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James Roguski on Substack has been reporting on the so-called WHO pandemic treaty and its history. | ||
He has shown that its entire history is fraudulent and relies upon the people's silence. | ||
On June 14, 1948, President Truman signed a joint resolution to sign onto the WHO Constitution. | ||
Section 2 states that three U.S. delegates would be chosen by the President and confirmed by the U.S. Senate. | ||
But the Biden administration has sent U.S. delegates who have not been confirmed, which makes them fraudulent. | ||
Section 5 states that in adopting this joint resolution, the Congress does so with the understanding that nothing in the Constitution of the World Health Organization in any manner commits the United States to enact The way they did that was with We're good to go. | ||
Go by that same adoption procedure. | ||
So in 2005, they made substantial changes, and for the last 18 or 19 years, we've been working off of the international health regulations as they were amended in 2005. | ||
I challenge anybody to look through the Federal Register or the Senate records to see if the Senate has ever given their consent two-thirds, either in 1948, 1969, 2005, or in 2022. | ||
On September 30th of 2022, 94 nations submitted more than 300 proposed amendments to the pandemic treaty. | ||
These documents were withheld from the public, and when James Roguski acquired copies, he discovered the reason for this was that the disputes were all based upon corrupt world leaders of smaller nations wanting a bigger piece of the action from the U.S. after realizing the billions of dollars being made by pharmaceutical companies. | ||
This is organized crime, and the big crime bosses are being faced by a bunch of little crime bosses who want in on the deal. | ||
They want to be able to manufacture the drugs and jams in-country so that they can control it and inflict it upon their own population while basically profiting from the next pandemic. | ||
And the proposed amendments to the 2005 IHR will bring this tyranny to its full potential. | ||
They want to create an international health regulations authority. | ||
They want the authority to declare a pandemic based on the mere potential for disease. | ||
They want the authority to compel new vaccines and quarantine for those who are not even sick. | ||
And they want to authorize surveillance and censorship to enforce their fraud. | ||
They also want to give nations the authority to quarantine and vaccinate foreign travelers at their own discretion. | ||
They want to add strengthening language to enable nations to quarantine international travelers As appropriate. | ||
That is not an attack on national sovereignty. | ||
That is a ridiculous strengthening of national sovereignty that would enable each nation to abuse the rights and freedoms of foreign travelers. | ||
The local tyrants that abused your rights over the last four and a half years Didn't need any amendments or didn't need any treaty to do what they did over the last four and a half years. | ||
So the core battle is still local. | ||
You can find these documents at stopthetreaty.org and rejecttheamendments.com. | ||
They view our silence as consent, so we must stand against them and speak out. | ||
Reporting for InfoWars, this is Greg Reese. | ||
Here you go, folks. That's the latest from Greg Reese. | ||
Find and share that at band.video and infowars.com. | ||
We'll be back on the other side with your Daily Dispatch. | ||
See the American Journal. Don't go anywhere. | ||
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It's Friday, May 3rd in the year of our Lord, 2024. | |
And you're listening to The American Journal with your host, Harrison Smith. | ||
Watch it live right now at band.video. | ||
Good morning, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
Welcome to The American Journal. | ||
We have a big show for you today. | ||
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Brianna Morello in studio, right? | |
Yes, okay. Yes, Brandon Morello in studio later in the show. | ||
We'll open up the phone lines for your calls in the second hour. | ||
A lot to get to in the first hour, so let's not waste any time. | ||
Here it is, your Daily Dispatch. | ||
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All right, here it is, folks. | |
Your Daily Dispatch for Friday, the 3rd of May, 2024. | ||
Election interference. That's the headline from Daily Caller. | ||
Brag case gag order puts unprecedented limitations on Trump campaign. | ||
Allies close to former President Donald Trump are furious with the gag order imposed on him and his campaign by New York State Supreme Court Justice Juan Merchant telling the Daily Caller it hamstrings his campaign like no other has been before. | ||
On Tuesday at the start of week three of Trump's Manhattan trial, Merchant held the 2024 Republican presidential nominee in contempt of court and issued a $9,000 fine for repeatedly violating a gag order. | ||
Merchant has also threatened to jail time if Trump continues to violate the order because it's all about election interference. | ||
I mean, that is the point of this. | ||
Whether he's guilty or not, the punishment is being inflicted as we speak. | ||
His campaign is completely hamstrung. | ||
You're just a little over 100 days out of the election. | ||
And he's got a judge telling him what he can and can't say. | ||
It's election interference. | ||
It's pretty simple. | ||
Hey, speaking of election interference, AIPAC halts campaign fundraising for Republicans who voted against emergency Israel aid. | ||
AIPAC, originally called the American Zionist Committee for Public Affairs, Which means Zionism is what rules their decision. | ||
Zionism also rules... | ||
Oh, this is a comment? | ||
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Where's the article? Oh. | |
Alright, that's the headline. | ||
And it really says all you need to know, doesn't it? | ||
AIPAC halts campaign fundraising for Republicans who voted against emergency Israeli aid to the tune of hundreds of millions of dollars. | ||
That's what you get. That's what you get for daring to stand up against Israel. | ||
It's a foreign actor. | ||
It's election interference. | ||
It's foreign influence, which we're told is the worst thing in the entire world. | ||
But somehow, they get to do it out in the open on full display and are now carrying out punitive measures against those who dared to support America in the American Congress. | ||
Here's a headline from New York Times that... | ||
Let's just read it. Thousands believe COVID vaccines harmed them. | ||
Is anyone listening? Is anyone listening? | ||
says the New York Times to the thousands of people who believe the COVID vaccines harmed them. | ||
Apoorva Mendevili spent more than a year talking to dozens of experts in vaccine science, policymakers, and people who said they experienced serious side effects after receiving COVID-19 Within minutes of getting the Johnson& Johnson COVID-19 vaccine, Michelle Zimmerman felt pain racing up her left arm to her ear and down to her fingertips. | ||
Within days, she was unbearably sensitive to light and struggled to remember simple facts. | ||
She was 37 with a PhD in neuroscience and until then could ride her bicycle 20 miles, teach a dance class, and give a lecture on artificial intelligence all on the same day. | ||
Now, more than three years later, she lives with her parents. | ||
Eventually diagnosed with brain damage, she cannot work, drive, or even stand for long periods of time. | ||
There's just some of the devastation wrought by the COVID vaccines. | ||
And now New York Times is actually daring to give them attention. | ||
It's... Truly amazing. | ||
These people carried out a crime against humanity. | ||
And there need to be trials. | ||
There need to be trials for this. | ||
It is, I mean, just reading some of those side effects. | ||
You get that it's impossible to be that wrong, right? | ||
You get that it's impossible for a simple vaccine, in the traditional sense, to cause, like, permanent brain damage. | ||
To a 37-year-old woman, it's on purpose. | ||
It's all on purpose. They hit us with a neurological weapon is the point here. | ||
And we'll return to that in just a little bit. | ||
Moving on now to our e-drama portion of our Daily Dispatch. | ||
Daily Wire obtains gag order against Candace Owens despite Ben Shapiro wanting debate. | ||
The right-leaning news and commentary site Daily Wire obtained a gag order against former host Candace Owens despite co-founder Ben Shapiro We're good to go. | ||
It's just sort of weasel behavior. | ||
Just weasel behavior out of the Daily Wire. | ||
The facts don't care about your feelings, people. | ||
We're very upset at what Candace Owens had said. | ||
So while they were publicly challenging her to a debate and framing it as if she was unwilling or incapable of having the debate, in reality they were legally restricting her, binding her ability to... | ||
Speak out. Just weasel behavior from the weasels. | ||
And finally we have this. Elon Musk to reinstate ex-account of white nationalist Nick Fuentes. | ||
That's a headline from Axios. | ||
I swear, it's a thing. | ||
They cannot just say Nick's name. | ||
It's almost like a religious compulsion, like when a Muslim says, Muhammad, peace be upon him. | ||
It's like they cannot just say Nick Fuentes. | ||
And they can't give him a title anything other than, you know, white nationalist, holocaust-denying, domestic terrorist Nick Fuentes. | ||
He has to have his appellations. | ||
Elon Musk says, X, formerly Twitter, will reinstate the suspended account of Nick Fuentes, a white supremacist and Holocaust-denying broadcaster. | ||
Yeah, yeah. | ||
This is the crazy thing. | ||
The closest, as far as I'm aware, the closest he's ever gotten to denying the Holocaust is laughing at a joke somebody else made questioning the mathematical reality. | ||
Of the gas chambers. | ||
Laughing at somebody else's joke now gets you labeled a Holocaust denier. | ||
But of course, Sebastian Gorka wanted to kick InfoWars out of CPAC because we had some vague association with Nick Fuentes. | ||
That shows you how pungent this stain is. | ||
That Nick Fuentes laughs at a joke somebody made about the Holocaust and now Infowars for having done events with Nick Fuentes are now considered Holocaust nyers. | ||
That's how virulent the infection can be. | ||
A very interesting timing from Elon Musk. | ||
Of course, the big story yesterday is the anti-Semitism bill and it says that bill passes through Congress and heads to the Senate that Elon Musk decides after Really relentless nagging from people online to reinstate Nick Fuentes. | ||
Now, as far as I know, he hasn't tweeted yet. | ||
Hasn't been back on the platform so far. | ||
But he's had a very turbulent relationship with Twitter. | ||
And it's interesting to see Elon Musk welcoming him back. | ||
So that's your Daily Dispatch. | ||
Brought to you, of course, by Infowarsstore.com. | ||
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I've got a bunch of videos to play today, so I want to get right into them. | ||
I think we'll start with clip 19. | ||
Some of my dad's in me. | ||
It's a TikTok. | ||
I think this guy, and maybe it has more impact because he's not a white European by descent. | ||
And maybe it is more... | ||
Maybe people will be more amenable to listening to what he's saying since... | ||
If a white person were to say this, it would reek of some classification of superiority. | ||
But I think the things that he is pointing out are extremely important to consider, especially in a world that is moving away from the Western hegemony and towards something else entirely. | ||
He's basically talking about the We'll comment on this on the other side, but let's go now to clip number 19. | ||
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So here's the thing, and not a lot of people want to hear this, but the very concept of human rights is a Western concept. | |
To other cultures in the world, if you say, you can't do that to me, I have human rights, they're going to laugh at you and be like, huh, why are you so selfish and entitled? | ||
What makes you so special, huh? | ||
What makes you deserve any of these things? | ||
Did you work for it? That is literally the rest of the world's mentality. | ||
Collectivism. Social Darwinism, survival of the fittest, honor culture and shame culture. | ||
In the non-West, being a good person means being obedient, being loyal to your family and to your clan and to your nation and to the collective society by any means. | ||
It has nothing to do with justice or love or compassion and caring. | ||
Now, it's thanks to Zoroastrianism, Judaism, and Christianity why the West is like this. | ||
It's called guilt-based culture. | ||
It's funny because people say there's no objective morality, yet they say being homophobic is objectively wrong. | ||
That doesn't make sense. But it's because... | ||
Human rights are really not a thing in the non-West, especially in the government. | ||
That's why it's so hard or nearly impossible to try to spark change or create change. | ||
Because if you try to rebel against society and fight the government, not only are they going to torture you and show no mercy because you've just proved that you're a disloyal person in the society, but your whole family will be shamed and ostracized and also probably tortured. | ||
People are going to laugh at you for doing something so idiotic. | ||
Just for vanity or change. | ||
Like again, this is why East Asians, but also the non-West, that's why they're so stressed all the time. | ||
That's why they're so insecure because they perceive insecurity as just obedience and being a good community person, being a good family person. | ||
And I know this is very hard for Americans to wrap their brains around because America and the whole Western society is really just a gem. | ||
It is the gem that is the outlier of the whole world. | ||
Because America was founded on rebellion. | ||
It was founded on standing up for what you believe. | ||
It was founded for rebellion against authority. | ||
No other society on earth has that kind of culture. | ||
It's the opposite. It's about loyalty. | ||
It's about reverence for your nation and society and doing anything you can to fight for your society and nation. | ||
This is actually why samurai commit seppuku, by the way. | ||
They are so insecure at the fact that they got captured by their enemy, or that they basically did something embarrassing, that they literally cannot live with that. | ||
Same reason why they had the kamikaze attacks and the banzai attacks in World War II. They cannot live with the shame of being overpowered. | ||
That is just too embarrassing to live with. | ||
And that's also why honor unalivings happen. | ||
When members of a family do things that the father doesn't like, the father can't live with that embarrassment. | ||
And so he literally has to, unfortunately, unalive the whole family. | ||
And in the West, that's like unthinkable. | ||
That's completely immoral. | ||
But then again, that's because we view things from an objective moral framework of good versus evil. | ||
Good being tolerant, inclusive, liberal, and bad being discriminatory, narcissistic, vindictive, etc. | ||
Things that would actually in the non-West be considered manly. | ||
And having guts. | ||
Take war crimes, for example. | ||
War crimes is also a Western concept. | ||
Like, how are you going to make sure in a time of war, when your adrenaline is high, that neither party is going to commit war crimes? | ||
Just out of the goodness of your heart? | ||
During a time of war? | ||
That's why war crimes happen. | ||
Because... Like, how can it be enforced unless someone else enforces it? | ||
Now, in the olden days, that's why God was a thing. | ||
Because if you did something immoral, you'd go to hell. | ||
That's your punishment. And no one's more powerful than God. | ||
It's not like you could get away with it in other cultures because you have so much power. | ||
And that's exactly why the U.S. military is doing what it's doing. | ||
They truly are trying to bring objective Western morality to the rest of the world for better. | ||
Through awful means, because they are trying to be the almighty God that no one can challenge, that if you do bad things like be homophobic, be misogynistic to women, you will pay the price physically, because the only language and morality they speak is social Darwinism, the law of the jungle. | ||
This is what Western individualistic minds need to comprehend, is that the rest of the world is actually very vindictive, quite narcissistic, very insecure, and is two-faced. | ||
While the West and our morals, compared to the rest of the world, they will see us as being naive, being gullible. | ||
Like, straight up, it took people like Zoroaster and Jesus to change the whole shame-based culture of survival of the fittest into a guilt-based culture of doing actual good and helping humanity. | ||
And fighting for justice, fighting against discrimination. | ||
So, after a long yap sesh, to answer your question, how can a toxic, insecure, collectivist society be changed? | ||
It will literally take another Jesus to change society. | ||
And this Jesus is going to need an army. | ||
Yeah, incredibly enlightening stuff there. | ||
I think he's right to a certain degree. | ||
I think there's some nuance here. | ||
Long story short, suffice it to say, we've gone too far in the wrong direction. | ||
Sorry, we've gone too far in the right direction, I guess would be a better way of putting it. | ||
In other words, our tolerance has moved from being a virtue to a liability. | ||
I thought so much of that was just incredibly insightful and something that Americans sort of need to hear. | ||
Because the thing that made our civilization great in the past was, first of all, a population that believed in what he was saying, an objective truth, an objective reality. | ||
Honoring the individual. | ||
And a lot of this actually comes out of Protestantism. | ||
This was a big conflict with Martin Luther when he opposed the Catholic Church. | ||
And there's this, I can't remember the exact quote, but basically when he was on trial for heresy, for being a heretic after putting up the theses on the door of the church. | ||
He was basically asked about his rebellion against the authority of the church, and his answer was that he had to follow his conscience, that he only had one authority to answer to, and that was God. | ||
And the Catholic Church had to take a back seat to his own interpretation of what was morally correct. | ||
And that concept was totally novel at the time. | ||
The Catholic Church was considered the embodiment of God, so he obeyed the Catholic Church, and that was obeying God. | ||
To Martin Luther, it was an interference between he and God, and that he could go to the Bible and see what God wanted, and that was his instruction manual. | ||
That's who he obeyed. | ||
So that whole idea really comes out of Protestantism, which itself was an outgrowth of just the general... | ||
German moral character that's been on display since, you know, Julius Caesar was chasing through the woods. | ||
But he uses, he used the guy there, the Asian white supremacist there, rise of Asian white supremacy. | ||
And I guess there was a drudge headline today, man was just telling me, saying the rise of Hispanic white supremacy. | ||
Yeah, there's, you know, The culture that came out of Europe is the best culture. | ||
It just is. | ||
It's superior to these other cultures that rely on shame and... | ||
Force and power and might makes right. | ||
The Western setup is superior. | ||
And this is something I've pointed to a lot as to being kind of evidence for Christianity itself. | ||
After all, if you go to a pre-Christian world and you tell people actually the way to succeed and the way to gain power and success is to be nice and merciful. | ||
Thank you. Far-right and neo-fascist Latinos becoming more visible, is what it says. | ||
Yeah, there's people of every race, color, and creed that are attracted to Western ideals for very good reason. | ||
Now, those Western ideals are considered far-right white supremacy, but they're not. | ||
They're actually just the secret truth about the construct of our universe. | ||
And that's the thing. If you go to a pre-Christian world and tell people actually not getting vengeance on your enemy, actually being merciful, being beneficent, being self-sacrificing, that's actually the way to gain power, gain authority over the world. | ||
I mean, it sounds crazy. | ||
That sounds totally crazy. In a world without Christian morals, no, you kill your enemies. | ||
You do whatever you can to destroy them. | ||
Any trick or scheme you can pull off, it's got to be good because you'll gain power, gain worldly power. | ||
And it turns out, acting morally over the long term is actually the better way to act. | ||
And I've described it before like, God being the programmer of a video game, and you think you're playing the video game correctly, and then somebody gives you the handbook. | ||
He goes, no, actually, the game's easier. | ||
You do better in the game, and the game's more fun if you do the opposite of what you think you're supposed to be doing. | ||
And that's because the programmer has put incentives in the universe to... | ||
If you learn how they work, you can actually... | ||
I don't want to say exploit them, but take advantage of them. | ||
You actually... | ||
And this happens in your personal life as well, right? | ||
How many times are you given an opportunity where like, well, you can be kind of underhanded and you'll probably do better. | ||
You'll probably succeed. You'll probably get more money. | ||
You know, you could probably screw this person over. | ||
They might not even know you're screwing them over. | ||
You might get away with this totally. | ||
And always, in the immediate sense, it seems like it's going to be advantageous for you to do something immoral or tricky or underhanded. | ||
And if you live that way, you find that it actually makes everything worse. | ||
You might get a little bit more money, but that's going to come with a lot of other troubles. | ||
And it turns out that if you just Try to be as honest and moral and upright and understanding and empathetic and merciful as you can. | ||
That actually turns out to be better for you and for everyone in the long run. | ||
So Western societies were able to build this because the people understood this. | ||
They believed in it and they held their leadership to account for this. | ||
And yet the way that that guy described it in the view of non-Western, non-Christian society, You know, sort of archaic cultures, because that's what they are. | ||
I mean, that's... It was everybody before Jesus Christ. | ||
Everybody was like this. This isn't, you know, people think that they're progressing by going into social Darwinism. | ||
No, you're regressing. Christianity, a moral, upright, self-sacrificing culture, that is the advancement that humanity required. | ||
They're going backwards. | ||
Because things like human rights, selfish and entitled, as well as like naive and gullible... | ||
That's how they feel. Why did the Western culture dominate the entire world? | ||
Because it turns out that you're selfish and entitled if you try to grab everything for yourself. | ||
Welcome back, folks. Just to finish up our thoughts here, we'll get some of the headlines. | ||
A little bit of a slow news day today. | ||
No major breaking news that I feel like you have to Receive immediately a lot of just the same old, same old drama at Trump, drama at the Trump trial, drama at the college protests, build up to World War III. You know, just the typical, just your typical world affairs. | ||
So I want to, again, focus a little bit on what exactly it is we're fighting for rather than what we're fighting against. | ||
We're fighting against is the globalist religion, the globalist conception of morality, which is not an advancement, it's not progressive, it's regressive, it's returning to the eye-for-an-eye barbarism that the light of Christianity guided us out of 2,000 years ago, trying to return to that for some God-forsaken reason. | ||
Again, I just think it's... | ||
So, to finish the thought that I started 10 minutes ago, there's a couple reasons why the Western world was able to dominate the entire globe while being merciful and kind and inventing human rights and not exploiting their strength over everybody else. | ||
I mean... Do we need to read the white man's burden? | ||
That sort of explains the contradiction that the Western world faces, faced back during the days of colonialism. | ||
Where it was perfectly within the technological and physical power to just eradicate the rest of humanity if they wanted to. | ||
But instead how incredible pains were taken to Try to bring the world still stuck in the pre-Christian chaos and madness into the modern world. | ||
And it's like kind of a meme at this point. | ||
There's one particular passage that's often posted where it's like you hear about the horrors of colonialism and you're outraged. | ||
And then you read a description of the first passage White or Anglo explores into Africa and what they discovered there in the heart of darkness. | ||
And it is beyond horrifying. | ||
And there's this one in particular that always gets posted where it's just talking about basically open-air butcher's market of human meat. | ||
I think in Benin is where that takes place. | ||
But that's just one of... | ||
I mean, there are journals full of this stuff. | ||
There were hundreds of guys that... | ||
Struck out into Africa and documented what they found there. | ||
And it's beyond horrifying. | ||
I mean, it's... | ||
It's so bad I don't even bring it up on the show. | ||
Because we'll cover gang rapes and pedophile networks and mass murder, but I mean, there's a limit. | ||
There's a limit. And some of these accounts that you read, there's just some British guy like... | ||
Myself and the African tribe were sitting around the fire when one of their witch doctors decided she'd gotten a vision that they all must kill their babies. | ||
And so they all immediately, without hesitation, picked up rocks and smashed it in their babies' heads and started eating the brains. | ||
And she's like, oh my god! | ||
Oh my god, what is this? | ||
What is going on? | ||
So imagine discovering that. | ||
Imagine coming from merry old England and going and discovering these, you know, just cannibal... | ||
Families in the heart of darkness. | ||
Man, I keep... I keep getting off track. | ||
The point I'm trying to say is that the things that have allowed the Western world to succeed in this regard is one, the people were moral. | ||
They understood the moral framework. | ||
They understood the value and power of a Christian morality. | ||
And so they held their leaders to that standard. | ||
And it's like a self-fulfilling thing. | ||
If everybody in your community believes this, Then it's true and it's how you get ahead. | ||
If you're the only one, as this TikToker was pointing out, if you're the only one in a society where vindictiveness and power and social Darwinism is the king and you try to be merciful or empathetic or not play the power, you are going to lose in that situation because everybody else is just going to think you're an idiot and take advantage of you and destroy you. | ||
But when everybody in your society adheres to this and reinforces the morality of Christianity, then it is like a garden. | ||
I mean, everything, all of these moral values grow and flourish and take root. | ||
That's one thing. The other thing is that we understood that not everybody was like this. | ||
That what we have in America, in Europe, in the rest of the Western world is something incredibly valuable and delicate and really tenuous and that you can lose it and you can, if you don't uphold it and you don't fight for it and you don't adhere strictly to these morals, they go away and you return to barbarism, you return to the mud and the strife and the chaos. | ||
And so... Our leadership especially didn't treat our enemies as if we could just be nice and friends to them and that they would return the favor. | ||
They understood that Social Darwinism in a nationalistic sense. | ||
They go, look, we love being nice and merciful to everybody, but if we're nice and merciful to the cannibal hordes, they're going to eat us. | ||
So we're not going to be nice and merciful to them. | ||
We'll do what we can to bring them out of the mire. | ||
That's our moral imperative and we're under orders basically from our God to do this. | ||
I just think that's such an important message. | ||
And so, you know, he's equating Western tolerance and empathy and objective truth and reality and good and evil. | ||
He's referring to these things as like, you know, the ultimate expression of this is like being nice to gay people. | ||
And it's like, no, that's a little off the mark. | ||
Because the moral framework that we operate under is that you have freedom, you have liberty, you have license. | ||
Because we prefer freedom over tyranny. | ||
We understand that despotism can be abused. | ||
We want to avoid it at all costs. | ||
But that means that your liberty, your freedom, your ability to act... | ||
On your conscience is not a license for doing whatever you want. | ||
It's a requirement. It's actually the imposition of an obligation. | ||
You're free. You have liberty. | ||
Now it's up to you to be able to maintain it. | ||
It's up to you to be able to to act in a way that you're not forced to do something that you do it on your own accord because you understand how it contributes to the overall success and and Power of this correct worldview. | ||
He calls Western society a gym. | ||
And of course we equate goodness with, he equates goodness with tolerance, non-discrimination, not being homophobic. | ||
Again, this is where it's been warped. | ||
This is where this entire concept has gone too far and been divorced from its underpinnings, which are immoral underpinnings, and again, point to the requirement that you act correctly when you're given liberty, and that you don't do things for the sake of your immediate carnal pleasure, | ||
and that you understand that some of your desires and vices have to actually be Tamped down by you, and you have to make a choice to act morally, even when acting immorally seems more fun, and that that's an obligation that you have to uphold for the sake of our entire system here. | ||
But I just thought that was a brilliant video breaking down the difference between the Western objective, Christian-centered worldview and the worldview that Exists everywhere outside of this, in time and space, anywhere outside of the last 2,000 years of advancement in Western Europe and then America. | ||
Everything outside of that sees this worldview as naive, gullible, weak. | ||
It's obviously not, but it's obviously not, and history is evidence of that. | ||
So we'll get into some more news here in just a second, but I really didn't think that was valuable. | ||
As I mentioned, we're not just fighting against the globalists. | ||
We're fighting for a worldview that is infinitely precious, rare, and powerful. | ||
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All the narcissistic devil-worshipping filth. | |
I see you enemy! | ||
I see you enemy! | ||
Enemy! Enemy! | ||
You are my enemy! | ||
And I swear total resistance to you with everything I've got! | ||
Disingenuous, fake, false, broke back, twisted, a defiler, a betrayer, a backstabber, a devil! | ||
You will pay. | ||
Yeah, you think I don't see your face, scum? | ||
You don't think I don't see you? | ||
I see you, you understand me? | ||
I know what you think of me and my family. | ||
I see you right back. | ||
You understand that? You understand that? | ||
You will fall! | ||
You will not bring humanity down! | ||
God is going to destroy you! | ||
While other networks lie to you about what's happening now, Infowars tells you the truth about what's happening next. | ||
Well, AI is getting interesting, isn't it? | ||
That's us. We are all Alex Jones now on the march against the globalist scum dodging the bombs of the New World Order. | ||
Got a lot more videos to get you here. | ||
I'll open up the phone lines in the next hour. | ||
Let's go to clip number six now. | ||
I actually had this video yesterday, but I was too distracted. | ||
I was too consumed by the gall of the anti-Semitism bill, which we can return to that topic here in just a second as the fallout continues. | ||
But I didn't play this. | ||
I probably should have, but we're going to pair it with another video of Klaus Schwab. | ||
So these are two of our unelected overlords, two princes in the New World Order global government. | ||
First, BlackRock CEO Larry Fink talking about population growth and developed versus undeveloped countries. | ||
Let's listen. I could argue, in the developed countries, the big winners are countries that have shrinking populations. | ||
That's something that most people never talked about. | ||
We always used to think shrinking population is a cause for negative growth. | ||
But in my conversations with the leadership of these large developed countries that have xenophobic immigration policies, they don't allow anybody to come in, shrinking unemployment, excuse me, shrinking demographics, these countries We'll rapidly develop robotics and AI and technology. | ||
And if the promise, I didn't say it's going to happen, but if the promise of all that transforms productivity, which most of us think it will, we'll be able to elevate the standard of living of countries, the standard of living of individuals, even with shrinking populations. | ||
And so the paradigm of negative population growth is going to be changing. | ||
And the social problems that one will have in substituting humans for machines is going to be far easier in those countries that have declining populations. | ||
And so for those countries that have rising populations, the answer will be education and so rapidly developing. | ||
You know, for those countries that do not have a foundation of rule of law or education, They're going to be left. | ||
That's where the divide's going to get more and more extreme. | ||
unidentified
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And unfortunately... | |
Sort of a little bit all over the place there. | ||
I'm not even sure what point he was actually trying to make. | ||
BlackRock CEO Larry Fink says AI will boost productivity and worker pay. | ||
Fink says AI will ultimately lead to higher wages as the firm produces more with fewer people. | ||
Long story short, it's an anti-human agenda. | ||
It's quite literally an anti-human agenda. | ||
It seems like if human development was allowed to take its natural course, Then what would happen would be that as civilizations developed and got more scientifically sound, | ||
you almost had a balancing act where the technology in terms of the food production, the nutritional health we're able to achieve, as well as the medical technology and understanding of the ways that illness or injuries killed you. | ||
Then you would see longer lives, you would see more people surviving childhood, while simultaneously affected by all these influences that delay reproduction. | ||
You're going to college, so you're not getting married younger, so you're having less kids, or you're being inundated with plastics and atrazine and pesticides. | ||
Pestides are sort of the perfect example. | ||
On one side, extremely useful in preserving crops and getting the nutrition you need. | ||
And in that way, they'll raise your birth rate in your population. | ||
But then simultaneously, they're poisoning you and subtly affecting your testosterone and all these sorts of things. | ||
So you're simultaneous. | ||
That's going to be lowering the birth rate. | ||
So at the end of the day, it sort of evens out a little bit. | ||
It kind of evens out. | ||
And I think if this was allowed to progress naturally, the thing that would happen would be that these technological advancements should move from the first world into the third world, from the developed countries into the undeveloped countries, where you'd see the same type of sort of balancing act take place there. | ||
Because right now it's just completely unbalanced. | ||
You've got the industrialized, developed world Not even getting close to reaching replacement rates of births while the third world and the undeveloped countries are absolutely exploding. | ||
And the numbers are insane. | ||
In places like Niger, it's like nine times replacement rate of births while their country remains in chaos and third world strife. | ||
What should be happening is we should be Developing these countries by, you know, outsourcing our technological advancements. | ||
And that way we could have some sort of parity balance. | ||
The problem with it and the way it all goes completely off the rails has to do with Social Security and the Ponzi scheme that the economy itself is based on that is predicated on infinite growth. | ||
Now that's impossible. | ||
In a world of physical reality. | ||
You can't have infinite growth. | ||
So to predicate your economy on the requirement of infinite growth is to set up a sort of Ponzi scheme situation where you're having to import people to keep your population rates up. | ||
If instead we had some sort of more reasonable or just real money system that didn't require... | ||
Fiat printing of worthless money. | ||
And we wouldn't require it in the Ponzi scheme of Social Security constantly requiring to pay out more than it's collected so you have to keep collecting more. | ||
Without that It wouldn't be that big of a deal that we're not having five kids per person. | ||
It would be fine if the average was just basic replacement rate. | ||
We could be at sort of a stasis and not have to try to infinitely grow, which again is just completely impossible. | ||
Let's combine what we just heard from BlackRock CEO Larry Fink about how it's fine that humanity is dying out because the robots will keep the GDP boosted. | ||
And that's where the takeaway, right? | ||
It's that humanity is here to serve the economic system of the bankers, not the other way around. | ||
So if human beings are incapable of reproducing at a sufficient rate, it's not that the economic system needs to be reformed to prioritize that or incentivize that. | ||
It's that the people need to be replaced to prop up the economic system. | ||
That's putting them in this suicidal position to begin with. | ||
So let's go to clip number 11 here. | ||
This is Klaus Schwab talking to new young global leaders at the World Economic Forum. | ||
And he gets a little carried away. | ||
He gets a little excited. | ||
You know, normally he goes to these events and everybody treats it like it's very serious. | ||
It's very important. It's very meaningful. | ||
And he goes up in a bunch of kids. | ||
He's not used to the energy of young people. | ||
And I think it kind of throws him for a loop, and he starts saying some things that he maybe realizes he shouldn't say and sort of backtracks a little bit. | ||
You'll see. You'll see what I mean. Let's go now to clip number 11. | ||
Another of our self-appointed unelected overlords, Klaus Schwab, giving a talk to the new generation of young global leaders at the World Economic Forum. | ||
unidentified
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You have the chance to look forward to a career of 50 years. | |
In my own opinion, yeah. | ||
Maybe, maybe more, you will get some injections and so on. | ||
And then, don't forget, your avatar will continue to live. | ||
And your brain will be replicated through artificial intelligence and algorithm. | ||
So we don't know. | ||
But at least 50 years. | ||
Yeah, a little creepy. It's a little creepy. | ||
He gets a little carried away. | ||
He'll work for 50 years. | ||
Everybody's like, yeah! He's like, yeah! | ||
You'll get injections that'll make you live longer. | ||
We'll reverse aging. And if that doesn't work, we'll upload your brain to the mother frame. | ||
And you'll all be robots. | ||
Everybody's like, eh, wait, what? | ||
And he's like, anyway, moving on. | ||
Anyway, moving on from the ultimate goal of our plans. | ||
Just to finish off our coverage of the madness currently dictating world policy, at least here in the West, we're going to go to a clip of Jared Bernstein, the chair of the Council of Economic Advisers to the president, to again talk about the font of so much of our troubles, the economic system, the Ponzi scheme fraud of our central bank currency creation. | ||
That Ron Paul practically identified decades ago as being the head of the snake, the driving engine behind so many of the trends that we combat every day. | ||
Again, the social security system built like a Ponzi scheme requiring infinite growth, the GDP and economic markers serving as the health report for the state. | ||
I mean, all of these things contribute. | ||
To the incentives that compel people to do things that they do, that we report on every single day. | ||
So let's go to clip number 10. Again, this is Jared Bernstein, the chair of the Council of Economic Advisers to the president. | ||
Here's him struggling to even understand, let alone express and justify, the madness of our current economic system. | ||
unidentified
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Let's watch. The US government can't go bankrupt because we can print our own money. | |
It obviously begs the question, why exactly are we borrowing in a currency that we print ourselves? | ||
I'm waiting for someone to stand up and say, why do we borrow our own currency in the first place? | ||
Like you said, they print the dollar, so why does the government even borrow? | ||
Well, um... | ||
The, uh... | ||
So, I mean, again, some of this stuff gets... | ||
Some of the language and concepts are just confusing. | ||
I mean, the government definitely prints money, and it definitely lends that money, which is why... | ||
The government definitely prints money, and then it lends that money by selling bonds. | ||
Is that what they do? | ||
Yeah, they sell bonds. | ||
Yeah, they sell bonds, right? | ||
Since they sell bonds and people buy the bonds and lend them the money. | ||
Yeah, so a lot of times, at least to my ear with MMT, the language and the concepts can be kind of unnecessarily confusing, but there is no question that the government prints money and that it uses that money to... | ||
So, yeah, I guess I'm just... | ||
I can't really talk. | ||
I don't get it. | ||
I don't know what they're talking about, like, because it's like, the government clearly prints money, it does it all the time, and it clearly borrows, otherwise we wouldn't be having this debt and deficit conversation, so I don't think there's anything confusing there. | ||
I don't think there's anything confusing. | ||
He's like, I can't exactly explain it. | ||
But it's not confusing, though. | ||
It's all normal. This is why I refer to financial things as black magic. | ||
They don't even understand it. | ||
They don't even understand what the hell they're doing. | ||
This guy is like a head economic advisor. | ||
He is the, let me repeat it again, chair of the Council of Economic Advisors to the President of the United States. | ||
He's probably one of the most powerful and influential economic advisors. | ||
thinkers in the country can't even explain the most basic function of our monetary system. | ||
Can't even explain it. | ||
This is why people get into hedge funds and puts and stays and all these different economic maneuvers people do. | ||
And I'm just like, ugh. Can you explain why we both print money and borrow it? | ||
And they're just like, well, no. | ||
No, I can't actually. | ||
It doesn't make sense on the face of it. | ||
Because it's all a scam. | ||
Because to explain it would be to reveal that it's a blatant scam being pulled against the American people. | ||
Council of Economic Advisors Chair, Jared Bernstein, cannot even explain the most basic function of our monetary system. | ||
He's the expert. | ||
And he's the one in charge. | ||
Because it's all a fraud. | ||
Because it's all a fraud. | ||
Kind of like why Mr. | ||
Ponzi couldn't explain how people were getting such good returns on his investments. | ||
Because it was all fraudulent. | ||
Because it's all a big fraud, actually. | ||
That's why. Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
unidentified
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Show the folks a brand new way of life. | |
But all you've shown the folks around here is trouble. | ||
And you've only added misery to their stride. | ||
I just thought we'd, uh... | ||
unidentified
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I guess we'll get into the campus protests. | |
I guess with this song leading the way... | ||
I didn't know what I was going to talk about this segment, but... | ||
unidentified
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Considering the fact that we have... | |
Been having to deal with this since the 50s, and this song is about communists pretending to provide people with an alternative that'll help them, but just bringing a bunch of strife and chaos and misery and leaving poverty in their wake. | ||
Yes, folks, it's... | ||
It's a never-ending cycle we've found ourselves trapped in, and it really is a testament to the quagmire. | ||
Like, this is the thing. Like I mentioned with Christianity and social Darwinism, That people who are tearing our country apart right now, this whole concept of, well, now I've been put in a position of authority, now I have power, so I'm going to use it to do whatever I want, right? | ||
Judges saying the Second Amendment has no space in this courtroom, right? | ||
I am the law. | ||
I have the authority, so I don't have an obligation to use that authority to fulfill the oath I took. | ||
I just have the power now. | ||
Now I have the power, and you have to do what I say, or I get to punish you. | ||
This whole concept is not progressive. | ||
I mean, they want to make you think it's progressive. | ||
It's a recession to the way the world used to be before we rose out of the quagmire of the ability of... | ||
Basically, it's the ability of humans to justify their immoral decisions, which we're very good at. | ||
Rhetorically, we are very good at justifying immoral things. | ||
With a lot of fancy words. | ||
But in the same way, this idea that supporting social justice causes on college campuses is a form of progression, you can quite literally go back to the early 60s and hear exactly the same arguments about exactly the same topics with exactly the same programs suggested with exactly the same outcomes as are being suggested today. | ||
They're not progressing us anywhere. | ||
They're keeping us stuck in the mud. | ||
It's like our civilization is stuck in a mud pit of social justice that we've been in since the 60s. | ||
And you have the same type of riots with the same type of complaints. | ||
Same type of government funded welfare programs. | ||
Pitched as a solution that only make things worse. | ||
It's the same thing. For the last 60 years, 70 years at this point, we have been stuck in the mud. | ||
And so what people think is... | ||
They think they're being progressive because they're slamming on the accelerator. | ||
Problem is, if you've ever been stuck in the mud with an SUV... Slamming the accelerator doesn't actually help, does it? | ||
You're not actually doing anything. | ||
You're just wasting time and effort and not getting anywhere. | ||
And in reality, just digging yourself deeper into the mud pit. | ||
That's American progressivism. | ||
They think as long as we're slamming our foot on the accelerator, that means we're progressing. | ||
The reality is they're keeping us stuck in the same conflicts that have bogged us down for the last 70 years. | ||
So let's talk about the let's talk about the campus. | ||
Protest. | ||
I've roiled the American landscape over the last several days. | ||
We'll go now to clip number 16 as Ben Shapiro wants to know, where's the violence? | ||
Where's the hatred? Where's the outrage coming from the Israeli side? | ||
Clearly, Any conflict that occurs at a pro-Palestine protest is the fault of the protesters. | ||
So he asked the question, where's all the chaos and violence from the pro-Israel side? | ||
Luckily, somebody put some videos together to show him. | ||
Let's go now to clip number 16. | ||
unidentified
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Anti-Semitic protests on college campuses where Jewish students are being spit upon. | |
Oh! Physically assaulted, harassed, blocked from going to class, and people are chanting genocidal slogans. | ||
Really, where are the Jewish students assaulting the Palestinian students? | ||
Where are they? Where are they? | ||
Anywhere? Pretty good. | ||
That's pretty good though. | ||
For our radio listeners, if you're not a television viewer, those were shots of the pro-Israel side attacking the Hamas protesters in a variety of different ways. | ||
unidentified
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Fireworks. Bear spray. | |
Or just physically punching them. | ||
I don't know what to add to that. | ||
Just like... Ben Shapiro, Daily Wire, one of the things they do, like reaction videos. | ||
I'd love to see the Ben Shapiro reaction video to that video. | ||
Where is it? Right here, right there, on camera, for everybody to see. | ||
Now, one of the things that's happened is these frat boys are standing up against the protests, destroying everything. | ||
This is very good to see. | ||
I'm very happy to see frat boys. | ||
Holding up the American flag, doing this sort of thing. | ||
Postmillennial has a story. I'd die for this flag. | ||
UNC frat brother speaks out after protecting stars and stripes from Gaza camp protesters. | ||
One of the University of North Carolina Chapel Hill fraternity brothers who protected the American flag from pro-Palestinian protesters after it was returned to its rightful place on the campus flagpole has spoken out about why he decided to act. | ||
Daniel Stumple, a political science student, a member of Pi Kappa Phi, said there was a communal sense of duty among the group, all of whom... | ||
With all of them deciding they would defend the flag, even if it meant being injured or worse, saying, quote, I love that side of America. | ||
We all just kind of connected our brains and stood there protecting one thing. | ||
There was stuff flying in. | ||
We'd say, heads up. We'd cover each other. | ||
We'd look out for other people. I was like, I'd die for this flag. | ||
Everybody was like, yeah, if they get any closer, we're going to start throwing hands. | ||
They're going to have to tear me off this flag by my dead body. | ||
He said the experience was insane. | ||
He nonetheless left feeling hopeful. | ||
Now, I don't know, apparently this guy was... | ||
Matt, you were telling me he's like a... | ||
He was actually pretty much on the anti... | ||
unidentified
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He was an agitator. | |
He was an agitator. There are videos of that same dude. | ||
We'll have to put the internet article on screen so people can get a view of the picture of the dude. | ||
But, yeah, we recognized him as a guy who was going out super early mornings and blasting different things off of an iPhone soundboard. | ||
Things like a rooster crowing... | ||
Some music and I think another thing was like something patriotic like Good Morning Vietnam. | ||
Actually, now that I think about it, it was exactly that. | ||
It was Robin Williams' Good Morning Vietnam! | ||
Right, he was playing at like 4 in the morning when all these people were camped out. | ||
Although I thought that was in California. | ||
Maybe I misread that. | ||
Maybe it's happening in multiple places. | ||
So maybe this doesn't quite have the symbolic importance that I thought it did at first, but I still think, sort of outside of that context, it's almost too perfect, this view of a bunch of white young men upholding the American flag while surrounded by the foreign warring factions of Israel and Palestine. | ||
There's something so sort of symbolic about that. | ||
On one side, you've got the Socialist morons funded by George Soros protesting Palestine ostensibly while actually their ultimate goal is tearing down the Western world as we know it. | ||
And then the other side being the Israeli pro-Israel side dead set on supporting Israel regardless of how genocidal or mad its campaign against Gaza is. | ||
It's just in the middle of these two warring, petulant, endlessly conflicted groups. | ||
There's the young white guys just trying to hold up the American flag. | ||
Just wanting to stand for the American flag. | ||
I think the symbolic importance of that is not to be overstated. | ||
Can't be overstated. Not to be understated. | ||
Wouldn't it be nice if we could all come together? | ||
unidentified
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I'm actually re-watching the Vietnam video, Good Morning Vietnam video. | |
It's actually a different frat bro. | ||
I was going to say. They just look so much alike. | ||
They just look similar. Yeah, I'm a bad person. | ||
I'm a bad person. Well, I mean, it makes sense. | ||
You know, it seemed at first like these were just... | ||
American dudes on either side on either protest but just going we're going to uphold the American flag because that's us. | ||
That represents us. That's our side in this conflict outside of the two warring parties just wanting to uphold the things our country is founded in. | ||
But then the way things are portrayed these days especially by the right wing and the right wing politicians especially who are desperately trying to Trying to make people think that, you know, protesting Israel is like un-American, unpatriotic. | ||
You have Mark Levin being like, you know, we stand with Israel because we're red-blooded American men. | ||
It's like, yeah. No, red-blooded American men stand for America and don't allow their country to be taken over and dominated by some minuscule foreign adjutant. | ||
Same thing's happening in Ole Miss, I guess. | ||
Clip 17, Ole Miss taking care of business. | ||
We can roll this as B-roll. Seems like White Boy Summer is off to a powerful start. | ||
White Boy Summer and the frat boy rising has commenced. | ||
Dude's dressed in American flag overalls. | ||
Standing up against the political agitators from whatever side they're from. | ||
Doesn't even matter at this point. | ||
So this guy continues. | ||
We should reach out to this guy, Stomple. | ||
I'd like to hear it. I guess he was born in Russia. | ||
He just moved to the United States in 2009, which is interesting. | ||
He attended high school in Israel and is currently preparing dual majors in peace, war, and defense studies of political science at UNC. This is getting more complicated as we go on. | ||
So he's a Russian-Israeli dude? | ||
unidentified
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Yeah, I'm trying to think of some type of slur. | |
And there's just too many floating around in your head while you're trying to find one? | ||
unidentified
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I'm really not the wordsmith I once was. | |
Yeah, I don't really know what to make of this. | ||
But you know what? It's one of the times where the symbol is actually more important than the facts. | ||
Like George Washington chopping down the cherry tree. | ||
It doesn't actually matter whether he chopped down the cherry tree or not. | ||
What matters is the symbol. And what matters here is the symbol of the frat boys uplifting and upholding and protecting the American flag from either side of the protests over Gaza and Israel. | ||
And there's an article from Tablet Mag that talks about the way that The average student is just being screwed over by this whole conflict called normal kids get effed. | ||
Don't you love the modern world? | ||
Don't you love curse words in your news headlines? | ||
That's progressive, isn't it? | ||
Elite universities went to war against fraternities and fun while indulging Hamas-admiring collectives, and the students have noticed. | ||
Just talking about what's led up to this and the way that colleges have coddled and prioritized Again, these just petulant, entitled, needy, jealous little scumbags who think that the reason that they're unhappy and failures is because of capitalism and socialism will save us. | ||
If we can just rob and kill the beautiful people, then the world will be saved. | ||
For some reason, colleges have prioritized their needs, their concerns, and their demands over anybody else, most especially the white boys, who apparently just want to have a good time and support America. | ||
Do we have any more videos about these little conflicts? | ||
I don't think we have any more that we need to play here so we can move on. | ||
But of course, it goes on and on. | ||
Matt Baker is actually doing some pretty good interviews with some of the protesters there in California. | ||
His video is about 20 minutes long. | ||
We just don't have time to get to it. | ||
In the next segment, I will get into some interesting rumors about the CEO of NPR. I played a bunch of her videos yesterday. | ||
Last week, talking about how the biggest problem with America today is the First Amendment. | ||
Now we'll see where she came from on the other side. | ||
But I want to go ahead and give out the phone number right now for you to call. | ||
We'll be taking calls throughout this hour. | ||
We'll be joined by Brianna Morello in the... | ||
Next hour. But in the meantime, I want to hear what's on your mind, sort of open line Friday. | ||
But I do want to ask for new callers in particular. | ||
And we've heard a lot from our regular callers because they're very quick on the draw. | ||
We love hearing from them, but I want to hear from new people on this Friday. | ||
So if you want to call in, if you've never called in before or never gotten on air before, give us a call. | ||
1-877-789-2539. | ||
1-877-789-2539. | ||
See what I did there is I waited to say the number until the crew got sick of having the number up on the screen just to frustrate them. | ||
Just to frustrate them because it was running so smoothly. | ||
1-877-789-2539. | ||
Give us a call now here on American Journal. | ||
And you know what? We'll go ahead and go to this video right now. | ||
Because I think it's... It's interesting. | ||
It's very interesting. Clip number 15. | ||
The new CEO of NPR that, again, we played videos of. | ||
She's... Frustrated that the First Amendment exists. | ||
She thinks her position in NPR is to dictate reality, not report on it. | ||
She was the head of Wikipedia and learned how effective subtle propaganda can be in these mass data big tech companies. | ||
And now she's at NPR, which itself is crumbling under the leftist influence. | ||
But where did she come from? | ||
How did she get her start? | ||
And is she a member of the CIA? Let's watch. | ||
unidentified
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The CEO of NPR, who is, it turns out, a CIA asset. | |
Sanjana, take it away. | ||
She may be a CIA agent. | ||
She certainly seems to be an asset. | ||
This is based on Chris Ruffo, Chris Ruffo's reporting, pointing out that Catherine Marr, the new CEO of NPR, has, in her previous life working at NGOs in the Middle East, Sort of weirdly hewed closely to a lot of revolutions happening around the time of the Arab Spring. | ||
And she was like in the right place at the right time in a lot of cases. | ||
I mean, first of all, she got a degree in Islamic studies and Middle East studies at NYU. I remember I was told in college if I wanted to be a CIA agent, that was the direction to go. | ||
But then between, like, 2011 and 2013, she was, let's see, she was in Libya, Tunisia. | ||
She was at the Turkish and Syrian border. | ||
As one does. As one does. | ||
Right? Like, who among us? | ||
She's like the Forrest Gump of, like, color revolutions. | ||
She's got every single one. | ||
unidentified
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I mean, she basically seems to have been working for NGOs that had very close connections to the CIA, including one called the National Democratic Institute, which I guess former CIA employees have said, yes, has very close connections to the intelligence community. | |
Chris Rufo's point is basically, you know, she seems to have in some ways been involved in fomenting these, like, pro-liberal democracy revolutions abroad, and then at home come back and We fomented our own color revolution, as he says, in the George Floyd protests through her work at the Wikimedia Foundation, pushing this left-wing racialist ideology. | ||
And a lot of the reporting he did was based on her tweets. | ||
Like, he just went through her Twitter and found, there's like a tweet of hers from 2011 where she's like, I'm heading to the Turkish-Syrian border tomorrow. | ||
It's not even like... | ||
She was hiding her movements. | ||
This is all publicly available information. | ||
Does Rufo allege a formal affiliation with the CIA, or does one have to have a... | ||
Rufo's strategy is just asking questions. | ||
If she was actually a CIA agent and she was out there reporting from all these revolutions on the ground, I think I would be much more interested in listening to NPR. I think that's... | ||
A very good way to understand what's happening here. | ||
You've got this lady who seemingly just crops up everywhere there's a color revolution. | ||
And now she's put in charge of Wikipedia. | ||
Now put in charge of NPR. Catherine Mayer's color revolution. | ||
NPR boss is a symbol of regime change, foreign and domestic. | ||
That is what's happening now. | ||
The CIA has all but carried out a color revolution here in the United States, and they're working now to make that reality publicly acknowledged and accepted by the populace at large. | ||
And of course, NPC News plays a vital role in framing the developments of the political world in the most benign and Dishonest way possible. | ||
So I thought that was very interesting. | ||
Let's go out to calls now. | ||
I'm seeing some interesting calls here from names I do not recognize. | ||
Sebastian in Alabama has called in about leftist women catfishing men on Truth Social. | ||
What's this about, Sebastian? Hey, Harrison. | ||
unidentified
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You had me on once before a couple weeks ago, and I'm a fairly new listener, but... | |
I just wanted to ask, okay? | ||
Can you hear me good? Yeah, absolutely. | ||
Are you the recovering addict, right? | ||
unidentified
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Yeah, yeah. Yeah, sir. | |
That is me. Hey, so can you tell me, have you heard of basically undercover leftists on Truth Social like Disguising themselves as MAGA supporters. | ||
Message men. | ||
This happened to me. Message me. | ||
Got me all the way there like I'm talking to the most beautiful girl in the world. | ||
Then start asking questions like, do Trump support me? | ||
Hey, sorry, you're breaking up a little bit there, Sebastian, but I think I get the overall message that you're trying to say. | ||
So you've got leftist women going on Truth Social pretending to be MAGA supporters to try to, I don't know, work their way in to try to get you to say... | ||
unidentified
|
They tried to get me to delete my Truth Social because I'm gaining influence on them. | |
They tried to catfish me into deleting my account over love because she doesn't trust men. | ||
That's hilarious. It's so crazy. | ||
I had not heard of that. | ||
I think it's so funny. | ||
I mean, there have been people that were like, I went undercover as a Trump supporter for six months. | ||
You won't believe what I've discovered. | ||
And it's just nothing. | ||
So if these women want to waste their time, they're more than welcome to. | ||
Welcome back, folks. We go out to your calls now. | ||
We got a couple calls about the genocide in Gaza, the Israel-Palestine conflict. | ||
I think I want to go quickly to a video here before we go out to calls. | ||
We're going to go to Caleb and Joe here in just a second. | ||
But this is clip number 12. | ||
It's from Al Jazeera, but it's about the protests here in Austin. | ||
It's a Jewish student named Elijah talking about How he got involved in the movement, what it was like to be subjected to police repression for standing up against war overseas. | ||
Let's go down to clip number 12. | ||
unidentified
|
And I'm majoring in Jewish Studies, Government, and Middle East Studies. | |
My father's side is Ashkenazi Jewish, and my mother's side has Sephardic Jewish heritage. | ||
I'm a very proud Jew. In most Jewish education, when it comes to Palestinians, you're not told about the 1948s, you're not told about the Nakba. | ||
You're typically told sometimes outright racist things about Arabs and Palestinians. | ||
I began a process of unpacking a lot of what I was told in Hebrew school, but also engaging with Palestinians. | ||
And a conclusion I came to is that Palestinian culture is more similar to my culture than to any other culture in the world. | ||
I'm the president and founder of Atina International. | ||
We're a peace group. Atidna combines the Hebrew word atid, for future, with the Arabic suffix na, for our, and when you put those two together, it means our future. | ||
We really just try to promote open dialogue on college campuses to get to know the quote-unquote other. | ||
You begin to humanize the other, and I think that's more important now than ever. | ||
I believe that the actions in Gaza do constitute a genocide. | ||
There are many corporations that are profiteering from what is happening in Gaza, specifically American corporations like Boeing, like Lockheed Martin. | ||
And these are the corporations that need to be called out for profiteering from the death and destruction of the Palestinian people. | ||
And because students took their First Amendment civil liberties at the university to the forefront, they were repressed. | ||
I was injured when one of the state troopers charged the crowd with their horse, and I was subsequently pushed to the ground. | ||
I was in shock when that happened. | ||
Speaking out on behalf of the Palestinian people is not inherently anti-Semitic. | ||
I've personally dealt with a lot of accusations that I am either a self-hating Jew, and even worse, some have called me a capo, which is a Jew who sold out fellow Jews to the Nazis, all for the stances I've taken for my Palestinian brothers and sisters. | ||
And that's personally very hurtful to me. | ||
I lost family in the Holocaust, but it doesn't stop me. | ||
I understand what I'm doing is just. | ||
I am standing with my Palestinian brothers and sisters for a very normal cause, and I view them as my family. | ||
I view them as my family. | ||
Let's compare that statement. | ||
Very admirable, in my opinion. | ||
Takes a lot of strength to stand up against your entire community like that. | ||
Let's compare that thoughtful statement We're here to discuss the little Gazas that have risen up on campuses across America and the liberal college administrators and politicians who refuse to restore law and order and to protect other students. | ||
These little Gazas are disgusting cesspools of anti-Semitic hate, full of pro-Hamas sympathizers, fanatics, and freaks. | ||
The terrorist sympathizers in these little Gazas aren't peacefully protesting Israel's conduct of the war. | ||
They're violently and illegally demanding death for Israel, just like their ideological twins, the Ayatollahs in Iran. | ||
Yeah, not quite as reasonable or admirable in my opinion. | ||
These little Gazas, frankly, they should be bombed. | ||
They should be bombed. They should be eradicated with airstrikes, I think. | ||
Completely insane. | ||
I'll call protest at college campuses these little Gazas. | ||
Not yet. Not yet, it's not. | ||
Maybe we're getting there. Caleb and Austin, you've called in about the goings-on in Gaza. | ||
Thanks for calling in, Caleb. You're on the air. | ||
unidentified
|
Hey, good morning, Harrison. I hope you're well, brother. | |
Let me start just by clarifying my position real quick before I ask your question and opinion. | ||
So, me personally, I kind of side more with Alex's opinion. | ||
He's sick and tired of hearing about it. | ||
Everything's about Jewish and anti-Semitic and all that. | ||
And I try and put myself in both shoes on both sides. | ||
If you look at it from the Israeli perspective, they don't want their people to get slaughtered and innocent civilians slaughtered and killed. | ||
And then you look at the Palestinian side and they're living in an open-air prison and they probably don't like that either. | ||
So I understand that. | ||
But You've talked a lot about genocide. | ||
How long do you think this genocide has been going on for? | ||
Since the start or what? | ||
I think since, well, yeah, there are aspects of it from the very beginning. | ||
Certainly the NACPA would represent the forceful expulsion of a population. | ||
I mean, it depends on how you're quantifying it, but I think under the UN statute of genocide, I think it has been going on since the beginning. | ||
I just think what's going on in the last six months is so egregious that it needs a label like genocide to understand the true scale of brutality that's happening. | ||
unidentified
|
That's my take on it. And I've seen some really messed up videos from all over, from stuff you guys have posted and other independent media and stuff. | |
And yeah, there's some really messed up stuff that I've seen, but if the crew could, if it's possible, if they could pull up a population growth of Palestine and Israel and the definition, like you just referenced, of genocide, if Israel is doing this genocide that you talk about so vividly, and again, they're doing things that are wrong, If they have been doing this genocide that you're referring to, I don't think that they're doing a very good job of it. | ||
They've consistently, year after year, since I believe like the 40s, had a significant increase in their population year over year. | ||
Yeah. Yeah, I mean, I don't know. | ||
I guess we look at the population trend of Native Americans. | ||
I bet their population is growing as well. | ||
That doesn't mean they weren't subjected to genocidal attacks, right? | ||
I mean, yeah, you can point to population growth overall. | ||
In most Muslim countries, they do a pretty good job of meeting and exceeding replacement levels of births, but Like I said, I don't think that absolves Israel of the way that they treat their Palestinian neighbors. | ||
unidentified
|
I don't think it absolves them either, but I think that it's talked about too much, and I think that the word is used lightly, and I think that it has more significant impact, and that Yes, there's terrible things happening on both sides, but I don't think that it meets the classification of a genocide. | |
I'm sick and tired of hearing genocide, to be honest with you. | ||
Well, I understand that. | ||
I get it. I mean, it is an extreme word to use, but again, I think it's appropriate just considering the extreme level of violence is taking place. | ||
Again, the reason I think it's important to talk about is because Israel is only able to do it because of American support. | ||
So, I mean, this is an American political issue, and I just put myself in the shoes of the Gazans if I was in that position. | ||
I would want people to speak out for me because I wouldn't have a voice myself. | ||
So I feel like we have a bit of an obligation as being responsible in large part for this being allowed to continue. | ||
And as Americans, you know, it really falls on our shoulders at the end of the day. | ||
So I'm also sick of talking about it, quite frankly. | ||
That being said, it still goes on. | ||
So I guess we still have to talk about it. | ||
And if you don't think it's genocide, I get that. | ||
I get... That argument, I just think it's appropriate considering the ultimate plans that Israel has for Gaza. | ||
Pretty obvious genocide in my opinion. | ||
unidentified
|
Like I said at the start of the call, I mean, I like to put myself in both sides of the shoes. | |
And you just said you like to put yourself in both sides of the Gazans because obviously they're the... | ||
The weaker, I guess. Well, not necessarily because they're the weaker. | ||
They're the ones who are being subjected to, you know, AI algorithmic elimination and robotic terror that we're going to face very soon if we don't stand up against it now in Gaza. | ||
That's how I feel. | ||
It's a selfish stance, I admit. | ||
Welcome back. We're going to go directly out to calls. | ||
So I want to get to as many calls as possible in this segment for welcoming Brianna Morello in studio, although we will continue to take calls with her in studio here. | ||
So stay on the line, but we'll get to as many as possible before then. | ||
Let's go to Joe in Florida. | ||
He also wants to talk about the Israel-Palestine conflict. | ||
Go ahead, Joe. You're on the air. | ||
unidentified
|
Yes, hi. Can you hear me? Yes. | |
Yeah, so I hear both sides. | ||
People are speaking. It seems like people are trying to take a side. | ||
I don't know if you're taking a side or not, but you describe how you feel on one side of the war and stuff like that. | ||
I personally, it's hard to really take any sides when you don't know what's truth anymore. | ||
It's so difficult. Each side seems to be corrupt. | ||
And, like, you know, you don't want to be in this side scenario, you don't want to be in the other side scenario either, because, you know, if you ever live, go to any of these countries, you ever visit any of them? | ||
I have not been to the Middle East. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay, well, when you go to these countries, it's a whole different, you come out with a whole different take on how to approach it, you know? | |
It's crazy to speak about a country, how it goes on in the dilemma, you know, between the two sides and the people, you know, from an outsider perspective. | ||
It's easy to come to conclusions based on our observations, but when you're there, it's a whole different ballgame. | ||
I'm not saying I'm taking any sides in this case, but it seems to me that you basically have to pick and choose based on everyone's own observations, based on information they're being given, right? | ||
So, whatever speaks the most truth, which who knows how you're supposed to come to that conclusion, I personally don't find it important to try to come to these conclusions. | ||
To me, the only thing I could take control of as a conclusion seems to me is that there seems to be some narrative that someone's controlling from both sides. | ||
You see it seems to be that in the American government, they're pretty much supporting the war on both sides. | ||
So it seems to me, it's like that over many years, not just the span of this specific war, of many, many years, they seem to be, you know, like wishy-washy, like jumping, they're supporting this side, supporting that side, and it's like, it seems like there's one body pulling, you know, with two hands over here, pulling strings on both sides, which is creating this imbalance constantly. | ||
And that brings us, to me, you know, my perspective, this brings us back home, you know, to America, right? | ||
This is, like, just another distraction that somebody's pulling to create a worldwide problem, so to speak, when there's so many issues going on in the world, right? | ||
And they're turning this into, like, the major issues of our century. | ||
they're doing this whole right this anti-Semitism act or whatever this bill that they're putting up over there what you're just creating more anti-Semitism because all they're doing is putting more focused on the Jews right which most Jews don't want anything to do with this at all you know like you know the people who are representing the Jews out there in the media in the public most of | ||
Nobody voted for them. | ||
No, these people just happen to have, you know, I don't know who's paying them. | ||
I don't know who, you know, what type of fame they want, et cetera, et cetera. | ||
Their backgrounds, a lot of them, their backgrounds aren't the cleanest Yeah. | ||
I mean, we've talked about this with the lobby documentary they explain. | ||
I mean, AIPAC literally explains how they do it. | ||
They get together, you know, 50 Jews in New York City, and they say, this is the Jewish community, and what they believe, they speak for all Jews. | ||
And then they, you know, combine all of their money and give it to a lawmaker to say, now you're going to do what we want because we are the Jews, right? | ||
And it's 50 people out of, you know, however many tens of thousands. | ||
But they present themselves as if they speak for the entire community, regardless what the community actually wants. | ||
If they present themselves convincingly as the spokespeople, then that's the way it's interpreted. | ||
But, yeah, it's – I mean, yeah, they're pulling strings on both sides. | ||
I mean, every war only benefits the tyrants, essentially. | ||
I mean, it gets them what they want faster than any other method. | ||
And, you know, that includes things like rationing that we know that they're moving towards. | ||
Thank you very much for the call, Joe. Let's go to Bob in California. | ||
I want to talk about some questions about law school, I guess. | ||
Go ahead, Bob. You're on the air. Hey, good morning, Harrison. | ||
How you doing? Good morning. Good, thanks. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, last week you guys had Paimon Matahede on from Freedom Law School. | |
I was wondering if anyone you guys know or if anyone that's listening can say they've done the program and if it was worth it and successful. | ||
You know, I obviously haven't done the program, but I assume it is. | ||
I didn't actually get to watch that interview. | ||
I was on the hour before that with Chase, but I didn't look into it. | ||
But, I mean, I know he's been vetted and is a good guy, and I think you should look into it, and you'll probably be happy with what you find. | ||
Anything else, Bob? Yeah, absolutely. | ||
Thank you. Alright, let's go to Ben in Pennsylvania now. | ||
You have an insane story about a post-COVID hospital visit. | ||
Go ahead, Ben. You're on the air. | ||
unidentified
|
Harrison, how you doing, buddy? | |
Good, thanks. Can you hear me okay? | ||
I hear you well, yeah. Nice. | ||
unidentified
|
My phone works today. Thank God. | |
Thank you, God. Alright, so the reason I'm calling is because I would like to help. | ||
A lot of people all in one try. | ||
So I heard Alex, he was upset and sad because his family, they're not doing so hot, their heart or something like that. | ||
So I have a story that I wanted to tell you about my heart and how I fixed it. | ||
Okay. I'm 52 years old. | ||
I bought a dirt bike right when COVID came out, 2020, your guy TJ told me. | ||
TJ, TJ. So he told me that, yeah, 2020, Is when the COVID came out. | ||
So I bought a dirt bike. | ||
I fell. I broke my ribs. | ||
I didn't know that I broke my ribs. | ||
But I knew that I didn't want to go to the hospital because I'm like, they're going to kill me in there. | ||
Right. You'd be a COVID desk. | ||
Yeah, right? So I'm like, yeah, what are you going to do for ribs anyway? | ||
Tape them until you beat it? | ||
So I could do that myself. | ||
So then I'm just walking it out. | ||
And then I went to somebody's house and they were like, can you open the vent? | ||
The vent stuck. My girl's cold or hot or whatever. | ||
So I opened it. It was on full blade. | ||
All this dirt came down my nose. | ||
I got sick, real sick. | ||
My lungs started filling up with fluid. | ||
And I didn't realize. | ||
So apparently I ended up in the hospital for Christmas Eve. | ||
They're like, you have an enlarged heart. | ||
I'm like, oh, wow. Where'd that come from? | ||
And then they're like, we don't know, but take all these pills. | ||
And if it doesn't fix you, we're going to put a defibrillator in your chest. | ||
I'm like, oh, no, you're not. I'll call you back, doc. | ||
So I went to another doctor. | ||
They're like, defibrillator. I'm like, nope, call you back. | ||
So my girlfriend lets me watch a little bit of TV at night before I go to sleep. | ||
So I'm watching a guy out in the woods with his Swiss Army knife and his dog, and he's making, like, Viking forts and things like that. | ||
Yeah, yeah. | ||
And every morning he puts the pine needles in his water and he boils it. | ||
He drinks it. | ||
I'm like, I wonder what that dude's doing. | ||
That dude's cool, man. | ||
Why is he doing that? | ||
And then he announced it. | ||
Pine needles, pine needle tea cures heart disease. | ||
I'm like, that's right. | ||
So I started taking it. | ||
In less than 72 hours, all my symptoms went away. | ||
What? | ||
Pine needle tea? | ||
Pine needle tea, if you look it up, apparently it's been around for centuries. | ||
They are hiding it. | ||
Interesting. Well, you can't make money with pine needle tea. | ||
You can just go out and grab pine needles, so I guess it hasn't been marketed. | ||
unidentified
|
Bro, you want to bet? | |
So, um... I got the laziest people that will not put the water on boil and throw the pine needles in there because you have to strip the pine... | ||
They pay me 50 bucks a week to send them pine needles. | ||
I got everybody in my neighborhood on it. | ||
Really? Yeah, everybody has a recovery story. | ||
My one buddy works at Ashley's Furniture. | ||
I gave it to him. | ||
unidentified
|
He sold 20,000 of furniture on the next day. | |
He was like, holy crap, I'll give you 50 bucks a week to start pumping that to me. | ||
My girlfriend... She takes it. | ||
It cures her stomach. | ||
My mom takes it. | ||
She's bowling. She's 80. | ||
Everybody I know, there's like, there's nobody that had a, it didn't work story. | ||
I have never even heard of this. | ||
unidentified
|
And the doctor, the doctor, they wanted to give me, they gave me a shot in my knee and they said, one to ten, what's your pain, Ben? | |
And I'm like, I had to lie because I didn't have any pain. | ||
But I wanted my shot just in case. | ||
And I was like, a five? | ||
And they're like, whatever, we don't care, just here. | ||
And then I told the lady, I'm taking the pine needle tea. | ||
And then the doctor looked it up and was like, I didn't even know that. | ||
The doctors don't even know about it. | ||
And then somebody told me, that's because they're just practicing medicine. | ||
Right. Interesting. | ||
How does it taste? Does it taste good? | ||
Actually, it's so mild and it's so... | ||
It's so likable. | ||
It's so good. | ||
I mix it with lemon, honey, and an orange peel. | ||
You put it in there. | ||
Look. You get the white pine. | ||
I think it's the eastern white pine. | ||
It's got the long pine needles. | ||
That's the strongest, most effective one because there's all types of pine. | ||
Christmas tree is a pine tree. | ||
They all have different effects. | ||
But the white pine is what I saw. | ||
All right. I'm sorry. | ||
I've been so into your story. | ||
I didn't realize we're about to come to the end of the segment. | ||
That's great. I'm going to have to try it myself. | ||
Maybe we'll have a pine needle supplement at InfoWarsStore.com at some point. | ||
unidentified
|
So last night I got a call from my congressman, Jamal Bowman. | |
I live in Westchester. | ||
He's very close to where AOC is. | ||
I originally helped him get elected. | ||
I mean, I didn't do much. | ||
I do canvassing. | ||
I go around to the houses. | ||
I do some phone lists. | ||
I've done it my whole life. | ||
Like, since I'm 14, I've been actively involved in politics. | ||
My parents were involved in politics. | ||
I had a grandmother that was very involved in Brooklyn politics. | ||
It's in our blood. We're one of those families. | ||
I've always felt it was my civic duty to help get elected, the people that align with your same political beliefs. | ||
I feel it's a civic duty, just like jury duty. | ||
I went to American University. | ||
I did an internship at the Democratic National Committee. | ||
I was very actively involved when I was in college. | ||
Anyway, so they called to see if I'm going to canvas for them again. | ||
And I had just been watching TikToks all day, and I'm, like, appalled about what's going on. | ||
And it just came over me, and I just went, I'm done. | ||
I'm done. I'm done with politics. | ||
It's a farce. | ||
My eyes are wide open. | ||
It's a scam. | ||
These people do not work for us. | ||
They work for the special interest groups. | ||
They work for the corporations. | ||
They definitely don't work for us when my president, the man that I voted for, can't come out and just be against burying babies alive. | ||
It's a farce. | ||
It's... So anyway, so the kid's like, well, can we put you down? | ||
And I'm like, no. | ||
And he's like, yeah, but Jamal's a good guy. | ||
And I'm like, yeah, he's a product of a single mother. | ||
He worked in education in the Bronx. | ||
And let me tell you, I substitute teach in the Bronx. | ||
You gotta be good. You gotta be a good person to do that because you just don't make that much money. | ||
And... You got to be a good person. | ||
I said, yeah, but give him 20 years. | ||
He'll have blood on his hands just like the rest of them because they do not work for us and they do not have any power. | ||
They have no power over things like this. | ||
So I'm done. | ||
I'm done pushing along this scam. | ||
I'm not saying this like it's going to help because I don't think it's going to help. | ||
I'm just not going to do it anymore. | ||
I mean, I raised a Gen Z, so, you know, I have some hope in the Gen Zs. | ||
They're different. I have one. | ||
They're different. And these Gen Alphas, they call them the Honey Badgers. | ||
I mean, they're gonna have to be the Honey Badgers to deal with what's going on. | ||
But me personally, the 64-year-old woman sitting in a broken-down old car, Because I'm broke. | ||
I'm done. I realized why I stopped being active in politics when I was talking to this kid on the phone. | ||
I was, like, really active when I was in college. | ||
I mean, and I come from a generation that was just awful, okay? | ||
We weren't the boomers, but we're not the Gen Z. We're kind of, like, stuck. | ||
Right in the middle there. I was born in 1960 and none of my friends were interested. | ||
I was always doing ransom. | ||
They were always rolling their eyes and glazed over. | ||
I always had to keep it completely separate from my social life. | ||
But why was I involved? | ||
I was involved because I believed it. | ||
And why did I stop? I stopped because I owed money for my car insurance. | ||
And then I got married and I got a mortgage. | ||
And then I got sick. | ||
And it took 20 years to get a diagnosis because I have an autoimmune disease, which is primarily a woman's disease, and they don't put much money into it. | ||
So I was sick all the time. And I went, oh, my God, this is by design. | ||
It's by design. | ||
They want us sick and they want us broke so that we can only think about what's right in front of our faces. | ||
And we don't think about all those abstract things. | ||
It's by design. | ||
This is on purpose. | ||
And I just won't be a part of it anymore. | ||
So I tell her to the kid, and I don't know if I'm going to get a visit from some federal office or something, but I'm like, burn the whole MF thing down. | ||
Burn it down. | ||
That is what an awakening looks like, folks. | ||
I'm here in studio with Brianna Morello. | ||
Welcome to the show. Thank you for having me, Harrison. | ||
I appreciate it. Very excited to get into a number of different topics in the next hour. | ||
Stay with us. It's American Journal Infowarsstore.com. | ||
It's the only way that we get funding. | ||
It's the only way that we're able to be here to counteract the lies of the New World Order and help foster awakenings like that. | ||
This is a potential for unity. | ||
Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
This is the American Journal. | ||
Third hour has begun. | ||
I'm your host, Harrison Smith. Joining me in studio is Brianna Morello, host of the Brianna Morello Show over on Rumble. | ||
Just go to Rumble, search the Brianna Morello Show, or you can go to briannamorello.com or find her on X at Brianna Morello. | ||
Of course, we've talked many times virtually. | ||
First time in studio. Welcome. | ||
Welcome in. Thank you for having me. | ||
I'm happy to be here. It's our pleasure, of course, and you do a lot of great work on a number of different topics, and we've been talking a lot about January 6th and some of the big changes going on there. | ||
I don't know where you want to start exactly, but what is the latest with the whole January 6th debacle? | ||
Yeah, the latest I guess I would have to say is we could start with Harry Dunn, the Capitol Police officer who we now know, thanks to the great work of Steve Baker, was lying on the stand during the Oath Keepers trial. | ||
We know that based on the surveillance footage that we now have available to us, which sadly people like Nancy Pelosi and Kevin McCarthy withheld. | ||
But we know that, and we've always known this because they've been very loyal to their statements, but Kelly Meggs, And Ken Harrelson have been very open about what happened that day with Harry Dunn inside the Capitol. | ||
He openly said, you know, listen, I tried helping Harry Dunn when I saw protesters getting very aggressive with him, talking to him in a very aggressive tone. | ||
But Harry Dunn was ready to shoot and open fire on these protesters. | ||
And so they intervened. | ||
They created this barrier around them to stop it from happening. | ||
And Harry Dunn initially wrote a statement about this and actually put that in his statements. | ||
Really? Really. But of course, yeah, during the Oath Keepers trial, Judge Mehta, for some reason, would not allow that to be told in front of the jury because his story suddenly shifted. | ||
And nobody understood why it shifted, of course. | ||
Still to this day, he's never had to answer why he changed his story. | ||
Now we do know from the surveillance footage that Steve Baker has made available that Harry Dunn is lying. | ||
And we know this because not only was Harry Dunn lying on the stand during the Oath Keepers trial, but there was another officer, Officer Lazarus. | ||
It was David Lazarus' name. | ||
He claimed to have witnessed the interaction between the Oath Keepers and Harry Dunn. | ||
Now, the interesting part in this is, well, Officer Lazarus wasn't even in the area at the time. | ||
Right. | ||
He didn't arrive until like 10 minutes later. | ||
Yes. | ||
Yes. | ||
And so that was already when the Oath Keepers had left. | ||
And so he had lied on the stand, said it, obviously, Dunn. | ||
And now, sadly, Ken Harrelson has spent four years or nearly four years in prison. | ||
He just completed his sentence. And he is out. | ||
I spoke with him exclusively the first time. | ||
It's just a heartbreaking story because his life is obviously ruined from all of this. | ||
But then you have the other Oath Keepers who are still sitting in jail right now. | ||
Kelly Meggs got 12 years. | ||
Then there was another one who got eight years. | ||
And then obviously Stuart Rhodes got his 18 years. | ||
And so all these people are still sitting in prison right now. | ||
Nothing seems to be happening with this. | ||
And we all know that they lied now. | ||
There's no denying it. Yeah, and this is the craziest thing. | ||
So, I mean, they were convicted in very large part from the testimony from these two guys, Harry Dunn and David Lazarus, who testified that the Oath Keepers were threatening them and shouting at them and attacking them, basically. | ||
The security camera footage comes out that shows literally the opposite. | ||
I mean, the exact opposite. The Oath Keepers were actually protecting Harry Dunn and, you know, the protesters getting in between them. | ||
David Lazarus wasn't even in the area to see what he claimed he saw under oath on the stand. | ||
So... This is the amazing thing. | ||
This footage comes out, completely contradicts and blows their testimony out of the water. | ||
It seems like as soon as that is revealed, all of these convictions should be overturned. | ||
I mean, they were convicted on the basis of perjury. | ||
Yeah, one would think. | ||
And we haven't seen anything really happening right now. | ||
They seem to all be very silent on the issue. | ||
Harry Dunn is running right now for Congress. | ||
Isn't that scary? And the scarier part in it? | ||
Suddenly Nancy Pelosi is backing him. | ||
Right. And there's all these veteran causes that are backing him too, but he's not a vet. | ||
He's just somebody who's a Capitol Police officer. | ||
There's actual vets running in his district. | ||
Right. These causes are not backing. | ||
They're specifically going with Dunn. | ||
So we're kind of wondering why did you pick this guy? | ||
Right. He doesn't seem to be truthful. | ||
He seems to be a liar, obviously. | ||
He doesn't seem to be very bright. | ||
So I guess that would make him a good congressional candidate. | ||
Yeah, yeah. It'd make him a good Democrat, for sure. | ||
Yeah, yeah. It's disturbing. | ||
It's upsetting. But, I mean, Ken Harrelson called him out in the videos that, you know, we did the interview, and he called him out, called him a liar, and he's really upset. | ||
I mean, these people, we owe them a lot because they've lost so much from all of this. | ||
Yeah, and of course, you know, the protesters in New York City that were firebombing police cars, they all got, you know, $20,000 checks from the city for the inconvenience of having been arrested for, like, 12 hours in some cases. | ||
These guys have... Have their lives destroyed and lost years of their lives. | ||
And some of them haven't even been able to see or talk to their families in a long time. | ||
I mean, brutal what's been done to these people. | ||
And yet, it's crazy. | ||
I mean, this information comes out and just nothing happens. | ||
Where's the Republican Congress on this? | ||
Where's the activist groups using this to vacate these convictions? | ||
I mean, this is the frustrating part. | ||
We reveal this stuff and then nothing happens. | ||
Yeah, and I think we've got maybe three or four who were emboldened enough to come out, members of Congress, and speak out about these issues. | ||
We really don't have many these days. | ||
The Weaponization Committee really hasn't been doing anything, unfortunately. | ||
You know, I broke another story. | ||
My Florida AGA, Ashley Moody, she's been absolutely useless on the issue. | ||
We have the most J6ers. | ||
She, at one point, actually was interested in going after the DOJ and launching an investigation to go after them for violating You know, people's constitutional rights, Florida residents' constitutional rights, and that was supposed to happen. | ||
It's been about seven months since she told a reporter that she was going to do it secretively, and she's done nothing. | ||
I've reached out for comment. Now she says she's not able to prosecute the Department of Justice, what we weren't asking for. | ||
We were just asking for an investigation to get help with their appeals process. | ||
But she's gone completely silent. | ||
They don't want to talk about these issues, and that's what's really upsetting here. | ||
Yeah, you wonder how these influence networks are so effective and powerful. | ||
So do we know where is Harry Dunn running for Congress? | ||
It's in Maryland. I think maybe the 6th or 7th District. | ||
I'm not sure. Maryland. | ||
Yeah. So, and was Harry Dunn, was he the, or was it Lazarus? | ||
Who was the person who was directly under Nancy Pelosi? | ||
Was it either one of these guys? | ||
Officer Lazarus, yes. | ||
And actually, Steve Baker uncovered the fact that he had a really bad record, that he was accused of drinking on the job, and that that should have been a fireable offense because he lied about it and said he wasn't. | ||
And so he directly answers to Nancy Pelosi. | ||
She seems to be pulling the strings behind a lot of this and was on the day of January 6, obviously. | ||
And there's even the footage of her going, haha, we got him. | ||
You know, we got Trump because, you know, these protesters are now reacting to being attacked by the Capitol Police. | ||
So Harry Dunn has sent these people to prison for decades on the basis of lies, and now he's running for Congress. | ||
Again, where's the media on this, right? | ||
Isn't this a point in the media? | ||
Isn't this a big bombshell story? | ||
You've got somebody running for Congress with all of this horrible dirt in their background. | ||
Isn't this what they're supposed to be reporting and bringing out, even if for no other reason than the massive ratings it would bring? | ||
Where are all of these institutions that are ostensibly here to safeguard our liberties? | ||
They're all co-opted. | ||
It's really astounding, the scale of this. | ||
Yeah, I mean, they don't want to talk about it. | ||
I mean, obviously, as a former Fox employee, we're not doing it. | ||
Well, Fox isn't doing anything about it anymore. | ||
They don't want to talk about it. | ||
They just are completely distancing themselves from anything related to January 6th, which is disturbing, but I don't understand why. | ||
There's so much that we know is 100% truthful. | ||
It's not considered a conspiracy theory, and yet they don't want to talk about it. | ||
We had also the arrest of the journalist who broke that story, Steve Baker. | ||
Right. He broke the story and gets arrested, like, the next day. | ||
Yeah, they gave it a couple of weeks. | ||
Now, here's the thing with them, too, which is very, very interesting. | ||
They actually, the DOJ itself, did launch an investigation into him for being there on January 6th, but he was with other journalists. | ||
Those other journalists, not charged. | ||
You know what they use? They use the terms insurrectionist, insurrection, all of these things that the DOJ loves. | ||
It goes with their narrative, and they're okay with that. | ||
Right. And that's the disturbing part in all of it. | ||
And I was sitting in the courtroom while Steve Baker was brought in and they literally had him in shackles, which is disturbing in itself because it's just misdemeanor offenses and they're really going hard on him. | ||
Right. And it'd be bad enough just to arrest a journalist for being on the scene of a major event and documenting it. | ||
That alone is a severe violation of the First Amendment and the way our civilization operates. | ||
But they did it in such an obviously... | ||
I mean, it's just obviously punishment. | ||
It's punishment. He revealed something that undercut their entire case that they're depending on. | ||
I mean, it's the RICO charges. | ||
I mean, the whole thing with Stuart Rhodes, the more you look into this case, the more absurd it gets that they actually were convicted for unspoken conspiracy. | ||
In other words, other people did something, but you're at fault because you were in a chat group with them. | ||
I mean, this is insane that people aren't standing up against this, even just, again, for their own interests, for the Republican congressman Who could very well be the next person arrested by the DOJ. It's like, even for your own personal safety, don't you want to stand up against this trend before it's too late? | ||
One would think, honestly, yes, I'd hope so, but they don't want to. | ||
They're all weak. | ||
They went after Stuart Rhodes saying that he orchestrated what happened on January 6th. | ||
We know it's false. | ||
We know that Stuart Rhodes actually had issues making phone calls that day, and there's going to be more coming out about that soon. | ||
But he never made a call into anyone who was in the Capitol, any of the healthkeepers inside the Capitol, because the service was not working. | ||
And that's what we hear from everyone who was there that day. | ||
Yeah. It's interesting how they were able to pin all of this on him. | ||
A lot of things were withheld from his attorneys as well. | ||
It's gonna be a long appeals process. | ||
Even if he wins it, he's gonna spend years in prison, sadly, and you can't make up for that time. | ||
Yeah, seriously. And it is absolutely brutal what's happening to him specifically, but really to everybody. | ||
How much of it do you think has to do with setting the precedent for going after Trump? | ||
Because if you can say, you know, if you can convict Stuart Rhodes and send him to jail for 18 years for just being in a chat group with people who walked through the Capitol, you know... | ||
It feels like they're setting the groundwork to say, hey, if we can do it to Stuart Rhodes, we can do it to Donald Trump. | ||
It's a RICO case. Donald Trump is just as responsible for this as Stuart Rhodes was, you know? | ||
And how much of this do you think is designed to go after Donald Trump? | ||
Well, you know, it's funny. When I spoke to Stuart Rhodes, the first time I spoke with him on a phone call, he actually said, and this was before his trial even began, that this was actually, this was after his trial. | ||
He said, you know, this was only to lay the groundwork to go after the president. | ||
And now they're going to go after him. | ||
So he predicted exactly what you're seeing unfold right now. | ||
He's a defense attorney, so he gets it. | ||
But I think all of it is. | ||
I think it was all to lay out the groundwork. | ||
Enrique Tarrio is another one. | ||
22 years, and he was not there. | ||
And Tarrio is tucked away in the Kentucky Mountains, which is, according to the First Step Act, illegal because he has to be within 500 miles of his home. | ||
He lives in Miami. We know Miami has beds in Miami because they just put Peter Navarro there. | ||
But they will not move him. | ||
They are keeping him in Kentucky to keep him away from family and friends from visiting him and making him feel even worse about the situation he's in. | ||
But again, it's just they're going after these people. | ||
It's a corrupt DOJ. No one's stepping in. | ||
The judges have to be in on it at this point. | ||
There's no other way to look at it. They're not even intervening. | ||
You know, it's interesting too, Ken Harrelson, the gentleman I just mentioned, who was just recently released, the judge in that case, Judge Mehta, the Obama-appointed judge, mentioned during his sentencing to Ken, he said, I don't think you're the person that the DOJ is trying to make you out to be. | ||
And then he slapped on that terrorist enhancement. | ||
And there was no reason for it. | ||
The enhancements are completely, completely being misused. | ||
We know that also because the D.C. appeals court as well said it as well. | ||
But the DOJ doesn't care. | ||
They're using it and they're trying to manipulate our laws so that they could sit here and slam these people with it. | ||
And then, you know, U.S. Attorney Matthew Graves in D.C. is out here saying now, well, if you get the enhancement appealed and we lose the enhancement, we're going to go back and we're going to appeal your sentence and we're going to go harder for your lighter crimes. | ||
We're going to request more time. | ||
And they're doing it. They're doing it right now with Enrique Attario. | ||
22 years is long enough. | ||
They wanted 32 years originally for him. | ||
Same thing with Stuart. I think they were asking for 22 years originally. | ||
They're appealing him, too. | ||
And they're also suing. I mean, the lawfare is just so crazy when you're trying to follow this all the way through. | ||
It's horrible. I mean, I don't know how else to describe this to people. | ||
Attorneys are afraid to touch these cases as well. | ||
Right. We talk about it all the time because you see what's happening to Trump. | ||
Trump's attorneys are being prosecuted now for simply representing their clients. | ||
So I don't know how we overcome this at this point, honestly. | ||
It's really, really aggressive and nobody's bold enough to go after these people. | ||
It really is sick, man. | ||
And maybe the most disappointing part of all of it is seeing all of our fellow Americans Who ostensibly are, you know, their number one thing. | ||
They won't shut up about, you know, saving democracy and, you know, saying they promote all of these things that safeguard our liberties, and yet they aren't just turning a blind eye to this. | ||
They're in favor of how this is done. | ||
It's so disappointing to me to see the way that our fellow Americans are giving approval to this happening, even though it could very well be them in the, you know... | ||
Who knows? Maybe they go to a protest and enter a building they're not supposed to, and suddenly they're facing over 10 years in prison. | ||
I mean, this to me is sort of the most disappointing part. | ||
And we just played a video in the first five minutes of that woman, 64 years old, sort of going, wait, all this is BS. All this is fake. | ||
My life is failing. | ||
She says, I'm sitting in this broken down car because I can't even afford a new one. | ||
Where are the people that are working for me? | ||
I'm not even going to participate in politics anymore because it's such BS. I mean, it seems like a lot of people are sort of coming around. | ||
They're sort of waking up to the reality of the situation. | ||
What is it going to take for them to take that next step and realize, okay, it's all a scam. | ||
I need to be fighting against what I see here, not just throwing up my hands and going, ah, it's all fake. | ||
I'll just walk away. I mean, really, I guess all this is to say, like, the disappointment I have in my fellow American citizens who seem to understand this when it's in a fantasy movie, right? | ||
They get that Voldemort was the bad guy, right? | ||
They get that... Mordor is the bad guy in Lord of the Rings. | ||
They get it when it's in fantasy, but when it's right in front of them, they can't seem to see what we all see. | ||
How do we break through to that? | ||
Sadly, I know people aren't going to like to hear this, but we have to hit rock bottom. | ||
We have to hit rock bottom because people need to change their habits. | ||
And the only way for them to change their habits is by just getting on an awakening. | ||
I mean, that's the only way to kind of go through this at this point. | ||
We're starting to see it in blue cities. | ||
I mean, I honestly do truthfully believe that New York City is in play for President Trump. | ||
And I know most people don't get it. | ||
They'll say that's crazy. A lot of people are really pissed off with the illegals that are being sent to New York City. | ||
They understand it now. | ||
We're seeing rises in minority communities, people getting infuriated. | ||
We see it in Chicago and New York City all the time now. | ||
And then you have the suburbs outside of New York, which we're going to help save it. | ||
So if he could kind of turn New York City a little bit, the suburbs, upstate New York, Long Island will help him out significantly. | ||
So I honestly think the greatest thing that we could do is just keep having Greg Abbott keep sending them, keep sending them. | ||
Right, right. Well, and... | ||
I think Republicans are failing to make the case because I think, you know, we're seeing a major vulnerability here in the Democrat positions where, you know, their own citizens are going, what the heck's going on? | ||
We're being abused and these foreigners are being given five-star treatment. | ||
Where are the Republicans making the case of, yeah, this is what we've been saying the whole time. | ||
Now it's time to come over to our side where we... | ||
The lady, the six-, four-year-old lady, I mean, she's just like, I'm done with politics. | ||
What she should be saying is, I'm on... | ||
Team Trump now. I get why Trump supporters are the way they are, why we support the things we support, because you are seeing it now in real time. | ||
Where are the Republicans making the case? | ||
Because I have a fear that there's a huge portion of Democrats who go, you know, ah, these illegals are draining the city. | ||
They're prioritizing illegals over us. | ||
This is bad. But Trump is still racist for wanting the wall, right? | ||
They're still stuck in this old mindset situation. | ||
Of Republicans' evil, so they can't even approach voting for somebody like Donald Trump because they really still believe the lies about him, even though they can see now that the opposition to immigration wasn't racist. | ||
It was against the bad effects they're now experiencing. | ||
Where are the Republicans making this case? | ||
Are they? I think they're intentionally not making the case. | ||
And here's why. I think that they just run on a motion like Democrats do as well. | ||
And that's why, you know, when they controlled all three branches of government under Trump, they didn't want to pass anything regarding immigration. | ||
They didn't want to keep pushing forward on any of those key issues that bring out Republican voters to vote. | ||
They know that if you want to drive out voters, you have to do you have to let it keep going and you have to let you need to run on something. | ||
And they run on broken promises. | ||
And that's just kind of their thing. | ||
We're seeing with Mike Johnson, for an example, the speaker. | ||
He has been horrendous in the last six and a half months. | ||
And it's been a complete turnaround. | ||
Why? | ||
Well, we'll find out soon. | ||
I mean, I just don't understand how something he claims he wants to cure borders. | ||
But then he's sitting here giving foreign aid, $95 billion in foreign aid, $3.5 billion going to the NGOs, which are causing the issues at the border. | ||
So in fact, Republicans are fueling it. | ||
They want to run on the issue. | ||
They want it to get even worse so that it's easier for them to campaign on. | ||
And so I don't even think voting Republican anymore is going to help fix these issues anymore because they don't want to completely fix them. | ||
I mean, that's just another way to describe it. | ||
And when you call their offices, they don't want to talk to you about anything. | ||
Right. Right. It's just so stupid to me. | ||
And there's so many massive vulnerabilities in the Democratic Party right now. | ||
I mean, they're split on immigration, obviously, because the people in the inner cities are seeing the negative effects. | ||
They're split on Israel because half of them are the protesters in Hamas. | ||
The other half are the, you know, people cheering for the police, clearing out those camps. | ||
these massive vulnerabilities and republicans just refuse to take advantage of it whatsoever it really does seem at this point like if it's not on purpose i mean it has to be on purpose it just has to be on purpose right it's the opposite of hamlin's razor uh where they say you know don't don't ascribe to malice what can be explained by incompetence there's no incompetence this deep as we're seeing on display in the republican party yeah it's got to be malice You just have to assume at this point. | ||
Yeah. I don't know how else to explain to people. | ||
I'm like, listen, this is all intentional. | ||
It's all intentional. I mean, you got a couple of Republicans who stick their necks out. | ||
We know their names by now. | ||
And the rest of them are just all rhinos and they're awful. | ||
I mean, I remember people were cheering for New York for flipping seats. | ||
And they're like, wow, this is great. We're going to send a whole bunch of Republicans to Congress. | ||
Those are the people who are destroying our country. | ||
I think it's named Mike Lawler. | ||
Lawler, yeah, yeah. He was just the one who put forward that anti-Semitic free speech violation legislation. | ||
Republicans. Yeah, Republicans. | ||
Because he's a rhino. And this is the thing. | ||
This is a chance for Republicans to actually stand up for the things they profess to believe in. | ||
If they actually said, hey, look, we don't agree with the protests, but... | ||
This is free speech, and this is what we've been warning you about, left. | ||
Remember, left, how we keep warning, you know, if you pass these anti-free speech laws, they're going to come down on you. | ||
Now they are. So maybe it's time to listen to us this time. | ||
Listen to when we say how important free speech is, because you're now experiencing, you know, what happens when it goes away. | ||
And the economy, of course, is sort of the biggest one. | ||
How many videos have we seen of people just going, what is happening here? | ||
Why is the economy not working? | ||
I'll never be able to afford a house. | ||
I'll never even be able to be in the middle class, even though I've done everything right and I have a degree and I'm working every day. | ||
I'll never afford a house. | ||
Making the case that this is on purpose, by design, and there is a way to break out of it, and it's by undoing the policies that have gotten us to this position, how can they not be making this case? | ||
Even again, if they're only driven by the power that they experience being a congressman, well, that's going to go away if you aren't making the case to the American people. | ||
They're going to vote you out. I mean, it's so disappointing here, which is the frustration of all this. | ||
We can bring it up, we can talk about it, but then just nothing gets done. | ||
Nothing's going to get done. I mean, that's just how it is. | ||
You know, I spoke about, we've obviously got a thinning majority in the House right now, and I say they're just forfeiting it at this point because they're all withdrawing. | ||
Now, Congressman Michael Gallagher was the last one, and I think that's an interesting one to kind of pin on people. | ||
So he came into Congress, and I thought he was great at first because he wanted to go after China. | ||
He said all the right things. | ||
Mm-hmm. And then all of a sudden he becomes the chairman of the subcommittee for the CCP and all of a sudden changes drastically. | ||
He's trying to ban TikTok. | ||
And then all of a sudden he's resigning now. | ||
And, oh, he's another one. | ||
Didn't want to vote for Mayorkas' impeachment either. | ||
He recently just stepped down. | ||
And he stepped down on a key date, April 19, so they couldn't replace him before November to make sure that he didn't get him. | ||
Right, right, right, right. I heard rumors when I was in D.C. that he already has a job. | ||
He had a job lined up before he even stepped down. | ||
And people don't want to, Republicans, they don't want to confront him on the issue. | ||
Marjorie Taylor Greene tried to, Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene, tried her best to do so. | ||
And she wanted to expel him, but there was no desire to do so. | ||
And again, Republicans know it. | ||
They're all dropping like flies. | ||
Why are they all leaving? | ||
Former Speaker Kevin McCarthy really loved America. | ||
Why would he sit there and forfeit his seat? | ||
No, it makes no sense. | ||
I mean, it literally is absurd. | ||
And I think Mike Johnson's maybe the paramount example of this, of just willfully giving up any negotiations that you could possibly have, they just surrender on immediately. | ||
It's beyond disappointing. | ||
And of course, it is always they become the chair of a subcommittee or Mike Johnson's like, well, I went into the skiff for 10 minutes and when I came out, I had a completely different view and that's just how it works. | ||
I mean, what do they have on these guys? | ||
That was like my favorite quote ever. | ||
I mean, we're talking about a guy who claims to be a constitutional attorney, claims to see his politics through the lens of the Bible. | ||
Then all of a sudden now everything's changed, right? | ||
He doesn't know what the Constitution is. | ||
He's putting bills on the floor, which clearly violate your First Amendment rights as Americans. | ||
And he's now all of a sudden seen the light. | ||
I mean, Tucker Carlson said it best. | ||
He thinks that they all probably have these weird sexual kinks and they're all just afraid of it coming out, I guess. | ||
I mean... I don't know what else to think. | ||
I mean, I would have to go with that because at this point, it's just like, how does someone make such a quick turnaround in six and a half months and then tells others to do it? | ||
I mean, FISA, we all know that they misused FISA. And for some reason, they were all willing to sign off on it again, warrantless. | ||
And not just going, oh, it's okay to get it. | ||
They expanded it. They made it even worse. | ||
unidentified
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I mean, it's... That's very annoying. | |
We need a wholesale reorganization, I think, of everything that's going on here. | ||
Brianna Morello. More on the other side. | ||
We'll take your calls as well. | ||
Show you some videos. BriannaMorello.com. | ||
unidentified
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Stay with us. Alright, welcome back. | |
Ladies and gentlemen, I'm here with Brianna Morello. | ||
The Brianna Morello Show streams on Rumble and you can find her website at briannamorello.com or follow her on X at Brianna Morello. | ||
And we're going to go ahead and take some of your calls and use that as a jumping off point. | ||
We have Amy in South Carolina who's called in. | ||
Amy, I understand you have some past experience with paid protesters. | ||
Thanks for calling in, Amy. You're on the air with myself and Brianna Morello. | ||
unidentified
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Hey, hey, Harrison. | |
Hey, Brianna. Hey, Amy. | ||
Long-time listener. This is my first time calling in. | ||
About four years, well, four years ago, during that same weekend of the George Floyd riot, I wasn't even paying attention to all that. | ||
It was right when, you know, COVID, they were finally lifting restrictions, and I was like, I want to head to the beach. | ||
I invited one of my friends to go with me, and so we went to Myrtle Beach, and we were staying kind of right on that strip, and I Before we left, my friend Tammy, she's very spiritual, which I am too, but she had a dream that we were in our hotel room and people were trying to come in and hurt us. | ||
And I told her, well, let's just pray against that because, you know, I just want to go to the beach and have a good time. | ||
And so we get there and everything's fine. | ||
And I meet up with my friend Bonnie who lives in the area and her daughter. | ||
And we were kind of hanging out that weekend with them. | ||
Then Sunday comes along and we're just all hanging out at the beach and all of a sudden my friend Tammy jumps up and Bonnie's looking at me and she's like, what's your friend doing? | ||
Because she was over there talking to these two guys. | ||
And she was just over there for a few minutes and we're like, I have no idea. | ||
I have no idea why she's talking to these guys. | ||
Well, she comes back and she's like, oh my gosh. | ||
She's like, these guys just told me there's going to be riots. | ||
And it's going to be from, like, the Ferrisville down, and don't go out of your room from, like, 6 p.m. | ||
to 6 a.m. And she seemed really, like, freaked out by it. | ||
And some of the people around us were listening, and we were talking to them. | ||
Well, then, shortly after, I get a text from the hotel, because I was the one that booked it, that said, the mayor has issued a curfew for Myrtle Beach from 6 p.m. | ||
to 6 a.m. So we knew it was real. | ||
So... And so I'm kind of like, I found out later that the reason she told me that she got up to talk to these guys was she just all of a sudden heard the Lord speaking to her and he said, go talk to them. | ||
And she kind of hesitated at first and then he's like, go. | ||
And so he goes up and starts talking to them and it was like he just gave her the words to say. | ||
And she just, it's like she just knew. | ||
They were dressed normally, like beach clothes and everything, but these guys were at Antifa. | ||
And they admitted that they were being paid to be there. | ||
And they were freaked out. | ||
When she first came up, they're like, what made you come over and talk to us? | ||
And she's like, God did. | ||
And they're just kind of looking at her. | ||
And so she starts asking them questions. | ||
And they admitted that they were being paid to be there. | ||
And they said, you seem like a cool girl. | ||
Just don't go out of your hotel from this time to this time. | ||
So anyways, after that, everybody was talking about it around us. | ||
We told some of the lifeguards. | ||
Well, then... We headed back to the room for a minute, and I called my pastor because they were having church that day, and I was like, can you please have the church pray for us? | ||
I don't know what's going to happen tonight, but apparently with all these riots happening with George Floyd this weekend, apparently it's going to happen here too. | ||
And so my pastor was like, yeah, absolutely. | ||
So I get back outside, and my friend Bonnie at this point was about to leave with her daughter. | ||
And Tammy's over there talking to this guy at the lifeguard chair, and he wasn't a lifeguard. | ||
He was a black guy, and he had a mask on. | ||
And Bonnie's like, yeah, I don't know. | ||
But she just went over and started talking to him. | ||
And I thought, well, I need to bring all this stuff back to the room. | ||
So I went over to tell Tammy, like, hey, can you watch the rest of this stuff while I'm bringing it back? | ||
And the guy looks at me, and he goes, do you believe all this? | ||
And I had no idea what they were talking about, and I said, believe what? | ||
And Tammy starts in again, and she just told him, you know, all these people are here just having a great time with their families. | ||
I know racism exists and everything. | ||
And she's like, but she goes, I love you, and I don't even know you. | ||
And his girlfriend comes down, and it was a white girl. | ||
And we're just talking to both of them, and we're both saying the same thing. | ||
Like, look, you know, a lot of the stuff seems... | ||
Sounds like Tammy's little social butterfly. | ||
So, yeah, so all these things were pre-planned. | ||
They were all organized. | ||
And again, this is the big difference between what we're seeing... | ||
On the college campuses, you know, today and what we saw in 2020. | ||
I mean, these riots, they were organized, they were orchestrated. | ||
Obviously, people in the government knew they were happening. | ||
The people in the media knew where to go, what to look at, what to publish and what not to publish. | ||
Can you talk a little bit about the difference just between 2020 and what we see today, Brianna, and what that might signify? | ||
Yeah, we're hearing a lot about all of this going down right now because, well, we're in an election year. | ||
I think that's also why they're going after all these people. | ||
There's a lot of George Soros money floating around these days, and I think the New York Post has done a great job at showing that. | ||
Now, I don't care what side you fall on on this Israel-Gaza issue right now. | ||
Personally, for me, you have a right to protest, as long as it's peaceful. | ||
But there's agitators being added to it. | ||
It looks like those agitators are Soros-funded. | ||
The New York Post has been doing some digging and found out that these people, yeah, are funded. | ||
I think they're trying to create more division in the country as we get closer to November. | ||
We see it. We saw it play out during the BLM riots. | ||
We're seeing it play out again. I just tell everyone, you got to be careful. | ||
You just can't fall for the emotional issues that are kind of wrapped up into all of this because I think That's what they always tie people into. | ||
I always just tell people, take a step back, think of the reverse, and then kind of decide for yourself where you fall on the issues. | ||
But again, I mean, you were talking about it earlier before I jumped on with you. | ||
This Israel issue right now with protesters, that they're yanking, police are yanking all these protesters off the property. | ||
I don't have an issue with them being able to, you know, speak freely. | ||
The violence is another issue. | ||
If they're blocking students from being able to get across the campus, that I have an issue with. | ||
But they're all paid to be there. | ||
A lot of them are paid to be there. Not all of them. | ||
A lot of them are paid to be there. | ||
Right, and the organizers are paid and orchestrated, and of course they, again, I mean, what stands out to me is the leaked video is like a hot mic moment during 2020 where you had this protester going up to an NBC reporter and going, yeah, I'm in communication with your producer, and I know this guy, and I'm from Chicago, and I was sitting here to help lead this march. | ||
I mean, if Black Lives Matter was given the January 6th treatment, if they got into the finances and saw who was funding it and who was promoting it and arrested those people and had RICO charges against those people, I mean, that was a real insurrection they were trying to foster. | ||
You know what's funny? I don't think people realize it, but FISA has actually been used against BLM protesters. | ||
Right. And that was like a big thing that nobody really spoke about. | ||
I don't understand why, but it was a big issue for everyone. | ||
We could have actually used that to our advantage. | ||
Right. But if you recall, too... | ||
The college protests that are going on right now have amplified and grown significantly. | ||
And so I was wondering, why are we all of a sudden paying attention to this? | ||
The government last week just voted to extend FISA. We just voted over the weekend for foreign aid, billions of dollars in foreign aid being thrown around everywhere. | ||
But now all of a sudden they're telling you, okay, look at this one issue. | ||
I think a lot of it's a distraction intentionally. | ||
So you don't see them kind of chipping away at your rights. | ||
I mean, it's exactly what they're doing and they don't want you to pay attention to it. | ||
And that's what they've effectively done, is you have Republicans now just completely betraying any morals about free speech, going completely along with the suppression taking place. | ||
And, you know, the FBI spying on the Black Lives Matter protest, that was a big deal to the left. | ||
And again, it was one of these times where it was like, okay, so now you get how this is bad. | ||
Don't you want to be against this? | ||
But to them, it's, well, it's good when the FBI is doing it to our enemies. | ||
It's only bad when it's done to us. | ||
That's the real bad thing. No, the bad thing is that the FBI is completely out of control and able to spy on domestic peace protests with impunity in order to shut them down. | ||
Why can we not unify on this? | ||
This is the frustrating part. | ||
Why can we not come together on this stuff that we obviously align on? | ||
So, you would think that Republicans would be more vocal from that sense. | ||
Unfortunately, they're not. That would have been the bridge that I would have created. | ||
I would have said, hey, listen, I don't agree with you politically, but you didn't have to be spied on. | ||
You had your rights violated, and you should be just as infuriated as everybody else on the right about this issue. | ||
But they didn't do it. | ||
And they supported, Speaker Mike Johnson supported the warrantless FISA extension. | ||
And if you turn on Fox News, Fox News was pushing it. | ||
They were saying, oh, they were fear-mongering. | ||
They were saying, you know, we use what we gather in FISA so much. | ||
They also denied it that Americans were really being spied on. | ||
There was one expert who came on to say, oh, it's not being used against Americans. | ||
That's just a myth. It's not a myth. | ||
myth. | ||
We know there was millions of people who were spied on through it. | ||
Republicans just don't know how to bridge it. | ||
They don't know how to talk to people. | ||
There's just no other way to describe it. | ||
I mean, you could sit there and talk to people and say, hey, listen, I don't agree with you, but you shouldn't have been a victim of being spied on illegally. | ||
You have a constitutional right. | ||
I have my constitutional rights. | ||
We should both support our constitution. | ||
Honestly, there's so many opportunities for the American people to come together on these issues. | ||
All right, folks. Welcome back. | ||
Brianna Morello is in studio with me. | ||
Our final segment here on American Journal. | ||
Of course, you can follow her on X at Brianna Morello. | ||
Briannamorello.com is her website. | ||
And how often do you do and what time is your Rumble show, the Brianna Morello show? | ||
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When does that air on Rumble? Live Monday through Friday at 7 p.m. | |
Eastern Time. There you go. | ||
Live, 7 p.m. | ||
Eastern Time on Rumble, the Brandon Morello Show. | ||
And yeah, you just told me about a clip I had not seen from just a few days ago. | ||
I guess it was April 30th. | ||
Matt Gaetz was questioning Lloyd Austin in Congress. | ||
And I guess there's just so much going on. | ||
This sort of falls through the cracks. | ||
But we'll go to this video and then comment on the other side. | ||
So here's just a few days ago, Matt Gaetz grilling Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin about the new Gaza campaign. | ||
Landing dock that we're creating there. | ||
Let's watch. Ms. | ||
Slotkin just said there'll be about a thousand US service members operating a peer system off of Gaza. | ||
How many of them will have guns, Mr. | ||
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Secretary? Well, typically all of the deployed service members carry guns, and they have the ability to protect themselves if challenged. | |
So if someone from land in Gaza shoots at our service members who are on the $320 million pier that we're building, you're telling me our service members can shoot back? | ||
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They have the right to return fire to protect themselves. | |
So now I want to move to the likelihood that you think someone from land in Gaza might shoot at our service members on this pier. | ||
Do you think that's a likely scenario? | ||
That's possible, yes. This is a very telling moment, Mr. | ||
Secretary, because you've said something that's quite possible that could happen, right? | ||
Shots from Gaza on our service members, and then the response, our armed service members shooting live fire into Gaza. | ||
That is a possible outcome here so that we can become the port authority and run this pier. | ||
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Right? That's correct. | |
I expect that we will always have the ability to protect ourselves. | ||
Don't you think that counts as boots on the ground? President Biden told the country that we weren't going to have boots on the ground in Gaza. | ||
And we won't. Okay, but you guys parse the distinction between when Americans think boots on the ground, they think Americans in harm's way or engaged actively in a conflict. | ||
You guys seem to be sort of... | ||
Saying that boots on a pier, connected to the ground, connected to service members, shooting into Gaza, doesn't count as boots on the ground? | ||
It does not. I think you're going to find the American people have a different perspective on that. | ||
And if we're going to have people shooting into Gaza, we probably should have a vote on that, pursuant to our war powers. | ||
Well, the War Powers Act. | ||
I mean, we haven't voted to go into a war since World War II. So, I mean, maybe this is, again, one of these things where it's like, this has been the way it is for a while. | ||
Now they're just sort of making it public in the same way where, you know, you've got these CIA agents bragging about how they control the Congress and Congress has no oversight. | ||
It's been that way for a while. | ||
Now they're just making it public. | ||
So... We're, for all intents and purposes, at war in Gaza, it just won't be put to a vote and it won't be, like, discussed in that capacity in the mainstream media. | ||
What's your take on that exchange? | ||
Well, I think Congressman McIntyre did a phenomenal job at grilling him, holding him accountable, and getting him to say what we all know, what he is actually thinking, and what's going on right now with this administration. | ||
Look, they're looking to get us involved in this war, and they're going to do so by any means necessary, which is likely going to be something that could pull at the heartstrings of Americans, what might be an attack. | ||
And we're putting ourselves in harm's way intentionally because if an attack does take place, guess what, guys? | ||
We're booting up and we're going to war. | ||
And that's what's going to happen. | ||
I have a strong, strong feeling about that. | ||
There's no reason to be sitting here building ports so you could sit there and give out humanitarian aid. | ||
I think there was another video that I randomly saw, too, of Hamas taking the aid that's being given right now and seizing it and shooting civilians who were coming to come and get their aid that they were looking for. | ||
It's just, we're setting these people up for failure. | ||
We're setting up our people for failure, and it's intentional. | ||
Listen, we don't need any more wars. | ||
They call it a proxy war. I don't think it's a proxy war. | ||
I think we're just trying to slowly get ourselves involved in it so that they can validate it. | ||
And most Americans would be like, well, you know, they attacked us, and now we have to fight back. | ||
Well, we shouldn't have been there in the first place, and I think that's the point we have to drive home here. | ||
Yeah, and what do you think the likelihood is that the port's real intention is to offload Gazans and bring them here by the millions? | ||
I mean, I think that's a more likely use for the port than delivering aid. | ||
If they want to deliver aid, There's a million ways to do it. | ||
I mean, the only thing preventing us from delivering aid would be Israel, and they're our allies. | ||
We should be able to cooperate with them to get aid in without having to build a port to do that. | ||
It seems like the port is being built probably to start sending the cruise ships so we can bring all the Palestinians here. | ||
You know, it's interesting, too. | ||
I just saw a report that Gaza residents, they actually don't, that they come through our southern border right now, we don't have a way to kind of classify them. | ||
So they're counting them as just Israelis. | ||
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Okay. It's bizarre, but it's intentional. | |
Yeah. So what they're looking to do is they are looking to bring these people into our country, and they're looking to protect them when they come into our country, and that's what they're going to start doing. | ||
I strongly believe the port's going to be used for that purpose alone. | ||
They're not even defending or denying the NBC News report, I believe it was NBC or CBS, which came out just a couple of days ago saying that the Biden White House is actually looking to actively bring these people into our country. | ||
I mean, it's absurd. It's crazy because, again, nobody else in the Middle East wants these individuals because they know that there is a strong likelihood that they're terrorists. | ||
And they're not allowing them to come in their countries, especially Egypt. | ||
I mean, that would be the country that I would assume would take ownership of a lot of these folks, and they're not doing so. | ||
So why is our administration so willing to take these people in and put us all at risk? | ||
That's the million-dollar mission. | ||
Especially since any feeling that they have towards Israel is going to be reflected in their feeling towards America, since Israel only does what it does because America has backup. | ||
So like in the Middle East, they don't see a great distinction between American actions and Israeli actions. | ||
It's sort of all one and the same to them. | ||
So the idea that we would fund the campaign that would drive them from their homes and then bring them into our country, it's utter madness. | ||
I mean, these are the people that are like, these are the worst heirs in the world, this They're the Nazis. They want everybody dead. | ||
And you have to take them in your neighborhood. | ||
Like, what? How could this possibly make sense? | ||
It doesn't. It just clearly doesn't. | ||
Yeah, I don't get the appeal is to get individuals who are probably going to attack us. | ||
First off, they hate us. I mean, there's no other way to talk about it. | ||
They don't like us. And they have their reasons. | ||
We have not been so kind to the Middle East, obviously. | ||
Hasn't gone well our last few interventions, yes. | ||
So why would you bring them into this country? | ||
I mean, they're literally chanting on U.S. soil right now. | ||
We see chants for death to America. | ||
Also, by the way, I reached out to the FBI to see if they're investigating any of those individuals, and the FBI does not want to comment on it. | ||
Well, no, they're focused on the dangerous white Christian men. | ||
Yeah. The guys holding up the flag in the middle of the protest. | ||
Those are the real danger to the FBI. They are. | ||
They are. Well, I mean, at least they're onto something. | ||
I mean, I don't even get it anymore. | ||
You know, it's the most absurd thing these days that none of our federal agencies are operating in the ways that they were supposed to be. | ||
Right. Supposedly. And they're getting away with it. | ||
I mean, we talked about it just a second ago, but members of Congress continue to fund them and they shouldn't be funded anymore. | ||
And they're getting new buildings like the FBI. Yeah. | ||
It's all disturbing. Yeah, it's all very disturbing. | ||
And again, I mean, and this isn't just about, you know, the FBI doing things that we don't want and wanting to punish them or anything. | ||
I mean, this really is like the crucial conflict defining... | ||
Our future at this moment, do we have civilian oversight of our deep state or is the deep state in charge and the election process just sort of something we do to entertain ourselves? | ||
I mean this really is a defining moment for America as whether we continue on as a constitutional republic or whether it's just openly acknowledged that The civilians' ability to have a say in our government is an illusion and the government does whatever the deep state wants regardless of what the voters say. | ||
You want to talk about the death of democracy. | ||
It's literally what this is. | ||
Yeah, I mean, I'm torn on the issue because I don't want to discourage people from going out and voting and participating in democracy, but are you actually participating in democracy is the question. | ||
And does the fourth branch of government take over and kind of tell us how we're going to go? | ||
I mean, we're going to see soon. | ||
I think the big telling moment is that Supreme Court ruling regarding presidential immunity. | ||
Right. Because, listen, they won't give up any type of power, presidential powers, if President Trump loses that. | ||
Right. They know that they're next up. | ||
If President Trump loses that and he doesn't have immunity, then they know that they're going down too next time around. | ||
Yeah. And so I think that's the telling moment that's kind of going to be the deciding factor in all of us. | ||
You know, there's also, I'm glad you brought this up, but I meant to ask about the Supreme Court, just going back to what we were talking about in the first segment, January 6th, there was all this reporting about them questioning even the ability to apply this statute about interfering and obstructing an official proceeding. | ||
What's the latest on that? Have you been following that? | ||
Yeah, it looks like the Supreme Court's maybe open to it. | ||
They were a little critical when they were grilling the DOJ during opening arguments. | ||
But ultimately, we'll have to wait to see. | ||
We'll find out in June, I believe. | ||
In June, okay, yeah. I was wondering where that was because, yeah, we heard the videos or the audio recordings and saw the reporting where they were not happy with the way that this statute had been applied to January 6th. | ||
It was totally outside of the remit. | ||
The original intention of the law was about financial institutions destroying records. | ||
Suddenly, it's being used to go after grandmas who walked through the Capitol. | ||
We heard a lot about that recently, and I just said that it fell off the map, so I was wondering when we'd hear from that, so probably in June. | ||
Folks, stay tuned to the Brandon Morello Show to get updates on all of this stuff. | ||
An incredible investigative reporter breaking stories in really a way that nobody else is. | ||
BrandonMorello.com on X, at Brandon Morello. | ||
And thank you so much for joining us. | ||
It's been a total pleasure. Thank you for having me, Harrison. | ||
I appreciate it. Of course. Anytime. All right, folks. | ||
Stay tuned. The Alex Jones Show begins in 90 seconds. | ||
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