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Between 1959 and 1961 under Mao Zedong, China starved an estimated 30 million Chinese people. | ||
Mao's official goal was to quickly evolve China from a rural economy into a modern industrial society. | ||
63 years later, after decades of industrialization aided by burgeoning world government, think tanks and Kissinger acolytes, Mao's second coming, China's Xi Jinping is taking a giant leap into sovereign nations across the globe. | ||
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The United States must make sure that we do not have a pure competitor for our security. | |
Think about what this means. | ||
This is a brutalist philosophy. | ||
If they actually appear to be succeeding, Regardless of their beliefs, we must stop them, even if it means pushing them back toward poverty. | ||
I don't mean this question cynically or sarcastically, but what's wrong with that? | ||
We wondered how all of these migrants knew about this particular entryway into California. | ||
The answer was in their hands. | ||
Oh, you learned on TikTok. | ||
Meanwhile, the borders are flooded with an occasional Chinese female, the uniquely rare Chinese child, and horde upon horde of Chinese military-aged males. | ||
Are they simply Chinese special recon teams? | ||
San Vicente, first of all, it's not a town. | ||
This is a camp that is built as a transit camp. | ||
And it is almost entirely Chinese. | ||
They are the opposite of forthcoming. | ||
And I've been to dangerous places before. | ||
I've been to places where people fear their government and can't talk to you because they feel it's not safe. | ||
This didn't feel like that at all. | ||
This felt like people who did not want to share information because it would be a mistake to do so. | ||
I spoke with the chairman of the Homeland Security Committee, Mark Green, and he told me, yes, he believes Xi Jinping is directing these people to come to America and perhaps act as saboteurs when Beijing directs them to do so. | ||
In the fiscal year 2023, you've got 24,000 Chinese nationals having been apprehended. | ||
That compares to just 2,000 people in 2022 and just 342 in 2021. | ||
So clearly Beijing sees the weakness in the White House as an opportunity to storm America, send these folks in here, and we don't know what their motivations are. | ||
According to CCP textbooks, there is a tactic known as the Armed Work Team Behind Enemy Lines, a team that, under the leadership of CCP, goes deep into enemy-occupied areas to carry out armed, military, economic, and organizational construction behind enemy lines. | ||
Additionally, the FBI and the Cyber Security and Infrastructure Security Agency, CISA, meekly published Joint guidance on how to live off the land. | ||
To live off the land is a term regarding the sabotage of network routers utilizing botnet attacks designed to give Chinese attackers persistent access to the critical infrastructure. | ||
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Before the first shot is fired in a war on Asia, they're just going to turn off the lights, turn off the water, shut off the gas. | |
Nothing in the U.S. will work. | ||
Just after he was elected, but before he took office, they had that famous lecture by a guy named Di Dongcheng, a famous academic. | ||
He said, we own the White House. | ||
When Biden gets back into the Oval Office, we're going to determine American policy at the highest level. | ||
If you took every single one of the FBI's cyber agents and intelligence analysts and focused them exclusively on the China threat, China's hackers would still outnumber FBI cyber personnel by at least 50 to 1. | ||
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We found out that the Chinese spy balloon was using an American internet provider to send burst transmissions encrypted back to China, what they were finding around our nuclear facilities. | |
As the Biden administration crumbles, National security must be addressed post-haste by any remaining patriotic elements within America's military brass. | ||
Time and investigations will tell if Biden did the unthinkable, allowing Chinese bio-warfare to eliminate U.S. citizens, followed by aiding enemy recon by Chinese spy balloons that revealed vulnerable military targets. | ||
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The President ordered the Air Force to shoot it down as soon as it reached the Atlantic Ocean. | |
What were the orders? To shoot down a balloon six miles off the coast. | ||
And allowing the CCP to position their soldiers within key choke points of critical... | ||
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It's Friday, February 16th in the year of 2024. | |
And you're listening to the American Journal with your host, Chase Geyser. | ||
Watch it live right now at band.video.com. | ||
Welcome to the American Journal, folks. | ||
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I am Chase Geiser, your host this morning. | |
Back in the saddle again. | ||
What a crazy day we had yesterday. | ||
We were doing spaces and all the shows. | ||
Had the awesome round table with Harrison, Owen, and myself. | ||
Alex popped in. I think that was actually the first time for me that I was in the same room with all three of them at the same time. | ||
Everybody's always running around. | ||
Like I said yesterday, it's like... | ||
Sort of the Battle of Hoth here at Infowars. | ||
I don't know if I've ever told this story on air. | ||
I was in a X space last night and there were obviously a lot of Infowars fans that joined the space and we were just chatting about different things like AI, national security. | ||
One of my buddies is in cyber intelligence and it's got a background in defense contracting for naval defense specifically. | ||
And so we were talking about Russia and China and Chinese naval capabilities versus U.S. naval capabilities and the global reserve currency that is the U.S. dollar and one of the speakers in the space Pops in and nice guy. | ||
He's like, hey, I emailed you guys so many times eight years ago telling you that you needed to figure out a way to decentralize some of your content so you could be a 24-7 live news broadcast like the other major networks. | ||
It's like, I don't know why nobody got back to me. | ||
And I'm sure that many of you listeners have reached out to InfoWars before, either via email or direct message. | ||
But I told them, I was like, it's not that anybody was ignoring you or thought your idea was bad. | ||
It's like the Battle of Hoth here at InfoWars. | ||
The Empire is right outside the door. | ||
Han Solo and Princess Leia are arguing with each other. | ||
The Rebels are running around frantically trying to solve problems and make things happen. | ||
And the ceilings are collapsing and there's snow everywhere. | ||
It's not like a typical sort of corporate company culture. | ||
The ceilings are literally collapsing. | ||
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At InfoWars. So again, the ceilings are literally collapsing. | |
That's right. Last week in my office, several ceiling tiles did collapse because the AC unit leaked on them. | ||
So they got waterlogged and then the weight of the water made them collapse and then the ceiling tiles just basically exploded all over the office. | ||
It was a nightmare to clean up. But that's what it's like here. | ||
It's like the Battle of Hoth. | ||
And I told Alex when we were doing an X-Space on Monday, I think it was Monday, That the Infowar is something that's never won entirely or lost entirely. | ||
You're either winning it or you're losing it, but it doesn't end. | ||
It is sort of an endless war. | ||
And so the objective is to always be winning, be winning as much as possible. | ||
And I just bring that up because I want to remind everybody how important it is To support this network. | ||
Now, I understand that about a half a percent or so of the people who listen to Infowars actually purchase our products at Infowarsstore.com. | ||
And we know that the products are amazing. | ||
I actually use the products. | ||
I wasn't somebody who consumed any supplements at all before working here. | ||
And I was just, you know, they're laying around everywhere here. | ||
So we shoot ads with the bottles and things like that. | ||
So I just started trying some of them. | ||
It had a substantial impact on my life with just sort of cognitive ability, energy, comfort, whatever. | ||
There are some that are just right up my alley, others that are less sort of relevant to me or less of interest to me. | ||
But here's the deal. | ||
If you don't want to buy any of the products at Infowarsstore.com, if you don't want to make a donation at Infowarsstore.com, I understand. | ||
I know what it's like to go to a grocery store and come out with less than is on the grocery list because of inflation. | ||
I know what it's like to worry at night how I'm going to make ends meet, worry about my mortgage, worry about my bills, worry about paying off debt. | ||
And I understand if you as members of the audience are reluctant or hesitant to go to Infowarsstore.com and spend money there when you're worried about All the other expenses, taking care of your family, putting food on the table, paying the bills, saving up for retirement. | ||
But that isn't the only way. | ||
Money is not the only way that you can support this network, this platform, Alex specifically, and all the work that we're doing to try to save this country just simply by raising awareness. | ||
If you want to help but just simply can't afford it or feel like you can't afford it, Then, share all the broadcasts. | ||
Go to band.video. | ||
Download the full shows. | ||
Cut your favorite moments using apps on your smartphone that basically do it for you. | ||
Because if you can share the message, if you can share... | ||
What we're trying to do here on this network with even just a couple of people manually via text, that is enough over an extended period of time to have an exponential impact. | ||
And not only will some of the people who see the content that you share eventually become customers, That's great. | ||
But it's more about the Enlightenment than anything else. | ||
So this Infowar is not just the 50 or so employees that work here at Infowars. | ||
It's not just me. | ||
It's not just Harrison, Owen, and Alex and the crew working to fight this war. | ||
The Infowar is a war that everyone in this country, and frankly everyone in the world, is in regardless of whether they even know it or not, right? | ||
We famously say there's a war on for your mind and a lot of people don't realize that they've been brainwashed or that they're being brainwashed or manipulated or just totally We're coerced in this info war that is being waged right before our eyes, right under our noses, every single day with headline after headline, with talking head after talking head, with political lie after political lie, with war after war. | ||
This is a major info war, and you are a soldier in this info war. | ||
There are no civilians in this info war. | ||
You're either a good soldier or you're a bad soldier, and you're either on the right side or you're on the wrong side in this info war. | ||
And it's basically a war... | ||
Between the globalists and everyone else. | ||
Those are the two sides. | ||
Those are the two armies, so to speak. | ||
There are those who advocate for the conglomeration of world power and the subjugation of all individual sovereignty, all national sovereignty, all individual rights. | ||
And there are those who advocate for truth to shine so brightly that there just simply isn't anywhere for the Lie to hide. | ||
And once you realize that the Infowar is real, and then you go the next step and realize that you are a soldier in it, similar to the rebels in the Battle of Hoth in Empire Strikes Back, then you can get activated. | ||
It's not just about spending money or buying the products, though I think you should. | ||
And I'll tell you why time and time again as I'm on air, but... | ||
It's about actually winning the Infowar and sharing the information, sharing the broadcasts, sharing the clips. | ||
And it's not about sort of Alex Jones cult worship and he's always right and we're so perfect. | ||
It's not about that. | ||
It's not an ego thing. It's not even a business thing for us. | ||
It is simply about bringing people out of the matrix. | ||
And it's funny because I think the first Matrix movie is one of the most profound science fiction movies that was ever made. | ||
I think it's brilliant. The first one, they should have just stopped there, in my opinion. | ||
But like many science fiction classics, the themes of that film, that movie, are so true and so resonating with the human condition and everything that we're experiencing now with the advent of artificial intelligence that it's Sort of imperative, in my opinion, to study that movie, namely for one reason. | ||
There's a small sort of subtle aspect of the plot, the storyline, the world that they're in, where those who are outside of the Matrix, those who are in the real world... | ||
Understand that you can't simply force someone out of the matrix. | ||
You can't just yank someone out of this artificial simulation and expect them to adapt or adjust or accept true reality. | ||
Only those who are ready to be awakened, ready to be enlightened, those who seek truth... | ||
Have the sort of psychological well-being to accept the truth, right? | ||
And I've had this experience before. | ||
I was at a family event in California, and we had some family friends that were there. | ||
It was my wife's family primarily. | ||
Extended family friends, conservatives, traditionally conservatives, people that, you know, for years I would sit with and talk politics and agree with, you know, 90% of what they said. | ||
And I'm getting all these weird vibes. | ||
I'm like, what is going on? | ||
And one of the ladies just started giving me a bunch of crap for working for Alex Jones. | ||
This is not something that just happened to me. | ||
I know this has happened to members of the crew. | ||
I know that I'm not the only person that's lost friends. | ||
I know that Harrison has experienced stuff like this when going to family events. | ||
And basically this lady implied that Alex was full of crap. | ||
You know, he's right sometimes, but he gets a lot of stuff wrong. | ||
He's just kind of like naggy neocon ignorant stuff, right? | ||
And I had recently been going through a lot of the broadcasts from 20 years ago to try to find examples of things that he predicted that maybe got lost or fell through the cracks. | ||
Using some tools that I created. | ||
And I just started naming dates and predictions because I'd like recently been at any of these videos. | ||
Like March 6, 2001, Alex Jones said they were going to fly planes into the World Trade Center. | ||
You know, July 25, 2001, Alex Jones said they were going to blame it on Osama Bin Laden. | ||
I just go through and I list them. | ||
Just like, boom, boom, boom. I was so mad. | ||
and my face must have been red. | ||
And I just boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom. | ||
And the woman I was speaking to was not ready to leave the matrix. | ||
And so even though she sort of... | ||
Through this baseless criticism at me and at Alex Jones and at Infowars with no backing, it was just sort of like an intuitive, emotional, it's just an opinion that she held that she didn't know why she held it. | ||
You know, we've all had those opinions before. | ||
Even though she had no backing and I was able to just immediately respond with a half a dozen or a dozen substantial and accurate facts with dates and quoting him when he was right, it just went right over her head. | ||
Because she's not ready to leave the matrix. | ||
But as we begin to feel the pain of the corruption that is manifest in the world, as it begins to trickle down, right? | ||
We talk about trickle down economics. | ||
Well, there's such a thing as trickle down corruption too, where the corruption at the top eventually does seep down to the people and they feel the pain of that corruption. | ||
As people begin to suffer just as Neo suffered before he left the Matrix in the beginning of that movie. | ||
Then they become ready and willing to leave the Matrix. | ||
So there are more and more people in America that are reaching a different chapter in their lives that is much less pleasant than previous chapters. | ||
They're struggling economically for the first time. | ||
They're reaching out to their parents and asking for financial help for the first time even though they've been on their own successfully for years. | ||
They're going through divorces. | ||
Their children are being brainwashed at school and they're coming home and having to answer bizarre questions about gender and sexuality even though their kids are 9 and 8 and 7 and 6 and 5 years old. | ||
The people in this country are beginning to see the symptoms of the corruption at the top. | ||
It is trickling down. | ||
And though they do not know why or how this is happening... | ||
They are beginning to realize that there is a significant problem. | ||
That something is very, very deeply wrong. | ||
Just like Neo realized at the beginning of The Matrix. | ||
He just intuitively knew that there was something really wrong. | ||
And he just wanted to know the truth so bad. | ||
And he sought Morpheus. And he sought to understand what The Matrix was and get out of The Matrix. | ||
And our job in this info war... | ||
It's not to pat ourselves on the back. | ||
It's not to brag about how right we were or about how we knew this was going to happen 20 years ago. | ||
We're all like a family. | ||
The audience, the hosts, the crew, we understand each other. | ||
We're the same people. | ||
We're the same type of people. | ||
We're sort of a tribe. | ||
The purpose of the Infowar is to win the war. | ||
I know I said at the beginning of the segment that it's unwinnable, but that doesn't mean that it's not what we strive for. | ||
Perfection may be impossible, but we always strive for perfection. | ||
So if the purpose is to win the war, that means that we need as many boots on the ground, so to speak, as possible. | ||
So if you're not in a position to fund the war, if you're not in a position to go to Infowarsstore.com and purchase any of our great products, which I genuinely and sincerely recommend, I would avoid saying that at all costs if I didn't truly believe it because it would make me uncomfortable to just lie about it. | ||
If you're not in a position to do that, and I understand, it's tough out there. | ||
There is still a way for you to win this war. | ||
And I know that in 2016 and in 2020, there's all sorts of memes and criticisms from the leftists about keyboard warriors. | ||
And the right does the same thing, right? | ||
They complain about keyboard warriors. | ||
It's actually a very noble thing to be a keyboard warrior, in my opinion. | ||
Maybe it wasn't 10 years ago, but now it is because we are transitioning into a more and more digital reality and a less and less physical reality in terms of where we spend our time, where we spend our thought, where we create, where we produce, where we work. All of it's sort of wired in. | ||
And so now is the time to Enlist in the Infowar as a keyboard warrior. | ||
Sign up. And join the effort to win this information war. | ||
Make sure that we're getting this content out to those who we know personally who are feeling the pain of this corruption and ready to see and understand and accept the light in a way that they might not previously have been willing to do. | ||
And post your content on all of your social media platforms as much as possible. | ||
And I'm working on some programs myself for Infowars that I'm going to present. | ||
Some training programs on how to do things like cut viral Instagram reels, cut TikTok reels, how long should captions be, how to use artificial intelligence to make content. | ||
So I'm going to provide those resources to the audience if you're interested, those of you who are interested. | ||
So that we can as effectively as possible wage this war and bring us to some sort of victory on November 5th of 2024. | ||
Remember the 5th of November because it is... | ||
Perhaps the most consequential and important day in the history of the United States since July 4th, 1776. | ||
I genuinely believe that. | ||
I know it sounds hyperbolic, and I know this is just such a politically charged time, and there are people on both sides of the political spectrum who are absolutely foolish. | ||
And so when you hear hyperbolic things like that, it's easy to project the fools that you've seen and encountered under the statement, but it's really true. | ||
And I don't think that the world is going to end in the next four years, depending on who is elected in November. | ||
But I do believe that whoever is elected in November will determine whether or not the United States survives over the next hundred years. | ||
It's going to send us on a trajectory either way that cannot be reversed. | ||
And so we have to determine, we have to do everything in our power. | ||
This is the last lap of the race for America, so to speak. | ||
We have to do everything in our power every waking moment this year. | ||
So that in the tragic event that Trump doesn't win for some reason in the fall, I think he will. | ||
But in the tragic event that he doesn't win, I certainly don't want it on my conscience that I could have done more. | ||
You know? And frankly, that's something I think about just generally in my life. | ||
It's one of my primary motivating sort of thoughts or philosophies. | ||
My goal is when I'm on my deathbed, I don't look back on my life and feel like I just totally failed and didn't do enough and didn't have the character or the courage to do the right thing. | ||
I want to look back on my life and say, you know what? | ||
I made mistakes, but man, did I try my hardest. | ||
And that's what's happening right now in the United States of America, in the global landscape. | ||
We are on this last lap. | ||
We are on this deathbed and it's To be determined whether or not this nation is going to recover from its terminal illness or not. | ||
And it's all going to be decided on November 5th. | ||
And we as info warriors need to fight like hell. | ||
We need to fight like hell. Folks, we can see the whites of their eyes, right? | ||
And I'm using that metaphorically. | ||
I'm not talking about violence. | ||
I'm literally talking about being a keyboard warrior. | ||
So, best thing you can do is go to Infowarsstore.com and purchase any of our amazing products. | ||
It's not an expense. It's an investment in yourself. | ||
I genuinely believe that. | ||
So it's something that you should seriously consider if you've been on the fence. | ||
I highly recommend TurboForce because it gives me the energy and alertness to be as effective as possible in this info war. | ||
I love all the other supplements as well, but specifically TurboForce and BrainForce because These are the supplements that you can feel within 20 minutes. | ||
I mean, your state of mind and the way your body feels literally shifts by at least one or two standard deviations in the right direction after you consume these products. | ||
And I know that on the ads, like, oh, it's so strong. | ||
I just take half a scoop. | ||
And that's true. Most of the guys around here do just take half a scoop. | ||
But I do the full scoop because this is the info war. | ||
This is the last scoop. | ||
Laugh for America and we have to determine whether or not we're going to win this conflict. | ||
So if you can, go to InfoWarsStore.com, search through the products, check out TurboForce or BrainForce or Bodies, which is on sale for 40% off. | ||
See if there's something there for you because it is directly funding the InfoWars. | ||
I mean, if you're upset that... | ||
Our leaders are trying to give another, what is it, $95 billion to the Nazis in Ukraine in this conflict that doesn't really make any sense for us. | ||
Then the way to counterfund that is to support the Infowar or other independent journalists that you trust and believe in as well. | ||
I mean, I'm not even just trying to advocate for Infowars itself. | ||
There are other battalions. | ||
There are other legions. | ||
There are other units that exist in this war that you can support. | ||
But Infowars has proven itself over the last years. | ||
20 or 30 years to be consistent, determined, accurate, and basically impossible to compromise. | ||
I mean, it would have been so easy for Alex Jones to simply take a job at Fox or take a job at one of these other networks and become this sort of radio personality with a producer and a boss and an editor. | ||
And He made the wise decision, a very American decision, that it's better to struggle and have total freedom over your own manifest destiny, | ||
over your own trajectory, than it is to sit and comfort and wealth and ease at the behest of someone else or some other organization or some other agenda, right? | ||
And so we can embody that philosophy, that decision that Alex Jones made, not just once, but time and time again, to determine his own destiny, to be the captain of his own soul. | ||
We can embody that by investing in the InfoWar and enlisting in the InfoWar as InfoWarriors. | ||
Stay with us, folks. We're going to cover more news in the next segment. | ||
a lot of crazy things going on in the world. | ||
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Getting funky. | |
It's the American Journal. | ||
With your host, Chase Geyser. - D. | ||
Welcome back to the American Journal, folks. | ||
I am Chase Geyser, your host this morning. | ||
Sorry for doing a plug for 20 minutes straight in the last segment, but I felt inspired to do so. | ||
I wonder where you guys want to start. | ||
Do you want to start with Fannie or do you want to start with Putin? | ||
Let's start with Fannie. | ||
I love this headline. Don Salazar is really talented here at Infowars. | ||
This article is from Infowars.com. | ||
Fannie pounded as Nathan Wade testifies to cash money reimbursements and former friend flushes her defense. | ||
We're going to run clip six here in a second. | ||
On Thursday, Special Prosecutor Nathan Wade testified under oath that he charged several lavish vacations with DA Fannie Willis to his corporate credit card while working on the Trump case and was later reimbursed in cash by Fannie. | ||
The relationship between Wade and Willis is the subject of an evidently Evidentiary hearing as part of Willis' sprawling racketeering case brought against former President Donald Trump and 18 co-defendants for their alleged efforts to overturn or, quote, correct, depending on your perspective, the results of the 2020 U.S. election in Georgia. | ||
Wade also testified that his marriage was irretrievably broken in 2015 and that his wife agreed to a divorce, but they held off because their children were still in school. | ||
So... I don't know if you guys had a chance to see this testimony that she made. | ||
First of all, she shows up, and I don't believe she was even supposed to be a witness that day. | ||
She just showed up and said, put me on the stand, and they did. | ||
And if you look closely, it took people a long time to notice that I didn't see a post about this observation until late last night. | ||
I mean, hours upon hours after clips had been going viral already. | ||
She's wearing her dress backwards. | ||
I mean, she shows up. She is totally disheveled. | ||
She's not supposed to be on the stand. | ||
And then she gets on the stand and inside out her backwards clothes. | ||
You can see the zipper on the front. | ||
The zippers go in the back. | ||
Somebody looked up the dress online and found that it was actually supposed to be the other way around anyway. | ||
It's insane. She's like totally a nutcase. | ||
She shows up and then she just proceeds to... | ||
She didn't incriminate herself. | ||
She basically just confessed in some sort of a self-righteous way to several crimes, seemingly. | ||
I'm not a lawyer, but it seems to me illegal to take campaign funds and put them in your own pocket. | ||
I don't know. I mean, at least the other politicians who do it try to cover it up or launder it through a book sale or something like that. | ||
But she just pocketed this money. | ||
She was in cash app to reimburse and exchange money and pay herself basically illegally from her campaign, as I understand it. | ||
Now, let's start with clip number six here, and let's just get a little taste of this. | ||
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He initially paid for that. | |
For Aruba, yes, ma'am. | ||
So let's talk about both of those. | ||
I know he initially paid for it. | ||
Did you pay him back? | ||
For the Cruz and for Aruba, yes. | ||
Yeah, I gave him his money before we ever went on that trip. | ||
You gave him cash before you ever went on the trip? | ||
Mm-hmm. Okay. And so when you got cash to pay him back on these trips, would you go to the ATM? No, lady. | ||
You would not go to the ATM? No. | ||
Okay. So Fulton County pays you direct deposit, I assume? | ||
Yes. Fulton County and the state of Georgia both pay me direct deposits. | ||
Okay. So the cash that you would pay him, you wouldn't get it out of the bank? | ||
I have money in my house. | ||
You have money in your house. So it was just money that was there. | ||
Okay. When you meet my father, he's gonna tell you as a woman, you should always have, which I don't have, so let's don't tell him that, you should have at least six months in cash at your house at all times. | ||
Now, I don't know why this old black man feels like that, but he does. | ||
When we were growing up, my daddy had three safes in the house. | ||
So my father's bought me a lockbox, and I always keep cash in the house. | ||
Now, I don't do it to the degree that my father would do it, so he would probably be ashamed with me, but I always have cash at the house. | ||
That has been... Six monies? | ||
I don't know. Is that $600? | ||
I'm not familiar with this line. | ||
Is that what six monies means, $600? | ||
She said six months. | ||
Oh, six months? I thought you said six monies. | ||
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Yeah. My dad always said, you gotta have six monies. | |
That also begs the question, well, okay, so you depleted your six months stash, your cash stash. | ||
How did you fill it back up? | ||
Right. You don't use your emergency fund for just basic transactions. | ||
Right. And then on top of that, you know when someone's lying and they get into an oddly specific tangent? | ||
I feel like that's what she's doing here. | ||
On Wednesday, I met Taylor Swift and I was wearing this really cool shirt. | ||
It was blue. I was wearing it backwards. | ||
Yeah, it was totally bizarre. | ||
One of those oddly specific things, right? | ||
It's like, we didn't need the details of your dad. | ||
I want to see more of this. | ||
If you guys have clip two ready, this is Fannie Willis grilled over cash payments to her lover. | ||
It looks like it goes on. | ||
I got to see more of this. | ||
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And where, when did he come to, I guess the condo, I'm not sure what you called it, condo apartment. | |
Would he come and stay at that condo or visit you there? | ||
I'm sorry, visit you there. What condo? | ||
What apartment? I want to be clear. | ||
So not your house. I know you classified one as house and one as condo. | ||
So I'm trying to use those terms. So there's been more. | ||
See, what you don't understand is because of this case, I got to move. | ||
If you could ask a more precise question. | ||
unidentified
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Yes, please. Give me the time period. | |
Did Mr. Wade visit you at the place you laid your head? | ||
When? Has he ever visited you at the place you laid your head? | ||
So let's be clear, because you've lied in this. | ||
Let me tell you which one you lied in. | ||
Right here? I think you lied right here. | ||
No, no, no, no. | ||
This is the truth, Judge. It is a lie. | ||
It is a lie. Mr. | ||
Sano, thank you. We're going to take five minutes. | ||
We'll be back in five. Clip four was actually the one that I meant to run. | ||
That was great, too. | ||
But let's dive straight into clip four where it's specific about some of her transactions with her lover. | ||
unidentified
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Did you ever pay him through Cash App? | |
No. You only ever paid him through cash? | ||
Well, yes. | ||
We're talking about, I'm very confused. | ||
You've never given Mr. Wade money through cash out? | ||
No. The only money you've ever given him outside of a contract is cash. | ||
I didn't give him money in a contract, so that was cute, but I didn't give him money outside in a contract. | ||
What happened is, no, we're going to answer it since you said it. | ||
He worked. He worked more hours than he was paid. | ||
And the county paid him for the work that he did. | ||
So don't be cute with me and then think that you're not going to get an answer. | ||
And I will ask you about the contract in a minute. | ||
I asked you about cash. | ||
Did you ever pay him anything? | ||
And I'm trying to qualify my questions. | ||
I'm not talking about the contract with Fulton County that was paid. | ||
I'm not talking about that. I'm talking about outside of that, did you ever pay him anything other than cash? | ||
I've only given him cash a few times in the course of what we're talking about. | ||
If we would go to dinner, I wouldn't give him cash because he paid for dinner or I paid for dinner. | ||
I've given him cash only a few times in life, probably four. | ||
Probably the most money I've ever handed him is $2,500, the least amount of money I've handed him, probably between $500 and $1,000. | ||
You never wrote him a check? | ||
Ma'am, I don't have checks. | ||
Okay. So you have no proof of any reimbursement for any of these things because it was all cash, right? | ||
The testimony of one witness is enough to prove a fact. | ||
So my question was, do you have any proof? | ||
Are you telling me that I'm lying to you? Is that what you're intimating right here? | ||
I'm asking if you have any proof that you paid for many of these monies. | ||
The proof is what I just told you. You have no written proof. | ||
Is that correct? So I have some, um, Probably some transactions like in Belize. | ||
I probably spent $500 on my card in Belize. | ||
I spent, I can't remember, $900 on each of our tickets to go to Belize. | ||
I did the $700. | ||
I probably got some minor expenses in Aruba that would be on a card. | ||
But for the most part, for those trips, other than, so the two cruises, I gave him money for those before we ever left. | ||
Let me answer. | ||
Well, the question was if you had any written proof. | ||
So I've answered you, that I've had written proof. | ||
We can move to the next question. If you've answered if you had any written proof, then that was my question. | ||
I want to make sure that we're clear that for the two cruises... | ||
I asked if she gave them written proof. | ||
Ms. Merchant, she answered your question, so... | ||
You know, I'm looking at this and I'm thinking, alright, how should she have handled this? | ||
First of all, she shouldn't have gone on the stand if she didn't need to be on the stand that day. | ||
That's number one. Second of all, she should have put her dress on the right way. | ||
And third of all, you never lose your cool. | ||
In a situation like that, one of the things that was impressive about the Putin interview, and I can see that he's probably an evil guy, was how calm and cool and collected he was during the entire two-hour conversation answering questions that were likely frustrating for him, talking about frustrating topics. | ||
You've got to keep your cool if you're going to win people over. | ||
There's one more clip I'm going to show you on the other side of this break. | ||
Stick with us, folks. | ||
unidentified
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More news. | |
Welcome back to the American Journal, folks. | ||
I'm Chase Geiser, your host this morning. | ||
But have no fear, Harrison is here. | ||
unidentified
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He will be hosting the War Room this afternoon. | |
And Owen Schroyer will be hosting the Alex Jones Show. | ||
Alex has just given his voice a rest for a couple days. | ||
He's actually been popping around the office. | ||
I've seen him every day in the office this week. | ||
And he's been joining some ex-spaces that have been fantastic yesterday. | ||
Alex joined a great space talking about these space nukes, and we'll dive into that a little bit more later. | ||
But I want to just wrap up this Fannie Willis story for a second. | ||
So we're going to run clip nine, which is Fannie preaching the importance of morality and having a certain type of distinguished leader who would never betray the confidence of their constituents and would abide by a strict moral and ethical code. | ||
unidentified
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Let's run nine. Because they deserve a DA that won't have sex with his employees. | |
Because they deserve a DA that won't put money in their own pocket when it should go to benefit children. | ||
Because we deserve better. | ||
Okay, there she is saying that. | ||
Now, let's run clip eight, which is seemingly Fanny admitting on stand in an inside-out or a backwards dress when she didn't even have to be a witness that she did all those things. | ||
unidentified
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Let's go ahead and run eight. It's been my whole life. | |
When I took out a large amount of money on my first campaign, I kept some of the cash of that. | ||
To tell you, I just have cash in my house. | ||
I don't have as much today as I would normally have, but I'm building back up now. | ||
You just put money in. It's a very good practice. | ||
I would advise it to all women. | ||
So you can't identify when you came into this cash or where the cash came from? | ||
I didn't say I couldn't identify it. | ||
Nobody gives me anything. | ||
I am sure that the source of the money is always the work, sweat, and tears of me. | ||
What you asked me for is, when did the money go in there? | ||
What I am trying to tell you is, so I got divorced in 2005 from my husband. | ||
No, no, no. It's important. | ||
You said, where did the money come from? | ||
And I need to tell you where the money came from. | ||
And so for many, many years, I have kept money in my house. | ||
That money, in my worst days, has probably only been $500 or $1,000. | ||
At my best days, I probably had $15,000 in my house in cash. | ||
At all times, there's going to be cash in my house. | ||
Or wherever I'm laying my head. | ||
The money that you paid, Mr. | ||
Wade, the cash, in October of 2022, you do not know where that money came from? | ||
I do know where it came from. | ||
It came from my sweat and tears. | ||
You know which job it came from. | ||
Did it come from Fulton County or did it come from a private job? | ||
It came from... I don't... | ||
I'm not a... What are you talking about? | ||
So it could have come from a private job because before I was DA, I was in private practice. | ||
So I earned money during that time period that's probably in there. | ||
You don't know where... She literally admitted at the beginning of that segment that she took money out of the campaign fund and put it in her own pocket. | ||
She explicitly admitted that. | ||
I don't know if she accidentally did or if she doesn't realize that it's against the law. | ||
But the funny thing is, the way that she rationalizes it, she's saying that it was money from her own sweat and tears. | ||
And my dad gave me a piece of business advice that really stuck with me years ago. | ||
My dad is a small business owner, but... | ||
He had a small IT company in a small town in the Midwest where I grew up for years, decades, and was successful by his sweat and tears and by his sort of self-learning. | ||
I mean, the guy reads like a fiend consistently and has mentors and takes advice. | ||
I mean, he's a brilliant guy. | ||
He's just a really brilliant sort of unassuming all-American small business owner. | ||
This was a piece of advice that he had actually received from a peer that he then bestowed upon me. | ||
He said he was told, it's not a matter of if your accountant or financial advisor will steal from you. | ||
It's a matter of when. | ||
And typically what happens is over an extended period of time, An employee or a person you're working with will in their own mind feel that they are entitled to more than they are compensated. | ||
And sometimes it's true. | ||
Sometimes it's not. | ||
Often it's not. But after the excitement of their sort of initial compensation and their satisfaction with that over time, people just tend to become less satisfied with what they have. | ||
They take it for granted. It's less important to them. | ||
It's true of all of us. | ||
And in the position of a financial advisor or an accountant, if you go 20 years and they feel that they're doing all this amazing stuff for you that you're not even aware of and they've been compensated the same amount for a long time, they begin to feel entitled to... | ||
Some of your money that you did not agree to pay them. | ||
And that's sort of the thinking or the psychology behind the principle or the belief, the advice that it's not a matter of if your financial advisor will steal from you or your accountant will steal from you. | ||
It's a matter of when. Obviously there's exceptions to every rule. | ||
There's exceptions to that rule. | ||
There are some people that it would take 500 or 1,000 years before they'd finally buckle, so not in any single lifetime. | ||
But in this instance, you see someone who, in the first clip, explicitly stated that DAs should not be taking money and putting it in their own pocket, but they should be helping the children, | ||
whatever that means. She explicitly stated several things, and then just a couple years later, we see this clip of her on the stand, and she is just adamant, even in her own mind, that she was entitled to money that was literally illegal for her to have. | ||
I mean, it wasn't even, it wasn't only stealing, but it was, I believe, that would be a campaign finance violation to just pocket money that was donated to a campaign in your own personal checking account. | ||
And she says it's by her own sweat and tears. | ||
So she had rationalized in her own mind why she had the right to do what she did, why she had sort of the moral philosophical backing justification to do what she did already. | ||
And she's on the stand confessing to this crime. | ||
So brainwashed, so deluded, that she doesn't even realize that it's abundantly wrong. | ||
Even though she explicitly stated years ago in that first clip that what she would later do was the wrong thing to do. | ||
It's like Saruman in Lord of the Rings when he sort of infected and infested the mind of King Theoden through Cream of Warm Tongue. | ||
Over time, you just get corrupted by this nagging sort of devil on your shoulder. | ||
And it's easy to fall into the trap. | ||
But she should have known better. | ||
She did know better. | ||
She proved that she knew better by saying that she knew better in that first clip. | ||
And it just goes to show how sort of incompetent and terrible of a person she is. | ||
And what's really funny about it to me... | ||
Is despite the fact that she appears so stupid, especially juxtaposed to other leaders like Trump or Putin, despite the fact that she's got her dress on backwards, she wasn't even supposed to be there, and then she takes a stand and just proceeds to admit to crime after crime and incriminate herself, despite the fact that she is abundantly stupid, and it's abundantly obvious that she is, she still comes off sharper than Joe Biden. | ||
I mean, she could put a woman, she could put a sentence together, at least. | ||
Right? Which is more than what Biden could do. | ||
And that's what's particularly alarming to me. | ||
When somebody like that is more articulate and coherent than the President of the United States, we have a serious problem. | ||
Which brings me to this next story. | ||
Biden slammed Herr for asking about Bo's death. | ||
Sources say Biden actually brought it up. | ||
So, hours after last week's release of Special Counsel Robert Herr's report on Biden's handling of classified documents, which described the president as a well-meaning elderly man with a poor memory and diminished faculties. | ||
Quote, diminished faculties. | ||
Team Biden pushed their man in front of reporters in a hopeless bid to demonstrate that his mind is fully intact. | ||
Of course, it backfired in various ways. | ||
Most notably when Biden referred to Egyptian President Sisi as the president of Mexico. | ||
And we'll show the clip. | ||
I'm not sure how long the clip is, but just look how incoherent and unhinged he is here in clip seven. | ||
And then we'll talk about it before the break. | ||
Some attention paid to some language in the report about my recollection of events. | ||
There's even reference that I don't remember when my son died. | ||
How in the hell dare he raise that? | ||
Frankly, when I was asked the question, I thought to myself, it wasn't any other damn business. | ||
Let me tell you something. | ||
Some of you have commented. I'm aware since the day he died, every single day, the rosary he got from Our Lady of... | ||
Every Memorial Day, we hold a service, remembering him attending my friends and family and the people who loved him. | ||
I don't need anyone. | ||
I don't need anyone to remind me when he passed away or passed away. | ||
The simple truth is I sat for a 500 interview over two days of events going back 40 years. | ||
At the same time I was managing an international crisis, their task was to make a decision. | ||
All right, so we have Biden going up there saying that he was appalled that he was even asked when his son died. | ||
And bringing up the fact that his memory was called into question and then forgetting a saint or whatever that was associated with his prayer beads or his prayer bracelet. | ||
Guys, what do you do? - The following report is from Dr. Anne. | ||
Ana Maria Mielcia's recent article entitled, Hydrogel Platform Enables Versatile Data Encryption and Decryption. | ||
The building blocks of hydrogels are being found in the COVID vaccine, and hydrogels are being found in the blood of both the vaccinated and the unvaccinated. | ||
They are the so-called blood clots that are being found around the world, and these hydrogels can now be programmed, encrypted, and decrypted. | ||
According to Mielcia, they are the substrate of the brain-computer interface and the primary method of fusing humans with machines, as she described by referencing MIT research in the article, Hydrogel Interfaces for Merging Humans and Machines. | ||
Elements which Mielcia and Clifford Carnicom found with near-infrared spectroscopy in the blood of the unvaccinated exposed to shedding and environmental contamination include hydrogel plastics such as polynes, vinyl, nylon, Kevlar, and spider silk proteins, as well as other nanotechnology signatures such as silicone and sulfur. | ||
This technology hijacks methyl groups, which are needed to detoxify and create glutathione in the body. | ||
Hydrogels used for the encrypted programmable technology include polyvinyl alcohol and polycaprolactone. | ||
Both of these hydrogels are listed as stealth nanoparticles in the Moderna patent for lipid nanoparticle composition. | ||
This suggests that not only those who received the shot have this hydrogel encryption technology in their bodies, but also those who have experienced shedding and environmental contamination, which is just about everyone. | ||
These hydrogels are known to be programmable and encrypted. | ||
This technology can behave as brain storage. | ||
It can store memories and visual information in an individual's brain. | ||
And it can be chemically induced to be securely encrypted and decrypted, allowing for the secure recording and storage of confidential visual information. | ||
This provides a platform for secure financial transactions, which is a requirement for a digital ID. MIT researchers have discussed how this very same technology can be used to fuse humans with machines. | ||
And while they've had problems working it out in the past, a recent paper has announced they've found success using the very same elements found in both the blood of the vaccinated and unvaccinated by Miel Sia and Carnicom. | ||
In a lecture by Professor Sakrat Kisroev at the University of Miami, it is discussed how advanced materials can be used for interfacing machines and the human brain. | ||
He references a research project funded by DARPA, wherein magnetic nanoparticles are key to this technology. | ||
Mielcia has published research that shows how the COVID shots alter torsion fields in the body and produce magnetism. | ||
A review by the RAND Corporation, Brain-Computer Interfaces, U.S. Military Applications and Implications, discussed the convergence of human with machine. | ||
In an interview with big pharma whistleblower Karen Kingston, Kingston discusses this self-assembly nanotechnology and how the spike protein is an engineered device triggered by electromagnetic frequency and how the quantum dots are gene editing technology. | ||
This nanotechnology appears to be distributed via chemtrails, the food and water supply, medications, and in all of the scheduled vaccines for children. | ||
It has been found by multiple scientists in the blood of both the vaccinated and the unvaccinated. | ||
And the fact that this widespread technology is being ignored while the topic of mRNA is being pushed into the mainstream is of great concern. | ||
Mielcia has shown that the new protocols being sold to the public as a way of reversing the negative effect of the COVID shots have no effect on these hydrogels, and it would seem that well over a billion people are infected with them. | ||
While many are talking about an archaic implanted computer chip, it seems that the latest breakthrough technology has already been deployed without anyone's consent. | ||
The situation almost seems hopeless, but where there is a will, there is a way. | ||
And now is not the time to hide our head in the sand. | ||
The human body is miraculous, and our potential is endless. | ||
The more people addressing this dire situation, the better chances we have of finding a remedy. | ||
Reporting for InfoWars, this is Greg Reese. | ||
unidentified
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I love this song. | |
The American Journal with Chase Geyser. | ||
A testament to America's resilience and resolve. | ||
Roseanne Barr had an epic rant on The Alex Jones Show. | ||
I think it was like the first two weeks that I worked here. | ||
It would have been the very beginning of July of 2023. | ||
And I cut up that rant and put this song in the background of it. | ||
I think it got over a million views on Instagram. | ||
It just blew up. | ||
She is really a remarkable, remarkable woman. | ||
You know, it's interesting too because... | ||
I was talking to one of my close friends about the Roseanne show, the original one, not the reboot that they fired her from and all that drama. | ||
But we were talking about the original Roseanne show with the classic, iconic intro of the camera sort of panning around the dining room table and the family sort of arguing over it. | ||
I think it even had RC Cola in it. | ||
You know, that was the poor man's soda and they were eating pizza and stuff. | ||
It's such a great intro. But that was one of the first sitcoms that sort of portrayed the American family as... | ||
A real family. I mean, it was a dysfunctional family. | ||
They loved each other unconditionally. | ||
They were loyal to each other unconditionally. | ||
So they were intact. | ||
They were healthy in that sense. | ||
Their values aligned. But it was a dysfunctional family. | ||
Every episode is a major crisis, right? | ||
One of the early episodes of that show... | ||
Is the father, is it John Goodman, is that his name? | ||
Forgive me. Yeah, John Goodman is sort of having a midlife crisis and he wants to enter this songwriting competition and Roseanne's really encouraging him to do it because the song is really good that he wrote but he's shy about it because he hasn't played music in so long and it's just so wholesome yet real and raw, | ||
the struggle and it's funny that This show sort of comes out in the context of the 80s and 90s when we were coming out of the Cold War and we were coming out of this rapid inflation. | ||
And there were a lot of blue-collar families, just as there are now, that were really struggling at that time, particularly in manufacturing because we were outsourcing it all to China and basically just evaporating all those jobs in the United States. | ||
And I think people forgot what that was like for like 20 years, maybe until the housing crisis of 2008. | ||
But things were really getting better from 2012, basically until 2020. | ||
And there is a generation of people, namely my generation, the millennial generation, who That for the first time is experiencing what it's like when things aren't good. | ||
So I graduated from high school in 2010. | ||
Obviously, that was sort of right after the major economic crash. | ||
But I was dependent on my parents at the time. | ||
18-year-old kid. | ||
And I know that my dad was feeling stressed out with business and work and things like that because the damage to the economy was so all-encompassing that it was virtually impossible not to feel. | ||
But my dad was really good at sort of keeping that stuff away from the family. | ||
I'm sure that he and my mom talked about it, but I never felt uncomfortable or worried or presented with my dad's concerns as a child, which is one of the things I appreciate about him. | ||
And I go to college, and by the time I graduate from college, it's 2014. | ||
And that's when things really started to get better again, economically speaking. | ||
I know Barack Obama was a terrible president, but he basically started in a terrible economic situation. | ||
So there was nowhere to go but up. | ||
And I would purport that the economic improvements that happened during the Obama administration happened despite the Obama administration. | ||
And then, of course, Donald Trump gets elected in 2016. | ||
And I literally started my small business, my advertising business, four weeks after Donald Trump was inaugurated. | ||
And my business, all the way through the pandemic, every month was better than the month before. | ||
And it wasn't until the end of the pandemic, when the Biden administration set in, that I really began to feel the weight of how bad things are economically in this country. | ||
And I noticed it when I was in Eagle Pass, when we drove down there. | ||
I mean, this town is dilapidated. | ||
It's basically falling apart. | ||
Frankly, it's just shabby. | ||
And I noticed it all over Austin, Texas. | ||
And Austin, it's a blue city, but it's not like San Francisco because San Francisco has the disadvantage of being a blue city in a very blue state. | ||
Austin is a blue city in a red state, so it has the economic benefits of more prudent, sort of responsible decisions at the state level. | ||
I was at the gas station this morning, right before I came in. | ||
And I'm looking around at the people in line. | ||
And their clothes were just like literally tattered and they weren't homeless people. | ||
These were just working class people picking up a Gatorade before they go to whatever job site they're going to. | ||
Just regular sort of contractors. | ||
And there's holes in their clothes and their shoes are ripping away from the soles. | ||
And it was like almost like looking at a photograph from... | ||
The Great Depression, where you see people just in hand-me-down after hand-me-down. | ||
It reminded me of my grandmother who grew up in the Dust Bowl during the Great Depression. | ||
And she told me a few stories. | ||
She was very sort of modest about it. | ||
She was a very classy lady, very elegant. | ||
And she was a very talented pianist. | ||
And so she gave me piano lessons growing up every Sunday and she would tell me stories now and then. | ||
And I remember she told me she was only allowed to wear shoes on Sunday to church because they were so poor that they couldn't afford to wear their shoes during the week because if they wore them out, that would be it. | ||
They'd be shot. And she remembers the dust and how just sort of barren everything was and the struggle. | ||
We're starting to see the remnants of that manifest in the United States of America today. | ||
And there are a number of different factors that are contributing to it. | ||
It's a hyper-complicated economic situation. | ||
We're a very complicated nation in a very complicated and ever increasingly complicated world. | ||
But it's very clear that this Biden administration and the intelligence community and the bureaucrats in our federal government Seem to have no incentive to solve any of our problems. | ||
You hear people criticize China and Russia for things like, oh, Russia, wow, they're doing so terrible. | ||
They are literally just throwing bodies into the meat grinder. | ||
Or, oh, China, they're doing so terribly. | ||
They're going to have a major depopulation crisis. | ||
And those things are true. | ||
But as Americans, we tend to commit the fallacy of assuming that every other nation has the same political dynamic as we do in the United States. | ||
In that we assume that just because traditionally, it isn't this way anymore, but traditionally, there has been some sort of accountability between the people in the United States of America and the politicians. | ||
Traditionally, our politicians, though they were corrupt and they would lie to us, did really genuinely fight hard to earn the support of the people. | ||
Because after all, They were, at least for some time, empowered based off of elections, especially Congress. | ||
But in China and in Russia, it doesn't matter what the people think at all because they're not constitutional republics, they're not democracies. | ||
I mean, you got to keep in mind that during the great leap forward between 1958 and 62, estimates from 50 to 100 million people died of starvation. | ||
And there is still a cult of personality around Chairman Mao. | ||
They still love him, despite the fact that everybody is related to somebody who starved to death due to his leadership and his decisions. | ||
That's how bad the cognitive dissonance is there. | ||
And the same was true for a long time in the USSR, of course, before the collapse. | ||
And the point I'm trying to make is we are now crossing a threshold in the United States where not only does it not matter what the people think about our politicians, because there's no accountability, but our politicians have now realized this and weaponized this. | ||
So you go back just 10 years to the Obama administration, for example, And at least Barack Obama would very seriously try to successfully lie to cover his tracks. | ||
Successfully cover things up. | ||
Successfully lie about things like being able to keep your doctor and the nature of the Affordable Care Act. | ||
The Bush administration would at least try to lie. | ||
Bill Clinton would at least try to lie. | ||
I smoked pot, but I did not inhale. | ||
I did not have sexual relations with that woman. | ||
There was some sort of fear of the people among our political class just 10 or 20 or 30 years ago that vaporized in the last five years or so. | ||
To the point where we have the Karangian Piers and the Jen Psaki's going up and blatantly lying on behalf of the Biden administration, where we have Court documents explicitly stating that Joe Biden's faculties are diminished, | ||
where we have one political candidate being prosecuted aggressively for harboring so-called classified information in their home, and another one being let off the hook for having classified information in their garage. | ||
Where the Hunter Bidens walk around, where the Fannie Willis' can admit to committing campaign finance fraud or violations. | ||
And we don't know if she's ever actually going to be held accountable in any real way. | ||
Maybe. I doubt she'll go to prison. | ||
When was the last time you saw a politician go to prison? | ||
I guess Anthony Weiner? And so my concern here is that We've got a situation in which our politicians realize that they're not accountable to us, and we're beginning to realize it, so how do we fix it? | ||
And I think the reason that our political class is able to maintain its power despite the people is because they still have very close to a monopoly on information. | ||
This is what I was talking about in the very first segment of the show this morning. | ||
They're winning, or have been up until this point, winning the Infowar on that front. | ||
So it's more important now than ever that we get involved in any way that we can. | ||
But speaking of the Infowar, There is a little bit of an update on Elon Musk that is sort of interesting. | ||
I don't want to fall into the trap of Elon worship. | ||
It's easy to do because he's such an impressive guy and he really did something remarkable with purchasing Twitter that has directly impacted Infowars in a positive way, but also just sort of saved freedom of speech on the internet, at least for the time being. But Matt Taibbi is a journalist who I admire. | ||
He wrote a really good book about the corruption of the mainstream media called Hate Inc., I believe. | ||
And he was, of course, involved in writing some of the famous Twitter files that came out very shortly after Musk took over at Twitter, now X. Quote, you are dead to me. | ||
Twitter files journalist Matt Taibbi posts unhinged messages from Elon Musk. | ||
And I saw this last night, like three in the morning. | ||
I was like, what is going on? I had no idea that there was beef between Musk or Twitter and Substack. | ||
But check this out. Journalist Matt Taibbi posted screenshots of unhinged messages he received from billionaire Twitter owner Elon Musk. | ||
Days after Taibbi accused Musk of restricting his account, the former Musk ally posted these screenshots from a conversation the two had had nearly a year prior. | ||
Quote, since at Elon Musk published parts of these conversations, I might as well include others, declared Taibbi on Thursday. | ||
I was under a blanket search ban at one point, and a lot of my 1.9 million followers still don't see my content. | ||
Of course, I saw this content. In the messages dated April of 2023, Taibbi could be seen asking Musk whether he was being shadowbanned following Musk's crackdown on Substack, which Taibbi writes for. | ||
So, Taibbi was really pushing his Substack because that's how he makes his money, people being able to... | ||
Contribute to his Substack, which is like a Patreon for journalists, right? | ||
You write articles, people subscribe to support the work that you do. | ||
And I believe, I don't know what the number is, but I believe Taibbi has traditionally made a substantial amount of money on that platform because he's a very talented journalist. | ||
Quote, we went on lockdown after discovering that Substack had stolen a massive amount of our data to pre-populate their Twitter ripoff, replied Musk. | ||
Looks like there is still a blanket search ban should be fixed by tomorrow. | ||
He added, going forward, tweets with Substack will not appear in for you unless it is paid advertising just like Facebook, Instagram, etc. | ||
So, Substack basically set itself up as a competitor, stole data from Twitter in order to support that competitor, and that's why Musk began treating it like a competitor, shutting it down, not favoring those links. | ||
Tybee questioned, Elon, I've repeatedly declined to criticize you and have nothing to do with your beef with Substack. | ||
Is there a reason why I'm being put in the middle of things? | ||
This really seems crazy. | ||
Musk simply replied, you are dead to me. | ||
Please get off Twitter and just stay on Substack. | ||
So, it seems like there's more going on here than meets the eye. | ||
And typically, I don't like to read the entirety of any article on air. | ||
But I am going to finish this one just because I want to cover all the details. | ||
Prior to their falling out, Taibbi was seen as a close ally of Musk, of course, because of the Twitter files. | ||
And was described by House Delegate Stacey Plaskett as one of Elon Musk's public scribes during a hearing in March of 2023. | ||
Their relationship deteriorated just weeks later after Substack, a website Taibbi writes for, announced the launch of a Twitter rival. | ||
Musk retaliated by blocking all links to Substack, which prompted Taibbi to announce his departure from Musk's platform. | ||
Taibbi criticized Musk and several other Twitter posts on Thursday, calling the social network worse than ever. | ||
Quote, supposed free speech champion Elon Musk has decided to suppress this account forever instead of just talking to me, protested Taibbi. | ||
Elon Musk is uncomfortable around people who aren't afraid of him and wants to prove he can hurt my business instead of just talking to me, even if it means suppressing access to news he thinks is important. | ||
So it sounds pretty bitter. | ||
But what doesn't... | ||
What makes sense to me is, why did Elon Musk just spontaneously say, you are dead to me, to Taibbi? | ||
There's something missing here in this chain of communication that doesn't really make sense. | ||
It makes sense to me that Musk would be Combative and antagonistic towards Substack for stealing Twitter data in order to support its competitor to Twitter. | ||
I understand why he would block the links to Substack articles and things. | ||
That makes perfect sense to me. | ||
That's just a business decision. But why is it that seemingly out of nowhere in that exchange, Musk literally just said, you are dead to me to Taibbi. | ||
But the fact that he's coming after him saying that he's not really a free speech advocate because of the substack decision that he's making, it just doesn't add up. | ||
This is just so bitter and weird. | ||
It's reminiscent of the interactions many of us had with friends and family over the sort of political disparity and division that's in this country right now. | ||
In the context of the free speech information war that's going on domestically, it is continuing to be waged overseas as well. | ||
Obviously, Vladimir Putin is notorious for suppressing the press, for arresting journalists. | ||
This is something that is a criticism of him that I believe is true. | ||
The only issue I take with those who criticize Putin for this is that they disregard the fact that those who they support here domestically basically do the same exact thing. | ||
We'll dive into that a little bit. | ||
But Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny dies in jail. | ||
This happened apparently just within the last 24 hours. | ||
I started seeing articles about it very early this morning before the sun was up. | ||
And I don't know what to think of this. | ||
So it's possible, if not likely, that Putin did actually... | ||
Call for the death of this journalist. | ||
We know that it's very likely that he was responsible for the plane crash of the plane harboring the man who led the Wagner group and had ostensibly staged a coup. | ||
So it's not unimaginable that this was simply a political assassination. | ||
But it's also interesting to me that this happened immediately after all of this news here in the United States of these space nukes. | ||
We have Jake Sullivan coming out saying that there's a major national security threat that's imminent, where we have Calls for Congress to immediately declassify the information so that the United States and its allies, particularly NATO allies, can discuss what to do in response to the so-called threat of space nukes. | ||
Space nukes that, of course, would violate the Outer Space Treaty of 1967 and potentially justify legally in the international stage a NATO war with Russia. | ||
And within 24 hours, Navalny dies. | ||
This guy's been in prison in Russia for a couple of years. | ||
I think since 2021. Three years. | ||
He's just a political opponent. | ||
And I wonder if this classified information... | ||
This is just my speculation. | ||
I could be way off base on this. | ||
And we'll open up an annex space the rest of the show after this segment. | ||
We can talk about it. But I wonder if Navalny was in any way responsible for... | ||
Information being leaked or given to the United States that was used yesterday as sort of a pretext or a catalyst for this global war. | ||
But it's just very bizarre to me that this assassination happens immediately after this major news break. | ||
So, Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny died in a maximum security prison in the country's far north. | ||
The Interfax News Service reported Friday, citing the Federal Penitentiary Service. | ||
47-year-old Navalny, a major critic of President Vladimir Putin, vanished in December from a prison in the Vladimir region. | ||
They relocated him a bunch. | ||
He later emerged in an Arctic prison camp and disappeared again. | ||
Then on February 16, 2024, in Penal Colony No. | ||
3. Man, that sounds so Soviet. | ||
Convict A.A. Navalny felt unwell after a walk, almost immediately losing consciousness. | ||
In fact, citing the country's prison service. | ||
Apparently he died of a stroke. | ||
That's what they're saying. Though he's not very old and was apparently in good health very recently. | ||
Navalny's death leaves any opposition to Putin in question. | ||
All of Putin's top adversaries are now either deceased, imprisoned, or living in exile. | ||
Navalny was undoubtedly the biggest thorn in the Kremlin side. | ||
For over a decade, he led nationwide protests against the authorities, ran for office to challenge members of the Russian establishment, and set up a network of campaign offices across the country that have since been dismantled. | ||
Years ago, President Biden did issue a threat to President Putin, saying that there would be major consequences if Navalny was killed. | ||
And obviously this is a terrible thing. | ||
I think it's likely that this was a political assassination. | ||
It's possible that we did it to frame them, but I doubt it. | ||
I think that this is a political assassination. | ||
It's a very politically tumultuous time globally right now. | ||
But to suggest that this gives the United States any sort of moral high ground is utterly misguided. | ||
I mean, let's just keep in mind some of the treatment that the United States government has bestowed upon similar political dissidents, protesters, journalists, and others. | ||
Keep in mind, Edward Snowden exercised every legal possibility to be a whistleblower regarding the espionage Of the American people under the guise of the Patriot Act that was blatantly illegal, blatantly a violation of the Fourth Amendment. | ||
And he had to seek asylum in Moscow of all places. | ||
Look what happened to Julian Assange. | ||
Look at the obvious assassination or murder of Jeffrey Epstein. | ||
Look at all of the J6 protesters who were spending decades in prison as if we are better, folks. | ||
It's absolutely crazy to make that claim. | ||
unidentified
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This is the American Journal, where Chase Geyser brings America's stories to the forefront. | |
I just died on your arms tonight. . | ||
Welcome back to the American Journal, folks. | ||
I am Chase Geyser, your host this morning. | ||
We've got an hour and a half left of the show. | ||
We just fired up a space on X. Go to at Infowars on X. And join the space that way. | ||
You can also go to my profile on X at RealChaseGeyser and you should be able to tap on my profile picture and join the space that way. | ||
We're going to let it populate over the course of the next 30 minutes or so. | ||
And then at the top of the hour, we will start giving speakers access to share their thoughts, share their mind. | ||
And if the listeners in the space are not in the mood to speak at the top of the hour, we may actually take some old school traditional calls. | ||
That could be fun, too, to give our landline audience, our cell phone audience, a chance to participate again in the show. | ||
We should not forget about those who are responsible for the reason we were able to stay in business over the course of the several years that we were deplatformed from every major social media platform until X allowed us back on last fall. | ||
So, there is some new news that is supposed to be coming in today. | ||
Trump's civil fraud trial verdict is expected today. | ||
A verdict is expected Friday, Wednesday, in Donald Trump's New York civil fraud trial, adding to a consequential week for the former president's legal calendar. | ||
So, he could be hit, I guess, in this instance, with millions of dollars in penalties and other sanctions in the decision by Judge Arthur Ingeron, our favorite supervillain. | ||
He's already ruled that the former president inflated his wealth on financial statements that were given to banks, insurers, and others to make deals and secure loans. | ||
So he's set to rule after it's been now two and a half months of testimony from 40 witnesses. | ||
And the closing arguments were on January 11th. | ||
So we should be hearing something from him today. | ||
They've estimated that Trump exaggerated his wealth by as much as $3.6 billion, which probably isn't true. | ||
And it's kind of moot, even if it is true, because I don't even believe the lenders or the plaintiffs. | ||
He paid back the loans, as I understand it. | ||
State lawyers contend that Trump used the inflated numbers to get lower insurance premiums and favorable loan terms, saving at least $168 million on interest alone. | ||
So Angeron's going to decide six claims in James' lawsuit, including allegations of conspiracy, falsifying business records, and insurance fraud. | ||
State lawyers allege that Trump exaggerated his wealth by as much as $3.6 billion. | ||
So we know that they already made the decision before they issued this sort of prosecution. | ||
We know that this is an example of lawfare. | ||
We know that there weren't actually any harmed parties in this so-called feud or dispute. | ||
No one's complaining. | ||
They're literally just trying to dig anything up possible that they can use to weaken him financially, that they can use to slander him and berate him and just make his followers look like idiots in the mainstream media. | ||
Anything they can do to render it less likely that he becomes the President of the United States again in 2025. | ||
Of course, when he's inaugurated 2024, he'll be elected. | ||
And the level of just conflicts of interest and hypocrisy. | ||
You have the left constantly calling for Supreme Court justices to recuse themselves from these cases. | ||
And then you have them supporting anger on despite the fact that before this trial even began, his wife was just bragging all over social media that Trump was dead meat, basically. | ||
And then you have the likes of these... | ||
Lawfare sort of ponds in the globalist agenda, claiming that Donald Trump is the fraudster, that Donald Trump is the criminal, the liar, the con man, and disregarding the fact that Joe Biden is obviously missing very important cognitive faculties, despite the fact that we know that The Biden crime family is just that, a Biden crime family. | ||
There's an abundant amount of evidence and financial records to show that there was a money laundering scheme going on in Ukraine and other parts of the world through Hunter Biden's firm, Rosemont Seneca, that Joe Biden was directly receiving kickback from and that this money laundering scheme did involve businesses that were receiving government contracts. | ||
And they say that Donald Trump is responsible for quid pro quo because of a perfect phone call that he had with Zelensky. | ||
And we just showed the clip on the screen of Joe Biden literally bragging about quid pro quo when he threatened to withhold U.S. foreign aid illegally from Ukraine unless they fired the prosecutor that was investigating Burisma and others in Ukraine that Hunter Biden was in business with. | ||
And then you have them coming after Trump, trying to say he's a criminal, trying to indict him, trying to lock him up for literally hundreds of years while... | ||
Fannie Willis sits on the stand and just explicitly admits that she has committed campaign finance violations. | ||
Actually stolen money, similar to the way that Black Lives Matter was stealing money for its leaders. | ||
Just pocketing the donations, just pocketing the money, not actually doing anything they said they were going to do. | ||
Absolute corruption. And there is very obviously a disproportionate application of the law and it's very one-sided. | ||
They go after you if you are on the wrong political side and they don't call foul when it's somebody from their side. | ||
It's as simple as that. | ||
And now we're seeing other things sort of creep into play. | ||
These moves made to weaken the likes of X and Elon Musk where we have SpaceX now reincorporating, I believe, in Texas because of some issues that they're having in Delaware, the laws that are changing and they're just trying to come after them. | ||
We have examples of the government declining or denying subsidies that Musk's companies were entitled to. | ||
Tax subsidies, things like that. | ||
And we have examples of campaigns that seem to be very well coordinated by Organizations, NGOs, very closely in cahoots with and working with the government. | ||
These campaigns to get all of the major advertisers, the Disneys, the major Hollywood studios, the other major businesses to just suddenly pull all of their advertising from accident effort to cripple the business. | ||
I think it failed, but it was close. | ||
It definitely was painful for them. | ||
So while we are imprisoned, while we are taxed and audited and prosecuted and harassed with lawfare and threats, and while we are accused of being domestic terrorists and held responsible for the actions of every transgender lunatic who commits a mass shooting, | ||
which is happening more and more frequently, They are literally funding the death of hundreds of thousands of people in wars in Ukraine, in wars between Israel and Hamas, and now the United States and Iraq, and the United States and Iran through its proxies that we've attacked and bombed. | ||
And so they commit genocide, and they literally give standing ovations to Nazis, but right-wing extremism is the greatest threat to national security until yesterday. | ||
And it's some classified Russian threat now that happens to be a very convenient manifestation for anyone, any nation, any organization, any globalist entity that is eager to go to war with Russia. | ||
So they can bring us into World War III. They can steal all of our tax dollars and give it to other nations while 10,000 people a day cross our border illegally. | ||
And they can just basically screw us every way to Sunday. | ||
And then they can make up that we're the ones doing what they are actually doing and prosecute and imprison us for it. | ||
There will be a reckoning because any time in history when there has been an injustice to this extent, Where people are prosecuted simply for what they believe or who they are for an extended period of time in an incredibly unfair way. | ||
Eventually, those people say, that's enough. | ||
I'm done. | ||
I'm not going to be victimized anymore. | ||
And I just hope that when that day comes, we keep our heads, folks, because there is going to be a great temptation for us to exact a vengeance on this political class, the likes of which the world has never seen. | ||
Make sure you go to Infowarsstore.com. | ||
Check out Bodies, which is 40% off. | ||
It's an amazing product. | ||
I highly recommend that you look at the details and see how it could help you. | ||
I also recommend TurboForce Plus and BrainForce Ultra. | ||
I think for this folks, more on the other side. | ||
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Welcome back to the American Journal, folks. | |
I am Chase Geyser, your host this morning. | ||
We have fired up the space on X. Make sure you go to at realchasegeyser or at infowars. | ||
Join the space and request to speak if you'd like to be a speaker. | ||
The crew is going to help out with moderating this X space. | ||
We are trying to establish some standard operating procedures so that we can sort of streamline what the experience is like for the hosts as well as the audience when we do use X spaces. | ||
And so today, rather than me, Actually clicking on people and making them speakers and muting people and managing that. | ||
I'm going to focus just on the conversation and the crew is going to be helping out and we're going to try that to see if we can sort of get into a rhythm here with how we're going to do this on an ongoing basis moving forward. | ||
I do want to just take a moment to thank the audience for being patient with us for the last several weeks as we've been experimenting with this sort of new way to engage with the audience. | ||
I know that The traditional calls have been sort of a hallmark or a staple in the Infowars brand, and we're not going to eliminate call-ins or anything like that. | ||
So for those of you who prefer to call, please don't be alarmed. | ||
But we really like to broadcast on the spaces because when we broadcast on the spaces and people request to speak and we make them speakers, then their followers see that they are speaking in the space with InfoWars or with Harrison or with Alex Jones. | ||
And it creates a ripple effect or a snowball effect or a domino effect that can help increase the size of the InfoArmy and the InfoWars like we've been talking about. | ||
So that's one of the reasons why we really love that. | ||
And plus, there are a lot of sort of influencer accounts, major accounts that are much more inclined to spontaneously join and speak in a space than perhaps they are to call in and wait on hold to be picked. | ||
So that's one of the other advantages as well. | ||
But we will continue to take calls. | ||
We will continue to do spaces both. | ||
And I highly recommend that you, if you haven't already, follow at InfoWars. | ||
Follow me at RealChaseGeyser. | ||
Follow at RealAlexJones. | ||
Follow OwenSchroyer76 or TheWarRoom or HarrisonSmith. | ||
And just make sure that we're in your feed on these platforms and do what you can to share anything that we say that resonates with you so that we can win this InfoWars. | ||
So... There's a couple more things on the desk that I want to talk about. | ||
And as always, it's overwhelming to just see all of the details and intricacies of the New World Order agenda, which is so well documented every day in the headlines. | ||
And it's funny because I was in an ex-space last night and we were just talking about InfoWars and Alex Jones, things like that. | ||
It came up, you know, Alex Jones is always right, or Alex Jones was right. | ||
And, you know, a lot of people, he's an American icon. | ||
So a lot of people sort of fall into what you fall into with any American icon. | ||
I mean, if you have a poster of Jim Morrison up in your room when you're in high school because you idolize him as a rock star, he's an American icon, or Elvis, or Marilyn Monroe, what have you. | ||
Alex sort of fits into that category for the politically awakened crowd. | ||
But it's not any sort of, you know, Nostradamus level prophecy. | ||
It's not any sort of magical or supernatural powers that have been bestowed upon him that he wields to predict what's going to happen months or years in advance with alarming accuracy and detail. | ||
It's just that he actually reads the documents. | ||
And one of the things I said in this space, which I want to share with this audience today, is it's like the Bible. | ||
Everybody's got a copy, but hardly anyone ever reads it or has read it. | ||
Because, frankly, people think that the Bible's boring. | ||
And some parts of it, frankly, are boring. | ||
It's the Word of God, but, you know, it's a little dry to read Leviticus sometimes. | ||
That's the way these documents are. | ||
Nobody wants to sit and watch hours of C-SPAN. Nobody wants to sit and watch these globalists give speeches at Davos. | ||
I mean, even Joe Biden has been caught on camera falling asleep at these globalist events, conferences that he's forced to go to by his handlers for no reason. | ||
And nobody wants to read through thousands upon thousands of pages of documents as they're released to try to put together what the heck is going on. | ||
But Alex Jones actually has put in the time to study these documents over the course of the last 10, 20, 30 years. | ||
First it was in the local library and Other sort of more traditional, old-school resources. | ||
And then, of course, on the internet, we have access to all this information. | ||
And when you actually consume this information that, for some reason, no one seems to take the initiative to consume, you are basically acquiring for yourself pieces to the puzzle of what is really going on. | ||
And once you get enough pieces, even if you don't have them all, You can begin to perceive what the puzzle is, what the image is, what the picture is. | ||
And so you can make predictions. | ||
Oh, this thing's over here, and this is what's in the upper left-hand corner. | ||
This is what's in the lower right. You can begin to make predictions and point things out that nobody else has noticed because they just frankly don't have the same pieces that you got. | ||
And so when I'm looking at these headlines, these are all different pieces and you have to interpret them correctly in order to understand. | ||
But they're all just little clues as to what this agenda for this globalism is. | ||
Here's one example. California bill could pave way for free tuition for black students. | ||
Obviously, a violation of the 1964 Civil Rights Act. | ||
If you're giving somebody tax dollars for their education disproportionately because of their immutable characteristics, it seems to be blatantly racist. | ||
And so what we see here is the sowing of division among races. | ||
We see here the pushing of the belief that one race is owed something by another race because of the sins of that race's ancestors and not even all those ancestors. | ||
And what we have here is this white guilt among white people and this sort of bitterness for white people among any people of color in this country and is catalyzed by policies like this. | ||
But the politicians do it even though it's unhealthy for the nation because politically it's very conducive to their success because they're able to spin it like they are righting a wrong or establishing justice or fixing an injustice. | ||
And so they repeatedly sell out the country. | ||
They divide us against each other and they use that to fuel their political power perpetually. | ||
And it doesn't just stop there because they don't have to spend any of their own money on these initiatives. | ||
That's going to be state money. | ||
And when they spend their state money on initiatives like this, Many of these politicians, whether it's the governor, whether it's the state legislatures, whether it's members of our federal Congress, are invested in the contractors and businesses and companies and entities that provide the services or products that are paid for in these services. | ||
So, for example, and this is just a hypothetical example, but in the event that California decides to pay for every textbook for any person of color, and we know that the textbooks are printed and sold by private companies, some of them publicly traded perhaps, Then our politicians can simply invest in those companies, either privately or on the public market. | ||
They can pass a law to ensure that those companies make an increased amount of money because of this policy. | ||
These textbooks are going to be purchased. | ||
They can even encourage these companies to raise the prices of their products so that the margins are even better. | ||
And that is the laundering of tax dollars into political pockets through corruption. | ||
What you realize is... | ||
The more a government spends, the more its politicians get kickback. | ||
So there's no incentive among our political class to actually stop or slow or stall or reverse the spending because that's going to have a negative impact on their bottom line through all of the money laundering and sort of insider trading that they're doing. | ||
Both the right and the left. This is not a one-sided issue. | ||
This is a uniparty issue. | ||
And then when you realize that that is what's happening, it begins to make sense why the United States is constantly spending billions and billions and billions of dollars overseas instead of domestically, where of course they could be audited domestically. | ||
It would be more obvious what they were doing domestically. | ||
There's more resources for investigations domestically. | ||
They spend it overseas and the foreign countries love it because we're giving them all this money. | ||
But we're giving them this money to spend on products and services that our companies, American companies, provide. | ||
Those companies, of course, being companies that our politicians are invested in. | ||
So yeah, we're loaning $95 billion to Ukraine. | ||
What are they going to spend it on? Well, they're going to spend it on weapons and training and ammunition and supplies provided by U.S. companies in large and other European companies in large that the European politicians are invested in, that our politicians are invested in, and that is how our politicians get kicked back by selling out the American people. | ||
And they somehow justified it in their mind by, you know, claiming to themselves that it's some sort of moral war between some obviously good and pure and some obviously evil and corrupt entity when both of them are frankly corrupt. | ||
And so every politician in the world now, because of the way that this money laundering scheme works, has an incentive to come together and work together to exacerbate this problem, the spending, the selling out of their various constituents. | ||
And that is how globalism is manifest. | ||
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more on the other side folks to close through the lens of the american journal captures the mosaic of american life | |
Are the globalists preparing a nuclear-triggered EMP false flag to be blamed on Russia? | ||
You bet your ass they are. | ||
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Hear an artist's projection of the president's vision. | |
Banning into space, a layered defense to protect the country from nuclear devastation. | ||
U.S. spy satellites would watch the world below. | ||
Detect Soviet missiles blasting off. | ||
Compute the position and speed of each missile. | ||
Alert battle stations in space on Earth. | ||
Is Russia developing nuclear-powered lasers? | ||
Are they deploying them in space? | ||
And the answer is undoubtedly yes. | ||
But guess who was doing this even back in the 1970s and had perfected it by the 1980s and 90s? | ||
The United States. | ||
And as usual, everybody's running around, even mainstream media, governments, acting like they don't know what's going on to scare the public when there's a very clear history of exactly what's going on with the United States, Russia, China, and other governments. | ||
So I'm about to break down what's really happening in space straight ahead. | ||
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The first response. | |
Space-based kinetic energy weapons fire high-speed projectiles from hyper-velocity guns. | ||
Intercepting enemy missiles as they are boosted through the atmosphere. | ||
Popped up into space, Earth-based nuclear-powered X-ray lasers fire their radioactive rays. | ||
Attack rays from land-based eczema lasers are redirected by huge mirrors orbiting in space. | ||
Chemical lasers fire beams that burn through the shell of the onrushing missile. | ||
Particle beam weapons with pulsing rays join the attack. | ||
Still over the atmosphere, the missile bus ejects its cargo. | ||
multiple nuclear warheads Ronald Reagan popularized Star Wars or the strategic defense initiative in the 1980s but was really going on since the 1960s And by the 1970s, it's declassified. | ||
The United States have powerful lasers mounted in space, some of them what are called X-ray lasers that are powered by a nuclear power plant. | ||
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Earth-based nuclear-powered X-ray lasers fire their radioactive rays. | |
In many cases, they would actually detonate a small atomic or hydrogen bomb that then fires through the X-ray laser arrays and just fries everything in a massive radius around it. | ||
This would also cause major electromagnetic disturbances in the atmosphere. | ||
That's why the Pentagon back in the 1960s did Operation Fishbowl, where they tried to detonate the upper atmosphere with high-powered hydrogen bombs just to test and see it was safe. | ||
So now that we hear all this talk about Russia might be developing and deploying nuclear-powered lasers in space, all of this is Excalibur-type technology being deployed by the Russians decades and decades and decades later. | ||
Look up Project Excalibur for yourself, already in function, already in operation by the 1970s, heavily deployed by the 1980s. | ||
One of the reasons the Russians gave up. | ||
And the Soviet Union collapsed because they understood the United States was so much farther advanced than them. | ||
So why is this all coming out now? | ||
Why is the Pentagon and the White House all mysteriously, oh, we're not gonna say if they have a weapon or what it is, but it's probably nukes in space and nukes that power lasers. | ||
It's because they're ratcheting up a new cold and probably hot war with Russia. | ||
The EU, the NATO leaders are saying it's going to be a 2030-year long-term war. | ||
They're going to bring back national conscription in Europe and the UK. They're setting their entire political future while they make us eat bugs and own nothing and have nothing and be happy on using the outside threat of Russia as the pretext for domestic crackdowns and control here at home. | ||
So crazy developments with this space nukes allegation yesterday. | ||
We'll unpack that over the course of the next hour. | ||
Alex Jones just texted me that he's going to be joining the space in the next 20 minutes or so, so we'll look for him. | ||
Hopefully he does actually make it. | ||
Stick with us, folks. We have a one-minute break, and then we will be back on air after that. | ||
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You're listening to The American Journal with your host, Chase Geyser. | |
Welcome back to The American Journal, folks. | ||
I am Chase Geyser, your host. | ||
What an amazing song. | ||
It's amazing to me how much better all the covers of Bob Dylan songs are than the original Bob Dylan track. | ||
He's such a talented songwriter. | ||
Not the best musician. | ||
So we were talking at the end of the last segment about how... | ||
There's these different pieces to the puzzle, and every sort of headline that we get is a piece of the puzzle of the New World Order or the globalist agenda. | ||
And we got into just one simple example. | ||
I can just pull these out of a stack miscellaneously and sort of explain how it's part of the New World Order. | ||
So let's just do an exercise, a lesson in how to read the news. | ||
So, Rant, CL students told it's white supremacy to love reading and writing. | ||
Obviously, they don't want you awakened. | ||
They don't want you educating yourself. | ||
They don't want you thinking critically or for yourself if they want to brainwash you into going along with this new world order. | ||
And there's something I want to just express as explicitly as possible here. | ||
Over the course of the last, I don't know, 50 years, maybe even 100 years, really since we went off the gold standard. | ||
So somewhere it actually happened, technically, before Nixon legally did it. | ||
That's why he did it, because we were already doing it, going off the gold standard, that is. | ||
So for the last 50 years or so, what we've seen is the political class do everything in its power to kick the can as far as our currency is concerned. | ||
They know that the fractional reserve banking doesn't work. | ||
They know that the central bank doesn't work. | ||
The federal reserve system that we have doesn't work, especially since it relies on fiat, which is backed by nothing of value. | ||
But they've been successful in kicking the can down the road for this inevitable collapse because over the course of the last 50 years, there was tremendous amount of global economic growth, namely because of the advancements in technology and the onset of the internet and things like that. | ||
And so GDP always outpaced the increase in our debt or the payments on our debt. | ||
But now we're arriving at a place where growth seems to be stalling globally relative to the amount of debt and the amount of debt that we have to Take on is greater and greater on an exponential level. | ||
That's just not sustainable. | ||
And so what we've seen is a pivot from the political class, from the globalists, a pivot from trying to kick the can and delay the inevitable to preparing for a post-collapse world. | ||
So instead of focusing on policies and arguing about the intricacies of taxation and printing and spending and sort of debates that we saw between Democrats and Republicans in the 90s and the early 2000s, what we're seeing now is an increase in involvement in these international conflicts that really do have to do with protecting our status as a global reserve currency. | ||
And we're seeing the likes of Klaus Schwab and others and these globalist organizations like the World Economic Forum succeed in bringing all of the world's leaders together in a room for no obvious reason that they would want to even be there. | ||
It seems like it would be a waste of time. | ||
But he's succeeding in getting them in a room and having a conversation about The Great Reset or this New World Order or this Fourth Industrial Revolution. | ||
They're talking about a post-apocalyptic world. | ||
And I've been racking my brain about Klaus Schwab for years now, trying to figure out how it is that this son of a Nazi who really has... | ||
Nothing going for him. | ||
He's not some business mogul or some super powerful bureaucrat or politician himself by any rate. | ||
How is it that this guy comes out of nowhere and is somehow able to successfully get all of the world's leaders in the same room At Davos every year, whether it's Trudeau, whether it's Xi Jinping, whether it's Donald Trump or Joe Biden, just name it. | ||
The world leaders come together because Klaus Schwab called a meeting. | ||
And then it occurred to me last week when I was on the TMI podcast, it just sort of had an epiphany while we were talking about this stuff. | ||
The reason they're meeting is because they all understand from either their intelligence communities or just their explicit conversations. | ||
And we know they're buddies. Look at Bohemian Grove. | ||
They get together and hang out and do crazy stuff. | ||
They all understand that this collapse is coming and they have come together to conspire As to how the post-collapse will be handled so they can control what the new world looks like. | ||
What the post-apocalypse world looks like. | ||
So if you look at the example of what happened in Germany in the late 20s, early 30s with the basically takeover of the Third Reich, the Nazi Party. | ||
What happened was there was a total collapse of their currency because of hyperprinting. | ||
They were famously burning their paper currency to stay warm, or they were using it as wallpaper in their homes. | ||
It was so worthless. | ||
People had to go into the grocery store, similar to today, with wheelbarrows full of cash just to get small items because prices were changing literally by the hour, just rapidly expanding. | ||
And after that collapse happened, what we saw was a hyper-nationalist movement that pointed the finger. | ||
And at first they blamed the Jews and the Treaty of Versailles. | ||
And frankly, the Treaty of Versailles probably was culpable for a lot of the injustices and ails that the German people faced. | ||
But I believe it was erroneous for them to blame the Jews. | ||
Quote, quote, the Jews. All the Jews did it. | ||
And what happened was a world war and a tremendous amount of injustice. | ||
Millions bombed, countries fallen, collapsed, borders redrawn, changing global power dynamics. | ||
It was just a mess. | ||
And the whole world had to get together afterward at Bretton Woods and decide what they were going to do about international monetary policy. | ||
And that was the first New World Order. | ||
And so... Having had that experience, our leaders understand that when the collapse happens, there is going to be a vacuum of power and a tremendous amount of political turmoil and changing dynamics in Arapahoe. | ||
It's going to be an unstable sort of nuclear reactor. | ||
And... They don't want to allow a rogue movement or a rogue leader like a MAGA Republican movement or a Donald Trump type person. | ||
They don't want some rogue leader to ride the wave of this turmoil and this power vacuum all the way to the top to establish some unpredictable new political class. | ||
They want to control it this time. | ||
Last time it happened, they didn't control it, and it was chaos. | ||
The world almost went in any number of different terrible directions. | ||
And so since they know it is going to happen again, since they know that eventually the dollar must collapse because it is backed by nothing, because our debt is exponentially growing, this Ponzi scheme cannot sustain itself, We're good to go. | ||
When this happens, they want a monopoly on information so badly because only through a monopoly of information will these globalists be able to actually manifest the new world that they envision for themselves, which of course will keep them at the top, keep everyone else subjugated and brainwashed to believe that their subjugation is some sort of divine Intervention in their lives. | ||
Some beautiful thing like the people in North Korea when they see their beloved leader. | ||
And so it makes sense. | ||
And we see all the pieces of their agenda playing out in every single headline. | ||
Don't read it right. Don't think for yourselves because when this collapse happens, we want to make sure that you don't actually understand who's responsible for us for it. | ||
It's we the globalists. | ||
We want to be able to tell you who's responsible for it. | ||
It's going to be either white people or capitalists or whatever enemy that they create. | ||
That's why they love identity politics so much. | ||
That's why they're pushing identity politics so much because only through identity politics can they make an enemy out of an entire group which may or may not even actually exist. | ||
And then you see bipartisan House lawmakers working to finalize military aid border bill, sallying out the interests of our own border in the name of funding this global war, this war between Ukraine and Russia that it's not obvious why we're involved. | ||
And they've successfully brainwashed the majority of the people To think that it's simply about a dictator versus a democratically elected leader. | ||
It's an underdog story of Ukraine standing up against Goliath. | ||
They have ridden that wave and they have been pushing that, but it's just simply not true. | ||
What they're really trying to do is ensure that no superpower has international sovereignty, whether it's China or whether it's Russia. | ||
Because they want to control the new digital currency that is to replace the dollar when the dollar collapses. | ||
And if Russia is disproportionately powerful in these regions, and if China is disproportionately powerful in the international community, then they will be able to successfully subvert the dollar and replace it with the yen. | ||
With that, I want to go to some speakers in the X space. | ||
Thank you for being patient with us and hanging in there. | ||
I will leave it to the crew to determine who is up next. | ||
Go ahead and fire away, guys. | ||
Hey, everybody in the space. | ||
We've got Phillip, which is Big Phillip, Big Phil, 10-3-1-4. | ||
Go ahead and unmute your mic. | ||
We want to hear what you have to say. | ||
I'm not getting Philip. I think you might have to reconnect to the Bluetooth, Matt. | ||
I can't hear it in my ears. In the meantime, what I'm going to do is keep going through these headlines while they figure that out. | ||
Sorry about that, Philip, but we will get back to you. | ||
Just hang in there. So, Democrat Gavin Newsom says, we need to pass constitutional amendment against guns. | ||
At first, I like this headline because it's a Democrat admitting that they would actually have to amend the Constitution in order to change gun laws. | ||
I was like, oh great! At least he understands that it's a constitutional issue. | ||
But then I'm looking at, oh, yeah, this is another piece of the puzzle of the New World Order, of the global agenda. | ||
They want to amend our Constitution to ensure that the American people are not armed to defend themselves, are not able to stand up for themselves in the face of this total economic collapse, which is going to wreak havoc on our civilization any day. | ||
It could happen in 100 years, could happen in 50 years, could happen tomorrow. | ||
But the way they're acting is as if it's going to happen literally any minute. | ||
Now, Okay, let's do it. | ||
Phillip, go ahead and unmute yourself and let me see if I can hear you. | ||
Well, he seems to have dropped off, but I did hear him for a second before he dropped off. | ||
Yep. Okay. In that case, we're waiting for Phil to rejoin, but we've got another speaker who has raised their hand. | ||
Mike Kelly. Oh, Mike Kelly, you just dropped the speaker privilege. | ||
Let's go to InnerCityRogue. | ||
InnerCityRogue, you've been waiting for a while to make a comment. | ||
You're a speaker. Go ahead and unmute your mic. | ||
Well, it looks like he might have stepped away. | ||
So let's just do another headline in the meantime until we get that figured out. | ||
All right. China expands Mark of the Beast to include CBDCs. | ||
Coming fast to the West, a now viral account of a Chinese citizen's life being turned upside down due to his low social credit score has resurfaced as Westerners awaken to the dangers of central bank digital currencies. | ||
This is the mechanism, the tool through which the globalist community will be able to enforce its agenda upon a desperate people after the collapse of traditional currency. | ||
So this is another piece of puzzle. | ||
We're just doing a lesson here on how to read the news, folks. | ||
OpenAI unveils next-level generative AI text-to-video tool. | ||
That's all great. I love artificial intelligence. | ||
It's really fun to play with, and it's very helpful to make things and do things. | ||
But it's very interesting that all of these artificial intelligence developments are happening by major companies with hundreds of millions of dollars invested by the likes of Microsoft. | ||
And the government is being lobbied by these major entities, these companies, Special interests to create regulations such that no competitor can develop anything remotely as effective as these tools being developed by the massive resources and infrastructure and talent of the existing corporations. | ||
So what we see here is... | ||
The new era of a weapon of mass destruction. | ||
We talk about chemical weapons. | ||
We talk about nuclear weapons. | ||
Nuclear weapons were the weapon of mass destruction of the 20th century. | ||
The 21st century weapon of mass destruction is artificial intelligence. | ||
And just as the only instance of the use of a nuclear weapon in actual war was when only one nation had a nuclear weapon... | ||
So it is that artificial intelligence will only be a serious threat or will certainly be a serious threat so long as it is only in the hands of these globalists, the political class. | ||
That's why it's got to be democratized. | ||
That's why we have to diversify those who are able to create and use these tools. | ||
I am hearing a speaker successfully now. | ||
Go ahead. Say what you got to say with the people. | ||
Can you hear me? Yep. | ||
Testing, testing. You sound great. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. Thanks. | |
Yeah, it's, you know, everything's inverted, right? | ||
It's the deep state is, they're in their last, we have them cornered, You know, they know they're cornered. | ||
They know they're on their heel and they're going to do everything they possibly can, you know, to flip it, to attack us, to keep us distracted. | ||
They're trying to destroy us. | ||
They know that we're done voting for them and they know that we probably never will again. | ||
So they're literally trying to import a whole new voting class. | ||
You know, they shut our pipelines down. | ||
They've rigged our elections. | ||
They've poisoned our youth. | ||
All they need is a blip. | ||
A blip in the youth to where they're not functionally reading and learning and understanding and comprehending the world around them like some of us older generation people can, and that's when they slip in their agenda. | ||
These smart cities, and they're making their last stand because they know how important this election is. | ||
So they're trying to bombard us, overwhelm us and keep us, you know, just a mess. | ||
You know, you have to look away. | ||
You know, you either have to look away from this horrible thing and focus on, you know, a video game or a sporting event or a fly fishing trip or something just to keep your sanity these days. | ||
And they know that, you know. | ||
And they're just trying to buy time and suck as much money as they can and fund their—that's what it is. | ||
It's all this money to Ukraine. | ||
They're just trying to fund their propaganda, and they're cheating for the next election. | ||
So we have to keep the pressure on, stay calm, stay laser-focused, and start listening to those people like Alex Jones, Chase Geiser, Harrison Smith. | ||
You know, this is it. | ||
This is the final battle, guys. | ||
This is it. Yeah, you made an outstanding point, and you made that point in such an articulate and succinct and powerful way, so I appreciate you chiming in and saying that. | ||
I ran cross-country when I was in high school. | ||
I was fairly competitive at it, and one of the big things I learned from my coach, I had a great coach, and I'm sure that anyone else here who has run cross-country has heard the same thing from their coach. | ||
You don't ever look behind you in a race. | ||
Right? So intuitively, we want to turn over our shoulder and see how far behind us the guy that we just passed is or the guy that might be creeping up on us is. | ||
But you always have to look forward because every time you look over your shoulder, it slows you down and actually harms your speed, your time, and your likelihood to get a personal record or win. | ||
And that's exactly what the left or these globalists are trying to do. | ||
They're trying to get us, as we're winning this info war, to look over our shoulder because they are right behind us. | ||
We are barely winning, but we are. | ||
And they know that the more we look over our shoulder with Netflix or entertainment or pornography or Taylor Swift, The more we look over our shoulder, the easier it is for them to pass us because they have their eyes on the ball. | ||
And I totally appreciate what you said. | ||
And ties in perfectly to what I said about this being sort of the last lap. | ||
So, thank you so much. | ||
Do we have another speaker? Yeah, we've got Kevin Brennan lined up who's got his hand raised. | ||
Kevin, go ahead and unmute your mic. | ||
And we the people, go ahead and mute your mic back. | ||
unidentified
|
Alrighty, am I good to go? | |
Yeah, I hear you. Hello? | ||
I hear you. It's all right. | ||
unidentified
|
Brennan's a good strong name. | |
You know, there's a way to have your cake and eat it too a little bit here. | ||
As far as entertainment goes, you start reading Dostoevsky. | ||
So, in the 1800s Russia, Fyodor Dostoevsky, in my perspective, is the Russian equivalent of C.S. Lewis or George MacDonald. | ||
They both cut into the psychology of humanity and the spirituality that informs and fuels that psychology. | ||
And I read a book called Demons, translated demonoy, but the leftists will translate it as the possessed because they try to make Dostoevsky out to be an existentialist. | ||
It's all about the communist socialist mindset behind these ideological subversives and how, like old Michael Caine says in that Batman movie... | ||
Some men just want to watch the world burn. | ||
Well, I think what happened in 1860s Russia to 1917-18 when you have the October Revolution is the same trajectory America has seen from 1960 to today. | ||
The difference being this. | ||
Hillary was supposed to make it in, and our October revolution was supposed to be in 2017-18. | ||
COVID probably was supposed to hit about then. | ||
But because the good Lord smiled and gave us grace, we got Donald Trump instead, and that cattywompous their revolution card, if you will, if you'll allow me to use those words loosely like that. | ||
So, like you said, we are ahead in the race a little bit, And they want us to look behind because they have an ambition that transcends generations and has been planned by the global equivalent of your local chamber of commerce, which we call the UN, the WEF and all that stuff for years. | ||
And now it's all cattywampus, and they don't know what to do about it because they've been compartmentalized for their whole life as a petty bureaucrat facilitating this Power putsch. | ||
So yeah, they're yelling behind us and whatnot. | ||
The difficulty is when you intellectualize it, it's a lot different than being in it. | ||
Because when you intellectualize it, you can look back and you can put yourself above it all. | ||
But when you're in the middle of it, you're alone in a house with a cat drinking raw eggs. | ||
And you know, you got to look at the bigger picture. | ||
Or maybe that's just me. | ||
And the cat doesn't even like the raw eggs. | ||
I'm totally with you on all that. | ||
All of those old school legacy media outlets, their numbers have at least halved, if not gone down by 75% in the last 10 years, depending on the net worth you look at. | ||
They are very much struggling because people are consuming news and information in a much more diversified way than before the internet was as expansive as it is today, right? | ||
Yeah. And what we're seeing now is we're seeing the wild animal that is the mainstream media cornered. | ||
And it is gnashing his teeth and biting, right? | ||
We're seeing them freak out and they're doing all sorts of crazy stuff. | ||
They're more dangerous now than ever, even though they're less powerful now than ever because they're desperate and they're doing that sort of 300-level gasp for the last stand against this invasion. | ||
And we're seeing the same exact thing from the political class and from the globalists where they realize that They're about ready to lose everything in terms of their agenda, and that's why they're bringing us to the brink of World War III, and all these conflicts are breaking out, and all these crises are happening all of the sudden in the last several months. | ||
It's crazy. We have a break for four minutes, but we will be back on the other side right after this. | ||
unidentified
|
Join Chase Geyser and the American Journal, the melting pot of America's diverse voices on InfoWars. | |
Welcome back to the American Journal, folks. | ||
I am Chase Geiser, your host this morning. | ||
Owen Schreuer will be hosting the Alex Jones Show in just about 30 minutes. | ||
After that, your favorite Harrison Smith will be hosting the War Room this afternoon at 3 p.m. | ||
Hopefully, Alex Jones will be joining this ex-space before the end of the show today, but he's a very busy man, as you can imagine, so we don't expect that he will for sure. | ||
We are going to take more speakers for the remainder of the show today. | ||
So I leave the floor to the crew to call somebody up. | ||
Hey, Indy Luke. | ||
We just made you a speaker. | ||
We see you're standing by. | ||
Go ahead and unmute that mic and let's hear from you. | ||
unidentified
|
Matt Weber and Chase Geiser. | |
What's going on, guys? Hey, man. | ||
unidentified
|
How are you? Can you guys hear me all right? | |
I'm on my car speaker. | ||
My bad. You sound good. Okay. | ||
Yeah, like, talking about what the guy before was talking about. | ||
So, everything in me, and I'm going to refrain from cussing because I did that the last time I was on. | ||
Everything in me is like fight or flight. | ||
I had to, like, distance myself from a lot of this information stuff to kind of give, you know... | ||
Get back on the straight and narrow because it's like everything is shooting for rebellion. | ||
It's hard not to get that urge to fight. | ||
We are getting completely taken over right now. | ||
That's what they want you to do because as soon as there's some sort of actual rebellion, that's when they ramp up all of their powers and minimize all of the rights of individuals. | ||
unidentified
|
Absolutely. But I would say, like, yeah, it's an absolute trap. | |
Rex 84 would be enacted. | ||
There's all kinds of these executive orders that would be put in place to put just a cap right on everything we're doing. | ||
You know, I mean, peaceful protesting is absolutely necessary, though. | ||
And people need to start talking to each other. | ||
Talking in 3D. You know, having a million bumper stickers on the back of their car. | ||
I mean, let's go, bro. | ||
You know, but you don't have to get violent with it. | ||
And that's kind of what I wanted to get into. | ||
And love you guys, man. | ||
And driving to work. | ||
So y'all have a wonderful rest of your day. | ||
You have a good day too, man. | ||
And I really appreciate you calling in and saying that. | ||
It's so important that we keep... | ||
Reminding ourselves and everyone the importance of avoiding violence at all costs because that's exactly what the establishment wants us to do. | ||
They want us to make a January 6th level mistake again and again as often as possible and as bad as possible so they can exploit that as a pretext to do things like take our guns, do things like ramp up national security and surveillance and social credit scores and Digital currencies that they can control in the name of protecting us against terrorism, | ||
despite the fact that it's all but proven now that over the course of the last 50 years, the greatest threat to our national security has been our own government the whole time. | ||
Who else do we have? Next up, looks like we've got Sauce. | ||
Sauce, you've been hanging out as a speaker for a second. | ||
Go ahead and unmute that, Mike. Let's hear from you. | ||
Yo. What's up? | ||
unidentified
|
Hey Sauce, what's going on? Not much. | |
So I hear you guys talking about the AI and all that. | ||
I think it's going to take away the intellectual currency that we have in society. | ||
No one's going to be able to talk to each other or function as regular people. | ||
Yeah, that's a concern of mine too. | ||
I was thinking about that a lot yesterday. | ||
ChatGPT this week, I believe it was this week, came out with a new feature where instead of typing and reading the response, you can speak to it and it will respond with a human sounding voice in pretty much real time. | ||
So you can feasibly put it on on your phone on a stand in a room and you've got an assistant just sitting there listening to you, answering your questions when you talk to it as if you had a real person sitting right next to you who can search the web. | ||
And we are rapidly arriving at a place where some of the basic fundamental things Common sense level skills that we've had for the history of our species that we've taken for granted are not... | ||
They're going to atrophy in the face of this artificial intelligence. | ||
Similar to how nobody knows how to survive in the wilderness anymore. | ||
Nobody knows how to skin rabbits or deer or hunt anymore because we haven't had to for so long, given the way that we do agriculture and the way that our supply chain works. | ||
We just don't rely on those skills anymore like we used to, and therefore they have atrophied. | ||
So if there was some sort of massive EMP attack and everything collapsed and the Internet went away and electricity went away, estimates from the studies that I've seen are that 90 percent of the people in the United States would die within nine months if there was an EMP attack because nobody knows how to survive without all estimates from the studies that I've seen are that 90 percent of the people in the United States would die within nine months That's too much infrastructure to rebuild. | ||
unidentified
|
They'll just do a fake power outage or limit or whatever they need to do. | |
Yeah. We saw what happened after Hurricane Katrina. | ||
Yeah. And also, if they do an EMP, then that basically would mean people are stagnant, which would also kind of not work in their favor as well. | ||
They kind of would need people to fight each other and kind of weed out the weakest. | ||
That way they kind of would have an incentive to maybe go to a FEMA camp or something. | ||
Because they know it's basically like the jungle, right? | ||
Absolutely. And then just let other people fight each other off. | ||
They already do that now. Yeah, I totally agree with you. | ||
Who else do we have that wants to speak? Next up, let's go to Inner City Rogue. | ||
Inner City Rogue, we tried you once before. | ||
Go ahead and unmute your mic. | ||
unidentified
|
Let's hear from you. Hey, guys. | |
Can you hear me okay? You sound great. | ||
unidentified
|
All right. Yeah, I just wanted to talk about the attacks on Trump and what's getting ready to happen with Trump. | |
Yeah, the attacks on Trump are kind of crumbling, right? | ||
But they're all by design to pump up his numbers and get him back into the office. | ||
And the whole plan, I've told you before, is to collapse the system on him once the central bank digital currency becomes mandatory. | ||
And there's nothing really he can do about it. | ||
And there's a specific individual that everybody's got to be watching in his administration. | ||
And that man is Jared Kushner. | ||
Now, I've told Alex this before. | ||
I believe this man is none other than your Antichrist. | ||
Look no further. This guy's running the Abraham Accords deal in the Middle East. | ||
He's running the whole gig. | ||
He's setting the stage right now for this new world order to collapse the powers on Trump after he gets back in office. | ||
Everybody's really got to be watching out for this guy. | ||
I mean, he's really been single-handedly... | ||
Doing things since the beginning and, you know, the spotlight's not on him, but all this attention's on Trump, but really this guy's sitting in the background getting ready to set Trump up. | ||
And it's unfortunate because Trump, you know, deep down I believe he's a good man, but, you know, he's been controlled from the get-go and he hasn't been able to do the things that he wants to do, you know, drain the swamp and lock anybody up or, you know, whatever. | ||
And he's moments away from being Julian Assange, but they're not going to do that until they set him up. | ||
And that has to come after this election. | ||
But everybody has to get ready because this antichrist is about to be revealed. | ||
I believe the rapture of the church is right around the corner. | ||
That's why I'm telling people to get saved because tomorrow's not promised. | ||
And let's face it, the main The goal of Christians is to minister the gospel, which we just don't hear enough of. | ||
People just need to really have salvation explained to them because, let's face it, there's a lot of false gospels out there today. | ||
There's a lot of people in this new age cult, you know, works-based gospels, and they don't understand that it's only by the blood. | ||
I appreciate all your thoughts, and I agree with most of what you're saying, at least the sentiment of it, but I'm just going to cut you off because it sounds like you're at a bowling alley and we're coming up on a break. | ||
Make sure you guys go to InfoWarsStore.com. | ||
Be the reason that we're still on the air, that we're able to do these exit spaces, that we're able to broadcast worldwide to millions of people and awaken the world to this threat to humanity itself. | ||
InfoWarsStore.com. Check out Bodies. | ||
We're 40% off. TurboForce Plus. | ||
I always like to push because it's my personal favorite. | ||
unidentified
|
and stick with us. | |
We have a four-minute break, radio, and then we'll be back after that with speakers for the rest of the hour. | ||
unidentified
|
Another great song. | |
I tell you what, the crew is on it this Friday morning. | ||
This is the American Journal and I'm Chase Geyser, your atypical host. | ||
Harrison Smith will be hosting the War Room this afternoon and Owen Schroer will be hosting the Alex Jones Show today. | ||
I always like seeing Owen host the Alex Jones Show. | ||
I think he looks good in that studio. | ||
It's a good vibe for him, good space for him. | ||
I'm wearing that red tie yesterday, power tie. | ||
You know, it's interesting. I read a book called E-Myth Revisited, which is one of my favorite business books. | ||
It helped me out a lot when I started my business in 2016. | ||
And one of the chapters of the book covers some studies about sales. | ||
And they did research on sales numbers among salesmen based on what they were wearing to try to determine if there was an impact on performance. | ||
And they found that Red had the highest performance of sales. | ||
So a black suit with a red tie. | ||
Trump red power tie. | ||
Classic. Blue was second best. | ||
And then as soon as somebody wore a brown suit, the numbers plummeted. | ||
Or a green suit or green tie. | ||
So I always try to wear black and white because it's neutral. | ||
Or red or blue when I present myself because it just, for some reason psychologically, it crosses the line better. | ||
So... Anyway, let's go to T. Luna next. | ||
T. Luna, you have been waiting to speak for some time. | ||
Go ahead and unmute yourself if you're there and say what you have to say. | ||
unidentified
|
Hey, hi. This is my first time talking on Spaces, so this is nice. | |
Thank you. But I'm going to try to go real quick. | ||
I know it's the end of your show. | ||
You did really good today. | ||
Thank you. I want to talk about the elections because at one point I thought that would be good and we could be saved, you know, as long as Trump was elected. | ||
But, you know, the Democrats passed all the crazy laws during COVID. Where they was able to steal the election, well, all those laws are still there. | ||
So even if we beat him, you know, three to one or something, which is probably what we'll do, hopefully he'll still get in there. | ||
But kind of piggybacking off what that other guy was saying, I think it's done gotten so bad. | ||
I'm concerned, what power does he have to fix this? | ||
Like, are they going to activate all these sleeper cells when he gets into office to where he's unable to, you know, start deporting all these Illegal immigrants he's let in? | ||
I just don't understand how he's actually going to get these people out of here. | ||
I think it's going to be too ugly. | ||
It's going to be too ugly, and the sanctuary states, they're not going to turn over these people, and we're not going to be able to get them out of here. | ||
We aren't. I don't know how Our problems, and I was talking about this yesterday, are such that they can't be solved by any one person or any one administration or any one term. | ||
We need consistent victories from America First candidates for America First Americans over the course of at least the next eight years. | ||
Probably the next 16 years. | ||
We need to win every time for as long as possible because without that consistency of solid, honest leadership, everything just gets reversed. | ||
We have seen that the executive branch of our government, the White House, is so powerful now. | ||
Relative to what it was ever intended to be compared to the other branches of government. | ||
It is so disproportionately powerful now, especially in terms of military capabilities and just executive order privileges. | ||
That we see total reversals on some of the most important issues that our nation faces, depending on who the President of the United States is. | ||
So why is it that when Trump is President of the United States, the border is historically well protected? | ||
And then suddenly when Biden is the president of the United States, it's the most vulnerable, open, terrible situation that has ever been the case at our border, basically since Texas was at war with Mexico. | ||
And it just goes to show that the executive branch has unilateral control over these major issues in a way that it definitely should not. | ||
Our president should not be so powerful that these sorts of sways and radical changes happen. | ||
We went from totally private healthcare to basically totally nationalized healthcare. | ||
Over the course of one administration, everything has been sort of compromised since then by the Biden administration. | ||
Every major issue. We have a president who is able to, just on a whim, bomb Iranian proxies. | ||
Basically, what I'm trying to say here is that... | ||
This is not a checks and balances system anymore. | ||
Not only is the intelligence community the unchecked fourth branch of government that was never intended to exist, certainly not in the way that it does, but the executive branch of our government has way too much power and it started with Every administration doing more and more executive orders, | ||
relying less and less on Congress, and it's gotten exponentially worse, and it will continue to get worse unless Congress passes some sort of legislation to mitigate the power of the White House. | ||
We have a semi-dictatorship. | ||
Now, I know that Joe Biden isn't making any decisions. | ||
I know that he is handled by the intelligence community, by his staff, by the people he's surrounded with. | ||
Obviously that's the case, but he's special because he's in cognitive decline and doesn't have all his faculties. | ||
But a president who knows what they're doing can actually execute a tremendous amount of change, probably too much change. | ||
I don't really know what the difference is between the power that Caesar had, Julius Caesar had in Rome, and the power that the President of the United States has today. | ||
What's the difference? What could Caesar do that our presidents can't do? | ||
And when you think about it like that, then it begs the question, does it mean the fall of the United States is next? | ||
Because the fall of Rome came relatively shortly after that. | ||
Who else wants to speak? | ||
Next up, we've got LDN Social. | ||
Colorado is a red state. | ||
Go ahead and open your mic and see what you have to say. | ||
unidentified
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What's happening, Chase Geyser? | |
I gotta tell you that your brain and my brain think like almost virtually the same, right? | ||
Because you said something yesterday. | ||
I felt a connection. Yeah, you said something yesterday on your InfoWars roundtable there. | ||
And you said, we don't need a third party. | ||
We need a second party. | ||
Okay, now I got three points I want to hit real quick here. | ||
And the third point was the most important. | ||
Okay, so first off is time sensitivity here. | ||
This is the final battle. | ||
If we don't get Trump in there, if we don't save this country this term, they're going to lock it down. | ||
You've got AI and all this other stuff that's happening to where they just start jailing dissidents and everything else and shut us all up. | ||
Maybe even shut down Infowars, arrest Alex Jones, whatever – You can't put anything past these people. | ||
And you got to understand that there's a penalty for treason. | ||
And if that penalty is ever actually implemented, then these people, you know, they don't have, they're kind of like going for broke, obviously, because, you know, the penalty for treason, and I don't have to say it. | ||
Number two is that you were saying presidents have too much ability to change stuff, right? | ||
This president changes, all of a sudden we lose all our rights. | ||
And the reason for that is that the average American does not know law. | ||
We outsource that to the Bar Association, and the Bar Association is completely corrupt and definitely needs to be abolished. | ||
You should not have to have a license to practice law in this country. | ||
It's totally ridiculous. | ||
People think of Abraham Lincoln, for example, as one of the most famous lawyers in American history. | ||
He was a lawyer before there was even a bar. | ||
That guy never passed the bar. | ||
He just decided to practice law. | ||
It's an example of... | ||
Those who are in the little club setting up anti-competitive policies to ensure that they have a monopoly on the market. | ||
It's just like what we saw during the lockdowns when small businesses couldn't afford... | ||
We trust, right? Yeah. Yep, exactly. | ||
unidentified
|
Do you know anybody that's a lawyer? | |
Do you know, like, you've got a bunch of friends that's a lawyer that you trust with your entire life? | ||
No, none of us know lawyers. | ||
You know what I'm saying? You go out and get a lawyer. | ||
He's just got a batting average. | ||
And the defense attorneys have a 2% batting average. | ||
And the prosecutors have a 98% batting average. | ||
So why would you give any bar attorney money to defend yourself? | ||
So the third point I need to make here is GOP local involvement. | ||
I'm going to get you as a speaker in a space next time. | ||
But we've only got 20 seconds left before this show is over. | ||
So I hate to cut you off. | ||
I love your first two points. | ||
I want to hear your third point. | ||
But we do have to wrap up the show. | ||
Stay tuned, everyone, for the Alex Jones Show, which you can watch, of course, on X and fan.video. | ||
unidentified
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