Speaker | Time | Text |
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unidentified
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I had an opinion that went against the narrative. | |
And whatever they're saying in the West is nonsense, quite frankly. | ||
Because what is happening right now is what everybody realized was going to happen six months ago, five and a half months ago when this special military operation started, Russia is winning. | ||
It's definitively winning. | ||
The victory on the part of the Russians is overwhelming. | ||
And the people who are bleeding that the Russians are losing, that it's a static war and whatnot, they simply don't want to see reality. | ||
And that's why I went to prison. | ||
I've taken a beating in my time, so sure, it hurt like hell, but it was manageable. | ||
But then, at one point, two thugs held my head and used a toothpick to scratch the whites of my left eye while asking me if I could still read if I had just one. | ||
I got a cracked rib in my first cell, but it wasn't too bad. | ||
The worst stretch was in my fourth cell. | ||
From 1pm on June the 21st until 7pm the next day, 30 hours, I was beaten and sleep-deprived. | ||
My arms twisted the wrong way around at the shoulders and generally beaten pretty bad. | ||
And that's why, if I'm arrested again, I will die in prison. | ||
Chilean-American journalist Gonzalo Lira has reportedly died in prison in Ukraine at the age of 55. | ||
U.S. journalists cited Lira's father, who believes his son was tortured to death, over his criticism of Vladimir Zelensky. | ||
I was very upset to learn that Gonzalo Lira was tortured to death as a political prisoner by the government of Ukraine. | ||
I was able to interview him a few times over some of our other crew. | ||
He seemed like an interesting journalist on the ground, giving a different perspective than what we were all being force-fed at the time. | ||
And, of course, we saw the footage of men with machine guns taking him out of his apartment, disappearing him now over a year ago. | ||
And we learned that he died in their custody. | ||
They would not give him treatment for double pneumonia and just basically tortured him to death. | ||
Imagine if the Russians had a journalist and a U.S. citizen and were holding him and they died in custody. | ||
It would be international scandal. | ||
There'd be major sanctions. | ||
But the last year plus, his family and others have gone to the State Department and they just said, we're not doing anything. | ||
So they won't stand up for U.S. citizens, even as we send over $100 billion to Ukraine. | ||
And now Zelensky tells us he wants U.S. troops there on the ground, which is World War III. This is outrageous and it's disgusting. | ||
And while our veterans sleep on the street and while our border totally collapses, we pay billions of dollars to secure much of the Ukrainian border. | ||
unidentified
|
We know our future is bound to yours. | |
Let me repeat that again. We know... | ||
Our future is bound to yours. | ||
The goal of the present war against Ukraine is to torn our lands. | ||
Our people, our lives, our resources into a weapon against you. | ||
A $1.85 billion package of security assistance includes both correct transfers of equipment that Ukraine needs, as well as contracts to supply ammunition Ukraine will need in the months ahead for its artillery, its tanks, and its rocket launchers. | ||
Mr. President, we keep all the situation on the southern border of Brighton. | ||
No, but I wish they would react. | ||
I've been pushing them, my Republican colleagues, since I got in office. | ||
Fox News, AP, they're all reporting it. | ||
Sweden's defense minister warning to brace for war with Russia. | ||
Shints public into panic. | ||
Lines grabbing food, gasoline, emergency supplies. | ||
NATO and Sweden have been saying this for weeks. | ||
Russia has laughed and said that's insane. | ||
We have no intention of invading or attacking Sweden. | ||
Obviously, Sweden borders areas close to Russia. | ||
They've said that because of NATO's aggressive stance, they may have to beef up troops, but that they know attacking Sweden would lead to nuclear war. | ||
They have no intention of doing that, but it doesn't matter. | ||
It's all over the news that the Russians, with no evidence, are going to attack Sweden. | ||
This is a major escalation. | ||
Germany ponders banning its second most popular political party. | ||
Banning of parties and candidates happening everywhere in the West now. | ||
A classic sign of incredible totalitarianism. | ||
unidentified
|
I won't let myself be insulted as being a Nazi because I'm sympathising with the AFD. For me, the AFD is the only party representing our constitutional rights and freedom of opinion. | |
The UN has put out new reports saying uncharted territory, doom and total destruction. | ||
We don't hand total control over to... | ||
unidentified
|
It's Monday, January 15th in the year of 2024. | |
And you're listening to The American Journal with your host, Harrison Smith. | ||
Watch it live right now at band.video. | ||
Good morning, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
This is The American Journal. | ||
We are coming to you live on this Martin Luther King Day. | ||
Are we even supposed to be working today? | ||
What's going on here? | ||
Well, there's a lot going on. | ||
Obviously, it's the first day of voting in the Republican primary. | ||
Lots of contention over the weekend between Vivek and Trump. | ||
We'll talk a little bit about that. | ||
Obviously, I don't think we're going to be seeing any results by the time this show is over. | ||
We'll talk a little bit about what is going on in Iowa during the caucuses. | ||
It's also the first day of Davos as the World Economic Forum meets in the Swiss mountain town to game plan, try to figure out amongst themselves, try to establish a strategy to force you to eat bugs and give up all your electric gadgets. try to establish a strategy to force you to eat Or if you have to have an electric gadget, it should at the very least spy on you continuously. | ||
So yes, we are going to Probably get some breaking reports from Davos a little bit later today and talk about sort of what they're up to. | ||
So a lot going on on this Monday morning. | ||
Of course, we still have the war in the Middle East spiraling and the war with Russia. | ||
All of the signals are there. | ||
Germany is telling its people it's actually activating its military reserves in anticipation of war with Russia. | ||
Sweden has warned its population that war with Russia is on the horizon. | ||
And of course, this comes as the Ukrainian war against Russia has proven to be an abject failure. | ||
And of course, in that first five minutes, we showed a little... | ||
Tribute to Gonzalo Lira, a.k.a. | ||
Coach Red Pill. He has been reported as dead in Ukraine. | ||
And this story is frankly horrifying. | ||
Absolutely maddening. | ||
This is from unz.com, unz.com. | ||
There are lots of things you could say about this situation, but the first and foremost important thing to note is that it is completely insane that the Biden administration allowed Ukraine to indefinitely detain a U.S. citizen on charges of disagreeing with the government of Ukraine. | ||
The death could have easily been prevented by one phone call from the State Department. | ||
In fact, a two-sentence email would have done it. | ||
The Biden administration was aware that a US citizen was being held in Ukraine and tortured, and they made the active decision to allow the Kiev government, which is totally funded and supported by the US, to do this. | ||
The question then is, why wouldn't the US do this to people in the US? This is a U.S. citizen in a country that's not only an ally, but a country that only exists because of U.S. taxpayer subsidies. | ||
It is not, by any stretch, a sovereign nation, given that it is entirely beholden to the United States for its basic existence. | ||
In any normal circumstance, the Ukraine would simply assume that a U.S. citizen journalist... | ||
Couldn't simply be imprisoned and tortured. | ||
That is to say, there is a 100% chance that the Kiev government asked the US government what they should do with this guy, and the US government told him to lock him up in a gulag. | ||
That means the US government does not protect their citizens. | ||
Why should they? They don't protect us in the country. | ||
Why would they protect us overseas? | ||
It's sort of a stark realization. | ||
I think he's right. Why wouldn't this happen here? | ||
And there's a certain thing that happens with these people. | ||
Where they are so self-important, they're so deluded in their belief that everything they believe is absolutely correct and that you can't, really like you can't question them. | ||
Questioning them is blasphemy. | ||
They are God. See, when their dictates are God, if you disagree with them, well, you're committing heresy. | ||
You're committing blasphemy and you deserve to die. | ||
And there's a lot of that. | ||
There's a lot of that. We've seen that during the Israeli conflict as well. | ||
You'll have a journalist, Palestinian journalist, speaking out against Israel, and then Israel will bomb him and kill him. | ||
And then you'll have normally, you know, decent people, sensible people, wholesome people, like celebrating it, being like, haha, not so funny now, huh? | ||
And it's like, the man died? | ||
The man died, and you're gloating over it because he disagreed with your ideas. | ||
He spoke out against you, then you killed him, and now you're gloating over it. | ||
I mean, literally, I can't think of the guy's name right now. | ||
There's a Palestinian journalist who, you know, insulted Israel, and even libs of TikTok, Chayek or whatever her name is. | ||
She was, like, gloating over this, that this man died because he questioned Israel. | ||
The nation of Israel and their actions, genocide in Gaza. | ||
So this is just like the world that we're entering into. | ||
The idea of free speech and, you know, some sort of measured response to disagreement. | ||
That's all in the past. | ||
Palestinian-American journalist Shirin Abu Akleh was killed a year ago. | ||
Remember when Khashoggi was killed? | ||
Remember when that journalist Khashoggi, who was a CIA, cut out? | ||
Remember, he was killed in Saudi Arabia or whatever, and it was like they still bring it up. | ||
It's like a years-long story. | ||
We're supposed to go to war over this or something. | ||
I haven't seen Gonzalo Lira in any mainstream media whatsoever. | ||
And so, of course, this just ties into everything that there is to know about globalism. | ||
Because the concept of being a citizen... | ||
Is contrary to what globalism represents. | ||
We're a citizen of the world. | ||
That means you're a citizen of nowhere. | ||
You're not a citizen. And I've said a million times, like if I was running for president, my slogan would be make citizenship a thing again. | ||
Make citizenship mean something again. | ||
The idea is not that hard to conceive of. | ||
It's just this is what being a nation is supposed to mean. | ||
It's like an extended family. | ||
It's like because you are us, because you're with us, because you're in our group, then whatever happens to you happens to all of us. | ||
And whenever you need help, we are there to help you. | ||
And This is like a beautiful thing. | ||
This is like a wonderful advancement of human society. | ||
The whole nation comes together to support one another. | ||
I remember being in Mexico with Ben Swan before I worked here at InfoWars filming a documentary that the Mexican government would rather not have us discuss about 20 or so missing students that were kidnapped by the federal government. | ||
And at one point, everywhere we went, you could see a federal agent shadowing us and following us. | ||
It was kind of horrifying. | ||
I mean, after all, the story we're reporting is that 20 students got on a bus, were loaded onto a bus by the government, and were never seen again. | ||
So here we are in this situation, in the country under false pretenses, right? | ||
We couldn't tell the Mexican government, we're here to make a documentary calling you all murderers. | ||
They wouldn't have let us in. So we went there on some... | ||
You know, claiming something else to get visas. | ||
And we're there and the federales are following us. | ||
Sort of scary. And then you have this realization of like, but I'm an American. | ||
They can't touch me. | ||
See, I'm an American. | ||
If something happens to me, I've got the American government that's going to come down on Mexico like a ton of bricks. | ||
Because I'm an American. | ||
Like, that's what happens as an American. | ||
Even not like other countries. | ||
It's not even necessarily a nation versus nation thing. | ||
There's a device that ships can get, like boats, yachts, whatever. | ||
And it doesn't matter where you are in the world, but certainly anywhere in between America and Hawaii, if you throw this device overboard and it gets wet, an alarm goes off, or you can activate the device somehow, an alarm goes off, and the Coast Guard is dispatched to that area. | ||
It's an emergency buoy that... | ||
It's just, you know, if you're in trouble, you just activate it and here comes America. | ||
You're an American after all. | ||
You're an American, so if you're in trouble, You get helicopters, you get rescue boats, you get airplane flyovers, you get satellite uplinks. | ||
I mean, everything, all of the power that Americans can manifest is at your service because you're an American citizen. | ||
Like, that's what it means to be an American citizen. | ||
So that's going away now. | ||
That's going to be gone very soon, or it is gone already, as you can look at Gonzalo Lira. | ||
He didn't commit any crimes. He didn't hurt anybody, right? | ||
Everything he was actually doing was trying to bring truth to the lies that were hurting people. | ||
See, when he, in that video that we just saw, when he's talking about everybody knew Russia was winning from the beginning. | ||
Everybody knew Russia was winning from six months ago and, you know, et cetera, et cetera. | ||
You've got A year at this point. | ||
It could have ended a year ago. | ||
I mean, it could have ended a month after it started, and everybody knows that. | ||
And there were peace summits, and Ukraine was ready to sign the peace agreement, and then the UK. And America came in and pressured them not to sign it. | ||
Russia was willing to give back the land they'd taken. | ||
I mean, it was very... | ||
Literally, Russia said, you can declare peace in Ukraine. | ||
We'll give you back the territories. | ||
You just have to remain neutral. | ||
You can't join NATO. You have to remain neutral. | ||
You can't join the EU. You have to remain neutral between Russia and the NATO West. | ||
That was all. That was what they wanted. | ||
This is all about protecting Russian sovereignty and defending against NATO aggression or incremental advancement towards Russia. | ||
So it could have ended a year ago. | ||
It could have ended two years ago. And that's all Gonzalo Lira was saying. | ||
And he was right. And if people would listen to him and if his Ideas and knowledge was able to get out. | ||
Hundreds of thousands of lives could have been saved. | ||
So again, in this country today, it's... | ||
I mean, everything is so backwards. | ||
Everything is so inverted. | ||
Everything is so satanic. | ||
I mean, it really... | ||
A beggar's belief, man. | ||
It really is insane at this point. | ||
There's a story, and I'll have to try to find it here in my Twitter bookmarks because I didn't think I was going to talk about it today. | ||
I don't even want to bring it up until I find it because it's so sort of horrifying, but it was a crime committed against a woman in public on a bus, I believe, or a subway. | ||
But the person that attacked her was an eight-time felon. | ||
Eight felonies on this guy's record. | ||
And he's out there walking around. | ||
So I just want you to understand that this is the new dividing line between good and evil. | ||
You know, the libertarians have a non-aggression principle. | ||
It basically says if you're not hurting anybody, you're not really committing a crime. | ||
Or, you know, more or less, right? | ||
That you should... | ||
There it is. | ||
Chicago woman left brain dead. | ||
Oh, yeah, see? I knew it was something horrifying. | ||
Chicago woman left brain dead after a purse thief stomped her with all her weight in subway attack. | ||
He... And, yeah, this was on the 14th yesterday. | ||
Eight-time felon. | ||
Eight felonies. | ||
Not eight misdemeanors. | ||
Not eight jaywalking charges. | ||
Eight... Felony convictions, and he's out there walking around. | ||
Johnson. So, you know, the new paradigm is that there's really only one thing you're not allowed to do. | ||
And we're moving towards this. | ||
All the stuff in the past that we would consider criminal, that we would design our entire society to prevent, those things are being... | ||
Clandestinely, or at this point, openly permitted. | ||
You can be a murderer, you can be a thief, you can be a pedophile or a rapist. | ||
And it's like, if you're so bad at it that you happen to get caught when there's no police and nobody doing any investigations as there is in most cities in America, you can get a little slap on the wrist. | ||
Maybe get a little probation. | ||
Maybe spend some time in a federal hotel and then you're back on the street to do it again. | ||
But if you oppose the system, if you oppose the wars that they're starting, if you expose things, you're not hurting anybody. | ||
You're not being aggressive to anybody. | ||
Nobody is suffering because of what you're saying. | ||
But the system is challenged by what you're saying. | ||
Then you deserve death and you'll be killed. | ||
That's what Gonzalo, Lira heard, realized, learned. | ||
And it's not just coming to America. | ||
It's here. It is certainly here. | ||
It is one of those things where it's like, here's this guy who didn't commit any violence. | ||
He didn't sell secrets. | ||
He wasn't a traitor or a spy. | ||
He was just an activist and a journalist. | ||
And he's arrested and tortured in prison. | ||
And you've got these people writing articles saying, this could happen in America. | ||
It's like, well, I bet Stuart Rhodes would be very scared to hear that. | ||
I bet Rufio would be very concerned that this could one day come to America. | ||
I bet Enrique Tarrio would be really interested in hearing that this could one day happen to Americans. | ||
Isn't that a chilling warning? | ||
It's already happening. It's already here. | ||
It's already going on. | ||
American citizens in America who have committed no crime, committed no violence, haven't even discussed committing violence, are sitting behind bars for two decades. | ||
It's almost crueler than killing them. | ||
Some of these guys are going to die in prison, no doubt. | ||
Many of them have been tortured in prison already. | ||
So I just want you to fully understand where we're headed with all of this. | ||
Honestly, I just, I don't even... | ||
Well, we'll just get into some of, you know, what's going on in the world. | ||
These are headlines from Infowars. | ||
By the way, you'll notice that I should have gone to break like five minutes ago. | ||
We're changing things up here. | ||
We have eliminated the majority of our commercial breaks. | ||
This is actually... Very good news. | ||
The number one complaint I hear on comments on streams or videos of Infowars is that there's too many breaks. | ||
Well, the breaks are pre-programmed by the radio stations. | ||
We're on the radio. But we're basically skipping over half of them now. | ||
We're breaking the rules on the breaks. | ||
So this is very exciting. | ||
And it means that we'll have longer periods where we can... | ||
Really flesh out some of these stories and really dig into them. | ||
We take more phone calls. | ||
I mean, we're basically expanding this show by 10 minutes an hour. | ||
So you're getting an extra 30 minutes of American Journal a day now because we've eliminated half the commercial breaks. | ||
So it's a little experiment. | ||
We're not sure how it's going to go. | ||
We're not sure if we can keep this up all the time. | ||
And we're also not sure if we can afford it. | ||
So, if you like, having a commercial-free couple of segments. | ||
So, in other words, instead of having a short segment at the beginning, then slightly longer, then another, then another. | ||
Instead of having five segments, four ten-minute segments an hour, we're going to have basically one little five-minute segment and then two... | ||
25 minute segments. | ||
So if you like this, if you like this new format, if you like having half the commercial breaks as before, then I hope you go to Infowarsstore.com because obviously the only thing that would make us go back to the old way is if People aren't seeing commercials, so they aren't buying products, so we can't afford it. | ||
So if you keep going to Infowarsstore.com, if you go to Infowarsstore.com and support us and keep us on the air, and especially if that increases, right, if our revenue increases because of this, then we will certainly continue it. | ||
But if you like having commercial-free half-hour broadcast chunks, go to InfoWarsStore.com today. | ||
Take advantage of the mega super sale. | ||
You're getting up to 60% off plus free shipping and double Patriot points. | ||
And there is no better time to make sure that you're boosting your natural systems and getting essential vitamins, minerals, and nutrients than now. | ||
In this time of need, it's especially crucial that we're giving our bodies what they need to function at optimum health. | ||
And with the brand-new sales available at InfoWarsStore, we're making it easier than ever for you to do so. | ||
DNA Force Plus, one of our more expensive products, honestly, but it's because it's worth it and it's just incredibly powerful. | ||
But that also means that 40% off, you're getting a massive discount. | ||
That is a huge saving on this big ticket item, DNA Force Plus. | ||
So if you've wondered what makes DNA Force Plus so powerful, now is your time to try it and learn the power of DNA Force Plus. | ||
So that's DNA Force Plus at 40% off. | ||
Real Red Pill Plus is 40% off. | ||
DNA Force Plus Plus Real Red Pill Plus is a full 50% off both those products. | ||
And also Winter Sun Plus is 40% off. | ||
And on Friday during the war room, I read a new scientific study. | ||
And again, I'm not a doctor, so I'm not about to make medical claims also. | ||
Don't have the details in front of me of this story, but just look up what vitamin D can do for you. | ||
I mean, it was like it improves neuroplasticity. | ||
It improves the immune system, and also it increases the anti-inflammation cytokines and decreases the pro-inflammation cytokines, so it helps with inflammation. | ||
The whole article was about how it prevented fatigue, especially if fatigue is caused by certain diseases. | ||
But the fact is that we don't even know. | ||
We don't even know the power of some of these vitamins. | ||
But do your own research. | ||
Figure out what you're missing from your life and go to Infowarsstore.com to make up for any shortfalls that you may have. | ||
And also, keep us on the air in these longer commercial-free breaks that we're trying out here. | ||
My goodness. So there's so much to get into. | ||
This stuff is from last week when Fauci testified in front of the Coronavirus Committee. | ||
Fauci admits social distancing has no basis. | ||
Wuhan lab leak hypothesis is not conspiracy theory. | ||
Although I kind of disagree with this headline. | ||
This headline's from Infowars. But let's be clear. | ||
The Wuhan lab leak hypothesis was very much a conspiracy. | ||
Like, by definition. | ||
We know beyond any doubt by the admissions of the people involved, this was a conspiracy. | ||
They conspired. They worked together in a group secretly. | ||
They took steps to hide their cooperation, took steps to hide their participation in this conspiracy, and then afterwards took steps to conceal the existence of the conspiracy and the actions that it took that led us to this point. | ||
The Wuhan lab leak was a conspiracy. | ||
Not a theory, a conspiracy. | ||
We showed how when requesting funds from DARPA, EcoHealth Alliance has emails where they're discussing with their Chinese partners saying, we're going to leave your name off of it because if they knew that the Chinese were running this, DARPA might not give us funds. | ||
So that's fraud. | ||
That's a conspiracy. | ||
It's like if I... Break into your house and steal money from you and you find out. | ||
And I go, well, I only stole money from it because I knew if I asked, you would say no. | ||
I knew if I asked you for money, you wouldn't give it to me, so I had to go take it instead. | ||
It's like that's not an excuse, right? | ||
They're saying, well, we hid that it was a Chinese project because we knew if we told you it was, you wouldn't have given us money. | ||
That's fraud. | ||
That's conspiracy. | ||
Now the Wuhan lab leak, it was a theory. | ||
It was a conspiracy theory. | ||
It's been confirmed now. So the Wuhan lab leak was a conspiracy. | ||
Did anybody think social distancing ever had a basis at all? | ||
It's ridiculous on the face of it. | ||
It's absurd. And it was absurd the first time I heard it. | ||
Back to this on the other side. | ||
We'll talk about the Iowa Coxes. | ||
unidentified
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We'll show you some videos. Stay with us. You're watching The American Journal with your host, Harrison Smith. | |
Watch live right now at band.video. | ||
Welcome back, folks. This is the American Journal. | ||
The second of our commercial-free info chunks. | ||
No, there's got to be a better word than that. | ||
Radio segments. | ||
That sounds better. Yes, ladies and gentlemen, we're moving into a new format with almost less than half... | ||
Of the commercial time than usual. | ||
So if you appreciate that, please don't make us regret it by going to infowarsstore.com and purchasing a product. | ||
Because again, if it turns out that not showing commercials means no one's going to Infowarsstore, meaning we're not getting revenue, meaning we can't stay on air, then we're going to have to go back to the old format. | ||
So that's a threat, folks. | ||
I'm going to blackmail you with commercial breaks. | ||
But seriously, that's just the way that capitalism works. | ||
So again, Fauci admits social distancing has no basis. | ||
Now, we knew this from the beginning. | ||
In fact, the six-foot rule might be one of the best examples of how decisions are made in complete contradiction to scientific reality, but entirely focused on and dialed in to psychological pressure. | ||
We've covered this story before. | ||
Fauci admitted it during closed-door testimony to the Coronavirus Committee. | ||
But we knew a long time ago that the six-foot rule had nothing to do with science, had nothing to do with virology, had nothing to do with reality and the way that germs actually spread. | ||
Again, this was obvious from the very beginning. | ||
Right? Right? We should pull in the pitch meeting skit. | ||
That was published in... | ||
When did I first publish that? | ||
I think it was early 2021. | ||
I don't think it was quite in 2020, but... | ||
It was always laughable. | ||
It was always laughable. The plexiglass boards were always ridiculous. | ||
The masks were always unscientific. | ||
But the six-foot rule in particular... | ||
They admitted. They said, first of all, they claimed that they had gotten the idea from some, like, middle school girl science project. | ||
That was a story that was going around for a while. | ||
But it came out, and they admitted that the six-foot rule was chosen particularly for its psychological impact. | ||
They said, we thought about 12 foot, but that's unsustainable. | ||
You can't have 12 feet between people all the time. | ||
It's just too much. People just will ignore it at that point. | ||
You say it's a 12 foot rule, people will just go, well, that's impossible. | ||
So, 12 foot's too much. | ||
If they said 3 feet, then people would think, how can 3 feet really matter? | ||
I mean, 3 feet's like the width of this desk. | ||
There's no way that that's going to make a big impact. | ||
So, like, then it would be obvious that this was show. | ||
So, they chose 6 feet. | ||
They say, and I'm not the one saying this, by their own admission, 6 feet was a psychological medium that people would accept, but would have no... | ||
Remote impact on the viral transmission whatsoever. | ||
But it wasn't chosen because it would help the spread of the virus. | ||
It was chosen for psychological impact. | ||
That's how they made the choice. | ||
What will people put up with? | ||
Let's do that. That was the only thing that they... | ||
And this is one of the things that if at the time, just like masks, just like lockdown, just like everything else, If you said, the six foot rule sounds ridiculous. | ||
The six foot rule makes no sense. | ||
Why are there dots on the floor that you're making me stand on? | ||
Why is there a sign in every window saying, remember the six foot rule, keep your distance? | ||
This is stupid. This makes no sense. | ||
If you said that during the height of coronavirus, you'd be fired. | ||
People would mock you, right? | ||
Just do it. Just stay six feet away. | ||
Is that so hard? It's like, no, but you don't get it. | ||
They're messing with you. | ||
you they're screwing with you literally everything there's everything like that Like, I just don't... | ||
unidentified
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I'll just be honest with you. | |
I'll just be completely honest with you. | ||
Until last night, I didn't think that we were going to do a show today because it's Martin Luther King Day and I thought we had off. | ||
So usually I do a lot of preparation the day before. | ||
I didn't do that. And then this morning, by the way, it's freezing and there was ice covering my car and I'm from Texas. | ||
I literally don't know how to deal with that. | ||
How do people deal with this? | ||
How do people deal with their cars being frozen all the time? | ||
So I was super late today. | ||
So I have tons of stories from this weekend. | ||
Like I said, it's the Iowa caucus today. | ||
It's the World Economic Forum. | ||
So there's a lot of stuff. There's a lot of news that's going to be coming out today. | ||
That hasn't yet as we get returns from the Iowa caucus and as I'm sure videos will start coming out from what's going on on the ground in Davos as World Economic Forum meets. | ||
And it's not that I have a lack of preparation so I don't have anything to talk about. | ||
I have too much. My preparation has to do typically with whittling down the vast number of stories I have to what I think is actually important and what You know, people need to hear about and what people are talking about versus what they're not talking about, but should be. | ||
So I almost just want to go through these headlines just in a completely random way. | ||
I just don't I don't like doing this because I like to have things sort of systematically thought out, like strategically planned out. | ||
I go first look over this and I'll explain how this relates to this. | ||
But let's just do a scattershot thing here. | ||
All right, let's just look at some headlines and hopefully We can leave you just the impression that I feel being hyper-tuned into what's going on in the world, especially compared to the average American. | ||
And I'm not saying that as like superiority, like we know so much more than the average American, but... | ||
At a certain point, when you see these headlines, when you realize that it's not just there's a lie here or there, and it's like, well, we don't quite know the truth about this, or maybe this is being portrayed the wrong way, but when you realize how universal, | ||
how ubiquitous deception is, and that it's so overwhelming, and this may be part of the strategy that, like, Like, I can't have a conversation with a regular person. | ||
I just can't. I can't do it. | ||
Everything they believe is wrong. | ||
Everything they believe is not just wrong, it's the inverse of what's true. | ||
And it's like, I feel bad for them. | ||
And especially if they're my friend, I, like, don't want to humiliate them. | ||
So it's, I can't talk to them. | ||
And this happens with a lot of topics. | ||
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It's like... | |
Israel's a good example because the amount of misinformation about the conflict in Gaza is so overwhelming. | ||
And I was just recently having a very intense and in-depth conversation about it. | ||
I was trying to be very diplomatic. | ||
I was trying to be very thoughtful about how I presented the information to the person. | ||
But in reality... | ||
What they think happened on October 7th is complete BS, complete nonsense. | ||
The reality about October 7th is that about 600 Israeli civilians were killed, and the majority of those were killed by Israel. | ||
I would honestly hazard that less than 500 Israelis were killed. | ||
Still could be a very large number. | ||
I mean, that's a lot of people. | ||
I mean, it's like an afternoon in Gaza, right? | ||
So, I mean, it's not that—comparatively, it's actually not that many people. | ||
I tend to value human lives equally, unlike most people in this conflict. | ||
But everything they think they know about October 7th, utter hogwash. | ||
The build-up to October 7th, they're completely misinformed on. | ||
The entire history of Palestine and Israel and how the conflict started and why it started and who started it and who's been the victim and who's been the oppressor. | ||
Everything they believe is wrong up to October 7th. | ||
Everything they believe about October 7th is completely wrong. | ||
Following October 7th, everything they've been told is a ridiculous lie. | ||
So, how do you even talk to somebody about a conflict where... | ||
My interpretation of it is the real interpretation because I have to get up in front of a camera and talk about this and then I open up the phone line so I don't want to look like an idiot so I have to actually know what I'm talking about and I also research it from a non-biased completely independent perspective not having a conclusion as to whose side I'm on before we figure out what the result is. | ||
So my perception of it Is that you've got this colonial project called Israel... | ||
...consisting primarily of Eastern European communists that founded it... | ||
...supported by the British mandate system... | ||
...which they manipulated with their terrorist organizations. | ||
Those terrorist organizations, the Airguns, the Stern Gang, all these... | ||
Literal terrorist organizations, bombing civilians, committing false flags, starting wars. | ||
Actually became the Mossad, became Shin Bet, same people. | ||
No military authority. | ||
So you've got a colonial project in the Middle East that forcibly displaces the natives of that area. | ||
For 70 years, it's a continuous sort of slow burn of attacks against the native people of Palestine. | ||
Continuously. And until recently, that trend has continued. | ||
And it's been brutal. | ||
It's been absolutely brutal. Where you've got thousands of Palestinians, women, children in jail without charges in Israel. | ||
Some of them tortured, some of them raped, some of them killed, thousands of them. | ||
You've got story after story, whether it's in Gaza or the West Bank, where you just have a campaign of continuous, relentless terror from Israel on the Palestinian population, where they do things like shoot men, In the genitals, on purpose, for no reason, and then shoot a child, and then if somebody rushes out to help the child, shoot the person helping the child. | ||
I mean, just brutal, horrific treatment of human beings. | ||
And to expect those human beings to not want to fight back is basically just dehumanizing. | ||
So anyway, this goes on for decade upon decade. | ||
And in response to not just increased activity at the Al-Aqsa Mosque with Jewish settlers and agitators storming the mosque and threatening to take over the mosque and targeting this holy site of Islam, in reaction to that, and in an attempt to get their own prisoners so they can do a prisoner exchange, Hamas storms in because Israel was... | ||
Primarily reliant on AI and surveillance cameras and things to observe their border. | ||
And then in the guard towers, they would be manned by one female soldier apiece every couple miles. | ||
I'm just getting into the narrative. | ||
But all this is to say that you have Hamas, a couple thousand guys, storming across the border at a whole bunch of different points. | ||
They start taking hostages. | ||
They kill some people. | ||
Then the Israeli army comes and just kills everybody. | ||
They just killed everybody. | ||
The people at the music festival killed by an Apache helicopter from Israel. | ||
Burned by Israeli airstrikes. | ||
Kibbutzes bombed by Israeli airstrikes. | ||
It's called the Hannibal Directive. It's a policy of Israel. | ||
So the official count in every story you read that talks about Israel and Gaza, the very beginning of the article, it will remind you this is all in response to the horrible, deadly terrorist attack of October 7th, where over 1,400 Israels were murdered by Hamas. | ||
And you go, okay, 1,400 Israels murdered by Hamas. | ||
That makes them all sound like civilians. | ||
Well, the vast majority were actually killed. | ||
What's that? Israelis. | ||
Did I, would I say something else? | ||
I don't understand. So you've got the original claim, 1400 Israelis killed, murdered. | ||
But then you learn that like half of them were military. | ||
That's different than being murdered. | ||
That's a combatant death in a war. | ||
And then you learn that it was the Israeli military that killed huge numbers, including eyewitness testimony from Israelis, like the woman who was a hostage in the kibbutz. | ||
I was like, yeah, it was me and a dozen hostages, and the Israeli government came in and killed them all. | ||
The Israeli army came in and killed them all. | ||
There's story after story about this. | ||
And then some of the hostages were taken back to Gaza, a couple hundred of them, and by all accounts have been treated badly. | ||
As well as any prisoner of war should ever expect to be treated, certainly significantly better than any Palestinian prisoners treated in Israel. | ||
As we've learned throughout all this that Israel deploys things like rape against their Palestinian prisoners in a deliberate psychological operation. | ||
And so you've got this attack and it was bad and it targeted innocent people. | ||
And certainly some children died. | ||
Now, whether they were killed by Israel or not, it's hard to say. | ||
This was a military attack on military targets with the purpose of getting prisoners in order to a prisoner exchange because of the thousands and thousands of illegal prisoners that Israel's holding. | ||
And then in response to a couple hundred dead civilians... | ||
Who they themselves may have killed. | ||
Israel launches a genocidal campaign of land acquisition in order to annex Gaza, as was obvious from the very beginning, and now there's more information coming out about that. | ||
And that's a very different story than Hamas killed 14,000 innocent Israeli citizens, that they beheaded 40 babies, that they were... | ||
Running rape gangs while they were in the middle of this attack that they targeted the music festival on purpose and slaughtered everyone there which they didn't and by the way the Israeli government knew this attack was coming and then purposefully moved the music festival just days before it started to be not only significantly closer to Gaza more in danger but in between two military bases They're put into harm's way by the Israeli military despite knowing the attack was imminent. | ||
And then the Apache helicopter showed up and killed them all. | ||
So again, when you look at this, and Scott Adams would always say, you know, we're watching the same screen but we're seeing two different movies. | ||
And that's a little bit of what's going on here. | ||
But it's more like you've got two guys watching a movie in a theater and And then they come out, and one of them does his best to describe to you what he remembers about the movie, even though it's imperfect and he might get some things wrong and he might have forgotten a couple scenes or missed something when he went to the bathroom, but he's generally got it correct, versus the other guy who comes out of the theater and just lies to you about everything in the movie. | ||
It's not that we're seeing the same thing and coming to two different results. | ||
It's that the vast majority of Americans are relying on that second guy who's lying about everything. | ||
Everything. Everything. | ||
Everything. So again, all this is to say, I don't even know how you even broach these subjects with people. | ||
Especially when it's also deeply interconnected. | ||
And if people aren't willing to accept a lot of the story that we tell, then they won't accept any of it. | ||
If they won't accept any of it, then they have to, like all they have to rely on are the statements made by the liars that are very good at concealing the reality of what's going on. | ||
So... Again, this is just, it's just like, I honestly, I just don't know. | ||
I just don't know what to do. | ||
Okay, so let's just go through some of these stories. | ||
ERCOT issues conservation appeal for Texans as polar vortex to spark record-breaking demand. | ||
Year after year, we have cold snaps, and the Texas grid can't handle it. | ||
How can we not handle it? | ||
How can America in 2023, how can America in the 21st century not have infrastructure that can handle cold? | ||
Like, what are you talking about? | ||
How is this possible? It's possible because for the last 50 or 60 years, our priority has been anything but the safety, comfort, and continued existence of our own citizenry. | ||
I don't know. I never hear about China Having infrastructure failure like this. | ||
They tend to invest money in things that serve their citizens. | ||
We've spent God only knows how many billions of dollars on illegal immigrants. | ||
But we can't guarantee that our electric system can survive a snowstorm. | ||
Americans are going to be freezing to death. | ||
And this is what I mean. Like, if you are stupid, you might think this has something to do with global warming. | ||
You might think this has to do with greedy oil companies. | ||
You might think this has to do with the need to get to sustainable energy. | ||
Stop it. Stop it. | ||
Just stop. We don't need you adding to this conversation. | ||
This is about a couple things. | ||
And almost all of this is about the deliberate destruction of America through any means necessary, through covert means, and through forcing what they want on the American people. | ||
So they don't want Texas on an independent electric grid. | ||
So what they want is for our electric grid to fail, so they can say, look, your electric grid is failing. | ||
You need to join in with the American electric grid. | ||
They don't want us to have... | ||
Really, they don't want us to have energy at all. | ||
They don't want us to have nuclear energy. | ||
They want us relying on things like solar panels and wind farms, which continuously fail to do what they're supposed to do. | ||
It would not be difficult to reinforce our grid and to keep it all safe and online. | ||
They're just choosing not to do it. | ||
It would be extremely simple to stop the illegal immigration. | ||
They're just choosing not to do it. | ||
It would be extremely easy to get peace in Ukraine. | ||
They're choosing not to do it. | ||
It would be extremely easy to stop the conflict in the Middle East. | ||
It continues to spiral out of control. | ||
They're choosing not to do that. | ||
It would be easy to not have planes falling out of the sky. | ||
They're choosing diversity instead. | ||
These are all choices being made by people on purpose, and if you don't get that, if you aren't prepared to accept that reality, How can you understand anything that's going on in the world right now? | ||
How can you possibly look around and see how just that we're in a state of collapse? | ||
We're in utter, sustained, continuous, slow burn collapse. | ||
And I don't know how, I mean, people either don't notice or can't wrap their mind around why this is happening. | ||
And so it's just going to keep happening. | ||
You have to notice something before you can prevent or reverse it. | ||
And maybe, I mean, honestly, it might just be football. | ||
It might all be. | ||
But, you know, I say that, but then it's not. | ||
Because, again, I'm thinking about, well, I mean, it's any social gathering. | ||
I just don't follow football, college or anything else. | ||
And so it's like when I'm around a big group of people, And they talk so much about football. | ||
And then I look over, you know, during a wedding ceremony, and the dude next to me is checking scores on his phone. | ||
And then every speech that's given has some reference to some big game that I don't even know was happening. | ||
And then, you know, all these people... | ||
If you try to bring up globalism, you talk about... | ||
If I were to sit down on a table and go, you guys know, it's like a cabal of billionaires that's meeting right now in a castle in Switzerland, who's in their entire purpose for existence is to try to fold us into a global world government that's unelected so we'll all be slaves of some masterless system. | ||
You can just imagine the fluoride stares I would get back. | ||
The dead-eyed look. | ||
And there's just, you know, it's just this permeating stillness. | ||
Then you go, who here likes the Buckeyes? | ||
And they're all like, yeah! Yeah! | ||
Yeah! It's like the energy is just like overwhelming. | ||
And it's like, okay, one is the existence of your nation and your race and your religion. | ||
And you're just like scared to even mention it. | ||
But then football, it's like, there's the energy! | ||
That's what, and it's just like, all right. | ||
It's bread and circuses, and it's collapse of Rome. | ||
Dennis Rancourt has a PhD in physics. | ||
He is a former tenured full professor and has published over 100 articles in leading science journals. | ||
Rancourt and his team have used all-cause mortality data to prove there have been about 17 million deaths as a result of official COVID-19 measures, but not from COVID, which was a lie. | ||
As far as I can tell from all-cause mortality data that we've been studying extensively for a long time, there's There was no such thing as a viral respiratory pandemic. | ||
He explains all this in his essay entitled, There Was No Pandemic, which you can find on his substack. | ||
There was no pandemic, in the sense that there was not a particularly virulent new pathogen that was spreading and causing death. | ||
That is not what happened. | ||
What happened was huge assaults against vulnerable people by many different methods, and every time you did that, you caused excess mortality. | ||
In all the countries where they were not doing that, there was absolutely no excess mortality, even if it was a jurisdiction that was right beside the one that was doing this. | ||
Rancord explains a science of psychological murder that has been officially studied and documented for well over a century. | ||
It wasn't just the spike protein that killed us. | ||
It was the whole damn thing. | ||
Psychological stress and social isolation are... | ||
Dominant determinants of an individual's health. | ||
That causes a suppression of your immune system and you're going to get some kind of infection, cancer, heart disease, and very often the lungs are very exposed to the environments and they're subjected to all the bacteria that you live with all the time. | ||
You get bacterial pneumonia. | ||
And it's a huge killer when a society is stressed, meaning all of its individuals are stressed. | ||
The kind of psychological stress that kills you is when your entire world is turned upside down. | ||
Your whole life you thought you had a place in the world and it's gone. | ||
That will kill you within a very short time. | ||
We always occupy a dominance hierarchy, a social dominance hierarchy. | ||
That is how we organize our societies because we are social animals. | ||
It is a fundamental truth of how we organize societies. | ||
The stress that is intended to keep you in your place within that dominance hierarchy is an everyday chronic stress. | ||
And the stressors have to keep changing how they're going to stress you because you get habituated to the stress. | ||
So they have to randomly hit you with hard things every once in a while to really make sure you understand what your place is. | ||
That stress is one of the biggest determinants of health. | ||
But we have to admit that medicine itself is a massive killer. | ||
It's a massive cause of premature death of individuals. | ||
Modern Western medicine is officially recognized as the third highest cause of death. | ||
It was designed to be a way of controlling the population. | ||
The role of medicine as an institution in our society is to maintain the dominance hierarchy. | ||
And to put them in their place, it's just part of that institutionally. | ||
Financed by the Carnegie Foundation and published in 1910, the Flexner Report was used to outlaw natural medicine practices in America. | ||
The Rockefeller Foundation then funded a new kind of medicine, an inverted form of healthcare that utilized petrochemical drugs and experimental surgery to keep people sick and in many cases kill the patient. | ||
As Dennis Rancourt has pointed out, this is how societies have been run for centuries. | ||
A declassified document entitled Geomagnetic Factors in Spontaneous Subjective Telepathic Precognitive and Postmortem Experiences, as well as Decades of Trauma-Based Mind Control Research, It shows us that the CIA and our governments are well aware of the deadly effects that traumatizing a population can induce. | ||
They are killing us with fear and trauma. | ||
This is known as psychogenic death or psychosomatic death. | ||
It is the phenomenon of sudden death brought about by strong emotional shock. | ||
Chairman of the Department of Physiology at Harvard Medical School, Walter Cannon, called it. | ||
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Welcome back. | |
Ladies and gentlemen, second hour of the American Journal is on. | ||
I'm going to go ahead and give out the phone number. | ||
Take your calls throughout the rest of the show today. | ||
The number to dial is 1-877-789-2539. | ||
1-877-789-2539. | ||
Let's take a look now at... | ||
Their plans for 2024 and their attempts to stop Donald Trump. | ||
InfoWars has the story and actually Alex Jones did a very powerful tweet about this yesterday. | ||
Of course you can follow us once again on Twitter at InfoWarsNotRealAlexJones and this was about the Well, the story from Infowars. | ||
The story from Infowars is Democrats in deep state preparing to remove president's control of military if Trump elected. | ||
Democrat lawmakers, advocacy groups, and former government officials are quietly devising plans to stop former President Donald Trump from asserting control of the military if elected president again in November, according to a report. | ||
They actually admitted this. | ||
It's a new NBC News article titled Fears Grow That Trump Will Use the Military, quote, in Dictatorial Ways If He Returns to the White House. | ||
Details how a, quote, loose knit network of public interest groups and lawmakers are preparing to foil any efforts for Trump to use the military to carry out his political agenda if he becomes commander in chief once again. | ||
The report acknowledged that despite the fact that Trump will have vast powers as commander in chief bestowed by the Constitution and the American people, these groups are nonetheless working to subvert his ability to lawfully order the military to carry out his agenda. | ||
America's commander-in-chief has vast powers at his disposal, some well-known, others not so much. | ||
Some lawmakers and pro-democracy advocates were the pro-democracy advocates. | ||
Pro-democracy advocates are organizing to disrupt, subvert, and undo the outcome of an election, just so we're clear. | ||
The pro-democracy advocates worry there may be nothing stopping a president from mobilizing the military to intervene in elections, police American streets, or quash domestic protests, NBC News reported. | ||
You know, again, it's just one of these stories where it's like, the fact that we're at a point where this type of article can be written, I don't know, it just makes me black-billed. | ||
I mean, what are we supposed to do about this? | ||
They're announcing their treason. | ||
That's all that's happening here. They're saying, if Trump gets elected, it doesn't matter because we're in control of the military. | ||
You really have to ask yourself, what is it that the elected government even does at this point? | ||
They're not the ones making the decision. | ||
And they brag about this, right? | ||
You remember last year, or last election rather, They bragged about this after the fact. | ||
After they stole the election, they wrote articles in Time magazine, which is owned by Mark Benioff, who's the second in command under Klaus Schwab of the World Economic Forum, right? | ||
They control media outlets from Davos as well, so... | ||
This globalist outlet brags about the fact that they spent billions of dollars to undermine the electoral system, to impose unconstitutional, unapproved, illegally implemented mail-in ballot systems, the secret history of the shadow campaign that saved the 2020 election. | ||
So they brag about the fact that they stole the election, they do it right out in the open, they celebrate it. | ||
That was bad enough. | ||
Now they're literally advertising That they've taken over the military and will refuse to follow the lawful orders of the Commander-in-Chief. | ||
So what is this? | ||
It's just the coming out party of the Empire? | ||
It's just them announcing once and for all, you're welcome to vote. | ||
It won't change how things are going. | ||
They're just shedding that illusion once and for all. | ||
It's annoying to them, I imagine, to have to rig elections. | ||
They'd rather just do things. | ||
By fiat. But I mean, Time Magazine even sort of celebrates this. | ||
This is their headline of their January issue. | ||
The envoy, Secretary of State Anthony Blinken, in the test of American leadership. | ||
Because everybody recognizes that Joe Biden is not in charge. | ||
Everybody gets that Joe Biden is not the one making decisions at this point. | ||
So I don't believe that Joe Biden was elected in the first place. | ||
I think it's beyond any reasonable doubt that that election was stolen right out in the open and they bragged about it. | ||
But let's just take that as an assumption. | ||
Let's assume that Joe Biden actually won the election. | ||
We'll just take that as the groundwork to operate from. | ||
Nobody voted for Anthony Blinken. | ||
Anthony Blinken never had to debate, never had to campaign. | ||
And Anthony Blinken, by the way, has been Joe Biden's handler for the last, like, 20 years. | ||
Like, we have this system in America where you've got, like, the face who's just sort of a cutout, sort of a puppet. | ||
He doesn't really believe anything. | ||
He doesn't really control anything, but he's the face, and it might as well be a cartoon. | ||
You might as well have a cartoon figure up there, and people debate about him, and he answers questions, and people vent their ire on him. | ||
Meanwhile, just behind him, in the shadow, is the real power. | ||
And it's almost like Joe Biden is Anthony Blinken's Pokemon. | ||
That's sort of what it is. | ||
There's the Pokemon master, right? | ||
And that's Anthony Blinken. And Joe Biden's like his little Pikachu that runs around and does all the fighting for him. | ||
So throughout his Senate career, Joe Biden's out there making speeches. | ||
Joe Biden's campaigning throughout the vice presidency. | ||
Joe Biden's acting in that position. | ||
But meanwhile, the entire time, his policies... | ||
are being decided by his actions are being dictated by his daily schedule is being given to him by Anthony Blinken since he was a senator since like the 80s guys look it up when was Anthony Blinken when did he first catch Joe Biden with a pokeball when did he first start working for Joe Biden because it's been decades That this idea of Joe Biden has just been a smokescreen for Anthony Blinken to operate in the background. | ||
So this isn't democracy. | ||
I never voted for Anthony Blinken. | ||
Nobody voted for Anthony Blinken. | ||
Nobody voted for Victoria Nuland. | ||
Nobody voted for Lloyd Austin. | ||
Nobody voted for any of these people. | ||
Theoretically, the Senate and the Congress approved them. | ||
So you say, well, but they were approved by people you did vote for. | ||
But when it's a rubber stamp, that actually doesn't have an effect. | ||
That actually doesn't matter. | ||
So again, just the title of this article, Secretary of State Anthony Blinken in the Test of American Leadership. | ||
What does leadership even mean in that sentence? | ||
He's not a leader. He's never led anything. | ||
I've never seen him give a speech... | ||
To a crowd of citizens. I've never seen him take questions from the press. | ||
I've never seen him in front of Congress or in front of the Senate. | ||
Who is he leading? What is he leading? | ||
How is he a leader? How is Anthony Blinken a part of the leadership? | ||
He's just part of the control apparatus. | ||
He's part of the bureaucratic deep state that actually runs things. | ||
So What does DC, like, what do they even do? | ||
What does Congress do anymore? | ||
Nobody asked Congress if we should go to war in Yemen. | ||
They did that while the Secretary of State was incapacitated and out of commission. | ||
So who gave that order? | ||
2008 was when Blinken captured Joe Biden with a pokeball. | ||
Yeah, so 15 years, 15 years. | ||
For 15 years, he's been Joe Biden's number one aide, meaning he does everything. | ||
The envoy, the test of American leadership. | ||
There's no American leadership. | ||
It doesn't exist. | ||
It's an illusion. | ||
It's a fraud. I mean, Time Magazine, we really should just go through this magazine piece by piece. | ||
Again, it's owned by Mark Benioff, owner of Salesforce, second in command of the World Economic Forum. | ||
The contents of this, right? | ||
The food choices we make say a lot about the world we now inhabit. | ||
Nikki Haley's ascent. | ||
How she positioned herself as the best bet for Republicans exhausted with Donald Trump. | ||
The showman, Volodymyr Zelensky's roots from tough Ukrainian steel town to the post-Soviet entertainment industry. | ||
Ideas of the year, insights to drive progress in 2024, including profiles of U.S. Secretary of State Anthony Blinken and the EU's Robert Metzola. | ||
So it's just, like you can get what they want you to believe. | ||
It's very simple. They want you to vote for Nikki Haley. | ||
They want you to hate and fear Trump. | ||
They want you to love and admire Volodymyr Zelensky. | ||
The actor-turned-president-turned-dictator who has killed an entire generation of young men in his country who's lost a war and is now completely, wholly, and in total owned by BlackRock and Goldman Sachs. | ||
By the way, that's a video I had from last week. | ||
I'll go in and find Where Ukrainian is actually talking about the amount of debt that Ukraine is accruing as this war continues. | ||
And of course that goes into the statements made by things like BlackRock and Goldman Sachs where they're like, we have a rebuilding plan. | ||
As soon as this war's over, we're going to come in and turn Ukraine into a prosperous first world nation. | ||
So they're just, again, I mean, it's all just such nonsense. | ||
It's all so utterly and completely insane. | ||
So I do, I just want to jump through this like schizophrenically, okay? | ||
Maybe just give you an idea of what it's like to know all this stuff all at once. | ||
Department of Homeland Security files emergency motion to stop Texas from securing border. | ||
In the Supreme Court of the United States, Department of Homeland Security et al. | ||
Versus the state of Texas. | ||
They're literally suing Texas for stopping the invasion at the southern border. | ||
Even though that's not even really what's happening. | ||
You still have... | ||
Them suing Texas over even attempting to slow the influx of the full-on invasion. | ||
Lauren Witzke comments on this saying, Arrest Mayorkas for treason and then impeach him. | ||
Make a public example out of him. | ||
What other proof do you need? | ||
He's intentionally facilitating an invasion in the ultimate conquering of America, a nation he has sworn to protect, yet is deliberately destroying. | ||
Have a Texas sheriff arrest him immediately so that he can stop the invasion and investigate everyone involved in it. | ||
America cannot survive this. | ||
She's right. America's being killed right in front of us. | ||
She's strangled by Alejandro Mayorkas and Anthony Blinken. | ||
By the way, did you ever vote for Mayorkas? | ||
Anybody ever cast a vote for Mayorkas? | ||
Here's the question. Did Congress ever change the law to say that we don't have a border? | ||
Did Congress ever write a law saying we can't arrest illegal immigrants? | ||
That violating our national sovereignty and crossing the border illegally? | ||
It's suddenly not a crime anymore. | ||
It's still a crime. It doesn't even matter what Congress does. | ||
It doesn't even matter what the laws are. | ||
It matters who's in charge. | ||
It matters who is in these positions of power. | ||
And you don't get to vote for them. | ||
So we're not a republic. | ||
We're not a democracy. | ||
We're an empire with extra bells and whistles. | ||
ERCOT issues conservation demand for Texans as polar vortex to spark record-breaking demand because, of course, our infrastructure is collapsing. | ||
At the same time that we are funding the Ukraine war and the war against Yemen and the war against Gaza and the NATO expansion against Russia and, of course, billions upon billions upon billions of dollars to support the invasion at the southern border. | ||
So, again, it's not the fact that we can't have an electric grid that functions. | ||
It's that other things are more important to the people who have all of our money, by the way. | ||
It's just another infuriating thing on top of this that everything that I'm talking about is being funded completely by our tax dollars. | ||
And they just take thousands of dollars out of your paycheck and there's nothing you can do about it. | ||
What about this? FAA's diversity push includes focus on hiring people with severe intellectual and psychiatric disabilities. | ||
The Federal Aviation Administration is actively recruiting workers who suffer severe intellectual disabilities, psychiatric problems, and other mental and physical conditions under a diversity and inclusion hiring initiative spelled out on the agency's website. | ||
Quote, targeted disabilities are those disabilities that the federal government, as a matter of policy, has identified with a special emphasis in recruiting and hiring. | ||
The FAA's website states, they include hearing, vision, missing extremities, partial paralysis, complete paralysis, epilepsy, severe intellectual disability, psychiatric disability, and dwarfism. | ||
The initiative is part of FAA's Diversity and Inclusion Hiring Plan, which claims diversity is integral to achieving FAA's mission of ensuring safe and efficient travel across our nation and beyond. | ||
I wouldn't even write this in a comedy. | ||
It wouldn't even be funny. | ||
It's too unbelievable. We are dedicated to ensuring that air travel in this country is safe, uninterrupted, and efficient. | ||
So we're hiring retarded and insane people to make that happen. | ||
Okay. And then, of course, in addition to that, you've got these types of stories from the New York Post. | ||
Why airplane crashes are now safer than ever. | ||
So they're not saying that crashes are rarer than ever. | ||
They're not saying that planes are safer than ever. | ||
They're saying that plane crashes are safer than ever. | ||
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Whatever. Period. | |
What? What are you talking? | ||
What? The collision between a pair of airplanes on a runway at Japan's Haneda International Airport last week has been hailed as nothing short of a miracle. | ||
The crash captured the world's attention as it was shared across social media, but the real headline was how few fatalities resorted from a very well could have been a tragedy of spectacular proportions. | ||
Just five crew members of the Coast Guard prop plane perished. | ||
So they're actually portraying this. | ||
They're pitching this as a good thing. | ||
It's like, sure, airplanes are going to start crashing a lot more now. | ||
But what? Five, ten people die? | ||
What a miracle that is! | ||
Incredible. And of course, a lot of people are speculating now. | ||
I saw this all over Twitter, and I think there's something to this. | ||
Although, you know, it's also just a matter of... | ||
Everything, the diversity, the immigration program, the corporate greed that has Boeing. | ||
You know, Boeing outsourced the code for the MAX 737, the plane that fell out of the sky in Africa, the plane whose door flew off. | ||
In the middle of a flight from Alaska, the plane where they were like, you can fly, just don't go over any big bodies of water because you might have to land this baby at any moment. | ||
That's the level of safety that air travel is dealing with now. | ||
I don't think they announced that to the people in the plane. | ||
This is your captain speaking. | ||
Should have a pretty safe flight looking at a minor turbulence about midway through. | ||
And also we're not going to pass over any water because this thing might fall apart in midair. | ||
So we're going to want to land if that happens. | ||
So enjoy your flight. But that's the reality. | ||
That's literally the decision that they made. | ||
Okay. And a lot of people are speculating that this is deliberately... | ||
Designed to prevent, like to stop people from flying on their own accord. | ||
Because obviously they want to stop people from flying. | ||
Not only do they not want people flying, they're getting cities and mayors and national governments and corporations to sign compacts to forcibly reduce the number of times people fly. | ||
As we've reported many times, but the C40 program stands for 40 cities. | ||
It's 40 cities that have signed on. | ||
To enforce this climate change agenda. | ||
And now those cities are following through with their commitments to do things like serve bugs in school cafeterias. | ||
So there's that. And one of the things in C40, where they lay out their plan for humanity, where you won't just be able to go wherever you want, do whatever you want, buy whatever you want. | ||
You'll actually have limitations set on you. | ||
It's like, you get to buy two sets of clothes a year. | ||
From Telegraph, the climate change proposal, which means you'll never see the Mediterranean again. | ||
A report by a global think tank has suggested that people should take just one short-haul flight every three years by 2030. | ||
But that's a dishonest way of portraying it, isn't it? | ||
A report by a global think tank which suggests people should take just one short-haul flight. | ||
No. This wasn't a think tank. | ||
This is a globalist... Organization who's enforcing these things. | ||
They're not suggesting people should take just one short-haul flight. | ||
They are deliberately causing the conditions by which any more flights are impossible for the average person. | ||
And we've covered the C-40 forum before. | ||
So I don't know how you don't know about this. | ||
I mean, they literally... Lay it out for you. | ||
They say in their own documents, like right now people travel, people fly on average about five times a year, five round half, you know, short flights. | ||
And we're going to get that down to one round trip flight every three years. | ||
We're going to do that. | ||
And there's going to do that. | ||
They're going to make you eat bugs because it's going to be the only thing on the shelf. | ||
You don't think they have the ability to do this? | ||
Have you tried buying raw milk at the store recently? | ||
I don't know. I guess people are fine with this. | ||
I don't know. I guess they think these people who are just shown by example time and time again to be the most dishonest people in the world who lie openly, deliberately, in your face, They get exposed constantly. | ||
Their lies are so abjectly ridiculous. | ||
Like when Mayorkas gets up and says the border is secure. | ||
We just play idiocracy for the rest of the show. | ||
Because that really is what it feels like. | ||
It just feels like Like everyone is insane. | ||
Like everyone is completely out of their minds and completely disconnected with reality. | ||
utterly, completely divorced from anything that's real or actually happening. | ||
By the way, we have a genocide update. | ||
Day 100. | ||
So it's been 100 days since... | ||
Israel launched its genocidal campaign to annex Gaza, as we reported from the very beginning. | ||
Obviously that's the point. | ||
The numbers we have now are 24,000 people have been killed, 61,000 have been injured, 1.9 million are homeless and displaced, 117 journalists have been killed, 148 UN staff dead. | ||
As if that's not outrageous enough, Israel wants the rest of the world to now clean up this mess and pay for it. | ||
And they want you to take in the Gazans that they are displacing. | ||
And of course we've started a war in Yemen to ensure that this continues. | ||
And people support this. | ||
People in Texas beat up Palestinian protesters at a Greg Abbott speech. | ||
So that this can continue. | ||
24,000 people dead, 10,000 witcher children. | ||
Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
We'll go out to your phone calls here momentarily. | ||
We do have some videos out of Davos, as is the first day of the World Economic Forum meeting there in Switzerland. | ||
Let's... Learn what's on the top of their agenda, shall we? | ||
We'll go first, clip number nine. | ||
Davos 2024, three key topics for leaders at the World Economic Forum. | ||
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White alpine mountains, billionaires, and the global elite. | |
It can only be Davos, the tiny ski resort in Switzerland, home to the annual meeting of the World Economic Forum. | ||
Here are three key topics high on the agenda. | ||
Number one, a dovish pivot. | ||
Despite all the talk of higher for longer, sticky inflation and robust labor markets, investors are now pricing in aggressive rate cuts by key central banks this year. | ||
Following the cost of living crisis and the unprecedented cycle of global monetary tightening, reduced borrowing costs cannot come soon enough for debt strapped companies and governments. | ||
And the next crucial question is whether policymakers can make the pivot to avoid a hard economic landing. | ||
Two, rising geopolitical pressure. | ||
World leaders were already grappling with the Russian invasion of Ukraine, launched by Putin's forces nearly two years ago. | ||
The much anticipated counteroffensive by Kyiv hasn't quite gone to plan, and foreign support and military aid is not flowing as freely. | ||
There's now also a second conflict on the global stage between Israel and Hamas. | ||
The humanitarian cost has been immense, and the war has the potential to spark wider tensions across the Middle East with ramifications for global trade. | ||
And three, just two letters, AI. Investors are obsessed with its potential to disrupt chunks of the economy, and it drove some of the biggest stock market gains last year. | ||
Pressure is now mounting on tech companies to deliver on some of the earnings hope. | ||
And in the hallways of power, security and ethical concerns remain. | ||
The EU struck a landmark agreement to regulate artificial intelligence, and it could set the tone for similar rules by governments across the globe. | ||
Of course, Davos draws a lot of criticism as being exclusive and out of touch with reality. | ||
But key politicians and industry titans continue to go in droves. | ||
And as long as they do, the buzz will remain along with the potential for meaningful change. | ||
Exclusive and out of touch with reality. | ||
Is that the criticisms that we have? | ||
The criticisms that I have are that everything these people do, everything these people claim to be combating are their own creation. | ||
I don't have a problem with how exclusive it is. | ||
I have a problem that it's exclusively evil retards. | ||
I don't have a problem with The concept of aristocracy, the concept of an elite who've proven themselves to get to the top. | ||
Their eliteness isn't the issue. | ||
Them being out of touch with reality is debatable. | ||
I think they're extremely in touch with reality, actually. | ||
I think they are just way more in touch with reality than the average American. | ||
You've got three types of people. | ||
You've got the Davos people who get what's going on because they're the ones doing it because they're evil scumbags. | ||
You think the people at Davos are sitting there going in their own internal monologues? | ||
I mean, because they lie to each other, right? | ||
So I'm sure if you recorded them, they would stick to the talking points. | ||
But In their own mind, you think there's any confusion about why the West in America is being flooded by immigrants? | ||
I mean, they're the ones doing it, right? | ||
They're the ones funding it, these NGOs, UN. It's all these people that are in Davos right now. | ||
They're, like, starting programs. | ||
They're paying. They're lobbying for law changes. | ||
They're organizing this. | ||
They're orchestrating this. | ||
Or like Christopher Wray last year at Davos, head of the FBI. Do you think he's out of touch with the reality that he's cooperating with big tech in order to censor dissonant voices? | ||
He's bragging about it on stage. | ||
So the three types of people you have are the people that know what's going on because they're the ones doing it and they're evil liars. | ||
Do you think there's any illusion about all these poor refugees? | ||
Oh, they're climate refugees. | ||
They know exactly what they're doing. They're lying. | ||
They have policies that To deliberately destroy the United States. | ||
So that's what they're doing. They're just doing that. | ||
So they know what's going on and they love it because they're doing it. | ||
Then there's us on the opposite side of the spectrum who know what they're doing, despise it, loathe it, and doing everything we can to fight against it. | ||
And then there's the vast majority of people in the middle who just have no idea what's going on. | ||
They just buy the lies completely. | ||
And sort of are either distracted or stupid enough to not see what's obviously right in front of their faces. | ||
So again, these people aren't out of touch with reality. | ||
They are, in most cases, and to most Americans, the dictators of reality. | ||
They determine what is reality because they control the media, because they control the policies, they control what people know. | ||
So how can they be out of touch with reality when reality is whatever they say it is? | ||
These people aren't wizards. | ||
They aren't actually creating reality. | ||
But if they say all these immigrants are refugees, and then the media reports all these immigrants are refugees, and then everybody who's not paying attention and who just hears this in the local news or whatever, their reality is, man, there's a lot of refugees at the southern border. | ||
America sure is doing a good job helping them. | ||
That's their reality. They've created that reality for people, and people live in that reality. | ||
It's unrecognizable, speaking from my position, in actual reality, but that's beside the point. | ||
Dovish pivot. They're trying to deal with the cost of living crisis. | ||
Cost of living crisis is, of course, directly, solely, completely a consequence of their policies. | ||
Whether it was lockdown, shutting down the supply chains, whether it was the Russian sanctions cutting off energy, destroying industry in Western Europe, whether it was the bombing of the Nord Stream pipeline further compounding the energy crisis in Europe, whether it's the cost of everyday products skyrocketing because of the shipping cost because we can't go through the Red Sea because Israel's genociding Gaza and the Western countries are helping them do that. | ||
Whether it's the cost of living in terms of buying houses, or the rising cost of rent, directly attributable to private equity, buying the majority of houses last year, massively outbidding the individual buyers. | ||
Whether it's the inflation that continues to increase year over year, continues to be denied, but continues to obviously and manifestly be making everything more expensive because of the money that they printed. | ||
So, you know, it's just the same thing over and over. | ||
I don't know how many times you have to explain it before people understand it. | ||
They cause the cost of living crisis. | ||
They come in to say, don't worry, we're going to save you from the cost of living crisis. | ||
Perhaps the most obvious example of this is the geopolitical situation. | ||
The examples they said, the war in Ukraine, the war in Gaza, and of course Russia winning the war in Ukraine and how that's a big issue. | ||
They started the war in Ukraine. | ||
They're the ones responsible for the ongoing conflict in Israel. | ||
So what are they doing? | ||
I mean, they're coming out and saying, all these major problems, don't worry, we're going to solve them. | ||
They're the ones doing it. I mean, these are the arsonists standing there going, don't worry, we'll fight the fire. | ||
Like, I see the gasoline can in your hand. | ||
I see the burnt match in your other hand. | ||
You were the ones that did this. | ||
And it's not like they're admitting that. | ||
It's not like... It's one thing if they go, look, we made the big mess, so it's our responsibility to clean this up. | ||
But they're going to tell you that it's Russia's fault that they overthrew the Ukrainian government and installed a puppet. | ||
It's Hamas' fault that Israel is genociding the people of Gaza. | ||
It's Trump's fault. | ||
That they're taking over the military and performing a coup out in the open and bragging about it. | ||
And then finally, the issue of AI. Which again, they frame as like, it's a concern for investors. | ||
Obviously, they feel very comfortable in the economic realm. | ||
I feel like if they can frame everything as a consequence of capitalism and a consequence of business interests, then they can get away with it. | ||
Do you really think their concern about AI is for profit? | ||
For how they can best invest money? | ||
AI is the most powerful control mechanism that humanity has ever created. | ||
That's why they're concerned about it. | ||
All this is so obvious. | ||
Last year during Davos, a video we played a million times, I mentioned at least once a week, was Alex Karp of Palantir. | ||
Bragging that they'd single-handedly stopped the rise of the far right in Europe. | ||
I just can't emphasize what a big deal this is. | ||
These dudes, these random guys, nobody voted for, nobody elected, not appointed by God, they just happen to have the money, are bragging about Manipulating the political outcome of an entire continent through AI. Not saying they can do it, saying they did do it. Saying they did do this already. | ||
The Gotham program single-handedly stopped the rise of the far right in Europe. | ||
And as Jeremy Clarkson notes in an article this Sunday... | ||
Apparently growing food is far right now. | ||
The tractor protest in Germany, they're calling a far right protest. | ||
It's literally just farmers being like, you're taxing us out of work. | ||
We have to grow food. | ||
So growing food is far right. | ||
I mean, that's the type of thing they mean when Alex Karp says we stopped the rise of the far right. | ||
He means people that want national sovereignty, want to be able to grow their own food, don't want to eat bugs, don't want to live in a box, want to have children. | ||
That's what he means, that they stopped. | ||
They stopped the humans. | ||
From having a say in their own politics. | ||
They're bragging about this. | ||
And then he immediately says. | ||
He says this. | ||
And it's almost like he realizes what he just said. | ||
It's almost like he realizes. He just said something that in any. | ||
Sensible world. | ||
Like the people would rise up. | ||
The people would get rid of that guy. | ||
You're running a. Program. | ||
Where you are single-handedly, by his own words, single-handedly manipulating the political outcome of an entire continent. | ||
You don't get to do that. | ||
That's called being a tyrant. That's called being a dictator. | ||
You should be disposed of. | ||
So it's like he kind of realizes that as soon as he says it. | ||
And he's like, so obviously, you know, people are... | ||
Really ready to invest with us. | ||
So, you know, our profit margin is extremely good. | ||
So we have a proven product that companies will want to take advantage of. | ||
It's like, which is more valuable? | ||
Being able to make some money or being able to control the outcome of an entire continent in their political direction? | ||
I think the billionaires at Davos who literally print the money, I think they care about profit. | ||
They don't care. They have all the money. | ||
They have all the money. They care about control. | ||
So when they talk about AI, they're talking about how to control it completely. | ||
And of course we saw, and I did a whole three-part report on it on the War Room, the way that OpenAI experienced a coup in which the head of OpenAI, Sam Altman, It was, according to his underlings and the people that worked there and the board of the company, was basically evil. | ||
Like, he was just evil. Like, that's sort of what the letter said. | ||
That was an open letter to the board. | ||
Basically, somebody at OpenAI, or a lot of employees at OpenAI, saying, this Sam Altman guy has ulterior motives. | ||
He is not doing what's just best for the world or best for humanity or best for our business, even. | ||
He's doing evil things. | ||
He's using AI in the most irresponsible way ever. | ||
And the advancements that we're making make his irresponsibility an existential threat for humanity. | ||
Kind of a big deal. | ||
So they fire Sam Altman. Then there's a counter coup in which the board itself that fired Sam Altman is itself fired and is replaced by Larry Summers. | ||
Who has been one of these kingpin... | ||
Puppet master operatives who have had positions of power and used those positions of power to kill millions and start wars and do all sorts of evil things. | ||
So now he's in charge of OpenAI. | ||
And OpenAI values diversity above all else. | ||
So with that, let's go out to your phone calls. | ||
We've got Simon in Florida. | ||
I want to talk about a flurry of activity of Mideast ministers. | ||
Making new announcements. I did see a speech by Hassan Nasrallah recently. | ||
unidentified
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What do you got for us, Simon? Hi there, Harrison, and it's a pleasure to speak with you again. | |
There is an extraordinary amount going on, and I should just alert you and the audience that this is likely to be one of the busiest news weeks of the year. | ||
So you have to really praise yourself for the amount of news that's going to be occurring. | ||
But I appreciate that most of the audience is obviously at prayer meetings and memorial occasions because of our public holiday today. | ||
But in the rest of the world, we've had the foreign minister of India go to Iran, and he has had meetings with the minister of transportation, The Foreign Minister of Iran, the President of Iran, | ||
and given the most extraordinary press conference, which also had a short burst of comment From the Iranian foreign minister. | ||
Now, that is available on press TV for the whole thing, which is just 11 and a half minutes long. | ||
I strongly recommend people to watch that. | ||
It will really give them an idea of what is going on, as the Indian foreign minister described, in West Asia. | ||
But in particular, he talked about the INSTC, which you and I have been talking about all of the last year, the route from basically Bombay to St. | ||
Petersburg via Iran. | ||
But he also was explaining how they see that as a gateway for them to the whole of Central Asia. | ||
So he was reiterating the comments that had been made in the last week about the pivotal nature of Iran in terms of being the hub in the spoke of all of these routes now, basically going from Saudi Arabia to China and India to Russia and all basically going from Saudi Arabia to China and India to Russia and all of this incredible shift in logistics routes, many of which are being devised to avoid all the | ||
But we've had announced that the Indian Prime Minister has just spoken today with President Putin of Russia, talking about the plans for BRICS for 2024. | ||
And the Indian foreign minister in Tehran acknowledged with great pleasure how Iran is now a member of BRIC and he's also a member of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization and all of their plans for 2024. | ||
And just yesterday, we had the Chinese foreign minister meeting in Egypt with both the president and the foreign minister there, also talking not only about the situation in Gaza, but also about BRIC and the Belt and Road Initiative and all of their plans for 2024. | ||
So we've got all of these countries, which are all now former members of BRIC since the 1st of January, and they're all massively kicking off their agenda that President Putin explained in his New Year's address, not only for BRIC and the SDO, but also in terms of combining all the not only for BRIC and the SDO, but also in terms of combining all the blocs together, reiterating for the sixth time for the Russians the importance | ||
So, once again, we have an extraordinary amount of events occurring. | ||
Obviously, the Indians were very concerned about transport through the Red Sea and the Persian Gulf. | ||
But what was very noticeable is the Iranian foreign minister acknowledged That the Iranian government had received a message that President Biden had also mentioned over the weekend in a private format. | ||
And he said that he had given his response Secretary Blinken in a very loud voice. | ||
And he said that he wanted to publicly reiterate three warnings to the American government. | ||
One, not to tie itself to the personal fate of Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu. | ||
Because he has so many domestic problems of all the criminal cases against him. | ||
And they said that his prime ministership is essentially expired. | ||
It wasn't like a personal threat, but it's just saying that, you know, his political situation there is very difficult. | ||
They warned America supposedly to not continue supporting the actions of the Israeli military in Gaza. | ||
And they also warn them against pursuing further attack against Yemen, which is exactly what the Chinese foreign minister said in Egypt and what the Chinese ambassador to the United Nations reiterated when he explained that the resolution telling the Houthis to knock off attacking shipping did not include any Authorization for the use of military force by any countries against Yemen. | ||
So it's very, very, you know, significant events going on. | ||
And I'll discuss the Foreign Minister of India trip to Tehran in extended detail on my show after Infowars finishes the day at Weaponized News at 7 p.m. | ||
New York time. And of course, Weaponized News is on Twitter and Rumble. | ||
Thank you very much for the call, Simon. | ||
I want to emphasize something that you just briefly mentioned, which is Benjamin Netanyahu's domestic political situation. | ||
This article I covered on The War Room, but I think it's extremely important to understand. | ||
It's from Politico. It's called, The U.S. is dealing with an Israeli leader who's losing control. | ||
Benjamin Netanyahu is waging a war while struggling to avoid prison, salvage his legacy, and keep his political partners happy. | ||
So the Israeli leader is trying to stay in office and avoid prison on corruption charges, two linked desires that have long made him vulnerable to the demands of far-right members of his governing coalition. | ||
Now an Israeli Supreme Court ruling against his effort to overhaul the judiciary may make him even more susceptible. | ||
The far-right figures, notably Bezalil Smotrik and Itamar Ben-Gavir, harbor deep anti-Palestinian views and are resistant to U.S. proposals that they consider too friendly to Palestinians. | ||
If they abandon Netanyahu's coalition, he could lose his prime ministership, increasing his legal peril. | ||
That has made Netanyahu reluctant to take American advice on the war, and it suggests that U.S.-Israeli tensions will grow as Palestinians struggle to survive the Israelis' bombardment of the Gaza Strip. | ||
in other words, if Benjamin Netanyahu does not do what the far-right... | ||
Members of his party want him to do, then they have the ability to very easily withdraw their support from him, causing his government to collapse, causing him to no longer be the prime minister, causing him to be exposed to massive legal troubles. | ||
So if he wants to stay out of prison and he wants to avoid ending his 16-year-long career as prime minister of Israel in absolute disgrace and dishonor, then he has to do what the members... | ||
I'm the farthest to his right want, which is unambiguously the elimination of everyone in Gaza, whether that's death or expulsion, they really don't care. | ||
So if he doesn't do that, then they'll eject him from the prime ministership, then he'll go to jail. | ||
So to save his own hide, he's having to do whatever the far right wants. | ||
And then, of course, America... is led like a dog by Israel and we may be the superpower but seem totally unwilling or unable to exert any influence of any tangible degree against Israel. | ||
Time and time again we've sent Sullivan, we've sent Blinken, we've sent Lloyd Austin. | ||
Every time they announce before they go we're going to demand a ceasefire. | ||
We're going to demand a two-state solution. | ||
Every time there's absolutely no impact. | ||
In fact, the last time And I showed this on multiple occasions. | ||
But the last time in particular, they go with the demand to minimize civilian casualties. | ||
They say, we're going to Israel and we're going to demand that Israel do more to kill less civilians. | ||
And the very next day, literally the next day, it's the biggest attack Israel's ever launched, the most amount of dead in a single day. | ||
So they do the opposite of what we say. | ||
So in other words, America... | ||
He's controlled by Israel. | ||
Israel is controlled by Netanyahu. | ||
Netanyahu is controlled by the far-right members of his party. | ||
Therefore, the world is under the control of some Jewish supremacist extremist genociders. | ||
Corruption has run its course. | ||
It's 2024, and the minions of the Biden administration are inevitably being fed to the wolves. | ||
In hubris-riddled desperation, Hunter Biden yet again stormed the hill to defend his privileged outpost as the bag man in a foreign pay-to-play family business scheme tied to the goals of the New World Order. | ||
The child-man byproduct of a lifetime surrounded by federal goons and philandering politicians Took his Benedict Arnold dog and pony show to his contempt of Congress hearing only to feverishly race for the exits once the rhetoric hurt the child man's ears. | ||
unidentified
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It does not matter who you are, where you come from, or... | |
Who your father is or your last name? | ||
Yes, I'm looking at you, Hunter Biden, as I'm speaking to you. | ||
You are not above the law. | ||
I believe that Hunter Biden should be held completely in contempt. | ||
I think he should be hauled off to jail right now. | ||
Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Excuse me, Hunter. | ||
Apparently, you're afraid of my words. | ||
unidentified
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Whoa! Oh! | |
I saw it to you. | ||
I'll answer your question. | ||
What kind of crack do you normally smoke, Mr. | ||
Biden? In an unprecedented outcome, the House will now vote on recommending criminal charges against the child of a sitting U.S. president as the GOP enters the final stages of an impeachment inquiry into the president himself. | ||
Meanwhile, Alejandro Mayorkas, dubbed the architect of the devastation, finally garnered an impeachment proceeding that laid out the brutal facts against him. | ||
unidentified
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On Secretary Mayorkas' watch, Customs and Border Protection has recorded more than 8.1 million encounters at America's borders, including more than 6.7 million at our southwest border alone. | |
For comparison, CBP recorded just over 3 million encounters nationwide from fiscal year 2017 to 2020. | ||
Jay Johnson, President Obama's former DHS secretary, previously said that a thousand encounters a day, quote, overwhelms the system, end quote. | ||
On Secretary Mayorkas' watch, encounters have never averaged less than 3,000 per day, even going as high as 10,000 to 12,000 per day. | ||
It's not about money. | ||
We spent less money in 2019 than we did in 23, a lot less. | ||
Through DHS, and we had the border under control. | ||
It's policy that has changed. | ||
And who is driving that policy? | ||
Secretary Mayorkas. | ||
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It strains the resources, and it is wildly intimidating to our local law enforcement, where they have maybe a police force of three or four in a community of 2,000, and yet they have four or five illegal grows that are populated by illegal immigrants, Mexican cartel members, Chinese syndicated crime organization members, with... Semi-automatic rifles are abundant and they are unwilling to go in. | |
Mayorkas should be investigated even further as to his knowledge and involvement of the massive foreign criminal operations infiltrating the American heartland under his watch. | ||
unidentified
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Throughout Oklahoma, law enforcement comes into contact daily with foreign nationals who have entered our country illegally or who remain here illegally or both. | |
In Oklahoma, out-of-state residents can't legally operate a GROW through OMMA or be registered with the Oklahoma Bureau of Narcotics. | ||
Since the standing up of the Organized Prime Task Force, there have been 15 illegal GROW operations shut down per day. | ||
And you track it all the way back to mainland China. | ||
That is the source of the problem. | ||
The Mockingbird Media and the Uniparty establishment would have us all believe that this is merely business as usual, just two sides of the aisle muckraking as the election season ramps up. | ||
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How have you been coping personally with the onslaught of accusations against your husband and your family, including and especially Hunter, showing pictures of him during vulnerable moments in his battle with addiction, on the floor of the house, However, Hunter Biden and Alejandro Mayorkas are far more than pawns caught in the political storm. | |
They are minions of a strategic globalist mafia threat to U.S. sovereignty, commonly known as the New World Order. | ||
And they have each succeeded at harming the future and security of the Republic of the United States of America. | ||
John Bowne reporting. | ||
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While other networks lie to you. | |
Real death is shutting off the economy. | ||
The bureaucrats and the corporations control the economy. | ||
As they vertically integrate the economy and consolidate power, they murder people en masse. | ||
And Elon Musk has warned them that if you destroy civilization, you won't be able to have certain redoubts of it and certain city-states still have it. | ||
The Hunger Games model, it will destroy the elite as well. | ||
And anybody that studies history and has common sense knows that. | ||
The wars that are going to come out of the starvation and the inflation are being blamed on global warming. | ||
The viruses that come out of the labs are being blamed on global warming. | ||
The third world hordes being organized by the UN to invade are being blamed on global warming. | ||
The mass starvation is blamed on the virus. | ||
And everywhere we're told it's going to get worse. | ||
Billions are coming. | ||
Al Gore and Bill Clinton and Hillary Clinton and the Rothschilds and the Davos Group and Bill Gates and Klaus Schwab and Yuvaldo Harari say billions are coming to Europe. | ||
A billion are coming to the U.S. because of climate change. | ||
No, because you cut their economy off because the IMF and World Bank controls the loans and ordered lockdowns. | ||
Welcome back, folks. We'll go directly out to your calls in this final hour of the American Journal. | ||
Let's go to GooGuy in Wisconsin. | ||
Go ahead, Mr. | ||
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Goo. You're on the air. Hi, this is Mr. | |
Goo, a.k.a. Goo Man. | ||
I wanted to talk about what Alex Jones was talking about, like the cannibalism food supply stuff. | ||
And I was wondering if you heard about SB Senate Bill 228 here in Wisconsin. | ||
I haven't heard that. So they call it liquid cremation, but it's like they use this tube and they invented it with taking care of cows that have mad cow disease. | ||
And, like, it uses a 300-degree temperature and, like, alkaline hydrolysis process to turn the body into goo. | ||
And they put in a bunch of bodies. | ||
And then they crush the bones and give it to your relatives. | ||
But it's a mixture of some other people's bones. | ||
And then they take the motor oil-like goo and literally spray it over children's playgrounds. | ||
And our crop supply, our food supply, so there's already trace elements of humans in our food supply. | ||
What did you just say? | ||
They melt down bodies and then spray it over playground equipment? | ||
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Yes, yes, because according to the science and the experts, Harrison, not me, according to the science and the experts, Harrison, they said that because it's in a goo, the toxic metals and chemicals are... | |
Stuck in the goo and cannot harm the kids or harm us at all, which of course... | ||
Okay, hold on. | ||
Just because something's not going to harm kids doesn't mean you spray it all over a playground. | ||
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It's obviously harming kids. | |
They just... See, what they do, Harrison, is you rig the test, rig the experts. | ||
But whether it's safe for kids, like Windex is safe to use around kids. | ||
You don't spray a whole playground with Windex. | ||
Why would they be spraying this? | ||
Tell me where the state is again. | ||
What state are you talking about? This is Wisconsin. | ||
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This is Wisconsin, and they already passed Senate Bill 228, and they passed it in 2021. | |
And they want to roll it out nationwide. | ||
Obviously, I don't need to explain to you, you know, it's desecrating of God's creation. | ||
You know, you're making an accelerated decomposition acid bath process. | ||
And then a lot of it also just gets flushed in the toilet system, in the sewer system. | ||
So it's like, you know, I don't think it's respectful to the body to just treat it like waste, you know. | ||
And yeah, they said they spray it on the playground, underneath the wood chips and the stuff. | ||
I can use it as fertilizer for lawns and for crops because the experts say it's safe. | ||
And I obviously don't think it's safe, nor is it natural, nor is it healthy. | ||
And plus, it's just unappetizing, you know? | ||
Like, if anybody got busted as a food producer, you saw what happened with Bud Light. | ||
Imagine with this. | ||
Let alone, it's like literally, Alex Jones was right again. | ||
Soiling green is where we were eating people right now, bro. | ||
You're blowing my mind. | ||
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It goes to the cows, too, here in the dairy land of Wisconsin. | |
And the cheese, you know, the cows eat the feed, and then I think it transfers over. | ||
You know, they say, you are what you eat. | ||
And I don't think it's... | ||
I don't know if it's just me, if I'm taking crazy pills, but I don't think it's good to eat the motor oil flurry goo of dead humans just throwing it out there. | ||
I don't understand how... | ||
So they call it alkaline hydrolysis to cremate human remains. | ||
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Do you see the tube there? | |
Look how the tube looks. It's terrifying. | ||
I'm worried they're going to make one of those the size of a building. | ||
It just may pull 10,000 people in at once. | ||
So it says, Senate Bill 228, an act to renumber and amend blah, blah, blah. | ||
Relating to the use of alkaline hydrolysis to cremate human remains and providing an exemption from emergency rule procedures. | ||
So I don't... | ||
Like, I get how you could have this process that is a way of cremating, like, liquefying human remains. | ||
Why would they spray it on stuff? | ||
That's what I'm not understanding. | ||
What would be the benefit? I'll tell you why. | ||
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I'll tell you why. Because just like you see with the fluoride, The industrial conglomerates, they use all that stuff because they charge for it. | |
So they're charging the liquid human goo stuff, warm liquid goo phase stuff, as fertilizer because you can make money off that goo, Harrison. | ||
Money off the flesh of the humans. | ||
That's not nothing new. You know, they do it with live organs. | ||
Why not with the dead? Of course. | ||
They do it with the living. Why not with the dead? | ||
See, that's why morality and values need to come back into business. | ||
Because otherwise, we're just going to make our hellscape for some prostitutes and money and stocks and hedge funds. | ||
You know, it's like, why don't we nuke the world? | ||
Because it will be good stock. | ||
Right. You know? | ||
But I'll let you get the other dollars. | ||
I don't want to jabber your job. | ||
Do you see the tube there, though? | ||
Do you see the tube? You got a picture of it up? | ||
I don't see the tube. I was just reading the bill list here. | ||
I mean, I'm going to have to look into this. | ||
I mean, we know that they're talking about, you know, recycling feces into water in California. | ||
So, I mean, obviously, total human recycling is on the table. | ||
Again, much in the line of something like Soil and Green, but also something like Brave New World. | ||
Where people willfully go in to be broken down into their component parts. | ||
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It's like Soylent Green with extra steps. | |
You know, that's all it is. | ||
And I don't know, I just think it's really gross. | ||
And obviously, you know, they talked to religious people about it. | ||
And the religious people were like, yeah, it's desecration of the body, Christian and other faiths, you know. | ||
But they're just going ahead with it. | ||
And I'm worried they're going to just Scale it up and just make these, like, building-sized tubes so they can, like, liquidate giant populations of people way quicker. | ||
Here's the tube I think you're talking about. | ||
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Open that image. Yeah, it's like all chrome. | |
Yeah, yeah, it looks like an iron lung almost. | ||
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Yep, yep, that's it. | |
Yeah, so they just jam a bunch of bodies in there and then create an accelerated rotting decomposition process. | ||
You know, the fire thing, I don't know, it's like it's kind of burning it. | ||
I would never do cremation, but I understand why some people, because you just kind of turn into ash and it's kind of sanitary. | ||
But this seems like the exact opposite of sanitary, you know? | ||
Because I don't think they can get every DNA molecule cleansed and every bacteria and everything. | ||
And plus, it's just gross factor of the food. | ||
I don't want that on my food. That's what I still don't get, is why it would be used as... | ||
Fertilizer or something. | ||
Why not just bury it? | ||
Just bury the... Option A, you can have an extremely complicated high-pressure tube break you down into your component parts. | ||
It costs thousands of dollars and it's hugely expensive and probably dangerous and probably not sanitary. | ||
That's option one. Extremely difficult and pointless. | ||
Or option two, just put them in the ground. | ||
Dig a hole. Put them in. | ||
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Cover them up. Okay. | |
I'm going to have to look into this. | ||
I mean, this is insane and disgusting. | ||
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So let's go to our next call now. | |
Thank you very much for the call, Goo Man. | ||
William in Arkansas wants to talk about Leonard Peltier. | ||
Is that how you pronounce it, William? | ||
Yes, I'm here. Leonard Peltier, a lot of people know his story. | ||
His situation's coming up for maybe another opportunity to get out. | ||
There's a pro bono lawyer out there working for him. | ||
The man's innocent. You really look into the history himself. | ||
I'm talking to people that don't know anything about him out there. | ||
He's got 36 million people that have signed a petition to get him out. | ||
People like Sister Teresa, Archbishop Desmond Tutu, and Nelson Mandela, along with the Canadian government, had requested that the United States return him because the law enforcement and whoever prosecuted him lied during the extradition because he was in Canada, and Canada had shipped him out. | ||
But the man, just an old, dying blind doctor, at this point, has been served a total injustice by our law enforcement and by this nation. | ||
The other thing I'd like to pass by everybody is to remember who Madeline O'Hare was. | ||
Madeline O'Hare was the lady that gave us the lawsuit and shut down prayer in school. | ||
Well, two or three years before she was murdered, she found God and wrote a book. | ||
A lot of people would probably not like that because she pushed a lot of, you know, pro-Satan, if that's what you want to call it, pro-non-believers anyway. | ||
She pushed that agenda, got her out of school, and then later she found the Lord. | ||
And they asked her, in one of her last interviews, why did you do this? | ||
And her response was, why did you let me? | ||
We should be looking at that when we look at our border and the condition of the world and every nation. | ||
I mean, every nation that's in upheaval right now with their farmers, we should be listening to these people that grow our food and they're doing everything they can just short of a gun to let the world know. | ||
And all of us have to eat, you know, a little bit of comical situation on maybe artificial intelligence. | ||
Something we can all compare it to. | ||
Is it anything like artificial sex? | ||
Because I don't think it quite equates. | ||
So, anyways, here we are, people, and we're doing it to ourselves because we're not standing up in the right way. | ||
Because we're letting them. | ||
Because we're letting them. You know, it's one of those things that it's like... | ||
I don't even... | ||
I don't even necessarily, you know, hate or despise... | ||
Well... I don't like the people that are doing this to us. | ||
I just don't like to hate anybody, but I hate the way that people are tearing the country down, but I almost don't blame them. | ||
It's like people are going to try to do that. | ||
Everybody knows there's going to be elements of the society that try to take advantage of people, try to manipulate people, try to hurt or exploit people. | ||
And so I was like, that's understandable to me. | ||
It's people that let them do it that I don't understand. | ||
It's like, I understand that a rabid dog is going to want to bite you. | ||
What I don't understand is the people who let the rabid dog into the play center, right? | ||
People who open the door to the... | ||
Kindergarten and let the dog in. | ||
That's the people I don't understand. | ||
I'm not mad at the dog. I get it. | ||
Dogs are going to bite. Can't be mad at a dog for being a dog. | ||
Can't be mad at a subversive globalist for trying to get prayer out of the school. | ||
You're mad at the people that go along with it, that allow them to do it. | ||
It'd be so easy to fix all of this. | ||
But they're not. They're choosing not to. | ||
So let's go. Thank you very much for the call, William. | ||
Always appreciate it. | ||
And you've given me a couple rabbit holes to go down. | ||
Leonard Peltier. | ||
So I guess he was convicted of killing two FBI agents in 1975, but there's a lot of controversy about it. | ||
And yeah, at this point, I mean, if he's not a danger to anybody. | ||
But I don't know. | ||
To me, the endorsement of some of these people is not as powerful as I would... | ||
As others would be. But with that, let's go to Amanda in Arizona. | ||
Thanks for calling in. Amanda, you're on the air about the Arizona Secretary of State. | ||
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Go ahead, Amanda. Yes, I was recently at a meeting in which our Arizona Secretary of State, Adrian Fontes, who, just a side note, was an ex-cartel lawyer, was giving a speech to legislatures and business leaders, and he was saying that our presidential election in Arizona It's going to be so close that we will need to do a recount. | |
And if this happens, we probably won't be able to do the recount in time to get our electors to Washington. | ||
And therefore, Arizona won't be electing a president this year. | ||
And I want to remind everybody, too, Arizona, we were able to keep Trump on the ballot because of other cases that were brought against some of our congressional leaders and Arizona state legislators. | ||
We were able to keep him on the ballot. | ||
So obviously, This is plan B and signaling to what is to come to our election in Arizona. | ||
So basically they're setting up a situation where if Trump wins in a state, that state will withhold its electors and be able to not send them to D.C. for them to count by blaming it on the process that they're going through. | ||
That doesn't make any sense to me. | ||
I mean, how would they not be able to do a recount in time? | ||
How could they know In January of 2024, that in November of 2024, there would both be a recount necessary and that it wouldn't be able to be done by the time January 6th and the certification rolls around. | ||
I mean, that doesn't make any sense. | ||
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Exactly. He's blaming it on state legislation in which we recently changed how close the recount, like what triggers a recount, we change it to half a percentage. | |
And he's like, well, because you guys did that, now we won't be able to recount in time. | ||
They have, what, a month to recount? | ||
They can't do that in time to send our electors to Washington? | ||
Yeah, at least. I mean, they have almost two months, actually. | ||
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Yeah, so there's signaling here, obviously, all the corruption that exists. | |
It's funny. I just search Arizona Secretary of State on Google to see if there's any stories about this. | ||
Arizona Secretary of State Fontes promises security in elections. | ||
That's how it's being reported from KJZZ or Wired. | ||
Arizona Secretary of State is already sick of election conspiracy theories. | ||
Sounds like he is the one promoting conspiracy theories. | ||
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Exactly, but nobody will call him out on it. | |
That is really wild. | ||
All right, well, we'll have to look into that, too. | ||
Thank you for the call, Amanda. | ||
Let's go to Joe in Arkansas now. | ||
You also have a story about Arizona, a personal story this time. | ||
Go ahead, Joe. Well, Joe in Arkansas, but in the description it says AZ. Are you in Arkansas or Arizona? | ||
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What's your story about Joe? Yeah, no, I'm in Arkansas, but I grew up in Arizona. | |
So my story is I kind of watch a lot of Ben Burkham's videos and the people that are bringing... | ||
Kids across. Me looking at these kids, I'm pretty sure I know the outcome for a lot of these kids anyway. | ||
I ended up in CPS for almost a year in 1979. | ||
The house I went to was in Eloy, Arizona. | ||
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It was an older couple. | |
And I was the only boy in the house. | ||
There were eight girls. | ||
And what they were doing is they were trafficking kids from that house. | ||
And they used a home-based PB unit. | ||
And they'd be in contact with the truck drivers. | ||
They would show up. Eloy's just a small town. | ||
Has two or three truck stops. | ||
And they would drive the kids to the truck stop. | ||
You know, of course, you know, they didn't make it obvious with the CB what they were doing. | ||
So I'm just saying, you know, I mean, our government's been corrupt for years. | ||
They know what's going on. | ||
Like when they would have their inspectors come to the house, you know, they just talked to the couple. | ||
You know, they weren't interested in, you know, in what us kids were going through or Nothing like that. | ||
So this was 1979. | ||
How old were you at this point? | ||
I was nine years old. | ||
How old were the girls that were living there? | ||
Most of them were a little older than me. | ||
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Probably about 12 was the oldest. | |
And I ended up there. | ||
I'll tell you why I ended up there. | ||
Back... In those years, when we went to school, we had PE, right? | ||
And we had to shower after PE. Well, my grandfather had spanked me, which I had it coming, right? | ||
So he left some marks on my leg. | ||
And so the PE teacher told the principal, and by the time I got out of PE and showered, CPS was waiting for me at the principal's office. | ||
I got swept off. | ||
My mom was working in Utah. | ||
Took her a year and thousands of dollars. | ||
Back then, that was a lot of money. | ||
Went broke, just trying to get me out of there. | ||
And then, that was nine. | ||
By the time I was 13, we went to court. | ||
You know, the couple got prosecuted, and one of the inspectors... | ||
Huh? Okay, so the couple that was doing this got caught? | ||
Yeah, yeah, yeah. | ||
They got caught because, you know, they had been doing it for years, but... | ||
The old man got probation, and the lady ended up going to prison. | ||
The old man was in too bad of health to go to prison, so he got probation. | ||
And the lady got four years in prison, which back then, so back then it was 50%. | ||
So they'd done 50% of their time back then. | ||
So I don't even think she did two. | ||
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So yeah. So that was 1979. | |
I can only imagine how these kids are getting traffic now with the internet. | ||
And the sad part is, back then there was a lot of customers. | ||
I can only imagine now. | ||
What happened to the girls? | ||
Was this a foster home where you were there until you were 18? | ||
Or typically people were there until they were 18? | ||
Or was this like... You know, people would be there for a couple years and then move on to another place. | ||
So me, my mom got me out, but it caused me to go to school for an extra year because they kept everybody out of school, right? | ||
So by the time my mom got me back, it's like I had to start that grade back all over again. | ||
So nobody in that house went to school anymore. | ||
And I stayed in contact with a couple of the girls for a while, but, you know, I'm in my 50s now. | ||
But nobody at that house went to school, though. | ||
So, you know, they kept us out. | ||
It was kind of like a compound-type deal with the big fence around it. | ||
We didn't really get to go anywhere. | ||
And we're pretty much locked in all the time. | ||
So because you had... | ||
Because you had bruises on your leg, they take you from your caretaker, deliver you to a compound where nine preteen girls are being kept by an elderly couple with no communication and they don't even let the kids go to school and they traffic them to truck drivers at truck stops using a CB radio. | ||
And do you think CPS was ignorant of this or do you think they were in on it? | ||
So the... | ||
One caseworker that was over that house was in on it. | ||
She ended up losing her job and going to prison for a year as well. | ||
It sounds like what happened in Germany. | ||
It's tragic enough. | ||
It's not like... I think you need more tragedy on top of a story of the government willfully, willingly supplying children to pedophiles to be sex slaves, which they did in Europe by the thousands, and obviously has happened in America, as the story you've just told. | ||
But it's often reported that it's orphans that are doing this, because at least that makes a little bit more sense that it's like, well, there's nobody, you know, there's no other adults in their lives to care for them, so they're just totally can be victims of the state, and there's nobody to advocate for them, and they can't do anything themselves. | ||
Like, logically, I'm not saying it's good, but it makes sense logically. | ||
But the reality is that, like yourself, and this happened in Germany as well when this was an established case, I almost wonder if What was happening in Germany was also happening here and we just haven't had the same expose on the practice because I mean it literally sounds exactly like what you're describing. | ||
But the fact that they would actually take kids from parents, these kids were not always orphaned and it's almost always a story just like the one you described where there's some hint at some maybe minor abuse or maybe the kid's a little bit neglected and they use that as an excuse to steal them from the parents, put them into sex slavery and then keep the parents away. | ||
That's horrifying. I'm glad you made it out of it, Joe, and I'm glad some justice came to that. | ||
At least it seems like it stopped in that instance. | ||
Man, that's heavy stuff, man. | ||
Thank you for the call. We'll be back on the other side with more phone calls and more stories, and maybe I'll go into that German project because the details of it are staggering. | ||
Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
We go back out to your phone calls now. | ||
There's still some lines open if you want to call in. | ||
The number to dial is 1-877-789-2539. | ||
That's 1-877-789-2539. | ||
We go out to your phone calls now. | ||
Andrew in New Jersey has a comment on MLK. It is Martin Luther King Day today. | ||
Thanks for calling in. Andrew, you're on the air. | ||
Yeah, I wanted to comment on MLK Day and also on MLIK. And the Amish, just a quick comment. | ||
I had a friend, class girlfriend, that I met in New Jersey, but she was from the former Soviet Union from Estonia. | ||
And they're real pro-American there because, you know, Reagan and they stood up against the Soviet Union. | ||
But anyway, her family had a potato and dairy farm. | ||
And locals, they would sell it commercially, but also locals would come for the fresh milk that has enzymic activity. | ||
So the enzymes, like you guys used to sell, is beneficial, of course, for you. | ||
And the reason why milk is pasteurized is just to preserve it longer, which also makes sense. | ||
But it simply tastes better and it's healthier when you have enzymes in the milk. | ||
So it just reminded me, like locals, like old ladies, they would come over giddy with their little jars, you know, and get fresh milk. | ||
So the left ruins everything. | ||
And MLK Day, in my neighborhood, It was very positive. | ||
And we were one of the few white families in the neighborhood. | ||
And I remember that on MLK Day that the black families, that they would dress up in their Sunday finest and go to church. | ||
And it was like a real positive vibe. | ||
Like serious, but not a downer. | ||
Like kind of somber, but not negative, like somber. | ||
So now they messed that up the left. | ||
Because he's not LG... Supporting LGBTQ. But that's the start of civil rights for everyone. | ||
So they can't even, you know, have that. | ||
You know, they have to mess up everything. | ||
And the question I'll ask you is that with MLK, he was a Republican and a Reverend. | ||
And back then in the 60s, before the late 60s, the out-of-wedlock birth rate was only like 10% in the black community. | ||
And it skyrocketed once the Democrats got a hold of the black vote to almost 70%. | ||
Which was a scheme. But if he was not assassinated, perhaps he and others could have prevented the Democrats from scamming and taking over the black vote and doing that damage to the family and all the other damage to the schools that they did. | ||
So I just want to hear your thoughts on that aspect of MLK. Yeah, I'm sort of torn about it. | ||
And it's all, you know, I was actually thinking about this question yesterday, and I was thinking about MLK Day and thinking, just what if, what if he hadn't been assassinated? | ||
What if MLK had been alive today? | ||
Because he would be, right? | ||
He was killed fairly young, and I think he'd be like the same age as, he's about the same age as Biden, isn't he? | ||
Something like that. So, you know, where would he stand? | ||
What would he... What would his leadership have meant to the black community? | ||
Because on one hand, he sort of represents the best of America in terms of the values that we like to think that we embody. | ||
He was obviously a reverend. | ||
He was Christian. He was respectable. | ||
And the FBI was surveilling Martin Luther King Jr., And we've talked about that a lot on this show, and obviously it's a big conspiracy, and they did things like wrote him letters saying, we have evidence that, you know, you cheated on your wife, could kill yourself, or will... | ||
Oh, he'd be 95. | ||
Okay, so he's about 10 years older than Biden. | ||
He could potentially still be alive today. | ||
Could have at least, you know, lived long into my life. | ||
And, you know, obviously when you listen to his speeches... | ||
The FBI publishing a... | ||
Yeah, you know, sometimes the murderer goes to the funeral. | ||
They gotta keep up that cover story. | ||
And you know, Martin Luther King Jr.'s family has won in a civil case, a court case that said that it was a conspiracy by the government to kill Martin Luther King Jr. | ||
We have the evidence of the FBI writing letters to him saying, kill yourself. | ||
And it's almost like I... I really appreciate and love the Martin Luther King symbol. | ||
What he has become since his death. | ||
And like there's a value in these symbols. | ||
The people. Like real people. | ||
Becoming symbols. | ||
Becoming avatars of some idea. | ||
Like I don't think it's valuable to tear these people down post-mortem. | ||
And inject all of this Salacious detail. | ||
Even if it's true, what's the value of that? | ||
I don't know. I mean, I guess this is like a Plato's Republic type of thing. | ||
And I know the founding fathers were very into this idea. | ||
Where they made themselves and their forefathers like these symbols, these icons of virtue. | ||
Because that's what you need in order to orient a society. | ||
Orient a citizenry. | ||
You want to give them heroes that embody the things that your country stands for. | ||
So it's like, even though you could, you know, point to George Washington and go, oh, he was a slave owner, and he did this one time, and the story about the cherry tree isn't actually true, that never actually happened, and actually he did, you know, this story also wasn't true, and it's like, who cares? | ||
Who cares? He's a symbol. | ||
He is an icon. He is a... | ||
Avatar of virtue. | ||
He never told a lie. He was the bravest man ever. | ||
He willfully gave up basically kingship in America. | ||
He could have been an American king. | ||
He gave it up in order to found our republic. | ||
All of these things vastly outweigh the fact that he didn't cut down a cherry tree when he was a kid. | ||
Who cares? It's a nice story. | ||
I've talked about this before. Even kids' books now You'll open up a book for toddlers. | ||
It's like my first biography book, George Washington. | ||
And it will say in that book, George Washington never actually chopped down a cherry tree. | ||
And it's like, my kid's never even heard. | ||
I bought this book to tell him those types of stories, not have stories that he's never heard debunked. | ||
This makes no sense. | ||
How was the first book of George, my first biography, book of George Washington, say, like, correcting stories that obviously the kid has never heard before? | ||
You want to tell your kid the story about George Washington chopping down a cherry tree. | ||
And you want to say, look how virtuous this guy was. | ||
Look how brave he was. | ||
Even though he made a mistake, he fessed up to it. | ||
And that's why we celebrate him. | ||
Like, there's such good, there's such important value to In having things like that, I don't get the impulse to tear it down. | ||
Because, yeah, as a little kid, you might fully believe these things, and as you grow up, you go, yeah, you know that story about the cherry tree? | ||
It probably wasn't true. It probably didn't actually happen exactly like that, but I still understand and get and think is important. | ||
You know, that we have this story. | ||
Some people, like, they realize that the cherry tree story is fake. | ||
And so they're just like, George Washington was evil. | ||
It was nothing that... It's like it destroys their whole perception of what they think the founding fathers were because they learned that this mythological tale wasn't true. | ||
And so sort of the same things happened with Martin Luther King Jr. | ||
And I don't think... | ||
That's particularly valuable. | ||
Like the important lessons of Martin Luther King Jr. | ||
are about not judging people by their appearance or their immutable characteristics. | ||
Again, extremely valuable lesson. | ||
You want kids to learn. Treat people as you want to be treated, but judge people by their actions, by their character, not by the way they were born. | ||
And that has to do with race, but it also has to do with physical disfigurements or even mental incapacity. | ||
Right? You treat people the same regardless. | ||
Wonderful thing. He was about non-violent intervention, peaceful protest to bring about change. | ||
Another valuable lesson. | ||
Same way, you know, Gandhi was. | ||
So, you know, there's a lot of stuff that you could point to in Martin Luther King Jr.'s life, and even in his speeches. | ||
He wanted reparations. | ||
He had communists writing his speeches. | ||
He was funded by the Rothschilds, which that's an interesting connection that I'll get to in just a second, between MLK and MILK, pasteurization. | ||
But I'm always sort of torn about it, because at the same time, you know, if the truth is that Martin Luther King Jr. | ||
didn't write his own speeches and was pushing for things that did not help the black community, like reparations, which they never got, but they got the equivalent, right, the welfare state. | ||
And we've talked about a million times, right, that the blacks in America went from abject slavery, less than zero, not being allowed to read, Not being able to have families, not being able to own anything, right? | ||
Less than anything in America, because they were slaves, in a hundred years, to basic parity with white Americans in terms of all the things that matter, in terms of graduation rates, and children growing up in a home with two families, even crime rates. | ||
And it wasn't until the intervention of the government... | ||
That the black community started going downhill to where it is now, where it's like a quarter of black men will be in jail by the time they're 18. | ||
I mean, just the ridiculous number. | ||
75% of black children are raised without a father. | ||
I mean, just devastating, horrific numbers that are going to be incredibly difficult to correct in any meaningful way. | ||
And so I don't know. I wonder if Martin Luther King Jr., like, what he would feel about the state of the world today, if his continued existence would have maybe helped mitigate some of the disasters that have befallen the black community. | ||
But, you know, when the FBI was surveilled, like... | ||
The FBI writing threatening letters to Martin Luther King Jr., not really a good excuse for that, right? | ||
The fact that they spied on American citizens in violation of the Constitution, that was wrong. | ||
If they wanted to surveil American citizens, then they needed to go to a judge and provide probable cause, just like any other criminal investigation. | ||
And if that was the case, then spying on Martin Luther King Jr., It would have at least been legal. | ||
It would have not been an abuse of power. | ||
It would have not been the manipulation that we know that they've engaged in since that time and continuing on forward. | ||
But they also had a very realistic concern about the black community in America being weaponized By a messiah figure. | ||
That's what they say. In the internal documents of the FBI, what they say is that Martin Luther King Jr. | ||
is becoming so powerful in the black community. | ||
He is of such great influence. | ||
They're treating him like a messiah. | ||
And we want to make sure he's not about to use that influence to start a civil war, basically. | ||
Which is a legitimate concern. | ||
And they could have gone through the process and actually investigated it. | ||
And if they found it not to be true, then they need to leave the guy alone. | ||
This is a time in the 60s where you have riots everywhere. | ||
I mean, it was like 2020, but it went on for even longer. | ||
In New Jersey, these massive riots. | ||
I mean, riots really across the United States. | ||
And you had a very active and growing dissident community in the black community that were very angry. | ||
Very righteously pissed off and mad that they were being excluded from America when they had proven over the last 100 years that they could do it. | ||
They didn't need to be second-class citizens. | ||
They owned homes. They sent their kids to school. | ||
They went to church. They owned businesses. | ||
They operated their communities. | ||
I mean, they really proved themselves over those 100 years, proved the detractors wrong. | ||
So it makes sense that they were getting impatient. | ||
They were getting mad. And it also makes sense that the FBI, during this time of heightened conflict... | ||
The 60s were crazy. | ||
You understand the 60s were insane, right? | ||
How many bombs were going on? | ||
I mean, when's the last time a bomb went off in America? | ||
That Nashville one that we don't even know what that was about? | ||
I mean, it was almost like a regular thing. | ||
We even hear about it. | ||
In Houston, there was a family that... | ||
Black family moved into a Jewish community, actually. | ||
Their house was bombed, right? | ||
You don't even hear about it, but there were like dozens of bombings a year. | ||
So you've got the United States government who's concerned that this violence will spread even wider, that you'll start having militias running around destroying everything and killing everybody. | ||
So they wanted to make sure that Martin Luther King Jr., He wasn't going to lead a violent revolution against the American government, which if you have to surveil the guy to figure that out, that's fine. | ||
You just do it in the proper setting. | ||
So I don't know. The answer is I really don't know if he was alive today, whether that would have a positive impact or not, since so many, when you actually go back and look at some of the speeches he gave where he's arguing in favor of reparations or he's really pushing some pretty communistic ideas, But I honestly don't think those should impact the symbol of Martin Luther King Jr. | ||
that we have now, which is a positive one. | ||
I feel the same way about Abraham Lincoln, right? | ||
I'm torn about Abraham Lincoln. | ||
Obviously, as a person who loves liberty, I think destroying the practice of slavery in this country was a Huge net positive, obviously. | ||
And it's like, I love that we have giant temple statues celebrating this guy because he freed the slave. | ||
Because he's an icon and a symbol of freedom. | ||
And of course you go back and you look at it and it's like, okay, this dude was actually kind of a dictator. | ||
Actually it was kind of under Abraham Lincoln that America went from being a republic to an empire. | ||
And I think he was clearly wrong in terms of the arguments for or against the civil war. | ||
I think it was primarily Lincoln that brought about the Civil War. | ||
And despite deploring slavery, I think the Civil War was just awful and set us up for the horrors that we experience now. | ||
But again, as a symbol, I love the guy. | ||
I love Abraham Lincoln as Honest Abe. | ||
As this upright, God-fearing lawyer from small-town Kentucky that was born in a log cabin. | ||
And refuse to tell a lie. | ||
That's a great symbol and we need that symbol. | ||
We need to celebrate that symbol and we need to point our children and point all Americans towards this symbol because we love the values that it represents. | ||
And I don't think our national symbols should be torn down by their human foibles because we all have them. | ||
But here's an interesting connection. | ||
The Kings and Rothschilds working together for civil rights. | ||
This is from MyJewishLearning.com. | ||
Janice the Rothschild Bloomberg and her husband Rabbi Jacob Rothschild whose synagogue in Atlanta was bombed by white supremacists in 1958 were close friends with Coretta Scott King and Reverend Dr. | ||
Martin Luther King Jr. working together championing civil rights. | ||
So, you know, the Rothschilds basically funded Martin Luther King Jr., They set him up with scriptwriters who, you know, penned a lot of his most famous speeches. | ||
And the Rothschilds largely funded the so-called civil rights movement in America. | ||
And I explained this on The War Room yesterday, that what happens is because we're an open society, because we're a free and tolerant society, because we're Christian, because of The Western European tradition has that openness. | ||
Then that means change is really inevitable. | ||
Especially over time. | ||
And I talked about feminism. | ||
Before the 50s, before the 40s, you didn't have washing machines. | ||
You didn't have... The technology wasn't there to give women the... | ||
Time of day to do anything other than be a housekeeper, right? | ||
If you have to hand wash all the clothes in order to prevent disease, if you have to, you know, there's all these things that are necessary. | ||
And then as technology advanced, it left housewives a lot of time on their hands and they were wondering what to do with it and they were getting mad. | ||
So... Which was fine. | ||
And that happened all through the 50s as women started getting jobs. | ||
They started opening charities and starting, you know, volunteer programs, all that sorts of stuff, which was great. | ||
And then it led to sort of a discomfort where the old way was out of sync with the emergence of this new reality. | ||
And so there's a little bit of discomfort there. | ||
So instead of allowing the process to continue as it was, Bad actors take that tension and exploit it to make these changes that happen naturally and gradually happen really rapidly. | ||
And that's where the trouble comes in. | ||
So I'd even say it was the same thing with the civil rights movement. | ||
How slowly but surely the black community, the black population in America was integrating into the white population. | ||
The economy, everything, right? | ||
They started as slaves, so it's like for them to get parity and then start to actually outdo the white population in something, it's a huge achievement. | ||
And so, of course, it's going to naturally and gradually lead to people being unsatisfied with being second-class citizens because of Jim Crow laws. | ||
And so that's where the tension came in. | ||
And then you have bad actors come in and say, okay, don't worry. | ||
We'll help you. We'll accelerate this. | ||
So I'm just letting the process take place. | ||
You have impatience. People who are impatient, they don't want to wait for things to naturally change and for the society to come around. | ||
They want to force it on the society. | ||
And so suddenly you have the welfare system. | ||
Suddenly you have single mothers being paid to not live with their children's father. | ||
Suddenly you have... You know, diversity requirements, affirmative action, as it was called back then, to put black people in positions that they're not actually qualified for, so you're actually setting them up for failure. | ||
And we've talked about all these things a million times. | ||
These are the things that are presented as positives, are presented as boons and gifts to the black community that have in fact been poison seeds that have led to the destruction of the black community in large degree. | ||
So time and time again, you have this natural inclination of Western societies to willingly change for the better. | ||
And you have that impulse then taken advantage of by bad actors who play on people's impatience with the change to destroy the whole thing that the change is supposed to bring about. | ||
But here's the connections. | ||
The Rothschilds basically funded and helped to orchestrate MLK's popularity and the civil rights movement that led to all the government programs that have been poison pills to the black community. | ||
But in addition to that, and here's the irony of this call talking about milk and MLK. | ||
Nathan Rothschild, Nathaniel Rothschild, sat in the English House of Lords for a lifetime position, and yet he only spoke to the chamber on two occasions. | ||
One of these occasions was to ask the parliament to assist in the settling of 100,000 plus Jewish settlers and then British-owned Palestine. | ||
This makes sense. | ||
The Rothschilds, after all, were leaders of the Zionist movement in the early 20th century. | ||
The other speech that Lord Rothschild gave, milk pasteurization. | ||
Now, why on earth would a man, part of a billionaire dynasty that practically single-handedly invented the Zionist movement, care about milk pasteurization as much as he cares about moving Jewish settlers into Palestine? | ||
Why are these of equal importance? | ||
Just something to consider. | ||
Something I think about every time I think about milk pasteurization now is Lord Rothschild was in parliament for life Only gave two speeches, these two things that he found so important he needed to make a speech. | ||
One was settling Jews in Israel, Palestine. | ||
And two was milk pasteurization. | ||
That's how passionate Lord Rothschild was about milk pasteurization. | ||
Just an interesting connection and a bizarre one since he brought up both milk pasteurization and MLK. And if you look back in history, it's the Rothschilds that gave us both. | ||
Daryl in North Carolina wants to talk about Russian neighbors. | ||
You have some Russian neighbors telling you about what's going on in Russia? | ||
Oh man, we're almost at the end of the show. | ||
I'm totally thrown off by this whole time change. | ||
I think tomorrow's show will have a little bit more of a handle on it. | ||
We have about a minute left, Daryl. | ||
You're on the air. Okay, hey. | ||
unidentified
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Thanks, Harrison. I wanted to get your gut feeling first. | |
The Russians are saying that they killed Lloyd Austin in an airstrike. | ||
On January 3rd. | ||
And it's all over the intel. | ||
Are you getting any intel on that? | ||
I have not heard that at all. | ||
So they're saying Lloyd Austin was in Ukraine and they killed him? | ||
unidentified
|
Yes, sir. And they're saying that this whole cancer thing or I guess the official story is he's been in the hospital for two weeks for a urinary tract infection and they're saying it's just a cover-up and they're embarrassed about it and they don't know what to do. | |
That's... That's crazy. | ||
I don't know what to think about that. | ||
I mean, I guess we'll see. | ||
I guess we'll see if Lloyd Austin emerges at some point. | ||
You know, we got three different wars basically starting at once. | ||
It'd be nice to have a Secretary of Defense. | ||
It'd be nice to have somebody in charge of the military that we know their name and face because right now the choices are being made by somebody. | ||
We just don't know who. I hadn't heard that. | ||
I'm going to have to look into that, Daryl. | ||
Thank you to everybody for all the calls. | ||
Go to Infowarsstore.com to support us. | ||
Stay tuned. Alex Jones, 90 seconds. | ||
unidentified
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