Speaker | Time | Text |
---|---|---|
unidentified
|
how you intend on getting the union vote when there's a large portion of the union workers that are gun enthusiasts and you are actively trying to diminish your second amendment right You're forced. All right, thank you guys. | |
Shush. Shush. | ||
I support the Second Amendment. | ||
The Second Amendment, just like right now, if you yell, fire, that's not free speech. | ||
And from the very beginning, I have a shotgun, I have a 20-gauge, a 12-gauge, my son's hunt. | ||
Guess what? You're not allowed to own any weapons. | ||
I'm not taking your gun away at all. | ||
You need 100 rounds of your gun. | ||
So when you were in vain, though, when you said you were going to take over guns... | ||
I did not say that. | ||
We're going to ban assault weapons again, come hell and high water. | ||
unidentified
|
I'm demanding a ban on the slow weapons and high-capacity magazines. | |
Biden told 15 lies, nearly a lie a minute. | ||
From whoppers about the economy to prevarications on Israel, Biden spun a fantasy land of a presidency that voters know is false. | ||
How about number eight? Inflation was 9% when it came to office? | ||
Nope. That's right. | ||
And on and on it went. | ||
There it is right there. 9% when it came to office. | ||
1.4% when he came into office. | ||
Inflation has gone slightly up. | ||
up, it was at 9% when I came in. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh my God! | |
F*** you, Joseph! F*** you! F*** you! | ||
When such a geriatric calamity is not only the president of these United States, but is running for re-election, something has gone terribly wrong. | ||
unidentified
|
F*** you, Joe! F*** you! F*** you! | |
Which begs the question, why is any of this even necessary? | ||
Shortly following Biden's inauguration, the first thing that people immediately began wondering about Joe Biden was, who is really running the show and why? | ||
Of course, CIA plant and Soros minion, the arrogant Barack Obama, kept very little close to the vest when it came to his intentions following his second term. | ||
With Joe Biden, he's living his dream. | ||
Remember what he said? He's on tape. | ||
My dream is to phone in the presidency. | ||
I would like to have a third term, but not if I had to work. | ||
I would just like to sit in my basement and just tell people what's going to do. | ||
And he said it, and that's what he's doing right now. | ||
The Obamas are running the country. | ||
My point is they want Joe Biden the way he is because he's a construct. | ||
But the inside man acting as the ventriloquist with his arm up the dummy known as President Biden is, by all accounts, White House Chief of Staff Jeff Zients. | ||
By getting Jeff's sign-off, you're getting the President's sign-off. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh, this Jeff guy's powerful. | |
Yeah. Realistically, they are, people call him, like, the second most powerful person in Washington. | ||
He runs the White House. | ||
unidentified
|
He runs the White House. Like, he's responsible for everybody that works there. | |
Uh-huh. He, like, helps set the president's agenda. | ||
Uh-huh. Like, controls what gets said, all that. | ||
unidentified
|
Is he, is Jeff more powerful than Harris? | |
In some ways, yes. In some ways, no. | ||
unidentified
|
And is Jeff more powerful than Kamala? | |
Like, not legally, but... | ||
unidentified
|
Who would you say is the most powerful person at the White House? | |
Jeff. Jeff? Yeah. | ||
Jeff is the most powerful person at the White House? | ||
Other than, like, the president, no. | ||
unidentified
|
So all buck stops? Like, all roads lead to Jeff? | |
Jeff and the president, yeah. | ||
unidentified
|
Despite falling short of President Biden's goal to vaccinate 70% of adults by July 4th, this weekend the White House is celebrating progress in the fight against the pandemic. | |
Here to discuss, White House COVID-19 response coordinator Jeff Zients. | ||
This is the man behind the inflation, energy crisis, impending food shortages, border invasion, and new world order policy. | ||
unidentified
|
We do not believe what is happening in Gaza is a genocide. | |
Underneath Obama, Zients served as director of the National Economic Council from 2014 to 2017 and led the effort to bring us the nightmare known as the Affordable Care Act. | ||
unidentified
|
Obama. | |
You got Obama phone? | ||
Yes, everybody in Cleveland, low minority, got Obama phone. | ||
Keep Obama in president, you know. | ||
He gave us a phone. | ||
He gave you a phone. | ||
We're going to do more. | ||
How do he give you a phone? | ||
You sign up. | ||
You're on full stamps. | ||
You're on Social Security. | ||
You got low income. | ||
You disability. | ||
Notably, Zients was a member of Facebook's board of directors from 2018 to 2020. | ||
As the crew behind the disaster known as the Biden administration becomes more visible to the general public, perhaps now the American people will know who to actually complain to because Joe Biden is merely a pitiful decoy. | ||
John Bowne reporting. | ||
Welcome back to the American Journal, folks. | ||
I am Chase Geiser, your host this morning. | ||
Harrison is out sick today, recovering sick. | ||
And he should be back in studio tomorrow. | ||
But in the meantime, you are stuck with me. | ||
Lucky, lucky you. | ||
Well, it is an honor and a pleasure to be here. | ||
And it feels like it's been a while since I've been sitting in this chair. | ||
And I gotta say, of all three studios that we have here at Infowars, this is my favorite one. | ||
It's the most intimate. It just feels like home. | ||
I think it's because I spent so much time sitting in this chair when Harrison was away on paternity. | ||
And this is where I guest hosted the first time. | ||
This feels like home base. | ||
Now, we have a lot of news to cover. | ||
I'm looking through the stacks here this morning. | ||
The brunt of the news pertains to what's happening in Ukraine. | ||
Now, I know that we just sent over $60 billion to Ukraine. | ||
We happened to send it on April 20th. | ||
That was the famous vote. | ||
That was Hitler's birthday. So we send the Nazis $60 billion worth of weapons and aid on Hitler's birthday. | ||
And all of Congress seems to love waving the Ukrainian flag in the halls of our Capitol, in the House of Representatives, in a moment of historic amounts of treason. | ||
And Now we see that they have reached a crisis level. | ||
So we've got this first report here from Infowars.com, which I'm going to go over before I show you some of the other amazing clips that the crew put on the list today. | ||
And it says here, no deal between Moscow and Kiev, according to London. | ||
Britain will not support any solution to the conflict between Russia and Ukraine that involves what it sees as concessions to Moscow, Defense Secretary Grant Shapps told Times Radio on Tuesday. | ||
The UK has been among the largest arms donors to Kiev. | ||
In recent weeks, London has stepped up its rhetoric by saying that British weapons supplied to Ukraine may be used for attacks deep inside Russia. | ||
Moscow recently summoned the UK ambassador over the matter and warned of possible retaliation, including strikes targeting any British military facilities and equipment in Ukraine and beyond. | ||
So we've got this escalation here. | ||
Meanwhile, we have other reports on the desk. | ||
That Europe and Britain are getting ready for World War III. Of course, this is an escalation directly toward World War III. And the real shame of it is, folks, it's not even just the fact that we're giving so much aid to Ukraine or Israel or Taiwan, but it seems like we always choose the losing side. | ||
I mean, how many billions upon billions of dollars and hundreds of thousands of civilians died in the wars in Ukraine? | ||
Iraq and Afghanistan and then we totally just give up all of the ground. | ||
I mean didn't we have to take Ramadi twice? | ||
Jocko Willink came on Joe Rogan's podcast back in like 2018 and talked about what it was like to take Ramadi and then ISIS came and retook it. | ||
I think we took it back and now we've conceded the entire country. | ||
These are brutal battles, brutal wars against some of the most evil people in the world. | ||
These terrorists that use Civilians as human shields. | ||
And then once our aims are complete over there, I guess we just abandon it. | ||
And everybody who died, whether they came back in a casket with an American flag on top or totally maimed or struggling with PTSD, not to mention all the civilians, they all just died in vain. | ||
And now we've given billions upon billions of dollars in weapons to Ukraine, yet they simply do not have the soldiers to use all the weapons to support this conflict. | ||
There was a demographic chart that I think Jones had up on the Alex Jones show the other day where it showed the drastic dip in the age group 18 to 34 in America. | ||
I mean, they've wiped out an entire generation. | ||
And I know that the UN, Geneva Convention, the United States and its studies have all said that if you wipe out more than 10% of a nation's population, that inflicts catastrophic damage and psychological trauma to the population that extends generations. | ||
And what we're doing by funding this war on Ukraine is, yes, we are elongating it. | ||
We are certainly adding time before there's a total collapse of Ukraine. | ||
But we are delaying the inevitable. | ||
The inevitable defeat and loss of Ukraine because, yes, I know Americans love to root for an underdog. | ||
But is Ukraine really the underdog if it's backed by NATO and every European nation and the United States? | ||
Or is it Russia that's the underdog? | ||
And frankly, everyone in this group, this NATO group, is going to be totally sick and tired of funding this war, just like after 20 years the United States got sick and tired of funding the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. | ||
And so what's going to happen to Ukraine then? | ||
We'll just be an additional hundreds of thousands or perhaps millions who have been displaced and died for no reason, just like Afghanistan when we left all of the weapons behind, all of the weapons behind in order for Iran to seize them through the Taliban and then sell them to Hamas and then catalyze this attack that we witnessed on October 7th. | ||
And it's not just the displacement that we're seeing in Ukraine and the perpetual loss of innocent lives and young men for no reason. | ||
But now that we have all these weapons over there, who do you think is gonna be in control of these weapons when the war is completely over? | ||
I mean, let's say that Russia completely conquers Ukraine It takes over entirely in all this artillery and all these munitions and all these tanks and all these helicopters and all these jets are left behind. | ||
That's just the same exact thing that happened in Afghanistan happening all over again in Ukraine where the enemy just acquires all of our technology. | ||
And the more advanced the technology is that we leave behind, that's the greater the opportunity for Russia to reverse engineer that technology and create counter technologies that can totally counter all that tech. | ||
If we are to go to a conflict with them on a world war scale. | ||
Despite everything that we try to do to prevent Russia from expanding, none of it seems to work. | ||
We tried to cripple their economy with sanctions. | ||
We tried to inhibit their relations with China, and it seems like they're only getting closer and closer to With our other enemy overseas. | ||
Defying the West, Russia's Putin set to meet Xi Jinping in Beijing. | ||
So Putin is flying around having international meetings while Zelensky is literally scrapping foreign visits amid Russian advances after we just gave him, what is it, 61 or 63 billion dollars? | ||
I can't remember. I know it was over 60. | ||
The whole bill was over 90, but only 60 of it, I believe, was allocated to Ukraine. | ||
So Hong Kong, Moscow, Reuters. | ||
Russian President Vladimir Putin's Beijing visit on Thursday is likely to be light on hard deals, but will mark the start of his new presidential term with a show of support from his most powerful political partner, Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping. | ||
Putin's two-day mission is expected to highlight the pair's vaunted no-limits partnership and defiance from pressure from the United States over Russia's 2022 invasion of Ukraine. | ||
The Chinese foreign ministry confirmed Putin's trip on Tuesday, saying Xi and Putin would exchange views on ties and international regional issues of common concern. | ||
All right, so let's zoom out 30,000 feet on this, and let's look at the big picture here. | ||
We know, traditionally speaking, that Ukraine has been the breadbasket of Europe. | ||
We know that Europe has been fed because of the amazing soil and agricultural production of the Ukrainian region. | ||
And the history of Ukraine being an amazing agricultural region goes back hundreds of years. | ||
Famously, the communists seized all of the crops from the Ukrainian region and forced the Ukrainians to starve under communist rule. | ||
That's why many of them joined the Nazis when the Nazis invaded Russia, because anything that was a relief from communism seemed like a good idea to them. | ||
And ever since the fall of the Soviet Union, this region has served as a major exporter of agriculture to Europe. | ||
Not to mention all the energy that goes right through Ukraine that's exported from Russia. | ||
Now, historically speaking, there has been a nice, convenient interdependence between China and the United States. | ||
We outlawed slavery here in the United States. | ||
And so in the 70s, we exported slavery, outsourced slavery to China. | ||
And while their children and women and men work for basically slave wages, literally living on campus at many of these factories where they have to put nets up outside the windows to keep people from jumping off and committing suicide because the pressure is so high. | ||
We have allowed all of our pharmaceuticals and basically every product that you get on Amazon, with few exceptions, to be manufactured in China because, frankly, it's cheaper. | ||
Despite the fact that we have to ship it all the way across the Pacific Ocean, despite the fact that we have to move it halfway across the planet to get here, the labor is so much cheaper, the regulations are so much lighter in China that the United States has become completely dependent on China to manufacture all of its products. | ||
So we haven't really outlawed slavery here in the United States. | ||
We've simply outsourced it. | ||
And this is something that Biden has supported and been behind since the 70s. | ||
I mean, he's been in office longer than most of us have been alive. | ||
And what's happened is the Chinese economy has traditionally speaking been totally dependent on our capitalist dollar. | ||
That's the way communists work. | ||
That's the way communisms work. That's the way socialisms work. | ||
These socialisms in communist countries, they can all function as long as they have a capitalist nation to exploit off of or to feed off of. | ||
And the more communist a country is, the more capitalist its partners need to be in order to support it. | ||
So if you look at North Korea, it's more communist than China and it leans on China for support. | ||
If you look at China, it's more communist than the United States as of now and it leans on the United States for support. | ||
It's got some capitalist features. | ||
It certainly created some sort of a hybrid model. | ||
But the globalists who want to institute socialism and communism on a global scale, that's why they love globalism so much because these are not self-sustaining economic systems. | ||
These systems require extensive, unlimited, inevitable expansion and exploitation in order to survive. | ||
Otherwise, they collapse in on themselves like the USSR. But there has been one thing other than our dollar that the CCP has been dependent on, and that's been our agriculture, namely soybeans. | ||
Now, I grew up in McLean County in Bloomington, Illinois, and at one point in time, McLean County in Bloomington, Illinois, produced more corn and soy than any other county in the world. | ||
So I grew up amidst loads and loads of fields. | ||
It's the headquarters of State Farm Insurance because State Farm Insurance came into business because it was able to provide better... | ||
Insurance rates for farmers than the other insurers who were making rates based off of city levels. | ||
So long story short, what happened with State Farm is it used to be that if you had car insurance or tractor insurance, you would be charged rates and premiums based off of the number of accidents that were happening in the cities. | ||
But State Farm Insurance discovered that people who lived in the country got in far fewer accidents because there wasn't as much traffic. | ||
And so they were able to offer Record low insurance premiums to all the farmers, hence State Farm Insurance, hence its headquarters being in Bloomington, Illinois, where there's more farming than anywhere else in the United States, because all the farmers signed up for State Farm, and that's how it exploded. | ||
That's the short story there. | ||
My point is, we export all of this soy and all this agriculture to China. | ||
It's basically the only thing that we export to them, and they have been traditionally dependent on all of our agriculture in order to feed their people. | ||
And they don't want another massive famine because they saw what happened between 1958 and 1962 when during the Great Leap Forward somewhere between 50 and 100 million of them starved to death because they couldn't reap enough harvest. | ||
Or crops for their people and there was a bunch of misreporting. | ||
There's a whole complicated litany of reasons that that starvation happened. | ||
But over the last decades, China has been completely dependent on our agriculture. | ||
Now, China knows that if it goes to war with the United States, it will no longer have access to our agriculture. | ||
And that's going to be a massive problem for them because their people are going to begin to starve. | ||
And when their people stop supporting the CCP, that's a major internal conflict, internal strife for them. | ||
So what they've tried to do over the last several years is diversify. | ||
They've done things like invest in massive amounts of gold. | ||
They're importing gold like crazy. | ||
They're misreporting the amount of gold they're mining in their own country because they are anticipating a collapse of the U.S. dollar, and they want to position the yen as the global reserve currency. | ||
And they know in order to do that, they need to have the greatest amount of gold possible because after this collapse happens, whatever's next is going to have to be backed by something, whether it's a CBDC from the West or whether it's a new gold-backed currency from the East. | ||
Controlled by the CCP. Either outcome is devastating. | ||
And so since they've been dependent on our agriculture, and since they know that our currency is about to collapse and World War III seems to be heating up, what they have done is they have partnered with Russia. | ||
And so there's a couple of reasons that Russia has invaded Ukraine. | ||
And there's a couple of reasons that Russia and China are suddenly partners, seemingly out of nowhere. | ||
And this all ties into the BRICS stuff. | ||
But what's happened here is Russia invaded Ukraine because A, it knew that it could not sustain having NATO on its border. | ||
So if Ukraine became a NATO member, that would be an untenable position because over 70% of Russia's economy is dependent on natural gas exports. | ||
And those natural gas exports go right through Ukraine. | ||
And so if NATO has control over Ukraine, that means NATO can be a bottleneck or a gridlock. | ||
In terms of negotiating the rates of energy exports. | ||
So Russia's entire economy would be under the control of NATO if Ukraine were to become a member of NATO. That is an untenable position. | ||
So that's reason number one to invade Ukraine. | ||
Second reason here. If we are going to have World War III and if Russia and Iran and China want to be in a position to fight the United States in a hot war if they need to, but also in a position to replace the dollar as the global reserve currency, then China cannot be dependent on U.S. agricultural exports to feed its people. | ||
So Russia takes Ukraine. | ||
Now it controls the region. | ||
Now it can export gas wherever it wants without having to pay off NATO or negotiate with NATO. And simultaneously, Russia will have total control of all of the agriculture produced by Ukraine. | ||
Now, do you think that once Russia wins this war, it is going to allow the agricultural exports of Ukraine to continue to go to Europe in the same way? | ||
After all that Europe has done to fund this war, the billions upon billions of dollars, the people that have been sent over to train their troops, the munitions that have been sent, the weapons that have been sent, no way. | ||
So what's going to happen is, and this is why our United States government tells us time and time again that this is a major national security issue, what's going to happen is Russia's going to take control over Ukraine and Ukraine is going to divert its agricultural exports from Europe Screw you, Europe. Look what you did to us. | ||
From Europe to China. | ||
Making China totally independent of U.S. agricultural exports. | ||
Then China is ready for war. | ||
And this is why our ambassadors in NATO and others are constantly trying to get in the way of Putin and Xi Jinping being buddies. | ||
And this is why we're welcoming Xi Jinping to San Francisco with massive amounts of CCP flags flying everywhere. | ||
This is why our own Marines are holding up CCP flags when Xi Jinping walks into the conference room. | ||
This is why we're totally sucking up to Xi Jinping. | ||
We are practically begging China not to become allies with Russia because we know it's going to be completely devastating to our own economy when our main export agriculture is totally cut off from China. | ||
I mean, our farmers are going to be screwed. | ||
Plus, it's going to screw all of Europe up because they're going to lose all of their food that they have been relying on from Ukraine. | ||
And it's going to establish a completely independent Russia in China from the entire global economy. | ||
I mean, these globalists, for 50 years at least, basically since the end of World War II, have been working tirelessly via organizations like the World Economic Forum or Davos or the United Nations or others. | ||
They've been working tirelessly to try to create this web of interdependence on a global scale because they foresaw interdependence as... | ||
Similar to the mutually assured destruction of nuclear war. | ||
So just as mutually assured destruction worked in the Cold War to prevent the exchange of nuclear bombs. | ||
You bomb us, we bomb you, and we're all dead. | ||
This mutually assured dependence, this interwoven web of... | ||
Globalism was thought to be the catalyst for world peace forever. | ||
This is part of the globalist agenda, but the problem is whenever you have a globalist agenda, there are members of the global community who are treated unfairly and disproportionately impacted negatively. | ||
Like all of the members of OPEC who maybe don't want to trade oil in US dollars because every time we want to bully these nations into doing something, we simply withhold their US dollars in the US banks that they have to hold it in. | ||
That's why Iran hates us. | ||
It's why Russia hates us. | ||
It's why China hates us. | ||
It's the sanctions that we impose on these economies that are forced to use the dollar because we went off of the gold standard and created this petrodollar. | ||
And so all of these conflicts, whether they're the ones in Afghanistan or Iraq or Vietnam, all of these conflicts that we've had over the last 50 years are because we've been trying to leverage our fake money into a new globalist world order and the likes of China and Russia, imperfect as they are, just as corrupt as they are, just as corrupt as any other nation, are sick of it. | ||
I mean, look what we did to Russia after they invaded Ukraine. | ||
First of all, we sabotaged the pipeline and screwed over our allies as well as Russia. | ||
Then we tried to impose sanction after sanction. | ||
Then we seized yacht after yacht from Russian oligarchs. | ||
And we tried to harm their economy as much as possible. | ||
Turns out it didn't work because of things like blockchain technology and cryptocurrencies. | ||
They were able to divert and subvert a lot of our tactics and methods. | ||
But this is why basically the entire world hates the United States of America. | ||
It's not because of our freedom. | ||
Remember they used to try to explain the attacks on 9-11? | ||
They used to try to say that these terrorists hate us because we're free. | ||
That's not true. These nations hate us because we constantly get involved, and we constantly get involved because we have to keep the petrodollar status in order to maintain global reserve status, in order to maintain economic dominance over the 21st century. | ||
But this is all shifting, and this is the reason why our national security apparatus is so gung-ho about winning these conflicts. | ||
It has nothing to do with protecting democracy in Ukraine or protecting religious freedom in Israel or protecting independence in Taiwan. | ||
I mean, our government won't even say that Taiwan is officially independent. | ||
They support a one-China policy. | ||
Then they follow that up by advocating no change as of now. | ||
They're always trying to kick the can as much as possible. | ||
But the reason we're involved in these conflicts, folks, is because it all boils down to our global reserve status. | ||
And we know that if Russia owns Ukraine, then China no longer needs the United States. | ||
And there goes our web of globalism. | ||
There goes our globalist interwoven interdependence that was supposed to assure world peace forever under a global new world order. | ||
Because as soon as China becomes independent of the United States, and that is coming, folks, we are screwed. | ||
You know why? Because we don't make anything. | ||
Not only do we not make anything, but we don't produce skilled laborers. | ||
We don't even know how to make anything. | ||
We don't even have the tooling here to make anything. | ||
There goes the pharmaceutical industry. | ||
You think it's so great that Joe Biden has reduced the cost of insulin? | ||
Let's see what happens to the cost of insulin when China no longer exports to the United States. | ||
Let's see what happens to the price of virtually everything on Amazon when China no longer exports to the United States. | ||
Let's see what happens to world peace and global conflict when China no longer exports to the United States. | ||
And we could say, oh, well, we're going to cut off exports to you, China. | ||
Ha ha ha. And it might hurt them a little bit temporarily while things ramp up in Ukraine and agricultural exports divert. | ||
But you know who is really going to hurt? | ||
The farmers. And now we have Bill Gates and even the Chinese themselves owning so many thousands upon thousands of acres of our own farmland that when our federal government comes in to subsidize the farmers, when the demand vanishes out of nowhere, do you know who's going to make all the money? | ||
Bill Gates and the Chinese who own it. | ||
They have 4D chest us and totally outplayed us and we are scrambling right now to divert World War III, but the only solution to the problem is World War III, folks. | ||
We're going to get into more news on the other side. | ||
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Welcome to the American Journal, folks. | ||
I am Chase Geiser, your host this morning. | ||
We've got a great show ahead, a lot of news to cover, a couple of clips I'm going to show you as well. | ||
And Raw Egg Nationalist, the man himself, is going to be coming on air at 10 o'clock Central. | ||
So in about 90 minutes, we're going to be speaking with Raw Egg Nationalist. | ||
I'm not sure if we're going to keep him on for 30 minutes or 60 minutes, but he has been doing a lot of incredible writing at Infowars.com. | ||
He's got a great magazine, which I'm going to emphasize a little bit later, closer when he comes on. | ||
That I've absolutely adored and given to so many friends. | ||
So it's going to be an exciting show. | ||
In the meantime, I want to kind of wrap up a little bit on the Ukraine stuff and tighten up the story here. | ||
So Zelensky scraps foreign visits amid Russian advances. | ||
Ukrainian President Vladimir, excuse me, Volodymyr, Basically, Ukrainian President Voldemort Zelensky has cancelled his upcoming trips abroad as Russia takes further territory in Ukraine's northeastern Kharkiv region. | ||
This, of course, in the context of us just giving them billions upon billions of dollars. | ||
They are still losing territory as everyone in the world anticipated. | ||
Even the experts saying that they only had six months left. | ||
No matter how much we sent them in terms of weapons and munitions, they simply don't have enough boots on the ground. | ||
The Ukrainian leader has instructed that all international events involving him, scheduled for the coming days, be postponed and new dates coordinated. | ||
Presidential spokesperson Sergril Nikforov, pardon my pronunciation, said in a statement on Wednesday. | ||
In the meantime, Secretary Blinken is partying it up in Kiev, so while we have Zelensky frantically canceling all of his events overseas... | ||
We have Secretary Blinken rocking out in Kiev in clip number two. | ||
Let's watch. It's playing Keep on Rockin' in the Free World by Neil Young. | ||
It's not even a democracy over there. | ||
I mean, they canceled their elections. | ||
unidentified
|
Was that like a fundraiser? | |
I mean, what's the point? | ||
unidentified
|
They're like, oh, Secretary Blinken, you play guitar, right? | |
That might cheer him up. | ||
It reminds me of that clip that they had. | ||
Maybe the crew can find it from weeks ago. | ||
Do you remember when he was doing the interview? | ||
And he was asked what his favorite band was, and he said ACDC. And he goes, I have such moments. | ||
I have such moments. | ||
Let me know if you guys can pull that up, because I want to show that. | ||
I can't believe that we're giving them billions upon billions of dollars in aid. | ||
They're losing territory right and left. | ||
And Zelensky's frantically canceling all appearances. | ||
I mean, remember his wife didn't even show up after being invited to the State of the Union address that Joe Biden had. | ||
She doesn't even show up to that because they're literally being invaded and we're sending Secretary Blinken around to play Keep on Rockin' in the Free World by Neil Young in a terrible cover performance. | ||
Don't even get me started on how sick I am of Neil Young. | ||
I've told you before how I feel about Eric Clapton. | ||
Neil Young, remember what he did after Joe Rogan was put on Spotify? | ||
Joe Rogan announced this major deal with Spotify years ago right in the middle of this pandemic. | ||
And Neil Young says, I want all my music off of Spotify as long as Joe Rogan is allowed to express his freedom of speech. | ||
And that's the song that they choose. | ||
Keep on Rockin' in the Free World by Neil Young after Neil Young literally tried to cancel Joe Rogan because he didn't understand that more people listened to Joe Rogan than Neil Young. | ||
He thought it was going to be some kind of leverage to take his music off of Spotify. | ||
I don't know if it ever came back. But the whole thing just makes me absolutely sick. | ||
Meanwhile, Biden offers to debate Trump with terms shunning the debate commission. | ||
We saw clips this past week and time and time again of... | ||
Trump's saying anytime, anywhere. | ||
Biden's saying set it up, set it up. | ||
After months and months of bizarre responses at press conferences, remember Kareem Jean-Pierre says, that's up to the campaign, whether or not Joe Biden's going to debate. | ||
I'm not sure if he's going to. We had pundits saying that he shouldn't even bother doing it because Trump is just a liar. | ||
Do you remember that? Now it's finally gotten to the point where he's doing so poorly in the polls, people think he's lost his mind to such an extent that he's buckling under the pressure. | ||
And it looks like he's trying to set up this debate, but under unique terms. | ||
So President Biden is willing to debate former President Donald J. Trump at least twice before the election and as early as June, but his campaign is rejecting the nonpartisan organization that has managed presidential debates since 1988, according to a letter obtained by the New York Times. | ||
What? Why? I mean, this organization has basically staged all of these debates in favor of the Democrats. | ||
You would think that President Biden would be absolutely delighted to work with the same organization that leaked questions to the Clinton campaign in 2016, for example, or that cut off Donald Trump relentlessly to allow Joe Biden to mumble a few sentences together, or that allowed Joe Biden to just tell Trump to shut up on stage. | ||
Do you remember that? The letter by the Biden campaign lays out for the first time the president's terms for giving Mr. | ||
Trump We're good to go. | ||
The voters can see the two candidates side by side well before early voting begins in September. | ||
No, they want it sooner because he's slipping and they want to do this as soon as possible before he slips. | ||
I bet they're going to want him earlier in the day as well. | ||
They want the debate to occur inside a TV studio with microphones that automatically cut off when a speaker's time limit elapses. | ||
There you go. And they want it to be just the two candidates and the moderator without the raucous in-person audiences that Mr. | ||
Trump feeds on. Anybody in the audience because they know the audience is going to love Trump and Trump is going to feed on the audience. | ||
Wow. These are the Democrats, folks. | ||
The people that advocate for democracy, that advocate for the people. | ||
They say they love the people so much and they don't want the people to even be in the same room as the debates because it disproportionately benefits the populist candidate. | ||
And without the participation of Robert F. Kennedy Jr. | ||
or other independent or third-party candidates. | ||
So, the proposal suggests that Mr. | ||
Biden is willing to take some calculated risks to reverse his fortunes in a race in which most battleground state polls show the president trailing Mr. | ||
Trump and struggling to persuade voters that he's an effective leader and steward of the economy. | ||
So, this debate's going to happen, and I bet you Trump will agree to all those terms. | ||
Because, frankly, Trump could totally murder in that debate under those terms as well. | ||
And I hope that he does it because the American people deserve to see the debate and we deserve to see the juxtaposition here. | ||
And it calls to mind that historic date that Tucker Carlson interviewed Vladimir Putin and Joe Biden made the terrible mistake of coming out and doing that press conference right as this Vladimir Putin interview was going on with Tucker Carlson and we could see just by flipping channels back to back the disparity in cognitive functions between Putin and President Biden. | ||
Biden was barely able to put a sentence together. | ||
He was responding to a report that he wasn't cognitively functioning enough to handle charges against him. | ||
And Putin was succinct, articulate, sharp. | ||
Regardless of whether you agree with him, regardless of whether he's good or evil or a liar or telling the truth, the man is obviously sharper than Biden. | ||
Keep in mind, he mentioned that he hadn't spoken to Biden since this war broke out between Ukraine, which is absolutely terrifying, because the fact of the matter is we know that President Biden is not running the White House. | ||
And now to see Donald Trump right next to Joe Biden, and if they're able to cut off the mics when Joe Biden trails on, this seems like a totally fair debate. | ||
Let's do it. I don't think RFK should be there. | ||
I don't want a CIA plant there anyway. | ||
But there's no way in hell that Joe Biden is going to come off more coherent, succinct, articulate, intelligent than Donald Trump in a debate under this format as described. | ||
Now, we're going to come to break, folks, and then we're going to come back and cover more news on the other side. | ||
In the meantime, make sure you go to InfoWarsStore.com. | ||
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Stick with us, folks, for more on the other side. | ||
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As a human being, so many people look up to you. | |
They rely on you. No one can imagine how hard that is. | ||
Do you do anything for yourself? | ||
Are you ever able to take a minute to read or to listen to music or something to sort of give yourself that moment? | ||
I have such moments. | ||
It's important to be inside. I have such moments? | ||
That's French. How can I be alone? | ||
Alone, I can be with music, through, or with a book. | ||
And early in the morning, when there are no sounds in... | ||
No air raid sirens. No people, nobody. | ||
I mean, the people, our stuff. | ||
I mean, nobody is in my cabinet. | ||
Nobody. I can just read, think, think. | ||
And the music helps, really. | ||
What music do you like? | ||
Oh, I like ACDC and Ukrainian music. | ||
Of course, I like Ukrainian music a lot because Ukrainian is a native language. | ||
That's why you understand not only music, you understand the words and etc. | ||
ACDC, I don't understand all the words. | ||
You like the music. | ||
I like the energy of ACDC. I like Eric Clapton. | ||
A lot of Guns N' Roses. | ||
Maybe it's too old music for... | ||
I understand. We're the same. | ||
We're the same. I love it. | ||
No, no, it's important to have sometimes at 6:00, 7:00 in the morning some trainings. | ||
Workout. | ||
Yes, workouts, or to do something with music, with such music, which gives you energy for all the day. | ||
That explains why he's canceling all of his trips. | ||
He just wanted to see his favorite band, Secretary Blinken. | ||
What was the name of his band on Spotify again? | ||
Abe Blinken? Terrible, terrible music. | ||
And this just transitions perfectly into what we were talking about with the European Union and Ukraine and NATO. When you have globalism, you have to concede to the globalist agenda. | ||
And the European Union really, the best way to put it is, it's been a test case for globalism. | ||
What globalism will look like. | ||
Alright, so we're going to try this new world order. | ||
We're going to try this globalist government where all of the world's nations come together and these nations vote on policies that are going to impact each individual nation disproportionately. | ||
And we're going to see how it works. | ||
But first we should test it on a small scale. | ||
So we're going to put together the European Union and we're going to have our own currency just like we're going to do with a CBDC on a global scale. | ||
And we're going to see how it works. | ||
And we're going to force countries to take massive amounts of refugees. | ||
And if it works here, and if these sovereign nations buckle to the will of the European Union, if there is enough political pressure from this centralized, globalized entity that these sovereign nations take punch after punch without fighting back or resisting or leaving... | ||
Then we know that we can scale this up to a globalist new world order. | ||
That is what the European Union is doing. | ||
Now, if you want to see what's going to happen in the United States under a globalist new world order, you simply have to look at what's happening in Europe. | ||
And it is foreshadowing. | ||
It is a forecast. So we have parts of Paris off limits without a QR code this summer. | ||
This is the type of behavior we're going to see here. | ||
The French capital Paris will be split into zones this summer with anyone wanting to enter certain areas required to show a pass on their phone. | ||
We'll get into the bird flu later. | ||
Now we have mysterious fires in Poland raising fears of sabotage. | ||
Several major fires have erupted across Poland in recent days with a significant blaze destroying Warsaw's largest retail hall. | ||
Remind you at all of the Reichstag? | ||
decimating the shopping facility in Baitum, Silesia. | ||
10 buses were consumed by flames at a transport depot and a school building in Grodzisk Mazowiakki, excuse me, caught fire during an examination. | ||
Additionally, a chemical plant in Semenwais, Silesia, experienced a fire and multiple waste disposal sites throughout the country also reported fires. | ||
This is the type of stuff that's happening over the world. | ||
And it's not the only place where we see dumpster fire after dumpster fire, but here in the United States we have seen the invasion of the United States sponsored by the government as part of a globalist agenda. | ||
And now we have our leaders in major sanctuary cities backpedaling and saying that somehow this migrant crisis could be a good thing. | ||
I want to go to clip one here of Mayor Adams calling migrants excellent swimmers, saying they could help with the lifeguard shortage. | ||
This is bizarre. Watch this. | ||
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If we had a migrant and asylum seeker plan that states those jobs that we are in high demand, we could expedite. | |
How do we have a large body of people that are in our city and country that are excellent swimmers, And at the same time, we need lifeguards. | ||
And the only obstacle is that we won't give them the right to work, to become a lifeguard. | ||
That just doesn't make sense. | ||
But if we had a plan that say, you have a shortage of food service workers, and those who fit the criteria, we're going to expedite you. | ||
If you have the experience that you are a nurse, which you have a nurse's shortage, and we will expedite you. | ||
And that's the same with lifeguards. | ||
So we have all these eligible people waiting to work with the skills we need to fill the jobs, but we're unable to allow them to work because bureaucracy is in the way. | ||
That just does not make sense. | ||
Unbelievable. Absolutely unbelievable. | ||
Meanwhile, we have fugitive killers arrested by ICE after release into U.S. This is just the thing that we expect to happen. | ||
And on top of all of this, we have a motif of overspending from our government and overprinting from our government where during our pandemic, 40% of all dollars printed by the Federal Reserve ever in our history were printed during this pandemic. | ||
And I've said this before on air, and I just want to emphasize this again because of the headlines. | ||
We have people struggling to make ends meet here in the United States, and the Biden administration is bragging about record unemployment. | ||
But do you think that the person with a master's degree in cyber intelligence who is driving DoorDash to make ends meet feels like he's really employed? | ||
Do you think that the person with a master's or bachelor's degree in engineering or a bachelor's degree in computer science or a bachelor's degree in business administration who's driving DoorDash or Uber or working as a bartend feels like he's truly employed? | ||
I've said it before that under Trump you had one good job to make ends meet. | ||
Now under Biden you have to have three crappy jobs in order to make ends meet. | ||
And they're bragging about unemployment as if people aren't struggling, working jobs that are beneath them, working multiple jobs, trying to make money in this so-called gig economy that Silicon Valley brags about. | ||
And inflation is at record highs. | ||
I mean, we know that credit card utilization is at record highs. | ||
We know that bankruptcies are up 20%. | ||
We know that mortgage rates are skyrocketing. | ||
Nobody can afford to purchase a home. | ||
We know that defaults are going up. | ||
We know that there's a crisis looming right on the horizon. | ||
And the reason our government won't do anything about this, the reason they love to just allow this invasion into our nation while simultaneously allowing the indefinite, unlimited printing of money, is because this printing is a tax on the people and serves to line the pockets of all of those who participate in the political class, the political industrial complex. | ||
Any organization, contractor, NGO, or business that does business with the federal government makes an asinine amount of money every time they print money while your buying power collapses. | ||
And just to prove my point, $11 trillion stock broom here. | ||
Let's just go through on the overhead cam. | ||
JP Morgan CEO Jamie Dimon urges U.S. to deal with its fiscal deficit. | ||
Nope, the deficit's got to go up. | ||
NASDAQ hits record close after Powell reassures investors. | ||
Fed Chair Powell says inflation has been higher than thought. | ||
JLDC pro-lifers, in other news as well, are in prison. | ||
So they're imprisoning pro-lifers, they're imprisoning protesters, but they're printing astronomical amounts of money, making the people more desperate while we see record performance at the stock market. | ||
And I've got no problem with record performance in the stock market. | ||
I think it's great. It's good for our retired people who somehow scrounged enough money to put away. | ||
Over the years for their retirement, but you have to keep in mind that the higher inflation goes the more difficult it becomes for people to put away money for retirement because they're just trying to make ends meet their paycheck to paycheck and all the studies show that more people are paycheck to paycheck now than ever that more people are pulling from the retirement savings prematurely now than ever So if you can't afford to put money in the stock market then you can't fight against this record inflation And it's disproportionately making the multimillionaires and the billionaires and our politicians rich while we struggle. | ||
But they're happy to make you poor if it means that they become rich because they no longer represent your interests, folks. | ||
Now, we're coming up on a break. We are going to take calls in the next... | ||
Segment for the next hour. | ||
I want you to call in 877-789-2539. | ||
Again, that's 877-789-2539. | ||
Call in. The sooner you call, the more likely I am to get to you. | ||
After I take your calls for an hour, we're going to speak with raw egg nationalists. | ||
We're going to cover some of these other articles here I have on the desk as well. | ||
So make sure you call in 877-789-2539. | ||
And in the meantime, open up another tab and go to infowarsstore.com to be the reason that we are still on the air. | ||
Things are looking Very sketchy here at InfoWars right now. | ||
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Stick with us folks for more on the other side. | ||
Americans know in their gut that the despotism demonically possessing the federal government is only getting started. | ||
According to the FBI, Chinese hackers have prepared a barrage of imminent strikes on critical U.S. infrastructure. | ||
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The purpose of the hacking was not to gather intelligence. | |
The purpose was to install malware that once activated would disrupt or damage the infrastructure. | ||
Meanwhile, the effects of China's biological warfare via COVID-19 and the resulting now blatant evidence of a genocidal vaccine rollout of epic proportions enters a new chapter. | ||
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The Australian Bureau of Statistics is a statistical agency. | |
It, see, it shows, its own figures now show around about 26,000 deaths, excess deaths for 2022, and no one is asking why. | ||
Another conspiracy theory becomes reality as AstraZeneca is now pulling its COVID vaccine from the market. | ||
They know exactly what they're doing, and it is self-assembling Nanotech in the body, and we were finding this stuff decades ago, but right when they rolled out the COVID hysteria four years ago, we had all the literature, and they were keeping secret what was in the Pfizer shots and the Moderna shots and the rest of it. | ||
But whistleblowers actually released, it's later been confirmed, what was in it, and it was a giant test. | ||
They were changing thousands of times at Moderna and Pfizer run by the Pentagon. | ||
They were just front companies. What they were putting in it, they were testing all sorts of stuff. | ||
Ebola, Marburg, all sorts of bird flows. | ||
As Natural News reports, world-renowned Belgian virologist Dr. | ||
Geert van den Bosch predicted a soon-coming massive tsunami of illness and death among those who got vaccinated, unleashing a wave of long COVID that will overwhelm the healthcare sector, not to mention the economy-wide impact in terms of eventual total economic failure and social chaos. | ||
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The truth will surface. | |
This has been a large-scale experiment of gain of function. | ||
On the very human population. | ||
As the lights are turned on and the vaccine roaches are scurrying, the panic goes live and the big guns are put into play. | ||
As Adan Salazar reported, a top meteorologist is warning government weather modification could unintentionally spark conflicts between nations where weather would be used in warfare among countries. | ||
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Plots, droughts, and wildfires last year were just a preview of what is to come. | |
According to Kister's senior meteorologist, John Jacques, the cloud-seeding debacle that precipitated the Dubai floods should serve as a reminder that government influence on the weather can lead to consequences that aren't fully predictable. | ||
Jacques says if we're not careful, unrestrained use of this technology could end up causing diplomatic instabilities with neighboring countries engaging in tit-for-tat weather wars. | ||
Meanwhile, the next plandemic begins to rear its ugly head. | ||
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You say the next pandemic. | |
There will be another pandemic. | ||
Absolutely. We don't know when. | ||
You know, the risk per year, 2%, 3%. | ||
Do we have the capability to ensure that we don't see another pandemic, the like of which we saw while you were leading the World Health Organization? | ||
Yeah. Virologists explained that H5N1, or bird flu, has mutated and can now spread more easily among mammals. | ||
They also warned that an outbreak in the human population could be a hundred times worse than COVID-19, and a bird flu pandemic could kill 50% of those infected. | ||
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That virus now evolves and develops the ability to infect humans and then critically the ability to go from human to human transmission. | |
And we know that in the rare cases, I think off the top of my head, four or five hundred cases so far of humans, the mortality rate is extraordinarily high. | ||
And as the Chinese develop weaponized Ebola, giving a group of hamsters distinct secretions in their eyes, a scabbing over the eyeballs, it ensures that if unleashed in the Western world, we will know where it came from. | ||
Meanwhile, the PREP Act has been quietly updated to include Ebola and Marburg disease. | ||
Add to that the Soros-funded Communist College jackbooting summer awaiting us, incoming CBDCs, nuclear war on a hair trigger, Uniparty-backed Orwellian speech laws, and Biden's illegal voting bloc leading up to an unprecedented presidential election. | ||
All hell is gonna break loose. | ||
John Bowne reporting for InfoWars. | ||
American Journal with Chase Geyser. | ||
Welcome back to the American Journal, folks. | ||
I am Chase Geiser, your host this morning. | ||
We are going to be taking calls throughout the hour. | ||
Make sure you call in 877-789-2539. | ||
I see several names on the board. | ||
The sooner you call, the more likely I am to get to you. | ||
Again, that's 877-789-2539. | ||
Before we start going to calls... | ||
I just want to cover this one story followed by a clip that I saw weeks ago from the flagrant podcast with Andrew Schultz. | ||
Alex Jones was a guest on that podcast at one point. | ||
It's a great podcast, but this clip pertains directly to this. | ||
So Trump's private Boeing hits another jet at Florida airport. | ||
A private jet reportedly belonging to former U.S. President Donald Trump struck an unoccupied corporate plane with its wingtip as it was repositioning after landing at Palm Beach International Airport in Florida. | ||
Reuters wrote on Wednesday, quoting an anonymous source, the Federal Aviation Administration reported the incident on Sunday on its website, although it did not mention the owner of the jet. | ||
It says, quote, It's not known whether Trump was on board at the time of the incident, but in the context of this story, let's watch this clip. | ||
And today we are going to begin with a absolutely phenomenal conspiracy that I heard over the weekend from the good folks over there that ninjas are butterflies. | ||
They came to the show in Jacksonville, man. | ||
We were chopping it up backstage in the green room. | ||
I get them all sitting down. I'm like, I need some heat. | ||
Don't give me these like B or C level conspiracies. | ||
I need the number one shit right now. | ||
He goes, uh, okay, you've been hearing a lot about the Boeing planes falling apart, the doors falling off, the planes aren't working, the whistleblower that might have gotten murked, and the public has been almost desensitized to Boeing planes falling apart. | ||
When I'm in a plane flying right now, I'm like, is this Boeing? | ||
Like, I'm concerned. And if a Boeing plane does fall apart, that wouldn't blow my mind. | ||
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Well, you know whose jet happens to be a Boeing? | |
Take a wild guess. Why don't Trump? | ||
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That's how they get him out of here. | |
If they can't... | ||
That's what he said. I was like, yo! | ||
Because if... God forbid. | ||
God forbid. God forbid we lose the great one. | ||
God forbid. We lose the next press, you know? | ||
But if, for example, Trump's plane went down and it was a Boeing... | ||
People wouldn't immediately go, oh, they killed him. | ||
They would go, of course it did. | ||
It's a Boeing. These planes are going down nonstop. | ||
Yeah. So are they inflating the fact that these Boeing planes are falling apart? | ||
Are Boeing planes falling apart more than Airbus? | ||
We don't even know. We just right now expect Boeing to fall apart. | ||
And if they can't get him out of here and it looks like he's going to win the election, he has to fly to Iowa or something, plane goes down. | ||
See you later, Trump. We blame Boeing. | ||
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Wow. That's he. | |
Admit that's he. Let me add. | ||
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Didn't Boeing get bailed out back in the day? | |
So the government could be like, hey, we bailed you. | ||
You're going to take a little hit, but we already gave you your money. | ||
This is the beautiful thing about conspiracy theories. | ||
It's basically, it's comedy without humor. | ||
But it's connecting two things that definitely have nothing to do with one another. | ||
Weeks ago, after one of these court filings or rulings and the litany of Trump lawsuits, one of his planes, I think, had a boot on it, at least for a little while, when they thought they were going to seize his assets. | ||
That's my understanding. And it just seems like there's so many opportunities at these airports for people to mess with these planes. | ||
Now that it's contacted another plane on the runway, that's an excuse for new mechanics to come in and work on it, new regulations to come in and check things off. | ||
It seems like a security vulnerability that now people are going to be working on this plane in light of That conspiracy theory that Andrew Schultz brilliantly mentioned on Flag Island. | ||
It's the first I'd heard that conspiracy theory, but it's something that's been on my mind for weeks now. | ||
We're going to go straight to calls. Let's go straight to Vortex Guy in California. | ||
Vortex Guy, what is on your mind this morning? | ||
Hold on while the crew clicks on your name. | ||
Vortex Guy, can you go ahead and... | ||
There you go. Can you hear me? | ||
Yeah. Very good. | ||
Hey, Chase. How are you this morning? | ||
You hear me? I'm good. You sound great. | ||
How are you? Great. | ||
Fine. Just a word about this judicial corruption and censorship lawfare, and also election interference. | ||
Obviously, Alex Jones knows it all too well, but now we got Bannon, Navarro, Trump, and Rudy Giuliani with the ridiculous hearing where he couldn't put any evidence or cross-examination forward. | ||
And now John Eastman's lost his license. | ||
Luckily, none of these guys are saying they're giving up. | ||
And Rudy just got laid off of his ABC show in New York. | ||
He has not given up. | ||
In fact, he's probably going to, just like Tucker did, gain a larger audience. | ||
But how do these accused defendants that are forced into these trials presided over by such corrupt judges You know, their political biases are being revealed. | ||
They're really activists. | ||
And hardly any honest grand jury trials as these authoritarian courts allow these bench defaults, which are ridiculous. | ||
And the decisions, often barring evidence and cross-examination and the lack of transparency, is disgusting. | ||
You know, we need to get the receipts on the table. | ||
And the only court we have now obviously, Chase, is the court of public opinion. | ||
That's it. You know, I totally agree with you. | ||
And I've thought a lot about this, obviously, just given the nature of our current political climate. | ||
But even before things got so divisive and heated over the years, because if you think about the entire legal industry, it has been totally corrupted over the course of at least 100 years. | ||
Now, people famously talk about Abraham Lincoln as someone who taught himself to read by firelight in his one-room cabin. | ||
Growing up, and he's famous for being an attorney. | ||
He did the circuit in Illinois. | ||
The David Davis Mansion is in Bloomington, Illinois, also where I grew up. | ||
And he did the circuit with David Davis, who was a Supreme Court Justice at one point in time. | ||
And you have to keep in mind that for a long time in this country, you did not have to go to law school or take a bar exam in order to legally practice law. | ||
But what happened was the lawyers got together in lawyer fashion and they decided to make it a good old boys club, similar to like Skull and Bones at Yale or any other boys club. | ||
And they wanted to establish this rigorous testing at every state level where you'd have to pass a bar in every state in order to be able to practice law. | ||
The reason they did that is because they didn't want to be undercut by less expensive attorneys who just studied the law and opened up practices. | ||
What's happened is you have this boys club of lawyers who are already part of the system. | ||
You have to go to a law school. | ||
You have to graduate from the law school. | ||
Once you graduate from the law school, you can then take the bar. | ||
Once you pass the bar, then you can legally practice law. | ||
They've eradicated Anyone basically under the age of 25 from practicing law, and if you do practice law, you have to do so after going through this system of these law schools for years and years and then passing the bar, and then you're allowed to compete in the club. | ||
So what's happened is we have an entire judicial system that is a very specific demographic set of people. | ||
And the system is those who play ball with the machine. | ||
These people play ball with the system itself. | ||
They go to the law school. | ||
They take the bar. They open up the practice. | ||
Then maybe they run for judgeship in given districts. | ||
And then they get funded by the Soroses who can fund infinite numbers of political action committees or support infinite numbers of judges across the nation. | ||
And over time you have the gradual erosion of our entire judicial system Where now that all of our institutions, like the law schools and others, are literally leftist institutions, keep in mind that critical theory is something that originated in the law schools. | ||
This is explicitly Marxist thought. | ||
You have an entire generation where virtually every single lawyer, every single judge has gone through, whether or not they come out the other end indoctrinated, they have gone through Marxist indoctrination to even be able to practice in the way that they practice. | ||
And this is how you have this leftist outcome of our entire judicial system. | ||
It's because of this forced indoctrination. | ||
That's why, in my opinion, you shouldn't even have to go to law school to open up a practice. | ||
You should be able to just open up a practice. | ||
You shouldn't even have to pass the bar to open up a practice if you don't want it. | ||
You should be able to just open up a practice. | ||
Or if you want to pass the bar, great, but you shouldn't have to go to law school in order to take it. | ||
I mean, if you've ever seen the movie Catch Me If You Can, based off of the autobiography by Frank Abingnell, this is a famous example of a con artist who conned graduating from an Ivy League school, and he conned himself into taking the bar, and everybody thought for years that he cheated on the bar, but the fact of the matter is he just studied really hard for the bar, and even though he didn't go to law school, he was able to pass the bar and get licensed to be a lawyer. | ||
I think it was in Louisiana. | ||
And my point is, when you put up these increased regulations and these increased obstacles in these industries, then you can control who occupies key positions, you can indoctrinate the people that occupy those key positions, and then you have what we have now, which is an entire judicial system which doesn't really see the light of day, doesn't really understand Americanism, and they praise Abraham Lincoln all day, regardless of the fact that it wouldn't even be legal today for Abraham Lincoln to practice law with the credentials that he had. | ||
What do you think about that, Vortex? Well, I think your key word there, obviously, is indoctrination, which is so true. | ||
But now, have you heard, they are in the Northwest, I don't know if it's Oregon or Washington, they're talking about not requiring going through the bar exam. | ||
I think New Hampshire might allow you to practice law, I think. | ||
I'm not positive, but I think New Hampshire might be the only state where you can practice law without being licensed. | ||
They're discussing it here in the Northwest. | ||
Hey, thanks for taking my call, Chase. | ||
You're welcome. Always a pleasure to hear from you. | ||
Len in Indiana. Len, I'm thinking it's time we start hiring the bounty hunters. | ||
Are you there, Len? Can we go ahead and click on his name, please? | ||
unidentified
|
Len? Yes, absolutely. | |
You know, I heard Alex's broadcast and Maria's. | ||
I used to have a dog... | ||
And I named this dog, Damn It. | ||
And I called out, Damn It, a lot of times when I wouldn't call in the dog. | ||
And every segment of that show, I was going, Damn It, Damn It, they doing it. | ||
You know? That's one way to get your dog to watch the Alex Jones show. | ||
Name it, Damn It. That's amazing. | ||
How you doing, Len? I'm doing good. | ||
unidentified
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I'm doing really good. | |
Really good. I'm going to email you today. | ||
Okay. Do it. Thank you for calling in, Len. | ||
All right. JR in New York. | ||
JR, what is on your mind? | ||
unidentified
|
Hey, Jim. Hey, man. | |
How you doing? Good. How are you doing? | ||
Great job. Thank you. | ||
Not too bad. I just wanted to share with you about my experience with the gig economy. | ||
Basically, I applied to Grubhub like three months ago and haven't received the reply. | ||
And I live on Long Island. | ||
So you think there's plenty of demand in Long Island, right? | ||
unidentified
|
Listen, 100%. | |
Because I got hired by DoorDash. | ||
Yeah. Now, the only day I got jobs was the first day I got hired. | ||
I made $100. After that, I'm telling you, I wake up every day to bring my daughter to the bus stop at 7 o'clock. | ||
There's no jobs, which is ridiculous because there's plenty of people around. | ||
My wife is a waitress. | ||
And she sees that everybody who comes in that's doing the deliveries, they're all like Turkish or South American, or if they're white, they're a woman. | ||
Out of the hundreds of delivery people I've seen, she's full-time, so she sees it all day. | ||
So you think that they're neglecting you because you're a white male? | ||
unidentified
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Obviously. It's the DEI. They hired 96% of them, and we're not getting jobs. | |
Or white men are just lazy and we don't want to work. | ||
I check every single day. | ||
Right now, I check Even Manhattan says no jobs available. | ||
It shows you all the way up to Connecticut and around. | ||
It says there's no jobs available in Manhattan. | ||
So even if I wanted to drive to the city, there's nothing for me. | ||
It's total garbage. | ||
I'm sorry to hear that. | ||
What did you do for work before you started looking into the Grubhub stuff and the gig economy? | ||
unidentified
|
I did scent detection with my dog. | |
He's a bed bug finder, but that got wrecked because of COVID. So I got trapped in my apartment and there's just chaos ensued. | ||
So I had to move in with my mother now. | ||
So things are not good for me. | ||
That's why I'm just trying to make this happen. | ||
I can't even make a penny. | ||
Yeah, I'm sorry you're going through that. | ||
Maybe you can fire up that scent detection business one more time. | ||
You know, things have unlocked a little bit. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, it's just that money to retrain her and bring her to get recertified. | |
You gotta go get, like, certified and then advertise. | ||
And if you don't have, like, the money to advertise, nothing's gonna happen. | ||
It's just, like, dead in the water. | ||
So, guys, whoever's out there in this boat with me, stick together, stick it out. | ||
We're gonna win in the end. | ||
Absolutely. God bless you, JR. I appreciate you calling in. | ||
William in Arkansas. William, what's on your mind? | ||
Oh, there's so much on my mind I wouldn't know. | ||
Where to start, but if we can compare some of my own liberal logic with the mayor that talked about lifeguards, for one, anybody I saw trying to swim was really drowning, coming across the Rio Grande, and most places you can walk across it. | ||
But I'm going to have to blame Ted Nugent for all my problems, because I got kicked off the school bus about 78 for singing Cat Scratch Fever and the Lang Dang song. | ||
I could have had 10 or 12 or 15 PhDs by the time I was 17, maybe matched up with Tesla or Einstein or Confucius or somebody. | ||
I'm going to find me a lawyer and sue Ted Nugent, you know? | ||
unidentified
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Yeah, it's all his fault. I had that school bus rocking, buddy. | |
Yeah, I believe it. I remember those memories fondly on the bus and screaming at the bus driver to change it to the station that she wanted. | ||
I appreciate you calling in, William. Mitch in Cape Cod, Mitch, what's on your mind? | ||
Hey, Chase. How are you doing? I think... | ||
I'm good. | ||
unidentified
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How are you? Did you drop your phone? | |
Are you still with us? We're going to move on. | ||
We'll go back to you, Mitch, if you can get a better signal. | ||
Bill in Pennsylvania. Bill, what's on your mind? | ||
unidentified
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Good morning, Chase. How are you doing? | |
I'm doing well. Thanks for calling in. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, I'm calling about the Trump trial. | |
I think in the long run, if these two lawyers that are on the jury, if they have it in their heart to really be honest what's going on, I think you have two hung juries there at the end. | ||
Yeah, you would think that any lawyer would be very uncomfortable with the precedence that has been set by these trials. | ||
And just from a matter of their own practices or whatever it is that they do, this is incredibly unhealthy. | ||
I think anybody who understands law should understand that. | ||
I'm hoping that these juries are hung juries. | ||
unidentified
|
Right, but the thing is, if it goes the other way, these lawyers and the judge, they need to go back to law school and start, you know, retraining themselves. | |
Yeah, well... Instead of making a call to the White House, like they had these secret meetings, what's going on there, you know? | ||
Yeah, and I've said this before, the crazy thing about it is not only the fact that Trump is innocent of these crimes, but many of these crimes that he's being accused of are... | ||
So vanilla compared to the actual crimes that we know have been proven to have been committed by the Biden crime family, whether it's Hunter Biden or whether it's Joe Biden, especially when he was vice president. | ||
I mean, the amount of crimes that he committed, the amount of abuse of power that he is guilty of and has been for decades now is so astronomical. | ||
So it's not only the fact that Trump is innocent, but it's also the fact that Biden is guilty in not being prosecuted at all in any way whatsoever. | ||
So if they convict Donald Trump, of any of these, what is it, 91 indictments now? | ||
I lose track. | ||
It seems like they add one every week. | ||
If they convict him of any of these charges, these crimes, are they going to do this for every president now when that president of the United States comes out of office? | ||
Is Joe Biden going to face any trials when he comes out of office? | ||
I don't think so, Bill. What do you think? | ||
unidentified
|
I guess if you're considered a Republican, you would. | |
Yeah, that's true. | ||
That's why I remember a few years ago, Jesse Ventura He was going to run as an independent. | ||
He was saying the problem is the Republicans and Democrats, because like I said, he said before, nothing gets done. | ||
They're always fighting all the time, you know? | ||
That's why nothing gets done when they... | ||
Supposed to be passing a law or, you know, you know what I'm saying? | ||
Yeah, yeah. I used to kind of agree with that too, but frankly, I would love a federal government where nothing gets done. | ||
And it seems like every single year they pass a budget and billions upon billions, if not trillions upon trillions of dollars get done, lining their own pockets in some way. | ||
So yes, nothing meaningful gets done, but they do succeed in working together to waste all of our money every year and water down our currency bill. | ||
Thanks for your call. Tim in Seattle. | ||
Tim, what is on your mind? | ||
unidentified
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How's it going, Chase? Can you hear me? | |
Am I coming in alright? You sound great. | ||
unidentified
|
Fantastic. Guess who's resigning? | |
Melinda Gates. You hear about it? | ||
unidentified
|
Melinda Gates. Do you think that me playing that clip 70 times at the foundation had anything to do with that? | |
I don't know. Do you think the public pressure has a little bit? | ||
Is she resigning from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation? | ||
unidentified
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Yes. Do you think she has any more with the divorce? | |
You know, I think it has a lot to do with everything, and I think that the public pressure and the court of public opinion has made its decision, and they're just literally going to cave through our will. | ||
I think bullhorns and protesting is effective. | ||
So I just want to let everybody know that unless you can prove me wrong, I think that the bullhorn had a small effect, and it can actually do some good for the world. | ||
So get your bullhorns out, y'all. | ||
Wow. So now apparently she's going to focus on women's rights and gender equality with her philanthropy. | ||
This is what it says here in this headline that's on the screen. | ||
So I bet you she's resigning because of the divorce, and she obviously doesn't want to be associated with Bill Gates in any capacity anymore. | ||
unidentified
|
They're going to have to implode it. | |
Yeah, they might. But remember, they tried to implode the Clinton Foundation and they just resurrected it last fall in the name of rebuilding Ukraine. | ||
So despite all the scandals associated with the Clinton Foundation, they were able to resurrect that. | ||
I think they're going to, man, this Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, this Gates Foundation thing is going to go on in some form or another, I think. | ||
But Tim, thank you so much for your call. | ||
Let's go next to the other Tim, Tim in California. | ||
Tim, what is on your mind? | ||
You know, thanks for taking my call, Chase. | ||
You're welcome. You've been discussing this and even the previous caller, but you've got this inflation and it's just run away and it's going back up again. | ||
And now you think about how much money they put at play and the debasement of our currency through all this crazy, crazy printing of more money than any time in history. | ||
But here's what I called about. | ||
According to Forbes Magazine, as of May of 2024, the average salary in the United States is $59,428, or $28.34 an hour. | ||
So about $59,000. | ||
But also this morning what came out was the information that shows how much money families of four need to make to live comfortably. | ||
As it turns out, all of them you need more than $170,000. | ||
Mississippi is the least expensive at $177,798, and we scale all the way up to the most expensive, which was Massachusetts, at $301,184. | ||
Wow. In all cases, if you are a family of four, you will need more than $170,000 a year to live comfortably, Now, that was, let me give you the source on those numbers. | ||
Sure, so that's about $85,000 salary for both parents working full-time, and then you've got to send your kids to public school because you can't afford private school, and so your kids are being indoctrinated. | ||
I mean, this is how they get you, folks. | ||
They inflate the currency so much that both parents have to work. | ||
And when this began to become a fact of our economy in the late 60s, late 70s, and definitely into the 80s, that's when you simultaneously see this massive push for feminism. | ||
And people act like feminism was about or is about women's rights. | ||
It's not really because women on paper have all of the same rights as men. | ||
Feminism was about a psychological cope with the fact that no one could afford to have their wife stay at home and raise the kids while they work full time anymore. | ||
The economy just wouldn't allow it. | ||
Inflation was so difficult. | ||
And so to cope with that, men supported feminism, women supported feminism, I want to work, I want a career. | ||
You don't have a choice, lady. | ||
You gotta work because there's no way you can afford to stay home while your husband works because his income is no longer enough to provide and sustain a family of four. | ||
the Don Drapers with Jon Hamm and Mad Men, those days are gone. | ||
There is no longer such a thing as supporting a family of four if you're an electrical contractor or a plumber or a working class person. | ||
You have to have both parents working. | ||
And when you have both parents working, you can't afford the childcare. | ||
You can't afford the private schools. | ||
So you have to send them to public school. | ||
And that's when you have an entire generation, multiple generations now of our entire population indoctrinated by the state. | ||
That's why you have this massive leftism. | ||
You've got kids cutting off their genitals and being all screwed up. | ||
You have this dependence on the algorithms and parents having to outsource raising their kids to the screen. | ||
I mean, everything has fallen apart because of inflation. | ||
Basically, every single one of our problems, in my opinion, goes back to inflation. | ||
We're going to take more calls on the other side of break in 10 seconds for four minutes. | ||
Make sure you call an 877-789-877. | ||
2-5-3-9. | ||
Again, that's 877-789-2539. | ||
unidentified
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We'll be right back. | |
AI, AI, AI, AI, AI, AI, AI, AI, AI, AI, AI, AI, AI, AI, AI, AI, AI, AI, AI, AI, AI, AI, AI, AI, AI, AI, AI, AI, AI, AI, AI, AI, AI. And that's the power of generative AI. AI AI AI AI AI AI AI Train AI AI AI AI toolkit AI AI AI AI Generative AI AI Generative AI AI. And that's the power of generative AI. AI AI AI AI AI AI AI Train AI AI AI AI toolkit AI AI AI AI Generative AI AI Generative AI AI AI AI AI AI AI So if you haven't had a seizure yet, obviously AI is a major topic of conversation. | ||
I got this report on the desk. | ||
Google unveils Project Astra chatbot tech and brings AI overview to search for all US users. | ||
So Google showed off a new AI chatbot technology dubbed Project Astra along with a series of announcements infusing artificial intelligence throughout its catalog of products as company executives took the stage at its annual developers conference on Tuesday. | ||
Now, Alphabet's CEO, and Alphabet, of course, is the company that owns Google, Sundar Pakai, announced Tuesday that Google will roll out AI capabilities in its flagship search product to all U.S. users this week, while the head of Google's DeepMind AI unit unveiled Project Astra, a universal AI agent that can understand the context of a user's environment. | ||
Now, there's obviously a lot of implications of this, and I am going to go back to your calls, so make sure you call in 877-789-2539. | ||
But right now, there is a war on multiple fronts going on as it pertains to artificial intelligence. | ||
And this all started with the advent of OpenAI, which, of course, Elon Musk was invested in years ago. | ||
And it was supposed to be open-sourced and a non-profit, and its whole mission changed when it took in, I think it was, $100 million, if not more, from Microsoft. | ||
So Microsoft has repeatedly tried to compete with Google on basically every front, whether it's with emails, whether it's with documents. | ||
They have been major competitors for at least 20 years. | ||
And Google dominated the search market. | ||
Everybody uses Google. Bing was a massive failure compared to Google. | ||
Google was by far the best search engine, so everybody used it. | ||
So what Microsoft brilliantly did was it basically bought off OpenAI and ChatGPT and invested tens of millions, if not hundreds of millions of dollars in it because it understands, Microsoft understands that the future of search is going to be your artificial intelligence assistant, not you using a search engine engineer anymore, search engine anymore. | ||
And so what's happening here is Google is pushing back and saying, all right, well, we are going to create an AI that can integrate with all of our tools that competes back with OpenAI and Microsoft and what it's doing. | ||
And they're simultaneously competing with each other for a monopoly for dominance over the artificial intelligence space while lobbying Congress to increase the amount of regulation on what artificial intelligence technologies can be developed and by whom. | ||
Because they want to ensure that no competitor is going to rise up out of a garage, no individual citizen or civilian, no person with his buddies in college in a dorm like Mark Zuckerberg starting Facebook is going to create a better artificial intelligence for cheaper that's faster, that's more honest and not woke. | ||
They are lobbying so hard to ensure that this competition cannot arise out of the ashes of censorship that is the internet today. | ||
That they are sort of competing with each other, but mainly working together, collaborating, and conspiring to lobby our leaders to make every form of artificial intelligence basically illegal except the forms of artificial intelligence that they establish. | ||
And we're seeing it happen at every conference. | ||
It's a major topic of conversation. | ||
Even Apple is getting involved with its own AI that's supposed to be integrated with its systems coming out as well. | ||
With that, let's go back to your calls. | ||
I want to speak with Joe in Wisconsin. | ||
Joe, what is on your mind? Joey, Chase, how are you doing? | ||
I'm good. You can hear me all right. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah, you sound great. You're good? Yeah, thank you. | |
Yeah, I wanted to talk about... | ||
I've spoken with the other host about the Nikola Tesla technology in regards to the coronal mass ejection. | ||
Yeah. With the sun. | ||
And, like, you can look up with NASA. They've sent, like, probes over there. | ||
Same with Russia and other countries to the sun. | ||
And they use, like... | ||
Microwave, cymatic technology, directed energy weapons, and they can, like, fuck with the sun. | ||
Yeah, make sure you watch your language because we're on the radio. | ||
Oh, yeah, sorry about that. | ||
That's okay. And, you know, they have, like, the Icarus complex, and they're obsessed with the sun, you know, and it affects the weather. | ||
It's part of the weather control system. | ||
And people forget with the Carrington event that, you know, if it's an extreme electric charge or EMP, Anybody with fillings in their mouth, they're just going to turn into red-hot sparklers and jewelry and wire-rimmed glasses like back in the original Carrington event. | ||
It moves electrons through any conductors at a massive speed that causes friction and heat, right? | ||
Well, and also depending on where you are in the absorption of it, because there's also the ozone layer that can protect you in cloud cover and trees and caves. | ||
You know, that's why the whole tunnels thing is so hot, you know, and they're discovering more about the tunnels and all the tunnel news. | ||
You know, they just were talking about how they had a whole civilization in tunnels in the Middle East and in Egypt, obviously with the New York tunnels, is that they protect you from the cosmic rays. | ||
And the cosmic rays are super key for humanity. | ||
No one talks about them, but the cosmic rays is the number one influencer of... | ||
Genetic code change. | ||
It will change your genetic DNA and mess with your DNA. Right. | ||
They know that radiation can go in and totally screw up your DNA. I mean, that was one of the massive effects of the radiation from Chernobyl. | ||
Yeah. Yeah, and it can do good things. | ||
People have claimed that they've gained powers and stuff. | ||
Sure. Like Daredevil. | ||
People get cancer and die. | ||
But yeah, I also think it's... | ||
Related to the World War III thing, because if you control the sun, obviously, the sun can also be used as a weapon because you can use the sun to bounce other signals off. | ||
No one talks about this, but, like, we get rays and signals from Jupiter quicker bouncing off the sun than from Jupiter directly, you know, and, like, because it's, like, this giant charged thing, and, obviously, they use the sun then to that advantage because... | ||
They can bounce man-made waves off the sun. | ||
Same with the lunar surface. | ||
So I definitely think that's why they're like pumping this and hyping up the coronal mass ejection and solar flare thing. | ||
I have an article on my desk right now that the U.S. suffers radio blackouts after being hit by another solar storm, according to NOAA. | ||
So the sun released another powerful stream of energized particles toward Earth early Tuesday, causing blackouts over the U.S. | ||
Solar Flare classified as an X 8.8 was the strongest to come from this cycle which started in 2017. | ||
And the real thing that scares me about this, yes, I understand that these solar entities... | ||
These celestial entities can be used to bounce frequencies around and there's all sorts of implications and national security implications. | ||
And I understand that our Department of Defense keeps information and technology classified on a massive scale and that they're much further along than anybody could even possibly imagine. | ||
But what's terrifying to me about the solar weather stuff and the solar behavior stuff specifically is that we are going through the... | ||
Rapid process of the Earth's magnetic field inverting, the poles are inverting. | ||
Now, my understanding is that it can take decades for it to happen, maybe even a couple of centuries, but in the scheme of things, it's considered very rapid. | ||
And as that inversion happens, the magnetic field around the Earth weakens and makes the Earth much more vulnerable to solar weather and solar behavior and electromagnetic frequencies from outside of our specific atmosphere or region around the planet. | ||
I'm really concerned about what's going to happen to a lot of our infrastructure, not necessarily this cycle, but in the 2030s or in the 2040s. | ||
I mean, if we don't do something to harden our systems now, aren't we going to be even more vulnerable to this solar weather coming up in the next decades as our magnetic poles shift on the planet? | ||
We are going to go to a break here, Joe, in a second, so I'm going to have to end the call. | ||
But before we go to break, I do want to remind everybody to call in. | ||
We are going to be taking more calls. But also go to InfoWarsStore.com and check out Nitric Boost. | ||
Nitric Boost is on sale at 40% off. | ||
This product is amazing at enhancing your vitality, at helping with muscle recovery, and improving your heart health. | ||
It also keeps us on the air. | ||
So check out Infowarsstore.com and get Nitric Boost now so that freedom of speech and truth can be broadcast worldwide at this most important time of our nation's history. | ||
unidentified
|
Welcome back to the American Journal, folks. | |
I am Chase Geiser, your host this morning, taking calls for the remainder of the hour and then speaking with the infamous raw egg nationalist. | ||
Got a couple of new articles that hit the desk I want to go over before I go right back to your calls. | ||
OpenAI co-founder and chief scientist departs AI firm. | ||
He writes on X, after almost a decade, I've made the decision to leave OpenAI. | ||
Saying he was going to work on a personally meaningful project. | ||
He added he was confident the firm would build an artificial general intelligence that is safe and beneficial. | ||
Altman posted on X that Sutskiver and OpenAI would part ways and the former chief scientist is something personally meaningful he's going to work on. | ||
So either they don't need him anymore, he's working on something else. | ||
But just as artificial general intelligence is about ready to come out, they're announcing OpenAI is giving ChatGPT new powers to see and hear. | ||
So OpenAI and Microsoft are in a heated rivalry with Google to be Generative AI's major player, but Facebook-owned Meta and Upstart Anthropic are also making big moves to compete. | ||
OpenAI on Monday released a higher-performing and even more human-like version of the artificial intelligence technology that underpins its popular generative tool, ChatGPT, making it free to all users. | ||
The update to OpenAI's flagship product landed a day before Google is expected to make its own announcement about Gemini. | ||
We covered some of Google's announcements. | ||
Search Engine Giant's own AI tool that competes with ChatGPT head-on. | ||
So this is the war of AI, the AI war that we've been talking about, and it's being reported that... | ||
Meta is using deceitful tactics for programming deceit and dishonesty into its AI in strategy games. | ||
So it's using strategy games as the cover to train AI in how to lie or mislead or deceive. | ||
And of course, as artificial general intelligence unfolds and comes out, it'll have learned these skills and it will employ them in other ways that will manipulate the masses. | ||
That's what's happening, folks. | ||
Let's go to John in Minneapolis. John, what is on your mind this morning? | ||
Can you hear me? You sound great. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay. Once, you know, all human relationships are based on trust. | |
Once the trust is gone, then you have anarchy. | ||
Now, there's a quote that everyone needs to understand. | ||
Joseph Stalin. | ||
It's not the people who vote that count. | ||
It's the people who count the votes. | ||
Okay, so now we're flooded with this myriad of attacks from all angles, and largely due to AI and surveillance. | ||
Okay. But fortunately, we have the Bill of Rights. | ||
And those people were trying to throw off tyranny. | ||
And now, fortunately, they set up that our rights come from God. | ||
The right of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. | ||
So this is not making people very happy, what's going on. | ||
We can see our legal system has crumbled with the cases that they're bringing towards Trump. | ||
We can see that they don't You know, that we can't trust the little black boxes that they use for the elections. | ||
So here's what we have to do. | ||
It's us that have to count the votes. | ||
And this is just one scenario. | ||
I mean, nobody knows what will happen in the election. | ||
But in the case that there is an election, if everybody snaps a picture of their ballot, hold on to those because we might need to count the votes ourselves. | ||
Okay, it goes back to Joseph Stalin. | ||
I'm just saying that, look, we have the right to do that. | ||
We have the right to collect our own votes and count them ourselves. | ||
And if we have those votes, we're not going to put up with another stolen election. | ||
Four years of thinking about that is enough. | ||
Okay? Well, I agree with you. | ||
I don't think we're going to put up with this on election. | ||
And I think we're very quickly, John, arriving at a place where the deep state has tried everything to undermine the re-election campaign for Donald Trump. | ||
And I'm really concerned that they're going to try to whack him, whether it's by sabotaging his plane or whether it's by some other means. | ||
But I do need to get into this breaking news here that just came across the desk. | ||
Robert Fico, Slovakia's prime minister, is in life-threatening condition after being shot... | ||
Multiple times and typically I don't read the entire article but I probably am going to with this one just so we can get the story right. | ||
This is breaking news. This is a big deal and has a lot of implications as far as the conflict between Russia and Ukraine is concerned and it just doesn't smell good. | ||
It smells like something is up here and you'll see why as we read through this article. | ||
The suspected gunman was detained at the scene by law enforcement officers according to Slovakia's state news agency TASR. The official statement said the prime minister was taken there instead of the capital city of Bratislava because an acute intervention was necessary. | ||
Handalova is about two hours' drive from the capital, Bratislava. | ||
Slavic President Zuzana Kaputova condemned what she called a brutal and reckless attack on the 59-year-old politician. | ||
Quote, I'm shocked. I wish Roberto Fico all the strength in his critical moment. | ||
To recover from the attack, Capitova wrote on Facebook, FICO won a third term as Slovakian Prime Minister last October after running a campaign that criticized Western support for Ukraine. | ||
FICO had pledged an immediate end to Slavic military support for Ukraine and promised to block Ukraine's NATO ambitions in what would upend Slovakia's staunch backing for Ukraine. | ||
So he refuses to back Ukraine after Slovakia has been backing Ukraine, and suddenly he gets shot multiple times. | ||
Ahead of the election, FICO made no secret of his sympathies toward the Kremlin and blamed Ukrainian Nazis and fascists for provoking Vladimir Putin into launching the invasion, repeating the, quote, false narrative Russia's president has used to justify his invasion. | ||
It's not false. This is just what CNN is saying. | ||
While in opposition, FICO became a close ally of Hungary's prime minister, Viktor Orban. | ||
Especially when it came to criticism of the European Union. | ||
Fico previously served as Slovakia's Prime Minister for more than a decade, first between 2006 and 2010, and then again from 2012 to 2018. | ||
He was forced to resign in March of 2018 after weeks of mass protests over the murder of investigative journalist Jan Kusik and his fiancée, Martina Kusnirova. | ||
Kushik reported on corruption among the country's elite, including people directly connected to FICO and his party, SMER. European leaders immediately condemned the attack. | ||
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen tweeted, I strongly condemn the vile attack on Prime Minister Robert FICO. Such attacks of violence have no place in our society and undermine democracy, our most precious common good. | ||
My thoughts are with Prime Minister FICO and his family. | ||
And Hungarian Prime Minister Orban added, I was deeply shocked by the heinous attack against my friend Prime Minister Robert Fico. | ||
We pray for his health and quick recovery. | ||
But it seems like things are getting very hairy overseas as it pertains to anyone supporting the Kremlin. | ||
I would not be surprised, though I can't say based on the facts that we have. | ||
This is just pure speculation. | ||
I would not be surprised if Ukraine or the United States or the CIA had something to do with this. | ||
Support is being rallied among all NATO nations and basically Europe as a whole for a World War III level conflict against Russia and China. | ||
Let's go to CJ in Florida. CJ, what is on your mind? | ||
unidentified
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Chase, I finally get through. | |
Bless, bless. What's up, man? | ||
Good to talk to you. Go ahead. | ||
unidentified
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You too, you too. I got seven points to make sure you guys are okay, right? | |
Okay. I got to put this down or else I'll get it. | ||
I'll miss it. First I'll tell you guys, thank you all for all the parties you guys do. | ||
Those comedy stuff, those are so helpful. | ||
It gets information across very quick. | ||
And it's just, listen, we get to see you guys in real, and we don't take no nonsense from anybody, you know? | ||
So I'm happy to see you guys do the comedy skits. | ||
It's very helpful. Okay, let me get myself together. | ||
All right, point number two, right? | ||
I heard Alex mentioned a couple years ago that presidents are not elected, but they are selected. | ||
He had a guest speaker on that was pretty much saying, he's like, yeah, so I'm like, yeah, so the votes don't really matter. | ||
Then why every time we go to this whole series, every time election year, company, my president, my president, it's like you're trying to pick a dog in a fight. | ||
But still, we get the same thing. | ||
I think all of this is part of the Hegelian dialectic of divide and conquer, because if it really was not the case, we'd have a lot of different outcomes than what we have now. | ||
Point number three, Trump, right? | ||
And Congress is a sponsor of Project Veritas, the CIA, FBI reveal. | ||
And I'm James O'Keefe. | ||
I'm trying to be nervous here. You're doing a good job. | ||
When Trump... Thank you so much. | ||
Thank you so much. When Trump and Congress responded to James O'Keefe's reveal, just how they did with Julian Assange, you notice nothing really happened. | ||
Trump himself even said, you know, pretty much you should fire the guy. | ||
And Julian Assange is still in prison. | ||
So what are they really doing? | ||
Then the answer to this is, who started the FBI in the first place? | ||
Wasn't that by, what, Herbert Walker Bush? | ||
The FBI and CIA are not American police. | ||
They're not for us. They're to monitor police, the people, in the meantime. | ||
Okay? Same thing goes. Julian Assange is still in prison. | ||
And even though Trump was saying, thanks for him for WikiLeaks, thanks for WikiLeaks all the time in the beginning, Julian Assange is rotten there, and WikiLeaks is gone, and pretty much where we are. | ||
Same place where we are. Now, the FBI has been funded again by Congress. | ||
Same thing. Nothing changed. | ||
It's one uni-party. Okay? | ||
Part number four. | ||
Israel. Where is it right now? | ||
Israel is strategically placed. | ||
Just as how we see happening with the campus riots and all this stuff happening there, and just as how we saw with the MAGA hats, everything Trump supports, everything Congress and then supports in terms of Israel is going to backfire against Christians and the Bible. | ||
Simply put, look what's happening in the campuses right now. | ||
They talk now, they want to talk about everything. | ||
It's anti-Semitic. | ||
You can't talk about how the Jews were part responsible for Jesus being crucified. | ||
Right, and they're using the whole Israel conflict as an excuse to do things like ban TikTok and censor free speech in the event. | ||
I agree. They exploit it and use it as an opportunity. | ||
I'm sorry to cut you off early, CJ, but we only have 20 seconds left of this segment. | ||
Up next, we do have Raw Egg Nationalist as a guest Skyping in, so make sure you stay tuned for that. | ||
And if we have time, I will be going back to your calls as well. | ||
So stay tuned. We've got a couple-minute break here. | ||
Then we're going to have Raw Egg Nationalists for 30 minutes to an hour. | ||
And more news on the other side. | ||
unidentified
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All right, folks. | |
Welcome back to the American Journal. | ||
I am Chase Geiser and we have a very special guest with us in studio. | ||
Not in studio, but on the show today. | ||
Raw Egg Nationalist. The Raw Egg Nationalist is the sworn enemy of soy globalism. | ||
Moves and pencil neck Nancy's pushing cricket meal as a sustainable food source of the future. | ||
Raw Egg Nationalist proves... | ||
of classic bodybuilders like Vince Garanda and consuming large quantities of raw eggs. | ||
Raw egg nationalists are able to build the healthy, strong bodies and resilient, independent minds they need to fight the great reset and usher in a pro-human future. | ||
Also the creator of Man's World magazine, which I have on the desk here, This is an absolutely hysterical and amazing and informative magazine. | ||
I highly recommend that you check out his work here. | ||
This issue is issue number 13, I believe. | ||
It's got a great interview on the back with Noor Bin Laden and Owen Schroyer. | ||
It's awesome to flip through. | ||
I've given this as a gift to many people. | ||
Raw Egg Nationalist, it is an honor and a pleasure to be with you today. | ||
How are you, sir? I'm very well, thank you. | ||
All the better for speaking to you, Chase. | ||
Oh, thank you. I'm very flattered. | ||
Yeah, it was a joy to be with you on your podcast just a couple of weeks ago. | ||
We had a nice conversation, and it could have gone on for hours. | ||
Yeah, we talked about your new book, which is a handbook for giving the full title again, Chase. | ||
Yeah, it's The Rise of American Populism, and it's coming out on June 18th. | ||
It's a handbook for radical patriotism. | ||
That's it. Yeah, it's a fantastic book. | ||
We actually featured the second chapter or a section of the second chapter on the Man's World website and I will be directing everybody again to it on my Twitter because it's a fantastic read and everybody should go out and pre-order a copy now. | ||
Well, thank you. I appreciate that. | ||
It's very kind of you to say. | ||
So, I've got several articles here on the desk from your work writing now for Infowars. | ||
Where would you like to begin? | ||
We've got just a couple minutes left of this segment, and then after a short one-minute break, we'll have, you know, 25 minutes uninterrupted. | ||
But what is on your mind lately? | ||
Oh, so many things. | ||
So, I've been writing. I've been doing reporting for Infowars, but I've also been writing opinion pieces. | ||
My latest opinion piece I wrote about AI. No, actually, that wasn't my latest. | ||
My latest opinion piece was about a Zempik, about the fact that now one in eight Americans, 12% of Americans have taken some form of weight loss drug like a Zempik, which isn't a surprise, of course, because 40% of American adults are now obese. | ||
But the piece really talks, it's called To Deal With The Devil, as you can see on the screen, and it's about the fact that Basically, you know, we are making a deal with the devil using these drugs because what they do fundamentally is prevent us from addressing the underlying problems that are creating obesity and disease. | ||
In simple terms, that would be that we live in a way that is totally at odds with our evolved nature. | ||
We eat the wrong foods. | ||
We don't move. | ||
We bathe ourselves in blue light, sitting in front of screens all day. | ||
We're poisoned by toxic, endocrine-disrupting chemicals and pesticides and all sorts of other nasty industrial chemicals. | ||
But if we just reach I think we're good to go. | ||
I think we're good to go. | ||
Yes, absolutely. And we've only got one minute left before we're going to cut to break. | ||
So before I ask you any questions, I want to plug InfoWarsStored.com so that you have enough time to respond as thoroughly as you always do on the other end. | ||
Folks, we are coming up on a very crucial time in American history. | ||
This could be the most important election in the history of America coming up on November 5th in 2024. | ||
And that's why freedom of speech and broadcasting the truth as far and wide as possible is more important than ever. | ||
By going to InfoWarsStore.com, there are a litany of amazing products like Nitric Boost and others that can help you support your health in a number of different ways. | ||
I can assure you that all of these products are of the utmost highest quality. | ||
So please check out InfoWarsStore.com and another tab. | ||
Get something for yourself, for your friends, and for your family. | ||
Support your own health and stick with us for more from Raw Egg Nationalist on the other side. | ||
Again, that's Infowarsstore.com. | ||
Go now and be the reason we are still on the air. | ||
unidentified
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Welcome back to the American Journal, folks. | |
I am Chase Geiser, your host this morning, joined by the one and only, the great, the Raw Egg Nationalists. | ||
And we were just talking about Ozepic and how, especially in America with obesity, we're looking at Putting Band-Aids on these problems without solving the fundamental issue. | ||
There's reports coming out that now up to one in eight American adults are using weight loss drugs like Ozempic. | ||
I know that I have family and friends who have used it with a lot of success as far as weight loss is concerned. | ||
But I've heard rumors and murmurings that there's all sorts of health concerns associated with products like this. | ||
Ryan, can we get a little bit into the weeds on this? | ||
Can you tell me a little bit about some of the risks associated or why using products like this is bad news? | ||
Yeah, of course. So, I would be the first person to say, look, I mean, these drugs, in many cases, do have a miraculous effect, and people do lose a lot of weight. | ||
People who've had terrible problems losing weight otherwise take as MPIC or a similar drug, Manjaro, something like that, and then they end up losing a lot of weight. | ||
But the thing is, first of all, we don't really understand how these drugs work. | ||
So, we're only just starting to discover that actually, you know, Appetite isn't just some sort of isolated system within the body. | ||
These drugs work on appetite. | ||
They suppress appetite by affecting the GLP-1 receptors, which are a particular class of receptor within the body's cells, within the stomach, and other tissues. | ||
Appetite isn't just something that exists independent of other systems within the body. | ||
Appetite is actually We're fundamentally involved in mood and motivation. | ||
And so it's, you know, we're actually, we're not just affecting people's appetite. | ||
So that's one thing that needs to be said off the bat. | ||
So it has effects on mood. | ||
And we're seeing, for instance, that there are suggestions on the positive side that maybe a Zempic might be used and similar drugs might be used to help cure people's addiction. | ||
Things like addiction to alcohol, Tobacco and even drugs because, like I say, appetite is a part of mood and a part of motivational systems within the body. | ||
But then you've also got, there's a dark side where it looks like actually it might induce suicidal thoughts, for example, forms of psychosis. | ||
That's an emerging side effect that is quite serious. | ||
But one of the most well-attested side effects is stomach paralysis. | ||
Ozempic and similar drugs slow the passage of food out of the stomach and through the digestive tract, and that helps you feel fuller. | ||
That's one of the main reasons it works. | ||
It just gives you a feeling of satiety. | ||
You don't want to eat. | ||
Well, actually, that can go seriously wrong, and your entire digestive apparatus shuts down, basically. | ||
It's called... gastroparesis and it is basically you have a paralyzed stomach and if it doesn't turn back on you can't use your stomach anymore. | ||
You can't use your intestines anymore. | ||
I mean, this is like a life-altering condition and lots of people are getting this and there's a big wave of lawsuits coming now, class action lawsuits against Eli Lilly, Novo Nordisk, the companies that are making these drugs because people feel that they weren't warned adequately that actually, you know, one side effect could be that you can never use your stomach again. | ||
I wrote a piece for Valiant News as well about some other side effects, other unpleasant gastric side effects. | ||
There was a woman who was told, for example, that she would have diarrhea forever because there's a side effect of taking a Zempic. | ||
You can get things like chronic obstructions in the bowels where the food stops moving, basically, and then it just kind of builds up in your bowel and you get a chronic obstruction and that can kill you. | ||
And there's a suggestion actually that Lisa, I think it was Lisa Marie Presley, one of the Presleys, died recently and there's a suggestion. | ||
Well, the Presleys are notorious for having bad gastro health. | ||
Yes, yeah, quite. | ||
And she was also taking opioid painkillers as well. | ||
Oh, that'll really mess up your intestine too. | ||
I think Matthew Perry, the famous actor who played Chandler in Friends, had his colon exploded because of opioid abuse. | ||
Yeah, that's a nasty, nasty thought. | ||
So yeah, there's a wide range of side effects. | ||
And what seems to be happening actually is that barely a week passes without some new study that suggests that actually there are other side effects coming out. | ||
Like I wrote recently about the fact that actually if you give a Zempik to pregnant mice, It basically causes serious fetal abnormalities in the baby mice, so the mice don't develop properly. | ||
We've seen a lot of There's been a lot of coverage of this phenomenon of a Zempic babies, where previously obese women take a Zempic and suddenly their reproductive apparatus essentially turns back on, because if you're obese, then you will suffer fertility problems, serious fertility problems. | ||
Right, but if you lose weight radically, then you can get pregnant again, plus they're more likely to want to bed you, right? | ||
Quite, yeah. | ||
And so they're inadvertently taking this product, not knowing that they're pregnant? | ||
Yes, and so there's the potential, obviously, if they stay on as NPIC while they're pregnant, There's a potential that it may cause serious fetal abnormalities in humans. | ||
The simple fact is we just don't know at the moment. | ||
Once again, we are guinea pigs. | ||
And yes, it works for some people, but I don't think that most people are fully brought up to speed on the potential risk at all. | ||
But then there's the broader kind of argument that I make in that opinion piece is that What we're doing is we're ceding control when we're using these drugs on a large scale to deal with obesity. | ||
We're ceding control of yet another aspect of our lives to big pharma. | ||
Once upon a time, ordinary people just maintained their own weight. | ||
You were responsible for what you put in your mouth and for whether or not you put on any weight, whether you're a healthy weight, whether you've got fat. | ||
But now what we're saying, and what these companies are saying as well in their advertising, of course, is that actually it's impossible for you to maintain your weight Without these drugs, you know, if you're fat, you can't lose weight. | ||
Dieting and exercise, that doesn't work. | ||
And they've tried to brand obesity as an immutable characteristic with this whole, you know, fat positive movement when they're trying to make all the models now and on the major magazines be fat. | ||
And they're trying to cram it down our brains, into our minds, down our throats that fat is beautiful. | ||
And they're treating it like an immutable characteristic when it's really not. | ||
It's a choice. Yes, quite. | ||
I mean, I would be the first person to say that obesity is a complicated problem. | ||
It's a complicated problem in the modern world because it's not just... | ||
I mean, people do eat too much, but there are other factors at work. | ||
For example, pervasive industrial pollution, our exposure to chemicals, That are endocrine disruptors, so hormone disruptors, and also obesogens. | ||
So, you know, if you're exposed to BPA, to bisphenol A, for example, that can have obesogenic effects where it The chemical actually alters your body's metabolic rate so that what happens is you can put on weight without eating more because your body's metabolism slows down. | ||
Its caloric needs decrease and then you're still eating the same amount and that actually puts you in a calorie surplus. | ||
So there's all sorts of stuff going on with obesity today that makes modern obesity, I think, a unique problem. | ||
But nevertheless, there is a fundamental thermodynamic truth at the bottom of all of it, which is that if you eat too many calories, you put on weight, and if you don't eat enough calories, you lose weight. | ||
The drug companies are trying very hard to obfuscate that and to say that it's genetics, it's individual genetics, and it's also the environment. | ||
We live in an environment where it's impossible to have access to healthy food, etc. | ||
So you just need to hand off control of your weight to Novo Nordisk or Eli Lilly or whoever. | ||
Obviously, they're going to want to say that kind of thing because it sells more of their product. | ||
Now, let me ask you this. | ||
Obviously, every single pharmaceutical product you can get is going to have side effects. | ||
I mean, anybody who's seen any ad, especially in the United States, I don't know what the laws are in the United Kingdom, but in the United States, they have to have the disclaimer on the end, and you hear the narrator of the ad speaking at lightning speed of all the terrible side effects... | ||
Obviously, we know that any drug we take has a risk of things like suicidal thoughts or whatever. | ||
I mean, I'd be hard-pressed to come up with a drug that doesn't have a litany of side effects from Western medicine. | ||
So my question for you is, how prevalent do these negative side effects from Ozempic seem to be? | ||
And do the benefits for those who are morbidly obese and on the verge of having a stroke or a heart attack, do the benefits outweigh the risks? | ||
Yeah, I couldn't tell you exact figures, but I mean, certainly there are class action lawsuits involving tens of thousands, maybe even hundreds of thousands of people now. | ||
So, I mean, I think it's fairly prevalent, but I think if you weigh 600 pounds or 400 pounds and you've tried everything and nothing is working, then yes, I wouldn't discourage you from taking a Zempic, but the risks are there. | ||
And A Zempic is being pushed more widely than just for the morbidly obese. | ||
We see these celebrities taking it. | ||
Elon Musk took it. | ||
Kim Kardashian clearly took it. | ||
And you see these Hollywood celebrities and they have their gaunt faces and they've got no fat in their cheeks suddenly and they've lost 30 pounds or whatever. | ||
You know they've taken one of these drugs. | ||
So it's being pushed as a general... | ||
drug. | ||
And also, like I said earlier, it's being pushed for other conditions as well. | ||
It's being tested as a treatment for addiction, and it may very well work as a treatment for addiction, but it will still have all of these same side effects potentially. | ||
So it's just a case of, it's a case once again, I think of asking why people aren't adequately informed about the side effects, because they're not. | ||
Okay, they might be there on the insert leaflet, but they're in tiny, small print. | ||
If you go to a physician, the physician isn't going to say, look, have you Have you considered what life might be like with a paralyzed stomach? | ||
They're not going to say that, and they don't. | ||
And my understanding is that in order to take this specific drug, and please correct me if I'm wrong, of course, you go in once a week and they do an injection right into your stomach. | ||
unidentified
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Is that right? Yeah, I think, yes. | |
I mean, it is a regular injection. | ||
I think you can get the jab and do it yourself at home. | ||
And I think a lot of people do. | ||
But... Yes, it is a jab. | ||
I think they're talking about doing it in pill form as well, if they haven't already. | ||
These companies are banking on this product. | ||
They know obesity is an enormous problem. | ||
They have a They have a captive market of tens, hundreds of millions of people. | ||
I think a billion people now are obese. | ||
Wow. I think there's a Benjamin Franklin quote where he said, I've never seen anyone die of not eating enough, but I've seen many people die of eating too much. | ||
So we've definitely seen that reflected here. | ||
I want to divert a little bit. | ||
We can still talk about Ozempic specifically, but I want to talk a little bit about the gut biome and our psychology. | ||
Now, I am not somebody who is nearly as well-versed as you are in this space, but I have seen studies and reports and heard things that our psychology and our gut biome are deeply linked. | ||
Can you expand a little bit on that? | ||
Because obviously, if we're impacting the gut, it's going to have Implications not just on our body and how we digest, but could directly impact the brain. | ||
Is that true or are those links exaggerated by the reports that I've seen? | ||
No, absolutely not. | ||
I mean, it's becoming very, very clear that the gut biome is a fundamental aspect of proper human health. | ||
Maintaining your gut biome is essential and our gut biomes are under attack in a In an unprecedented manner, and scientists, researchers have suggested that one of the great extinctions that is taking place on this planet at the moment is actually taking place in our guts. | ||
Oh, because the antibiotics go in and just wipe out all the biology in your stomach? | ||
Yes, it's antibiotics, but it's also ingredients in processed foods. | ||
So it's, you know, the antifungals and the preservatives and emulsifiers that are in processed food. | ||
I mean, but yes, to get back to what you were saying at the beginning, you know, there are There's study after study now. | ||
Again, barely a week passes without multiple studies showing some kind of fundamental link between the health of the gut and broader physical health, including the health of the mind. | ||
And so there have been plenty of studies substantiating, for instance, the link between autism and a compromised gut biome. | ||
So there's plenty of reason to believe that Maybe not all cases, but certainly some cases of autism may be linked to, for example, overgrowth of fungi and yeast in the gut biome. | ||
And that may actually be, for instance, to do with antibiotic use during pregnancy or antibiotic use after birth. | ||
It also might be due to processed food consumption, like I said, emulsifiers, antifungals. | ||
In processed food, you know, these compounds are added to processed food to make it last longer on the shelf, but they're also very bad for the, you know, they kill microbes that might land on the food or be on the food when it's in its packaging or in the cupboard, but they also kill microbes in your stomach as well. | ||
Right, so people are having to take probiotics and stuff to compensate for that. | ||
And what's really interesting to me, especially here in the United States, egg is... | ||
We'll have doctors advocate for consuming foods X, Y, and Z, all processed. | ||
But simultaneously, they'll try to do things like make it illegal or impossible to purchase things like raw milk, or they'll discourage you from consuming raw eggs. | ||
And I wanted to bring that up specifically because you're the raw egg nationalist. | ||
Because of the, you know, salmonella or whatever issues. | ||
Can you dive in a little bit on why it is that the establishment is so against these traditional foods that were common during the 19th century or the first half of the 20th century, but they're simultaneously pushing clearly cancer-causing, clearly biome screwing up, clearly loaded with microplastic stuff instead of raw milk or raw eggs? | ||
Yeah, well, it's very noticeable, isn't it? | ||
It's hard not to look at the food system and the broader health system and really start to ask some quite serious questions about the priorities of the people who are in charge. | ||
I mean, the thing about raw milk, for example, is if you actually look at the history of pasteurization, And I've done this on my Substack page, raweggstack.com. | ||
I went in depth on the history of pasteurization. | ||
What you realize is that actually pasteurization didn't become a widespread food treatment process because of health concerns. | ||
There were some health concerns. | ||
There were concerns about tuberculosis, but that was more related to unsanitary conditions in dairies, particularly in urban areas. | ||
Pasteurization really took hold because it suited the priorities of These emerging dairy conglomerates, big sort of dairy corporations, because what they wanted was they wanted a product that they could ship easily. | ||
And you can't ship raw milk like you can pasteurized milk. | ||
You pasteurize milk, you can store it, you can ship it on railroads to the other side of the continent or the country, and it will keep. | ||
And it's a standardized product, and... | ||
So these corporations, really what they wanted was they wanted a new industrial version of milk that they could sell in industrial quantities. | ||
So that's the actual history of pasteurization. | ||
That's the real motivation behind pasteurization. | ||
It wasn't that everybody who was drinking raw milk in the past was getting diarrhea and then dying of salmonella. | ||
That just wasn't happening. | ||
I mean, people got ill drinking raw milk, but people get ill drinking pasteurized milk too. | ||
So it seems like these claims against raw milk or against raw eggs are more of like a lobby to wipe out any local competition? | ||
So they want you buying their milk or their eggs instead of the local farm's raw egg or milk? | ||
I think there absolutely is a very strong element of that, yes. | ||
that it's about broader kind of industrial systems of food production and distribution and pasteurization and other food preparation and hygiene techniques definitely favor big corporations. | ||
Because you have to understand a small farmer with his farm selling milk from his dairy, he can't afford pasteurization equipment. | ||
So in an instant when laws and regulations were passed about pasteurization. | ||
that instantly put small producers on the back foot because they just couldn't afford to pasteurize their own milk. | ||
So what did they have to do? They ended up having to supply their milk to these big dairy conglomerates. | ||
It's an interesting story. | ||
And when you actually look at the story, at the actual history, then you see that the health claims that are made, that it was primarily a health-driven decision that we have to pasteurize milk because milk in its unpasteurized state, in its raw state, is dangerous. | ||
That just isn't true. | ||
And I think that the overwhelming sort of story of food in the 20th and 21st century I think that explains so much of why we are all eating processed food. | ||
Sure. And there's chart after chart that shows you the conglomeration and consolidation of food. | ||
Like everything's owned by Nestle now, at least in the United States. | ||
So that's definitely backed up. | ||
And we see the New World Order doing the same thing with political power, where they're trying to conglomerate all political power worldwide into one new world government. | ||
I do want to switch over to plastics a little bit. | ||
I don't know if this is from you, Egg, or if it's from something else that I saw this week. | ||
I have a study on my desk, a study analysis from you about microplastics and skin aging, but I saw something this week, it may have been from you, that the average American consumes a credit card's worth of plastic every week. | ||
unidentified
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Have you seen anything like that? Yes, yeah, I have. | |
So they've They've been trying to estimate for some time exactly how much plastic is going down our throat. | ||
And yeah, it looks like it's a credit card's worth It may even be more than that, you see, because up until now then what they've been doing is they've been looking at microplastics, which are very small, tiny pieces of plastic, but now what scientists and researchers are getting hip to is nanoplastics, which are even smaller. | ||
And they've got more sophisticated detection equipment now to quantify nanoplastics within the air, within water, within foods. | ||
And it's becoming clear that actually there are massive, massive amounts more of nanoplastics rather than microplastics in food, water, the air, et cetera. | ||
So, I mean, that credit card, you know, that may actually be an underestimate, I think. | ||
Wow. | ||
So we've got about one minute before we're going to go to break. | ||
So I'm going to take this opportunity to plug. | ||
But I want you to stay with us if you can, Raleigh Nationalist, and unpack that a little bit and talk more about some of the negative health impacts of the plastics in our food that are in our bodies now on the other side. | ||
In the meantime, folks, I want to encourage everybody to visit Infowarsstore.com. | ||
As I've said before countless times, now it's more important than ever that freedom of speech We got 10% off the water filter as well as Life Select. | ||
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unidentified
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Welcome back to the American Journal folks. | |
I am Chase Geiser, your host this morning with Raw Egg Nationalist, outstanding guest. | ||
I hope I get to meet this guy one day, even though he's anonymous. | ||
I'm gonna find him. I'm gonna find him. | ||
All right, Raw Egg, we were talking about microplastics. | ||
Can you give me the lowdown on what the deal is in terms of So obviously, psychologically speaking, the idea that there's a credit card worth of plastic in my body every week is unnerving just at face value. | ||
But what are the actual health impacts of all these plastics and preservatives in our bodies? | ||
Yeah, well, there are serious, serious implications. | ||
And actually, you know, we understand that already, despite the fact that actually we've only just really started in the last Certainly within the last sort of five years to get serious about microplastics and nanoplastics, even smaller pieces, as a threat. | ||
So it's an emerging field of inquiry, for sure. | ||
And we already know, for example, that microplastics enter, we breathe them in, We also consume them in food and water and from our gut and from our lungs they pass into the blood and from there into basically every single tissue in the body. | ||
So microplastics have been found in not only lung tissue and gut tissue but also in the liver, the kidney, the heart recently, the brain. | ||
So this is the really worrying one, the brain. | ||
So microplastics Go into your blood and they cross the blood-brain barrier, which is the brain's only defense. | ||
It's a literal physical barrier that prevents objects of a certain size from moving through. | ||
Microplastics can be small enough, nanoplastics can be small enough that they end up in your brain. | ||
And what we're really starting to understand is that, you know, these tiny plastic particles are basically linked to more or less every single one of the chronic diseases that are so prevalent in the modern world. | ||
So they're probably linked to obesity. | ||
They're probably linked to diabetes, to Alzheimer's and dementia, to, you know, kidney and liver damage, to lung damage. | ||
I did a piece, I think, at the weekend or maybe the week before for InfoWars about microplastics and skin cancer because there's a suggestion. | ||
We've got that on the desk. Yeah, well, there's a suggestion now, for instance, that there was a first-of-its-kind study released recently that showed the effect of microplastics on skin cells. | ||
The fact that skin cells can absorb microplastics, that they enter the cell machinery within the skin cells, including the mitochondria, that they affect the DNA, and that they cause processes associated with aging and also with the onset of cancer. | ||
And, you know, it's an indisputable fact that people wear more plastic-based clothing than ever before, you know, polyester, nylon, etc., you know. | ||
People weren't wearing plastic clothing 100 years ago. | ||
They weren't really wearing plastic clothing 70 or 50 years ago. | ||
But now everybody is wearing plastic-based underwear. | ||
So it's not just what we consume or what we breathe, but it's just literally the fact that we have this material touching our skin constantly. | ||
Yes. Yeah, exactly. | ||
So, I mean, there have been studies, for example, of polyester that show that if a man wears a polyester jockstrap... | ||
It will reliably make him infertile. | ||
Reliably make him infertile. | ||
Yep. So there's a study that showed that, yeah, if men wore a polyester sling, it would reliably make them infertile within a period of months because what they think... | ||
Can they recover? Apparently, yes. | ||
But I would argue that if you make someone temporarily infertile, it's unlikely that you haven't done some form of lasting damage. | ||
But they think that it works that way, the polyester, because it generates a static electric charge across the testicles, and that inhibits sperm production. | ||
Wow. Yeah, it's pretty crazy. | ||
So they've done it with dogs, they've done it with rats, and they've done it with humans. | ||
And it was suggested for a time that this would kind of catch on as an easy form of contraceptive for men. | ||
You know, you would just wear polyester underwear, it would electrocute your testicles, essentially. | ||
And, you know, then you wouldn't get anybody pregnant. | ||
Yeah. So we've seen massive reports over the last 50, 60, 70 years of increased infertility. | ||
So sperm counts are down, especially here in the West, and testosterone levels are down. | ||
Every other commercial I see is for some sort of testosterone supplementation. | ||
Do you have an idea from a 30,000 foot view, Ren, as to why that's happening? | ||
Is it multiple things? | ||
Is it one thing? Is it on purpose or is it a side effect? | ||
What is going on? Why is it that nobody can have kids? | ||
Yeah, I think it's a witch's brew. | ||
I think that we've created a world for ourselves that is basically, in so many different ways, is hostile to our basic nature as evolved creatures, as human beings. | ||
So like I was saying earlier when I was talking about a Zen pick, you know, we eat the wrong kind of foods. | ||
We eat processed foods, a type of food that, you know, didn't exist until the middle of the last century, manufactured in a totally different way, using totally different ingredients, including things, novel ingredients like preservatives and emulsifiers and humectants and antifungals and all this kind of stuff. novel ingredients like preservatives and emulsifiers and humectants and antifungals So there's a dietary thing where we're eating the wrong kind of food. | ||
We're also increasingly overweight. | ||
We don't exercise as much. | ||
We don't move around. | ||
We don't sleep properly because we are exposed to blue light from screens all the time. | ||
You know, we sit in front of computers and televisions all day, mobile phones, so we don't sleep properly. | ||
We're exposed to harmful endocrine-disrupting chemicals, which are ubiquitous, which are absolutely everywhere. | ||
And so, I mean, it really... | ||
We're being assaulted on multiple fronts, I think. | ||
There's a chemical war on our bodies, there's a physical war on our bodies, and there's a spiritual war too, I think, because I think, in part, then, you know, testosterone is, certainly for men, you know, is a hormone of motivation. | ||
And the fact that men... | ||
Are so demonized and masculinity is so demonized and so discouraged, of course, has a knock-on effect on men's hormonal systems, men's bodies. | ||
And that, I think, is responsible too for declining fertility. | ||
So it's a multifaceted problem. | ||
Well, I know a lot of the numbers today in terms of fertility are compared to numbers right after World War II, and I've often wondered, is there something about being at war in a high-adrenaline environment for years with other men that artificially spikes your testosterone and fertility? | ||
So if you're a soldier and you're coming back from combat for four years, are you going to have an artificially inflated Fertility or testosterone level, and then if we use that as the frame of reference, does it look like we're losing that fertility and testosterone, or are we actually going back to a more normal level because our whole society isn't at world war anymore? | ||
Yeah, I don't honestly know. | ||
I don't honestly know. | ||
I think that... Yeah. | ||
form of very very acute even chronic stress because it went on for years I mean stress is generally bad for us and it's been shown for example that stress affects female fertility in some very interesting ways it makes it more difficult for women to give birth to boys for example so it was shown by demographers that after 9/11 fewer boys were born because people were more people were more stressed women | ||
That's an actual thing. | ||
I mean, I think you're touching on something that is definitely an interesting issue, which is, you know, the data only go back so far. | ||
None of us can look at the testosterone levels of a Viking. | ||
We can't say, you know, like our 10th century ancestors had 50 times the testosterone levels that we have. | ||
So it's difficult, but certainly within the last sort of four or five decades, then testosterone has declined precipitously. | ||
And I don't know that there's any reason to believe that that's normal, especially with what we know about testosterone. | ||
You know, how bad our lifestyles are, how unhealthy we are, and the degree to which we're exposed to all these horrible, harmful industrial chemicals. | ||
Well, stick with us, Ren. | ||
We have one more four-minute break coming up in about 10 seconds, and then we're going to finish out the show with you on the other side for another eight or nine minutes or so. | ||
Everybody, open up a tab. | ||
Visit InfoWarsStore.com. | ||
Make sure you follow Raw Egg Nationalist on X. He's absolutely amazing. | ||
More from him on the other side. | ||
Welcome back to the American Journal, folks. | ||
I am Chase Geiser. | ||
This is the final segment of the American Journal before the great Alex Jones show begins in 13 minutes. | ||
We've got 10 minutes left with the amazing Raw Egg Nationalist. | ||
You can follow him on x at babygravy9, looks like. | ||
An amazing follow. | ||
He's been doing some great writing for InfoWars at InfoWars.com. | ||
I love his magazine, Man's World. | ||
You can read the online version of it, I believe. | ||
What is the URL, Raw Egg, for Man's World? | ||
It's mansworldmag.online and you can buy the physical copy at passage.press. | ||
Amazing, amazing stuff. | ||
Well, thank you so much for coming on and talking to us and thank you for spending the entire hour with us. | ||
It's really an honor and a pleasure to speak with you. | ||
So when we're talking about testosterone and fertility rates, let's just dive straight into what are the impacts of lower testosterone and how can you naturally combat it? | ||
I mean, should I be sunning my balls? | ||
I think every man should be sunning his balls as a power move, as well as to increase his testosterone. | ||
It really does make you feel good. | ||
Low testosterone is definitely an epidemic today. | ||
I don't think it's an exaggeration to say that. | ||
The effects of low testosterone are... | ||
In a nutshell, you are less of a man. | ||
That's just the case. | ||
I mean, testosterone is the master male hormone. | ||
Women have testosterone, and men have estrogen, but in different ratios. | ||
So men have much more testosterone than estrogen, and women have much more estrogen than testosterone, or at least that should be the case. | ||
So everything that you really associate with being a man is associated with testosterone. | ||
Having sufficient testosterone. | ||
So men who have low testosterone will lack motivation. | ||
They may very well be depressed. | ||
They'll have low libido, low self-confidence. | ||
They will put on weight. | ||
They may go bald. | ||
They'll be less fertile, etc. | ||
I mean, it's a nightmare. | ||
And actually, if you go on Reddit, there are loads of Reddit, subreddits, these... | ||
Groups on Reddit where people talk about problems devoted to having low testosterone. | ||
So there are all these low testosterone forums where you can read people's personal testimonies of what it's like to have low testosterone as a man, how it ruins their lives. | ||
I mean, from top to bottom, everything is rubbish. | ||
And then you'll get these other testimonies where men say, look, I went on testosterone replacement therapy or, you know, I started working out, etc. | ||
And then they describe how everything about their life is better. | ||
It's no exaggeration to say that, you know... | ||
Increasing your testosterone either by having therapy or by doing things like taking control of your diet, exercising, lifting weights, getting adequate sunlight, sleeping properly. | ||
Sleep is a huge, huge factor. | ||
There was a study, for example, that showed that if you double your sleep from four hours a night to eight hours a night as a man, you can double your testosterone. | ||
If you can take control of your life, and as a man, if you have low motivation, if you're unfit, unhappy, unmotivated, if you can somehow claw back control of your life and start doing little things, Work on your health, work on your sleep, work on your diet, then actually you can transform your life in quite a, not that long a period of time, a period of months, maybe a year, you'll be unrecognizable. | ||
Let's dive more into what you can do outside of testosterone therapy to improve your testosterone levels. | ||
The first question I have for you, is it inevitable that as we age as men that our testosterone levels will decline or is that something that just happens to some people? | ||
And then the second thing is what specifically can people do naturally to improve their testosterone before making the leap for therapy? | ||
Yeah, so I would say, off the bat, look, therapy should be a last option. | ||
You shouldn't take it off the table, but it shouldn't be your go-to just to have testosterone injections, in my opinion, for reasons that I can get into. | ||
But as far as the aging and testosterone things goes, then actually there's some argument about this. | ||
So it generally has been established, or the established view is that Once you get past the age of 30, your testosterone declines by 1% every year. | ||
And that's taken as a kind of given. | ||
But actually, there's There are other studies that suggest that might not be the case. | ||
So there was a study to do with sleep and testosterone which showed that actually sleep is fundamental for testosterone and one of the reasons older men seem to have lower testosterone than younger men is because actually older men and older people in general Don't sleep as well as younger people. | ||
So that's actually kind of like an established thing. | ||
And most of your body's testosterone is produced at night. | ||
And so if you're not sleeping properly, you're interrupting that process. | ||
And so, you know, you're producing less. | ||
There's another interesting study that suggests that it was a study that was done of peasants in Bolivia. | ||
And it showed that peasants in Bolivia living in the countryside, doing sort of traditional kind of agricultural jobs, There was no difference whatsoever between the testosterone levels of the older men and the younger men studied. | ||
The researchers suggested various different reasons for this. | ||
One of the reasons might be that There are seasonal fluctuations in testosterone. | ||
This is something that's been observed. | ||
So, you know, you tend to have, for instance, higher levels of testosterone in the summer because of the sunlight, because you're exposed to the sun and your body's making vitamin D and vitamin D is essential to testosterone production. | ||
And that's one of the ways actually that you can increase your testosterone is by taking vitamin D supplements or eating foods that are rich in vitamin D as well as getting sunlight. | ||
But then in the winter, of course, when you... | ||
When the sun isn't as bright and when it's cold and you might not sleep as well at night if you're a peasant because you're living in like a hovel essentially and it's cold and uncomfortable and maybe the animals are in the hovel with you. | ||
So the researchers behind this study suggested that actually maybe what's happening is that because there's this sharp seasonal fluctuation for these Bolivian peasants, they have higher testosterone in the summer, lower testosterone in the winter, that has some kind of protective effect. | ||
Essentially. And I mean, this is one of the reasons why testosterone therapy is, it works and it's good if it's a last option, but it doesn't mimic how your body produces testosterone. | ||
And that is in some regards a problem. | ||
Now, is testosterone directly correlated to sperm count and fertility or are they unrelated? | ||
Yes, it's directly correlated. | ||
Yeah, it's one of the It's one of the main parameters, you know, and when people track fertility decline in men, then they track sperm counts and testosterone. | ||
So they've been declining precipitously in tandem for the last... | ||
Well, it would make sense that as our economy has shifted from a production economy in the United States to a service-based economy, all in the context of the advancement of technology, I mean, we are exposed to exponentially less sunlight as adult men in our workforce today than 50 years ago. we are exposed to exponentially less sunlight as adult men I mean, it could all go back to vitamin D deficiency. | ||
I think vitamin D deficiency is a big part of it, yes. | ||
And there are numerous studies that have shown the importance of vitamin D to healthy hormonal function more broadly, but also, yes, also testosterone. | ||
I mean, fundamentally, my contention is Yes, that we are living in a manner that is incompatible or largely incompatible with our evolved nature as human beings. | ||
We've spent 199,950 years or 900 years living one way and then about 50 or 100 years living another way that's radically opposed to the way that our ancestors lived for the longest period of time. | ||
And so, of course, that's going to have Serious negative effect on our health and well-being. | ||
Now, it may very well be that living for a long enough period in an industrial system, we will evolve in different ways and we'll evolve to adapt to the industrial system. | ||
But as such, our bodies are still the bodies of people who lived In small nomadic hunter-gatherer bands, eating predominantly animal-based food, subject to very, very low levels, basically no chronic stress, just acute stress. | ||
You know, you're attacked by a wild animal or another tribe, that kind of thing. | ||
Sleeping according to the rhythms of the earth, you know, the diurnal rhythms, night and day, you know, once it's dark, you don't do anything, you just go to sleep. | ||
Right. So, yeah, I mean, we need to try to recapture some of that. | ||
And that's why people are living these sort of primal lifestyles and going back to eating largely animal-based diets and trying to mimic the evolutionary conditions under which modern humans evolved. | ||
Because fundamentally, and I believe this, they are better for us and they're better for our health, they're better for our happiness and our well-being. | ||
And so that's exactly what I advocate doing. | ||
Well, thank you so much for being on the show, Ren. | ||
We've got about 30 seconds left before the end of the American Journal this morning. | ||
It's always an honor and a pleasure to speak with you. | ||
You're obviously a brilliant man. | ||
You can follow him, raweggnationalist.com or go to raweggstack.com. | ||
Follow him on X at babygravy9. | ||
And make sure you check out Man's World magazine. | ||
It's amazing. But since we've been talking about testosterone, I do want to mention that 1776 testosterone boost is 25% off at Infowarsstore.com. | ||
So check out Infowarsstore.com. | ||
Get 1776 testosterone boost right now. | ||
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