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I didn't want to be right. | ||
I really didn't want to be right. | ||
Turns out I was right, and a hitherto secret Israeli intelligence document admits it. | ||
Americans, Canadians, Brits, Europeans. | ||
If you've been enjoying scenes like this over the past few weeks... - - Well, get ready for a whole lot more. | ||
A leaked document penned by the Israeli Ministry of Intelligence reveals all. | ||
Their preferred option, according to this document, is the full, forcible and permanent transfer of the Gaza Strip's 2.2 million Palestinian residents. | ||
Initially to Egypt's Sinai Peninsula, and then to guess where? | ||
Countries in Europe, and especially the Mediterranean, Greece, Spain, which will be mandated to absorb and settle this vast quantity of people, along with Canada, which will also carry out the absorption of the population of Gaza and its settlement within the framework of the permissive immigration policy. | ||
The document lays out how an aggressive public relations campaign will be ramped up in the Western world to promote the transfer plan. | ||
One which does not incite or vilify Israel, but which calls on the West to step up and take the refugees as a humanitarian necessity to prevent mass civilian deaths in Gaza. | ||
What could possibly go wrong now? | ||
Statistically, 57% of Gazans have a positive view of Hamas, which, whatever you think of Israel, is a terrorist group that slaughters innocent civilians to achieve its political aims. | ||
So that's another 1 million-plus people minimum heading to the West who support an Islamic terror group. | ||
But is the document authentic? | ||
Well, unfortunately for us, it seems to be completely legitimate. | ||
First reported on in English by 972mag.com, which isn't some random website. | ||
It's a prominent news outlet in the region run by seasoned journalists, both Israelis and Palestinians. | ||
The report was also first released in Hebrew by partner site LocalCall, which also verified the authenticity of the document. | ||
A source in the intelligence ministry confirmed to LocalCall and Plus 972 that the document was authentic. | ||
That it was distributed to the defence establishment by the ministry's policy division and that it was not supposed to reach the media. | ||
Does the existence of the document mean that the forcible transfer of 2.2 million Gazans to Canada, America and Europe will go ahead? | ||
Not necessarily. The government doesn't have to explicitly follow the plan. | ||
But given Benjamin Netanyahu's previous behaviour, it's a distinct question. | ||
Although it was subsequently scrapped. | ||
BB reached a deal with the UN back in 2018 to send 16,000 West African migrants to Western countries instead of deporting them back to their homelands. | ||
Only last month, Israel responded to migrant riots in Tel Aviv. | ||
By vowing to deport all African migrants, every single one, are they all heading our way too? | ||
We're just gonna lie back and take it as Israel dumps its problems on us once again. | ||
Exports its ethnic blood feuds to our streets. | ||
Streets that are already boiling over with rage and resentment as a direct result of the vast quantities of migrants from that region that we've already imported. | ||
Turning back to the document in more detail, it recommends that Israel act To evacuate the civilian population to Sinai during the war, establish tent cities and later more permanent cities in the northern Sinai that will absorb the expelled population, and then create a sterile zone of several kilometers within Egypt and prevent the return of the population to activities residences near the border with Israel. | ||
At the same time, governments around the world, led by the United States, must be mobilized to implement the move. | ||
It also emphasises how the Biden administration, which has not so far overtly said that Palestinian refugees will be settled in the US, will be a key player in overseeing this massive population transfer to the West. | ||
The document also says that the United States should be enlisted in the process to exert pressure on Egypt to absorb the Palestinian residents of Gaza, and that other European countries, particularly Greece and Spain as well as Canada, should help absorb and settle the Palestinian refugees. | ||
The Ministry of Intelligence said the document was not yet formally distributed to US officials but only to the Israeli government and security agencies. | ||
It also makes clear that the Palestinians will not be allowed to return. | ||
Don't forget, both Jordan and Egypt have made it very clear that they'll refuse to take in any Palestinian refugees for any length of time other than on a very temporary basis before they're quickly dispatched to Western Europe, Canada and the United States. | ||
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You're watching The American Journal with your host, Chase Geyser. | |
Watch live right now at band.video. | ||
Welcome back to the American Journal, folks. | ||
I am Chase Geyser, your host today. | ||
As always, there is so much news to cover as the New World Order publishes daily on every major media outlet except this one, of course. | ||
It's plans for the total takeover of the world and all of our rights. | ||
Everything seems to be going swimmingly for those who seek to catalyze World War III. But I've been doing a little investigative reporting on my own. | ||
Believe it or not, when I go home, I don't just eat a Hot Pocket and take a nap. | ||
I submitted a FOIA request on InfoWars, a Freedom of Information Act request on InfoWars, and I received a very interesting response last night in the mail. | ||
It was written on October 26, Hillary Clinton's sacred birthday. | ||
Dear Mr. Geyser, it says, this acknowledges receipt of your Freedom of Information Act request to the FBI. The FOIPA request number listed above has been assigned to your request. | ||
Below, you will find information relevant to your request. | ||
Please read each paragraph carefully. | ||
Please be advised, the FBI will neither confirm nor deny the existence of such records pursuant to FOIA exemptions B6 and B7C. The mere acknowledgement of the existence of FBI records on third-party individuals could reasonably be expected to constitute an unwarranted invasion of personal privacy. | ||
This is our standard response to such requests and should not be taken to mean that records do or do not exist. | ||
As a result, your request has been closed. | ||
And then, of course, they listed the subject here as Alex Jones at the top of the document. | ||
But there's actually something quite funny about this. | ||
I went back and I reviewed my request to make sure. | ||
I didn't submit a FOIA request on Alex Jones. | ||
I submitted a FOIA request on InfoWars. | ||
And then they mischaracterized what the request was about so that they could close the case without sending back any details of their investigations or documents or records on their espionage of this network. | ||
So I sent them a request. | ||
It was about five bullet points asking for any information they had on Infowars as a network, as a company. | ||
They said, oh, sorry, we can't tell you anything that we have about Alex Jones. | ||
So, of course, I'm going to appeal this and try to get more information, but I just thought it was so interesting that they endeavored to mischaracterize my request so that they could use that as an excuse not to share whatever information that they have. | ||
Meanwhile, Vice President Kamala Harris has been suggesting that AI-enabled mis- and disinformation is an existential threat to democracy. | ||
Of course, the funny thing being, aren't intelligence operators responsible for mis- and disinformation? | ||
Haven't people been engaged in mis- and disinformation for centuries, if not millennia? | ||
Do we not already constantly face mis- and disinformation? | ||
And why is it that AI is suddenly an existential threat to democracy when we know that the intelligence community, that the deep state, has been actively against our constitutional republic for quite some time? | ||
Vice President and Artificial Intelligence Czar Kamala Harris, oh my god, they made her the AI Czar? | ||
When did that happen? They railed against AI-enabled myths and disinformation and pushed for protections against potential harm during a speech at the U.S. Embassy in London. | ||
I'm surprised that speech wasn't overrun with refugee protesters one day before she's due to represent the U.S. at the U.K.'s AI Safety Summit. | ||
President Biden and I believe that all leaders from government, civil society and the private sector have a moral and ethical and societal duty to make sure that AI is adopted and advanced in a way that protects the public from potential harm and then ensures that everyone is able to enjoy its benefits. | ||
See, they saw what happened with DARPAnet. | ||
When it became the internet, they released it to the public thinking that it would be just this cool little communications tool, this cool little networking tool. | ||
They didn't realize that the people would actually build the internet based off of the infrastructure that they released. | ||
And they're learning from their mistakes because what happened was we had these massive social media platforms. | ||
We had massive growth of networks like this one, like Infowars. | ||
And all of a sudden, freedom of speech and freedom of the press was taken to a whole new level. | ||
One that they couldn't readily control. | ||
And so they sought to help the big tech corporations monopolize, conglomerate, into a few major corporations that ran the internet. | ||
And they did so in an effort to ensure that they could control the narrative. | ||
So the internet exploded. | ||
It grew rapidly over the course of time. | ||
10 to 20 years. And then all of a sudden you had your Facebooks and your Googles and your YouTubes and your podcasters, alternative news sources. | ||
And so what did they do? They sought to ensure these companies would go public so that their founders could make billions upon billions of dollars. | ||
And once they reached IPO status, that's when the intelligence company started. | ||
Comes in because you have to have a board of directors when you take a company public. | ||
The CEO no longer runs his or her own company after it goes public because it has to be run by a board of directors in the name of protecting the interests of shareholders. | ||
Because you don't own your company anymore at that point. | ||
The public owns it via their investments in the stocks. | ||
And so when you have a board of directors being ushered in, that's the opportunity for the intelligence community to come out and say, all right, how are we going to infiltrate this board to get the information that we want, to plant the information that we want, to control the direction of these companies. | ||
And that's why we saw awesome platforms like Facebook and Instagram and YouTube and Google, some of the most groundbreaking, amazing platforms that Some of the most amazing groundbreaking tools in the history of inventions or discoveries by mankind turn from these open source feeling, | ||
innovative, powerful weapons of mass information to state-sponsored State-endorsed, state-controlled media outlets. | ||
Now they are controlling your search results. | ||
They're doing things like censoring presidential candidates, if not Donald Trump. | ||
They certainly did this to Tulsi Gabbard. | ||
They're doing things like taking people off of the platforms, accusing people of being domestic terrorists, monitoring people for their social media activity, adding them to lists. | ||
And they're going to use artificial intelligence to do the same thing. | ||
They are learning from their mistake of a free internet, which wasn't actually a mistake. | ||
It was a beautiful thing for humanity. | ||
But they perceive it as a mistake because they almost lost control of all information, a monopoly that they'd had forever. | ||
That's why they hate Elon Musk so much because he re-privatized a public Twitter into what is now X. And even though it's not a perfect approach to freedom of speech, it is drastically improved from what it was to what it is. | ||
And they hate him so much, they're constantly suing him, whether they're not suing... | ||
Twitter, they're suing him personally, whatever. | ||
They're coming after him to try to ensure that he doesn't have the control over his company that he rightfully does. | ||
They're trying to accuse him of anti-Semitism. | ||
He's got to be in a lawsuit against the ADL as a result of it because they want to make sure that they control the narrative around anti-Semitism in the face of World War III, which is designed and planned to be started with this conflict between Israel and Hamas. | ||
And so with artificial intelligence, they see an Internet 2.0. | ||
They see the next round of a technology that's out of control that can empower the people against them. | ||
And so they're going to try to regulate it as much as possible while they use it in the abusive way that they claim they are trying to protect us from. | ||
We're going to cover more great news in the next segment. | ||
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Stick with us. We'll be back on the other side. | ||
Somebody needs to do a mash-up. | ||
This song with Paranoid. | ||
You know, you can hear it. It'd be so good. | ||
Right? It'd be so good. | ||
Welcome back to the American Journal, folks. | ||
I love me some Ozzy Osbourne. | ||
This was the first song that gave me goosebumps when I bought a CD on my portable CD player in, like, fifth grade. | ||
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I remember listening to this and thinking, wow, this is so cool! | |
It was a yellow Sony, and every time the bus hit a bump in the road, it would skip. | ||
You guys remember the good old days? | ||
Crazy, crazy stuff. So much going on, I don't even know where to begin. | ||
Let's... Going to U.S. infant mortality rates. | ||
So definitely concerning. | ||
U.S. infant mortality rates are rising for the first time in 20 years. | ||
The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, CDC, admitted Wednesday the infant mortality rate in America rose by 3% in 2022 for the first time in 20 years. | ||
We know it's not COVID as a virus that's causing this because if you look at any of the studies any of the research even that which is published by the government itself we know that this illness doesn't negatively impact those under the age of 18 and it certainly doesn't negatively impact those who are infants So, don't allow them to make any claims about the pandemic causing an increase in infant mortality. | ||
This seems to me to be something else altogether. | ||
The first thing, of course, that comes to mind is women who are getting vaccinated in vitro, or excuse me, in utero, while they're pregnant, and potentially the vaccination of infants themselves. | ||
So, CDC data shows the infant mortality rate increased for the first time in 20 years in 2022. | ||
Experts are baffled. | ||
Oh, what happened? | ||
This is the first we've seen this rate go up in about two decades. | ||
More deep dive and drill down will be needed to understand the reasons. | ||
There is a bigger picture here. | ||
So, University of Maryland infant mortality researcher Mary Thomas told CBS News it's definitely concerning given that it's going in the opposite direction from what it has been. | ||
The demographics seeing the largest increase in infant mortality rates were white Americans, Native Americans, all males, and babies born at 37 weeks or earlier. | ||
Interesting. Considering whites and Native Americans received the experimental COVID-19 vaccines at much higher rates than black or Hispanic Americans, the jab may have played a role in this disturbing trend, you think? | ||
Of course, doctors and other medical professionals tried sounding the alarm about potential links between COVID shots and maternal and infant health during the height of the pandemic, but were largely silenced by big tech sensors, otherwise known as deep state sensors, and mainstream media information gatekeepers Though I do dispute the characterization as mainstream, we have to stop referring to these outlets as mainstream. | ||
When was the last time you saw somebody throw a Wall Street Journal or a New York Times newspaper on somebody's front step? | ||
When was the last time you went over someone's house and they had either Fox or CNN on the TV? I'm convinced that the only place that major sort of mainstream legacy media outlets are even consumed is like the airport. | ||
When you're sitting there and there's no other option, or maybe if you're sitting at a doctor's office, I don't think anybody actually watches these platforms anymore or reads these articles anymore. | ||
I think we follow influencers that we trust. | ||
We listen to platforms like Infowars. | ||
We listen to platforms like Podcasters. | ||
My wife and I, instead of watching Tucker like we would have on Fox when he was there... | ||
We pulled up the Theo Vaughn interview that he did. | ||
It was great. And more informative and much more insightful and more in-depth. | ||
And it was longer and it was funny and it was entertaining and it was true. | ||
And it wasn't corporate narrative pumping. | ||
This is the future of the way that information is going to be consumed. | ||
And the funniest thing about it is... | ||
The left realizes this and they try to ride the wave. | ||
They try to create their own podcast. | ||
Wasn't there like a Barack Obama podcast and there was a Michelle Obama one and there was a Hillary Clinton one? | ||
And nobody wants to listen because they can't turn off the fake narrative, the focus group soul that they have created, the clone of the human they once were that they have made to be politically correct. | ||
So, when they go and they try to do the independent platform thing, they don't do it in the way that is the reason that it's been so successful for other people. | ||
The reason Tucker has been so successful on this independent platform approach that he's made... | ||
It's because Tucker is able to be more Tucker, more real when he's independent than when he's working within the parameters of a major legacy corporation with shareholders and a board of directors. | ||
But when Hillary Clinton starts a podcast, she's just going to say all the same stuff that she could say on MSNBC or CNN. Because her narrative is the narrative. | ||
So when the left's like, oh, we don't understand why our talk show hosts don't take off. | ||
We don't understand why we haven't been successful on talk radio for the last 30 years. | ||
We don't understand why nobody listens to our podcasts. | ||
It's because if they want to listen to that crap, they might as well just go to MSNBC or CNN. But then you have right-wingers that go independently. | ||
And I wouldn't call Joe Rogan a right winger, but he's not a leftist. | ||
So anybody who's not a leftist, I'm just going to refer to as a right winger for the sake of argument. | ||
You have the Joe Rogans go independent. | ||
You have the Theo Vons go independent. | ||
You have the Tucker Carlson's go independent. | ||
You have the Alex Jones's go independent. | ||
He was maybe the first guy to really do it. | ||
And it's awesome because there are no rules. | ||
You can actually be yourself. | ||
And it takes off. I mean, Howard Stern was awesome when he was just on the radio. | ||
And then as soon as he sold out to XM, he became a corporate shill. | ||
What'd you say, Matt? Oh, I was going to say that your initial question, you know what you're getting at here, I think is answered really well in one of Noam Chomsky's essays, What Makes the Mainstream Media Mainstream. | ||
And there's a paragraph, a few paragraphs in, where he starts talking about the mainstream media. | ||
He says there's another sector of media, the elite media, sometimes called the agenda-setting media, because they're the ones with the big resources... | ||
When you look at the New York Times or the Wall Street Journal, they've got resources that definitely are disproportionate to the amount of influence they have in terms of readers, views, things that you look at in terms of metrics that you would judge any other outlet by. | ||
A lot of outlets that are downstream of them that are critiquing them and are deconstructing what they're saying actually have a bigger economy and tend to have larger spheres of influence. | ||
But if we were to go on, he states that they set the framework in which everyone else operates. | ||
And that right there is the main reason why we still call them mainstream media. | ||
Right? They're the ones that typically get the news either from Reuters or from AP, right? | ||
And those are the two major networks that employ a lot of freelancers and have the resources to get stories, put them out, and they adhere to a certain style guide that's dictated by elites. | ||
We're talking about the language they're allowed to use and everything like that. | ||
So if we're not actually consuming the information directly from them, they are characterizing the whole entire conversation. | ||
We're sitting here on InfoWars responding to what they say. | ||
So in a way, they are the white in the chest. | ||
Right. We're pointing them out for all their BS. Yeah. | ||
Very interesting. Stick with us, guys. | ||
More on the other side. Welcome back to the American Journal, folks. I am Chase Geiser, your host today. | ||
Got a couple of great guests coming on the show today. | ||
Probably take some calls at some point, too. | ||
But more news to cover before then. | ||
Peloton's turnaround plan has faltered as anti-obesity drug craze soars. | ||
Peloton crowd basically has moved on to Ozempic. | ||
I don't know if you have heard the craze. | ||
I have heard the craze. I have friends and family who are participating in the craze. | ||
I'll probably have to intervene and do an intervention here soon. | ||
Because I'm hearing a lot of reports from the crew that this Ozempic craze isn't all it's cracked up to be. | ||
That's a headline right there. | ||
There's some major health risks associated with this, but let's go into this Peloton story. | ||
Shares of Peloton Interactive Incorporated tumbled in pre-market trading following a drop in revenue and ongoing difficulties in maintaining its subscriber base during the last quarter. | ||
It appears Chief Executive Barry McCarthy's turnaround plan is faltering as America's anti-obesity craze, courtesy of GLP-1-based weight loss drugs such as Magovi and Monjaro. | ||
Made in Nova Nordisk and Eli Lilly is an easier weight loss solution than hopping on an overpriced bike with a giant iPad while being yelled at by an instructor for a 20-minute workout. | ||
You know, I have a Peloton. | ||
I got it on about half a dozen times since I bought it two years ago. | ||
I actually really like it. | ||
But the problem with this Ozempic craze, in my opinion, is just aside from the negative health consequences of injecting your gut with something that makes you not eat, is that it doesn't allow you to develop the discipline and the character that you need in order to stay healthy. | ||
So many of these people, as soon as they get off of it, are just going to go back to their old habits and they're going to become obese again. | ||
I understand If you're somebody who's morbidly obese and your doctor's like, look, you're going to die if you don't do something about this and you tried and you just can't do it. | ||
Maybe you have an eating disorder or you have some sort of a psychological issue where you have to eat for comfort. | ||
I don't know. I understand if you need to do something radical in order to solve a radical problem. | ||
But if you're just trying to lose like 20 pounds and you're doing Ozempic instead of getting on a bike, it's like, come on. | ||
In my opinion. And the benefit of doing things like working out, something I'm obviously an expert in, is also the mental capacity thing of it, right? | ||
So I was a very competitive cross-country runner when I was in high school. | ||
I haven't been running since then because I have a bad ankle. | ||
But one of the things I miss the most about running was the psychological component of it. | ||
If you're going to go do a three-mile run, After about the first half mile, you enter a psychological zone of pure catharsis. | ||
It's similar to being on air or playing an instrument or playing in any sport. | ||
Or there's nothing else on your mind except for what you're experiencing right in any given moment. | ||
Like when I'm talking to you guys, I'm not thinking about my bills. | ||
I'm not thinking about taxes. | ||
I'm not thinking about arguments I'm having with my wife or problems like that or anything like that. | ||
I don't think about any problems that I have while I'm on air. | ||
So for three hours every day, I get to experience complete catharsis. | ||
Of course, I'm thinking about the problems of the world. | ||
And it's the same thing when you're engaged in a workout routine. | ||
It's why people who are in perfect shape continue to work out even if they could, you know, work out half as much because it's almost like a religious experience where for an hour to three hours every day you hit a psychological stride that resets you in a healthy way. | ||
You develop the discipline of getting up earlier than you normally would in the morning in order to get your workout hammered out before the workday begins. | ||
And you teach yourself how to do things that you don't actually want to do anyway. | ||
And when you can go in and get a shot in your gut instead of developing the discipline to get on a bike or whatever, you're missing out on the character development which you can do. | ||
There's never going to be a drug that makes you a better person, that makes you a smarter person. | ||
Maybe there are drugs that can make you operate like a smarter person. | ||
Of course, we have Brain Force Ultra, which isn't a drug, but it's a supplement that doesn't actually improve your intelligence, but it does help with things like focus and cognitive function. | ||
But you can't make yourself a better human being by consuming any external product. | ||
You can make yourself healthier, I suppose, but not better. | ||
But by doing something that requires character to improve your health, like exercise and workout, you've got so many more benefits beyond just the health benefits. | ||
My dad's a consultant. | ||
He was recently at a consulting event, sort of exclusive for a certain minimum level of success. | ||
Among consultants, he said he noticed that he was one of two fat people there out of 50 people. | ||
He's like, I was like the only fat guy there, Chase. | ||
I was talking to him on the phone about it. | ||
And all these people who were making hundreds of thousands of dollars a year, millions of dollars a year in the private sector, the unknowns, not the ones that are corrupt, not the ones that are the elite, not the ones involved in big tech and all that BS, not the political... | ||
Industrial complex, but the people that are actually starting like HVAC businesses that started with just doing residential areas and small towns and now they've expanded to major cities and municipal projects, people like that typically are fit these days and it's because there is a correlation, there is a link between individual discipline, that which is required in order to get yourself in good physical condition, and the success that you'll have in your life. | ||
And we can talk all day about how bad the economy is, and it is bad, folks, and it's going to get worse. | ||
We can talk about how bad inflation is, and it is bad, folks, and it's going to get worse. | ||
We can talk about bankruptcies being up and mortgage rates being 8% all day long. | ||
But the fact of the matter is, the United States is still among the top three, if not the best place in the world to do business, and it's not really close. | ||
And so if people are finding ways, though it's a struggle, to be successful in places like England or Russia or Australia, despite all their regulation and their mixed economy, which is really just social, but they're finding a way to be successful entrepreneurs in Italy or Germany, then there's definitely a way to do it here in the United States. | ||
But in order to pull it off, you're going to have to reach another level of competence. | ||
If you want to be incompetent, then just run for office. | ||
Because obviously, competence isn't correlated with success there. | ||
Or at least it's the wrong kind of competence. | ||
But that's my concern about this losemic stuff. | ||
Maybe it wrecks your thyroid. | ||
Maybe it creates issues with your gut-brain barrier that causes permanent brain damage. | ||
I'm hearing rumors of that. But the real problem with this Ozempic craze, in my opinion, is that it is giving people a scapegoat, an excuse, another out, not to do the mental work required in order to become a better person. | ||
So you can manifest a body for yourself that is not overweight with a drug, but inside you're still a fat guy. | ||
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You know? Which I have no problem with. | |
Everybody's got their own ailments. If you were to look at my lungs, you'd probably see black tar. | ||
Everybody's got their different thorn in their side. | ||
I'm not judging people who are fat. | ||
I'm just saying, if you don't do the work to fix the character problem that's causing the problem, then you're not really overcoming the issue. | ||
I mean, they've made drugs for alcoholism, for example, where you take the drug, if you have a drink, you're just going to puke all day. | ||
But it's not solving the reasons why a person is an alcoholic. | ||
And so when they stop taking the drug, they just start drinking again. | ||
Those drugs are really only useful if you're trying to go through the withdrawal period, which is actually a pretty short-lived for most drugs. | ||
It can be really painful for a few days or a week or two weeks. | ||
After that, it's all mental. | ||
No drug can solve your character problem. | ||
No drug can erase original sin. | ||
No drug can fix evil. | ||
You're just going to have to do that on your own with your own conviction and your God. | ||
In the meantime, make sure you visit infowarsstore.com and look at some of the supplements that we have that can help you on your journey to making yourself a better person. | ||
We can't solve all of your problems, but we can give you the tools you need to do the work you need to do to become the best version of yourself. | ||
Visit InfoWarsStore.com today. | ||
Check out Rainforest Ultra at 60% off. | ||
Some of our other great products at 40% off. | ||
These are top-selling products at the lowest prices ever. | ||
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For you to enjoy and experience, be the reason we're selling here at InfoWarsStore.com. | |
More on the other side. Welcome back to the American Journal, folks. | ||
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I am Chase Geyser. | |
Talk about how Peloton is losing money because why get on a bike when you can just get a shot? | ||
Americans love their drugs. | ||
I remember when the drugs Americans loved were the cool ones. | ||
I remember when Americans like to smoke a little weed, like to do a little cocaine, try to make a little bit of money, like to try acid, see another dimension. | ||
Now the drugs we take are like, hey, I don't want to be fat anymore. | ||
What happened to the spirit of the 60s? | ||
The liberation of the mind? Oh yeah, that's right. | ||
It got MKUltrad. Right. | ||
The government ruins everything. So, more on this Ozempic craze. | ||
Healthline reports that Ozempic is making life miserable for some people. | ||
Why? Some people are claiming life on Ozempic is miserable. | ||
Well, drugs like Ozempic and Wagovi can help people lose weight. | ||
They can also alter the way food tastes and even impact your ability to derive pleasure from activities you enjoy. | ||
The potential to make life boring and miserable may be an unwelcome side effect of drugs like ozempic and wogovia. | ||
I just loved eating food. | ||
It was so much fun. Now I'm not hungry anymore. | ||
I'm miserable. The medication could alter the way food tastes and may even impact your ability to derive pleasure from activities you enjoy. | ||
Side effect has the potential to damage your relationship with food in the long term. | ||
These articles are so... | ||
They're just so informed from critical theory. | ||
Like, you can almost just see the bleeding Marxist influence. | ||
Experts say you should consider the long-term impact before choosing any medication as a weight loss tool or before choosing any vaccine, in my opinion. | ||
I don't want to say anything about that. Fox News reports that Ozembek and Wogovi may be linked to stomach paralysis and other digestive issues in a large-scale study. | ||
Those taking diabetes and weight loss meds are three times more likely to have condition. | ||
Researchers claim Novo Nordisk said patient safety is top priority. | ||
They always say patient safety is top priority, and then you find out that their blood products gave you AIDS. Or their ADD medication give you depression or suicidal thoughts. | ||
Or their SSRIs actually made you not only want to kill yourself, but kill a group of other random innocent people first. | ||
Popular weight loss drugs like Wigovia and Ozempic could increase the risk of stomach paralysis. | ||
I don't know what stomach paralysis even is, so hopefully this article actually shows us. | ||
But I can't imagine how I'm paralyzed from the stomach end. | ||
As well as several other serious gastrointestinal conditions, according to a study published Thursday in JAMA. This was the first large epidemiological disease-related study to examine these adverse effects in non-diabetic patients using the drug specifically for weight loss per a mass release from the University of British Columbia. | ||
The risk was linked to all semaglutides, a class of medications known as GLP-1 receptor agonists, including Ozempic, which was of course originally prescribed for diabetes management. | ||
And Wigovi is prescribed for weight loss and a couple others. | ||
Stomach paralysis, officially known as gastroparesis, prevents the nerves and muscles in the stomach from moving food into the small intestine, which keeps digestion from occurring, as described on Cleveland Clinic's website. | ||
Okay. Popular weight loss drugs like Wigovi and Ozempic could increase the risk of stomach paralysis as well as several other serious gastrointestinal conditions, according to a study. | ||
In addition to stomach paralysis, the drugs were linked to a greater risk of pancreatitis. | ||
That's inflammation of the pancreas. | ||
And bowel obstruction, which prevents food from passing through the small, large intestine. | ||
I started taking Ozempic and now I don't give a shit. | ||
Yeah, we know, because you're swearing on air. | ||
Oh, sorry. I apologize. I didn't know the S-word still counted as a swear word. | ||
Everything else has become okay over the last 20 years, except for saying the S-word while we broadcast on. | ||
It's okay. We'll just blame it on the Ozempic. | ||
Blame it on the Ozempic, man. That's why I'm so skinny. | ||
I'm skinny fat. So I want to go into a little bit on this new sort of Big Brother thing. | ||
Do you guys remember a couple of years ago, These teens that murdered this Uber Eats driver. | ||
We're going to go ahead and run clip six and then talk about that a little bit. | ||
unidentified
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It's shocking video of a carjacking as it happens. | |
The victim is an Uber Eats driver and he's hanging on to his car for dear life as it speeds away. | ||
Done. So that was an Uber Eats driver. | ||
A couple of teenagers got in his car, and they tried to force him out of the car, but he tried to stay in his car so it wouldn't be stolen. | ||
And at some point in the exchange, one of the students hit the gas on the car while the door was open as they were trying to force him out while he was holding on to the inside of the car. | ||
They took off, and the open door smashed into, like, a barrier off the road, and it slammed into his head, killing him, I think, instantly or very soon after there. | ||
So the 14-year-old and the 15-year-old will not be released from juvenile detention until they turn 21, a D.C. Superior Court spokesman said. | ||
So they were tried as children and basically sentenced to juvenile detention until the age of 21 after they murdered that guy after trying to steal his car. | ||
Which some don't think is enough of a sentence for that crime. | ||
Obviously it's a hard decision when determining whether or not to try someone as a child or as an adult. | ||
Especially when they're several years under what we consider adult. | ||
But I'm pretty sure that that 14 year old and that 15 year old knew exactly what they were doing. | ||
They knew how dangerous it was and they did it anyway. | ||
I'm not sure that seven or six years in juvenile detention will develop in them a conscience. | ||
So while they're getting a little bit of juvenile detention, basically permanent violence summer camp until the age of adulthood, we see today that the D.C. mayor has implemented a Big Brother digital vehicle tracking program amid rising car thefts. | ||
D.C. mayor Muriel Bowser and the Metropolitan Police Department unveiled a new taxpayer-funded program that uses digital tracking tags to find stolen cars more easily. | ||
This comes as Bowser's failed progressive defund the police policies have sparked a crime tsunami across the nation's capital. | ||
On Wednesday morning, Bowser's office stated that tracking tags will be available to residents who live in areas with the greatest increase in vehicle theft. | ||
MPD will install the device in vehicles, allowing them to track stolen cars via a mobile device easily. | ||
Of course, most new cars today already have that sort of tracking technology. | ||
This year, the nation's capital has recorded a surge in violent crimes. | ||
Metro Police Department crime stats show vehicle tests have soared 101% this year. | ||
That's over double. With a total of 5,916 in 2023. | ||
That is so many. | ||
Especially since so many of the cars today, it's stupid to steal them because they can be shut down or tracked. | ||
This is up from the 2942 car thefts in 2022. | ||
Also, homicides hit the highest level in two decades in the first six months. | ||
Not even government officials are safe. | ||
Several lawmakers and staffers have been robbed. | ||
Here's the quote from Bowser. | ||
Last week, we introduced legislation to address recent crime trends. | ||
This week, we are equipping residents with technology that will allow MPD to address these crimes, recover vehicles, and hold people accountable. | ||
Bowser continue, we have had success with similar programs where we make it easier for the community and NPD to work together, from our private security camera incentive program to the wheel lock distribution program, and we will continue to use all the tools we have and add new tools to keep our city safe. | ||
So, just another excuse to increase surveillance. | ||
Anytime anything bad happens, the government always seems to find a way to use it as an excuse to usher in new tracking, surveillance, abuses of our liberties. | ||
I would like to see them catalyze a society in which people do not even feel compelled to commit crimes. | ||
But by doing that, they would have to acknowledge that their Marxist critical theory philosophy is not conducive to a society of peaceful progress or productivity or success or class transition. | ||
They have to lean in and double down on all of the ails that have made our society come to this place of struggle and strife. | ||
We see that the policies manifest in the likes of San Francisco have resulted in basically a zombie apocalypse where one can walk around after the sun goes down and see an army of ragged mutants drooling and wandering slowly as they nod off from an opioid epidemic of imported fentanyl. | ||
And other drugs. And if you want to ruin your life and take fentanyl and do drugs, I don't care, whatever. | ||
But when our society actually catalyzes it by the terrible decisions it makes, when we import lethal poison from our enemies at a profit both to our pharmaceutical companies and to the CHICOMs, and then we totally disregard the needs or weaknesses or vulnerabilities of our people, | ||
And then when those people struggle, when we use it as an excuse to increase taxes on those making ends meet, but just barely, as an excuse to criticize those who are patriots of xenophobia, those who believe in the West with racism, | ||
those who believe in God with bigotry, Then we've got a problem that isn't really sustainable, and they're trying to expand this philosophy from places like Los Angeles and San Francisco to the whole world. | ||
It was what Twitter was doing before Elon Musk took it. | ||
It's one of the reasons why he claimed on Joe Rogan's podcast, he made the decision to purchase it. | ||
We're going to cover some more news in the next segment. | ||
Make sure you stick with us, folks, and visit Infowarsstore.com. | ||
Be the reason we're still on the air. | ||
More great stuff coming over the next two hours this morning before the great Alex Jones is live on the Alex Jones Show at 11 a.m. | ||
Central. Climate denier, racist, Nazi, and anti-Semitism are words that have been exhaustively misused to psychologically beat people into a submission of shame. | ||
It is a human control technology that works on many people. | ||
When you point out the facts which expose the man-made global warming theory as a hoax, you are called a climate denier or a science denier. | ||
We are expected to trust the science even if it doesn't scientifically add up. | ||
The group mind has been conditioned to look down upon those who question the official narrative. | ||
And the word denier or denial has been made into a curse. | ||
This deceptive wordplay, along with the term hate speech, both stem from the Holocaust denial trials of the 1980s. | ||
In 1983, the founder of the Canadian Holocaust Remembrance Association, who was a Holocaust survivor, filed a private complaint against German-born citizen Ernst Zundel before the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal. | ||
In 1984, the Ontario government joined the criminal proceedings and Zundel was charged of spreading false news by publishing the book, Did Six Million Really Die? | ||
The Truth At Last. | ||
He was not making claims that the Holocaust did not happen, just that it did not happen as we were told. | ||
The main argument was simply challenging the number six million. | ||
Many others have worked out the math and concluded that six million would have been impossible, based on multiple logistical factors. | ||
The charge against Zundel alleged that he knowingly published a false statement intended to stoke racial intolerance. | ||
He was found guilty by two juries, but was acquitted by the Supreme Court of Canada in 1992, who ruled it was a violation of the guarantee of freedom of expression under the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms. | ||
But in 1995, Ewald Althans got three and a half years imprisonment in Germany for asking the same question. | ||
From a logical perspective, discussing observable reality should not be so emotionally offensive. | ||
But Zundel was a fan of Hitler and was surrounded by extreme neo-Nazis, so there was no sympathy for his persecution. | ||
And the term Holocaust denier became the absolute worst thing anyone could be charged with. | ||
Zundel left Canada and moved to the United States. | ||
In 2003, Germany issued a warrant for his arrest. | ||
U.S. authorities arrested him for violating immigration rules and deported him to Canada, where he was tried, found guilty, and given the maximum sentence of five years in prison for violating the Volkswehr-Hetzung law in the German penal code, which bans incitement of hatred. | ||
This quickly evolved into the term hate speech, and those paying attention could see that this would soon be used against anyone the government wanted to silence. | ||
The Zionist government, who funds and operates Hamas under the Mossad maxim, by way of deception, thou shalt do war, is openly calling for genocide of all Palestinian people under the banner of their god. | ||
Are we still bad people for asking logical questions based on observable facts? | ||
The number six million has been ritually used by Zionists since their official beginning in the late 1800s, decades before the Holocaust. | ||
It obviously means something. | ||
Six million is a six followed by six zeros, and so it can represent 66. | ||
Sixty-six is also two-thirds. | ||
The Hebrew prophet Zechariah wrote that two-thirds of the nation of Israel will be cut off and die. | ||
Many believers of biblical prophecy believe that this mass blood sacrifice is necessary in order for their Messiah to return. | ||
The Zionists seem to be no friend of the Jewish people. | ||
But by simply showing this information, many of you are triggered into thinking that I am an anti-Semite, a racist, or even a Nazi. | ||
And yet all I am doing is reporting on the unbiased scientific inquiry that people have had for decades in the pursuit of truth. | ||
Mind control is a real threat, and we are all affected. | ||
Reporting for InfoWars, this is Greg Reese. | ||
Welcome back to the American Journal, folks. | ||
I'm Chase Geiser, your host today. | ||
And for the next 30 minutes or so, we are going to have an awesome guest with us. | ||
Ian Crossland. He's a TimCast co-host and a musician, co-founder of Minds.com, a platform that we at Infowars proudly and happily use every day for all of our hosts and our network. | ||
I highly recommend that you check him out. | ||
Follow him on x.com at Ian Crossland. | ||
Ian, it is an honor and a pleasure to be with you again, man. | ||
How are you doing? Oh, awesome, dude. | ||
Thanks for having me. Absolutely, dude. | ||
I don't know if you remember, but I had you on my podcast a couple of years ago. | ||
We had a great chat. How could I forget, dude? | ||
And are you going to be in the studio on Monday? | ||
I'm going to be on Timcast. Oh, yeah. | ||
Yeah. Awesome. So we're going to finally get to meet in person, dude. | ||
unidentified
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Excellent. I'm so glad. | |
I checked my schedule. Our schedule had been mislabeled. | ||
I thought you had already been here, so this is great. | ||
Oh, yeah. It's perfect. Yeah. | ||
Well, hopefully I wasn't supposed to be there. | ||
No, I got the flight information from you guys. | ||
I'm really excited to come out and meet you. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah, for sure, dude. | |
It's going to be hot. So, you're one of my favorite voices on the internet because you take such a kind and macro approach to how you frame things. | ||
Sometimes I see your tweets at 2 in the morning, and it's so prescient in the zeitgeist. | ||
And there aren't a lot of voices that are hyper-zeitgeist, spirit of the times. | ||
Everybody's really specific, especially in the political space, about why this policy is hypocritical or what this person did seven years ago with this company and this contract. | ||
We get lost in the details of what's going on that we often don't take that sort of 30,000-foot view and see sort of like the state of humanity's soul. | ||
And I feel like you do a really good job of capturing that. | ||
unidentified
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I tend to think in patterns. | |
I think that's why. Like, I see shapes and patterns when I'm considering ideas and behaviors. | ||
And, like, often if I see somebody doing something, I'm immediately... | ||
Concerned with why they're doing it. | ||
And I'm thinking of the contingencies, like what would have caused that behavior? | ||
I'm thinking about their childhood. | ||
I'm thinking about what And this translates all across the board. | ||
It translates to video games when I'm playing them. | ||
I'm thinking about the next move and the next 60 possible moves and how other ways could I have gotten to where I'm at for future games when I'm replaying the game. | ||
So in politics, it's nice because I can depersonalize and I don't take as much personally. | ||
I can kind of see the pattern of behavior. | ||
They say like, oh, violence and hate and corruption erupts and then there's a revolution and the new revolutionaries take over and then they become violent and hateful and then another revolution comes up to get rid of them and like, I just don't want that to happen again. | ||
Yeah. So let me bring this question to you this way. | ||
Imagine I was a nine-year-old kid and I asked you whether or not everything's going to be okay in America. | ||
unidentified
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How would you respond to that? | |
Define okay. Man, I'm nine. | ||
I don't know. Well, things are going to be up and down. | ||
Yeah. But you can make the best of your life. | ||
Yeah. So, do you think that... | ||
Because I don't know if it was like this for you, but when I was growing up, And I'm sort of assuming that this was sort of the zeitgeist for everyone. | ||
There was this major push, like you can be whatever you want, follow your dreams. | ||
I've been watching a lot of old Disney movies with my two and a half year old daughter. | ||
And there's definitely an emphasis in the old stuff, like the Cinderella's and the Snow White's and things of just never giving up on your dream. | ||
Anything's possible as long as you believe in it. | ||
Do you think that's still true? | ||
Or is that dream becoming more and more difficult or less and less possible? | ||
unidentified
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Well, it's not always going to look like the way you envision it, but you have to believe it will become real, and then you have to be diligent and work towards it. | |
Things don't just happen. | ||
You've got to sacrifice, like, for me, I sacrifice eating sweet foods. | ||
I cut sugar out of my diet. | ||
I couldn't be a singer if I kept it. | ||
unidentified
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No, I decided to bypass it. | |
My diet is like a science now. | ||
I don't enjoy cake. | ||
I don't eat cheese. I like sugar. | ||
I guess like is kind of a vague term, but I've had to sacrifice that aspect of my life, eating sugar, in order to pursue a career in music, for instance. | ||
Yeah. A lot of achieving your goals and your dreams requires immense concentration and, I said it before, diligence, but like consistent work, yeah, discipline. | ||
Yeah, that makes a lot of sense. | ||
So have you noticed any other differences since you cut sugar other than just your performance getting better? | ||
unidentified
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Yeah, my cuts heal faster. | |
They don't swell. I have a bleeding disorder. | ||
I noticed that when I did the keto diet, I stopped bruising. | ||
unidentified
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Man, I stopped getting allergies. | |
I used to be real allergic to pollen, I was told. | ||
And then when I cut the sugar out, I can breathe in the pollen. | ||
I can feel it kind of tickling, but when I drink water, it feels fine. | ||
I don't get the sneezes anymore because it was the swelling from the sugar. | ||
It's the sugar. There's no more swelling in the cuts. | ||
The skin heals rapidly. | ||
I love it. There's probably other great things that have come out of it too. | ||
I don't have a sugar addiction anymore. | ||
Yeah. What do you think is worse for you? | ||
Smoking a pack of cigarettes a day or eating as much sugar as you want every day? | ||
unidentified
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Sugar. Well, that's tough. | |
Probably sugar. And I bet together, combined, it's extremely synergistically dangerous. | ||
For sure. For sure. | ||
That is so crazy. | ||
One thing I noticed, too, when I did the keto diet, I have floaters in my eyes, right? | ||
So if I look quickly one direction, I can just see all this crap fly across my field of vision. | ||
Have you ever had that or noticed that when you cut sugar, that goes away? | ||
unidentified
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I didn't notice it with the sugar going away, but I do know the floaters. | |
And one thing that melts those is sun gazing, if you've ever done that before. | ||
Just staring at the sun? Not really staring. | ||
The easiest way to do it is when it's low to the horizon and you turn your face towards it and you let it into your eye. | ||
Don't focus on it, but you just kind of let it wash over the back of your eye or the retina. | ||
It feels like your eye is working out. | ||
But you'll notice it'll melt the floaty stuff. | ||
Really? How did you figure that out? | ||
unidentified
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It just happened one day. I was sun gazing and I realized they were disappearing in my eye. | |
Wow, that is amazing, man. | ||
So how many years have you been co-hosting Timcast now? | ||
It seems like you've been on a minute. Probably four. | ||
unidentified
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Before we go to that, I want to specify about sugar. | |
I think that word sugar gets misused because glucose is sugar and you need glucose to survive. | ||
Yeah, that's the danger is this aspartame, high fructose, all these weird new sugars. | ||
That's a big part of it. So just saying sugar is kind of vague, and people keep reminding me about that. | ||
But anyway, to answer your question, about four years, I think. | ||
How's it going? Do you love it? | ||
unidentified
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Three, four years? I love it. | |
It can be stressful, but I just took a few weeks in Miami to kind of clear my head. | ||
And a lot of this stuff that's happening in the Middle East was like, oh, it's so overwhelming to watch this stuff and talk about it and think about it. | ||
But then I was doing tactical training with Luke Rutkowski from We Are Change. | ||
And it was like, you know, I don't want to walk around being afraid of people. | ||
And I realized doing the tactical training, I don't have to think about being afraid anymore because I don't think about it anymore. | ||
I'm integrating the abilities into me so I can react in the situation. | ||
It's like calming that I've done the training. | ||
It's kind of the same way with being on IRL. Knowing all this stuff and seeing it is stressful, but once it's in there, I don't have to worry about it as much because it's already integrated into my reactive skills. | ||
Yeah, absolutely. | ||
So the stress you mentioned is more pertaining to just sort of burying your head in the weeds of current events and just consuming how bad things are exclusively, right? | ||
Is that what you mean? Yeah. Yeah, for sure. | ||
unidentified
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Burying the head is the way, but also overindulgence causes a lot of stress. | |
So I've had to look away from some of the graphic stuff, because firstly, I don't know if it's from this war or from another war. | ||
And I also don't know if it's artificial intelligence or if it's propaganda of some sort. | ||
So I'm like, I don't want to write it into my brain code right away. | ||
I don't know. It's a mixed bag. | ||
Like, do you witness the horror? | ||
Do you allow your brain to be subject to it? | ||
Or do you protect yourself from it without burying your head in the sand? | ||
This is just the most stressful stuff about this kind of job. | ||
For the most part, it's really, really fun. | ||
Last night I was talking to Tim and thinking, if I retired, what would I do in my life? | ||
I would do this. I'd do the same thing I'm doing now. | ||
I love it that much. Mm-hmm. | ||
Yeah, absolutely. So what are your thoughts on it about witnessing all this horrific imagery and stuff? | ||
So I've noticed that if I get a little too entrenched, I need to just take a break for a few days. | ||
So I don't really look at the news at all over the weekend. | ||
And I know the weekend is traditionally a slower news cycle, but I come in on Monday morning To get ready for the show. | ||
Hopefully on time. And that's me looking at the news for the first time since Friday. | ||
And that really helps. Also making sure that you do fun stuff that you enjoy. | ||
One of the things that... | ||
I was watching the Alex Jones show yesterday. | ||
And he's got so much going on. | ||
He's got so much stress. | ||
I just... I was thinking to myself, I wish that guy could just go relax and have fun and have a beer with his buddies or something. | ||
I hope he does stuff like that. | ||
I don't know him well enough to say whether he does or not. | ||
Because it's so important to unwind. | ||
And when you're fighting a war, whether it's a real war or an info war, it's so important not to forget what you're fighting for. | ||
That's why we have leave for soldiers in combat. | ||
They can go away for a couple of weeks and then come back to the front. | ||
We'll talk more about that in the next segment. | ||
We're cutting a break right now. | ||
Make sure you guys visit Infowarsstore.com and be the reason we are still on the air. - Welcome back to the American Journal, folks. | ||
We have a great guest with us for this segment. | ||
Another guest coming up in the second half of the hour as well. | ||
Ian Crossland is a musician, co-founder of Minds.com, and your favorite co-host of TimCast. | ||
I highly recommend you check him out on all things social media. | ||
Make sure you tune in to TimCast next Monday. | ||
I will be on the air in person. | ||
Looking forward to that. So, Ian, we got off at the end of the last segment talking about, I don't know, just sort of balancing being entrenched in current events and how corrupt and sad and violent the world is with remembering what you're fighting for. | ||
Did that resonate at all with you? Yeah, I've been praying a lot. | ||
unidentified
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I'm kind of like, what do I do? | |
Because before I was like, how can I help prevent The next war and maybe we'll never do war again like that really I really grew up with that when I saw the Berlin Wall come down and my dad was like it was this feeling of like we did it we finally did it you know this this hundred year Cold War thing is this like war versus the communist revolution of the Soviets from 1917 versus the American the liberal economic order it's been going on for like 100 years and it's like it was cold for a while it was hot now it was Russia was involved in this it's exploded into other but anyway Can I prevent it? | ||
And now I'm starting to wonder, like, maybe it's just it's all planned out, man. | ||
Maybe this is all just part of some grand story and all you can really do is your best and, like, document and give, like, a roadmap of how to be a better person for when people rebuild. | ||
And I know that our voices are heard. | ||
Like, the Syria, the war that never happened in Syria was because the outcry. | ||
People were refusing to partake. | ||
They let Obama know and they were like, all right, the people are going to riot if we do this, so we're not going to do it. | ||
So there is that. And we can change it. | ||
But also, you know, it can be overwhelming to think, like, why aren't I doing enough? | ||
Why isn't it working? And now I'm just trying to, like, you know, give my best chance at wisdom and, like, observation. | ||
And I feel a little better. | ||
And the prayer, you know, it helps. | ||
I actually will think words instead of say them. | ||
I'll think, like, God, what can I do? | ||
And I'll get an image of me, you know, running or working out or... | ||
God told me to climb a mountain. | ||
I was like, what should I do? It said, climb a mountain. | ||
I prayed to Jesus once, because you can like pray to like visages of God, like the image of whatever you think it is through. | ||
And it was like, go surfing. | ||
So it's like, get healthy, you know, get out there, experience nature. | ||
I think it's something maybe a lot of people can do. | ||
It's personal for everybody, but that was the advice I was getting. | ||
Man, that's awesome. Pray to Jesus and he told you to go surfing? | ||
unidentified
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Yeah, he's like, go surfing. | |
I heard his voice sounded cool too. | ||
Yeah. It's got that like, that echo, just go surfing, surfing, surfing. | ||
Yeah, very clear. | ||
unidentified
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It was powerful. Like, very like, almost like, not hollow, but like, oh, you know, you gotta surf now. | |
It's like what I think Jesus would have sounded like, I think. | ||
Yeah, yeah. | ||
So when you say that we're part of a, like a big, like there's this big plan going on, are you referring to like God's plan or are you referring to a new world order, globalist sort of conspiracy type plan? | ||
unidentified
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Literally God's plan. | |
That's what I was considering, that this whole like, This is really no time. | ||
Things are in motion constantly, so humans built this concept of time to coordinate motion, but it's just happening. | ||
I mean, there... | ||
I can't imagine that the globalist banking system, what I mean by that is the liberal economic order banking system based out of Switzerland from the Bank of International Settlements that kind of oversees the Federal Reserve, the Bank of England, the Bank of Australia, that they would want a nuclear holocaust. | ||
I don't think they want to annihilate the surface of Earth. | ||
Again, like 12,800 years ago after the great flood that wiped out Atlantis, like that reset things. | ||
And maybe it did make a few people very, very wealthy and powerful, those that maintain the knowledge of irrigation and data like mathematics, and maybe they still had the secrets of electricity because you hear about like Zeus who could throw lightning. | ||
Yeah, that dude had electricity. Some of the people in the Bible, Lucifer was the light bringer. | ||
Did they have electricity? God's angels had swords of flaming fire. | ||
Did they have blowtorches? This old tech, I feel like, was preserved somehow. | ||
But I just don't think that these bankers, and maybe they're more than just bankers, but that they would want a nuclear holocaust. | ||
That doesn't make sense. Maybe it's more of just a localized land grab, and people want control of the region, and the bankers are like, oh, crap. | ||
But maybe they all live in underground bunkers and they're like, yo, we're going to reduce the population by 85%. | ||
This is going to heal the earth, maybe. | ||
But more on that, I'm starting to believe that maybe there is some sort of grander plan and we're just playing, we're part of it. | ||
Like I'm talking about like cosmic. | ||
Right. So do you think that this is the first time that society has ever been this technologically advanced or do you think that we've been here at least once before? | ||
unidentified
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If I had to guess, I would say this is the most advanced it's ever been. | |
But I do think that before the flood, at the end of the Younger Dryas, there's evidence that comets exploded over North America, peppered the North American glacial continent, caused a catastrophic global flood, wiped out all the megafauna in North America, smeared sand up into Africa. | ||
If you look from Google Maps, you can see the smear coming off into the West. | ||
I think they had electricity and radio, even, maybe, that they were able to Because they circumnavigated the globe. | ||
They had that statue of Atlas carrying the Earth on her shoulder. | ||
Atlas, the king of Atlantis. | ||
You see pyramids all over Earth. | ||
This ancient technology, like the pyramids, how they cut these rocks. | ||
But it's like the really old stuff is really well designed and cut. | ||
Technology we can't explain. | ||
And then you find technology like the Baghdad battery, where they have these clay pots filled with a vinegar or an acidic substance with an iron rod wrapped with copper wire to create an electrical charge. | ||
Ancient electricity. | ||
Yeah, I think the pyramids were used in sort of like a Tesla, Nikola Tesla way to wirelessly light up the city at night. | ||
I think that it was just projecting electricity, static that way. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah, they were probably really well lit, and they were capped with gold, which is a superconductor. | |
The king's chamber inside the Great Pyramid is made of like this, I think it's basalt, maybe? | ||
I don't know. I know that they're made from limestone, though, and limestone's a good conductor, too, right? | ||
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Yeah. The pyramid's limestone, but the king's chamber's granite, I think. | |
And it's ancient. I think that was from the ancient culture. | ||
And these Egyptians came and they buried it with this pyramid because they were like, well, fuck that. | ||
I don't want to remember the old ways. | ||
Let's cover it up. I don't know. | ||
I think the pyramids are much older than the Egyptians. | ||
I think the Egyptians found them. | ||
I think they were probably constructed before the Yungadarias issue. | ||
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The Egyptians certainly defaced the Sphinx. | |
Yes, the Sphinx too has all that water erosion and there hasn't been rain there for like 10,000 years or something like that, so it doesn't make sense that it would have that water erosion. | ||
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They found it, man. Yeah. | |
I'm currently, well, I don't want to talk to you, but I've been writing scripts. | ||
I love Atlantis and I love the idea of ancient technology that they have like Tesla tech. | ||
I don't know, man. Maybe they caused the comet to explode over North America and accidentally wiped out the surface. | ||
It's just tough to tell. You know Randall Carlson, right? | ||
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You guys have had him on the show. No, we've never had him on IRL, and I would love to. | |
And I do know who he is. I just saw an interview with him. | ||
Did you see from like four months, three weeks, four weeks ago where they're talking about this plasma technology? | ||
Yes. Where they're like, oh, dude. | ||
I don't even want to begin to... | ||
You have to ask Randall Carlson about what happened to humanity around the Younger Dryas thing. | ||
He might tell you in person. I don't think he likes to talk about it on air, but I think he would be very fascinated to have a conversation with that. | ||
I actually don't know him. I just know someone who knows him. | ||
Put me in touch. Yeah, I'll see what I can do for sure. | ||
But fascinating, fascinating stuff. | ||
Fascinating guy. Where can people find you and follow you and engage with your voice? | ||
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At Ian Crossland. Anywhere on the internet. | |
Hit me up. X is a really good platform. | ||
I'm really interactive there and I do spaces on X. So I think X right now is the best. | ||
You can hit me up on Minds too. | ||
Mm-hmm. Awesome, man. | ||
It's been an honor and a pleasure to have you on. | ||
Thanks for popping in for a couple of segments. | ||
I know that you're a late night person and that this would constitute early for you. | ||
So I appreciate you getting out of bed and coming to talk to us. | ||
I'll meet you next week. I'm looking very much forward to it. | ||
In the meantime, folks, make sure you visit InfoWarsStore.com and check out our awesome deals. | ||
We got Brain Force Ultra at 60% off. | ||
It's one of my favorite products. Be the reason we're still on the air. | ||
And don't think of it as an expense. | ||
It's not. It's an investment in yourself. | ||
Be sharper, better, faster, stronger. | ||
Welcome back to the American Journal, folks. | ||
I am Chase Geiser, your host today. | ||
We have a very special guest up with us for the remainder of the hour today and more news in the third hour. | ||
And we'll be taking your calls probably at the end of the hour as well. | ||
Michael Seifert is the CEO of Public Square, which is a marketplace app you can use to easily shop with brands that share your values and at the same time support local and American-owned businesses. | ||
Check out Michael on X at real Michael Seif, that's S-E-I-F, and his website is publicsquare.com. | ||
Michael, it's an honor and a pleasure to have you on the American Journal this morning. | ||
How are you today, sir? I'm fantastic. | ||
It's good to be here. Thanks for having me. | ||
I'm glad we finally got it worked out, man. | ||
Sometimes it's hard to get that first date in the books, but we're together. | ||
It's good to be. I'm a big fan of your show, and it's been a wild ride the past few weeks. | ||
I'm glad we got this in, too. Yeah, absolutely. | ||
So tell me a little bit about the story of Public Square. | ||
What inspired you to get involved in this project? | ||
Well, for a decade, I've watched as corporate America has been swallowed up by globalists and progressive authoritarians that We're good to go. | ||
What would happen is that we'd have a company that we knew and trusted and loved and some classic American brand. | ||
And then all of a sudden they would embrace progressive virtue signaling. | ||
They would cancel Americans. | ||
They'd censor you. They'd silence you. | ||
They'd close your bank accounts. | ||
And then we're left wondering where the heck can we go for services that will refuse to act in such a manner. | ||
So, finally, COVID was the straw that broke the camel's back for us. | ||
Watching the government's response to COVID and how businesses actually became agents of the state in canceling people if they did not get the vaccine or the mask mandates, that drove us insane. | ||
And so we decided to finally create a solution that would allow us to push back. | ||
And so we actually put a list on a piece of paper of 22, 23 businesses in our local community of San Diego, California, That we knew respected our liberties. | ||
They were not going to trample upon our rights. | ||
They loved the country, this constitution and the values that it protects. | ||
So we felt proud of supporting them. | ||
Then I started sharing that list with a few friends, discovered that they actually would love that sort of list for their own community. | ||
And we thought, well, what if we bring this into a digital environment and businesses could actually join the list by affirming the principles of the list? | ||
We could create a pretty neat online interactive community that would help patriots vote their values with the power of their wallet. | ||
And that was about almost three years ago now that I originally had that idea. | ||
That was January of 2021. | ||
Today, we are the world's largest marketplace of anti-communist, anti-woke, anti-tyrant businesses. | ||
These are businesses that make our communities special. | ||
And we have over 70,000 vendors on our platform now that have all been vetted in alignment with our core values of the platform. | ||
We have over 1.6 million consumer members on the platform as well. | ||
And it continues to grow at a tremendous speed because Americans are hungry to not just boycott, but also move their money somewhere positive that they can feel proud of supporting. | ||
It's pretty cool. So was this your first entrepreneurial venture or do you have a background in this sort of thing? | ||
I've always loved coming up with ideas and building things. | ||
I built a non-profit to a fairly significant scale. | ||
Before this, I was also the marketing director for a private equity group that would actually empower small businesses to continue growing in the San Diego County area. | ||
And so I had a lot of exposure growing gun stores and plumbing companies and an amusement park. | ||
And so learning how to speak the language of small businesses and help them increase their footprint in their local community was what I was doing before this. | ||
So this kind of made a lot of sense. | ||
And it's been amazing to witness now the way in which the parallel patriotic economy is growing in force, because it's not just me or not just our team, but it's 70,000 other entrepreneurs that are actually putting their values out there and saying, if you are tired of Bud Light, if you're tired of Target, if you're tired of these authoritarians enforcing their DEI and ESG agenda on you, you have other options. | ||
And we're here to present the largest compilation of other options that have ever existed. | ||
So tell me a little bit about how the app works from a consumer basis. | ||
Do you have to download the app or can you just go to the website? | ||
Just tell me a little bit about the model of what it's like to use this platform. | ||
So if you go to publicsquare.com, so if you head to publicsquare.com, you will see that you can actually enjoy the entire experience without ever having to download the app. | ||
We didn't want to rely on the app stores, so we actually have really pressed in and built a fantastic web experience. | ||
We do have a presence on the App Store or Google Play as well, so if you'd like to download the app, you can. | ||
You can search Public Square and you'll see the first thing that pops up for you, America's Marketplace there on iOS or Android. | ||
And that's awesome. | ||
We love that experience for folks. | ||
We have about 50-50 in terms of usage on the desktop versus on the apps. | ||
And it's very simple. | ||
It's free to sign up. You do not have to pay anything. | ||
There's no premium option that we try to get you into. | ||
It's totally free for the consumer. | ||
For the business, it's free as well. | ||
You can sign up your business. You get vetted by a research team that's happy to partner with you throughout that process. | ||
We generally have about a 24-hour turnaround time if a business joins the platform at publicsquare.com. | ||
And then you're live on the platform to enjoy connecting with consumers or businesses that share your values and would love to support you. | ||
We make money in a few primary ways. | ||
Number one is we sell subscription advertising packages. | ||
So this is not where we have to sell consumer data in order to make money. | ||
That's not how this works. Businesses will basically pay for features. | ||
So you can pay for a push notification to be sent to users. | ||
You can pay for featured tiles, different parts of the experience. | ||
We also have the ability to share in transaction rates. | ||
So if transactions are conducted through the platform, we take a success fee on that. | ||
And then finally, some of these brands we actually own. | ||
So, for example, where we see there are holes in the market and there's a need for values-aligned brands, we can actually create those brands and bring them to market. | ||
So this is kind of random, but there's a brand on our platform called EveryLife. | ||
EveryLife exists as the only pro-life, pro-family baby care brand in the world. | ||
It's the only pro-life diaper company, believe it or not. | ||
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Wow, it's a diaper company and it's the only one that came out against abortion? | |
Yeah. Dude, this will blow you away, but I am dead serious. | ||
Every single major diaper company in the world today, vocally or financially, supports abortion. | ||
Wow. Every single one. You think that would be bad for business? | ||
You would think so. And my wife and I, we were having our first baby a year ago, so we thought, you know what? | ||
We're not going to go fund the abortion industry with the purchase of our baby gear. | ||
That's absolutely absurd. So we thought, you know what? | ||
Let's create a diaper brand that actually will have a hopeful, positive alternative message. | ||
You can find it at everylife.com. | ||
And thankfully, we just heard from our Manufacturers Association this past week. | ||
We are the fastest growing baby care brand in modern history. | ||
Wow. Americans are tired. | ||
They're tired of feeling like they don't have any options. | ||
And now they're proactively moving their money in a positive direction. | ||
Anytime there's a hole in the industry that we see represented on Public Square where there's not a good competitor to some of the major incumbents, we'll go and we'll create that brand so that we can solve the need of our consumers at a greater level. | ||
It's pretty cool. That's really cool. | ||
How many consumers do you have on the app? | ||
We have over 1.6 million. | ||
Wow, that's very good. | ||
Congratulations. How many businesses are on the platform? | ||
Over 70,000. | ||
Wow. Maybe that's an opportunity. | ||
Matt, you have to remind me after the show today, I'm talking to Matt Weber, about having seen a FIMFOR is a good fit for this. | ||
That's fascinating stuff. | ||
Of course. We're aligned with your values. | ||
What's next for the business then? What are the big goals for Public Square by 2025? | ||
Well, you know, there's a real opportunity here in two areas. | ||
One is to counteract Amazon. | ||
You know, Amazon has become a very tyrannically run corporate, really oligarchy, that's the best word for it. | ||
And they're very happy to impose their values on you. | ||
And because they're so convenient, we've just kind of felt like that's really the only option. | ||
And so people are more than happy to give their data over to Amazon and to allow them to treat their workers horribly and to steal American enterprise and stifle small businesses in the process because we feel like we don't have another option. | ||
Our goal is to create the other option. | ||
Constant feature additives to make it easier for consumers to quickly and efficiently support small businesses that you can find on publicsquare.com. | ||
That's the big goals. We head into 2024, continue to enhance our e-commerce capabilities to add convenience and ease to the shopping experience. | ||
We should not have to sell our soul as a country on the altars of convenience. | ||
We've been doing that for decades, and it's not working, so now it's time to actually create a shopping experience that does not absolutely decimate our ethical standing as a company, and yet still provides an easy way to shop from businesses that make our country special. | ||
That's the first thing. The second thing, we have a massive election year coming up in 2024. | ||
Hey, before we go into the election year, we've got to cut to break. | ||
I'm sorry to cut you off, Michael. Let's talk about the second thing at the beginning of the next segment, and we'll be right back. | ||
Back in the meantime, folks, visit publicsquare.com, sign up today, and visit infowarstore.com and get something good. | ||
Welcome back to the American Journal, folks. | ||
I'm Chase Geiser with a very special guest, Michael Seifert. | ||
He's the CEO of Public Square, a marketplace app you can use to easily shop with brands that share your values and at the same time support local and American-owned businesses. | ||
Check him out on x.com at real Michael Seif. | ||
Seif being spelled S-E-I-F. The website is publicsquare.com, spelled just how it sounds. | ||
Michael, we were getting into the second part. | ||
Your first part of this 2025 sort of strategy was being a competitor to Amazon. | ||
Second part, you mentioned the elections. | ||
Please, go on. Well, I believe, you know, we say this every election cycle, but I really believe this year is the most consequential election in modern history. | ||
We've seen what the globalists and tyrants are willing to do. | ||
When we give them an inch, they take more than a mile. | ||
They take your freedoms, your liberties. | ||
And their desire is to truly, I believe, throw us all in camps. | ||
We saw what they want to do during COVID. And if you carry that logic to its fullest extent, it's a very dark place. | ||
But we have not lost hope. | ||
The reality is a company like ours couldn't even exist or thrive if folks had completely lost hope. | ||
The reason we keep growing is because people are actually hopeful for alternatives. | ||
And so our goal as we head into the election year It's actually to help shift through economic exchange the power structures of society back toward we the people. | ||
The reality is if you look at the Democrats and you look at what they did during 2020, you saw that this was a power struggle funded by corporate America. | ||
When Mark Zuckerberg is going and pouring $400 million into the election, what did we think was going to happen? | ||
The reality is their power centers, their profit centers are housed in corporate America. | ||
Their lobbyists have so much power over Washington, D.C. | ||
Mm-hmm. | ||
But you also have to recognize that you have the ability to vote every single day with your wallet. | ||
So, for example, we're hosting a public square town hall series where we actually we promote certain politicians, give them a stage, I should say, to be able to speak to the interests of the American small business community. | ||
And they have to make the case for why they believe that their policies We'll actually lead to prosperity for the American small business community. | ||
We're gonna do a massive town hall series actually starting on Monday. | ||
We've got Donald Trump Jr. speaking with us. | ||
We've got Congressman Jim Banks from Indiana. | ||
And we're going to have lots of different congressional officials make their case as to why the conservative agenda is one that will lead to prosperity. | ||
We're also going to really push heavily America First policies heading into 2024. | ||
We as a company do not endorse any candidates, but we certainly endorse views. | ||
And we believe ultimately that before the United States Congress should be focusing on other countries, we've got to take care of our own people first. | ||
It's the classic airline analogy. | ||
You're getting on a plane, the cabin pressure were to drop, the mask falls from the ceiling, and you're supposed to put your mask on before you put your neighbors on. | ||
That's the strongest case for nationalism. | ||
If you don't take care of your own economy first, you can't do any good to your own people, nor the countries of the world. | ||
We as a country have to focus on our own economy first, and Public Square is the only marketplace that's paying attention to that need. | ||
So we've got some big plans heading into 2024 and 2025, and we're excited to roll them out to the country. | ||
Wow, you know what we got to do? | ||
We have to make a meme on our end of the airplane seat, three seats, one seats Donald Trump, one seats Bibi Netanyahu, and one seats Erdogan from Turkey and the masks are dropped. | ||
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That's a great idea. | |
I love that. So let me ask you this. | ||
What would you say is something you know now that you wish you had known when you started the business? | ||
I wish I would have known how powerful the parallel economy could be in terms of unifying lots of different wings of the conservative base. | ||
I think that we would have asserted more of the parallel economy language earlier. | ||
I think I misjudged how ready the country was for this. | ||
I guess what I mean is I wish I would have started earlier. | ||
I think that in the early days when I would pitch this to certain folks, they'd say, well, you know, is the country really ready for it? | ||
Are you sure? And then Bud Light and Target and these things happen and it's like, wow, okay, yeah, the country is ready. | ||
But I had the dream of this years ago and I wish I would have... | ||
I think we've never recognized the receptability of the American people for a solution like this, the unifying force the parallel economy can be sooner than later. | ||
The whole country is never going to be unified. | ||
The idea that 340 million people are all going to get along is absolutely absurd. | ||
At the conservative, America first, patriotic base of the United States, we're looking at over 100 million people. | ||
The one issue that we can all rally behind is the need to vote with our wallet and support companies that support us back. | ||
I wish I would have recognized how strongly other people needed this, not just me, earlier, because we would have jump-started. | ||
What would you say is the hardest thing that you've had to overcome since you started the business? | ||
Was there ever a time when you were scared about the future of the business or just an obstacle that was really challenging? | ||
Yeah, we've had many days throughout this journey where I just thought, I don't see a path forward. | ||
It's incredibly expensive to build something like this. | ||
It is incredibly time consuming. | ||
And we're trying to ultimately confront not only Amazon, but also consumer complacency because of how convenient Amazon is. | ||
Right. So we have two challenges ahead of us. | ||
We have to do what Amazon did in half the time and on one-tenth of the budget. | ||
We can. We have the best developers on the planet that have left companies like Amazon because they're tired of the woke stuff, and they're now helping us build this platform. | ||
We can do that, but that's a real challenge. | ||
The other challenge, though, that we have to deal with is that we are trying to build a solution, but a lot of people, unfortunately, still choose convenience over solutions. | ||
We have to help folks I think a lot of us feel like, well, unless I can ditch my iPhone and my MacBook and my Honda car that does the gay stuff, unless I can ditch all this stuff, then I really can't make progress. | ||
And what we're trying to instill in people is that, hey, with A purchase as simple as a cup of coffee from a company that does not hate you. | ||
Because remember, Starbucks is using your money to fund abortions, to fund the BLM agenda. | ||
So if we can recognize that with something as simple as diverting your cup of coffee purchase away from Starbucks and using an America First alternative instead, you can actually begin to change the country. | ||
Instilling that realization in people is a real challenge, but thankfully, it's one that we've been able to conquer, and now it's like a compounding effect. | ||
When one person does it and they recognize the power of their wallet, they're going to go tell three friends. | ||
And so our goal is that we would continue to grow this movement through a very grassroots effort, and it's not easy, but it's very much worth it. | ||
Have you faced any issues with censorship on big tech platforms? | ||
I know that you have an app, for example. | ||
So by having an app on the Apple Store or Google Play, you sort of have to abide by their terms in terms of content that you have on the app. | ||
Have you had any issues that you faced with that? | ||
A little bit. Not as much on the app stores because we're not a social platform. | ||
So, you know, they have a lot of restrictions around speech and things like this. | ||
They have less restrictions around what you can sell. | ||
And so, you know, we host gun companies. | ||
We host ammo. | ||
We host body armor. We host all these things that are probably frowned upon by Apple or Google. | ||
But at the same time, they allow those things on their platform. | ||
So the fact that we're not a social platform gives us a little bit more leeway to Operate without as much fear of cancellation than a parlor, for example, or a gab might face. | ||
Because they're confronting the free speech issue, which is beautiful. | ||
They should. They should keep running. | ||
We're behind them 100% of the way. | ||
It's just we don't have that challenge given the marketplace positioning. | ||
Where we do face a lot of censorship, though, is social media. | ||
Being able to put out our message on platforms like Meta or Twitter before it became X or YouTube, for example, it's just impossible. | ||
We've really pushed at utilizing platforms like Truth or like Rumble to get our message out there. | ||
The other piece that's really interesting, Chase, is that we have vendors that we look to partner with for lots of different tools that we operate with within our business. | ||
And we have to ask these vendors every time we look at partnering with them, if we have a piece of negative publicity, will you drop us for our values? | ||
You'd be amazed at the amount of times people have said, yeah, we actually would drop you. | ||
And so we require in writing for most all of our vendors now a clause that basically says, if we come under bad reputational attack, will you drop us? | ||
That you need to commit to not doing that. | ||
And we've had some vendors say, sure, we're in to do that. | ||
We've had other vendors say, no, we're not willing to. | ||
And so, you know, as much of the vetting as we can do on the front end is incredibly helpful for the tools that we employ for our own business. | ||
It's a wild world out there. | ||
Here's what I can say. | ||
The network of alternatives that are popping up, not just in our world in consumer spending, but also in infrastructure, in hosting, in database technology, it's enormous. | ||
So we have this very cool American Renaissance era we're heading into in tech. | ||
Where the existing incumbents have revealed their cards, they've shown their true intentions, and everybody realizes how corrupt they are now. | ||
And so these great entrepreneurs are building these free speech alternatives and censor-free alternatives, and I'm here for it. | ||
It's very exciting. Wow, wow. | ||
Great stuff from the American hero, Michael Seifert. | ||
He's the CEO of Public Square Marketplace app you can use to easily shop with brands that share your values and at the same time support local and American-owned businesses. | ||
Make sure you check out Public Square at publicsquare.com. | ||
And follow Michael at RealMichaelSeif. | ||
That's RealMichaelSeif on x.com. | ||
Stick with us, folks. We've got more news coming in the next hour. | ||
We will be taking your calls in the next hour. | ||
and visit InfoWarsStore.com to be the reason we are still on the air while you can invest in yourself with some of these great products from Health and Wellness. | ||
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In the pages of the American Journal, Chase Geiser writes the unfolding chapters of our nation. | |
you know what the cia really dreamed of was sort of like a drug you could give to someone get them to commit all sorts of unspeakable acts and they wake up the next day and they don't remember what they've done The MKUltra program is well known. | ||
The American Intelligence Agency had paid for a series of brainwashing experiments under a project codenamed MKUltra. | ||
The tests were conducted in secret in the United States and in Canada at a mental hospital attached to McGill University. | ||
Experimental drugs, including LSD, were administered to human guinea pigs. | ||
Regardless of the catch-all-go-to conspiracy theorist moniker to explain away the possibility of this recent culture of mass shooters being connected to the CIA's MKUltra program, It is obvious that the guns cannot murder anyone without a psychotic madman behind the trigger. | ||
So one cannot help but look to a possible motive. | ||
And every time these possible MK Ultra Tide shooters point the narrative towards themselves, it distracts from the government's corruption. | ||
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The James Holmes we're seeing now is a universe away from the clean-cut, up-and-coming neuroscientist he once was. | |
And it never fails. | ||
Within hours, these shootings are followed by calls to confiscate Americans' guns protected by the Second Amendment. | ||
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Another assault weapon used to murder at least 16 people and perhaps another 50 being wounded. | |
It's time for this House to act. | ||
On extending the previous ban on assault weapons. | ||
This has nothing to do with the Second Amendment. | ||
This has everything to do with war on the American people. | ||
I want to do what will work. | ||
And to me, the most clear What did the Maine shooter accomplish with his demonic acts, disappearance, and alleged suicide other than the obvious? | ||
Not only had he locked down the state of Maine and neighboring areas of Canada, but he briefly put the national conversation on lockdown for citizens We're good to go. | ||
According to bankruptcy court documents, James Biden received these loans, quote, based upon representations that his last name, Biden, could open doors and that he could obtain a large investment from the Middle East based on his political connections, end quote. | ||
On March 1st, 2018, AmeriCorps wired a $200,000 loan into James and Sarah Biden's personal bank account, not their business bank account. | ||
And then on the very same day, James Biden wrote a $200,000 check from this same personal bank account to Joe Biden. | ||
James Biden wrote this check to Joe Biden as a quote, loan repayment. | ||
AmeriCorps, a distressed company, loaned money to James Biden, who then sent it to Joe Biden. | ||
Even if this was a personal loan repayment, it's still troubling that Joe Biden's ability to be paid back by his brother depended on the success of his family's shady financial dealings. | ||
We can only expect more bizarre incidents like the one in Lewiston, Maine, to ramp up. | ||
Was 22-year-old Diego Barajas-Modina an MKUltrapatsy whose programming failed? | ||
Medina was wearing body armor, a ballistic helmet, patches and tactical gear and armed with an AR-15 style gun and explosives and was found dead inside a Colorado amusement park with an eerie message scrawled on the wall, I am not a killer, I just wanted to get into the caves. | ||
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He was well intended to do something very heinous. | |
Again, why would you prep for that? | ||
And whatever he had intention, fortunately, did not follow through with it. | ||
After a police search, no evidence of bomb-making materials were recovered in Medina's private residence. | ||
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The weapons found on the man were ghost guns, which do not have serial numbers and therefore cannot be traced. | |
Why was Robert Card outfitted after going to a military mental institution in the summer of 2023 with high-powered hearing aids that his sister-in-law reported were telling him horrifying suggestions? | ||
Why? | ||
Welcome back to the American Journal, folks. . | ||
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So much to think about, so much to talk about. | |
A couple of great guests on the show today. | ||
Man, it's been a fun, fun episode of the American Journal. | ||
I will be probably taking calls. | ||
Yeah, in the last 30 minutes of the show today, we'll be taking calls. | ||
But I do want to use a couple of segments to cover some new developments. | ||
First up... Black Lives Matter activist jailed for fraud after spending charity donations on herself. | ||
A Black Lives Matter activist who was instrumental in organizing the infamous protests that saw the statue of Sir Edward Colston torn down and thrown in the Bristol Harbor has been jailed for fraud after using donations intended for a children's charity on herself. | ||
Born Yvonne Mena, founding member of the BLM offshoot All Black Lives Matter Bristol activist group has been jailed for two and a half years after being found guilty of stealing 32,344 in charitable donations to a local children's group. | ||
Changing your mindset. | ||
which had planned to use the money to fund a trip to Africa for disadvantaged children in the area. | ||
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Oh, my God. | |
She stole the money that was supposed to be used to send the kids to Africa. | ||
Yeah. | ||
And she just decided to spend it on herself. | ||
Because a black life matters. | ||
Right. Because a black life matters to her own. | ||
Selene was found to have taken the money and used it to enrich herself. | ||
She bought an iPhone, a computer, takeaway food, and beauty products as well as spending $5,800 of it. | ||
On Uber taxi rides over the 11 months up until June of 2021, the Times of London reported. | ||
So she stole like a fifth of it. | ||
The BLM activist who appeared in court in a hijab was told at her sentencing hearing that she had abused the trust of the charity and had caused serious detriment to the victims. | ||
Unbelievable, unbelievable, unbelievable. | ||
Meanwhile, speaking of terrorist organizations... | ||
Black Lives Matter, of course, being one that was supported by AOC. AOC has been going off on AIPAC, saying they are an extremist organization. | ||
Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Democrat from New York, went off on AIPAC on Tuesday, labeling the pro-Israel lobbying group an extremist organization that destabilizes U.S. democracy. | ||
I hate that word, democracy, so much. | ||
To me, I would rather have... | ||
I'd rather hear any other swear word than democracy. | ||
No problem. When I hear the word democracy on the television, I put my hands over the ears of my daughter. | ||
It is, to me, an atrocious manipulation of language. | ||
It has this implication of it that You know, it's about giving power to the people against a corrupt government. | ||
That's why they use it so much, because they can gaslight you and say that they want to give you power and take it away from them, which is totally antithetical to how interests work, special interests work. | ||
They definitely don't. And I was talking to, I think it was Scott the other day about this. | ||
I'm pretty sure it was Scott. | ||
We were talking about the Cold War and how this idea of democracy was really used as an antagonist to communism, right? | ||
So communism was spreading after World War II, and we had this great Cold War, this great pushback against communism. | ||
And so we labeled any country in any foreign region that was a democracy, an ally of the United States, because, of course, if it was a democracy, then it would never give way or give in to communism. | ||
And so now that the Cold War is over, for some reason, we still have this language from those decades and decades of propaganda about how important democracy is. | ||
It's the only democracy in the region, this democracy, that democracy. | ||
Vietnam wants to be a democracy. | ||
Vietnam wants to be communist, whatever. | ||
We drilled it in so much that democracy was so good, even though the word democracy isn't used once in our Constitution. | ||
We have democratic elements. | ||
We do have democratic elections, kind of, but it's a constitutional republic. | ||
It's a different form of government than a direct democracy. | ||
And it was even supposed to be more republican-esque until we made changes throughout our history to how voting is done, how presidents are elected. | ||
And now we see this word used constantly by the state because they know that they can use democracy to build trust among the vulnerable or the gullible. | ||
And simultaneously they also realize that they're working on behalf of the mob. | ||
So you want a democracy whenever the majority of people agree with you as a politician and you don't want one whenever a minority of the people agree with you as a population. | ||
She made the comments in response to AIPAC smearing Representative Thomas Massey, a Republican of Kentucky, as an anti-Semite for not wanting America to fund Israel's wars. | ||
AIPAC endorsed scores of January 6th insurrectionists. | ||
They are no friend to American democracy, AOC said. | ||
They are one of the more racist and bigoted PACs in Congress as well, who disproportionately target members of color. | ||
They are an extremist organization that destabilizes U.S. democracy. | ||
So, although I agree that just allowing foreign lobbies to influence Congress is a bad thing, I disagree with all of her characterizations or critiques of this specific one. | ||
But we see that this Black Lives Matter activist is trashing AIPAC, and she's totally happy with supporting terrorist organizations, generally speaking, but on a selective basis, on a case-by-case basis. | ||
I don't think I have enough time to go into this RFK stuff this segment, so I'm probably going to touch on it the next segment. | ||
But new developments in some of the staffing for RFK Jr. | ||
may shed some light on some of the theories that we came over in the show last week about whether or not he is an operative designed to split the vote so that Republicans cannot win the White House in 2024. | ||
Authoritarians are drunk on power and stating that it's time to recalibrate the government here. | ||
This article authored by John Anisha Whitehead for Zero Hedge. | ||
Nice alliteration there. | ||
This is from V for Vendetta, which would explain the good writing. | ||
We have arrived at the dystopian future depicted in the 2005 film V for Vendetta, which is no future at all. | ||
Set in the year 2020, V for Vendetta, written and produced by the Wachowskis, provides an eerie glimpse into a parallel universe in which a government-engineered virus wreaks havoc on the world. | ||
Capitalizing on the people's fear, a totalitarian government comes to power and knows all, sees all, controls everything, and promises safety and security. | ||
Above all, this sounds painfully similar to what's going on. | ||
Great article there by the Zero Hedge. | ||
Rough sleeping in London hits record high as migrants become majority living on the streets. | ||
So we bring in these refugees and we treat them like refugees. | ||
Homelessness charities said the government's attempts to clear the asylum backlog have resulted in an influx of foreign nationals sleeping on the streets. | ||
It's not something that's just happening overseas, but we see it happening in our United States of America as we have opened the border to all who wish to come in through the South. | ||
The number of people sleeping rough in London has hit a record high with homelessness charities warning that the ongoing asylum crisis in Britain has led to an overflow of migrants living on the streets. | ||
This is why you have to put on your mask first, folks. | ||
If we don't put on our mask first, we risk both or all parties not having the advantage of the safety of being taken care of. | ||
New figures from the combined homelessness and information network chain Revealed that a record 4,068 people were spotted sleeping rough in the UK capital between July and September this year. | ||
A 12% rise compared with the same period in 2022 and a 24% increase over the figure recorded for April to June earlier this year. | ||
That's what happens when you bring people into your country and your infrastructure can't even handle the demands of your own people. | ||
It is a betrayal of all sovereign nations, of all constituents of sovereign nations. | ||
When we sell out our interests... | ||
For foreign interests, just as an excuse to conglomerate power. | ||
We're going to cover this RFK stuff in the next segment. | ||
In the meantime, visit Infowarsstore.com and take advantage of some of these awesome sales that we have in place. | ||
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Welcome back to the American Journal, folks. | ||
I am Chase Geyser, hosting this show today. | ||
We talked last week about RFK Jr. | ||
We covered a couple of conspiracy theories around his candidacy. | ||
Some more tenable than others. | ||
Some more defensible than others. | ||
Some a little bit on the fringe side. | ||
But the most reasonable one, in my opinion, the one that I actually believe, is that he is running as a DNC plant in an effort to intentionally split the vote against Trump to ensure that whoever the Democratic candidate is gets elected. | ||
That's it in one run-on sentence. | ||
RFK Jr.'s donor data reveals his 2024 threat. | ||
A political analysis of his donor base reveals a lot about who is powering this unconventional candidate. | ||
Presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s large-dollar donor base has a clear Republican lean. | ||
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. | ||
is collecting checks from past Donald Trump donors at a much higher rate than former Joe Biden contributors. | ||
A sign the independent presidential hopeful may pull more from the Republican electorate than Democratic voters. | ||
That's the whole reason they wanted to run him. | ||
he knew he wasn't going to be on the Democratic ballot because he's running against the Democratic presidential incumbent. | ||
After all, they pushed him out of the ballot. | ||
He acted like they were trying to force him off because he was a legitimate threat to Joe Biden. | ||
But really, it was a plan to get him off so he could run as an independent and split the vote against Donald Trump to ensure that whoever the Democrat is, whether it's Biden or someone else, gets an office. | ||
We know he doesn't really have a principled approach regarding these vaccines. | ||
If after all, he's hosting holiday parties that require proof of vaccination. | ||
And I'm going to go ahead and see if I can. | ||
He's got a history of doing all sorts of morally questionable things. | ||
And we're all morally questionable at our best even. | ||
But this is another level... | ||
Of Machiavellianism, of manipulation. | ||
This is the political class at its finest. | ||
He is really tricking everybody, I think, on the right. | ||
Because he says so many things that resonate with the right. | ||
And the right is yearning for someone who is a moderate. | ||
Yearning for someone who is reasonable. | ||
But the fact of the matter is, we have radical problems. | ||
And our radical problems are going to require radical solutions. | ||
And the only president with enough hate from the enemies of America has been and would be Donald Trump. | ||
In this new report here we see a spurious spy now runs RFK Jr.'s campaign. | ||
I don't know why a Kennedy would ever hire anybody who was a former CIA operative to run his office, given what we know happened to JFK. | ||
Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s campaign for president is now being run by his daughter-in-law, who happens to be a former employee of the CIA, the same agency that RFK Jr. believes played a role in the 1963 murder of his uncle, the 35th president, and the same agency that RFK Jr. believes played a role in the What is going on? | ||
Amaryllis Fox Kennedy says she worked as an undercover operative for the CIA where she was assigned to keep nuclear weapons out of the hands of terrorists. | ||
Great job. It's not like Iran isn't a nuclear power. | ||
As with everyone else in the conspiracy-drenched world of RFK Jr., including the CIA career of the new campaign manager, however, nothing is as it seems. | ||
The campaign announced on Friday that Kennedy Fox was replacing the outgoing campaign manager, former Congressman Dennis Kucinich. | ||
Amaryllis is a woman of extraordinary intelligence and drive who I am confident will take this campaign to the next level, RFK Jr. | ||
said in a statement. Apparently, according to our research that Mr. | ||
Producer did during the last break, she was responsible for creating or being behind an algorithm as well that was designed to predict terrorist activity before it happened. | ||
So if the algorithm worked, it means that the CIA knew that the attack on Israel was going to happen on October 7th, and if it didn't work... | ||
Then there's a sign of incompetence there or that it's not actually being used for the purpose of predicting terrorist activity abroad, but perhaps surveilling Americans domestically. | ||
Here's another article on her from 2018. | ||
Bobby Kennedy III to marry former CIA officer Amaryllis Fox. | ||
Robert F. Bobby Kennedy III is set to marry former CIA officer Amaryllis Fox at the Kennedy family compound in Hyannis Port on July 7th. | ||
And his father says he's over the moon about the upcoming nuptials. | ||
I'm really happy, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. | ||
told TNC Tuesday morning following the first report of the wedding plans in the New York Post. | ||
His son, 33, and the former CIA clandestine service officer, 36, been dating for about a year. | ||
Oh, it's practically an elope. | ||
Here's more honor from Wikipedia to just give you a sense. | ||
She was born September 22nd, 1980. | ||
She's an American writer, television host, public speaker, former Central Intelligence Agency officer and campaign manager to Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s 2024 presidential campaign. | ||
She departed from her role at the CIA in 2010. | ||
Subsequently, Kennedy authored a memoir about her time in the CIA entitled Life Undercover, Coming of Age in the CIA. Published by Knopf Doubleday in October of 2019. | ||
So right after she got married to a Kennedy, she comes out with a memoir. | ||
And then now she's running a campaign for a Kennedy. | ||
This is like a CIA op. | ||
Especially since she was involved in work ensuring that terrorists don't have access to nuclear weapons, creating algorithms designed to predict terrorist activity before it happens. | ||
Now she's running a candidate for office who is designed to split the vote against Donald Trump to ensure that the leftists in office can still be in office, whoever that leftist may be. | ||
Because the deep state knows that it can control the leftists in office because they have sold out their souls and principles to the state. | ||
Any leftist either is the state or always wants to be the state. | ||
And the Central Intelligence Agency, the deep state of America, the intelligence community, loves nothing more than a malleable president. | ||
Because after all, we have had a presidency in which the committee of the deep state has been in total power while Joe Biden simply follows the instructions of his handlers. | ||
She was born in New York City. | ||
Her mother's a retired English actress. | ||
Her father, Hudson Thornburg, was an economist. | ||
Her mother has since married billionaire businessman Stephen Rails. | ||
I mean, this is the political class, folks. | ||
Saying that she grew up in the CIA. Fox Kennedy became one of the youngest female officers in the CIA at the age of 22. | ||
Assigned to non-official cover entailing living abroad with a fake identity and no diplomatic protections. | ||
During her time at the CIA, she married fellow officer Dean Fox, who she had her first child with. | ||
Before their divorce, she lived undercover with him in Shanghai. | ||
Oh my god. Fox states her work focused on preventing terror organizations from acquiring weapons of mass destruction, assuming the cover of an art dealer. | ||
No, Hunter Biden sells art. | ||
I wonder if she was involved with that. | ||
After eight years at the agency, Fox left the CIA in 2010, or at least publicly stated that she did. | ||
Fox's memoir entitled Life Undercover, Coming of Age in the CIA describes her experiences as an officer. | ||
Prior to the book's release, numerous journalists and former CIA officers pointed out that her memoir's manuscript had been submitted to publishers Knopf Doubleday without first receiving approval from the CIA's Publication Review Board, a potential violation of non-disclosure agreements signed by CIA staff. | ||
Fox was represented in that process by Attorney Mark Zaid. | ||
Some former CIA case officers have expressed skepticism about elements of Fox's accounts of events or raised questions regarding the circumvention of the CIA's lengthy approval process. | ||
Fox responded by stating that she had taken care not to reveal potentially sensitive details and that some characters were composites. | ||
So there we have it, folks. | ||
The CIA is running Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s campaign for president. | ||
And it seems to be a coup or an attempt, a Machiavellian approach, to split the vote against Trump to ensure that whatever leftist is actually on the ticket when the time comes will be ushered in. | ||
Be wary of RFK Jr. | ||
I know that he said the truth in his publications about these vaccines. | ||
I know that he's done good work. | ||
But just because a man speaks the truth and has done good things does not make him a good man. | ||
Be very careful of these threats to our constitutional republic. | ||
unidentified
|
We'll be right back on the other side. | |
Round the outside. | ||
Welcome back to the American Journal, folks. | ||
I am Chase Geiser, your host today. | ||
We are going to be taking calls for the remainder of the hour before the great Alex Jones is live on the air on the legacy, the legend... | ||
The Alex Jones Show. | ||
Make sure you call in 877-789-2539. | ||
Again, that's 877-789-2539. | ||
I want to hear what you have to say about everything going on right now. | ||
In breaking news, the SEC has subpoenaed PayPal over its USD-pegged stablecoin. | ||
Just three months after PayPal entered the fray to bring stablecoins to the masses, it's attracting attention from U.S. regulators. | ||
A stablecoin, as I understand it, is a coin that's supposed to be pegged to the value of the dollar. | ||
The payment giant said Thursday that it had received a subpoena from the Securities and Exchange Commission related to its U.S. dollar-pegged stablecoin, according to Reuters. | ||
TechCrunch has reached out to PayPal for comment in early August. | ||
PayPal launched... PYUSD, a stablecoin issued by Paxos Trust Company and backed by U.S. dollar deposits. | ||
At the time, the firm said the digital currency solution would be gradually rolling out to users in the U.S. In September, PayPal made the stablecoin available on Venmo. | ||
Now, we're seeing this in the context of Chase Bank recently announcing that it's no longer going to process crypto transactions. | ||
So, if Chase Bank is banning crypto transactions ahead of World War III, in the context of this conflict with Russia where we've attempted to cut them off from the economy of the world but failed because of cryptocurrency to some extent. | ||
And then now we see that... | ||
You can take this coin into PayPal and you can still do business with PayPal through the centralized banking system. | ||
It is a way to sort of circumvent these new policies, these mandates being issued by the banks against this cryptocurrency. | ||
They're stating that the reason they're coming out against cryptocurrency is because of heightened use of scams. | ||
Relating to digital currencies, relating to cryptocurrencies. | ||
But the real reason is we're about ready to go to World War III and the centralized banking system is trying to tighten its grip on how value is transacted globally. | ||
PayPal joins a growing list of tech companies targeted by U.S. authorities over their interaction with digital currencies. | ||
While most of the players under regulatory scrutiny are crypto native, PayPal marked the first major U.S. financial institution to launch stablecoins for payments and transfers. | ||
The move will likely raise concerns within the stablecoin space in the U.S. | ||
Meanwhile, on other continents, entrepreneurs and regulators and regulations are propelling the development of stablecoins, which are regarded as the more useful form of cryptocurrency for the exchange of value than most volatile tokens. | ||
Hong Kong, for instance, is working to launch a regulatory framework for stablecoins by 2024. | ||
The European Union similarly has established guardrails for stablecoin use with companies like Monarium offering regulated euro denominated tokens. | ||
This story is developing. | ||
We'll be keeping you updated as breaking news is relevant. | ||
Make sure you call in 877-789-2539. | ||
Again, that's 877-789-2539. | ||
I want to take a call right out of the gate from QC in Virginia. | ||
Let's go ahead and take that call. QC, what's up? | ||
Can you hear me? Oh, man. | ||
Hey, how are you? Are you there? Yeah, I'm here. | ||
Hello? You sound great. What's up? | ||
Okay, yes. Okay, so the United States is run by the same extraterrestrials or aliens that all the other countries are. | ||
We just... Humans are their creation, and they just... | ||
Are using us as they're fighting their wars for the resources. | ||
Once they rob the resources, then they'll leave and go to another planet or do something else somewhere else. | ||
So the thing is, Iraq, Iran, Israel, all of this stuff going on, they're going to continue to have wars. | ||
They're going to bomb everybody. | ||
And the humans are being used as pawns. | ||
But that's the facade. | ||
All these organizations, all these politicians like Kennedy and Trump and Biden, these are all facade, alien bloodlines. | ||
They know what's going on. | ||
They're not going to tell us right now because the world will be in shock. | ||
They're running everything. | ||
And the history shows that they've always fought wars with each other. | ||
But there's one side. | ||
There's one side that wants humans to know the truth. | ||
They don't want the humans to be ignorant. | ||
They want the humans so as Moses said, look upon the head of the snake and ye shall be hit on the cane and ye shall be healed. | ||
That's because the symbol of healing is the caduceus. | ||
You follow what I'm saying here is that, look, they're aliens. | ||
They've run everything. One side wants the human population to know the truth. | ||
To know who they are and their power and the other side doesn't, but they're still going to fight wars and take over countries and use the human population to control and die in these wars. | ||
When did you realize it was the aliens? | ||
Well, I realized this through study back in 2008. | ||
You know, Alex Jones woke me up with Endgame. | ||
That opened my eyes. | ||
And I started doing research. | ||
And from there on, you know, I'm just being led to open up and read and understand these things. | ||
I have to say also that through the studies and research of Jordan Maxwell, the late, great Jordan Maxwell also opened my eyes. | ||
Then we had the Anunnaki, that bloodline, and the Sumerian tablets that were, and all these things. | ||
The Bible has some truth, but there's also a compilation of other books, and so other histories and other cultures, but there's some truth. | ||
In those books that tell us these things, we're just being—the human race is so naive. | ||
We can sue for peace. | ||
That's all we can do is sue them for peace and say, hey, look, America is great because they're using America—one side is using America for human rights and dignity, but they're still going to wage wars because that's who they are. | ||
That's their life. That's their culture. | ||
But we have hope. | ||
The human race has hope that we can sue for peace and get some dignity. | ||
But they're still going to kill. | ||
Are you of the belief that some of us are descended from these aliens? | ||
I met a guy that was all about the Anunnaki and thought that anybody with a negative blood type was an alien. | ||
Oh, yes. If you want to know who the next president is going to be, all you have to do is just look who has the bloodline that's German. | ||
Or you could say British or English, but British is different. | ||
It's German. And also the French. | ||
So you want to know, Biden is not Irish. | ||
His great-great-grandfather, I believe it was, is British. | ||
He's German. British. He's not Irish. | ||
He wants to use that. | ||
That's not true. I did the research and everybody else can too. | ||
I already found out who his grandfather's name is in the bloodline. | ||
So whoever the bloodline is of the French and the German, that's the alien bloodline that's ruling on perhaps one side. | ||
But China has a bloodline. | ||
And Iraq and Iran, they have a blood. | ||
Those leaders are all extraterrestrial. | ||
They look like us. | ||
Let us make man in our image after our likeness. | ||
We look like them. | ||
So they walk amongst us. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. We're the aliens. | |
Well, we have their genetic code. | ||
Genetic engineering. They did this a long time ago. | ||
So they came down and manipulated existing organisms on the planet to make them into us? | ||
Okay. How long ago? | ||
Yes, they took the existing hominids that were here and had to create a working class with intelligence, the ability to work. | ||
What resources do they want, though? | ||
What do we have that they want so badly? | ||
unidentified
|
Look at it. Water, the minerals, the... | |
What are we mining? | ||
What are we mining? Oil? | ||
Now they want to do this, the minerals that they're mining in Africa for electric batteries and all these things. | ||
They're robbing the planet. | ||
Humans are just watching it, and we're gullible. | ||
Unless we sue for peace and acknowledge who they are on the side of... | ||
The United States is great. | ||
We're a great... Ruled by great aliens, but they're still gonna fight wars. | ||
But at least we have some dignity here that we can sue for peace. | ||
Interesting. Well, thank you so much for your call. | ||
I really do appreciate it. Always a pleasure to speak with you. | ||
We're going to take more calls in the next segment. | ||
Make sure you call an 877-789-2539. | ||
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All right, I'm gonna take Anonymous Anonymous, can you hear me? Hey Chase, how's it going? | ||
It's not the Jesuits, okay? | ||
I love you. Let's go to Sean in Indiana. | ||
Sean, what's up? Can you hear me, Sean? | ||
Okay, Sean's not there. Let's talk to Sean in California. | ||
Sean, what's up? Sean in California, are you there? | ||
Yeah, I click it. Oh, there you go. | ||
I hear you. You sound great, buddy. What's up? | ||
I'm here. Can you hear me? Yes, sir. | ||
Am I getting everybody to forget about Epstein? | ||
Well, you might be. | ||
I mean, Chase Manhattan, that bank was all focused on trying to get its name cleared with Epstein, and now instead of distracting everybody with all that CBD stuff, or excuse me, Central Bank Digital Currency, So, it's kind of like funny, Chase Manhattan as a bank just can't keep their fingers either out of causing trouble or, you know, financing trouble. | ||
And, you know, I don't know if you're following, you know, they got Ivanka lined up to be a witness now in this Trump Organization probe that the Biden administration's doing. | ||
You gotta wonder if that'll be the breaking point for Donald Trump, them, you know, going after his daughter after they went after Don Jr. | ||
yesterday. And he, of course, you know, had fun with it in the press and excoriated them. | ||
But the other item I had on the list of items... | ||
Yeah, well, just to respond to that one point, just real quick, I want to hear the rest of your list, too. | ||
It seems to me, just based on what I see in the news, when I look at these documents, when I see what policies Chase Bank has, it seems to me that they're the most closely linked to the intelligence community. | ||
You'd be correct. If you do the deep dive, there's even a thing called the Epstein Trust or the Epstein Foundation that does these donations to different colleges and things of the like. | ||
And it makes you wonder what those professors, how that trust got their money and how those professors, why they're accepting the money from it and the colleges are accepting the money from it. | ||
I think we know the answer, of course, to that one. | ||
So there's a lot of dirty money flowing probably in that bank and a few other banks we could name. | ||
Real quick, too. I am actually on the Public Square website, so I wanted to say bravo to your guests because that got me curious about it. | ||
And where I'm going with that thought, it was just something that popped up while I was on hold, is that if you can do that, if Everwars can do that once a week, twice a week, have people who have created solutions and wins for us, We can beat the policy of injection, ingestion, and injunction. Let's educate the people on what they can do lawfully, legally, financially, etc., so that we can win this simple war. | ||
And the first thing is you guys, of course, spotlighting the bad guys and getting the word out. | ||
And I think that's a great deal. | ||
I'm looking right now at the menu options, and I'm going to start browsing the site. | ||
Awesome, man. So the little image holds up a cell phone, so you know I ain't pulling your leg on it. | ||
And I'm going to go let you get to other callers because they might want to talk more about Anunnaki DNA and all that esoteric stuff that we all like to dive into. | ||
But I'm looking for more practical solutions, but I appreciate you bringing them to us. | ||
Absolutely. Thank you so much for your call. | ||
I really, really appreciate it. | ||
Let's hear next from Zorbach on planet Coney Island. | ||
Zorbach, live long and prosper, dude. | ||
unidentified
|
What's up? Good morning. | |
Greetings, human geyser. | ||
How are you today? I'm doing well. | ||
How are you, sir? Very well. | ||
unidentified
|
I've been observing your creative creatures on Earth here at Infowars. | |
Most of you have not locked her up, built a wall, or drained a swamp. | ||
How do we plan to do such a thing? | ||
Is there a solution on Earth? | ||
I have no idea what the solution is. | ||
I just know that it's not whatever the heck it is that we're currently doing. | ||
It's certainly not going to be to empower the government. | ||
unidentified
|
If there was pure meat left on Earth, how to keep animals pure from vaccinations, what else shall we do? | |
You know, this alien sounds a lot like a robot. | ||
Let's hear next from Johnny in Denmark. | ||
Johnny, what's on your mind? Oh, yeah, two things. | ||
unidentified
|
First thing I was going to quote about was continuing on this... | |
Before I do that, just a little bit of fun. | ||
You wanted some substitutes, and I completely agree with you. | ||
We shouldn't call them mainstream media that's being manipulated. | ||
So I've got a few alternatives that rhyme with it. | ||
Mainstream media, mainstream, gamestream, gamestream, inamestream, lamestream, maimestream, namestream, Pain stream, shame stream, vain stream, wain stream, and zany stream. So take your pick, any combination of that. | ||
Anyway, now, what profit me also, I'm profit for two reasons. | ||
One is, I talked before, but I've kind of gotten cut off, about Reese's Peace, as I like calling them, about three world wars to usher in a one world religion. | ||
And it became more relevant a few days ago when I don't know if you heard it, but it's actually not a telephone replay. | ||
A caller called in and claimed he criticized Alex sarcastically for hiring you, who he claimed was a 33rd degree Satan-worshipping Freemason. | ||
Right, right. | ||
unidentified
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I don't know if you heard that. | |
Yeah, I heard it. He did. Okay. | ||
And then just to help put some of this to rest, my 33rd degree Freemason friend, whom you were interested in DMing you, and we'll work that out, forwarded me a nice documentary, Origins of the Freemasons, on YouTube, from the city of Allen, spelled A-W-L-E-N-A-C-T-V, by Kevin Mayne, who was a Freemason Masonic historian before he was a Freemason. | ||
He's a Freemasonic historian for 20-something years and a Freemason for only 11 or 12. | ||
Just a fun fact, more than 16% of the signers of the Declaration of Independence and more than 33% of the signers of the Constitution are Freemasons. | ||
33%, 33%, 33%. | ||
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More than more. | |
Yeah, exactly. I haven't forgotten American marketing. | ||
And as you call them out, get a freak in tonight. | ||
Including George Washington, Benjamin Franklin, my favorite founding father, John Hancock, Paul Revere, and Chief Justice John Marshall. | ||
If they weren't really American, who was? | ||
And Albert Pike was a very interesting character. | ||
He was... | ||
The propaganda helps with him because his writing is very dense and abstrue. | ||
He was an author, editor, jurist, lawyer, military officer, and orator. | ||
And the reason there's a lot of this false history of previous history is because of this one French hoaxer, Leo Taxa. | ||
L-E-O-E with an accent, T-A-X-I-L, who went under a pen named Prosper Martin. | ||
And he had an interesting history. | ||
He was actually raised in a seminary, schooled in a seminary, and he became very disillusioned with Catholicism. | ||
So you're right, he wrote some really anti-Catholic texts, down with cloth, the Jesuit son, the life of Jesus, the amusing Bible. | ||
Identifying logical contradictions and what he claimed were in the Bible, debauchery of the confessor, holy pornographers, and he feigned the Pope's mistresses in 1884. | ||
And he was actually prosecuted for writing a pamphlet in 1885 that was highly critical of Catholicism, and he feigned conversion and started writing the Martyrdom of Joan of Arc, And he wrote a history, a very detailed, several-volume history of Freemasonry. | ||
The problem with it was it was really fictitious. | ||
And the way we know that is because he himself set up a press conference on Freemasonry. | ||
April 19th, 1897, one day before Hitler's eighth birthday, interestingly enough. | ||
And people were interested. | ||
He thought he would be vindicated and all. | ||
And he announced that the whole history he had written was false because he hated both Freemasonry and Catholicism. | ||
But unfortunately, that hasn't made its way around the Internet as much as all the other things. | ||
The anti-freemason things. | ||
And the woman he had... | ||
Who was supposed to have had first-hand accounts of these satanic rituals turned out to be a typist of his. | ||
Diana Vaughn, who smilingly agreed to have her name being used. | ||
One thing to consider, too, Johnny, about the masonry thing. | ||
People think of masonry like they think about other organizations. | ||
They think about... When we think about organizations in America, we think very top-down. | ||
Like, there's federal government, and there's state government, and there's local government. | ||
We think about... We think like CEO and then employees that follow orders. | ||
When we think about churches, we think like, okay, Pope, Cardinal, Priest, Deacon. | ||
Our mentality about organizations is very top-down, but Albert Pike is just an interesting guy who was a Freemason, but he's not like... | ||
It's not like he's the top dog that everybody... | ||
You don't have to agree with these people. | ||
These people are just philosophers that are Freemasons that write about Freemasonry and how they interpret it. | ||
Same with, like, Manly P. Hall. | ||
Manly P. Hall was just a philosopher who wrote about Freemasonry. | ||
It doesn't mean that everything that he wrote about it was true or a directive or a top-down edict. | ||
Some of the stuff he wrote I thought was really interesting. | ||
Other stuff I'm like, ah, it's just out there. | ||
So I think people, when they look at Freemasonry, they look at it the wrong way. | ||
They think that you take orders from... | ||
The leader of a lodge or the leader of a grand lodge, and it just doesn't work like that. | ||
So anyway, great show today, guys. | ||
I really enjoyed being with you. | ||
More tomorrow on the American Journal at 8 a.m. | ||
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Central. | |
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