Speaker | Time | Text |
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unidentified
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A woman accused in Mexico of several murders and body dismemberments, even removing victims' hearts, is arrested in El Paso. | |
She was wanted for five murders in Juarez. | ||
She's also suspected of being involved in several other killings. | ||
Investigators say she crossed illegally into the U.S. and was operating on behalf of the gang Artistas Did you move too quickly to roll back some of the executive orders of your predecessor? | ||
Rolling back the policies of remaining in Mexico, sitting on the edge of the Rio Grande in a muddy circumstance with not enough to eat. | ||
I make no apologies for that. | ||
unidentified
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Because we need more forces on the border. | |
I don't have the authority to do that. | ||
unidentified
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The president needs to be looking at executive orders. | |
The president needs to be looking at executive orders. | ||
Under Joe Biden, the United States has become nothing less than a massive dumpster for the world's prison populations. | ||
Countries such as Venezuela are known to be emptying out their prisons and their mental institutions, and they're sending them to America. | ||
They're happy to let our open border be the solution to their problems and their responsibilities. | ||
And as the great unknowns wash in, Americans are being murdered at an astounding pace. | ||
unidentified
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Lake and Riley in the state of Georgia was murdered allegedly by an undocumented Venezuelan migrant. | |
Was there a breakdown in the system? | ||
So, Margaret... | ||
unidentified
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First of all, let me say that we don't use the term illegal immigrants. | |
The five men in the van that hit and killed a motorcyclist from Fort McCoy last weekend were all undocumented immigrants. | ||
The FHP arrest report identified Demetrio Moreno Alahua as the driver, as well as four passengers. | ||
The investigator called them all, quote, illegal aliens. | ||
They're accused of hitting the 74-year-old and leaving him, instead running away. | ||
So our complainants got home from the grocery store. | ||
They were unloading groceries, the whole family. | ||
These men came out from the side of the yard, approached them. | ||
One had a rifle, one had a pistol, put guns to their heads, ended up shooting the father, mid-40s-year-old man in the foot. | ||
To add treason to injury, Joe Biden has secretly flown 320,000 illegal immigrants from Latin American airports to 43 U.S. cities while U.S. Customs and Border Protection is refusing to identify which cities they are landing in. | ||
This, after FOIA litigation, revealed the Biden administration's utilization of the CBP-1 cell phone scheduling app. | ||
According to journalist Todd Bensman, under these legally dubious parole programs, aliens who cannot legally enter the country use the CBP-1 app to apply for travel authorization and temporary humanitarian release from those airports. | ||
The parole program allows for two-year periods of legal status during which adults are eligible for work authorization. | ||
This all in an effort to break America, hollowing out the working poor and the middle class while gradually bankrupting the welfare benefit systems funded by the U.S. taxpayers. | ||
unidentified
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Last summer, New York State offered to help by launching a $25 million migrant relocation program, paying an entire year's rent for every migrant family that chooses to move out of the city. | |
The problem is New York's suburban communities don't want them. | ||
I'm here to speak on behalf of the poor, the elderly, who are struggling because of the issues that you deal with and how you deal with them. | ||
If we look at Denver with 40,000 immigrants, and we think that they cost $1,000 a month for housing, it's going to be $480 million for one year. | ||
That's just the $1,000 and I don't think you can get housing for that. | ||
If you feed those people $40,000 at $200 a month per person, I don't think that's possible today. | ||
If any of you have gone to the grocery store, that's $96 million in a year. | ||
We are headed for a tsunami. | ||
And once the hotel's free food and money runs out, untold chaos is the only possible outcome and intention. | ||
John Bowne reporting for Infowars.com. | ||
unidentified
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It's Thursday, March 7th 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. | ||
Welcome back to the American Journal, folks. | ||
I am Chase Geiser, your host this morning. | ||
Harrison Smith will be hosting the War Room this afternoon. | ||
And back in studio tomorrow morning hosting the American Journal. | ||
Owen Schreier is hosting the Alex Jones Show today. | ||
And I think you'll be hearing from Alex Jones. | ||
By the end of the day, I would stay tuned. | ||
Keep your eyes closely viewing everything Infowars on everywhere it is broadcast. | ||
Tomorrow afternoon I'll be hosting The War Room, which I'm always excited about. | ||
It's always fun to be in the different seats and the different studios working with the different crews. | ||
Everything has a different vibe and it's good to change things up. | ||
Don't forget to tune in this weekend as well because I am hosting the Sunday Night Live show now as Owen is launching his new podcast, 30 Minutes. | ||
I like to say that it's half as long and twice as good as 60 Minutes, where every Sunday he's going to be broadcasting, posting, and sharing a 30-minute conversation with a different guest in the 60 Minutes-esque format here in the Infowars studio. | ||
So far, all the guests have been in person. | ||
This is an awesome, awesome podcast. | ||
New initiative that Owen has taken on. | ||
And the first two episodes have been absolutely amazing. | ||
So make sure you keep your eyes peeled for that as well. | ||
Obviously, the big news today is that the State of the Union is going to be tonight. | ||
And we saw some memes, clips, images shared of Joe Biden looking over the prep documents for the speech that somebody else wrote for him to say. | ||
For us to comprehend and understand, despite the fact that our own president can't comprehend or understand anything that comes out of his mouth or anyone's mouth, for that matter. | ||
And I believe the State of the Union is going to be at 9 p.m. | ||
Eastern Time, so the real question is whether or not Joe Biden will be waking up very early to be delivering the State of the Union address, or is he staying up very late? | ||
I know that if I was a Biden staffer, I would be very, very nervous about tonight, and I'll be watching closely because the likelihood of mishaps, errors, and total embarrassment is increasing with every day that goes by. | ||
We know that cognitive decline is something that at first is gradual and later on can be quite rapid. | ||
And we know that even though Joe Biden demonstrated all the signs of dementia or cognitive decline at the beginning of his last campaign, it has gotten markedly worse over the course of the last four years. | ||
To the point where we barely ever see him. | ||
When we see him, it's very controlled. | ||
Of course, the Biden administration made the terrible mistake of deciding to have Joe Biden do a press conference at the same exact time that Tucker Carlson's interview with Vladimir Putin was being aired. | ||
So we got a nice A-B test, a nice juxtaposition of The coherence and health, mental health, of Vladimir Putin versus Joe Biden. | ||
And I know that the left is going to come out and say that Infowars or Chase Geiser or Alex Jones are all Putin shills. | ||
And no one's ever endorsed... | ||
Vladimir Putin here, as far as I can tell. | ||
And frankly, I don't think anybody from the right, either the alt-right, the extreme right, or the neocon, generally more conservative traditional right, has ever endorsed Putin. | ||
Explaining someone's actions is not the same thing as excusing them or endorsing them. | ||
And just because it makes logical sense that Vladimir Putin would have made the decision to invade Ukraine those years ago now... | ||
Doesn't mean that it was the morally right thing to do. | ||
And so when you sit and listen to him talk for a couple of hours, it does make sense. | ||
You can walk away from that interview. | ||
You can walk away from that conversation understanding the position of Russia. | ||
And I understand that perhaps some of the expressed ideas in that conversation with Tucker were carefully engineered in the realm of propaganda. | ||
Maybe not honest. | ||
Maybe not the genuine reasons. | ||
It's very possible. I don't know for sure. | ||
Maybe no one knows for sure. | ||
But to say that it doesn't make sense after listening to that conversation is a mischaracterization. | ||
It absolutely makes sense why Russia... | ||
Wanting to preserve its sovereignty as a nation, regardless of whether its leader is a despot or not, regardless of whether its leader has a conscience or not, it makes sense that they would launch a full-scale invasion, attack, war on Ukraine, given the geopolitical climate. | ||
It's an untenable position for Russia to have NATO on its border into the 21st century. | ||
And we can beat a dead horse. | ||
We can get in all the details of reserve currencies, trade corridors. | ||
And I don't want to get academic and boring and say the same thing over and over again that I've said before on air. | ||
But I can honestly tell you that if I were the leader of Russia, I likely would have made the same decision that Putin made. | ||
Because imagine what it looks like when over 70% of Russia's economy is dependent on natural gas energy exports, and suddenly they have to negotiate with NATO to get that energy out of their country. | ||
That means that their entire economy is leveraged by the international community, which means that there is no sovereignty for Russia anymore if Ukraine joins NATO. There's no autonomy, no sovereignty. | ||
It is now a globalist entity. | ||
And our national security operatives want this. | ||
They want Russia to not have any sovereignty because they are terrified of who may become leaders in Russia over the course of the century. | ||
It is one of, if not the largest nuclear power. | ||
And given that it's not really a democracy or a republic, given that it's pretty much a dictatorship as far as I can tell, that presents a tremendous risk for the United States on a national security front because what if a madman comes into power in Russia and decides to do something rash or impulsive with that tremendous power? | ||
With the ability to veto the existence of the human species on the face of the planet. | ||
And so they can talk all day about how this is a humanitarian crisis and they want to protect Ukraine's democracy and how all these issues are just because the United States is so good and wants to protect the freedoms of innocents all over the world. | ||
The fact of the matter is the only reason the United States does anything on a global scale is because of special interests and national security interests, some of them at conflict with one another sometimes. | ||
It's not black or white. | ||
And the only reason that we're waging this war with Russia is an attempt to maintain our economic dominance over the course of the next century. | ||
Now, what's terrifying to me, and Jordan Peterson has said something to this effect in the past. | ||
He's not somebody I agree with all the time, but he's someone I deeply respect. | ||
I've seen him speak a couple of times. | ||
He's a brilliant man, regardless of whether you agree with him. | ||
He says, if you're scared of what a strong man can do in power... | ||
Referring to Donald Trump. Just wait until you see what a weak man will do in power. | ||
And we have crossed the threshold in this country where before the evil that our country did, the wrongs that it did, the violations of rights that were done, were all executed by very competent people. | ||
The world's supervillains used to be top-of-the-line Olympic-level supervillains. | ||
The ones you would send to the Intergalactic Olympic Games to represent your species. | ||
Now we've crossed this threshold from strong men doing evil to weak men doing evil. | ||
And this is where I become increasingly alarmed. | ||
When you have the Joe Bidens who were never good people, never particularly bright people, now at the helm of Seeming to have totally lost their minds. | ||
Literally lost their minds. | ||
Not in the colloquial sense. Not as an expression. | ||
Actually not upstairs. | ||
Out to lunch. Or in Joe Biden's case, on vacation. | ||
I think somebody did an analysis of it. | ||
What has it been? 41% of the days that Joe Biden has been in office. | ||
I believe he's been on vacation. | ||
Something like that. And he's criticizing Republicans in Congress for taking a break. | ||
Or going on vacation when important issues need to be voted on or negotiated. | ||
Like the border or funding Ukraine or funding Israel. | ||
But the guy has been on vacation 4 out of 10 days. | ||
Imagine how much worse this country would be if he actually showed up to work every day. | ||
Having to manage him. I just imagine him sitting in the Oval Office. | ||
On the floor with his legs crossed. | ||
Playing with Lincoln Logs. | ||
Wow. Several bureaucrats in the intelligence community frantically shuffle papers on his desk and argue with one another about policies and issues. | ||
He's just sitting there playing with Lincoln Logs. | ||
We need to do an AI meme of that because that's really the truth. | ||
So if you were worried about what Donald Trump would do in office, just imagine what somebody who is not mentally present could do. | ||
Just imagine what the Karine Jean-Pierres and the other bureaucrats would Running our country are capable of. | ||
They are not Sun Tzu Art of War level competence like before. | ||
And I don't really know what happened. | ||
We'll open up calls later on in the show today. | ||
We can talk about this. It's probably a number of things. | ||
But I'm very curious to know and explore how it is that our government... | ||
Became so incompetent at corruption. | ||
It's sloppy now. | ||
It's not thinking straight. | ||
It's like after Don Corleone dies and the family struggles to keep the empire running because they don't have the character or maturity of the OG empire. | ||
And maybe it was just because there was a time in this country where there wasn't the internet and there wasn't this mass media. | ||
And in order to come to significant power in this country, it was more difficult to make a name for yourself without a very serious network. | ||
Maybe it's because the world's supervillains used to go to Ivy Leagues when Ivy Leagues actually taught Ivy League level education. | ||
And they networked. | ||
And so in the halls of power in this country, regardless of whether these were good people or evil people, they were the best of the best as far as critical thinking was concerned, political strategy was concerned, things of that nature. | ||
And there was a lot more uniformity in the country 50 or 60 years ago in terms of values and culture. | ||
And consensus around what it means to be an American, what Americanism means. | ||
But now we've got this onslaught of diversity, equity, and inclusion, now JEDI. They threw the word justice on the front because justice. | ||
And environmental sustainability and governance scores, pilots being hired because of their race, surgeons being hired because of their race, press secretaries being hired because of their race, gender, sexual orientation, instead of whether or not they're actually fit for the job. | ||
And though there is a latent effect, we do see the effects of this approach to filling roles of leadership in our country. | ||
And I know our intelligence community is backpedaled off of this, but if you were looking at military or intelligence community recruitment videos from just 24 or 36 months ago, you know exactly what I'm talking about. | ||
There is an active, intentional effort To recruit people based off of their protected identity instead of their ability to fulfill the job. | ||
And you have to keep in mind, I have no problem with minorities having jobs. | ||
I have no problem with people of different sexual orientations having jobs, people of different genders having jobs. | ||
Any immutable characteristic doesn't bother me. | ||
It's when you hire someone because of that immutable characteristic that I'm concerned. | ||
If you would have asked me in 1999 if I was concerned that the surgeon about to perform brain surgery on me was a person of color, I would have said, of course not. | ||
Because I would have had good reason to believe that that person earned the job. | ||
But now, if I go to the hospital, I've got to have brain surgery. | ||
I've got to wonder, is this person actually the best brain surgeon? | ||
Or do they get the job because they're a person of color? | ||
That's the concern. It's reintroducing racism into our consciousness as a nation. | ||
And so often it's the case that these policies and efforts and programs and departments that are created by the government exacerbate the problems that in name they are designed to resolve or mitigate. | ||
So diversity, equity, and inclusion, which claims to be an effort to mitigate or eradicate racism altogether, actually fosters and perpetuates and propagates on a massive scale racist thinking. | ||
I guarantee you now a black person is more likely to say that white people are inherently evil than they would have 20 or 30 years ago. | ||
Despite the fact that 30 years ago we were much closer to the Civil Rights Act being enacted in 1964. | ||
Despite the fact that Chronologically speaking, we were much closer to explicit racism in this country. | ||
It was much more recent that we were explicitly racist 30 years ago. | ||
But now, because of these programs, these initiatives, these lessons and messages that we're sending out to our entire culture, from the age of three onward, this racism has been fostered. | ||
I did a poll really early on. | ||
When I became active on Twitter before Musk ever got in, this poll is no longer visible because Twitter took it down. | ||
But I did this poll and it simply said, which race is inferior? | ||
And I listed four races. | ||
White, black, Latino, or Hispanic, and Asian, I think. | ||
And I can't remember how many thousands of people responded to the poll, but it was one of the first things I ever did that really blew up. | ||
Retweeted by major accounts. | ||
The replies were vicious and brutal. | ||
It was like 80% of the responses said that white people were inferior. | ||
Because they thought, as a white man, I was putting this poll out to try to get people to respond and say that black people were inferior. | ||
Which I wasn't. I was trying to prove that The brunt of racism in this country actually is targeted toward white people. | ||
That was the whole point of the poll. | ||
And I even did a reply to the poll saying, I don't endorse any of these responses. | ||
The fact that so many people responded so vehemently is indicative of a real race problem in this country. | ||
So the whole context of the poll was not meant to be racist. | ||
It was very clear that it didn't violate Twitter's terms at the time. | ||
They took it down anyway. They shut it down. | ||
Maybe I'll dig up the screenshots later and share it with the audience. | ||
But the point is, racism in this country now, I believe, is worse than it has been since before 1964. | ||
It's just inverted. | ||
And there's not a lot of sympathy in the hearts and minds of the American people for racism targeted toward white people. | ||
Because after all, in terms of population size, we aren't a minority in this country. | ||
So it's not like we're a small group being targeted by the mob yet, though these demographic numbers are changing. | ||
And they commit the fallacy of attributing the sins of white men 100 years ago to the character of white men today. | ||
Despite the fact that the vast majority of people in this country today aren't even related to anybody that ever owned any slaves or supported slavery. | ||
My family didn't even come over to the United States from Switzerland until 1893. | ||
So I never directly benefited from slavery in the United States, but apparently I have some sort of white privilege. | ||
So because of these policies like DEI and ESG, we have created incentive, created automation in our political infrastructure that either intentionally or by accident is systemically designed to To make all of our institutions less competent, | ||
whether it's private businesses, whether it's schools, whether it's the military, whether it's the intelligence community, whether it's representatives in the House, senators in the Senate, or the president in the White House. | ||
It is designed to weaken us, which is why I think we see the likes of the CCP and Russia and other foes add fuel to the fire of this problem that we have here. | ||
They give us a different version of TikTok. | ||
So we see this woke ideology constantly. | ||
There is a psychological operation being conducted on the minds of all American people of all ages on all platforms by our enemies, both foreign and domestic. | ||
And we know this is occurring intentionally because these nations, these foes, these opponents of ours perpetuate these attacks on our people, but protect their own people from themselves. | ||
So if you use TikTok in China, every few videos that you scroll through, you're going to have a math lesson or an educational lesson or a mandatory video to watch. | ||
And I don't agree with that because I believe in free speech, but it's alarming to me that they're being so responsible with the platform for their people. | ||
But then when they release it to the United States, it's just... | ||
Pornographic, woke, trash. | ||
It's garbage. People talk about trash TV or video games or rot your brain. | ||
When I was growing up in the 90s, that's something that the millennial generation heard from adults growing up. | ||
But that was nothing compared to what we see now from all the platforms where we consume information. | ||
And we can see the effects of it on our people. | ||
Why else is there an astronomical increase in transgenderism in our country among youths? | ||
It's because the younger you are, the more vulnerable you are to peers. | ||
The more vulnerable you are to peer pressure, social influence, social proof. | ||
And when you have an algorithm that's designed to incessantly show you bad ideas from bad people doing bad things, as a youth, you're going to absorb that and adopt some of that. | ||
And it's going to confuse you and wreck you and harm you. | ||
and it's manifesting in a broken society of broken generations. | ||
So the only real correction to this is for Americans to reclaim America on a cultural level. | ||
We have to remember what it means to be American. | ||
We have to not allow for our history and our culture and our values and ideals to be demonized or villainized by our enemies. | ||
Why do we listen to our enemies when they tell us what we should think about ourselves? | ||
It's like asking an ex-wife or an ex-girlfriend about the character of their former husband or boyfriend. | ||
Probably a biased source, don't you think? | ||
But we have to reclaim it. | ||
We have to embrace the melting pot principle in America instead of this siloed multicultural diversity propaganda. | ||
You got to keep in mind, diversity, equity, and inclusion and ESG are antithetical to the notion of a melting pot because in a melting pot, all of the different ingredients become one thing. | ||
They become one dip or one whatever it is that you're making. | ||
But with diversity, equity, and inclusion, what we're doing is putting different cultures and people together, making it against the rules for any cultural assimilation either direction, and forcing them not to mix, | ||
not to blend. And this is creating conflict and bitterness and hatred and sexism and racism, all the things that were the worst names you could call anybody in the 90s when those terms still meant something. | ||
They're actually fostering that again, intentionally, and it's working for them politically. | ||
They love it. It's how they fund their programs and institutions. | ||
It's how they get jobs that they're not qualified for. | ||
It's how they sell books that no one reads. | ||
It's all part of this massive scam from the top to the deepest roots of our culture. | ||
Stick with us folks. More news on the other side. | ||
Make sure you visit InfoWarsStore.com and be the reason we are still on the air. | ||
Welcome back to the American Journal, folks. | ||
I'm Chase Geyser, your host today. | ||
unidentified
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Love this song. You can say The Weeknd Satanist, but it's a song still. | |
It's like Michael Jackson. | ||
I don't know what to think. I don't know if he's guilty or not. | ||
But whenever Thriller comes on the radio, I'm turning it up, and I'm just going to put the fact that he might be a pedophile in a corner far, far away. | ||
unidentified
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It's so good! Are you kidding me? | |
Gotta separate the art from the artist. | ||
So I've got this clip. | ||
This is from when Harrison hosted the American Journal last week. | ||
He did a great segment on rising food costs. | ||
The new reports show that the percentage of American incomes being used for food is 11%. | ||
So... Basically one out of every $10 that you earn your spending on food, which of course we know is necessary to survive. | ||
And that proportion of our income for food hasn't been so high since the late 80s, early 90s. | ||
And some are saying that the food shortages are orchestrated because of the you will eat the bugs agenda. | ||
We know that China and Bill Gates are buying up farmland. | ||
It's becoming more and more expensive for farmers to produce. | ||
The breadbasket of Europe is being invaded. | ||
That's Ukraine. So supply chains have been disrupted. | ||
And then we have the climate hoax agenda doing everything it can to force us not to eat beef, not to have chicken. | ||
Prices, you guys know. You know. | ||
And now we're seeing alarm bells for the U.S. food supply going off. | ||
I'm going to dive into this article, but first I want you to see this clip that we cut from Harrison's show last week. | ||
unidentified
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It's been 30 years since food ate up this much of your income. | |
The last time Americans spent this much of their money on food, George H.W. Bush was in office. | ||
Read my lips. | ||
Terminator 2 Judgment Day was in theaters. | ||
I need your clothes, your boots, and your motorcycle. | ||
And C&C Music Factory was rocking the Billboard charts. | ||
We had a slight bump, but really just a stabilization through the 2010s. | ||
Slight hike moving towards the 2020s, about midway. | ||
A major drop into 2020. | ||
And then there's this. And then there's this massive spike. | ||
This huge, giant spike that, of course, is caused by a variety of issues, but all of them the consequence of democratic policy. | ||
So this article goes on, how much more are you spending on food each month compared to two or three years ago? | ||
In recent years, our leaders have been flooding the system with money at the same time that global supplies of food have been getting tighter and tighter. | ||
Of course, because of the laws of supply and demand, the smaller the supply is, the more expensive a product is, or the higher the demand is, the more expensive a product is as well. | ||
So as the supply goes down, costs are going to go up. | ||
It's common sense. On the other side of the world, hundreds of millions of people do not have enough food to eat on a regular basis, and children are literally dropping dead from starvation. | ||
Here in the United States, nobody is dropping dead from starvation, but demand at food banks is absolutely exploding as U.S. households struggle to deal with how oppressively expensive groceries have become. | ||
Fortunately, things are about to get even worse. | ||
Check out the article at Infowars.com. | ||
You know, whenever I read about this, it reminds me of the Life Select food storage prep that we sell. | ||
Because when we started selling Life Select or Patriot Supply, whatever it was when we first, we've been selling crisis preparation stuff for 20 or 30 years on this network in some form or another. | ||
I was going back and listening to old ads from The Jones Show. | ||
Selling survival gear, survival equipment. | ||
We always pitch the end of the world could happen in any moment. | ||
A nuclear attack could happen in any moment. | ||
A mass flood, a hurricane, a tsunami, solar flares. | ||
Our infrastructure collapsing, whether it's the dollar, whether it's the internet itself, all cell devices. | ||
Any number of these catastrophes can and inevitably will happen in some form or another. | ||
And that's why it's smart to have storable food. | ||
I keep three months of food at my house via this Life Select. | ||
It's good. I tried the mac and cheese. | ||
It was really good. And just in case, the reason I bought it was because I was just an InfoWars listener when the massive freeze happened in Texas and nobody could go anywhere for several days and we were living off peanut butter. | ||
And so I figured, hey, I'm just going to keep this around in case something like that happens again or the apocalypse. | ||
That way I can eat when God tells me whether or not I'm damned to hell or made it to the kingdom. | ||
And that's a good angle. | ||
That's every bit reason enough to get life-selected Infowarsstore.com to prepare for the sudden onset of a major crisis that disrupts everything. | ||
But now that inflation has gotten so bad, now that 11 out of every $100 that you make is being spent on groceries or food, it's introduced this unfortunate problem or this unfortunate problem Economic situation where Life Select is not only your best bet, | ||
25 years shelf life, to be prepared for a sudden crisis in the next decades, but it's the cheapest way as far as I can tell. | ||
How much do we sell a month's worth of Life Select for? | ||
Can we pull up the store page for that product specifically? | ||
Yeah. It's now, I believe, the cheapest way to buy a month's worth of groceries. | ||
If I was a college kid and didn't have an Italian wife who loved to cook and was very picky about food, I would be living off of this stuff. | ||
It's 277 bucks. | ||
I don't know if you can live off of $277 worth of food in any other way. | ||
Our monthly grocery bill at HEB is astronomical. | ||
We brought it down from $1,500 a month to, I think, $750 by really working the coupon system and the rewards and paying very close attention and meal planning. | ||
We really worked it out at my house. | ||
But still, where else can you get a month's worth of groceries for $277? | ||
So if you're really on the grind right now, if things are really tight right now and you leave the grocery store with less than is on your list because of inflation and costs and struggles that all Americans are facing right now, seriously consider getting a month's worth trying it. | ||
See if you like it. You don't have to use it for a crisis just because that's what it was designed for or originally pitched for. | ||
Repurpose it. And InfoWars could be your source of groceries. | ||
We could be the cheapest digital grocery store in the United States of America in the face of this radical inflation and shortage of food. | ||
So I highly recommend that you check that out at InfoWarsStore.com. | ||
Life Select. So we've got this massive shortage happening. | ||
We've got thousands upon thousands of acres being conglomerated. | ||
Keep in mind that the Midwest is some of the best soil in the world for agriculture, similar to Ukraine. | ||
And they alternate corn and beans every year in the field for scientific reasons. | ||
You're not supposed to grow the same crop in the same field two years in a row. | ||
But at one point in time, McLean County, Illinois, where I grew up, Bloomington, Illinois, headquarters of State Farm Insurance, because there's so many farmers there, I believe produced more corn per capita than any other county in the world. | ||
This was years ago. I'm not sure that it's still true. | ||
But it's one of the last things made in America. | ||
Food. And it's being conglomerated and the farmers don't own their land anymore. | ||
They purchase the right to farm land owned by others, whether it's major banks, major investors. | ||
Everything has shifted to a point where we have an unrecognizable farming community. | ||
What is more American than a farmer? | ||
Look at pictures of the Great Depression. | ||
Look at pictures, footage from early 20th century, pictures from Civil War era. | ||
Everybody is living on and working off of the land that has gone away and the land that is being worked isn't even owned by those who work it. | ||
It's funny how in 1860 the men who worked the land didn't own it either. | ||
Now we've gone full circle and the men who worked the land don't own it. | ||
So stick with us, folks. | ||
We're coming up on a break here in 20 seconds. | ||
Make sure you visit InfoWarsStore.com. | ||
More great news to cover in the next segment. | ||
Make sure you follow at real Alex Jones on X at Harrison H Smith at Owen Troyer 76 at real chase geyser and share the link everywhere. | ||
A link can be shared. | ||
Welcome back to the American journal folks. | ||
I am Chase Geiser, your host this morning. | ||
The media is now claiming that an assassination attempt on Zelensky after Russian missile strikes near his motorcade occurred. | ||
Ukraine's key southern port city of Odessa has been coming under increased Russian drone and rocket attack of late, resulting in fears that Moscow could possibly be eyeing its takeover next. | ||
I believe it is against... | ||
International law, Geneva Conventions, to assassinate a head of state. | ||
And it's not to say that just because it's against the rules doesn't mean it wouldn't happen. | ||
But it seems to me that a lot of these accusations, whether it's Russian space nukes or Russian assassination attempts of Zelensky, are accusations made explicitly because they are a violation of the rules of war, the international law. | ||
And it seems to me, likely, that if Zelensky is driving around in Kiev while Kiev is being bombed daily, every once in a while an explosion is going to happen close by his motorcade, regardless of whether or not the targeting is intentional. | ||
And then you have to ask the question, what incentive would Putin have to eliminate Zelensky? | ||
Because we know that Ukraine is a proxy for the United States. | ||
We know that Zelensky is a puppet of the United States. | ||
Even though we can't get him to convince his wife to come to the State of the Union. | ||
So, by eradicating him, you don't actually solve the problem from a Russian standpoint. | ||
Because the next person in line is just going to be another puppet in this satellite of the United States. | ||
Even Vladimir Putin himself expressly Shared in the interview with Tucker Carlson that these were U.S. satellite countries in conflict. | ||
So it doesn't make sense. | ||
It makes more sense to assassinate Putin from a military standpoint because Putin actually runs Russia. | ||
But Zelensky doesn't run Ukraine. | ||
The United States intelligence community runs Ukraine and has ever since 2014 at least. | ||
So it doesn't make sense that Zelensky would be assassinated from a Russian strategic standpoint at this point in time, as far as I can tell. | ||
Because they're not going to want to eliminate him from leadership until they have their own puppet that they can install and replace him with, which likely will occur at the end of this conflict. | ||
Probably part of the surrender terms and negotiations that are going to occur. | ||
Any minute now, it seems to me that this is just a false accusation. | ||
The article goes on to say it is perhaps for this reason that President Vladimir Zelensky made a visit Wednesday to the Black Sea Hub. | ||
A bit of a risky move. | ||
The Ukrainian leader also brought along Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis for the official visit. | ||
Russia reportedly sent missiles or drones against the city at the very moment of their visit. | ||
It's being bombed every day like London is being bombed. | ||
London was being bombed every day for months. | ||
And it wasn't as if the Nazis were trying to assassinate Winston Churchill just because an explosion happened within a few blocks of parliament. | ||
It seems like a stretch to me to claim that there's an assassination attempt. | ||
If they wanted him dead, they would just kill him. | ||
They don't need to bomb. They can drone kill him. | ||
No problem. Look what we did to Soleimani. | ||
You don't think Russia has that technology? | ||
You don't think that they could whack Zelensky if they wanted to? | ||
The guy's constantly uploading videos of where he is, constantly taking pictures with the background showing exactly where he is moments ago. | ||
They're not going to assassinate him. | ||
It just doesn't make sense. He might inadvertently die in an explosion while his capital is being bombed. | ||
And for all those, by the way, who suggest that Ukraine can still win this war or that Ukraine is even winning this war, I can't believe anybody out there still exists with such audacity. | ||
How many times has Moscow been bombed in this conflict compared to Ukraine? | ||
unidentified
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Thank you. | |
Because the last I checked, if your capital is being bombed every day and there's no reciprocity of violence, you're probably not winning a war, just historically, generally speaking. | ||
You're probably losing that war if your capital is being bombed. | ||
That's the object of a war. | ||
If you're trying to have total victory in war, the objective is to take control of the capital. | ||
I don't know. Sometimes I assume everybody just knows that, but that's just a fact. | ||
So the bombing of capital is not only a strategic move to disrupt the centralized source of all leadership in a country, but it's also a morale thing, a symbol thing. | ||
It's a slapping thing. | ||
After the fight is over, they're just slapping Ukraine around now. | ||
Like, oh, well, can't defend your capital, huh? | ||
Can't defend, you know, we're coming, we're coming. | ||
That's part of it. It's a morale thing. | ||
It's a psychological thing to be constantly bombing the capital. | ||
So this assassination attempt accusation, I just don't buy it. | ||
Even Ukraine came out. Didn't Ukraine come out and say that Navalny died of a blood clot and that they don't think that it was poison? | ||
I mean, after he died, it was very suspicious. | ||
But he's not even assassinating his own political distance. | ||
Frankly, Russia is protecting Edward Snowden. | ||
Russia protected Tucker Carlson. | ||
The subject of another rumor of an assassination attempt. | ||
Probably not true. | ||
And the whole world is upside down. | ||
It's upside down world. Invert world. | ||
Forty years ago, all the countries that committed the greatest acts of violence... | ||
Violation of rights against human beings, their citizens, and others are now giving asylum to citizens of nations previously committed to the protection of those rights. | ||
It's upside down world. Biden considers sending U.S. Army's money to Ukraine. | ||
So now we're just going to weaken our own military for the sake of Ukraine. | ||
The U.S. government is considering tapping into the U.S. Army budget in order to provide Ukraine with much-needed additional military aid, Bloomberg reported on Wednesday, citing people familiar with the matter. | ||
Joe Biden really wants Zelensky's wife to come to the State of the Union. | ||
One of the sources told the news agency that a final decision has not been made yet. | ||
Some reportedly sought by the White House and the Pentagon reserves is around $200 million. | ||
It's a small fraction of the $61 billion worth of Ukraine President Biden has been busting from Congress. | ||
But we can't protect the border. | ||
But we can't declare an emergency at the border. | ||
But... President Biden is claiming that he doesn't have the authority to do what needs to be done at the border. | ||
He can protect the border of Ukraine. | ||
It's legally easier for him to protect the border of Ukraine than it is, according to him, to protect the border of the United States of America. | ||
Why doesn't he just send the military to our border and use the army budget for that and actually do something about the invasion happening at our own border at a much greater scale than the invasion of Russia in Ukraine itself? | ||
unidentified
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Well, there's no incentive. | |
That's why. There is no incentive for globalists, Democrats, or any member of the political class, except those accountable to the American people on some semblance of what used to be our republic. | ||
There is no incentive for this political machine to protect our southern border. | ||
They want these people to come in by the thousands. | ||
They want them to populate the Leftist states, they're not trying to flip right-wing states, they are trying to increase the population of Democratic states so that when the census comes around, these Democrats are allocated more representatives in the House of Representatives based on the numbers. | ||
Keep in mind, this was a major controversy in 2020 when the census occurred. | ||
Republicans were trying to ensure that Or at least stating that they were trying to ensure. | ||
I don't know if they really were. | ||
Bogans were trying to ensure that illegal migrants or non-citizens not be counted in the census, which of course is then used to redistrict and determine how many representatives different counties and states get. | ||
And the Democrats were pushing back against this. | ||
Remember that controversy over that field on the census form that asked whether or not you were a citizen or whether or not everyone in your household was a citizen? | ||
That was what that was meant for, for this purpose. | ||
They pushed back. Why did they push back so hard against that? | ||
It's not racist not to count somebody in a census. | ||
It's because they want the representation in Congress. | ||
So it doesn't matter whether or not these migrants come over here and register to vote or participate in our electoral process. | ||
It does matter, but that's not actually the issue at hand here because regardless of whether or not that specific issue is resolved at the state legislatures and dealt with, They're still going to be counted in the federal census. | ||
And if they're counted in the federal census, that means that states like California and New York and other leftist strongholds will have more representatives because of the number of people simply residing in their jurisdiction regardless of their citizenship status. | ||
So the left not only is... | ||
They are capable of stopping this border invasion, but they're unwilling to. | ||
In fact, they're sponsoring it, and they sue states like Texas when Texas tries to come out and stop it. | ||
They want millions of people to come in over the course of the next six years so they can permanently turn the United States of America into a one-party state, folks. | ||
unidentified
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folks. | |
We can't let it happen. | ||
More on the other side. | ||
unidentified
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I tell you, I'm so sick of Tom Petty. | |
It's Tom Petty is like ice cream sundae. | ||
It's one of the best desserts of all time. | ||
It's absolutely delicious. | ||
But after you have a thousand of them, you want to vomit. | ||
And he was an American hero. | ||
He was great. I swear to God, if I hear a Tom Petty song one more time, I'm going to pull my hair out. | ||
Not because it's best. Same with the Beatles. | ||
I'm okay with never hearing a Beatles song ever again for the rest of my life. | ||
Some of their songs are the best songs ever written. | ||
While my guitar gently weeps, I even like Dear Prudence. | ||
That was a great song. One of my favorites off the White Album. | ||
Very underrated. I never want to hear another Beatles song or Tom Petty song ever again for the rest of my life. | ||
I'd rather listen to Thriller despite the fact that Michael Jackson evokes thoughts of terrible things we're going to take calls in an hour Thank you. | ||
And I want to cover the news and what you think is going to happen about the State of the Union. | ||
Whether you think Biden's going to have major gaffes tonight and just totally blow it. | ||
I almost wonder if he's being set up to fail tonight so they can use it as another chip. | ||
To make the case for replacing him as the candidate. | ||
We saw reports yesterday that Michelle Obama's office, not just her passively in an interview, her office came out and said that she wasn't going to run for president because there's been so much interest around her. | ||
The Biden administration knows that the Democrats are more supportive of Michelle Obama than Joe Biden. | ||
And I think that the Biden administration simply asked her or the DNC asked her to make a statement because it's become a problem. | ||
And we saw that they had this press conference with Biden the day that a court ruled that he was retarded at the same exact time as the Vladimir Putin interview with Tucker. | ||
That was a setup to make him look terrible. | ||
And even in their own ads and their own content, they're pushing videos showing Joe Biden walking like a two by four at the border. | ||
A telltale sign of cognitive decline and dementia, that stiff walk. | ||
And it's gotten to the point where everything they put out that contains him or has him in it is terrible to an almost comical degree. | ||
Like, this has got to be on purpose, right? | ||
This isn't just an accident, right? | ||
Everything he says, everything he does is an embarrassment. | ||
And it's not just because I'm right wing. | ||
I would be so embarrassed if Trump was acting like that, even if his policies were what I agreed with. | ||
It's a terrible precedent. | ||
So in my opinion, I think the DNC is conspiring against the Biden administration. | ||
And I think the intelligence community is involved as well. | ||
They are trying to figure out a way to get Joe Biden out of office, but it's complicated. | ||
Because they know that if he resigns now, that introduces a Kamala presidency. | ||
And then she'll have that leverage to suggest that she should be the Democratic candidate for president of the United States. | ||
And she may not be on board with stepping aside for a better candidate to run. | ||
We know that she was abysmally unpopular today. | ||
During the last primary election, and that lack of popularity will manifest likely throughout the rest of her career. | ||
So she's not a viable candidate for the president of the United States, I don't think. | ||
She was a token VP. So they got to figure out who is going to be the candidate. | ||
Then they got to figure out how to gracefully get Biden out of office while simultaneously stifling any of Kamala Harris's political ambition. | ||
Either through leverage or incentives, what have you. | ||
And they floated names like Newsom, who for some reason did a debate with Ron DeSantis, even though Newsom wasn't running for president. | ||
For some reason, he ran campaign or political ads in Florida, even though he's the governor of California. | ||
Conversations are being added behind closed doors, folks. | ||
And I wonder if tonight's State of the Union is going to be a massive Biden setup for him to humiliate himself and prove to the world that he is not fit for office. | ||
Welcome back to the American Journal, folks. | ||
I am Chase Geiser, your host today, covering the news and the New World Order agenda. | ||
Who told me not to say sort of so much when I hosted last week, and now they're telling me not to cross my arms. | ||
unidentified
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Tell you what, guys, it is tough out there. | |
All of my natural inclinations, dispositions, instincts are wrong. | ||
You have me up here like the Sphinx. | ||
Doing the broadcast. We should integrate the Sphinx into an AI promo. | ||
Make it talk. Make it sing. | ||
So, I know the crew is wrangling a couple of clips. | ||
There's a couple of stories here that, as I was going through these articles, are just mind-blowing. | ||
And I try to avoid anecdotal click-baity type stories for the most part. | ||
Because I'm trying to look at the 30,000 foot view and anecdotal incidents. | ||
Sometimes I think are a distraction. | ||
But sometimes they're so good that That you just can't ignore it. | ||
Top ATF agent struggles to disassemble a Glock during anti-Second Amendment CBS News segment. | ||
I'll run this clip in one second. The top ATF federal agent comically struggled to remove the slide from a Glock pistol during an awkward CBS News segment demonizing 3D printed firearms, popularly known as ghost guns. | ||
Go ahead and run it. And Chris is here. | ||
unidentified
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He's one of our leading experts. | |
So that's the frame Holy shit Cleveland steamer Wow He just gives up? | ||
Thank you. | ||
Thank you. | ||
He just gives up. So was it a Glock 19? | ||
unidentified
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I think that's my parts and attach that. | |
Yeah. Simply attach that on. | ||
It can be frustrating to take those things apart, but. | ||
unidentified
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And to buy those parts. He's not even able to get back together. | |
That's the easy part. This guy. | ||
This poor guy. We're not regulated under the law. | ||
We're not allowed to do that. | ||
You would like to do that? That's up to Congress. | ||
Ah, unbelievable. | ||
Unbelievable. These people know nothing about firearms. | ||
And they constantly demonize them. | ||
They don't even know the difference between an automatic weapon and a semi-automatic weapon. | ||
They don't even know if an assault rifle is actually an assault rifle or just short for armor light. | ||
They don't get it. They don't understand whatsoever. | ||
For some reason, they think that the most gun violence occurs from an AR-15 in mass shootings and disregard the fact that the vast majority of homicides committed with guns in the United States are small arms. | ||
And they're happy with giving guns to the cartel. | ||
It's Operation Fast and Furious. | ||
They're happy with ensuring that every Ukrainian has a firearm. | ||
But they're constantly trying to take away your firearms. | ||
Why is that? | ||
It's because they only want you to have a gun when they need you to use it for their political agenda. | ||
And right now, your right to bear arms, your possession of a firearm, is perceived as a threat to them. | ||
I went and saw Dune last weekend, and they were running trailers for that Civil War movie, which is coming out. | ||
We covered the trailers of that movie in the fall when they were released. | ||
And there's articles coming out saying that this is an insensitive time to be coming out with such a movie because America actually is on the cusp of Civil War. | ||
It seems to me that this movie is very likely going to be an anti-right-wing, anti-right-wing extremist propaganda piece. | ||
It looks like the protagonist is a legacy media journalist. | ||
It looks like all of the antagonists in the movie are right-wingers, vigilants, extremists. | ||
So it seems like it's riding off of the wave or momentum or zeitgeist of the January 6th insurrection propaganda that has been incessantly shoved down our throats to the point of total psychological brainwashing. | ||
And it's going to be popular because Civil War is in the zeitgeist and good art often explodes because it resonates and brings the zeitgeist to another chapter. | ||
I'm going to go see it regardless. | ||
It's up my alley to see these sorts of things. | ||
But they don't want you to have a firearm because they know that as long as you have a firearm, you are more difficult to subjugate. | ||
They don't want you to know the truth. | ||
They don't want you to see how ridiculous they are. | ||
They avoid direct confrontation or conflict at all costs. | ||
They refuse to respond to any replies or any arguments or any debates. | ||
They don't show up. | ||
They don't actually make the case for their political position. | ||
They just strong-arm it and executive order it time and time again, and they have for years. | ||
Do we have this KJB clip? | ||
Okay, wait a second. And even the World Economic Forum Just in a small way that grinds my gears, turn off the replies to their expo. | ||
So they post every day this globalist crap, whether it's pseudoscience or just dogma from the demonic philosophy, really theology that they have. | ||
And then they turn off the replies because they don't want to get ratioed, because they know everybody hates it. | ||
And they don't want anybody to see that everyone hates it. | ||
So they don't want any evidence or proof that there are actually people out there who disagree with them. | ||
You have to keep in mind, the World Economic Forum is perhaps one of the most evil organizations in our time. | ||
And absolutely everything they say is 100% perfectly politically correct. | ||
Isn't that bizarre? There's been this advocacy for years on the importance of political correctness in the face of microaggressions and systemic racism and privilege. | ||
And it's been used as this tool to change our language itself, to change definitions themselves. | ||
To reframe, rebrand, and reprogram the way that people communicate and think. | ||
You also have to keep in mind that the way most people think is in the language that they speak. | ||
They say that once you learn a second language, you know that you know it well when you dream in that language. | ||
Because language is so deeply intertwined with thought itself. | ||
So when they... Gain a monopoly over language and communication. | ||
And when they have the power to change on a whim what words or phrases mean, how words or phrases make us feel, that means that they can change your very thoughts themselves. | ||
You don't need voice to skull technology to brainwash a people to control the people. | ||
You just need a good marketing department. | ||
A good lie and a way to tell it over and over again. | ||
A way to hide the truth. Because the truth eradicates all lies and deceit. | ||
And so that's why we're seeing the greatest evil coming from the organizations that are the most politically correct. | ||
Some great irony. | ||
And that's why we're seeing the World Economic Forum refuse to hear any feedback from the audience, refuse to show or allow it to be shown that they are opposed by average people the world over. | ||
They want top-down directives, not consensus, not collaboration, not some one-world democracy where everybody is heard. | ||
They just want top-down directives. | ||
And now we see Karina Jean-Pierre refuse to say whether Biden will debate Trump. | ||
Let's see what she says. Now that the field is down to two, is President Biden going to commit to a debate with Donald Trump? | ||
That's something for the campaign to speak to. | ||
Well, we know when the debates are going to be. | ||
We know where they're going to be. | ||
Is he going to go? | ||
You should speak to the campaign. | ||
Look how uncomfortable she is with that question. | ||
Joe Biden said, I can hardly wait to debate. | ||
You realize the correct answer here is Joe Biden is ready to debate Donald Trump anytime, anywhere. | ||
Even if that's not true, that's what she should have said. | ||
That is the lie that Jen Psaki would have told, which makes the case for why I think she was so much better at her job than Karina Jean-Pierre. | ||
She's so uncomfortable and awkward and trying to hide a smirk because she's embarrassed knowing the answer. | ||
Why wouldn't she just lie and say Joe Biden is ready to debate Trump anytime, anywhere? | ||
Joe Biden will debate Trump as soon as he comes back on Twitter and allows his asinine policies to be replied to by the American people. | ||
Something like that. I don't know. | ||
I know that Jones doesn't like it when we run clips multiple times, but every time he does it, I put a run clip twice token in my bag. | ||
I'm going to spend one of those tokens now. | ||
I want to watch that one more time. | ||
Play really close attention to her facial expressions and mannerisms here. | ||
Now that the field is down to two, is President Biden going to commit to a debate with Donald Trump? | ||
That's something for the campaign to speak to. | ||
Well, we know when the debates are going to be. | ||
We know where they're going to be. | ||
Is he going to go? | ||
You should speak to the campaign. | ||
In 2020, once we got down to one-on-one, Joe Biden said, I can hardly wait to debate him. | ||
unidentified
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How about now? I'm going to sound like a broken record. | |
You should reach out to the campaign. | ||
Why is this a campaign thing? | ||
Because it's an election. | ||
unidentified
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It's a debate for the 2024 presidential election. | |
She acts like it's a silly question. | ||
I'm not asking what argument he is going to make at a debate. | ||
I'm just asking. We're not talking about arguments. | ||
You're talking about his attendance. | ||
You have a lot of questions in here about these polls concerning the president's age and his acuity. | ||
Do you think that it is going to quiet concerns about the president's age and acuity if he decides not to debate? | ||
What I can say about that is not talking about the debate, that's something for the campaign to speak to. | ||
I'm not going to speak about that. | ||
To your question about age, I think I sort of answered that. | ||
unidentified
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I think, you know, you're going to see the State of the Union tomorrow. | |
You're going to hear the president lay out his plans. | ||
You're going to hear the president, a president who has had a successful three years of progress, still a lot more work to be done, but a progress nonetheless, and how he's going to build on that. | ||
All she needs to say is that, from my experience, President Biden It's always willing to do whatever is in the best interest of the United States of America. | ||
And if, when the time comes, it is in the best interest of the United States that Joe Biden spent his time bickering with a bitter Donald Trump, then he will. | ||
And if not, then he won't. | ||
You don't have to answer the question by... | ||
You can answer the question without answering the question. | ||
It was just so bizarre, the way she responded to that. | ||
It's almost like... I wonder if she was concerned about accusations that... | ||
The Biden administration was using tax dollars to fund its campaign. | ||
Do you remember weeks and weeks ago? | ||
There might have been a lawsuit. | ||
I don't know if the crew remembers. There were allegations that some of the things that she said behind the pulpit during these press conferences could be perceived as campaigning for the president and it's illegal to use tax dollars to fund a campaign. | ||
So maybe she's trying to avoid any campaign-related statements because she doesn't want these lawsuits to escalate. | ||
Or this issue to ask, that's possible if we're exploring all options here. | ||
The other avenue too is, if you've worked in any corporate organization, you know that internal politics are just as, if not even more sometimes, embattled as political. | ||
External politics. So it's possible that the White House staff and the Biden administration that works directly for Biden doing administration, federal government level stuff, is this separate department from the campaign who is managing the campaign, who is leading the campaign, who is involved in the campaign. | ||
And it's possible that the campaign... | ||
Leadership realizes that Karine Jean-Pierre is a disaster and doesn't want any of her statements to interfere with their control of the campaign narrative. | ||
And it's possible that she's been asked not to talk about the campaign by the campaign because she'll muck it up. | ||
And that would explain some of the discomfort, some of the smirks, some of the lack of eye contact. | ||
I think it's possible that whoever's running the campaign doesn't like her and she knows that and she's just holding her tongue there and it makes her uncomfortable. | ||
But who knows? One thing's for sure, Joe Biden doesn't know when or where the debates are or who he is, where he is, or what job he has. | ||
So... We've got food crisis everywhere. | ||
We've got State of the Union happening. | ||
We've got Karina Jean-Pierre not even acknowledging whether or not Biden's going to participate in these debates. | ||
The border is wide open. | ||
All of our money goes everywhere else. | ||
And it's always when victory seems impossible that we have some great miracle. | ||
It's true in personal lives as well as on a national level. | ||
Americans seem to do their best when faced with the worst. | ||
And part of the reason I think that we've weakened so much as a nation is we haven't had real struggle in a long time. | ||
We won World War II with soldiers who lived through the Great Depression or grew up in the Great Depression. | ||
These were tough people. After World War II, Despite the massive inflation in the 70s and Vietnam and the crash in 2008 and 9-11, despite these terrible things and struggles and challenges that we faced, nothing compared to the Depression. | ||
Where people by the millions in the United States actually starved to death because they couldn't find food or couldn't buy food. | ||
Mass starvation during the Great Depression. | ||
Something I don't know if it's ever really happened in the United States other than that. | ||
Conflict. And so we are a weaker people now than we used to be because we haven't faced the struggle, this challenge. | ||
But times are about to get hard, and I believe that we will rise to the occasion. | ||
Jordan Peterson was doing a podcast. | ||
I can't remember where I saw the clip. I might have told the story on air, but I'm going to tell it again because it makes my point. | ||
I was talking to Alex about this briefly in the halls. | ||
I saw him speaking about the genetics of psychologically our genes themselves. | ||
And I didn't realize this, but as I was scrolling through on Instagram or something, I just saw this clip. | ||
It was fascinating to me. | ||
Did you know that we have genes that remain dormant until we're under a state of stress? | ||
And when we are stressed out, those genes activate. | ||
So obviously you don't always have, for example, a bunch of adrenaline pumping through your body. | ||
But if you see something Exhilarating or experience something terrifying, that gene activates, boom, done. | ||
It's not just constantly producing adrenaline for you to experience. | ||
That would be amazing. | ||
So, we've talked about generations in this country where we have strong generations and weak generations, and I actually think that's a misunderstanding of how a generation works. | ||
We often think that, oh, well, if a generation has these characteristics, then it must always have these characteristics, and the only way those characteristics will go away is if the next generation is different. | ||
Even if you go back to Plato's Republic and some of the things that Socrates said, he was complaining about how the youth of the nation were irresponsible, and all the same stuff you hear from Boomers today. | ||
It's been a problem of the human condition forever. | ||
But I think that when things get really tough in this country, on literally a genetic level, we're going to change gears as a people. | ||
So millennials aren't going to act like millennials have traditionally acted. | ||
Boomers aren't going to act how boomers have traditionally acted. | ||
Gen Zers, Gen Xers aren't going to act how they traditionally acted because when we face this crisis, there is an activation. | ||
And our mindsets will change and we will rise to the occasion because we still have the greatest degree of freedom in this country relative to other nations. | ||
And that freedom is the reason for our success because when we get activated as a people, our free market capitalist leaning infrastructure is more efficient than centralized top-down structures. | ||
So we were able to win the Cold War because centralized management of an economy is much less efficient than the invisible hand from Wealth of Nations by Adam Smith. | ||
And when we were activated, we were efficient. | ||
We were able to win World War II after Japan attacked us on Pearl Harbor. | ||
Despite the fact that our Navy was crippled and our infrastructure was weighed down and we were still struggling with the ends of the Great Depression, we ramped up infrastructure and production so much. | ||
We made so many planes, ships, weapons, uniforms, everybody activated, pitched in. | ||
And we won because our economic system was more efficient than the economic systems of a fascist Germany or a Soviet Russia. | ||
I know we weren't at war with Russia in World War II, but we kind of were. | ||
Not explicitly, but we knew that they were going to be a problem after the war, so we were preparing for that, and we won that too. | ||
For all this is whether you think it was based on a lie. | ||
So what I'm hoping is that there's still enough of that edge, that advantage in our system itself, Our freedoms themselves that when we are activated, we prevail. | ||
And I think we will time and time again. | ||
So when things get tough, I think that we're going to bounce back and solve this problem and deal with these leftists who won't allow us to share the truth, see the truth, and constantly lie to us as if we're stupid and then smirk about it. | ||
And then they... Push this culture upon us and our children. | ||
That's what's sick about it to me. I always cared about children because that's just what a normal good human being does. | ||
Maybe you guys have noticed this too. | ||
When you have your own kids, you get it on a whole other level. | ||
Talking about genes activating, there is something that is turned on when you have a kid. | ||
That was dormant before where you care to an astronomically greater degree about the future than you do when you're just going stag. | ||
And I hope, I hope that for the sake of our children, we win this because they lie to our children from the age of four through college, guys. | ||
About everything. About what happened in history. | ||
About what we are. About whether or not they are even good. | ||
About whether or not they are even male or female. | ||
They break down their entire identity so that they can rebuild it into something conducive to the success of their political agenda, which is, their agenda is, the crippling and weakening of America because globalism cannot exist as long as America or any other superpower, for that matter, remains sovereign. | ||
It's the reason that we're trying to Wrestle and pin Russia because their sovereignty is a threat to globalism, even though there's a lot of evil that goes on and corruption that goes on in their country. | ||
And our sovereignty in America is the last obstacle, the last front in the world against the likes of Klaus Schwab and the New World Order and the World Economic Forum and the Alex Soros and the Zuckerbergs of the world, the Bill Gates's of the world. | ||
And I wish I could just sit down and make a manual or a to-do list or a guide on how to solve this problem. | ||
If I could know anything, I wish I knew that. | ||
Every day I go to the whiteboard in my office here and I revisit. | ||
What I wrote on it yesterday, and I make a new list of things that I would like to do, ideas that I have so I don't forget anything. | ||
And I'm able to be a productive and efficient person by doing that. | ||
But when it comes to our problems in this country, why is it that we can't simply find our path, find our way, without civil war, without violence, without any of the easy answers that you guys come to? | ||
unidentified
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When we stand up, we're going to... | |
We need a nuanced conspiracy to take back this country from the conspirators who have ruined it. | ||
More on the other side. Welcome back to the American Journal. | ||
I am Chase Geiser, your host this morning. | ||
It's interesting to me, funny to me. | ||
I don't know if you all noticed this on Infowars.com when you were perusing the news today. | ||
One article about how terrible Russia is for its assassination attempt of Zelensky, and then there's another article about how the German MP calls for attack on government buildings in Moscow. | ||
So while they criticize Putin for alleged attempts to assassinate a head of state, Of course, a violation of international law, rules of war, Geneva Conventions. | ||
They simultaneously push this gaslighting where they're calling for the explicit targeting of government buildings. | ||
Russia's Ministry of Defense building, or the HQ of the country's intelligence service in central Moscow, are legitimate targets that should be attacked. | ||
The Deputy Chairman of the German Parliament's Oversight Committee, Roderick Kaiswetter, as stated. | ||
I'm not sure if there's a clip for this or not, but if there is, will you dig it up? | ||
The lawmaker, who is a former German army, Bundeswehr, general staff officer, insisted that Ukraine should take the war to Russia. | ||
Ukraine should be given the opportunity to take the war to Russian territory. | ||
Just like I said earlier, how many times has Moscow been bombed versus Kiev? | ||
Well, apparently I'm not the only person that's noticed that this is an issue in the war. | ||
So they should be given the opportunity to take the word of Russian territory. | ||
He told a talk show on state broadcaster ZDF, noting that Defense Minister Boris Vistorius had already called for the same in April of 2023. | ||
The only thing I will add from my side that is also necessary to attack the Russian Ministry of Defense or the Intelligence Service, the MP said, it is absolutely clear that this is not about civilian targets and not about the people, but about explaining the To the Russian population that they are the aggressors. | ||
So it's not about targeting civilians. | ||
It's about explaining to civilians that they are the aggressors and then targeting them. | ||
Unbelievable. Tell me, international community, tell me, NATO, environmentalists, leftists the world over. | ||
What do you think happens if Moscow's government buildings, intelligence buildings... | ||
Begin to receive attacks. | ||
Begin to get bombed. | ||
Do you think that Russia, in the context of history, in the context of what we know about Putin, in the context of everything that's happened from today back to 894 AD or whatever year it was that Putin started off with in the Tucker interview, do you think that if we bombed Moscow buildings, That the Russians would come out and make a statement and say, okay guys, we get it. | ||
This conflict has obviously gone way too far. | ||
We're going to go ahead and back off now. | ||
And hopefully we can just move on, forgetting this ever happened. | ||
Do you think that's how they respond? | ||
You got to keep in mind, this nation is famous. | ||
By this nation, I mean Russia, for throwing millions and millions of bodies at conflicts to keep cities. | ||
They're famous for abandoning cities altogether during the Napoleon era. | ||
For a strategic advantage in a conflict, they are only going to act out more, more aggressively if they're bombed. | ||
If you want to stop nuclear war, I highly recommend that you don't bomb Moscow, that you don't bomb intelligence headquarters. | ||
We're lucky it didn't happen after we destroyed the Nord Stream 2 pipeline. | ||
It still gets me every time that comes up. | ||
I don't know if you guys are the same way. | ||
First thing that comes to mind for me every time the Nord Stream pipeline comes up is the audacity of the Biden administration to first claim that they were going to blow up the pipeline if Russia invaded Ukraine. | ||
And then when it happened, they claimed that they didn't do it. | ||
I mean, that's the definition of gaslighting, right? | ||
Like, if I told you I was going to slap you in the face, if you blinked, you blink, I slap you in the face, you say, you shouldn't slap me in the face, and I just said, I didn't slap you. | ||
unidentified
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That's some screwed up stuff! | |
And just because there was a six-month gap or a three-month gap between Biden saying they were going to destroy the Nord Stream pipeline and it actually happened, is that really enough for people to forget? | ||
We forget so easily every single lie told to us. | ||
We forget so easily. | ||
The harms of the Patriot Act and everything that Edward Snowden revealed, it's still a major headline whenever it's revealed to the public in the United States that the intelligence community of our country has been illegally spying on candidates or citizens or organizations or political action committees. | ||
We act like we're so surprised. | ||
It's major breaking news. | ||
The story came out 10, 12, 15 years ago. | ||
None of the policies changed. | ||
Nobody got fired. How many people lost their job because of the MKUltra scandal in the early 70s? | ||
You remember that? Any Infowars listener should know what MKUltra is, or was, or still is. | ||
After World War II, there were all sorts of bizarre efforts to get an edge over communism. | ||
And there's a couple of reasons for this. | ||
There was a genuine fear of communism, I believe, in our intelligence community. | ||
And the second is, we ramped up military-industrial spending so much in order to win World War II. That when the war ended abruptly, it was going to be incredibly disruptive for the government and major contractors to lose all that revenue suddenly. | ||
Same thing happened with the vaccines after the pandemic. | ||
Those drug companies made so much money. | ||
Selling those vaccines that when the pandemic ended, it was incredibly disruptive. | ||
And that's why Biden came out and said he was going to cure cancer and put a cancer board together and gave a bunch of funding, tried to replace that a little bit, give him a little cushion, a little welfare, corporate welfare. | ||
So after World War II, the intelligence community did a little whiteboarding and anything was on the table. | ||
You can bring any issue, any idea to the table. | ||
We're going to try everything. | ||
We're going to spend as much money as it takes. | ||
We're going to do anything. Somebody comes up to the table. | ||
How about astral projection? | ||
Alright, let's fund it. Department next. | ||
Someone comes up to the table. | ||
Voice to school technology. | ||
All right, you got a department. That was what it was like for decades after World War II. And it comes out that they have documents on things like astral projection and voice to school technology and espionage. | ||
And eventually it came out that they were doing a little operation called MKUltra. | ||
I know you likely know about this, but for the sake of new listeners, they were doing psychological experiments for decades on the general population and students using hallucinogens like LSD. Many of the subjects of these studies were not aware that they were subjects in these studies. | ||
They were being drugged unwittingly, video recorded, audio recorded, followed. | ||
Famously, the Unabomber, Ted Kaczynski, was one of the subjects of one of these MKUltra studies, specifically conducted by a psychology professor at the university he attended. | ||
He volunteered for the study and was subjected to psychological torment for an extended period of time. | ||
You can read all about documented public information. | ||
Then when it came to light that these incredibly inhumane experiments were being conducted, To the scale of the same level of evil almost we saw during the Holocaust where you hear stories of medical experiments on Holocaust prisoners, concentration camp inmates. | ||
And then we were doing similar experiments on our own prisoners. | ||
Anton is rumored to be one of them. | ||
And the general populace, unwittingly. | ||
And college students. | ||
With majorly powerful drugs, it comes to light that this is happening, and the intelligence community destroys all the evidence, all the documents, similar to the Nazis when they were losing the war, burning all the documents and the papers and the evidence. | ||
I don't think a single person was fired, lost their jobs. | ||
Supposedly, they shut MKUltra down, but the more likely outcome, since there was no accountability, is that they just renamed it. | ||
And it's still operating today. | ||
So there's no accountability for the lies, and we forget so easily all of the sins our government perpetuates against us. | ||
When are we going to realize that we're an abusive relationship and we need to break up? | ||
More on the other side. Welcome back to the American Journal, folks. | ||
unidentified
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I'm Chase Geyser, your host this morning. | |
We are going to open up the phone lines. | ||
Call in 877-789-2539. | ||
I'm going to give the crew this segment to screen the calls, and we'll start taking the calls at the top of the hour in 13 minutes. | ||
Again, that's 877-789-2539. | ||
877-789-2539. | ||
Open lines, you can call about whatever you want, but I am particularly interested in thoughts about the State of the Union this evening, whether or not it's going to be a setup, whether or not the DNC and... | ||
Coordination or collaboration with the intelligence community is plotting to get Biden out before it's too late for this election in the fall. | ||
And we see this headline on Infowars.com. | ||
Election interference. Democrat, Michigan Secretary of State is coordinating with five battleground secretaries of state to fight a common adversary. | ||
So these are people that are paid with state tax dollars. | ||
Coordinating, collaborating together for a political victory, it seems to me to be a violation of campaign finance laws, if not directly, indirectly. | ||
Problematic for secretaries of state to be conspiring with one another. | ||
For the outcome of federal elections that don't relate directly to any of their states individually. | ||
Seems to me that this has all sorts of problems. | ||
I want to run the clip here in a second. Michigan Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson announced she's coordinating with six other secretaries of battleground states to fight a common adversary ahead of the 2024 election. | ||
Let's go ahead and run this clip. | ||
unidentified
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Michigan leading the way in a lot of these efforts to ensure that democracy continues to exist, that every vote is heard and counted at the ballot. | |
But you're not just helping Michigan. | ||
You're part of a group of secretaries of state that are really working on this around the country. | ||
Can you tell us about that? Yeah, one of the things we saw in 2020 was that, particularly in battleground states, we were all battling a common adversary, a really nationally coordinated effort to undermine the will of the people, both before, during, and after Election Day. | ||
And we learned to semi-coordinate with each other in 2020. | ||
You know, Katie Hobbs and I was Secretary of Arizona at the time. | ||
She and I are friends. We would talk regularly. | ||
But there was really no way for us to consistently as a team, the six of us in those six battleground states, which is Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, Michigan, Arizona, Nevada, and Georgia, to constantly both compare notes and also say, okay, how are we going to respond to this nationally coordinated effort with a coordinated response? | ||
And so that's Now we have that. | ||
We actually spent 2022 working to build that team in these six states. | ||
You've got strong voices now in Arizona, in Nevada, in Georgia, in Wisconsin, in Pennsylvania, and in Michigan. | ||
And we're all talking. | ||
We're all working together. We're all very clear about what we're up against. | ||
Because the battle over the future of our democracy isn't going to be in the post-election process only. | ||
It starts now. And it starts with how various court battles are playing out, and we'll see all of us getting hit with the same types of sham lawsuits that are lawsuits, you know, or PR campaigns masquerading as lawsuits. | ||
So as we work together, as we talk to each other, we can develop common strategies and be much more powerful and united as a team, even across party lines, than we would be if we were just fighting these battles in our respective states by ourselves. | ||
Now, she appears to be tuning in for that segment from her home. | ||
And it's obviously a beautiful home. | ||
I don't have a problem with that. | ||
But it's fascinating to me when I see some of these backgrounds. | ||
You can learn so much by the background of a video like this. | ||
How perfectly put together that house is. | ||
The plants behind her on the table with the book conveniently placed under. | ||
It looks like a hotel room. | ||
And I don't understand how these people live such lies. | ||
There were rumors that Nancy Pelosi's husband was Closeted when that man was arrested for invading their home. | ||
And I remember saying something like, the problem isn't whether or not Nancy Pelosi's husband is gay. | ||
The problem is that our politicians all live lies. | ||
That's the issue at hand here. | ||
That's why this is disturbing. That's why this is interesting to look at. | ||
And when you go to work and you speak to a legacy media backed by the intelligence community, saying talking points backed by the intelligence community, being politically correct, literally working for a political machine, regardless of whether or not it's ethical or legal because of cult-level loyalty or just dependence on this machine. | ||
And then when you have your home set up like a hotel, so it's not a home, it's just a really nice house, And you wear the right things, and you say the right things, and you do the right things, and you go from one fluorescent room to another fluorescent room, from one giant box to another smaller box. | ||
And your whole life, when you look back on it, you realize that your job was to tell lies for the benefit of bad people. | ||
Is that fulfilling? | ||
I mean, I tell you what, folks, this is the best job that I ever had, working in Infowars in any capacity. | ||
It's the most fulfilling job I've ever had. | ||
I make less than half of what I made before I worked here, but I am four, five, six times happier because rather than creating Facebook advertising campaigns for life insurance policies, I'm doing something that I believe actually matters. | ||
It's fulfilling. It's important. So why is it that people are so ready to... | ||
Sell out fulfillment for a big box that looks like a hotel. | ||
I'd rather live in a small house that feels like home than a mansion that feels manufactured by someone else for someone else. | ||
I had a client years ago when I still lived in California. | ||
This guy was so rich. | ||
Nice guy, too. He'd been a doctor. | ||
And he had this property that was in a remote area of California. | ||
It was his second home. | ||
So he lived in a more regular home. | ||
And he had this just amazing mansion on top of a hill in California. | ||
And if any of you have been to California or seen some of the outskirts of the major cities, it is rolling hills of green and trees. | ||
It is one of the most beautiful places ever. | ||
In America. And we went out there to do a shoot because we were going to build a website for him and push a book that was coming out. | ||
And so I'm walking through this mansion, trying to figure out which room we should shoot the videos in, what the different locations are. | ||
And he bought this house totally furnished. | ||
So everything was perfect, staged in this house. | ||
He walked in, every room had details figured out by someone else. | ||
Just purchase like that, almost like an ego thing, because he wanted to have a property in this part of California on this hill, and the view was astounding, infinity pool and sliding glass doors and massive windows. | ||
And we decided to shoot the video in the library. | ||
It made sense, of course, since the purpose of some of this content was to push a book. | ||
And I remember carefully going through the books on the bookshelf behind my client just to make sure that everything was going to be okay in case anybody looked. | ||
So one of the books we pulled off the shelf was The Bell Curve, for example, a very controversial book about IQ and race. | ||
I think it's a fascinating book, but it was not appropriate for that to be in the background for this guy. | ||
It was only going to cause problems for him in his book if somebody noticed or complained about it. | ||
So little stuff like that. | ||
And I was talking to him about it, and I realized that he had never read any of the books on the shelf. | ||
And then I realized that there are companies where you can buy books by the foot or the yard for the purpose of filling up a bookshelf in a library. | ||
So this guy's got this house that he doesn't live in full-time to satisfy his ego, and it's furnished with furniture he didn't buy or pick out that's not very comfortable. | ||
Half the technology in the house he doesn't know how to use. | ||
He never swims in the pool. | ||
He never uses the gym. | ||
He doesn't read the books. | ||
He didn't even buy the books. | ||
It felt like a stranger's house. | ||
To me, of course, it was. | ||
Why would you buy that, live there? | ||
I don't understand. These people have all their values totally backwards. | ||
And they live a lie, and they insist that we live that lie along with them. | ||
Make sure you call in 877-789-2539. | ||
Open lines, talk about whatever you want. | ||
I'm particularly interested in the State of the Union address this evening, whether or not the DNC is conspiring to... | ||
Remove Biden either from office or at least from the candidacy and how that's going to play out with the Kamala VP and the other contenders, potential contenders for this race. | ||
And in the meantime, before we take calls after this two-minute break, make sure you go to Infowarsstore.com. | ||
Check out Bodies, which is 40% off, I believe still, and Turbo Force Plus. | ||
Between these two products, you will feel good and think more sharply. | ||
I highly recommend both these products. | ||
I particularly love Turbo Force Plus. | ||
It will light you up like a Christmas tree. | ||
Check it out now at TurboForce, excuse me, at InfoWarsStore.com. | ||
That'd be the reason we are still on the air. | ||
unidentified
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This is such a good song. | |
I don't know if they ever had another hit either. | ||
It's just one of those random This is such a mood setter. | ||
It's crazy how not just turbo force that can change your mindset in a moment, but a song. | ||
You ever had that experience where you hear a song for the first time in 10 years and for a moment you remember exactly what that chapter of your life felt like the last time you heard that song? | ||
What's that called? Synesthesia. | ||
Okay, crossing of the senses. | ||
Such a powerful, powerful tool. | ||
Okay, let's take some calls. | ||
First up, I want to hear from BS Assassin in New York. | ||
BS Assassin, always good to hear from you. | ||
unidentified
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What do you have to say? Yo, what's up, brother? | |
I'm not doing my push-ups. | ||
unidentified
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Give me one second, bro. Get a swole out here. | |
Get a swole, son. Yeah, I just want to say that we all got to get on the same page. | ||
Got to stop talking about nations and countries. | ||
It's a global cabal. | ||
I got news for you. They got bad actors. | ||
They got good actors. Putin's their resonated bad guy. | ||
They're all working together. | ||
They're following Kissinger's plan. | ||
Do you really think, right, our government, that poisoned us, that passed a wartime propaganda act against its people, and that it's facilitating an invasion, wants us to win a war? | ||
Does anyone really, really believe that? | ||
Yeah. Well, when was the last time we won a war? | ||
Precisely. Precisely. | ||
So we got to bring all our troops home, right? | ||
And we got to straighten out this tyranny. | ||
I was puking the other day as everyone was posting to the poisoner-in-chief. | ||
Everyone's feeling bad for the guy that rolled out poison instead of the people that got poisoned. | ||
You know what I mean? That's the truth. | ||
I mean, I called up three senators, three congressmen the other day. | ||
I called up Ron Paul DeSantos and my representative from Long Island, whatever his name is. | ||
Can't get in touch with any of them. | ||
I told them all, you know, mRNA, radio label, definition, any material bound to a radioactive substance. | ||
I don't know why I'm the only person that could use Google and make these connections and see that all the symptoms that everyone is suffering are right on par with radiation sickness. | ||
You know what I mean? And then the cross-contamination from radiation, the shedding, you know what I mean? | ||
Do you take X2? What's up? | ||
Do you take our X2 iodine? | ||
But nah, I take Himalayan sea salt and stuff like that. | ||
I think iodine is supposed to be a good stalwart against radiation, but I'm with you on all the chemicals in the vaccines and even the radioactive frequencies that come from our cellular devices. | ||
The point is this, bro. | ||
We ain't got much time, bro. | ||
This is live action. | ||
They're killing America, everybody. | ||
All the troops Everybody that wants to come together, you got to come together, and we got to lock up all these freaking tyrants that are working on behalf of the destruction of America. | ||
Just the Smithsburg Modernization Act alone is treason. | ||
You know what I mean? Every one of your congressmen should be up on every single one of them to be asked, are you aware that you're operating under a wartime propaganda act against the American people? | ||
I think people are starting to wake up. | ||
I think people are starting to become aware of it because even this clip I want to show before we go to break, Adam Schiff is getting booed after a primary victory in California because people are realizing that we're constantly at war on behalf of everyone else except for our own people. | ||
Let's go ahead and run it. | ||
unidentified
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I want to thank you all. | |
This is a victory speech. | ||
I've never seen somebody heckled so bad at a victory speech. | ||
unidentified
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We are so lucky. | |
So lucky to live in a democracy where we all have the right to protest. | ||
We are so lucky to live in that kind of democracy. | ||
I'm so lucky you guys are making me look like a moron in my victory speech. | ||
I'm so lucky! Welcome back to the American Journal. | ||
We're going to be taking calls for the remainder of the show today for an hour. | ||
We've got a long segment coming up, so we should be able to get to a bunch of calls without being cut off or interrupted by any of these advertisements which keep us on the air. | ||
Let's hear from Keith in Florida. | ||
Keith, I want to talk about NASA and their lives. | ||
What's on your mind? Hey, Chase. | ||
unidentified
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Hey, man. Hey, so yeah, I think this is something that's kind of important because NASA, you know, it's so scientific, you know, it's bipartisan. | |
There can't be any kind of political aspects to it, but we need to figure out why they're lying to us so much and why it's so obvious. | ||
Is this a flat earth call? It's pretty easy to point out. | ||
unidentified
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No, no, no. I mean, you can get into that. | |
It's okay if it is. I was just trying to prepare myself mentally. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah. Oh, sure, sure. | |
No, I mean, that's kind of a side note. | ||
Okay. You know, people call flat earth a styop, but I think the term is because flat is not a shape, right? | ||
But anyway. So if the earth is flat, it has no shape. | ||
Well, I mean, there could be a shape, but a flat is a... | ||
It's not flat. It's a rectangular prism. | ||
It's just very thin. | ||
And if you keep digging, it'll fall through. | ||
unidentified
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No, no, no. It's probably a flat plane that we're in the middle of a... | |
It's the same exact shape as the rectangle pizza from public school. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah. Anyway, but get back to NASA, because it all ties in, but NASA obviously lies. | |
Like, if you look at a lot of goofs from the ISS, I mean, it's just clearly a green screen. | ||
There's all kinds of glitches. | ||
You, being a video editor, to be able to easily tune in with that. | ||
They definitely faked a lot of footage. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah, they do layering. | |
They do augmented reality. | ||
They're on wires. | ||
They do flips. Ask yourself why any time they do a video on IFS, they're just doing things that try to get there in zero gravity. | ||
They don't show you any experiments they're doing. | ||
They just do flips. | ||
They move around objects. | ||
Oh, look at this water beating and whatnot. | ||
I mean, it's kind of a joke. | ||
And you can look up tons and tons of goof videos on that. | ||
But I think they need to be audited, and not in a financial way, but in a free speech way. | ||
Why are they lying to us? | ||
It should be called out. I think people can get on to that because, hey, this is supposed to be a bipartisan organization. | ||
They get $26 billion a year. | ||
It's $71 million a day. | ||
And where's that money going? | ||
They have the biggest green screen studio in New Orleans. | ||
I'm getting a little bit of feedback, and I'm not sure if it's on our end. | ||
Keith, do you have the radio on in the background by chance, or are your headphones just blasting? | ||
unidentified
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No, yeah. Let me... | |
Because I want to keep having this conversation, but it was just distracting me a little bit. | ||
So yes, they're astronomically funded. | ||
Yes, they fake a lot of stuff sometimes as well. | ||
So let's get into the weeds here with this. | ||
I'm somebody who even though I know that they lied a lot during the Cold War and there was some fake footage that was used. | ||
I know the green screen. I've seen the clips and done the research there. | ||
I'm somebody, as it stands now, and just as I respect you, Keith, for your perspective on this, I'm genuinely curious about it. | ||
Please humor me as somebody who's going to fall into the normie category here. | ||
I generally accept that we went to the moon. | ||
I don't know if the live stream broadcast was real or not, but I think we were there I think that space is real. | ||
I think the planet's round. I think we're actually in orbit. | ||
I generally accept the consensus narrative. | ||
And I hate to use the term consensus because it's used by lefties so much. | ||
But I'm willing to admit that I'm wrong and I'm genuinely curious about this. | ||
So can you explain to me a little bit about how you got into the weeds with the NASA hoax stuff? | ||
What convinced you and what conclusions you've arrived at? | ||
Because I have a feeling that though many of our listeners are on the same page as you, many are on the same page as me too and would be interested to hear what you have to say. | ||
unidentified
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Right. Yeah. So, I mean, the question comes down to, well, why would they need to fake it? | |
If they just, if all that stuff is real and they can do everything they say they can do, Why not just do it? | ||
I mean, they're lying. I mean, they're lying to kids. | ||
You know, young kids grow up with this and say, oh, astronauts are heroes. | ||
You know, you can be an astronaut and everything. | ||
But why would they need to fake all that stuff? | ||
I mean, it just kind of goes against them being scientific when they're clearly faking a lot of things. | ||
Especially the ISS. Let's do the moon thing, for example. | ||
Let's do the moon thing, for example. | ||
So, we were in the space race with Russia. | ||
And... We're good to go. | ||
To go to the moon. So they conspired together to have somebody have a victory so that they could stop spending astronomical sums of money on the space race that was moot or for nothing. | ||
That's one explanation. | ||
But it makes sense to me, given that the space race was a propaganda war, it was an info war in the Cold War about capitalism versus communism. | ||
It was very important, since it was a propaganda war, that the Outcome of the space race would be a propaganda victory. | ||
And had they not broadcast the astronauts on the moon, supposedly live from space, it would not have had the impact that it did. | ||
So it seems to me possible that they did, in fact, land on the moon, but that the broadcast was faked. | ||
unidentified
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Sure. Yeah, I mean, that's a possibility. | |
I don't know for sure. I'm just shooting with you. | ||
Yeah, for sure. I mean, that's a possibility. | ||
But, I mean, at the same token, they could just all be fake. | ||
You know, like, we need to challenge the basis, you know, our presuppositions on why we believe what they're telling. | ||
You know, why we're picking up what they're putting down. | ||
You know, if they can lie about stuff that should be pretty easy, like footage on the ISS, and they do conference calls with kids, and like, oh, look, we can do a flip. | ||
We can move this ball around, but, you know, there's tons of green-screen goofs, and it's obviously that they're lying. | ||
You know, that's kind of shaky grounds. | ||
So, I mean, I think, for me, it stems from just kind of doing away with all the kind of indoctrination on that stuff. | ||
You know, when you're a young kid, you're impressionable. | ||
It's really hard to shake that. | ||
A lot of people end up with cognitive dissonance when they're confronted with obvious evidence of lies. | ||
But I think it all needs to be challenged. | ||
Because it really just comes away with, I don't have any answers. | ||
It all comes from questions. | ||
That's how you get answers. | ||
But I just want to drop a plug to a guy named Austin Witsit. | ||
He runs a YouTube channel, Witsit Gets It. | ||
And he's trying to put together audit NASA, basically going and having them answer questions that should be easy, but seem to be pretty difficult. | ||
There's a lot of contradictions and everything. | ||
But I think it's important that we kind of, some people kind of think of that, go down that route, because it is supposed to be all scientific. | ||
But if we can prove that they're lying, they need an answer for that. | ||
And things can fall apart. | ||
And I think it's kind of foundational, too, at the end of the day. | ||
Yeah, so the crew found an example of a clip that's critical of NASA, calling them out a little bit here. | ||
I want to watch this and keep you on the line. | ||
I just want to give the audience an example of some of the content. | ||
It's not critical. It debunks it. | ||
It debunks the debunkers? | ||
Okay, well, let's run it and see what it says, and maybe we can talk about it, Keith. | ||
unidentified
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Ever since Neil Armstrong first set foot on the moon, the conspiracy theories began. | |
Everybody loves a conspiracy. | ||
That's Paul Delaney, astronomer and senior lecturer at York University. | ||
Can you effectively generate that type of illusion today? | ||
The answer is probably yes. | ||
But back in 1969, 1771, the answer is no. | ||
Conspiracy number one. | ||
How is the flag waving in no atmosphere? | ||
NASA's new image was everything. | ||
And if it wanted to secure more government funding, the public needed to be impressed. | ||
A flag standing on the surface of the moon which is limp isn't nearly as good a photo op. | ||
They made it look like it was waving in the wind by installing a horizontal rod on top of the flag. | ||
However, the astronauts were unable to extend the entire way, giving it that waving effect. | ||
Conspiracy number two. | ||
Why aren't there any stars in the photos? | ||
A limited exposure range is the reason why we can't see stars in any of the Apollo photos. | ||
Unlike our eyes, cameras can take in only a certain amount of light. | ||
If the exposure is too high, everything will look too bright. | ||
Too low, everything will look too dark. | ||
The sun was shining on them. | ||
They were reflecting brightly. | ||
The surface was reflecting brightly. | ||
Stars on Earth, let alone the moon, it's the same brightness. | ||
They're relatively faint. | ||
Conspiracy number three. | ||
The shadows are wrong. Conspiracy theorists point out that since the sun is the only light source on the moon, shadow angles should be consistent. | ||
However, when sunlight hits the surface of the moon, some of it bounces off, meaning the moon itself becomes a reflective light source. | ||
Professional photographers refer to this as a film. | ||
That's why an astronaut in the lunar module's shadow isn't completely shrouded in black. | ||
The moon's light is softening the shadow. | ||
Conspiracy number four. | ||
Why didn't the astronauts die from radiation exposure? | ||
The spacecraft's hull shielded the astronauts from being exposed to lethal radiation while traveling through the Van Allen belts. | ||
Layers in Earth's magnetic field that trapped solar wind particles, creating high levels of radiation. | ||
Once cleared, they were exposed to natural background radiation. | ||
You certainly wouldn't want the astronauts on the surface of the Moon in their spaces for days on end, but for the hours that we're talking about on the Moon's surface, the radiation environment is comparable to the radiation environment we have here. | ||
Conspiracy number five. | ||
Who filmed Neil Armstrong stepping on the moon? | ||
We gotta send people to the moon to stand on the moon and not have a camera strapped to the outside of the lunar module. | ||
NASA put cameras on every piece of the Apollo spacecraft. | ||
That's why we have stunning images like this. | ||
This. And this. | ||
You don't go that far and miss the photo opportunity of a century of history. | ||
If you're still skeptical, several photos of the moon's surface have been taken over the decades, showing Apollo lunar module exactly where Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin parked it 50 years ago. | ||
The notion that a conspiracy of the magnitude that's required, needing tens of thousands of people to stay quiet about it for decades, again, you know, the U.S. government can't keep a secret for more than a few hours, generally speaking. | ||
Okay, that's enough of that. So, I know that the music and tone of that video is a little patronizing. | ||
I didn't mean for it to be, but that was actually a really good... | ||
Video in response to some of the conspiracies that I've heard. | ||
What do you think when you see the counter-argument? | ||
Have you looked into that as well and come up with your own responses to some of those? | ||
Have you debugged the debuggers? | ||
unidentified
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Well, I mean, sure. | |
Well, just picking one. | ||
You could go all day on it, but picking one is the seeing stars, right? | ||
You had Neil Armstrong, and they did the conference after they came back. | ||
They said, oh, actually, I didn't see any stars. | ||
But then you have contradicting claims or people who are in space like, oh, they were super bright and vivid, which you would expect them to be, because you're seeing them not through an atmosphere. | ||
They should be a lot brighter. | ||
So there's some contradiction there. | ||
But, I mean, you just have to assume that they're all doing that in good faith and they're giving these explanations in good faith, too. | ||
Which I'm just skeptical about. | ||
I know we're all here. Everyone listening is skeptical. | ||
Sure. That's why we tune in. | ||
Yeah, I love it. I don't think the people who question the moon landing or the shape of the earth even or space itself, I don't think those people are inherently stupid just because I disagree with those notions. | ||
I think it's healthy. But just because we're lied to constantly by our government doesn't mean that sometimes they don't tell the truth. | ||
You know, like if Hitler says two plus two is four, he's right even though he's Hitler. | ||
Yeah. Right. | ||
So let me ask you this. | ||
Do you think space is real? | ||
Do you think we've ever been to space? Do you think the whole thing is made up? | ||
Do you believe in the dome, ether theories? | ||
What do you think the nature of the universe is? | ||
unidentified
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Sure. I mean, I think that we are the center of the universe, and I think that is kind of godly, too. | |
It would make sense. You know, we're here. | ||
We're put here. You know, God created the Earth. | ||
But I mean, from a scientific standpoint, try to do an experiment where you have a vacuum and a pressure system next to each other without a barrier. | ||
Try to recreate that. | ||
Not really possible. | ||
How is it that we have an atmosphere, space is a vacuum, wouldn't all the gases and stuff just fly to the lowest density place? | ||
unidentified
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Yeah, I understand. And then whirling, twirling through space in three different directions. | |
We're spinning, we're going around the sun, that whole system is moving. | ||
Say, oh, well, you don't feel like you're moving when you're in an airplane. | ||
Well, what about turbulence? | ||
You feel that, right? | ||
So any kind of shift in that You're going to feel. | ||
So why do you think it is that these lies have been perpetuated than if they are lies? | ||
unidentified
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Sure. I think it's foundational. | |
You know, if you can be grounded on shaky ground and you build everything off of that... | ||
So it started as a small lie and a bigger lie has been needed every time to pay for it? | ||
unidentified
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Yeah, and then, you know, people get into all these organizations, all these governments, all these space organizations are in on it. | |
Well, you've got compartmentalization, right? | ||
We know all about that. So, you know, if you can be drilled into it as a kid, the Rockefeller educational system, you know, globe in every classroom, it's one of the first things you really kind of conceptualize as a child is that where we are, you know, it's foundational. | ||
So if you're able to build a false It's hard to go all the way back and kind of pull away that indoctrination and kind of rebuild. | ||
I think it sounds kind of not important, but I think it's foundational. | ||
I think it is more important than people really think. | ||
So that's where I am on it. | ||
I just have more questions. | ||
I don't have answers. I think everyone should just be skeptical. | ||
Um, until you can really be convinced with evidence. | ||
Keith, I'm really glad that you called and thank you for spending 15 minutes with us talking about this. | ||
I know that time is of the essence. | ||
I appreciate you calling any time. | ||
We're going to move on and talk about more things while we have time left in this segment. | ||
I want to talk to... | ||
Oh, I saw who I wanted to talk to next. | ||
Let's do... | ||
Rick, Washington State. | ||
Rick, what's on your mind? Hey, good morning. | ||
unidentified
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Hey, man. Um... So, I got some body disease and it works great. | |
I've got some severe arthritis and it cuts down about half of it. | ||
Is it your knees, your hands? | ||
unidentified
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Where do you have it? Well, both my knees and my hands, actually. | |
Time in the Marine Corps kind of destroyed my knees and ankles, but... | ||
My hands, you know, doing a bunch of manual labor when I got out. | ||
My hands are pretty wrecked. | ||
Bodies really, really helps. | ||
But I've got to beef with you guys. | ||
Okay, what's up? I ended up getting a pretty good job last year, and I've been slowly introducing my coworkers to some of the stuff. | ||
You know, I've been giving out the brain force because that stuff is awesome to keep your alert levels up. | ||
And I've been handing out bodies, but people have been asking me, where do I get it from? | ||
And there's no website on the bottles. | ||
You guys need to put the website on there. | ||
Yeah, you're absolutely right. | ||
I agree with you. I'll talk to our partner about that. | ||
unidentified
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Just throwing that out there, you know, people don't necessarily have to watch them for support it. | |
You know what I mean? Like, if... | ||
If the website was on there, they could just go to the info store and get stuff, which they want. | ||
Man, that's crazy. I can't believe we don't... | ||
Now, I knew we didn't have the website on the front of the bottles. | ||
It's not on it at all. | ||
I know. I'm looking all over it now. | ||
I'm holding it now. I actually asked about this a couple of weeks ago because I make a lot of the ads during the break that feature the products. | ||
And rather than flying in the graphic of the InfoWarsStore.com logo, I want it to be on the front of the bottle so whenever there's a product in a shot in our ads, there's also the website. | ||
Yeah. And I did raise that issue, but I didn't realize that the website wasn't anywhere on the bottle at all. | ||
So even if you have it in your hand, you can't see where it was purchased from. | ||
That's crazy. Yeah. | ||
Okay. Well, thank you so much for raising my awareness on that. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah, I've got a bunch of coworkers. | |
Like, this stuff is great. Where do I get more of it? | ||
Like, it doesn't say on the bottle? | ||
Like, hell. Yeah. | ||
Wow. Well, thank you for bringing that up. | ||
I'm glad that was your beef, because there are other people that have beef with us, and we try to take a lot more than a few minutes of our time on air. | ||
Rick, I appreciate you calling in. | ||
Thank you so much. Let's hear from Brian in Oklahoma. | ||
Brian, what is on your mind? A few moments back, you were talking about free enterprise, and I think that's a keyword psycho... | ||
unidentified
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In the 90s, it was the Clinton administration bringing on NAFTA, and Ross Perot was forewarning us that the sucking wind was going to be our economy. | |
What we really need to be focused on is free enterprise. | ||
We, as a country, can freely commerce across states. | ||
Okay? That's the promise. | ||
What we need is free enterprise to be able to, without regulation in our private endeavors, free of regulation so that we can be entrepreneurial. | ||
And that's what hinders our growth and our ideas is because of regulation. | ||
It's not free market. | ||
We can have China. | ||
We can have Mexico. We can have I just lost audio. | ||
Sorry, guys. Can't hear anybody. | ||
Can we go to Marcus in Idaho and see if I can hear him? | ||
Sorry, guys. I have a little bit of a technical issue here on our end. | ||
We'll get to the bottom of it and pop back into the calls here in a second. | ||
Marcus, are you there? Can you hear me now? | ||
unidentified
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Yes, I can. Okay, great. | |
Thank you. Sorry about that, Brian. | ||
Didn't mean to cut you off. Go ahead, Marcus. | ||
unidentified
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I want to talk about American Samoa allowing 11 electors for the presidency. | |
That is an impossibility. | ||
That is an illegal act because American Samoa... | ||
It's a protectorate. It is not a state. | ||
They don't have citizenship. | ||
Yeah, I didn't think there would be two days in a row where the American Samoan issue would come up. | ||
That's crazy. And how do you know that? | ||
unidentified
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Because of the fact you have to have a passport to go to Guam, Puerto Rico, American Samoa, and the Virgin Islands. | |
Right? So, therefore, it is an illegal act by the Democrats. | ||
And people have been so dumbed down. | ||
That they don't realize that. | ||
They think, oh, these guys can come over to America. | ||
Well, yeah, they have the right to do that, but they're not citizens. | ||
And what's happened with, back in 2009, the Mint produced the 50 state quarters, started doing that. | ||
And what they did was they created quarters for Guam, American Samoa, and others, which were not states. | ||
So when people take a look at the quarter, they say, well, these places must be a state. | ||
They're putting territories on the coins to try to get us to be convinced that the whole world is the United States. | ||
unidentified
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Right, right. I mean, all of a sudden, yeah, breaking news. | |
Israel has 11 electors for President Trump. | ||
We should start a campaign. We should start a troll campaign to try to get a coin, a quarter made for Ukraine. | ||
That's crazy. Marcus, all your points are really well received. | ||
I want to move on to another subject, but I understand that there is this PSYOP happening. | ||
Absolutely. Hobbs in Nebraska. | ||
Hobbs, what's on your mind? So, you asked earlier on in the show about why it seems... | ||
Hobbs, I'm so sorry, man. | ||
I called on you right before we were to cut to break. | ||
I hadn't looked at the clock. Can you stick with us for this four-minute break and talk on the other side? | ||
Absolutely. Thank you, Hobbs. | ||
We'll get right back to you. Stick with us, folks. | ||
unidentified
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More on the other side. Welcome back to the American Journal, folks. | |
I'm Chase Geiser, your host this morning, taking calls. | ||
Hobbs, thank you for waiting so patiently. | ||
I very much appreciate you hanging on there. | ||
Sorry for calling on you right before we went to commercial break. | ||
What do you have to say, man? Hey, like I said, so you asked at the beginning of the show why it seems that the people in power are just so bad at corruption. | ||
They're corrupt. | ||
And I have a theory that I've had for a couple of years now, and I've called into Harrison a couple of times to try and put words to what I have in my head is actually going on. | ||
And it also has to deal with all of the weird, woke recruiting ads that you also talked about. | ||
And you said that there seems to be a push to get these kinds of people into these services like the military and the intel services and whatnot. | ||
And I think that's incorrect. | ||
I think that the reason they were pushing so hard with these weird woke recruitment ads Isn't to recruit those types of people, but to discourage people like us and other patriots from entering the services. | ||
So only the politically ambiguous or the politically unbiased join, right? | ||
Because traditionally, people that join the military are more likely to be conservatives, especially after they're in the military. | ||
So if they want to make the military as unbiased, brainwashed, following orders as possible, they can run these ads to discourage Right-wingers from joining the military. | ||
It's not going to cause transgender people to join the military because they're not going to join anyway. | ||
The only people who do join then left are those who just aren't paying attention because they're not politically invested. | ||
unidentified
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Is that kind of what you're getting at? That's exactly what I'm getting at, and I'm a prime example of that. | |
I was in the Army for nine years, and I got out in 2012 because I saw this stuff coming even as far back as then, because the military has always been a testbed for social experimentation. | ||
Right. Because it has the largest cross-section of demographics. | ||
You know, everybody from everywhere in the United States is likely to be in an active-duty military unit. | ||
They pick you from one place and put you somewhere else. | ||
So the reason that I think that they're doing all of this is, one, that's part of it, to keep the political undesirables from joining the government services to begin with. | ||
But the other reason that I think that they're so bad at corruption and they're so blatantly open with their weird, woke DEI recruiting is, I believe, and you can... | ||
Stop me if I'm not making myself clear on this, but I believe that the objective isn't to destroy the United States as much as it is to completely discredit the ideas upon which the United States was built. | ||
And what I think by that is, is that rather than simply destroying the United States through corruption and graft and If you destroy the United States, | ||
and it appears to be the actions of bad actors, Then the people who like and appreciate the United States are simply going to pick up the pieces and try again, whether that would be in splitting the United States into several component smaller nation states or some type of a violent revolution or whatever it may be. | ||
The people who appreciate and enjoy the United States as it was meant to be are going to try it again. | ||
If you can create the illusion and the narrative in people's minds that the result of the United States collapsing was a baked-in inevitability of the system itself, that if you try this experiment in self-governance again... | ||
Yeah, look what happened the last time. | ||
Wow, it's almost like a death blow to just the ideas altogether, which... | ||
Globalists hate because of free people can't be subjugated. | ||
Hobbs, great call. | ||
Outstanding points. Thank you for calling in. | ||
I do want to move to Goo Man in Wisconsin. | ||
Goo Man, what is on your mind? | ||
Hey, Chase. How are you doing? | ||
I wanted to talk about the State of the Union, but first to like the space caller. | ||
Like there were other countries like the Italians and the Japanese that like tracked I know a guy that was responsible for surveilling some of those communications of the Russians. | ||
He was in our intelligence community at the time, and he said that he heard astronauts just blowing up and screaming and stuff all the time. | ||
Yeah, they burn up. | ||
They say it's getting hot here, and the only way they could get that is by tracking them in space. | ||
And I think his main question can be answered, and it's kind of scary, And that's the fact that, obviously, the military is going to put its sweet weapon technology secretly in space. | ||
So you green screen some of the stuff to, like, throw the Ruskies off. | ||
Look at everything that's done with the Ukraine war and all the psyops technology and green screen views. | ||
And probably, obviously, at this point, if we have Sora and AI, the military's had it for a long time. | ||
You know, you can see that with Zelensky, and it probably helps with tonight's State of the Union. | ||
With Joe Biden, I wanted to ask you if he's going to have... | ||
State of the Union that's going to be AI or AI-assisted. | ||
So, you know, he's not a bumbling, senile old man. | ||
I think at this point, it's like elder abuse, you know? | ||
And then that other caller was talking about the cell phone rays and electromagnetic fields and stuff. | ||
Vaccines, yeah. Yeah, and they make organite pucks. | ||
I know a lot of bishops and priests that use that because everyone's kind of bathed in it now. | ||
So there are ways to counteract it and there's plates and paints you can use if you're really that concerned about it because there's science behind it because there's all these very super sensitive magnets that are in the blood-brain barrier and in other animals. | ||
And obviously holding a magnet or anything electronic up against your head like this phone or having headphones or an earpiece then is going to mess with that. | ||
And then lastly, I was wondering if you heard of the product for a new InfoWars product, like probably around $100. | ||
I think it would be cool if you guys sold Himalayan Shilajit. | ||
Have you heard of that? I haven't. | ||
It's like this goo. | ||
unidentified
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It's goo? Oh, you're the goo man. | |
Yeah, it's like a black goo. | ||
That's from the Himalayans. | ||
And like, I think it's in your guys' wheelhouse. | ||
And like, I don't know, it could be like... | ||
I'll have to look into that. I'll look into it. | ||
Shilajit or something. I think around $100 would be good. | ||
And there's versions with Mercury and without Mercury, so it's kind of sketchy. | ||
And a lot of sketch ones on the market, so it'd be nice if you guys... | ||
It's a blood-brain barrier. | ||
That's one of the things about the vaccines. | ||
They put a lot of toxins in them. | ||
I think mercury being one of them, if I'm not mistaken. | ||
And they don't show up in the bloodstream. | ||
So when they do studies to see if these toxins are in our bodies after we're vaccinated, they don't show up in the blood tests, but it's because they cross the blood-brain barrier and they just sit in our brains. | ||
Yeah, that's definitely... Not going to be discussed at tonight's State of the Union. | ||
The vaccine, healthcare, holocaust, or the grocery... | ||
$10 orange juice? | ||
$10 for a gallon of orange juice. | ||
I wonder, who do you think actually wrote the State of the Union? | ||
I think it's going to be... | ||
I don't mean it in a bad way, but it's probably like nine Jews and two black people. | ||
I don't know what to say to that. | ||
I don't know how to respond to that. | ||
The point I was trying to get at is I wonder if they used ChatGPT. | ||
Was it Kareem? | ||
Is it just some ghostwriter? | ||
Some quiet speechwriter? | ||
Because this whole thing obviously has to be vetted by the campaign and the administration and the marketing people. | ||
It had to have been a group effort to make this speech because everything is so politically correct with this guy and he can't come up with any of his own ideas. | ||
The Hunter Biden crack is going to kick in. | ||
Yeah. I tell you what, if any Biden should be on meth, it should be Joe Biden. | ||
He would be at least 10% better at being the President of the United States if he just got a little bit of that meth from Hunter. | ||
Or if he found a little bit of that cocaine laying around the White House. | ||
That would probably be enough to improve his performance by 10%. | ||
Folks, stick with us. More calls in the next segment after this four-minute break. | ||
unidentified
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And then the Alex Jones Show hosted by Owen Troyer. | |
Look at that. | ||
Great contribution from one of the listeners. | ||
Actually did the AI-generated Joe Biden Lincoln Logs Oval Office. | ||
It's painfully true. | ||
He actually looks better in the AI rendering than he looks in real life. | ||
Look at that flexibility. He must be taking bodies. | ||
I don't think the real Joe Biden could stand like that. | ||
Great job, Aaron. Thank you for putting that together. | ||
unidentified
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I love seeing that on the feed. | |
All right. First up, we've got Phil in Georgia. | ||
Phil in Georgia, what's on your mind? | ||
unidentified
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How you doing? Well, I actually have a pretty little point. | |
I'll get to the whole Biden thing at the end, but that some young hoe that was on her way to Austin, Texas and drove her Tesla into a lake I honestly think there's a good possibility that she was on her way to Infowar Studios to drop some bombshell information, and they said, well, we've got to rear this car off the road real quick. | ||
Yeah, well, we looked into it, and it looks like it might have just been bad Asian driving. | ||
unidentified
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That's interesting. My second point was with the whole Zielinski thing, bombing thing. | |
Just like the Nord Stream pipeline, we're going to take Zielinski out when it suits us And then we're going to absolutely blame it on Putin just to get that whole Putin bad thing going some more. | ||
And the Joe Biden thing, it's going to be 100% drugged up and green screened. | ||
Would you say that again? You cut out for a second. | ||
unidentified
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I'm sorry. It's going to be green-screened? | |
It's going to be 100% drugged up and green-screened. | ||
Well, how can they green-screen it, though? | ||
Because Congress is actually going to be there. | ||
I mean, the Marjorie Taylor Greens are going to be in the audience, and if there's any discrepancy between what gets broadcast and what they see, they'll get called out for it. | ||
unidentified
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I thought it was going to be a closed-door session, but... | |
Is it? I think Congress always goes to the State of the Union, though, right? | ||
unidentified
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Generally speaking, but we're not in the right... | |
Time. They don't do things like they're supposed to. | ||
We'll see for sure soon. | ||
There's one thing that came to mind. When you were talking about that Tesla thing, I want to just go back to that. | ||
I'm sorry for cutting you off. I want to keep talking to you and let you finish your other points. | ||
We've got a clip up. I saw this video. | ||
I don't know what the deal is here. Maybe you guys can shed some insight in the replies, comments, or whatever. | ||
But I saw this video of NASA parking lots, and they have all of these old cars in droves that don't have any electronics. | ||
It seems to me like this video... | ||
The reason for this is because they know that these electric vehicles can be sabotaged by hackers and things of that nature. | ||
I wonder if the government is going to forbid government employees from owning Teslas or electric vehicles at some point because they could be hacked and compromised. | ||
Let's see this here. | ||
Yeah, you walk through this parking lot, you can see it right up on the screen, and I don't know if, Phil, I don't know if you're watching while we're talking here, but they've got a parking lot full. | ||
unidentified
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I've actually seen the video. | |
Yeah, it's full of these cars from, it looks like the 70s. | ||
Why would they keep all of these cars? | ||
Do you have any insight, Phil? Well, one of two things. | ||
unidentified
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They're either using them for movie props and say, look, we're at the moon, and make more Uh-huh. | |
OBD-1 vehicle will be able to operate their vehicle because they have computers in the cars back in the 70s. | ||
It goes that far back. | ||
It's really the OBD-2 where they started. | ||
It was about 94, I believe it was, or 96, where they really started umping up the computers in the vehicles to make them run with all the sensors and everything else. | ||
Upon a EMP, none of those cars back in the 90s are going to run anymore. | ||
So I can see it being back in the 70s, 60s, vehicles back then that don't have any OBD-1 or OBD-2 computer-related mechanisms that allow them to operate. | ||
That makes sense. Bill, thank you for your call. | ||
I appreciate it. I want to hear from Brandon in California. | ||
Brandon, what's on your mind? Yo, what's up, man? | ||
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Thanks for calling. Yeah, NASA. NASA is key to all this. | |
Um... I need everyone who's listening to look up the zero-point energy doc with Mark McCandlish. | ||
I've heard of that. Can you share a little bit with me about what that is for my sake? | ||
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Yeah, if you go on BitChute, you'll be able to find it a lot easier than obviously anywhere else. | |
But it's really about all these scientists who created different energy technologies that could generate unlimited energy for their homes, for their families. | ||
And they would just keep this for themselves. | ||
And like, some of them would get patents, some of them would get assassinated, all this. | ||
Yeah, I've heard about, I've heard like several people who've invented cars that can run off of water have been, have died mysteriously. | ||
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Yeah, and the doc really covers all these different scientists who've invented all these different types of the same, basically the same thing. | |
And so, it is key because there's a A document, too, from NASA about the technological ages of mankind and how they say we're like, you know, by 2020, we'd be in the bio-nano era. | ||
And then beyond that, we'd be in the virtual era. | ||
And that, to me, just feels like, you know, with all the quantum computing and all the nanotech they're spraying on us, like, what is that? | ||
The smart cities and the fucking internet of bodies. | ||
Sorry, excuse my language. | ||
But it's just, it's crazy to me. | ||
Like, are they putting this in real time in a matrix? | ||
Is that what's going on? Well, one of the things Elon Musk has said that I think is a fascinating perspective that had never occurred to me before I heard him say it first on Joe Rogan, and I think since then a number of times, is we are already interfacing with the Matrix directly, and I'm paraphrasing his words. | ||
I don't know if you use the term Matrix directly. | ||
So when we look at our phones, when we scroll on our phones, when we consume data presented to us by these algorithms, we are interfacing with the Matrix. | ||
It's just an inefficient, low-resolution interface. | ||
It's the dial-up version of the Matrix, if you will. | ||
And we're about ready to get into the high-speed fiber version of this integration with things like Neuralink, which still... | ||
Raises alarms for me, despite the fact that I appreciate Musk for all the other things he's done. | ||
I can't believe that he's investing in this technology or creating this technology that has so many very obvious risks associated with it if it's used for the wrong purposes by bad people, by bad governments and corporations. | ||
But we are going to get to this place where we don't have to integrate with the Matrix by looking at a screen in the physical world. | ||
It's going to be It's going to be integrated totally with our consciousness because of this technology. | ||
And I don't know if we're ready for that, man. | ||
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What do you think? I don't know. | |
We don't have, like, the maturity for it, you know? | ||
Yeah, I mean, yeah, whether or not we have the maturity for it, I think, because obviously we have this satanic force, this ancient evil force, Which is this death cult that's been ruling over humanity for some time now, clearly. And, you know, also people too should check out NASA or Dennis Bushnell. | ||
Jason Bermes has talked about this, but Dennis Bushnell had like a keynote speech where he talked about, you know, Ray Kurzweil, the singularity. | ||
Yeah. And... | ||
You know, merging man with machine and all that. | ||
And it sounds to me like there is this inner clique of scientists who pretty much got together and said, like, we're the best because we know how to make the most technologically advanced stuff. | ||
And we should just make our own civilization. | ||
So it sounds like there is a breakaway civilization somewhere on the planet. | ||
Maybe it's Antarctica. Yeah. | ||
I don't know. Some of these conspiracy theories are so cool that I find myself wishing they were true. | ||
And the fact that I wish they were true, I have to be careful because I have a bias to try to make the case that they are. | ||
Breakaway civilizations, hollow earth, hollow moon, all these conspiracy theories that I don't really agree with, they're cooler than reality. | ||
You know? Brandon, thank you so much for your call. | ||
I do appreciate it. | ||
We just got about... A minute 40 left. | ||
I'm trying to find a clip or have the crew find a clip of the Joe Rogan podcast that really blew my mind. | ||
He might have been with Elon Musk when he did it. | ||
They were talking about this woman who had this brain implant. | ||
That she was able to press a button and it would give her an orgasm on demand and she got caught in this loop of not being able to stop herself from pressing the button because the reward pathways were so disproportionately high and unnatural. | ||
And so she was in this wretched state of suffering because she wanted to stop it altogether but she couldn't stop it at the same time. | ||
Total conflict internally. | ||
And these are the unintended consequences of these technologies. | ||
And that's not to say that we should just stop making new technology or that we should resist the development of new technology. | ||
We just have to have the wisdom and the maturity to realize that there are disruptive implications of this technology and we should be prudent in the way that we develop it and bring it to... | ||
The market, the general populace, because I'm telling you folks, you saw what happened with Gemini. | ||
And if Google and Microsoft and the intelligence community are the only organizations that are able to literally wire into your brain, get information from it, and send information to it, then you have sold your autonomy for convenience. | ||
You have... Integrated yourself into the Matrix, voluntarily like Cypher in the Matrix, and sold your soul to the devil. | ||
That is the epitome of selling your soul to the devil, to sacrifice your humanity for some mundane and... | ||
Stay tuned, folks. | ||
The Alex Jones Show, hosted by Owen Troyer today. | ||
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