
And that's what really matters at this point. | ||
So, farmers that have been on their land for several generations, Sorry, you have to go now. | ||
The bankers want your land for some other design. | ||
At the end of the day, that's the purpose of the government as it exists now. | ||
So very powerful stuff from the EU Parliament. | ||
We'll be back on the other side with more videos, funnier videos this time. | ||
We'll show you some funny videos on the other side from our friend Damon Amani. | ||
unidentified
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Putting the power of conversation into the caller's hands, you're tuned in to the American Journal with your host, Harrison Smith. | |
Alright, welcome back. | ||
Ladies and gentlemen, this is the American Journal. | ||
As you saw in our first segment today, that report by Paul Joseph Watson that you can find and share at band.video. | ||
The mainstream media is very concerned that when people are healthy, happy, and fulfilled, they turn right wing. | ||
When they're strong and confident, And informed, it's inevitable. | ||
They oppose all of the sick, unnatural madness of the left. | ||
And, you know, this isn't actually that unsurprising. | ||
Remember, about a month ago, there was a story about childhood obesity here in America. | ||
The absolute pandemic pandemic. | ||
Little fatties. Little fat children. | ||
It's actually not funny. | ||
It's like actually... | ||
It's going to cause them problems for life. | ||
But hey, every... | ||
It's like every... | ||
I bet we could do the calculation. | ||
Every like five pounds that a child is overweight translates over a lifetime to like a million dollars to the pharmaceutical industries. | ||
Like there's got to be some sort of equation... | ||
That can actually show you the monetary amount that the pharmaceutical and medical industries make for every pound of fat that's on a child. | ||
Because obviously that's what they're setting them up for, just a lifetime of messed up joints and difficulty breathing and all the other problems that come with being overweight. | ||
But when they talk about that shocking rate of childhood obesity, which... | ||
The pandemic doubled or something. | ||
I mean, it's completely insane how many more overweight children there are this year than there were in 2019 because of the pandemic. | ||
Not because of the pandemic, obviously. | ||
COVID doesn't make you fat. | ||
It might actually make you lose weight because it's hard to eat. | ||
But... Because of the lockdowns, obviously, right? | ||
When we say because of the pandemic, what we mean is because of the pre-programmed policy set dictated by the World Economic Forum in Event 201, that's determined that everybody has to lock down and stay inside forever. | ||
But regardless, remember their answer to that, their solution to the childhood obesity epidemic was pills. | ||
It's like we got to get them on pills, ASAP, maybe some amphetamines. | ||
Maybe some sort of other experimental drug. | ||
There's too many fat kids. | ||
They should also be fat and drugged. | ||
It's okay that they're fat. | ||
They should just also be on drugs. | ||
That's the solution for the pharmaceutical industry. | ||
So it's not so much about being physically fit. | ||
They want you to be physically fit. | ||
They just want you to get physically fit through chemical intervention, through paying them, through your insurance company, hundreds of thousands of dollars to pay for their Medicines that they give you. | ||
So they don't want self-control. | ||
They don't want willpower. | ||
They don't want physical strength that comes from working out, being active. | ||
They want you sedentary, fat, stupid, and pilled up. | ||
So that's the solution, according to our healthcare leaders in the mainstream media. | ||
And working out can make you very right-wing. | ||
And again, it reminds me, I've mentioned this before, but it reminds me It really reminds me of this one quote from the Arnold Schwarzenegger Pumping Iron documentary from way back, from the 70s or 80s, when he was a young bodybuilder. | ||
And the one line that stuck out from that, for me, two lines. | ||
The first one is when he... | ||
His little right-hand man who just worships the ground he walks on and listens to everything he says, and he just talks about how easy it is to trick that guy. | ||
He's just like, I give him the wrong advices. | ||
Because he's sort of a jackass, to be honest with you, the Schwarzenegger guy. | ||
But besides that, the other line that's always stuck out to me was when he talks about that you can't There is no shortcut to having a healthy body. | ||
You can't take a pill to grow muscles. | ||
You can't just pay somebody to work out for you. | ||
If you work out and build up your body, if you have the muscles of a bodybuilder, it's because you had to go through the training. | ||
You had to have the discipline that it takes. | ||
There's not a lot of stuff like that. | ||
There's a lot of stuff that you can just pay for people to do, take shortcuts on, whether it's drugs or money, like whatever you have to do to get it. | ||
It's like a facsimile of achievement, right? | ||
It's like Hunter Biden bragging about how many women he slept with. | ||
It's like, you mean the ones you paid? | ||
You mean the foreign sex-trafficked women? | ||
The slaves that you're forced to sleep? | ||
You're bragging about that? | ||
It's like a facsimile. | ||
It's like none of it's real. | ||
But bodybuilding, being fit and healthy, you really can't fake that. | ||
You can enhance it, steroids and that sort of stuff, testosterone. | ||
There's ways to sort of bend the needle a little bit. | ||
But at the end of the day, it's something real. | ||
It's something that you actually have to dedicate yourself to. | ||
And so there's this... | ||
Metaphysical reality to it. | ||
There's the physical reality of you being strong, but that reflects a strong willpower, a strong mind, a thought of the future. | ||
I mean, it's not fun to work out. | ||
Maybe some people have fun working. | ||
I don't have fun working out. | ||
So you don't do it for immediate gratification. | ||
You do it For far-reaching gratification, it shows your ability to put off reward, which is like a key part of being a civilized human being. | ||
So all these things to say that when they talk about being healthy and being fit, being a right-wing phenomenon, they aren't just flapping their gums. | ||
They're actually pointing to something very real and tangible, and that is the fact that if you are tuned into reality, if you are Disciplined and forward-thinking, aware of your body and its functions and the physical world around you, you are going to be right-wing because those things are intrinsically right-wing because the left-wing rejects nature at every turn. | ||
Some people have to learn this the hard way. | ||
Clip number one is a friend of the show, Damon Imani, at Damon Imani on Twitter, I believe. | ||
He's a liberal guy. | ||
He made the mistake of working out. | ||
Things were never the same. | ||
Let's go now to clip number one. Here's Damon Amani. | ||
unidentified
|
So yesterday, MSNBC published a piece which reads, the far right's obsession with fitness is going digital. | |
Now, that sounds pretty strange. | ||
And as a liberal and someone who doesn't really work out, I thought, I would give it a try and see. | ||
So let's do how about push-ups. | ||
Okay. | ||
Okay. | ||
Do I feel the difference? | ||
The country did better on their trunk. | ||
Holy. | ||
There are only two genders! | ||
Only two genders! | ||
Abortion is wrong! | ||
Okay, dude, this is... | ||
Justin, stop it. Stop it. | ||
Dad, Damon Amani on Twitter. | ||
unidentified
|
That guy cracks me up. | |
Excuse me. | ||
I'm too sick to laugh. | ||
This is the type of dedication we have at InfoWars. | ||
I can hardly talk, and yet I refuse to stop hosting my radio show. | ||
Hilarious stuff. Absolutely fantastic from Damon Amani. | ||
Turns out you do a couple push-ups. | ||
Suddenly abortion's wrong and country is doing better. | ||
Suddenly the veil falls from your eyes and the truth is revealed. | ||
It's amazing. It really is amazing stuff. | ||
And a lot of people out there, I mean, working out's one thing, but they're wondering how you raise a child in this messed up world, how you raise a child to be strong and to fulfill their destiny and to be proud of themselves. | ||
Luckily, we have the answer. | ||
Clip number two is a father doing what he can to prepare his child for My name's Cooper and I'm a boy. | ||
unidentified
|
I'm a boy and my name's Cooper. | |
I'm Cooper and I'm a straight white boy. | ||
I'm a white straight boy Cooper. | ||
Cooper the straight white boy. | ||
I'm a white straight boy named Cooper. | ||
Cooper's my name. I'm straight, I'm white, and I'm a boy. | ||
I identify as he I'm a man, a boy, a white, straight boy, and I believe in God, kind of. | ||
Literally me and my son. | ||
All right, folks, we'll be right back on the other side. | ||
We'll get down to the serious news war and stuff. | ||
All right, folks, let me get down to the basics here. | ||
On today's show. I guess it's what we have to do. | ||
I mean, honestly, it's... | ||
unidentified
|
It's a weird position to be in. | |
I was going to show some videos about the Ukraine war. | ||
Maybe I'll save those for the next hour. | ||
I do want to talk about this. | ||
When we talk about the basics, I mean... | ||
The real basics, like the real, like, you know, drink water if you're thirsty, breathe air if you want to live, like, real, real simple stuff. | ||
One of these would be, if you want to stop criminals, you should arrest them. | ||
It's not complicated. | ||
It's not hard. It's not novel. | ||
It's not a new concept. Somehow, powers that be have tricked people into thinking that We need some novel new concept of crime control where we send psychiatrists into the ghetto to talk about the feeling of criminals. | ||
Like, it's just... What? | ||
Makes no sense. It's utterly and completely bizarre. | ||
From Information Liberation, Mayor Sadiq Khan of London, quote, We can't arrest our way out of London's crime problem. | ||
Yes, you can. No, you actually can. | ||
No, it's actually not hard, complicated, confusing. | ||
You just arrest the criminals. | ||
Or you deport them. | ||
You arrest them first. | ||
Deport them. Throw them in jail. | ||
Whatever. You just get them off the street. | ||
You stop them from further committing crime. | ||
Like, it's... It's so weird. | ||
It's so weird to be in a position where it's like... | ||
I have this crazy idea. | ||
What if we arrest criminals? | ||
Everybody's like, what? What do you mean? | ||
Arrest? You mean like put them in jail? | ||
It's like, yeah. Yeah, I know. | ||
I just came up with this. | ||
I know we tried giving them cake. | ||
That has not proven effective so far. | ||
I know we tried giving the criminals money. | ||
Turns out they keep doing crime. | ||
We tried making shoplifting legal. | ||
They still shoplift. | ||
It's crazy. It's totally crazy. | ||
So how about we put them in a concrete box forever? | ||
How about if they're a criminal, you just take them out of society so they can't victimize people anymore? | ||
Like, it's a very weird position to be in. | ||
But hey, if we're not explaining that men are men and women are women, I guess we have to explain crime. | ||
That you arrest criminals to stop them from carrying out their criminal activity. | ||
Very, very simple stuff. | ||
In fact, I'm going to go ahead and drop a new video in here of some of the crime fighting going on in the UK as we speak and the way it's being portrayed by the people posting these videos. | ||
It really is hilarious. | ||
I'll go ahead and drop that in right now. | ||
But again, we're talking about Sadiq Khan, London mayor. | ||
On Monday, claimed for the upteenth time that cities cannot solve their crime problem through mass arrests, even though that's been proven false by El Salvadorian President Nayib Bukele. | ||
There's no place for crime in London, Khan said on Twitter, but we can't arrest ourselves out of the problem. | ||
From removing knives from our street to providing Londoners with meaningful, engaging activities, I'm committed to being tough on crime and its complex causes. | ||
Can you imagine? Can you imagine just, like, you're walking home from the tube one day after your long day at work, some gang of youths of age and descent, maybe, however they say it in the UK, just stabs you, just leaves you bleeding on the sidewalk. | ||
You're like, oh, if only they had a pinball machine. | ||
Oh, if only somebody had organized a wiffle ball league. | ||
This wouldn't have happened to me. | ||
What are you talking about? What are you talking about? | ||
Do kids need to feel engaged, feel like they have a purpose, feel like there's a better choice than crime? | ||
Sure, of course. | ||
But that's not the solution to crime. | ||
There are major societal ills that you have to confront. | ||
But it's even different in America where you have You know, it's tradition or history of slavery, I should say. | ||
And just the, you know, all the outcomes of that. | ||
London, it's like you imported these people. | ||
The vast majority of the crime in London is committed by people that, like, just arrived there. | ||
So you're importing this problem and then saying the solution to this is not arresting the criminals, deporting them back to where they came from, It's engaging activities. | ||
They need more engaging activities. | ||
What are you... | ||
Okay. Yeah, try that. | ||
Try that for a little while. | ||
See how that goes. Or you can just arrest the people like Naya Bukele did. | ||
El Salvador President Bukele's wildly popular gang crackdown is actually so effective it's reducing illegal immigration to the U.S., His crackdown on crime is so successful it's solving crime in America. | ||
How wild is that? | ||
President Nayib Bukele's successful crackdown on MS-13 gang members has led to a dramatic reduction in the number of Salvadorians illegally crossing our southern border, the Wall Street Journal reports. | ||
The Wall Street Journal says the country with the highest murder rate now has the highest incarceration rate. | ||
Oh, and also one of the lowest murder rates. | ||
It's lowered homicides by 92% compared to 2015, giving Bukele the support of 9 out of every 10 Salvadorians, polls show. | ||
The number of Salvadorians illegally crossing the U.S.-Mexico border has dropped by 44%. | ||
This country is the size of Massachusetts. | ||
It's a tiny little country. | ||
And this gang crackdown has been so unbelievably successful. | ||
That's actually showing... | ||
Like, if you were serious about stopping illegal immigration to this country, you would be encouraging all the South American countries to follow this pattern. | ||
To go after their gangs in the same way that El Salvador has. | ||
Lowering homicide rates by 92%. | ||
God only knows how many lives have been saved because these criminals have been taken off the street and it's having such effect that immigration in America is being affected by it. | ||
Like there really is only two options when it comes to crime. | ||
You either just arrest the criminals and you put them in prison or You live in a prison. | ||
Those are really the only options. | ||
Either the whole society becomes a prison, or you put the criminals in prison. | ||
I guess that's the choice that we all have to make. | ||
After all, in a trend that we've seen all along the West Coast, Yet another major chain is removing locations from places that refuse to stop retail theft. | ||
Right Aid shutters Bartell Drug location amid increased retail theft. | ||
Another Bartell Drug location shuttered last month, adding yet another closure in the Seattle area for the Right Aid-owned chain. | ||
According to the Seattle Times, the closure of the South Lake Union's Bartell Drugs at 1001 Mercer Street brings the total number of Seattle shutdowns of the chain to four in less than a year. | ||
And it's because of the rampant shoplifting and crime. | ||
They simply can't maintain. | ||
It's a 133-year-old drugstore. | ||
Can't survive two years under our new regime of defund the police. | ||
She's have to shut down, not have nice things, not have things out on display. | ||
Just order everything online. | ||
That's very convenient for the globalists as well. | ||
Or you can do what Tacoma is doing. | ||
Tacoma businesses demand city council allow more electric fences to stop rampant theft. | ||
So these are the options. | ||
You either just arrest the criminals and put them in prison or Where you have to do things like install electric fences around everywhere that you go. | ||
You have to live like a rat in a maze, just constantly surrounded by barbed wire and electric fences and surveillance cameras and militarized police. | ||
Because you refuse to actually arrest the criminals, you now have to live like a criminal. | ||
You now have to live in a cage because you refuse to cage the animals. | ||
Businesses in Tacoma, Washington, are looking to install electric fences to prevent thefts that have resulted in the loss of thousands of dollars from the Tacoma City Council. | ||
Now the Tacoma City Council is considering allowing more to be put up. | ||
Currently, Tacoma only allows electric fences to be installed in industrial areas, but the council is considering changing the code to allow more businesses to do the same. | ||
If a new measure is adopted by the City Council, electric fences could be installed in some mixed-use commercial and downtown districts. | ||
You know, like they use for cows. | ||
You know, like the fences that they use to keep cows in their pens? | ||
Yeah, we'll just have that now, downtown. | ||
So just instead of stopping the crime, we'll just all live like cows and cattle being herded through electric fences because you can't, or refuse to, just arrest the actual criminals actually committing the crime because apparently when you do that, the statistics Look a little bit racist. | ||
They look a little bit racist. So it's better to just be a cow. | ||
Just live as a cow in your electric barnyard and be surrounded by electric fences or put the criminals in prison. | ||
I guess that's the choice that we have to make. | ||
Tonya's looking more and more tempting to move to El Salvador. | ||
Can I claim refugee status in El Salvador? | ||
Probably not. | ||
They seem to run their country in a correct way, so they probably don't allow criminals like that. | ||
unidentified
|
Welcome back. | |
Ladies and gentlemen, second hour has begun here on American Journal- Infowars.com, band.video. | ||
We're talking crime. We're talking about crime. | ||
It's always been a problem. | ||
It's always an aspect of human culture. | ||
People will violate each other's rights. | ||
They'll take things that don't belong to them. | ||
They'll try to get one over on their neighbors. | ||
It's just something you have to deal with. | ||
It's going to exist no matter how small or large the community, no matter its racial or demographic makeup. | ||
But that doesn't mean it's inevitable and acceptable. | ||
You can actually limit it to a bare minimum. | ||
And anybody who's been to a safe country knows what a shocking revelation it is to be surrounded by people that trust each other. | ||
I'm thinking of course of Japan where you go there and it's just like You know, when there'll be a group of kids in a convenience store and they just leave all their backpacks on the sidewalk out front. | ||
Just like 30 backpacks. | ||
Probably every one of them has a laptop inside just sitting on the road. | ||
Nobody steals it. | ||
Tokyo, the biggest city, I think, in the entire world. | ||
And you just see unlocked bikes just sitting on the curb everywhere. | ||
Nobody's going to take it. Nobody will steal it. | ||
It almost feels uncomfortable for an American. | ||
See, you're just like, really? | ||
They're just going to leave it out there like that? | ||
Maybe I should steal it. | ||
Isn't this the way the world works? | ||
That if you aren't hyper-vigilant, then somebody will take advantage of you? | ||
No. What? They trust each other? | ||
They're a homogenous population that doesn't try to screw each other constantly? | ||
What? That's possible? | ||
I thought this was the modern world. | ||
Tokyo must be some... | ||
some... | ||
anachronistic... | ||
what's the word? An... Old school, you know, some relic of a forgotten age. | ||
They must be behind everybody else. | ||
And there's just, like, hologram anime characters dancing around and just, like, floating buses. | ||
And God knows what else they have in Japan. | ||
Just, like, way ahead of us technologically. | ||
Like, way more modern than us in almost every way. | ||
While also simultaneously not subcoming to the modern trend of just rampant crime everywhere all the time. | ||
Do you know that's possible? Do you know that we don't have to accept these things? | ||
We don't have to live this way? | ||
We can just punish criminals. | ||
It is possible. Not only is it possible, it's necessary. | ||
Let's go to a video now. | ||
This is in Portland, Oregon. | ||
This is the future if we don't get a handle on this because, as we said before, you either put the criminals in prison or you live in an open-air prison. | ||
Either you get the people that are committing the crime and separate them from society, or you leave them in society and all of society has to become barbed wire fences and electric fences and surveillance cameras and militarized police walking the street just waiting for the next big heist. | ||
Tacoma businesses demand city council allow more electric fences to stop rampant theft. | ||
So they no longer either have the resources to deal with the theft because their police have been defunded or they have actively, like so many other places on the West Coast, made laws that they no longer arrest criminals. | ||
Ah, you're shoplifting 700 bucks? | ||
Get out of here, you scamp. | ||
And then if the Retail worker actually not only tries to stop, we covered the story last week, a guy who just filmed the theft taking place, got fired from his job, lost his job, is now unemployed, possibly homeless, because he simply observed people stealing. | ||
So look, you either live as a victim of the criminals, or you take the criminals away. | ||
We'll get back into it on the other side. | ||
Turns out Stop and Frisk, highly effective. | ||
Highly effective. Almost everywhere it's implemented, from New York City to London. | ||
This kid getting a machete pulled out of his pants. | ||
You won't believe how this was posted on Twitter. | ||
unidentified
|
Welcome back, folks. | |
Yeah, I think we should have some sort of diagram. | ||
I'm not sure what it would take. Something that illustrates the percentage of our problems that are just fabricated whole cloth by the policies of the left. | ||
It's like crime, again, it's a human problem. | ||
You know, you can have... | ||
Nice areas where crime doesn't exist. | ||
And it's also sort of a... | ||
It really puts you in a lose-lose situation. | ||
I was thinking the other day about the... | ||
I think it was a documentary on the Night Stalker I was watching. | ||
It was some serial killer documentary in California. | ||
I want to say in the 80s. | ||
Was that Night Stalker, right? | ||
This Hill Strangler? | ||
I don't know. There's so many. But there's a guy, you know, basically there's a series of murders that took place in this area of California. | ||
And one of the victims who was killed was a grandmother and her granddaughter was being interviewed during the documentary. | ||
She said that like the day before... | ||
The woman was murdered in her home by somebody breaking in and murdering, like strangling her to death. | ||
The granddaughter was like, you need to start locking your doors. | ||
Grandmother was like, I don't want to live in a world where I have to lock my doors. | ||
It's such a sad thing, right? | ||
It's like, I don't either. | ||
I don't want to live in a world where you have to lock your doors or you have to worry that your neighbors are going to sneak in in the middle of the night and kill you like... | ||
Nobody wants to live in that world, but once the crime is introduced, once the serial killer is prowling your neighborhood, you've got to lock your doors. | ||
She didn't. So it's like you can't... | ||
I don't know. It's just so sad. | ||
It's like you have this safe... | ||
Nice community culture for your whole life. | ||
You're like 70 years old and you're like, I've never locked my door ever. | ||
I go to sleep. I wake up. | ||
I leave the house. I come back home. | ||
Doors unlocked the whole time. | ||
Nobody's going to steal from me. This is America after all. | ||
And then that goes away. And then that's just not the case anymore. | ||
And it's just a symptom of the collapse of society as we know it and in general. | ||
And it's sort of a cyclical loop, right? | ||
It's like, well, now that there's a murder out there, we've got to lock the doors. | ||
Well, now we can't let the kids play outside after sundown. | ||
Well, now we don't. We interact with our neighbors quite so much anymore. | ||
Maybe we look at them a little bit suspiciously. | ||
Well, now we're not as good friends with the people around us anymore. | ||
Well, now we're more isolated. | ||
And so when people are more isolated, they're more likely to get up to stuff that other people would stop them doing if they were around. | ||
But now they're in isolation so they can get away with it. | ||
So it's like it becomes a self-fulfilling cycle. | ||
It becomes... An endless feedback loop of crime and suspicion, crime and suspicion, crime and suspicion, and now here we are. | ||
Now here we are in the 21st century with all the technology you could ever want and more. | ||
And yet we're installing electric fences in our downtown cities because we refuse to arrest the police. | ||
unidentified
|
It always stood out to me. | |
It's like... | ||
It's really a pathetic thing. | ||
It's sort of a symbol of the downfall of America. | ||
It's like, yeah. Can't lock your doors. | ||
Can't trust your neighbors. Have no safety in or out of your home. | ||
You can't be free. You can't be free without safety. | ||
You can't be free if you're constantly under threat. | ||
You can't be free if... | ||
Nobody else has to lock you in your house. | ||
If you lock yourself in your house, you're not free. | ||
Again, Tacoma, Washington has been a victim of the leftists. | ||
How many of these problems? | ||
So, with crime, it's something, to me, it's like you've got a faucet, like your hose bib, right, outside of your house, and it's dripping, right? | ||
That's a problem. You don't want it to drip. | ||
Every couple seconds, droop, droop. | ||
And you're like, ah, this is an issue. | ||
This is crime. We've got to do something to stop it. | ||
Here comes along a leftist or a liberal, and they crank open the spout. | ||
It's just like spewing water now. | ||
And you're like, oh my God, what the hell? | ||
It was a problem before. | ||
It was. I mean, it existed. | ||
Crime was a problem. But your solution has just made it infinitely worse. | ||
Now that the water is just pouring out like crazy, And for some reason, instead of just going, I have an idea, here we go. | ||
Okay, alright, we're back to the drip. | ||
Alright, we've closed the nozzle now. | ||
Things are back to the way they were. | ||
Instead, the leftist solution is like, oh no, we already opened the spigot. | ||
We already opened the hose bit. | ||
There's no going back on that. | ||
So now we need a gutter system. | ||
Now we need buckets. Now we need a chain of people bringing the water out. | ||
Now we need some sort of complicated device to capture the water and feed it to somewhere else. | ||
And it's just like you could just undo what you just did. | ||
You could just undo the thing you just did that made everything worse, but they're not going to do that. | ||
It's literally exactly what's happening here. | ||
There was crime, sure. There was a little bit of crime. | ||
Then they defunded the police. | ||
Crime skyrocketed. Now Tacoma has a total crime rate 109% higher than anywhere else in Washington State and 170% higher than the rest of the U.S. The violent crime rate is 187% higher than the state's rate and 117% higher than the rest of the country. | ||
And a lot of this came about in the last two years because of the defund the police program. | ||
According to a new report, violent crime in Washington increased by 9% in 2022, with robberies increasing by 18% and vehicle theft increasing by 34%. | ||
34% in a single year increase. | ||
That's them opening the spigot. | ||
Solution would be to undo the defund the police program, to just put police back on the street, go back to how you were before. | ||
Sure, it didn't solve the problem completely, there will still be crime, but at least you can undo the effects of the liberal program of open up the spigot, see what happens. | ||
But instead... Here come the buckets and the gutter systems and the hoses and the redirection of the water because apparently you can't just undo what you just did. | ||
There's a solution now. Electric fences, cameras, motion detectors, just a ton of other stuff that isn't addressing the problem at all. | ||
It just diverts it to somebody else. | ||
Right? You just put an electric fence around your neighborhood, that wandering criminal, they're still going to commit a crime, just not to you. | ||
And this is the future under the new regime. | ||
Let's go down to this Portland video. | ||
This is what the future looks like, a human open-air concentration camp prison because they refuse to simply arrest the people actually committing the crimes. | ||
unidentified
|
Let's watch. Please look at camera for entry. | |
David, you stand on the shoes... | ||
This is Portland, Oregon. | ||
Camera hanging over the door. | ||
Telling you, look up into the camera for entry. | ||
We will scan your face. | ||
Oh, you want to go shopping? | ||
Well, let us scan your face and take your fingerprint and watch you the entire time. | ||
Again, this is the choice we're making. | ||
You arrest the criminals and put them in prison or you live in an open-air prison. | ||
Your society becomes the prison. | ||
Now, as Matt pointed out during the break, this was Rudy Giuliani's claim to fame. | ||
He actually brought peace to New York City by being tough on crime at a time when the violent crime rate was significantly higher than it even is today. | ||
And stop and frisk was one of the policies that he implemented in order to bring this about. | ||
Stop and frisk is now being used on the streets of London. | ||
And hilariously, this video was posted with just another young man whose life is ruined by stop and frisk policing. | ||
Let's watch. There's the young man, the young scholar on his way to his computer programming class, stopped by the UK police, roughing him up for no good reason. | ||
I'm sorry, what's that? | ||
Is that a giant machete? | ||
Is that a gigantic machete in his pants? | ||
What was he going to do with that? | ||
People post this video being like, this young man's life is ruined. | ||
Where was he going with the gigantic jackknife? | ||
What was he going to do with that? | ||
Oh, the poor young man. | ||
The poor child. | ||
No, the poor victim that that dude was going to slice their head off. | ||
Thank God they get to live. | ||
And this guy gets to go to jail. | ||
unidentified
|
Bye, criminal. Bye. Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | |
A little bit about the war in Ukraine now. | ||
It's like... It's like we could have just filmed one segment two years ago and just been like... | ||
The U.S. is promising more money and more weapons to Ukraine, and Zelensky is very mad and petulant and angry and demanding more. | ||
And then we can just play that segment every week for an entire year, because it's like Groundhog Day. | ||
It's like the same thing over and over again. | ||
We give him billions of dollars, we give him new, advanced, more irresponsible weapons, and then Zelensky is furious and angry that we're not giving more. | ||
He demands more. | ||
Anybody else just sick of this? | ||
It wouldn't even be that big of an issue if the dude had just the slightest humility. | ||
Just the slightest, like, thank you so much for what you've given us. | ||
Really, we couldn't ask for more. | ||
And we're like, no, we insist. | ||
And they're like, I mean, if you want to, we'll take it. | ||
But yeah, this is our fight. | ||
You know, we're... We're willing to do it ourselves. | ||
We'll fight with rocks if we have to. | ||
But, you know, if you want to give us your weapons, we're honored that you give it to us. | ||
Can you at least play the part a little bit? | ||
At least assuage some of the rage that the rest of us feel? | ||
With just like, oh, you're giving us cluster bombs? | ||
Well, how are we going to launch them? | ||
We need launchers for the cluster bombs. | ||
I mean, what are you doing? | ||
Giving us cluster bombs? | ||
We need more than cluster bombs, okay? | ||
It's just like... | ||
Would this fly in any just, like, personal relationship? | ||
Has anybody ever had a friend like this? | ||
They wouldn't be your friend for long. | ||
Right? Dude, I've given you everything I have. | ||
I've literally shelled everything out I have for you. | ||
And you're just there being like, not enough. | ||
Not enough, buddy. | ||
You want to give me everything you have? | ||
I need more. I deserve more. | ||
Okay. Okay. | ||
Seriously. I'm just making this up, right? | ||
Zelensky outraged after Biden rejects Ukraine NATO membership. | ||
Unprecedented and absurd. | ||
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky is not being shy about his dissatisfaction over his country currently being denied NATO membership, taking to social media to express his outrage. | ||
Ukraine will be present at the NATO summit taking place Tuesday and Wednesday in Vilnius, Lithuania, but Zelensky lamented that the alliance continues to keep his country from joining. | ||
You cannot join a defensive alliance if you're at war. | ||
End of statement. Just makes no sense. | ||
So, I mean, what he is demanding is that the combined might of all of Western Europe and America go to war for him against Russia. | ||
That we subject our own population to what he's put his population through, despite the fact that we've given him Literally all of our weapons. | ||
Just javelin, stingers, five years worth of production. | ||
We don't even have enough to protect ourselves anymore. | ||
Biden said the reason we're sending cluster bombs is because we ran out of ammunition. | ||
It's now resorting to the illegal stuff that we weren't going to send because it's a war crime. | ||
But now we are because Zelensky demands it. | ||
Again, you would just love to see... | ||
This like, okay, here's the missiles. | ||
Here's hundreds of billions of dollars to prop up your government. | ||
Here's, you know, more cash for your wife to spend at high-end luxury stores in Paris. | ||
Just like, here's everything we got. | ||
Here's soldiers, you know, mercenaries that we can dress up in your uniform and send American boys to fight for you. | ||
Here's everything you could ever possibly want. | ||
Okay, it's all yours. | ||
It's yours. He's just like, um, but you're not letting me join Mado? | ||
But you're not going to war for me? | ||
I'd love to just see the guy being like, Hmm. | ||
And there's a scene cuts and Zelensky in a cage like an elephant in a circus train being shipped to Russia. | ||
It's like, yeah, we tried with this guy, but, like, you can have him. | ||
You can just have him now, Putin. | ||
Whatever you want to do with him, I don't know, make a pinata out of him, who cares? | ||
Like, just get him away from us. | ||
Just there's nothing that will satisfy this creepy little gremlin. | ||
So, off to Russia with you, sir. | ||
Again, it didn't start this way, right? | ||
February of 2022, Russia invades Ukraine. | ||
It wasn't like, good! Screw Zelensky! | ||
It was like, oh gosh, this is bad, and Putin's not a great guy, but look at the background of this, and NATO's really setting up Ukraine to fall for this, and we can help out, but really, peace should be the number one goal. | ||
Now it's been a year and a half, and it's just like, I'm done, I'm sick of it, I'm over it. | ||
The best thing for humanity itself would be for Zelensky to disappear in a puff of smoke. | ||
Literally, for humanity. | ||
Should we watch a video? | ||
Should we watch a little video of what's going on on the ground in Ukraine? | ||
Just to give us a little taste of what's going on. | ||
We'll do it on the other side, because I want to show the full thing. | ||
We have the on-the-ground footage of some of the mercenaries. | ||
But we can go now to clip number four. | ||
Do we already go to this? Clip number four is Henry Kissinger. | ||
He apparently got pranked by the Russian pranksters that call world leaders and pretend to be Vladimir Zelensky. | ||
So this is them pretending to be Zelensky calling Henry Kissinger and asking him about the Nord Stream pipeline. | ||
Let's go now to clip number four. | ||
unidentified
|
On North Stream 2. | |
How do you think? | ||
Who is behind Explosion of Nord Stream 2? | ||
Who is guilty? | ||
How do you think? I frankly thought you were. | ||
Really? You think that we? | ||
No, no. | ||
But I didn't blame you. | ||
I would not say that as a criticism. | ||
Get the show wheel. | ||
Yeah, so that's the prank guy stinger at the end there. | ||
So in case you had trouble understanding that, that was the Russian pranksters praying to be Zelensky saying, who do you think bombed the Nord Stream pipeline? | ||
And Henry Kissinger going, I thought that was you guys. | ||
I thought that was you guys that did that. | ||
I wouldn't blame you. | ||
Of course... Henry Kister. | ||
I mean, you got to be impressed. | ||
You got to be impressed with the guy. He's like 119 years old and he's still that sharp. | ||
He's still sharp enough to pretend like he doesn't know it's the CIA that did it. | ||
I thought it was you guys. I thought Ukraine had the capability to send covert operations around the entire European peninsula to the North Sea to avoid the Russian surveillance and place a bomb on Nord Stream. | ||
I thought that was the Ukrainian special forces. | ||
No. He knows exactly who it was. | ||
So good on him for being so sharp that, uh... | ||
Even in what he thinks is a private conversation with Zelensky, he still keeps up the facade of, oh, I thought that was you guys. | ||
Gee, I thought that was Ukraine that did that. | ||
That wasn't Ukraine. Gee. | ||
unidentified
|
A pint of young boy's blood a day keeps the Grim Reaper away. | |
Maybe, there may be something to that. | ||
unidentified
|
I thought you did it. | |
This is just like, oh, okay. | ||
Oh, okay. Henry Kissinger. | ||
Yeah, you and Zelensky can go dance off into the sunset for all I care. | ||
We'll show you the video on the other side of what it's like on the ground in Ukraine, what the people fighting this fight are actually going through, the horrors, the genocide, the chaos, the American accents, all coming up in the second half of American Journal Infowars.com. | ||
Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
We still have a lot to cover today, and we'll be showing a pre-recorded interview that we did yesterday afternoon with the one and only Ed Dowd. | ||
That will be airing in the third hour of today's program. | ||
In the meantime, let's go back to the war in Ukraine. | ||
Again, you've got... | ||
You've got the world being run as if it's a bunch of, like, high school mean girls. | ||
Just, like, petulant, kind of bitchy, entitled... | ||
Scumbags. Just like shrieking at each other. | ||
Zelensky outraged after Biden rejects Ukraine's NATO membership, saying it's unprecedented and absurd. | ||
It's unprecedented and absurd when a time frame is not set neither for the invitation nor Ukraine's membership. | ||
While at the same time, vague wordings about conditions is adding even more, even for inviting Ukraine, Zelensky said in a lengthy tweet Tuesday morning. | ||
He also said that the international alliance was disrespecting his country and was subsequently motivating Russia in the process. | ||
World leaders, including Biden and German Chancellor Schultz, however, have suggested the Ukraine joining NATO would prompt further aggression by Russia rather than serve as a deterrence. | ||
Obviously. | ||
Obviously. | ||
So Zelensky's outraged that he didn't get an invite to the dance. | ||
that's That's how this needs to be seen, I think. | ||
It's just like, did you invite Zelensky to the party? | ||
No, no, no. Dude's a downer. | ||
I didn't invite him in the party. Instead of just Zelensky being like, dang. | ||
Dang, what's wrong with me? | ||
What did I do that's wrong? | ||
He just like shows up at the party anyway. | ||
He's like, oh, you don't want me at your party, huh? | ||
Well, now I'm at your party. | ||
What now? And he's just like wrecking things. | ||
He's like, this is why we didn't invite you. | ||
You little gremlin. A little creepy gremlin. | ||
He'll put a suit on for once in the last two years. | ||
So he's very mad. | ||
Zelensky outraged that they're not letting him into NATO. Meanwhile, U.S. delegation furious over Zelensky tweets, well, they're all mad at each other. | ||
Ukraine leader suggested NATO's indecisiveness about Kiev joining the bloc was a sign of weakness. | ||
U.S. delegation attending NATO summit in Vilnius is furious over a tweet by Ukrainian President Vladimir Zelensky in which he criticized the military alliance for its reduction to provide a concrete roadmap to Kiev's ascension to the bloc. | ||
The Washington Post reported, Members of the U.S. delegation were furious after learning about the Ukrainian leader's message. | ||
The Washington Post reported on Tuesday, citing an unnamed official familiar with the matter. | ||
A senior NATO official told WAPO that Zelensky's tweet puts pressure on the alliance while also helping him say, I'm fighting to the end to the population of Ukraine. | ||
In their joint statement, which was later issued late on Tuesday, the NATO member only said they agreed they would be in a position to extend an invitation to Ukraine to join the alliance when allies agreed and conditions are met. | ||
Not enough for this guy. Let's take a look at what we're actually talking about when we're talking about the Ukraine war. | ||
Take a look at what's actually going on on the ground. | ||
Reminder that this is all over two areas in eastern Ukraine, which were 90% or something like it, ethnic Russian that had a plebiscite that voted to join Russia that didn't want to be under Ukraine anymore. | ||
It's happened all the way back in 2014. | ||
Ukraine has been intermittently bombing them and terrorizing them for the last several years. | ||
Until Russia stepped in and said, we're annexing these areas and protecting them from you. | ||
So, I mean, they caused this problem. | ||
They caused this issue. And this is all over retaining these two territories that they haven't actually had full and governmental control of since 2014. | ||
So you have to ask, is a single life worth this? | ||
Is a single life worth forcing these people that don't want to be a part of Ukraine to be a part of Ukraine? | ||
And if a single life isn't worth it, would you put your life down for that particular goal? | ||
I doubt it. Some people apparently willing to. | ||
Now hundreds of thousands of people are dead for this, again, really just absolutely pointless goal. | ||
Absolutely pointless, nonsensical, retarded goal. | ||
So let's watch a little interview with some behind-the-scenes footage of an Irish mercenary after he returns from Ukraine, talking about his experience, showing his experience. | ||
And take a listen for the American accents that you hear. | ||
Irish, American. This is an international force using Ukraine as a battlefield to fight the Russians. | ||
It really is just the worldwide government, American hegemony fighting against the Russians who in this case seem to be standing alone. | ||
But again, pay attention to the lack of Ukrainian accents and plethora of American and Irish accents of these Ukrainian mercenaries. | ||
Let's watch. | ||
unidentified
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What is it like right now on the front line? | |
The zero point. | ||
Zero on zero line? | ||
It's horror. | ||
It's horror. There is just... | ||
It's a genocide. | ||
It's slaughter. There is just people dead everywhere. | ||
Russians dead. Ukrainian people dead. | ||
Ukrainian soldiers dead. | ||
Just left there. Just left there. | ||
And I don't know why. | ||
Incoming. Rhys Byrne says he was almost killed a few weeks ago as his multinational unit prepared to attack the line. | ||
It keeps just reacting all the bells, bro. | ||
We were told there's a Russian trench line, and our job is to go into the trenches and clear them out, hold them until auxiliary units come, and then we go home. | ||
They were taken to a staging area, but they had no air cover, and a pair of Ukrainian tanks withdrew. | ||
In the distance, another tank approached the unit, assuming it was friendly. | ||
Are you doing all right, though? Yeah, yeah, I'm good. | ||
But it wasn't. | ||
Soldiers took cover in the woods, hoping that assistance would arrive. | ||
Any station, any station. | ||
Can anybody hear me? | ||
Can anybody read me? Go, go, go, go! | ||
As the light fell, a Ukrainian truck pulled up and the survivors scrambled in the back. | ||
But Burns said they were spotted. | ||
A Russian tank giving chase. | ||
Let's go! Now we have the tank literally coming out, starting to chase us. | ||
And that's terrifying. When you see a big T-72 coming for you and you're in a Humvee pickup, yeah, it's like a hot night for you, but you're finished. | ||
So again, all of us are screaming, drive the Humvee, drive the Humvee! | ||
I was going mental. | ||
Come on! I've never done those big mountains like you have, but I wanna, bro. | ||
This sanctuary is run by a muscular pastor, a New Zealander called Owen Panoma. | ||
What's the point of this place, this house? | ||
Be some sort of support, you know, to sit there. | ||
Where are you from? You got kids, you know, basically to take their mind off war. | ||
No one is pressured to communicate, but the trauma will often make itself known. | ||
They sleep talk. They scream. | ||
At that time, you come out and go to the toilet and think, is it all right? | ||
And the guys wake up, you know, they don't realise what they're doing. | ||
They might not be aware of what they're actually doing because it's quiet here. | ||
Out there, it's not. | ||
The train will take them home. | ||
The past few weeks on the Eastern Front have been the final straw. | ||
These men have spent months on the edge. | ||
This will become a memory for me, yeah? | ||
That's all it'll be, just a memory that I'll try to push, push, push, push behind, that I'll hopefully forget. | ||
I genuinely hope I forget it, but I know it'll haunt me to come back. | ||
Yeah, absolutely horrifying. | ||
Absolutely horrifying. | ||
What's going on there, just everything about it. | ||
And these are the guys that survived, right? | ||
They'll be changed forever. So I hope you can understand when I talk about wanting to send Selinsky into, I don't know, a homemade sub to the Titanic or something of the sort. | ||
Like, what would you do to stop that going on? | ||
What would you do to end that cycle of senseless, unimaginable horror going on in Ukraine right now? | ||
Are you willing to give up a little bit of territory? | ||
Are you willing to step down as president of a country? | ||
Would you allow this meat grinder to continue to fulfill your geopolitical aims? | ||
All right, folks, welcome back to the American Journal. | ||
We're at the closing segment of our second hour today. | ||
In the third hour, we'll be watching an interview that I did yesterday with Ed Dowd about his new book called Cause Unknown about the sudden and unexpected rise in symptomless death around the world. | ||
And it was a very good conversation. | ||
I think you will appreciate that. | ||
We tried to frame it as like a segment you could send to your normie friends. | ||
A segment you could send to people that just watch MSM all the time and don't know what's going on. | ||
In other words, I didn't want to just be preaching to the choir. | ||
This is extremely important information and we tried to talk about it in a way that could break through using just pure data. | ||
No like Coming from off the wall, going, the vaccine's killing you! | ||
And here's the data. It's like, well, first, here's the data showing a massive rise in unexplained deaths. | ||
You want to talk about this? | ||
I mean, this is data from life insurance companies. | ||
Can't exactly brush it off, call it a conspiracy theory. | ||
The data of the unexplained deaths is very real. | ||
The question is, what's causing it? | ||
What do we do about it? | ||
So that's the way we tried to approach it, and I think we had a good conversation. | ||
So we'll play that in the next hour. | ||
We've been two hours through the show, and I've hardly plugged at all. | ||
Infowarsstore.com is where you go to support us. | ||
It's not even... | ||
I mean, it is for our sake. | ||
It really is a 360 win. | ||
Obviously, we need your support. | ||
We rely on your support. | ||
We would not be able to do anything without your support. | ||
Without your support, we'll go away forever. | ||
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But on top of that, our products are awesome. | ||
So you're benefiting from this as well. | ||
I know I had a story here. | ||
Just like every day, there's a story about PFAs. | ||
This one is about how Water filters are going way up in demand. | ||
They say, since we've discovered that all these PFAs are immune suppressants, so they suppress your immune system, that means any opportunistic disease, including some types of cancer, could take over, said Graham Peasley, who's a biochemist. | ||
It's like, what? What don't the PFAs do? | ||
It's like, well, there's this stuff in the water. | ||
What's it do? Well, it makes you gay and gives you cancer and suppresses your immune system and alters your hormone balance and rot your teeth out and calls you stupid. | ||
It's like, what don't they do to the human body? | ||
You've got to be protecting yourself from this stuff. | ||
So there's two levels of the info war. | ||
We want to change the society. | ||
We want to change the industrial regulations and Hopefully, by God, change the environmental movement to actually focus on things that are actually destroying the earth and humanity. | ||
That's a big goal. That's a big ask. | ||
And we're making major gains and having massive victories in that. | ||
But in the meantime, you can protect yourself. | ||
There's the individual info war where you're protecting yourself and informing yourself about all this. | ||
Then there's the Wide-ranging, high-level InfoWar where we're trying to make a mass movement of change here. | ||
But until we get that mass movement, your water is still contaminated. | ||
Your air is still contaminated. | ||
Your food is still contaminated. | ||
So do everything you can to fight back on an individual level for yourself and your family. | ||
Get a water filter from InfoWarStore.com. | ||
Get an air filter from InfoWarStore.com. | ||
Get the supplements you need to counteract the poison that's in your food and water. | ||
I've said it a million times, but it doesn't matter how healthily you eat these days. | ||
If you're eating nothing but salad and carrots, if you're a rabbit, that's fine, but the soil it's grown in is depleted of nutrients, so you're not getting everything you need no matter how healthily you eat. | ||
No matter how health conscious you are in terms of what you put into your body, you need to be supplementing because the earth itself has been denuded of nutrients that you have to make up for. | ||
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Again, you may have been able to laugh at this when it was Alex Jones 20 years ago saying it, and I guess it took 20 years for the rest of society to catch up, but it was real then, it's real now. | ||
All these other people acting like they're just discovering PFAs and just figuring out that you need to filter your water. | ||
Welcome to the team. You can apologize whenever you'd like for mocking us for so long. | ||
So, protect yourself. | ||
I mean, that's all I can say. | ||
Nobody's going to protect you. Nobody's going to be out there helping you do it, so you've got to do the hard work of protecting yourself. | ||
And, of course, PFAs aren't just in the water and the food. | ||
They're in the air as well, which is why Alexa Pure Breeze is such a must-have item from Infowarsstore.com. | ||
There's a bunch of weird... | ||
unidentified
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There's a bunch of weird... | |
I should have done it. | ||
I was going to do a funny thing today. | ||
I didn't do it. I didn't do it. | ||
There's a bunch of weird cultural stuff going on. | ||
We'll get to some of the political stuff too before we go to that interview in the next hour. | ||
But there's all these articles like this. | ||
Zuck is a cuck? | ||
Why is Elon Musk borrowing insults from white supremacists? | ||
Does that make you a white supremacist? | ||
So, again, things that make you a white supremacist. | ||
Working out. Eating well. | ||
Being on time. Not liking your wife to have sex with other men. | ||
So, you know, reject white supremacy. | ||
Be a cuck. Be a cuck, the Guardian says. | ||
Don't let those white supremacists... | ||
Convince you that loyalty and fidelity are something you should demand in a relationship. | ||
Let your wife be used by other men. | ||
You're not a racist, are you? | ||
Be a cuck. | ||
They say the world's richest toddler is at it again. | ||
Don't you love when, like, literally just petulant, childish journalists... | ||
Journalists, newspaper bloggers in some one-room apartment with their cats and boxed wine somewhere is condescending towards the richest man in the world who single-handedly pioneered private space travel and created the most successful electric car company of all time has changed the world in ways you'll never even imagine. | ||
But you're going to be condescending? | ||
You're going to call him a toddler? | ||
Okay. Alright. She's like, why even listen to these people? | ||
Because what they say is funny. | ||
That's right. Elon Musk, a very stable genius, is throwing a temper tantrum over Mark Zuckerberg launching the Twitter rival called Threads. | ||
You would think a capitalist such as Musk would welcome a little healthy competition, but he doesn't seem keen to compete in the business arena. | ||
Again, these like children... | ||
These absolute children. | ||
Obviously, you don't want a rival company to compete with yours. | ||
They think this is like an own on capitalism? | ||
A little healthy competition is good, but for the business owner, they don't want it, obviously. | ||
What, you're not happy about that? | ||
Like, this is the mindset of a cuck, right? | ||
Right? Oh, if you love your wife so much, why don't you let her have sex with other men? | ||
What? Because it's my wife. | ||
What are you talking about? If you love your business so much, why are you so mad that a copycat business has sprung up to steal all of your customers? | ||
It's like, what? | ||
unidentified
|
So stupid. They're so stupid. | |
Musk, who's 52 years old, prefaced the invitation to fight, I guess. | ||
Preface the invitation by tweeting, Zuck is a cuck. | ||
It's not clear whether he had professional help crafting his zinger or if it came to him in a flash of brilliance. | ||
Again, this attitude, right? | ||
It's like superior condescending. | ||
Did somebody professional write that for you? | ||
It triggered you into writing an article. | ||
It was pretty effective, wasn't it? | ||
That was a simple, funny little rhyme that has you freaking out and writing an angry article in your... | ||
I don't know. One room apartment. | ||
So they act like they're up. | ||
We're above this all. | ||
And this toddler. Meanwhile he's just like the gallivanting billionaire playboy richest man in the world. | ||
Owns spaceships. | ||
And you're going to condescend to him? | ||
Okay. Alright. But again it's funny that like calling somebody a cuck is like a right wing thing now. | ||
It has been for a while. | ||
But it's pretty hilarious. And then she explains it. | ||
This is where these unfunny, unserious, childish, condescending, self-important losers do. | ||
For those of you who lead healthy offline lives and are unfamiliar with the term, cuck is slain for a feeble man with progressivish views. | ||
And stems from the word cuckold, meaning a man whose wife is unfaithful. | ||
Yeah, it's like an insult that's like hundreds of years old. | ||
And what it means is to be a cuckold. | ||
To be a cuck is to be a cuckold. | ||
That's what it means. It means anybody who isn't progressive and doesn't embrace diversity. | ||
No, it means the spirit of being okay with being made somebody else's bitch. | ||
unidentified
|
You absolute cuck. | |
We'll be right back. Alright, welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
We have a lot to talk about here in the third hour of American Journal. | ||
We'll start with the video. | ||
Which I'm so bummed that we didn't catch this. | ||
It's really my fault. | ||
I really should have covered this yesterday. | ||
I don't know how I missed it. | ||
But we covered the story yesterday of... | ||
Gal Luft, who we showed the video of, talking about being a Biden whistleblower. | ||
Well, he's been charged as being an unregistered foreign agent because he was working for this company, the CEFC. And a little twist in this story that we didn't mention yesterday is that Hunter Biden, Joe Biden's son, And Jim Biden, Joe Biden's brother, both have worked for CEFC without registering as foreign agents. | ||
They've both done the thing that Gal Luft has been charged with a federal crime for doing. | ||
Amazing, isn't it? | ||
So this was asked to Jake Sullivan... | ||
He didn't have a good answer because there is no good answer. | ||
But let's go now to clip number five. | ||
Here's Jake Sullivan being asked, if Gal Luft is being charged for this, why aren't the Bidens? | ||
unidentified
|
Yesterday, U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York invited a man named Gao Luft for violating the Foreign Agents Registration Act by working without registration for a company called CEFC China Energy. | |
The President's son and brother worked safely with her without registration, and the President was invoked to him that he was shipped down a text message, receiving the transfer of $5 million to the Biden family. | ||
The President pledged to be met with their business partners and was consulted for a 10 percent, excuse me, I've not seen that and can't comment on it. | ||
Yeah. I will ignore that, I guess. | ||
Moving on. Okay, great. | ||
Wonderful. According to Washington Post, this is a story from the 30th of March last year. | ||
While many aspects of the Hunter Biden financial arrangement with CEFC China Energy have been previously reported and were included in a Republican-led Senate report from 2020, a Washington Post review confirmed many of the key details and found additional documents showing Biden family interactions with Chinese executives. | ||
Over the course of 14 months, the Chinese energy conglomerate and its executives paid $4.8 million to entities controlled by Hunter Biden and his uncle, according to government records. | ||
Court documents and newly disclosed bank statements as well as emails obtained on a copy of a laptop hard drive that purportedly once belonged to Hunter Biden. | ||
So again, just to wrap this up here for you, a whistleblower who worked with a Chinese company, He was going to testify against Hunter Biden and Joe Biden and discuss how he had personal firsthand experience of the corruption that was taking place within the Biden family. | ||
He fled the country because he thought he was going to be retaliated against, not allowed to whistleblow because they were going to charge him with a crime and arrest him to prevent him from speaking out. | ||
They then filed that crime, that accusation. | ||
Calling him a foreign agent for working for CEFC China Energy, which just so happens to be a company that Hunter Biden and Joe Biden's brother Jim both were paid millions and millions of dollars for representing. | ||
So they're charging this guy for a crime that the Bidens... | ||
Also did, but they're charging him to stop him from speaking out about the crimes that the Bidens were engaged in. | ||
It's like a corruption fractal. | ||
It's like a corruption Morbius loop or whatever those things are called, right? | ||
Where you're inside and outside at the same time. | ||
Where you're using the crimes that you committed to silence the whistleblowers who are going to tell people about the crime you committed. | ||
I mean, it's just... It's incredible. | ||
I mean, it's like they're twisting a pretzel of the truth. | ||
It's really something else. | ||
All right, welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
Third hour of the American Journal, Infowars.com. | ||
Infowarsstore.com is where you go to support our mission of conquering the world for humanity, robbing the globalists, Of their desired victory in forcing us all into an open-air prison camp. | ||
We are having massive success, and that's entirely thanks to you, the InfoWarriors, spreading this message, having conversations with your friends and family, telling them about what's really going on, and of course supporting us at InfoWarStore.com. | ||
We could not do any of this without you, and we thank you sincerely. | ||
For giving us the opportunity to play our part in this mission. | ||
We're going to play in the remainder of this hour after this segment the interview that we did yesterday with Ed Dowd, former BlackRock manager, who has written a book outlining the unexpected and inexplicable rise in unexplained who has written a book outlining the unexpected and inexplicable rise in unexplained deaths | ||
I think it's a very interesting interview, and I think our audience will get a lot from it. | ||
We'll post it, of course, on band.video after we air it here. | ||
I'm just wondering, in the time between, do we want to talk about transgenderism or race? | ||
You know, it's our favorite two topics. | ||
Which do we cover? | ||
Do we cover... The freaky weirdos that are castrating children? | ||
Or do we talk about the freaky weirdos that are trying to inject racial supremacy into our previously bias-free system? | ||
It's a difficult choice. | ||
Difficult choice we have to make. | ||
Let's talk about race. California Democrats push judges to make race a factor in sentencing criminals. | ||
California Democrats have proposed a bill that would require judges to consider a convicted criminal's race when determining prison sentences. | ||
Under the guidance of the California Reparations Task Force... | ||
By the way, he's been coming out with all sorts of hilarious statements like this. | ||
It's like, you're a task force. | ||
Your job is to determine the monetary amount of the suffering experienced by black people whose great-great grandparents were slaves. | ||
And they're just like, well, we've got a couple suggestions. | ||
One, stop putting black people in jail. | ||
Two, make black boys into black girls. | ||
Make little girls. Three, abort them. | ||
But if you don't abort them, change their gender. | ||
But abort them first. Like, they're coming out with all these statements of nothing to do with reparations, but do have everything to do with some sort of anti-white program where this is just seeping into everything, right? | ||
Hiring decisions. | ||
White people will have their race weighed against them. | ||
As we discussed in New Zealand and of course happening here as well. | ||
The video I helped to expose the practice. | ||
Taking race into account with medical decisions. | ||
You need life-saving medicine? | ||
Sorry bud, you're white and privileged so you don't get the medicine that'll save your life. | ||
Crazy. Just absolutely crazy. | ||
How anybody can see what's going on around the world and not recognize a pervasive, ubiquitous, constant anti-white sentiment. | ||
Really hard to figure out. | ||
Really hard to figure out. Is it really that easy for them to use little code words that just mean non-white? | ||
Diverse. They're like, look at this diverse collection of individuals and they're just all black people. | ||
Like, not even diverse black people. | ||
It's all just like people from Cameroon. | ||
It's like all just one ethnicity and they're like, it's so diverse. | ||
It's like, you just mean not white. | ||
We get it. We understand. | ||
And they're like, we must have, you know, white men too, straight white men, straight Christian white men. | ||
Like this is, everything in our society is being orchestrated to destroy those people. | ||
Is it because I'm a straight white man that I think this is weird and not good? | ||
Or is it because I'm a human being and this would be weird if it was happening to anybody, it's just only happening to straight white men? | ||
Who's to say? But when they're like, we have to support and provide money and privileges for all of the people of color, the foreigners, the non-Christians, Females, non-gender conforming, non-straight, just say non-white. | ||
Just say non-white. Everybody but the white people. | ||
Just say that you're implementing policies to disadvantage white people. | ||
Just say it. That is what they're doing. | ||
They kind of feel like they have to a little bit skirt around the issue because we are still a majority white country. | ||
Not that you know it by looking around, but In reality, once that's not the case anymore, there's no point that they're trying to get to where it's like, ah, equality, we have done it. | ||
Welcome back to humanity, white people. | ||
You're valid now. | ||
We're not going to be biased or discriminate against you anymore. | ||
That's never going to happen. | ||
There's never going to be a point where it's like, all done with that. | ||
Let's get all those policies out of here. | ||
We're all equal now. | ||
Never gonna happen. Never gonna happen. | ||
Eventually be a time where whites are 10% of the population. | ||
And it'll be like, sweetie, you're the minority. | ||
We're the majority. So we get to say the way things are. | ||
What white privilege to think that as a minority, you should have any rights at all, right? | ||
That's the place where we're headed. | ||
Obviously. Could not be more obvious. | ||
There's just another example of this where it's just like... | ||
And again, you know, it's like, well, Democrats are the real racist, I guess, right? | ||
It's just like, under existing law, a conviction or sentence is unlawfully imposed on the basis of race, ethnicity, or national origin if the defendant proves, among other things, that the defendant was charged or convicted of a more serious offense than defendants of other races, ethnicities, or national origins that the defendant was charged or convicted of a more serious offense than defendants of other races, ethnicities, or national origins or received a longer or more severe sentence as the evidence establishes that the prosecution more frequently sought or obtained convictions for more serious offenses against | ||
Or a longer or more severe sentence was more frequently imposed on defendants of particular race, ethnicity, or natural origin as specified. | ||
Long way to say that right now it is, as it should be, as it obviously should be, illegal to give people more harsh or longer sentences based on their race. | ||
Obviously that should be the case. | ||
unidentified
|
Now... We're reversing that. | |
Now it's... | ||
Well, sure, he committed the crime. | ||
Yes, he was found guilty, but he's black, though. | ||
So can you blame him? But, I mean, can you blame him? | ||
He's black. You can't hold that against him. | ||
So let him off easy this time. | ||
The white guy... The white guy is fully capable of understanding his actions. | ||
He's a full human being that must be held to account because, you know, his... | ||
His actions reflect his will. | ||
But the black people, they just don't know what they're doing. | ||
They're like animals. | ||
They can't be held responsible for their actions. | ||
It's so mean. They're trying to survive. | ||
It's not even really a joke when they're like, Democrats are the real racists. | ||
That really is the sentiment that I get. | ||
It really is like, they call you a white supremacist for just Treating black people like they are human beings that are responsible for their own actions. | ||
Sorry, black people. I think that you are just as capable of white people of not committing crime. | ||
I think you are just as responsible when you do commit crime. | ||
I think you are just as capable of living a good life, and it's your fault if you refuse to do so. | ||
Sorry. Sorry, I'm not a liberal. | ||
I don't treat you like you are incapable of making correct decisions and that when you commit crime, it's some societal impulse that you just can't control. | ||
Sorry, sorry, you have to actually do time for the crimes that you commit because everybody's equal under the law in this country. | ||
But they're trying very, very hard to change that. | ||
Yet another reparation maneuver by California. | ||
They say the laws are discriminatory against black residents because the disproportionate amount of African Americans who are burdened with child support debt. | ||
It's not their fault that they leave their poor children without a father. | ||
It's not their fault that they make decisions that lead to horrific outcomes in the people that they're supposed to love and protect. | ||
They're black. You can't blame them for that. | ||
You have to coddle them. | ||
Treat them like children. | ||
I'd be insulted. I don't know. | ||
If I'm a black person, I would be insulted by this. | ||
I'd be insulted by the idea that I'm somehow less capable of being a good person than white people and therefore need to be treated with kid gloves. | ||
And I refuse to disrespect black people by suggesting such a thing. | ||
We'll be back with that interview with Ed Dowd. | ||
Stay with us, folks. | ||
InfoWordStore.com. | ||
Here you go to support us. | ||
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Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | |
This is The American Journal. | ||
I am your host, Harrison Smith. | ||
With me today, very special guest, Ed Dowd. | ||
He is the author of Cause Unknown, The Epidemic of Sudden Deaths in 2021 and 2022. | ||
He is a founding partner of Finance Technologies, and that's spelled with a PH instead of an F, so PH, Finance Technologies, a global macro-alternative investment firm. | ||
Ed has worked on Wall Street most of his career, spanning both credit markets and equity markets. | ||
Some of the firms he worked for include HSBC, Donaldson Lufkin, and Generette, and Independence Investments. | ||
The book, again, is Cause Unknown, The Epidemic of Sudden Deaths in 2021 and 2022. | ||
It can be found on Amazon.com, and you can also go to Financetechnologies.com, and that's finance, again, spelled with P-H, so P-H-I-N-A-N-C-E, technologies.com. | ||
Thank you so much for joining us, Mr. | ||
Dowd. Great to be here, Harrison. | ||
Thanks for having me on today. | ||
Well, I'm very excited to have you on because I think your book has the ability to break through the mental barrier a lot of people have that stops them from addressing really concerning issues that really should be on the forefront of their mind, yet the mainstream media doesn't talk about it. | ||
They haven't been told to care about it, so they don't care about it. | ||
But what do you lay down in your book? | ||
Again, it's called Causes Unknown. | ||
Because I think what you do is you just stick with the numbers, the pure data. | ||
Does the data have the ability to break through to people and at least let them know there's a problem that they should be paying attention to? | ||
Absolutely. Look, the book was pitched to me last August by Gavin DeBecker, Tony Lyons of Sky Earth Publishing, and Bobby Kennedy. | ||
They thought that, you know, I arrived on the scene just pointing out all-cause mortality was rising, especially in the young in 2021. | ||
There was a mixed shift From 2020 to 2021, millennials and younger folks are dying suddenly and staggeringly statistically high signals. | ||
Not a lot in numbers, but enough to cause concerns statistically. | ||
40% excess mortality in 2021 in what's called the group life insurance cohort. | ||
These are people who work at Fortune 500 and mid-sized companies. | ||
So they came to me, and they wanted to talk about two things. | ||
The human face of this, which are the stories of the sudden athletic deaths. | ||
And these are just merely—we didn't comment on anything. | ||
We just posted the stories in the local newspapers that never made national. | ||
These types of deaths would make national back in the old days. | ||
But there were an alarming rise in sudden athletic deaths. | ||
Young people dying in their sleep, celebrities kind of dropping on stage. | ||
And we chronicled a lot of those stories. | ||
We just put them in the book, and then I wrapped in what I call the metadata, the all-cause mortality that my firm and I did in Europe is in the book. | ||
We looked at the actuary numbers in the Society of Actuaries, and then we looked at U.S. disability data, and we were able to break down and show that the employed of this country Had an alarming increase in their disability rate of around 31% starting in February of 21. | ||
And that's the employed population. | ||
The general U.S. population had disabilities rise only 8%. | ||
And what we found even most curious was there's a group called Not in Labor Force. | ||
These are people that are willing to work, able to work, but are in transition. | ||
And their disability rate rose 4%. | ||
We suspect those are people who either got fired for not taking the jab, because you remember this was mandated in firms above 100 people, and or they quit because they didn't want to take the jab. | ||
They had the best health outcome. | ||
So one of the conclusions in the book I come to was that it was detrimental to your health, statistically, to be employed in 21 and 22. | ||
That's borne out in the numbers, and that's never happened before in the country. | ||
And in December of last year, after the book came out December 13th, I was invited by Senator Ron Johnson to attend a COVID panel, and I presented these numbers, and I presented my thesis that it's the vaccine. | ||
I also said that, at the very least, this is a national security concern, because the most able-bodied amongst us are having worse health outcomes, statistically, across the board. | ||
Yeah, absolutely. It's a national security concern. | ||
It should be a concern for everybody. | ||
But again, I know there's a lot of people out there. | ||
Our audience, you know, they understand. | ||
They see the big picture of what's going on. | ||
But I would really love for this segment especially to be something that you could send to Your normie friends, for lack of a better word, people that aren't, you know, they watch the news and they take in whatever the mainstream's saying and don't really look any farther than that. | ||
This seems like something the mainstream should be covering, and it seems like eventually they will, and then people will be concerned about it. | ||
So, like, if CNN was covering this, how would they put it forward? | ||
You know, it'd be something like, statisticians are warning, there's an unexplained rise in deaths. | ||
They're not saying that, they're not covering it, but it is happening. | ||
How would you... Put it just to a normal person who they don't want to hear about vaccine deaths. | ||
They think that's all conspiracy theory. | ||
They don't want to go down any rabbit holes. | ||
But what do they need to know to get them to go, okay, something's going on here. | ||
Something is happening that we need an answer to. | ||
We don't need to give them the answer yet. | ||
Just what is the statistical anomaly that they need to be made aware of so that they can start really knowing what's going on here? | ||
Yeah, absolutely. So let's forget the cause for a moment. | ||
The numbers suggest excess deaths started in 21 amongst the young. | ||
They continue to this day. | ||
That's a smaller number. | ||
Then disabilities are on the rise. | ||
We just in the month of June reported the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics disability number. | ||
It rose 857,000 in the month of June. | ||
That's a huge number. | ||
If you look at the chart of the disabilities over time, it's a breakout chart to a new all-time high. | ||
The disabilities are on the rise. | ||
And then there's something called injuries. | ||
Or lost work time, people just chronically ill, those numbers are statistically off the charts. | ||
So lost work time went up a little bit in 2020, up a little bit in 21. | ||
This is all from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. | ||
Then it exploded in 2022 to what is a 12-13 standard deviation above a 20-year trend. | ||
That in my world is called the black swan event. | ||
Statistically, it's not supposed to happen. | ||
So people are sick. | ||
For some reason, missing work. | ||
They're getting disabled for some reason and they're dying for some reason. | ||
Forget the cost. The numbers are the numbers. | ||
We're seeing this in the U.S. We did some U.K. disability analysis, seeing the same exact numbers, same standard deviation in lost work time. | ||
So let's just pretend we're going to forget what the cause is. | ||
There's literally a pandemic right now that we have. | ||
After the pandemic was declared over a couple months ago by the WHO and Rochelle Walensky resigned and they claimed victory. | ||
But today we have alarming pandemic numbers worse than 2020. | ||
So you have to ask yourself, these are the numbers, they're real. | ||
There seems to be no interest in talking about them from our government and health regulatory authorities. | ||
Why is the question you need to ask. | ||
And why is the media silent on this? | ||
So this is a silent pandemic that's worse than the COVID pandemic. | ||
And as far as I can tell, and I said this in my book at the end, They see the data that we see. | ||
And at this point, it's a cover-up of something. | ||
You don't have to believe it's the vaccines, but it's something. | ||
And at the very least, it needs to be discussed openly and honestly. | ||
And we're going to drop a report tomorrow or the next day that analyzes the UK personal independence payment system. | ||
It's their disability system. | ||
And we found great data that goes into actual body. | ||
They assign the body system and then the cause of the claim that they award. | ||
And we're seeing off the charts, Physical anomalies in all sorts of causes, mostly inflammatory issues. | ||
And we're gonna drop this report and we're gonna need the help of doctors because the data is so devastating. | ||
The doctors are gonna have to explain why this is occurring. | ||
The regulatory authorities are gonna have to explain why this is occurring. | ||
And we're just gonna leave it at that. | ||
The way we're gonna frame it is, you all know what I think, but let's assume I'm wrong. | ||
What is it and why? Yeah, just to play devil's advocate here, is there, you know, I guess if I'm a Normian, I hear, oh, there's, you know, these extremely high rates of disability and unexplained deaths, I might say, well, of course, we had a pandemic. | ||
It was the pandemic. We're just still experiencing fallout from that. | ||
And I even find myself, you know, I've got little kids, and so they're always sick, and I find myself going, is this just the cold, or is this... | ||
The latest mutation of the COVID-grown, you know, disease. | ||
So is that a valid argument? | ||
I mean, could that be a contributing factor that, hey, we got hit by a pandemic of this new virus, and so, of course, we're going to see higher numbers in some of these things. | ||
I'm just trying to think of what the response would be, you know, initially to hearing these numbers. | ||
Of course, we have higher numbers. | ||
There was the pandemic, so that explains everything that's going on. | ||
Is that a part of it? Is it a valid guess as to what's causing these numbers? | ||
Or do you think that this has been explained away by the fact that these numbers didn't come about until long after the pandemic had slowed down? | ||
Yeah, so a lot of these numbers are presenting themselves in 2022 when we had Omicron, which is a cold. | ||
So they're devastating. | ||
And the other thing to remember is the pandemic... | ||
Came, and there was a lot of focus on the deaths in 2020. | ||
Now there's no focus on the deaths, and we have to ask the question why. | ||
These numbers, the rate of change in 2022 is so alarming, and especially, you know, I went to Australia a couple weeks ago, and I posed that their excess deaths were minus, Their total excess death, all-cause mortality, was minus 2% in 2020. | ||
It went up to 4% in 2021, but now stands at 16% excess deaths across the country in 2022. | ||
And I said to them, look, Who cares whether I'm right or wrong? | ||
Whatever your health response was in your country, it's causing 16% excess death into 2022, probably rising in 2023. | ||
So you need to ask yourself, the health response of your government was so atrocious, you're having deaths you haven't seen since World War II excessively. | ||
Forget the cause. | ||
The health response has caused more death. | ||
Whatever the global governments did, well, then you can ask yourself, well, what did they do? | ||
Well, they mandated a new experimental technology that has never been tested on humans before. | ||
Again, remember, they did animal tests. | ||
The test was you in this pandemic. | ||
Yeah, absolutely. And of course, the title of your book, again, is Cause Unknown, The Epidemic of Sudden Deaths in 2021-2022. | ||
And I know, you know, we've read articles, I don't have them in front of me, but, you know, things like Ottawa, the number one cause of death now is just unexplained. | ||
So, I mean, is this a new phenomenon, this idea that people are just... | ||
We've fallen over dead and we don't even have a reason to give. | ||
So there's just unexplained. | ||
I mean, there are places in the world where unexplained is the number one cause of death. | ||
That's unprecedented, am I right? | ||
Absolutely. And so, you know, if you notice the title of my book, it's Cause Unknown in Quotes. | ||
And around the time we were writing the book, we were trying to come up with a title. | ||
And in certain areas of Canada and the U.S., This phrase, cause unknown, was floated by the media. | ||
So we used it. It's not something that we've seen before. | ||
They also tried to float the idea of sudden adult death syndrome, which they quickly and quietly abandoned. | ||
They don't even want to bring attention to it, because by naming it, it's absurd. | ||
We had SIDS. Sudden infant death syndrome that kind of, you know, started arising around the change in the vaccine protection laws in 86 when the vaccine schedule exploded. | ||
So now we have another term called sudden adult death syndrome. | ||
And what's interesting is in the old days, I was, I was, last night I'm on Maui and there's a bunch of frontline doctors here to talk about solutions to the vaccine and kind of healing yourself from it. | ||
And I was on a panel last night and Dr. | ||
Ryan Cole talked, the question of autopsies came up. | ||
And when you die in the hospital, you really don't need an autopsy because they have all the tests. | ||
They kind of know why you died. | ||
But when you die outside the hospital, usually in the old days, an autopsy was performed. | ||
Autopsies are not being performed, and they're just listing cause unknown. | ||
And when a young person dies in their sleep, that used to be an autopsy. | ||
Now today, it's just kind of not done. | ||
And we need to start doing autopsies to really get at the bottom of this. | ||
And there seems to be this, you know, Like you said, let's create a new term to explain it away, and then they can put their own explanation on it, like climate change, cold weather, whatever they want, but they don't want to look at the root cause. | ||
Yeah, and that's one of the more absurd things that we've seen recently is them trying to explain the rise in sudden deaths by things like climate change or exercise, right? | ||
Oh, maybe they exercise too much. | ||
That's why their hearts stopped working. | ||
It would be funny if it wasn't dealing with actual massive amounts of human death. | ||
It's really not funny at the end of the day. | ||
It's just absurd. It's just absolutely absurd the way that they try to categorize this. | ||
And, you know, I wouldn't be surprised. | ||
You're right. They have stopped using this sudden adult death syndrome phrase, for one thing, as you point out, because that really admits that they know that it is going on. | ||
They gave it a name, after all. | ||
It has to be something that they're naming. | ||
But also, I think that would then make people question, well, they go, well, SADS is... | ||
Is kind of obviously BS. I wonder if SIDS is as well. | ||
Maybe they'll start asking questions about not just the COVID vaccine, but all vaccines. | ||
I mean, we're really witnessing the tantalizing evidence of what has to be the biggest cover-up in the entire world. | ||
I mean, is that overstating it? | ||
No, I said that in the conclusion to my book. | ||
I said... | ||
I purposely left out the who and the why. | ||
I wrote a section on that. | ||
It was speculation on my part. | ||
I think it was pretty good. But when I was talking to Gavin DeBacker, my editor, we said, you know what? | ||
The book stands on its own. | ||
We don't need to get into the who and the why. | ||
It just is. And at the end, I said that. | ||
I said, we didn't get into the who and why. | ||
We purposely left it out. | ||
But the numbers are the numbers. | ||
We think it's the vaccine. | ||
If it isn't, why is no one talking about it? | ||
The health authorities see what I see, and why aren't they talking about it? | ||
Well, we assumed it's a cover-up. | ||
And I said, at this point, it's a cover-up and a crime, and that's it. | ||
So usually, you know, we don't know whether I personally wasn't in the room when all these decisions were made, so I don't know whether it was competence or a plan, you know, a willful plan. | ||
It doesn't matter. At this point, it's a cover-up. | ||
So that's the crime. The crime is the cover-up now. | ||
Yeah, but of course, you know, you don't cover up something without a reason for it, right? | ||
And so often, in the political sphere at least, you know, they'll charge on the cover-up. | ||
You know, I'm thinking back to Hillary Clinton and her emails. | ||
It's like the emails weren't the real crime. | ||
That was the cover-up. The real crime was what they were covering up. | ||
So obviously, if they're... | ||
Not addressing this issue, if they're covering up or downplaying this issue, there's got to be a reason behind it. | ||
Otherwise, I mean, what would be the reason for them not reporting on all of these deaths? | ||
And again, we've seen hints of this for months now, and yet it's only getting worse, it seems. | ||
This book goes through 2021 and 2022. | ||
Does it have any information about 2023? | ||
Do we know if this trend is continuing into this year? | ||
Yeah, so we at Finance Technologies have continued to do our research and only found more alarming evidence. | ||
We put out a vaccine damage report that took a stab at estimating the economic cost. | ||
We identified three buckets, the dead, the disabled, and the injured. | ||
The dead is easy. We believe it's around 300,000 in 21 and 22. | ||
That's a $5.2 billion economic cost. | ||
Again, we just looked at lost wages. | ||
There's other costs that are way higher than that, multiples of that, that we can't measure, but they're there. | ||
Then we looked at the newly disabled. | ||
That's about $1.36 million since the vaccines were introduced. | ||
And that's about $50 billion in economic costs. | ||
And then there's something we call the injured. | ||
We got that from the Pfizer clinical trials themselves. | ||
We imputed a number from there with the adverse event number that was there. | ||
And that's the reason they wanted to hide the clinical trial data for 75 years, because when we looked at that data, it was apparent there was a safety signal in that data. | ||
They should have ended the trial and said it's not working. | ||
But they didn't. They rolled it out. | ||
So they knew in the clinical trial that this would manifest itself in the real world. | ||
And the injured are nothing more than those who are reporting chronically sick. | ||
We capture that in the lost work time data. | ||
And we estimate that number around 26.6 million Americans. | ||
This is all U.S. numbers. | ||
So about 28-plus million people in the U.S. have either died, been disabled, or injured. | ||
With some sort of manifestation and running around working or not working subpar, not disabled, but not doing well, chronically ill. | ||
And the injured is $89 billion, so a total of $150 billion in lost wages in 2022 alone. | ||
Again, lost productivity, a reallocation of resources towards the injured and the disabled. | ||
You know, the economic cost is probably approaching 500 billion to a trillion when you have the multiplier effects and all those things. | ||
Wow. Yeah, it really is staggering. | ||
And you really can't just shrug it off or ignore it when the numbers are this massive. | ||
I mean, this isn't a personal anecdote. | ||
This isn't, well, but my friend was healthy and he died, so now the vaccines are bad. | ||
I mean, this is aggregated data from various reputable sources who are saying this. | ||
It's just nobody is pointing it out except for you. | ||
And I guess this would just be step one, right? | ||
This is the first step in hopefully getting some sort of justice for what's gone on. | ||
Because as you pointed out, people want to move on. | ||
They go, you know, and there's even people writing articles going, sure, we made some mistakes, but forgive and forget. | ||
Let's just move on. | ||
The pandemic's over, so forget all the stuff we put you through, you know, throughout all of it, you know, saying you weren't human and denying you hospital care. | ||
Just the past is the past. | ||
Let's move on. | ||
I don't want to move on. | ||
I know you don't want to move on. | ||
We have to have some sort of justice, if for no other reason than to stop them from doing this again. | ||
So do you see your book playing that part and laying the groundwork and giving the foundation for what will eventually become some Nuremberg 2.0 type trial where justice is brought to the people? | ||
Because to me, it seems like that's what you need first is the data to show that there is a problem. | ||
Then you can start diagnosing it. | ||
Was that part of writing this book, is that this would be step one and what would eventually be justice for what's been done to us? | ||
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Yes. | |
So the book I wrote for my loved ones, because a lot of my loved ones got vaccinated. | ||
And so I wrote it for them, trying to convince them. | ||
And all of them are on board now. | ||
And I wrote it for your loved ones, trying to convince them that something's going on. | ||
And look, let's just step back for a second. | ||
We know a couple things about the vaccine at this point. | ||
It doesn't prevent you from getting COVID, and it doesn't stop transmission. | ||
So it doesn't work. So if you don't believe that the vaccine has a safety issue, why would you continue to take something that doesn't work? | ||
And we're hearing things from doctors that this is dose dependent. | ||
So the more boosters you get, the more likely you are to injure yourself at some point. | ||
So why take a product that doesn't work baseline? | ||
So this book is kind of a Paul Revere message. | ||
I'm on a horse running around handing out pamphlets. | ||
And the book has been spreading word of mouth. | ||
I did get on Tucker Carlson before he was fired. | ||
I've been on Patrick.David. | ||
I've been on some podcasts, but, you know, the message still needs to get out there. | ||
And at the very least, if you don't believe me, the thing doesn't work. | ||
So why would you risk taking something that doesn't work? | ||
And the claim that they say is, well, it prevents serious hospitalization. | ||
Well, there's no study that shows that. | ||
That's just a marketing statement. | ||
And additionally, at this point, COVID is a cold. | ||
So why do you need to take a vaccine to prevent a cold? | ||
And it doesn't work. | ||
So this is a clarion call to everyone. | ||
The good news is, I think the book continues to have some waves. | ||
It had a first wave of sails, it trailed off, and now there's a second wave. | ||
So the book is getting out there. | ||
Our continued research is getting out there. | ||
Wall Street has been paying attention to our research. | ||
They may not admit it, but my LinkedIn profile, I can look at some statistics. | ||
All the Wall Street banks are looking at my profile. | ||
Then they're going to our website, Finance Technologies, where we have the humanities projects. | ||
It has all our data. | ||
We are the axe on this issue. | ||
And at the very least, there's something horrible going on in the global populations that no one seems in any authority wants to talk about. | ||
Yeah, and it seems like, I mean, we have the reason we ascribe to it, the reason we think it's the vaccine, obviously, and if you disagree with that, fine, but now it's incumbent on you to come up with the real reason that you say it's happening, because so far it's unexplained. | ||
We think we have an explanation. If you think our explanation is lacking, then you've got to come up with an alternative one, because you can't just not have an explanation for what's going on. | ||
There has to be some sort of cause behind this, and I'm glad you brought up Wall Street, because That was actually my next question. | ||
And again, just in case people are just tuning in, the book is Cause Unknown, The Epidemic of Sudden Deaths in 2021 and 2022. | ||
It can be found on Amazon, Cause Unknown, and at financetechnologies.com, which is finance spelled with a P-H. So P-H-I-N-A-N-C-E, technologies.com. | ||
That's a website where you can find this book and a lot of this information as well. | ||
Because, yeah, my question was, like, how long can they ignore this? | ||
I mean, obviously, they're ignoring this trend now, but there's got to be a certain point where it's having a tangible financial impact on the markets, and they can't just ignore it anymore. | ||
Are we approaching that, I think you used the phrase before we started filming, event horizon? | ||
I mean, is that an event horizon that we're approaching? | ||
There's two event horizons. | ||
Vaccine awareness, we also do a lot of economic work. | ||
We have early cycle indicator models. | ||
My partner Carlos wrote a book, Economic Cycles, Debt and Demographics, and he comes from the hedge fund world of Europe. | ||
He's a PhD in physics and finance, and URI, my other partner, has a PhD. | ||
We track the economy. | ||
We're projecting a deep recession. | ||
It's already started. Our economic cycle indicators are through the floor showing a recession coming as bad as the S&L crisis in Q3, Q4, Q1. So there's going to be an economic It's going to be a lot of chaos in the next six to 12 months. | ||
It's going to get even more strange than it is now. | ||
A lot of people look at the stock market and say, well, the stock market's recovered a little bit from last year's sell-off. | ||
Well, to understand what's going on in the stock market, you have to understand it's been driven by five stocks. | ||
And that's a bad indicator going forward. | ||
The average stock is down on the year, and this is not a new bull market. | ||
We're about to see, I think, into the fall, a horrendous sell-off in stock markets. | ||
And that's when people will start to really, you know, shake off the spell of normalcy that they've been under for a while. | ||
Sort of a silver lining, I guess, to what seem to be some storm clouds in the future. | ||
And I do want to talk about that a little bit because, you know, obviously you have a very good handle on the financial markets. | ||
And, I mean, clearly something is happening. | ||
Countries, rather, are dropping the dollar. | ||
There's a lot of gold hoarding going on. | ||
I understand they just started pumping money back in. | ||
They're maybe worried that they... | ||
We've overcorrected with interest rates and maybe we're going into deflationary cycles now. | ||
I mean, is this the real trouble that people have been, you know, talking about for a while? | ||
It seems like we constantly get little stopgap measures to hold off the flood. | ||
Is it eventually going to come due and is that happening by the end of the year? | ||
I mean, what's your prediction on the overall stability of the financial and, I guess, physical world? | ||
Let's go back a little bit to 2019. | ||
Those of us in the financial markets before we were aware of COVID were monitoring a global economic slowdown. | ||
And in 2019, it appeared that we were going to have, what many of us have been looking for, you know, for the last 14 years, kind of an end to what we call the everything bubble. | ||
And it was starting to occur. | ||
And then... Miraculously, out of nowhere in 2020, the system was saved by COVID, because the system needs constant credit creation, and credit creation is essentially the same as money printing. | ||
When you print money, you create debt. | ||
So COVID came, and the Fed Did 65% increase in the money supply, the most unprecedented increase in money supply ever in 2020. | ||
The politicians then did huge deficits spending around the globe. | ||
Other central banks did the same thing. | ||
And the system was saved for a couple of years, but that unleashed inflation, unfortunately. | ||
So what they did is they Now undertaken the fastest, sharpest rate increase, rate of change we've ever seen in the history of the Fed, and we've seen some bank failures show up, and now we're seeing deflation on the horizon. | ||
So they overcorrected and printed too much money during COVID, and now they're going to overcorrect this way and bring the global economy down with a choking of credit and money supply destruction, which we've already seen. | ||
The money supply As measured by M2 on a year-over-year growth rate went negative starting in November of 2022. | ||
That hasn't happened since 1930. | ||
And every time it's happened, it's been associated with banking crises. | ||
And sure enough, we saw Silicon Valley Bank disappear, Credit Suisse blow up, First Republic blow up. | ||
And the Fed did some emergency measures that have seemed to have given people some sort of hope. | ||
That hope is temporary. | ||
It's going to continue again in the fall. | ||
This is something I think is beyond their control, everyone's control. | ||
The issues are still lurking out there. | ||
You gotta remember that just, you know, three months ago, bank failures, the biggest bank failures ever were occurring. | ||
People have short attention spans. | ||
They think everything's fine. It's not fine. | ||
The Fed hasn't fixed anything. | ||
Yeah, and that is one of the things. | ||
It's like the biggest bank failing in the world, and like two weeks later, people have totally forgotten about it and don't even care. | ||
But obviously, stuff is still happening behind the scenes. | ||
And of course, if there's one thing we know about our globalist masters, there's no crisis that they can't take advantage of to accrue more power unto themselves. | ||
But I don't know how they spin the rise in deaths. | ||
I don't know how they spend the excess deaths except to blame it on long COVID or something absurd like that. | ||
This is something they really have to eventually contend with and come up with some reason it's happening. | ||
So far, they have absolutely nothing. | ||
Again, the book is Cause Unknown, The Epidemic of Sudden Deaths in 2021 and 2022 by author Ed Dowd. | ||
The website is finance, spelled with a P-H, financetechnologies.com. | ||
And of course, Cause Unknown can be found on Amazon. | ||
Now, is this book, is it data heavy? | ||
Is it a lot of information people are going to be presented or does it have a narrative aspect to it? | ||
For people that are interested in this phenomenon, what is it that they're going to find in your book? | ||
Is it fully explained? | ||
Is it a lot of just, here's what's happening, you know, you be aware, but we don't have any reason. | ||
Who's this book written for? | ||
Is it written for the everyday layman to understand what's going on? | ||
Yeah, I wrote it for the Everyday Layman, and there's a lot of information in there. | ||
We QR code everything so you can check the links and check the data links. | ||
Every story that we put in there has a QR code so you can go to the original story on the website. | ||
So it's a quick read. | ||
You can get through it in a day, day and a half. | ||
It has a narrative to it. | ||
I talk a little bit about my background, talk about how I think and why I came to this study of this phenomenon. | ||
I've been asked many questions like, you're not a doctor. | ||
When I was in Australia, Sky News interviewed me and the person said, you're not a doctor, why are you qualified to talk about this? | ||
I said, you're right, I'm not a doctor. | ||
I'm a capital markets expert with stock picking background. | ||
We follow trends. We analyze trend change. | ||
We analyze statistical anomalies. | ||
And my job was to get ahead of the curve and identify these trend changes before everyone else. | ||
Well, guess what? That fits in well with what I'm doing here because excess deaths, excess disabilities, injuries are nothing more than a graph. | ||
It looks like a stock chart and they're breaking out. | ||
So that's what I did on Wall Street. | ||
I'm doing it now. And that's why I'm qualified to talk about this. | ||
Yeah, absolutely. And thank you so much for turning your talents towards this really all-important event going on, this cause. | ||
I can't think of anything more important, especially for people who have in their own lives experienced this. | ||
I mean, I can't imagine having what seemed to be a young teenage kid or something that just doesn't wake up one day. | ||
I mean, There have got to be so many people out there with questions that have gone unanswered and hopefully at least by presenting the data and starting to ask questions, starting to draw attention to this, we can maybe get to the bottom of what's been done to people because there really are a lot of victims out there that may not even know they've been victimized. | ||
They just think this is a random happenstance. | ||
So this really is a powerful thing that is necessary for people to get a grip on what's actually going on in the world. | ||
Again, Cause Unknown, The Epidemic of Sudden Deaths in 2021 and 2022. | ||
It's a book available on Amazon and at finance, spelled with a P-H, financetechnologies.com. | ||
I just want to thank you so much, Mr. Dowd, for coming on and sharing this with us. | ||
And hopefully, hopefully you're wrong. | ||
Hopefully, you know, we get to the two years from now and everything's great, but I doubt it. | ||
And thank goodness we have people such as yourself sounding the alarm bell so we can all be prepared for what's to come and aware of what's going on around us. | ||
So thank you so much for coming on, and thank you for what you've done for the movement, really. | ||
Well, thank you for your work. | ||
I've been following you for years. | ||
Big fan and continue doing what you're doing. | ||
Appreciate you. Well, thank you very much, folks. | ||
That's Ed Dowd, the author of Cause Unknown, The Epidemic of Sudden Deaths in 2021 and 2022, now available on Amazon.com. | ||
Finance Technologies, P-H-I-N-A-N-C-E Technologies.com is where you can go to find them. | ||
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