Speaker | Time | Text |
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It hasn't even been a fortnight since the sitting president of the United States' son no-showed to a pivotal hearing on the rampant influence peddling of the criminal Biden family. | ||
Should I allow Hunter to give his opening statement first? | ||
Doesn't appear Mr. Biden showed up for his public hearing, so we'll recognize you, Mr. | ||
Poplitzki. Thank you, Mr. | ||
Chairman. A massive, unprecedented scandal involving treason and corruption on a level that 20 years ago would have been a constant media event due to its alarming nature and the implications regarding the national security of the United States of America. | ||
unidentified
|
The leaked records are called the Pandora Papers. | |
And they expose a financial system that shields the deals and assets of some of the world's richest and most powerful people. | ||
We arrived at the conclusion pretty quickly that this was going to be bombshell material. | ||
I said, I'm telling you, you're not getting a billion dollars. | ||
I said, you're not getting a billion? | ||
I'm going to be leaving here, and I think it was, what, six hours? | ||
I looked, I said, we're leaving in six hours. | ||
If the prosecutor's not fired, you're not getting the money. | ||
Oh, son of a bitch. | ||
unidentified
|
Got fired. On December 4th, we have coffee with Jonathan Lee, who was one of the members who started Bohai Harvest, and he was connected with the CCP. They were having trouble getting licensed to work because, of course, the CCP has to get permission for that, until Hunter flew over on Air Force Two with Vice President Joe Biden at the time. | |
They met with Jonathan Lee. | ||
Hunter introduced him. Joe ended up writing a letter of recommendation to Jonathan Lee's daughter to get into college, and then we see that this relationship continues to be formed. | ||
There is no question, Tony Bobulinski brought the receipts. | ||
I'm here today because I'm a patriot and I'm a truth teller. | ||
We keep hearing from certain corners that our democracy is at risk and democracies on the ballot in 24. | ||
Yet the same people preaching this mantra know better. | ||
They continue to lie directly to the American people without hesitation and remorse. | ||
Rep Dan Goldman and Jamie Raskin, both lawyers, and Mr. Goldman, a former prosecutor with the SDNY from New York, will continue to lie today in this hearing and then go straight to the media to tell more lies. | ||
Chairman... The cold-hearted facts. | ||
unidentified
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Mr. Chairman, it saved his time, but he called members of this committee liars, and I just want to know whether the order and decorum requirements of House Rule 11 apply to witnesses appearing before the committee. | |
Decorum from the members. | ||
We've asked for that. There's no language that I'm aware of pertaining to a witness. | ||
unidentified
|
You have met Joe Biden. | |
Isn't that correct? Correct. | ||
In fact, you had a meeting with Joe Biden. | ||
Isn't that correct? Two of them. | ||
One of those times was before the Milken Conference in Los Angeles in May of 2017. | ||
Is that correct? It was during the Milken Conference. | ||
unidentified
|
You provided a great deal of documentation to this committee. | |
I want to show you some messages between you and Hunter Biden that will be on the screen here in May of 2017 before you first had a meeting with Joe Biden. | ||
These are messages between you and Hunter Biden dated May 2, 2017. | ||
Do you recognize these? I do. | ||
At the bottom Hunter wrote, dad not in now until 11 lets me and Jim meet at 10 at Beverly Hilton where he's staying. | ||
Jim is James Biden, President Biden's brother, is that correct? | ||
Correct. The next set of messages is, if you put those on screen, is between another business associate of Hunter Biden's and you. | ||
His name is James. Do you recognize it? | ||
I do. At the top, you write, about to meet Hunter, Jim, and I guess Joe at Beverly Hilton Hotel. | ||
Joe is now President Joe Biden, is that correct? | ||
Correct. This chat between you and Joe Biden, Joe Biden's, Jim Biden, Joe Biden's brother, you write to Jim, Great to meet you and spend some time together. | ||
Please thank Joe for this time. | ||
It was great to talk. Thanks, Tony B. You met with Joe Biden, Hunter Biden, and Jim Biden the night before the Millikan Conference in 2017. | ||
Is that correct? I did, and Jim Biden perjured himself by trying to deny that meeting. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you, Mr. Bobulinski. | |
I didn't ask for the meeting, so I wish Hunter Biden was sitting next to me and he could under oath describe it. | ||
unidentified
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And the only reason why I was there is because I was the CEO of the enterprise that they were putting together with the Chinese company CFC. But when asked whether the meeting at the Beverly Hilton between Joe Biden, Jim Biden, Hunter Biden and Tony Bobulinski took place, Jim Biden testified absolutely not. | |
These stories don't match up. | ||
Jim Biden also told the committee that Joe Biden did not meet the Chinese businessman Yixing Ming. | ||
Rob Walker, by known as a friendly witness committee, said the opposite. | ||
So, Mr. Chairman, it appears to me that there are material inconsistencies between the witnesses' testimony. | ||
These witnesses' statements appear to me to be... | ||
April 4th, 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. | ||
Have no fear. You are going to get a bunch of the great Harrison Smith today. | ||
We have a wild day lined up for you today at InfoWars on all three of the broadcasts. | ||
We have an awesome guest coming in studio on this show this morning as well as the other shows. | ||
Alex obviously is out of town. | ||
He's on vacation taking some much-deserved time off and Before he left, he rallied the crew together, myself included, to try to get some guests booked for the Alex Jones show while Owen hosts it. | ||
And we packed up. | ||
I almost feel bad for the crew and for Owen because we packed the calendar so tight over the course of the next two days. | ||
It's going to be wild. I believe today we've got Brian Krasenstein coming on for 30 minutes. | ||
We've got Nick Sortor who's going to be in studio for 30 minutes. | ||
We're going to do a panel for at least 30 minutes with Harrison, myself, and Owen during the Alex Jones show as well. | ||
And there is going to be Gavin McInnes as well for 30 minutes. | ||
So it's just going to be packed up. It's going to be an awesome InfoWars day. | ||
Everybody is wanting to tune in to the broadcast. | ||
Obviously, we've got this story about this eclipse coming up. | ||
We did a great space a couple of weeks ago with Alex Jones at 6 p.m. | ||
It was an after hours sort of thing that we did, and it was absolutely a ton of fun. | ||
And, you know, I've been talking to the crew about this eclipse, and maybe we'll have a chance to take calls or do a space or something at the end of this show today. | ||
I can't understand what the deal is. | ||
To me, this eclipse thing is kind of like the Super Bowl where everybody seems to be really interested. | ||
Many of these people, people I absolutely respect, people I know to be intelligent, smart, critical thinking, reasonable people. | ||
But for some reason, maybe I'm on the spectrum or something. | ||
I just can't understand why anybody's interested. | ||
And maybe I'll go and I'll see it and it'll be this miraculous experience where for 90 seconds or two or three minutes, all the animals will start being quiet and the birds will stop chirping and there'll be this shadow. | ||
And maybe I'll have a spiritual experience, but I don't understand. | ||
Why is it that there's so much hype around this? | ||
I was sitting in one of the offices yesterday talking to our producer, Scott. | ||
And we were looking at the schedule like, oh, there's going to be another one in 2025 and another one in 2027. | ||
And I know that it's only every however many years that it comes over this part of our continent and we get to experience this total eclipse of the sun right where we are without having to travel to some obscure part on the planet. | ||
But this stuff happens all the time. | ||
And every time it happens, people really freak out. | ||
I've given any credence or put any weight into astrology. | ||
You know, it's one of those things in college where... | ||
The girls that asked you what your sign was within the first 30 seconds of meeting with you, you knew that they were going to be a lot of fun but not necessarily wanting to take home to mom and dad. | ||
So, you know, I'm a Scorpio. | ||
Oh, yeah, that makes sense. That makes sense. | ||
They live and die by their horoscopes every day, whether it's an app or whether it's something from the newspaper. | ||
And every time something celestial happens, there are all sorts of ramifications and implications as to what's going to happen psychologically to human beings across the entire globe. | ||
I don't know. I don't know. | ||
The older I get, the more I think that everything in the universe is intimately connected. | ||
And it is likely that when things happen on a macro scale, millions upon millions, billions upon billions of light years away, it has some small ripple effect that does impact us in a certain way. | ||
And that... The horoscopes you see in the newspaper are the commercialized, butchered, silly version of the general philosophy that maybe there is something to what happens in space. | ||
But for some reason, that is not obvious to me. | ||
We have the science. We understand what's happening now. | ||
It's not cause for concern when the sun goes away for a few minutes. | ||
We don't think that it's God. | ||
Giving us a sign that the world is about to end like we may have a thousand years ago or two thousand years ago before we had the science to really understand what's going on but for some reason every time something like this happens Everyone gets totally distracted and is absolutely fascinated with this phenomenon. | ||
And I get it. It's cool. You know, the moon is exactly in front of the sun and it doesn't happen every day. | ||
It does happen all the time, but not every day. | ||
And it's neat. But I mean, we're talking about I was talking to Matt right before I came on the show. | ||
They're Restructuring some of the way cell service is done in the city of Austin on Monday so they can ensure that emergency responders will have cellular service because they're anticipating a massive influx in people trying to stream or use their cellular devices during this eclipse. | ||
It's going to be at 1.30 p.m. | ||
here in Austin when we're going to be covering it. | ||
And entire cities. | ||
You've got other cities coming out and saying, That they need to impose martial law. | ||
I don't know if the term martial law has been used, but they're ramping up security, declaring a state of emergency in some cities, as I understand it. | ||
And it's not the first time this has happened. | ||
It happened six or seven years ago as well when the eclipse happened. | ||
And everybody's just all in a tizzy because they know that everyone's going to experience a shadow. | ||
Within this path on Monday. | ||
It's just bizarre to me. | ||
I don't know. I can't fathom it. | ||
While all this is happening, we seem to be met with story after story of natural disaster after natural disaster. | ||
And these natural disasters don't just seem to occur in obscure parts of the planet. | ||
They seem to occur in Right in the middle of politically charged situations. | ||
Of course, what I'm referring to when I bring this up now is the earthquake that rocked Taiwan the other day. | ||
And I'm a big fan of Sean Ryan. | ||
He hosts a great podcast called the... | ||
I believe it's called the Sean Ryan Podcast. | ||
It might be called the Sean Ryan Show. | ||
And I know I've showed the clip before on the show, so I'm not going to show you again. | ||
But he had a very interesting guest on his show. | ||
Several months ago now. | ||
This is someone who claims to have had access to some of the top secret facilities that we have under the ice caps. | ||
And he claims that the United States for years has had the ability to use directed energy weapons. | ||
We talk about directed energy weapons. | ||
We think of things like space lasers over Hawaii. | ||
Gregory's reports about space lasers disappearing. | ||
Commercial airplanes. | ||
But earthquake weapons are another type of directed energy weapon. | ||
You're directing energy and it's being used as a weapon. | ||
And I saw this months ago totally out of the context of this earthquake phenomenon that happened in Taiwan. | ||
It wasn't like this whistleblower was just being opportunistic about this crisis and trying to get attention for content by making claims. | ||
This is a person who worked at these facilities, had access in some sort of a maintenance capacity as I understand it. | ||
And Is making the claim, seemingly, he's an oddball, but credibly making the claim that the United States for years has had the ability and sometimes has accidentally triggered an earthquake. | ||
And apparently we can trigger earthquakes anywhere on the planet from the facility under the ice caps. | ||
If I understand this whistleblower correctly. | ||
And we know that it's not beyond our own government. | ||
Or any other intelligence community, for that matter, to do things like trigger or exploit crises. | ||
Don't ever let a good crisis go to waste. | ||
Was it Nancy Pelosi that said that? | ||
I don't know if she was the first one that said that, but I think she famously did. | ||
And so, whether 9-11 was an inside job or not, it was certainly something that was exploited and used to do things like Usher and the Patriot Act. | ||
Whether or not the release of COVID-19 was intentional or not from the Wuhan lab, it was certainly something that was exploited and used for political benefit the world over. | ||
Specifically here in the United States, they were able to restructure all of the standard operating procedures for how we do elections in various states because, oh, it's too scary to go out. | ||
That certainly had an impact on what happened in 2020 as far as I can tell. | ||
And right now they're preparing for the next one with disease X. And so as soon as I saw this news of this massive earthquake in Taiwan, obviously you feel bad for the victims, what happened. | ||
It's terribly destructive and disruptive. | ||
First thing that came to mind was, I don't know if this was a natural disaster or if it was triggered. | ||
And maybe our greatest strength is our greatest weakness. | ||
We question everything. | ||
So we're less likely to be fooled when we're told lies by the establishment. | ||
But we're also less likely to believe things that are true when told to us by liars. | ||
So we know that CNN, MSNBC, the White House, our government, all these mainstream media institutions lie to us By conspiracy. | ||
They conspire to lie to us constantly. | ||
Sometimes they report the news too accurately. | ||
Seemingly, when it comes to politics, almost never accurately. | ||
But not everything they tell you is a lie. | ||
They just lie to you and tell you the truth sometimes together. | ||
And so I don't believe any of the lies, but I also don't believe the truth sometimes. | ||
So I'm looking at this massive earthquake on Taiwan. | ||
The first thing that comes to mind is I don't even know if that was natural. | ||
I can't imagine myself four or five years ago having that thought. | ||
I would be like, oh man, bad earthquake. | ||
Yeah, I guess it's on a fault, right? | ||
It's in an area that's known to have earthquakes, right? | ||
This happened back in 1999 apparently as well. | ||
So, natural disasters were too bad. | ||
But then I'm thinking about all these stories that we've been reporting on for the last... | ||
Several weeks and months about Taiwan and the importance of the semiconductors which are used for military applications and the tension over Taiwan and the military exercises that are being conducted by this DCP in violation of Taiwanese airspace. | ||
And how we're stationing, what was it, 2,000 troops just a week or two ago indefinitely in Taiwan? | ||
And as soon as I see this earthquake, I think, okay, if it was manufactured, who would gain more from this? | ||
Would the CCP want to do this to Taiwan or would the United States want to? | ||
The first thing that came to mind is, okay, if we manufactured this earthquake... | ||
On Taiwan, now we have a perfect excuse to send in a bunch of supplies concealed as aid or humanitarian aid, service help, whatever. | ||
We could send in troops to help manage the destroyed cities. | ||
And that would allow us, it would give us an excuse to establish more military presence and infrastructure in Taiwan without China necessarily being alarmed. | ||
Of course, they would know what we were really doing, but they wouldn't publicly be able to state it because it would come off to the general public as ridiculous because they're so psyoped and brainwashed. | ||
And so I'm at a point now where I don't even know. | ||
I think it's likely. I would say that I would give it 85%, in my opinion. | ||
Just a natural disaster coincidence. | ||
That's probably what happened. | ||
But the fact that we've arrived at a point where when something like this happens, there's always... | ||
A not insignificant level of doubt as to whether or not it's even real. | ||
I mean, of course, something happened, but was it natural? | ||
Was it caused? Same with the bridge crisis that people have been talking about for the last couple of weeks with the boat that slammed into that bridge. | ||
In 1998, if something like that would have happened, everyone would be like, oh man, terrible accident. | ||
You know, accidents happen sometimes. | ||
We don't live in an accident-free universe. | ||
Not everything is a conspiracy. | ||
But it happens now. | ||
We're thinking, okay, was it hacked? | ||
Was the master of the ship Ukrainian? | ||
Is that true or is that a rumor? Was it a DEI thing? | ||
Every terrible thing that happens, regardless of whether or not it's actually anyone's fault, in our minds, immediately goes back to, just ties directly back to any number of these Examples of incompetence from our government. | ||
Whether it's diversity, equity, inclusion. | ||
Whether it's this proxy war that we have with Ukraine. | ||
Was it hacked by the Chinese or the Russians? | ||
Did the cell service weeks ago go down because of solar weather? | ||
Or was it a cyber attack? | ||
So now that we know who the liars are and we know Not to believe the lies. | ||
We're really only halfway to the awakening. | ||
Because the next step is then determining what is true. | ||
So we know that CNN, MSNBC, all these outlets lie to us constantly. | ||
We know that the intelligence community has compromised all of our media. | ||
Not just here in the United States, overseas too. | ||
For decades. And we know it can't be trusted. | ||
But when you lose faith in these formerly thought to be sacred institutions, it's a really difficult position to be in because it creates this vacuum and you don't know where to place it. | ||
I don't know about you. I've gone through so many different Phases of my faith in my life. | ||
I grew up Lutheran. | ||
I read the Bible when I was 15. | ||
I left the Lutheran church and I joined a very obscure denomination of Christianity called the Christadelphians. | ||
It means brothers in Christ. | ||
Very literal understanding of the Bible. | ||
Very intense. Kind of, I would compare it to Jehovah's Witnesses, but less culty. | ||
It wasn't like you got ostracized if you quit. | ||
And there was a period after I went to college where I reverted back to an almost entirely secular mindset. | ||
There's never been a time in my life that I didn't believe in God, but my thoughts and opinions were About all the surrounding details have changed so drastically so many times. | ||
As I grow, you're supposed to go through this journey. | ||
So I was really involved in my faith in high school. | ||
I had read the Bible. I made the decision to go get baptized because the Lutherans baptized me as an infant and that's not how it's done. | ||
And I got dunked and I was into it and I was going to the camps and I was baptizing people in Canada and driving all over the country to different meetings and groups and studies. | ||
I go to college, I minor in philosophy, a few months goes by, and I basically lose all faith in the literal understanding of Christianity. | ||
I believe in God, but you know, this resurrection story, I don't know, it seems more like a story or a metaphor. | ||
Maybe it doesn't matter whether or not Jesus Christ actually came back from the dead. | ||
Maybe all that matters is that he's resurrected in us. | ||
I was going down dark, shabby roads because I was lost. | ||
And I remember at this point having two different feelings, two different thoughts. | ||
The first one was egotistical and self-righteous. | ||
Like, alright. | ||
At least I don't believe the dumb thing I used to believe. | ||
And I'm thinking more critically about this. | ||
That was the first egotistical error. | ||
And the second thing was the tremendous feeling of loss that Not knowing where then to put my faith. | ||
So if I no longer believe this literal story, if I no longer have confidence in a resurrection of those who have been baptized, if I no longer have confidence in the literal miracles of the Messiah in the New Testament that are promised to us, where am I supposed to put this faith? | ||
So I'm so proud of myself because I had figured out in my own mind that what I formerly believed was likely silly, but at the same time just empty. | ||
And I've since gone full circle and my faith is restored. | ||
It's not ever a finished problem or a story that ends. | ||
We struggle with our faith throughout our life and we change our ideas and views. | ||
But I've gone full circle, I'm back, and I feel so much better Because I now know where to put my faith. | ||
The reason I wanted to tell you that story is because those on the left and those within our civilization who are still refusing to see the obvious and glaring truth that something is terribly wrong are avoiding the psychological, | ||
spiritual pain That I described to you as having when I was in college. | ||
They do not want to believe that the state or the media or their late night hosts that they love to watch are a lie. | ||
They don't want to believe that Santa doesn't exist. | ||
They're not ready to be told by the older kid on the bus that Santa isn't real. | ||
And it's because as a culture in the United States of America, and Nietzsche predicted this, we allowed ourselves to divert our faith in God away from God. | ||
And into these man-made institutions. | ||
We have worshipped in the United States of America the false idol of media, social media, mainstream media, news, politicians, leaders. | ||
And when we put our faith in an idol, we are typically met with the wrath of God. | ||
And I don't know how to solve this problem. | ||
I don't think it's hopeless. | ||
I believe that there's a solution out there. | ||
I think with faith the size of a mustard seed, you can move mountains. | ||
But we've identified the problem. | ||
The problem is that those who have lost or misplaced their faith have replaced God with all these institutions that they rely on for the comfort that God is actually supposed to provide us as human beings. | ||
And they cannot face the music. | ||
They cannot acknowledge the glaring fact of the matter that everything that they have put their faith in is less real, less authentic, less true than God. | ||
When Nietzsche said in the 19th century that God is dead, he didn't literally mean God. | ||
That God was alive for a period of time and this supernatural entity in another dimension literally died and doesn't exist anymore. | ||
What he meant was that in Western culture, in Western civilization, on a massive zeitgeist trend level, people were moving away from religion into science. | ||
And I don't have a problem with science at all. | ||
In fact, I think that anything that helps in the pursuit of truth will inevitably lead you back to God. | ||
Because I believe God is true. | ||
So, this whole science versus religion thing, I really think people misunderstand it. | ||
I don't think they're mutually exclusive. | ||
I think you should have both. I think you can't have both. | ||
So, in our foolishness, we thought we had to choose And for the last hundred years, we put all our faith in science and new institutions. | ||
Is it going to be communism? | ||
Is it going to be capitalism? Is it going to be the military-industrial complex? | ||
Is it going to be fascism? Is it going to be socialism? | ||
We created so many different types of economies and currencies and governments and institutions and policies and ways. | ||
To manage society all within the last 150 years. | ||
None of them worked. Most of them amounting to terrible degrees of injustice and millions of deaths. | ||
Totally unnecessary deaths, whether it's famine or genocide. | ||
And that's what Nietzsche was trying to warn us about in the 19th century. | ||
He said, look, God is dead. | ||
Everyone's going to replace that with something else. | ||
And when they do, it is going to be hell to pay. | ||
It's going to be a century of hell. It was. | ||
Two world wars? Problem is, we haven't figured out how to bring God back. | ||
And I don't think it's knocking on doors and selling Bibles and encyclopedias. | ||
I don't know. That's what I'm struggling with. | ||
How can I help people place their faith in that which is true and away from these institutions designed only to deceive us and compromise us? | ||
More on the other side, folks. Welcome back to the American Journal, folks. I am Chase Geiser, your host this morning, filling in for the great Harrison Smith. | ||
We need a few things around because Alex Jones, as you know, is on vacation. | ||
He will be back, I believe, in the studio next Friday. | ||
Sometimes he comes back from vacation early. | ||
I know that he likes to be back in the studio. | ||
He's getting back in town sometime next week. | ||
So we are going to play a little musical chairs around here, and I will likely be in the chair a few times more as well over the next week. | ||
But Harrison is going to be hosting The War Room this afternoon, and we are all, three of us, Harrison, Owen, and myself, going to be doing a panel on The Alex Jones Show as well, so make sure you stay tuned for that. | ||
I don't know if you guys had a chance to take a look at this, but former ESPN host says that her Biden interview was totally scripted to the word. | ||
Now, this isn't the first time something like this has happened. | ||
Do you remember when the debate questions were leaked to the Hillary Clinton campaign in 2016? | ||
I think it was a CNN debate. | ||
And we obviously know that Biden's been caught a number of times with cue cards and there's countless examples of him sitting at Big conference tables meeting with very important people, and he's got placards of their names, so when he looks at them, he can read who they are. | ||
He doesn't even know who they are. It's very obvious this guy is not operating on all cylinders, maybe not operating on any cylinders anymore, and that when he does function, it is because he has hopped up on amphetamines and given a teleprompter to read from. | ||
He's not really good on the fly. | ||
He's not good with... Spontaneous responses. | ||
He tries to joke about it and brush it off, but it doesn't come off very funny. | ||
Oh, I'm not supposed to answer any questions, otherwise I'll get in trouble. | ||
That's not what the President of the United States is supposed to be saying to the American people, especially not in the current global political climate. | ||
You mean that you're going to get in trouble by a staffer if you start answering questions, but you're somehow equipped to lead the United States in efforts to maintain peace with China and Taiwan and Israel and the Palestinians and Ukraine and Russia? | ||
This is terrifying stuff here. | ||
Let's see this clip. This is clip number three, I believe. | ||
Yes. Here as we get set for a wonderful day in sports. | ||
I'm happy to be. Opening day for America's national pastime. | ||
This was about two months after he took office. | ||
That was an interesting experience in its own right because it was so structured and I was told, you will say every word that we write out. | ||
You will not deviate from the script and go. | ||
To the word, like every single question, Was scripted, gone over dozens of times by many executives, editors and executives. | ||
Absolutely. I was on script and was told not to deviate. | ||
It was very much, this is what you will ask, this is how you will say it. | ||
No follow-ups. No follow-ups. | ||
Next. I knew that this was a lot bigger than just the wonderful editors that I worked with. | ||
This went up to the fourth floor, as we said, where all the bosses, the top executives, the decision makers are, the president of our company, the CEO, where they all work. | ||
And when he's done press conferences, you know that he's got approved journalists. | ||
That he's allowed to call on. | ||
He knows he was going to call on before. | ||
He knows what question they're going to ask. | ||
It's all a feigned puppet show. | ||
I'm old enough to remember that if you wanted to watch some entertaining, bad acting, you watched Baywatch. | ||
This is such bad TV because they're terrible actors. | ||
They don't even understand the words that they're using most of the time. | ||
They... Have to follow these scripts. | ||
God knows where these scripts come from. | ||
That's the other thing that's absolutely alarming to me. | ||
There was a story the other day. | ||
I think it was Newsmax posted some headline that was unnecessarily critical of Trump. | ||
I think it was something about calling migrants animals or something. | ||
Everyone's like, whoa, Newsmax, what are you doing? | ||
I thought you were the right-wing outlet. | ||
And they immediately took it down. | ||
They came out and they said it was a low-level staffer who posted that piece of content. | ||
We apologize. That's not something that went through our traditional editorial process. | ||
And I've got problems with Newsmax. | ||
But that makes sense to me. | ||
When I think about these organizations, these institutions and how they operate, many of them relying on interns, many of them having entry-level staffers doing all the work. | ||
Same with Congress. | ||
You've got staffers that are actually writing these pieces of legislation that the politicians don't read themselves. | ||
They just rely on their staff to tell them whether it's a green light or not. | ||
Then they vote and the whole world changes. | ||
But I'm looking at what happened to Newsmax. | ||
These examples of these staffers that screw up all the time. | ||
I'm thinking to myself, who is writing the questions? | ||
Is it Kareem Jean-Pierre? | ||
I don't think so. Because I think somebody gives her a script too. | ||
Because whenever she gets an off-script question, she doesn't know how to respond to it. | ||
I'll show you a clip about that in a minute. | ||
Is it coming from Soros or the ADL? Or is it just a group of... | ||
Really left-wing, feminazi-type, pantsuit-wearing, angry suburban white women that get together in committee and decide what the questions and answers are going to be. | ||
And I'll tell you, I told you before, I'll tell you time and time again, there is nothing I hate more than when groups make decisions. | ||
In business, it's often terrible. | ||
Sometimes it's brilliant. Sometimes it's necessary. | ||
It's great. But I've seen it. | ||
In government, business, Ayn Rand famously said nobody ever makes statues of committees. | ||
You only make statues of individuals because groups and committees don't actually accomplish anything. | ||
And I think this administration, obviously not having a captain, not having someone driving the ship at the top, not having a president or a commander-in-chief who's functional, I think this administration is an example of what the United States looks like when it's being run by committee. | ||
By a group of staffers, not necessarily given any authority. | ||
They have to have consensus. | ||
They're dealing with internal politics, internal conflicts. | ||
Even the White House is bizarre about how it discusses the campaign. | ||
Do you remember that clip we showed a number of weeks ago where Karina Jean-Pierre didn't want to make any comments about whether or not Joe Biden was going to participate in a debate with President Trump before this election? | ||
And she was real cryptic and weird and bizarre about it, as if she'd been told not to, as if she didn't want to step on any toes on the campaign. | ||
It's a bunch of people. | ||
Nobody's got any authority. | ||
They're running around. They lost the leadership. | ||
Nobody's in command. It's like a scene from Band of Brothers, where the person who's supposed to be in command is just shivering, making bad decisions, taking fire, and somebody else needs to come in and take the ship. | ||
This is what we're going to do in November. | ||
Check out this example. This is clip number eight. | ||
Peter Doocy got under Karin Jean-Pierre's skin asking about Biden saying bloodbath back in 2020. | ||
We know they're criticizing Trump for using the term bloodbath, even though this administration is funding a bloodbath. | ||
And now you can find examples, turns out, of politicians who use this very common expression. | ||
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Take a look. Just a quick point of clarification, Karine. | |
So when Donald Trump is talking about a bloodbath, it is violent rhetoric. | ||
What was it when Joe Biden said in 2020, what we can't let happen is let this primary become a negative bloodbath? | ||
So, I'm going to be really mindful and careful about Donald Trump, but if you read, because he is a candidate, we're talking about a 2024 election, you should read what he said in its context. | ||
So you've got to read what he said in context. | ||
Bloodbath is an ugly word. | ||
When Trump uses it, what is it when Biden uses it? | ||
No, no, no. Let's be very clear. | ||
You've got to actually ask me the question in context of what it was said, right? | ||
And what it was said when he said that. | ||
What it was said when he said that. | ||
Right? And so that's being disingenuous in your question. | ||
I'm reading a direct quote from Joe Biden. | ||
What we can't let happen is let this primary become a negative bloodbath. | ||
He's talking about... | ||
He was talking about a group of people. | ||
A group of people. | ||
That's what he's talking about. | ||
What the president was talking about during the primary was not to allow it to be the words and the primary and that election to become negative. | ||
Two different things. | ||
They're not the same. They're not the same. | ||
And your question is disingenuous. | ||
And so, look, I'm going to be really mindful here. | ||
I've got to be really careful. We have to denounce violent rhetoric. | ||
Which, wherever it comes from, a former leader, we have to denounce that. | ||
Because we saw what happened on January 6th. | ||
We saw what happened there. | ||
When you have a mob of 2,000 people go to the Capitol because they didn't believe in the free and fair election that just happened months prior, because of violent rhetoric, Alright folks, we'll be right back. | ||
Visit InfoWarsStore.com and stick with us. | ||
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On Grand Rapids Southwest Side yesterday. | |
Armed and dangerous. | ||
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This is the parking lot where police responded yesterday to gunfire reports. | |
And it is where they found 22-year-old Leah Gomez, who was pronounced dead right here at the scene. | ||
A mom to a nearly two-year-old daughter with special needs. | ||
Sledgehammer smashing through the jewelry cases. | ||
It should be surprising, but it's not. | ||
Great Lakes Crossing and Oakland Mall in Troy were hit by this crew, linked back to his cell from Chile in South America. | ||
The Chilean gangs have been hitting us very hard. | ||
We have 100 plus teams in operation right now in America. | ||
Police say Brandon Ortiz Vitae used a handgun he bought illegally to shoot Ruby Garcia multiple times on Friday before leaving her body on the freeway and driving off in her car. | ||
Just an awful story. | ||
And he confessed that he committed the crime. | ||
Welcome back to the American Journal, folks. | ||
I am Chase Geiser, your host this morning. | ||
We've got one more segment before the top of the hour. | ||
And Nick Sordor is going to be joining us, I believe, half past the hour. | ||
He's going to be popping in the studio any minute. | ||
I'm really excited to speak with him. | ||
Highly encourage that you follow him. | ||
And as I'm looking across the desk here, I am struck by... | ||
The verse from Ecclesiastes, what is it? | ||
There's nothing new under the sun. | ||
Heraclitus said something similar. | ||
The universe is like a river, always changing yet always the same. | ||
And the headlines change, but the message and the story remains the same every single day. | ||
Popped in for the first 20 minutes this morning. | ||
Talked about the solar eclipse. | ||
I'm excited about it. Cool. | ||
I'm glad people aren't interested in it. | ||
I don't get it, but cool. | ||
Let's do it. It'll be fun. And it's always... | ||
One thing happens and then something else seemingly related happens. | ||
We put troops in Taiwan and then an earthquake happens. | ||
And stock price of NVIDIA skyrockets and then one of the manufacturing facilities gets hit with the earthquake. | ||
We don't know if it's still going to function. It's just so bizarre how there's one story and then a completely unrelated phenomenon happens. | ||
I don't know. I guess that's why they say God has a plan. | ||
Or maybe it's the conspirators behind this intelligence community. | ||
But NASA is now warning us. | ||
Of solar storms that could cause internet apocalypse by 2025. | ||
So what they were doing before, as far as I can tell, what they were doing before is if they were anticipating a cyber attack on the United States, whether it was cell service, internet service, major platforms, you name it, they would throw out some headlines in science magazines, science blogs, science sites about Solar activity increasing. | ||
Solar weather. Space weather, they call it. | ||
They always make a name for something. | ||
They say, oh, did you know that there's a thing called space weather? | ||
They put it in quotes. And you feel smarter, but they just made it up. | ||
I mean, I know there's a climate change in this climate-less void, but... | ||
They would warn of specific solar activity over the course of several days. | ||
And then if anything would happen over those several days, they would blame it on the solar activity they're talking about. | ||
So over the next couple of weeks, we're anticipating there might be some outages, some GPS issues, whatever, because this increased solar activity. | ||
And then it happens. And they say, oh, it was solar activity. | ||
It wasn't a hack from the Russians that caused only one specific carrier to go out for several hours. | ||
Now, what's alarming to me about this specific headline... | ||
Is they just threw a blanket statement out there. | ||
And the claims as to what could happen are less specific and more all-encompassing. | ||
And they bought themselves several years. | ||
By 2025? | ||
Well, they bought themselves several months, I guess. | ||
But into the next year. | ||
And so, this almost seems to me like foreshadowing. | ||
Like, they're indicating in anticipation for a very serious escalating cyber war between either China and the United States, Russia and the United States, Iran and the United States, up until and through the election. | ||
I mean, why would they just say that? | ||
Oh, you know, things are going to be really crazy indefinitely. | ||
Basically, the rest of the year, anything could happen to any of our infrastructure because the sun's really fired up. | ||
Yeah. I don't get it. | ||
The National Aeronautics and Space Administration, NASA, has warned that the sun is entering a time of high volatility as it approaches the peak of its 11 year solar maximum cycle. | ||
I'd be very curious to see what happened in 2013. | ||
I was a junior in college in 2013, and I seem to remember my phone worked, my Netflix worked, and my internet worked just fine all year. | ||
So if this is some cyclical thing that's totally normal so you don't need to be alarmed, then why are you anticipating a completely different outcome than the last time that it happened? | ||
They don't want to alarm you, but they want to put this in So they can fall back to it as an excuse for when something crazy happens. | ||
It's similar to what we saw with Moscow. | ||
A couple of weeks before the attack on Moscow, the terrorist attack on Moscow, I believe that it was likely Ukrainian-backed, either directly or not. | ||
When the State Department comes out, I think it was March 7th or something, and says, hey, we're anticipating terrorist activity in Russia. | ||
We encourage all people to stay away from large gatherings. | ||
They put that out. And then it happens two or three weeks later. | ||
We're likely backed or funded, at least indirectly, by the United States. | ||
So if Ukraine did it, we fund them, so we did it. | ||
If ISIS did it, well, we fund them through the CIA, so we did it. | ||
We put this little thing out saying, hey, guys, be careful. | ||
I think there's going to be a terrorist act. | ||
Then we do it. | ||
And when the backlash comes, hey, why did you guys fund this terrorist activity? | ||
We say, hey, two weeks ago, we told you this was going to happen. | ||
We tried to warn you. We were looking out for your innocent civilians. | ||
And so we see the same mechanism right here. | ||
NASA warns solar storms could cause internet apocalypse by 2025. | ||
So now, if the entire internet shuts down any time this year, you need not be alarmed. | ||
You need not think that we're in World War III. It is merely just some weather happening on the sun, apparently. | ||
So during this period, sunspots can produce intense solar storms, which if directed toward the Earth could create widespread outages to electronics and radio communications. | ||
The first two months of 2024 alone have witnessed a surge in solar activity, with sunspots producing numerous coronal mass ejections, which are phenomena responsible for solar storms. | ||
So I guess it's just a coincidence that the sun is acting up while the entire world is acting up in terms of escalating us at the World War III NASA, which has been watching the sun's activity using the Parker Solar Probe, warns the probability of a solar storm caused Internet apocalypse remains a cause for alarm through 2025. | ||
Such an event could increase currents through the Earth's infrastructure, destroying navigation, communication systems, and the GPS-enabled time synchronization crucial to the operation of the Internet. | ||
The PSB has successfully journeyed through solar winds in space to understand the phenomenon better. | ||
Scientists have long warned about the likely negative results of such storms. | ||
Okay, so it seems like they're just establishing a little bit of an insurance policy in case something crazy happens as all of these things escalate. | ||
And this news comes out right after China's escalating some of its military... | ||
Posturing in the context of this earthquake, there's just some weird stuff going on. | ||
And I don't think that the fires in Hawaii were started by lasers from space actually igniting a fire. | ||
We can talk to Sordor about this. | ||
I'd be interested to hear what he has to say. | ||
But I do think that the lasers were used from satellites to hack the facility to leak the 700 gallons of diesel fuel on the island. | ||
And I do think that it was retaliation for the balloon. | ||
And I do think that the F-35 that went missing and was allegedly found was actually stolen and never found because it was hacked. | ||
And I do think that when AT&T went down weeks ago, it was a cyber attack. | ||
And they know this is escalating. | ||
And they're trying to establish an intelligence insurance policy. | ||
All right, so we are going to cut to break here in about a minute and a half. | ||
Before we go to break, I want to make sure not to forget to plug because if we don't plug, we are not going to be on the air. | ||
It's funny. I was watching some clips of Alex Jones and in court, just old clips. | ||
I was just going through some stuff. People seem to think that we do this broadcast so that we can sell supplements. | ||
And that's exactly the opposite of the case. | ||
One of my favorite lines in The Fountainhead by Ayn Rand is Howard Rourke. | ||
He's passionate about architecture. | ||
And he says, I don't... | ||
Build buildings to have clients. | ||
I have clients so that I can build buildings. | ||
We do not do this broadcast because we want to sell you supplements. | ||
We do want to sell you the supplements. They're great. | ||
We feel good about them. | ||
They're highest quality. | ||
They have amazing benefits. But we sell the supplements because we want to be able to do this broadcast. | ||
So every time you go to InfoWarsStore.com and purchase anything, and these products are good, they're amazing in fact, and they are all legitimate. | ||
I've had Personal friends and family members of mine who are licensed and certified nutritionists look at the ingredients on this stuff and say, this is great. | ||
This is all legit. I'm not alarmed about any of this stuff. | ||
It's amazing. So check out InfoWarsStore.com. | ||
Right now we've got Survival Shield X3 back in stock at 40% off. | ||
We've also got TurboForce Plus at 40% off. | ||
These are amazing products that will improve your quality of life and it's a 360 win because they keep us on the air. | ||
Make sure to go to InfoWarsStore.com right now, and we'll be right back on the other side. | ||
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American Journal, where Chase Geyser deciphers the heartbeat of a nation. | |
Give me a ticket for an aeroplane. | ||
Southern Delaware, they talk at you like it, you know what I mean? | ||
Joe Biden, pandering to a group of Hispanic Americans, He thinks. | ||
Telling them, oh, I got into politics because of Cesar Chavez. | ||
Cesar Chavez is her grandfather. | ||
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He's the guy that got me interested. | |
He came to Delaware when I was running in 19th. | ||
I won't even tell you when. Well, he's on record saying he got into politics because of the Kennedys. | ||
And the point is, can you imagine giving a speech to people and then lying to them? | ||
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Most of us, all of us, are a product of our background and our culture. | |
As a matter of fact, you and I had a discussion. | ||
I did not grow up in an area or community where there were large Hispanic, or even small Hispanic population. | ||
It was just non-existent. | ||
I come from a little state, the little state of Delaware. | ||
It's not like the congressman from New York. | ||
She's in a big state. | ||
But we have a very, in relative terms, large Puerto Rican population in Delaware, relative to our population. | ||
I was sort of raised in the Puerto Rican community at home. | ||
Like when Hillary gets up in Kentucky, it's a famous clip, she goes, It's good to see you today, everybody! | ||
That's not even a Kentucky accent, but... | ||
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I won't know how I got here, but I'm now here! | |
Remember that clip? We have a march to finish. | ||
I will be reintroducing the Count Every Vote Act to ensure that every voter is given the opportunity to vote, that every vote is counted, and each voter is given the chance to verify his or her vote before it is cast and made permanent. | ||
I don't feel no ways tired. | ||
I've come too far. | ||
From where I started from, nobody told me that the road would be easy. | ||
I don't believe he brought me this far to leave me. | ||
You know, I'm not sitting here as some little woman standing by my man like Tammy Wynette. | ||
I'm sitting here because I love him, and I respect him, and I honor what he's been through and what we've been through together. | ||
Hello! It's good to be here now and talk to you! | ||
Diversity of this community, as distinct as the Bogota's of the Bronx, as beautiful as the Blossoms of Miami, And as unique as the breakfast tacos here in San Antonio. | ||
The audience cheered, but the scripted comment generated backlash on social media. | ||
One prominent Hispanic group encouraging the First Lady and her team to take time to better understand the complexities of our people and communities, adding, we are not tacos. | ||
So say it with me! | ||
Si se cuadre! | ||
The future is ours! | ||
Thank you. But again, it's like Kamala Harris. | ||
There's a bunch of videos of her. | ||
When she's speaking in front of a NAACP group, it's mainly black folks, she's like, you know, she tries to put on this fake black accent. | ||
It's so fake. It's like some fake southern black accent. | ||
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I think he's gonna get in. | |
Vice President Harris appears to use a French accent. | ||
We campaign with the plan. | ||
Uppercase T, uppercase P. The plan. | ||
We're expected to defend the plan. | ||
The plan. The plan. | ||
Because there's sociopath to millions. | ||
You know, if I'm in New York, I'm talking just like I talk. | ||
If I am in England, I don't put on an English accent. | ||
I walk in and I'd say, Yeah, give me a beer and bangers and mash. | ||
I'm checking in my hotel. Yeah, it's Alex Jones. | ||
I got a king-size bed. | ||
I'm here for two days. Imagine if you walked up and said, Hello, my dear. | ||
I would like to check in. | ||
I'm Alex Jones. | ||
The disrespect, if I got up there and went, Hello, do you want a taco? | ||
Oh, hello, how you doing today? | ||
All right, folks. We are going to cover some great news over the next 20 minutes. | ||
We're going to cut the break here in about 15 seconds. | ||
Nick Sordor is going to be joining us at the top of the hour at 10 o'clock a.m. | ||
Central Time. And we're going to be diving into some of the Ben Shapiro hypocrisy and other news on the other side. | ||
Ty, stick with us. | ||
We'll be back in one minute. | ||
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I can never tell if that's vocal or the guitar. | |
You're watching the American Journal with your host, Chase Geyser. | ||
Man, there's something to be said for attitude. | ||
You know? I can't remember what it was I was watching the other day or listening to. | ||
Oh, you know what it was? I was talking to my dad. | ||
I was talking to my dad about the Elon Musk biography that Walter Isaacson wrote and came out a few months ago. | ||
I think I got it for Christmas. | ||
And whenever Walter Isaacson writes a biography, I always try to read it because he's, in my opinion, the best biographer of all time. | ||
He did a great Steve Jobs biography, Benjamin Franklin, Albert Einstein, Elon Musk. | ||
And a lot of people, Steve Jobs famously, will actually commission Isaacson to write their biography. | ||
Steve Jobs wanted him to write his before he died. | ||
He wanted to control his legacy a little bit. | ||
Because he will tell the truth about the subject and He will not hold back, but he will not have an agenda to just berate or attack or tear down the subject. | ||
So, he'll tell the story of how so-and-so's a jerk, or so-and-so did this and it was wrong, but there's no agenda to just malign the name of these people, these iconic figures. | ||
And when I was talking to my dad about this biography, he and I have been reading it together and He said, you know, I really like it. | ||
I'm very much enjoying it. | ||
But with the other biographies that I've read of Walter Isaacson, he says, I learned so much. | ||
I learned a lot from reading the Steve Jobs one, from the Benjamin Franklin one. | ||
This one, I'm not really learning that much. | ||
I'm just enjoying it. | ||
I said, well, the one thing I've learned, based on the, I don't know, five hours I'm in, in the audio book, Is the importance of attitude. | ||
And yes, genius and talent is helpful. | ||
And having a ton of money is helpful. | ||
And having skills and management and the right team. | ||
It's all necessary in order to accomplish great things. | ||
But a lot of it, whether it's rock and roll, movies, InfoWars, or big tech, is about attitude. | ||
And one of the things that these mega successful industrialists have in common, these entrepreneurial icons, whether it's from 100 years ago or today, is the attitude. | ||
They make decisions quickly. | ||
They're not afraid to make mistakes. | ||
And as long as they're right, more often than they're wrong, the amount of mistakes they can make can be astronomical and the accomplishments will still be astounding. | ||
Yeah, a lot of rockets crashed, but they came up with one that landed. | ||
I mean, I'm driving into my neighborhood the other day, and somebody got their Cybertruck, and it looks like something that flew right out of a Nintendo 64. | ||
Honestly, I was like, did I take shrooms? | ||
Am I playing Cruising the World right now? | ||
Because this Cybertruck looks like it popped right out of a Nintendo 64. | ||
And everybody's pulling up. | ||
It's like, these dorks. | ||
I like Teslas a lot. | ||
I think they're cool. And I like Elon Musk a lot. | ||
But these dorks, they get together with their Teslas, and it's like they're in a gang or something. | ||
It's like there's the Bloods, the Crips in our neighborhood, and then there's the Tesla guys, right? | ||
And one day, they're all just going to brawl it out, West Side Story style. | ||
And they're all taking pictures with their Teslas next to the Cybertruck. | ||
They're so excited about the Cybertruck. | ||
It's cool. It's different. | ||
It's very geometric. Wallproof glass. | ||
Awesome. I've never been in one. | ||
I don't know what the features are. Great. | ||
Whatever. Cool that you did that, Elon. | ||
Sorry that there was a major earthquake in Taiwan and maybe the chips that you need are going to get destroyed because our leadership here doesn't know what they're doing. | ||
But... I was on Twitter and people were just talking trash about Musk. | ||
And there's reasons to be critical. | ||
I'm very, very concerned about the implications of Neuralink. | ||
I don't think that Musk is intentionally malicious. | ||
But Neuralink, yeah, it's alarming. | ||
There's reasons to be critical and question things. | ||
But at this point, it is undeniable that Elon Musk is a force to be reckoned with. | ||
And somebody said something just so stupid. | ||
They said all Elon Musk ever did was convince everyone that he was a genius and could fix anything. | ||
I just responded, turns out all you need to do in order to be the richest man in the world is convince everybody you're a genius and that you can fix anything. | ||
Like, okay, it's so easy, then you do it. | ||
And it reminds me of this clip that I want to run from the Steve Jobs movie, the only good one that I've seen. | ||
This is clip 24. People don't realize, they don't, they think that if you can technically do a thing, it means that you're more valuable than the person that envisioned the thing they had you do. | ||
The vision, the metaphysical part of leadership, whether it's the Infowar, whether it's politics, whether it's culture, the metaphysical part, not tangible, you can't see it, but it's real, is so imperative to manifesting a vision. | ||
This great experiment that was and is the United States of America was just a metaphysical idea. | ||
They put some principles down on paper, and it's manifest over the last 300 years. | ||
We should never make the mistake of underestimating the importance and the power of those among us who can envision and make that vision come true by rallying people to manifest it. | ||
Alex Jones is one of these people. | ||
And we should never underestimate the world's supervillains who are doing the exact same thing. | ||
We think just because watching the conference in Davos is boring... | ||
That nothing is happening there. | ||
It's the world's supervillains getting together in a boring tone and manifesting a vision. | ||
Let's go ahead and run this clip. I was angry. | ||
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You were saying things about the Apple II and the way you were treating the team was you had a free pass for life. | |
I gotta get back on stage. We've got like two minutes of rehearsal time left. | ||
Do you understand how condescending that just was? | ||
Maybe you don't. I don't want to see you get dragged off... | ||
I get a free pass for life from you! | ||
You give out the pass... | ||
You give them to me! | ||
You're gonna have a stroke, little buddy. | ||
What did you do? What did you do? | ||
Why has Lisa not heard of me? | ||
Man, how many fourth graders have heard of you? | ||
You can't write code. | ||
You're not an engineer. | ||
You're not a designer. You can't put a hammer to a nail. | ||
I built the circuit board. | ||
The graphical interface was stolen from Xerox PARC. Jeff Raskin was the leader of the MAC team before you threw him off his own project. | ||
Everything! Someone else designed the box! | ||
So how come 10 times in a day, I read Steve Jobs as a genius? | ||
What do you do? | ||
I play the orchestra. | ||
And you're a good musician. | ||
You sit right there. You're the best in your role. | ||
I came here to clear the air. | ||
Do you know why I came here? | ||
Can you just answer that? I came here because you're gonna get killed. | ||
Your computer's gonna fail. | ||
You had a college and university advisory board telling you they needed a powerful workstation for $2,000 to $3,000. | ||
You priced next at $6,500 and that doesn't include the optional $3,000 hard drive which people will discover isn't optional because the optical disc is too weak to do anything and the $2,500 laser printer brings the total to $12,000 and in the entire world you are the only person who cares that it's housed in a perfect cube. | ||
You're gonna get killed. And I came here to stand next to you while that happens, because that's what friends do. | ||
That's what men do. I don't need your pass. | ||
We go back, so don't talk to me like I'm other people. | ||
I'm the only one that knows that this guy here is someone you invented. | ||
I'm standing by you because that perfect cube that does nothing is about to be the single biggest failure in the history of personal computing. | ||
Now, if you don't know the context there, that cube was called Next, and there's an amazing story behind it. | ||
But yeah, it was basically worthless. | ||
Waz was right there. But he was able to use that product that he developed in order to leverage his way back into the CEO position at Apple with basically unilateral control of the company. | ||
And people don't understand when you're in the weeds, when you're in the trenches, Fighting as a soldier, whether it's in a company, in a real war, in the info war, it's often hard to understand the grand strategy. | ||
And the Musks of the world, the Jobses of the world, the Klaus Schwabs of the world, they look at the risk board and the little pieces don't know that they're being manipulated. | ||
And... I bring this up because it's so easy to get caught up in the weeds with this Ukraine versus Russia or this Israel versus Gaza and pick a side and hyper-focus on the minutia of what's happening right now in the context of the literal attempted conspiracy to conglomerate all power in the world. | ||
So, I'm an America first person. | ||
I'm going to explain this. I care infinitely more about Jewish Americans than Jewish Israelis. | ||
I care infinitely more about Muslim Americans than I do about Palestinian Muslims. | ||
Muslim Palestinians. I don't care. | ||
I don't care what countries fall, which ones rise. | ||
I don't care if democracy anywhere else is protected or conquered. | ||
I could care less about any other country. | ||
It's not because I'm cold. | ||
It's not because I have no heart or no empathy or I don't want the best for the world, but I know that if you try to catch two rabbits at once, you're not going to catch either of them. | ||
You're just going to be running around your yard indecisive. | ||
And so my focus is, alright, if I want to make the world a better place, then where should I as an American start? | ||
Well, probably not worried about some conflict thousands of miles away. | ||
Maybe I should be worried about my own people. | ||
And maybe if everybody worried about their own people, then we'd start catching rabbits. | ||
Use a silly metaphor. | ||
And yes, innocent people, it's overwhelmingly evident that innocent people are just being massacred right now by Israel. | ||
And I'm not anti-Semitic. | ||
Maybe I am. I don't really like Muslims. | ||
Technically, if you're against Muslims, you're anti-Semitic too, right? | ||
Because isn't it a Semitic language they speak in the Middle East? | ||
I guess that's just one of those terms that's been hijacked for one people. | ||
I have no problem inherently with Arabs or Jewish people. | ||
I don't think they're genetically inferior or sneaky or cheap. | ||
Any of the stereotypes. | ||
I'm not somebody who has a problem with people based on their immutable characteristics. | ||
But I do have a problem with ideologies. | ||
And I do believe that some ideas are better than others. | ||
You know how our teachers used to tell us there's no such thing as a stupid question because they wanted to make sure that if you had a question you could ask it? | ||
Well, there are such things as very stupid ideas. | ||
And globalism is one of them because its inevitable outcome is the complete collapse of humanity. | ||
We talk a lot about team humanity here. | ||
And people are getting so wrapped up in this Israel... | ||
Versus Palestine conflict, that because this seemingly genocide, I could be mistaken, but I believe the evidence, it looks like they're just bombing civilians. | ||
Because this genocide is happening on the Palestinians, we have totally forgotten everything that's screwed up about the Palestinians. | ||
I'm not saying that any sort of genocide is ever justified. | ||
I think it's wrong what's happening over there. | ||
I feel terrible for the women and children and innocent people that are just having their whole entire world destroyed. | ||
Crying children, seeing their dead parents, it's terrible. | ||
Nobody wants to pull a baby out of rubble, and it's happening. | ||
I know that both sides lie about whether or not babies got decapitated or whether or not this hospital was bombed by them or us. | ||
I know there's a lot of lies, but there's definitely some tragic stuff going on. | ||
And since we've gotten so focused on this conflict, we have forgotten that Islam sucks. | ||
It does. It's a bad idea. | ||
It's a bad culture. | ||
Do you realize over 40% of marriages... | ||
And Gaza are among first or second cousins. | ||
Do you know what that does to mental health and IQ to a people over years? | ||
And it's not a racist comment because it has nothing to do with their race. | ||
It has to do with their incest. | ||
It's something you choose to do. | ||
It's not an immutable characteristic. And it's not just there. | ||
It's all of these Middle Eastern countries because of this Islam culture, this mentality. | ||
It's a bad idea and people are playing out this bad idea and it's having terrible outcomes all over. | ||
And so I'm looking at these reports like Spain to recognize Palestinian statehood calls on Western allies to fall suit. | ||
That doesn't bother me. Whatever. | ||
If they can be a state, fine. | ||
If they can figure it out. But I'm looking at one in ten polls would fight in any future war new survey reveals. | ||
And I feel that because we are so aware in a way that most people aren't of some of the less than good details about Israel as a whole, as a nation, and specifically what it's doing now, | ||
we have forgotten that the idea of globalism mixed with the idea of Islam through the European Union is Has created the total occupation of Europe by extremists. | ||
And I know that not all Muslims are extremists. | ||
I know that many of them are peaceful. And I believe you should have a right to practice Islam. | ||
Absolutely. I believe in freedom of religion. | ||
I don't want to interfere with their rights whatsoever. | ||
I just think it's a bad idea. | ||
And people say, oh, jeez, you're so Islamophobic. | ||
Anytime anybody ever calls you Islamophobic, just ask them this very simple question. | ||
Why is it that you are not a Muslim? | ||
And they'll try to give you some easy answer. | ||
Like, well, I wasn't born in a Muslim family. | ||
No, no, no. | ||
Why is it that you now, today, are living the decision not to be a Muslim? | ||
And only a couple of options could come up. | ||
First one was, okay, well, I don't believe Muhammad was really the prophet he said he was. | ||
Okay, so does that mean that you believe that he was a lunatic? | ||
Or do you believe that he was a liar? | ||
Because I'm pretty sure any Muslim would feel that that was very Islamophobic for you to identify their sacred prophet as either a lunatic or a liar. | ||
I mean, he was certainly a pedophile. | ||
And the word pedophile gets thrown around. | ||
Technically, pedophile just means prepubescent attraction. | ||
So you sleep with a 16-year-old. | ||
Yes, it's statutory rape. | ||
It's wrong. It's immoral. But it's not pedophilia because it's biologically older. | ||
It's postpubescent. But he was literally married to somebody that hadn't gone through puberty yet. | ||
I think nine years old, maybe 12. | ||
I don't know. I mix it up. | ||
So this guy's a pedophile. | ||
He's either a liar or a lunatic. | ||
And that's a good reason not to be in the religion. | ||
Like, maybe I'm going to pass on that one. | ||
Got a lot of doubts about that one. | ||
Let's look at the next one. You go through them, then finally you land on Jesus Christ. | ||
Hopefully, right? You sign up. | ||
Get baptized. And so we've got this population of people in Europe, and I'm not even going to get into the border here and what's happening. | ||
Same thing. It's this population of bad ideas. | ||
And you look at the Pew Research, the Pew Research says things like, oh, well, only 10 to 20% of Muslims in Europe believe in Sharia law. | ||
You're telling me that one in five of the thousands upon thousands of people that you're bringing into these countries who are going to be able to vote and run for office, one in five of them, these are the most radical too, so they're the most likely to get involved and active in the communities, believe in Sharia law? | ||
Oh, only 10% of them think it's okay to do a suicide bombing. | ||
That's one in 10! | ||
That's a tremendous number! | ||
History is made by small minorities enacting massive changes. | ||
Small radical minorities mold this human condition, this human experience that we have, this world we create. | ||
You're going to have like 10% is small because it's not most. | ||
They think about democracy. They think the only thing that matters are majorities because there's no democracy and democracy. | ||
The only thing that ever mattered was the individual, what individuals are capable of. | ||
And so I bring this up because I just don't want us to forget that just because Israel is guilty of genocide right now, I don't want us to forget that there's a lot of really screwed up things happening. | ||
Specifically, among the Palestinians, but all over the Middle East and in Europe. | ||
And they have allowed themselves, through the bad idea of globalism, to be invaded by a foreign hostile force with open arms and open borders. | ||
And I was doing the research last night, how many Muslims in each of the different European Union countries. | ||
Poland is basically the only nation as far as I can tell in the European Union that's taken a substantial stand against Accepting these migrants into the country and when you look at the details when you try to look up research or headlines about it All of them come up Right-wing extremism a problem in Poland now Nationalism is a problem in Poland because they refuse to allow these people to come into their country and dilute and ruin their culture. | ||
And so I'm thinking about this. I'm like, all right, all right. | ||
We've got this ideal. Diversity is so amazing. | ||
Diversity is what made the United States of America so powerful. | ||
All people from all over the world could come to the United States, and it worked in this melting pot. | ||
And it wasn't the diversity that made us strong. | ||
It was the assimilation. Everybody that came here bought into the philosophy, the idea, the culture of America. | ||
So it didn't matter if you were Lithuanian or Japanese. | ||
If you came here and you wanted to be an American, you were an American. | ||
It's not related to your ethnicity. | ||
And that's why it worked because people assimilated. | ||
Now they're advocating this diversity. | ||
They want everybody together but not assimilating because that's cultural appropriation if you do it. | ||
So they're trying to put people together in close quarters like putting a piranha in a fish tank with a goldfish To catalyze this division in pain. | ||
And I'm looking at Japan. | ||
Like, alright, well, let's take a look at some of the statistics of a homogenous culture. | ||
You guys can pull up my tweet from yesterday if you don't mind. | ||
I'd like to show it on the screen. I'm looking at the research of Japan. | ||
97% of people in Japan are ethnically Japanese. | ||
97%. And they've got two or three different crime metrics I was looking at comparing it to the United States. | ||
And it's not even close how much safer it is there. | ||
Their life expectancy is almost, if not 10 years more. | ||
I think it's 84 years old to our 76. | ||
Let's see here. 97% of people in Japan are ethnically Japanese. | ||
There are 10 times more murders, 13 times more rapes per capita. | ||
And 208 times more robberies in the United States than in Japan. | ||
Japanese life expectancy is over 84 years while only 76 years in the United States. | ||
Diversity, equity, and inclusion is not the way. | ||
So, those who advocate for DEI, they know and they don't actually believe that diversity is some beautiful thing, some precious thing for us. | ||
Some necessary... | ||
Moral and just, just awesome, into the new era of humanity, graduation for our psychology and our spirit as a species. | ||
They are making up a lie, data-backed, very obviously a lie, to justify actions that are conducive to some other political agenda. | ||
And there can be no true globalism. | ||
There can be no one world government as long as there is one nation that remains sovereign. | ||
That's why they hated Trump because he was America first and he fought for American sovereignty. | ||
That's why they hate Putin because he's Russia first and he advocates for Russian sovereignty. | ||
These are major obstacles and they are doing everything they can to cripple that. | ||
And so we have to stay focused and remember that We have to make a decision whether or not we want to be in the orchestra or whether or not we want to play the orchestra. | ||
There are a lot of people contending right now for the baton, whatever it's called, to control the orchestra of humanity. | ||
Maybe there are several orchestras at the same time. | ||
And they're all vying for dominance on the global stage. | ||
You have Klaus Schwab. You have big tech, you have the political industrial complex, the military industrial complex, the intelligence community, and then you have just the average American people who just want their freedom back. | ||
We're not going to get it back if we are played by them. | ||
We have to take control of the orchestra. | ||
We have to follow the example of great minds and supervillains. | ||
We have to learn from them, too. | ||
We can take this country back. Stick with us, folks. | ||
More on the other side. All right, if you guys are too chicken to go to InfoWarsStore.com and give back a little for this amazing network and all the content that we give out for free and has always been for free, then at least download the clips at band.video and cut some shorts or share your favorite clips from today. | ||
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So I'm going to wrap up this Islamophobic conversation that I was having and talking about Steve Jobs and Nintendo 64 Cybertrucks with... | ||
This clip of Ben Shapiro and follow it with Andrew Schultz clip. | ||
I was talking in the beginning of the show today about cognitive dissonance and how we have replaced God with other institutions. | ||
And the problem isn't that people aren't smart enough to understand. | ||
It's that they're not of character enough or brave enough to accept the truth and accept the pain that the institutions that they put all their faith in are failing them. | ||
Lies. And Ben Shapiro is somebody who, if you would have asked me before October 7th what I thought of Ben Shapiro, I thought, talks a little fast. | ||
I agree with him about 80% of the time. | ||
Definitely very smart. That's what I would have told you. | ||
And there's no doubt in my mind that if he sat down and took an IQ test, I'm sure that he's very bright in terms of being able to solve puzzles and spatial awareness and critical thinking. | ||
It's one type of intelligence. | ||
I don't think he's a stupid person. | ||
Cognitive distance has very little to do with intelligence. | ||
In fact, I think the more intelligent you are, oftentimes the more inclined you are to believe ridiculous things because you have the ability to rationalize more sophisticated arguments for the ridiculous thing that you believe than a normal person does for the actual thing that's true. | ||
So... Since October 7th, it has become abundantly clear, in my opinion, and I could be mistaken, I'm not trying to berate Ben Shapiro, but it's become abundantly clear to me that he's an Israel-first guy. | ||
And that's okay. | ||
I believe that all Americans should have the right to think what they think, say what they say. | ||
But we should realize this, and it's not just about Jewish people and whether or not they're loyal to Israel or loyal to the United States. | ||
It's not just about whether or not the ADL or the Israel lobby is a real problem. | ||
I don't even want to get in the weeds with that. | ||
You can watch Harrison's show. Harrison is very knowledgeable about that, and he'll tell you all about it. | ||
But we have to realize the implications of truly being America first and And it means not caring about anybody else, frankly. | ||
So let's see this hypocrisy that highlights this cognitive dissonance I'm talking about. | ||
This is clip number 10. We have literally tens of millions of people in the United States who are afraid that the cancel culture is coming for them. | ||
And cancel culture does exist. | ||
And so what this results in very, very often is corporations looking to cram down a particular viewpoint on you and then cancel you. | ||
When it comes to the hosts on The Daily Wire, obviously everyone is able to say what they want. | ||
But the reality is that there is an Overton window at The Daily Wire. | ||
There are polls out there that show that a vast majority of Americans in every single political group, including liberals, Feel like they cannot say what they want to say in public because they're afraid that they are going to be canceled, fired, cast out from polite society. | ||
This actually happened to a socialist moron named Nathan Robinson. | ||
He got canceled from The Guardian. | ||
And he said he got canceled from The Guardian because he had put up some anti-Israel tweets. | ||
Okay, now I think he's an idiot. I think that his views on Israel are abhorrent, but I don't think that he should lose his columnist slot over at The Guardian. | ||
That's a different story, obviously, when it comes to Any publisher gets to make decisions about what it wishes to purvey and not. | ||
The Daily Wire is a publisher, not a platform. | ||
Publishers obviously have to decide what sort of things they wish to pay for the publication of. | ||
And when it comes to hosts and publishers parting ways, obviously there will be a non-meeting of the minds. | ||
That's pretty much all I can say on that. | ||
Obviously there was a non-meeting of the minds. | ||
It seems that it's gotten awfully personal for Ben, and I understand he's a Jewish guy. | ||
And he's always been very pro-Israel and he's got religious feelings and personal relationships about the situation going on over there. | ||
I don't blame him at all. | ||
I'm just using this as an example of when we abandon reason because the heart has got reasons of its own. | ||
And I want to show you this clip to follow up with that from Andrew Schultz. | ||
Andrew Schultz hosts a podcast called Flagrant. | ||
I think it's called Flagrant 2. | ||
One of the best Alex Jones interviews I've ever seen in terms of just really fun is from a couple of years ago on Flagrant 2. | ||
So if you want to watch an awesome Alex Jones interview, I highly recommend this one, but I'm going to show you this clip specifically because Andrew Schultz addresses this Ben Shapiro censorship issue right here. | ||
unidentified
|
He makes the argument for censorship. | |
He calls it something else. | ||
Yeah, I forgot the term I have in my phone. | ||
I don't even think he's using the term right, but he's basically like there's a window. | ||
Of ideas we accept. | ||
Yes. And we accept ideas between this, uh, this... | ||
I guess this is... | ||
If I get window, you're looking like this. | ||
So we accept ideas between here and here. | ||
And anything outside of that window, well, you're fireable. | ||
That's censorship. But he's acting as if this is, like, a justified reason for firing people when you built your identity and platform off of no censorship and freedom of speech. | ||
Facts don't care about your feelings and all this s***. | ||
It's so funny that that window happens to end where his beliefs end. | ||
Isn't it interesting you would say that? | ||
By not being pro-Israel, that's where the window ends. | ||
That's also your specific personal belief. | ||
What? So, I just don't see... | ||
So you can't have an opinion on your platform that is not pro a country that is not ours? | ||
Yeah. Wait a minute. | ||
It's crazy. So is the Daily Wire an American media platform or is it an Israeli media platform? | ||
F***. I'm just asking. | ||
This guy's cooking. I'm just asking. | ||
Get that, get that, get that. | ||
No, if the rule is, I'm just saying, if the rule is you cannot be critical, because he has no problem being very critical of America. | ||
Yep. He's critical of the left in America. | ||
Left is half the country. You have no problem eviscerating half of the country. | ||
That's the current party in power. | ||
But you can't criticize Israel as a country? | ||
That's just another country. Unless you're saying, and you're clearly admitting that the Daily Wire is an arm of the Israeli, I guess, media or propaganda machine? | ||
Is that? Oof. | ||
Are you manipulating the religious right in America? | ||
Are you manipulating the right-wing conservatives in America and selling them country western movies and putting on your little cowboy hat and fake moving in Nashville so that you could take all their money? | ||
Fake moving in Nashville? | ||
One of the core tenets of the American identity. | ||
Benjamin Benjamin. | ||
What is happening? I know that this issue is nuanced, and I know that the Candace stuff is... | ||
It's been a long time coming. | ||
And there are other details, too, that people haven't really been talking about with them. | ||
Like, when she first started her show, The Candace Show, on Daily Wire, she had a live studio audience. | ||
And then it just went away after a number of episodes. | ||
You could just tell they were squeezing her out. | ||
I don't know, folks. | ||
So, stick with us. | ||
We are going to do another segment before we have our amazing guest on with us this morning. | ||
Make sure you visit InfoWarsStore.com. | ||
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Welcome back to the American Journal, folks. | ||
What a pleasure it is to be with you. | ||
I am Chase Geiser, your host this morning. | ||
But you will be seeing Harrison on the air today. | ||
He's hosting the War Room, I believe. | ||
And Owen Schreier is hosting the Alex Jones Show as well. | ||
While Alex is taking a much-needed vacation, much-deserved vacation. | ||
And we're going to be doing a lot of fun stuff all day. | ||
I'm particularly excited about all the shows today because we've got great guests popping in. | ||
I'm doing a panel with Harrison and Owen during the Alex Jones Show as well. | ||
So make sure you stay tuned for that. | ||
Before we have our distinguished guest, Nick Sordor, on the show, the top of the hour, I'm going to use this time to share with you a little bit about what's been on my mind. | ||
So, I'm coming out with a book called The Rise of American Populism, and I had to read it through... | ||
The last time, just a couple of days ago, to make sure the editors didn't miss any typos or grammatical errors, stuff like that. | ||
So I'm reading through it with a pen. | ||
And one of the themes of the book is the United Party and how the Republican establishment fails us just as much as the Democrats do. | ||
do and we have to stop thinking of ourselves as Republicans versus Democrats and start thinking of ourselves as the American people versus the political class. | ||
And sometimes I wish Alex was here because he's got so much more experience than I do. | ||
I haven't been around long enough to see a major shift within a single political party. | ||
But the Republican Party that we knew, the warmongering, privacy-violating, dogmatic party that we knew growing up that alienated so many people, No, it was better than the Democrats. | ||
That party cannot survive in the political climate of America anymore. | ||
It's dead. | ||
It's like taking off your mask on Mars. | ||
unidentified
|
You're just going to choke and die. | |
Because the American people are waking up to the fact of the Uniparty. | ||
They're waking up to the fact that the Republicans don't actually represent them. | ||
And Republican voters have shifted from conservative to populist. | ||
And there's a lot of overlap there. | ||
It's not like we don't have conservative values anymore by any means. | ||
Frankly, none of our values really changed. | ||
We just realized that the people we were voting for weren't representing us in our interests and those values. | ||
And I want to show you this clip as an example. | ||
This is Karl Rove. Karl Rove is a brilliant man. | ||
He is a famous campaign manager. | ||
He did a master class with David Axelrod where they sat together as Republican and Democratic campaign managers and talked about what it takes to win Elections. | ||
Now it's dated now because all the technology's changed so much. | ||
But this guy has been a major player in Republican politics for a long time. | ||
He's been very successful for a long time. | ||
And he is perhaps the embodiment of the old guard now. | ||
And I want you to see what he says here in clip 15. | ||
If they were smart, they'd take the January 6th and go hard at it. | ||
And they would say, he wants to pardon these people who attacked our capital. | ||
I worked in that building. | ||
As a young man, to me, the Congress of the United States is one of the great examples of the strength of our democracy and a jewel of the Constitution. | ||
And what those people did when they violently attacked the Capitol in order to stop a constitutionally mandated meeting of the Congress to accept the results of the Electoral College is a stain on our history. | ||
And every one of those sons of who did that, we ought to find them, try them, and send them to jail. | ||
And one of the critical mistakes made in this campaign is that Donald Trump has now said, I'm going to pardon those people because they're hostages. | ||
No, they're not. They're thugs. | ||
There were people, some of them had automatic weapons at a hotel in Virginia hoping to be able to We had people saying, where's Nancy Pelosi? | ||
We had people who were, you know, taking desks and sitting at the desk of the Speaker of the House and attempting to, you know, find people in order to bring them to justice and saying to them, yelling at the police, kill them, kill them all. | ||
And so why Trump has done this is beyond me. | ||
If he had said, you know what? | ||
I trust our jury system. | ||
I trust law enforcement. Anybody who assaulted the Capitol ought to be— Do you think Trump trusts the jury system? | ||
But now he's got—he's appearing in a video with people who assaulted police officers with an intent to take the Capitol by force. | ||
So, you know, look, I'm a Republican. | ||
I don't want to have a Democrat president. | ||
I want to have a Republican president. | ||
But we're facing as a country a decision, and you know, everybody gets to make it. | ||
It's a false dichotomy. As to what kind of leadership we're going to have. | ||
And to me, it is a mistake on the part of the Trump campaign to allow the president's impulses to identify himself with the people who assaulted the Capitol rather than people who stand for law. | ||
There he said it. Obviously, you know how I feel about his position on January 6th. | ||
That is an example of a Republican. | ||
An old guard Republican. | ||
That will not survive in American politics. | ||
That's done. That's the last gasps of republicanism in America because we are now populist and we realize that these institutions like the juries that he mentioned can't be trusted because so many trials have been kangaroo trials, shams. Lawfare has been the number one go-to method for the left to exact its political injustice and will upon innocent people in this country for an extended period of time. | ||
The future of politics in this country is populism. | ||
And it can mean a number of different things. | ||
We can get into it another time when we have more time. | ||
But it's not going to be about trying to get Republicans to beat Democrats anymore. | ||
It's not going to be about reaching across the aisle to come up with bipartisan solutions anymore or compromise. | ||
The era of Democrats and Republicans arguing about whether income tax should be 22% or 24% is done. | ||
Now we are arguing about whether America should remain America or sell out to globalism. | ||
It's existential now. | ||
It's not nitpicky little details, little touch-ups to our experiment here. | ||
Now it's existential. That's done. | ||
He might as well be a Democrat, as far as I can tell. | ||
That position, because that's the uniparty. | ||
There is no bipartisan support. | ||
We don't need a third party in this country. | ||
We need a second one. | ||
There is only one party now, and we should give them. | ||
If they want a one-party state, we should give it to them. | ||
We should give them a populist party. | ||
Let's see what Marjorie Taylor Greene says in Clip 20. | ||
CBO has projected that we will be approximately $55 trillion in debt at the current spending levels. | ||
If everything stays the same, we're going to be $55 trillion in debt in 10 years. | ||
We are going to implode. | ||
If the American people finally decide they're tired of illegal aliens murdering them, they're tired of illegal aliens squatting in their homes, they're tired of illegal alien men raping children and raping women, Yeah, if the American people finally have had enough and say no, | ||
they can stop it. And let me tell you, Tucker, if the American people say enough of sending money to foreign wars and foreign aid and funding the murder of people in foreign countries and countries we can't even find on a map most of the time, yeah, if the American people say they've had enough of that and they're able to engage in this and stop spending all their money on all their hobbies and being disconnected And refusing to look at the serious situation that we're living in right now, | ||
oh yeah, the American people have far more power than I have, and I'm a member of Congress. | ||
If they literally hold our government accountable and stand up and say, enough of this! | ||
And I think they should throw out every single elected official. | ||
I'm not kidding. Every one of us should be thrown out. | ||
This government is a failure to the American people. | ||
And I'm angry about it, Tucker, because I'm a mom. | ||
My adult children and that generation and your kids and our grandchildren, at the current rate right now, they'll never be able to afford a home. | ||
They have no strong financial future. | ||
And they are going to be living and raising their own children in a country whose government has screwed all of us It's over. | ||
And that is the flat-out honest truth, Tucker. | ||
And so, yeah, the American people could stop it if they really want to. | ||
I hope that lion roars. | ||
I will say, Congressman Marjorie Taylor Greene of the state of Georgia, thank you so much for that. | ||
Good luck. All right, folks. | ||
So we've got a great guest coming up after this break. | ||
I think we're going to run a report during the first five minutes at the top of the hour just so we can get everything set up in here. | ||
Nick Sordor is going to join us. Nick Sordor is an independent journalist who covers stories the mainstream media won't. | ||
I have been impressed with his work for an extended period of time. | ||
I've seen him on TimCast and other outlets as well. | ||
You can find him at x.com slash Nick Sordor, which is N-I-C-K-S-O-R-T-O-R. In the meantime, make sure you go to Infowarsstore.com and check out some of our great products. | ||
Now, two of my favorite products are available online. | ||
For sale at 40% off. | ||
Survival Shield X3 is back in stock at 40% off. | ||
Traditionally, we think of iodine as something that is to be taken after being exposed to massive amounts of radiation, and that's certainly true. | ||
It is known to be used as a safeguard in that instance, but it's got so many other health benefits too. | ||
I was blown away when I did some research to put some ads together at the amazing benefits of iodine. | ||
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go to InfoWarsStore.com because without you going there and getting great products for yourself, this broadcast could not be on air. - The solar eclipse on April 8th this broadcast could not be on air. - The solar eclipse on April 8th is The National Guard is being deployed and the people are being advised to have two weeks of food and to fill their fuel tanks. | ||
This could all be explained due to the fact that tens of thousands of visitors are expected along the path of totality. | ||
But many people believe that they could be preparing for possible earthquakes due to the Devil Comet aligning with the April 8th eclipse and due to the fact that in 1811, a comet also appeared in the skies during a solar eclipse on the same path and was followed by the biggest earthquakes in American history. | ||
Known as the New Madrid Earthquakes, around 10,000 earthquakes occurred in just three months' time, the biggest being measured at 8.8 magnitude. | ||
They were the most devastating series of earthquakes in recorded history. | ||
But it was a different comet, and while some claim that a solar eclipse can trigger earthquakes, this scenario seems unlikely. | ||
This eclipse season is, however, a very rare event. | ||
The recent eclipses in August of 2017 and October of 2023, along with the upcoming one on April 8th, forms an alef and a tav over the United States. | ||
The Aleph and Tav are the first and last letters of the Hebrew alphabet, the Alpha and Omega, the beginning and the end. | ||
These eclipses mark the end of the great year, a 26,000-year period that starts anew with the dawning of Aquarius and a new golden age. | ||
Manly P. Hall wrote that high-level nations designed America for a peculiar and particular purpose, a secret destiny to bring about a new Atlantis or a new world order, wherein a king, descended of a divine race, will rule over all. | ||
In rituals, this king is symbolized as Apollo, Horus, or Nimrod, the father of Freemasonry, and is thought to be a descendant of the biblical Nephilim, or the Sumerian Anunnaki. | ||
According to Thomas Horne, this will happen in 2025, which corresponds to several documents published by intelligence agencies, such as Global Governance 2025, Global Trends 2025. | ||
And the 2025 Deagle forecast on world population. | ||
NASA is notorious for performing Masonic rituals based on the Egyptian mystery schools. | ||
Apollo being the same character as Horus, Sirius representing Isis, and Atlantis being the new golden age they hope to restore. | ||
And during the eclipse on April 8th, NASA will fire three rockets named after Apep, the Egyptian serpent god, whose goal was to devour Ra, the sun. | ||
And when the sun re-emerges after three minutes of darkness, it will be likened to the rebirth of Horus, their new king of the Golden Age. | ||
CERN, known for practicing occult rituals at a statue of Shiva, the Hindu god who symbolizes death, destruction, and the end of an age, will be firing up their large Hadron Collider to full power during the solar eclipse. | ||
And Israel, who is in the midst of committing genocide, is preparing to sacrifice a red heifer, a ritual sacrifice to prepare them for taking back the Temple Mount. | ||
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Red heifers, to be precise. | |
Some Jews and Christians believe they're the key to rebuilding the historic Jewish Temple in Jerusalem and to beckoning the Messiah. | ||
To understand, you have to go back nearly 2,000 years When the ancient Romans destroyed the last temple in the city, to rebuild it, these believers point to the Bible's Book of Numbers. | ||
It commands the Israelites to sacrifice a red heifer without defect or blemish and that has never been under a yoke. | ||
Only then can the temple rise again. | ||
Those sacred cows were showcased in Washington at a recent prayer gathering. | ||
Many evangelicals believe these red heifers will usher Christ's second coming. | ||
We need the Messiah to come, right? | ||
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So for me, the red heifer, it's red for the blood of Jesus Christ. | |
A massive altar already awaits. | ||
You're tuned in 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 Geyser, your host this morning. | ||
So much great stuff going on. | ||
Harrison Smith will be hosting the War Room this afternoon. | ||
Just filling in while Alex Jones is taking a much-deserved vacation. | ||
He'll be back at the end of next week. | ||
With us in studio is the great... | ||
Nick Sordor. Nick, it is an honor and a pleasure to have you. | ||
How are you, sir? It's a great day to be here. | ||
I'm so happy. Thank you for inviting me. | ||
I love saying hello to you as if we haven't been hanging out for five minutes. | ||
You know, you always think about that. | ||
It's like, do people realize what goes on in the background? | ||
You know, there's a commercial and we just shut down for five minutes and watch it, but no. | ||
So I've been following your work for some time. | ||
I know you did a lot of amazing coverage in Hawaii, and we can get into that if you'd like. | ||
But what I'm really interested in, with these conversations in studio, we've been so fortunate to have such cool guests that want to come on. | ||
I just want to know how you got into the space at all. | ||
Man, I'm telling you, it was not anything that I expected at all. | ||
I mean, keep in mind, before I was doing, I was working in political technology, is what I was doing, and I was working with various candidates for, really, state office in Kentucky, and I was driving, actually, to Texas to come visit a friend, and my car broke down in western Kentucky, and I was like, I saw a space that was going on with Mario Knopfel, with Thomas Massey was on it, and I'm like, I had no idea what a Twitter space was at this point. | ||
This is in December of 2022. | ||
And I ended up requesting to come up on stage on that and ended up pretty much botching the entire thing. | ||
But I had a conversation and stuff. | ||
And I was like, you know, that was actually kind of fun. | ||
But whatever reason, they invited me back. | ||
And I started actually paying a lot of attention to Twitter and stories that weren't being covered by the mainstream media. | ||
Like East Palestine, Ohio, where it was just, I wasn't a journalist or anything at the time. | ||
I was just some guy on Twitter that was really pissed off about what was going on in our world and watching these people in East Palestine, Ohio. | ||
I don't know if you remember. They trained around it. | ||
Yeah. And these people were just getting totally, totally shafted. | ||
Yeah. So I decided I'm just going to drive up there. | ||
You know, I had like, I guess like 20,000 followers at the time. | ||
You didn't take the train? No. | ||
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Too soon. But, you know, I go up there and I'm the only one there. | |
It's just me and my Twitter account. | ||
So I start whining and moaning about it. | ||
But where is everybody? | ||
Where is the media? | ||
These people are, you get out of the car and you're just, you know, all of a sudden it's intoxicating, this smell of chemicals in the air. | ||
Were the train cars still strewn about when you were there? | ||
Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah. They were still smoldering at the time and everything. | ||
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And media's gone. | |
Federal government's not there. | ||
State government's nowhere to be found. | ||
I mean, there's pretty much got a small skeleton crew of people that are just kind of wandering around the crash site. | ||
And you have all these people that have been left in limbo out there. | ||
And I could not believe it. | ||
It made me so mad. | ||
So I just started just lambasting the federal government, state government, Norfolk Southern on Twitter. | ||
And it ended up – it started to go viral. | ||
And that's when Tucker Carlson's team called me and said, hey, we want you on for tonight's segment. | ||
Can you do it? I'm like, oh, I've never been. | ||
If Tucker wants me, he can call me. | ||
Yeah, he can call me himself. | ||
How much are you going to pay me? | ||
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But I mean, dude, I had never done any sort of TV before. | |
I had nothing. This is just my first time. | ||
It's like, yeah, put me on the largest cable show, you know, in the history of cable, it seems. | ||
And that was like a couple of months before... | ||
Tucker. Sure. So did you just pop? | ||
Like, did you log into your Twitter after that appearance? | ||
And it was just notification, notification. | ||
Oh, yeah. I mean, dude, the amount of people that texted me, it's like, hey, I haven't talked to you since eighth grade. | ||
What do you want? It's kind of like, you know, after people that win the lottery and then their long-lost cousin, you know, six times removed, shows up, you know, all of a sudden. | ||
It's like, but no, it was surreal, but it... | ||
Tucker Carlson deserves a hell of a lot of credit for that story. | ||
You know, you guys covered it and you did a hell of a lot of good for those people out there because without independent outlets such as yourself and, you know... | ||
Even just random TikTokers uploading images of the creeks that had like the soapy water look. | ||
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That was my video. That was you? Yeah. | |
Oh, you're a hella guy. | ||
Yeah. Well, the video that's being referred to was this rock that we took that we threw into the water and it stirred up the... | ||
That was you? The sheen. Yeah, that was... | ||
I knew I loved you for some reason. | ||
Yeah, that was blowing my mind. | ||
And Biden didn't show up, I think, until recently. | ||
February 16th of this year, which was over a year after the train derailment. | ||
He's like, listen, they will do Valentine's Day. | ||
So they had a Q-D. We can't have the best team in the world here, don't you? | ||
Wow. Yeah, the rainbow sheen. | ||
It looks like the bubble water you get for your kids. | ||
Yeah, exactly. Except this is definitely not the kind of bubbles you'd want your kids to pull into. | ||
Man, I wish we would have known you back then because we could have set you down there with one of our water filters. | ||
Test it out. So we did, actually. | ||
So we had a team, a man named Scott Smith came in. | ||
He spent over $100,000 of his own dollars testing the water, testing furnace filters, testing the air, you know, all around East Palestine and the area. | ||
And he found things that were, I mean, just, you know, bombshell evidence that the EPA was trying to hide because as the way that he kept putting it, you can't find what you don't test for. | ||
They were intentionally, the EPA and Norfolk Southern, purposely not testing. | ||
For the chemicals that they knew were in the cars. | ||
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Right. | |
And so when they're saying that there's nothing in the water, the water is totally fine. | ||
Obviously, that's not that's not true. | ||
This stuff had gone to, it was sitting in the bottom of the creek, just waiting to be stirred up. | ||
And keep in mind, there are children that this lady, her name is Courtney Miller. | ||
She was a resident there. | ||
She has not been back to her house since this occurrence. | ||
She just got out of Dodge. | ||
She just moved out. | ||
Yeah, she's got children. She won't bring her children back here for obvious reasons. | ||
Her children used to play in this creek all the time and throw rocks in it and stuff. | ||
And this never happened before. | ||
This is all new stuff. | ||
So the EPA was lying absolutely full of it. | ||
What were the chemicals? So, I mean, you had tons of different dioxins. | ||
You had vinyl chloride, which is most likely what this was. | ||
This ran straight from the tanker cars into the streams and the water system, which is why it ended up right here. | ||
And that vinyl chloride, as well as a phosgene. | ||
Phosgene was a chemical weapon used in World War I. And they detonated it in the middle of this town. | ||
And I'm telling you, Chase, they would never have done this in the middle of Washington, D.C. or Columbus, Ohio. | ||
They told us for the longest time that nothing else could have been done. | ||
This is the only thing that we could have done. | ||
So the only way to get rid of the mess was to ignite it? | ||
He actually grilled the NTSB chair, Biden's NTSB chair, on this a couple of weeks ago. | ||
And she now admits that this was not necessary. | ||
They did not have to blow up the train. | ||
So they said that this was going to happen if they didn't blow it up themselves. | ||
That's what they said in the beginning. And now they're coming back and saying, no, this was unnecessary. | ||
We should not have done it. | ||
Bizarre. What do you think about the 60,000 pounds of ammonium nitrate that disappeared off that train on the way to California? | ||
You know what I'm talking about? It was... | ||
Yeah, and you know, you don't hear anything else about it anymore. | ||
Right. They said that because it's used for fertilizer, but it's obviously used for improvised explosive devices as well. | ||
Well, look what happened in Beirut, Lebanon a couple of years ago. | ||
Do you remember that where you had that massive explosion? | ||
Yes. I mean, it blew up half the city out there. | ||
Right. It was a plant. It was all ammonium nitrate. | ||
Right. There were people from their apartments that were like out their windows. | ||
Yeah. Boom. Yeah. And it ended up falling over. | ||
Well, they said that it just dissolved in the soil. | ||
So what they claimed, as I understand it, was that there was some sort of a leak in the carriers, the cars, and they didn't catch it. | ||
And I find that very hard to believe because... | ||
Maybe I'm wrong, but it seems to me that it's very likely that we have sensors on these carts. | ||
So if it's suddenly way lighter, you would think that they would know that maybe they lost some of their inventory. | ||
And so they said that it spilled out over the course of the route and just was absorbed into the soil. | ||
They never found it. They said it was gone. | ||
So I'm like, all right, we have 10 million people that have come in illegally to the United States since the Biden administration came here. | ||
Over 70,000 of them are recognized to be from places of interest, so terrorist countries. | ||
And we have 60,000 pounds of ammonium nitrate missing, and you're just saying that it was absorbed into the soil? | ||
Did you test? Right. | ||
I mean, how far did this train go before anybody noticed it, too? | ||
And how many of these—like, this is what we know about. | ||
This is what we've heard about. | ||
What have we not heard about in terms of the, you know, stuff disappearing off of trains and such? | ||
There are a lot of trains that go, you know, crisscross this country every single day, and this is one occurrence— How much more is it happening? | ||
Yeah. What caused the derailment in East Palestine? | ||
So there was a, apparently there was a wheel. | ||
This is the official story anyway, which, you know, the NTSB hasn't released all of their findings yet. | ||
You know, whether or not they will is, you know, they like to kind of wait until these stories go out of the news cycle totally before they start actually giving facts if they ever give any facts. | ||
Like, are we going to find anything out about Maui? | ||
Maybe not. | ||
But in terms of this, you had a wheel on one of the train cars that was reportedly stuck for miles. | ||
I mean, it was over 10 miles where it was stuck, and it wasn't spinning anymore. | ||
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It wasn't spinning. | |
It was just dragging. | ||
Yeah, but there are sensors that are supposed to catch that over the course of these 10 miles, multiple sensors. | ||
Apparently, none of them worked, so the wheel ended up catching fire. | ||
And so once it got to East Palestine, Ohio, for whatever reason, they decided they're going to stop right there in the middle of the town. | ||
And so the fire gets a little bit bigger. | ||
But they had already depressurized the cars, supposedly. | ||
Okay, so, or the cars where the fire was. | ||
So that one wasn't necessarily at risk of exploding. | ||
However, they decided to blow up the entire train with their controlled detonation rather than just taking care of that one car. | ||
It was like a Building 7 move. | ||
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Just bring it down. Yeah! Dude, you know what? | |
I didn't say it, but, you know, a lot of people are thinking it. | ||
It's in the wars, man. I said it. | ||
That's why I love this show. So, alright, so obviously we haven't heard much build back better rhetoric from Biden, probably because there's been train derailments like crazy, probably because boats are flying into bridges and F-35s are disappearing. | ||
We never heard anything about that again. | ||
They said they found it, but there was no evidence. | ||
I've done so many segments on that. | ||
I don't want to beat a dead horse for the sake of the audience. | ||
What made you decide to go to Hawaii? | ||
Maui was a similar situation as Palestine, Ohio, where you just weren't... | ||
You heard about it in the beginning, the mainstream media. | ||
They go there when the story is nice and sexy. | ||
And the government gives them very little information, but all of a sudden, you know, it's not as appealing to them anymore. | ||
Maybe they're not getting the clicks and ratings that they were once getting. | ||
And they got these supposed answers from the government, which aren't real answers. | ||
I mean, they're either lies or it's just half of the information. | ||
They're omitting a bunch of stuff. | ||
And then they just kind of drift away into the next, you know, story that's a different story. | ||
A distraction, yeah. They're distracted so easily and they move away and they just expect everybody else to forget about it. | ||
That's exactly what the government wants. | ||
Especially this administration, man. | ||
I'm telling you. Their entire motive seems to be to just cover things up and things will go away. | ||
They think they can control the entire narrative. | ||
And I realize that about Maui. | ||
I go out there to Maui, same situation, very little media on the ground. | ||
The national media is gone. I never even interacted with anybody from national media while I was out there, besides the ones that were having me on their shows. | ||
No reporters that were on the ground were ones that were doing TV interviews and stuff. | ||
They weren't broadcasting this stuff anymore. | ||
And so I started screaming and yelling about the fact that these people are not being given any aid. | ||
They're not being given any answers. | ||
We don't know what started the fire. | ||
We don't know why they were locking people into the burn zone and not letting them leave, which resulted in, you know, I mean, dozens and dozens of deaths, and I believe that there are a lot more deaths than what we actually know about. | ||
They were very cryptic about missing children and things like that. | ||
Yeah, but there are that number, this is the first time in a situation like this where I've seen an official death count drop by like 30%. | ||
It's like Monty Python. | ||
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I'm not dead! How did that happen? | |
You're going to call this a confirmed death, a confirmed fatality, based on getting carcasses and bodies and such, many of which were just totally charred. | ||
I mean, I know the death count for children is higher than what they said. | ||
We just don't know how many. | ||
I mean, I've seen pictures of, you know, from people's phones that were running through the burn zone trying to escape. | ||
And then they had gone in right after the fire to try to go back in and find people that they were with. | ||
And there was one kid that had a video. | ||
And it ended up being, you know, two of his cousins that were kids in a car. | ||
dead with the entire family And I didn't ask him why I took a video of it. | ||
I wasn't going to ask him for the video because you could just tell it was really bothering him. | ||
Right. But... The total in these videos that he had, there were six children that were dead, and the official number is one. | ||
And you can tell just based on the size of the being. | ||
And it's sad, but a lot of these families are either afraid to come out and say anything, Or some of them were undocumented. | ||
And so there's nobody looking for them as well. | ||
And the undocumented ones are obviously going to be afraid to come out and challenge the government narrative because the government of Hawaii is very vindictive. | ||
Very vindictive. They're the most corrupt government in the United States by far. | ||
But regardless, they're lying to these people, and I believe that this is a land grab at this point, where they are trying to force these people out onto the streets and then off the island because they want this land. | ||
They've wanted this land for the longest time because it's very valuable. | ||
Who's they specifically? The state government? | ||
The state government and their beneficiaries. | ||
Like I said, it's the most corrupt government in the country. | ||
Right. I think that... | ||
I don't want to jump to the conclusion that they said it on purpose. | ||
They knew that it was going to happen, though. | ||
Really? This has been a topic of conversation for years now among locals that have been saying, the town's going to burn down. | ||
You guys aren't doing anything about it. | ||
And they had no plan in place at all. | ||
They won't let people fight their own fires. | ||
They won't allow volunteers to... | ||
They don't have a volunteer fire department or anything like that because they won't allow them to out there. | ||
And people are like, why? | ||
Why were you blocking us from doing any of this stuff? | ||
Why weren't you giving us water to fight the fire? | ||
They were trying to fight the fire without water. | ||
They wouldn't release the water to the firefighters to fight the fire in the town. | ||
There was something that I noticed. | ||
I didn't see anybody else notice it. | ||
I'm sure somebody else did. | ||
But are you familiar with the diesel fuel leak that happened in February of the same year of the fires? | ||
Where was this? So, my memory's rusty on specifically where it was, but there's a Space Force Center on the island, like a facility. | ||
Yep, I've been there. And, oh cool, look at you. | ||
Well, they won't let me in. | ||
I just go to the outside of it. | ||
And the crazy thing is, do you remember the space lasers? | ||
Yes. So, within 24 hours of the space lasers being sighted over Hawaii, it was right over that, as I understand it, the Space Force facility. | ||
A fuel pump malfunctioned and 700 gallons of diesel fuel spilled all over the mountain. | ||
700 gallons, it's a lot, but it's not a lot. | ||
I don't know. You can look at it either way. | ||
And I did a little bit of research, and yes, the major flammable elements of diesel fuel evaporate within like a day, but if it seeps into the soil, it can remain easily flammable for months, apparently. | ||
Assuming the chat GPT gave me accurate information when I was asking about it. | ||
So the government knew about this spill, and And they, as of July, had yet to have cleaned it up. | ||
So they had it taped off. | ||
They had contractors, I believe, even hired to do it, but it was still not addressed. | ||
To fix the fuel pump. So my thinking was that the lasers didn't actually start a fire. | ||
That the lasers, because they transmit data so quickly, may have been used to hack the facility to cause the fuel pump to leak. | ||
And then it caught later some other way. | ||
So I don't know. It's a stretch, but it's just bizarre to me that 700 gallons of diesel fuel spills all over an island that's engulfed in flames within six months and they didn't clean it up. | ||
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So this actually... | |
I can see something like this potentially being... | ||
Lahaina was not the only wildfire that day. | ||
Right. There was also, right underneath the mountain, you're talking about Haleakala. | ||
That is where this Space Force, Air Force facility is. | ||
On top of it, it's supposedly an observatory. | ||
It's very highly guarded. | ||
Don't really know a lot of what goes on there. | ||
Nothing to see here at the observatory. Yeah, right. Is it an observatory? | ||
No. Yeah. | ||
And so, but right under the mountain, you have the town of Kula. | ||
Kula also burned that day. | ||
I mean, it was totally out of control. | ||
You don't hear as much about it because it's, number one, it wasn't as, you know, Kula is not, Lahaina was a very, very significant town. | ||
Like probably the most significant town for native Hawaiians. | ||
Kula is just, it's called upcountry. | ||
It's probably 45 minutes from Lahaina, but nobody's really talking about that place. | ||
They still don't have running water up there or anything like that. | ||
I don't know if it had anything to do with, you know, we've never heard what sparked the fire up there. | ||
We don't know what fueled it. | ||
We don't know any of that. | ||
We know a lot less about that fire that burned down houses and displaced people. | ||
And Hawaii is very lush. A lot of people don't realize it's not like you drop a match and it ignites California in some places or somewhere else. | ||
It's very wet and damp and vibrant, right? | ||
Or was it dry season? | ||
It depends on the part of the year. This was actually during the dry season, but that's why I argue to say that they knew that this was a possibility, and they should have planned for it. | ||
However, they refused to, and they would keep brushing the possibility under the rug over and over and over again. | ||
And... The thing that's fueling a lot of the questions here are the fact that they keep lying to us. | ||
They keep lying to the media. | ||
They're arresting people for going in and trying to visit their own homes. | ||
You can't cross the line. | ||
I mean, if they secured the southern border like they secured Lahaina, I mean, we would have no more immigration problem at all. | ||
I mean, it would totally... I never looked at it like that. | ||
That's a pretty good point. Yeah, dude. | ||
I mean, you can't... You cannot slip in there. | ||
They're constantly patrolling it. | ||
They've got drones overhead. | ||
They're watching everybody. How many federal dollars have flooded in? | ||
Do you know? I know I'm throwing curveballs at you. | ||
I don't expect you to know. No, no, no. Well, so the federal... | ||
We don't have the exact federal numbers yet because they're... | ||
One of the other issues that we're having is also an issue that's going on down at the border where... | ||
They're putting this money into NGOs, which makes it so you don't really know exactly where the money is going because these NGOs that are non-profits and such... | ||
They get a grant, they spend it however they want. | ||
They spend it however they want to, so we don't necessarily know where the money is going. | ||
I do know that FEMA is really not doing much at all for a lot of these people. | ||
There are so many more homeless people now than there were before that FEMA is just, you know... | ||
I that's why I'm getting to the point where I feel like this is planned. | ||
They don't want to help these people. | ||
They want them to have to move off the island because, you know, you can't these people that have lost their their businesses, you know, the lack of tourism that is out there right now. | ||
And keep in mind, Maui's economy is 90 percent tourism and really expensive and brutally expensive. | ||
You have no idea. I want my honeymoon there. | ||
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I have an idea. Yeah, well, okay, then you absolutely do. | |
And, you know, paying rent, you get a small one-bedroom apartment or something like that, you're going to pay, you know, three, four grand a month. | ||
Yeah. And when you don't have a job anymore, FEMA's not helping you, the SBA isn't helping you, the federal government's nowhere to be found, what's your option? | ||
Will they buy you a plane ticket to leave? | ||
Did they establish any system? | ||
Oh, no. No, no, no. They just won't give you anything. | ||
But, you know, what are you going to do? | ||
If they were to buy you a plane ticket to leave, then it's easier to point the finger at them and be like, clearly they want you to leave. | ||
That's the only help they're giving you. | ||
They have to be careful about what they do, or else people will start seeing the light and realize, oh, that is actually the plan. | ||
Wow, incredible, incredible stuff. | ||
This is Nick Sordor, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
Make sure you follow him on x.com slash Nick Sordor, N-I-C-K-S-O-R-T-O-R. Absolutely amazing conversation. | ||
Nick, thank you so much for coming in the studio. | ||
I really appreciate it. Thank you for having me, Chase. | ||
Stay tuned, folks. We are going to cover more news for the rest of the show this morning. | ||
And don't forget, Nick is going to be on the Alex Jones Show with Owen and the War Room with Harrison for this afternoon as well. | ||
well. | ||
So stay tuned all day in for wars every day, all day forever. | ||
Welcome back to the American Journal folks. | ||
I'm I am Chase Geis, your host this morning. | ||
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We are going to try to take some calls before the show is over. | |
We've got 30 minutes left of the show. | ||
Go ahead and call in 877-789-2539. | ||
Again, that's 877-789-2539. | ||
The sooner you call, the more likely I am to get to you. | ||
I'll give the crew a chance to screen some of these calls as they pop in, and hopefully we'll have enough time to get into some. | ||
As the show goes on before it's over and the great Alex Jones show begins at the top of the hour, 11 a.m. | ||
Central Time, hosted by Owen Schroyer. | ||
Very good guest. It's going to be in studio and Skyping in throughout the show. | ||
And Harrison and I will also be joining Owen at the end of the Alex Jones show today as well. | ||
So make sure you stay tuned for that. | ||
Man, what a conversation. | ||
It's so crazy to me. | ||
I was just thinking we didn't have enough time to get into it with Nick. | ||
Everything I hear from our politicians seems to be about some other nation. | ||
So, I hadn't thought in depth about the East Palestine derailment or the ammonium nitrate that vanished or the Maui fires in some time. | ||
Obviously, I thought a lot about them when they were happening. | ||
But we move on. | ||
And just going through... | ||
Those two or three absolute nightmare situations. | ||
Back to back like that. | ||
Juxtaposed to the fact that our politicians seem to only care about Ukraine. | ||
This is why populism is replacing the Republican Party. | ||
This is why the America First movement is so powerful. | ||
And they try to call us MAGA Republicans because they're really trying to marry this America First movement, this populist movement, to Trump so that when Trump is gone, either at the end of his next term or retires, they want the whole movement to die with him. | ||
That's why they're calling us MAGA Republicans, MAGA Republicans. | ||
They don't want to call us America First Republicans because that actually sounds like a good thing. | ||
They don't want to call us populist because it sounds like we care about the people. | ||
So they want to call us MAGA Republicans. | ||
It's like the N-word for white guys who love their country. | ||
It's the new slur. | ||
And they act as if we're just radical, dogmatic extremists that want to violate the healthcare rights of women and we're backwards and dated and passe and antiquated. | ||
And not only are we antiquated, but they frame us as if we're violent and need to be imprisoned and surveilled and censored constantly, slandering us, berating us. | ||
And The irony of this is the more they do that, the more it wakes people up. | ||
The more people want to be America first, the more trains fly off of rails and explosive chemicals that blow up in cities while our politicians pander to Ukraine for reasons unknown, the more people are going to be like, hey, I'm going to elect somebody that's America first. | ||
The more we hear the Karl Rove's of the world or the Nancy Pelosi's of the world call us insurrectionists because... | ||
The smallest percentage of people that were actually protesting on January 6th did anything out of line. | ||
They just take those actions and project them on a whole entire political movement that came about for very reasonable reasons. | ||
The more they do that, the more starships slip between their fingers. | ||
And I just... | ||
Can't believe. We've got ships flying into bridges. | ||
We've got trains falling off the rail. | ||
We've got ammonium nitrate disappearing. | ||
We have a wide open border. | ||
We have islands of our nation aflame. | ||
We have F-35s disappearing. | ||
We have billions upon billions of dollars going to Ukraine while Social Security is bankrupt. | ||
We have Joe Biden... | ||
Bragging about the low cost of insulin, which is something the Trump administration did, the Democrats reversed, if you remember, all while the Affordable Care Act has done nothing but increase the cost of health care exponentially since its enactment. | ||
You understand that one of the stipulations of the Affordable Care Act is that Health insurance companies are only allowed to make, I think it's 10% above the cost of care. | ||
Let me just ask you something simple. | ||
If I own a business and I'm selling you something, and I'm only allowed to make 10% above the cost, let's say that what I'm selling you costs $10. | ||
That means I can charge $11 and keep $1. | ||
Now, the only way I'm going to make more money is if I somehow figure out a way to get what I sell you to cost 10 times more. | ||
So if it costs $100 instead of $10, then I can make $10 on top instead of just the $1, right? | ||
So they literally created a backward reverse free market system where the insurance companies, totally counterintuitively, want healthcare to be as expensive as possible because they can only make 10% more than the cost. | ||
In any other insurance business, whether it's car insurance, homeowners insurance, they're constantly trying to drive down the cost of Of claims. | ||
You wreck your car. | ||
They send a guy out to look to see if it was really wrecked. | ||
And they make you go to their vendor to make sure that they're not overpaying for the repair with the insurance claim. | ||
Any other insurance agency. | ||
But with healthcare, they want it to be more expensive. | ||
And so what they do is... | ||
They work with the drug companies, the hospitals to increase the cost of care every single year. | ||
And that's why our premiums go up so much because the premiums can only go up if the cost of care goes up. | ||
It's absolutely backwards. | ||
That's why people sign up for America First. | ||
That's why this America First movement is more than just Trump. | ||
It's not just MAGA. It's not a fluke. | ||
It's not a phase. This is who we are, and it is who we are becoming as a movement, as a people in America. | ||
Let's go straight to calls. All right. | ||
I want to hear from Andrew, New Jersey. | ||
Andrew, what is on your mind? | ||
Hey, how's it going? Just wanted to say, I describe you and Ben Shapiro the same as Sharpie. | ||
Like, that's my nickname for you guys, because you're both Sharp. | ||
Thank you. Like you always point out quick with Ukraine that we have American contractors that make money and they donate to the politicians and the weapons. | ||
But I want to say I agree mostly with what Ben Shapiro says, but two things I disagree, and it was on Infowars that he was a big proponent of the Iraq War, yet he was like 24 or 25, so he didn't join the military. | ||
And you don't even have to be in a forward position. | ||
Like in the combat, you could join an administrative, so he didn't even do that. | ||
So that was real hypocritical and chicken hawk of him. | ||
And another mistake that he made, I think only because he's not old enough to have seen in the 90s when welfare was reformed and the 94 crime bill, which I don't always agree with. | ||
But he said that in the black community, the out of wedlock birth rate is so detrimental, which is true. | ||
But he said it could take 100 years to change because it's culture. | ||
But no, he's wrong. | ||
It's the policies of the Democrat Party that encourages that and gets people on the plantation and sucks them in. | ||
So I saw in 94 when welfare was reformed, you still got money for the kids out of wedlock, but there was a cutoff point. | ||
I think after the third kid, you wouldn't get any more checks. | ||
So literally on a dime, it changed in the inner cities. | ||
In my city of Newark, in Jersey City, right, you would never see a lady with like four or five kids anymore. | ||
It would be three kids. | ||
And the teen pregnancy went down too because the welfare benefits were harder to get or it was reformed. | ||
And the 94 crime bill, it changed on a dime, even though I would have went to decriminalize. | ||
But the amount of drug dealers in Newark on the streets, literally overnight, it went from, like, maybe seven or eight on a summer night to zero or one. | ||
It was, like, shocking how it changed. | ||
So he just got that wrong. | ||
Okay. It's culture, but it's about money and welfare benefits that the Democrats, you know, suck people into. | ||
Not just black, but all racist. | ||
Yeah, sure. Andrew, thanks for your call. | ||
Those are all great points. I really appreciate you chiming in. | ||
Stick with us, folks. | ||
More calls on the other side, 877-789-2539. | ||
Welcome back to the American Journal, folks. | ||
I am Chase Keiser, your host this morning. | ||
One more segment before the Alex Jones Show begins, hosted by your very own Owen Schroyer. | ||
And Harrison Smith will be hosting the War Room this afternoon. | ||
All three of us, myself, Harrison, and Owen, will be on the Alex Jones Show at some point, so make sure you stay tuned. | ||
We are going to take calls for this final segment. | ||
I'm going to go first to White Tiger in California. | ||
unidentified
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White Tiger, go ahead. Hey, what's going on, Chase? | |
Hey. I called right after the Pearl Harbor stand-down, I mean the Israeli stand-down, or I mean the Hamas attack, and I was going pretty hard, almost pro-Islam and anti-Israel, which I still am anti-Israel. | ||
Easy to do. Yeah, yeah, and I realize that it is kind of irrational. | ||
I was getting a little, like, I had this, like, fever pitch towards it, and I was almost, like, pro-Islam. | ||
Yeah. But I just wanted to say that I agree with everything you said, dude, and, you know, I'm sort of changing my views on that. | ||
I think that it is a problematic religion. | ||
I think that Judaism is problematic as well because of the state of Israel. | ||
Yeah. and all that and so yeah dude i just wanted to and i it was crazy i had a dream about it that i was getting chased by like muslim extremists and then i watched this video so i had to call the baby that's that's wild well i'm glad it was just a dream Yeah, no, but it's one of those dreams that felt really real, and I've had them in the past before, so I'm kind of tripping a little bit. | ||
That's probably going to happen, then. | ||
That's probably what it was. Yeah. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah, definitely. And real quick, dude, I just wanted to say, like, I know you're a Mason and all that, and my grandpa was a Mason, and he owned a cop bar, a police bar in Arcadia called The Station, and it was all the cops, because cops are all Masons and stuff, usually. | |
A lot of them are, though. Yeah, yeah, and so I saw that, and he had all these bunch of these different secret rooms and stuff. | ||
He had a cellar behind a false wall that you have to, like, push in a certain spot. | ||
So it was kind of tricky like that. | ||
Yeah, yeah, far out. | ||
And, um, also, oh, dude, I totally forgot what I was going to say. | ||
Um, uh, but yeah, dude, uh, Yeah, so just keep it up. | ||
I totally blanked on what I was going to say. | ||
That's totally funny. It happens all the time. | ||
It happens to me on air all the time, and I have to pretend that I'm about ready to say something profound while I think of something else to say. | ||
So, White Tiger, I appreciate your call, and thank you for sharing that you resonated with some of the points I was making, because it's so important. | ||
I really do appreciate it. Tim in California. | ||
Tim, what's on your mind? I'm kind of reflecting back to a story that these things get lost in the mix because so many things happen all at once. | ||
This is a story from Newsweek from March 20th, and it's a warning about drinking water issued nationwide. | ||
And this is cyber attacks that are causing this. | ||
And it's from Michael Reagan from the EPA and also White House National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan. | ||
It went to all 50 governors of the United States, and it just tells them, yeah, you know, basically you can't have your passwords on equipment coming from Iran where the default password is password. | ||
You have to change that. You can't leave your default password as password. | ||
Yeah. It's crazy too because like I was covering earlier with NASA coming out and saying that we could have an internet apocalypse this year because of solar weather. | ||
Okay, so our internet could die at any time because of solar weather and the water is not safe to drink anymore. | ||
So we don't have water when we have internet. | ||
It sounds like you're preparing us for the apocalypse. | ||
I'm going to give you something worse. | ||
This is what I really called in about. | ||
I saw on X Bill Malusian. | ||
He's showing where The difference between 2021 and current day, as far as the Chinese nationals that are trying to come across the border, in 2021, it was a grand total of 342 for the whole year. | ||
That's less than one a day. You can't get out of China without the Chinese government letting you out. | ||
And nowadays, okay, last year it was 24,000 for the whole year, but just since October, just this fiscal year, we're already at 22,233 since October. | ||
Now, how does 22,000 people with roller bags come from China to the border? | ||
And we also have the statistics we're now averaging 700-some-odd average known gotaways a day. | ||
And then you've got, like, Michael Jan showing that, hey, you're not even looking at the northern border. | ||
unidentified
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You've got a big problem on the northern border, too. | |
Yeah, it's a CCP-sponsored invasion. | ||
And they come, they get integrated in the communities, they run for office, they become police officers. | ||
You let that go on for year after year after year, suddenly your entire nation has been conquered and you don't even realize that. | ||
How about this? 112,000 people killed in one single year without firing a shot using fentanyl. | ||
That's more than double what it took 10 years to kill in Vietnam. | ||
Yeah, that's true, man. | ||
That is true. Great call, Tim. | ||
Thank you for calling in. I appreciate it. | ||
Let's go on to Hobbs in Nebraska. | ||
unidentified
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Hobbs, go ahead. Hey, good morning, Chase. | |
Good morning, Info Warriors. It's your boy Hobbs. | ||
We'll try and make this quick, but I don't know if I can. | ||
So there were two articles that came out in Newsweek yesterday pertaining to my state. | ||
And as InfoWars' resident, regularly contributing corn person, I felt that I needed to call in and let you guys know about it. | ||
And they both have to deal with the way that our electoral college votes are apportioned out to the presidential candidate. | ||
Now, 48 out of the 50 states Right. | ||
unidentified
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Not New Hampshire. No, Maine and Nebraska. | |
Wait a minute. I thought it was New Hampshire. | ||
Okay. Thank you for correcting me. Nope. | ||
No, Maine and New Hampshire. I mean, sorry. | ||
Maine and Nebraska. It's contagious. | ||
It is. Maine and Nebraska are the other two where we go by our congressional districts. | ||
Nebraska has three congressional districts, and normally crazy Omaha swings Democrat, whereas District 1 and District 3, that's the area around Lincoln, and then like the giant majority of the rest of the state, they usually go Republican. | ||
So currently, Jim Pilton, our governor, and certain activists here in our state are trying to push to change Nebraska over to a winner-take-all approach, which personally I think is a little bit short-sighted and wrong, and I'll explain why in a little bit. | ||
And Newsweek is kind of having a freakout about it because in their mind, they see a scenario where that one electoral college vote is going to be the difference between Joe Biden and Donald Trump winning. | ||
The presidency. | ||
Now, for this election, that may be the case. | ||
On its own, that single electoral college vote is unlikely to swing things one way or another. | ||
But taken in aggregate with everything that's going on, when you have RFK potentially splitting a lot of votes away from Biden and Trump, as well as several House Republicans resigning in this term, the possibility of nobody reaching the 270 threshold and the vote going to the House is a possibility. | ||
And with that one being the potential swing one way or the other, it becomes much more likely. | ||
Now, for this election, It's a possibility. | ||
But in the long run, I think that rather than advocating for the two holdout states to go with the winner-take-all approach, I think it would be much more advantageous and in the spirit of how our republic is structured for other states to adopt our approach to Electoral College. | ||
Because the way that we apportion our votes out, I think, is almost like applying the Electoral College to the state level. | ||
And if you think about it, you have states like Colorado and Illinois that would be reliable Republican states save for one major urban area. | ||
So what I'm gathering, and I could be mistaken, but what I'm gathering is you're, because traditionally we've had the debate about whether or not It should be popular vote or electoral college. | ||
But what you're suggesting is almost like an in-between where it's still an electoral college but it's not winner-take-all. | ||
So it's like a compromise between the two arguments. | ||
No, no, I'm advocating for the Electoral College all of the way, and I'm advocating for an expansion of the Electoral College down to the state level rather than simply at the national level. | ||
If you think about it, with all of the reliably Republican districts in states like Colorado and Illinois, if we did it the Nebraska and Maine way, there would probably not be another Democratic president We're good to go. | ||
Rig this election and Hillary Clinton come out all day and all night and say that Trump's gonna try to rig the election but we know who rigs elections ever since the primary between her and Bernie Frankly, people have known that every corpse in Cook County in Illinois has been voting for 50, 60 years. | ||
So we know they're trying to rig it. | ||
They're trying to bring InfoWars down. | ||
They're trying to censor you and silence you. | ||
And they're trying to make you dependent on the state so that you will obey them in exchange for what you need to live and survive. | ||
And we're doing everything we can to fight it. | ||
So please visit InfoWarsStore.com. | ||
Get something amazing for yourself or a loved one. | ||
Tons of great products. The sales are amazing. | ||
And not only will you be making yourself better and healthier and happier and more productive, these products, but you'll be keeping us on the air so we can be the bastion of truth in 2024. | ||
unidentified
|
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