Speaker | Time | Text |
---|---|---|
pay insufficient attention to the frightening scenario of a comprehensive cyber attack on | ||
unidentified
|
So essentially what this public-private partnership at the WEF is pushing for is for every person's access to the internet to be tied to a digital ID or a government-issued ID, but presumably a digital ID just because of where government-issued ID programs are all going essentially around the world. | |
People aren't necessarily going to consent to that unless they are made to believe that anonymity and privacy online are dangerous. | ||
So how exactly can you convince people that that needs to happen? | ||
It's an event where anonymous hackers do something online that causes major disruption globally, and then the consent can be manufactured through fear and panic, as is often done, that anonymity and privacy needs to be eliminated, that we need to know exactly who is doing what online to prevent a calamity of that scale from ever happening again. | ||
And this is the exact solution that these guys have been cooking for a very long time. | ||
Hackers affiliated with China's People's Liberation Army have infiltrated critical services here in the U.S. It was actually a very shocking result to us that there's very few number of substations you need to take out in the entire United States to knock out the entire grid. | ||
Knock out the entire grid? | ||
That's correct. How many would it take to knock out putting the entire country in a blackout? | ||
Less than 20. That report was from 2013 and it actually found the number was even lower. | ||
Nine. Taking out just nine critical substations could black out the whole country. | ||
This was a huge cyber attack in the panicked early days of the COVID-19 pandemic, targeting a $1.8 trillion government agency. | ||
The truth of it has never been reported. | ||
This is the Department of Health and Human Services, and on March 16, 2020, they were going to full remote work. | ||
Network operators had to adjust all their firewall and security settings to allow hundreds of thousands of new, unknown connections into their network, so they had to scale down their security all at the same time. | ||
And that's when the attacks drop. | ||
China's preparing for war with the United States. | ||
The strategy here is that they want to be able to invade Taiwan. | ||
They're worried that the United States will project military power from bases in Hawaii and the continental United States to Asia To defend Taiwan. | ||
And so what China's trying to do is to do these cyber intrusions, lay in wait, and at the right moment, attack ports, attack water supply, attack energy supplies to prevent the United States from projecting military power forward. | ||
CCP-tied group is quietly fueling U.S.-based climate initiatives, tax violence. | ||
And it goes through. | ||
The group's wanting to shut off fossil fuels, shut down the coal plants, CCP-funded, Saudi Arabian-funded. | ||
And they have their buddies in our government that are heavily invested there as the middlemen. | ||
They're shipping what's left of our jobs overseas. | ||
They're making announcements all over the country. | ||
No more money for building traditional roads. | ||
They're building roads just for EVs in Florida. | ||
unidentified
|
The road itself will charge electric vehicles. | |
If you have an electric vehicle and you have the right equipment attached, you will be able to charge as you're driving. | ||
That dynamic charging is a pilot program. | ||
So at first, it'll only work for the fleet of test electric vehicles. | ||
But the end goal is for the expressway to charge all types of EVs. | ||
And I think when this is done, this will be a leadership model for the rest of the world. | ||
And they're putting power cables under the road but don't worry they said it's coming to a road near you and they're going to do it on regular roads so you don't have to pull over and charge you just drive down the highway while all that radiation same stuff comes out of power lines that makes people sick on record. | ||
unidentified
|
So we're charging at 131 kilowatts here at a DC fast charger and up close to the cable We're getting a little bit higher, but that's very close. | |
EMS. Meanwhile, this ties into it. | ||
Texas power plants have no responsibility to provide electricity in emergencies. | ||
Justice's rule. The decision now leaves the families of those who died during 2021 when the feds ordered the power not to be boosted. | ||
unidentified
|
We have a nuclear power plant offline because a water pump froze. | |
We have coal plants offline because equipment froze. | ||
All right. Folks, that is the latest from Band.video. | ||
2024 will see digital IDs ushered in by cyber and terror attacks as we are back live from the Infowars studio broadcasting this December 27th. | ||
See you on the other side for the Daily Dispatch. | ||
This is Harrison Smith. You're watching the American Journal, Infowars.com, Band.video. | ||
Share those links now. | ||
We'll be right back. | ||
unidentified
|
It's Wednesday, December 27th, year of our lore in 2023. | |
And you're listening to The American Journal with your host, Harrison Smith. | ||
Watch it live right now at band.video. | ||
All right, good morning, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
Welcome to The American Journal. I am your host, Harrison Smith. | ||
It is Wednesday, the 27th of December, and we're coming to you live from the InfoWars studio. | ||
Hope everybody had a wonderful and relaxing Christmas. | ||
I know I did. I know I was getting a lot of messages from people saying, get back to work. | ||
So, here we are. | ||
We are back, ready to fight the good fight. | ||
What a fight it is we have ahead of us. | ||
Of course, I'll actually be out starting on Friday, so I'll be here today and tomorrow, and then Chase will take over for a very brief time into the new year. | ||
And then come 2024, it's firing on all cylinders. | ||
Pedal to the metal, election year, world war, cyber attacks, massive invasion at the southern border. | ||
It's all coming down, folks. | ||
And we are entering the final stretch, I think, for this great conflict between humanity and the technocratic psychopaths that are trying to put us all in boxes. | ||
Soon it will all be decided. | ||
We'll be joined later in this show by Daniel Miller, president of the Texas Nationalist Movement. | ||
Talk about the great strides they've made towards Texas independence and the Texas secession movement. | ||
He'll be joining us in the 10 o'clock hour, so we'll open up the phone lines nice and early, probably in the 9 o'clock hour, to hear from our audience before welcoming Daniel Miller. | ||
And we'll be talking not just about the fact that They've achieved the requisite petition signature number in order to get the question of Texas secession on the ballot. | ||
But how Texas secession could be a solution to so many problems that we face these days, in particular, the invasion of the southern border. | ||
And that'll be a major topic throughout the show today. | ||
So let's just get right into it. | ||
Shall we? | ||
Here it is, your Daily Dispatch. | ||
All right, here it is, folks, your Daily Dispatch for Wednesday, the 27th of December 2023. | ||
Largest migrant caravan in over a year headed to open U.S. border. | ||
15,000 illegal migrants in Christmas caravan, and it's growing every day. | ||
The largest migrant caravan in over a year is on its way to the open border of the southern United States. | ||
The Christmas caravan left on December 25th from southern Mexico and is led by activist Luis Garcia Villagran. | ||
unidentified
|
Activist, the right word? | |
Yes. | ||
Activist. He's an activist. | ||
No, he's a criminal. | ||
He's leading a giant criminal gang. | ||
He's leading an invasion. | ||
He's a commanding general of the invading forces. | ||
An activist. Are you kidding me? | ||
He's guiding tens of thousands of foreign nationals towards our border with the express purpose of breaking our laws and achieving illegal egress into our country. | ||
That's not an activist. | ||
That's That's a mafia member. | ||
That's a leader of a criminal mob. | ||
Unless we're also going to call the shoplifting mobs activists. | ||
They're activists. They're freeing the goods from the shelves, liberating them into the hands of the criminals, looting. | ||
It's like, well, you're not a... | ||
You're not an activist. You're just a criminal. | ||
So this guy's just a criminal. | ||
How we know who this guy... | ||
I mean, we'll get into it later. | ||
We'll get into it later. | ||
It's so absurd at this point. | ||
I mean, the fact that we've gone from 2016, 2017, them claiming that migrant caravans were a conspiracy theory that weren't real... | ||
You can find videos of leftist politicians going up and being like, Trump's imaginary caravan that he's trying to scare everyone with. | ||
The fact that we've gone from that to just like, this year's caravan is bigger than last. | ||
And it's just tens of thousands a day crossing over. | ||
We have a story that we'll get to a little bit later of essentially African travel agencies being set up. | ||
Senegalese travel agencies who just are advertising we can get you in the United States. | ||
Just pay a couple thousand bucks. It is a full-fledged industry at this point. | ||
And of course the human trafficking is coming along with it and so much more. | ||
Again, we'll get into some of the numbers a little bit later because they are truly astonishing. | ||
But meanwhile, the next story in our daily dispatch is this. | ||
teen tourists stabbed by deranged stranger at Grand Central who shouted, quote, I want all the white people dead on Christmas. | ||
Yeah, a troubled, yeah a troubled a troubled vagrant randomly stabbed two teenage girls enjoying a christmas morning meal with their parents at grand terminal grand central terminal restaurant after ranting that he wanted all white people dead authority said well another another harvard grad making his mark in the world um | ||
Another just patriotic adherent to the Leftist ideology doing what is the inevitable thing to do, the inevitable conclusion of The stochastic terror that has been assaulting us for years. | ||
The girls, 14- and 16-year-olds visiting from South America, were attacked at Tartanary in the Grand Central Dining Concourse around 11.25 a.m. | ||
Monday and suffered non-life-threatening stab wounds, police and sources say. | ||
Quote, I want all the white people dead. | ||
The suspect, Stephen Hutcherson, 36, allegedly yelled, according to police sources, I want to sit next to the crackers. | ||
Oh, gay. It's just, you know, come to America, get stabbed by a crazy black racist. | ||
I think it would look good on a poster. | ||
I think it's a good advertising for our tourist industry. | ||
Apparently the girls are being treated for their injuries. | ||
And the guy was booked on felony counts of attempted murder, assault, criminal possession of a weapon, and misdemeanor endangering the welfare of a child, according to the MTA. So he'll be out tomorrow probably. | ||
If I had to guess, if I had to guess, he'd be out tomorrow. | ||
Meanwhile, 160 Christians massacred, including pastors in Nigeria. | ||
Coordinated attacks launched during Christmas. | ||
Terrorists massacred 160 people, many of them preparing for church Christmas programs Saturday night through Christmas Day and coordinated attacks on predominantly Christian areas in the Plateau State, Nigeria. | ||
Sources say Christian pastors were killed and hundreds of houses were destroyed in the massacres in the villages of Barkanladi, Bokos, and Mangu counties. | ||
Officials and residents say the assailants killed Reverend Solomon Gushy of... | ||
Baptist Church in Dares Village, along with nine of its family members, said Bocos County resident, Dauzino Mallow, But I mean, that's typical as well. | ||
I mean, it's like, why do we even report this? | ||
A black guy stabs white girls screaming about white people. | ||
Christians get massacred ad nauseum and nobody even reports. | ||
I mean, these things just happen, right? | ||
I mean, this is just normal. | ||
It's just your average, everyday, once a week sort of occurrences in the world that we live in. | ||
Why even pay attention to it? | ||
I mean, obviously, it must be because I'm racist. | ||
Meanwhile, Netanyahu looking for countries to absorb ethnically cleansed Palestinians. | ||
Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has told his supporters that he's working on finding countries ready to absorb Palestinians from Gaza. | ||
Yeah, not his. | ||
Obviously not his country. | ||
Right, I mean, obviously not his. | ||
Obviously his country's doing everything they can to exterminate the Gazans. | ||
But anybody else want him? | ||
But does anybody else want to have him? | ||
I'll tell you what. Why would anybody want to take them when clearly having Palestinians in your midst is like an open invitation to have Israel bomb your hospitals? | ||
We'll get into what's going on in Israel. | ||
Today as well, because of course, it is as predicted as almost seems inevitable at this point. | ||
Spiraled out into a wider regional conflict. | ||
Story from Infowars.com. | ||
U.S. launches airstrikes in Iraq. | ||
U.S. forces have carried out airstrikes targeting Khatab Hezbollah militants. | ||
That's Hezbollah in Iraq. | ||
After blaming the group for a drone attack that injured three American soldiers in the country's Kurdish region. | ||
Yeah, there's been a lot of developments. | ||
America's trying to bribe Houthis to stop attacking people in the Red Sea. | ||
They're rejecting it. America's just, like, desperate to do absolutely anything to stop this conflict, you know, other than reign in Israel like a modicum, like a little tiny bit. | ||
All right, welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
Yes, war in the Middle East. | ||
Spiraling as we always knew it would. | ||
Southern border being absolutely opened up for full-fledged invasion, just like we always knew it would. | ||
And it just goes on and on. | ||
We'll be joined by Daniel Miller in the third hour to talk about the Texas nationalist movement and the petition to have Texas cede from the union. | ||
Very excited to talk to him about that, which I see is a... | ||
There's a little white pill in a sea of black. | ||
There's a little glimmer of hope that we could do something, literally anything, to stop the deliberate dismantling of our entire country. | ||
Does that seem ironic to you? | ||
Do I actually want to dismantle the union in order to stop it from being dismantled? | ||
Well, there's dismantling the union in a political sense. | ||
In which states, like Texas, whose economies are bigger than Russia's and whose landmass is bigger than Germany or France, can be politically independent from the corrupt scumbag network class in Washington, D.C. That's one option. | ||
Option two... Would be that the people and the culture and the history and the heritage and the physical landmass of the United States is picked apart, destroyed, piecemeal over the next decade or so. | ||
Where we might still have 50 states... | ||
But the composition of the country will be utterly unrecognizable in a permanent and irreversible process that is taking place now. | ||
Really hard to overstate what's going on here. | ||
There's a lot of stuff to talk about. | ||
We'll take your calls in the second hour. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
I am tempted to get into Israel right now, but let's continue with the discussion of the invasion as it is just unrelenting, unprevented, and continuous. | ||
And again, the most frustrating part of all of it is how easy it would be to fix, how simple it would be to prevent all of this from happening. | ||
And yet the longer it goes on with every day that our border is open, the ultimate project work we have ahead of us has made that much more difficult, that much more dangerous. | ||
Now these people want you to think that it's somehow anti-American and an imposition of violence. | ||
Simply put up a wall or... | ||
Some sort of barbed wire fence. | ||
This is unacceptable to them. | ||
Can't happen. Won't happen. | ||
They won't do it. They won't deploy that type of violence. | ||
Really what they're just setting us up for is a much more significant level of violence in the future as we have to undo what they're doing right now. | ||
Just don't for a second think that just because they've flooded the country with tens of millions of people That does mean we have to accept it, and that, like, with every month that another million come in, we just have to go, well, shoot, they got away with that million. | ||
Nothing we can do about that. | ||
No, there's a lot we can do about that. | ||
And it... It makes it obvious that there is, in fact, a political solution to this because this is a political problem. | ||
It's not overwhelming. | ||
It's not something we can't handle. | ||
It's not something that we just can't do anything about. | ||
It's something that our leadership is doing on purpose, and if we had different leadership, they could do something else. | ||
And they were doing something else, like when Trump was in office. | ||
And just to illustrate how ridiculous all of this is, Endwokeness on Twitter, says the annual cost of accommodating the millions of illegals in this country, the annual cost is nearly half a trillion dollars. | ||
$451 billion a year. | ||
$451 billion a year. | ||
To care for, process, the illegal migrants in this country. | ||
The cost of the border wall would have been about $15 billion. | ||
We couldn't even get $5 billion when Trump was in office. | ||
And we controlled the Congress and the Senate. | ||
Couldn't even get $5 billion. | ||
It was too expensive. It was too much money. | ||
So instead we're spending $451 billion a year To take care of and house, provide the transportation for, provide the legal services for, and provide the courtroom facilities for foreigners, people that are not American. | ||
Contributed absolutely nothing to this country, by definition. | ||
And yet are costing us half a trillion dollars a year while we simultaneously spend probably about that much defending the borders of Israel and Ukraine amongst others. | ||
And then Wokeness, of course, says this is not a crisis. | ||
It is by design. | ||
And of course it is. | ||
Echo Chamber on Twitter says this, the great replacement is accelerating. | ||
15% of the U.S. population is foreign-born and is growing three times faster than when Trump was in office. | ||
In October 2023, the foreign-born share was the highest in history at 49.5 million, and 15% of the U.S. population, immigrants now at a record. | ||
15% of the entire U.S. population. | ||
Since President Biden took office in January 2021, the foreign-born population has grown by 4.5 million, larger than the individual populations of 25 U.S. states. | ||
And I believe, I've heard even higher counts. | ||
Things like, I may have this wrong, but New Jersey, the 11th largest U.S. state. | ||
More people crossing in a single year. | ||
More than 11,000 migrants waiting in northern Mexico amid border surge. | ||
just hanging out, just waiting. | ||
I mean, we're going to have to take your calls on this because I don't even know what to say. | ||
I mean, we're just sitting here daily watching an invasion of millions take place, being funded by our government, being coordinated and orchestrated by the United Nations, being facilitated by the governmental program That was endowed with incredible powers specifically to prevent what they are now facilitating. | ||
And they're just doing it. | ||
They just keep doing it. | ||
So I don't know if the answer is like citizen militias forcing the government's hand. | ||
I don't know. I don't know what the solution is. | ||
So we'll have to open up the lines for your calls in the next hour. | ||
I'm sick of talking about this. | ||
I'm sick of seeing it. Sick of this being a reality. | ||
It is mind-boggling. | ||
unidentified
|
Welcome back, folks. | |
We're on the cusp of 2024. | ||
I truly wonder what comes next. | ||
unidentified
|
Alexander Dugan. | |
Prosper Russian political scientist, referred to as Putin's brain, very highly regarded thinker in Russian patriotic circles, has said this the next year. | ||
The Great War will come to the Middle East. | ||
It may be a little late, but it will happen. | ||
The Houthis will not stop. | ||
Ships will no longer enter the Red Sea. | ||
Oil prices will rise. | ||
Iran will respond to provocations. | ||
The collapse of Israel is inevitable. | ||
We call this the end of time. | ||
The apocalypse has already arrived right now or a little later. | ||
This may not happen yet, but soon. | ||
You see the actual tweet. | ||
a Apocalypse is now. | ||
Right now or a bit later. | ||
Maybe not yet, but soon. | ||
Eh, but soon. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay. | |
And there's this weird, like... | ||
I don't even know how to describe it. | ||
There's this weird sense of inevitability. | ||
It's almost like everybody at this point is just a nerd to the fact. | ||
They're just used to the idea that the entire world is run by psychopaths. | ||
And it's almost just like When your parent has dementia and you just have to deal with it, you just go, gosh, it's the way it is, you know? | ||
It's just the way it is. | ||
She's just going to keep telling that same story over and over because she just doesn't remember she already told it. | ||
She's just going to keep doing it. | ||
She's got to nod along, go along with it. | ||
It's like the Ukraine war has more or less been hopeless for the last year at least. | ||
They're just still doing it. | ||
Everybody just sort of goes, yeah, yeah, that's what's going to happen. | ||
They're just going to kill everybody in Ukraine. | ||
They're just going to, at this point, they're done killing the young men. | ||
Now they're going to kill the old men. | ||
And we just have to deal with it. | ||
We just have to put up with it. This is just what's going to happen. | ||
It's a self-fulfilling prophecy. | ||
It's a, the greatest gift we could give to them is acting like they're Literally insane. | ||
Absolutely diabolically insane ideas are just... | ||
We just have to accept them. | ||
They just have to keep going. | ||
They just have to keep bombing Gaza. | ||
They just have to keep sending Ukrainians into the meat grinder. | ||
They just have to keep escalating with Russia. | ||
They just have to keep flooding the border with millions and millions of people. | ||
They just have to keep letting all the murderers out to kill again. | ||
That's just how it is. | ||
And that's what I don't really understand, is this mindset of inevitability, this Concept of helplessness, like learned helplessness, that humanity itself seems to have been inculcated with. | ||
We can go to clip number five here. | ||
This is in Ukraine. This is the new recruiting class of Ukraine. | ||
Let's go ahead and roll the tape. | ||
For our radio listeners, I'll tell you what we're looking at here is a bunch of old men sitting in what looks like an elementary school cafeteria. | ||
They're old men. They've got gray hair. | ||
They've got wrinkles. I don't see a single man that looks below the age of probably 50, but at least 45. | ||
You know, this is what happened... | ||
At the end of World War II, when it was like Germany was surrounded, the Allies were moving in, the Russians were moving in, and they were just desperately shoving a uniform on every 12-year-old and 75-year-old they could find because it was basically a fight to the death, and they were not going to surrender until, you know, the Allies were in Berlin, and that's what happened. | ||
In this case, though, it's just like this is just a choice. | ||
They're just deciding to do this. | ||
This isn't like a, for the survival of our country, we will bring in every man, woman, and child. | ||
It's just like, yeah, they just killed all the young ones already, and now they're bringing the old ones in. | ||
Ukraine's frontline troops are getting older. | ||
Physically, quote, I can't handle this. | ||
Why? What is the point of this? | ||
What goal are we trying to achieve here? | ||
What ultimate outcome they even think is possible at this point? | ||
And I guess this is the point of the unaccountable, unelected, globalist world government, is they don't have to give you a reason. | ||
They don't have to try to justify what they're doing. | ||
They don't have to make an argument in favor of the sacrifice that they're forcing you to make. | ||
There's no... There's no balancing of sacrifice versus outcome, return on investment sort of thing. | ||
The average age of the Ukraine soldier is older than 40 as the country grapples with personnel problems. | ||
That's one way to put it. | ||
You say tomato, I say tomato. | ||
I say you have a psychopath, demonic, crackhead elf running your country. | ||
On the behalf of and for the benefit of multinational corporations headquartered in America, you say personnel problems. | ||
I mean, it's one and the same. | ||
It's six, one half dozen of the other, I guess. | ||
Personnel problems, that's the way to put it. | ||
Yeah, Hitler had personnel problems in the bunker. | ||
Germany had personnel problems until he took a cyanide capsule. | ||
Ukraine's got personnel problems. | ||
Average age is over 40. | ||
And for some reason, it's only getting more intense. | ||
For some reason, the conflict is not winding down. | ||
They're not shoring things up. | ||
It's accelerating. | ||
It's ramping up. Russian warship damage and Ukraine strike on Crimea. | ||
Ukraine forces have damaged the Russian landing ship Novo Cherkask at its home base in Feodosia with an overnight missile strike, the Russian Defense Ministry confirmed on Tuesday morning. | ||
The engagement also resulted in the downing by Russian anti-aircraft weaponry of two Ukrainian Su-24 jets near the city of Nikolev by Russian anti-aircraft weaponry, the military said. | ||
The attack on the Crimean port city was also confirmed by the region's governor, Sergei whatever, who reported that one person had been killed and two others injured. | ||
Blast waves from explosions of the military facility also damaged windows in nearby buildings, but otherwise civilian infrastructure remained intact, the officials stated. | ||
Local emergency workers were later told the media that five people had been reported injured and 250 rescue workers responding to the situation. | ||
I don't know if the guys can pull up a video of this. | ||
I actually have one, but I didn't put it in yet. | ||
But it is an absolutely monumental explosion taking place here. | ||
Just absolutely huge. | ||
For our television viewers, you're seeing it on screen now. | ||
It's almost nuclear in scale. | ||
I suppose that would be what happens when you hit the munitions target. | ||
But simultaneous to and with that, you have Russian nuclear weapons being moved into Belarus for the first time. | ||
Story again from Gateway Pundit. | ||
Apocalypse Now, Russian tactical nuclear weapons in position in the territory of Belarus. | ||
Positioning of the nukes is intended as a defense against both Ukraine and Poland. | ||
Tactical nuclear weapons are designed for battlefield use and carry a smaller payload for specific location attacks as opposed to a much more powerful strategic intercontinental nuclear missile. | ||
In the old world, these weapons would give pause and make NATO rethink its push eastward by seeing that powerful retribution can be expected. | ||
Nowadays, it does seem like nuclear deterrence has lost its persuasion power, which is very concerning since an attack is a real possibility in the current geopolitical moment. | ||
The board has set, the pieces are moving, and the nukes have arrived in Belarus. | ||
Lukashenko stated that housing Russian nuclear weapons in his country is a move to Czech aggression by Poland. | ||
And sure, in the old world, these weapons would give pause, but so would a lot of other stuff. | ||
Having to recruit old men. | ||
Having to have press gangs roam your streets and grab family men and shove them into vans and send them off to die for no discernible purpose. | ||
That would cause pause too. None of these things are causing pause because how do you fight somebody that's suicidal? | ||
The West is suicidal. | ||
They'll do anything. Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
Remember, you fund everything we do here at Infowars by going to Infowarsstore.com. | ||
Infowarsstore.com is the only place that we receive funding of any sort. | ||
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The information is free. | ||
The information is just the cherry on top. | ||
You know, at Infowarsstore.com, we have really incredible products, supplements, t-shirts, books, movies, all sorts of great stuff. | ||
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Place your orders and make sure that you have the boost and the help that you need this upcoming New Year's to fulfill your New Year's resolutions. | ||
We should take calls on New Year's resolutions or something. | ||
No, we'll take calls on literally everything. | ||
And I will open up the phone lines in the next hour for being joined by Daniel Miller in the third hour. | ||
We've got a lot of... | ||
Yeah. Well, do you want to just go through some of these headlines? | ||
Should we just go through some of these headlines about Israel? | ||
unidentified
|
Shall we? Because it's... | |
It's certainly not getting any better. | ||
And you would just think at a certain point enough would be enough. | ||
You have to think there's some sort of threshold beyond which even the most extremist Israeli settler would be like, okay, I think we can let up a little bit now. | ||
Not only has the bombing campaign of Gaza not relented, not slowed down, it's ramped up, it's intensified, and practically every week since October 7th, that's been the case. | ||
It started out really big, really strong, really devastating, really damaging, and it's only gotten worse and worse and worse and worse and worse. | ||
Almost like it's on purpose. | ||
Almost like this was the intention the entire time. | ||
Let's go through some of these headlines from Wall Street Journal. | ||
Israel intensifies offensive against Hamas in Gaza refugee camps. | ||
Wow. We can't let them have refuge. | ||
Israeli forces intensified their ground offensive in refugee camps in the central Gaza Strip as fighting continued to drive Palestinian civilians into shrinking and overcrowded areas in search of safety. | ||
Since the launch of its military operation in October, Israel has struck several refugee camps in Gaza as it seeks to eradicate Hamas or, you know, whatever. | ||
You know, as it seeks to eradicate Hamas or just, I mean, or not. | ||
I mean, they're not actually damaging Hamas that much. | ||
In fact, they've hardly damaged Hamas at all. | ||
As we've known since the very beginning, since before the attack on October 7th, long before, Hamas operates primarily in massive tunnel complexes 60 plus feet underneath the surface of the earth. | ||
So they're not the ones being damaged by the bombs. | ||
They're not the ones taking casualties. | ||
It's been solely and completely civilians. | ||
And, you know, just sort of draw these these two things together. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
The story I covered in the Daily Dispatch. | ||
Largest migrant caravan in over a year heading to open U.S. border. | ||
15,000 illegal migrants in Christmas caravan and it's growing every day. | ||
They talk about how this is being led by some dude. | ||
Luis Garcia Villagran. | ||
Now, if you are leading a military force of 15,000 people towards a stated goal of invading a sovereign nation, I think you should be treated as an enemy combatant. | ||
You should be taken out. | ||
I think it would be easy to do. | ||
I don't think it would be difficult. | ||
I don't think America would have to do it. | ||
I think we could probably pay the cartels to do it. | ||
Pretty cheap. If that's the way you wanted to go. | ||
I think if you're leading an invasion, 15,000 people, you have set yourself up as a military opponent of a superpower, I think you should be taken out. | ||
Whether that's, you know, a SEAL team just dropping in with helicopters, throwing you in the ocean like they did with Osama bin Laden, wink, wink. | ||
Or whether like, you know, kidnapped and interrogated and shouldn't say kidnapped, arrested and interrogated and discovered who's funding you and then you go after those people, you know, unspool the network in order to dismantle it. | ||
I'm good with any of those. | ||
That being said, if America's response to this was to just kill all 15,000 people And go, well, we are hyper-targeted Luis. | ||
We are very concerned with civilian casualties. | ||
We are doing our best to have as few of those as possible. | ||
But in order to get Luis, we went ahead and carpet-bombed the whole open-air caravan. | ||
We killed 15,000 people, 7,000 of them were children. | ||
And we're not even sorry about it. | ||
When you kind of feel sick... | ||
It seems like these are the two extremes we're dealing with in the world right now. | ||
It's like either you just silently sit back as a person becomes a public figure just going, I'm funded by billionaires to lead 15,000 people into your country and violate your laws. | ||
You sit there and go, well, okay. | ||
Well, all right. Well, I don't like it, but good luck with that. | ||
That's one option. And then the other option is burn all of the 15,000 civilians to death. | ||
It's like, how about something in the middle? | ||
How about just like, if you are going to target opponents militarily, you do it in a surgical and reasonable fashion. | ||
And if you're going to kill tens of thousands of civilians... | ||
Just routinely in a meat grinder sort of process that just goes on and on and on and on and on. | ||
You should be treated like the war criminal, psychopath, mass murderers that you are by the rest of the world. | ||
It's just kind of weird, isn't it? | ||
I mean, isn't it all just kind of like... | ||
Messed up and backwards. | ||
It's how everything is just... | ||
It's like... | ||
Some things are just allowed. | ||
Even though they're obviously illegal. | ||
Obviously terrible. It's all obvious. | ||
And the authorities do nothing. | ||
And on the other hand... | ||
You've got... | ||
What? A thousand people out of two million in Gaza... | ||
That spend an afternoon killing people in Israel. | ||
And so then for the next, I don't know, is it going on three, four months at this point? | ||
You just are flattening entire city blocks, murdering everybody. | ||
I mean, is this a tactic? | ||
Is this a psychological thing? | ||
Is there something about this that's so wildly out of touch with just reality and what is necessary or good or like the way anything has ever been done in the past? | ||
It literally just feels like since World War II, the world has just been in a nightmare. | ||
It's just been in a bad dream where nothing makes sense. | ||
Nothing works the way it's supposed to. | ||
I literally feel like you could wake up tomorrow and And it's just like, well, what about the caravans and the war? | ||
And then people would just be like, what are you talking about? | ||
We patrol our border, and if somebody tries to cross illegally, we arrest them and send them back. | ||
War? No. There's been a two-state solution for the last 40 years. | ||
They're living peacefully next to each other, just like any other country lives next to its neighbors. | ||
War in Ukraine? No, it's just, everything's going fine. | ||
You know, the Ukraine people elected a pro-Russian person, and there was no coup performed, so everything's just going fine and normal. | ||
It's like, instead, it's just this degenerate, chaotic, violent madness just roiling continuously ever since World War II. And, like, that's got to be the marking. | ||
That's got to be the point. Where you just go, okay, before this, everything seemed pretty normal. | ||
Everything was just like, everybody just did normal things and treated threats with a normal amount of, you know, pushback. | ||
For the last 70 years, it's just been this nightmare, madness, fever dream, chaos, murder, violent blood in the streets, criminals running rampant, good people cowering and hiding while evil flourishes. | ||
Alright, welcome back. Ladies and gentlemen, we are going to open up the phone lines for your calls this hour. | ||
The number to dial, if you want to dial in, is 1-877-789-2539. | ||
1-877-789-2539. | ||
We're taking your calls throughout this hour, joined by Daniel Miller in the third hour, talking about... | ||
Secession, Texas secession, it will be on the ballot this March, barring some extra-legal interference from the powers that be. | ||
We would rather us be stuck in a one-sided, monumentally unfair union, so-called, with the federal government and the fellow states. | ||
Yeah, I don't even – I don't even – I don't even know at this point. | ||
Honestly, I just... | ||
What are you supposed to say? | ||
What are you supposed to say about any of this? | ||
unidentified
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The border, the wars. | |
Just everything. Just everything going on and on. | ||
And I guess I have to believe that people just don't know this is going on. | ||
Like, they have to just not know, right? | ||
There's no way... | ||
No, you know what it is. | ||
You know what it is. There's two options. | ||
People either don't know this stuff is going on. | ||
It's totally ignorant. | ||
They literally just see, like, Fox News headlines that's like, massive migrant caravan, and they're just like, more conspiracy theories. | ||
Like, they just literally cannot believe the evidence of their own eyes. | ||
They're just, like, psychologically broken. | ||
Or... They're completely in favor of everything that's happening. | ||
Those are the only options, as far as I'm concerned, for why you wouldn't be outraged at this, for why you wouldn't be infuriated with this. | ||
The whole thing is that, like, I don't know, man. | ||
People just, just so psychologically weak. | ||
it's really like all it is I was like how do we get And we only got here because of decade upon decade of poisoning in the food and water, poison information in the school system, poison information in the mainstream media. | ||
Just slowly but surely sucking the life and intelligence and sovereignty and vitality and vim and vigor and self-preservation. | ||
And I think no small part of it, maybe this is just my imagining... | ||
I don't know if it's like a flex. | ||
I don't know if it's a flex by the people in charge. | ||
But it's not necessary for them to do some of this stuff. | ||
But in terms of things like the anti-natalist move now, getting people to override or to Push down and eliminate in their own minds the most basic primal drive, | ||
the most evolutionarily necessary drive to procreate, to have kids, to find somebody else, to mate with for life, to raise a child like it's It is a biological imperative of the strongest order, | ||
and yet they have people willfully, willingly, without coercion, at least overt coercion, without threatening, willingly giving that up. | ||
And it's like they don't even have to. | ||
They don't even have to. It's like that image from They Live where he puts on the sunglasses and it says, like, procreate, obey. | ||
Like, they could be tyrants without having us so disconnected that we... | ||
Don't even want to have kids anymore. | ||
It's like they're doing it on purpose. | ||
You know what I'm saying? It's like they're like, wow, we can really make them do anything, huh? | ||
Let's get rid of the drive to have a genetic continuation next. | ||
Wouldn't that be funny? | ||
Wouldn't that be a good joke to pull on humanity? | ||
Because I don't get why else they would do it. | ||
It goes up to me. Welcome back, folks. | ||
The headline for today's show is this. | ||
Wednesday Live. World awakens to globalist migrant invasion agenda. | ||
Is it too late? | ||
It's not too late. | ||
If I was American dictator charged with spelling immigrants from this country, I don't think it'd be that difficult, honestly. | ||
I really don't. I think there's actually not even... | ||
That difficult of a solution to this. | ||
And it goes into my primary political belief, which is make citizenship mean something again. | ||
If you're a citizen, you're a citizen, and you deserve and theoretically have privileges because of your status as a citizen. | ||
On the flip side, you also have obligations. | ||
As a citizen. That illegal immigrants don't have. | ||
So I would say something like, you know, if you've been here for 10 years and never been convicted of a crime, if you were brought over before the age of 10 by a parent or a family member of some sort, and maybe something like if you have It's called the 10-10-10 deal. | ||
If you've been here for 10 years, if you were brought over before the age of 10, or if you have like 10 family members that are citizens, then you shouldn't be made a citizen. | ||
You shouldn't have a path to citizenship. | ||
But you should be given some sort of... | ||
What would be the word? | ||
Like... Permanent visa. | ||
Permanent visa, basically. | ||
Conditional permanent visa. | ||
But you have to come in and register for it. | ||
If you've been here for less than 10 years, then you're just going to be expelled. | ||
If you've been here, if you were raised somebody else until you were 10 and then you were brought over at 15, we're going to send you back to your home country. | ||
I think if you grow up somewhere until you're 10 years old, Sending you back to that place is just sending you home. | ||
I do think it's unfair, and it's an issue we have to deal with, the idea of sending kids back. | ||
Like, if a kid is brought over by his parent, he has no choice, he's two years old, he's brought over by his parent, he's raised in America until he's 15, I think it's kind of cruel to send that kid to a different country. | ||
If he didn't grow up there and doesn't know it there, I do think that's kind of cruel, so I think you have to sort of carve out caveats. | ||
But the point of all this is to say that It's not a matter of like sending the stormtroopers out to round up illegal immigrants. | ||
I think you can have incentives and you can have programs that are like pseudo-citizenship where you don't get to vote, but you pay taxes, you can have an ID, but you're not a citizen and you don't have birthright citizen, like your kids aren't citizens. | ||
We got to get rid of birthright, get rid of all that stuff. | ||
But there's like bureaucratic processes that you can just put into place where you can go, you either comply with this bureaucratic process, And you don't suffer, but you have to leave. | ||
Or you don't suffer, but you have to have a conditional visa where you come in and register once a year, once every two years or whatever it is. | ||
Or you're going to be forcibly evicted from the country. | ||
Or you're going to be imprisoned here in America. | ||
And you're going to work for us to pay off the cost you've had to the American people. | ||
I'm talking work camps, baby. | ||
None of this is difficult. | ||
Any of this stuff would work. | ||
Any of this stuff has worked in the past. | ||
You just go, we're not going to run around chasing you. | ||
Stopping you and let me see your paper, sir. | ||
But here's the deal. You come in and register with us. | ||
Or we will chase you down. | ||
Just give them the option. And just make it bureaucratic. | ||
Make it just a process that everybody has to go through. | ||
And I don't think it's that difficult. | ||
And you can carve out exceptions for people that were brought over as kids that it's not their fault. | ||
We don't have to give them citizenship. | ||
Again, this false dichotomy of like, you either make them citizens or you have to send them back to Ecuador. | ||
It's like, well, there's another, there's a third option. | ||
It's like a million options, actually. | ||
You can make up as many options as you want and then do them. | ||
So, why not have some sort of permanent but conditional visa program where it's like, as long as you're paying taxes and as long as you aren't breaking the law, then you can stay. | ||
You can't vote. Maybe you can't even own property. | ||
And you're always welcome to leave. | ||
We don't need deportations. | ||
We need A program that lets them know that they're welcome to leave at any time and makes it a priority of them to do so. | ||
Anyway, all this is just, it's all just to say that these are choices that we're making. | ||
unidentified
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Obviously. Obviously, right? | |
And we get to some more headlines here, but I've been rambling and I want to go to phone calls. | ||
Let's go to Joe in Arkansas. | ||
He wants to talk about the borderline number one. | ||
Thanks for calling in, Joe. You're on the air. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah, Harrison, it's nice to talk to you. | |
Yeah, you said earlier that we talk and talk and talk, and I think you're right. | ||
I think that we've done plenty of singing, and I think the time to bring it is now. | ||
I think we could go down to the border. | ||
We could make it very uncomfortable for them to cross our border. | ||
You know, we have to do it right, of course, so I'm calling for January 6th starting Eagle Pass, Texas. | ||
Once we're down there, Once people see we're down there, the others can go to Lukeville, San Luis, you can go to El Paso. | ||
But if we don't start now, we're not going to have a home real soon. | ||
This country is on the verge of not being able to get back on the right course. | ||
So, I mean, we can talk and talk and talk. | ||
We all know what's coming. | ||
So, January 6th, Eagle Pass. | ||
That's what I think needs to happen. | ||
Yeah, I mean, there's got to be some. | ||
There's got to be some organized movement of action. | ||
Of course. It's sort of a foolproof, well, it's not foolproof, but the good part of an idea like this is that they couldn't talk about it without showing the situation. | ||
Right now, ignorance is their greatest weapon. | ||
Yeah. You know, lead to the question of like, well, wait, why are they on the board? | ||
Because there's how many? Because there's what number of people crossing over? | ||
Like right now, they just sort of like brush it off and they're like, yeah, we're doing the best we can with the best we got. | ||
And it's just a difficult situation. | ||
They just act like, it's the other thing these people do. | ||
They just act like everything is just kind of happening. | ||
There's not people making decisions. | ||
It's not this activist leader leading a caravan of 15,000 people. | ||
It's just a developing situation that's being dealt with by professionals. | ||
And it's just this corporate doublespeak that allows them to get away with this. | ||
I agree. There's got to be something to do. | ||
I do want to move on to another call before we go to break here. | ||
Thank you for the call, Joe. Let's go to Nathan in Virginia. | ||
You want to talk about immigration? | ||
Go ahead, Nathan. You're on the air. | ||
unidentified
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Hello, Harrison. First time getting through. | |
Oh, wonderful. Good to talk to you. | ||
Thanks, Colin. I love what you guys are doing there. | ||
I really appreciate it. | ||
Love the X2. Glad it's back. | ||
But what I want to get to is the immigration. | ||
They're pumping this immigration issue up on purpose. | ||
They're going to use that to push the digital passport, digital ID. And the Republicans are going to eat it up because they're going to use that as a Excuse to fix voting, fix illegal immigration, fix everything. | ||
We need to all be super aware, watch for this very, very closely. | ||
I just perceive that coming with the mainstream media flipping everything. | ||
Up until now, they've been denying there's even a problem now. | ||
All of a sudden, hey, guess what? We have this big problem. | ||
It's the classic... Paradigm that they deploy every single time, right? | ||
Problem, reaction, solution. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah, fix the globalist problem with the... | |
Yeah, fix the globalist problem with the globalist solution. | ||
And, I mean, the craziest part is they literally already did this. | ||
They already did this to get E-Verify in, like, the 90s. | ||
I wish I'd saved the clip. | ||
I was listening to Coast to Coast. | ||
It was like an old archive clip from the 90s where he's going, well, I'm not usually in favor of... | ||
You know, things like electronic verification, digital ID sort of thing, but it'll help crack down on illegal immigration, and I guess I'm for it. | ||
Well, they got the E-Verify, and illegal immigration exploded. | ||
They've already done this. | ||
They're going to do it again. | ||
That's where the report was about at the top of this show. | ||
unidentified
|
We'll be right back. Welcome back, folks. | |
We're just going to write down the list of callers here. | ||
We've got Jonathan in New Jersey next. | ||
We want to talk about open-air prisons. | ||
Go ahead, Jonathan. You're on the air from the open-air prison of New Jersey. | ||
unidentified
|
Hello. Yeah, right. | |
We're the armpit of America, that's what I like to call us. | ||
But, um, what, uh... | ||
What made me think about it, because I've always had this thought, but what made me think about it is when Owen said it was like throwing matches at a powder keg, right? | ||
So basically, my comparison to that is they're in a watchtower, and we're just in a prison, and they're just literally doing whatever the hell that they think they can do to make us turn against each other, and they're just like, damn... | ||
These people, like, they really love each other, but then, like... | ||
But they know the switches to flip to really, like, get it turned up, you know? | ||
But, uh... I don't know. | ||
It's just, like, a sick, sick, twisted thing that these people do. | ||
And they must see that, like, literally, AI is going to take over. | ||
There's going to be no more jobs, and they don't want to have everybody live on a, you know, just a central bank to a digital currency, live on this one flat line of money, because, you know... | ||
Somebody down the street is going to buy the new game, and you don't have enough money because you spent it on the last game from last month or whatever. | ||
So you're going to be jealous of that guy, and there's no way to prosper because we're going to be... | ||
I do things like recycled glass, so hopefully I'll be all right. | ||
I can just go to somebody's recycled bin and just take their glass, and they'll be happy I took it. | ||
So hopefully I'll be all right when the poop hits the fan. | ||
Pardon my language. Yeah, sorry. | ||
Yep, I love you guys. | ||
I just wanted to say that. And for people that say that you had to stay on the line first time caller, dude, I tried calling two times. | ||
The time that Olin with Sansa, I heard him over the line. | ||
I'm like, what the hell is this? Like, what's going on? | ||
I guess, like, he must have, and it felt like he was trying to, like, go, whatever. | ||
But it's easy to contact you guys. | ||
It's not a problem. | ||
You guys want to talk to these people. | ||
It's not a problem. You know, they're right there. | ||
You can touch. One more thing, Harrison. | ||
I think somebody should just literally, like, if you, like, Elon, Elon should buy one of these, like, regular channels, right? | ||
And literally make the government into, like, a TV reality show. | ||
So everyone has to tune in. | ||
Because it's damn near a joke. | ||
Goddamn comedy. Comedy show. | ||
So if you had people playing, like, these people, you know, and everyone could just watch it, they'll really see what the hell is going on. | ||
I think people will change their minds. | ||
Yeah, that's an interesting idea. | ||
That is basically what he's doing with X. I mean, he's You even need the old people. | ||
unidentified
|
You even need the old people so even the old people could tell the kids and then the kids could start having that value too. | |
Even get to the old people. I mean the problem is – I mean there's – again, there's almost this like strategic bureaucratic level of action where it's like it's boring. | ||
I mean, because that exists. | ||
I mean, C-SPAN, that's basically what C-SPAN is, is just a live feed of the government. | ||
And nobody watches it because it's beyond boring. | ||
And anytime that there's anything interesting happens, it's usually broadcast on a different network. | ||
So they don't even use C-SPAN. | ||
But I mean, that is sort of the idea behind C-SPAN. | ||
I like that X is opening it up to everybody. | ||
I mean, X-Space is awesome. | ||
When you can go on a space, I mean, we're on the space and it's the world's richest man, Elon Musk, talking to the world's most censored man, Alex Jones, live and unfiltered and directly to one another without any sort of, you know, impasse or barrier between them. | ||
And then you got Matt Gaetz hopping on and talking as well. | ||
I really think, you know, what he's doing with X is the future of not just communication, but government as well, where The government figures can't just sort of hide behind this perception of... | ||
Being above everybody else and doing things in the halls of government. | ||
It's like, no, you've got to explain yourself. | ||
You've got to come on Twitter and deal with the questions and actually confront your detractors and give them an open platform. | ||
I mean, if we could actually discuss this stuff openly, all of this stuff, and have it be a spectacle, have it be something that people want to tune into. | ||
It's another great thing about Donald Trump. | ||
Being in politics was people actually paid attention for the first time, and a lot of people woke up to a lot of stuff going on. | ||
So I think you're right. | ||
I think he's already sort of doing that with X. But thank you so much for the call, Jonathan. | ||
We go now to Judy in Florida, who wants to talk about the invasion. | ||
Thanks for calling in, Judy. You're on the air. | ||
Hey, Harrison. I hope you had a good Christmas with your family. | ||
Good to talk to you. | ||
I look at this situation just as an aside. | ||
There's no war at all. | ||
That I want anywhere on the planet. | ||
That's not something I sign on to. | ||
I mean, I absolutely am with, you know, the Prince of Peace, having peace, but it doesn't seem to really matter. | ||
Just to give you a quick update, I had told Chase that I had gone to Virginia from where I live to attend my ex-husband's funeral, and Come to find out that not only he died, but the middle child of nine, she died also of a turbo cancer. | ||
And, you know, I didn't ask whether or not these two individuals, because I don't know where their thinking is on the COVID spectrum, but I didn't ask how many shots, you know, and what type of shots, because it's like a forbidden question. | ||
But I probably have Three family members racked up that Anthony Fauci has indirectly or directly killed is what I'm trying to get to. | ||
Right. But one of the main things when I mention war, and I hear how you are distraught, as I am also, about the response that Israel had on what they call the Palestinian territory. | ||
Right. I want to just impart to you, with the invasion that's occurring in the United States, two things. | ||
I would like for you to look at the revised Minnesota flag and look at the Somali flag and understand that it is a conquesting ideology, theology, political system that is Islam, and where Jesus was born, is now in the West Bank. | ||
And these are just types of things that we need to look at in a historic perspective. | ||
But understand that as much as Christianity, we act in a defensive posture. | ||
Islam is advancing along with whatever communistic, you know, satanic arm of globalism, you know, just to devour. | ||
But one other thing that I sent you this morning, and if you go to Brighteon, the guy is called The Prisoner. | ||
The heading, and I sent it to you just a little while ago, the heading is Whistleblower, Illegal Immigrants Ages 19 to 30 Crossing Borders to Murder the Illegal Citizens. | ||
So I think it's worth a listen to. | ||
It starts with a guy in Texas, but the whistleblower is out of the U.K., The ending is just kind of irrelevant because it's just, you know, a guy singing, we're not going to take it. | ||
But, you know, you've covered a lot of ground here, Judy. | ||
There's a lot of stuff to respond to. | ||
Thank you so much for the call, and we'll respond to some of it on the other side. | ||
Because, yeah, I mean, it is all mixed together. | ||
I'll say there was a... | ||
A moment, I sort of tweeted about it on Christmas Eve, because there's an advent calendar that we have where there's 24 books telling the story of the birth of Jesus, and there in the fold-out is a map. | ||
It says, the Holy Land. | ||
It's just kind of like jarring hearing the story of the birth of the Son of God, Mary, this pleasantly plump, pregnant woman being led on a donkey. | ||
And then the map that you see You've seen every day because the bomb's falling. | ||
unidentified
|
Right down the lines of the phone calls, some familiar names coming up on the list. | |
First is Presley in North Carolina. | ||
Presley in North Carolina. | ||
I gotta be honest. I clicked over the weekend. | ||
Dr. Carlson did an interview with Kevin Spacey. | ||
I thought this was kind of odd, people talking about it. | ||
I clicked it. I watched about 30 seconds of it. | ||
I kind of couldn't handle it. | ||
It was kind of too cringy for me. | ||
Was that why you were throwing up a whole bunch? | ||
Yeah, yeah, that's what it was, yeah. | ||
The stomach bug of having to listen to Kevin Spacey. | ||
It was weird. It was very weird. | ||
I didn't even watch it. So you probably know more about this than I do, Presley. | ||
Thanks for calling in about the Tucker and Kevin Spacey interview. | ||
What was all that about? | ||
unidentified
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God only knows what it was really about, man. | |
I felt like I took a hit of acid watching that thing, man. | ||
Because he's interviewing Kevin Spacey as Frank Underwood, but he's asking both of them questions. | ||
It's the most bizarre thing I've seen since Kanye was on with Alex. | ||
Yeah, I saw a lot of people... | ||
I mean, the speculation was all over the place. | ||
It was like... What the hell is this? | ||
Obviously, first of all, pretty well-known, suspected, alleged gay pedophile, Kevin Spacey. | ||
On with Tucker Carlson. | ||
Is this a joke? | ||
And then there's other people being like, no, it's a warning. | ||
It's a shot across the bow to the other people. | ||
And it's like, I don't know. | ||
I can't make heads or tails of it. | ||
I think maybe Kevin Spacey is just desperate for attention. | ||
And so he'll go on anybody who will have them. | ||
unidentified
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I guess. I mean, Tucker must have known it was going to get a lot of views and cause a lot of stirs. | |
So I just... It's very bizarre. | ||
I don't know if they're good friends or what. | ||
But, you know, you haven't heard anything from Kevin Spacey. | ||
And then, like, he's stuck in that Frank Underwood character now. | ||
I don't know what's going on, dude. | ||
It is really weird. It is really weird. | ||
And he did it on Christmas? | ||
On Christmas or Christmas Eve they came out with that? | ||
unidentified
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Yeah, Christmas Eve. Yeah. | |
Yeah. It's kind of been Kevin Spacey's M.O. to do like a Christmas Eve video in that character when he was on the show House of Cards. | ||
Right. And then when he got canceled, he did that really bizarre off-the-wall one. | ||
And then now it's been like I don't know, a couple years, and he's been quiet, and he's this all of a sudden. | ||
All of his accusers have died, basically. | ||
All of his accusers have all mysteriously passed away, reminiscent of Hillary Clinton. | ||
It's weird, man. | ||
unidentified
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Well, not to mention all the real truth bombs in that show, House of Cards. | |
It's kind of, I don't know, it's beyond our imitating reality at this point, man. | ||
I just don't know. | ||
Yeah. Yeah. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah, I'm sure. I just want to say, that was an awesome gift you got your son, the armor outfit, dude. | |
That was great. He is refusing to take it off. | ||
He calls it his army. I need my army. | ||
unidentified
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He'll be leaving it one day, man. | |
Yeah, he's been, even though he's sick, he's just like, he was sick and just lying, you know, forlorn, but also wearing armor. | ||
unidentified
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There he is. That's how my youngest son was, man. | |
He was all into the outfits, just wouldn't take him off. | ||
But it's what's up. Yeah. | ||
He's got a good spirit. | ||
Yeah, man. I just want to give you a take on that. | ||
Yeah, thank you for the call. You know, It's very weird. | ||
I'm sure I've told the story before, but my connection to Kevin Spacey is that when I was working on a video production company, we were basically using... | ||
Not basically. We were literally hired the crew that did the first season of House of Cards. | ||
And so this was back when House of Cards was airing, and it was before anything had broken with Kevin Spacey. | ||
There was no big scandal yet or anything. | ||
But it was just an open secret on set that the crew was like, oh yeah, if you... | ||
They were telling me, this was almost 10 years ago at this point. | ||
They were telling me, yeah, if you were on the set of House of Cards, Kevin Spacey would have had you be his personal assistant. | ||
Wink, wink. Nudge, nudge. | ||
Like, it was just a thing that Kevin Spacey would just, when he got to a set to film something, would just identify the young pretty boys and be like, you're mine for this shoot. | ||
We'll just track them across. | ||
And it was before anything, you know, actually happened. | ||
So, you know, it's not like, it's not like these are It wasn't like a Louis C.K. situation, right? | ||
That was one where it was like, you know, treated as just like, Louis C.K. is a rapist, but then the accusations were really that he just like politely asked a woman in his hotel room if he could do stuff, and she said yes, and so he did. | ||
I guess like, that's not even a thing. | ||
Why is he getting wrapped up in a big scandal when it's like, that seemed kind of weird, but... | ||
Also not a violation, also not an aggressive or, you know, violation sort of thing. | ||
So I don't know. It's like, this is just what Kevin Spacey did. | ||
Everybody knew that he did it. | ||
Whether he kept it all above board or whether there was some coercion in place, I can't say. | ||
But I do not know why Doug Carlson would... | ||
It's just creepy, man. | ||
It's creepy and weird, and I don't get it. | ||
Have me on, Tucker. Don't have Kevin Spacey. | ||
Have me on. We'll talk about all sorts of interesting things. | ||
Let's go now to William in Arkansas. | ||
You want to talk about the Texas nationalist movement? | ||
We will be joined by Daniel Miller of the TNM later in the program. | ||
Talk about Texas secession, and it will be on the ballot later this year. | ||
William in Arkansas, what are your thoughts on the matter? | ||
Pretty vast. No accusations, but there's a lot of lack of participation by a lot of individuals in the state of Texas that claim to be patriots. | ||
You can say what you want, springtime patriot, wintertime patriot. | ||
It takes more than 2,500 state guard members to form a formal military. | ||
You've got the aspect of the federal government within the state of Texas. | ||
They moved out of Texas. | ||
Texas. Texas would be hurting. | ||
There's a lot of military in Texas. | ||
If they take their federal money, that's just what's going to happen. | ||
I spent umpteen years in the state military, 15-plus, and the federal side of it. | ||
And the first thing that everybody seems to ask, and, you know, service, it's called service, is, well, what do I get out of it? | ||
Well, you're not supposed to get anything out of it. | ||
This is the difference between a springtime patriot and a wintertime patriot. | ||
You know, it's ridiculous for anyone to expect me to fight for them when they won't fight for themselves. | ||
We're sitting here talking about the details of how they're killing us. | ||
I'm at my wit's end in certain regards of the stupidity of this nation. | ||
You know, we're sitting here literally watching a thousand different ways that they're justifying killing us. | ||
And we're talking about it. | ||
I look at a lot of the, you know, patriots in Texas as blowhards. | ||
There are 30 million people down there, you know, and you've got how many in the state military? | ||
And it's that way the nation over, and I'm no superhero. | ||
But don't talk to me about, once again, being a springtime patriot when you're more interested in the Astros and Krakos than you are, you know, other serious issues. | ||
I'm not sure I'm receiving your point, William. | ||
So, I mean, what is your take on the Texas nationalist movement? | ||
Do you think it's just not worth it? | ||
What would be your advice? | ||
To get on board, if crap or get off the pot, I don't see enough participants. | ||
I don't see a mindset change within the Texas State Guard or any military entity in this nation or the world that's going to change no more bombs in Ukraine. | ||
I mean, talk is cheap. | ||
Talk is cheap, you know? | ||
And we're sitting here having to worry about literal words. | ||
I know. And talking about treading water and saying the same thing over and over. | ||
It's our three-year anniversary of the American Journal, and Zero Foxtrot posted our first episode all the way back in, I guess, December 2021. | ||
I'm sorry, January 2021. | ||
And you were one of our first callers, William. | ||
So at least we're keeping that tradition going, bringing it full circle. | ||
We'll be back on the other side with more of your calls, starting with Simon from Florida, another one of our favorite regular callers. | ||
Stay with us, folks. Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
Straight out to your phone calls once again, we've got Simon in Florida. | ||
Simon, I've only touched really on some of the international goings-on, but there's a lot. | ||
Belarus has accepted and finalized acceptance of the delivery of Russian tactical nuclear systems. | ||
Of course, a Russian warship was destroyed. | ||
Off Crimea earlier this year, earlier this weekend. | ||
And then you have Alexander Dugan saying, Israel's done for, the Middle East is going to be on fire soon, maybe this year, maybe next year, but it's certainly happening not too far into the future. | ||
What else is going on, Simon? | ||
So, Harrison, I've been working on this for several hours. | ||
I've got an absolutely mind-blowing scoop. | ||
For you and the Infowars audience, as you do watching the simulcast of the Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs with their midday press conference with the visiting foreign minister of India. | ||
But to set this up for you as to why this is so incredibly significant, just ask your audience to hark back to a question that Sergei Lavrov He was asked previously, | ||
given the close relationship that had historically existed between India and Russia, was he concerned about how India was operating very closely with the United States And his response had been, | ||
India has an independent foreign policy, and they will make their own choice, i.e. | ||
between America and Russia, in their own sweet time. | ||
Okay? Now, today, he had meetings this morning in a press conference, and they're going to have more meetings today. | ||
But what the Indian foreign minister said was truly extraordinary. | ||
And you can probably answer what you think the decision for the Republic of India, which is the largest country in the world, they may have made and may have therapistiously announced whilst we were all asleep, or most of us were asleep, at 5 a.m. Texas time. | ||
So the foreign minister of India said that it wasn't a matter of strategic cooperation or even a strategic partnership, but that what was occurring between Russia and India was in fact a new term that he coined today called strategic convergence because the two countries' interests We're so aligned. | ||
He praised the International North-South Transportation Corridor, which is the route that's intended to go all the way from St. | ||
Petersburg on the Baltic Sea all the way down through Iran, acting as the hub of the Middle East to the west coast of India. | ||
He also talked about the transportation route from Chennai on the east coast of India all the way through to the seaport of Vladivostok, which is on the far eastern side of Russia looking towards Alaska. | ||
And then detailed how you could essentially go all the way around the central Eurasian landmass by then using the northern sea route He talked about greatly expanding tourism and negotiations resuming in three weeks' time for India to establish a free trade agreement with the entire Eurasian economic area, | ||
which Iran just did on Christmas Day, along with agreeing to trade Russia without the use of the U.S. dollar. | ||
But that would form a European Union-style free trade area from the tip of India, basically Sri Lanka, all the way through Iran, all of Central Asia, into the entire Russian Federation, the world's largest geographical into the entire Russian Federation, the world's largest geographical free trade area. | ||
Then he talked about energy, including coal, oil, and two deals on nuclear power plants. | ||
He talked about, and this is what you and I discussed about a week ago, GO, BRIC, G20, and Putin and Modi resuming their annual high-level meetings. | ||
He talked about Ukraine, Gaza, and being grateful for Russia supporting India, getting a seat as a permanent member of the United Nations Security Council. | ||
And then the 50th resistance was he said that the new global order is rebalancing global politics and global trade. | ||
And that was halfway through his talks today. | ||
Yeah, and of course they are. | ||
I mean, it seems like they're just sort of marching on without it. | ||
It almost feels like, you know, America's sitting over here like, I thought we were in charge. | ||
And they're just like, not really, actually. | ||
Not anymore. Actually, we're making agreements. | ||
We're moving on. We're forging ahead on these economic zones and cooperation agreements. | ||
And whether America likes it or not, sort of in... | ||
Doesn't matter to us. Doesn't matter to us because, you know, they're the old world and we're making the new one. | ||
And of course, this is just another aspect, another element of the general degradation of America's power and influence and prestige around the world that these massive agreements are being signed. | ||
And either they, in the past, wouldn't have been signed if they were against, you know, American interest. | ||
America would have some way of putting a stop to it. | ||
Or America would want to have a piece of the pie. | ||
I mean, we're the big dogs in the room. | ||
So, you know, you got to pay us a little bit and then we'll let you do what you want. | ||
I mean, that sort of was how the world was for a while. | ||
But it seems like increasingly that's not the case. | ||
And it seems like they're able to overcome some of what could have been petty roadblocks to cooperation. | ||
In other words, there's border conflicts between China and India. | ||
Obviously, China and Russia are increasingly intertwined in their geopolitical goals and aspirations. | ||
So you could see some sort of roadblock there where India and China and Russia are sort of this, you know, love triangle where some of them hate each other. | ||
Some of them love each other. | ||
But they're just sort of going, you know, that's a different issue. | ||
We're going to make this trade group. | ||
We're going to make this. | ||
What do you what do you say? | ||
I wrote it down. | ||
Strategic convergence cooperation between India and Russia. | ||
And, you know, the border stuff with China. | ||
It's really not that important. | ||
I mean, they're just doing it, aren't they? | ||
I mean, is there anything that America could do to stop this? | ||
What's the impact on America in all this? | ||
The impact on America is... | ||
It's huge. This is an astronomical strategic defeat to close out 2023. | ||
Yes, another one that you and I have had the opportunity to detail to the InfoWorlds audience. | ||
I mean, this is so big. | ||
I'll be talking about it for an hour on my show at 7 New York time on Weaponised News on Rumble and Twitter. | ||
But To give you an idea, Sergei Lavrov, the Russian foreign minister, said, look, you know, we've tried to cooperate with the West. | ||
And he said, and now, unfortunately, we're in a situation where the global South and the global East is aligned against the golden billion, which is the phrase he likes to use. | ||
And that essentially is the population of NATO. And that's where we stand in world affairs now, unfortunately. | ||
Well, unfortunately, but perhaps not unsurprisingly. | ||
Thank you very much for that update. | ||
So, Weaponized News tonight at 7 p.m. | ||
New York time. Simon will be breaking down further developments from this summit and Thank you so much for the call, as always, Simon. | ||
We're going to be joined in the next hour by Daniel Miller of the Texas Nationalist Movement. | ||
I do want to remind you that Everything that we're seeing now is unfolding exactly as we told you because we weren't predicting it. | ||
We were just reading the plans of the people that have now put them into motion. | ||
And we've been, I don't want to say right about everything, but I will. | ||
We've been right about everything. | ||
And if only people had listened before, it would have been a lot easier to fix the problems that we currently find ourselves confronted by. | ||
The problems are still fixable. | ||
We can still solve them. People should still be listening to us, more so now than ever. | ||
But we won't be able to get this message out. | ||
We won't be able to try to reorient and right this ship before it goes down. | ||
If you don't go to Infowarsstore.com to support us, Infowarsstore.com is the only place we get funding. | ||
Fantastic products, fantastic prizes, but best of all, you keep us on the air and in the fight. | ||
A true 360 win. | ||
The Christmas Mega Super Sale still on at InfoWarsStore.com. | ||
Rudolph Steiner, whose teachings led to anthroposophical medicine, biodynamic farming, and the Waldorf School, said that the heart is a seven-sided regular form that sits in an imaginary box said that the heart is a seven-sided regular form that sits in an Regular means that all seven sides are identical. | ||
Plato described five platonic solids, and Steiner said there was a sixth one. | ||
He also said that the heart is not a pump. | ||
This fantastic claim was vindicated by Frank Chester, who figured out how to design a seven-sided regular form. | ||
This sixth platonic solid is now called the chestahedron, and it fits perfectly inside a cube at an angle of 36 degrees off-center to the left, the exact same angle that the heart sits in the chest. | ||
When submerged in water and spun, two counter-rotating vortices are formed. | ||
Recent scientific studies have shown that these two vortices facilitate the closing of the valves, and when the vortices don't form properly, blood clots will appear. | ||
The man who unfolded a thousand hearts, Paco Torrent Guasp, discovered that the heart is a single muscular band folded over itself in a spiraling pattern. | ||
The heart itself is a vortex of tissue. | ||
It is not a pump. | ||
It is a vortex machine. | ||
For centuries, it was believed that matter can only exist in three states, such as water, which can exist as liquid, ice, and vapor. | ||
Human cells are 70% water, but most of this water is not in any of these three states. | ||
We have recently learned that with water, there is a fourth state. | ||
This fourth state is called the plasma state, gel phase, exclusion zone, or structured water. | ||
And this is what pushes your blood through the entire cardiovascular system. | ||
Fueled by infrared energy from its environment, the water in our body becomes an electrical propulsion system. | ||
A certain percentage of the water in our body becomes structured water and the rest remains normal liquid water, or bulk water. | ||
The structured water becomes negatively charged and forms the gelatinous outer walls of our capillaries, veins, and arteries. | ||
These negatively charged outer walls continuously propel the positively charged bulk water within, carrying the blood with it. | ||
This propulsion system will run indefinitely, so long as it stays charged. | ||
And the way you charge it is with the Earth's electromagnetic field, infrared energy, and positive thought. | ||
The work of Dr. | ||
Misaru Emoto has scientifically demonstrated that water exposed to loving human words and thoughts is transformed into its natural hexagonal shape. | ||
It becomes structured at a molecular level based on our positive intention. | ||
This new model shows that it is the blood that pumps the heart, not the other way around. | ||
And in order to keep the flow strong and healthy, our best medicine is to connect to the earth, get sunlight, love ourselves, and love one another with physical touch. | ||
Victor Schauberger spent his life studying water and found that in the natural world, water will always create vortices along its path. | ||
Schauberger learned that this spiral action is what structures the water in nature, and that when subjected to modern man-made water treatment, it loses its structure. | ||
Schauberger's work led him to believe that one could generate energy out of a vortex. | ||
He described it as an energy implosion, as opposed to an energy explosion. | ||
Dr. Tom Cowan, who has written about this in Human Heart, Cosmic Heart, has an interesting theory which may explain the saying, a heart of gold. | ||
Another recent discovery is that gold in its purest form does not appear to be gold at all. | ||
Under the right conditions, normal physical gold can be transformed into a fine white powder known as monatomic gold. | ||
This monatomic gold has been studied by multiple advanced laboratories and it has very strange properties. | ||
It can be made to levitate and disappear. | ||
Monatomic gold is superconductive And many would argue that this is what the alchemists were after. | ||
One of the ways of turning metallic gold into monatomic gold is by putting it through a high-speed vortex. | ||
When this transformation occurs... | ||
Okay, that is an incredible video by Greg Reese. | ||
You can find and share it now at band.video. | ||
The mysterious human heart. | ||
You know, I'd heard of that concept and tried to look into it, but I've never understood it like I did just watching that video. | ||
Share that around, folks. | ||
I just shared it with my dad. | ||
He's going to enjoy that one. | ||
unidentified
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We'll be right back. It's beginning to look a lot like Texas It's past time we go Take a look at the real grand It's over and once again With drugs and migrants, | |
even Taliban It's beginning to look a lot like Texas. | ||
Boys transform to girls. | ||
But speak out in an agency with the letters that a three will knock down your door. | ||
There's still time for us kids to return to our roots and declare independence again. | ||
Throw off our chains and start using our brains. | ||
Let's restore our freedom, my friend. | ||
It's beginning to look a lot like Texas Vote yes, I didn't vote you For your family, take a stand. | ||
Draw a line across the sand Restore freedom once more It's beginning to look a lot like Tegxit, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
Tegxit, please No longer just a dream, but now a political reality rapidly taking shape. | ||
That is a song by a singer called TheSinger underscore DM on Twitter, and that, of course, was posted by TNM and my guest, Daniel Miller. | ||
It's been too long, sir. | ||
Very glad to have you back. Daniel Miller is the president of the Texas Nationalist Movement and the author of the book, Texit, Why and How Texas Will Leave the Union. | ||
He's been a featured guest on Fox News, CNN, CNBC, BBC News, RT. But importantly, here on Infowars, you've been a vocal proponent of a fundamental re-examination of the relationship between all states and the federal union. | ||
The website is tnm.me and you can follow Dan at the Texian DM. Thank you so much for joining us once again, Dan. | ||
Hey, thanks for having me. | ||
I had to have you on because you have made some monumental strides towards the goal, the ultimate goal of Texas secession and an independent Texas. | ||
Tell us, what is the latest? | ||
Well, you know, the last time I was here visiting with you, I told you about the petition campaign that we had to force this question on the Republican primary ballot. | ||
And so, The news was that we delivered on December the 11th, we delivered 142% of the required signatures to get the Texas question on the March 2024 ballot. | ||
So we're excited, still waiting on the Texas GOP to do its thing, but we're excited. | ||
I mean, this is big. | ||
It is, and we've been covering it and covering the updates as they've rolled in. | ||
So just to lay out to everybody how this works, it'll be on the Republican primary ballot, so it won't be for the general election. | ||
But essentially there was a law passed, I think in the 80s, you can correct me, basically saying that the Republican Party gets to decide what initiatives are on the ballot, but... | ||
If you get enough petitions, then it's got to go on the ballot whether the Republican Party wants it or not. | ||
You guys didn't just achieve that benchmark number of signatures on the petition but exceeded it massively, as you said, 142% higher than it needed to be. | ||
And now the Republican Party is trying to find some legal workaround to prevent that from taking place. | ||
They don't exactly want this on the ballot, do they, Dan? | ||
Yeah, I mean, look, let's be honest. | ||
I've had to tell all of our supporters this from the jump. | ||
You have to remember, we've had to fight for every single advance that we've made. | ||
We followed the letter of the law, but that doesn't mean that the battle's over. | ||
So, you know, we're currently, what is it, the 27th of the month. | ||
We delivered on the 11th. | ||
We're still waiting for them to acknowledge that it will be on the ballot. | ||
In fact, our board of directors met yesterday And authorize legal action against the Texas GOP so that we can get this vote done. | ||
So that the 139,456 signatures that were delivered to the GOP, those people actually get their voices heard. | ||
But really, that everyone in Texas will have an opportunity to go into the polls and vote On this question, even if it is advisory, it's important that the people of Texas be able to answer this question that, frankly, they've wanted to be asked for some time. | ||
And, of course, to me, it seems like no reason not to do this. | ||
I mean, the Republicans might not want to have Texas' session on the ballot, but you put it to... | ||
It's on their platform. You know, I mean, like Harrison, you hit the nail on the head. | ||
These folks... | ||
That are opposed to this are so freaked out by it. | ||
Their primary objection is no one believes in this. | ||
They say it is fringe. | ||
No one believes in it. | ||
If it goes on a ballot, it'll fail. | ||
And my response is always, look, I'm your huckleberry. | ||
Let's just put this thing on the doggone ballot and let's find out which one of us is going to eat crow. | ||
I have a sneaking suspicion it will not be us. | ||
Yeah, you know, if they're so confident, put it on the ballot. | ||
Prove us wrong. | ||
Prove us wrong. This isn't a popular idea. | ||
I think it's an obviously good idea, at least something to explore. | ||
It's an option that's available to us. | ||
And we've sort of explained the breakdown before of what the process would be, because it's obviously not, you know, this goes on the Republican primary ballot. | ||
It gets enough yes votes and suddenly Texas secedes, right? | ||
This is the next step in a long process that will eventually, and hopefully not in too long, We're good to go. | ||
The question becomes, what really does binding mean? | ||
If you talk about legally binding, well, let's be honest, we get asked questions on ballots all the time that are not necessarily legally binding. | ||
But what we have seen around the world over the last 100 years on independence referendums, advisory or not, Is that when you put these questions to the people and the people answer fairly emphatically, that while they may not be legally binding in the sense that, you know, it doesn't compel some sort of action afterwards, they do become politically binding, right? | ||
So you take this particular vote and you say, the people come back in the Republican primary, You increase voter turnout massively because it's on the ballot. | ||
It comes back with an overwhelming yes. | ||
What that effectively does is that pushes this issue forward into the next legislative session where we get the Texas Independence Referendum Act filed again. | ||
This will be the third time, which is not unusual for legislation here in Texas. | ||
But now you have got a groundswell of political momentum behind it. | ||
Something that, you know, we had before but not expressed in such a visible way as a vote on a ballot where the people got to actually vote on this issue. | ||
And so, you know, I would like to pretend like this is some unique strategy to us, but this is sort of the playbook that we have seen many times through many independence movements over the last 75 to 80 years. | ||
Yeah, in some cases it's worked. | ||
In some cases it's been sort of scuttled in the bureaucratic process afterwards. | ||
You know, I'm thinking of Brexit, which was such a big deal and they fought so hard for it. | ||
But ever since it passed, nothing's really happened for any meaningful change in that regard. | ||
So we want to avoid going down that path. | ||
And so I think taking it sort of slow and just piece by piece, step by step, leading towards the inevitable separation of Texas from the rest of the country is a very brilliant way to do it. | ||
So the question on the petition, or the question rather on the ballot in March, right, it'll be March of this year, that it should be on the ballot if everything is done legally, it'll simply say, are you interested in this possibility? | ||
Is it something like that? | ||
Do you know what the wording will be exactly? | ||
Yeah, I mean, we had to include it as part of the petition, right? | ||
When we actually, our petition circulators had to read the statement to the people who signed the petition, we put the wording. | ||
And I will tell you, Harrison, the wording is exactly the wording that was in the Texas Independence Referendum Act. | ||
So it is the final question that we want put to all voters in a statewide referendum authorized by that act. | ||
And it's simply this. | ||
We want them to answer, should the state of Texas reassert its status as an independent measure? | ||
It's a yes from me, Dan. | ||
We'll be back with Dan Miller of the Texas Nationalist Movement, TNM.me. | ||
Stay with us, folks. | ||
So Daniel Miller is my guest. | ||
He is the president of the Texas nationalist movement. | ||
He is working very hard behind the scenes to, well, basically make the Republican Party adhere to their own rules and their own stricture. | ||
Last time you were on, Mr. | ||
Miller, I described sort of how I see Texas secession as almost a one-size-fits-all, singular solution to the myriad of problems that we're faced with, not from natural occurrences or some sort of natural disaster, but they all come from the federal government. | ||
It's the taxes and the invasion and the wars. | ||
And it's like there's all these different problems. | ||
And then it's Texas secession would be like the slice of the sword that severs the Gordian knot. | ||
And so when the petition passed... | ||
A couple weeks ago, I sort of said that same idea, the same analogy or metaphor online. | ||
Somebody actually drew it for us. | ||
It was at jazmoart on Twitter. | ||
Threw this together very, very quickly, but it is Texas severing the Gordian knot of corruption, the spy state, foreign influence, war, rigged elections, immigration. | ||
Solve it all with one swing of the sword that is Texas' secession. | ||
I just thought that was a brilliant... | ||
It was exactly what I was imagining. | ||
So shout out to Jazz Mo Art on Twitter who threw that together for us. | ||
But this is... | ||
Am I seeing it through rose-colored glasses? | ||
I mean, it can't be that simple, can it? | ||
Well, look, that's... | ||
You know, Harrison, I get asked a lot about what motivated me to get involved in this back in 1996. | ||
And for me... | ||
It was not some catalyzing moment. | ||
You know, that happens with a lot of people. | ||
There's one final straw that broke the camel's back, and that's where they are. | ||
For me, it was a process, and literally... | ||
What you just showed, that picture, which by the way, if that happened to be sent to me, it would be hanging on my wall right now, just saying. | ||
But that was what drew me to the process, right? | ||
It seems like when people go and they try to fix the federal government, you might get something that has the semblance of a victory, but while you have given everything for that one battle, They've won 50 more. | ||
I mean, they just keep shoving us down into a hole and making us eat horse crap, and the people of Texas are sick of it. | ||
Look, I'll put it in a football analogy for fellow Texans so you understand. | ||
If you've got the goal line in sight, Why in the world are you running a flea flicker or a Statue of Liberty play when all you've got to do is take the ball right up the middle and do what 200 other teams around the world have done, right? | ||
I mean, that's literally the situation here. | ||
Particularly opposition, love to throw fear at this thing. | ||
You know, they want to make it scary. | ||
I mean, if anyone wants to read some of the most ridiculous, fear-mongering arguments known to man against this, go read replies to any of my tweets. | ||
I mean, the hate is strong with these people, right? | ||
Seriously. But they say these ridiculous things. | ||
And you look around the world, and you see all of these other countries That have got the right of self-government. | ||
They govern themselves. They don't pay money to a capital full of people that they didn't elect, forcing policies on them that they don't want. | ||
They don't suffocate under 180,000 pages of federal laws, rules and regulations. | ||
They have the ability to maintain their borders and set their immigration policy, set their military policy, their currency and everything else. | ||
And these people, these opposition folks, are of the mind that somehow 200 other countries around the world can govern themselves, but somehow we are too stupid or too lazy or whatever it is to govern ourselves. | ||
And, you know, it's getting increasingly insulting while we're sitting here in the eighth largest economy in the world, right? | ||
Right. That somehow they feel Texans are just not smart enough or strong enough to govern ourselves. | ||
And I'm here to absolutely shatter their worldview. | ||
So let's do that because let's go through some of the numbers. | ||
You just said eighth largest economy in the world. | ||
I think in terms of American states, California is a little higher than us, but I think we're bigger than Russia. | ||
And then by landmass, we're bigger than Germany. | ||
We're bigger than France. The idea that Texas can't survive as a country, it's just sort of absurd. | ||
Tell us how absurd it is with just everything that Texas has going for it. | ||
I love that. When you tell me to tell you how absurd something is, this feels like a wind-up, right? | ||
But I mean, look, you just said it. | ||
It is perhaps one of the stupidest arguments that you could ever give is that, look, if Texas can't make it, We're good to go. | ||
It takes a 40% haircut and then they take the rest of it and they dangle it over us and they say, if you don't dance to our tune, you don't get a dime. | ||
And by the way, we're only going to give you a portion of it. | ||
You're going to have to go dip back into Harrison and Daniel's pocket to get the rest of it, right? | ||
So, you know, and all the while... | ||
All the while, they pursue a policy that collapses our border with a foreign country, that threatens our national security, right? | ||
We overpay that $103 to $160 billion annually into the federal system. | ||
For what? For nothing but grief. | ||
And at the end of the day, all they're doing, it's not like they're spending it on that, they're borrowing against our children's, children's, children's future as they heap 30 to 40 trillion dollars of debt on future generations that will absolutely drive us into poverty. | ||
They are going to collapse us if we don't do something. | ||
This is an existential crisis for us. | ||
Greg Abbott just signed a thing saying that Texas cops could arrest illegal immigrants. | ||
So we're already having to do it ourselves. | ||
We're already having to pay the extra to do it ourselves on top of the money that we send to D.C. that instead gets turned around and turned into $5,000 gift certificates and new cell phones for the illegal immigrants rather than actually stopping it. | ||
So we're already having to pay to stop it on top of having to pay all the money to the federal government who's doing nothing or I shouldn't even say they're not doing anything. | ||
They're actively subverting and destroying our nation and funding and facilitating the invasion of our entire country. | ||
They're having us finance our own destruction, Harrison. | ||
They're weaponizing our money, and they're having us finance our own destruction. | ||
And it's like the worst of both worlds. | ||
We're both paying for our own destruction, and we're still having to make up for the shortfalls when the illegal limits commit crimes. | ||
Well, we have to watch President PPAD on the TV every day. | ||
So, you know, I mean, insult to injury. | ||
That alone is enough. | ||
I mean, you want to know my argument for why Texas should leave the union? | ||
It's a five-minute compilation of Joe Biden just existing in public for the last three years. | ||
It's an embarrassment. It's like a humiliation ritual we're going through that we have to be subject to these people in Washington, D.C. Utterly, utterly infuriating. | ||
We are going to get into sort of the immigration stuff quickly here in the last 30 seconds before we go to break, and then we'll be back. | ||
What could Texas secession mean for the border? | ||
Well, we could secure our border. | ||
I mean, look, every self-governing independent nation by right Can control its own border. | ||
It can set its own border policy. | ||
It can set its own immigration policy. | ||
We have to face the fact that this side of independence, anything that we do related to the border is a band-aid. | ||
Anything we do related to immigration is a band-aid. | ||
The only way we will ever get control of our own border policy and immigration policy is to become a self-governing, independent nation. | ||
Period. Then we can give ourselves the true treatment to solve this disease, not just put a band-aid on it and hope for the best. | ||
We'll be right back. | ||
Hello, folks. | ||
Texit, a.k.a. the Texas Nationalist Movement, a.k.a. Texas Secession, a.k.a. the National Divorce, whatever appellate you want to put on it, has got to be one of those topics that it always inspires a lot of feedback, whether it's on social media. has got to be one of those topics that it I was just scrolling through my Twitter notifications during the break here. | ||
A lot of people tuned in. | ||
A lot of people very interested in this. | ||
I see so many people when I talk about this who say I will be in Texas tomorrow if you guys secede. | ||
I mean, I think once this ball gets rolling downhill, there's no stopping it. | ||
It's just going to grow momentum, and once people know it's on the ballot, they'll start moving to Texas with this idea as a motivating factor, and then they'll get active, and more states might join. | ||
I mean, this is just the beginning, isn't it, of this snowball rolling down the hill? | ||
Look, that's been happening for well over a decade now. | ||
I mean, we are contacted or come across people as we're out there engaging with voters. | ||
That's literally why they came to Texas, because they are anticipating At some point in the near future, Texas will be independent. | ||
And they view this as kind of the last-ditch hope to save these values of a constitutional republic and inherent rights of man. | ||
I mean, you know, these things that we value or that they, you know, in particular value, this is the safe haven. | ||
And I tell this, this happened a lot back when Right around the time, I guess it was 2016, this issue flared up when there was a big debate about it on the floor of the Republican State Convention. | ||
And, you know, you had these politicians come out there with this crafted, ridiculous, weak line about, well, I believe that we should lead and not leave. | ||
And it's like, well, you know, stay in there and... | ||
Taking it from the federal government and not pushing back and not doing what's best for your people, that's not leading. | ||
That's just being a sycophant to Uncle Scam, right? | ||
So, look, I sympathize with some people's Stockholm Syndrome. | ||
But at the end of the day, the lives of my fellow Texans, my neighbors, my friends, my family, my children, my soon-to-be grandchild, those are not up for negotiation. | ||
And if we stay attached to this federal system, For whatever rationale these people give, whether it's just this inflated sense of nostalgia or whatever it is, the fact of the matter is, if we want to set an example to the people in the other states and to the world of what a free people can do, the first step you have to take is to reclaim your right of self-government. | ||
Because at the end of the day, if you've got no right of self-government, what difference do any of the other rights make? | ||
100 percent. 100 percent. | ||
And we talked a little bit about the border, and I think that's a major motivator, too, because people see what's happening at the southern border here in Texas, but also in Arizona and California and everywhere else along the border. | ||
Even the Canadian border now is being overrun. | ||
I mean, it's insanity across the board, but it's another one of these things where... | ||
People that are just normal people. | ||
They'll call us all sorts of names, and I don't even like giving them the courtesy of responding to the names they call us, but it's just common sense. | ||
We want to protect our border. | ||
We want a sovereign nation. | ||
We don't want caravans of tens of thousands of people showing up every month with their hand out. | ||
Looking to subvert our laws in order to, you know, get access to our country. | ||
It's just the most obvious, simple thing, and yet we can't get it done. | ||
And Alejandro Mayorkas has just got the border open, and it's just the most frustrating thing in the world to see this take place and not be able to do anything about it. | ||
And so this, I think, is something that's just a glimmer of hope that just says, here's something we can do. | ||
And people are just like, good, something, let's do that. | ||
And it's not just a something something, right? | ||
It's actually effective. | ||
It actually would work. It actually is beneficial in a number of different ways. | ||
But it's the frustration with the sort of helplessness, hopelessness that we feel under the power of the federal government that I think people are responding to. | ||
You think that's right? Yeah, I mean, look, there's no doubt that there is this disconnection between the people and their government, and it's a wider gap than it's ever been. | ||
I tell people all the time, you know, they want to paint this as, you know, and it's, again, probably why I have an issue with the whole idea, the term national divorce. | ||
National divorce is a slogan, it's not a plan, right? | ||
We're not a, the United States is not a union of political parties, it's a union of sovereign states. | ||
But this is what I tell folks all the time about this particular issue, is that for us to be able to do anything concretely about this, we have to reclaim our right of self-government because we cannot leave things like our immigration policy and our border policy up to states that would elect people like Adam Schiff or Spiderman or any of these other guys. | ||
I mean, where is their concern for the average, everyday Texan? | ||
And so it's not this Split in the ways that they normally tell us we're split. | ||
It really is the people versus a permanent political establishment and a system in Washington, D.C., whose sole purpose is to suck our money, to give itself more power, to grind us to powder. | ||
That's why they exist. | ||
And so when you begin to look at The real battle that way and understand that many of us that may be seemingly divided by the things they tell us to be divided by are actually kind of on the same side, the receiving end of that hammer from Washington, D.C. All of a sudden now, the path forward is a lot more clear. | ||
If we can become a self-governing independent nation, which we will become, it's not an if now, it's a when, but when we do, people don't have to move here. | ||
Perhaps what we do inspires people and empowers those people in other states to reach down and claim their right of self-government, or at least start having the conversation and then make the decision that is best for them. | ||
Right, and it's one of the things that I, it's, you know, it's like a question you could ask to pretty much any American anywhere in America. | ||
Is D.C. corrupt? | ||
Who's going to say no, right? | ||
Everybody knows that D.C. is corrupt, and we might have political differences here or there. | ||
We might disagree on what our foreign policy could be, but it's like, let's just get out of the federal government. | ||
Let's deal with the big problem first, and then we can, you know, have our differences, and we can work things out and determine what the best process is to deal with some of the actual problems that, you know, we want to deal with. | ||
Well, and look, Harrison, I'll tell you, I'm cognizant of the people out there who look at some of this mess that we've got here in Texas, right? | ||
Let's be honest. Governments by men, by humans, are going to have problems because, you know, people can be bad. | ||
I mean, that's just the way that it is. | ||
Texas is not a promise of utopia, but what it is a promise of is an opportunity to do something about it, right? | ||
That system that we see here in Texas that we have such opposition to, that we have problems with as well, will never be cured as long as 100% of the attention is driven toward Washington, D.C. All of the financial, | ||
essentially, decisions trickle down from Washington, D.C., You know, we did a study a few sessions back, and almost half of the laws, half of the bills that were filed in the Texas legislature mentioned the federal government, a federal agency, federal funds, a federal court ruling. | ||
You know, so we're having our laws essentially crafted at least the rough edges From K Street lobbyists or bureaucrats in Washington, D.C. But what Texas is, Texas is a chance to do something. | ||
It's an opportunity to reset this, right? | ||
Imagine, and you and I have talked about this before, the average voter turnout for independence referendums around the world over the last 100 years is 85%. | ||
Think about right now in Texas, when's the last time we had voter turnout that high? | ||
Spoiler alert, never, right? | ||
Never. So what does that mean? | ||
That means independence engages the people in a way that they've never been engaged before. | ||
If you want to break the back of the political establishment and you want to clean out that sewer pipe that flows right down there to Moscow on the Colorado, then your number one thing to do is push for an independence vote Deal with what comes after that and then utilize that which would become effectively the largest voting bloc in Texas history to change everything. | ||
You know, it's exciting. | ||
It's something new. It's like if we can do this, we can come together and get the petition and then take it to the next step and do the studies and figure out how it would work and then, you know, get the nationwide, statewide referendum and get it done. | ||
It's like then you get to be a part of starting this new country. | ||
Then you get to be a part of, you know, starting with almost a blank slate and go, okay, what did we do wrong last time? | ||
How do we need to do it right this time? | ||
And that's something that people get behind. | ||
It doesn't feel like you're stuck in this quagmire that we so often feel like. | ||
Ladies and gentlemen, final segment of American Journal for this Wednesday, December 27th broadcast. | ||
Daniel Miller is my guest. | ||
He is the president of the Texas Nationalist Movement. | ||
You can find their website, tnm.me. | ||
That's Texas Nationalist Movement, tnm.me. | ||
And you can follow Dan on Twitter at the Texian DM. And there's plenty of Twitter accounts to follow. | ||
Just go to Dan's Twitter and you can find links and reposts from things like the Texas Nationalist Movement. | ||
Tags it official. Twitter at Texas Nat Move. | ||
N-A-T-M-O-V. Again, this is just... | ||
I just love talking about this because it really is something that it's like exciting. | ||
It's not just miserable. | ||
It's not just the same slogging news thing. | ||
It's like... Oh, this is, oh, we could do it this way, or you could do it this way, and we could do it, and it's like strategizing. | ||
It's just an exciting thing to be a part of. | ||
Dan, how can people get involved with it? | ||
What's your call to action? What can people do if they hear about Texas Secession and go, wait, this is a real thing? | ||
What's their next step? Yeah, first and foremost, I would encourage everyone with the distinct Possibility this will be on the ballot in March. | ||
I would encourage everyone to go to the website right now. | ||
Go to tnm.me and register their support. | ||
Because one of the key things we're going to have to do, because the mainstream media will suppress the heck out of this thing, is we're going to have to connect with Texas voters. | ||
Get out the vote. It's standard retail politics, but we've got to be able to connect with Our people and connect with Texas supporters. | ||
So head over there right now, register your support. | ||
And then once you register your support, I would encourage people to become volunteers, to join the organization, to become a member, to make a contribution. | ||
If nothing else, birthing a brand new nation on the planet is expensive, but get plugged in. | ||
I mean, look, we're an organization and people have to understand The TNM, outside of the Republican Party and the Democratic Party, is the single largest political advocacy organization in the state. | ||
We're literally everywhere. | ||
But does that mean that it's done? | ||
It's a done deal? Absolutely not. | ||
We still have to go out there and work it just like everyone else. | ||
And frankly, because the political establishment hates this idea so much, We have to work twice as hard for half as much. | ||
And you know what? We do it with a smile on our face because we're building a brand new nation on this planet. | ||
We're restoring the right of self-government to the people of Texas. | ||
Now, here's the other thing. | ||
If people are outside of Texas, You got a couple options. | ||
You can show your support in some way on the website. | ||
You can become a member that's non-geographic specific. | ||
You can make a contribution. We even have volunteers from outside of state that help make phone calls for us and things of that nature. | ||
But if you are not so compelled to move to Texas or to help us out, then do this one thing. | ||
Start the conversation in your state. | ||
Start that conversation. | ||
Ask yourself this question. | ||
If your state was already a self-governing independent nation in the world, like 200 other countries, and you had control over your own border and immigration policy, your own currency and monetary policy and taxation policy, you had your own military policy, you had all things that 200 other countries around the world have. | ||
And you were being asked to join the union today. | ||
Knowing everything you know about the federal government, would you vote to join? | ||
And if you wouldn't, you need to start what we're doing in your state. | ||
Yeah, absolutely. And I'm just laughing, picturing the sales pitch that Washington, D.C. would make. | ||
I mean, would you like to be involved in wars that you have nothing to do with? | ||
Would you like to spend all of your money bombing people you'll never meet around the sea? | ||
How about our open border policy? | ||
Can we interest you in 10 million migrants in 10 years? | ||
No? You know, it's like, what is the selling point for being a part of this union? | ||
It is insanity, Dan. | ||
It's complete insanity. Well, look, that's what we've estimated. | ||
I mean, they will probably have to spend $5 billion to propagandize Texans when the final vote comes. | ||
I mean, look, their pitch is always going to be the same. | ||
It's going to be fear-mongering, right? | ||
We saw Project Fear during the Scottish independence referendum. | ||
We saw it during Brexit. And we see it now. | ||
You know, their whole bundle of nonsense, it boils down to this. | ||
It's unconstitutional. | ||
It's illegal. The Supreme Court says. | ||
The Civil War settled it. | ||
Texit means your grandma's gonna die in a ditch. | ||
I mean, that's basically all they got, right? | ||
They've got no positive case whatsoever for why anyone I mean, sure, join the union. | ||
Please be suffocated by $30 trillion worth of debt. | ||
And they'll say something like, well, what about the military? | ||
Doesn't the military keep us safe? | ||
Well, I guess that's cool unless they decide to drop a nuke off a Chinese weather balloon. | ||
Right. I mean, or, you know, or just send people up, you know, through the southern border, which has got more holes in the Democrat jobs plan. | ||
I mean, come on, guys. | ||
No, it's crazy. | ||
And, you know, there's so many, I mean, Texas has already made such big strides recently with California and New York are just hemorrhaging populations. | ||
People flee these hellholes they've created. | ||
A lot of them are flocking to Texas. | ||
You got Elon Musk launching rockets and Joe Rogan bringing his studio here to celebrities are moving. | ||
I mean, it's like everybody's moving to Texas. | ||
Can we get some of these guys on board? | ||
I mean, have you talked to Elon Musk? | ||
Has anybody floated Dan Miller on the Joe Rogan experience to break this down and get Joe Rogan on board? | ||
I think that would be another thing people could do. | ||
If you have a Twitter account, maybe tag Joe Rogan and go, hey, get this guy on to talk about Texas nationalist movement. | ||
It might be something you'd be interested in. | ||
I mean, how valuable would that be? | ||
Well, I mean, look, the more people know about this, the better. | ||
Look, we still run into people. | ||
I mean, even as much as we have done, and Harrison, I've done probably thousands of interviews since I got Sort of stuck in, you know, and crossed that line in the sand. | ||
I've done thousands of interviews. | ||
You know, we have a highly trafficked website. | ||
You know, we put out information. | ||
You know, you keep showing the screenshot from the website to look at how many public events that we have held. | ||
And that's really, I think, since 2015. | ||
You know, over 6,000. | ||
Yeah, we're almost at 6,100. | ||
I mean, so... You know, it's not like we're keeping this secret. | ||
It's just we have been a victim of suppression on this issue by the mainstream media. | ||
I've been approached by journalists who left media outlets who told me specifically that stories about us were spiked. | ||
And that didn't happen once or twice, but has happened several times. | ||
So, you know, when you guys go out there and you start hitting some of these people that have large platforms, And telling them, look, we want this covered. | ||
Get Miller on the thing. | ||
Let's have this conversation. | ||
It is immensely helpful. | ||
And again, it's something that is exciting. | ||
If you're tagging Joe Rogan and saying, hey, you need to get this guy on, point out, this is a big movement. | ||
This thing's starting to roll. | ||
And this is exciting and new and fresh, and it's a crazy idea to most people, but actually it's been going on for years. | ||
That's another point you make on your Twitter. | ||
You guys were founded, the Texas nationalist movement, founded I think in 2005, right? | ||
And you said you started working with the legislature about four years later, but this is not a flash in the pan, like wild-eyed idea that you just came up with. | ||
You've spent decades systematically working on this. | ||
Yeah, I mean, look, it took from 1996 to 2005 to even get the TNM founded. | ||
And even the foundation of the TNM came about because of a two-year study that we did about independence and self-determination movements historically and contemporaneously ahead of forming the TNM because we wanted to make sure that we were on a path to success. | ||
And it was very in-depth. | ||
One of the things that became very apparent was that there needed to be a legitimate political movement that pursued legitimate political aims. | ||
And oddly enough, even after that two-year study, at the very core of what we do was found right in the Texas Constitution, in Article 1, Section 2, where it says that all political power is inherent in the people. | ||
And so at the focus of everything that we do, We know that it has to be a people movement, and it's why we focus so much on reaching Texas voters. | ||
We need to have meaningful interactions and conversations with every Texan, because at the end of the day, what we're doing, whether that person supports Texan or is against Texan, what we're doing is in their interest by just getting this vote, because at the end of the day, let's be honest, whether they Love Texit, hate Texit, don't know about Texit. | ||
When is the last time any of us have ever had a real say in a fundamental issue of governance? | ||
Spoiler alert, never. | ||
I mean, that's just the bottom line. | ||
We get an opportunity every two to four years to rearrange the deck chairs on the Titanic. | ||
But when is the last time we ever had an opportunity to say, look, guys, I don't care about the captain. | ||
I don't care about the seating arrangements of the place cards in the ship. | ||
That's going into the North Atlantic and is at a 45-degree list. | ||
Instead, what I want to do is I want to go do something else, to build something else, to be something else, to be the captain of my own destiny. | ||
When is the last time we've done that? | ||
And so even if people hate Texan, even if they don't know about Texan, at least let's have the conversation and let's have the vote so you can do something and have a choice that you have never had in your entire life. | ||
I think it's just the most exciting thing happening in politics right now. | ||
The website again, TNM.me, Twitter at TheTexianDM. | ||
Dan Miller, thanks so much once again for coming on, and thank you for everything that you do, sir. | ||
All right, thanks, sir. Appreciate you, buddy. | ||
All mine, folks. | ||
Stay tuned, Alex Jones, 90 Seconds. | ||
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